CHAPTER XXIV
CUTTING FOR THE QUEEN
It was a suggestion so purely in the spirit of a day when men betted on every contingency, public or private, decorous or the reverse, from the fecundity of a sister to the longevity of a sire, that it sounded less indecent in the cars of Lord Almeric"s companions than it does in ours.
Mr. Thoma.s.son indeed, who was only so far a gamester as every man who had pretensions to be a gentleman was one at that time, and who had seldom, since the days of Lady Harrington"s faro bank, staked more than he could afford, hesitated and looked dubious. But Mr. Pomeroy, a reckless and hardened gambler, gave a boisterous a.s.sent, and in the face of that the tutor"s objections went for nothing. In a trice, all the cards and half the gla.s.ses were swept pell mell to the floor, a new pack was torn open, the candles were snuffed, and Mr. Pomeroy, smacking him on the back, was bidding him draw up.
"Sit down, man! Sit down!" cried that gentleman, who had regained his jovial humour as quickly as he had lost it, and whom the prospect of the stake appeared to intoxicate. "May I burn if I ever played for a girl before! Hang it! man, look cheerful, We"ll toast her first--and a daintier bit never swam in a bowl--and play for her afterwards! Come, no heel-taps, my lord. Drink her! Drink her! Here"s to the Mistress of Bastwick!"
"Lady Almeric Doyley!" my lord cried, rising, and bowing with his hand to his heart, while he ogled the door through which she had disappeared.
"I drink you! Here"s to your pretty face, my dear!"
"Mrs. Thoma.s.son!" cried the tutor, "I drink to you. But--"
"But what shall it be, you mean?" Pomeroy cried briskly. "Loo, Quinze, Faro, Lansquenet? Or cribbage, all-fours, put, Mr. Parson, if you like!
It"s all one to me. Name your game and I am your man!"
"Then let us shuffle and cut, and the highest takes," said the tutor.
"Sho! man, where is the sport in that?" Pomeroy cried, receiving the suggestion with disgust.
"It is what Lord Almeric proposed," Mr. Thoma.s.son answered. The two gla.s.ses of wine he had taken had given him courage. "I am no player, and at games of skill I am no match for you."
A shadow crossed Mr. Pomeroy"s face; but he recovered himself immediately. "As you please," he said, shrugging his shoulders with a show of carelessness. "I"ll match any man at anything. Let"s to it!"
But the tutor kept his hands on the cards, which lay in a heap face downwards on the table. "There is a thing to be settled," he said, hesitating somewhat, "before we draw. If she will not take the winner--what then?"
"What then?"
"Yes, what then?"
Mr. Pomeroy grinned. "Why, then number two will try his luck with her, and if he fail, number three! There, my bully boy, that is settled. It seems simple enough, don"t it?"
"But how long is each to have?" the tutor asked in a low voice. The three were bending over the cards, their faces near one another. Lord Almeric"s eyes turned from one to the other of the speakers.
"How long?" Mr. Pomeroy answered, raising his eyebrows. "Ah. Well, let"s say--what do you think? Two days?"
"And if the first fail, two days for the second?"
"There will be no second if I am first," Pomeroy answered grimly.
"But otherwise," the tutor persisted; "two days for the second?"
Bully Pomeroy nodded.
"But then, the question is, can we keep her here?"
"Four days?"
"Yes."
Mr. Pomeroy laughed harshly. "Ay," he said, "or six if needs be and I lose. You may leave that to me. We"ll shift her to the nursery to-morrow."
"The nursery?" my lord said, and stared.
"The windows are barred. Now do you understand?"
The tutor turned a shade paler, and his eyes sank slyly to the table.
"There"ll--there"ll be no violence, of course," he said, his voice a trifle unsteady.
"Violence? Oh, no, there will be no violence," Mr. Pomeroy answered with an unpleasant sneer. And they all laughed; Mr. Thoma.s.son tremulously, Lord Almeric as if he scarcely entered into the other"s meaning and laughed that he might not seem outside it. Then, "There is another thing that must not be," Pomeroy continued, tapping softly on the table with his forefinger, as much to command attention as to emphasise his words, "and that is peaching! Peaching! We"ll have no Jeremy Twitcher here, if you please."
"No, no!" Mr. Thoma.s.son stammered. "Of course not."
"No, damme!" said my lord grandly. "No peaching!"
"No," Mr. Pomeroy said, glancing keenly from one to the other, "and by token I have a thought that will cure it. D"ye see here, my lord! What do you say to the losers taking five thousand each out of Madam"s money?
That should bind all together if anything will--though I say it that will have to pay it," he continued boastfully.
My lord was full of admiration. "Uncommon handsome!" he said. "Pom, that does you credit. You have a head! I always said you had a head!"
"You are agreeable to that, my lord?"
"Burn me, if I am not."
"Then shake hands upon it. And what say you, Parson?"
Mr. Thoma.s.son proffered an a.s.sent fully as enthusiastic as Lord Almeric"s, but for a different reason. The tutor"s nerves, never strong, were none the better for the rough treatment he had undergone, his long drive, and his longer fast. He had taken enough wine to obscure remoter terrors, but not the image of Mr. Dunborough--_impiger, iracundus, inexorabilis, acer_--Dunborough doubly and trebly offended! That image recurred when the gla.s.s was not at his lips; and behind it, sometimes the angry spectre of Sir George, sometimes the face of the girl, blazing with rage, slaying him with the lightning of her contempt.
He thought that it would not suit him ill, therefore, though it was a sacrifice, if Mr. Pomeroy took the fortune, the wife, and the risk--and five thousand only fell to him. True, the risk, apart from that of Mr.
Dunborough"s vengeance, might be small; no one of the three had had act or part in the abduction of the girl. True, too, in the atmosphere of this unfamiliar house--into which he had been transported as suddenly as Bedreddin Ha.s.san to the palace in the fairy tale--with the fumes of wine and the glamour of beauty in his head, he was in a mood to minimise even that risk. But under the jovial good-fellowship which Mr. Pomeroy affected, and strove to instil into the party, he discerned at odd moments a something sinister that turned his craven heart to water and loosened the joints of his knees.
The lights and cards and jests, the toasts and laughter were a mask that sometimes slipped and let him see the death"s head that grinned behind it. They were three men, alone with the girl in a country house, of which the reputation, Mr. Thoma.s.son had a shrewd idea, was no better than its master"s. No one outside knew that she was there; as far as her friends were concerned, she had vanished from the earth. She was a woman, and she was in their power. What was to prevent them bending her to their purpose?
It is probable that had she been of their rank from the beginning, bred and trained, as well as born, a Soane, it would not have occurred even to a broken and desperate man to frame so audacious a plan. But scruples grew weak, and virtue--the virtue of Vauxhall and the masquerades--languished where it was a question of a woman who a month before had been fair game for undergraduate gallantry, and who now carried fifty thousand pounds in her hand.
Mr. Pomeroy"s next words showed that this aspect of the case was in his mind. "Damme, she ought to be glad to marry any one of us!" he said, as he packed the cards and handed them to the others that each might shuffle them. "If she is not, the worse for her! We"ll put her on bread and water until she sees reason!"
"D"you think Dunborough knew, Tommy?" said Lord Almeric, grinning at the thought of his friend"s disappointment. "That she had the money?"
Dunborough"s name turned the tutor grave. He shook his head.
"He"ll be monstrous mad! Monstrous!" Lord Almeric said with a chuckle; the wine he had drunk was beginning to affect him. "He has paid the postboys and we ride. Well, are you ready? Ready all? Hallo! Who is to draw first?"
"Let"s draw for first," said Mr. Pomeroy. "All together!"
"All together!"
"For it"s hey, derry down, and it"s over the lea.