At seven o'clock that morning the men in the circus camp awoke,

worried, fatigued, vaguely resentful, unusually profane. Horan was

openly mutinous, and announced his instant departure.

By eight o'clock a miraculous change had taken place; the camp was

alive with scurrying people, galvanized into hopeful activity by my

possibly unwarranted optimism and a few judiciously veiled threats.

Clothed with temporary authority by Byram, I took the bit between my

teeth and ordered the instant erection of the main tents, the

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construction of the ring, barriers, and benches, and the immediate

renovating of the portable tank in which poor little Miss Claridge had

met her doom.

I detailed Kelly Eyre to Quimperlé with orders for ten thousand

crimson hand-bills; I sent McCadger, with Dawley, the bass-drummer,

and Irwin, the cornettist, to plaster our posters from Pont Aven to

Belle Isle, and I gave them three days to get back, and promised them

a hundred dollars apiece if they succeeded in sticking our bills on

the fortifications of Lorient and Quimper, with or without

permission.

I sent Grigg and three exempt Bretons to beat up the country from

Gestel and Rosporden to Pontivy, clear across to Quiberon, and as far

east as St. Gildas Point.

By the standing-stones of Carnac, I swore that I'd have all Finistère

in that tent. "Governor," said I, "we are going to feature

Jacqueline all over Brittany, and, if the ladies object, it can't be

helped! By-the-way, do they object?"

The ladies did object, otherwise they would not have been human

ladies; but the battle was sharp and decisive, for I was desperate.

"It simply amounts to this," I said: "Jacqueline pulls us through or

the governor and I land in jail. As for you, Heaven knows what will

happen to you! Penal settlement, probably."

And I called Speed and pointed at Jacqueline, sitting on her satchel,

watching the proceedings with amiable curiosity.

"Speed, take that child and rehearse her. Begin as soon as the tent

is stretched and you can rig the flying trapeze. Use the net, of

course. Horan rehearsed Miss Claridge; he'll stand by. Miss Crystal,

your good-will and advice I depend upon. Will you help me?"

"With all my heart," said Miss Crystal.

That impulsive reply broke the sullen deadlock.

Pretty little Mrs. Grigg went over and shook the child's hand very

cordially and talked broken French to her; Miss Delany volunteered to

give her some "Christian clothes"; Mrs. Horan burst into tears,

complaining that everybody was conspiring to injure her and her

husband, but a few moments later she brought Jacqueline some toast,

tea, and fried eggs, an attention shyly appreciated by the puzzled

child, who never before had made such a stir in the world.

"Don't stuff her," said Speed, as Mrs. Horan enthusiastically trotted

past bearing more toast. "Here, Scarlett, the ladies are spoiling

her. Can I take her for the first lesson?"

Byram, who had shambled up, nodded. I was glad to see him reassert his

authority. Speed took the child by the hand, and together they entered

the big white tent, which now loomed up like a mammoth mushroom

against the blue sky.

"Governor," I said, "we're all a bit demoralized; a few of us are

mutinous. For Heaven's sake, let the men see you are game. This child

has got to win out for us. Don't worry, don't object; back me up and

let me put this thing through."

The old man shoved his hands into his trousers-pockets and looked at

me with heavy, hopeless eyes.

"Now here's the sketch for the hand-bill," I said, cheerfully, taking

a pencilled memorandum from my pocket. And I read:

"THE PATRIOTIC ANTI-PRUSSIAN REPUBLICAN CIRCUS,

MORE STUPENDOUS, MORE GIGANTIC, MORE

OVERPOWERING THAN EVER!

GLITTERING, MARVELLOUS, SOUL-COMPELLING!"

"What's 'soul-compelling'?" asked Byram.

"Anything you please, governor," I said, and read on rapidly until I

came to the paragraph concerning Jacqueline:

"THE WONDER OF EARTH AND HEAVEN!

THE UNUTTERABLY BEAUTIFUL FLYING

MERMAID! CAUGHT ON THE

COAST OF BRITTANY!

WHAT IS SHE?

FISH? BIRD? HUMAN? DIVINE?

WHO KNOWS?

THE SCIENTISTS OF FRANCE DO NOT KNOW!!

THE SCIENTISTS OF THE WORLD

ARE CONFOUNDED!

IS SHE

A LOST SOUL

FROM THE SUNKEN CITY OF KER-YS?

50,000 FRANCS REWARD FOR THE BRETON WHO CAN

PROVE THAT SHE DID NOT COME STRAIGHT FROM

PARADISE!!!"

"That's a damn good bill," said Byram, suddenly.

He was so seldom profane that I stared at him, worried lest his

misfortunes had unbalanced him. But a faint, healthy color was already

replacing the pallor in his loose cheeks, a glint of animation came

into his sunken eyes. He lifted his battered silk hat, replaced it at

an angle almost defiant, and scowled at Horan, who passed us sullenly,

driving the camel tentwards with awful profanity.

"Don't talk such langwidge in my presence, Mr. Horan," he said,

sharply; "a camuel is a camuel, but remember: 'kind hearts is more

than cornets,' an' it's easier for that there camuel to pass through

the eye of a needle than for a cussin' cuss to cuss his way into

Kingdom Come!"

Horan, who had betrayed unmistakable symptoms of insubordination that

morning, quailed under the flowing rebuke. He was a man of muscular

strength and meagre intellect; words hit him like trip-hammers.

"Certainly, governor," he stammered, and spoke to the camel politely,

guiding that enraged and squealing quadruped to his manger with a

forced smile.

With mallet, hammer, saw, and screw-driver I worked until noon,

maturing my plans all the while. These plans would take the last penny

in the treasury and leave us in debt several thousand francs. But it

was win or go to smash now, and personally I have always preferred a

tremendous smash to a slow and oozy fizzle.

A big pot of fragrant soup was served to the company at luncheon; and

it amused me to see Jacqueline troop into the tent with the others and

sit down with her bit of bread and her bowl of broth.

She was flushed and excited, and she talked to her instructor, Speed,

all the while, chattering like a linnet between mouthfuls of bread and

broth.

"How is she getting on?" I called across to Speed.

"The child is simply startling," he said, in English. "She is not

afraid of anything. She and Miss Crystal have been doing that

hair-raising 'flying swing' without rehearsal!"

Jacqueline, hearing us talking in English, turned and stared at me,

then smiled and looked up sweetly at Speed.

"You seem to be popular with your pupil," I said, laughing.

"She's a fine girl--a fine, fearless, straight-up-and-down girl," he

said, with enthusiasm.

Everybody appeared to like her, though how much that liking might be

modified if prosperity returned I was unable to judge.

Now all our fortunes depended on her. She was not a ballon d'essai;

she was literally the whole show; and if she duplicated the

sensational success of poor little Miss Claridge, we had nothing to

fear. But her troubles would then begin. At present, however, we were

waiting for her to pull us out of the hole before we fell upon her and

rent her professionally. And I use that "we" not only professionally,

but with an attempt at chivalry.

Byram's buoyancy had returned in a measure. He sat in his

shirt-sleeves at the head of the table, vigorously sopping his tartine

in his soup, and, mouth full, leaned forward, chewing and listening to

the conversation around him.

Everybody knew it was life or death now, that each one must drop petty

jealousies and work for the common salvation. An artificial and almost

feverish animation reigned, which I adroitly fed with alarming

allusions to the rigor of the French law toward foreigners and other

malefactors who ran into debt to French subjects on the sacred soil of

France. And, having lived so long in France and in the French

possessions, I was regarded as an oracle of authority by these

ambulant professional people who were already deadly homesick, and

who, in eighteen months of Europe, had amassed scarcely a dozen French

phrases among them all.

"I'll say one thing," observed Byram, with dignity; "if ever I git

out of this darn continong with my circus, I'll recooperate in the

undulatin' medders an' j'yful vales of the United States. Hereafter

that country will continue to remain good enough for me."

All applauded--all except Jacqueline, who looked around in

astonishment at the proceedings, and only smiled when Speed explained

in French.

"Ask maddermoselle if she'll go home with us?" prompted Byram. "Tell

her there's millions in it."

Speed put the question; Jacqueline listened gravely, hesitated, then

whispered to Speed, who reddened a trifle and laughed.

Everybody waited for a moment. "What does she say?" inquired Byram.

"Oh, nothing; she talked nonsense."

But Jacqueline's dignity and serene face certainly contradicted

Speed's words.

Presently Byram arose, flourishing his napkin. "Time's up!" he said,

with decision, and we all trooped off to our appointed labors.

Now that I had stirred up this beehive and set it swarming again, I

had no inclination to turn drone. Yet I remembered my note to the

Countess de Vassart and her reply. So about four o'clock I made the

best toilet I could in my only other suit of clothes, and walked out

of the bustling camp into the square, where the mossy fountain

splashed under the oaks and the children of Paradise were playing.

Hands joined, they danced in a ring, singing:

"Barzig ha barzig a Goneri

Ari e mab roue gand daou pe dri"--

"Little minstrel-bard of Conéri

The son of the King has come with two or three--

Nay, with a whole bright flock of paroquets,

Crimson, silver, and violet."

And the children, in their white coiffes and tiny wooden shoes, moved

round and round the circle, in the middle of which a little lad and a

little lass of Paradise stood motionless, hand clasping hand.

The couplet ended, the two children in the middle sprang forward and

dragged a third child out of the circle. Then the song began again,

the reduced circle dancing around the three children in the middle.

"--The son of the King has come with two or three--

Nay, with a whole bright flock of paroquets,

Crimson, silver, and violet."

It was something like a game I had played long ago--in the age of

fable--and I lingered, touched with homesickness.

The three children in the middle took a fourth comrade from the

circle, crying, "Will you go to the moon or will you go to the

stars?"

"The moon," lisped the little maid, and she was led over to the

fountain.

"The stars," said the first prisoner, and was conducted to the stone

bridge.

Soon a small company was clustered on the bridge, another band at the

fountain. Then, as there were no more to dance in a circle, the lad

and lassie who had stood in the middle to choose candidates for the

moon and stars clasped hands and danced gayly across the square to the

group of expectant children at the fountain, crying:

"Baradoz! Baradoz!"

(Paradise! Paradise!)

and the whole band charged on the little group on the bridge, shouting

and laughing, while the unfortunate tenants of the supposed infernal

regions fled in every direction, screaming:

"Pater noster

Dibi doub!

Dibi doub!

Dibi doub!"

Their shouts and laughter still came faintly from the tree-shaded

square as I crossed the bridge and walked out into the moorland toward

the sea, where I could see the sun gilding the headland and the

spouting-rocks of Point Paradise.

Over the turning tide cormorants were flying, now wheeling like hawks,

now beating seaward in a duck-like flight. I passed little, lonely

pools on the moor, from which snipe rose with a startling squak!

squak! and darted away inland as though tempest blown.

Presently a blue-gray mass in mid-ocean caught my eye. It was the

island of Groix, and between it and Point Paradise lay an ugly, naked,

black shape, motionless, oozing smoke from two stubby funnels--the

cruiser Fer-de-Lance! So solidly inert lay the iron-clad that it did

not seem as if she had ever moved or ever could move; she looked like

an imbedded ledge cropping up out of the sea.

Far across the hilly moorland the white semaphore glistened like a

gull's wing--too far for me to see the balls and cones hoisted or the

bright signals glimmering along the halyards as I followed a trodden

path winding south through the gorse. Then a dip in the moorland hid

the semaphore and at the same moment brought a house into full

view--a large, solid structure of dark stone, heavily Romanesque,

walled in by an ancient buttressed barrier, above which I could see

the tree-tops of a fruit-garden.

The Château de Trécourt was a fine example of the so called

"fortified farm"; it had its moat, too, and crumbling wing-walls,

pierced by loop-holes and over-hung with miniature battlements. A

walled and loop-holed passageway connected the house with another

stone enclosure in which stood stable, granary, cattle-house, and

sheepfold, all of stone, though the roofs of these buildings were

either turfed or thatched. And over them the weather-vane, a golden

Dorado, swam in the sunshine.

One thing I noticed as I crossed the unused moat on a permanent

bridge: the youthful Countess no longer denied herself the services of

servants, for I saw a cloaked shepherd and his two wolf-like and

tailless sheep-dogs watching the flock scattered over the downs; and

there were at least half a dozen farm servants pottering about from

stable to granary, and a toothless porter to answer the gate-bell and

pilot me past the tiny loop-holed lodge-turret to the house. There was

also a man, lying belly down in the bracken, watching me; and as I

walked into the court I tried to remember where I had seen his face

before.

The entire front of the house was covered with those splendid

orange-tinted tea-roses that I had noticed in Paradise; thicket on

thicket of clove-scented pinks choked the flower-beds; and a broad mat

of deep-tinted pansies lay on the lawn, spread out for all the world

like a glorious Eastern rug.

There was a soft whirring in the air like the sound of a humming-bird

close by; it came from a spinning-wheel, and grew louder as a servant

admitted me into the house and guided me to a sunny room facing the

fruit garden.

The spinner at the wheel was singing in an undertone--singing a Breton

"gwerz," centuries old, retained in memory from generation to

generation:

"Woe to the Maids of Paradise,

Yvonne!

Twice have the Saxons landed; twice!

Yvonne!

Yet must Paradise see them thrice!

Yvonne! Yvonne! Marivonik."

Old as were the words, the melody was older--so old and quaint and

sweet that it seemed a berceuse fashioned to soothe the drowsing

centuries, lest the memories of ancient wrongs awake and rouse the

very dead from their Gothic tombs.

All the sad history of the Breton race was written in every minor

note; all the mystery, the gentleness, the faith of the lost people of

Armorica.

And now the singer was intoning the "Gwerz Ar Baradoz"--the

"Complaint of Paradise"--a slow, thrilling miséréré, scarcely

dominating the velvet whir of the spinning-wheel.

Suddenly the melody ceased, and a young Bretonne girl appeared in the

doorway, courtesying to me and saying in perfect English: "How do you

do, Mr. Scarlett; and how do you like my spinning songs, if you

please?"

The girl was Mademoiselle Sylvia Elven, the marvellously clever

actress from the Odéon, the same young woman who had played the

Alsacienne at La Trappe, as perfectly in voice and costume as she now

played the Bretonne.

"You need not be astonished at all," she said, calmly, "if you will

only reflect that my name is Elven, which is also the name of a Breton

town. Naturally, I am a Bretonne from Elven, and my own name is

Duhamel--Sylvenne Duhamel. I thought I ought to tell you, so that you

would not think me too clever and try to carry me off on your horse

again."

I laughed uncertainly; clever women who talk cleverly always disturb

me. Besides, somehow, I felt she was not speaking the truth, yet I

could not imagine why she should lie to me.

"You were more fluent to the helpless turkey-girl," she suggested,

maliciously.

I had absolutely nothing to say, which appeared to gratify her, for

she dimpled and smiled under her snowy-winged coiffe, from which a

thick gold strand of hair curled on her forehead--a sad bit of

coquetry in a Bretonne from Elven, if she told the truth.

"I only came to renew an old and deeply valued friendship," she said,

with mock sentimentality; "I am going back to my flax now."

However, she did not move.

"And, by-the-way," she said, languidly, "is there in your

intellectual circus company a young gentleman whose name is Eyre?"

"Kelly Eyre? Yes," I said, sulkily.

"Ah."

She strolled out of the room, hesitated, then turned in the doorway

with a charming smile.

"The Countess will return from her gallop at five."

She waited as though expecting an answer, but I only bowed.

"Would you take a message to Mistaire Kelly Eyre for me?" she asked,

sweetly.

I said that I would.

"Then please say that: 'On Sunday the book-stores are closed in

Paris.'"

"Is that what I am to say?"

"Exactly that."

"Very well, mademoiselle."

"Of course, if he asks who told you--you may say that it was a

Bretonne at Point Paradise."

"Nothing else?"

"Nothing, monsieur."

She courtesied and vanished.

"Little minx," I thought, "what mischief are you preparing now?" and

I rested my elbow on the window-sill and gazed out into the garden,

where apricot-trees and fig-trees lined the winding walks between beds

of old-fashioned herbs, anise, basil, caraway, mint, sage, and

saffron.

Sunlight lay warm on wall and gravel-path; scarlet apples hung aloft

on a few young trees; a pair of trim, wary magpies explored the

fig-trees, sometimes quarrelling, sometimes making common cause

against the shy wild-birds that twittered everywhere among the vines.

I fancied, after a few moments, that I heard the distant thudding of a

horse's hoofs; soon I was sure of it, and rose to my feet expectantly,

just as a flushed young girl in a riding-habit entered the room and

gave me her gloved hand.

Her fresh, breezy beauty astonished me; could this laughing, gray-eyed

girl with her silky, copper-tinted hair be the same slender, grave

young Countess whom I had known in Alsace--this incarnation of all

that is wholesome and sweet and winning in woman? What had become of

her mission and the soiled brethren of the proletariat? What had

happened?

I looked at her earnestly, scarcely understanding that she was saying

she was glad I had come, that she had waited for me, that she had

wanted to see me, that she had wished to tell me how deeply our tragic

experience at La Trappe and in Morsbronn had impressed her. She said

she had sent a letter to me in Paris which was returned, opened,

with a strange note from Monsieur Mornac. She had waited for some

word from me, here in Paradise, since September; "waited

impatiently," she added, and a slight frown bent her straight brows

for a moment--a moment only.

"But come out to my garden," she said, smiling, and stripping off her

little buff gauntlets. "There we will have tea a l'Anglaise, and

sunshine, and a long, long, satisfying talk; at least I will," she

added, laughing and coloring up; "for truly, Monsieur Scarlett, I do

not believe I have given you one second to open your lips."

Heaven knows I was perfectly content to watch her lips and listen to

the music of her happy, breathless voice without breaking the spell

with my own.

She led the way along a path under the apricots to a seat against a

sunny wall, a wall built of massive granite, deeply thatched with

fungus and lichens, where, palpitating in the hot sun, the tiny

lizards lay glittering, and the scarlet-banded nettle-butterflies

flitted and hovered and settled to sun themselves, wings a-droop.

Here in the sunshine the tea-rose perfume, mingling with the incense

of the sea, mounted to my head like the first flush of wine to a man

long fasting; or was it the enchantment of her youth and

loveliness--the subtle influence of physical vigor and spiritual

innocence on a tired, unstrung man?

"First of all," she said, impulsively, "I know your life--all of it

in minute particular. Are you astonished?"

"No, madame," I replied; "Mornac showed you my dossier."

"That is true," she said, with a troubled look of surprise.

I smiled. "As for Mornac," I began, but she interrupted me.

"Ah, Mornac! Do you suppose I believed him? Had I not proof on proof

of your loyalty, your honor, your courtesy, your chivalry--"

"Madame, your generosity--and, I fear, your pity--overpraises."

"No, it does not! I know what you are. Mornac cannot make white

black! I know what you have been. Mornac could not read you into

infamy, even with your dossier under my own eyes!"

"In my dossier you read a sorry history, madame."

"In your dossier I read the tragedy of a gentleman."

"Do you know," said I, "that I am now a performer in a third-rate

travelling circus?"

"I think that is very sad," she said, sweetly.

"Sad? Oh no. It is better than the disciplinary battalions of

Africa."

Which was simply acknowledging that I had served a term in prison.

The color faded in her face. "I thought you were pardoned."

"I was--from prison, not from the battalion of Biribi."

"I only know," she said, "that they say you were not guilty; that

they say you faced utter ruin, even the possibility of death, for the

sake of another man whose name even the police--even Monsieur de

Mornac--could never learn. Was there such a man?"

I hesitated. "Madame, there is such a man; I am the man who

was."

"With no hope?"

"Hope? With every hope," I said, smiling. "My name is not my own,

but it must serve me to my end, and I shall wear it threadbare and

leave it to no one."

"Is there no hope?" she asked, quietly.

"None for the man who was. Much for James Scarlett, tamer of lions

and general mountebank," I said, laughing down the rising tide of

bitterness. Why had she stirred those dark waters? I had drowned

myself in them long since. Under them lay the corpse of a man I had

forgotten--my dead self.

"No hope?" she repeated.

Suddenly the ghost of all I had lost rose before me with her

words--rose at last after all these years, towering, terrible, free

once more to fill the days with loathing and my nights with hell

eternal,... after all these years!

Overwhelmed, I fought down the spectre in silence. Kith and kin were

not all in the world; love of woman was not all; a chance for a home,

a wife, children, were not all; a name was not all. Raising my head, a

trifle faint with the struggle and the cost of the struggle, I saw the

distress in her eyes and strove to smile.

"There is every hope," I said, "save the hopes of youth--the hope of

a woman's love, and of that happiness which comes through love. I am a

man past thirty, madame--thirty-five, I believe my dossier makes it.

It has taken me fifteen years to bury my youth. Let us talk of

Mornac."

"Yes, we will talk of Mornac," she said, gently.

So with infinite pains I went back and traced for her the career of

Buckhurst, sparing her nothing; I led up to my own appearance on the

scene, reviewed briefly what we both knew, then disclosed to her in

its most trivial detail the conference between Buckhurst and myself in

which his cynical avowal was revealed in all its native hideousness.

She sat motionless, her face like cold marble, as I carefully gathered

the threads of the plot and gently twitched that one which galvanized

the mask of Mornac.

"Mornac!" she stammered, aghast.

I showed her why Buckhurst desired to come to Paradise; I showed her

why Mornac had initiated her into the mysteries of my dossier, taking

that infernal precaution, although he had every reason to believe he

had me practically in prison, with the keys in his own pocket.

"Had it not been for my comrade, Speed," I said, "I should be in one

of Mornac's fortress cells. He overshot the mark when he left us

together and stepped into his cabinet to spread my dossier before you.

He counted on an innocent man going through hell itself to prove his

innocence; he counted on me, and left Speed out of his calculations.

He had your testimony, he had my dossier, he had the order for my

arrest in his pocket.... And then I stepped out of sight! I, the

honest fool, with my knowledge of his infamy, of Buckhurst's

complicity and purposes--I was gone.

"And now mark the irony of the whole thing: he had, criminally,

destroyed the only bureau that could ever have caught me. But he did

his best during the few weeks that were left him before the battle of

Sedan. After that it was too late; it was too late when the first

Uhlan appeared before the gates of Paris. And now Mornac, shorn of

authority, is shut up in a city surrounded by a wall of German steel,

through which not one single living creature has penetrated for two

months."

I looked at her steadily. "Eliminate Mornac as a trapped rat; cancel

him as a dead rat since the ship of Empire went down at Sedan. I do

not know what has taken place in Paris--save what all now know that

the Empire is ended, the Republic proclaimed, and the Imperial police

a memory. Then let us strike out Mornac and turn to Buckhurst. Madame,

I am here to serve you."

The dazed horror in her face which had marked my revelations of

Buckhurst's villanies gave place to a mantling flush of pure anger.

Shame crimsoned her neck, too; shame for her credulous innocence, her

belief in this rogue who had betrayed her, only to receive pardon for

the purpose of baser and more murderous betrayal.

I said nothing for a long time, content to leave her to her own

thoughts. The bitter draught she was draining could not harm her,

could not but act as the most wholesome of tonics.

Hers was not a weak character to sink, embittered, under the weight of

knowledge--knowledge of evil, that all must learn to carry lightly

through life; I had once thought her weak, but I had revised that

opinion and substituted the words "pure in thought, inherently loyal,

essentially unsuspicious."

"Tell me about Buckhurst," I said, quietly. "I can help you, I

think."

The quick tears of humiliation glimmered for a second in her angry

eyes; then pride fell from her, like a stately mantle which a princess

puts aside, tired and content to rest.

This was a phase I had never before seen--a lovely, natural young

girl, perplexed, troubled, deeply wounded, ready to be guided, ready

for reproof, perhaps even for that sympathy without which reproof is

almost valueless.

She told me that Buckhurst came to her house here in Paradise early in

September; that while in Paris, pondering on what I had said, she had

determined to withdraw herself absolutely from all organized

socialistic associations during the war; that she believed she could

do the greatest good by living a natural and cheerful life, by

maintaining the position that birth and fortune had given her, and by

using that position and fortune for the benefit of those less

fortunate.

This she had told Buckhurst, and the rascal appeared to agree with her

so thoroughly that, when Dr. Delmont and Professor Tavernier arrived,

they also applauded the choice she made of Buckhurst as distributer of

money, food, and clothing to the provincial hospitals, now crowded to

suffocation with the wreck of battle.

Then a strange thing occurred. Dr. Delmont and Professor Tavernier

disappeared without any explanation. They had started for St. Nazaire

with a sum of money--twenty thousand francs, locked in the private

strong-box of the Countess--to be distributed among the soldiers of

Chanzy; and they had never returned.

In the light of what she had learned from me, she feared that

Buckhurst had won them over; perhaps not--she could not bear to

suspect evil of such men.

But she now believed that Buckhurst had used every penny he had

handled for his own purposes; that not one hospital had received what

she had sent.

"I am no longer wealthy," she said, anxiously, looking up at me. "I

did find time in Paris to have matters straightened; I sold La Trappe

and paid everything. It left me with this house in Paradise, and with

means to maintain it and still have a few thousand francs to give

every year. Now it is nearly gone--I don't know where. I am dreadfully

unhappy; I have such a horror of treachery that I cannot even

understand it, but this ignoble man, Buckhurst, is assuredly a

heartless rascal."

"But," I said, patiently, "you have not yet told me where he is."

"I don't know," she said. "A week ago a dreadful creature came here

to see Buckhurst; they went across the moor toward the semaphore and

stood for a long while looking at the cruiser which is anchored off

Groix. Then Buckhurst came back and prepared for a journey. He said

he was going to Tours to confer with the Red Cross. I don't know where

he went. He took all the money for the general Red Cross fund."

"When did he say he would return?"

"He said in two weeks. He has another week yet."

"Is he usually prompt?"

"Always so--to the minute."

"That is good news," I said, gayly. "But tell me one thing: do you

trust Mademoiselle Elven?"

"Yes, indeed!--indeed!" she cried, horrified.

"Very well," said I, smiling. "Only for the sake of caution--extra,

and even perhaps useless caution--say nothing of this matter to her,

nor to any living soul save me."

"I promise," she said, faintly.

"One thing more: this conspiracy against the state no longer concerns

me--officially. Both Speed and I did all we could to warn the Emperor

and the Empress; we sent letters through the police in London, we used

the English secret-service to get our letters into the Emperor's hand,

we tried every known method of denouncing Mornac. It was useless;

every letter must have gone through Mornac's hands before it reached

the throne. We did all we dared do; we were in disguise and in hiding

under assumed names; we could not do more.

"Now that Mornac is not even a pawn in the game--as, indeed, I begin

to believe he never really was, but has been from the first a dupe of

Buckhurst--it is the duty of every honest man to watch Buckhurst and

warn the authorities that he possibly has designs on the crown jewels

of France, which that cruiser yonder is all ready to bear away to

Saïgon.

"How he proposes to attempt such a robbery I can't imagine. I don't

want to denounce him to General Chanzy or Aurelles de Palladine,

because the conspiracy is too widely spread and too dangerous to be

defeated by the capture of one man, even though he be the head of it.

"What I want is to entrap the entire band; and that can only be done

by watching Buckhurst, not arresting him.

"Therefore, madame, I have written and despatched a telegram to

General Aurelles de Palladine, offering my services and the services

of Mr. Speed to the Republic without compensation. In the event of

acceptance, I shall send to London for two men who will do what is to

be done, leaving me free to amuse the public with my lions. Meanwhile,

as long as we stay in Paradise we both are your devoted servants, and

we beg the privilege of serving you."

During all this time the young Countess had never moved her eyes from

my face--perhaps I was flattered--perhaps for that reason I talked on

and on, pouring out wisdom from a somewhat attenuated supply.

And I now rose to take my leave, bowing my very best bow; but she sat

still, looking up quietly at me.

"You ask the privilege of serving me," she said. "You could serve me

best by giving me your friendship."

"You have my devotion, madame," I said.

"I did not ask it. I asked your friendship--in all frankness and

equality."

"Do you desire the friendship of a circus performer?" I asked,

smiling.

"I desire it, not only for what you are, but for what you have

been--have always been, let them say what they will!"

I was silent.

"Have you never given women your friendship?" she asked.

"Not in fifteen years--nor asked theirs."

"Will you not ask mine?"

I tried to speak steadily, but my voice was uncertain; I sat down,

crushed under a flood of memories, hopes accursed, ambitions damned

and consigned to oblivion.

"You are very kind," I said. "You are the Countess de Vassart. A man

is what he makes himself. I have made myself--with both eyes open; and

I am now an acrobat and a tamer of beasts. I understand your goodness,

your impulse to help those less fortunate than yourself. I also

understand that I have placed myself where I am, and that, having done

so deliberately, I cannot meet as friends and equals those who might

have been my equals if not friends. Besides that, I am a native of a

paradox--a Republic which, though caste-bound, knows no caste abroad.

I might, therefore, have been your friend if you had chosen to waive

the traditions of your continent and accept the traditions of mine.

But now, madame, I must beg permission to make my adieux."

She sprang up and caught both my hands in her ungloved hands. "Won't

you take my friendship--and give me yours--my friend?"

"Yes," I said, slowly. The blood beat in my temples, almost blinding

me; my heart hammered in my throat till I shivered.

As in a dream I bent forward; she abandoned her hands to me; and I

touched a woman's hands with my lips for the first time in fifteen

years.

"In all devotion and loyalty--and gratitude," I said.

"And in friendship--say it!"

"In friendship."

"Now you may go--if you desire to. When will you come again?"

"When may I?"

"When you will."




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