The Bars of Iron eBook

Ethel May Dell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 601 pages of information about The Bars of Iron.

The Bars of Iron eBook

Ethel May Dell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 601 pages of information about The Bars of Iron.

He smiled tranquilly upon Piers at parting and congratulated him upon the prospect of missing the worst of the winter.  To which Piers threw back a laugh as he drove away in his little two-seater, coupled with the careless assurance that he meant to make the most of his time, whatever the weather.

“Lucky dog!” said Guyes, as he watched him disappear down the drive.

But if he had seen the expression that succeeded Piers’ laugh, he might have suppressed the remark.  For Piers’ face, as he raced alone through the darkness, was the set, grim face of a man who carries a deadly purpose in his soul.  He had laughed and danced throughout the evening, but in his first moment of solitude the devil he had kept at bay had entered into full possession.

To the rush and throb of his engine, he heard over and over the gibing, malicious words of a girl’s sore heart:  “Mind the doctor doesn’t cut you out in your absence!”

Obviously then this affair was the common talk of the neighbourhood since news of it had even penetrated to Wardenhurst.  People were openly watching the rivalry between Lennox Tudor and himself, watching and speculating as to the result.  And he, about to be ignominiously removed from the conflict by his grandfather, at Tudor’s suggestion, had become the laughing-stock of the place.  Piers’ teeth nearly met in his lower lip.  Let them laugh!  And let them chatter!  He would give them ample food for amusement and gossip before he left.

He had yielded to his grandfather’s desire because instinct had told him that his absence just at that stage of his wooing would be more beneficial than his presence.  He was shrewd enough to realize that the hot blood in him was driving him too fast, urging him to a pace which might irreparably damage his cause.  For that reason alone, he was ready to curb his fierce impetuosity.  But to leave a free field for Lennox Tudor was not a part of his plan.  He had scarcely begun to regard the man in the light of a serious rival, although fully aware of the fact that Tudor was doing his utmost to remove him from his path.  But if Ina thought him so, he had probably underestimated the danger.

He had always detested Tudor very thoroughly.  Piers never did anything by halves, and the doctor’s undisguised criticism of him never failed to arouse his fiercest resentment.  That Tudor disliked him in return was a fact that could scarcely escape the notice of the most careless observer.  The two were plainly antipathetic, and were scarcely civil to one another even in public.

But that night Piers’ antagonism flared to a deadly hatred.  The smouldering fire had leaped to a fierce blaze.  Two nights before he had smothered it with the exultant conviction that Tudor’s chances with Avery were practically non-existent.  He had known with absolute certainty that he was not the type of man to attract her.  But to-night his mood had changed.  Whether Tudor’s chances had improved or not, he scarcely stopped to question, but that other people regarded them as possibly greater than his own was a fact that sent the mad blood to his head.  He tore back through the winter night like a man possessed, with Ina Rose’s scoffing warning beating a devil’s tattoo in his brain.

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Project Gutenberg
The Bars of Iron from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.