<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<h3>WHEREIN MILLICENT ARMS FOR THE FRAY</h3>
<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">M</span>illicent was wondering how she would fare in the deep snow in boots
that were never built for such a test. She was standing on the swept
roadway between the hotel and the stables, and the tracks of her
quarry were plainly visible. But the hope of discovering some
explanation of Bower’s queer behavior was more powerful than her dread
of wet feet. She was gathering her skirts daintily before taking the
next step, when the two men suddenly reappeared.</p>
<p>They had left the village and were crossing the line of the path.
Shrinking back under cover of an empty wagon, she watched them.
Apparently they were heading for the Orlegna Gorge, and she scanned
the ground eagerly to learn how she could manage to spy on them
without being seen almost immediately. Then she fell into the same
error as <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276"></SPAN></span>Helen in believing that the winding carriage road to the
church offered the nearest way to the clump of firs and azaleas by
which Bower and Stampa would soon be hidden.</p>
<p>Three minutes’ sharp walking brought her to the church, but there the
highway turned abruptly toward the village. As one side of the small
ravine faced south, the sun’s rays were beginning to have effect, and
a narrow track, seemingly leading to the hill, was almost laid bare.
In any event, it must bring her near the point where the men vanished,
so she went on breathlessly. Crossing the rivulet, already swollen
with melting snow, she mounted the steps cut in the hillside. It was
heavy going in that thin air; but she held to it determinedly.</p>
<p>Then she heard men’s voices raised in anger. She recognized one. Bower
was speaking German, Stampa a mixture of German and Italian. Millicent
had a vague acquaintance with both languages; but it was of the
Ollendorf order, and did not avail her in understanding their rapid,
excited words. Soon there were other sounds, the animal cries, the
sobs, the labored grunts of men engaged in deadly struggle. Thoroughly
alarmed, more willing to retreat than advance, she still clambered on,
impelled by irresistible desire to find out what strange thing was
happening.</p>
<p>At last, partly concealed by a dwarf fir, she could peer over a wall
into the tiny cemetery. She was too late to witness the actual fight;
but she saw <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277"></SPAN></span>Stampa spring upright, leaving his prostrate opponent
apparently lifeless. She was utterly frightened. Fear rendered her
mute. To her startled eyes it seemed that Bower had been killed by the
crippled man. Soon that quite natural impression yielded to one of
sustained astonishment. Bower rose slowly, a sorry spectacle. To her
woman’s mind, unfamiliar with scenes of violence, it was surprising
that he did not begin at once to beat the life out of the lame old
peasant who had attacked him so viciously. When Stampa closed the gate
and motioned Bower to kneel, when the tall, powerfully built man knelt
without protest, when the reading of the Latin service began,—well,
Millicent could never afterward find words to express her conflicting
emotions.</p>
<p>But she did not move. Crouching behind her protecting tree, guarding
her very breath lest some involuntary cry should betray her presence,
she watched the whole of the weird ceremonial. She racked her brains
to guess its meaning, strained her ears to catch a sentence that might
be identified hereafter; but she failed in both respects. Of course,
it was evident that someone was buried there, someone whose memory the
wild looking villager held dear, someone whose grave he had forced
Bower to visit, someone for whose sake he was ready to murder Bower if
the occasion demanded. So much was clear; but the rest was blurred, a
medley of incoherences, a waking nightmare.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Oddly enough, it never occurred to her that a woman might be lying in
that dreary tenement. Her first vague imagining suggested that Bower
had committed a crime, killed a man, and that an avenger had dragged
him to his victim’s last resting place. That Stampa was laboriously
plodding through the marriage ritual was a fantastic conceit of which
she received no hint. There was nothing to dissolve the mist in her
mind. She could only wait, and marvel.</p>
<p>As the strange scene drew to its close, she became calmer. She
reflected that some sort of registry would be kept of the graves. A
few dismal monuments, and two rows of little black wooden crosses that
stuck up mournfully out of the snow, gave proof positive of that. She
counted the crosses. Stampa was standing near the seventh from a tomb
easily recognizable at some future time. Bower faced it on his knees.
She could not see him distinctly, as he was hidden by the other man’s
broad shoulders; but she did not regret it, because the warm brown
tints of her furs against the background of snow and foliage might
warn him of her presence. She thanked the kindly stars that brought
her here. No matter what turn events took now, she hoped to hold the
whip hand over Bower. There was a mystery to be cleared, of course;
but with such materials she could hardly fail to discover its true
bearings.</p>
<p>So she watched, in tremulous patience, quick to note each movement of
the actors in a drama the like to which she had never seen on the
stage.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>At last Bower slunk away. She heard the crunching of his feet on the
snow, and, when Stampa ceased his silent prayer, she expected that he
would depart by the same path. To her overwhelming dismay, he wheeled
round and looked straight at her. In reality his eyes were fixed on
the hills behind her. He was thinking of his unhappy daughter. The
giant mass of Corvatsch was associated in his mind with the girl’s
last glimpse of her beloved Switzerland, while on that same memorable
day it threw its deep shadow over his own life. He turned to the
mountain to seek its testimony,—as it were, to the consummation of a
tragedy.</p>
<p>But Millicent could not know that. Losing all command of herself, she
shrieked in terror, and ran wildly among the trees. She stumbled and
fell before she had gone five yards over the rough ground. Quite in a
panic, confused and blinded with snow, she rose and ran again, only to
find herself speeding back to the burial ground. Then, in a very agony
of distress, she stood still. Stampa was looking at her, with mild
surprise displayed in every line of his expressive features.</p>
<p>“What are you afraid of, <i>sigñorina</i>?” he asked in Italian.</p>
<p>She half understood, but her tongue clove to the roof of her mouth.
Her terror was manifest, and he pitied her.</p>
<p>He repeated his question in German. A child might have recognized that
this man of the benignant <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280"></SPAN></span>face and kindly, sorrow laden eyes intended
no evil.</p>
<p>“I am sorry. I beg your pardon, Herr Stampa,” she managed to stammer.</p>
<p>“Ah, you know me, then, <i>sigñorina</i>! But everybody knows old Stampa.
Have you lost your way?”</p>
<p>“I was taking a little walk, and happened to approach the cemetery. I
saw——”</p>
<p>“There is nothing to interest you here, madam, and still less to cause
fear. But it is a sad place, at the best. Follow that path. It will
lead you to the village or the hotel.”</p>
<p>Her fright was subsiding rapidly. She deemed the opportunity too good
to be lost. If she could win his confidence, what an immense advantage
it would be in her struggle against Bower! Summoning all her energies,
and trying to remember some of the German sentences learned in her
school days, she smiled wistfully.</p>
<p>“You are in great trouble,” she murmured. “I suppose Herr Bower has
injured you?”</p>
<p>Stampa glanced at her keenly. He had the experience of sixty years of
a busy life to help him in summing up those with whom he came in
contact, and this beautiful, richly dressed woman did not appeal to
his simple nature as did Helen when she surprised his grief on a
morning not so long ago. Moreover, the elegant stranger was little
better than a spy, for none but a spy would have wandered among <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281"></SPAN></span>the
rocks and shrubs in such weather, and he was in no mood to suffer her
inquiries.</p>
<p>“I am in no trouble,” he said, “and Herr Bauer has not injured me.”</p>
<p>“But you fought,” she persisted. “I thought you had killed him. I
almost wish you had. I hate him!”</p>
<p>“It is a bad thing to hate anyone. I am three times your age; so you
may, or may not, regard my advice as excellent. Come round by the
corner of the wall, and you will reach the path without walking in the
deep snow. Good morning, madam.”</p>
<p>He bowed with an ease that would have proclaimed his nationality if he
had not been an Italian mountaineer in every poise and gesture.
Stooping to recover his Alpine hat, which was lying near the cross at
the head of the grave, he passed out through the gate before Millicent
was clear of the wall. He made off with long, uneven, but rapid
strides, leaving her hot with annoyance that a mere peasant should
treat her so cavalierly. Though she did not understand all he said,
she grasped its purport. But her soreness soon passed. The great fact
remained that she shared some secret with him and Bower, a secret of
an importance she could not yet measure. She was tempted to go inside
the cemetery, and might have yielded to the impulse had not a load of
snow suddenly tumbled off the broad fronds of a pine. The incident set
her heart beating furiously again. How <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282"></SPAN></span>lonely was this remote
hilltop! Even the glorious sunshine did not relieve its brooding
silence.</p>
<p>Thus it came about that these three people went down into the valley,
each within a short distance of the others, and Spencer saw them all
from the high road, where he was questioning an official of the
federal postoffice as to the method of booking seats in the banquette
of the diligence from Vicosoprano.</p>
<p>That he was bewildered by the procession goes without saying. Where
had they been, and how in the name of wonder could the woman’s
presence be accounted for? The polite postmaster must have thought
that the Englishman was very dense that morning. Several times he
explained fully that the two desired seats in the diligence must be
reserved from Chiavenna. As many times did Spencer repeat the
information without in the least seeming to comprehend it. He spoke
with the detached air of a boy in the first form reciting the fifth
proposition in Euclid. At last the postmaster gave it up in despair.</p>
<p>“You see that man there?” he said to a keenly interested policeman
when Spencer strolled away in the direction of the village. “He is of
the most peculiar. He talks German like a parrot. He must be a rich
American. Perhaps he wants to buy a diligence.”</p>
<p>“<i>Wer weiss?</i>” said the other. “Money makes some folk mad.”</p>
<p>And, indeed, through Spencer’s brain was running <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283"></SPAN></span>a Bedlamite jingle,
a triolet of which the dominant line was Bower, Stampa, and Millicent
Jaques. The meeting of Bower and Stampa was easy of explanation. After
the guide’s story of the previous evening, nothing but Stampa’s death
or Bower’s flight could prevent it. But the woman from the Wellington
Theater, how had she come to know of their feud? He was almost tempted
to quote the only line of Molière ever heard beyond the shores of
France.</p>
<p>Like every visitor to the Maloja, he was acquainted with each of its
roads and footpaths except the identical one that these three
descended. Where did it lead to? Before he quite realized what he was
doing, he was walking up the hill. In places where the sun had not yet
caught the snow there was a significant trail. Bower had come and gone
once, Stampa, or some man wearing village-made boots, twice; but the
single track left by Millicent’s smart footwear added another
perplexing item to the puzzle. So he pressed on, and soon was gazing
at the forlorn cemetery, with its signs of a furious struggle between
the gateposts, the uncovered grave space, and Millicent’s track round
two corners of the square built wall.</p>
<p>It was part of his life’s training to read signs. The mining engineer
who would hit on a six-inch lode in a mountain of granite must combine
imagination with knowledge, and Spencer quickly made out something of
the silent story,—something, not <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284"></SPAN></span>all, but enough to send him in
haste to the hotel by the way Millicent had arrived on the scene.</p>
<p>“Guess there’s going to be a heap of trouble round here,” he said to
himself. “Helen must be recalled to London. It’s up to me to make the
cable hot to Mackenzie.”</p>
<p>He had yet to learn that the storm which brought about a good deal of
the preceding twenty-four hours’ excitement had not acted in any
niggardly fashion. It had laid low whole sections of the telegraph
system on both sides of the pass during the night. Gangs of men were
busy repairing the wires. Later in the day, said a civil spoken
attendant at the <i>bureau des postes</i>, a notice would be exhibited
stating the probable hour of the resumption of service.</p>
<p>“Are the wires down beyond St. Moritz?” asked Spencer.</p>
<p>“I cannot give an assurance,” said the clerk; “but these southwest
gales usually do not affect the Albula Pass. The road to St. Moritz is
practicable, as this morning’s mail was only forty minutes behind
time.”</p>
<p>Spencer ordered a carriage, wrote a telegram, and gave it to the
driver, with orders to forward it from St. Moritz if possible. And
this was the text:</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>“<span class="smcap">Mackenzie, ‘Firefly’ Office, Fleet-st., London.</span> Wire Miss Wynton
positive instructions to return to England immediately. Say she is
wanted at office. I shall arrange matters before she arrives. This
is urgent. <span class="smcap">Spencer.</span>”</p>
</div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>A heavy weight gradually lifted off his shoulders as he watched the
wheels of the vehicle churning up the brown snow broth along the
valley road. Within two hours his message would reach a telegraph
office. Two more would bring it to Mackenzie. With reasonable luck,
the line repairers would link Maloja to the outer world that
afternoon, and Helen would hie homeward in the morning. It was a pity
that her holiday and his wooing should be interfered with; but who
could have foretold that Millicent Jaques would drop from the sky in
that unheralded way? Her probable interference in the quarrel between
Stampa and Bower put Mrs. de la Vere’s suggestion out of court. A
woman bent on requiting a personal slight would never consent to
forego such a chance of obtaining ample vengeance as Bower’s earlier
history provided.</p>
<p>In any case, Spencer was sure that the sooner Helen and he were
removed from their present environment the happier they would be. He
hoped most fervently that the course of events might be made smooth
for their departure. He cared not a jot for the tittle-tattle of the
hotel. Let him but see Helen re-established in London, and it would
not be his fault if they did not set forth on their honeymoon before
the year was much older.</p>
<p>He disliked this secret plotting and contriving. He adopted such
methods only because they offered the surest road to success. Were he
to consult his own feelings, he would go straight to Helen, tell <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286"></SPAN></span>her
how chance had conspired with vagrom fancy to bring them together, and
ask her to believe, as all who love are ready to believe, that their
union was predestined throughout the ages.</p>
<p>But he could not explain his presence in Switzerland without referring
to Bower, and the task was eminently distasteful. In all things
concerning the future relations between Helen and himself, he was done
with pretense. If he could help it, her first visit to the Alps should
not have its record darkened by the few miserable pages torn out of
Bower’s life. After many years the man’s sin had discovered him. That
which was then done in secret was now about to be shrieked aloud from
the housetops. “Even the gods cannot undo the past,” said the old
Greeks, and the stern dogma had lost nothing of its truth with the
march of the centuries. Indeed, Spencer regretted his rival’s
threatened exposure. If it lay in his power, he would prevent it:
meanwhile, Helen must be snatched from the enduring knowledge of her
innocent association with the offender and his pillory. He set his
mind on the achievement. To succeed, he must monopolize her company
until she quitted the hotel en route for London.</p>
<p>Then he thought of Mrs. de la Vere as a helper. Her seeming
shallowness, her glaring affectations, no longer deceived him. The
mask lifted for an instant by that backward glance as she convoyed
Helen to her room the previous night had proved <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287"></SPAN></span>altogether
ineffective since their talk on the veranda. He did not stop to ask
himself why such a woman, volatile, fickle, blown this way and that by
social zephyrs, should champion the cause of romance. He simply
thanked Heaven for it, nor sought other explanation than was given by
his unwavering belief in the essential nobility of her sex.</p>
<p>Therein he was right. Had he trusted to her intuition, and told
Millicent Jaques at the earliest possible moment exactly how matters
stood between Helen and himself, it is only reasonable to suppose that
the actress would have changed her plan of campaign. She had no
genuine antipathy toward Helen, whose engagement to Spencer would be
her strongest weapon against Bower. As matters stood, however, Helen
was a stumbling block in her path, and her jealous rage was in process
of being fanned to a passionate intensity, when Spencer, searching for
Mrs. de la Vere, saw Millicent in the midst of a group composed of the
Vavasours, mother and son, the General, and his daughters.</p>
<p>Mrs. de Courcy Vavasour was the evil spirit who brought about this
sinister gathering. She was awed by Bower, she would not risk a
snubbing from Mrs. de la Vere, and she was exceedingly annoyed to
think that Helen might yet topple her from her throne. To one of her
type this final consideration was peculiarly galling. And the too
susceptible Georgie would be quite safe with the lady from the
Wellington Theater. Mrs. Vavasour remembered <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288"></SPAN></span>the malice in
Millicent’s fine eyes when she refused to quail before Bower’s wrath.
A hawk in pursuit of a plump pigeon would not turn aside to snap up an
insignificant sparrow. So, being well versed in the tactics of these
social skirmishes, she sought Millicent’s acquaintance.</p>
<p>The younger woman was ready to meet her more than halfway. The hotel
gossips were the very persons whose aid she needed. A gracious smile
and a pouting complaint against the weather were the preliminaries. In
two minutes they were discussing Helen, and General Wragg was drawn
into their chat. Georgie and the Misses Wragg, of course, came
uninvited. They scented scandal as jackals sniff the feast provided by
the mightier beasts.</p>
<p>Millicent, really despising these people, but anxious to hear the
story of Bower’s love making, made no secret of her own sorrows. “Miss
Wynton was my friend,” she said with ingenuous pathos. “She never met
Mr. Bower until I introduced her to him a few days before she came to
Switzerland. You may guess what a shock it gave me when I heard that
he had followed her here. Even then, knowing how strangely coincidence
works at times, I refused to believe that the man who was my promised
husband would abandon me under the spell of a momentary infatuation.
For it can be nothing more.”</p>
<p>“Are you sure?” asked the sympathetic Mrs. Vavasour.</p>
<p>“By gad!” growled Wragg, “I’m inclined to <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289"></SPAN></span>differ from you there, Miss
Jaques. When Bower turned up last week they met as very old friends, I
can assure you.”</p>
<p>“Obviously a prearranged affair,” said Mrs. Vavasour.</p>
<p>“None of us has had a look in since,” grinned Georgie vacuously. “Even
Reggie de la Vere, who is a deuce of a fellah with the girls, could
not get within yards of her.”</p>
<p>This remark found scant favor with his audience. Miss Beryl Wragg, who
had affected de la Vere’s company for want of an eligible bachelor,
pursed her lips scornfully.</p>
<p>“I can hardly agree with that,” she said. “Edith de la Vere may be a
sport; but she doesn’t exactly fling her husband at another woman’s
head. Anyhow, it was amazing bad form on her part to include Miss
Wynton in her dinner party last night.”</p>
<p>Millicent’s blue eyes snapped. “Did Helen Wynton dine in public
yesterday evening?” she demanded.</p>
<p>“Rather! Quite a lively crowd they were too.”</p>
<p>“Indeed. Who were the others?”</p>
<p>“Oh, the Badminton-Smythes, and the Bower man, and that
American—what’s his name?”</p>
<p>Then Millicent laughed shrilly. She saw her chance of delivering a
deadly stroke, and took it without mercy. “The American? Spencer? What
a delightful mixture! Why, he is the very man who is paying Miss
Wynton’s expenses.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“So you said last night. A somewhat—er—dangerous statement,” coughed
the General.</p>
<p>“Rather stiff, you know—Eh, what?” put in Georgie.</p>
<p>His mother silenced him with a frosty glance. “Of course you have good
reasons for saying that?” she interposed.</p>
<p>Spencer passed at that instant, and there was a thrilling pause.
Millicent was well aware that every ear was alert to catch each
syllable. When she spoke, her words were clear and precise.</p>
<p>“Naturally, one would not say such a thing about any girl without the
utmost certainty,” she purred. “Even then, there are circumstances
under which one ought to try and forget it. But, if it is a question
as to my veracity in the matter, I can only assure you that Miss
Wynton’s mission to Switzerland on behalf of ‘The Firefly’ is a mere
blind for Mr. Spencer’s extraordinary generosity. He is acting through
the paper, it is true. But some of you must have seen ‘The Firefly.’
How could such a poor journal afford to pay a young lady one hundred
pounds and give her a return ticket by the Engadine express for four
silly articles on life in the High Alps? Why, it is ludicrous!”</p>
<p>“Pretty hot, I must admit,” sniggered Georgie, thinking to make peace
with Beryl Wragg; but she seemed to find his humor not to her taste.</p>
<p>“It is the kind of arrangement from which one <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291"></SPAN></span>draws one’s own
conclusions,” said Mrs. Vavasour blandly.</p>
<p>“But, I say, does Bower know this?” asked Wragg, swinging his
eyeglasses nervously. Though he dearly loved these carpet battles, he
was chary of figuring in them, having been caught badly more than once
between the upper and nether millstones of opposing facts.</p>
<p>“You heard me tell him,” was Millicent’s confident answer. “If he
requires further information, I am here to give it to him. Indeed, I
have delayed my departure for that very reason. By the way, General,
do you know Switzerland well?”</p>
<p>“Every hotel in the country,” he boasted proudly.</p>
<p>“I don’t quite mean in that sense. Who are the authorities? For
instance, if I had a friend buried in the cemetery here, to whom
should I apply for identification of the grave?”</p>
<p>The General screwed up his features into a judicial frown.
“Well—er—I should go to the communal office in the village, if I
were you,” said he.</p>
<p>Braving his mother’s possible displeasure, George de Courcy Vavasour
asserted his manliness for Beryl’s benefit.</p>
<p>“I know the right Johnny,” he said. “Let me take you to him, Miss
Jaques—Eh, what?”</p>
<p>Millicent affected to consider the proposal. She saw that Mrs.
Vavasour was content. “It is very kind of you,” she said, with her
most charming smile. “Have we time to go there before lunch?”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Oh, loads.”</p>
<p>“I am walking toward the village. May I come with you?” asked Beryl
Wragg.</p>
<p>“That will be too delightful,” said Millicent.</p>
<p>Georgie, feeling the claws beneath the velvet of Miss Wragg’s voice,
could only suffer in silence. The three went out together. The two
women did the talking, and Millicent soon discovered that Bower had
unquestionably paid court to Helen from the first hour of his arrival
in the Maloja, whereas Spencer seemed to be an utter stranger to her
and to every other person in the place. This statement offered a
curious discrepancy to the story retailed by Mackenzie’s assistant.
But it strengthened her case against Helen. She grew more determined
than ever to go on to the bitter end.</p>
<p>A communal official raised no difficulty about giving the name of the
occupant of the grave marked by the seventh cross from the tomb she
described. A child was buried there, a boy who died three years ago.
With Beryl Wragg’s assistance, she cross examined the man, but could
not shake his faith in the register.</p>
<p>The parents still lived in the village. The official knew them, and
remembered the boy quite well. He had contracted a fever, and died
suddenly.</p>
<p>This was disappointing. Millicent, prepared to hear of a tragedy, was
confronted by the commonplace. But the special imp that attends all
mischief makers prompted her next question.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Do you know Christian Stampa, the guide?” she asked.</p>
<p>The man grinned. “Yes, <i>sigñora</i>. He has been on the road for years,
ever since he lost his daughter.”</p>
<p>“Was he any relation to the boy? What interest would he have in this
particular grave?”</p>
<p>The custodian of parish records stroked his chin. He took thought, and
reached for another ledger. He ran a finger through an index and
turned up a page.</p>
<p>“A strange thing!” he cried. “Why, that is the very place where Etta
Stampa is buried. You see, <i>sigñora</i>,” he explained, “it is a small
cemetery, and our people are poor.”</p>
<p>Etta Stampa! Was this the clew? Millicent’s heart throbbed. How stupid
that she had not thought of a woman earlier!</p>
<p>“How old was Etta Stampa?” she inquired.</p>
<p>“Her age is given here as nineteen, <i>sigñora</i>; but that is a guess. It
was a sad case. She killed herself. She came from Zermatt. I have
lived nearly all my life in this valley, and hers is the only suicide
I can recall.”</p>
<p>“Why did she kill herself, and when?”</p>
<p>The official supplied the date; but he had no knowledge of the affair
beyond a village rumor that she had been crossed in love. As for poor
old Stampa, who met with an accident about the same time, he never
mentioned her.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Stampa is the lame Johnny who went up the Forno yesterday,”
volunteered Georgie, when they quitted the office. “But, I say, Miss
Jaques, his daughter couldn’t be a friend of yours?”</p>
<p>Millicent did not answer. She was thinking deeply. Then she realized
that Beryl Wragg was watching her intently.</p>
<p>“No,” she said, “I did not mean to convey that she was my friend; only
that one whom I know well was interested in her. Can you tell me how I
can find out more of her history?”</p>
<p>“Some of the villagers may help,” said Miss Wragg. “Shall we make
inquiries? It is marvelous how one comes across things in the most
unlikely quarters.”</p>
<p>Vavasour, whose stroll with a pretty actress had resolved itself into
a depressing quest into the records of the local cemetery, looked at
his watch. “Time’s up,” he announced firmly. “The luncheon gong will
go in a minute or two, and this keen air makes one peckish—Eh, what?”</p>
<p>So Millicent returned to the hotel, and when she entered the dining
room she saw Helen and Spencer sitting with the de la Veres. Edith de
la Vere stared at her in a particularly irritating way. Cynical
contempt, bored amusement, even a quizzical surprise that such a
vulgar person could be so well dressed, were carried by wireless
telegraphy from the one woman to the other. Millicent countered with a
studied indifference. She gave her whole attention <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295"></SPAN></span>to the efforts of
the head waiter to find a seat to her liking. He offered her the
choice between two. With fine self control, she selected that which
turned her back on Helen and her friends.</p>
<p>She had just taken her place when Bower came in. He stopped near the
door, and spoke to an under manager; but his glance swept the crowded
room. Spencer and Helen happened to be almost facing him, and the girl
was listening with a smile to something the American was saying. But
there was a conscious shyness in her eyes, a touch of color on her sun
browned face, that revealed more than she imagined.</p>
<p>Bower, who looked ill and old, hesitated perceptibly. Then he seemed
to reach some decision. He walked to Helen’s side, and bent over her
with courteous solicitude. “I hope that I am forgiven,” he said.</p>
<p>She started. She was so absorbed in Spencer’s talk, which dealt with
nothing more noteworthy than the excursion down the Vale of Bregaglia,
which he secretly hoped would be postponed, that she had not observed
Bower’s approach.</p>
<p>“Forgiven, Mr. Bower? For what?” she asked, blushing now for no
assignable reason.</p>
<p>“For yesterday’s fright, and its sequel.”</p>
<p>“But I enjoyed it thoroughly. Please don’t think I am only a fair
weather mountaineer.”</p>
<p>“No. I am not likely to commit that mistake. It was feminine spite,
not elemental, that I fancied <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296"></SPAN></span>might have troubled you. Now I am going
to face the enemy alone. Pity me, and please drink to my success.”</p>
<p>He favored Spencer and the de la Veres with a comprehensive nod, and
turned away, well satisfied that he had claimed a condition of
confidence, of mutual trust, between Helen and himself.</p>
<p>Millicent was reading the menu when she heard Bower’s voice at her
shoulder. “Good morning, Millicent,” he said. “Shall we declare a
truce? May I eat at your table? That, at least, will be original.
Picture the amazement of the mob if the lion and the lamb split a
small bottle.”</p>
<p>He was bold; but chance had fenced her with triple brass. “I really
don’t feel inclined to forgive you,” she said, with a quite forgiving
smile.</p>
<p>He sat down. The two were watched with discreet stupefaction by many.</p>
<p>“Never give rein to your emotions, Millicent. You did so last night,
and blundered badly in consequence. Artifice is the truest art, you
know. Let us, then, be unreal, and act as though we were the dearest
friends.”</p>
<p>“We are, I imagine. Self interest should keep us solid.”</p>
<p>Bower affected a momentary absorption in the wine list. He gave his
order, and the waiter left them.</p>
<p>“Now, I want you to be good,” he said. “Put your cards on the table,
and I will do the same. Let us discuss matters without prejudice, as
the lawyers <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297"></SPAN></span>say. And, in the first instance, tell me exactly what you
imply by the statement that Mr. Charles K. Spencer, of Denver,
Colorado, as he appears in the hotel register, is responsible for
Helen Wynton’s presence here to-day.”</p>
<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i307.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="283" alt="" title="" /></div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />