""Ere we are, sir," said he to the Prince, as he jerked open the door of the cab. "Shall I wait, sir?"
"Certainly," said Robin, climbing out. "I am a long way from home, my good man."
He hurried up the steps and cast an eye about the place. There were no ladies unattached. As he was about to start on a tour of investigation, a polite person in bra.s.s b.u.t.tons came up to him.
"Alone, sir?" he inquired pityingly.
"Quite," said Robin, still peering into the recesses.
"Then come with me, if you please. I am directed to escort you to one who is also alone. This way, sir."
Robin followed him through a door, down a narrow hallway, up a flight of stairs and out another door upon a small portico, sheltered by a heavy canvas awning. Two men were standing at the railing, looking down upon the impressionistic lights of the sunken city. The Prince drew back, his face hardening.
"What does this mean, sirrah? You said--"
At the sound of his voice the two men turned, stared at him intently for an instant and then deliberately strode past him, entered the door and disappeared. The person in bra.s.s b.u.t.tons followed them.
A soft, gurgling laugh fell upon his ears--a laugh of pure delight.
He whirled about and faced--one who was no longer alone.
She was seated at the solitary little table in the corner; until now it had escaped his notice for the excellent reason that it was outside the path of light from the open doorway, and the faint glow from the adjacent porches did not penetrate the quiet retreat.
He sprang toward her with a glad cry, expecting her to rise. She remained seated, her hand extended. This indifference on her part may have been the result of cool premeditation. In any event, it served to check the impulsive ardour of the Prince, who, it is to be feared, had lost something in the way of self-restraint. It is certain-- absolutely certain--that had she come forward to meet him, she would have found herself imprisoned in a pair of strong, eager arms,--and a crisis precipitated. He had to be content with a warm hand-clasp and a smile of welcome that even the gloom could not hide from his devouring eyes.
"My dear, dear Bedelia," he murmured. "I had almost given you up.
Three long days have I waited for you. You--"
"I have never broken a promise, Rex," she said coolly." It is you who are to be commended, not I, for you see I was coming to Graustark anyway. I should not have been surprised if you had failed me, sir.
It is a long way from Vienna to this out-of-the-way--"
"The most distant spot in the world would not have been too far away to cause an instant"s hesitation on my part," said he, dropping into the chair opposite her. "I would go to the end of the world, Bedelia."
"But your personal affairs--your business," she protested. "Can you neglect it so--"
"My business is to find happiness," said he. "I should be neglecting it indeed if I failed to pursue the only means of attaining it. You are happiness, Bedelia."
"What would you sacrifice for happiness?" she asked softly.
"All else in the world," he replied steadily. "If I were a king, my realm should go if it stood between me and--you, Bedelia."
She drew back with a queer little gasp, as if suddenly breathless.
"Wait--wait just for a moment," she said, with difficulty steadying her voice. "This night may see the end of our adventure, Rex. Let us think well before we say that it is over. I know, if you do not, that a great deal depends upon what we are to say to each other to-night.
You will ask me to be your wife. Are you sure that you appreciate all that it means to you and to your future if I should say yes to that dear question?"
He looked at her intently. "What do you know, Bedelia?"
"I know that you are the Prince of Graustark and that it is ordained that you shall wed one whose station is the equal of your own. You must think well, dear Rex, before you ask Bedelia Guile to be your wife."
"You know that I am--" he began, dully, and then burst into a mirthless laugh. "And knowing who I am, why do you not leap at the chance to become the Princess of Graustark? Why not realise an ambition that--"
"Hush! You see how well I considered when I advised you to think before speaking? You are now saying things that are unworthy of you.
You are forgetting that it is my privilege to say no to the am in search of happiness. I too--"
He stood up, leaning far over the table, a penetrating look in his eyes.
"How long have you known, Bedelia?"
"Since the second day out on the _Jupiter_," she replied serenely.
He slowly resumed his seat, overwhelmed by the sickening realisation that his bubble had burst. She had known from the beginning. She had played with him. She had defied him!
"I know what you are thinking, Rex," she said, almost pleadingly.
"You are thinking ill of me, and you are unjust. It was as fair for me as it was for you. We played a cautious game. You set about to win my love as you saw fit, my friend, and am I to be condemned if I exercised the same privilege? I was no more deliberate, no more reprehensible than you. Am I more guilty of deceit than you?"
He gave a great sigh of relief. "You are right," he said. "It is my turn to confess. I have known for many days that you are not Bedelia Guile. We are quits."
She laughed softly. "I rather like Bedelia. I think I shall keep it as a good-luck name. We have now arrived at the time for a profound contemplation of the results of our experiments. In the meantime, I have had no dinner. I trust that the Prince of Graustark has dined so lightly that he will not decline to share my repast with me. It has already been ordered--for two."
"By jove, you--you amaze me!" he exclaimed.
"Please remove that dreadful mackintosh and touch the bell for me.
You see, I am a very prosaic person, after all. Even in the face of disaster I can have a craving for food and drink. That"s better."
In a sort of daze, he tapped the little table bell. A waiter appeared on the instant.
"Give us more light, waiter," was her command, "and serve dinner at once."
The lights went up, and Robin looked into her soft, smiling eyes.
"It doesn"t matter," he whispered hoa.r.s.ely. "I don"t care what happens to me, Bedelia, I--I shall never give you up. You are worth all the kingdoms in the world. You are the loveliest, most adorable-- "
"Hush! The eyes of your people are upon you. See! Even the waiter recognises his prince. He is overcome. Ah! He falters with the consomme. It is a perilous moment. There! I knew something would happen, poor fellow. He has spilled--but, all is well; he has his wits again. See! He replenishes from the steaming tureen. We are saved."
Her mood was so gaily satiric, so inconsequential, that he allowed a wondering, uncertain smile to banish the trouble from his eyes as he leaned back in the chair and studied the vivid, excited face of the girl who had created havoc with his senses. She was dressed as he had seen her on board the _Jupiter_ during those delightful days on deck: the same trim figure in a blue serge suit and a limp white hat, drawn well down over her soft brown hair, with the smart red tie and the never-to-be-forgotten scent of a perfume that would linger in his nostrils forever and forever.
"Do you think it strange that I should have asked you to meet me here in this unconventional way instead of at the Inn?" she inquired, suddenly serious. Again the shy, pleading expression stole into her eyes.
"I did think so, but no longer. I am glad that we are here."
"Mrs. Gaston is inside," she informed him quickly. "I do not come alone. An hour ago the Inn became quite impossible as a trysting place. A small party from the Regengetz arrived for dinner. Can you guess who is giving the dinner? The great and only William W.
Blithers, sir, who comes to put an obstinate daughter upon the throne of Graustark, whether she will or no."
"Did he see you?" cried Robin.
"No," she answered, with a mischievous gleam in her eyes. "I stole out through the back door, and sent Marie out with one of the porters to head you off. Then I came on here. I didn"t even stop to change my gown."
"Hide and seek is a bully game," said he. "It can"t last much longer, Bedelia. I think it is only right that we should go to your father and tell him that--everything is all right. It is his due. You"ve solved your own problem and are satisfied, so why not reveal yourself. There is nothing to be gained by further secrecy."