Charles Rex. Ethel M. Dell

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Charles Rex - Ethel M. Dell

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face flushed burningly. He hung back. "Not—not—from your glass, sir!" he said. "Not—liqueur!"

      "Why not? Afraid?" mocked Saltash.

      Toby was silent. His hand closed involuntarily upon the back of his master's chair. The flush died out of his face.

      Saltash sat and looked at him for a few seconds, still with that dancing gleam in his eyes. Then abruptly he moved, rose with one knee upon the chair, lifted the glass to Toby's lips.

      "Afraid?" he said again, speaking softly as one speaks to a frightened child.

      Toby raised a hand that sought to take the glass but closed instead nervously upon Saltash's wrist. He drank in response to Saltash's unspoken insistence, looking straight at him the while.

      Then oddly he smiled. "No, not afraid, sir," he said. "Only—lest I might not bring you luck."

      "Oh, don't fret yourself on that account!" said Saltash. "I'm not used to any luck."

      Toby's eyes widened. "I thought you had—everything, sir," he said.

      Saltash laughed and set down the empty glass. "Au contraire, mon cher," he said. "I am no richer than you are. Like Tantalus, I can never quench my thirst. Like many a better man than I, I see the stars, but I never reach them."

      "Does anybody?" said Toby in the tone of one not expecting an answer.

      Saltash laughed briefly, enigmatically. "I believe some people soar. But they generally come down hard in the end. Whereas those who always crawl on the earth haven't far to fall. Now look here, Toby, you and I have got to have a talk."

      "Yes, sir," said Toby, blinking rather rapidly.

      Saltash was watching him with a faint smile in his eyes, half-derisive and half-tender. "What are you going to be, Toby?" he said. "It all turns on that."

      Toby's hand still gripped the back of his chair. He stood up very straight, facing him. "That is for you to decide, sir," he said.

      "Is it?" said Saltash, and again his eyes gleamed a little. "Is it for me to decide?"

      "Yes, sir. For you alone." There was no flinching in Toby's look now. His eyes were wide and very steady.

      Saltash's mouth twitched as if he repressed some passing emotion. "You mean—just that?" he asked, after a moment.

      "Just that, sir," said Toby, with a slight quickening of the breath. "I mean I am—at your disposal alone."

      Saltash took him suddenly by the shoulder and looked at him closely.

       "Toby!" he said. "Aren't you making—rather a fool of yourself?"

      "No, sir!" Swiftly, with unexpected vehemence, Toby made answer. "I'm doing—the only thing possible. But if you—if you—if you—"

      "Well?" Saltash said. "If I what?"

      "If you want to get rid of me—at any time," Toby said, commanding himself with fierce effort, "I'll go, sir—I'll go!"

      "And where to?" Saltash's eyes were no longer derisive; they held something that very few had ever seen there.

      Toby made a quick gesture of the hands, and dropped them flat at his sides. "I'll get rid of myself—then, sir," he said, with sudden chill pride. "That won't be very difficult. And I'll do it—so that you won't even know."

      Saltash stood up abruptly. "Toby, you are quite unique!" he said. "Superb too in your funny little way. Your only excuse is that you're young. Does it never occur to you that you've attached yourself to the wrong person?"

      "No, sir," breathed Toby.

      "You're not afraid to stake all you've got on a bad card?" pursued

       Saltash, still curiously watching him.

      "No, sir," he said again; and added with his faint, unboyish smile, "I haven't much to lose anyway."

      Saltash's hand tightened upon him. He was smiling also, but the gleam in his eyes had turned to leaping, fitful flame. "Well," he said slowly, "I have never yet refused—a gift from the gods."

      And there he stopped, for suddenly, drowning all speech, there arose a din that seemed to set the whole world rocking; and in a moment there came a frightful shock that pitched them both headlong to the floor.

      Saltash fell as a monkey falls, catching at one thing after another to save himself, landing eventually on his knees in pitch darkness with one hand still gripped upon Toby's thin young arm. But Toby had struck his head against a locker and had gone down stunned and helpless.

      The din of a siren above them filled the world with hideous clamour as Saltash recovered himself. "Damn them!" he ejaculated savagely. "Do they want to deafen us as well as send us to perdition?"

      Then very suddenly it stopped, leaving a void that was instantly filled with lesser sounds. There arose a confusion of voices, of running feet, a hubbub of escaping steam, and a great rush of water.

      Saltash dragged himself up in the darkness, sought to drag Toby also, found him a dead weight, stooped and lifted him with wiry strength. He trod among broken glass and plates as he straightened himself. The noise above them was increasing. He flung the limp form over his shoulder and began desperately to claw his way up a steep slant towards the saloon-door and the companion-way. Sound and instinct guided him, for the darkness was complete. But he was not the man to die like a trapped animal while the most slender way of escape remained. Hampered as he was, he made for the open with set teeth and terrible foreign oaths of which he was utterly unconscious.

      Whether that fierce struggle for freedom could ever have ended in success single-handed, however, was a point which he was not destined to decide, for after a space of desperate effort which no time could measure, there suddenly shone the gleam of an electric torch in front of him, and he saw the opening but a few feet away.

      "Saltash!" cried a voice, piercing the outer din, "Saltash!"

      "Here!" yelled back Saltash, still fighting for foothold and finding it against the leg of the table, "That you, Larpent? How long have we got?"

      "Seconds only!" said Larpent briefly. "Give me the child!"

      "No! Just give me a hand, that's all! Hang on tight! It'll be a pull."

      Saltash flung himself forward again, his free hand outstretched, slipped and nearly fell on his face, then was caught by a vice-like grip that drew him upward with grim strength. In a moment he was braced against the frame of the door, almost standing on it, the saloon gaping below him—a black pit of destruction. Larpent's torch showed the companion stairs practically perpendicular above them.

      "Go on!" said Larpent. "Better give me the child. It's you that matters."

      "Get out, damn you!" said Saltash, and actually grinned as he began to climb with his burden still hanging upon his shoulder.

      Larpent came behind him, holding his torch to light the way. They climbed up into a pandemonium indescribable, a wild torrent of sound.

      There

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