Charles Rex. Ethel M. Dell

Charles Rex - Ethel M. Dell


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XII. The Ogre's Castle

       XIII. The End of the Game

      PART III

      I. The Virtuous Hero

       II. The Compact

       III. L'oiseau bleu

       IV. The Trap

       V. The Confidence

       VI. The Sacred Fire

       VII. Surrender

       VIII. The Magician's Wand

       IX. The Warning

       X. The Mystery

       XI. Suspicion

       XII. The Ally

       XIII. The Truth

       XIV. The Last Card

      PART IV

      I. The Winning Post

       II. The Villain Scores

       III. A Wife Is Different

       IV. The Idol of Paris

       V. The Dance of Death

       VI. The New Lover

       VII. The Refugee

       VIII. The Turning-point

       IX. Larpent

       X. In the Name of Love

       XI. The Gift of the Gods

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      ENNUI

      "I shall go to sea to-morrow," said Saltash, with sudden decision. "I'm tired of this place, Larpent—fed up on repletion."

      "Then by all means let us go, my lord!" said Larpent, with the faint glimmer of a smile behind his beard, which was the only expression of humour he ever permitted himself.

      "Believe you're fed up too," said Saltash, flashing a critical look upon him.

      Captain Larpent said nothing, deeming speech unnecessary. All time spent ashore was wasted in his opinion.

      Saltash turned and surveyed the sky-line over the yacht's rail with obvious discontent on his ugly face. His eyes were odd, one black, one grey, giving a curiously unstable appearance to a countenance which otherwise might have claimed to possess some strength. His brows were black and deeply marked. He had a trick of moving them in conjunction with his thoughts so that his face was seldom in absolute repose. It was said that there was a strain of royal blood in Saltash, and in the days before he had succeeded to the title when he had been merely Charles Burchester, he had borne the nickname of "the merry monarch." Certain wild deeds in a youth that had not been beyond reproach had seemed to warrant this, but of later years a friend had bestowed a more gracious title upon him, and to all who could claim intimacy with him he had become "Charles Rex." The name fitted him like a garment. A certain arrogance, a certain royalty of bearing, both utterly unconscious and wholly unfeigned, characterized him. Whatever he did, and his actions were often far from praiseworthy, this careless distinction of mien always marked him. He received an almost involuntary respect where he went.

      Captain Larpent who commanded his yacht The Night Moth—most morose and unresponsive of men—paid him the homage of absolute acquiescence. Whatever his private opinions might be, he never expressed them unless invited to do so by his employer. He never criticized by word or look. Saltash was wont to say that if he decided to turn pirate he believed that Larpent would continue at his post without the smallest change of front. To raise a protest of any sort would have been absolutely foreign to his nature. He was made to go straight ahead, to do his duty without question and with perfect self-reliance.

      On the present occasion, having cruised from port to port in the Mediterranean for nearly six weeks, it was certainly no ill news to him to hear that Saltash had at last had enough. The weather was perfect, too perfect for a man of his bull-dog instincts. He was thoroughly tired of the endless spring sunshine and of the chattering, fashionable crowds that Saltash was wont to assemble on the yacht. He was waiting with an iron patience for the word that should send them forth over the great Atlantic rollers, with the ocean spray bursting over their bows and the sting of the ocean wind in their faces. That was the sort of life that appealed to him. He had no use for civilization; the froth of society had no attraction for him. He preferred a deeper draught.

      Saltash was thoroughly cosmopolitan in his tastes; he liked amusement, but he abhorred boredom. He declared that for him it was the root of all evil. He was never really wicked unless he was bored. And then—que voulez-vous? He did not guide the star of destiny.

      "Yes," he said, after a thoughtful silence, "we will certainly put to sea to-morrow—unless—" he turned his head and threw a merry grin at his companion—"unless Fortune has any tricks up her sleeve for me, for I am going ashore for one more fling to-night."

      Larpent smoked on immovably, his blue-grey eyes staring out to the vivid sky-line, his sunburnt face quite imperturbable.

      "We shall be ready to start as soon as you come aboard, my lord," he said.

      "Good!" said Saltash lightly. "I may be late, or—more probably—very early. Leave the gangway for me! I'll let you know when I'm aboard."

      He got up as if he moved on springs and leaned against the rail, looking down quizzically at the man who sat stolidly smoking in the deck-chair. No two people could have formed a stronger contrast—the yacht's captain, fair-bearded, with the features of a Viking—the yacht's owner, dark, alert, with a certain French finesse about him that gave a strange charm to a personality that otherwise might have been merely fantastic.

      Suddenly he laughed. "Do you know, Larpent, I often think to myself what odd tricks Fate plays? You for instance—you, the captain of a private yacht when you ought to be roving the high seas in a Flying Dutchman! You probably were a few generations ago."

      "Ah!" Larpent said, through a cloud of smoke. "Life isn't what it was."

      "It's an infernal fraud, most of it," said Saltash. "Always promising and seldom fulfilling!"

      "No good expecting too much," said Larpent.

      "True!" said Saltash. "On the other hand it isn't always wise to be too easily satisfied." His look became suddenly speculative. "Have you ever been in love, Larpent?"

      The big man in the deck-chair made a sharp movement and spilt some cigar-ash on his coat. He sat up deliberately and brushed it off. Saltash watched him with mischievous eyes.

      "Well?" he said.

      Larpent leaned back again, puffing forth a thick cloud of smoke. "Once," he said briefly.

      "Only once?" gibed Saltash. "Man alive! Why, I've had the disease scores of times, and you are half a generation older than I am!"

      "I know," Larpent's eyes dwelt unblinking upon the sparkling blue of the water beyond the rail. "You've had it so often that you take it lightly."

      Saltash laughed. "You apparently took it like the plague."

      "I didn't die of it," said Larpent grimly.

      "Perhaps the lady did!" suggested Saltash.

      "No. She didn't die either." Larpent's


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