He descended, taking off his mask and showing a face white with fatigue under the streaks of dust and grime.
"I'll be all right in half an hour," he nodded, in answer to Dick's exclamation. "Send one of the boys for coffee, will you, please? Rupert needs some, too. Here, one of you others, ask one of those idle doctor's apprentices to come over with a fresh bandage; my arm's a trifle untidy."
In fact, his right sleeve was wet and red, where the strain of driving had reopened the injury of the day before. But he would not allow Dick to speak of it.
"I'm going to spend an hour or two resting. Come in, Ffrench, and we'll chat in the intervals, if you like."
"And Rupert? Where's he?" Dick wondered, peering into the dark with a vague impression of lurking dangers on every side.
"He's hurried in out of the night air," reassured familiar accents; a small figure lounged across into the light, making vigorous use of a dripping towel. "Tell Darling I feel faint and I'm going over to that grand-stand café a la car to get some pie. I'll be back in time to read over my last lesson from the chauffeurs' correspondence school. Oh, see what's here!"
A telegraph messenger boy had come up to Dick.
"Richard Ffrench?" he verified. "Sign, please."
The message was from New York.
"All coming down," Dick read. "Limousine making delay. Wire me St. Royal of race. Bailey."