Fair Margaret

Chapter 22

"Yes," he answered. "This is purely a matter of business, in which I am consulting nothing but my own interests. I should have acted precisely in the same way if I had never had the pleasure of knowing either of you. If it chances that I have been of service to Miss Donne, so much the better, but there is no reason why she should ever know it, so far as I am concerned. I would rather she should not. She might fancy that I had acted from other motives."

"Very well," Mrs. Rushmore answered; "then I shall not tell her."

Nevertheless, when the motor car had tooted and puffed itself away to Paris and Mrs. Rushmore still sat in her straight-backed garden chair holding the cheque in her hand, she thought it all very strange and unaccountable; and the only explanation that occurred to her was that the invention must be worth far more than she had supposed. This was not altogether a pleasant reflection either, as it made her inclined to reproach herself for not having driven a hard bargain with Logotheti.

"But after all," she said to herself, "if half a million is not a fortune, it"s a competence, even nowadays, and I suppose the man isn"t an adventurer after all--at least, not if his cheque is good."

In her complicated frame of mind she felt a distinct sense of disappointment at the thought that her judgment had been at fault, and that the Greek was not a blackleg, as she had decided that he ought to be.

CHAPTER X

Logotheti"s motor car was built to combine the greatest comfort and the greatest speed which can be made compatible. It was not meant for sport, though it could easily beat most things on the road, for though the Greek lived a good deal among sporting men and often did what they did, he was not one himself. It was not in his nature to regard any sport as an object to be pursued for its own sake. Only the English take that view naturally, and, of late years, some Frenchmen. All other Europeans look upon sport as pastime which is very well when there is nothing else to do, but not at all comparable with love-making, or gambling, for the amus.e.m.e.nt it affords. They take the view of the late Shah of Persia, who explained why he would not go to the Derby by saying that he had always known that one horse could run faster than another, but that it was a matter of perfect indifference to him which that one horse might be. In the same way Logotheti did not care to possess the fastest motor car in Europe, provided that he could be comfortable in one which was a great deal faster than the majority.

Moreover, though he was by no means timid, he never went in search of danger merely for the sake of its pleasant excitement. Possibly he was too natural and too primitive to think useless danger attractive; but if danger stood between him and anything he wanted very much, he could be as reckless as an Irishman or a Cossack--which is saying all there is to be said.

The motor tooted and whizzed itself from Mrs. Rushmore"s gate to the stage entrance of the Opera in something like thirty minutes without the slightest strain, and could have covered the distance in much less time if necessary.

Logotheti found Schreiermeyer sitting alone in the dusk, in the stalls.

Half the footlights and one row of border lights illuminated the stage, and a fat man in very light grey clothes, a vast white waistcoat and a pot hat was singing "Salut demeure" in a nasal half-voice to the tail of the Commendatore"s white horse, from _Don Juan_. The monumental animal had apparently stopped to investigate an Egyptian palm tree which happened to grow near the spot usually occupied by Marguerite"s cottage. The tenor had his hands in his pockets, his hat was rather on the back of his head, and he looked extremely bored.

So did Schreiermeyer when Logotheti sat down beside him. He turned his round gla.s.ses to the newcomer with a slight expression of recognition which was not perceptible at all in the gloom, and then he looked at the stage again, without a word. The tenor had heard somebody moving in the house, and he stuck a single gla.s.s in his eye and peered over the footlights into the abyss, thinking the last comer might be a woman, in which case he would perhaps have condescended to sing a little louder and better. A number of people were loafing on the stage, standing up or sitting on the wooden steps of somebody"s enchanted palace, but Logotheti could not see Margaret amongst them.

The conductor of the orchestra rapped sharply on his desk, the music ceased suddenly and he glared down at an unseen offender.

"D sharp!" he said, as if he were swearing at the man.

"I believe they hire their band from the deaf and dumb asylum,"

observed the tenor very audibly, but looking vaguely at the plaster tail of the horse.

Some of the young women at the back of the stage giggled obsequiously at this piece of graceful wit, but the orchestra manifested its indignation by hissing. Thereupon the director rapped on his desk more noisily than ever.

"_Da capo_," he said, and the bows began to sc.r.a.pe and quiver again.

The tenor only hummed his part now, picking bits of straw out of the plaster tail and examining them with evident interest.

"Is Miss Donne here?" Logotheti inquired of Schreiermeyer.

The impresario nodded indifferently, without looking round.

"I wish you had chosen _Rigoletto_ for her _debut_," said the Greek.

"The part of Gilda is much better suited to her voice, take my word for it."

"What do you know about it?" asked Schreiermeyer, smiling faintly, just enough to save the rude question from being almost insulting.

"When Gounod began _Faust_ he was in love with a lady with a deep voice," answered Logotheti, "but when he was near the end he was in love with one who had a high voice. The consequence is that Marguerite"s part ranges over nearly three octaves, and is frightfully trying, particularly for a beginner."

"Bosh!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the impresario, though he knew it was quite true.

He looked at the stage again, as if Logotheti did not exist.

"Oh, very well," said the latter carelessly. "It probably won"t matter much, as they say that Miss Donne is going to throw up her engagement, and give up going on the stage."

He had produced an effect at last, for Schreiermeyer"s jaw dropped as he turned quickly.

"Eh? What? Who says she is not going to sing? What?"

"I dare say it is nothing but gossip," Logotheti answered coolly. "You seem excited."

"Excited? Eh? Some one has heard her sing and has offered her more! You shall tell me who it is!" He gripped Logotheti"s arm with fingers that felt like talons. "Tell me quickly!" he cried. "I will offer her more, more than anybody can! Tell me quickly."

"Take care, you are spoiling my cuff," said Logotheti. "I know nothing about it, beyond that piece of gossip. Of course you are aware that she is a lady. Somebody may have left her a fortune, you know. Her only reason for singing was that she was poor."

"Nonsense!" cried Schreiermeyer, with a sort of suppressed yell. "It is all bosh! Somebody has offered her more money, and you know who it is!

You shall tell me!" He was in a violent pa.s.sion by this time, or seemed to be. "You come here, suggesting and interfering with my prima donnas!

You are in league, d.a.m.n you! d.a.m.n you, you are a conspiracy!"

His face was as white as paper, his queer eyes blazed through his gla.s.ses, and his features were disfigured with rage. He showed his teeth and hissed like a wildcat; his nervous fingers fastened themselves upon Logotheti"s arm.

But Logotheti gazed at him with a look of amus.e.m.e.nt in his quiet eyes, and laughed softly.

"If I were conspiring against you, you would not guess it, my friend,"

he observed in a gentle tone. "And you will never get anything out of me by threatening, you know."

Schreiermeyer"s face relaxed instantly into an expression of disappointment, and he looked wearily at the stage again.

"No, it is of no use," he answered in a melancholy tone. "You are phlegmatic."

"Perfectly," Logotheti a.s.sented. "If I were you, I would put her on in _Rigoletto_."

"Does she know the part?" Schreiermeyer asked, as calmly as if nothing had happened.

"Ask Madame De Rosa," suggested the Greek. "I see her on the stage."

"I will. There is truth in what you say about _Faust_. The part is trying."

"You told me it was bosh," Logotheti observed with a smile.

"I had forgotten that you are such a phlegmatic man, when I said that,"

answered Schreiermeyer with the frankness of a conjurer who admits that his trick has been guessed.

They had been talking as if nothing were going on, but now the conductor turned to them, and gave a signal for silence, which was taken up by all the people on the stage.

"Sh--sh--sh--sh--" it came from all directions.

"Here comes Cordova," observed Schreiermeyer in a low tone.

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