PROLOGUE
THE
FIRST CRUISE OF THE
ASTRONEFAbout
eight o'clock on the morning of the 5th of November, 1900, those of
the passengers and crew of the American liner
St. Louis who
happened, whether from causes of duty or of their own pleasure, to
be
on deck, had a very strange—in fact a quite unprecedented
experience.The
big ship was ploughing her way through the long, smooth rollers at
her average twenty-one knots towards the rising sun, when the
officer
in charge of the navigating bridge happened to turn his glasses
straight ahead. He took them down from his eyes, rubbed the two
object-glasses with the cuff of his coat, and looked again. The sun
was shining through a haze which so far dimmed the solar disc that
it
was possible to look straight at it without inconvenience to the
eyes.The
officer took another long squint, put his glasses down, rubbed his
eyes and took another, and murmured, "Well I'm damned!"Just
then the Fourth Officer came up on to the bridge to relieve his
senior while he went down for a cup of coffee and a biscuit. The
Second took him away to the other end of the bridge, out of hearing
of the helmsman and the quartermaster standing by, and said almost
in
a whisper:"Say,
Norton, there's something ahead there that I can't make out. Just
as
the sun got clear above the horizon I saw a black spot go straight
across it, right through the upper and lower limbs. I looked again,
and it was plumb in the middle of the disc. Look," he went on,
speaking louder in his growing excitement, "there it is again! I
can see it without the glasses now. See?"The
Fourth did not reply at once. He had the glasses close to his eyes,
and was moving them slowly about as though he were following some
shifting object in the sky. Then he handed them back, and
said:"If
I didn't believe the thing was impossible I should say that's an
air-ship; but, for the present, I guess I'd rather wait till it
gets
a bit nearer, if it's coming. Still, there
is something. Seems
to be getting bigger pretty fast, too. Perhaps it would be as well
to
notify the old man. What do you think?""Guess
we'd better," said the Second. "S'pose you go down. Don't
say anything except to him. We don't want any more excitement among
the people than we can help."The
Fourth nodded and went down the steps, and the Second began walking
up and down the bridge, every now and then taking another squint
ahead. Again and again the mysterious shape crossed the disc of the
sun, always vertically as though, whatever it might be, it was
steering a direct course from the sun to the ship, its apparent
rising and falling being due really to the dipping of her bows into
the swells."Well,
Mr. Charteris, what's the trouble?" said the Skipper as he
reached the bridge. "Nothing wrong, I hope? Have you sighted a
derelict, or what? Ay, what in hell's that!"His
hands went up to his eyes and he stared for a few moments at the
pale
yellow oblate shape of the sun.At
this moment the St.
Louis' head dipped
again, and the Captain saw something like a black line swiftly
drawn
across the sun from bottom to top."That's
what I wanted to call your attention to, sir," said the Second
in a low tone. "I first noticed it crossing the sun as it rose
through the mist. I thought it was a spot of dirt on my glasses,
but
it has crossed the sun several times since then, and for some
minutes
seemed to remain dead in the middle of it. Later on it got quite a
lot larger, and whatever it is it's approaching us pretty rapidly.
You see it's quite plain to the naked eye now."By
this time several of the crew and of the early loungers on deck had
also caught sight of the strange thing which seemed to be hanging
and
swinging between the sky and the sea. People dived below for their
glasses, knocked at their friends' state-room doors and told them
to
get up because something was flying towards the ship through the
air;
and in a very few minutes there were hundreds of passengers on deck
in all varieties of early morning costume, and scores of glasses,
held to anxious eyes, were being directed ahead.The
glasses, however, soon became unnecessary, for the passengers had
scarcely got up on deck before the mysterious object to the
eastward
at length took definite shape, and as it did so mouths were opened
as
well as eyes, for the owners of the eyes and mouths beheld just
then
the strangest sight that travellers by sea or land had ever
seen.Within
the distance of about a mile it swung round at right angles to the
steamer's course with a rapidity which plainly showed that it was
entirely obedient to the control of a guiding intelligence, and
hundreds of eager eyes on board the liner saw, sweeping down from
the
grey-blue of the early morning sky, a vessel whose hull seemed to
be
constructed of some metal which shone with a pale, steely
lustre.It
was pointed at both ends, the forward end being shaped something
like
a spur or ram. At the after end were two flickering, interlacing
circles of a glittering greenish-yellow colour, apparently formed
by
two intersecting propellers driven at an enormous velocity. Behind
these was a vertical fan of triangular shape. The craft appeared to
be flat-bottomed, and for about a third of her length amidships the
upper half of her hull was covered with a curving, domelike roof of
glass."She's
an air-ship of some sort, there's no doubt about that," said the
Captain, "so I guess the great problem has got solved at last.
And yet it ain't a balloon, because it's coming against the wind,
and
it's nothing of the æroplane sort neither, because it hasn't planes
or kites or any fixings of that kind. Still it's made of something
like metal and glass, and it must take a lot of keeping up. It's
travelling at a pretty healthy speed too. Getting on for a hundred
miles an hour, I should guess. Ah! he's going to speak us! Hope
he's
honest."Everybody
on board the St.
Louis was up on
deck by this time, and the excitement rose to fever-heat as the
strange vessel swept down towards them from the middle sky, passed
them like a flash of light, swung round the stern, and ranged up
alongside to starboard some twenty feet from the bridge
rail.She
was about a hundred and twenty feet long, with some twenty feet of
depth and thirty of beam, and the Captain and many of his officers
and passengers were very much relieved to find that, as far as
could
be seen, she carried no weapons of offence.As
she ranged up alongside, a sliding door opened in the glass-domed
roof amidships, just opposite to the end of the
St. Louis' bridge.
A tall, fair-haired, clean-featured man, of about thirty, in grey
flannels, tipped up his golf cap with his thumb, and said:"Good
morning, Captain! You remember me, I suppose? Had a fine passage,
so
far? I thought I should meet you somewhere about here."The
Captain of the St.
Louis, in common
with every one else on board, had already had his credulity
stretched
about as far as it would go, and he was beginning to wonder whether
he was really awake; but when he heard the hail and recognised the
speaker he stared at him in blank and, for the moment, speechless
bewilderment. Then he got hold of his voice again and said, keeping
as steady as he could:"Good
morning, my Lord! Guess I never expected to meet even you like this
in the middle of the Atlantic! So the newspaper men were right for
once in a way, and you
have got an
air-ship that will fly?""And
a good deal more than that, Captain, if she wants to. I am just
taking a trial trip across the Atlantic before I start on a run
round
the Solar System. Sounds like a lie, doesn't it? But it's coming
off.
Oh, good morning, Miss Rennick! Captain, may I come on
board?""By
all means, my Lord, only I'm afraid I daren't stop Uncle Sam's
mails,
even for you.""There's
no need for that, Captain, on a smooth sea like this," was the
reply. "Just keep on as you are going and I'll come
alongside."He
put his head inside the door and called something up a
speaking-tube
which led to a glass-walled chamber in the forward part of the
roof,
where a motionless figure stood before a little steering
wheel.The
craft immediately began to edge nearer and nearer to the liner's
rail, keeping speed so exactly with her that the threshold of the
door touched the end of the bridge without a perceptible jar. Then
the flannel-clad figure jumped on to the bridge and held out his
hand
to the Captain.As
they shook hands he said in a low tone, "I want a word or two in
private with you, as soon as possible."The
commander saw a very serious meaning in his eyes. Besides, even if
he
had not made his appearance under such extraordinary circumstances,
it was quite impossible that one of his social position and his
wealth and influence could have made such a request without good
reason for it, so he replied:"Certainly,
my Lord. Will you come down to my room?"Hundreds
of anxious, curious eyes looked upon the tall athletic figure and
the
regular-featured, bronzed, honest English face as Rollo Lenox
Smeaton
Aubrey, Earl of Redgrave, Baron Smeaton in the Peerage of England,
and Viscount Aubrey in the Peerage of Ireland, followed the Captain
to his room through the parting crowd of passengers. He nodded to
one
or two familiar faces in the crowd, for he was an old Atlantic
ferryman, and had crossed five times with Captain Hawkins in
the
St. Louis.Then
he caught sight of a well and fondly remembered face which he had
not
seen for over two years. It was a face which possessed at once the
fair Anglo-Saxon skin, the firm and yet delicate Anglo-Saxon
features, and the wavy wealth of the old Saxon gold-brown hair; but
a
pair of big, soft, pansy eyes, fringed with long, curling, black
lashes, looked out from under dark and perhaps just a trifle heavy
eyebrows. Moreover, there was that indescribable expression in the
curve of her lips and the pose of her head; to say nothing of a
lissome, vivacious grace in her whole carriage which proclaimed her
a
daughter of the younger branch of the Race that Rules.Their
eyes met for an instant, and Lord Redgrave was startled and even a
trifle angered to see that she flushed up quickly, and that the
momentary smile with which she greeted him died away as she turned
her head aside. Still, he was a man accustomed to do what he
wanted:
and what he wanted to do just then was to shake hands with Lilla
Zaidie Rennick, and so he went straight towards her, raised his
cap,
and held out his hand saying, first with a glance into her eyes,
and
then with one upward at the
Astronef:"Good
morning again, Miss Rennick! You see it is done.""Good
morning, Lord Redgrave!" she replied, he thought, a little
awkwardly. "Yes, I see you have kept your promise. What a pity
it is too late! But I hope you will be able to stop long enough to
tell us all about it. This is Mrs. Van Stuyler, who has taken me
under her protection on my journey to Europe."His
lordship returned the bow of a tall, somewhat hard-featured matron
who looked dignified even in the somewhat nondescript costume which
most of the ladies were wearing. But her eyes were kindly, and he
said:"Very
pleased to meet, Mrs. Van Stuyler. I heard you were coming, and I
was
in hopes of catching you on the other side before you left. And
now,
if you will excuse me, I must go and have a chat with the Skipper."
He raised his cap again and presently vanished from the curious
eyes
of the excited crowd, through the door of the Captain's
apartment.Captain
Hawkins closed the door of his sitting-room as he entered, and
said:"Now,
my Lord, I'm not going to ask you any questions to begin with,
because if I once began I should never stop; and besides, perhaps
you'd like to have your own say right away.""Perhaps
that will be the shortest way," said his lordship. "The
fact is, we've not only the remains of this Boer business on our
hands, but we've had what is practically a declaration of war from
France and Russia. Briefly it's this way. A few weeks ago, while
the
Allies thought they were fighting the Boxers, it came to the
knowledge of my brother, the Foreign Secretary, that the
Tsung-li-Yamen had concluded a secret treaty with Russia which
practically annulled all our rights over the Yang-tse Valley, and
gave Russia the right to bring her Northern Railway right down
through China."As
you know, we've stood a lot too much in that part of the world
already, but we couldn't stand this; so about ten days ago an
ultimatum was sent declaring that the British Government would
consider any encroachment on the Yang-tse Valley as an unfriendly
act."Meanwhile
France chipped in with a notification that she was going to occupy
Morocco as a compensation for Fashoda, and added a few nasty things
about Egypt and other places. Of course we couldn't stand that
either, so there was another ultimatum, and the upshot of it all
was
that I got a wire late last night from my brother telling me that
war
would almost certainly be declared to-day, and asking me for the
use
of this craft of mine as a sort of dispatch-boat if she was ready.
She is intended for something very much better than fighting
purposes, so he couldn't ask me to use her as a war-ship; besides,
I
am under a solemn obligation to her inventor—her creator, in fact,
for I've only built her—to blow her to pieces rather than allow her
to be used as a fighting machine except, of course, in sheer
personal
self-defence."There
is the telegram from my brother, so you can see there's no mistake,
and just after it came a messenger asking me, if the machine was a
success, to bring this with me across the Atlantic as fast as I
could
come. It is the duplicate of an offensive and defensive alliance
between Great Britain and the United States, of which the details
had
been arranged just as this complication arose. Another is coming
across by a fast cruiser, and, of course, the news will have got to
Washington by cable by this time."By
the time you get to the entrance of the Channel you will probably
find it swarming with French cruisers and torpedo-destroyers, so if
you'll be advised by me, you'll leave Queenstown out and get as far
north as possible.""Lord
Redgrave," said the Captain, putting out his hand, "I'm
responsible for a good bit right here, and I don't know how to
thank
you enough. I guess that treaty's been given away back to France by
some of our Irish statesmen by now, and it'd be mighty unhealthy
for
the St. Louis
to fall in with a French or Russian cruiser——""That's
all right, Captain," said Lord Redgrave, taking his hand. "I
should have warned any other British or American ship. At the same
time, I must confess that my motives in warning you were not
entirely
unselfish. The fact is, there's some one on board the
St. Louis whom I
should decidedly object to see taken off to France as a prisoner of
war.""And
may I ask who that is?" said Captain Hawkins."Why
not?" replied his lordship. "It's the young lady I spoke to
on deck just now, Miss Rennick. Her father was the inventor of that
craft of mine. No one would believe his theories. He was refused
patents both in England and America on the ground of lack of
practical utility. I met him about two years ago, that is to say
rather more than a year before his death, when I was stopping at
Banff up in the Canadian Rockies. We made a travellers'
acquaintance,
and he told me about this idea of his. I was very much interested,
but I'm afraid I must confess that I might not have taken it up
practically if the Professor hadn't happened to possess an
exceedingly beautiful daughter. However, of course I'm pretty glad
now that I did do it; though the experiments cost nearly five
thousand pounds and the craft herself close on a quarter of a
million. Still, she is worth every penny of it, and I was bringing
her over to offer to Miss Rennick as a wedding present, that is to
say if she'd have it—and me."Captain
Hawkins looked up and said rather seriously:"Then,
my Lord, I presume you don't know——""Don't
know what?""That
Miss Rennick is crossing in the care of Mrs. Van Stuyler, to be
married in London next month.""The
devil she is! And to whom, may I ask?" exclaimed his lordship,
pulling himself up very straight."To
the Marquis of Byfleet, son of the Duke of Duncaster. I wonder you
didn't hear of it. The match was arranged last fall. From what
people
say she's not very desperately in love with him, but—well, I fancy
it's like rather too many of these Anglo-American matches. A couple
of million dollars on one side, a title on the other, and mighty
little real love between them.""But,"
said Redgrave between his teeth, "I didn't understand that Miss
Rennick ever had a fortune; in fact I'm quite certain that if her
father had been a rich man he'd have worked out his invention
himself.""Oh,
the dollars aren't his. In fact they won't be hers till she
marries,"
replied the Captain. "They belong to her uncle, old Russell
Rennick. He got in on the ground floor of the New York and Chicago
ice trusts, and made millions. He's going to spend some of them on
making his niece a Marchioness. That's about all there is to
it.""Oh,
indeed!" said Redgrave, still between his teeth. "Well,
considering that Byfleet is about as big a wastrel as ever
disgraced
the English aristocracy, I don't think either Miss Rennick or her
uncle will make a very good bargain. However, of course that's no
affair of mine now. I remember that this Russell Rennick refused to
finance his brother when he really wanted the money. He made a
particularly bad bargain, too, then, though he didn't know it; for
a
dozen crafts like that, properly armed, would simply smash up the
navies of the world, and make sea-power a private trust. After all,
I'm not particularly sorry, because then it wouldn't have belonged
to
me. Well now, Captain, I'm going to ask you to give me a bit of
breakfast when it's ready, and then I must be off. I want to be in
Washington to-night.""To-night!
What, twenty-one hundred miles!""Why
not?" said Redgrave; "I can do about a hundred and fifty an
hour through the atmosphere, and then, you see, if that isn't fast
enough I can rise outside the earth's attraction, let it spin
round,
and then come down where I want to.""Great
Scott!" remarked Captain Hawkins inadequately, but with
emphasis. "Well, my Lord, I guess we'll go down to
breakfast."But
breakfast was not quite ready, and so Lord Redgrave rejoined Miss
Rennick and her chaperon on deck. All eyes and a good many glasses
were still turned on the
Astronef, which had
now moved a few feet away from the liner's side, and was running
along, exactly keeping pace with her."It's
so wonderful, that even seeing doesn't seem believing," said the
girl, when they had renewed their acquaintance of two years
before."Well,"
he replied, "it would be very easy to convince you. She shall
come alongside again, and if you and Mrs. Van Stuyler will honour
her
by your presence for half an hour while breakfast is getting ready,
I
think I shall be able to convince you that she is not the airy
fabric
of a vision, but simply the realisation in metal and glass and
other
things of visions which your father saw some years ago."There
was no resisting an invitation put in such a way. Besides, the
prospect of becoming the wonder and envy of every other woman on
board was altogether too dazzling for words.Mrs.
Van Stuyler looked a little aghast at the idea at first, but she
too
had something of the same feeling as Zaidie, and besides, there
could
hardly be any impropriety in accepting the invitation of one of the
wealthiest and most distinguished noblemen in the British Peerage.
So, after a little demur and a slight manifestation of nervousness,
she consented.Redgrave
signalled to the man at the steering wheel. The
Astronef slackened
pace a little, dropped a yard or so, and slid up quite close to the
bridge-rail again. Lord Redgrave got in first and ran a light
gangway
down on to the bridge. Zaidie and Mrs. Van Stuyler were carefully
handed up. The next moment the gangway was drawn up again, the
sliding glass doors clashed to, the
Astronef leapt a
couple of thousand feet into the air, swept round to the westward
in
a magnificent curve, and vanished into the gloom of the upper
mists.
CHAPTER I
The
situation was one which was absolutely without parallel in all the
history of courtship from the days of Mother Eve to those of Miss
Lilla Zaidie Rennick. The nearest approach to it would have been
the
old-fashioned Tartar custom which made it lawful for a man to steal
his best girl, if he could get her first, fling her across his
horse's crupper and ride away with her to his tent.But
to the shocked senses of Mrs. Van Stuyler the present adventure
appeared a great deal more terrible than that. Both Zaidie and
herself had sprung to their feet as soon as the upward rush of
the
Astronef had
slackened and they were released from their seats. They looked down
through the glass walls of what may be called the hurricane
deck-chamber of the
Astronef, and saw
below them a snowy sea of clouds just crimsoned by the rising
sun.In
this cloud-sea, which spread like a wide-meshed veil between them
and
the earth, there were great irregular rifts which looked as big as
continents on a map. These had a blue-grey background, or it might
be
more correct to say under-ground, and in the midst of one of these
they saw a little black speck which after a moment or two took the
shape of a little toy ship, and presently they recognised it as the
eleven-thousand-ton liner which a few moments ago had been their
ocean home.Mrs.
Van Stuyler was shaking in every muscle, afflicted by a sort of St.
Vitus' dance induced by physical fear and outraged propriety. Quite
apart from these, however, she experienced a third sensation which
made for a nameless inquietude. She was a woman of the world, well
versed in most of its ways, and she fully recognised that that
single
bound from the bridge-rail of the
St. Louis to the
other side of the clouds had already carried her and her charge
beyond the pale of human law.The
same thought, mingled with other feelings, half of wonder and half
of
re-awakened tenderness, was just then uppermost in Miss Zaidie's
mind. It was quite obvious that the man who could create and
control
such a marvellous vehicle as this could, morally as well as
physically, lift himself beyond the reach of the conventions which
civilised society had instituted for its own protection and
government.He
could do with them exactly as he pleased. They were utterly at his
mercy. He might carry them away to some unexplored spot on one of
the
continents, or to some unknown island in the midst of the wide
Pacific. He might even transport them into the midst of the awful
solitudes which surround the Poles. He could give them the choice
between doing as he wished, submitting unconditionally to his will,
or committing suicide by starvation.They
had not even the option of jumping out, for they did not know how
to
open the sliding doors; and even if they had done, what feminine
nerves could have faced a leap into that awful gulf which lay below
them, a two-thousand-foot dive through the clouds into the waters
of
the wintry Atlantic?They
looked at each other in speechless, dazed amazement. Far away below
them on the other side of the clouds the
St. Louis was
steaming eastward, and with her were going the last hopes of the
coronet which was to be the matrimonial equivalent of Miss Zaidie's
beauty and Russell Rennick's millions.They
were no longer of the world. Its laws could no longer protect them.
Anything might happen, and that anything depended absolutely on the
will of the lord and master of the extraordinary vessel which, for
the present, was their only world."My
dearest Zaidie," Mrs. Van Stuyler gasped, when she at length
recovered the power of articulate speech, "what an entirely too
awful thing this is! Why, it's abduction and nothing less. Indeed
it's worse, for he's taken us clean off the earth, and there's no
more chance of rescue than if he took us to one of those planets he
said he could go to. If I didn't feel a great responsibility for
you,
dear, I believe I should faint."By
this time Miss Zaidie had recovered a good deal of her usual
composure. The excitement of the upward rush, and what was left of
the momentary physical fear, had flushed her cheeks and lighted her
eyes. Even Mrs. Van Stuyler thought her looking, if possible, more
beautiful than she had done under the most favourable of
terrestrial
circumstances. There was a something else too, which she didn't
altogether like to see, a sort of resignation to her fate which, in
a
young lady situated as she was then, Mrs. Van Stuyler considered to
be distinctly improper."It
is rather startling, isn't it?" she said, with hardly a trace of
emotion in her voice; "but I have no doubt that everything will
be all right in the end.""Everything
all right, my dear Zaidie! What on earth, or I might say under
heaven, do you mean?""I
mean," replied Zaidie even more composedly than before, and also
with a little tightening of her lips, "that Lord Redgrave is the
owner of this vessel, and that therefore it is quite impossible
that
anything out of the way could happen to us—I mean anything more out
of the way than this wonderful jump from the sea to the sky has
been,
unless, of course, Lord Redgrave is going to take us for a voyage
among the stars.""Zaidie
Rennick!" said Mrs. Van Stuyler, bridling up into her most
frigid dignity, "I am more than surprised to hear you talk in
such a strain. Perfectly safe, indeed! Has it not struck you that
we
are absolutely at this man's—this Lord Redgrave's, mercy, that he
can take us where he likes, and treat us just as he
pleases?""My
dear Mrs. Van," replied Zaidie, dropping back into her familiar
form of address, but speaking even more frigidly than her chaperon
had done, "you seem to forget that, however extraordinary our
situation may be just now, we are in the care of an English
gentleman. Lord Redgrave was a friend of my father's, the only man
who believed in his ideals, the only man who realised them, the
only
man——""That
you were ever in love with, eh?" said Mrs. Van Stuyler with a
snap in her voice. "Is that so? Ah, I begin to see something
now.""And
I think, if you possess your soul in patience, you will see
something
more before long," snapped Miss Zaidie in reply. Then she
stopped abruptly and the flush on her cheek deepened, for at that
moment Lord Redgrave came up the companion way from the lower deck
carrying a big silver tray with a coffee pot, three cups and
saucers,
a rack of toast, and a couple of plates of bread and butter and
cake.Just
then a sort of social miracle happened. The fact was that Mrs. Van
Stuyler had never before had her early coffee brought to her by a
peer of the British Realm. She thought it a little humiliating
afterwards, but for the moment all sorts of conventional barriers
seemed to melt away. After all she was a woman, and some years ago
she had been a young one. Lord Redgrave was an almost perfect
specimen of English manhood in its early prime. He was one of the
richest peers in England, and he was bringing her her coffee. As
she
said afterwards, she wilted, and she couldn't help it."I'm
afraid I have kept you waiting a long time for your coffee,
ladies,"
said Redgrave, as he balanced the tray on one hand and drew a
wicker
table towards them with the other. "You see there are only two
of us on board this craft, and as my engineer is navigating the
ship,
I have to attend to the domestic arrangements."Mrs.
Van Stuyler looked at him in the silence of mental paralysis. Miss
Zaidie frowned, smiled, and then began to laugh."Well,
of all the cold-blooded English ways of putting things——"
she began."I
beg your pardon?" said Lord Redgrave as he put the tray down on
the table."What
Miss Rennick means, Lord Redgrave," interrupted Mrs. Van
Stuyler, struggling out of her paralytic condition, "and what I,
too, should like to say, is that under the circumstances——""You
think that I am not as penitent as I ought to be. Is that so?"
said Redgrave, with a glance and a smile mostly directed towards
Miss
Zaidie. "Well, to tell you the truth," he went on, "I
am not a bit penitent. On the contrary, I am very glad to have been
able to assist the Fates as far as I have done.""Assist
the Fates!" gasped Mrs. Van Stuyler, helping herself shakingly
to sugar, while Miss Zaidie folded a gossamer slice of bread and
butter and began to eat it; "I think, Lord Redgrave, that if you
knew all
the circumstances, you would say that you were working against
them.""My
dear Mrs. Van Stuyler," he replied, as he filled his own coffee
cup, "I quite agree with you as to certain fates, but the Fates
which I mean are the ones which, with good or bad reason, I think
are
working on my side. Besides, I
do know all the
circumstances, or at least the most important of them. That
knowledge
is, in fact, my principal excuse for bringing you so
unceremoniously
above the clouds."As
he said this he took a sideway glance at Miss Zaidie. She dropped
her
eyelids and went on eating her bread and butter; but there was a
little deepening of the flush on her cheeks which was to him as the
first flush of sunrise to a benighted wanderer.There
was a rather awkward silence after this. Miss Zaidie stirred the
coffee in her cup with a dainty Queen Anne spoon, and seemed to
concentrate the whole of her attention upon the operation. Then
Mrs.
Van Stuyler took a sip out of her cup and said:"But
really, Lord Redgrave, I feel that I must ask you whether you think
that what you have done during the last few minutes (which already,
I
assure you, seem hours to me) is—well, quite in accordance with
the—what shall I say—ah, the rules that we have been accustomed
to live under?"Lord
Redgrave looked at Miss Zaidie again. She didn't even raise her
eyelids, only a very slight tremor of her hand as she raised her
cup
to her lips told that she was even listening. He took courage from
this sign, and replied:"My
dear Mrs. Van Stuyler, the only answer that I can make to that just
now is to remind you that, by the sanction of ages, everything is
supposed to be fair under two sets of circumstances, and, whatever
is
happening on the earth down yonder, we, I think, are not at
war."The
next moment Miss Zaidie's eyelids lifted a little. There was a
tremor
about her lips almost too faint to be perceptible, and the
slightest
possible tinge of colour crept upwards towards her eyes. She put
her
cup down and got up, walked towards the glass walls of the
deck-chamber, and looked out over the cloud-scape.The
shortness of her steamer skirt made it possible for Lord Redgrave
and
Mrs. Van Stuyler to see that the sole of her right boot was
swinging
up and down on the heel ever so slightly. They came simultaneously
to
the conclusion that if she had been alone she would have stamped,
and
stamped pretty hard. Possibly also she would have said things to
herself and the surrounding silence. This seemed probable from the
almost equally imperceptible motion of her shapely
shoulders.Mrs.
Van Stuyler recognised in a moment that her charge was getting
angry.
She knew by experience that Miss Zaidie possessed a very proper
spirit of her own, and that it was just as well not to push matters
too far. She further recognised that the circumstances were
extraordinary, not to say equivocal, and that she herself occupied
a
distinctly peculiar position.She
had accepted the charge of Miss Zaidie from her Uncle Russell for a
consideration counted partly by social advantages and partly by
dollars. In the most perfect innocence she had permitted not only
her
charge but herself to be abducted—for, after all, that was what it
came to—from the deck of an American liner, and carried, not only
beyond the clouds, but also beyond the reach of human law, both
criminal and conventional.Inwardly
she was simply fuming with rage. As she said afterwards, she felt
just like a bottled volcano which would like to go off and
daren't.About
two minutes of somewhat surcharged silence passed. Mrs. Van Stuyler
sipped her coffee in ostentatiously small sips. Lord Redgrave took
his in slower and longer ones, and helped himself to bread and
butter. Miss Zaidie appeared perfectly contented with her
contemplation of the clouds.
CHAPTER II
At length Mrs. Van Stuyler, being a woman of large experience
and some social deftness, recognised that a change of subject was
the easiest way of retreat out of a rather difficult situation. So
she put her cup down, leant back in her chair, and, looking
straight into Lord Redgrave's eyes, she said with purely feminine
irrelevance:
"I suppose you know, Lord
Redgrave, that, when we left, the machine which we call in America
Manhood Suffrage—which, of course, simply means the selection of a
government by counting noses which may or may not have brains above
them—was what some of our orators would call in full blast. If you
are going to New York after Washington, as you said on the boat, we
might find it a rather inconvenient time to arrive. The whole place
will be chaos, you know; because when the citizen of the United
States begins electioneering, New York is not a very nice place to
stop in except for people who want excitement, and so if you will
excuse me putting the question so directly, I should like to know
what you just do mean to do——"
Lord Redgrave saw that she was
going to add "with us," but before he had time to say anything,
Miss Zaidie turned round, walked deliberately towards her chair,
sat down, poured herself out a fresh cup of coffee, added the milk
and sugar with deliberation, and then after a preliminary sip said,
with her cup poised half-way between her dainty lips and the
table:
"Mrs. Van, I've got an idea. I
suppose it's inherited, for dear old Pop had plenty. Anyhow we may
as well get back to common-sense subjects. Now look here," she went
on, switching an absolutely convincing glance straight into her
host's eyes, "my father may have been a dreamer, but still he was a
Sound Money man. He believed in honest dealings. He didn't believe
in borrowing a hundred dollars gold and paying back in fifty
dollars silver. What's your opinion, Lord Redgrave; you don't do
that sort of thing in England, do you? Uncle Russell is a Sound
Money man too. He's got too much gold locked up to want silver for
it."
"My dear Zaidie," said Mrs. Van
Stuyler, "whathavedemocratic and
republican politics and bimetalism got to do with——"
"With a trip in this wonderful
vessel which Pop told me years ago could go up to the stars if it
ever was made? Why just this, Lord Redgrave is an Englishman and
too rich to believe in anything but sound money, so is Uncle
Russell, and there you have it, or should have."
"I think I see what you mean,
Miss Rennick," said their host, leaning back in his chair and
folding his hands behind his head, as steamboat travellers are wont
to do when seas are smooth and skies are blue. "TheAstronefmight come down like a vision
from the clouds and preach the Gospel of Gold in electric rays of
silver through the commonplace medium of the Morse Code. How's that
for poetry and practice?"
"I quite agree with his
lordship as regards the practice," said Mrs. Van Stuyler, talking
somewhat rudely across him to Zaidie. "It would be an excellent use
to put this wonderful invention to. And then, I am sure his
lordship would land us in Central Park, so that we could go to your
Uncle's house right away."
"No, no, I'm afraid I must ask
you to excuse me there, Mrs. Van Stuyler," said Redgrave, with a
change of tone which Miss Zaidie appreciated with a swiftly veiled
glance. "You see, I have placed myself beyond the law. I have, as
you have been good enough to intimate, abducted—to put it
brutally—two ladies from the deck of an Atlantic liner. Further, in
doing so I have selfishly spoiled the prospects of one of the
ladies. But, seriously, I really must go to Washington
first——"
"I think, Lord Redgrave,"
interrupted Mrs. Van Stuyler, ignoring the last unfinished sentence
and assuming her best Knickerbocker dignity, "if you will forgive
me saying so, that that is scarcely a subject for discussion
here."
"And if that's so," interrupted
Miss Zaidie, "the less we say about it the better. What I wanted to
say was this. We all want the Republicans in, at least all of us
that have much to lose. Now, if Lord Redgrave was to use this
wonderful air-ship of his on the right side—why there wouldn't be
any standing against it."
"I must say that until just now
I had hardly contemplated turning theAstronefinto an electioneering machine.
Still, I admit that she might be made use of in a good cause, only
I hope——"
"That we shan't want you to
paste her over with election bills, eh?—or start
handbill-snowstorms from the deck—or kidnap Croker and Bryan just
as you did us, for instance?"
"If I could, I'm quite sure
that I shouldn't have as pleasant guests as I [...]