The Haute Noblesse. George Manville Fenn

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The Haute Noblesse - George Manville Fenn

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      “Sulky, eh? Well, I’d a good mind to stop in. Sorry you got so wet, Leslie.”

      Still no reply.

      “Cheerful party, ’pon my word!” said Harry, with a contemptuous laugh. “Hope no one objects to my smoking.”

      He looked hard at Madelaine, but she avoided his gaze, and he uttered a short laugh.

      “Got a cigar to spare, Vic?”

      “Yes, dear boy, certainly.”

      “Pass it along then and the lights. Hold hard a minute, Leslie.”

      The latter ceased rowing as Pradelle handed a cigar and the matches to his friend.

      “Will you take one, Mr. Leslie?” said Pradelle.

      “Thanks, no,” said Leslie quietly, and to the would-be donor’s great relief, for he had only two left. Then once more the rowing was resumed, Pradelle striking a match to light a cigar for himself, and then recollecting himself and throwing the match away.

      “Well, we’re enjoying ourselves!” cried Harry after they had proceeded some distance in silence. “I say, Vic, say something!”

      Pradelle had been cudgelling his brains for the past ten minutes, but the more he tried to find something à propos the more every pleasant subject seemed to recede.

      In fact it would have been difficult just then for the most accomplished talker to have set all present at their ease, for Harry’s folly had moved his sister so that she feared to speak lest she should burst into a hysterical fit of weeping, and Madelaine, as she sat there with her lips compressed, felt imbued with but one desire, which took the form of the following words:

      “Oh, how I should like to box his ears!”

      “Getting dry, Leslie?” said Harry after a long silence.

      “Not very,” was the reply.

      “Ah well, there’s no fear of our catching cold pulling like this.”

      “Not the slightest,” said Leslie coldly; then there was another period of silence, during which the water seemed to patter and slap the bows of the boat, while the panorama of rock and foam and glittering cascade, as the crags were bathed by the Atlantic swell, and it fell back broken, seemed perfectly fresh and new as seen from another point of view.

      At last Harry, after trying two or three times more to start a conversation, said shortly—

      “Well, this is my last day at home, and I think I ought to say, ‘Thank goodness!’ This is coming out for a pleasant sail, and having to row back like a galley-slave! Oh, I beg your pardon, ladies! All my mistake. I am highly complimented. All this glumminess is because I am going away.”

      He received such a look of reproach that he uttered an angry ejaculation and began to pull so hard that Leslie had to second his movement to keep the boat’s head straight for the harbour, whose farther point soon after came in sight, with two figures on the rocks at the end.

      “Papa along with Uncle Luke,” said Louise softly.

      “Eh?” said Harry sharply; “the old man still fishing?”

      “Yes,” said Louise rather coldly; “and, Maddy, dear, is not that Mr. Van Heldre?”

      Madelaine shaded her eyes from the western sun, where it was sinking fast, and nodded.

      “Where shall we land you?” said Harry sulkily now, “at the point, or will you go up the harbour?”

      “If there is not too much sea on, at the point,” said Louise gravely.

      “Oh, I dare say we can manage that without wetting your plumes,” said the young man contemptuously; and after another ten minutes’ pulling they reached the harbour mouth and made for the point, where Uncle Luke stood leaning on his rod watching the coming boat, in company with a tall grey man with refined features, who had taken off the straw hat he wore to let the breeze play through his closely-cut hair, while from time to time he turned to speak either to Uncle Luke or to the short thick set man who, with his pointed white moustache and closely clipped peaked beard, looked in his loose holland blouse like a French officer taking his vacation at the seaside.

      “Mind how you come,” said the latter in a sharp, decided way. “Watch your time, Leslie. Back in, my lad. Can you manage it, girls?”

      “Oh, yes,” they cried confidently. “Sit still then till the boat’s close in, then one at a time. You first, my dear.”

      This to Louise, as he stepped actively down the granite rocks to a narrow natural shelf, which was now bare, now several inches deep in water.

      “If we manage it cleverly we can get you ashore without a wetting.”

      The warnings were necessary, for the tide ran fast, and the Atlantic swell made the boat rise and fall, smooth as the surface was.

      “Now then,” cried the French-looking gentleman, giving his orders as if he were an officer in command, “easy, Harry Vine; back a little, Mr. Leslie. Be ready, Louie, my dear. That’s it: a little more. I have you. Bravo!”

      The words came slowly, and with the latter there was a little action; as he took the hands outstretched to him, when the boat nearly grazed the rock, there was a light spring, the girl was on the narrow shelf, and the boat, in answer to a touch of the oars, was half-a-dozen yards away rising and falling on the swell.

      “Give me your hand, my dear,” said the tall grey gentleman, leaning down.

      “Oh, I can manage, papa,” she cried, and the next moment she was by his side. Looking back, “Thank you, Mr. Van Heldre,” she said.

      “Eh? All right, my child. Now, Maddy. Steady, my lads. Mind that ledge; don’t get her under there. Bravo! that’s right. Now, my girl. Well done.”

      Madelaine leaped to his side, and was in turn assisted to the top, she accepting the tall gentleman’s help, while Uncle Luke, with his hands resting on his rod, which he held with the butt on the rock, stood grimly looking down at the boat.

      “I think I’ll land here,” said Leslie. “You don’t want my help with the boat.”

      “Oh, no; we can manage,” said Harry sourly; and Leslie gave up his oar and leaped on to the rock as the boat was again backed in.

      “That chap looks quite green,” said Uncle Luke with a sneering laugh. “Our London friend been poorly, Louie?”

      Before she could answer the tall gentleman cried to those in the boat—

      “Don’t be long, my boy. Tea will be waiting.”

      “All right, dad. Lay hold of this oar, Vic, and let’s get her moored.”

      “Why, you’re wet, Mr. Leslie,” said the tall gentleman, shaking hands.

      “Only sea-water, sir. It’s

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