"Then--did no quarrel take place, sir?" cried Ferrar, thinking of the landlady"s story.
"Not an angry word."
At this moment, as they were turning into Ship Street, Saxby, who seemed completely off his head, ran full tilt against Ferrar. It was all over, he cried out in excitement, as he turned back with them: the doctor p.r.o.nounced Pym to be really dead.
"It is a dreadful thing," said the captain. "And, seemingly, a mysterious one."
"Oh, it is dreadful," a.s.serted young Saxby. "What will poor Miss Verena do? I saw her just now," he added, dropping his voice.
"Saw her where?" asked the captain, taking a step backwards.
"In the place where I"ve just met you, sir," replied Saxby. "I was running past round the corner into the street, on my way home from Clapham, when a young lady met and pa.s.sed me, going pretty nearly as quick as I was. She had her face m.u.f.fled in a black veil, but I am nearly sure it was Miss Verena Fontaine. I thought she must be coming from Pym"s lodgings here."
Captain Tanerton and his chief mate exchanged glances of intelligence under the light of the street gas-lamp. The former then turned to Saxby.
"Mr. Saxby," said he, "I would advise you not to mention this little incident. It would not, I am sure, be pleasant to Miss Verena Fontaine"s friends to hear of it. And, after all, you are not sure that it was she."
"Very true, sir," replied Saxby. "I"ll not speak of it again."
"You hear, sir," answered Ferrar softly, as Saxby stepped on to open the house-door. "This seems to bear out what I said. And, by the way, sir, I also saw----"
"Hush!" cautiously interrupted the captain--for they had reached the door, and Mrs. Richenough stood at it.
And what Mr. Ferrar further saw, whatever it might be, was not heard by Captain Tanerton. There was no present opportunity for private conversation: and Ferrar was away in the morning with the _Rose of Delhi_.
After parting with Captain Tanerton on leaving the ship, I made my way to the Mansion House, took an omnibus to Covent Garden, and called at the Tavistock to tell Mr. Brandon of the return of the ship. Mr. Brandon kept me to dinner. About eight o"clock I left him, and went to the Marylebone Road to see the Fontaines. Coralie was in the drawing-room alone.
"Is it you, Johnny Ludlow!" she gaily cried, when old Ozias showed me in. "You are as welcome as flowers in May. Here I am, without a soul to speak to. You must have a game at chess with me."
"Your sister is not come home, then?"
"Not she. I thought it likely she would come, as soon as the ship"s head was turned seaward--I told you so. But she has not. And now the ship"s back again, I hear. A fine time you must have had of it!"
"We just had. But how did you know?"
"From papa. Papa betook himself to the docks this afternoon, to a.s.sure himself, I presume, that the _Rose of Delhi_ was gone. And my belief is, Johnny, that he will work himself into a nervous fever," Coralie broke off to say, in her equable way, as she helped me to place the pieces.
"When he got there, he found the ship was back again. This put him out a little, as you may judge; and something else put him out more. He heard that Vera went on board with Pym yesterday afternoon when the ship was lying in St. Katherine"s Docks. Upon that, what notion do you suppose he took up? I have first move, don"t I?"
"Certainly. What notion did he take up?" The reader must remember that I knew nothing of Sir Dace"s visit to the ship.
"Why, that Vera might be resolving to convert herself into a stowaway, and go out with Pym and the ship. Poor papa! He went searching all over the vessel. He must be off his head."
"Verena would not do that."
"Do it?" retorted Coralie. "She"d be no more likely to do it than to go up a chimney, as the sweeps do. I told papa so. He brought me this news when he came home to dinner. And he might just as well have stayed away, for all he ate."
Coralie paused to look at her game. I said nothing.
"He could only drink. It was as if he had a fierce thirst upon him. When the sweets came on, he left the table and shut himself in his little library. I sent Ozias to ask if he would have a cup of tea or coffee made; papa swore at poor Ozias, and locked the door upon him. When Verena does appear I"d not say but he"ll beat her."
"No, no: not that."
"But, I tell you he is off his head. He is still shut up: and n.o.body dare go near him when he gets into a fit of temper. It is so silly of papa! Verena is all right. But this disobedience, you see, is something new to him."
"You can"t move that bishop. It leaves your king in check."
"So it does. The worst item of news remains behind," added Coralie. "And that is that Pym does not sail with the ship."
"I should not think he would now. Captain Tanerton would not take him."
"Papa told me Captain Tanerton had caused him to be superseded. Was Pym very much the worse for what he took, Johnny? Was he very insolent? You must have seen it all?"
"He had taken quite enough. And he was about as insolent as a man can be."
"Ferrar is appointed to his place, papa says; and a new man to Ferrar"s."
"Ferrar is! I am glad of that: very. He deserves to get on."
"But Ferrar is not a gentleman, is he?" objected Coralie.
"Not in one sense. There are gentlemen and gentlemen. Mark Ferrar is very humble as regards birth and bringing-up. His father is a journeyman china-painter at one of the Worcester china-factories; and Mark got his learning at St. Peter"s charity-school. But every instinct Mark possesses is that of a refined, kindly, modest gentleman; and he has contrived to improve himself so greatly by dint of study and observation, that he might now pa.s.s for a gentleman in any society.
Some men, whatever may be their later advantages, can never throw off the common tone and manner of early habits and a.s.sociations. Ferrar has succeeded in doing it."
"If Pym stays on sh.o.r.e it may bring us further complication," mused Coralie. "I should search for Verena myself then--and search in earnest. Papa and old Ozias have gone about it in anything but a likely manner."
"Have you any notion where she can be?"
"Just the least bit of notion in the world," laughed Coralie. "It flashed across me the other night where she might have hidden herself.
I don"t know it. I have no particular ground to go upon."
"You did not tell Sir Dace?"
"Not I," lightly answered Coralie. "We two sisters don"t interfere with one another"s private affairs. I did keep back a letter of Vera"s; one she wrote to Pym when we first left home; but I have done so no more.
Here comes some tea at last!"
"I should have told," I continued in a low tone. "Or taken means myself to see whether my notion was right or wrong."
"What did it signify?--when Pym was going away in a day or two. Check to you, Johnny Ludlow."
That first game, what with talking and tea-drinking, was a long one. I won it. When Ozias came in for the tea-cups Coralie asked him whether Sir Dace had rung for anything. No, the man answered; most likely his master would remain locked in till bed-time; it was his way when any great thing put him out.
"I don"t think I can stay for another game," I said to Coralie, as she began to place the men again.
"Are you in such a hurry?" cried Coralie, glancing round at the clock: which said twenty minutes to ten.
I was not in any hurry at all that night, as regarded myself: I had thought she might not care for me to stay longer. Miss Deveen and Cattledon had gone out to dinner some ten miles away, and were not expected home before midnight. So we began a fresh game.