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Her face lights up with a smile.
"Perhaps I can guess what you would say."
"It is about the affair last night."
"Poor Sir Lionel is rather quiet to-day. He is not so young as he was, and I imagine that his severe exertions last night have caused him many twinges to-day."
"Perhaps. It was the most remarkable affair I ever witnessed."
"You saw it all?"
"Yes. Mustapha and myself were in hiding not far away. We were astounded at the easy way those fellows died."
At this Lady Ruth gives a merry peal of laughter.
"It was really ridiculous."
"Did you guess it at the time?"
"Well, certain things looked very strange to me. I was amazed as we were leaving to see a man whom I was positive had twice fallen as if dead, raise his head and look after us with a smile on his ugly face.
"Whatever I thought, I was so glad to get away on any terms that I said nothing, and when the next engagement took place I found Sir Lionel very much in earnest.
"On this account, although feeling sure that he was the cause of all the trouble, I have been disposed to forgive him. You know the poor fellow professes to be in love with me, though I have had some reason to believe it is my fortune he is after as well, for my father unfortunately left me an heiress."
"Well, I'm in a position to be generous, and though I condemn his methods, I can easily see how, in his despair he might forget his honor.
I have good reason to believe this is not the first time he has tried to play the hero."
Lady Ruth looks surprised.
"How is that?" she asks.
Thereupon John narrates what the boatman said to him off Malta, concerning a broken plank in the bottom of the little craft, which of course astonishes the young girl.
She shows some indignation at the thought of his imperiling her life.
"The joke of the whole thing lies in the fact that it was you who saved the would-be hero of the occasion," remarks John, and this fact induces both of them to laugh.
On the whole they feel so happy that it is hard to bear a grudge even against the veteran who has been baffled by fate.
Lady Ruth cannot forget that Sir Lionel gave many evidences of being in love with her, and a woman is apt to forgive even a fault in a man who professes to have sinned for her, to have even given up honor in the hope of winning her favor.
"I have arranged a little scheme whereby I hope to pay Sir Lionel back in his own coin," says the young Chicagoan, grimly.
"Why, John, I thought you said just now that you could forgive him. Now you pretend to be quite blood-thirsty."
"Oh, no; not that. I'm looking out for the poor fellow. He's gone it alone quite long enough, and I want to see him caught."
"Caught? Explain, please. Perhaps I'm a little obtuse, but really, under the circ.u.mstances--"
"Yes, I know. It's all excusable, my dear girl. In plain English I want to see the veteran married."
"Married?"
"And I shall take upon myself the task of selecting the girl who will rule him hereafter."
"John, what do you mean? Surely--oh, that is nonsense. Tell me who she is?"
"Pauline Potter," calmly.
"Why, that's the actress."
"True."
"The actress who professed to be so madly in love with one Doctor John Craig."
"And as the said Craig is already taken, she is left out in the cold.
Now you behold my little scheme. We are happy--why should not these two people be the same?"
"Why, indeed?"
"Their greatest fault lies in loving not wisely but too well. This has caused them to sin. Now, in order to prevent any future plots that may give us trouble, I purpose to so arrange it that Sir Lionel shall have a wife and Pauline a husband."
"A clever idea."
"I may want your a.s.sistance."
"You can have it at any time."
"We must protect ourselves, and the easiest way to do this will be to disarm our foes."
"Really, Doctor Chicago, I didn't give you credit for so much shrewdness. Tell me if you have any plans arranged."
"Well, only the skeleton of one as yet, but I'll tell you all about it as far as I have gone."
They sit upon that bench for a full hour. Time is not taken into account when love rules the occasion.
It is Lady Ruth who finally jumps up with a cry of consternation. She has heard a clock upon a tower in new Algiers strike the hour.
"What will they think of us, John?" she says.
"Little I care, for I mean to announce our engagement to Aunt Gwen on sight, and she is the only one who has any business to complain,"
returns the successful wooer, firmly.
"Oh! it is so sudden; perhaps we'd better wait a little while."
"With your permission, not an hour. You belong to me, now--see, let me put this solitaire diamond on your finger. It was my mother's ring. By that token I simply desire to warn all men 'hands off.' Tell me, am I right, Ruth?"