At The Villa Rose - Page 86/149

"Keep quiet, little one!" she ordered in a careless, chiding

voice, and she rapped with the flask peremptorily upon the table.

Immediately, as though the tapping had some strange message of

terror for the girl's ear, she stiffened her whole body and lay

rigid.

"I am not ready for you yet, little fool," said the old woman, and

she bent again to her work.

Ricardo's brain whirled. Here was the girl whom they had come to

arrest, who had sprung from the salon with so much activity of

youth across the stretch of grass, who had run so quickly and

lightly across the pavement into this very house, so that she

should not be seen. And now she was lying in her fine and delicate

attire a captive, at the mercy of the very people who were her

accomplices.

Suddenly a scream rang out in the garden--a shrill, loud scream,

close beneath the windows. The old woman sprang to her feet. The

girl on the sofa raised her head. The old woman took a step

towards the window, and then she swiftly turned towards the door.

She saw the men upon the threshold. She uttered a bellow of rage.

There is no other word to describe the sound. It was not a human

cry; it was the bellow of an angry animal. She reached out her

hand towards the flask, but before she could grasp it Hanaud

seized her. She burst into a torrent of foul oaths. Hanaud flung

her across to Lemerre's officer, who dragged her from the room.

"Quick!" said Hanaud, pointing to the girl, who was now struggling

helplessly upon the sofa. "Mlle. Celie!"

Ricardo cut the stitches of the sacking. Hanaud unstrapped her

hands and feet. They helped her to sit up. She shook her hands in

the air as though they tortured her, and then, in a piteous,

whimpering voice, like a child's, she babbled incoherently and

whispered prayers. Suddenly the prayers ceased. She sat stiff,

with eyes fixed and staring. She was watching Lemerre, and she was

watching him fascinated with terror. He was holding in his hand

the large, bright aluminium flask. He poured a little of the

contents very carefully on to a piece of the sack; and then with

an exclamation of anger he turned towards Hanaud. But Hanaud was

supporting Celia; and so, as Lemerre turned abruptly towards him

with the flask in his hand, he turned abruptly towards Celia too.

She wrenched herself from Hanaud's arms, she shrank violently

away. Her white face flushed scarlet and grew white again. She

screamed loudly, terribly; and after the scream she uttered a

strange, weak sigh, and so fell sideways in a swoon. Hanaud caught

her as she fell. A light broke over his face.

"Now I understand!" he cried. "Good God! That's horrible."