CHAPTER I
If John Grantham Browne had a
fault—which, mind you, I am not prepared to admit—it lay in the
fact that he was the possessor of a cynical wit which he was apt at
times to use upon his friends with somewhat peculiar effect.
Circumstances alter cases, and many people would have argued that
he was perfectly entitled to say what he pleased. When a man is
worth a hundred and twenty thousand pounds a year—which, worked
out, means ten thousand pounds a month, three hundred and
twenty–eight pounds, fifteen shillings and fourpence a day, and
four–and–sixpence three–farthings, and a fraction over, per
minute—he may surely be excused if he becomes a little sceptical as
to other people’s motives, and is apt to be distrustful of the
world in general. Old Brown, his father, without the “e,” as you
have doubtless observed, started life as a bare–legged street arab
in one of the big manufacturing centres—Manchester or Birmingham, I
am not quite certain which. His head, however, must have been
screwed on the right way, for he made few mistakes, and everything
he touched turned to gold. At thirty his bank balance stood at
fifteen thousand pounds; at forty it had turned the corner of a
hundred thousand; and when he departed this transitory life, a
young man in everything but years, he left his widow, young John’s
mother—his second wife, I may remark in passing, and the third
daughter of the late Lord Rushbrooke—upwards of three and a half
million pounds sterling in trust for the boy.
As somebody wittily remarked at
the time, young John, at his father’s death and during his
minority, was a monetary Mohammed—he hovered between two worlds:
the Rushbrookes, on one side, who had not two sixpences to rub
against each other, and the Brownes, on the other, who reckoned
their wealth in millions and talked of thousands as we humbler
mortals do of half–crowns. Taken altogether, however, old Brown was
not a bad sort of fellow. Unlike so many parvenus, he had the good
sense, the “e” always excepted, not to set himself up to be what he
certainly was not. He was a working–man, he would tell you with a
twinkle in his eye, and he had made his own way in the world. He
had never in his life owed a halfpenny, nor, to the best of his
knowledge, had he ever defrauded anybody; and, if he had made his
fortune out of soap, well—and here his eyes would glisten—soap was
at least a useful article, and would wash his millions cleaner than
a good many other commodities he might mention. In his tastes and
habits he was simplicity itself. Indeed, it was no unusual sight to
see the old fellow, preparatory to setting off for the City, coming
down the steps of his magnificent town house, dressed in a suit of
rough tweed, with the famous bird’s–eye neck–cloth loosely twisted
round his throat, and the soft felt hat upon his head—two articles
of attire which no remonstrance on the part of his wife and no
amount of ridicule from the comic journals could ever induce him to
discard. His stables were full of carriages, and there was a
cab–rank within a hundred yards of his front door, yet no one had
ever seen him set foot in either. The soles of his boots were
thick, and he had been accustomed to walk all his life, he would
say, and he had no intention of being carried till he was past
caring what became of him. With regard to his son, the apple of his
eye, and the pride of his old age, his views were entirely
different. Nothing was good enough for the boy. From the moment he
opened his eyes
upon the light, all the luxuries
and advantages wealth could give were showered upon him. Before he
was short–coated, upwards of a million had been placed to his
credit at the bank, not to be touched until he came of age. After
he had passed from a dame’s school to Eton, he returned after every
holiday with sufficient money loose in his pocket to have treated
the whole school. When, in the proper order of things, he went on
to Christ Church, his rooms were the envy and the admiration of the
university. As a matter of fact, he never knew what it was to have
to deny himself anything; and it says something for the lad’s
nature, and the father’s too, I think, that he should have come out
of it the honest, simple Englishman he was. Then old John died; his
wife followed suit six months later; and on his twenty–fifth
birthday the young man found himself standing alone in the world
with his millions ready to his hand either to make or mar him.
Little though he thought it at the time, there was a sufficiency of
trouble in store for him.
He had town houses, country
seats, moors and salmon–fishings, yachts (steam and sailing),
racehorses, hunters, coach–horses, polo–ponies, and an army of
servants that a man might very well shudder even to think of. But
he lacked one thing; he had no wife. Society, however, was prepared
to remedy this defect. Indeed, it soon showed that it was
abnormally anxious to do so. Before he was twenty–two it had been
rumoured that he had become engaged to something like a score of
girls, each one lovelier, sweeter, and boasting blood that was
bluer than the last. A wiser and an older head might well have been
forgiven had it succumbed to the attacks made upon it; but in his
veins, mingled with the aristocratic Rushbrooke blood, young John
had an equal portion of that of the old soap–boiler; and where the
one led him to accept invitations to country houses at Christmas,
or to be persuaded into driving his fair friends, by moonlight, to
supper at the Star and Garter, the other enabled him to take very
good care of himself while he ran such dangerous risks. In
consequence he had attained the advanced age of twenty–eight when
this story opens, a bachelor, and with every prospect of remaining
so. But the Blind Bow– Boy, as every one is aware, discharges his
bolts from the most unexpected quarters; and for this reason you
are apt to find yourself mortally wounded in the very place, of all
others, where you have hitherto deemed yourself most
invulnerable.
It was the end of the second week
in August; Parliament was up; and Browne’s steam– yacht, the Lotus
Blossom, twelve hundred tons, lay in the harbour of Merok, on the
Gieranger Fjord, perhaps the most beautiful on the Norwegian coast.
The guests on board had been admirably chosen, an art which in most
instances is not cultivated as carefully as it might be. An
ill–assorted house party is bad enough; to bring the wrong men
together on the moors is sufficient to spoil an otherwise enjoyable
holiday; but to ask Jones (who doesn’t smoke, who is wrapped up in
politics, reads his leader in the Standard every morning, and who
has played whist every afternoon with the same men at his club for
the last ten years) and De Vere Robinson (who never reads anything
save the Referee and the Sportsman, who detests whist, and who
smokes the strongest Trichinopolis day and night) to spend three
weeks cooped up on a yacht would be like putting a kitten and a
cat–killing fox–terrier into a corn–bin and expecting them to have
a happy time together. Browne, however, knew his business, and his
party, in this particular instance, consisted of the Duchess of
Matlock, wife of the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, and
her two pretty daughters, the Ladies Iseult and Imogen; Miss
Verney, the beauty of the season; the Honourable Silas Dobson, the
American Ambassador; his wife and daughter; George
Barrington–Marsh, of the 1st
Life; and little Jimmy Foote, a man of no permanent address, but of
more than usual shrewdness, who managed to make a good income out
of his friends by the exercise of that peculiar talent for pleasing
which rendered him indispensable whenever and wherever his
fellow–creatures were gathered together. In addition to those I
have mentioned there was a man whose interest in this story is so
great that it is necessary he should be described at somewhat
greater length.
Should you deem it worth your
while to make inquiries at any of the Chancelleries in order to
ascertain whether they happen to be acquainted with a certain
Monsieur Felix Maas, you would probably be surprised to learn that
he is as well known to them as—well
—shall we say the Sultan of
Turkey himself? though it would be difficult to mention in exactly
what capacity. One thing is quite certain; it would be no easy task
to find a man possessed of such peculiar characteristics as this
retiring individual. At first glance his name would appear to
settle his nationality once and for all. He would tell you,
however, that he has no right to be considered a Dutchman. At the
same time he would probably omit to tell you to which kingdom or
empire he ascribes the honour of his birth. If you travelled with
him you would discover that he speaks the language of every country
west of the Ural Mountains with equal fluency; and though he would
appear to be the possessor of considerable wealth, he never makes
the least parade of it. In fact, his one and only idea in life
would seem to be always irreproachably dressed and groomed, never
to speak unless spoken to, and at all times to act as if he took no
sort of interest whatever in any person or thing save that upon
which he happened to be engaged at the moment. When necessity
demands it he can be exceedingly amusing; he never allows himself
to be seen with a man or woman who would be likely to cause him the
least loss of prestige; he gives charming little dinners à la
fourchette at his rooms in town twice or thrice during the season,
and is rumoured to be the author, under a nom de plume, of one of
the best works on Continental politics that has seen the light
since Talleyrand’s day. So much for Felix Maas.
At one time or another there have
been a number of exquisite yachts built to satisfy the
extravagances of millionaires, but never one so perfect in every
detail, and so replete with every luxury, as Browne’s Lotus
Blossom. The state–rooms were large and airy; beds occupied the
places of the usual uncomfortable bunks; the dining–saloon was
situated amidships, where the vibration of the screw was least
felt; the drawing–room was arranged aft; and a dainty boudoir for
the ladies extended across the whole width of the counter. The
smoking–room was in a convenient position under the bridge, and the
bathrooms, four in number, were luxury and completeness itself. Add
to the other advantages the presence of Felicien, that prince of
chefs, and little Georges, once so intimately connected with the
English Embassy in Paris, and it is unnecessary to say more.
Browne himself was an excellent
host; and by the time the Norwegian coast had been sighted the
party had settled down comfortably on board. They visited
Christiania, the Bukn, Hardanger, and Sogne, and eventually found
themselves at anchor in the harbour of Merok, on the Gieranger
Fjord. It is in this lovely bay, overshadowed by its precipitous
mountains, that my story may be properly said to commence.
It is sometimes asserted by a
class of people who talk of the Eiffel Tower as if it were a bit of
natural scenery, and of the Matterhorn as though it were placed in
its present position
simply for the entertainment of
Cook’s tourists, that when you have seen one Norwegian fjord you
have seen them all. But this statement is, as are the majority of
such assertions, open to contradiction. The Ryfylke bears no sort
of resemblance, save that they are both incomparably grand, to the
Hardanger, or the Fjaerlands to the Gieranger. There is, of course,
the same solemnity and the same overwhelming sense of man’s
insignificance about them all. But in every other essential they
differ as completely as Windermere does from the Bitter Lakes of
Suez—shall we say?—or the Marble Arch from the Bridge of
Sighs.
“Knowing what we know, and seeing
what we see,” Maas remarked confidentially to the Duchess of
Matlock as they sat in their chairs on deck, gazing up at the
snow–capped mountains at the head of the fjord, “one is tempted to
believe that Providence, in designing Europe, laid it out with the
express intention of pleasing the British tourist.”
“I detest tourists,” replied her
Grace, as she disentangled the straps of her field–glasses. “They
cheapen everything, and think nothing of discussing their hotel
bills in the Temple of the Sphinx, or of comparing and grumbling at
their dhobie’s accounts under the façade of the Taj Mahal.”
“The inevitable result of a
hothouse education, my dear Duchess,” said Jimmy Foote, who was
leaning against the bulwarks. “Believe a poor man who knows, it is
just those three annas overcharge in a dhobie’s bill that spoil the
grandeur of the Sphinx and cast a blight over the Great Pyramid; as
far as I am personally concerned, such an imposition would spoil
even the Moti Masjid itself.”
“People who quarrel over a few
annas have no right to travel,” remarked Mrs. Dobson, with the
authority of a woman who rejoices in the possession of a large
income.
“In that case, one trembles to
think what would become of the greater portion of mankind,”
continued Miss Verney, who was drawing on her gloves preparatory to
going ashore.
“If that were the law, I am
afraid I should never get beyond the white walls of Old England,”
said Jimmy Foote, shaking his head; “it is only by keeping a sharp
eye on the three annas of which we have been speaking that I manage
to exist at all. If I might make a suggestion to the powers that
be, it would be to the effect that a university should be founded
in some convenient centre—Vienna, for instance. It would be
properly endowed, and students might be sent to it from all parts
of the world. Competent professors would be engaged, who would
teach the pupils how to comport themselves in railway trains and on
board steamboats; who would tell them how to dress themselves to
suit different countries, in order that they might not spoil choice
bits of scenery by inartistic colouring.
Above all, I would have them
instructed in the proper manner of placing their boots outside
their bedroom doors when they retire to rest in foreign hotels. I
remember a ruffian in Paris some years ago (truth compels me to put
it on record that he was a countryman of yours, Mr. Dobson) who for
three weeks regularly disturbed my beauty sleep by throwing his
boots outside his door in the fashion to which I am alluding. It’s
my belief he used to stand in the centre of his room and pitch them
into the corridor, taking particular care that they should fall
exactly above my head.”
“It seems to me that I also have
met that man,” observed Maas quietly, lighting another
cigarette as he spoke. “He
travels a great deal.”
“Surely it could not be the same
man?” remarked Mrs. Dobson, with an incredulous air. “The
coincidence would be too extraordinary.” A smile went round the
group; for an appreciation of humour was not the lady’s strong
point.
“To continue my proposal,” said
Foote, with quiet enjoyment. “In addition to imparting instruction
on the subjects I have mentioned, I would have my pupils thoroughly
grounded in the languages of the various countries they intend
visiting, so that they should not inquire the French for Eau de
Cologne, or ask what sort of vegetable pâté de foie gras is when
they encountered it upon their menus. A proper appreciation of the
beautiful in art might follow, in order to permit of their being
able to distinguish between a Sandro Botticelli and a ‘Seaport at
Sunrise’ by Claude Lorraine.”
“A professor who could give
instruction upon the intricacies of a Continental wine list might
be added with advantage,” put in Barrington–Marsh.
“And the inevitable result,” said
Browne, who had joined the party while Marsh was speaking, “would
be that you might as well not travel at all. Build an enormous
restaurant in London, and devote a portion of it to every country
into which modern man takes himself. Hang the walls with tricky,
theatrical canvases after the fashion of a cyclorama; dress your
waiters in appropriate costumes, let them speak the language of the
country in which you are supposed to be dining, let the tables be
placed in the centre of the hall, have a band to discourse national
airs, and you would be able to bore yourself to death in comfort,
for the simple reason that every one would talk, eat, drink, and
behave just as respectably as his neighbour. Half the fun of moving
about the world, as I understand it, lies in the studies of
character presented by one’s fellow–creatures. But, see, the boat
is alongside; let us go ashore while it is fine.”
Beautiful as Merok undoubtedly
is, it must be admitted that its amusements are, to say the least
of it, limited. You can lunch at the hotel, explore the curious
little octagonal church, and, if you are a walker, climb the road
that crosses the mountains to Grotlid. The views, however, are
sublime, for the mountains rise on every hand, giving the little
bay the appearance of an amphitheatre.
“What programme have you mapped
out for us?” inquired Miss Verney, who, as was known to her
companions, preferred an easy–chair and a flirtation on the deck of
the yacht to any sort of athletic exercise ashore.
Browne thereupon explained that
the Duchess, who was dressed in appropriate walking costume, had
arranged everything. They were to visit the church, do the
regulation sights, and, finally, make their way up the hillside to
the Storfos Waterfall, which is the principal, and almost the only,
attraction the village has to offer. The usual order of march was
observed. The Duchess and the Ambassador, being the seniors of the
party, led the way; the lady’s two daughters, escorted by
Barrington–Marsh and Jimmy Foote—who was too obvious a detrimental
to be worth guarding against—came next; Maas, Mrs. and Miss Dobson
followed close behind them; Miss Verney and Browne brought up the
rear.
Everything went merrily as a
marriage bell. After those who had brought their cameras had
snap–shotted the church, and made the usual mistake with regard to
the angles, the party climbed the hill in the direction of the
waterfall. It was only when they reached it
that those in front noticed that
Miss Verney had joined the trio next before her, and that Browne
had disappeared. He had gone back to the boat, the lady explained,
in order to give some instructions that had been forgotten. From
her silence, however, and from the expression of annoyance upon her
beautiful lace, the others immediately jumped to the conclusion
that something more serious must have happened than her words
implied. In this case, however, popular opinion was altogether at
fault. As a matter of fact, Browne’s reason for leaving his guests
to pursue their walk alone was an eminently simple one. He strolled
down to the boat which had brought them ashore, and, having
despatched it with a message to the yacht, resumed his walk, hoping
to overtake his party before they reached the waterfall.
Unfortunately, however, a thick mist was descending upon the
mountain, shutting out the landscape as completely as if a curtain
had been drawn before it. At first he was inclined to treat the
matter as of small moment; and, leaving the road, he continued his
walk in the belief that it would soon pass off. Stepping warily—for
mountain paths in Norway are not to be treated with disrespect—he
pushed on for upwards of a quarter of an hour, feeling sure he must
be near his destination, and wondering why he did not hear the
voices of his friends or the thunder of the fall. At last he
stopped. The mist was thicker than ever, and a fine but penetrating
rain was falling. Browne was still wondering what Miss Verney’s
feelings would be, supposing she were condemned to pass the night
on the hillside, when he heard a little cry proceeding from a spot,
as he supposed, a few yards ahead of him. The voice was a woman’s,
and the ejaculation was one of pain. Hearing it, Browne moved
forward again in the hope of discovering whence it proceeded and
what had occasioned it. Search how he would, however, he could see
nothing of the person who had given utterance to it. At last, in
despair, he stood still and called, and in reply a voice answered
in English, “Help me; help me, please.”
“Where are you?” Browne inquired
in the same language; “and what is the matter?”
“I am down here,” the voice
replied; “and I am afraid I have sprained my ankle. I have fallen
and cannot get up.”
Browne has since confessed that
it was the voice that did it. The accent, however, was scarcely
that of an Englishwoman.
“Are you on a path or on the
hillside?” he inquired, after he had vainly endeavoured to locate
her position.
“I am on the hillside,” she
replied. “The fog was so thick that I could not see my way, and I
slipped on the bank and rolled down, twisting my foot under
me.”
“Well, if you will try to guide
me, I will do all in my power to help you,” said Browne; and as he
said it he moved carefully towards the spot whence he imagined the
voice proceeded. From the feel of the ground under his feet he
could tell that he had left the path and was descending the
slope.
“Am I near you now?” he
asked.
“I think you must be,” was the
reply. And then the voice added, with a little laugh, “How
ridiculous it all is, and how sorry I am to trouble you!”
Had she known to what this
extraordinary introduction was destined to lead, it is very
doubtful whether she would have considered it so full either of
humour or regret as her
words implied.
Inch by inch Browne continued his
advance, until he could just distinguish, seated on the ground
below him, and clinging with both her arms to a stunted birch–tree,
the figure of the girl for whom he was searching. At most she was
not more than five feet from him.
Then, with that suddenness which
is the peculiar property of Norwegian mists, the vapour, which had
up to that moment so thickly enveloped them, rolled away, and the
whole landscape was revealed to their gaze. As he took in the
position, Browne uttered a cry of horror. The girl had wandered off
the path, slipped down the bank, and was now clinging to a tree
only a few feet removed from the brink of one of the most terrible
precipices along the Norwegian coast.
So overwhelmed was he with horror
that for a moment Browne found himself quite unable to say or do
anything. Then, summoning to his assistance all the presence of
mind of which he was master, he addressed the girl, who, seeing the
danger to which she was exposed, was clinging tighter than ever to
the tree, her face as white as the paper upon which I am now
writing. For a moment the young man scarcely knew how to act for
the best. To leave her while he went for assistance was out of the
question; while it was very doubtful, active as he was, whether he
would be able, unaided, to get her up in her injured condition to
the path above. Ridiculous as the situation may have appeared in
the fog, it had resolved itself into one of absolute danger now,
and Browne felt the perspiration start out upon his forehead as he
thought of what would have happened had she missed the tree and
rolled a few feet farther. One thing was quite certain—something
must be done; so, taking off his coat, he lowered it by the sleeve
to her, inquiring at the same time whether she thought she could
hold on to it while he pulled her up to the path above. She replied
that she would endeavour to do so, and thereupon the struggle
commenced. A struggle it certainly was, and an extremely painful
one, for the girl was handicapped by her injured foot. What if her
nerve should desert her and she should let go, or the sleeve of the
coat should part company with the body? In either case there could
be but one result—an instant and terrible death for her.
Taken altogether, it was an
experience neither of them would ever be likely to forget. At last,
inch by inch, foot by foot, he drew her up; and with every advance
she made, the stones she dislodged went tinkling down the bank,
and, rolling over the edge, disappeared into the abyss below. When
at last she was sufficiently close to enable him to place his arm
round her, and to lift her into safety beside himself, the reaction
was almost more than either of them could bear. For some minutes
the girl sat with her face buried in her hands, too much overcome
with horror at the narrowness of her escape even to thank her
preserver. When she did lift her face to him, Browne became aware
for the first time of its attractiveness. Beautiful, as Miss Verney
was beautiful, she certainly could not claim to be; there was,
however, something about her face that was more pleasing than mere
personal loveliness could possibly have been.
“At last … . he drew her
up.”
“How did you come to be up here
alone?” he inquired, after she had tried to express her gratitude
to him for the service he had rendered her.
“It was foolish, I admit,” she
answered. “I had been painting on the mountain, and was making my
way back to the hotel when the fog caught me. Suddenly I felt
myself falling. To save myself I clutched at that tree, and was
still clinging to it when you called to me. Oh! how can I thank
you? But for you I might now be―”
She paused, and Browne, to fill
in the somewhat painful gap, hastened to say that he had no desire
to be thanked at all. He insisted that he had only done what was
fit and proper under the circumstances. It was plain, however, from
the look of admiration he cast upon her, that he was very well
satisfied with the part he had been permitted to play in the
affair.
While, however, they were
progressing thus favourably in one direction, it was evident that
they were not yet at an end of their difficulties, for the young
lady, pretend as she might to ignore the fact, was undoubtedly
lame; under the circumstances for her to walk was out of the
question, and Merok was fully a mile, and a very steep mile,
distant from where they were now seated.
“How am I to get home?” the girl
inquired. “I am afraid it will be impossible for me to walk so far,
and no pony could come along this narrow path to fetch me.”
Browne puckered his forehead with
thought. A millionaire is apt to imagine that nothing in this world
is impossible, provided he has his cheque–book in his pocket and a
stylographic pen wherewith to write an order on his banker. In this
case, however, he was compelled to confess himself beaten. There
was one way out of it, of course, and both knew it. But the
young man felt his face grow hot
as the notion occurred to him.
“If you would only let me carry
you as far as the main road, I could easily find a conveyance to
take you the rest of the distance,” he faltered.
“Do you think you could carry
me?” she answered, with a seriousness that was more than half
assumed. “I am very heavy.”
It might be mentioned here, and
with advantage to the story, that in his unregenerate days Browne
had won many weight–lifting competitions; his modesty, however,
prevented his mentioning this fact to her.
“If you will trust me, I think I
can manage it,” he said; and then, without waiting for her to
protest, he picked the girl up, and, holding her carefully in his
arms, carried her along the path in the direction of the village.
It was scarcely a time for conversation, so that the greater
portion of the journey was conducted in silence. When at last they
reached the mountain road—that wonderful road which is one of the
glories of Merok—Browne placed the girl upon the bank, and, calling
a boy whom he could see in the distance, despatched him to the
hotel for assistance. The youth having disappeared, Browne turned
to the girl again. The pain she had suffered during that short
journey had driven the colour from her face, but she did her best
to make light of it.
“I cannot thank you enough for
all you have done for me,” she said, and a little shudder swept
over her as the remembrance of how near she had been to death
returned to her.
“I am very thankful I happened to
be there at the time,” the other replied with corresponding
seriousness. “If you will be warned by me, you will be careful for
the future how you venture on the mountains without a guide at this
time of the year. Fogs, such as we have had to–day, descend so
quickly, and the paths are dangerous at the best of times.”
“You may be sure I will be more
careful,” she replied humbly. “But do not let me keep you now; I
have detained you too long already. I shall be quite safe
here.”
“You are not detaining me,” he
answered. “I have nothing to do. Besides, I could not think of
leaving you until I have seen you safely on your way back to your
hotel. Have you been in Merok very long?”
“Scarcely a week,” the girl
replied. “We came from Hellesylt.”
Browne wondered of whom the we
might consist. Was the girl married? He tried to discover whether
or not she wore a wedding–ring, but her hand was hidden in the
folds her dress.
Five minutes later a cabriole
made its appearance, drawn by a shaggy pony and led by a villager.
Behind it, and considerably out of breath, toiled a stout and
elderly lady, who, as soon as she saw the girl seated on the bank
by the roadside, burst into a torrent of speech.
“Russian,” said Brown to himself;
“her accent puzzled me, but now I understand.”
Then turning to the young man,
who was experiencing some slight embarrassment at being present at
what his instinct told him was a wigging, administered by a lady
who was plainly a past mistress at the art, the girl said in
English:—
“Permit me to introduce you to my
guardian, Madame Bernstein.”
The couple bowed ceremoniously to
each other, and then Browne and the villager between them lifted
the girl into the vehicle, the man took his place at the pony’s
head, and the strange cortège proceeded on its way down the hill
towards the hotel. Once there, Browne prepared to take leave of
them. He held out his hand to the girl, who took it.
“Good–bye,” he said. “I hope it
will not be long before you are able to get about once more.”
“Good–bye,” she answered; and
then, with great seriousness, “Pray, believe that I shall always be
grateful to you for the service you have rendered me this
afternoon.”
There was a little pause. Then,
with a nervousness that was by no means usual to him, he
added:—
“I hope you will not think me
rude, but perhaps you would not mind telling me whom I have had the
pleasure of helping?”
“My name is Katherine
Petrovitch,” she answered, with a smile, and then as frankly
returned his question. “And yours?”
“My name is Browne,” he replied;
and also smiling as he said it, he added: “I am Browne’s Mimosa
Soap, Fragrant and Antiseptic.”
CHAPTER II
When Browne reached the yacht,
after bidding good–bye to the girl he had rescued, he found his
friends much exercised in their minds concerning him. They had
themselves been overtaken by the fog, and very naturally they had
supposed that their host, seeing it coming on, had returned to the
yacht without waiting for them. Their surprise, therefore, when
they arrived on board and found him still missing was scarcely to
be wondered at. In consequence, when he descended the companion
ladder and entered the drawing–room, he had to undergo a
cross–examination as to his movements. Strangely enough, this
solicitude for his welfare was far from being pleasing to him. He
had made up his mind to say nothing about the adventure of the
afternoon, and yet, as he soon discovered, it was difficult to
account for the time he had spent ashore if he kept silence on the
subject.
Accordingly he made the best
excuse that occurred to him, and by disclosing a half–truth induced
them to suppose that he had followed their party towards the
waterfall, and had in consequence been lost in the fog.
“It was scarcely kind of you to
cause us so much anxiety,” said Miss Verney in a low voice as he
approached the piano at which she was seated. “I assure you we have
been most concerned about you; and, if you had not come on board
very soon, Captain Marsh and Mr. Foote were going ashore again in
search of you.”
“That would have been very kind
of them,” said Browne, dropping into an easy–chair; “but there was
not the least necessity for it. I am quite capable of taking care
of myself.”
“Nasty things mountains,” said
Jimmy Foote to the company at large. “I don’t trust ‘em myself. I
remember once on the Rigi going out with old Simeon Baynes, the
American millionaire fellow, you know, and his daughter, the girl
who married that Italian count who fought Constantovitch and was
afterwards killed in Abyssinia. At one place we very nearly went
over the edge, every man–jack of us, and I vowed I’d never do such
a thing again. Fancy the irony of the position! After having been
poverty–stricken all one’s life, to drop through the air thirteen
hundred feet in the company of over a million dollars. I’m
perfectly certain of one thing, however: if it hadn’t been for the
girl’s presence of mind I should not have been here to–day. As it
was, she saved my life, and, until she married, I never could be
sufficiently grateful to her.”
“Only until she married!” said
Lady Imogen, looking up from the novel she was reading. “How was it
your gratitude did not last longer than that?”
“Doesn’t somebody say that
gratitude is akin to love?” answered Foote, with a chuckle. “Of
course I argued that, since she was foolish enough to show her bad
taste by marrying somebody else, it would scarcely have become me
to be grateful.”
Browne glanced at Foote rather
sharply. What did he mean by talking of life–saving on mountains,
on this evening of all others? Had he heard anything? But Jimmy’s
face was all innocence.
At that moment the dressing gong
sounded, and every one rose, preparatory to departing to their
respective cabins.
“Where is Maas?” Browne inquired
of Marsh, who was the last to leave.
“He is on deck, I think,” replied
the other; but as he spoke the individual in question made his
appearance down the companion–ladder, carrying in his hand a pair
of field–glasses.
For some reason or another,
dinner that night was scarcely as successful as usual. The English
mail had come in, and the Duchess had had a worrying letter from
the Duke, who had been commanded to Osborne among the salt of the
earth, when he wanted to be in the Highlands among the grouse; Miss
Verney had not yet recovered from what she considered Browne’s
ill–treatment of herself that afternoon; while one of the many kind
friends of the American Ambassador had forwarded him information
concerning a debate in Congress, in order that he might see in what
sort of estimation he was held by a certain portion of his
fellow–countrymen. Never a very talkative man, Browne this evening
was even more silent than usual. The recollection of a certain pale
face and a pair of beautiful eyes haunted him continually. Indeed,
had it not been for Barrington–Marsh and Jimmy Foote, who did their
duty manfully, the meal would have been a distinct failure as far
as its general liveliness was concerned. As it was, no one was
sorry when an adjournment was made for coffee to the deck above.
Under the influence of this gentle stimulant, however, and the
wonderful quiet of the fjord, things brightened somewhat. But the
improvement was not maintained; the pauses gradually grew longer
and more frequent, and soon after ten o’clock the ladies succumbed
to the general inertness, and disappeared below.
According to custom, the majority
of the men immediately adjourned to the smoking– room for cards.
Browne, however, excused himself on the plea that he was tired and
preferred the cool. Maas followed suit; and, when the others had
taken themselves off, the pair stood leaning against the bulwarks,
smoking and watching the lights of the village ashore.
“I wonder how you and I would
have turned out,” said Maas quietly, when they had been standing at
the rails for some minutes, “if we had been born and bred in this
little village, and had never seen any sort of life outside the
Geiranger?”
“Without attempting to moralize,
I don’t doubt but that we should have been better in many ways,”
Browne replied. “I can assure you there are times when I get sick
to death of the inane existence we lead.”
”Leben heisst träumen; weise sein
heisst angenehm träumen,” quoted Maas, half to himself and half to
his cigar. “Schiller was not so very far out after all.”
“Excellent as far as the
sentiment is concerned,” said Browne, as he flicked the ash off his
cigar and watched it drop into the water alongside. “But, however
desirous we may be of dreaming agreeably, our world will still take
good care that we wake up just at the moment when we are most
anxious to go on sleeping.”
“In order that we may not be
disillusioned, my friend,” said Maas. “The starving man dreams of
City banquets, and wakes to the unpleasant knowledge that it does
not do to go to sleep on an empty stomach. The debtor imagines
himself the possessor of millions, and wakes to find the
man–in–possession seated by his bedside. But there is one cure; and
you should adopt it, my dear Browne.”
“What is that?”
“Marriage, my friend! Get
yourself a wife and you will have no time to think of such things.
Doesn’t your Ben Jonson say that marriage is the best state for a
man in general?”
“Marriage!” retorted Browne
scornfully. “It always comes back to that. I tell you I have come
to hate the very sound of the word. From the way people talk you
might think marriage is the pivot on which our lives turn. They
never seem to realise that it is the rock upon which we most of us
go to pieces. What is a London season but a monstrous market, in
which men and women are sold to the highest bidders, irrespective
of inclination or regard? I tell you, Maas, the way these things
are managed in what we call English society borders on the
indecent. Lord A. is rich; consequently a hundred mothers offer him
their daughters. He may be what he pleases—an honourable man, or
the greatest blackguard at large upon the earth. In nine cases out
of ten it makes little or no difference, provided, of course, he
has a fine establishment and the settlements are satisfactory. At
the commencement of the season the girls are brought up to London,
to be tricked out, regardless of expense, by the fashionable
dressmakers of the day. They are paraded here, there, and
everywhere, like horses in a dealer’s yard; are warned off the men
who have no money, but who might very possibly make them happy;
while they are ordered by the ‘home authorities’ to encourage those
who have substantial bank balances and nothing else to recommend
them. As the question of love makes no sort of difference, it
receives no consideration. After their friends have sent them
expensive presents, which in most cases they cannot afford to give,
but do so in order that they may keep up appearances with their
neighbours and tradesmen, the happy couple stand side by side
before the altar at St.