<h2>CHAPTER XVI<br/> <span class="f8">REVELATIONS</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">In</span> the hall I met together two men whom I knew well.
The first was Adams of the American Embassy in
London; the second Cathcart of the British Embassy
at Washington, now on leave. I had not seen
either for two years, and it was with mutual pleasure
that we met. After our preliminary handshaking, and the
inevitable drink at the American’s request, Adams slapped
me on the shoulder and said heartily:</p>
<p>“Well, old fellow, I congratulate you; or rather am I
to congratulate you?”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” I asked in feeble embarrassment.</p>
<p>“All right, old chap!” he said heartily. “Your blush
is enough. I see it hasn’t come off yet at all events!”
A man never lets well alone when he is in an awkward
position. If I had only held my tongue I might not have
made a guy of myself; but as I was in doubt as to what
might be the issue of my suit to Marjory, I felt additionally
constrained to affect ignorance of his meaning. So I
floundered on:</p>
<p>“‘Come off yet’? What on earth do you mean?”
Again he slapped me on the back as he said in his chaffing
way:</p>
<p>“My dear boy I saw you come in over the bridge.
You had had a long ride I could see by your wheels; and
I am bound to say that you did seem on excellent terms<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span>
with each other!” This was getting dangerous ground,
so I tried to sheer off. “Oh,” I said, “you mean my
bike ride with Miss Anita”—I was interrupted by his
sudden whistle.</p>
<p>“Oh,” he said in exact imitation of my own manner.
“You mean Miss Anita! So it has come to that already!
Anyhow I congratulate you heartily, whether
it has come, or may come, or will come to anything
else.”</p>
<p>“I don’t see,” I said, with a helpless feeling of having
been driven into a corner, “that there is anything especially
remarkable in a man having a bicycle ride with a
young lady of his acquaintance.”</p>
<p>“Keep your hair on, old man!” he said with a smile.
“There is nothing remarkable about a man riding with a
young lady; but there is something very remarkable about
any man riding with this particular young lady. Why,
man alive, don’t you know that there isn’t a man in
America, or out of it, that wouldn’t give the eyes out of
his head to take your place on such an occasion. To ride
alone with Marjory Drake—”</p>
<p>“With whom?” I said impulsively; and having spoken
could have bitten out my tongue. Adams paused; he was
silent so long that I began to grow uneasy. His face grew
very grave, and there spread over it that look between
cunning and dominance which was his official expression.
Then he spoke, but his words had not the same careless
ring in them. There was a manifest caution and a certain
indefinable sense of distance.</p>
<p>“Look here, Archie Hunter! Is it possible that you
don’t know who it is that you were with. All right! I
know of course that you are acquainted with her personally,”
for he saw I was about to protest, “the very fact
of your being with her and your knowing the name that
she seldom uses answer for that; and you may take it from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span>
me that the lady needs no character for discretion from
me. But how is it that you are on such good terms with
her, and yet don’t seem even to know her name?” For
fully a minute there was silence between us. Cathcart had
as yet said not a word, and Adams was thinking. For
myself I was in a sea of multitudinous concerns; whichever
way I turned I was face to face with some new difficulty.
It would not do to leave these men under the
impression that there was any social irregularity in my
friendship with Marjory; I was too jealous of her good
name to allow such a thing to be possible. And yet I
could not explain at length how we had come to be such
good friends. Already there were so many little mysteries;
right up to this very evening when she and Mrs.
Jack had gone away so strangely, leaving me in the
ridiculous position of a guest with no host. It was not
easy to explain these things; it was impossible to avoid
them. In the midst of this chaotic whirl of thoughts
Adams spoke:</p>
<p>“I think I had better say no more, anyhow. After all,
if Miss Drake chooses to keep a secret, or to make one,
it is not my business to give it, or her, away. She knows
what she’s doing. You will excuse me, old fellow, won’t
you; but as it is manifestly a lady’s wish, I think I can
do best by holding my tongue.”</p>
<p>“Any wish of that lady’s,” said I, and I felt that I
must seem to speak grandiloquently, “can only have my
most loyal support.”</p>
<p>There was an awkward silence which was relieved by
Cathcart, who said to me:</p>
<p>“Come up to my room, Archie; I want to tell you
something. You’ll join us, too, Sam, won’t you?”</p>
<p>“All right, Billy,” said Adams, “I’ll come in a few
minutes. I want to give some directions about a horse
for to-morrow.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When we were in Cathcart’s room, he closed the door
and said to me with the most genuine good feeling:</p>
<p>“I didn’t like to say a word downstairs, old chap;
but I could see you were in some difficulty. Of course
I know it’s all right; but ought you not to know something
of the lady? With any one else but Sam and
myself such a thing might have conveyed a false impression.
Surely you can best protect the lady by knowing
how to avoid anything that might embarrass her!”
This was all good sound common sense. For a moment
I weighed up the matter against the possibility
of Marjory’s wishing to keep her name a secret. Looking
back, however, I could see that any concealment that
had been was rather positive than negative. The original
error had been mine; she had simply allowed it to pass.
The whole thing had probably been the passing fancy
of a bright, spirited young girl; to take it too seriously,
or to make too much of it might do harm. Why, even
these men might, were I to regard it as important, take
it as some piece of deliberate deceit on her part. Thus
convinced of the wisdom of Cathcart’s proposition I
spoke:</p>
<p>“You are quite right! and I shall be much obliged if
you will—if you will enlighten me.” He bowed and
smiled, and went on genially:</p>
<p>“The lady you called Miss Anita, you so far called
quite correctly. Her name is Anita; but it is only her
second Christian name. She is known to the world as
Miss Marjory Drake, of Chicago.”</p>
<p>“Known to the world.” Was this a mere phrase, or
the simple expression of a fact! I asked directly:</p>
<p>“How known to the world? Do you mean that is
the name known amongst her circle of acquaintances? Is—is
there any cause why the great world outside that
circle should know her at all?” He smiled and laid his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</SPAN></span>
hand on my shoulder in a very brotherly way as he answered:</p>
<p>“Yes, old fellow. There is a reason, and a good one,
why the great world should know her. I see you are all
in the dark; so I had better tell you what I know. Marjory
Anita Drake is an heiress, a great heiress, a very
great heiress; perhaps a long way the greatest heiress in
America, or out of it. Her father, who died when she
was a baby, left her a gigantic fortune; and her trustees
have multiplied it over and over again.” He paused; so
I said—it seeming necessary to say something:</p>
<p>“But being an heiress is not sufficient reason why a
girl should be known to the world.”</p>
<p>“It is a pretty good one. Most people wouldn’t want
any better. But this is not the reason in her case. She
is the girl who gave the battle ship to the American Government!”</p>
<p>“Gave the battle ship! I don’t understand!”</p>
<p>“It was this way. At the time the reports kept crowding
in of the Spanish atrocities on the <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">reconcentrados</i>;
when public feeling was rising in the United States,
this girl got all on fire to free Cuba. To this end she
bought a battle ship that the Cramp’s had built for Japan.
She had the ship armed with Krupp cannon which she
bought through friends in Italy; and went along the Eastern
coast amongst the sailors and fishermen till she had
recruited a crew. Then she handed the whole thing over
to the Government as a spur to it to take some action. The
ship is officered with men from the Naval Academy at
Annapolis; and they tell me there isn’t one of the crew—from
the cabin boy to the captain—that wouldn’t die
for the girl to-morrow.”</p>
<p>“Bravo!” I said instinctively! “That’s a girl for a
nation to be proud of!”</p>
<p>“She is all that!” said Cathcart enthusiastically.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span>
“Now you can understand why Adams congratulated you;
and why he was so surprised when you did not seem to
know who she was.” I stood for a moment thinking, and
all the clouds which wrapped Marjory’s purpose in mystery
seemed to disperse. This, then, was why she allowed
the error of her name to pass. She had not made an <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">incognita</i>;
chance had done this for her, and she had simply
accepted it. Doubtless, wearied with praise and with
publicity and notoriety in all its popular forms, she was
glad to get away and hide herself for a while. Fortune
had thrown in her way a man who was manifestly ignorant
of her very existence; and it was a pleasure to play
with him at hide-and-seek!</p>
<p>It was, after all, an up-to-date story of the Princess
in disguise; and I was the young man, all unknowing,
with whom she had played.</p>
<p>Here a terrible doubt assailed me. Other Princesses
had played hide-and-seek; and, having had their sport,
had vanished; leaving desolation and an empty heart behind
them. Was it possible that she too was like this;
that she had been all the while playing with me; that
even whilst she was being most gracious, she was taking
steps to hide even her whereabouts from me? Here was
I, who had even proposed marriage; and yet who did not
even know when or where I should see her again—if indeed
I should ever see her again at all. I could not
believe it. I had looked into her eyes, and had seen the
truth. Here was no wanton playing at bowls with men’s
hearts. My life upon her faith!</p>
<p>I seemed to have lost myself in a sort of trance. I
was recalled from it by Cathcart, who seeing me in a
reverie had gone over to the fireplace and stood with his
back to me, filling his pipe at the mantel-piece:</p>
<p>“I think I hear Adams coming. Pardon me, old fellow,
but though I am sure he knows I have told you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</SPAN></span>
about Miss Drake, and though he probably made an excuse
for delay so that I might have an opportunity to do
so, he wants to appear not to enter on the subject. He
is <em>diplomat</em> all over. Remember he is of the U. S. Embassy;
and Miss Drake, as an American citizen, is theoretically
under his care in this foreign country. Let us
be talking of something else when he comes in!” Sam
came along the passage softly whistling a bar of “Yankee
Doodle.” Cathcart nodded to me and whispered:</p>
<p>“I told you so! He takes good care that he may not
surprise us.” When he came in we were talking of the
prospects of the Autumn fishing on the Dee.</p>
<p>When we left Cathcart’s room, after a cigar, I, being
somewhat tired with my long ride, went at once to my
room. Adams came with me as far as the door.</p>
<p>I was just getting into bed when I heard a slight tap
at the door. I unlocked it and found Adams without. He
raised a warning hand, and said in a whisper:</p>
<p>“May I come in? I want to say something very privately.”
More than ever mystified—everything seemed
a mystery now—I opened the door. He came in and I
closed it softly and locked it.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span></p>
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