Mr. Briggerland’s jaw dropped.
“What?” he almost shrieked.
She nodded.
“We are going to be married next week,” she said, “and the little scene you witnessed has nothing whatever to do with you.”
The effect of these words on Mordon was magical. The malignant frown which had distorted his face cleared away. He looked from Jean to Briggerland as though it were impossible to believe the evidence of his ears.
“François and I love one another,” Jean went on in her even voice. “We have quarrelled tonight on a matter which has nothing to do with anybody save ourselves.”
“You’re — going — to — marry — him — next — week ?” said Mr. Briggerland dully. “By God, you’ll do nothing of the sort!”
She raised her hand.
“It is too late for you to interfere, father,” she said quietly. “François and I shall go our way and face our own fate. I’m sorry you disapprove, because you have always been a very loving father to me.”
That was the first hint Mr. Briggerland had received that there might be some other explanation for her words, and he became calmer.
“Very well,” he said, “I can only tell you that I strongly disapprove of the action you have taken and that I shall do nothing whatever to further your reckless scheme. But I must insist upon your coming back to the house now. I cannot have my daughter talked about.”
She nodded.
“I will see you tomorrow morning early, François,” she said. “Perhaps you will drive me into Nice before breakfast. I have some purchases to make.”
He bowed, and reached out his hand for the revolver which she had taken from him.
She looked at the ornate weapon, its silver-plated metal parts, the graceful ivory handle.
“I’m not going to trust you with this tonight,” she said with her rare smile. “Good night, François.”
He took her hand and kissed it.
“Good night, Jean,” he said in a tremulous voice. For a moment their eyes met, and then she turned as though she dared not trust herself and followed her father down the stairs.
They were halfway to the house when she laid her hand on Briggerland’s arm.
“Keep this,” she said. It was François’ revolver. “It is probably loaded and I thought I saw some silver initials inlaid in the ivory handle. If I know François Mordon, they are his.”
“What do you want me to do with it?” he said as he slipped the weapon in his pocket.
She laughed.
“On your way to bed, come in to my room,” she said. “I’ve quite a lot to tell you,” and she sailed into the drawingroom to interrupt Mrs. Cole-Mortimer, who was teaching a weary Lydia the elements of bezique.
“Where have you been, Jean?” asked Lydia, putting down her cards.
“I have been arranging a novel experience for you, but I’m not so sure that it will be as interesting as it might — it all depends upon the state of your young heart,” said Jean, pulling up a chair.
“My young heart is very healthy,” laughed Lydia. “What is the interesting experience?”
“Are you in love?” challenged Jean, searching in a big chintz bag where she kept her handiwork for a piece of unfinished sewing. (Jean’s domesticity was always a source of wonder to Lydia.)
“In love — good heavens, no.”
“So much the better,” nodded Jean, “that sounds as though the experience will be fascinating.”
She waited until she had threaded the fine needle before she explained.
“If you really are not in love and you sit on the Lovers’ Chair, the name of your future husband will come to you. If you’re in love, of course, that complicates matters a little.”
“But suppose I don’t want to know the name of my future husband?”
“Then you’re inhuman,” said Jean.
“Where is this magical chair?”
“It is on the San Remo road beyond the frontier station. You’ve been there, haven’t you, Margaret?”
“Once,” said Mrs. Cole-Mortimer, who had not been east of Cap Martin, but whose rule it was never to admit that she had missed anything worth seeing.
“In a wild, eerie spot,” Jean went on, “and miles from any human habitation.”
“Are you going to take me?”
Jean shook her head.
“That would ruin the spell,” she said solemnly. “No, my dear, if you want that thrill, and, seriously, it is worth while, because the scenery is the most beautiful of any along the coast, you must go alone.”
Lydia nodded.
“I’ll try it. Is it too far to walk?” she asked.
“Much too far,” said Jean. “Mordon will drive you out. He knows the road very well and you ought not to take anybody but an experienced driver. I have a permis for the car to pass the frontier; you will probably meet father in San Remo — he is taking a motorcycle trip, aren’t you, daddy?”
Mr. Briggerland drew a long breath and nodded. He was beginning to understand.
Chapter XXXIV
There was lying in Monaco harbour a long white boat with a stumpy mast, which delighted in the name of Jungle Queen. It was the property of an impecunious English nobleman who made a respectable income from letting the vessel on hire.
Mrs. Cole-Mortimer had seemed surprised at the reasonable fee demanded for two months’ use until she had seen the boat the day after her arrival at Cap Martin.
She had pictured a large and commodious yacht; she found a reasonably sized motor-launch with a whale-deck cabin. The description in the agent’s catalogue that the Jungle Queen would “sleep four” was probably based on the experience of a party of young roisterers who had once hired the vessel. Supposing that the “four” were reasonably drunk or heavily drugged, it was possible for them to sleep on board the Jungle Queen. Normally two persons would have found it difficult, though by lying diagonally across the “cabin” one small-sized man could have slumbered without discomfort.
The Jungle Queen had been a disappointment to Jean also. Her busy brain had conceived an excellent way of solving her principal problem, but a glance at the Jungle Queen told her that the money she had spent on hiring the launch — and it was little better — was wasted. She herself hated the sea and had so little faith in the utility of the boat, that she had even dismissed the youth who attended to its well-worn engines.
Mr. Marcus Stepney, who was mildly interested in motorboating, and considerably interested in any form of amusement which he could get at somebody else’s expense, had so far been the sole patron of the Jungle Queen. It was his practice to take the boat out every morning for a two hours’ sail, generally alone, though sometimes he would take somebody whose acquaintance he had made, and who was destined to be a source of profit to him in the future.
Jean’s talk of the caveman method of wooing had made a big impression upon him, emphasised as it had been, and still was, by the two