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HOME > Classical Novels > A Fool and His Money21 > CHAPTER VIII — I RESORT TO DIPLOMACY
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CHAPTER VIII — I RESORT TO DIPLOMACY
 "My dear Countess," said I, the next morning, "while I am willing to admit that all you say is true, there still remains1 the unhappy fact that you were very near to upsetting everything last night. Mr. Pless saw you quite plainly. The moon was very full, you'll remember. Fortunately he was too far away from your window to recognise you. Think how easy it might—"  
"But I've told you twice that I held my hand over Pinko's nose and he just couldn't bark, Mr. Smart. You are really most unreasonable2 about it. The dog had to have a breath of fresh air."
 
"Why not send him up to the top of the tower and let him run around on the—"
 
"Oh, there's no use talking about it any longer," she said wearily. "It is all over and no real harm was done. I am awfully3 sorry if they made it uncomfortable for you. It is just like him to suggest something—well, scandalous. And the rest of them are dreadful teases, especially Mrs. Smith. They love anything risque. But you haven't told me what they said that kept you awake all night."
 
My dignity was worth beholding4.
 
"It was not what they said to me, Countess, but what they left unsaid. I sha'n't tell you what they said."
 
"I think I can make a pretty good guess—"
 
"Well, you needn't!" I cried hastily, but too late. She would out with it.
 
"They accuse you of being a sad, sad dog, a foxy; bachelor, and a devil of a fellow. They all profess5 to be very much shocked, but they assure you that it's all right,—not to mind them. They didn't think you had it in you, and they're glad to see you behaving like a scamp. Oh, I know them!"
 
As a matter of fact, she was pretty near to being right. "All the more reason for you to be cautious and circumspect," said I boldly. "Pray think of my position, if not your own."
 
She gave me a queer little look and then smiled brightly. (She is lovely!)
 
"I'll promise to be good," she said.
 
"I only ask you to be careful," said I, blunderingly. She laughed aloud: her merriest, most distracting gurgle.
 
"And now will you be good enough to tell me who I am?" she asked, after a few minutes. "That is, who am I supposed to be?"
 
"Oh," said I uneasily, "you are really nobody. You are Britton's wife."
 
"What! Does Britton know it?"
 
"Yes," said I, with a wry6 smile. "He took a mean advantage of me in the presence of George Hazzard not an hour ago, and asked for a raise in wages on account of his wife's illness. It seems that you are an invalid7."
 
"I hope he hasn't forgotten the baby in his calculations."
 
"He hasn't, you may be sure. He has named the baby after me."
 
"How original!"
 
"I thought it rather clever to change Rosemary's sex for a few days," said I. "Moreover, it will be necessary for Britton to take Max's place as your personal servant. He will fetch your meals and—"
 
"Oh, I can't agree to that, Mr. Smart," she cried with decision. "I must have Max. He is—"
 
"But Britton must have some sort of a pretext8 for—"
 
"Nonsense! No one cares about Britton and his sick wife. Let well enough alone."
 
"I—I'll think it over, Countess," said I weakly.
 
"And now tell me all about—Mr. Pless. How is he looking? Does he appear to be unhappy?" There was a curious note in her voice, as of anxiety or eagerness, it was hard to tell which. In any case, I found myself inwardly resenting her interest in the sneering9 Hungarian. (I had discovered that he was not an Austrian.) There was a queer sinking sensation in the region of my heart, and a slight chill. Could it be possible that she—But no! It was preposterous10!
 
"He appears to be somewhat sentimental11 and preoccupied12. He gazes at the moon and bites his nails."
 
"I—I wish I could have a peep at him some time without being—"
 
"For heaven's sake, don't even consider such a thing," I cried in alarm.
 
"Just a little peek13, Mr. Smart," she pleaded.
 
"No!" said I firmly.
 
"Very well," she said resignedly, fixing me with hurt eyes. "I'm sorry to be such a bother to you."
 
"I believe you'll go back to him, after all," I said angrily. "Women are all alike. They—"
 
"Just because I want to see how unhappy he is, and enjoy myself a little, you say horrid14 things to me," she cried, almost pathetically. "You treat me very badly."
 
"There is a great deal at stake," said I. "The peril15 is—well, it's enormous. I am having the devil's own time heading off a scheme they've got for exploring the entire castle. Your hus—your ex-husband says he knows of a secret door opening into this part of the—"
 
She sprang to her feet with a sharp cry of alarm.
 
"Heavens! I—I forgot about that! There is a secret panel and—heaven save us!—it opens directly into my bedroom!" Her eyes were very wide and full of consternation16. She gripped my arm. "Come! Be quick! We must pile something heavy against it, or nail it up, or—do something."
 
She fairly dragged me out into the corridor, and then, picking up her dainty skirts, pattered down the rickety stairs at so swift a pace that I had some difficulty in keeping her pink figure in sight. Why is it that a woman can go downstairs so much faster than a man? I've never been able to explain it. She didn't stumble once, or miss a step, while I did all manner of clumsy things, and once came near to pitching headlong to the bottom. We went down and down and round and round so endlessly that I was not only gasping18 but reeling.
 
At last we came to the broad hall at the top of the main staircase. Almost directly in front of us loomed19 the great padlocked doors leading to the other wing. Passing them like the wind she led the way to the farthermost end of the hall. Light from the big, paneless windows overlooking the river, came streaming into the vast corridor, and I could see doors ahead to the right and the left of us.
 
"Your bedroom?" I managed to gasp17, uttering a belated question that should have been asked five or six flights higher up at a time when I was better qualified20 to voice it. "What the dickens is it doing down here?"
 
She did not reply, but, turning to the left, threw open a door and disappeared into the room beyond. I followed ruthlessly, but stopped just over the threshold to catch my breath in astonishment22.
 
I was in "my lady's bed-chamber."
 
The immense Gothic bed stood on its dais, imposing23 in its isolation24. Three or four very modern innovation trunks loomed like minarets25 against the opposite walls, half-open; one's imagination might have been excused if it conjured26 up sentries27 who stood ready to pop out of the trunks to scare one half to death. Some of my most precious rugs adorned28 the floor, but the windows were absolutely undraped. There were a few old chairs scattered29 about, but no other article of furniture except an improvised30 wash-stand, and a clumsy, portable tin bath-tub which leaned nonchalantly against the foot of the bed. There were great mirrors, in the wall at one end of the room, cracked and scaly31 it is true, but capable of reflecting one's presence.
 
"Don't stand there gaping," she cried in a shrill32 whisper, starting across the room only to turn aside with a sharp exclamation33. "That stupid Helene!" she cried, flushing warmly. Catching34 up a heap of tumbled garments, mostly white, from a chair, she recklessly hurled35 them behind the bed. "This is the mirror—the middle one. It opens by means of a spring. There is a small hole in the wall behind it and then there is still another secret door beyond that, a thick iron one with the sixth Baron36 Rothhoefen's portrait on the outer side of it. The canvas swings open. We must—"
 
I was beginning to get my bearings.
 
"The sixth baron? Old Ludwig the Red?"
 
"The very one."
 
"Then, by Jove, he is in my study! You don't mean to say—"
 
"Please don't stop to talk," she cried impatiently, looking about in a distracted manner, "but for goodness sake get something to put against this mirror."
 
My mind worked rapidly. The only object in the room heavy enough to serve as a barricade37 was the bed, and it was too heavy for me to move, I feared. I suggested it, of course, involuntarily lowering my voice to a conspiratorial38 whisper.
 
"Pull it over, quick!" she commanded promptly39.
 
"Perhaps I'd better run out and get Max and Ru—"
 
"If my hus—if Mr. Pless should open that secret door from the other side, Mr. Smart, it will be very embarrassing for you and me, let—"
 
I put my shoulder to the huge creaky bed and shoved. There were no castors. It did not budge40. The Countess assisted me by putting the tips of her small fingers against one end of it and pushing. It was not what one would call a frantic41 effort on her part, but it served to make me exert myself to the utmost. I, a big strong man, couldn't afford to have a slim countess pushing a bedstead about while I was there to do it for her.
 
"Don't do that," I protested. "I can manage it alone, thank you."
 
I secured a strong grip on the bottom of the thing and heaved manfully.
 
"You might let me help," she cried, firmly grasping a side piece with both hands.
 
The bed moved. The veins42 stood out on my neck and temples. My face must have been quite purple, and it is a hue43 that I detest44. When I was a very small laddie my mother put me forward to be admired in purple velveteen. The horror of it still lingers.
 
By means of great straining I got the heavy bed over against the mirror, upsetting the tin bathtub with a crash that under ordinary circumstances would have made my heart stand still but now only tripled its pumping activities. One of the legs was hopelessly splintered in the drop from the raised platform.
 
"There," she said, standing45 off to survey our joint46 achievement, "we've stopped it up very nicely." She brushed the tips of her fingers daintily. "This afternoon you may fetch up a hammer and some nails and fasten the mirror permanently47. Then you can move the bed back to its proper place. Goodness! What a narrow squeak48!"
 
"Madam," said I, my hand on my heart but not through gallantry, "that bed stays where it is. Not all the king's horses nor all the king's men can put it back again."
 
"Was it so heavy, Mr. Smart?"
 
I swallowed very hard. A prophetic crick already had planted itself in my back. "Will you forgive me if I submit that you sleep quite a distance from home?" I remarked with justifiable49 irony50. "Why the deuce don't you stay on the upper floors?"
 
"Because I am mortally afraid," she said, with a little shudder51. "You've no idea how lonely, how spooky it is up there at the dead hour of night. I couldn't sleep. After the third night I had my things moved down here, where I could at least feel that there were strong men within—you might say arm's length of me. I'm—I'm shockingly timid."
 
She smiled; a wavering, pleading little smile that conquered.
 
"Of course, I don't mind, Countess," I hastened to say. "Only I thought it would be cosier52 up there with Rosemary and the two maids for company."
 
She leaned a little closer to me. "We all sleep down here," she said confidentially53. "We bring Rosemary's little mattress54 down every night and put it in the bathtub. It is a very good fit and makes quite a nice cradle for her. Helene and Blake sleep just across the hall and we leave the doors wide open. So, you see, we're not one bit afraid."
 
I sat down on the edge of the bed and laughed.
 
"This is delicious," I cried, not without compunction for I was looking directly into her eager, wistful eyes. A shadow crossed them. "I beg your pardon. I—I can't help laughing."
 
"Pray do not stop laughing on my account," she said icily. "I am used to being laughed at since I left America. They laugh at all of us over here."
 
"I dare say they laugh at me, confound them," said I, lugubriously55.
 
"They do," said she flatly. Before I could quite recover from this sentient56 dig, she was ordering me to put the bathtub where it belonged. This task completed, I looked up. She was standing near the head of the bed, with a revolver in her hand. I stared. "I keep it under my pillow, Mr. Smart," she said nervously57. I said nothing, and she replaced it under the pillow, handling the deadly weapon as gingerly as if it were the frailest58 glass. "Of course I couldn't hit anything with it, and I know I should scream when it went off, but still—accidents will happen, you know."
 
"Urn21!" said I, judicially59. "And so my study is just beyond this mirror, eh? May I enquire60 how you happen to know that I have my study there?"
 
"Oh, I peeked61 in the other day," she said, serene62 once more.
 
"The deuce you did!"
 
"I was quite sure that you were out," she explained. "I opened Ludwig the Red an inch or two, that's all. You are quite cosy63 in there, aren't you? I envy you the grand old chaise longe."
 
I wavered, but succeeded in subduing64 the impulse. "It is the only comfortable piece of furniture I have left in my apartments," said I, with convincing candour.
 
"You poor man," she said, with her rarest smile. "How fortunate you are that I did not remember the chaise longe. You would have been deprived of it, I am quite sure. Of course I couldn't think of robbing you of it now."
 
"As a matter of fact, I never lie in it," I said, submitting to a once conquered impulse. "If you'd really like to have it, I'll see that it is taken up to your rooms at once."
 
"Thank you," she said, shaking her head. "It's kind of you, but I am not so selfish as all that, believe me."
 
"It is—quite in the way, Countess."
 
"Some one would be sure to miss it if you sent it up now," she said reflectively.
 
"We'll wait till they're all gone," said I.
 
She smiled and the bargain was settled without a word from her. You............
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