<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XLV" id="CHAPTER_XLV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XLV</h2>
<h3>THE END</h3>
<p>Diogenes sat beside the window in the tapperij listening with half an
ear to the sounds in and about the hostelry which were dying out one by
one. At first there had been a footfall in the room overhead which had
seemed to him the sweetest music that man could hear. It had paced
somewhat restlessly up and down and to the Laughing Cavalier, the gay
and irresponsible soldier of fortune, it had seemed as if every creaking
of a loose board beneath the featherweight of that footfall found its
echo in his heart.</p>
<p>But anon Mynheer Cornelius Beresteyn was called away and then all was
still in the room upstairs, and Diogenes burying his head in his hands
evoked the picture of that room as he had seen it five days ago. The
proud jongejuffrouw in her high-backed chair, looking on him with blue
eyes which she vainly tried to render hard through their exquisite
expression of appealing, childlike gentleness: and he groaned aloud with
the misery of the inevitable which with stern finger bade him go and
leave behind him all the illusions, all the dreams which he had dared to
weave.</p>
<p>Had she not told him that she despised him, that his existence was as
naught to her, that she looked on him as a menial and a knave, somewhat
below the faithful henchmen who were in her father's service? Ye gods!
he had endured much in his life of privations, of physical and mental
pain, but was there aught on earth or in the outermost pits of hell to
be compared with the agony of this ending to a dream.</p>
<p>The serving-wench came in just then. She scarcely dared approach the
mynheer with the merry voice and the laughter-filled eyes who now looked
so inexpressibly sad.</p>
<p>Yet she had a message for him. Mynheer Cornelius Beresteyn, she said,
desired to speak with him once more. The wench had murmured the words
shyly, for her heart was aching for the handsome soldier and the tears
were very near her eyes. But hearing the message he had jumped up with
alacrity and was immediately ready to follow her.</p>
<p>Mynheer Beresteyn had a room on the upper floor, she explained, as she
led the way upstairs. The old man was standing on the narrow landing and
as soon as Diogenes appeared upon the stairs, he said simply:</p>
<p>"There was something I did forget to say to you downstairs; may I
trouble you, sir, to come into my room for a moment."</p>
<p>He threw open one of the doors that gave on the landing and politely
stood aside that his visitor might pass through. Diogenes entered the
room: he heard the door being closed behind him, and thought that
Mynheer Beresteyn had followed him in.</p>
<p>The room was very dimly lighted by a couple of tallow candles that
flickered in their sconces, and at first he could not see into the dark
recesses of the room. But presently something moved, something ethereal
and intangible, white and exquisite. It stirred from out the depths of
the huge high-backed chair, and from out the gloom there came a little
cry of surprise and of joy which was as the call of bird or angel.</p>
<p>He did not dare to move, he scarcely dared to breathe. He looked round
for Mynheer Beresteyn who had disappeared.</p>
<p>Surely this could be only a dream. Nothing real on earth could be so
exquisite as that subtle vision which he had of her now, sitting in the
high-backed chair, leaning slightly forward toward him. Gradually his
eyes became accustomed to the gloom: he could see her quite distinctly
now, her fair curls round her perfect head, her red lips parted, her
eyes fixed upon him with a look which he dared not interpret.</p>
<p>All around him was the silence and the darkness of the night, and he was
alone with her just as he had been in this very room five days ago and
then again at Rotterdam.</p>
<p>"St. Bavon, you rogue!" he murmured, "where are you? How dare you leave
me in the lurch like this?"</p>
<p>Then—how it all happened he could not himself have told you—he
suddenly found himself at her feet, kneeling beside the high-backed
chair; his arms were round her shoulders and he could feel the exquisite
perfume of her breath upon his cheek.</p>
<p>"St. Bavon," he cried exultingly to himself, "go away, you rogue!
there's no need for your admonitions now."</p>
<p>Mynheer Beresteyn tiptoed quietly into the room. The roguish smile still
played around his lips. He came up close to the high-backed chair and
placed his hand upon his daughter's head.</p>
<p>Diogenes looked up, and met the kindly eyes of the old man fixed with
calm earnestness upon him.</p>
<p>"Mynheer," he said, and laughter which contained a world of happiness as
well as of joy danced and sparkled in every line of his face, "just now
I refused one half of your fortune! But 'tis your greatest treasure I
claim from you now."</p>
<p>"Nay! you rascal," rejoined Beresteyn, as he lifted his daughter's chin
gently with one finger and looked into her deep blue eyes which were
brimful of happiness, "methinks that that treasure is yours already!"</p>
<p>"Go back, good St. Bavon," cried the Laughing Cavalier in an ecstasy of
joy, "your heaven—you rogue—is not more perfect than this."</p>
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<h2><SPAN name="By_BARONESS_ORCZY" id="By_BARONESS_ORCZY"></SPAN>By BARONESS ORCZY</h2>
<p>"<span class="smcap">Unto Cæsar</span>"</p>
<p><span class="smcap">El Dorado</span></p>
<p><span class="smcap">Meadowsweet</span></p>
<p><span class="smcap">The Noble Rogue</span></p>
<p><span class="smcap">The Heart of a Woman</span></p>
<p><span class="smcap">Petticoat Rule</span></p>
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