Part 24 (1/2)
”But do not judge so hastily.”
”That I promise.”
”Did you learn among other things what Mr. Warrington had done?”
”Yes. A sordid affair. Ordinary peculations that were wasted over gaming-tables.”
Warrington had told her the truth. At least, the story told by others coincided with his own. But what was it that kept doubt in her mind?
Why should she not be ready to believe what others believed, what the man himself had confessed? What was it to her that he looked like Arthur, that he was guilty or innocent?
”And his name?” She wondered if the colonel knew that also.
”Warrington is a.s.sumed. His real name is Paul Ellison.”
”Paul Ellison.” She repeated it slowly. Her voice did not seem her own. The table, the lights, the faces, all receded and became a blur.
XV
A BIT OF A LARK
Mallow gave Craig one of his favorite cigars. The gambler turned it over and inspected the carnelian label, realizing that this was expected of him. Mallow smiled complacently. They might smoke as good as that at the government-house, but he rather doubted it. Trust a Britisher to know a good pipe-charge; but his selection of cigars was seldom to be depended upon.
”Don't see many of these out here,” was Craig's comment, and he tucked away the cigar in a vest pocket.
”They cost me forty-three cents apiece, without duty.” The vulgarian's pleasure lies not in the article itself so much as in the price paid for it. On the plantation Mallow smoked Burma cheroots because he really preferred them. There, he drank rye whisky, consorted with his employees, gambled with them and was not above cheating when he had them drunk enough. Away from home, however, he was the man of money; he bought vintage wines when he could, wore silks, jingled the sovereigns whenever he thought some one might listen, bullied the servants, all with the childish belief that he was following the footsteps of aristocracy, hoodwinking no one, not even his kind. ”I'm worth a quarter of a million,” he went on. ”Luck and plugging did it.
One of these fine days I'm going to sell out and take a whack at that gay Paris. There's the place to spend your pile. You can't get your money's worth any place else.”
Paris. Craig's thought flew back to the prosperous days when he was plying his trade between New York and Cherbourg, on the Atlantic liners, the annual fortnight in Paris and the Grand-Prix. He had had his diamonds, then, and his wallet of yellow-backs; and when he had called for vintage wines and choice Havanas it had been for genuine love of them. In his heart he despised Mallow. He knew himself to be a rogue, but Mallow without money would have been a bold predatory scoundrel. Craig knew also that he himself was at soul too cowardly to be more than despicably bad. He envied Mallow's absolute fearlessness, his frank brutality, his strength upon which dissipation had as yet left no mark; and Mallow was easily forty-five. Paris. He might never see that city again. He had just enough to carry him to Hongkong and keep him on his feet until the races. He sent a bitter glance toward the sea where the moonlight gave an ashen hue to the forest of rigging.
The beauty of the scene did not enter his eye. His mind was recalling the luxurious smoke-rooms.
”When you go to Paris, I'd like to go along.”
”You've never let on why they sent you hiking out here,” Mallow suggested.
”One of my habits is keeping my mouth shut.”
”Regarding your own affairs, yes. But you're willing enough to talk when it comes to giving away the other chap.”
”You can play that hand as well as I can.” Craig scowled toward the dining-room doors.
”Ha! There they come,” said Mallow, as a group of men and women issued out into the cafe-veranda. ”By gad! she is a beauty, and no mistake.
And will you look at our friend, the colonel, toddling behind her?”
”You're welcome.”
”You're a fine lady-killer.” Mallow tore the band from a fresh cigar and struck a match.