The Flying Mercury
Copyright© 2024 by Eleanor M. Ingram
Chapter 9
In the delicate, fresh June dawn, the Ffrench limousine crept into the Beach inclosure.
“We’re here,” said Bailey, to his traveling companions. “You can’t park the car front by the fence; Mr. David might see you and kill himself by a misturn. Come up to the grand-stand seats.”
Mr. Ffrench got out in silence and assisted Emily to descend; a pale and wide-eyed Emily behind her veil.
“The boys were calling extras,” she suggested faintly. “They said three accidents on the track.”
Bailey turned to a blue and gold official passing.
“Number seven all right?” he asked.
“On the track, Lestrange driving,” was the prompt response. “Leading by thirty-two miles.”
A little of Emily’s color rushed back. Satisfied, Bailey led the way to the tiers of seats, almost empty at this hour. Pearly, unsubstantial in the young light, lay the huge oval meadow and the track edging it. Of the fourteen cars starting, nine were still circling their course, one temporarily in its camp for supplies.
“I’ve sent over for Mr. Dick,” Bailey informed the other two. “He’s been here, and he can tell what’s doing. Four cars are out of the race. There’s Mr. David, coming!”
A gray machine shot around the west curve, hurtled roaring down the straight stretch past the stand and crossed before them, the mechanician rising in his seat to catch the pendant linen streamers and wipe the dust from the driver’s goggles in preparation for the “death turn” ahead. There was a series of rapid explosions as the driver shut off his motor, the machine swerved almost facing the infield fence and slid around the bend with a skidding lurch that threw a cloud of soil high in the air. Emily cried out, Mr. Ffrench half rose in his place.
“What’s the matter?” dryly queried Bailey. “He’s been doing that all night; and a mighty pretty turn he makes, too. He’s been doing it for about five years, in fact, to earn his living, only we didn’t see him. Here goes another.”
Mr. Ffrench put on his pince-nez, preserving the dignity of outward composure. Emily saw and heard nothing; she was following Lestrange around the far sides of the course, around until again he flashed past her, repeating his former feat with appalling exactitude.
It was hardly more than five minutes before Dick came hurrying toward them; cross, tired, dust-streaked and gasolene-scented.
“I don’t see why you wanted to come,” he began, before he reached them. “I’m busy enough now. We’re leading; if Lestrange holds out we’ll win. But he’s driving alone; Frank went out an hour ago, on the second relief, when he went through the paddock fence and broke his leg. It didn’t hurt the machine a bit, except tires, but it lost us twenty-six laps. And it leaves Lestrange with thirteen steady hours at the wheel. He says he can do it.”
“He’s fit?” Bailey questioned.
Dick turned a peevish regard upon him.
“I don’t know what you call fit. He says he is. His hands are blistered already, his right arm has been bandaged twice where he hurt it pulling me away from the gear-cutter yesterday, and he’s had three hours’ rest out of the last eleven. See that heap of junk over there; that’s where the Alan car burned up last night and sent its driver and mechanician to the hospital. I suppose if Lestrange isn’t fit and makes a miscue we’ll see something like that happen to him and Rupert.”
“No!” Emily cried piteously.
Remorse clutched Dick.
“I forgot you, cousin,” he apologized. “Don’t go off; Lestrange swears he feels fine and gibes at me for worrying. Don’t look like that.”
“Richard, you will go down and order our car withdrawn from the race,” Mr. Ffrench stated, with his most absolute finality. “This has continued long enough. If we had not been arrested in New York for exceeding the speed limit, I should have been here to end this scene at midnight.”
Stunned, his nephew stared at him.
“Withdraw!”
“Precisely. And desire David to come here.”
“I won’t,” said Dick flatly. “If you want to rub it into Lestrange that way, send Bailey. And I say it’s a confounded shame.”
“Richard!”
His round face ablaze, Dick thrust his hands in his pockets, facing his uncle stubbornly.
“After his splendid fight, to stop him now? Do you know how they take being put out, those fellows? Why, when the Italian car went off the track for good, last night, with its chain tangled up with everything underneath, its driver sat down and cried. And you’d come down on Lestrange when he’s winning—I won’t do it, I won’t! Send Bailey; I can’t tell him.”
“If you want to discredit the car and its driver, Mr. Ffrench, you can do it without me,” slowly added Bailey. “But it won’t be any use to send for Mr. David, because he won’t come.”
The autocrat of his little world looked from one rebel to the other, confronted with the unprecedented.
“If I wish to withdraw him, it is to place him out of danger,” he retorted with asperity. “Not because I wish to mortify him, naturally. Is that clear? Does he want to pass the next thirteen hours under this ordeal?”
“I’ll tell you what he wants,” answered Dick. “He wants to be let alone. It seems to me he’s earned that.”
Ethan Ffrench opened his lips, and closed them again without speech. It had not been his life’s habit to let people alone and the art was acquired with difficulty.
“I admit I do not comprehend the feelings you describe,” he conceded, at last. “But there is one person who has the right to decide whether David shall continue this risk of his life. Emily, do you wish the car withdrawn?”
There was a gasp from the other two men.
“I?” the young girl exclaimed, amazed. “I can call him here—safe—”
Her voice died out as Lestrange’s car roared past, overtaking two rivals on the turn and sliding between them with an audacity that provoked rounds of applause from the spectators. To call him in from that, to have him safe with her—the mere thought was a delight that caught her breath. Yet, she knew Lestrange.
The three men watched her in keen suspense. The Mercury car had passed twice again before she raised her head, and in that space of a hundred seconds Emily reached the final unselfishness.
“What David wants,” she said. “Uncle, what David wants.”
“You’re a brick!” cried Dick, in a passion of relief. “Emily, you’re a brick!”
She looked at him with eyes he never forgot.
“If anything happens to him, I hope I die too,” she answered, and drew the silk veil across her face.
“Go back, Mr. Dick, you’re no good here,” advised Bailey, in the pause. “I guess Miss Emily is right, Mr. Ffrench; we’ve got nothing to do but look on, for David Ffrench was wiped out to make Darling Lestrange.”
Having left the decision to Emily, it was in character that her uncle offered no remonstrance when she disappointed his wish. Nor did he reply to Bailey’s reminder of who had sent David Ffrench to the track. But he did adopt the suggestion to look on, and there was sufficient to see.
When Lestrange came into his camp for oil and gasolene, near eight o’clock, Dick seized the brief halt, the first in three hours.
“Emily’s up in the stand,” he announced. “Send her a word, old man; and don’t get reckless in front of her.”
“Emily?” echoed Lestrange, too weary for astonishment. “Give me a pencil. No, I can’t take off my gauntlet; it’s glued fast. I’ll manage. Rupert, go take an hour’s rest and send me the other mechanician.”
“I can’t get off my car; it’s glued fast,” Rupert confided, leaning over the back of the machine to appropriate a sandwich from the basket a man was carrying to the neighboring camp. “Go on with your correspondence, dearest.”
So resting the card Dick supplied on the steering-wheel, Lestrange wrote a difficult two lines.
He was out again on the track when Dick brought the message to Emily.
“I just told him you were here, cousin,” he whispered at her ear, and dropped the card in her lap.
“I’ll enjoy this more than ever, with you here,” she read. “It’s the right place for my girl. I’ll give you the cup for our first dinner table, to-night.
“David.”
Emily lifted her face. The tragedy of the scene was gone, Lestrange’s eyes laughed at her out of a mist. The sky was blue, the sunshine golden; the merry crowds commencing to pour in woke carnival in her heart.
“He said to tell you the machine was running magnificently,” supplemented Dick, “and not to insult his veteran reputation by getting nervous. He’s coming by—look.”
He was coming by; and, although unable to look toward the grand-stand, he raised his hand in salute as he passed, to the one he knew was watching. Emily flushed rosily, her dark eyes warm and shining.
“I can wait,” she sighed gratefully. “Dickie, I can wait until it ends, now.”
Dick went back.
The hours passed. One more car went out of the race under the grinding test; there were the usual incidents of blown-out tires and temporary withdrawals for repairs. Twice Mr. Ffrench sent his partner and Emily to the restaurant below, tolerating no protests, but he himself never left his seat. Perfectly composed, his expression perfectly self-contained, he watched his son.
The day grew unbearably hot toward afternoon, a heat rather of July than June. After a visit to his camp Lestrange reappeared without the suffocating mask and cap, driving bareheaded, with only the narrow goggles crossing his face. The change left visible the drawn pallor of exhaustion under stains of dust and oil, his rolled-back sleeves disclosed the crimson bandage on his right arm and the fact that his left wrist was tightly wound with linen where swollen and strained muscles rebelled at the long trial.
“He’s been driving for nineteen hours,” said Dick, climbing up to his party through the excited crowd. “Two hours more to six o’clock. Listen to the mob when he passes!”