Part 20 (1/2)
”You have the same apartment?”
She pressed the clasp of a black velvet bag which rested on the edge of the box, opened it, and pa.s.sed him a key.
”It is the same.”
He held the key in his fingers for a moment, but he had the air of a man to whom the action had no significance.
”You have enough money?” he asked.
”I have saved a million francs,” she told him. ”I am waiting for my lord to speak of things that matter. The woman in the box over there--who is she?”
”An English spy,” he answered calmly.
She lowered her eyes for a moment, as though to conceal the sudden soft flash.
”An English spy,” she repeated. ”My rival in espionage.”
”You have no rival, Nita,” he replied, ”and she is in the opposite camp.”
Her two red lips were distorted into a pout.
”Is it over, my task?” she asked. ”I am weary of Paris. I love it over here better. I am weary of French officers, of these solemn officials who come to my room like guilty schoolboys, and who speak of themselves and their importance with bated breath, as though their whisper would rock the world. My master has enough information?”
”More than enough,” he a.s.sured her. ”You have done your work wonderfully.”
”Shall I now deal with her?” she continued, with a slight, eager movement of her head towards the opposite box.
He smiled.
”She is harmless, she and her entourage,” he replied. ”Some stroke of good fortune brought them word of the meeting between myself and Immelan, and beyond that they guessed at its significance. They were at the shed to watch my arrival. Now, with their mouths open, they sit and wait for the information which they hope will drop in. They are very ingenuous, these Anglo-Saxons, but they are not diplomats.”
She turned her head and looked across the auditorium. Maggie was talking to a man whom Nigel had just brought in, and who was bending over her in obvious admiration. Nita, with her wealth of cosmetics, her over-red lips, stared curiously at this possible rival, with her clear skin, her beautiful neck and shoulders, her hair dressed close to her head, her air of quiet, almost singular distinction.
”The young lady,” she confessed, ”wears her clothes well for an English woman. She is _bien soignee_, but she looks a little difficult.”
His eyes followed the direction of hers, and her object was achieved.
She read correctly the light that gleamed in them.
”I may come to-night?” she asked quietly.
He shook his head.
”Not again,” he replied.
A violinist now held the stage, a Pole newly come to London. La Belle Nita closed her eyes. For a few minutes her sorrow seemed to throb to the minor music to which she was listening.
”For all my work, then,” she said presently, ”for the suffering and the risk, there is to be nothing?”
”Is it nothing for you to be invited to live in whatsoever manner you choose?” he remonstrated.
”It is little,” she replied steadily. ”There are a dozen who would do this for me, who pray every day that they may do so. What are all these things beside the love of my master?”