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"It's late. I think I had better see you safely home."
"I dare say our watchman has found himself a comfortable bed--"
"The slumbers of night-watchmen are notoriously deep."
"And Papa La Branche has finished his solitaire. There is no danger."
No one was in sight as they stole in through the driveway to the servants' door. She gave him her hand, and he pressed it closely, whispering:
"When shall I see you again?"
"After the quarantine. I can do nothing until then."
"You will go back to Oliveta's house?"
"Yes, but you must never come there, even in daylight." She thought for a moment while he still retained her hand. "I will instruct you later--" She broke off suddenly, and at the same instant Blake heard a stir in the darkness behind him.
Vittoria drew him quickly into the black shadows of the rear porch, where they stood close together, afraid to move until the man had pa.s.sed. The kitchen gallery was s.h.i.+elded by a latticework covered with vines, and Blake felt reasonably safe within its shelter. He was beginning to breathe easier when a voice barely an arm's-length away inquired, gruffly:
"Who's there?"
He would have given something handsome to be out of this foolish predicament, which he knew must be very trying to his companion. But the fates were against him. To his horror, the man struck a match and mounting the steps to the porch flashed it directly into his face.
"Good evening," said Blake, with rather a weak attempt at a.s.surance.
"What are you doing here?" the guard demanded. "Don't you know that this house is quarantined?"
"I do. Kindly lower your voice; there are people asleep."
The fellow's eyes took in the girl in her stiffly starched uniform before the match burned out and darkness engulfed them once more.
"I'm not a burglar."
"Humph! I don't know whether you are or not."
"I a.s.sure you," urged Vittoria.
"Strike another match and I'll prove to you that I'm not dangerous."
When the light flared up once more Norvin selected a card from his case and handed it to the watchman. "I am Norvin Blake, president of the Cotton Exchange."
But this information failed of the desired effect.
"Oh, I know you, but this ain't exactly the right time to be calling on a lady."
Vittoria felt her companion's muscles stiffen.
"I will explain my presence later," he said, stiffly; then, turning to Vittoria, "I am sorry I disturbed this estimable man. Good night."
"Just a minute," the watchman broke in. "You needn't say good night."
"What do you mean?"
"This house is quarantined for smallpox."
"Well?"
"n.o.body can come or go without the doctor's permission."
"I understand that."
"Now that you're here, I reckon you'll stay."
Miss Fabrizi uttered a smothered exclamation.
"You're crazy!" said Blake, angrily.
"Yes? Well, that's my instructions."
"I haven't been inside."
"That don't make any difference; the lady has."
"It's absurd. You can't force--"
"'Sh-h!" breathed Vittoria.
Some one had entered the kitchen at their back. A light flashed through the window, the door opened, and Mr. La Branche, clad in a rusty satin dressing-gown and carpet slippers, stood revealed, a lamp in his hand.
"I thought I heard voices," he said. "What is the trouble?"
"There's no trouble at all, sir," Blake protested, then found himself absurdly embarra.s.sed.
Vittoria and the guard both began to speak at once, and at length she broke into laughter, saying:
"Poor Mr. Blake, I fear he has been exposed to contagion. It was necessary for him to talk with me on a matter of importance, and now this man tells him he cannot leave."
But from Papa La Branche's expression it was evident that he saw nothing humorous in the situation.
"To talk with you! At this hour!"
"I'm working for the Board of Health, and those are my orders,"
declared outraged authority.
"It was imperative that I see Miss Fabrizi; the blame for this complication is entirely mine," Norvin a.s.sured the old creole.
The representative of the Board of Health inquired, loudly: "Didn't the doctors tell you that n.o.body could come or go, Mr. La Branche?"
"They did."