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"It is not in my power to do so. Jane always makes our travelling arrangements. Besides, we have sleeping berths secured on the night _rapide_ from the Gare de Lyon to Turin."
"I will see Mrs. Caldwell, and get her tickets changed," he said. "Do you understand, Enid? There are reasons--very strong reasons--why you should not travel across France!"
"No, I don't," declared the girl. "You are mysterious again. Why don't you be open with me and give me your reasons for this suggestion?"
"I would most willingly--if I could," he answered. "Unfortunately, I cannot."
"I don't think Mrs. Caldwell will travel by the roundabout route which you suggest merely because you have a whim that we should not cross France," she remarked, looking straight at him.
"If you enter France a disaster will happen--depend upon it," he said, speaking very slowly, his eyes fixed upon her.
"Are you a prophet?" the girl asked. "Can you prophesy dreadful things to happen to us?"
"I do in this case," he said firmly. "Therefore, take my advice and do not court disaster."
"Can't you be more explicit?" she asked, much puzzled by his strange words.
"No," he answered, shaking his head, "I cannot. I only forewarn you of what must happen. Therefore, I beg of you to take my advice and travel by the alternative route--if you really must go to Italy."
She turned towards the fire and, fixing her gaze upon the flames, remained for a few moments in thought, one neat foot upon the marble kerb.
"You really alarm me with all these serious utterances," she said at last, with a faint, nervous laugh.
He rose and stood by her side.
"Look here, Enid," he said, "can't you see that I am in dead earnest?
Have I not already declared that I am your friend, to a.s.sist you against that man Weirmarsh?"
"Yes," she replied, "you have."
"Then will you not heed my warning? There is distinct danger in your visit to France--a danger of which you have no suspicion, but real and serious nevertheless. Don't think about spying; it is not that, I a.s.sure you."
"How can I avoid it?"
"By pretending to be unwell," he suggested quickly. "You cannot leave with Mrs. Caldwell. Let her go, and you can join her a few days later, travelling by Ostend. The thing is quite simple."
"But----"
"No, you must not hesitate," he declared. "There are no buts. It is the only way."
"Yes; but tell me what terrible thing is to happen to me if I enter France?" she asked, with an uneasy laugh.
The man hesitated. To speak the truth would be to explain all. Therefore he only shook his head and said, "Please do not ask me to explain a matter of which I am not permitted to speak. If you believe me, Enid," he said in a low, pleading voice, "do heed my warning, I beg of you!"
As he uttered these words the handle of the door turned, and Lady Elcombe, warmly clad in furs, came forward to greet the novelist.
"I'm so glad that I returned before you left, Mr. Fetherston," she exclaimed. "We've been to a most dreary play; and I'm simply dying for some tea. Enid, ring the bell, dear, will you?" Then continuing, she added in warm enthusiasm: "Really, Mr. Fetherston, you are quite a stranger! We hoped to see more of you, but my husband and daughter have been away in France--as perhaps you know."
"So Enid has been telling me," replied Walter. "They've been in a most interesting district."
"Enid is leaving us again to-morrow morning," remarked her mother. "They are going to Nervi. You know it, of course, for I've heard you called the living Baedeker, Mr. Fetherston," she laughed.
"Yes," he replied, "I know it--a rather dull little place, with one or two villas. I prefer Santa Margherita, a little farther along the coast--or Rapallo. But," he added, "your daughter tells me she's not well. I hope she will not be compelled to postpone her departure."
"Of course not," said Lady Elcombe decisively. "She must go to-morrow if she goes at all. I will not allow her to travel by herself."
The girl and the man exchanged meaning glances, and just then Sir Hugh himself entered, greeting his visitor cheerily.
The butler brought in the tea-tray, and as they sat together the two men chatted.
In pretence that he had not been abroad, Walter was making inquiry regarding the district around Haudiomont, which he declared must be full of interest, and asking the general's opinion of the French new fortresses in antic.i.p.ation of the new war against Germany.
"Since I have been away," said the general, "I have been forced to arrive at the conclusion that another danger may arrive in the very near future.
Germany will try and attack France again--without a doubt. The French are labouring under a dangerous delusion if they suppose that Germany would be satisfied with her obscurity."
"Is that really your opinion, Sir Hugh?" asked Fetherston, somewhat surprised.
"Certainly," was the general's reply. "There will be another war in the near future. My opinions have changed of late, my dear Fetherston," Sir Hugh a.s.sured him, as he sipped his tea, "and more especially since I went to visit my daughter. I have recently had opportunities of seeing and learning a good deal."
Fetherston reflected. Those words, coming from Sir Hugh, were certainly strange ones.
Walter was handing Enid the cake when the butler entered, bearing a telegram upon a silver salver, which he handed to Sir Hugh.
Tearing it open, he glanced at the message eagerly, and a second later, with blanched face, stood rigid, statuesque, as though turned into stone.
"Why, what's the matter?" asked his wife. "Whom is it from?"
"Only from Blanche," he answered in a low, strained voice. "She is in Paris--and is leaving to-night for London."
"Is Paul coming?" inquired Enid eagerly.
"No," he answered, with a strenuous effort to remain calm. "He--he cannot leave Paris."
The butler, being told there was no answer, bowed and withdrew, but a few seconds later the door reopened, and he announced:
"Dr. Weirmarsh, Sir Hugh!"
CHAPTER XXI
THE WIDENED BREACH
WHEN Sir Hugh entered his cosy study he found the doctor seated at his ease in the big chair by the fire.
"I thought that, being in the vicinity, I would call and see if you've recovered from your--well, your silly fit of irritability," he said, with a grim smile on his grey face as he looked towards the general.