The Cab of the Sleeping Horse eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 249 pages of information about The Cab of the Sleeping Horse.

The Cab of the Sleeping Horse eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 249 pages of information about The Cab of the Sleeping Horse.

“My dear Mrs. Clephane,” he protested, “I assure you it is not necessary—­”

“Not necessary, if one is in the diplomatic profession,” she cut in.  “Murder and assassination both of men and of reputation, seem to be a portion of this horrible business, and perfectly well recognized as a legitimate means to effect the end desired.  I’m not in it—­diplomacy, I mean,—­and I’m mighty thankful I’m not.  Mrs. Spencer cold as ice, crafty as the devil, beautiful as sin, and hard as adamant, knowing her Paris and London and its scandals—­I suppose she must know them in her profession—­instantly recognized me and placed me as Robert Clephane’s wife.  For I am his wife—­or rather his widow.  I lied to her because I didn’t intend that she should have the gratification of seeing her play win.  She sought to distress and disconcert me, and to raise in your mind a doubt of my motives and my story.  It may be legitimate in diplomacy, but it’s dastardly and inhuman.  ’Rumour also had it that he was none too happy in his marriage, and that his Mrs. Clephane was something of the same sort—­she was of the type to make men’s hearts flutter.’  You see, I recall her exact words.  And what was I to do—­”

“Just what you did do.  You handled the matter beautifully.”

“Thank you!” she smiled.  “Yet she would win in the end—­with almost any other man than you.  She plays for time; a very little time, possibly.  I don’t know.  I’m new in this business—­and can’t see far before me.  Indeed, I can’t see at all; it’s a maze of horrors.  If I get out of this mess alive, I’ll promise never to get mixed in another.”

“Why not quit right now, Mrs. Clephane?” Harleston suggested.

“I won’t quit under fire—­and with my mission unaccomplished.  Moreover, this Spencer gang have ruffled my temper—­they have aroused my fighting blood.  I never realized I had fighting blood in me until tonight.  Mrs. Spencer’s ugly insinuation, topping their attempted abduction of the evening, has done it.  I’m angry all through.  Don’t I look angry, Mr. Harleston?”

“You’re quite justified in looking so, dear lady; as well as in being so,” Harleston replied.  “Only you don’t look it now.”

“You’re a sad flatterer, sir!” she smiled.  “Believe me, had you seen me in the room to which they decoyed me with a false message from you, you would believe that I can look it—­very well look it.”

“So that was the way of it!” Harleston exclaimed “Tell me about it, Mrs. Clephane.  I was sure that you were a prisoner somewhere in this hotel; to find you every room was being inspected.”

“Why did you think I was a prisoner in the midst of all this gaiety?” she asked.

“Because I was lured by a message purporting to be from you to the ninth floor and garroted.  I escaped.  However, that is another story; yours first, my lady.”

“You too!” she marvelled.

He nodded.  “And now we are sitting together at dinner, looking at the crowd, and you’re about to tell me your story.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Cab of the Sleeping Horse from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.