"That"s what it amounts to, but, of course, it began with Dodwell."
"I am perfectly aware that Captain Dodwell made a certain statement for which Mr. Beaton was only kept from knocking him down by the rest of you--brave men! What I want to know is if you were all in the conspiracy. Did you yourself see, with your own eyes, Mr. Beaton cheat?"
"I can"t say that I did."
"You were watching him the whole time?"
"I suppose I was."
"Did you see anything in the least suspicious about anything he did?"
"I"m bound to say I didn"t, at least, not to notice it."
"Had you any suspicions of him?"
"Not the faintest shadow of one, we were chums; I would as soon have suspected myself."
"So, except for what Captain Dodwell said, which was, after a fashion, corroborated by Mr. Noel Draycott, you had no reason to suppose that Mr. Beaton had been guilty of the slightest irregularity?"
"I suppose I hadn"t, if you look at it like that."
"You would unhesitatingly have handed the pool to Mr. Beaton, without even the slightest feeling of having been ill-used?"
"Of course I would; he had won it; his hand was better than mine."
"He denied having done what Captain Dodwell stated?"
"Rather; as you said, he wanted to knock him down; he was as mad as a hatter."
"Would you have behaved with perfect calmness in the face of Captain Dodwell"s hideous accusation?"
"I don"t expect I should, especially as we were all of us pretty warm to begin with."
"Would you want to knock a man down who said that kind of thing of you?"
"You bet, I should want to kill him."
"Because Mr. Beaton felt exactly as you would have done, his brother officers, chivalrous creatures, threw him out of the room--you a.s.sisted them?"
"Upon my word, I hardly know what I did do, it was a regular rough-and-tumble; Beaton fought like ten wild cats. I daresay I did bear a hand."
"Oh, you dare say? I congratulate you, Mr. Tickell, on the courageous a.s.sistance you lent your brother officers; was it twelve or twenty against one? They could scarcely have done without you. Cowards! And having a.s.sisted your friends in getting rid of the rightful claimant, you had no scruple in placing Mr. Beaton"s money in your pocket, and, I presume, paying with it some of the more pressing debts which I understand you owed?"
The young gentleman winced, the lady"s thrust had gone home.
"That"s all I want from you, Mr. Tickell; I am obliged to you for the confession you have made. I advise you to consider your position, and to ask yourself, when you are dancing with your next partner, if a person who has behaved as you have done is ent.i.tled to show his face in such a house as this. Mr. Beaton cheated no one; he is incapable of such conduct as yours; you cheated him, having first joined yourself with some twelve or twenty of your friends to get him out of the way.
Think over what I have said to you, Mr. Tickell, instead of whispering soft nothings to your partners, and remember that I shall be watching.
Now you may go."
CHAPTER XIV
"Who is Simmons?"
Miss Forster was strolling by herself along the corridor; she had declined to permit Mr. Tickell to accompany her, and the youth had seemed glad enough to get away. She examined her programme; she had it in her mind to cut the next dance, not from one of the reasons which usually prompt that nefarious course of action, but because she had a strong feeling that for a few minutes she would like to be alone. She pa.s.sed into the conservatory through a door which was at the end of the corridor. The music for the next dance had already commenced; the sitters-out, to whom the conservatory is a haven much to be desired, had gone. She moved to a couch which was flanked on either side by towering ferns. She had just sat down and was congratulating herself upon the prospect of remaining, for at least a brief period, undisturbed, when a voice addressed her.
"I am fortunate, Miss Forster, in finding you alone."
The speaker was Captain Anthony Dodwell. She said nothing, but, rising, made as if to go away. He treated her as she had just treated Mr.
Tickell; he interposed himself so as to render it difficult for her to pa.s.s.
"Pardon me, Miss Forster, but, as you are aware, there is an explanation which you owe me, and which you will be so good as to let me have before you go."
"Stand aside, sir."
"A short time ago you more than suggested that I was not the kind of person with whom you cared to dance--with whom, indeed, any decent woman would care to dance. You did this publicly, in such a way that your treatment of me is, at this moment, a common topic of conversation in the ballroom. What explanation have you to give?"
"None; you are not the kind of person with whom any decent woman would care to dance, or talk. Are you going to stand on one side, or am I to call for a.s.sistance?"
"What grounds have you for what you just now said--what have I ever done to you that you should say it?"
"Captain Dodwell--it seems incredible, but I believe you still do hold that rank in the King"s service--you are a liar, a coward, and, I believe, a thief. That you are not, in any sense, an honest man, is certain; to what extent your dishonesty goes, you know better than I do, though I hope to make the thing quite clear before very long. Do you really imagine that an explanation is required as to why a decent woman is unwilling to dance, to talk, or to be a.s.sociated in any way whatever, with a person of that kind?"
"You are taking advantage of your being a woman, Miss Forster; can you give me the name of any man who will be willing to be a.s.sociated with you in what you just now said?"
"On an infamous occasion, Captain Dodwell, you found one man, Mr. Noel Draycott, who, for reasons of his own, was so base as to be willing to be a.s.sociated with a foul lie which you uttered; but before very long I confidently hope that every man who was then present will be a.s.sociated with me against you. Will you let me pa.s.s, or would you prefer that I should repeat what I have just now said in the presence of the dancers who are now leaving the ballroom?"
He let her pa.s.s. The music had ceased, couples were streaming in; among the first was Lady Cantyre on the arm of her attendant cavalier. At sight of the girl she started.
"Haven"t you been dancing?" She glanced towards Dodwell, whose att.i.tude scarcely suggested riotous enjoyment. As her eye caught Violet"s she seemed to have a glimmer of understanding. She turned to her partner.
"That was a perfect dance she"s missed, wasn"t it?" Then, to Violet, "And, by the way, I think I heard a certain gentleman inquiring for you--with an air!"
Miss Forster danced through the rest of the programme--no other of her partners had occasion to complain of her in any way whatever. Her demeanour could not have been more orthodox; she behaved just as a young woman ought to who is having a first-rate time at a delightful ball. During the dances and in that more critical period between them, she was all that her partners could possibly have desired; lucky men!
No one, to look at her, or to listen to her, would have guessed that anything had happened to crumple a single rose leaf, to mar in the least degree her night"s enjoyment.
Only when dancing with one partner was a word said which was not, perhaps, altogether in keeping with the spirit of the hour. The partner was Major Reith, and, in the beginning, the words came from him. That scene in the woods, far from weakening, had rather strengthened their friendship. He was years older than she; what had pa.s.sed between them on that occasion seemed to have produced in him the att.i.tude, say, of an uncle, who was on the best terms with his niece. He said the word, after the dance was over, when they had settled themselves on chairs which were in full view of the whole a.s.sembly; there was evidently no thought of the privacy of the alcove for them.
"What"s this I hear you"ve been saying to Anthony Dodwell and to Jackie Tickell?"
"How can I tell what you hear behind my back?"
"Exactly; how can you? And you can"t guess either?"
"Did I ever pretend to be any good at guessing?"