Part 32 (1/2)
She took from the large purse she carried a card on which to record the game, impaled it to the green cloth with a pin, in the manner of the professional gambler, and drew forth a small roll of notes.
The first time she played the ”tailleur” dealt the cards quickly, one by one, then cried, ”_Six, quatre, rouge gagne et couleur perd_.”
She had lost. But next time she tossed two notes upon the scarlet diamond before her and won. She doubled her stake, won again, and then allowed the cards to be dealt several times without risking anything.
Presently, she hesitated, but suddenly counted out five one hundred-franc notes, folded them in half and carelessly tossed them upon the red. Again the cards were dealt one by one upon the leather-covered square; again the monotonous voice sounded, and again came her winnings towards her, five notes folded together on the end of the croupier's rake.
So engrossed had George become in the game, that he noticed nothing of what was transpiring around him. Had he not been so deeply interested in the play of this woman whom his father had designated as his wife, his attention would probably have been attracted by a curious incident.
At the moment when the cards had been dealt, a man seated at the end of the opposite table, who, with his companion had won a considerable sum, raised his head, and, for the first time, noticed amid the excited expectant crowd, that it was a woman who had been successful at the other table.
The man was Zertho. Next instant, however, his face went white. In his eyes there was a look of abject terror when he identified the lucky player. With a sudden movement he put his hand to his head to avoid recognition, and bending quickly to his companion, gasped,--
”Look, Brooker! Can't you see who's in front? Good G.o.d! why there's `The Golden Hand.' Quick! We must fly!”
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN.
THE HOUSE OF THE WICKED.
Next afternoon Liane and Zertho strolled up to Cimiez together to pay a call upon a Parisian family named Bertholet, who lived in one of those fine white houses high up on the Boulevard de Cimiez, and who had recently accepted the Prince's hospitality.
As they turned from the dusty Boulevard Carabacel, and commenced the long ascent where the tree-lined road runs straight up to the glaring white facade of the Excelsior Regina Hotel, Zertho expressed a fear that she would be fatigued ere they reached their destination, and urged her to take a cab.
”I'm not at all tired,” she a.s.sured him, nevertheless halting a second, flushed and warm, to regain breath. ”The day is so beautiful that a walk will do me no end of good.”
”It's a dreadful bore to have to toil up and call on these people, but I suppose I must be polite to them. They are worth knowing. Bertholet is, I hear, a well-known banker in Paris.”
Liane smiled. The patronising air with which her companion spoke of his newly-found friends always amused her.
”Besides,” he added, ”we must now make the best of the time we have in Nice. We leave to-morrow, or the day after.”
”So sudden!” she exclaimed, surprised. ”I thought we should remain for another fortnight or three weeks. The weather is so delightful.”
”I have arranged it with the Captain,” he said briefly. ”Do you regret leaving?”
”How can I regret?” she asked, glancing at him and raising her brows slightly. ”How can I regret when the place, so fair in itself, is to me so hateful? No, I'm glad for several reasons that we are leaving.”
She recollected at that moment what George had told her. Mariette Lepage was near them. She remembered, too, the fierce expression of hatred in that pair of angry eyes s.h.i.+ning through the mask.
”Yes,” he said at length, ”one can have too much of a good thing, and sometimes it is even possible to have too much of the Riviera. I have the satisfaction at least of having succeeded in obtaining a footing in society.” And he laughed as he added, ”A year ago I was a down-at-heel adventurer, almost too shabby to obtain admittance at Monte Carlo, while to-day I'm welcomed everywhere, even among the most exclusive set. And why? Merely because I have money and impudence.”
”Yes,” Liane admitted, with a touch of sorrow. ”This is indeed a curious world. There is a good deal of truth in the saying that a man is too often judged by his coat.”
”And a woman by her dress,” he added quickly. ”When you are Princess d'Auzac, you will find that other women will crowd around you and pet you, and declare you are the most beautiful girl of the year--as, of course, you are--all because you have wealth and a t.i.tle. They like to speak to their friends of `My friend the Princess So-and-So.'”
”You are very complimentary,” she answered, coldly. ”I have no desire to excite either the admiration or envy of other women.”
”Because you have never yet fully realised how beautiful you are,” he answered.
”Oh yes, I have. Every woman knows the exact worth of her good looks.”
”Some over-estimate them, no doubt,” he said, with a laugh. ”But you have always under-estimated yours. If the Captain had chosen he could have already married you to a dozen different men, all wealthy and distinguished.”