your gates! Killing is a matter of expediency. Permissible if you call it war, terrible if you call it murder. To me it is just killing. If you are caught in the act of killing they kill you, and people say it is right to do so. The sacredness of human life is a slogan invented by cowards who fear death — as you do.”
“Don’t you, Jean?” he asked in a hushed voice.
“I fear life without money,” she said quietly. “I fear long days of work for a callous, leering employer, and strap-hanging in a crowded tube on my way home to one miserable room and the cold mutton of yesterday. I fear getting up and making my own bed and washing my own handkerchiefs and blouses, and renovating last year’s hats to make them look like this year’s. I fear a poor husband and a procession of children, and doing the housework with an incompetent maid, or maybe without any at all. Those are the things I fear, Mr. Briggerland.”
She dusted the ash from her dress and got up.
“I haven’t forgotten the life we lived at Ealing,” she said significantly.
She looked across the bay to Monte Carlo glittering in the morning sunlight, to the green-capped head of Cap-d’Ail, to Beaulieu, a jewel set in greystone and shook her head.
“‘It is written’,” she quoted sombrely and left him in the midst of the question he was asking. She strolled back to the house and joined Lydia who was looking radiantly beautiful in a new dress of silver grey charmeuse.
Chapter XX
“Have you solved the mystery of the submerged bed?” smiled Jean.
Lydia laughed.
“I’m not probing too deeply into the matter,” she said. “Poor Mrs. Cole-Mortimer was terribly upset.”
“She would be,” said Jean. “It was her own eiderdown!”
This was the first hint Lydia had received that the house was rented furnished.
They drove into Nice that morning, and Lydia, remembering Jack Glover’s remarks, looked closely at the chauffeur, and was startled to see a resemblance between him and the man who had driven the taxicab on the night she had been carried off from the theatre. It is true that the taxidriver had a moustache and that this man was cleanshaven, and moreover, had tiny side whiskers, but there was a resemblance.
“Have you had your driver long?” she asked as they were running through Monte Carlo, along the sea road.
“Mordon? Yes, we have had him six or seven years,” said Jean carelessly. “He drives us when we are on the continent, you know. He speaks French perfectly and is an excellent driver. Father has tried to persuade him to come to England, but he hates London — he was telling me the other day that he hadn’t been there for ten years.”
That disposed of the resemblance, thought Lydia, and yet — she could remember his voice, she thought, and when they alighted on the Promenade des Anglaise she spoke to him. He replied in French, and it is impossible to detect points of resemblance in a voice that speaks one language and the same voice when it speaks another.
The promenade was crowded with saunterers. A band was playing by the jetty and although the wind was colder than it had been at Cap Martin the sun was warm enough to necessitate the opening of a parasol.
It was a race week, and the two girls lunched at the Negrito. They were in the midst of their meal when a man came toward them and Lydia recognised Mr. Marcus Stepney. This dark, suave man was no favourite of hers, though why she could not have explained. His manners were always perfect and, towards her, deferential.
As usual, he was dressed with the precision of a fashion-plate. Mr. Marcus Stepney was a man, a considerable portion of whose time was taken up every morning by the choice of cravats and socks and shirts. Though Lydia did not know this, his smartness, plus a certain dexterity with cards, was his stock in trade. No breath of scandal had touched him, he moved in a good set and was always at the right place at the proper season.
When Aix was full he was certain to be found at the Palace, in the Deauville week you would find him at the Casino punting mildly at the baccarat table. And after the rooms were closed, and even the Sports Club at Monte Carlo had shut its doors, there was always a little game to be had in the hotels and in Marcus Stepney’s private sittingroom.
And it cannot be denied that Mr. Stepney was lucky. He won sufficient at these out-of-hour games to support him nobly through the trials and vicissitudes which the public tables inflict upon their votaries.
“Going to the races,” he said, “how very fortunate! Will you come along with me? I can give you three good winners.”
“I have no money to gamble,” said Jean, “I am a poor woman. Lydia, who is rolling in wealth, can afford to take your tips, Marcus.”
Marcus looked at Lydia with a speculative eye.
“If you haven’t any money with you, don’t worry. I have plenty and you can pay me afterwards. I could make you a million francs to-day.”
“Thank you,” said Jean coolly, “but Mrs. Meredith does not bet so heavily.”
Her tone was a clear intimation to the man of wits that he was impinging upon somebody else’s preserves and he grinned amiably.
Nevertheless, it was a profitable afternoon for Lydia. She came back to Cap Martin twenty thousand francs richer than she had been when she started off.
“Lydia’s had a lot of luck she tells me,” said Mr. Briggerland.
“Yes. She won about five hundred pounds,” said his daughter. “Marcus was laying ground bait. She did not know what horses he had backed until after the race was run, when he invariably appeared with a few millenotes and Lydia’s pleasure was pathetic. Of course she didn’t win anything. The twenty thousand francs was a sprat — he’s coming tonight to see how the whales are blowing!”
Mr. Marcus Stepney arrived punctually, and, to Mr. Briggerland’s disgust, was dressed for dinner, a fact which necessitated the older man’s hurried retreat and reappearance in conventional evening wear.
Marcus Stepney’s behaviour at dinner was faultless. He devoted himself in the main to Mrs. Cole-Mortimer and Jean, who apparently never looked at him and yet observed his every movement, knew that he was merely waiting his opportunity.
It came when the dinner was over and the party adjourned to the big stoep facing the sea. The night was chilly and Mr. Stepney found wraps and furs for the ladies, and so manoeuvred the arrangement of the chairs that Lydia and he were detached from the remainder of the party, not by any great distance, but sufficient, as the experienced Marcus knew, to remove a murmured conversation from the sharpest eavesdropper.
Jean, who was carrying on a three-cornered conversation with her father and Mrs. Cole-Mortimer, did not stir, until she saw, by the light of a shaded lamp in the roof, the dark head of Mr. Marcus Stepney droop more confidently towards his companion. Then she rose and strolled across.
Marcus did not curse her because he did not express his inmost thoughts aloud.
He gave her his chair and pulled another forward.
“Does Miss Briggerland know?” asked Lydia.
“No,” said Mr. Stepney pleasantly.
“May I tell her?”
“Of course.”
“Mr. Stepney has been telling me about a wonderful racing coup to be made tomorrow. Isn’t it rather thrilling, Jean? He says it will be quite possible for me to make five million francs without any risk at all.”
“Except the risk of a million, I suppose,” smiled Jean. “Well, are you going to do it?” Lydia shook her