The Flying Mercury - Cover

The Flying Mercury

Copyright© 2024 by Eleanor M. Ingram

Chapter 6

Emily first heard the full story of the accident that evening, when Dick sat opposite her on the veranda and gave the account in frank anxiety and dejection.

“We’re going down to-night on the nine o’clock train,” he added in conclusion. “To-morrow morning he’ll spend practising on the track, and to-morrow evening at six the race starts. And Lestrange starts crippled because I am a clumsy idiot. He laughs at me, but—he’d do that anyhow.”

“Yes,” agreed Emily. “He would do that anyhow.” Her eyes were wide and terrified, the little hands she clasped in her lap were quite cold. “I wish, I wish he had never come to this place.”

“Oh, you do?” Dick said oddly. “Maybe he will, too, before he gets through with us. We’re a nasty lot, we Ffrenches; a lot of blue-blooded snobs without any red blood in us. Are you going to say good-by to me? I won’t be home until it’s over.”

She looked at him, across the odorous dusk slowly silvering as the moon rose.

“You are going to be with him?”

Dick smoothed his leggings before standing up, surveying his strict motor costume with a gloomy pride not to be concealed.

“Yes; I’m representing our company. Lestrange might want some backing if any disputes turned up. Uncle Ethan nearly had a fit when Bailey told him what I was going to do; he called me Richard for the first time in my life. I guess I’ll be some good yet, if every one except Lestrange did think I was a chump.”

“I am very sure you will,” she answered gently. “Good-by, Dick; you look very nice.”

When he reached the foot of the steps, her voice recalled him, as she stood leaning over the rail.

“Dick, you could not make him give it up, not race this time?”

He stared up at her white figure.

“No, I could not. Don’t you suppose I tried?”

“I suppose you did,” she admitted, and went back to her seat.

The June night was very quiet. Once a sleepy bird stirred in the honeysuckle vines and chirped through the dark. Far below the throb of a motor passed down the road, dying away again to leave silence. Suddenly Emily Ffrench hid her face on the arm of her chair and the tears overflowed.

There was no consciousness of time while that inarticulate passion of dread spent itself. But it was nearly half an hour later when she started up at the echo of a light step on the gravel path, dashing her handkerchief across her eyes.

It was incredible, but it was true: Lestrange himself was standing before her at the foot of the low stairs, the moonlight glinting across his uncovered bronze head and bright, clear face.

 
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