people to shout and dance. "You have him on the island - haven't
you?"
"Oh, yes: I have him there," said Renouard, without looking up.
"Well, then!" The Editor looked
helplessly around as if begging
for
response of some sort. But the only
response that came was
very
unexpected. Annoyed at being left in the
background, and also
because very little drink made him nasty, the
emotional Willie
turned
malignant all at once, and in a bibulous tone
surprising in
a man able to keep his balance so well -
"Aha! But you haven't got him here - not yet!" he sneered. "No!
You haven't got him yet."
This
outrageousexhibition was to the Editor like the lash to a
jaded horse. He
positively jumped.
"What of that? What do you mean? We - haven't - got - him - here.
Of course he isn't here! But Geoffrey's
schooner is here. She can
be sent at once to fetch him here. No! Stay! There's a better
plan. Why shouldn't you all sail over to Malata, professor? Save
time! I am sure Miss Moorsom would prefer. . ."
With a
gallantflourish of his arm he looked for Miss Moorsom. She
had disappeared. He was taken aback somewhat.
"Ah! H'm. Yes. . . . Why not. A pleasure
cruise,
delightfulship,
delightful season,
delightfulerrand, del . . . No! There
are no objections. Geoffrey, I understand, has indulged in a
bungalow three sizes too large for him. He can put you all up. It
will be a pleasure for him. It will be the greatest privilege.
Any man would be proud of being an agent of this happy
reunion. I
am proud of the little part I've played. He will consider it the
greatest honour. Geoff, my boy, you had better be
stirring to-
morrow bright and early about the preparations for the trip. It
would be
criminal to lose a single day."
He was as flushed as Willie, the
excitement keeping up the effect
of the
festive dinner. For a time Renouard, silent, as if he had
not heard a word of all that
babble, did not stir. But when he got
up it was to advance towards the Editor and give him such a hearty
slap on the back that the plump little man reeled in his tracks and
looked quite frightened for a moment.
"You are a heaven-born discoverer and a first-rate
manager. . .
He's right. It's the only way. You can't
resist the claim of
sentiment, and you must even risk the
voyage to Malata. . . "
Renouard's voice sank. "A
lonely spot," he added, and fell into
thought under all these eyes converging on him in the sudden
silence. His slow glance passed over all the faces in succession,
remaining arrested on Professor Moorsom, stony eyed, a smouldering
cigar in his fingers, and with his sister
standing by his side.
"I shall be
infinitely gratified if you consent to come. But, of
course, you will. We shall sail to-morrow evening then. And now
let me leave you to your happiness."
He bowed, very grave,
pointed suddenly his finger at Willie who was
swaying about with a
sleepy frown. . . . "Look at him. He's
overcome with happiness. You had better put him to bed . . . " and
disappeared while every head on the
terrace was turned to Willie
with
varied expressions.
Renouard ran through the house. Avoiding the
carriage road he fled
down the steep short cut to the shore, where his gig was
waiting.
At his loud shout the
sleeping Kanakas jumped up. He leaped in.
"Shove off. Give way!" and the gig darted through the water.
"Give way! Give way!" She flew past the wool-clippers
sleeping at
their anchors each with the open unwinking eye of the lamp in the
rigging; she flew past the flagship of the Pacific
squadron, a
great mass all dark and silent, heavy with the slumbers of five
hundred men, and where the
invisible sentries heard his urgent
"Give way! Give way!" in the night. The Kanakas, panting, rose
off the thwarts at every stroke. Nothing could be fast enough for
him! And he ran up the side of his
schooner shaking the ladder
noisily with his rush.
On deck he stumbled and stood still.
Wherefore this haste? To what end, since he knew well before he
started that he had a
pursuer from whom there was no escape.
As his foot touched the deck his will, his purpose he had been
hurrying to save, died out within. It had been nothing less than
getting the
schooner under-way, letting her
vanishsilently in the
night from
amongst these
sleeping ships. And now he was certain he
could not do it. It was impossible! And he reflected that whether
he lived or died such an act would lay him under a dark suspicion
from which he
shrank. No, there was nothing to be done.
He went down into the cabin and, before even unbuttoning his
overcoat, took out of the
drawer the letter addressed to his
assistant; that letter which he had found in the pigeon-hole
labelled "Malata" in young Dunster's outer office, where it had
been
waiting for three months some occasion for being forwarded.
From the moment of dropping it in the
drawer he had utterly
forgotten its
existence - till now, when the man's name had come
out so clamorously. He glanced at the common
envelope, noted the
shaky and
laborioushandwriting: H. Walter, Esqre. Undoubtedly
the very last letter the old
butler had posted before his illness,
and in answer clearly to one from "Master Arthur" instructing him
to address in the future: "Care of Messrs. W. Dunster and Co."
Renouard made as if to open the
envelope, but paused, and, instead,
tore the letter
deliberately in two, in four, in eight. With his
hand full of pieces of paper he returned on deck and scattered them
overboard on the dark water, in which they
vanished instantly.
He did it slowly, without
hesitation or
remorse. H. Walter, Esqre,
in Malata. The
innocent Arthur - What was his name? The man
sought for by that woman who as she went by seemed to draw all the
passion of the earth to her, without effort, not deigning to
notice, naturally, as other women
breathed the air. But Renouard
was no longer
jealous of her very
existence. Whatever its meaning
it was not for that man he had picked up casually on obscure
impulse, to get rid of the
tiresome expostulations of a so-called
friend; a man of whom he really knew nothing - and now a dead man.
In Malata. Oh, yes! He was there secure enough, untroubled in his
grave. In Malata. To bury him was the last service Renouard had
rendered to his
assistant before leaving the island on this trip to
town.
Like many men ready enough for
arduous enterprises Renouard was
inclined to evade the small complications of
existence. This trait
of his
character was
composed of a little indolence, some disdain,
and a shrinking from contests with certain forms of vulgarity -
like a man who would face a lion and go out of his way to avoid a
toad. His
intercourse with the meddlesome journalist was that
merely
outwardintimacy without
sympathy some young men get drawn
into easily. It had amused him rather to keep that "friend" in the
dark about the fate of his
assistant. Renouard had never needed
other company than his own, for there was in him something of the
sensitiveness of a
dreamer who is easily jarred. He had said to
himself that the all-
knowing one would only
preach again about the
evils of
solitude and worry his head off in favour of some
forlornly
useless protege of his. Also the inquisitiveness of the
Editor had irritated him and had closed his lips in sheer disgust.
And now he contemplated the noose of consequences
drawing tight
around him.
It was the memory of that
diplomatic reticence which on the
terracehad stiffled his first cry which would have told them all that the
man sought for was not to be met on earth any more. He
shrank from
the
absurdity of
hearing the all-
knowing one, and not very sober at
that, turning on him with
righteous reproaches -
"You never told me. You gave me to understand that your
assistantwas alive, and now you say he's dead. Which is it? Were you lying
then or are you lying now?" No! the thought of such a scene was
not to be borne. He had sat down appalled, thinking: "What shall
I do now?"
His courage had oozed out of him. Speaking the truth meant the
Moorsoms going away at once - while it seemed to him that he would
give the last shred of his rectitude to secure a day more of her
company. He sat on - silent. Slowly, from confused sensations,
from his talk with the professor, the manner of the girl herself,
the intoxicating
familiarity of her sudden hand-clasp, there had
come to him a half
glimmer of hope. The other man was dead. Then!