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The Little Lady of the Big House Page 13


  «I'll wager, for a man who drowned a whole kanaka crew, it was you who did the helping,» Dick commented.

  «She must have been forever grateful,» Paula challenged, her eyes directly on Graham's. «Don't tell me she wasn't young, wasn't beautiful, wasn't a golden brown young goddess.»

  «Her mother was the Queen of Huahoa,» Graham answered. «Her father was a Greek scholar and an English gentleman. They were dead at the time of the swim, and Nomare was queen herself. She was young. She was beautiful as any woman anywhere in the world may be beautiful. Thanks to her father's skin, she as not golden brown. She was tawny golden. But you've heard the story undoubtedly—»

  He broke off with a look of question to Dick, who shook his head.

  Calls and cries and splashings of water from beyond a screen of trees warned them that they were near the tank.

  «You'll have to tell me the rest of the story some time,» Paula said.

  «Dick knows it. I can't see why he hasn't told you.»

  She shrugged her shoulders.

  «Perhaps because he's never had the time or the provocation.»

  «God wot, it's had wide circulation,» Graham laughed. «For know that I was once morganatic—or whatever you call it—king of the cannibal isles, or of a paradise of a Polynesian isle at any rate.—'By a purple wave on an opal beach in the hush of the Mahim woods,'» he hummed carelessly, in conclusion, and swung off from his horse.

  «'The white moth to the closing vine, the bee to the opening clover,'» she hummed another line of the song, while The Fop nearly got his teeth into her leg and she straightened him out with the spur, and waited for Dick to help her off and tie him.

  «Cigars!—I'm in on that!—you can't catch her!» Bert Wainwright called from the top of the high dive forty feet above. «Wait a minute! I'm coming!»

  And come he did, in a swan dive that was almost professional and that brought handclapping approval from the girls.

  «A sweet dive, balanced beautifully,» Graham told him as he emerged from the tank.

  Bert tried to appear unconscious of the praise, failed, and, to pass it off, plunged into the wager.

  «I don't know what kind of a swimmer you are, Graham,» he said, «but I just want in with Dick on the cigars.»

  «Me, too; me, too!» chorused Ernestine, and Lute, and Rita.

  «Boxes of candy, gloves, or any truck you care to risk,» Ernestine added.

  «But I don't know Mrs. Forrest's records, either,» Graham protested, after having taken on the bets. «However, if in five minutes—»

  «Ten minutes,» Paula said, «and to start from opposite ends of the tank. Is that fair? Any touch is a catch.» Graham looked his hostess over with secret approval. She was clad, not in the single white silk slip she evidently wore only for girl parties, but in a coquettish imitation of the prevailing fashion mode, a suit of changeable light blue and green silk—almost the color of the pool; the skirt slightly above the knees whose roundedness he recognized; with long stockings to match, and tiny bathing shoes bound on with crossed ribbons. On her head was a jaunty swimming cap no jauntier than herself when she urged the ten minutes in place of five.

  Rita Wainwright held the watch, while Graham walked down to the other end of the hundred-and-fifty-foot tank.

  «Paula, you'll be caught if you take any chances,» Dick warned. «Evan

  Graham is a real fish man.»

  «I guess Paula'll show him a few, even without the pipe,» Bert bragged loyally. «And I'll bet she can out-dive him.»

  «There you lose,» Dick answered. «I saw the rock he dived from at Huahoa. That was after his time, and after the death of Queen Nomare. He was only a youngster—twenty-two; he had to be to do it. It was off the peak of the Pau-wi Rock—one hundred and twenty-eight feet by triangulation. And he couldn't do it legitimately or technically with a swan-dive, because he had to clear two lower ledges while he was in the air. The upper ledge of the two, by their own traditions, was the highest the best of the kanakas had ever dared since their traditions began. Well, he did it. He became tradition. As long as the kanakas of Huahoa survive he will remain tradition—Get ready, Rita. Start on the full minute.»

  «It's almost a shame to play tricks on so reputable a swimmer,» Paula confided to them, as she faced her guest down the length of the tank and while both waited the signal.

  «He may get you before you can turn the trick,» Dick warned again. And then, to Bert, with just a shade of anxiety: «Is it working all right? Because if it isn't, Paula will have a bad five seconds getting out of it.»

  «All O.K.,» Bert assured. «I went in myself. The pipe is working.

  There's plenty of air.»

  «Ready!» Rita called. «Go!»

  Graham ran toward their end like a foot-racer, while Paula darted up the high dive. By the time she had gained the top platform, his hands and feet were on the lower rungs. When he was half-way up she threatened a dive, compelling him to cease from climbing and to get out on the twenty-foot platform ready to follow her to the water. Whereupon she laughed down at him and did not dive. «Time is passing— the precious seconds are ticking off,» Ernestine chanted.

  When he started to climb, Paula again chased him to the half-way platform with a threat to dive. But not many seconds did Graham waste. His next start was determined, and Paula, poised for her dive, could not send him scuttling back. He raced upward to gain the thirty-foot platform before she should dive, and she was too wise to linger. Out into space she launched, head back, arms bent, hands close to chest, legs straight and close together, her body balanced horizontally on the air as it fell outward and downward.

  «Oh you Annette Kellerman!» Bert Wamwright's admiring cry floated up.

  Graham ceased pursuit to watch the completion of the dive, and saw his hostess, a few feet above the water, bend her head forward, straighten out her arms and lock the hands to form the arch before her head, and, so shifting the balance of her body, change it from the horizontal to the perfect, water-cleaving angle.

  The moment she entered the water, he swung out on the thirty-foot platform and waited. From this height he could make out her body beneath the surface swimming a full stroke straight for the far end of the tank. Not till then did he dive. He was confident that he could outspeed her, and his dive, far and flat, entered him in the water twenty feet beyond her entrance.

  But at the instant he was in, Dick dipped two flat rocks into the water and struck them together. This was the signal for Paula to change her course. Graham heard the concussion and wondered. He broke surface in the full swing of the crawl and went down the tank to the far end at a killing pace. He pulled himself out and watched the surface of the tank. A burst of handclapping from the girls drew his eyes to the Little Lady drawing herself out of the tank at the other end.

  Again he ran down the side of the tank, and again she climbed the scaffold. But this time his wind and endurance enabled him to cut down her lead, so that she was driven to the twenty-foot platform. She took no time for posturing or swanning, but tilted immediately off in a stiff dive, angling toward the west side of the tank. Almost they were in the air at the same time. In the water and under it, he could feel against his face and arms the agitation left by her progress; but she led into the deep shadow thrown by the low afternoon sun, where the water was so dark he could see nothing.

  When he touched the side of the tank he came up. She was not in sight. He drew himself out, panting, and stood ready to dive in at the first sign of her. But there were no signs.

  «Seven minutes!» Rita called. «And a half! … Eight!… And a half!»

  And no Paula Forrest broke surface. Graham refused to be alarmed because he could see no alarm on the faces of the others.

  «I lose,» he announced at Rita's «Nine minutes!»

  «She's been under over two minutes, and you're all too blessed calm about it to get me excited,» he said. «I've still a minute—maybe I don't lose,» he added quickly, as he stepped off feet first in
to the tank.

  As he went down he turned over and explored the cement wall of tank with his hands. Midway, possibly ten feet under the surface he estimated, his hands encountered an opening in the wall. He felt about, learned it Was unscreened, and boldly entered. Almost before he was in, he found he could come up; but he came up slowly, breaking surface in pitchy blackness and feeling about him without splashing.

  His fingers touched a cool smooth arm that shrank convulsively at contact while the possessor of it cried sharply with the startle of fright. He held on tightly and began to laugh, and Paula laughed with him. A line from «The First Chanty» flashed into his consciousness— «Hearing her laugh in the gloom greatly I loved her. »

  «You did frighten me when you touched me,» she said. «You came without a sound, and I was a thousand miles away, dreaming…»

  «What?» Graham asked.

  «Well, honestly, I had just got an idea for a gown—a dusty, musty, mulberry-wine velvet, with long, close lines, and heavy, tarnished gold borders and cords and things. And the only jewelery a ring—one enormous pigeon-blood ruby that Dick gave me years ago when we sailed the All Away .»

  «Is there anything you don't do?» he laughed.

  She joined with him, and their mirth sounded strangely hollow in the pent and echoing dark.

  «Who told you?» she next asked.

  «No one. After you had been under two minutes I knew it had to be something like this, and I came exploring.»

  «It was Dick's idea. He had it built into the tank afterward. You will find him full of whimsies. He delighted in scaring old ladies into fits by stepping off into the tank with their sons or grandsons and hiding away in here. But after one or two nearly died of shock—old ladies, I mean—he put me up, as to-day, to fooling hardier persons like yourself.—Oh, he had another accident. There was a Miss Coghlan, friend of Ernestine, a little seminary girl. They artfully stood her right beside the pipe that leads out, and Dick went off the high dive and swam in here to the inside end of the pipe. After several minutes, by the time she was in collapse over his drowning, he spoke up the pipe to her in most horrible, sepulchral tones. And right there Miss Coghlan fainted dead away.»

  «She must have been a weak sister,» Graham commented; while he struggled with a wanton desire for a match so that he could strike it and see how Paula Forrest looked paddling there beside him to keep afloat.

  «She had a fair measure of excuse,» Paula answered. «She was a young thing—eighteen; and she had a sort of school-girl infatuation for Dick. They all get it. You see, he's such a boy when he's playing that they can't realize that he's a hard-bitten, hard-working, deep– thinking, mature, elderly benedict. The embarrassing thing was that the little girl, when she was first revived and before she could gather her wits, exposed all her secret heart. Dick's face was a study while she babbled her—»

  «Well?—going to stay there all night?» Bert Wainwright's voice came down the pipe, sounding megaphonically close.

  «Heavens!» Graham sighed with relief; for he had startled and clutched Paula's arm. «That's the time I got my fright. The little maiden is avenged. Also, at last, I know what a lead-pipe cinch is.»

  «And it's time we started for the outer world,» she suggested. «It's not the coziest gossiping place in the world. Shall I go first?»

  «By all means—and I'll be right behind; although it's a pity the water isn't phosphorescent. Then I could follow your incandescent heel like that chap Byron wrote about—don't you remember?»

  He heard her appreciative gurgle in the dark, and then her: «Well, I'm going now.»

  Unable to see the slightest glimmer, nevertheless, from the few sounds she made he knew she had turned over and gone down head first, and he was not beyond visioning with inner sight the graceful way in which she had done it—an anything but graceful feat as the average swimming woman accomplishes it.

  «Somebody gave it away to you,» was Bert's prompt accusal, when Graham rose to the surface of the tank and climbed out.

  «And you were the scoundrel who rapped stone under water,» Graham challenged. «If I'd lost I'd have protested the bet. It was a crooked game, a conspiracy, and competent counsel, I am confident, would declare it a felony. It's a case for the district attorney.»

  «But you won,» Ernestine cried.

  «I certainly did, and, therefore, I shall not prosecute you, nor any one of your crooked gang—if the bets are paid promptly. Let me see— you owe me a box of cigars—»

  «One cigar, sir!»

  «A box! A box!» «Cross tag!» Paula cried. «Let's play cross-tag!—

  You're IT!»

  Suiting action to word, she tagged Graham on the shoulder and plunged into the tank. Before he could follow, Bert seized him, whirled him in a circle, was himself tagged, and tagged Dick before he could escape. And while Dick pursued his wife through the tank and Bert and Graham sought a chance to cross, the girls fled up the scaffold and stood in an enticing row on the fifteen-foot diving platform.

  CHAPTER XIV.

  An indifferent swimmer, Donald Ware had avoided the afternoon sport in the tank; but after dinner, somewhat to the irritation of Graham, the violinist monopolized Paula at the piano. New guests, with the casual expectedness of the Big House, had drifted in—a lawyer, by name Adolph Well, who had come to confer with Dick over some big water– right suit; Jeremy Braxton, straight from Mexico, Dick's general superintendent of the Harvest Group, which bonanza, according to Jeremy Braxton, was as «unpetering» as ever; Edwin O'Hay, a red-headed Irish musical and dramatic critic; and Chauncey Bishop, editor and owner of the San Francisco Dispatch , and a member of Dick's class and frat, as Graham gleaned.

  Dick had started a boisterous gambling game which he called «Horrible Fives,» wherein, although excitement ran high and players plunged, the limit was ten cents, and, on a lucky coup, the transient banker might win or lose as high as ninety cents, such coup requiring at least ten minutes to play out. This game went on at a big table at the far end of the room, accompanied by much owing and borrowing of small sums and an incessant clamor for change.

  With nine players, the game was crowded, and Graham, rather than draw cards, casually and occasionally backed Ernestine's cards, the while he glanced down the long room at the violinist and Paula Forrest absorbed in Beethoven Symphonies and Delibes' Ballets. Jeremy Braxton was demanding raising the limit to twenty cents, and Dick, the heaviest loser, as he averred, to the tune of four dollars and sixty cents, was plaintively suggesting the starting of a «kitty» in order that some one should pay for the lights and the sweeping out of the place in the morning, when Graham, with a profound sigh at the loss of his last bet—a nickel which he had had to pay double—announced to Ernestine that he was going to take a turn around the room to change his luck.

  «I prophesied you would,» she told him under her breath.

  «What?» he asked.

  She glanced significantly in Paula's direction.

  «Just for that I simply must go down there now,» he retorted.

  «Can't dast decline a dare,» she taunted.

  «If it were a dare I wouldn't dare do it.»

  «In which case I dare you,» she took up.

  He shook his head: «I had already made up my mind to go right down there to that one spot and cut that fiddler out of the running. You can't dare me out of it at this late stage. Besides, there's Mr. O'Hay waiting for you to make your bet.»

  Ernestine rashly laid ten cents, and scarcely knew whether she won or lost, so intent was she on watching Graham go down the room, although she did know that Bert Wainwright had not been unobservant of her gaze and its direction. On the other hand, neither she nor Bert, nor any other at the table, knew that Dick's quick-glancing eyes, sparkling with merriment while his lips chaffed absurdities that made them all laugh, had missed no portion of the side play.

  Ernestine, but little taller than Paula, although hinting of a plus roundness to come, was a sun-healthy, clear blonde, her s
kin sprayed with the almost transparent flush of maidenhood at eighteen. To the eye, it seemed almost that one could see through the pink daintiness of fingers, hand, wrist, and forearm, neck and cheek. And to this delicious transparency of rose and pink, was added a warmth of tone that did not escape Dick's eyes as he glimpsed her watch Evan Graham move down the length of room. Dick knew and classified her wild imagined dream or guess, though the terms of it were beyond his divination.

  What she saw was what she imagined was the princely walk of Graham, the high, light, blooded carriage of his head, the delightful carelessness of the gold-burnt, sun-sanded hair that made her fingers ache to be into with caresses she for the first time knew were possible of her fingers.

  Nor did Paula, during an interval of discussion with the violinist in which she did not desist from stating her criticism of O'Hay's latest criticism of Harold Bauer, fail to see and keep her eyes on Graham's progress. She, too, noted with pleasure his grace of movement, the high, light poise of head, the careless hair, the clear bronze of the smooth cheeks, the splendid forehead, the long gray eyes with the hint of drooping lids and boyish sullenness that fled before the smile with which he greeted her.

  She had observed that smile often since her first meeting with him. It was an irresistible smile, a smile that lighted the eyes with the radiance of good fellowship and that crinkled the corners into tiny, genial lines. It was provocative of smiles, for she found herself smiling a silent greeting in return as she continued stating to Ware her grievance against O'Hay's too-complacent praise of Bauer.