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<h2> CHAPTER VI. MISS ARMYTAGE’S PEARLS </h2>
<p>Lady O’Moy and Miss Armytage drove alone together into Lisbon. The
adjutant, still occupied, would follow as soon as he possibly could,
whilst Captain Tremayne would go on directly from the lodgings which he
shared in Alcantara with Major Carruthers—also of the adjutant’s
staff—whither he had ridden to dress some twenty minutes earlier.</p>
<p>“Are you ill, Una?” had been Sylvia’s concerned greeting of her cousin
when she came within the range of the carriage lamps. “You are pale as a
ghost.” To this her ladyship had replied mechanically that a slight
headache troubled her.</p>
<p>But now that they sat side by side in the well upholstered carriage Miss
Armytage became aware that her companion was trembling.</p>
<p>“Una, dear, whatever is the matter?”</p>
<p>Had it not been for the dominant fear that the shedding of tears would
render her countenance unsightly, Lady O’Moy would have yielded to her
feelings and wept. Heroically in the cause of her own flawless beauty she
conquered the almost overmastering inclination.</p>
<p>“I—I have been so troubled about Richard,” she faltered. “It is
preying upon my mind.”</p>
<p>“Poor dear!” In sheer motherliness Miss Armytage put an arm about her
cousin and drew her close. “We must hope for the best.”</p>
<p>Now if you have understood anything of the character of Lady O’Moy you
will have understood that the burden of a secret was the last burden that
such a nature was capable of carrying. It was because Dick was fully aware
of this that he had so emphatically and repeatedly impressed upon her the
necessity for saying not a word to any one of his presence. She realised
in her vague way—or rather she believed it since he had assured her—that
there would be grave danger to him if he were discovered. But discovery
was one thing, and the sharing of a confidence as to his presence another.
That confidence must certainly be shared.</p>
<p>Lady O’Moy was in an emotional maelstrom that swept her towards a
cataract. The cataract might inspire her with dread, standing as it did
for death and disaster, but the maelstrom was not to be resisted. She was
helpless in it, unequal to breasting such strong waters, she who in all
her futile, charming life had been borne snugly in safe crafts that were
steered by others.</p>
<p>Remained but to choose her confidant. Nature suggested Terence. But it was
against Terence in particular that she had been warned. Circumstance now
offered Sylvia Armytage. But pride, or vanity if you prefer it, denied her
here. Sylvia was an inexperienced young girl, as she herself had so often
found occasion to remind her cousin. Moreover, she fostered the fond
illusion that Sylvia looked to her for precept, that upon Sylvia’s life
she exercised a precious guiding influence. How, then, should the
supporting lean upon the supported? Yet since she must, there and then,
lean upon something or succumb instantly and completely, she chose a
middle course, a sort of temporary assistance.</p>
<p>“I have been imagining things,” she said. “It may be a premonition, I
don’t know. Do you believe in premonitions, Sylvia?”</p>
<p>“Sometimes,” Sylvia humoured her.</p>
<p>“I have been imagining that if Dick is hiding, a fugitive, he might
naturally come to me for help. I am fanciful, perhaps,” she added hastily,
lest she should have said too much. “But there it is. All day the notion
has clung to me, and I have been asking myself desperately what I should
do in such a case.”</p>
<p>“Time enough to consider it when it happens, Una. After all—”</p>
<p>“I know,” her ladyship interrupted on that ever-ready note of petulance of
hers. “I know, of course. But I think I should be easier in my mind if I
could find an answer to my doubt. If I knew what to do, to whom to appeal
for assistance, for I am afraid that I should be very helpless myself.
There is Terence, of course. But I am a little afraid of Terence. He has
got Dick out of so many scrapes, and he is so impatient of poor Dick. I am
afraid he doesn’t understand him, and so I should be a little frightened
of appealing to Terence again.”</p>
<p>“No,” said Sylvia gravely, “I shouldn’t go to Terence. Indeed he is the
last man to whom I should go.”</p>
<p>“You say that too!” exclaimed her ladyship.</p>
<p>“Why?” quoth Sylvia sharply. “Who else has said it?”</p>
<p>There was a brief pause in which Lady O’Moy shuddered. She had been so
near to betraying herself. How very quick and shrewd Sylvia was! She made,
however, a good recovery.</p>
<p>“Myself, of course. It is what I have thought myself. There is Count
Samoval. He promised that if ever any such thing happened he would help
me. And he assured me I could count upon him. I think it may have been his
offer that made me fanciful.”</p>
<p>“I should go to Sir Terence before I went to Count Samoval. By which I
mean that I should not go to Count Samoval at all under any circumstances.
I do not trust him.”</p>
<p>“You said so once before, dear,” said Lady O’Moy.</p>
<p>“And you assured me that I spoke out of the fullness of my ignorance and
inexperience.”</p>
<p>“Ah, forgive me.”</p>
<p>“There is nothing to forgive. No doubt you were right. But remember that
instinct is most alive in the ignorant and inexperienced, and that
instinct is often a surer guide than reason. Yet if you want reason, I can
supply that too. Count Samoval is the intimate friend of the Marquis of
Minas, who remains a member of the Government, and who next to the
Principal Souza was, and no doubt is, the most bitter opponent of the
British policy in Portugal. Yet Count Samoval, one of the largest
landowners in the north, and the nobleman who has perhaps suffered most
severely from that policy, represents himself as its most vigorous
supporter.”</p>
<p>Lady O’Moy listened in growing amazement. Also she was a little shocked.
It seemed to her almost indecent that a young girl should know so much
about politics—so much of which she herself, a married woman, and
the wife of the adjutant-general, was completely in ignorance.</p>
<p>“Save us, child!” she ejaculated. “You are so extraordinarily informed.”</p>
<p>“I have talked to Captain Tremayne,” said Sylvia. “He has explained all
this.”</p>
<p>“Extraordinary conversation for a young man to hold with a young girl,”
pronounced her ladyship. “Terence never talked of such things to me.”</p>
<p>“Terence was too busy making love to you,” said Sylvia, and there was the
least suspicion of regret in her almost boyish voice.</p>
<p>“That may account for it,” her ladyship confessed, and fell for a moment
into consideration of that delicious and rather amusing past, when O’Moy’s
ferocious hesitancy and flaming jealousy had delighted her with the full
perception of her beauty’s power. With a rush, however, the present forced
itself back upon her notice. “But I still don’t see why Count Samoval
should have offered me assistance if he did not intend to grant it when
the time came.”</p>
<p>Sylvia explained that it was from the Portuguese Government that the
demand for justice upon the violator of the nunnery at Tavora emanated,
and that Samoval’s offer might be calculated to obtain him information of
Butler’s whereabouts when they became known, so that he might surrender
him to the Government.</p>
<p>“My dear!” Lady O’Moy was shocked almost beyond expression. “How you must
dislike the man to suggest that he could be such a—such a Judas.”</p>
<p>“I do not suggest that he could be. I warn you never to run the risk of
testing him. He may be as honest in this matter as he pretends. But if
ever Dick were to come to you for help, you must take no risk.”</p>
<p>The phrase was a happier one than Sylvia could suppose. It was almost the
very phrase that Dick himself had used; and its reiteration by another
bore conviction to her ladyship.</p>
<p>“To whom then should I go?” she demanded plaintively. And Sylvia, speaking
with knowledge, remembering the promise that Tremayne had given her,
answered readily: “There is but one man whose assistance you could safely
seek. Indeed I wonder you should not have thought of him in the first
instance, since he is your own, as well as Dick’s lifelong friend.”</p>
<p>“Ned Tremayne?” Her ladyship fell into thought. “Do you know, I am a
little afraid of Ned. He is so very sober and cold. You do mean Ned—don’t
you?”</p>
<p>“Whom else should I mean?”</p>
<p>“But what could he do?”</p>
<p>“My dear, how should I know? But at least I know—for I think I can
be sure of this—that he will not lack the will to help you; and to
have the will, in a man like Captain Tremayne, is to find a way.”</p>
<p>The confident, almost respectful, tone in which she spoke arrested her
ladyship’s attention. It promptly sent her off at a tangent:</p>
<p>“You like Ned, don’t you, dear?”</p>
<p>“I think everybody likes him.” Sylvia’s voice was now studiously cold.</p>
<p>“Yes; but I don’t mean quite in that way.” And then before the subject
could be further pursued the carriage rolled to a standstill in a flood of
light from gaping portals, scattering a mob of curious sight-seers
intersprinkled with chairmen, footmen, linkmen and all the valetaille that
hovers about the functions of the great world.</p>
<p>The carriage door was flung open and the steps let down. A brace of
footmen, plump as capons, in gorgeous liveries, bowed powdered heads and
proffered scarlet arms to assist the ladies to alight.</p>
<p>Above in the crowded, spacious, colonnaded vestibule at the foot of the
great staircase they were met-by Captain Tremayne, who had just arrived
with Major Carruthers, both resplendent in full dress, and Captain Marcus
Glennie of the Telemachus in blue and gold. Together they ascended the
great staircase, lined with chatting groups, and ablaze with uniforms,
military, naval and diplomatic, British and Portuguese, to be welcomed
above by the Count and Countess of Redondo.</p>
<p>Lady O’Moy’s entrance of the ballroom produced the effect to which custom
had by now inured her. Soon she found herself the centre of assiduous
attentions. Cavalrymen in blue, riflemen in green, scarlet officers of the
line regiments, winged light-infantrymen, rakishly pelissed, gold-braided
hussars and all the smaller fry of court and camp fluttered insistently
about her. It was no novelty to her who had been the recipient of such
homage since her first ball five years ago at Dublin Castle, and yet the
wine of it had gone ever to her head a little. But to-night she was rather
pale and listless, her rose-petal loveliness emphasised thereby perhaps.
An unusual air of indifference hung about her as she stood there amid this
throng of martial jostlers who craved the honour of a dance and at whom
she smiled a thought mechanically over the top of her slowly moving fan.</p>
<p>The first quadrille impended, and the senior service had carried off the
prize from under the noses of the landsmen. As she was swept away by
Captain Glennie, she came face to face with Tremayne, who was passing with
Sylvia on his arm. She stopped and tapped his arm with her fan.</p>
<p>“You haven’t asked to dance, Ned,” she reproached him.</p>
<p>“With reluctance I abstained.”</p>
<p>“But I don’t intend that you shall. I have something to say to you.” He
met her glance, and found it oddly serious—most oddly serious for
her. Responding to its entreaty, he murmured a promise in courteous terms
of delight at so much honour.</p>
<p>But either he forgot the promise or did not conceive its redemption to be
an urgent matter, for the quadrille being done he sauntered through one of
the crowded ante-rooms with Miss Armytage and brought her to the cool of a
deserted balcony above the garden. Beyond this was the river, agleam with
the lights of the British fleet that rode at anchor on its placid bosom.</p>
<p>“Una will be waiting for you,” Miss Armytage reminded him. She was leaning
on the sill of the balcony. Standing erect beside her, he considered the
graceful profile sharply outlined against a background of gloom by the
light from the windows behind them. A heavy curl of her dark hair lay upon
a neck as flawlessly white as the rope of pearls that swung from it, with
which her fingers were now idly toying. It were difficult to say which
most engaged his thoughts: the profile; the lovely line of neck; or the
rope of pearls. These latter were of price, such things as it might seldom—and
then only by sacrifice—lie within the means of Captain Tremayne to
offer to the woman whom he took to wife.</p>
<p>He so lost himself upon that train of thought that she was forced to
repeat her reminder.</p>
<p>“Una will be waiting for you, Captain Tremayne.”</p>
<p>“Scarcely as eagerly,” he answered, “as others will be waiting for you.”</p>
<p>She laughed amusedly, a frank, boyish laugh. “I thank you for not saying
as eagerly as I am waiting for others.”</p>
<p>“Miss Armytage, I have ever cultivated truth.”</p>
<p>“But we are dealing with surmise.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no surmise at all. I speak of what I know.”</p>
<p>“And so do I.” And yet again she repeated: “Una will be waiting for you.”</p>
<p>He sighed, and stiffened slightly. “Of course if you insist,” said he, and
made ready to reconduct her.</p>
<p>She swung round as if to go, but checked, and looked him frankly in the
eyes.</p>
<p>“Why will you for ever be misunderstanding me?” she challenged him.</p>
<p>“Perhaps it is the inevitable result of my overanxiety to understand.”</p>
<p>“Then begin by taking me more literally, and do not read into my words
more meaning than I intend to give them. When I say Una is waiting for
you, I state a simple fact, not a command that you shall go to her. Indeed
I want first to talk to you.”</p>
<p>“If I might take you literally now—”</p>
<p>“Should I have suffered you to bring me here if I did not?”</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon,” he said, contrite, and something shaken out of his
imperturbability. “Sylvia,” he ventured very boldly, and there checked, so
terrified as to be a shame to his brave scarlet, gold-laced uniform.</p>
<p>“Yes?” she said. She was leaning upon the balcony again, and in such a way
now that he could no longer see her profile. But her fingers were busy at
the pearls once more, and this he saw, and seeing, recovered himself.</p>
<p>“You have something to say to me?” he questioned in his smooth, level
voice.</p>
<p>Had he not looked away as he spoke he might have observed that her fingers
tightened their grip of the pearls almost convulsively, as if to break the
rope. It was a gesture slight and trivial, yet arguing perhaps vexation.
But Tremayne did not see it, and had he seen it, it is odds it would have
conveyed no message to him.</p>
<p>There fell a long pause, which he did not venture to break. At last she
spoke, her voice quiet and level as his own had been.</p>
<p>“It is about Una.”</p>
<p>“I had hoped,” he spoke very softly, “that it was about yourself.”</p>
<p>She flashed round upon him almost angrily. “Why do you utter these set
speeches to me?” she demanded. And then before he could recover from his
astonishment to make any answer she had resumed a normal manner, and was
talking quickly.</p>
<p>She told him of Una’s premonitions about Dick. Told him, in short, what it
was that Una desired to talk to him about.</p>
<p>“You bade her come to me?” he said.</p>
<p>“Of course. After your promise to me.”</p>
<p>He was silent and very thoughtful for a moment. “I wonder that Una needed
to be told that she had in me a friend,” he said slowly.</p>
<p>“I wonder to whom she would have gone on her own impulse?”</p>
<p>“To Count Samoval,” Miss Armytage informed him.</p>
<p>“Samoval!” he rapped the name out sharply. He was clearly angry. “That
man! I can’t understand why O’Moy should suffer him about the house so
much.”</p>
<p>“Terence, like everybody else, will suffer anything that Una wishes.”</p>
<p>“Then Terence is more of a fool than I ever suspected.”</p>
<p>There was a brief pause. “If you were to fail Una in this,” said Miss
Armytage presently, “I mean that unless you yourself give her the
assurance that you are ready to do what you can for Dick, should the
occasion arise, I am afraid that in her present foolish mood she may still
avail herself of Count Samoval. That would be to give Samoval a hold upon
her; and I tremble to think what the consequences might be. That man is a
snake—a horror.”</p>
<p>The frankness with which she spoke was to Tremayne full evidence of her
anxiety. He was prompt to allay it.</p>
<p>“She shall have that assurance this very evening,” he promised.</p>
<p>“I at least have not pledged my word to anything or to any one. Even so,”
he added slowly, “the chances of my services being ever required grow more
slender every day. Una may be full of premonitions about Dick. But between
premonition and event there is something of a gap.”</p>
<p>Again a pause, and then: “I am glad,” said Miss Armytage, “to think that
Una has a friend, a trustworthy friend, upon whom she can depend. She is
so incapable of depending upon herself. All her life there has been some
one at hand to guide her and screen her from unpleasantness until she has
remained just a sweet, dear child to be taken by the hand in every dark
lane of life.”</p>
<p>“But she has you, Miss Armytage.”</p>
<p>“Me?” Miss Armytage spoke deprecatingly. “I don’t think I am a very able
or experienced guide. Besides, even such as I am, she may not have me very
long now. I had letters from home this morning. Father is not very well,
and mother writes that he misses me. I am thinking of returning soon.”</p>
<p>“But—but you have only just come!”</p>
<p>She brightened and laughed at the dismay in his voice. “Indeed, I have
been here six weeks.” She looked out over the shimmering moonlit waters of
the Tagus and the shadowy, ghostly ships of the British fleet that rode at
anchor there, and her eyes were wistful. Her fingers, with that little
gesture peculiar to her in moments of constraint, were again entwining
themselves in her rope of pearls. “Yes,” she said almost musingly, “I
think I must be going soon.”</p>
<p>He was dismayed. He realised that the moment for action had come. His
heart was sounding the charge within him. And then that cursed rope of
pearls, emblem of the wealth and luxury in which she had been nurtured,
stood like an impassable abattis across his path.</p>
<p>“You—you will be glad to go, of course?” he suggested.</p>
<p>“Hardly that. It has been very pleasant here.” She sighed.</p>
<p>“We shall miss you very much,” he said gloomily. “The house at Monsanto
will not be the same when you are gone. Una will be lost and desolate
without you.”</p>
<p>“It occurs to me sometimes,” she said slowly, “that the people about Una
think too much of Una and too little of themselves.”</p>
<p>It was a cryptic speech. In another it might have signified a spitefulness
unthinkable in Sylvia Armytage; therefore it puzzled him very deeply. He
stood silent, wondering what precisely she might mean, and thus in silence
they continued for a spell. Then slowly she turned and the blaze of light
from the windows fell about her irradiantly. She was rather pale, and her
eyes were of a suspiciously excessive brightness. And again she made use
of the phrase:</p>
<p>“Una will be waiting for you.”</p>
<p>Yet, as before, he stood silent and immovable, considering her,
questioning himself, searching her face and his own soul. All he saw was
that rope of shimmering pearls.</p>
<p>“And after all, as yourself suggested, it is possible that others may be
waiting for me,” she added presently.</p>
<p>Instantly he was crestfallen and contrite. “I sincerely beg your pardon,
Miss Armytage,” and with a pang of which his imperturbable exterior gave
no hint he proffered her his arm.</p>
<p>She took it, barely touching it with her finger-tips, and they re-entered
the ante-room.</p>
<p>“When do you think that you will be leaving?” he asked her gently.</p>
<p>There was a note of harshness in the voice that answered him.</p>
<p>“I don’t know yet. But very soon. The sooner the better, I think.”</p>
<p>And then the sleek and courtly Samoval, detaching from, seeming to
materialise out of, the glittering throng they had entered, was bowing low
before her, claiming her attention. Knowing her feelings, Tremayne would
not have relinquished her, but to his infinite amazement she herself
slipped her fingers from his scarlet sleeve, to place them upon the black
one that Samoval was gracefully proffering, and greeted Samoval with a gay
raillery as oddly in contrast with her grave demeanour towards the captain
as with her recent avowal of detestation for the Count.</p>
<p>Stricken and half angry, Tremayne stood looking after them as they receded
towards the ballroom. To increase his chagrin came a laugh from Miss
Armytage, sharp and rather strident, floating towards him, and Miss
Armytage’s laugh was wont to be low and restrained. Samoval, no doubt, had
resources to amuse a woman—even a woman who instinctively, disliked
him—resources of which Captain Tremayne himself knew nothing.</p>
<p>And then some one tapped him on the shoulder. A very tall, hawk-faced man
in a scarlet coat and tightly strapped blue trousers stood beside him. It
was Colquhoun Grant, the ablest intelligence officer in Wellington’s
service.</p>
<p>“Why, Colonel!” cried Tremayne, holding out his hand. “I didn’t know you
were in Lisbon.”</p>
<p>“I arrived only this afternoon.” The keen eyes flashed after the
disappearing figures of Sylvia and her cavalier. “Tell me, what is the
name of the irresistible gallant who has so lightly ravished you of your
quite delicious companion?”</p>
<p>“Count Samoval,” said Tremayne shortly.</p>
<p>Grant’s face remained inscrutable. “Really!” he said softly. “So that is
Jeronymo de Samoval, eh? How very interesting. A great supporter of the
British policy; therefore an altruist, since himself he is a sufferer by
it; and I hear that he has become a great friend of O’Moy’s.”</p>
<p>“He is at Monsanto a good deal certainly,” Tremayne admitted.</p>
<p>“Most interesting.” Grant was slowly nodding, and a faint smile curled his
thin, sensitive lips. “But I’m keeping you, Tremayne, and no doubt you
would be dancing. I shall perhaps see you to-morrow. I shall be coming up
to Monsanto.”</p>
<p>And with a wave of the hand he passed on and was gone.</p>
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