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Books: The Guest of Quesnay

B >> Booth Tarkington >> The Guest of Quesnay

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To analyse my impression of Mr. Percy's glances, I cannot
conscientiously record that I found favour in his eyes. For one thing, I
fear he may not have recalled to his bosom a clarion sentiment (which
doubtless he had ofttimes cheered from his native gallery in softer
years): the honourable declaration that many an honest heart beats
beneath a poor man's coat. As for his own attire, he was even as the
lilies of Quesnay; that is to say, I beheld upon him the same formation
of tie that I had seen there, the same sensuous beauty of the state
waistcoat, though I think that his buttons were, if anything, somewhat
spicier than those which had awed me at the chateau. And when we
simultaneously reached the fragrant hour of coffee, the cigarette case
that glittered in his hand was one for which some lady-friend of his (I
knew intuitively) must have given her All--and then been left in debt.

Amedee had served us both; Glouglou, as aforetime, attending the silent
"Grande Suite," where the curtains were once more tightly drawn.
Monsieur Rameau dined with his client in her own salon, evidently; at
least, Victorine, the femme de chambre, passed to and from the kitchen
in that direction, bearing laden trays. When Mr. Percy's cigarette had
been lighted, hesitation marked the manner of our maitre d'hotel;
plainly he wavered, but finally old custom prevailed; abandoning the
cigarette, he chose the cigar, and, hastily clearing my fashionable
opponent's table, approached the pavilion with his most conversational
face.

I greeted him indifferently, but with hidden pleasure, for my soul (if
Keredec is right and I have one) lay sorrowing. I needed relief, and
whatever else Amedee was, he was always that. I spoke first:

"Amedee, how long a walk is it from Quesnay to Pere Baudry's?"

"Monsieur, about three-quarters of an hour for a good walker, one might
say."

"A long way for Jean Ferret to go for a cup of cider," I remarked
musingly.

"Eh? But why should he?" asked Amedee blankly.

"Why indeed? Surely even a Norman gardener lives for more than cider!
You usually meet him there about noon, I believe?"

Methought he had the grace to blush, though there is an everlasting
doubt in my mind that it may have been the colour of the candle-shade
producing that illusion. It was a strange thing to see, at all events,
and, taking it for a physiological fact at the time, I let my willing
eyes linger upon it as long as it (or its appearance) was upon him.

"You were a little earlier than usual to-day," I continued finally, full
of the marvel.

"Monsieur?" He was wholly blank again.

"Weren't you there about eleven? Didn't you go about two hours after Mr.
Ward and his friends left here?"

He scratched his head. "I believe I had an errand in that direction. Eh?
Yes, I remember. Truly, I think it so happened."

"And you found Jean Ferret there?"

"Where, monsieur?"

"At Pere Baudry's."

"No, monsieur."

"What?" I exclaimed.

"No, monsieur." He was firm, somewhat reproachful.

"You didn't see Jean Ferret this morning?"

"Monsieur?"

"Amedee!"

"Eh, but I did not find him at Pere Baudry's! It may have happened that
I stopped there, but he did not come until some time after."

"After you had gone away from Pere Baudry's, you mean?"

"No, monsieur; after I arrived there. Truly."

"Now we have it! And you gave him the news of all that had happened
here?"

"Monsieur!"

A world--no, a constellation, a universe!--of reproach was in the word.

"I retract the accusation," I said promptly. "I meant something else."

"Upon everything that takes place at our hotel here, I am silent to all
the world."

"As the grave!" I said with enthusiasm. "Truly--that is a thing well
known. But Jean Ferret, then? He is not so discreet; I have suspected
that you are in his confidence. At times you have even hinted as much.
Can you tell me if he saw the automobile of Monsieur Ingle when it came
back to the chateau after leaving here?"

"It had arrived the moment before he departed."

"Quite SO! I understand," said I.

"He related to me that Mademoiselle Ward had the appearance of
agitation, and Madame d'Armand that of pallor, which was also the case
with Monsieur Ward."

"Therefore," I said, "Jean Ferret ran all the way to Pere Baudry's to
learn from you the reason for this agitation and this pallor?"

"But, monsieur--"

"I retract again!" I cut him off--to save time. "What other news had
he?"

There came a gleam into his small, infolded eyes, a tiny glitter
reflecting the mellow candle-light, but changing it, in that reflection,
to a cold and sinister point of steel. It should have warned me, but, as
he paused, I repeated my question.

"Monsieur, people say everything," he answered, frowning as if deploring
what they said in some secret, particular instance. "The world is full
of idle gossipers, tale-bearers, spreaders of scandal! And, though I
speak with perfect respect, all the people at the chateau are not
perfect in such ways."

"Do you mean the domestics?"

"The visitors!"

"What do they say?"

"Eh, well, then, they say--but no!" He contrived a masterly pretense of
pained reluctance. "I cannot--"

"Speak out," I commanded, piqued by his shilly-shallying. "What do they
say?"

"Monsieur, it is about"--he shifted his weight from one leg to the
other--"it is about--about that beautiful Mademoiselle Elliott who
sometimes comes here."

This was so far from what I had expected that I was surprised into a
slight change of attitude, which all too plainly gratified him, though
he made an effort to conceal it. "Well," I said uneasily, "what do they
find to say of Mademoiselle Elliott?"

"They say that her painting is only a ruse to see monsieur."

"To see Monsieur Saffren, yes."

"But, no!" he cried. "That is not--"

"Yes, it is," I assured him calmly. "As you know, Monsieur Saffren is
very, very handsome, and Mademoiselle Elliott, being a painter, is
naturally anxious to look at him from time to time."

"You are sure?" he said wistfully, even plaintively. "That is not the
meaning Jean Ferret put upon it."

"He was mistaken."

"It may be, it may be," he returned, greatly crestfallen, picking up his
tray and preparing to go. "But Jean Ferret was very positive."

"And I am even more so!"

"Then that malicious maid of Mademoiselle Ward's was mistaken also," he
sighed, "when she said that now a marriage is to take place between
Mademoiselle Ward and Monsieur Ingle--"

"Proceed," I bade him.

He moved a few feet nearer the kitchen. "The malicious woman said to
Jean Ferret--" He paused and coughed. "It was in reference to those
Italian jewels monsieur used to send--"

"What about them?" I asked ominously.

"The woman says that Mademoiselle Ward--" he increased the distance
between us--"that now she should give them to Mademoiselle Elliott! GOOD
night, monsieur!"

His entrance into the kitchen was precipitate. I sank down again into
the wicker chair (from which I had hastily risen) and contemplated the
stars. But the short reverie into which I then fell was interrupted by
Mr. Percy, who, sauntering leisurely about the garden, paused to address
me.

"You folks thinks you was all to the gud, gittin' them trunks off,
what?"

"You speak in mysterious numbers," I returned, having no comprehension
of his meaning.

"I suppose you don' know nothin' about it," he laughed satirically. "You
didn' go over to Lisieux 'saft'noon to ship 'em? Oh, no, not YOU!"

"I went for a long walk this afternoon, Mr. Percy. Naturally, I couldn't
have walked so far as Lisieux and back."

"Luk here, m'friend," he said sharply--"I reco'nise 'at you're tryin' t'
play your own hand, but I ast you as man to man: DO you think you got
any chanst t' git that feller off t' Paris?"

"DO you think it will rain to-night?" I inquired.

The light of a reflecting lamp which hung on the wall near the archway
enabled me to perceive a bitter frown upon his forehead. "When a
gen'leman asts a question AS a gen'leman," he said, his voice expressing
a noble pathos, "I can't see no call for no other gen'leman to go an'
play the smart Aleck and not answer him."

In simple dignity he turned his back upon me and strolled to the other
end of the courtyard, leaving me to the renewal of my reverie.

It was not a happy one. My friends--old and new--I saw inextricably
caught in a tangle of cross-purposes, miserably and hopelessly involved
in a situation for which I could predict no possible relief. I was able
to understand now the beauty as well as the madness of Keredec's plan;
and I had told him so (after the departure of the Quesnay party), asking
his pardon for my brusquerie of the morning. But the towering edifice
his hopes had erected was now tumbled about his ears: he had failed to
elude the Mursiana. There could be no doubt of her absolute control of
the situation. THAT was evident in the every step of the youth now
confidently parading before me.

Following his active stride with my eye, I observed him in the act of
saluting, with a gracious nod of his bare head, some one, invisible to
me, who was approaching from the road. Immediately after--and altogether
with the air of a person merely "happening in"--a slight figure, clad in
a long coat, a short skirt, and a broad-brimmed, veil-bound brown hat,
sauntered casually through the archway and came into full view in the
light of the reflector.

I sprang to my feet and started toward her, uttering an exclamation
which I was unable to stifle, though I tried to.

"Good evening, Mr. Percy," she said cheerily. "It's the most EXUBERANT
night. YOU'RE quite hearty, I hope?"

"Takin' a walk, I see, little lady," he observed with genial patronage.

"Oh, not just for that," she returned. "It's more to see HIM." She
nodded to me, and, as I reached her, carelessly gave me her left hand.
"You know I'm studying with him," she continued to Mr. Percy, exhibiting
a sketch-book under her arm. "I dropped over to get a criticism."

"Oh, drawin'-lessons?" said Mr. Percy tolerantly. "Well, don' lemme
interrup' ye."

He moved as if to withdraw toward the steps, but she detained him with a
question. "You're spending the rest of the summer here?"

"That depends," he answered tersely.

"I hear you have some PASSIONATELY interesting friends."

"Where did you hear that?"

"Ah, don't you know?" she responded commiseratingly. "This is the most
scandalously gossipy neighbourhood in France. My DEAR young man, every
one from here to Timbuctu knows all about it by this time!"

"All about what?"

"About the excitement you're such a VALUABLE part of; about your
wonderful Spanish friend and how she claims the strange young man here
for her husband."

"They'll know more'n that, I expec'," he returned with a side glance at
me, "before VERY long."

"Every one thinks _I_ am so interesting," she rattled on artlessly,
"because I happened to meet YOU in the woods. I've held quite a levee
all day. In a reflected way it makes a heroine of me, you see, because
you are one of the very MOST prominent figures in it all. I hope you
won't think I've been too bold," she pursued anxiously, "in claiming
that I really am one of your acquaintances?"

"That'll be all right," he politely assured her.

"I am so glad." Her laughter rang out gaily. "Because I've been talking
about you as if we were the OLDEST friends, and I'd hate to have them
find me out. I've told them everything--about your appearance you see,
and how your hair was parted, and how you were dressed, and--"

"Luk here," he interrupted, suddenly discharging his Bowery laugh, "did
you tell 'em how HE was dressed?" He pointed a jocular finger at me.
"That WUD 'a' made a hit!"

"No; we weren't talking of him."

"Why not? He's in it, too. Bullieve me, he THINKS he is!"

"In the excitement, you mean?"

"Right!" said Mr. Percy amiably. "He goes round holdin' Rip Van Winkle
Keredec's hand when the ole man's cryin'; helpin' him sneak his trunks
off t' Paris--playin' the hired man gener'ly. Oh, he thinks he's quite
the boy, in this trouble!"

"I'm afraid it's a small part," she returned, "compared to yours."

"Oh, I hold my end up, I guess."

"I should think you'd be so worn out and sleepy you couldn't hold your
head up!"

"Who? ME? Not t'-night, m'little friend. I tuk MY sleep's aft'noon and
let Rameau do the Sherlock a little while."

She gazed upon him with unconcealed admiration. "You are wonderful," she
sighed faintly, and "WONDERFUL!" she breathed again. "How prosaic are
drawing-lessons," she continued, touching my arm and moving with me
toward the pavilion, "after listening to a man of action like that!"

Mr. Percy, establishing himself comfortably in a garden chair at the
foot of the gallery steps, was heard to utter a short cough as he
renewed the light of his cigarette.

My visitor paused upon my veranda, humming, "Quand l'Amour Meurt" while
I went within and lit a lamp. "Shall I bring the light out there?" I
asked, but, turning, found that she was already in the room.

"The sketch-book is my duenna," she said, sinking into a chair upon one
side of the centre table, upon which I placed the lamp. "Lessons are
unquestionable, at any place or time. Behold the beautiful posies!" She
spread the book open on the table between us, as I seated myself
opposite her, revealing some antique coloured smudges of flowers.
"Elegancies of Eighteen-Forty! Isn't that a survival of the period when
young ladies had 'accomplishments,' though! I found it at the chateau
and--"

"Never mind," I said. "Don't you know that you can't ramble over the
country alone at this time of night?"

"If you speak any louder," she said, with some urgency of manner,
"you'll be 'hopelessly compromised socially,' as Mrs. Alderman McGinnis
and the Duchess of Gwythyl-Corners say"--she directed my glance, by one
of her own, through the open door to Mr. Percy--"because HE'LL hear you
and know that the sketch-book was only a shallow pretext of mine to see
you. Do be a little manfully self-contained, or you'll get us talked
about! And as for 'this time of night,' I believe it's almost half past
nine."

"Does Miss Ward know--"

"Do you think it likely? One of the most convenient things about a
chateau is the number of ways to get out of it without being seen. I had
a choice of eight. So I 'suffered fearfully from neuralgia,' dined in my
own room, and sped through the woods to my honest forester." She nodded
brightly. "That's YOU!"

"You weren't afraid to come through the woods alone?" I asked,
uncomfortably conscious that her gaiety met a dull response from me.

"No."

"But if Miss Ward finds that you're not at the chateau--"

"She won't; she thinks I'm asleep. She brought me up a sleeping-powder
herself."

"She thinks you took it?"

"She KNOWS I did," said Miss Elliott. "I'm full of it! And that will be
the reason--if you notice that I'm particularly nervous or excited."

"You seem all of that," I said, looking at her eyes, which were very
wide and very brilliant. "However, I believe you always do."

"Ah!" she smiled. "I knew you thought me atrocious from the first. You
find MYRIADS of objections to me, don't you?"

I had forgotten to look away from her eyes, and I kept on forgetting.
(The same thing had happened several times lately; and each time, by a
somewhat painful coincidence, I remembered my age at precisely the
instant I remembered to look away.) "Dazzling" is a good old-fashioned
word for eyes like hers; at least it might define their effect on me.

"If I did manage to object to you," I said slowly, "it would be a good
thing for me--wouldn't it?"

"Oh, I've WON!" she cried.

"Won?" I echoed.

"Yes. I laid a wager with myself that I'd have a pretty speech from you
before I went out of your life"--she checked a laugh, and concluded
thrillingly--"forever! I leave Quesnay to-morrow!"

"Your father has returned from America?"

"Oh dear, no," she murmured. "I'll be quite at the world's mercy. I must
go up to Paris and retire from public life until he does come. I shall
take the vows--in some obscure but respectable pension."

"You can't endure the life at the chateau any longer?"

"It won't endure ME any longer. If I shouldn't go to-morrow I'd be put
out, I think--after to-night!"

"But you intimated that no one would know about to-night!"

"The night isn't over yet," she replied enigmatically.

"It almost is--for you," I said; "because in ten minutes I shall take
you back to the chateau gates."

She offered no comment on this prophecy, but gazed at me thoughtfully
and seriously for several moments. "I suppose you can imagine," she
said, in a tone that threatened to become tremulous, "what sort of an
afternoon we've been having up there?"

"Has it been--" I began.

"Oh, heart-breaking! Louise came to my room as soon as they got back
from here, this morning, and told me the whole pitiful story. But they
didn't let her stay there long, poor woman!"

"They?" I asked.

"Oh, Elizabeth and her brother. They've been at her all afternoon--off
and on."

"To do what?"

"To 'save herself,' so they call it. They're insisting that she must not
see her poor husband again. They're DETERMINED she sha'n't."

"But George wouldn't worry her," I objected.

"Oh, wouldn't he?" The girl laughed sadly. "I don't suppose he could
help it, he's in such a state himself, but between him and Elizabeth
it's hard to see how poor Mrs. Harman lived through the day."

"Well," I said slowly, "I don't see that they're not right. She ought to
be kept out of all this as much as possible; and if her husband has to
go through a trial--"

"I want you to tell me something," Miss Elliott interrupted. "How much
do you like Mr. Ward?"

"He's an old friend. I suppose I like my old friends in about the same
way that other people like theirs."

"How much do you like Mr. Saffren--I mean Mr. Harman?"

"Oh, THAT!" I groaned. "If I could still call him 'Oliver Saffren,' if I
could still think of him as 'Oliver Saffren,' it would be easy to
answer. I never was so 'drawn' to a man in my life before. But when I
think of him as Larrabee Harman, I am full of misgivings."

"Louise isn't," she put in eagerly, and with something oddly like the
manner of argument. "His wife isn't!"

"Oh, I know. Perhaps one reason is that she never saw him at quite his
worst. I did. I had only two glimpses of him--of the briefest--but they
inspired me with such a depth of dislike that I can't tell you how
painful it was to discover that 'Oliver Saffren'--this strange,
pathetic, attractive FRIEND of mine--is the same man."

"Oh, but he isn't!" she exclaimed quickly.

"Keredec says he is," I laughed helplessly.

"So does Louise," returned Miss Elliott, disdaining consistency in her
eagerness. "And she's right--and she cares more for him than she ever
did!"

"I suppose she does."

"Are you--" the girl began, then stopped for a moment, looking at me
steadily. "Aren't you a little in love with her?"

"Yes," I answered honestly. "Aren't you?"

"THAT'S what I wanted to know!" she said; and as she turned a page in
the sketch-book for the benefit of Mr. Percy, I saw that her hand had
begun to tremble.

"Why?" I asked, leaning toward her across the table.

"Because, if she were involved in some undertaking--something that, if
it went wrong, would endanger her happiness and, I think, even her life--
for it might actually kill her if she failed, and brought on a worse
catastrophe--"

"Yes?" I said anxiously, as she paused again.

"You'd help her?" she said.

"I would indeed," I assented earnestly. "I told her once I'd do anything
in the world for her."

"Even if it involved something that George Ward might never forgive you
for?"

"I said, 'anything in the world,'" I returned, perhaps a little huskily.
"I meant all of that. If there is anything she wants me to do, I shall
do it."

She gave a low cry of triumph, but immediately checked it. Then she
leaned far over the table, her face close above the book, and, tracing
the outline of an uncertain lily with her small, brown-gloved
forefinger, as though she were consulting me on the drawing, "I wasn't
afraid to come through the woods alone," she said, in a very low voice,
"because I wasn't alone. Louise came with me."

"What?" I gasped. "Where is she?"

"At the Baudry cottage down the road. They won't miss her at the chateau
until morning; I locked her door on the outside, and if they go to
bother her again--though I don't think they will--they'll believe she's
fastened it on the inside and is asleep. She managed to get a note to
Keredec late this afternoon; it explained everything, and he had some
trunks carried out the rear gate of the inn and carted over to Lisieux
to be shipped to Paris from there. It is to be supposed--or hoped, at
least--that this woman and her people will believe THAT means Professor
Keredec and Mr. Harman will try to get to Paris in the same way."

"So," I said, "that's what Percy meant about the trunks. I didn't
understand."

"He's on watch, you see," she continued, turning a page to another
drawing. "He means to sit up all night, or he wouldn't have slept this
afternoon. He's not precisely the kind to be in the habit of afternoon
naps--Mr. Percy!" She laughed nervously. "That's why it's almost
absolutely necessary for us to have you. If we have--the thing is so
simple that it's certain."

"If you have me for what?" I asked.

"If you'll help"--and, as she looked up, her eyes, now very close to
mine, were dazzling indeed--"I'll adore you for ever and ever! Oh, MUCH
longer than you'd like me to!"

"You mean she's going to--"

"I mean that she's going to run away with him again," she whispered.




CHAPTER XXII


At midnight there was no mistaking the palpable uneasiness with which
Mr. Percy, faithful sentry, regarded the behaviour of Miss Elliott and
myself as we sat conversing upon the veranda of the pavilion. It was not
fear for the security of his prisoner which troubled him, but the
unseemliness of the young woman's persistence in remaining to this hour
under an espionage no more matronly than that of a sketch-book abandoned
on the table when we had come out to the open. The youth had veiled his
splendours with more splendour: a long overcoat of so glorious a plaid
it paled the planets above us; and he wandered restlessly about the
garden in this refulgence, glancing at us now and then with what, in
spite of the insufficient revelation of the starlight, we both
recognised as a chilling disapproval. The lights of the inn were all
out; the courtyard was dark. The Spanish woman and Monsieur Rameau had
made their appearance for a moment, half an hour earlier, to exchange a
word with their fellow vigilant, and, soon after, the extinguishing of
the lamps in their respective apartments denoted their retirement for
the night. In the "Grande Suite" all had been dark and silent for an
hour. About the whole place the only sign of life, aside from those
signs furnished by our three selves, was a rhythmical sound from an open
window near the kitchen, where incontrovertibly slumbered our maitre
d'hotel after the cares of the day.

Upon the occasion of our forest meeting Mr. Percy had signified his
desire to hear some talk of Art. I think he had his fill to-night--and
more; for that was the subject chosen by my dashing companion, and
vivaciously exploited until our awaited hour was at hand. Heaven knows
what nonsense I prattled, I do not; I do not think I knew at the time. I
talked mechanically, trying hard not to betray my increasing excitement.

Under cover of this traduction of the Muse I served, I kept going over
and over the details of Louise Harman's plan, as the girl beside me had
outlined it, bending above the smudgy sketch-book. "To make them think
the flight is for Paris," she had urged, "to Paris by way of Lisieux. To
make that man yonder believe that it is toward Lisieux, while they turn
at the crossroads, and drive across the country to Trouville for the
morning boat to Havre."

It was simple; that was its great virtue. If they were well started,
they were safe; and well started meant only that Larrabee Harman should
leave the inn without an alarm, for an alarm sounded too soon meant
"racing and chasing on Canoby Lea," before they could get out of the
immediate neighbourhood. But with two hours' start, and the pursuit
spending most of its energy in the wrong direction--that is, toward
Lisieux and Paris--they would be on the deck of the French-Canadian
liner to-morrow noon, sailing out of the harbour of Le Havre, with
nothing but the Atlantic Ocean between them and the St. Lawrence.

I thought of the woman who dared this flight for her lover, of the woman
who came full-armed between him and the world, a Valkyr winging down to
bear him away to a heaven she would make for him herself. Gentle as she
was, there must have been a Valkyr in her somewhere, or she could not
attempt this. She swept in, not only between him and the world, but
between him and the destroying demons his own sins had raised to beset
him. There, I thought, was a whole love; or there she was not only wife
but mother to him.

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