GKATITUDE.
“There were only two of you,
then, in the last carriage?” Guy asked with
deep interest, the very next morning, as Cyril, none
the worse for his long imprisonment, sat quietly in
their joint chambers at Staple Inn, recounting the
previous day’s adventures.
“Yes. Only two of us.
It was awfully fortunate. And the carriage that
was smashed had nobody at all, except in the first
compartment, which escaped being buried. So there
were no lives lost, by a miracle, you may say.
But several of the people in the front part of the
train got terribly shaken.”
“And you and the other man were
shut up in the tunnel there for fifteen hours at a
stretch?” Guy went on reflectively.
“At least fifteen hours,”
Cyril echoed, without attempting to correct the slight
error of sex, for no man, he thought, is bound to
criminate himself, even in a flirtation. “It
was two in the morning before they dug us quite out.
And my companion by that time was more dead than alive,
I can tell you, with watching and terror.”
“Was he, poor fellow?”
Guy murmured, with a sympathetic face; for Cyril had
always alluded casually to his fellow-traveller in
such general terms that Guy was as yet unaware there
was a lady in the case. “And is he all
right again now, do you know? Have you heard
anything more about him?”
But before Cyril could answer there
came a knock at the door, and the next moment Mr.
Montague Nevitt, without his violin, entered the room
in some haste, all agog with excitement. His face
was eager and his manner cordial. It was clear
he was full of some important tidings.
“Why, Cyril, my dear fellow,”
he cried, grasping the painter’s hand with much
demonstration of friendly warmth, and wringing it hard
two or three times over, “how delighted I am
to see you restored to us alive and well once more.
This is really too happy. What a marvellous escape!
And what a romantic story! All the clubs are
buzzing with it. A charming girl! You’ll
have to marry her, of course, that’s the necessary
climax. You and the young lady are the staple
of news, I see, in very big print, in all the evening
papers!”
Guy drew back at the words with a
little start of surprise. “Young lady!”
he cried aghast. “A charming girl, Nevitt!
Then the person who was shut up with you for fifteen
hours in the tunnel was a girl, Cyril!”
Cyril’s handsome face flushed
slightly before his brother’s scrutinizing gaze;
but he answered with a certain little ill-concealed
embarrassment:
“Oh, I didn’t say so,
didn’t I? Well, she was a girl then,
of course; a certain Miss Clifford. She got in
at Chetwood. Her people live somewhere down there
near Tilgate. At least, so I gathered from what
she told me.”
Nevitt stared hard at the painter’s
eyes, which tried, without success, to look unconscious.
“A romance!” he said,
slowly, scanning his man with deep interest.
“A romance, I can see. Young, rich, and
beautiful. My dear Cyril, I only wish I’d
had half your luck. What a splendid chance, and
what a magnificent introduction! Beauty in distress!
A lady in trouble! You console her alone in a
tunnel for fifteen hours by yourself at a stretch.
Heavens, what a tete-a-tete! Did British propriety
ever before allow a man such a glorious opportunity
for chivalrous devotion to a lady of family, face,
and fortune?”
“Was she pretty?” Guy
asked, coming down at once to a more realistic platform.
Cyril hesitated a moment. “Well,
yes,” he answered, somewhat curtly, after a
short pause. “She’s distinctly good-looking.”
And he shut his mouth sharp. But he had said
quite enough.
When a man says that of a girl, and
nothing more, in an unconcerned voice, as if it didn’t
matter twopence to him, you may be perfectly sure
in your own mind he’s very deeply and seriously
smitten.
“And young?” Guy continued.
“I should say about twenty.”
“And rich beyond the utmost
dreams of avarice?” Montague Nevitt put in,
with a faintly cynical smile.
“Well, I don’t know about
that,” Cyril answered truthfully. “I
haven’t the least idea who she is, even.
She and I had other things to think about, you may
be sure, boxed up there so long in that narrow space,
and choking for want of air, than minute investigations
into one another’s pedigrees.”
“We’ve got no pedigree,”
Guy interposed, with a bitter smile. “So
the less she investigates about that the better.”
“But she has, I expect,”
Nevitt put in hastily; “and if I were you, Cyril,
I’d hunt her up forthwith, while the iron’s
hot, and find out all there is to find out about her.
Clifford-Clifford? I wonder whether by any chance
she’s one of the Devonshire Cliffords, now?
For if so, she might really be worth a man’s
serious attetion. They’re very good business.
They bank at our place; and they’re by no means
paupers.” For Nevitt was a clerk in the
well-known banking firm of Drummond, Coutts, and Barclay,
Limited; and being a man who didn’t mean, as
he himself said, “to throw himself away on any
girl for nothing,” he kept a sharp look-out on
the current account of every wealthy client with an
only daughter.
Ten minutes later, as the talk ran
on, some further light was unexpectedly thrown upon
this interesting topic by the entrance of the porter
with a letter for Cyril. The painter tore it
open, and glanced over it, as Nevitt observed, with
evident eagerness. It was short and curt, but
in its own way courteous.
“’Mr. Reginald Clifford,
C.M.G., desires to thank Mr. Cyril Waring for his
kindness and consideration to Miss Clifford during
her temporary incarceration—–’
“Incarceration’s good,
isn’t it? How much does he charge a thousand
for that sort, I wonder?—–
“’during her temporary
incarceration in the Lavington tunnel yesterday.
Mrs. and Miss Clifford wish also to express at the
same time their deep gratitude to Mr. Waring for
his friendly efforts, and trust he has experienced
no further ill effects from the unfortunate accident
to which he was subjected.
“‘Craighton, Tilgate, Thursday morning.’”
“She might have written
herself,” Cyril murmured half aloud. He
was evidently disappointed at this very short measure
of correspondence on the subject.
But Montague Nevitt took a more cheerful
view. “Oh, Reginald Clifford, of Craighton!”
he cried with a smile, his invariable smile.
“I know all about him. He’s
a friend of Colonel Kelmscott’s down at Tilgate
Park. C.M.G., indeed! What a ridiculous old
peacock. He was administrator of St. Kitts once
upon a time, I believe, or was it Nevis or Antigua?
I don’t quite recollect, I’m afraid; but
anyhow, some comical little speck of a sugary, niggery,
West Indian Island; and he was made a Companion of
St. Michael and St. George when his term was up, just
to keep him quiet, don’t you know, for he wanted
a knighthood, and to shelve him from being appointed
to a first-class post like Barbados or Trinidad.
If it’s Elma Clifford you were shut up with
in the tunnel, Cyril, you might do worse, there’s
no doubt, and you might do better. She’s
an only daughter, and there’s a little money
at the back of the family, I expect; but I fancy the
Companion of the Fighting Saints lives mainly on his
pension, which, of course, is purely personal, and
so dies with him.”
Cyril folded up the note without noticing
Nevitt’s words and put it in his pocket, somewhat
carefully and obtrusively. “Thank you,”
he said, in a very quiet tone, “I didn’t
ask you about Miss Clifford’s fortune.
When I want information on that point I’ll apply
for it plainly. But meanwhile I don’t think
any lady’s name should be dragged into conversation
and bandied about like that, by an absolute stranger.”
“Oh, now you needn’t be
huffy,” Nevitt answered, with a still sweeter
smile, showing all those pearly teeth of his to the
greatest advantage. “I didn’t mean
to put your back up, and I’ll tell you what
I’ll do for you. I’ll heap coals of
fire on your head, you ungrateful man. I’ll
return good for evil. You shall have an invitation
to Mrs. Holker’s garden party on Saturday week
at Chetwood Court, and there you’ll be almost
sure to meet the beautiful stranger.”
But at that very moment, at Craighton,
Tilgate, Mr. Reginald Clifford, C.M.G., a stiff little
withered-up official Briton, half mummified by long
exposure to tropical suns, was sitting in his drawing-room
with Mrs. Clifford, his wife, and discussing—what
subject of all others on earth but the personality
of Cyril Waring?
“Well, it was an awkward situation
for Elma, of course, I admit,” he was chirping
out cheerfully, with his back turned by pure force
of habit to the empty grate, and his hands crossed
behind him. “I don’t deny it was
an awkward situation. Still, there’s no
harm done, I hope and trust. Elma’s happily
not a fanciful or foolishly susceptible sort of girl.
She sees it’s a case for mere ordinary gratitude.
And gratitude, in my opinion, towards a person in his
position, is sufficiently expressed once for all by
letter. There’s no reason on earth she
should ever again see or hear any more of him.”
“But girls are so romantic,”
Mrs. Clifford put in doubtfully, with an anxious air.
She herself was by no means romantic to look at, being,
indeed, a person of a certain age, with a plump, matronly
figure, and very staid of countenance; yet there was
something in her eye, for all that, that recalled
at times the vivid keenness of Elma’s, and her
cheek had once been as delicate and creamy a brown
as her pretty daughter’s. “Girls
are so romantic,” Mrs. Clifford repeated once
more, in a dreamy way, “and she was evidently
impressed by him.”
“Well, I’m glad I made
inquiries at once about these two young men, anyhow,
“the Companion of St. Michael and St. George
responded with fervour, clasping his wizened little
hands contentedly over his narrow waistcoat.
“It’s a precious odd story, and a doubtful
story, and not at all the sort of story one likes one’s
girl to be any way mixed up with. For my part,
I shall give them a very wide berth indeed in future;
and there’s no reason why Elma should ever knock
up against them.”
“Who told you they were nobodies?”
Mrs. Clifford inquired, drawing a wistful sigh.
“Oh, Tom Clark was at school
with them,” the ex-administrator continued,
with a very cunning air, “and he knows all about
them—has heard the whole circumstances.
Very odd, very odd; never met anything so queer in
all my life; most mysterious and uncanny. They
never had a father; they never had a mother; they
never had anybody on earth they could call their own;
they dropped from the clouds, as it were, one rainy
day, without a friend in the world, plump down into
the Charterhouse. There they were well supplied
with money, and spent their holidays with a person
at Brighton, who wasn’t even supposed to be
their lawful guardian. Looks fishy, doesn’t
it? Their names are Cyril and Guy Waring—and
that’s all they know of themselves. They
were educated like gentlemen till they were twenty-one
years old; and then they were turned loose upon the
world, like a pair of young bears, with a couple of
hundred pounds of capital apiece to shift for themselves
with. Uncanny, very; I don’t like the look
of it. Not at all the sort of people an impressionable
girl like our Elma should ever be allowed to see too
much of.”
“I don’t think she was
very much impressed by him,” Mrs. Clifford said
with confidence. “I’ve watched her
to see, and I don’t think she’s in love
with him. But by to-morrow, Reginald, I shall
be able, I’m sure, to tell you for certain.”
The Companion of the Militant Saints
glanced rather uneasily across the hearth-rug at his
wife. “It’s a marvellous gift, to
be sure, this intuition of yours, Louisa,” he
said, shaking his head sagely, and swaying himself
gently to and fro on the stone kerb of the fender.
“I frankly confess, my dear, I don’t quite
understand it. And Elma’s got it too, every
bit as bad as you have. Runs in the family,
I suppose—runs somehow in the family.
After living with you now for twenty-two years—yes,
twenty-two last April—in every part of
the world and every grade of the service, I’m
compelled to admit that your intuition in these matters
is really remarkable—simply remarkable.”
Mrs. Clifford coloured through her
olive-brown skin, exactly like Elma, and rose with
a somewhat embarrassed and half-guilty air, avoiding
her husband’s eyes as if afraid to meet them.
Elma had gone to bed early, wearied
out as she was with her long agony in the tunnel.
Mrs. Clifford crept up to her daughter’s room
with a silent tread, like some noiseless Oriental,
and, putting her ear to the keyhole, listened outside
the door in profound suspense for several minutes.
Not a sound from within; not a gentle
footfall on the carpeted floor. For a moment
she hesitated; then she turned the handle slowly, and,
peering before her, peeped into the room. Thank
Heaven! no snake signs. Elma lay asleep, with
one arm above her head, as peacefully as a child,
after her terrible adventure. Her bosom heaved,
but slowly and regularly. The mother drew a deep
breath, and crept down the stairs with a palpitating
heart to the drawing-room again.
“Reginald,” she said,
with perfect confidence, relapsing once more at a
bound into the ordinary every-day British matron, “there’s
no harm done, I’m sure. She doesn’t
think of this young man at all. You may dismiss
him from your mind at once and for ever. She’s
sleeping like a baby.”