“Mr. Herrick,” returned the other, “you are an understanding youth. I regret to be unable to respond just now as I should wish. But in a few days perhaps—I have a good memory.”
His tone was now as hard as his eye. He nodded towards the speechless poet with a little wave of the hand that was full of significance. Then without further noticing Mr. Villars, he turned on his heel and walked away towards the trees where he was instantly swallowed in the black shadows.
As Herrick stood glaring after him into space, his wrist was seized and a wrinkled eager face was thrust offensively close to his.
“My dear boy, I know all about it—all about it. The Deyvil! But that was a brilliant idea of yours to fox under that cloak. Her suggestion, eh? Naughty boy. Lucky dog, he—he! But what about the colonel, eh? What? You don’t mean to say the pretty widow has two——”
In the great silence of this hour before the dawn the sound of a master slap rang out sharp as a pistol shot; and the echo of it came back like a jeer from the terrace walls.
“A raving lunatic,” said Villars to himself with wry lips, as he nursed his cheek and blankly watched Herrick stride towards the house. “Certainly not worth taking the least notice of!”
Nevertheless, if that young man’s paper ever fell into his hands!
But Herrick was taking to his rooms a heart heavy enough to have satisfied even the financier’s vindictiveness.
CHAPTER XV
A SIMPLER’S EUTHANASIA
Tired, he sleeps, and life’s poor play is o’er.