"I think that you will come," he whispered. "I think that you will be very happy."
CHAPTER XXIX
The great house in Curzon Street awoke, the following morning, to a state of intense activity. Taxi-cabs and motor-cars were lined along the street; a stream of callers came and went. That part of the establishment of which little was seen by the casual caller, the rooms where half a dozen secretaries conducted an immense correspondence, presided over by Li Wen, was working overtime at full pressure. In his reception room, Prince Shan saw a selected few of the callers, mostly journalists and politicians, to whom Li Wen gave the entree. One visitor even this most astute of secretaries found it hard to place. He took the card in to his master, who glanced at it thoughtfully.
"The Earl of Dorminster," he repeated. "I will see him."
Nigel found himself received with courtesy, yet with a certain aloofness. Prince Shan rose from his favourite chair of plain black oak heaped with green silk cushions and held out his hand a little tentatively.
"You are very kind to visit me, Lord Dorminster," he said. "I trust that you come to wish me fortune."
"That," Nigel replied, "depends upon how you choose to seek it."
"I am answered," was the prompt acknowledgment. "One thing in your country I have at least learnt to appreciate, and that is your love of candour. What is your errand with me to-day? Have you come to speak to me as an amba.s.sador from your cousin, or in any way on her behalf?"
"My business has nothing to do with Lady Maggie," Nigel a.s.sured him gravely.
Prince Shan held out his hand.
"Stop," he begged. "Do not explain your business. If it is a personal request, it is granted. If, on the other hand, you seek my advice on matters of grave importance, it is yours. Before other words are spoken, however, I myself desire to address you on the subject of Lady Maggie Trent."
"As you please," Nigel answered.
"It is not the custom of my country, or of my life," Prince Shan continued, "to covet or steal the things which belong to another. If fate has made me a thief, I am very sorry. I have proposed to Lady Maggie that she accompany me back to China. It is my great desire that she should become my wife."
Nigel felt himself curiously tongue-tied. There was something in the other"s measured speech, so fateful, so a.s.sured, that it seemed almost as though he were speaking of pre-ordained things. Much that had seemed to him impossible and unnatural in such an idea disappeared from that moment.
"You tell me this," Nigel began--
"I announce it to you as the head of the family," Prince Shan interrupted.
"You tell it to me also," Nigel persisted, "because you have heard the rumours which were at one time very prevalent--that Lady Maggie and I were or were about to become engaged to be married."
"I have heard such a rumour only very indirectly," Prince Shan confessed, "and I cannot admit that it has made any difference in my att.i.tude. I think, in my land and yours, we have at least one common convention. The woman who touches our heart is ours if we may win her.
Love is unalterably selfish. One must fight for one"s own hand. And for those who may suffer by our victory, we may have pity but no consideration."
"Am I to understand," Nigel asked bluntly, "that Lady Maggie has consented to be your wife?"
"Lady Maggie has given me no reply. I left her alone with her thoughts.
Every hour it is my hope to hear from her. She knows that I leave for China early to-morrow."
"So at the present moment you are in suspense."
"I am in suspense," Prince Shan admitted, "and perhaps," he went on, with one of his rare smiles, "it occurred to me that it would be in one sense a relief to speak to a fellow man of the hopes and fears that are in my heart. You are the one person to whom I could speak, Lord Dorminster. You have not wished my suit well, but at least you have been clear-sighted. I think it has never occurred to you that a prince of China might venture to compete with a peer of England."
"On the contrary," Nigel a.s.sented, "I have the greatest admiration for the few living descendants of the world"s oldest aristocracy. You have a right to enter the lists, a right to win if you can."
"And what do you think of my prospects, if I may ask such a delicate question?" Prince Shan enquired.
"I cannot estimate them," Nigel replied. "I only know that Maggie is deeply interested."
"I think," his companion continued softly, "that she will become my Princess. You have never visited China, Lord Dorminster," he went on, "so you have little idea, perhaps, as to the manner of our lives. Some day I will hope to be your host, so until then, as I may not speak of my own possessions, may I go just so far as this? Your cousin will be very happy in China. This is a great country, but the very air you breathe is cloyed with your national utilitarianism. Mine is a country of beautiful thoughts, of beautiful places, of quiet-living and sedate people. I can give your cousin every luxury of which the world has ever dreamed, wrapped and enshrined in beauty. No person with a soul could be unhappy in the places where she will dwell."
"You are at least confident," Nigel remarked.
"It is because I am convinced," was the calm rejoinder. "I shall take your cousin"s happiness into my keeping without one shadow of misgiving.
The last word, however, is with her. It remains to be seen whether her courage is great enough to induce her to face such a complete change in the manner of her life."
"It will not be her lack of courage which will keep her in England,"
Nigel declared.
Prince Shan bowed, with a graceful little gesture of the hands. The subject was finished.
"I shall now, Lord Dorminster," he said, "take advantage of your kindly presence here to speak to you on a very personal matter, only this time it is you who are the central figure, and I who am the dummy."
"I do not follow you," Nigel confessed, with a slight frown.
"I speak in tones of apology," Prince Shan went on, "but you must remember that I am one of reflective disposition; Nature has endowed me with some of the gifts of my great ancestors, philosophers famed the world over. It seems very clear to me that, if I had not come, from sheer force of affectionate propinquity you would have married Lady Maggie."
Nigel"s frown deepened.
"Prince Shan!" he began.
Again the outstretched hand seemed as though the fingers were pressed against his mouth. He broke off abruptly in his protest.
"You would have lived a contented life, because that is your province,"
his companion continued. "You would have felt yourself happy because you would have been a faithful husband. But the time would have come when you would both have realised that you had missed the great things."
"This is idle prophecy," Nigel observed, a little impatiently. "I came to see you upon another matter."
"Humour me," the Prince begged. "I am going to speak to you even more intimately. I shall venture to do so because, after all, she is better known to me than to you. I am going to tell you that of all the women in the world, Naida Karetsky is the most likely to make you happy."
Nigel drew himself up a little stiffly.
"One does not discuss these things," he muttered.
"May I call that a touch of insularity?" Prince Shan pleaded, "because there is nothing else in the world so wonderful to discuss, in all respect and reverence, as the women who have made us feel. One last word, Lord Dorminster. The days of matrimonial alliances between the reigning families of Europe have come to an end under the influence of a different form of government, but there is a certain type of alliance, the utility of which remains unimpaired. I venture to say that you could not do your country a greater service, apart from any personal feelings you might have, than by marrying Mademoiselle Karetsky. There, you see, now I have finished. This is for your reflection, Lord Dorminster--just the measured statement of one who wears at least the cloak of philosophy by inheritance. Time pa.s.ses. Your own reason for coming to see me has not yet been expounded."
"I have come to ask you to visit the Prime Minister before you leave England," Nigel announced.
Prince Shan changed his position slightly. His forehead was a little wrinkled. He was silent for a moment.
"If I pay more than a farewell visit of ceremony," he said, "that is to say, if I speak with Mr. Mervin Brown on things that count, I must antic.i.p.ate a certain decision at which I have not yet wholly arrived."