CHAPTER V

  MR. HERBERT RANSOME SHAW

  The man in the shabby blue-serge suit detached his absent gaze from theopposite wall, and looked up quickly when Laurie stopped at his side. Hewas clearly surprised, but courteous. He half rose from his chair, butthe new-comer waved him back and dropped easily into the vacant seatopposite him. He was smiling. The man in blue serge was not. He lookedpuzzled, though vaguely responsive. A third person, watching the two,might almost have thought the episode the casual reunion of men whofrequently lunched together.

  Laurie leaned forward in his chair, rested one elbow on the table, and,opening his cigarette-case, extended it to the stranger. The latterrejected it with a slight bow.

  "Thank you, but not before lunch," he said, quietly. His voice andmanner were those of an educated man. The quality of his tone wasslightly harsh.

  Laurie lit a cigarette, blew out the match, and looked straight intothe stranger's projecting gray eyes. He had acted impulsively. Now thathe was here, he was anxious to put the job over concisely, firmly, but,above all, neatly. There must be nothing done that would attract theattention of the few persons in the big room.

  "I came over here," he said casually, "to mention to you that you areannoying the lady I am with. I want to mention also that the annoyancemust stop."

  The glance of the stranger held. Laurie observed with interest that theveiled look of the projecting eyes had changed a little. The change didnot add to the stranger's charm.

  "Before I answer you, tell me one thing," he said, formally. "By whatright do you act as the lady's protector?"

  Laurie hesitated an instant. The question was embarrassing.

  "Has she authorized you to act?"

  "In a way, but--"

  "How long have you known her? How well do you know her?"

  Command of the interview was slipping from the younger man. Heresolutely resumed it.

  "Look here," he said, firmly, "I came to this table to tell yousomething, but I will decide what that is to be. I am not here to answerquestions. It is enough for you to know that circumstances have givenme the right to protect the lady from annoyance. I want to make it clearto you that I shall exercise that right. Hereafter you are to let heralone. Do you understand? Absolutely alone. You are not to follow her,not to enter places where she is, not to bow to her, nor to be where shecan see you," he recklessly ended.

  The stranger looked at him through the light veil which seemed again tohave fallen over the projecting eyes.

  "I should really like to know," he said, "when and where you met her. Isaw you starting off together in the taxicab, but I am not quite surewhether your first encounter occurred this morning."

  "And you won't be." Laurie stood up. "I've warned you," he said curtly."I don't know how well you understand our laws in this country, but Ifancy you know enough of them to realize that you cannot shadow a ladywithout getting into trouble."

  "She admitted that?" The stranger appeared to experience a tepid glow ofemotion. "She must know you better than I thought," he addedreflectively. "Doris is not the type to pour her confidence into everynew ear," he mused, seeming to forget the other's presence in hisinterest in this revelation.

  "Have I made myself quite clear?"

  Laurie was staring at him with a mingling of resentment and interest.The other nodded.

  "You have, my young friend," he said, with sudden seriousness, "and nowI, too, will be clear. In return for one warning, I will give youanother. Keep out of matters that do not concern you."

  Laurie grinned at him.

  "You forget that I have made this matter my concern," he said, lightly."Try to remember that."

  The other man rose. His manner had changed to a sort of impatientweariness.

  "Get her out of here," he said abruptly. "You are beginning to irritateme, you two. Take her home, and then keep away from her, unless you arelooking for trouble."

  He delivered the last words so clearly and menacingly that the waiterwho had appeared with his luncheon heard them and fell back a step.Looking into the veiled eyes, Laurie also felt a sense of recoil. Thefellow was positively venomous. There was something serpentlike in thedull but fixed look of those goggling eyes, in the forward thrust of thesmooth brown head.

  "I've said my say," he retorted. "If I ever catch you around thatstudio, or in any way annoying the lady, I'll thrash you within an inchof your life; and then I'll turn what's left of you over to theauthorities. Understand?"

  He nodded and strolled back to Miss Mayo's table. For an instant theother man stood looking after him, as if tempted to follow. Then, with ashrug, he dropped into his chair and began the luncheon the waiter hadplaced before him.

  Laurie found the girl standing by the table, ready for the street, hercoat fastened, her gloves buttoned.

  "Oh, how could you!" she gasped. "What did he say?"

  Laurie summoned the waiter with a gesture and asked for his account.

  "Sit down a minute," he suggested, "and tell me who he is."

  "Not here," she urged. "I couldn't breathe here. Hurry, please. Let usget away!"

  She was so obviously in earnest that he yielded. He paid the bill, whichthe waiter had ready, accepted that appreciative servitor's help withhis overcoat, and escorted his guest from the room.

  "But, for heaven's sake, don't run!" he laughed. "Do you want thecreature to think we're flying before him?"

  She flushed and moderated her pace. Side by side, and quitedeliberately, they left the restaurant, while the stranger watched themwith his dull, fixed gaze. He seemed to have recovered his temper, butit was also plain that the little encounter had given him something tothink about. When he resumed his luncheon he ate slowly and with an airof deep abstraction, as if working out some grave problem.

  "What's his name?" asked Laurie, as he helped Miss Mayo into a waitingtaxicab.

  She looked startled. Indeed, his most casual questions seemed to startleher and put her, in a way, on her guard.

  "Shaw," she answered, unwillingly.

  "Is it spelled P-s-h-a-w?"

  Laurie asked the question with polite interest. Then, realizing that inher preoccupation she did not follow this flight of his mercurialspirits, he sobered. "It's a perfectly good name," he conceded, "butthere must be more of it. What's the rest?"

  "He calls himself Herbert Ransome Shaw."

  Laurie made a mental note of the name.

  "I shall call him Bertie," he firmly announced, "to show you howunimportant he really is. By the way,"--a sudden memory struck him--"hetold me your name--Doris."

  He added the name so simply that he seemed to be calling her by it. Afaint shadow of her elusive smile touched her lips.

  "I like it--Doris," Laurie repeated, dreamily.

  "I am so glad," she murmured.

  He ignored the irony in her tone.

  "I suppose you have several more, like our friend Bertie, but youneedn't tell them to me. If I had to use them every time I spoke to you,it might check my inspiration. Doris will do very nicely. Doris, Doris!"

  "Are you making a song of it?"

  "Yes, a hymn."

  She looked at him curiously.

  "You're a queer boy. I can't quite make you out. One minute you'reserious, and the next--"

  "If you're puzzled over me, picture my mental turmoil over you."

  "Oh--me?" With a gesture she consigned herself to the uttermost ends ofthe universe.

  The taxicab had stopped. They had reached the studio building withoutobserving the fact. The expression on the features of the chauffeursuggested that if they wanted to sit still all day they could do it, butthat it would not be his personal choice. Doris held out her hand.

  "Good-by," she said gently. "And thank you. I'm reallymore--appreciative--than I seem."

  Laurie's look expressed more surprise than he had ever reallyexperienced over anything.

  "But we haven't settled matters!" he cried. "We're going to the bank--"

  "We are not.
"

  She spoke with sharp decision. Then, relenting at the expression of hisface, she touched the heavy gold-and-amber chain around her neck.

  "I can pawn this," she said briefly. "It didn't seem worth while before,but as I've got to go on, I promise you I will do it. I will do itto-day," she added hurriedly, "this afternoon, if you wish. It isvaluable. I can get enough on it to keep me for a month."

  "Till we find that job for you," he suggested, brightening.

  She agreed, with a momentary flash of her wonderful smile.

  "And you will let me drop in this evening and take you to dinner?"

  "No, thank you. But--" again she relented--"you may come in for an hourat eight."

  "I believe you _are_ a crowned head," murmured Laurie, discontentedly."That's just the way they do in books. When I come I suppose I mustspeak only when I'm spoken to. And when you suddenly stand up at nine,I'll know the audience is over."

  She laughed softly, her red-brown eyes shining at him. Her laughter wasdifferent from any other laughter he had ever heard.

  "Good-by," she repeated.

  He helped her out of the cab and escorted her into the studio building,where he rang the elevator bell and waited, hat in hand, until the carcame down. When it arrived, Sam was in it. Before it stopped he hadrecognized the waiting pair through the open ironwork of the door. ToLaurie, the elevator and Sam's jaw seemed to drop in unison.

  The next instant the black boy had resumed his habitual expression ofindifference to all human interests. Dead-eyed, he stared past the twoyoung things. Dead-eared, he ignored their moving lips. But there wasfellowship in the jocund youth of all three. In an instant when Lauriestepped back into the hall as the car shot upward, the eyes of negro andwhite man flashed a question and an answer:

  In Sam's: "You done took her out an' fed her?"

  In Laurie's: "You bet your boots I did!"