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«So they are!» cried Da
«Excuse me, please,» said Rymer. «I can't pass this up. I can't let that wonderful little invisible lady go right out of my life like this.»
With that he sprang up, and began to lumber after the pigeons, which increased their pace. Too astonished to move, we saw him trip, fall, pick himself up again, and rush after the retreating birds faster than before. Soon he disappeared over the little rise.
«Did you ever see the like of that?» said Da
«Look here,» I said. «He may get over by the cliffs, I'll go round to cut him off. You follow him in case he goes the other way.»
I hurried round to the cliff edge, but there was no sign of Rymer. After waiting a long time I saw Da
«He's stretched out under a rock, poor man,» said he. «With his wind gone, and the heart broken in him, and saying over his numbers like a reverend father telling of his beads, and measuring with his hands like a fisherman, and crying like a child. Will it be a madness on him, your honour, or was he after seeing something he couldn't see entirely?»
«It must be the sun,» said I. «We'd better get him home.»
We clambered down to where Rymer lay. He was in a piteous state, «I'm beat,» said he. «My approach was all wrong. Rushing at her like that! She got the wrong impression.»
«You come home,» said I.
We rowed home in silence. When we landed, he looked back at the island. «If she'd given me just a chance!» said he. «Just a chance to explain!»
«You go up to your room,» said I, «and lie down.»
«That's what I mean to do,» said he. «That's all I'm fit for.»
He stayed in his room all that day, and all the next, and the day after. On the third day I was out for a while. When I came back I asked Doyle if all was well.
«Devil a bit of it,» said Doyle, «for he's keening like a woman over the dead.»
I listened at the foot of the stabs. «That's all right,» said I, coming back. «That's just his version of a song — 'Night and day, you are the one.' There's a note of optimism at the end of it. I've an idea he's bucking up.»
Sure enough, we soon heard his foot on the stabs. He was in the highest of spirits, a tremendous reaction. «Well, pal,» he said, «I'm afraid I've been a bit of a dead weight the last two or three days. She had me knocked right out, and that's the truth, brother. I didn't have an idea left in me. Mr. Doyle, I want you to hunt me up some canes or osiers or something, and I want your man Da
I gave Doyle the wink to humour him, and he took the particulars of what was wanted.
«You see the idea?» said Rymer to me. «I make me these two sort of cages, like the bird traps we used to make in the Midwest when I was a boy. In the little one, I put some boiled com. That's for the doves. The big one's for her.»
«What's the bait there?» said L
«She's a woman,» said he. «Divine, if you like, but still a femme.» With that he pulled out a leather case from his pocket and opened it to display a very handsome little wristwatch, set in diamonds. «Picked it up in Paris,» said he modestly. «Thought of presenting it to a young lady in Cleveland. Thirty-six hips, though. And here we have thirty-four, twenty-five, thirty-five! So this goes for bait, you see. It'll fetch her. And when I see it picked up in the air, I pull the strings, and I have them goddam doves in one cage and her in the other. Then I can talk. Nothing immoral, mind you. I want to proposition that little lady to be Mrs. Thomas P. Rymer.»
«But if you can't see her—» said I.
«Wait,» said he, «till I get the Max Factor Studios on her. A sort of simonizing job, only in technicolour, if you get me. It'll be,» said he, bursting into song, «'Oh, say can you see, by the dawn's early light —' Nothing unpatriotic, mind you, only it's kind of appropriate.» Still singing, he went out to the wood-shed, where I heard hammering going on for the rest of the day.
Next morning, as I was shaving, I happened to glance out of the window, and there I saw the boat pulling out, with Da
That evening, as I approached the hotel, I saw the boat pulled up on the beach, and hurried in to find Rymer. He was sitting in the bar, with a big whiskey in front of him, looking very grim. «What happened?» said I.
«Don't ask me what happened,» said he curtly. Then, relenting, «I'll tell you,» said he. «I'm afraid that little lady's out to make a monkey of me, and I don't like it.»
«What did she do?» I asked.
«I had Da
«Go on,» said I.
«Well,» said he, «they visited the small trap first, and the top left-hand dove flew down and picked up bits of the corn and fed all the others.»
«I'll be damned!» said I.
«Then,» said he, «they moved over to where the big cage was, and the dexter dove flew in and picked up the wristwatch in its beak, and she did a sort of humoresque dance with it, and threw it over the cliff into the sea in front of my eyes. What do you think of that?»
«That's pretty tough,» I said.
«It's downright inconsiderate!» said he, banging on the table. «And if that dame thinks she's going to get away with it with Thomas P. Rymer, well — Landlord, I want another highball.»
«Why don't you just give her the air?» said I.
«I'd have given her the world,» said he. «And I would yet. But she's gotta see reason. I'll make her listen to me somehow. Let me get her within reach of my arms, that's all! Landlord, I'll have a bottle of this hooch up in my room, I reckon. I gotta do a bit of thinking. Good night, pal. I'm no company. She's roused up the old cave man in me, that's how it is. I'm not claiming to be any sort of sheik, but this little Irish wonder lady's gotta learn she can't make a monkey of a straightforward American business man. Good night!»
Most of the night I heard him tramping up and down his room. It was pretty late when I got to sleep, and when I did I slept heavily and woke late. I went downstairs and looked about for my friend «Where's Mr. Rymer?» said I to Doyle.
«God alone knows,» said he. «Were you not hearing the great cry he gave in the grey of the dawn?»
«What?» said I.
«I woke up,» said Doyle, «and heard him muttering. Suddenly he lets a yell out of him: 'Marriage licence! That'll get her!' And then he went silent entirely, and I dropped off to sleep again. And when I came down this morning, he was missing. And his car was missing. There was a note on the bar here: 'Back in a few days.'»
«He's gone to Galway,» said I, «to get his confounded licence.»
«Like enough,» said Doyle. «It's a great affliction, to be sure.»
Sure enough, after a few days I was wakened in the early morning by the sound of a car driving up. I looked out in the half-light and recognized the impressive lines of Rymer's huge American roadster. At breakfast time I hurried downstairs, eager to have a word with him.
I met Doyle in the passage. «So Mr. Rymer's come back?» I said.
«He's come,» said Doyle. «And he's gone.»
«Gone? Where?»
«It must be to the island,» said Doyle. «He must have drove up in the night and took the boat out right away. I've sent Da