Part 4 (1/2)
”What is it?”
She paced with him a few steps in silence, while Muriel Chetwynd Lyle moved languidly away from the terrace and re-entered the ball-room.
”What is it?” repeated Dr. Dean. ”You seem distressed; come, tell me all about it!”
Helen Murray lifted her eyes--the soft, violet-gray eyes that Lord Fulkeward had said he admired--suffused with tears, and fixed them on the old man's face.
”I wish,” she said--”I wish we had never come to Egypt! I feel as if some great misfortune were going to happen to us; I do, indeed! Oh, Dr.
Dean, have you watched my brother this evening?”
”I have,” he replied, and then was silent.
”And what do you think?” she asked anxiously. ”How can you account for his strangeness--his roughness--even to me?”
And the tears brimmed over and fell, despite her efforts to restrain them. Dr. Dean stopped in his walk and took her two hands in his own.
”My dear Helen, it's no use worrying yourself like this,” he said.
”Nothing can stop the progress of the Inevitable. I have watched Denzil, I have watched the new arrival, Armand Gervase, I have watched the mysterious Ziska, and I have watched you! Well, what is the result?
The Inevitable,--simply the unconquerable Inevitable. Denzil is in love, Gervase is in love, everybody is in love, except me and one other! It is a whole network of mischief, and I am the unhappy fly that has unconsciously fallen into the very middle of it. But the spider, my dear,--the spider who wove the web in the first instance,--is the Princess Ziska, and she is NOT in love! She is the other one. She is not in love with anybody any more than I am. She's got something else on her mind--I don't know what it is exactly, but it isn't love.
Excluding her and myself, the whole hotel is in love--YOU are in love!”
Helen withdrew her hands from his grasp and a deep flush reddened her fair face.
”I!” she stammered--”Dr. Dean, you are mistaken. ...”
”Dr. Dean was never mistaken on love-matters in his life,” said that self-satisfied sage complacently. ”Now, my dear, don't be offended. I have known both you and your brother ever since you were left little orphan children together; if I cannot speak plainly to you, who can?
You are in love, little Helen--and very unwisely, too--with the man Gervase. I have heard of him often, but I never saw him before to-night. And I don't approve of him.”
Helen grew as pale as she had been rosy, and her face as the moonlight fell upon it was very sorrowful.
”He stayed with us in Scotland two summers ago,” she said softly. ”He was very agreeable...”
”Ha! No doubt! He made a sort of love to you then, I suppose. I can imagine him doing it very well! There is a nice romantic glen near your house--just where the river runs, and where I caught a fifteen-pound salmon some five years ago. Ha! Catching salmon is healthy work; much better than falling in love. No, no, Helen! Gervase is not good enough for you; you want a far better man. Has he spoken to you to-night?”
”Oh, yes! And he has danced with me.”
”Ha! How often?”
”Once.”
”And how many times with the Princess Ziska?”
Helen's fair head drooped, and she answered nothing. All at once the little Doctor's hand closed on her arm with a soft yet firm grip.
”Look!” he whispered.
She raised her eyes and saw two figures step out on the terrace and stand in the full moonlight,--the white Bedouin dress of the one and the glittering golden robe of the other made them easily recognizable,--they were Gervase and the Princess Ziska. Helen gave a faint, quick sigh.
”Let us go in,” she said.