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"Stand quite still, Miss Claiborne."
He peered about, and instantly, as though waiting for his voice, a tall figure rose not a yard from him and a long arm shot high above his head and descended swiftly. They were close to the rail, and a roll of the s.h.i.+p sent Armitage off his feet and away from his a.s.sailant. s.h.i.+rley at the same moment threw out her hands, defensively or for support, and clutched the arm and shoulder of the man who had a.s.sailed Armitage. He had driven a knife at John Armitage, and was poising himself for another attempt when s.h.i.+rley seized his arm. As he drew back a fold of his cloak still lay in s.h.i.+rley's grasp, and she gave a sharp little cry as the figure, with a quick jerk, released the cloak and slipped away into the shadows. A moment later the lights were restored, and she saw Armitage regarding ruefully a long slit in the left arm of his ulster.
"Are you hurt? What has happened?" she demanded.
"It must have been a sea-serpent," he replied, laughing.
The deck officer regarded them curiously as they blinked in the glare of light, and asked whether anything was wrong. Armitage turned the matter off.
"I guess it was a sea-serpent," he said. "It bit a hole in my ulster, for which I am not grateful." Then in a lower tone to s.h.i.+rley: "That was certainly a strange proceeding. I am sorry you were startled; and I am under greatest obligations to you, Miss Claiborne. Why, you actually pulled the fellow away!"
"Oh, no," she returned lightly, but still breathing hard; "it was the instinct of self-preservation. I was unsteady on my feet for a moment, and sought something to take hold of. That pirate was the nearest thing, and I caught hold of his cloak; I'm sure it was a cloak, and that makes me sure he was a human villain of some sort. He didn't feel in the least like a sea-serpent. But some one tried to injure you--it is no jesting matter--"
"Some lunatic escaped from the steerage, probably. I shall report it to the officers."
"Yes, it should be reported," said s.h.i.+rley.
"It was very strange. Why, the deck of the _King Edward_ is the safest place in the world; but it's something to have had hold of a sea-serpent, or a pirate! I hope you will forgive me for bringing you into such an encounter; but if you hadn't caught his cloak--"
Armitage was uncomfortable, and anxious to allay her fears. The incident was by no means trivial, as he knew. Pa.s.sengers on the great transatlantic steamers are safeguarded by every possible means; and the fact that he had been attacked in the few minutes that the deck lights had been out of order pointed to an espionage that was both close and daring. He was greatly surprised and more shaken than he wished s.h.i.+rley to believe. The thing was disquieting enough, and it could not but impress her strangely that he, of all the persons on board, should have been the object of so unusual an a.s.sault. He was in the disagreeable plight of having subjected her to danger, and as they entered the brilliant saloon he freed himself of the ulster with its telltale gash and sought to minimize her impression of the incident.
s.h.i.+rley did not refer to the matter again, but resolved to keep her own counsel. She felt that any one who would accept the one chance in a thousand of striking down an enemy on a steamer deck must be animated by very bitter hatred. She knew that to speak of the affair to her father or brother would be to alarm them and prejudice them against John Armitage, about whom her brother, at least, had entertained doubts. And it is not rea.s.suring as to a man of whom little or nothing is known that he is menaced by secret enemies.
The attack had found Armitage unprepared and off guard, but with swift reaction his wits were at work. He at once sought the purser and scrutinized every name on the pa.s.senger list. It was unlikely that a steerage pa.s.senger could reach the saloon deck un.o.bserved; a second cabin pa.s.senger might do so, however, and he sought among the names in the second cabin list for a clue. He did not believe that Chauvenet or Durand had boarded the _King Edward_. He himself had made the boat only by a quick dash, and he had left those two gentlemen at Geneva with much to consider.
It was, however, quite within the probabilities that they would send some one to watch him, for the two men whom he had overheard in the dark house on the Boulevard Froissart were active and resourceful rascals, he had no doubt. Whether they would be able to make anything of the cigarette case he had stupidly left behind he could not conjecture; but the importance of recovering the packet he had cut from Chauvenet's coat was not a trifle that rogues of their caliber would ignore. There was, the purser said, a sick man in the second cabin, who had kept close to his berth.
The steward believed the man to be a continental of some sort, who spoke bad German. He had taken the boat at Liverpool, paid for his pa.s.sage in gold, and, complaining of illness, retired, evidently for the voyage. His name was Peter Ludovic, and the steward described him in detail.
"Big fellow; bullet head; bristling mustache; small eyes--"
"That will do," said Armitage, grinning at the ease with which he identified the man.
"You understand that it is wholly irregular for us to let such a matter pa.s.s without acting--" said the purser.
"It would serve no purpose, and might do harm. I will take the responsibility."
And John Armitage made a memorandum in his notebook:
"_Zmai_--; _travels as Peter Ludovic_."
Armitage carried the envelope which he had cut from Chauvenet's coat pinned into an inner pocket of his waistcoat, and since boarding the _King Edward _he had examined it twice daily to see that it was intact.
The three red wax seals were in blank, replacing those of like size that had originally been affixed to the envelope; and at once after the attack on the dark deck he opened the packet and examined the papers--some half-dozen sheets of thin linen, written in a clerk's clear hand in black ink. There had been no mistake in the matter; the packet which Chauvenet had purloined from the old prime minister at Vienna had come again into Armitage's hands. He was daily tempted to destroy it and cast it in bits to the sea winds; but he was deterred by the remembrance of his last interview with the old prime minister.
"Do something for Austria--something for the Empire." These phrases repeated themselves over and over again in his mind until they rose and fell with the cadence of the high, wavering voice of the Cardinal Archbishop of Vienna as he chanted the ma.s.s of requiem for Count Ferdinand von Stroebel.
CHAPTER VIII
"THE KING IS DEAD; LONG LIVE THE KING"
Low he lies, yet high and great Looms he, lying thus in state.-- How exalted o'er ye when Dead, my lords and gentlemen!
--James Whitcomb Riley.
John Armitage lingered in New York for a week, not to press the Claibornes too closely, then went to Was.h.i.+ngton. He wrote himself down on the register of the New American as John Armitage, Cinch Tight, Montana, and took a suite of rooms high up, with an outlook that swept Pennsylvania Avenue. It was on the evening of a bright April day that he thus established himself; and after he had unpacked his belongings he stood long at the window and watched the lights leap out of the dusk over the city. He was in Was.h.i.+ngton because s.h.i.+rley Claiborne lived there, and he knew that even if he wished to do so he could no longer throw an air of inadvertence into his meetings with her. He had been very lonely in those days when he first saw her abroad; the sight of her had lifted his mood of depression; and now, after those enchanted hours at sea, his coming to Was.h.i.+ngton had been inevitable.
Many things pa.s.sed through his mind as he stood at the open window. His life, he felt, could never be again as it had been before, and he sighed deeply as he recalled his talk with the old prime minister at Geneva.
Then he laughed quietly as he remembered Chauvenet and Durand and the dark house on the Boulevard Froissart; but the further recollection of the attack made on his life on the deck of the _King Edward_ sobered him, and he turned away from the window impatiently. He had seen the sick second-cabin pa.s.senger leave the steamer at New York, but had taken no trouble either to watch or to avoid him. Very likely the man was under instructions, and had been told to follow the Claibornes home; and the thought of their identification with himself by his enemies angered him.
Chauvenet was likely to appear in Was.h.i.+ngton at any time, and would undoubtedly seek the Claibornes at once. The fact that the man was a scoundrel might, in some circ.u.mstances, have afforded Armitage comfort, but here again Armitage's mood grew dark. Jules Chauvenet was undoubtedly a rascal of a shrewd and dangerous type; but who, pray, was John Armitage?
The bell in his entry rang, and he flashed on the lights and opened the door.
"Well, I like this! Setting yourself up here in gloomy splendor and never saying a word. You never deserved to have any friends, John Armitage!"
"Jim Sanderson, come in!" Armitage grasped the hands of a red-bearded giant of forty, the possessor of alert brown eyes and a big voice.
"It's my rural habit of reading the register every night in search of const.i.tuents that brings me here. They said they guessed you were in, so I just came up to see whether you were opening a poker game or had come to sneak a claim past the watch-dog of the treasury."
The caller threw himself into a chair and rolled a fat, unlighted cigar about in his mouth. "You're a peach, all right, and as offensively hale and handsome as ever. When are you going to the ranch?"
"Well, not just immediately; I want to sample the flesh-pots for a day or two."
"You're getting soft,--that's what's the matter with you! You're afraid of the spring zephyrs on the Montana range. Well, I'll admit that it's rather more diverting here."
"There is no debating that, Senator. How do you like being a statesman?
It was so sudden and all that. I read an awful roast of you in an English paper. They took your election to the Senate as another evidence of the complete domination of our politics by the plutocrats."
Sanderson winked prodigiously.
"The papers _have_ rather skinned me; but on the whole, I'll do very well. They say it isn't respectable to be a senator these days, but they oughtn't to hold it up against a man that he's rich. If the Lord put silver in the mountains of Montana and let me dig it out, it's nothing against me, is it?"
"Decidedly not! And if you want to invest it in a senators.h.i.+p it's the Lord's hand again."
"Why sure!" and the Senator from Montana winked once more. "But it's expensive. I've got to be elected again next winter--I'm only filling out Billings' term--and I'm not sure I can go up against it."
"But you are nothing if not unselfish. If the good of the country demands it you'll not falter, if I know you."
"There's hot water heat in this hotel, so please turn off the hot air. I saw your foreman in Helena the last time I was out there, and he was sober. I mention the fact, knowing that I'm jeopardizing my reputation for veracity, but it's the Lord's truth. Of course you spent Christmas at the old home in England--one of those yule-log and plum-pudding Christmases you read of in novels. You Englishmen--"
"My dear Sanderson, don't call me Englis.h.!.+ I've told you a dozen times that I'm not English."
"So you did; so you did! I'd forgotten that you're so d.a.m.ned sensitive about it;" and Sanderson's eyes regarded Armitage intently for a moment, as though he were trying to recall some previous discussion of the young man's nativity.
"I offer you free swing at the bar, Senator. May I summon a Montana c.o.c.ktail? You taught me the ingredients once--three dashes orange bitters; two dashes acid phosphate; half a jigger of whisky; half a jigger of Italian vermuth. You undermined the const.i.tutions of half Montana with that mess."
Sanderson reached for his hat with sudden dejection.