Bandit Love - Page 43/133

It was Tony Standish who found himself practically ignored by Myra

after dinner that evening, and almost for the first time he began to

feel jealous, really jealous, of Don Carlos de Ruiz. Myra danced three

times with the Spaniard, and "sat out" two more with him in the

conservatory, flagrantly flirting with him, exercising all her powers

of attraction and fascination, continually tempting Don Carlos to break

his promise.

His dark eyes told her that she had fired his heart and set his pulses

throbbing with desire, but no word of love crossed his lips. When they

were dancing together, however, more than once he crushed her close to

his breast, but Myra did not rebuke him, and several times she squeezed

his hand and deliberately brushed his cheek with her hair during a

Tango.

"I rather fancy I am going to justify my boast and take my revenge, and

Don Carlos de Ruiz will learn to his cost that it isn't safe to trifle

with Myra Rostrevor," she reflected. "I suppose I am taking an unfair

advantage, but it serves Don Carlos right."

She was careful to lock and bolt her bedroom door that night before

retiring, and she left a light burning and sat up in bed waiting and

watching expectantly. Two o'clock chimed, and Myra was beginning to

nod drowsily, when a faint sound brought her to sudden wakefulness and

alertness. Someone was trying the door of her bedroom! She saw the

door-handle turn, and she held her breath and listened intently... The

handle turned again ... turned back to its original position.... And

that was all.

Listening with thudding heart, Myra could hear no sound from the other

side of her locked and bolted door, and the handle did not move again.

Slipping out of bed after a few minutes, she stole noiselessly across

the room and, dropping on one knee, put her ear to the keyhole and

listened, but heard no sound save the throbbing of her own heart.

She could not have explained what she expected, hoped, or dreaded to

hear as she crouched there, straining her ears, but it was

characteristic of her that suddenly she laughed aloud.

"So he was conceited enough to think that I would leave my bedroom door

unlocked!" she whispered, as she went back to bed and switched off the

light. "What sort of girl does he take me for? I don't know whether

to feel insulted or amused... But I'm glad I didn't forget to lock and

bolt the door. I wonder..."

Myra snuggled her head down in her pillow, but scarcely had she closed

her eyes when there was a crash against her bedroom door, a shout, and

then a shot, and the sound of more shouting. She sprang up

convulsively, her hands pressed to her breast, screamed involuntarily,

then, recovering herself, switched on the lights, sprung out of bed,

unbolted and unlocked the door, and flung it open--to find Don Carlos

de Ruiz, clad in pyjamas and dressing gown, engaged in a desperate

struggle with a burly, fully-dressed stranger on the floor of the

corridor outside her room.