Part 22 (2/2)

”No!” she cried. ”Why should I come for you?-- Bah! I come for _her_!”

”For whom?”

”For _her_,” she cried, pointing towards the Hall.

”For her?” inquired Stanley, somewhat dazed by this unexpected change of base. ”But who is she?”

”I do not know. I do not care; but she writes to my husband--she makes appointments with him.”

”Oh, the nameless friend.”

”Now you understand why I have come?”

”Yes, I see. Still I think it lays you open to misconstruction. You had better return to London. I suppose you know you were followed to my house?”

She snapped her fingers airily.

”I care just that for being followed. What of it?”

”My dear Inez, you forget that you're not in our native country. We can't fight duels galore in this part of the world, and cut the throats of inconvenient witnesses. People will talk; there are the newspapers; and--the dowagers; and the nonconformist conscience to be considered.

You don't know what you are letting me--I mean yourself, in for.”

”I tell you, I must confirm my suspicions. I must see your--what you call it--your visitors' book--which they have in great houses-- I must compare the handwriting of the guests with the handwriting of these letters. When I have proved my case I will return to London--not one moment before. You are my friend, you will help me.”

”Of course I will help you; but I a.s.sure you there is no one in the house who could be suspected for a moment.”

”At least, you will help me to prove myself wrong?” and she shot at him one of those unsettling glances.

”Of course--with all my heart--and then you'll go back to London and take Mr. Sanks' advice, won't you?”

”You are very anxious to have me go,” she said, piqued.

”No, no!” he a.s.sured her hastily. ”Far from it; but can't you see--that it is for your sake that I urge it. Supposing anyone saw us now; what would they think, what could they think--an early morning rendezvous.”

”They would say that you were making a report to me of your progress in discovering the plot against the treaty between England and our country.”

He looked at her dumbfounded and said nothing. Indeed there was nothing he could say without risking some imprudent disclosure.

”Ah,” she cried, laughing merrily at his discomfiture. ”You see, you diplomats do not know everything. It is true I only write supervised letters home, but that does not prevent my receiving letters from my country first hand, and my father has written much about this treaty. It seems they are going to try and bribe the Senators to defeat it, with money raised here, and some cowardly scoundrel has been engaged as go-between.”

Stanley stood looking at her in horrified astonishment. Was it possible that if she knew so much she did not know that she was condemning her own husband? But her next words proved to him that such must be the case.

”My father writes me,” she continued, ”that on proving the ident.i.ty of this go-between, the success or failure of the plot depends, and so far, the government have been at a loss to identify him.”

The Secretary, who held the key to the situation, could see excellent reasons why the Executive had kept Senor De Costa in the dark; what Madame was saying was evidently what everybody knew. Of the truth she had not the remotest inkling.

”Well,” she cried gaily, ”why don't you speak?”

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