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The interlude pleased the tired, jaded minds of the sad companions, and it was with some fict.i.tious reconstruction of past gaiety and animation that they drove to St. Pancras.
The train was in.
Gilbert's dressing-case was already placed in a first-cla.s.s compartment, his portmanteau snug in the van.
When he walked up the long platform with Rita, a porter, the Guard of the train and the steward of the dining-car, were grouped round the open door.
He was well known. All the servants of the line looked out for him and gave him almost ministerial honours. They knew he was a "somebody," but were all rather vague as to the nature of his distinction.
He was "Mr. Gilbert Lothian" at least, and his bountiful largesse was generally spoken of.
The train was not due to start for six minutes. The acute guard, raising his cap, locked the door of the carriage.
Gilbert and Rita were alone in it for a farewell.
He took her in his arms and looked long and earnestly into the young lovely face.
He saw the tears gathering in her eyes.
"Have you been happy, sweetheart, with me?"
"Perfectly happy." There was a sob in the reply.
"You really do care for me?"
"Yes."
His breath came more quickly, he held her closer to him--only a little rose-faced girl now.
"Do you care for me more than for any other man you have ever met?"
She did not answer.
"Tell me, tell me! Do you?"
"Yes."
"Rita, my darling, say, if things had been different, if I were free to ask you to be my wife now, would you marry me?"
"Yes."
"Would you be my dear, dear love, as I yours, for ever and ever and ever?"
She clung to him in floods of tears. He had his answer. Each tear was an answer.
The guard of the train, looking the other way, opened the door with his key and coughed.
"Less than a minute more, sir," said the guard.
... "Once more, say it once more! You _would_ be my wife if I were free?"
"I'd be your wife, Gilbert, and I'd love you--oh, what shall I do without you? How dull and dreadful everything is going to be now!"
"But I shall be back soon. And I shall write to you every day!"
"You will, won't you, dear? Write, write--" The train was almost moving.
It began to move. Gilbert leaned out of the window and waved his hand for a long time, to a forlorn little girl in a brown coat and skirt who stood upon the platform crying bitterly.
The waiter of the dining-car, knowing his man well, brought Lothian a large whiskey and soda before the long train was free of the sordid Northwest suburbs.
Lothian drank it, arranged about dinner, and sank back against the cus.h.i.+ons. He lit a cigarette and drew the hot smoke deep into his lungs.
The train was out of the town area now. There was no more jolting and rattling over points. Its progress into the gathering night was a continuous roar.
Onwards through the gathering night... .
"_I'd be your wife, Gilbert, and I'd love you--if you were free._"
CHAPTER V
THE NIGHT JOURNEY FROM NICE WHEN MRS. DALY SPEAKS WORDS OF FIRE
"Into a dark tremendous sea of cloud, It is but for a time; I press G.o.d's lamp Close to my breast: its splendour, soon or late Shall pierce the gloom. I shall emerge one day."
--_Browning._
A carriage was waiting outside a white and gilded hotel on the Promenade des Anglais at Nice.
The sun was just dipping behind the Esterelle mountains and the Mediterranean was the colour of wine. Already the Palais du Jetee was being illuminated and outlined itself in palest gold against the painted sky above the Cimiez heights, where the olive-coloured headland hides Villefranche and the sea-girt pleasure city of Monte Carlo.
The tall palms in the gardens which front the gleaming palaces of the Promenade were bronze gold in the fading light, and their fans clicked and rustled in a cool breeze which was eddying down upon the Queen of the Mediterranean from the Maritime Alps.
Mary Lothian came out of the hotel. Her face was pale and very sad. She had been crying. With her was a tall, stately woman of middle-age; grey-haired, with a ma.s.sive calmness and peace of feature recalling the Athena of the Louvre or one of those n.o.ble figures of the Erectheum crowning the hill of the Acropolis at Athens.
She was Mrs. Julia Daly, who had been upon the Riviera for two months.
Dr. Morton Sims had written to her. She had called upon Mary and the two had become fast friends.
Such time as Mary could spare from the sickbed of her sister, she spent in the company of this great-souled woman from America, and now Mrs.
Daly, whose stay at Nice was over, was returning to London with her friend.
The open carriage drove off, by the gardens and jewellers' shops in front of the Casino and Opera House and down the Avenue de la Gare. The glittering cafes were full of people taking an aperitif before dinner.
There was a sense of relaxation and repose over the pleasure city of the South, poured down upon it in a golden haze from the last level rays of the sun.