The Lighted Way Part 24
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"You haven't heard?" she gasped.
Sabatini drew out a chair and seated himself. He glanced around at the house and then began slowly to unb.u.t.ton his white kid gloves.
"I did not buy an evening paper," he remarked. "Your face tells me the news, of course. I gather that Starling has been arrested."
"He was arrested at five o'clock!" she exclaimed. "He will be charged before the magistrates to-morrow."
"Then to-morrow," Sabatini continued calmly, "will be quite time enough for you to begin to worry."
She looked at him for a moment steadfastly. She had ceased to tremble now and her own appearance was becoming more natural.
"If one had but a man's nerve!" she murmured. "Dear Andrea, you make me very much ashamed. Yet this is serious--surely it is very serious?"
Arnold had withdrawn as far as possible out of hearing, but Sabatini beckoned him forward.
"You are missing the ballet," he said. "You must take the front chair there. You, too, will be interested in this news which my sister has been telling me. Our friend Starling has been arrested, after all. I was afraid he was giving himself away."
"For the murder of Mr. Rosario?" Arnold asked.
"Precisely," Sabatini replied. "A very unfortunate circ.u.mstance. Let us hope that he will be able to prove his innocence."
"I don't see how he could have done it," Arnold said slowly. "We saw him only about ten minutes or a quarter of an hour later coming up from the restaurant on the other side of the hotel."
"Oh! he will come very near proving an alibi, without a doubt,"
Sabatini declared. "He is quite clever when it comes to the point. I wonder what sort of evidence they have against him."
"Is there any reason," Arnold asked, "why he should kill Mr.
Rosario?"
Sabatini studied his program earnestly.
"Well," he admitted, "that is rather a difficult question to answer.
Mr. Rosario was a very obstinate man, and he was certainly persisting in a course of action against which I and many others had warned him, a course of action which was certain to make him exceedingly unpopular with a good many of us. I am not sure, however, whether the facts were sufficiently well known--"
Fenella interrupted. She rose hurriedly to her feet.
"I am afraid, after all, that you will have to excuse me," she declared, moving to a seat at the back of the box. "I do not think that I can stay here."
Sabatini nodded gravely.
"Perhaps you are right," he said. "For my own part, I, too, wish I had more faith in Starling. As a matter of fact, I have none. When they caught Crampton, one could sleep in one's bed; one knew. But this man Starling is a nervous wreck. Who knows what story he may tell--consciously or unconsciously--in his desperate attempts to clear himself? You see," he continued, looking at Arnold, "there are a great many of us to whom Mr. Rosario was personally, just at this moment, obnoxious."
Fenella swayed in her chair.
"I am going home," she murmured.
"As you will," Sabatini agreed. "Perhaps Mr. Chetwode will be so kind as to take you back? I have asked a friend to call here this evening."
She turned to Arnold.
"Do!" she pleaded. "I am fit for nothing else. You will come with me?"
Arnold was already standing with his coat upon his arm.
"Of course," he replied.
Her brother helped her on with her cloak.
"For myself," he declared, "I shall remain. I should not like to miss my friend, if he comes, and they tell me that the second ballet is excellent."
[Ill.u.s.tration: "For myself," he declared, "I remain." _Page 139_.]
She took his hands.
"You have courage, dear one," she murmured.
He smiled.
"It is not courage," he replied, "it is philosophy. If to-morrow were to be the end, would you not enjoy to-day? The true reasonableness of life is to live as though every day might be one's last. We shall meet again very soon, Mr. Chetwode."
Arnold held out his hands. The whole affair was intensely mysterious, and there were many things which he did not understand in the least, but he knew that he was in the presence of a brave man.
"Good night, Count Sabatini," he said. "Thank you very much for our dinner. I am afraid I am an unconverted Philistine, and doomed to the narrow ways, but, nevertheless, I have enjoyed my evening very much."
Sabatini smiled charmingly.
"You are very British," he declared, "but never mind. Even a Briton has been known to see the truth by gazing long enough. Take care of my little sister, and au revoir!"
Her fingers clutched his arm as they pa.s.sed along the promenade and down the corridor into the street. The car was waiting, and in a moment or two they were on their way to Hampstead. She was beginning to look a little more natural, but she still clung to him. Arnold felt his head dizzy as though with strong wine.
"Fenella," he said, using her name boldly, "your brother has been talking to me to-night. All that he said I can understand, from his point of view, but what may be well for him is not well for others who are weaker. If you have been foolish, if the love of adventure has led you into any folly, think now and ask yourself whether it is worth while. Give it up before it is too late."
"It is because I have so little courage," she murmured, looking at him with swimming eyes, "and one must do something. I must live or the tugging of the chain is there all the time."
"There are many things in life which are worth while," he declared.
"You are young and rich, and you have a husband who would do anything in the world for you. It isn't worth while to get mixed up in these dangerous schemes."
"What do you know of them?" she asked, curiously.
"Not much," he admitted. "Your brother was talking to-night a little recklessly. One gathered--"
"Andrea sometimes talks wildly because it amuses him to deceive people, to make them think that he is worse than he really is," she interrupted. "He loves danger, but it is because he is a brave man."
"I am sure of it," Arnold replied, "but it does not follow that he is a wise one."
She shrugged her shoulders.
"Tell me one of those many ways of living which are worth while!"
she whispered. "Point out one of them only. Remember that I, too, have the spirit of restlessness in my veins. I must have excitement at any cost."
The Lighted Way Part 24
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The Lighted Way Part 24 summary
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