Part 91 (1/2)
Ilse Dumont, bent over the cat in her lap, stared absently into its green eyes where it lay playfully patting the rags that hung from her torn bodice.
Perhaps she was thinking of the dead man where he lay in the crowded cafe--the dead man who had confronted her with bloodshot eyes and lifted pistol--whose voice, thick with rage, had denounced her--whose stammering, untaught tongue stumbled over the foreign words with which he meant to send her to her death--this dead man who once had been _her_ man--long ago--very, very long ago when there was no bitterness in life, no pain, no treachery--when life was young in the Western World, and Fate gaily beckoned her, wearing a smiling mask and crowned with flowers.
”I hope,” remarked the Princess Mistchenka, ”that it is sufficiently early in the morning for you to escape observation, James.”
”I'm a scandal; I know it,” he admitted, as the car swung into the rue Soleil d'Or.
The Princess turned to the drooping girl beside her and laid a gloved hand lightly on her shoulder.
”My dear,” she said gently, ”there is only one chance for you, and if we let it pa.s.s it will not come again--under military law.”
Ilse lifted her head, held it high, even tilted back a little.
The Princess said:
”Twenty-four hours will be given for all Germans to leave France.
But--you took your nationality from the man you married. You are American.”
The girl flushed painfully:
”I do not care to take shelter under his name,” she said.
”It is the only way. And you must get to the coast in my car. There is no time to lose. Every vehicle, private and public, will be seized for military uses this morning. Every train will be crowded; every foot of room occupied on the Channel boats. There is only one thing for you to do--travel with me to Havre as my American maid.”
”Madame--would you do that--for me?”
”Why, I've got to,” said the Princess Mistchenka with a shrug. ”I am not a barbarian to leave you to a firing squad, I hope.”
The car had stopped; the chauffeur descended and came around to open the door.
”Caron,” said the Princess, ”no servants are stirring yet. Take my key, find a cloak and bring it out--and a coat for Monsieur Neeland--the one that Captain Sengoun left the other evening. Have you plenty of gasoline?”
”Plenty, madame.”
”Good. We leave for Havre in five minutes. Bring the cloak and coat quickly.”
The chauffeur hastened to the door, unlocked it, disappeared, then came out carrying a voluminous wrap and a man's opera cloak. The Princess threw the one over Ilse Dumont; Neeland enveloped himself in the other.
”Now,” murmured the Princess Naa, ”it will look more like a late automobile party than an ambulance after a free fight--if any early servants are watching us.”
She descended from the car; Ilse Dumont followed, still clasping the cat under her cloak; and Neeland followed her.
”Be very quiet,” whispered the Princess. ”There is no necessity for servants to observe what we do----”
A small and tremulous voice from the head of the stairs interrupted her:
”Naa! Is it you?”
”Hush, Ruhannah! Yes, darling, it is I. Everything is all right and you may go back to bed----”