A full minute more of the threatening silence, and at the end of it we were glaring at each other like two wild creatures crouching for the spring.
It was Jennifer who spoke first. “’Twas meant for me,” he said; and his voice had the warning of a mastiff’s growl in it.
“No!” said I, curtly.
“I say it was!”
“Then you say the thing which is not.”
Had I been Richard Jennifer, I know not what bitter reproach I should have found to hurl at the man who had thrice owed his life to me. But he said no word of what had gone before.
“You may give me the lie, if you like, John Ireton; I shall not strike you.” He said it slowly, but his face was gray with anger. Then he added, hotly: “You know well that word was meant for me!”
At this—God forgive me!—my jealous wrath broke bounds and I cursed him for a beardless coxcomb who must needs think he stood alone in the eye of every woman he should meet. “She needs a man!” I raged, lost now to every sense of decent justice, “a man, I say! And to whom would she send if not to her—”
I choked upon the word. He had risen with me, and we stood face to face in that grim earth-womb, snarling fiercely at each other across the narrow firelit space; two men with every tie to knit us close together, and yet—God save us all!—a pair of wild beasts strung up to the killing pitch because, forsooth, we must needs front each other across a deadline drawn by the finger of a woman!
God knows what would have come of all this had my dear lad been as fierce a fool as I. ’Twas his good common sense that saved us both, I think, for when the savage rival madness was at its height he turned away, swearing we were the very pick and choice of a world of asses to stand thus feeling for each other’s throats when, mayhap, the lady needed both of us.
This brought me to my senses at a gallop, as you would guess; to them and to the lighting of the conscience fire within whereon to grill the wicked heart that but now had thirsted for a brother’s blood.
“Now God have mercy on us both!” I groaned. “Forgive me, Dick, if you can; I was as mad as any Bedlamite. If I have any claim on her, ’tis not of her good will, you may be sure. You have the baronet to fear—not me.”
He shook his head and pointed to the parchment—to the line in French.
“Francis Falconnet was under the same roof with her—or at least in easy call—when she wrote that, Jack. He is no longer my rival—nor yours.”
His word set me thinking, and I would fall to picking out the strands that jealous wrath had woven for me into the web of happenings. Setting aside the story brought by Ephraim Yeates, there was no certain proof that she had ever favored the Englishman; nay, more, till I had come to be madly jealous of Falconnet, I had made sure that Jennifer was the favored one.
At this, as one sees a landscape struck out clear and vivid by the lightning’s flash, I saw the true meaning of the word the hunter had brought—saw it and went upon my knees to grope blindly for the sword I had let fall when Dick had found the arrow.