Scarhaven Keep J. S. Fletcher (early reader chapter books TXT) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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âA thousands pardonsâ âand two words of explanation!â he exclaimed, as he executed a deep bow to his lady prisoner. âFirstâ âMiss Greyle, I have sent a message to your mother that you are quite safe and will join her in due course. Secondâ âthis is merely a temporary detentionâ âyou shall all be landedâ âall in good time.â
Vickers as a legal man, assumed his most professional air.
âDo you know what you are rendering yourself liable to, sir, by detaining us at all?â he demanded. âAn actionâ ââ
Captain Andrius bowed again; again assumed his deprecating smile. He waved the two men to seats and himself took a chair with his back to the door by which he entered.
âMy dear sir!â he said courteously. âYou forget that I am but a servant. I am under orders. However, I give my word that no harm shall come to you, that you shall be treated with every polite attention, and that you shall be landed.â
âWhenâ âand where?â asked Vickers.
âTomorrow, certainly,â replied Andrius. âAs to where, I cannot exactly say. Butâ âwhere you will be in touch withâ âshall we say civilization?â
He showed a set of fine white teeth in such a curious fashion as he spoke the last word that Copplestone and Vickers instinctively glanced at each other, with a mutual instinct of distrust.
âWonât do!â said Vickers. âI insist that you put about and go into Scarhaven again.â
Andrius spread out his open palms and shook his head âImpossible!â he answered. âWe are already en voyage. Time presses. Be placableâ âtomorrow you shall be released.â
Vickers was about to answer this appeal with an angry refusal to be either placable or tractable, but he suddenly stopped the words which rose to his tongue. There was something in all thisâ âsome mystery, some queer game, and it might be worth while to find it out.
âWhere are you taking this yacht?â he demanded brusquely. âCome, now!â
âI am underâ âorders,â said Andrius, with another smile.
âWhose orders?â persisted Vickers. âLook hereâ âitâs no use trying to burke facts. Whoâs on board this vessel? You know what I mean. Is the man who calls himself Squire of Scarhaven here?â
Andrius shook his head quietly and gave his questioner a shrewd glance.
âMr. Vickers,â he said meaningly, âI know you! You are a lawyerâ âthough a young one. Lawyers are guarded in their speech. Nowâ âwe are aloneâ âwe four. No one can hear anything we say. Tell meâ âis that right what you said to me on deck, that the man who has called himself Marston Greyle is not so at all?â
âAbsolutely right,â replied Vickers.
âAn impostor?â demanded Andrius.
âHe is!â
âAnd never had any right toâ âanything?â
âNo right whatever!â
âThen,â said Andrius, with a polite inclination of his head and shoulders to Audrey, âthe truth is that everything of the Scarhaven property belongs to this lady?â
âEverything!â exclaimed Vickers. âLand, houses, furniture, valuablesâ âeverything. All the property which you have on this yachtâ âpictures, china, silver, books, objects of art, as I am instructed, removed from the houseâ âare Miss Greyleâs sole property. Once more I warn you of what you are doing, and I demand that you immediately return to Scarhaven. This very yacht belongs to Miss Greyle!â
Andrius nodded, looked fixedly at the young solicitor for a moment, and then rose.
âI am obliged to you,â he said. âThat, of course, is your claim. Butâ âthe other one, eh? It seems to me there might be something to be said for that, you know? So, all I can do is to renew my assurance of polite attention, offer you our best accommodationâ âwhich is luxuriousâ âand promise to land youâ âsomewhereâ âtomorrow. Miss Greyle, we have two women servants on boardâ âI shall send them to you at once and they will attend to youâ âplease consider them your own. You, gentlemen, will perhaps join me in my quarters?â âI have two spare cabins close to my own which are at your service.â
Copplestone and Vickers looked at each other and at Audreyâ âundecided and vaguely suspicious. But Audrey was evidently neither alarmed nor uneasyâ âshe nodded a ready assent to the Captainâs proposal.
âThank you, Captain Andrius,â she said coolly. âI know the two women. You may send one of them. Do what he suggests,â she murmured, turning to Copplestone, who had moved close to her, âIâm not one scrap afraid of anythingâ âand itâs only until tomorrow. Heâll land usâ âIâm sure of it.â
There was nothing for it, then, but to follow Andrius to his own comfortable quarters. There, utterly ignoring the strange circumstances under which they met, he played the part of host with genuine desire to make his guests feel at ease, and when he showed them to their berths, a little later, he emphasized his assurance of their absolute safety and liberty.
âYou see, gentlemen, your movements are untrammelled,â he said. âYou can go in and out of your quarters as you like. You can go where you like on the yacht tomorrow morning. There is no restriction on you. Sleep wellâ âand tomorrow you are all free again, eh?â
Copplestone got a word or two with Vickersâ âalone.
âWhat do you think?â he muttered. âShall you sleep?â
âMy impressionâ âfor I know what youâre thinking about,â said Vickers, âis that Miss Greyleâs as safe as if she were in her motherâs house! Sheâs no fear, herself, anyway. Thereâs some mystery, somewhere, and I canât make this Andrius man out at all, but I believe allâs right as regards personal safety. Thereâs Miss Greyleâs cabin, anyhow, right opposite oursâ âand I can keep an eye and an ear open even when Iâm asleep!â
But in spite of these assurances, Copplestone slept little. He was up, dressed, and on deck by sunrise, staring around him in a fresh autumn morning to get some notion of the yachtâs whereabouts, and he had just managed to make out a mere filmy line of land far to the westward when Audrey appeared at his elbow. There was no one of any importance near them and Copplestone impulsively seized her hands.
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