"Lord Rowland, you left London in company with a certain lady. You arrived here alone. Where is the lady?"
George rose to his feet.
"I fail to understand the question," he said coldly, speaking as much like the hero of a novel as he could. "I have the honour to wish you good-evening, gentlemen."
"But you do understand it. You understand it perfectly," cried the younger man, breaking out suddenly.
"What have you done with Alexa?"
"Be calm, sir," murmured the other. "I beg of you to be calm."
"I can assure you," said George, "that I know no lady of that name. There is some mistake." The older man was eyeing him keenly.
"That can hardly be," he said dryly. "I took the liberty of examining the hotel register. You entered yourself as Mr. G. Rowland of Rowland's Castle."
George was forced to blush.
"A - a little joke of mine," he explained feebly.
"A somewhat poor subterfuge. Come, let us not beat about the bush. Where is Her Highness?"
"If you mean Elizabeth - "
With a howl of rage the young man flung himself forward again.
"Insolent pig-dog! To speak of her thus."
"I am referring," said the other slowly, "as you very well know, to the Grand Duchess Anastasia Sophia Alexandra Marie Helena Olga Elizabeth of Catonia."
"Oh!" said Mr. Rowland helplessly.
He tried to recall all that he had ever known of Catonia. It was, as far as he remembered, a small Balkan kingdom, and he seemed to remember something about a revolution having occurred there. He rallied himself with an effort.
"Evidently we mean the same person," he said cheerfully, "only I call her Elizabeth."
"You will give me satisfaction for that," snarled the younger man. "We will fight."
"Fight?"
"A duel."
"I never fight duels," said Mr. Rowland firmly.
"Why not?" demanded the other unpleasantly.
"I'm too afraid of getting hurt."
"Aha! Is that so? Then I will at least pull your nose for you." The young man advanced fiercely. Exactly what happened was difficult to see, but he described a sudden semicircle in the air and fell to the ground with a heavy thud. He picked himself up in a dazed manner. Mr. Rowland was smiling pleasantly.
"As I was saying," he remarked, "I'm always afraid of getting hurt. That's why I thought it well to learn jujitsu."
There was a pause. The two foreigners looked doubtfully at this amiable-looking young man, as though they suddenly realized that some dangerous quality lurked behind the pleasant nonchalance of his manner. The young Teuton was white with passion.
"You will repent this," he hissed.
The older man retained his dignity.
"That is your last word, Lord Rowland? You refuse to tell us Her Highness's whereabouts?"
"I am unaware of them myself."
"You can hardly expect me to believe that."
"I am afraid you are of an unbelieving nature, sir."
The other merely shook his head, and murmuring: "This is not the end; you will hear from us again." The two men took their leave.
George passed his hand over his brow. Events were proceeding at a bewildering rate. He was evidently mixed up in a first-class European scandal.
"It might even mean another war," said George hopefully, as he hunted round to see what had become of the man with the black beard.
To his great relief, he discovered him sitting in a corner of the commercial room. George sat down in another corner. In about three minutes the black-bearded man got up and went up to bed. George followed and saw him go into his room and close the door. George heaved a sigh of relief.
"I need a night's rest," he murmured. "Need it badly." Then a dire thought struck him. Supposing the black-bearded man had realized that George was on his trail? Supposing that he should slip away during the night while George himself was sleeping the sleep of the just? A few minutes' reflection suggested to Mr. Rowland a way of dealing with this difficulty. He unravelled one of his socks till he got a good length of neutral-coloured wool, then creeping quietly out of his room, he pasted one end of the wool to the farther side of the stranger's door with stamp paper, carrying the wool across it and along to his own room. There he hung the end with a small silver bell - a relic of last night's entertainment. He surveyed these arrangements with a good deal of satisfaction. Should the blackbearded man attempt to leave his room, George would be instantly warned by the ringing of the bell. This matter disposed of, George lost no time in seeking his couch. The small packet he placed carefully under his pillow. As he did so, he fell into a momentary brown study. His thoughts could have been translated thus: