Part 2 (2/2)
”We don't want 'em.”
Silence for a few minutes.
”In a week, did you say?”
”Positively.”
”Well, I'll be ready,” she said solemnly.
He kissed her tenderly, lovingly, pressed her cold hand and said encouragingly:
”We'll meet in New York next Monday afternoon. Leave everything to me, dear. It will be much pleasanter to go by way of London and it will help to kill a good deal of time.”
”Hugh,” she said, smiling faintly, ”I think we're proving that father was right. I can't possibly arrive at the age of discretion until I am twenty-three and past.”
CHAPTER II
THE BEGINNING OF FLIGHT
Mr. Ridgeway paced back and forth outside the iron gates in the Grand Central Station on the afternoon of April 1st, 190--, a smile of antic.i.p.ation and a frown of impatience alternating in his fresh, young face. Certain lines of care seemed to have disappeared since we saw him last, nearly a week ago, and in their stead beamed the light of a new-found interest in life. Now and then he took from his pocket a telegram; spectators stared amusedly at him as he read and reread:
DETROIT, MICHIGAN, March 81, 190--.
To H.B. Ridge:
Got away safely. Meet me Forty-second Street, New York, to-morrow at three. Feel awfully queer and look a fright. Sympathetic lady, next compartment, just offered condolences for loss of my husband. What are the probabilities of storm? Be sure and find out before we start.
SISTER GRACE.
”Isn't that just like a girl!” he muttered to himself. ”Where else would Forty-second Street be but New York! London?”
They had decided to travel as brother and sister and to adopt Ridge as the surname. Hugh had taken pa.s.sage for Liverpool on the liner _Saint Cloud_, to sail on the second, having first examined the list of pa.s.sengers to ascertain if there were any among them who might know him or his companion in the adventure. The list was now complete, and he, a.s.sured that there was no danger of recognition, felt the greatest weight of all lifted from his mind.
He had also considerately inquired into the state of the weather and learned that it promised well for the voyage. The whole affair was such a glorious lark, such an original enterprise, that he could scarcely restrain himself in his exhilaration from confiding in his chance hotel acquaintances.
Purposely, the night before, he had gone to an hotel where he was unknown, keeping under cover during the day as much as possible.
According to the prearranged plan, they were to go aboard s.h.i.+p that evening, as the sailing hour was early in the morning.
He was waiting for her train. Every now and then his glance would shoot through the throng of people, somewhat apprehensively, as if he feared, instead of hoped, that some one might be there. This searching glance was to determine whether there might be any danger of Chicago or New York acquaintances witnessing the arrival of the person for whom he waited. Once he recognized a friend and dodged quickly behind a knot of people, escaping notice. That is why he audibly muttered:
”Thank Heaven!”
Every nerve was tingling with excitement; an indescribable desire to fly, to shout, to race down the track to meet the train, swept through him. His heart almost stopped beating, and he felt that his face was bloodless. For the twentieth time in the last two hours Ridgeway looked at his watch and frowningly exclaimed:
”Only five after two! Nearly an hour to wait!”
<script>