<h2 id="id01473" style="margin-top: 4em">CHAPTER XXI</h2>
<h5 id="id01474">CHAYNE COMES TO CONCLUSIONS</h5>
<p id="id01475" style="margin-top: 2em">"Six weeks ago I said good-by to the French Commission on the borders of
a great lake in Africa. A month ago I was still walking to the rail head
through the tangle of a forest's undergrowth," said Chayne, and he looked
about the little restaurant in King Street, St. James', as though to make
sure that the words he spoke were true. The bright lights, the red
benches against the walls, the women in their delicate gowns of lace, and
the jingle of harness in the streets without, made their appeal to one
who for the best part of a year had lived within the dark walls of a
forest. June had come round again, and Sylvia sat at his side.</p>
<p id="id01476">"You shall tell me how these months have gone with you while we dine,"
said he. "Your letters told me nothing of your troubles."</p>
<p id="id01477">"I did not mean them to," replied Sylvia.</p>
<p id="id01478">"I guessed that, my dear. It was like you. Yet I would rather have
known."</p>
<p id="id01479">Only a few hours before he had stood upon the deck of the Channel packet
and had seen the bows swing westward of Dover Castle and head toward the
pier. Would Sylvia be there, he had wondered, as he watched the cluster
of atoms on the quay, and in a little while he had seen her, standing
quite alone, at the very end of the breakwater that she might catch the
first glimpse of her lover. Others had traveled with them in the carriage
to London and there had been no opportunity of speech. All that he knew
was that she had been alone now for some weeks in the little house in
Hobart Place.</p>
<p id="id01480">"One thing I see," he said. "You are not as troubled as you were. The
look of fear—that has gone from your eyes. Sylvia, I am glad!"</p>
<p id="id01481">"There, were times," she answered—and as she thought upon them, terror
once more leapt into her face—"times when I feared more than ever, when
I needed you very much. But they are past now, Hilary," and her hand
dropped for a moment upon his, and her eyes brightened with a smile. As
they dined she told the story of those months.</p>
<p id="id01482">"We returned to London very suddenly after you had gone away," she began.
"We were to have stayed through September. But my father said that
business called him back, and I noticed that he was deeply troubled."</p>
<p id="id01483">"When did you notice that?" asked Chayne, quickly. "When did you first
notice it?"</p>
<p id="id01484">Sylvia reflected for a moment.</p>
<p id="id01485">"The day after you had gone."</p>
<p id="id01486">"Are you sure?" asked Chayne, with a certain intensity.</p>
<p id="id01487">"Quite."</p>
<p id="id01488">Chayne nodded his head.</p>
<p id="id01489">"I did not understand the reason of the hurry. And I was perplexed—and
also a little alarmed. Everything which I did not understand frightened
me in those days." She spoke as if "those days" and all their dark events
belonged to some dim period of which no consequence could reach her now.
"Our departure had almost the look of a flight."</p>
<p id="id01490">"Yes," said Chayne. For his part he was not surprised at their flight. He
had passed more than one wakeful night during the last few months arguing
and arguing again whether or no he should have disclosed to Sylvia the
meaning of that softly opening door and the shadow on the ceiling as he
read it. He might have been wrong; if so, he would have added to Sylvia's
burden of troubles yet another, and one more terrible than all the rest.
He might have been right; and if so, he might have enabled Sylvia to
avert a tragedy. Thus the argument had revolved in a circle and left him
always in the same doubt. Now he understood that his explanation of the
incident had been confirmed. The loud whistle from the darkness of the
road, the yokel's cry, which had driven Garratt Skinner from the room, as
noiselessly as he had entered it, had done more than that—they had
driven him from the neighborhood altogether. Some one had seen him—had
seen him standing just behind Walter Hine in the lighted room—and on the
next day he had fled!</p>
<p id="id01491">"I was right," he said, absently, "right to keep silent." For here was
Sylvia at his side and the dreaded peril unfulfilled. "Well, you returned
to London?" he added, hastily.</p>
<p id="id01492">"Yes. There is something of which I did not tell you, that night when we
were together on the downs. Walter Hine had begun to take cocaine."</p>
<p id="id01493">Chayne started.</p>
<p id="id01494">"Cocaine!" he cried.</p>
<p id="id01495">"Yes. My father taught him to take it."</p>
<p id="id01496">"Your father," said Chayne, slowly, trying to fit this new and astounding
fact in with the rest. "But why?"</p>
<p id="id01497">"I think I can tell you," said Sylvia. "My father knew quite well that he
had me working against him, trying to rescue Walter Hine out of his
hands. And I was beginning to get some power. He understood that, and
destroyed it. I was no match for him. I thought that I knew something of
the under side of life. But he knew more, ever so much more, and my
knowledge was of no avail. He taught Walter Hine the craving for cocaine,
and he satisfied the craving—there was his power. He provided the drug.
I do not know—I might perhaps have fought against my father and won. But
against my father and a drug I was helpless. My father obtained it in
sufficient quantity, withheld it at times, gave it at other times, played
with him, tantalized him, gratified him. You can understand there was
only one possible result. Walter Hine became my father's slave, his dog.
I no longer counted in his thoughts at all. I was nothing."</p>
<p id="id01498">"Yes," said Chayne.</p>
<p id="id01499">The device was subtle, diabolically subtle. But he wondered whether it
was only to counterbalance and destroy Sylvia's influence that Garratt
Skinner had introduced cocaine to Hine's notice; whether he had not had
in view some other end, even still more sinister.</p>
<p id="id01500">"I saw very little of Mr. Hine after our return to London," she
continued. "He did not come often to the house, but when he did come,
each time I saw that he had changed. He had grown nervous and violent of
temper. Even before we left Dorsetshire the violence had become
noticeable."</p>
<p id="id01501">"Oh!" said Chayne, looking quickly at Sylvia. "Before you left<br/>
Dorsetshire?"<br/></p>
<p id="id01502">"Yes; and my father seemed to me to provoke it, though I could not guess
why. For instance—"</p>
<p id="id01503">"Yes?" said Chayne. "Tell me!"</p>
<p id="id01504">He spoke quietly enough, but once again there was audible a certain
intensity in his voice. There had been an occasion when Sylvia had given
to him more news of Garratt Skinner than she had herself. Was she to do
so once more? He leaned forward with his eyes on hers.</p>
<p id="id01505">"The night when you came back to me. Do you remember, Hilary?" and a
smile lightened his face.</p>
<p id="id01506">"I shall forget no moment of that night, sweetheart, while I live," he
whispered; and blushes swept prettily over her face, and in a sweet
confusion she smiled back at him.</p>
<p id="id01507">"Oh, Hilary!" she said.</p>
<p id="id01508">"Oh, Sylvia!" he mimicked; and as they laughed together, it seemed there
was a danger that the story of the months of separation would never be
completed. But Chayne brought her back to it.</p>
<p id="id01509">"Well? On that night when I came back?"</p>
<p id="id01510">"I saw you in the road from my window, and then motioning you to be
silent, I disappeared from the window."</p>
<p id="id01511">"Yes, I remember," said Chayne, eagerly. He began to think that the
cocaine was after all going to fit in with the incidents of that night.</p>
<p id="id01512">"Walter Hine and my father were going up to bed. I heard them on the
stairs. They were going earlier than usual."</p>
<p id="id01513">"You are sure?" interrupted Chayne. "Think well!"</p>
<p id="id01514">"Much earlier than usual, and they were quarreling. At least, Walter Hine
was quarreling; and my father was speaking to him as if he were a child.
That hurt his vanity and made him worse."</p>
<p id="id01515">"Your father was provoking him?"</p>
<p id="id01516">Sylvia's forehead puckered.</p>
<p id="id01517">"I could not say that, and be sure of it. But I can say this. If my
father had wished to provoke him to a greater anger, it's in that way
that he would have done it."</p>
<p id="id01518">"Yes. I see."</p>
<p id="id01519">"They were speaking loudly—even my father was—more loudly than
usual—especially at that time. For when they went up-stairs, they
usually went very quietly"; and again Chayne interrupted her.</p>
<p id="id01520">"Your father might have wanted you to hear the quarrel?" he suggested.</p>
<p id="id01521">Sylvia turned to him curiously.</p>
<p id="id01522">"Why should he wish that?" she asked, and considered the point. "He might
have. Only, on the other hand, they were earlier than usual. They would
not be so careful to go quietly; I was likely to be still awake."</p>
<p id="id01523">"Exactly," said Chayne.</p>
<p id="id01524">For in the probability that Sylvia would be still awake, would hear the
violent words of Hine, and would therefore be an available witness
afterward, Chayne found the reason both of the loudness of Garratt
Skinner's tones and his early retirement for the night.</p>
<p id="id01525">"Did you hear what was said? Can you repeat the words?" he asked.</p>
<p id="id01526">"Yes. My father was keeping something from Mr. Hine which he wanted. I
have no doubt it was the cocaine," and she repeated the words.</p>
<p id="id01527">"Yes," said Chayne. "Yes," in the tone of one who is satisfied. The
incident of the lighted room and the shadow on the ceiling were clear to
him now. A quarrel of which there was a witness, a quarrel all to the
credit of Garratt Skinner since it arose from his determination to hinder
Walter Hine from poisoning himself with drugs—at least, that is how the
evidence would work out; the quarrel continued in Walter Hine's bedroom,
whither Garratt Skinner had accompanied his visitor, a struggle begun for
the possession of the drug, begun by a man half crazy for want of it, a
blow in self-defence delivered by Garratt Skinner, perhaps a fall from
the window—that is how Chayne read the story of that night, as fashioned
by the ingenuity of Garratt Skinner.</p>
<p id="id01528">But on one point he was still perplexed. The story had not been told out
to its end that night: there had come an unexpected shout, which had
interrupted it, and indeed forever had prevented its completion on that
spot. But why had it not been completed afterward, during the next few
months, somewhere else? It had not been completed. For here was Sylvia
with all her fears allayed, continuing the story of those months.</p>
<p id="id01529">"But violence was not the only change in Walter Hine. There were some
physical alterations which frightened me. Mr. Hine, as I say, came very
seldom to our house, though my father saw a great deal of him. Otherwise
I should have noticed them before. But early this year he came and—you
remember he was fair—well, his skin had grown dark, quite dark, his
complexion had changed altogether. And there was something else which
shocked me. His tongue was black, really black. I asked him what was the
matter? He grew restless and angry and lied to me, and then he broke down
and told me he could not sleep. He slept for a few minutes only at a
time. He really was ill—very ill."</p>
<p id="id01530">Was this the explanation, Chayne asked himself? Having failed at the
quick process, the process of the lighted room and the open window, had
Garratt Skinner left the drug to do its work slowly and surely?</p>
<p id="id01531">"He was so weak, so broken in appearance, that I was alarmed. My father
was not in the house. I sent for a cab and I took Mr. Hine myself to a
doctor. The doctor knew at once what was amiss. For a time Mr. Hine said
'No,' but he gave in at the last. He was in the habit of taking thirty
grains of cocaine a day."</p>
<p id="id01532">"Thirty grains!" exclaimed Chayne.</p>
<p id="id01533">"Yes. Of course it could not go on. Death or insanity would surely
follow. He was warned of it, and for a while he went into a home. Then he
got better, and he determined to go abroad and travel."</p>
<p id="id01534">"Who suggested that?" asked Chayne.</p>
<p id="id01535">"I do not know. I know only that he refused to go without my father, and
that my father consented to accompany him."</p>
<p id="id01536">Chayne was startled.</p>
<p id="id01537">"They are away together now?" he cried. A look of horror in his eyes
betrayed his fear. He stared at Sylvia. Had she no suspicion—she
who knew something of the under side of life? But she quietly
returned his look.</p>
<p id="id01538">"I took precautions. I told my father what I knew—not merely that Mr.
Hine had acquired the habit of taking cocaine, but who had taught him the
habit. Yes, I did that," she said simply, answering his look of
astonishment. "It was difficult, my dear, and I would very much have
liked to have had you there to help me through with it. But since you
were not there, since I was alone, I did it alone. I thought of you,
Hilary, while I was saying what I had to say. I tried to hear your voice
speaking again outside the Chalet de Lognan. 'What you know, that you
must do.' I warned my father that if any harm came to Walter Hine from
taking the drug again, any harm at all which I traced to my father, I
would not keep silent."</p>
<p id="id01539">Chayne leaned back in his seat.</p>
<p id="id01540">"You said that—to Garratt Skinner, Sylvia!" and the warmth of pride and
admiration in his voice brought the color to her cheeks and compensated
her for that bad hour. "You stood up alone and braved him out! My dear,
if I had only been there! And you never wrote to me a word of it!"</p>
<p id="id01541">"It would only have troubled you," she answered. "It would not have
helped me to know that you were troubled!"</p>
<p id="id01542">"And he—your father?" he asked. "How did he receive it?"</p>
<p id="id01543">Sylvia's face grew pale, and she stared at the table-cloth as though she
could not for the moment trust her voice. Then she shuddered and said in
a low and shaking voice—so vivid was still the memory of that hour:</p>
<p id="id01544">"I thought that I should never see you again."</p>
<p id="id01545">She said no more. From those few words, and from the manner in which she
uttered them, Chayne had to build up the terrible scene which had taken
place between Sylvia and her father in the little back room of the house
in Hobart Place. He looked round the lighted room, listened to the ripple
of light voices, and watched the play of lively faces and bright eyes.
There was an incongruity between these surroundings and the words which
he had heard which shocked him.</p>
<p id="id01546">"My dear, I'll make it up to you," he said. "Trust me, I will! There
shall be good hours, now. I'll watch you, till I know surely without
a word from you what you are thinking and feeling and wanting. Trust
me, dearest!"</p>
<p id="id01547">"With all my heart and the rest of my life," she answered, a smile
responding to his words, and she resumed her story:</p>
<p id="id01548">"I extracted from my father a promise that every week he should write to
me and tell me how Mr. Hine was and where they both were. And to that—at
last—he consented. They have been away together for two months, and
every week I have heard. So I think there is no danger."</p>
<p id="id01549">Chayne did not disagree. But, on the other hand, he did not assent.</p>
<p id="id01550">"I suppose Mr. Hine is very rich?" he said, doubtfully.</p>
<p id="id01551">"No," replied Sylvia. "That's another reason why—I am not afraid." She
chose the words rather carefully, unwilling to express a deliberate
charge against her father. "I used to think that he was—in the
beginning when Captain Barstow won so much from him. But when the bets
ceased and no more cards were played—I used to puzzle over why they
ceased last year. But I think I have hit upon the explanation. My
father discovered then what I only found out a few weeks ago. I wrote
to Mr. Hine's grandfather, telling him that his grandson was ill, and
asking him whether he would not send for him. I thought that would be
the best plan."</p>
<p id="id01552">"Yes, well?"</p>
<p id="id01553">"Well, the grandfather answered me very shortly that he did not know his
grandson, that he did not wish to know him, and that they had nothing to
do with one another in any way. It was a churlish letter. He seemed to
think that I wanted to marry Mr. Hine," and she laughed as she spoke,
"and that I was trying to find out what we should have to live upon. I
suppose that it was natural he should think so. And I am so glad that I
wrote. For he told me that although Mr. Hine must eventually have a
fortune, it would not be until he himself died and that he was a very
healthy man. So you see, there could be no advantage to any one—" and
she did not finish the sentence.</p>
<p id="id01554">But Chayne could finish it for himself. There could be no advantage to
any one if Walter Hine died. But then why the cocaine? Why the incident
of the lighted window?</p>
<p id="id01555">"Yes," he said, in perplexity, "I can corroborate that. It happened that
my friend John Lattery, who was killed in Switzerland, was also
connected with Joseph Hine. He also would have inherited; and I knew
from him that the old man did not recognize his heirs. But—but Walter
Hine had money—some money, at all events. And he earned none. From whom
did he get it?"</p>
<p id="id01556">Sylvia shook her head.</p>
<p id="id01557">"I do not know."</p>
<p id="id01558">"Had he no other relations, no friends?"</p>
<p id="id01559">"None who would have made him an allowance."</p>
<p id="id01560">Chayne pondered over that question. For in the answer to it he was
convinced he would find the explanation of the mystery. If money was
given to Walter Hine, who had apparently no rich relations but his
grandfather, and certainly no rich friends, it would have been given with
some object. To discover the giver and his object—that was the problem.</p>
<p id="id01561">"Think! Did he never speak of any one?"</p>
<p id="id01562">Sylvia searched her memories.</p>
<p id="id01563">"No," she said. "He never spoke of his private affairs. He always led us
to understand that he drew an allowance from his grandfather."</p>
<p id="id01564">"But your father found that that was untrue when you were in Dorsetshire,
ten months ago. For the card-playing and the bets ceased."</p>
<p id="id01565">"Yes," Sylvia agreed thoughtfully. Then her face brightened. "I
remember a morning when Mr. Hine was in trouble. Wait a moment! He had
a letter. We were at breakfast and the letter came from Captain
Barstow. There was some phrase in the letter which Mr. Hine repeated.
'As between gentlemen'—that was it! I remember thinking at the time
what in the world Captain Barstow could know about gentlemen; and
wondering why the phrase should trouble Mr. Hine. And that morning Mr.
Hine went to London."</p>
<p id="id01566">"Oh, did he?" cried Chayne. "'As between gentlemen.' Had Hine been losing
money lately to Captain Barstow?"</p>
<p id="id01567">"Yes, on the day when you first came."</p>
<p id="id01568">"The starlings," exclaimed Chayne in some excitement. "That's it—Walter
Hine owes money to Captain Barstow which he can't pay. Barstow writes for
it—a debt of honor between gentlemen—one can imagine the letter. Hine
goes up to London. Well, what then?"</p>
<p id="id01569">Sylvia started.</p>
<p id="id01570">"My father went to London two days afterward."</p>
<p id="id01571">"Are you sure?"</p>
<p id="id01572">It seemed to Chayne that they were getting hot in their search.</p>
<p id="id01573">"Quite sure. For I remember that after his return his manner changed.
What I thought to be the new plot was begun. The cards disappeared, the
bets ceased, Mr. Parminter was brought down with the cocaine. I remember
it all clearly. For I always associated the change with my father's
journey to London. You came one evening—do you remember? You found me
alone and afraid. My father and Walter Hine were walking arm-in-arm in
the garden. That was afterward."</p>
<p id="id01574">"Yes, you were afraid because there was no sincerity in that friendship.<br/>
Now let me get this right!"<br/></p>
<p id="id01575">He remained silent for a little while, placing the events in their due
order and interpreting them, one by the other.</p>
<p id="id01576">"This is what I make of it," he said at length. "The man in London who
supplies Walter Hine with money finds that Walter Hine is spending too
much. He therefore puts himself into communication with Garratt Skinner,
of whom he has doubtless heard from Walter Hine. Garratt Skinner travels
to London, has an interview, and a concerted plan of action is agreed
upon, which Garratt Skinner proceeds to put in action."</p>
<p id="id01577">He spoke so gravely that Sylvia turned anxiously toward him.</p>
<p id="id01578">"What do you infer, then?" she asked.</p>
<p id="id01579">"That we are in very deep and troubled waters, my dear," he replied, but
he would not be more explicit. He had no doubt in his mind that the
murder of Walter Hine had been deliberately agreed upon by Garratt
Skinner and the unknown man in London. But just as Sylvia had spared him
during his months of absence, so now he was minded to spare Sylvia. Only,
in order that he might spare her, in order that he might prevent shame
and distress greater than she had known, he must needs go on with his
questioning. He must discover, if by any means he could, the identity of
the unknown man who was so concerned in the destiny of Walter Hine.</p>
<p id="id01580">"Of your father's friends, was there one who was rich? Who came to the
house? Who were his companions?"</p>
<p id="id01581">"Very few people came to the house. There was no one amongst them who
fits in"; and upon that she started. "I wonder—" she said, thoughtfully,
and she turned to her lover. "After my father had gone away, I found a
telegram in a drawer in one of the rooms. There was no envelope, there
was just the telegram. So I opened it. It was addressed to my father. I
remember the words, for I did not know whether there was not something
which needed attention. It ran like this: 'What are you waiting for?
Hurry up.'"</p>
<p id="id01582">"Was it signed?" asked Chayne.</p>
<p id="id01583">"Yes. 'Jarvice,'" replied Sylvia.</p>
<p id="id01584">"Jarvice," Chayne repeated; and he spoke it yet again, as though in some
vague way it was familiar to him. "What was the date of the telegram?"</p>
<p id="id01585">"It had been sent a month before I found it. So I put it back into
the drawer."</p>
<p id="id01586">"'What are you waiting for? Hurry up. Jarvice,'" said Chayne, slowly, and
then he remembered how and when he had come across the name of Jarvice
before. His face grew very grave.</p>
<p id="id01587">"We are in deep waters, my dear," he said.</p>
<p id="id01588">There had been trouble in his regiment, some years before, in which the
chief figures had been a subaltern and a money-lender. Jarvice was the
name of the money-lender—an unusual name. Just such a man would be
likely to be Garratt Skinner's confederate and backer. Chayne ran over
the story in his mind again, by this new light. It certainly strengthened
the argument that the Mr. Jarvice who sent the telegram was Mr. Jarvice,
the money-lender. Thus did Chayne work it out in his thoughts:</p>
<p id="id01589">"Jarvice, for some reason unknown, pays Walter Hine an allowance. Walter
Hine gives it out that he receives it from his grandfather, whose heir
he undoubtedly is, and being a vain person much exaggerates the amount.
He falls into Garratt Skinner's hands, who, with the help of Barstow and
others, proceeds to pluck him. Walter Hine loses more than he has and
applies to Jarvice for more. Jarvice elicits the facts, and instead of
disclosing who Garratt Skinner is, and the obvious swindle of which Hine
is the victim, takes Garratt Skinner into his confidence. What happened
at the interview between Mr. Jarvice and Garratt Skinner in London the
subsequent facts make plain. At Jarvice's instigation the plot to
swindle Walter Hine becomes a cold-blooded plan to murder him. That plan
has been twice frustrated, once by me in Dorsetshire, and a second time
by Sylvia."</p>
<p id="id01590">So far the story worked out naturally, logically. But there remained two
questions. For what reason did Mr. Jarvice make Walter Hine an allowance?
And how would Walter Hine's death profit him? Chayne pondered over those
two questions and then the truth flashed upon him. He remembered how the
subaltern had been extracted from his difficulties. Money had been raised
by a life insurance. Again Chayne ranged his facts in order.</p>
<p id="id01591">"Walter Hine is the heir to great wealth. But he has no money now. Mr.
Jarvice makes him an allowance, the money to be repaid with a handsome
interest on the grandfather's death. But in order to insure Jarvice
from loss, if Walter Hine should die first, Walter Hine's life is
insured for a large sum. Thus Mr. Jarvice makes his position tenable
should his conduct be called in question. Having insured Walter Hine's
life, he arranges with Garratt Skinner to murder him. The attempt
failed the first time, the slower method is then adopted by Garratt
Skinner, and as a result comes the impatient telegram: 'What are you
waiting for? Hurry up!'"</p>
<p id="id01592">The case was thus so far clear. But anxiety remained. Was the plan
abandoned altogether, now that Sylvia had stood bravely up and warned her
father that she would not keep silent? So certainly Sylvia thought. But
then she did not know all that Chayne knew. It seemed that she had not
understood the incident of the lighted window. Nor was Chayne surprised.
For she was unaware of what was in Chayne's eyes the keystone of the
whole argument. She did not know that her father had worked as a convict
in the Portland quarries.</p>
<p id="id01593">"So they are abroad together, your father and Walter Hine," said<br/>
Chayne, slowly.<br/></p>
<p id="id01594">"Yes!" replied Sylvia, with a smile. "Guess where they are now!" and she
turned to him with a tender look upon her face which he did not
understand.</p>
<p id="id01595">"I can't guess."</p>
<p id="id01596">"At Chamonix!"</p>
<p id="id01597">She saw her lover flinch, his face grow white, his eyes stare in horror.
And she wondered. For her the little town, overtopped by its tumbled
glittering fields of snow and tall rock spires was a place apart. She
cherished it in her memories, keeping clear and distinct the windings of
its streets, where they narrowed, where they broadened into open spaces;
yet all the while her thoughts transformed it, and made of its mere
stones and bricks a tiny city magical with light and grace. For while she
stayed in it her happiness had dawned and she saw it always roseate with
that dawn. It seemed to her that plots and thoughts of harm could there
hardly outlive one starlit night, one sunlit day. Had she mapped out her
father's itinerary, thither and nowhere else would she have sent him.</p>
<p id="id01598">"You are afraid?" she asked. "Hilary, why?"</p>
<p id="id01599">Chayne did not answer her question. He was minded to spare her, even as
she had spared him. He talked of other things until the restaurant grew
empty and the waiters began to turn out the lights as a hint to these two
determined loiterers. Then in the darkness, for now there was but one
light left, and that at a little distance from their table, Chayne leaned
forward and turning to Sylvia, as they sat side by side:</p>
<p id="id01600">"You have been happy to-night?"</p>
<p id="id01601">"Very," she answered, and there was a thrill of joyousness in her clear,
low voice, as though her heart sang within her. Her eyes rested on his
with pride. "No man could quite understand," she said.</p>
<p id="id01602">"Well then, why should we wait longer, Sylvia?" he said. "We have waited
long enough, my dear. We have after all no one but ourselves to please. I
should like our marriage to take place as soon as possible."</p>
<p id="id01603">Sylvia answered him without affectation.</p>
<p id="id01604">"I, too," she whispered.</p>
<p id="id01605">"To-morrow then! I'll get a special license to-morrow morning, and make
the arrangements. We can go away together at once."</p>
<p id="id01606">Sylvia smiled, and the smile deepened into a laugh.</p>
<p id="id01607">"Where shall we go, Hilary?" she cried. "To some perfect place."</p>
<p id="id01608">"To Chamonix," he answered. "That was where we first met. There could be
no better place. We can just go and tell your father what we have done
and then go up into the hills."</p>
<p id="id01609">It was well done. He spoke without wakening Sylvia's suspicions. She had
never understood the episode of the lighted window; she did not know
that her father was Gabriel Strood, of whose exploits in the Alps she
had read; she believed that all danger to Walter Hine was past. Chayne
on the other hand knew that hardly at any time could Hine have stood in
greater peril. To Chamonix he must go; and to Chamonix he must take
Sylvia too. For by the time when he could reach Chamonix, he might
already be too late. There might be publicity, inquiries, and for
Garratt Skinner ruin, and worse than ruin. Would Sylvia let her lover
share the dishonor of her name? He knew very surely she would not.
Therefore he would have the marriage.</p>
<p id="id01610">"By the way," he said, as he draped her cloak about her shoulders. "You
have that telegram from Jarvice?"</p>
<p id="id01611">"Yes."</p>
<p id="id01612">"That's good," he said. "It might be useful."</p>
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