Cynthia's Chauffeur
AUTHOR OF THE WINGS OF THE MORNING, A SON OF THE IMMORTALS, ETC., ETC.
Copyright, 1910, by EDWARD J. CLODE
Entered at Stationers’ Hall
“There is no lovelier garden in England than at Wells Palace.”
Derby Day fell that year on the first Wednesday in June. By a whim of the British climate, the weather was fine; in fact, no rain had fallen on southern England since the previous Sunday. Wise after the event, the newspapers published cheerful “forecasts,” and certain daring “experts” discussed the probabilities of a heat wave. So London, on that bright Wednesday morning, was agog with excitement over its annual holiday; and at such a time London is the gayest and liveliest city in the world.
And then, wholly independent of the weather, there was the Great Question.
From the hour when the first ’bus rumbled Citywards until some few seconds before three o’clock in the afternoon the mass of the people seemed to find delight in asking and answering it. The Question was ever the same; but the answer varied. In its way, the Question formed a tribute to the advance of democracy. It caused strangers to exchange opinions and pleasantries in crowded trains and omnibuses. It placed peers and commoners on an equality. During some part of the day it completely eclipsed all other topics of conversation.
Thus, young Lord Medenham made no pretense of shirking it while he stood on the steps of his father’s mansion in Cavendish Square and watched his chauffeur stowing a luncheon basket beneath the front seat of the Mercury 38.
“You know a bit about racing, Tomkinson,” he said, smiling at the elderly butler who had brought the basket out of the house. “What’s going to win?”
“The King’s horse, my lord,” replied Tomkinson, with the unctuous conviction of a prelate laying down a dogma.
“Is it as sure as all that?”
Louis Tracy
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Cynthia’s Chauffeur
LOUIS TRACY
Illustrations by
HOWARD CHANDLER CHRISTY
CONTENTS
THE HIRED CAR
THE FIRST DAY’S RUN
SOME EMOTIONS—WITHOUT A MORAL
SHADOWS—WITH OCCASIONAL GLEAMS
A FLURRY ON THE MENDIPS
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S VAGARIES
WHEREIN CYNTHIA TAKES HER OWN LINE
BREAKERS AHEAD
ON THE WYE
THE HIDDEN FOUNTS OF EVIL
THE PARTING OF THE WAYS
MASQUES, ANCIENT AND MODERN
WHEREIN WRATH BEGUILES GOOD JUDGMENT
—AND GOOD JUDGMENT YIELDS TO FOLLY
THE OUTCOME
THE END OF ONE TOUR: THE BEGINNING OF ANOTHER
THE END
A FEW OF
A FEW OF
A FEW OF
A FEW OF
THE NOVELS OF
GEORGE BARR McCUTCHEON
Footnote:
Transcriber’s Note: