Fyne bounded out of the room. This is his own word. Bounded! He

assured me with intensified solemnity that he bounded; and the sight of

the short and muscular Fyne bounding gravely about the circumscribed

passages and staircases of a small, very high class, private hotel, would

have been worth any amount of money to a man greedy of memorable

impressions. But as I looked at him, the desire of laughter at my very

lips, I asked myself: how many men could be found ready to compromise

their cherished gravity for the sake of the unimportant child of a ruined

financier with an ugly, black cloud already wreathing his head. I didn't

laugh at little Fyne. I encouraged him: "You did!--very good . . .

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Well?"

His main thought was to save the child from some unpleasant interference.

There was a porter downstairs, page boys; some people going away with

their trunks in the passage; a railway omnibus at the door,

white-breasted waiters dodging about the entrance.

He was in time. He was at the door before she reached it in her blind

course. She did not recognize him; perhaps she did not see him. He

caught her by the arm as she ran past and, very sensibly, without trying

to check her, simply darted in with her and up the stairs, causing no end

of consternation amongst the people in his way. They scattered. What

might have been their thoughts at the spectacle of a shameless middle-

aged man abducting headlong into the upper regions of a respectable hotel

a terrified young girl obviously under age, I don't know. And Fyne (he

told me so) did not care for what people might think. All he wanted was

to reach his wife before the girl collapsed. For a time she ran with him

but at the last flight of stairs he had to seize and half drag, half

carry her to his wife. Mrs. Fyne waited at the door with her quite

unmoved physiognomy and her readiness to confront any sort of

responsibility, which already characterized her, long before she became a

ruthless theorist. Relieved, his mission accomplished, Fyne closed

hastily the door of the sitting-room.

But before long both Fynes became frightened. After a period of

immobility in the arms of Mrs. Fyne, the girl, who had not said a word,

tore herself out from that slightly rigid embrace. She struggled dumbly

between them, they did not know why, soundless and ghastly, till she sank

exhausted on a couch. Luckily the children were out with the two nurses.

The hotel housemaid helped Mrs. Fyne to put Flora de Barral to bed. She

was as if gone speechless and insane. She lay on her back, her face

white like a piece of paper, her dark eyes staring at the ceiling, her

awful immobility broken by sudden shivering fits with a loud chattering

of teeth in the shadowy silence of the room, the blinds pulled down, Mrs.

Fyne sitting by patiently, her arms folded, yet inwardly moved by the

riddle of that distress of which she could not guess the word, and saying

to herself: "That child is too emotional--much too emotional to be ever

really sound!" As if anyone not made of stone could be perfectly sound

in this world. And then how sound? In what sense--to resist what? Force

or corruption? And even in the best armour of steel there are joints a

treacherous stroke can always find if chance gives the opportunity.




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