"I wonder if it"s an illusion?" he muttered. "I"ll try again."
He returned to the couch and lay down. Again it grew a second time plainer than before, if possible. He watched for a long time with a feeling of awe.
"I wonder if I"m looking into the face of my own soul?" he mused.
He studied this second image with keen interest. It was five shades paler than the first. The thing had happened to him once before and his wife had declared it a sign that he would be elected to a second term, but the paleness of the second image meant that he would not live through it. It was uncanny. He rose and paced the floor, laid down again, and the image vanished. What did it mean?
Only that day a secret service man had come to warn him of a new plot of a.s.sa.s.sination and beg him to double the guard.
"What is the use, my dear boy, in setting up the gap when the fence is down all around?"
"Remember, sir, they shot a hole through your hat one night last week on your way to the Soldiers" Home."
"Well, what of it? If a man really makes up his mind to kill me he can do it----"
"You can take precautions."
"But I can"t shut myself up in an iron box--now, can I? If I am killed I can die but once. To live in constant dread of it is to die over and over again. I decline to die until the time comes--away with your extra guards! I"ve got too many now. They bother me."
He threw off his depression and took up a volume of Artemus Ward"s funny sayings to refresh his soul with their quaint humor. He must laugh or die. He had promised to see Betty Winter with a friend who had a pet.i.tion to present at ten o"clock. He would rest until she came.
John Vaughan had insisted on her coming at this unusual hour. She protested, but he declared the chances of success in asking for his father"s release would be infinitely better if she took advantage of the President"s good nature and saw him alone at night when they would not be interrupted.
As they neared the White House grounds, crossing the little park on the north side, Betty"s nervousness became unbearable. She stopped and put her hand on John"s arm.
"Let"s wait until to-morrow?" she pleaded.
"The President is expecting us----"
"I"ll send him word we couldn"t come."
"But, why?"
She hesitated and glanced at him uneasily:
"I don"t know. I"m just nervous. I don"t feel equal to the strain of such an interview to-night. It means so much to you. It means so much to me now that love rules my life----"
He took her hands in his and drew her into the friendly shadows beside the walk.
"Love does rule life, doesn"t it?"
"Absolutely. I"m frightened when I realize it," she sighed.
"You are all mine now? In life, in death, through evil report and good report?"
"In life, in death, through evil report and good report----yours forever, dearest!"
He took her in his arms and held her in silence. She could feel him trembling with deep emotion.
"There"s nothing to be nervous about then," he said, rea.s.suringly, as his arms relaxed. "Come, we"ll hurry. I want to send a message to my father to-night announcing his release."
At the entrance to the White House grounds they pa.s.sed a man who shot a quick glance at John, and Betty thought his head moved in a nod of approval or recognition.
"You know him?" she asked nervously.
"One of Baker"s men, I think--attempt on the President"s life last week.
They"ve doubled the guard, no doubt."
They pa.s.sed another, strolling carelessly from the shadows of the white pillars of the portico.
"They seem to be everywhere to-night," John laughed carelessly.
The White House door was open and they pa.s.sed into the hall and ascended the stairs to the Executive Chamber without challenge. Little Tad, the President"s son, who ran the House to suit himself at times, was in his full dress suit of a lieutenant of the army and had ordered the guard to attend a minstrel show he was giving in the attic.
The President had agreed to meet Betty in his office at ten o"clock and told her to bring her friend right upstairs and wait if he were not on time.
They sat down and waited five minutes in awkward silence. Betty was watching the strange glittering expression in John Vaughan"s eyes with increasing alarm.
She heard a m.u.f.fled footfall in the hall, stepped quickly to the door, and saw the man they had pa.s.sed at the entrance to the grounds.
She returned trembling.
"The man we pa.s.sed at the gate is in that hall," she whispered.
"What of it?" was the careless answer. "Baker"s secret service men come and go when they please here----"
He paused and glanced at the door.
"He has his eye on us maybe," he added, with a little laugh.
He studied Betty"s flushed face for a moment, curiously hesitated as if about to speak, changed his mind, and was silent. He drew his watch from his pocket and looked at it.
"I"ve ordered a carriage to wait for you at the gate at a quarter past ten," he said quickly. "I forgot to tell you."
"Why--it may take us longer than half an hour?"
"That"s just it. We may be talking two hours. Such things can"t be threshed out in a minute. You can introduce me, say a good word, and leave us to fight it out----"
"I want to stay," she interrupted.
"Nonsense, dear, it may take hours. Besides, I may have some things to say to the President, and he some things to say to me that it were better a sweet girl"s ears should not hear----"
"That"s exactly what I wish to prevent, John, dear," she pleaded. "You must be careful and say nothing to offend the President. It means too much. We must win."
"I"ll be wise in the choice of words. But you mustn"t stay, dear. I"m not a child. I don"t need a chaperone."
"But you may need a friend----"
"He does wield the power of kings--doesn"t he?"