<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER VI </h2>
<p>Dominey spent a very impatient hour that evening in his sitting-room at
the Carlton, waiting for Seaman. It was not until nearly seven that the
latter appeared.</p>
<p>"Are you aware," Dominey asked him, "that I am expected to call upon the
Princess Eiderstrom at seven o'clock?"</p>
<p>"I have your word for it," Seaman replied, "but I see no tragedy in the
situation. The Princess is a woman of sense and a woman of political
insight. While I cannot recommend you to take her entirely into your
confidence, I still think that a middle course can be judiciously
pursued."</p>
<p>"Rubbish!" Dominey exclaimed. "As Leopold Von Ragastein, the Princess has
indisputable claims upon me and my liberty, claims which would altogether
interfere with the career of Everard Dominey."</p>
<p>With methodical neatness, Seaman laid his hat, gloves and walking stick
upon the sideboard. He then looked into the connecting bedroom, closed and
fastened the door and extended himself in an easy-chair.</p>
<p>"Sit opposite to me, my friend," he said. "We will talk together."</p>
<p>Dominey obeyed a little sullenly. His companion, however, ignored his
demeanour.</p>
<p>"Now, my friend," he said, beating upon the palm of one hand with the
forefinger of his other, "I am a man of commerce and I do things in a
business way. Let us take stock of our position. Three months ago this
very week, we met by appointment at a certain hotel in Cape Town."</p>
<p>"Only three months," Dominey muttered.</p>
<p>"We were unknown to one another," Seaman continued. "I had only heard of
the Baron Von Ragastein as a devoted German citizen and patriot, engaged
in an important enterprise in East Africa by special intercession of the
Kaiser, on account of a certain unfortunate happening in Hungary."</p>
<p>"I killed a man in a duel," Dominey said slowly, with his eyes fixed upon
his companion's. "It was not an unforgivable act."</p>
<p>"There are duels and duels. A fight between two young men, in defence of
the honour of or to gain the favour of a young lady in their own station
of life, has never been against the conventions of the Court. On the other
hand, to become the lover of the wife of one of the greatest nobles in
Hungary, and to secure possession by killing the husband in the duel which
his honour makes a necessity is looked upon very differently."</p>
<p>"I had no wish to kill the Prince," Dominey protested, "nor was it at my
desire that we met at all. The Prince fought like a madman and slipped,
after a wild lunge, on to the point of my stationary sword."</p>
<p>"Let that pass," Seaman said. "I am not of your order and I probably do
not understand the etiquette of these matters. I simply look upon you as a
culprit in the eyes of our master, and I feel that he has a right to
demand from you much in the way of personal sacrifice."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you will tell me," Dominey demanded, "what more he would have? I
have spent weary years in a godless and fever-ridden country, raising up
for our arms a great troop of natives. I have undertaken other political
commissions in the Colony which may bear fruit. I am to take up the work
for which I was originally intended, for which I was given an English
education. I am to repair to England, and, under such identity as I might
assume after consultation with you at Cape Town, I am to render myself so
far as possible a <i>persona grata</i> in that country. I do not wait for
our meeting. I see a great chance and I make use of it. I transform myself
into an English country gentleman, and I think you will admit that I have
done so with great success."</p>
<p>"All that you say is granted," Seaman agreed. "You met me at Cape Town in
your new identity, and you certainly seemed to wear it wonderfully. You
have made it uncommonly expensive, but we do not grudge money."</p>
<p>"I could not return home to a poverty-stricken domain," Dominey pointed
out. "I should have held no place whatever in English social life, and I
should have received no welcome from those with whom I imagine you desire
me to stand well."</p>
<p>"Again I make no complaints," Seaman declared. "There is no bottom to our
purse, nor any stint. Neither must there be any stint to our loyalty," he
added gravely.</p>
<p>"In this instance," Dominey protested, "it is not a matter of loyalty.
Everard Dominey cannot throw himself at the feet of the Princess
Eiderstrom, well-known to be one of the most passionate women in Europe,
whilst her love affair with Leopold Von Ragastein is still remembered.
Remember that the question of our identities might crop up any day. We
were friends over here in England, at school and at college, and there are
many who still remember the likeness between us. Perfectly though I may
play my part, here and there there may be doubts. There will be doubts no
longer if I am to be dragged at the chariot wheels of the Princess."</p>
<p>Seaman was silent for a moment.</p>
<p>"There is reason in what you say," he admitted presently. "It is for a few
months only. What is your proposition?"</p>
<p>"That you see the Princess in my place at once," Dominey suggested
eagerly. "Point out to her that for the present, for political reasons, I
am and must remain Everard Dominey, to her as to the rest of the world.
Let her be content with such measure of friendship and admiration as Sir
Everard Dominey might reasonably offer to a beautiful woman whom he met
to-day for the first time, and I am entirely and with all my heart at her
service. But let her remember that even between us two, in the solitude of
her room as in the drawing-room where we might meet, it can be Everard
Dominey only until my mission is ended. You think, perhaps, that I lay
unnecessary stress upon this. I do not. I know the Princess and I know
myself."</p>
<p>Seaman glanced at the clock. "At what hour was your appointment?"</p>
<p>"It was not an appointment, it was a command," Dominey replied. "I was
told to be at Belgrave Square at seven o'clock."</p>
<p>"I will have an understanding with the Princess," promised Seaman, as he
took up his hat. "Dine with me downstairs at eight o'clock on my return."</p>
<p>Dominey, descending about an hour later, found his friend Seaman already
established at a small, far-away table set in one of the recesses of the
grill room. He was welcomed with a little wave of the hand, and cocktails
were at once ordered.</p>
<p>"I have done your errand," Seaman announced. "Since my visit I am bound to
admit that I realise a little more fully your anxiety."</p>
<p>"You probably had not met the Princess before?"</p>
<p>"I had not. I must confess that I found her a lady of somewhat
overpowering temperament. I fancy, my young friend," Seaman continued,
with a twitch at the corner of his lips, "that somewhere about August next
year you will find your hands full."</p>
<p>"August next year can take care of itself," was the cool reply.</p>
<p>"In the meantime," Seaman continued, "the Princess understands the
situation and is, I think, impressed. She will at any rate do nothing
rash. You and she will meet within the course of the next few hours, but
on reasonable terms. To proceed! As I drove back here after my interview
with the Princess, I decided that it was time you made the acquaintance of
the person who is chiefly responsible for your presence here."</p>
<p>"Terniloff?"</p>
<p>"Precisely! You have maintained, my young friend," Seaman went on after a
brief pause, during which one waiter had brought their cocktails and
another received their order for dinner, "a very discreet and laudable
silence with regard to those further instructions which were promised to
you immediately you should arrive in London. Those instructions will never
be committed to writing. They are here."</p>
<p>Seaman touched his forehead and drained the remaining contents of his
glass.</p>
<p>"My instructions are to trust you absolutely," Dominey observed, "and,
until the greater events stir, to concentrate the greater part of my
energies in leading the natural life of the man whose name and place I
have taken."</p>
<p>"Quite so," Seaman acquiesced.</p>
<p>He glanced around the room for a moment or two, as though interested in
the people. Satisfied at last that there was no chance of being overheard,
he continued:</p>
<p>"The first idea you have to get out of your head, my dear friend, if it is
there, is that you are a spy. You are nothing of the sort. You are not
connected with our remarkably perfect system of espionage in the slightest
degree. You are a free agent in all that you may choose to say or do. You
can believe in Germany or fear her—whichever you like. You can join
your cousin's husband in his crusade for National Service, or you can join
me in my efforts to cement the bonds of friendship and affection between
the citizens of the two countries. We really do not care in the least.
Choose your own part. Give yourself thoroughly into the life of Sir
Everard Dominey, Baronet, of Dominey Hall, Norfolk, and pursue exactly the
course which you think Sir Everard himself would be likely to take."</p>
<p>"This," Dominey admitted, "is very broad-minded."</p>
<p>"It is common sense," was the prompt reply. "With all your ability, you
could not in six months' time appreciably affect the position either way.
Therefore, we choose to have you concentrate the whole of your energies
upon one task and one task only. If there is anything of the spy about
your mission here, it is not England or the English which are to engage
your attention. We require you to concentrate wholly and entirely upon
Terniloff."</p>
<p>Dominey was startled.</p>
<p>"Terniloff?" he repeated. "I expected to work with him, but—"</p>
<p>"Empty your mind of all preconceived ideas," Seaman enjoined. "What your
duties are with regard to Terniloff will grow upon you gradually as the
situation develops."</p>
<p>"As yet," Dominey remarked, "I have not even made his acquaintance."</p>
<p>"I was on the point of telling you, earlier in our conversation, that I
have made an appointment for you to see him at eleven o'clock to-night at
the Embassy. You will go to him at that hour. Remember, you know nothing,
you are waiting for instructions. Let speech remain with him alone. Be
particularly careful not to drop him a hint of your knowledge of what is
coming. You will find him absolutely satisfied with the situation,
absolutely content. Take care not to disturb him. He is a missioner of
peace. So are you."</p>
<p>"I begin to understand," Dominey said thoughtfully.</p>
<p>"You shall understand everything when the time comes for you to take a
hand," Seaman promised, "and do not in your zeal forget, my friend, that
your utility to our great cause will depend largely upon your being able
to establish and maintain your position as an English gentleman. So far
all has gone well?"</p>
<p>"Perfectly, so far as I am concerned," Dominey replied. "You must
remember, though, that there is your end to keep up. Berlin will be
receiving frantic messages from East Africa as to my disappearance. Not
even my immediate associates were in the secret."</p>
<p>"That is all understood," Seaman assured his companion. "A little doctor
named Schmidt has spent many marks of the Government money in frantic
cables. You must have endeared yourself to him."</p>
<p>"He was a very faithful associate."</p>
<p>"He has been a very troublesome friend. It seems that the natives got
their stories rather mixed up concerning your namesake, who apparently
died in the bush, and Schmidt continually emphasised your promise to let
him hear from Cape Town. However, all this has been dealt with
satisfactorily. The only real dangers are over here, and so far you seem
to have encountered the principal ones."</p>
<p>"I have at any rate been accepted," Dominey declared, "by my nearest
living relative, and incidentally I have discovered the one far-seeing
person in England who knows what is in store for us."</p>
<p>Seaman was momentarily anxious.</p>
<p>"Whom do you mean?"</p>
<p>"The Duke of Worcester, my cousin's husband, of whom you were speaking
just now."</p>
<p>The little man's face relaxed.</p>
<p>"He reminds me of the geese who saved the Capitol," he said, "a brainless
man obsessed with one idea. It is queer how often these fanatics discover
the truth. That reminds me," he added, taking a small memorandum book from
his waistcoat pocket and glancing it through. "His Grace has a meeting
to-night at the Holborn Town Hall. I shall make one of my usual
interruptions."</p>
<p>"If he has so small a following, why don't you leave him alone?" Dominey
enquired.</p>
<p>"There are others associated with him," was the placid reply, "who are not
so insignificant. Besides, when I interrupt I advertise my own little
hobby."</p>
<p>"These—we English are strange people," Dominey remarked, glancing
around the room after a brief but thoughtful pause. "We advertise and
boast about our colossal wealth, and yet we are incapable of the slightest
self-sacrifice in order to preserve it. One would have imagined that our
philosophers, our historians, would warn us in irresistible terms, by
unanswerable scientific deduction, of what was coming."</p>
<p>"My compliments to your pronouns," Seaman murmured, with a little bow.
"Apropos of what you were saying, you will never make an Englishman—I
beg your pardon, one of your countrymen—realise anything unpleasant.
He prefers to keep his head comfortably down in the sand. But to leave
generalities, when do you think of going to Norfolk?"</p>
<p>"Within the next few days," Dominey replied.</p>
<p>"I shall breathe more freely when you are securely established there," his
companion declared. "Great things wait upon your complete acceptance, in
the country as well as in town, as Sir Everard Dominey. You are sure that
you perfectly understand your position there as regards your—er—domestic
affairs?"</p>
<p>"I understand all that is necessary," was the somewhat stiff reply.</p>
<p>"All that is necessary is not enough," Seaman rejoined irritably. "I
thought that you had wormed the whole story out of that drunken
Englishman?"</p>
<p>"He told me most of it. There were just one or two points which lay beyond
the limits where questioning was possible."</p>
<p>Seaman frowned angrily.</p>
<p>"In other words," he complained, "you remembered that you were a gentleman
and not that you were a German."</p>
<p>"The Englishman of a certain order," Dominey pronounced, "even though he
be degenerate, has a certain obstinacy, generally connected with one
particular thing, which nothing can break. We talked together on that last
night until morning; we drank wine and brandy. I tore the story of my own
exile from my breast and laid it bare before him. Yet I knew all the time,
as I know now, that he kept something back."</p>
<p>There was a brief pause. During the last few minutes a certain tension had
crept in between the two men. With it, their personal characteristics
seemed to have become intensified. Dominey was more than ever the
aristocrat; Seaman the plebian schemer, unabashed and desperately in
earnest. He leaned presently a little way across the table. His eyes had
narrowed but they were as bright as steel. His teeth were more prominent
than usual.</p>
<p>"You should have dragged it from his throat," he insisted. "It is not your
duty to nurse fine personal feelings. Heart and soul you stand pledged to
great things. I cannot at this moment give you any idea what you may not
mean to us after the trouble has come, if you are able to play your part
still in this country as Everard Dominey of Dominey Hall. I know well
enough that the sense of personal honour amongst the Prussian aristocracy
is the finest in the world, and yet there is not a single man of your
order who should not be prepared to lie or cheat for his country's sake.
You must fall into line with your fellows. Once more, it is not only your
task with regard to Terniloff which makes your recognition as Everard
Dominey so important to us. It is the things which are to come later.—Come,
enough of this subject. I know that you understand. We grow too serious.
How shall you spend your evening until eleven o'clock? Remember you did
not leave England an anchorite, Sir Everard. You must have your
amusements. Why not try a music hall?"</p>
<p>"My mind is too full of other things," Dominey objected.</p>
<p>"Then come with me to Holborn," the little man suggested. "It will amuse
you. We will part at the door, and you shall sit at the back of the hall,
out of sight. You shall hear the haunting eloquence of your cousin-in-law.
You shall hear him trying to warn the men and women of England of the
danger awaiting them from the great and rapacious German nation. What do
you say?"</p>
<p>"I will come," Dominey replied in spiritless fashion. "It will be better
than a music hall, at any rate. I am not at all sure, Seaman, that the
hardest part of my task over here will not be this necessity for
self-imposed amusements."</p>
<p>His companion struck the table gently but impatiently with his clenched
fist.</p>
<p>"Man, you are young!" he exclaimed. "You are like the rest of us. You
carry your life in your hands. Don't nourish past griefs. Cast the memory
of them away. There's nothing which narrows a man more than morbidness.
You have a past which may sometimes bring the ghosts around you, but
remember the sin was not wholly yours, and there is an atonement which in
measured fashion you may commence whenever you please. I have said enough
about that. Greatness and gaiety go hand in hand. There! You see, I was a
philosopher before I became a professor of propaganda. Good! You smile.
That is something gained, at any rate. Now we will take a taxicab to
Holborn and I will show you something really humorous."</p>
<p>At the entrance to the town hall, the two men, at Seaman's instigation,
parted, making their way inside by different doors. Dominey found a
retired seat under a balcony, where he was unlikely to be recognised from
the platform. Seaman, on the other hand, took up a more prominent position
at the end of one of the front rows of benches. The meeting was by no
means overcrowded, over-enthusiastic, over-anything. There were rows of
empty benches, a good many young couples who seemed to have come in for
shelter from the inclement night, a few sturdy, respectable-looking
tradesmen who had come because it seemed to be the respectable thing to
do, a few genuinely interested, and here and there, although they were
decidedly in the minority, a sprinkling of enthusiasts. On the platform
was the Duke, with civic dignitaries on either side of him; a
distinguished soldier, a Member of Parliament, a half-dozen or so of
nondescript residents from the neighbourhood, and Captain Bartram. The
meeting was on the point of commencement as Dominey settled down in his
corner.</p>
<p>First of all the Duke rose, and in a few hackneyed but earnest sentences
introduced his young friend Captain Bartram. The latter, who sprang at
once into the middle of his subject, was nervous and more than a little
bitter. He explained that he had resigned his commission and was therefore
free to speak his mind. He spoke of enormous military preparations in
Germany and a general air of tense expectation. Against whom were these
preparations? Without an earthly doubt against Germany's greatest rival,
whose millions of young men, even in this hour of danger, preferred
playing or watching football or cricket on Saturday afternoons to
realising their duty. The conclusion of an ill-pointed but earnest speech
was punctuated by the furtive entrance into the hall of a small boy
selling evening newspapers, and there was a temporary diversion from any
interest in the proceedings on the part of the younger portion of the
audience, whilst they satisfied themselves as to the result of various Cup
Ties. The Member of Parliament then descended upon them in a whirlwind of
oratory and in his best House of Commons style. He spoke of black clouds
and of the cold breeze that went before the coming thunderstorm. He
pointed to the collapse of every great nation throughout history who had
neglected the arts of self-defence. He appealed to the youth of the nation
to prepare themselves to guard their womenkind, their homes, the sacred
soil of their country, and at that point was interrupted by a drowsy
member of the audience with stentorian lungs, who seemed just at that
moment to have waked up.</p>
<p>"What about the Navy, guv'nor?"</p>
<p>The orator swept upon the interrupter in his famous platform manner. The
Navy, he declared, could be trusted at all times to do its duty, but it
could not fight on sea and land. Would the young man who had just
interrupted do his, and enroll his name for drill and national service
that evening?—and so on. The distinguished soldier, who was
suffering from a cold, fired off a few husky sentences only, to the tune
of rounds of applause. The proceedings were wound up by the Duke, who was
obviously, with the exception of the distinguished soldier, much more in
earnest than any of them, and secured upon the whole a respectful
attention. He brought in a few historical allusions, pleaded for a greater
spirit of earnestness and citizenship amongst the men of the country,
appealed even to the women to develop their sense of responsibility, and
sat down amidst a little burst of quite enthusiastic applause.—The
vote of thanks to the chairman was on the point of being proposed when Mr.
Seaman, standing up in his place, appealed to the chairman for permission
to say a few words. The Duke, who had had some experience with Mr. Seaman
before, looked at him severely, but the smile with which Mr. Seaman looked
around upon the audience was so good-natured and attractive, that he had
no alternative but to assent. Seaman scrambled up the steps on to the
platform, coughed apologetically, bowed to the Duke, and took possession
of the meeting. After a word or two of compliment to the chairman, he made
his confession. He was a German citizen—he was indeed one of that
bloodthirsty race. (Some laughter.) He was also, and it was his excuse for
standing there, the founder and secretary of a league, doubtless well
known to them, a league for promoting more friendly relations between the
business men of Germany and England. Some of the remarks which he had
heard that evening had pained him deeply. Business often took him to
Germany, and as a German he would be doing less than his duty if he did
not stand up there and tell them that the average German loved the
Englishman like a brother, that the object of his life was to come into
greater kinship with him, that Germany even at that moment, was standing
with hand outstretched to her relatives across the North Sea, begging for
a deeper sympathy, begging for a larger understanding. (Applause from the
audience, murmurs of dissent from the platform.) And as to those military
preparations of which they had heard so much (with a severe glance at
Captain Bartram), let them glance for one moment at the frontiers of
Germany, let them realise that eastwards Germany was being continually
pressed by an ancient and historic foe of enormous strength. He would not
waste their time telling them of the political difficulties which Germany
had had to face during the last generation. He would simply tell them this
great truth,—the foe for whom Germany was obliged to make these
great military preparations was Russia. If ever they were used it would be
against Russia, and at Russia's instigation.—In his humble way he
was striving for the betterment of relations between the dearly beloved
country of his birth and the equally beloved country of his adoption. Such
meetings as these, instituted, as it seemed to him, for the propagation of
unfair and unjustified suspicions, were one of the greatest difficulties
in his way. He could not for a moment doubt that these gentlemen upon the
platform were patriots. They would prove it more profitably, both to
themselves and their country, if they abandoned their present prejudiced
and harmful campaign and became patrons of his Society.</p>
<p>Seaman's little bow to the chairman was good-humoured, tolerant, a little
wistful. The Duke's few words, prefaced by an indignant protest against
the intrusion of a German propagandist into an English patriotic meeting,
did nothing to undo the effect produced by this undesired stranger. When
the meeting broke up, it was doubtful whether a single adherent had been
gained to the cause of National Service. The Duke went home full of wrath,
and Seaman chuckled with genuine merriment as he stepped into the taxi
which Dominey had secured, at the corner of the street.</p>
<p>"I promised you entertainment," he observed. "Confess that I have kept my
word."</p>
<p>Dominey smiled enigmatically. "You certainly succeeded in making fools of
a number of respectable and well-meaning men."</p>
<p>"The miracle of it extends further," Seaman agreed. "To-night, in its
small way, is a supreme example of the transcendental follies of
democracy. England is being slowly choked and strangled with too much
liberty. She is like a child being overfed with jam. Imagine, in our dear
country, an Englishman being allowed to mount the platform and spout,
undisturbed, English propaganda in deadly opposition to German interests.
The so-called liberty of the Englishman is like the cuckoo in his
political nest. Countries must be governed. They cannot govern themselves.
The time of war will prove all that."</p>
<p>"Yet in any great crisis of a nation's history," Dominey queried, "surely
there is safety in a multitude of counsellors?"</p>
<p>"There would be always a multitude of counsellors," Seaman replied, "in
Germany as in England. The trouble for this country is that they would be
all expressed publicly and in the press, each view would have its
adherents, and the Government be split up into factions. In Germany, the
real destinies of the country are decided in secret. There are counsellors
there, too, earnest and wise counsellors, but no one knows their varying
views. All that one learns is the result, spoken through the lips of the
Kaiser, spoken once and for all."</p>
<p>Dominey was showing signs of a rare interest in his companion's
conversation. His eyes were bright, his usually impassive features seemed
to have become more mobile and strained. He laid his hand on Seaman's arm.</p>
<p>"Listen," he said, "we are in London, alone in a taxicab, secure against
any possible eavesdropping. You preach the advantage of our Kaiser-led
country. Do you really believe that the Kaiser is the man for the task
which is coming?"</p>
<p>Seaman's narrow eyes glittered. He looked at his companion in
satisfaction. His forehead was puckered, his eternal smile gone. He was
the man of intellect.</p>
<p>"So you are waking up from the lethargy of Africa, my friend!" he
exclaimed. "You are beginning to think. As you ask me, so shall I answer.
The Kaiser is a vain, bombastic dreamer, the greatest egotist who ever
lived, with a diseased personality, a ceaseless craving for the limelight.
But he has also the genius for government. I mean this: he is a splendid
medium for the expression of the brain power of his counsellors. Their
words will pass through his personality, and he will believe them his.
What is more, they will sound like his. He will see himself the knight in
shining armour. All Europe will bow down before this self-imagined Caesar,
and no one except we who are behind will realise the ass's head. There is
no one else in this world whom I have ever met so well fitted to lead our
great nation on to the destiny she deserves.—And now, my friend,
to-morrow, if you like, we will speak of these matters again. To-night,
you have other things to think about. You are going into the great places
where I never penetrate. You have an hour to change and prepare. At eleven
o'clock the Prince Von Terniloff will expect you."</p>
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