"Of the county of c.u.mberland," I replied meekly. I felt as if I was repeating my catechism.
"Then, Mr. Morrice Buckler, of the county of c.u.mberland," he began, with an exaggerated politeness. But I broke in upon him.
"I have some knowledge of the county of Bristol, too," I said, with as much bravado as I could muster. But "twas no great matter. The display would have disgraced a tavern bully.
The words, however, served their turn. Just for a second, just long enough for me to perceive it, a startled look of fear flashed into his eyes, and his body seemed to shrink in bulk. Then he asked suddenly:
"How came you here?"
"By a path Sir Julian Harnwood told me of," says I.
He stretched a finger towards the window.
"Go!" he cried in a low voice. "Go!"
I stood my ground, for I noted with a lively satisfaction that the quaver had pa.s.sed from my voice into his.
"Have a care, Master Buckler!" he continued. "You are no longer in England. You would do well to remember that. There are reasons why I would have no disturbance here to-night. There are reasons. But on my life, if you refuse to obey me, I will have you whipped from here by my servants."
"Ah!" says I, "this is not the first time, Count Lukstein, that some one has stood between you and the bell."
He cast a glance over my shoulder. I saw that he was going to shout, and I whipped out the pistol from my pocket.
"If you shout," I said, "the crack of this will add little to the noise."
"It would go ill with you if you fired it," he bl.u.s.tered.
"It would go yet worse with you," I answered.
And there we stood over against one another, the finest brace of cowards in Christendom, each seeking to overcome the other by a wordy braggadocio. Indeed, my forefinger so trembled on the trigger that I wonder the pistol did not go off and settle our quarrel out of hand.
"What does it mean?" he burst out, s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g himself to a note of pa.s.sion. "What does it mean? You skulk into my house like a thief."
"The manner of my visit does in truth leave much to be desired," I conceded. "But for that you must thank your reputation."
"It does, in truth," he returned, ignoring my last words. "It leaves much--very much. You see that yourself, Mr. Buckler. So, to-morrow!
Return by the way you came, and come to me again tomorrow. We can talk at leisure. It is over-late to-night."
"Nay, my lord," said I, drawing some solid comfort from the wheedling tone in which he spake. "Your servants will be abroad in the house tomorrow, and, as you were careful to remind me, I am not in England.
I have waited for some six hours upon the parapet of your terrace, and I have no mind to let the matter drag to another day."
His eyes shifted uneasily about the room; but ever they returned to the shining barrel of my pistol.
"Well, well," said he at length, with a shrug of the shoulders, and a laugh that rang flat as a cracked guinea, "one must needs listen when the speaker holds a pistol at your head. Say your say and get it done."
He flung himself into a chair which stood in the corner by the window.
I sat me in the one from which he had risen, drawing it closer to the fire. A little table stood within arm"s reach, and I pulled it up between us and laid my pistol on the edge.
"I have come," said I, "upon Sir Julian Harnwood"s part."
"Pardon me!" he interrupted. "You will oblige me by speaking English, and by speaking it low."
The request seemed strange, but "twas all one to me what language we spoke so long as he understood.
"Certainly," I answered. "I am here to undertake his share in the quarrel which he had with you, and to complete the engagement which was interrupted on the Kingsdown."
"But, Mr. Buckler," he said, with some show of perplexity, "the quarrel was a private one. Wherein lies your right to meddle with the matter?"
"I was Sir Julian"s friend," I replied. "He knew the love I bore him, and laid this errand as his last charge upon it."
"Really, really," said he, "both you and your friend seem strangely ill-versed in the conduct of gentlemen. You say Sir Julian laid this errand upon you. But I have your bare word for that. It is not enough.
And even granting it to be true, my quarrel was with Sir Julian, not with you. One does not fight duels by proxy."
He had recovered his composure, and spoke with an easy superciliousness.
"My lord," I answered, stung by his manner, "I must ask you to get the better of that scruple, as I have of one far more serious, for, after all, one does not as a rule fight duels with murderers."
He started forward in his chair as though he had been struck. I seized the b.u.t.t of my pistol, for I fancied he was about to throw himself upon me.
"I know more than you think," said I, nodding at him, "and this will prove it to you."
I drew the oval gold box from my fob and tossed it on to his knees.
His hands darted at it, and he turned it over and over in his palms, staring at the cover with white cheeks.
"How got you this?" he asked hoa.r.s.ely, and then remembering himself, "I know nothing of it. I know nothing of it."
"Sir Julian gave it into my hands," said I. "I visited him in his prison on the evening of the 22nd September."
He stared at me for a while, repeating "the 22nd September" like one busy over a sum.
"The 22nd September," said I, "the 22nd September. It was the day of his trial."
At the words his face cleared wonderfully. He rose with an indescribable air of relief, flung the box carelessly on the table, and said with a contemptuous smile:
"Ah, Mr. Buckler! Mr. Buckler! You would have saved much time had you mentioned the date earlier. How much?" and he shook some imaginary coins in the cup of his hand.
"Count Lukstein!" I exclaimed.
I had not the faintest notion of what he was driving at, and the surprise which his change of manner occasioned me obscured the insult.
"Tut, tut, man!" he resumed, with a wave of the hand. "How much?
Surely the farce drags."
"The farce," I replied hotly, "is one of those which are best played seriously. Remember that, Count Lukstein!"
"Well, well," he said indulgently, "have your own way. But, believe me, you are making a mistake. I have no wish to cheapen your wares.
That you have picked up some fragments of the truth I am ready to agree; and I am equally ready to buy your silence. You have but to name your price."