<h2><SPAN name="#id5">CHAPTER IV--The Steam Yacht <em class="italics">Titania</em></SPAN></h2>
<p>She did wait, for three-quarters of an
hour; and at the end of that time the
manager received a reply to his letter. In
consequence, he told Joan that Lady John
Bevan would see her at Kensington Park
Mansions.</p>
<p>As soon as the girl heard the name of
Lady John Bevan, she knew why the yacht
was for sale, and was hopeful that the eccentric
proposition she meant to make might be
received with favour. Lord John Bevan
was in prison, for the crime of forgery,
committed after losing a fortune at Monte Carlo.</p>
<p>Joan took another cab to Kensington
Park Mansions--a mean shelter for a woman
whose environment had once been brilliant.
But Lady John, a tall and peculiarly elegant
woman, shone out like a jewel in an
unworthy setting. The two women looked at
each other with admiration, and there was
eagerness in the elder's voice as she said:
"You want to buy the <em class="italics">Titania</em>, Miss Mordaunt?"</p>
<p>"I'm not sure yet, till I've tried, to see
how I like her," replied Joan. "That's
fair, isn't it? What I want, if I see the
yacht, take fancy to her, and we can
come to terms, is to hire the <em class="italics">Titania</em> for
a while. Then, at the end of that time,
if I don't buy her myself, I'll sell her for
you to somebody else; that's a promise.
What would you want for your yacht for a
couple of months, all in working order, and
the captain and crew's money included?"</p>
<p>"Five hundred pounds," returned Lady
John. "You can see her at Cowes."</p>
<p>"Well, I don't mind telling you that's
more than I expected. I'm G. B. Mordaunt's
niece, and some day I suppose I
shall be one of the richest women in America,
but my money's tied up till I'm twenty-five.
I've only an allowance, and Uncle Grierson,
who is my guardian, is hard as nails. I'll
tell you what I can do, though. I have some
shares which are worth a lot of money,
but I don't want to deal with them myself,
as their value is a secret, and my uncle
would be mad with me if he knew I was
using it. What I was going to say is this.
The shares I speak of are worth mighty
little to those who aren't 'in the know,' and
a lot to those who are. If you'll call
to-morrow morning at ten o'clock on a
stockbroker in the City, whose address I'll give
you, and tell him you've a block of Clerios to
dispose of, he'll jump at the offer. All you
must do is to stand firm, and you can get
eight hundred pounds out of him. If he
says they're no good, just let your eyes
twinkle and tell him G. B. Mordaunt's
niece has been talking to you. That will
settle Mr. George Gallon! Keep your five
hundred for the yacht, and give the three
hundred change to me. Of course, this is
provided I like the yacht. You give me an
order to see her at Cowes. I'll start at once,
wire you what I think of her, and, if it's all
right, I'll call here first thing in the morning
with the share certificates."</p>
<p>Carried away by the girl's magnetism and
dash, Lady John Bevan would have said
"Yes" to almost anything. She said "Yes"
now with a promptness which surprised
herself when she thought of it afterwards,
by the cold light of reason.</p>
<p>Joan arrived at Cowes before dark, and
was delighted with the <em class="italics">Titania</em> and her crew.
She wired her approval to Lady John, and
telegraphed Tommy Mellis, asking him to
meet her at Waterloo for the eleven o'clock
train from Southampton, bringing the share
certificates which had that morning been
Mitchison's. She was sure that Tommy
would not fail, and he did not. They had
supper together in the grill-room of the
Carlton, as Joan was not in evening dress.
She told him all she chose to tell, and no
more; and thus ended the busiest day of
Joan Carthew's life.</p>
<p>The transaction in which Lady John
Bevan was to act as catspaw came off next
morning as the girl had expected, and she
would have given something handsome if
she could have seen George Gallon's face
when he found himself obliged to pay, for
the very shares he had expected to obtain
yesterday, four times what he had intended
to offer Mitchison. His profit would now
be small, when the great <em class="italics">coup</em> came off;
still, he could not afford to refuse the chance,
and Joan knew it. Some day, she meant that
he should also know to whom he owed his
defeat; but that day was not yet.</p>
<p>For the shares sold by Mitchison he had
received two hundred pounds. A like sum
Joan agreed to place in Tommy's hands, as
part profit of the transaction; and when
Lady John Bevan was paid for the two
months' hire of the <em class="italics">Titania</em>, the girl would
have a hundred pounds over, to "play with,"
as she expressed it to herself. The other
shares which Mitchison was pledged to obtain
from Genoa would be available within the
next few days, and Joan had made up her
mind what to do with them by and by.
She had had several inspirations since
overhearing snatches of conversation between her
employer and his Italian visitor yesterday
morning, and one of these inspirations
concerned Lady John Bevan.</p>
<p>Lady John was pitied by the old friends
in the old life from which poverty and
misfortune had removed her. People would
have been glad to be "nice" to her in any
cheap way which did not cost too much
money or trouble, if she had let them. But
the woman was a proud woman, who still
loved her husband in spite of his guilt, and
she had not cared to go out of her hired
flat in Kensington to be patronised by the
world which had once flattered and fought
for her invitations. Joan guessed as much
of this as she did not know, and when Lady
John wished her, rather wistfully, a "pleasant
cruise," the girl said suddenly: "Come
along and be my chaperon! My aunt
Caroline, Uncle Grierson Mordaunt's sister,
came to England with me; but she hates the
sea, and flatly refuses to do any yachting.
I'm not sorry, because she's a prim old
dear, and what I want is to see a little life
and fun. I've been kept very close till
now, and though I'm of age, I'm only just
out, so I don't know many people, and you
would be sure to meet lots of nice friends of
yours, to whom you'd introduce me. It's so
foggy and horrid here now; I'm going to
make straight for the Riviera with the <em class="italics">Titania</em>,
and it will do you good. Please come."</p>
<p>Lady John could not resist the prospect,
or that "Please," spoken cooingly, with
lovely, pleading eyes and a childlike touch
on her arm. Besides, she was fond of the
<em class="italics">Titania</em>, and before she quite knew what
she was doing, she had promised to chaperon
Grierson Mordaunt's niece.</p>
<p>Considering the way in which she was
handicapped by false pretences and
shortness of cash, Joan could not have done
better for herself. She told Lady John that
she had had a disagreement with the friends
with whom she had been staying, and wished
to be recommended to a hotel for the few
days before they could get off on the <em class="italics">Titania</em>.
Of course, Lady John invited her to the
flat, and the girl accepted. She asked her
new chaperon's advice about dressmakers
and milliners for the Riviera outfit, which
must be got together in a hurry. Lady
John had paid all her own bills after the
crash, with money grudgingly supplied by
relations, and was still in the "good books"
of the tradespeople she had once lavishly
patronised. Introduced by her as a niece
of the well-known American millionaire, Joan
had unlimited credit to procure unlimited
pretty things. Everything had to be bought
ready made; and at the end of the week
the steam-yacht <em class="italics">Titania</em>, with "Miss Jenny
Mordaunt" and Lady John Bevan on board,
was bounding gaily over the bright waters
of the Bay. A few days later, the <em class="italics">Titania</em>
made one of a colony of other yachts lying
snugly in Nice harbour.</p>
<p>Now, Joan's wisdom in the choice of a
chaperon justified itself even more pointedly
than when it had been a question of a pilot
among shoals of tradespeople. Lady John
believed in her young charge, whose
statements concerning her engaging self it had
never occurred to the elder woman to doubt.
Having undertaken the duties of a chaperon,
she was conscientious in carrying them out,
and lost no time in picking up old friendships
which might be valuable to Miss Mordaunt--just
how valuable, or in what way, Lady
John little dreamed.</p>
<p>Not only did she know a number of rich
and titled English folk, who had come out to
spend the cold months at their villas, or in
fashionable hotels, at Nice, Monte Carlo, and
Mentone, but she could claim acquaintance
with various foreign royalties and
personages of high degree. These latter
especially were delighted to meet the beautiful
American girl, who was so rich and
independent that she travelled about the world
on her own yacht. It was nobody's business
that the <em class="italics">Titania</em> was but hired for two months,
since it was Miss Mordaunt's pleasure to
pose as the owner. The name of the yacht
had been changed, for politic reasons, since
gay Lord John had careered about the
waterways of the world in her; she had been
newly decorated, and the colour of her paint
had undergone a change, therefore she could
pass unrecognised by all save experts. Joan
and her chaperon kept "open house" on
board. The luncheon-table was always laid
for twelve, in case any one strolled on in
the morning whom it would be agreeable to
detain. On fine days--and what days were
not fine on these shores beloved of the sun?--tea
was always served on deck under the
rose-and-white awning; and Russian princes,
Austrian barons and baronesses, French counts
and countesses, with a sprinkling of the
English nobility, came early and stayed
late to drink the Orange Pekoe and eat the
exquisite little cakes provided by the
confiding tradespeople of Nice. Joan paid for
nothing, and got everything. Was she not a
great American heiress, and was not the yacht
alone a guarantee of her trustworthiness?</p>
<p>Not even the owners of famous American
yachts lying alongside suspected the girl to
be other than she seemed, though they were
of the world in which Grierson Mordaunt
was prominent. He was not a man who
made intimate friends, and none of those
who knew him best had any reason to doubt
that he had a pretty niece named Jenny.
Concerning the great Mordaunt himself Joan
kept posted as to his whereabouts. She read
the papers and followed his movements in
Florida; therefore she felt safe and pursued
her business more or less calmly.</p>
<p>For it was business more than pleasure
which had brought the girl on this adventure,
though she knew how to combine the two.
Her hospitality, her breakfasts, her tea and
cakes, her lavish dinners, were not supplied
to her guests for nothing, though they were
not aware that they were paying save by the
honour of their presence. When Joan had
established friendly relations with a person
worth cultivating (she abjured all others),
her next step was to drop a careless word
about a wonderful "tip" she had got from
Grierson Mordaunt. "It's all in the family,"
she would say, laughing, "or he would never
have given it away; and, of course, I mustn't.
He just said to me: 'Buy up a certain
thing while you can get it,' and I did. My
goodness! I've got more than I know what
to do with, for, after all, I had more money
than I wanted before. By and by I shall be
<em class="italics">too</em> rich. Mercy! I'm afraid now of being
married for my money."</p>
<p>Then the hearers, dazzled by this fairy
story, wondered whether they might possibly
ask Miss Mordaunt if they could profit by
the marvellous "tip," and pick up a few
crumbs from her overflowing table. If Joan
had hawked her wares, no doubt these
people would have fought shy; but as the
object was difficult of attainment and must
be manoeuvred for, according to the way
of the world they struggled for it with
eagerness. As soon as Joan could decently appear
to understand, in her innocence, what her dear
friends were driving at, she was so
"good-natured" that she volunteered to sell them
a few of her own shares. The only promise
she exacted in return was that nobody would
boast of the favour granted. The shares
which she had bought at a low price--not
yet paid--she sold for three times their
face value, sent half the profit to Tommy
Mellis as she got it in, and pocketed her own
half. She was thus able to pay the tradespeople
who had trusted her, and to lay in coal for
the trips round the coast which the <em class="italics">Titania</em>
often took with a few distinguished passengers.</p>
<p>The girl could have sung for joy over the
success of her adventure. In the end she
would cheat nobody; she would make a
decent sum for herself, and meanwhile she
was drinking the intoxicating nectar of
excitement. She was so happy that when
she had finished her business, sold all her
shares, and the two months for which the
<em class="italics">Titania</em> was hired were drawing to an end
she longed to stay on. She was her own
mistress, and could pay her way now--at
least, for awhile, until she had another
stroke of luck, which her confidence in
herself enabled her to count upon as certain.
She and Lady John were having a "good
time," everybody liked them, and she did
not see why this good time should not go
on indefinitely. Besides, she had promised
to sell the yacht for its owner. The two
ladies of the <em class="italics">Titania</em> had invitations for a
month ahead, and one evening were dressed
and waiting for the arrival of an English
bishop, a Roman prince, two American
trust magnates, and a French duchess and
her daughter, when the name of Mr. Grierson
Mordaunt was announced.</p>
<p>Joan's blood rushed to her head, but she
stood up smiling. "Leave us for a minute,
dear," she breathed to Lady John, who
slipped off to her cabin unsuspectingly.
The girl found herself facing a grizzled,
smooth-shaven man with a prominent chin,
a large nose, and deep eyes of iron grey
which matched his hair and faded skin.</p>
<p>"So you are the young woman who has
been trading on a supposed relationship to
me?" remarked Grierson Mordaunt, looking
her up and down from head to foot.</p>
<p>"We are related--through Adam," replied
Joan, whose lips were dry. "As for
'trading' on the relationship, I'm proud of it,
and I don't see why you should be ashamed
of me. I've done nothing to disgrace you."</p>
<p>"What is your game, that you should have
selected my particular branch of the Adam
family?"</p>
<p>"Because I have one of your family
secrets. If you are going to disown me,
there's no reason why I shouldn't give it away."</p>
<p>"What are you talking about?"</p>
<p>"Clerios. You aren't ready for the secret
of that deal to come out yet, are you? I
saw in the paper the other day that you had
denied any intention of taking the Clerio
line into your combine. It was the same
paper that said you had just returned to
New York from Florida."</p>
<p>"You are an adventuress, my young friend."</p>
<p>"Every seeker of fortune is an adventurer
or an adventuress. The crime is, failure.
I'm not a criminal, because I am succeeding,
and my success has enabled me to meet my
obligations. If you don't think that I was
justified in claiming relationship with you
through so remote an ancestor in common
as Adam, you can make the rest of my stay
here very uncomfortable, I admit; and if
you have no fellow-feeling for a beginner, I
suppose you will do it."</p>
<p>"How long do you intend your stay to
be?" inquired Mordaunt grimly, but with
a twinkle in his eye.</p>
<p>"How long do you want it kept dark
about Clerios?"</p>
<p>"A fortnight."</p>
<p>"Then I should like very much, if you
don't mind, to stop here a fortnight."</p>
<p>The great man laughed. "You've the
pluck of--the Evil One!" he ejaculated.
"I was in Paris, and read about one of my
niece's smart dinner-parties, so I came
on--especially to see you. Now----"</p>
<p>"Now you are here, won't you stop to one
of the dinner-parties? Some very nice people
are coming this evening."</p>
<p>"And play the part of fond uncle? No,
I thank you. But, by Jove! I'm hanged if
I don't go away without unmasking you.
You may bless your pretty face and your
smart tongue for that----"</p>
<p>"And the family secret."</p>
<p>"That's part of it, but not all. I give
you a fortnight's grace. Mind, not a day
more; and respect the character you've
stolen meanwhile, or the promise doesn't
stand. This day fortnight you clear out,
and Miss Jenny Mordaunt must never be
heard of again."</p>
<p>"It's a bargain," said Joan. "By some
other name I shall be as great."</p>
<p>"So long as it's not mine. Have you done
well with Clerios?"</p>
<p>"Pretty well, thank you. I was a little
hampered for lack of capital. I might get
you a few shares here in Nice, if you like;
not cheap, exactly--still, a good deal lower
than they will be a fortnight from now."</p>
<p>"Much obliged. You needn't trouble
yourself. But I shall keep my eye on you."</p>
<p>"I shall consider it a compliment," said
Joan, "and try to be worthy of it."</p>
<p>"Good-bye."</p>
<p>"Good-bye."</p>
<p>When he was gone, Joan sank into a
chair and closed her eyes. It would have
been a comfort to faint, but the first guest
arrived at that moment, and she rose to them
and to the occasion. The dinner was a great
success, and every one was grieved to hear
that the <em class="italics">Titania</em> was due to steam away--for
a destination unmentioned--in a fortnight.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />