diff options
| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 01:23:17 -0700 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 01:23:17 -0700 |
| commit | 2b4d45004ba749ce7d8910507d13c1d6968beb1a (patch) | |
| tree | 0dce7a59fa3953a991cc222f1525d5267e733376 /20485-8.txt | |
Diffstat (limited to '20485-8.txt')
| -rw-r--r-- | 20485-8.txt | 7828 |
1 files changed, 7828 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/20485-8.txt b/20485-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0035dda --- /dev/null +++ b/20485-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,7828 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lunatic at Large by J. Storer Clouston + + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no +restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under +the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or +online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license + + + +Title: The Lunatic at Large + +Author: J. Storer Clouston + +Release Date: January 30, 2007 [Ebook #20485] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO 8859-1 + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LUNATIC AT LARGE*** + + + + + + THE + LUNATIC AT LARGE + + _A NOVEL_ + + BY + J. STORER CLOUSTON + +AUTHORIZED EDITION + +BRENTANO'S +NEW YORK +1915 + + + + + + CONTENTS + + +INTRODUCTORY. +PART I. + CHAPTER I. + CHAPTER II. + CHAPTER III. + CHAPTER IV. + CHAPTER V. + CHAPTER VI. + CHAPTER VII. +PART II. + CHAPTER I. + CHAPTER II. + CHAPTER III. + CHAPTER IV. + CHAPTER V. + CHAPTER VI. + CHAPTER VII. + CHAPTER VIII. + CHAPTER IX. +PART III. + CHAPTER I. + CHAPTER II. + CHAPTER III. + CHAPTER IV. + CHAPTER V. + CHAPTER VI. + CHAPTER VII. +PART IV. + CHAPTER I. + CHAPTER II. + CHAPTER III. + CHAPTER IV. + CHAPTER V. +ERRATA. + + + + + + + THE LUNATIC AT LARGE. + + + INTRODUCTORY. + + +Into the history of Mr Francis Beveridge, as supplied by the obliging +candour of the Baron von Blitzenberg and the notes of Dr Escott, Dr +Twiddel and his friend Robert Welsh make a kind of explanatory entry. They +most effectually set the ball a-rolling, and so the story starts in a +small room looking out on a very uninteresting London street. + +It was about three o'clock on a November afternoon, that season of fogs +and rains and mud, when towns-people long for fresh air and hillsides, and +country-folk think wistfully of the warmth and lights of a city, when +nobody is satisfied, and everybody has a cold. Outside the window of the +room there were a few feet of earth adorned with a low bush or two, a line +of railings, a stone-paved street, and on the other side a long row of +uniform yellow brick houses. The apartment itself was a modest chamber, +containing a minimum of rented furniture and a flickering gas-stove. By a +small caseful of medical treatises and a conspicuous stethoscope, the +least experienced could see that it was labelled consulting-room. + +Dr Twiddel was enjoying one of those moments of repose that occur even in +the youngest practitioner's existence. For the purposes of this narrative +he may briefly be described as an amiable-looking young man, with a little +bit of fair moustache and still less chin, no practice to speak of, and a +considerable quantity of unpaid bills. A man of such features and in such +circumstances invites temptation. At the present moment, though his +waistcoat was unbuttoned and his feet rested on the mantelpiece, his mind +seemed not quite at ease. He looked back upon a number of fortunate events +that had not occurred, and forward to various unpleasant things that might +occur, and then he took a letter from his pocket and read it abstractedly. + +"I can't afford to refuse," he reflected, lugubriously; "and yet, hang it! +I must say I don't fancy the job." + +When metal is molten it can be poured into any vessel; and at that moment +a certain deep receptacle stood on the very doorstep. + +The doctor heard the bell, sat up briskly, stuffed the letter back into +his pocket, and buttoned his waistcoat. + +"A patient at last!" and instantly there arose a vision of a simple +operation, a fabulous fee, and twelve sickly millionaires an hour ever +after. The door opened, and a loud voice hailed him familiarly. + +"Only Welsh," he sighed, and the vision went the way of all the others. + +The gentleman who swaggered in and clapped the doctor on the back, who +next threw himself into the easiest chair and his hat and coat over the +table, was in fact Mr Robert Welsh. From the moment he entered he pervaded +the room; the stethoscope seemed to grow less conspicuous, Dr Twiddel's +chin more diminutive, the apartment itself a mere background to this +guest. Why? It would be hard to say precisely. He was a black-moustached, +full-faced man, with an air of the most consummate assurance, and a person +by some deemed handsome. Yet somehow or other he inevitably recalled the +uncles of history. Perhaps this assurance alone gave him his atmosphere. +You could have felt his egotism in the dark. + +He talked in a loud voice and with a great air of mastery over all the +contingencies of a life about town. You felt that here sat one who had +seen the world and gave things their proper proportions, who had learned +how meretricious was orthodoxy, and which bars could really be +recommended. He chaffed, patronised, and cheered the doctor. Patients had +been scarce, had they? Well, after all, there were many consolations. Did +Twiddle say he was hard up? Welsh himself in an even more evil case. He +narrated various unfortunate transactions connected with the turf and +other pursuits, with regret, no doubt, and yet with a fine rakish defiance +of destiny. Twiddel's face cleared, and he began to show something of the +same gallant spirit. He brought out a tall bottle with a Celtic +superscription; Welsh half filled his glass, poured in some water from a +dusty decanter, and proposed the toast of "Luck to the two most deserving +sinners in London!" + +The doctor was fired, he drew the same letter from his pocket, and cried, +"By Jove, Welsh, I'd almost forgotten to tell you of a lucky offer that +came this morning." + +This was not strictly true, for as a matter of fact the doctor had only +hesitated to tell of this offer lest he should be shamed to a decision. +But Welsh was infectious. + +"Congratulations, old man!" said his friend. "What's it all about?" + +"Here's a letter from an old friend of my people's--Dr Watson, by name. He +has a very good country practice, and he offers me this job." + +He handed the letter to Welsh, and then added, with a flutter of caution, +"I haven't made up my mind yet. There are drawbacks, as you'll see." + +Welsh opened the letter and read:-- + +"DEAR TWIDDEL,--I am happy to tell you that I am at last able to put +something in your way. A gentleman in this neighbourhood, one of my most +esteemed patients, has lately suffered from a severe mental and physical +shock, followed by brain fever, and is still, I regret to say, in an +extremely unstable mental condition. I have strongly recommended quiet and +change of scene, and at my suggestion he is to be sent abroad under the +care of a medical attendant. I have now much pleasure in offering you the +post, if you would care to accept it. You will find your patient, Mr +Mandell-Essington, an extremely agreeable young man when in possession of +his proper faculties. He has large means and no near relatives; he comes +of one of the best families in the county; and though he has, I surmise, +sown his wild oats pretty freely, he was considered of unusual promise +previous to this unfortunate illness. He is of an amiable and pleasant +disposition, though at present, we fear, inclined to suicidal tendencies. +I have no particular reason to think he is at all homicidal; still, you +will see that he naturally requires most careful watching. It is possible +that you may hesitate to leave your practice (which I trust prospers); but +as the responsibility is considerable, the fee will be proportionately +generous--£500, and all expenses paid." + +("Five hundred quid!" exclaimed Welsh.) + +"I would suggest a trip on the Continent. The duration and the places to +be visited will be entirely at your discretion. It is of course hardly +necessary to say that you will seek quiet localities. Trusting to hear +from you at your very earliest convenience, believe me, yours sincerely, + + TIMOTHY WATSON." + +Welsh looked at his friend with the respect that prosperity naturally +excites. He smiled on him as an equal, and cried, heartily, +"Congratulations again! When do you start?" + +Twiddel fidgeted uncomfortably, "I--er--well, you see--ah--I haven't _quite_ +made up my mind yet." + +"What's the matter?" + +"Hang it, Welsh--er--the fact is I don't altogether like the job." + +Scruples of any kind always surprised Welsh. + +"Can't afford to leave the practice?" he asked with a laugh. + +"That's--ah--partly the reason," replied Twiddel, uncomfortably. + +"Rot, old man! There's a girl in the case. Out with it!" + +"No, it isn't that. You see it's the very devil of a responsibility." + +At this confession of weakness he looked guiltily at his heroic friend. +From the bottom of his heart he wished he had screwed up his courage in +private. Welsh had so little imagination. + +"By Gad," exclaimed Welsh, "I'd manage a nunnery for £500!" + +"I daresay you would, but a suicidal, and possibly homicidal, lunatic +isn't a nunnery." + +Welsh looked at his friend with diminished respect. + +"Then you are going to chuck up £500 and a free trip on the Continent?" he +said. + +"Dr Watson himself admits the responsibility." + +"With a--what is it?--agreeable young man?" + +"Only when in possession of his proper faculties," said the doctor, +dismally. + +"And an amiable disposition?" + +"With suicidal tendencies, hang it!" + +"I should have thought," said Welsh, with a laugh, "that they would only +matter to himself." + +"But he is homicidal too--or at least it's doubtful. I want to know a +little more about that, thank you!" + +"What is the man's name?" + +"Mandell-Essington." + +"Sounds aristocratic. He might come in useful afterwards, when he's +cured." + +Welsh spoke with an air of reflection, which might have been entirely +disinterested. + +"He'd probably commit suicide first," said Twiddel, "and of course I'd get +all the blame." + +"Or homicide," replied Welsh, "When _he_ would." + +"No, he wouldn't--that's the worst of it; I'd be blamed for having my own +throat cut." + +"Twiddel," said his friend, deliberately, "it seems to me you're a fool." + +"I'm at least alive," cried Twiddel, warming with sympathy for himself, +"which I probably wouldn't be for long in Mr Essington's company." + +"I don't blame your nerves, dear boy," said Welsh, with a smile that +showed all his teeth, "only your head. Here are £500 going a-begging. +There must be some way----" He paused, deep in reflection. "How would it +do," he remarked in a minute, "if _I_ were to go in your place?" + +Twiddel laughed and shook his head. + +"Couldn't be managed?" + +"Couldn't possibly, I'm afraid." + +"No," said Welsh. "I foresee difficulties." + +He fished a pipe out of his pocket, filled and lit it, and leaned back in +his chair gazing at the ceiling. + +"Twiddel, my boy," he said at length, "will you give me a percentage of +the fee if I think of a safe dodge for getting the money and preserving +your throat?" + +Twiddel laughed. + +"Rather!" he said. + +"I am perfectly serious," replied Welsh, keenly. "I'm certain the thing is +quite possible." + +He half closed his eyes and ruminated in silence. The doctor watched +him--fascinated, afraid. Somehow or other he felt that he was already a +kind of Guy Fawkes. There was something so unlawful in Welsh's expression. + +They sat there without speaking for about ten minutes, and then all of a +sudden Welsh sprang up with a shout of laughter, slapping first his own +leg and then the doctor's back. + +"By Gad, I've got it!" he cried. "I have it!" + +And he had; hence this tale. + + + + + + PART I. + + + + + CHAPTER I. + + +In a certain fertile and well-wooded county of England there stands a high +stone wall. On a sunny day the eye of the traveller passing through this +province is gratified by the sparkle of myriads of broken bottles arranged +closely and continuously along its coping-stone. Above these shining +facets the boughs of tall trees swing in the wind and throw their shadows +across the highway. The wall at last leaves the road and follows the park +round its entire extent. Its height never varies; the broken bottles +glitter perpetually; and only through two entrances, and that when the +gates are open, can one gain a single glimpse inside: for the gates are +solid, with no chinks for the curious. + +The country all round is undulating, and here and there from the crest of +an eminence you can see a great space of well-timbered park land within +this wall; and in winter, when the leaves are off the trees, you may spy +an imposing red-brick mansion in the midst. + +Any native will inform you, with a mixture of infectious awe and becoming +pride, that this is no less than the far-famed private asylum of +Clankwood. + +This ideal institution bore the enviable reputation of containing the +best-bred lunatics in England. It was credibly reported that however well +marked their symptoms and however well developed their delusions, none but +ladies and gentlemen of the most unblemished descent were permitted to +enjoy its seclusion. The dances there were universally considered the most +agreeable functions in the county. The conversation of many of the inmates +was of the widest range and the most refreshing originality, and the +demeanour of all, even when most free from the conventional trammels of +outside society, bore evidence of an expensive, and in some cases of a +Christian, upbringing. This is scarcely to be wondered at, when beneath +one roof were assembled the heirs-presumptive to three dukedoms, two +suicidal marquises, an odd archbishop or so, and the flower of the +baronetage and clergy. As this list only includes a few of the celebrities +able or willing to be introduced to distinguished visitors, and makes no +mention of the uncorroborated dignities (such as the classical divinities +and Old Testament duplicates), the anxiety shown by some people to certify +their relations can easily be understood. + +Dr Congleton, the proprietor and physician of Clankwood, was a gentleman +singularly well fitted to act as host on the occasion of asylum reunions. +No one could exceed him in the respect he showed to a coroneted head, even +when cracked; and a bishop under his charge was always secured, as far as +possible, from the least whisper of heretical conversation. He possessed +besides a pleasant rubicund countenance and an immaculate wardrobe. He was +further fortunate in having in his assistants, Dr Escott and Dr Sherlaw, +two young gentlemen whose medical knowledge was almost equal to the +affability of their manners and the excellence of their family +connections. + +One November night these two were sitting over a comfortable fire in +Sherlaw's room. Twelve o'clock struck, Escott finished the remains of +something in a tumbler, rose, and yawned sleepily. + +"Time to turn in, young man," said he. + +"I suppose it is," replied Sherlaw, a very pleasant and boyish young +gentleman. "Hullo! What's that? A cab?" + +They both listened, and some way off they could just pick out a sound like +wheels upon gravel. + +"It's very late for any one to be coming in," said Escott. + +The sound grew clearer and more unmistakably like a cab rattling quickly +up the drive. + +"It is a cab," said Sherlaw. + +They heard it draw up before the front door, and then there came a pause. + +"Who the deuce can it be?" muttered Escott. + +In a few minutes there came a knock at the door, and a servant entered. + +"A new case, sir. Want's to see Dr Congleton particular." + +"A man or a woman?" + +"Man, sir." + +"All right," growled Sherlaw. "I'll come, confound him." + +"Bad luck, old man," laughed Escott. "I'll wait here in case by any chance +you want me." + +He fell into his chair again, lit a cigarette, and sleepily turned over +the pages of a book. Dr Sherlaw was away for a little time, and when he +returned his cheerful face wore a somewhat mystified expression. + +"Well?" asked Escott. + +"Rather a rum case," said his colleague, thoughtfully. + +"What's the matter?" + +"Don't know." + +"Who was it?" + +"Don't know that either." + +Escott opened his eyes. + +"What happened, then?" + +"Well," said Sherlaw, drawing his chair up to the fire again, "I'll tell +you just what did happen, and you can make what you can out of it. Of +course, I suppose it's all right, really, but--well, the proceedings were a +little unusual, don't you know. + +"I went down to the door, and there I found a four-wheeler with a man +standing beside it. The door of the cab was shut, and there seemed to be +two more men inside. This chap who'd got out--a youngish man--hailed me at +once as though he'd bought the whole place. + +" 'You Dr Congleton?' + +" 'Damn your impertinence!' I said to myself, 'ringing people up at this +hour, and talking like a bally drill-sergeant.' + +"I told him politely I wasn't old Congers, but that I'd make a good enough +substitute for the likes of him. + +" 'I tell you what it is,' said the Johnnie, 'I've brought a patient for +Dr Congleton, a cousin of mine, and I've got a doctor here, too. I want to +see Dr Congleton.' + +" 'He's probably in bed,' I said, 'but I'll do just as well. I suppose +he's certified, and all that.' + +" 'Oh, it's all right,' said the man, rather as though he expected me to +say that it wasn't. He looked a little doubtful what to do, and then I +heard some one inside the cab call him. He stuck his head in the window +and they confabbed for a minute, and then he turned to me and said, with +the most magnificent air you ever saw, like a chap buying a set of diamond +studs, 'My friend here is a great personal friend of Dr Congleton, and +it's a damned---- I mean it's an uncommonly delicate matter. We must see +him.' + +" 'Well, if you insist, I'll see if I can get him,' I said; 'but you'd +better come in and wait.' + +"So the Johnnie opened the door of the cab, and there was a great hauling +and pushing, my friend pulling an arm from the outside, and the doctor +shoving from within, and at last they fetched out their patient. He was a +tall man, in a very smart-looking, long, light top-coat, and a cap with a +large peak shoved over his eyes, and he seemed very unsteady on his pins. + +" 'Drunk, by George!' I said to myself at first. + +"The doctor--another young-looking man--hopped out after him, and they each +took an arm, lugged their patient into the waiting-room, and popped him +into an armchair. There he collapsed, and sat with his head hanging down +as limp as a sucked orange. + +"I asked them if anything was the matter with him. + +" 'Only tired,--just a little sleepy,' said the cousin. + +"And do you know, Escott, what I'd stake my best boots was the matter with +him?" + +"What?" + +"The man was drugged!" + +Escott looked at the fire thoughtfully. + +"Well," he said, "it's quite possible; he might have been too violent to +manage." + +"Why couldn't they have said so, then?" + +"H'm. Not knowing, can't say. What happened next?" + +"Next thing was, I asked the doctor what name I should give. He answered +in a kind of nervous way, 'No name; you needn't give any name. I know Dr +Congleton personally. Ask him to come, please.' So off I tooled, and found +old Congers just thinking of turning in. + +" 'My clients are sometimes unnecessarily discreet', he remarked in his +pompous way when I told him about the arrival, and of course he added his +usual platitude about our reputation for discretion. + +"I went back with him to the waiting-room, and just stood at the door long +enough to see him hail the doctor chap very cordially and be introduced to +the patient's cousin, and then I came away. Rather rum, isn't it?" + +"You've certainly made the best of the yarn," said Escott with a laugh. + +"By George, if you'd been there you'd have thought it funny too." + +"Well, good-night, I'm off. We'll probably hear to-morrow what it's all +about." + +But in the morning there was little more to be learned about the +new-comer's history and antecedents. Dr Congleton spoke of the matter to +the two young men, with the pompous cough that signified extreme +discretion. + +"Brought by an old friend of mine," he said. "A curious story, Escott, but +quite intelligible. There seem to be the best reasons for answering no +questions about him; you understand?" + +"Certainly, sir," said the two assistants, with the more assurance as they +had no information to give. + +"I am perfectly satisfied, mind you--perfectly satisfied," added their +chief. + +"By the way, sir," Sherlaw ventured to remark, "hadn't they given him +something in the way of a sleeping-draught?" + +"Eh? Indeed? I hardly think so, Sherlaw, I hardly think so. Case of +reaction entirely. Good morning." + +"Congleton seems satisfied," remarked Escott. + +"I'll tell you what," said the junior, profoundly. "Old Congers is a very +good chap, and all that, but he's not what I should call extra sharp. _I_ +should feel uncommon suspicious." + +"H'm," replied Escott. "As you say, our worthy chief is not extra sharp. +But that's not our business, after all." + + + + + CHAPTER II. + + +"By the way," said Escott, a couple of days later, "how is your mysterious +man getting on? I haven't seen him myself yet." + +Sherlaw laughed. + +"He's turning out a regular sportsman, by George! For the first day he was +more or less in the same state in which he arrived. Then he began to wake +up and ask questions. 'What the devil is this place?' he said to me in the +evening. It may sound profane, but he was very polite, I assure you. I +told him, and he sort of raised his eyebrows, smiled, and thanked me like +a Prime Minister acknowledging an obligation. Since then he has steadily +developed sporting, not to say frisky, tastes. He went out this morning, +and in five minutes had his arm round one of the prettiest nurses' waist. +And she didn't seem to mind much either, by George!" + +"He'll want a bit of looking after, I take it." + +"Seems to me he is uncommonly capable of taking care of himself. The rest +of the establishment will want looking after, though." + +From this time forth the mysterious gentleman began to regularly take the +air and to be remarked, and having once remarked him, people looked again. + +Mr Francis Beveridge, for such it appeared was his name, was distinguished +even for Clankwood. Though his antecedents were involved in mystery, so +much confidence was placed in Dr Congleton's discrimination that the +unknown stranger was at once received on the most friendly terms by every +one; and, to tell the truth, it would have been hard to repulse him for +long. His manner was perfect, his conversation witty to the extremest +verge of propriety, and his clothes, fashionable in cut and of +unquestionable fit, bore on such of the buttons as were made of metal the +hall mark of a leading London firm. He wore the longest and most silky +moustaches ever seen, and beneath them a short well-tended beard completed +his resemblance--so the ladies declared--to King Charles of unhappy memory. +The melancholic Mr Jones (quondam author of 'Sunflowers--A Lyrical Medley') +declared, indeed, that for Mr Beveridge shaving was prohibited, and darkly +whispered "suicidal," but his opinion was held of little account. + +It was upon a morning about a week after his arrival that Dr Escott, alone +in the billiard-room, saw him enter. Escott had by this time made his +acquaintance, and, like almost everybody else, had already succumbed to +the fascination of his address. + +"Good morning, doctor," he said; "I wish you to do me a trifling favour, a +mere bending of your eyes." + +Escott laughed. + +"I shall be delighted. What is it?" + +Mr Beveridge unbuttoned his waistcoat and displayed his shirt-front. + +"I only want you to be good enough to read the inscription written here." + +The doctor bent down. + +" 'Francis Beveridge,' " he said. "That's all I see." + +"And that's all I see," said Mr Beveridge. "Now what can you read here? I +am not troubling you?" + +He held out his handkerchief as he spoke. + +"Not a bit," laughed the doctor, "but I only see 'Francis Beveridge' here +too, I'm afraid." + +"Everything has got it," said Mr Beveridge, shaking his head, it would be +hard to say whether humorously or sadly. " 'Francis Beveridge' on +everything. It follows, I suppose, that I am Francis Beveridge?" + +"What else?" asked Escott, who was much amused. + +"That's just it. What else?" said the other. He smiled a peculiarly +charming smile, thanked the doctor with exaggerated gratitude, and +strolled out again. + +"He is a rum chap," reflected Escott. + +And indeed in the outside world he might safely have been termed rather +rum, but here in this backwater, so full of the oddest flotsam, his +waywardness was rather less than the average. He had, for instance, a +diverting habit of modifying the time, and even the tune, of the hymns on +Sunday, and he confessed to having kissed all the nurses and housemaids +except three. But both Escott and Sherlaw declared they had never met a +more congenial spirit. Mr Beveridge's game of billiards was quite +remarkable even for Clankwood, where the enforced leisure of many of the +noblemen and gentlemen had made them highly proficient on the spot; he +showed every promise, on his rare opportunities, of being an unusually +entertaining small hour, whisky-and-soda _raconteur_; in fact, he was +evidently a man whose previous career, whatever it might have been (and +his own statements merely served to increase the mystery round this +point), had led him through many humorous by-paths, and left him with few +restrictive prejudices. + +November became December, and to all appearances he had settled down in +his new residence with complete resignation, when that unknowable factor +that upsets so many calculations came upon the scene,--the factor, I mean, +that wears a petticoat. + +Mr Beveridge strolled into Escott's room one morning to find the doctor +inspecting a mixed assortment of white kid gloves. + +"Do these mean past or future conquests?" he asked with his smile. + +"Both," laughed the doctor. "I'm trying to pick out a clean pair for the +dance to-night." + +"You go a-dancing, then?" + +"Don't you know it's our own monthly ball here?" + +"Of course," said Mr Beveridge, passing his hand quickly across his brow. +"I must have heard, but things pass so quickly through my head nowadays." + +He laughed a little conventional laugh, and gazed at the gloves. + +"You are coming, of course?" said Escott. + +"If you can lend me a pair of these. Can you spare one?" + +"Help yourself," replied the doctor. + +Mr Beveridge selected a pair with the care of a man who is particular in +such matters, put them in his pocket, thanked the doctor, and went out. + +"Hope he doesn't play the fool," thought Escott. + +Invitations to the balls at Clankwood were naturally in great demand +throughout the county, for nowhere were noblemen so numerous and +divinities so tangible. Carriages and pairs rolled up one after another, +the mansion glittered with lights, the strains of the band could be heard +loud and stirring or low and faintly all through the house. + +"Who is that man dancing opposite my daughter?" asked the Countess of +Grillyer. + +"A Mr Beveridge," replied Dr Congleton. + +Mr Beveridge, in fact, the mark of all eyes, was dancing in a set of +lancers. The couple opposite to him consisted of a stout elderly gentleman +who, doubtless for the best reasons, styled himself the Emperor of the two +Americas, and a charming little pink and flaxen partner--the Lady Alicia à +Fyre, as everybody who was anybody could have told you. The handsome +stranger moved, as might be expected, with his accustomed grace and air of +distinction, and, probably to convince his admirers that there was nothing +meretricious in his performance, he carried his hands in his pockets the +whole time. This certainly caused a little inconvenience to his partner, +but to be characteristic in Clankwood one had to step very far out of the +beaten track. + +For two figures the Emperor snorted disapproval, but at the end of the +third, when Mr Beveridge had been skipping round the outskirts of the set, +his hands still thrust out of sight, somewhat to the derangement of the +customary procedure, he could contain himself no longer. + +"Hey, young man!" he asked in his most stentorian voice, as the music +ceased, "are you afraid of having your pockets picked?" + +"Alas!" replied Mr Beveridge, "it would take two men to do that." + +"Huh!" snorted the Emperor, "you are so d--d strong, are you?" + +"I mean," answered his _vis-à-vis_ with his polite smile, "that it would +take one man to put something in and another to take it out." + +This remark not only turned the laugh entirely on Mr Beveridge's side, but +it introduced the upsetting factor. + + + + + CHAPTER III. + + +The Lady Alicia à Fyre, though of the outer everyday world herself, had, +in common with most families of any pretensions to ancient dignity, a +creditable sprinkling of uncles and cousins domiciled in Clankwood, and so +she frequently attended these dances. + +To-night her eye had been caught by a tall, graceful figure executing a +_pas seul_ in the middle of the room with its hands in its pockets. The +face of this gentleman was so composed and handsome, and he seemed so +oblivious to the presence of everybody else, that her interest was +immediately excited. During the set of lancers in which he was her +_vis-à-vis_ she watched him furtively with a growing feeling of +admiration. She had never heard him say a word, and it was with a +sensation of the liveliest interest that she listened to his brief passage +with her partner. At his final retort her tender heart was overcome with +pity. He was poor, then, or at least he was allowed the use of no money. +And all of him that was outside his pockets seemed so sane and so +gentlemanly; it seemed a pity to let him lack a little sympathy. + +The Lady Alicia might be described as a becoming frock stuffed with +sentiment. Through a pair of large blue eyes she drank in romance, and +with the reddest and most undecided of lips she felt a vague desire to +kiss something. At the end of the dance she managed by a series of little +manoeuvres to find herself standing close to his elbow. She sighed twice, +but he still seemed absorbed in his thoughts. Then with a heroic effort +she summed up her courage, and said in a low and rather shaky voice, +"You--you--you are unha--appy." + +Mr Beveridge turned and looked down on her with great interest. Her eyes +met his for a moment and straightway sought the floor. Thus she saw +nothing of a smile that came and went like the shadow of a puff of smoke. +He took his hands out of his pockets, folded his arms, and, with an air of +the deepest dejection, sighed heavily. She took courage and looked up +again, and then, as he only gazed into space in the most romantically +melancholy fashion and made no answer, she asked again very timidly, +"Wh--what is the matter?" + +Without saying a word Mr Beveridge bent courteously and offered her his +right arm. She took it with the most delicious trepidation, glancing round +hurriedly to see whether the Countess noticed her. Another dance was just +beginning, and in the general movement her mysterious acquaintance led her +without observation to a seat in the window of a corridor. There he +pressed her hand gently, stroked his long moustaches for a minute, and +then said, with an air of reflection: "There are three ways of making a +woman like one. I am slightly out of practice. Would you be kind enough to +suggest a method of procedure?" + +Such a beginning was so wholly unexpected that Lady Alicia could only give +a little gasp of consternation. Her companion, after pausing an instant +for a reply, went on in the same tone, "I am aware that I have begun well. +I attracted your attention, I elicited your sympathy, and I pressed your +hand; but for the life of me I can't remember what I generally do next." + +Poor Lady Alicia, who had come with a bucketful of sympathy ready to be +gulped down by this unfortunate gentleman, was only able to stammer, "I--I +really don't know, Mr----" + +"Hamilton," said Mr Beveridge, unblushingly. "At least that name belongs +to me as much as anything can be said to in a world where my creditors +claim my money and Dr Congleton my person." + +"You are confined and poor, you mean?" asked Lady Alicia, beginning to see +her way again. + +"Poor and confined, to put them in their proper order, for if I had the +wherewithal to purchase a balloon I should certainly cease to be +confined." + +His admirer found it hard to reply adequately to this, and Mr Beveridge +continued, "To return to the delicate subject from which we strayed, what +would you like me to do,--put my arm round your waist, relate my troubles, +or turn my back on you?" + +"Are--are those the three ways you spoke of--to make women like you, I +mean?" Lady Alicia ventured to ask, though she was beginning to wish the +sofa was larger. + +"They are examples of the three classical methods: cuddling, humbugging, +and piquing. Which do you prefer?" + +"Tell me about your--your troubles," she answered, gaining courage a +little. + +"You belong to the sex which makes no mention of figs and spades," he +rejoined; "but I understand you to mean that you prefer humbugging." + +He drew a long face, sighed twice, and looking tenderly into Lady Alicia's +blue eyes, began in a gentle, reminiscent voice, "My boyhood was troubled +and unhappy: no kind words, no caresses. I was beaten by a cruel +stepfather, ignored and insulted for my physical deformities by a +heartless stepmother." + +He stopped to sigh again, and Lady Alicia, with a boldness that surprised +herself, and a perspicacity that would have surprised her friends, asked, +"How could they--I mean, were they _both_ step?" + +"Several steps," he replied; "in fact, quite a long journey." + +With this explanation Lady Alicia was forced to remain satisfied; but as +he had paused a second time, and seemed to be immersed in the study of his +shoes, she inquired again, "You spoke of physical infirmities; do you +mean----?" + +"Deformities," he corrected; "up to the age of fourteen years I could only +walk sideways, and my hair parted in the middle." + +He spoke so seriously that these unusual maladies seemed to her the most +touching misfortunes she had ever heard of. She murmured gently, "Yes?" + +"As the years advanced," Mr Beveridge continued, "and I became more nearly +the same weight as my stepfather, my life grew happier. It was decided to +send me to college, so I was provided with an insufficient cheque, a +complete set of plated forks, and three bath-towels, and despatched to the +University of Oxford. At least I think that was the name of the +corporation which took my money and endeavoured to restrict my habits, +though, to confess the truth, my memory is not what it used to be. There I +learned wisdom by the practice of folly--the most amusing and effective +method. My tutor used to tell me I had some originality. I apologised for +its presence in such a respectable institution, and undertook to pass an +examination instead. I believe I succeeded: I certainly remember giving a +dinner to celebrate something. Thereupon at my own expense the University +inflicted a degree upon me, but I was shortly afterwards compensated by +the death of my uncle and my accession to his estates. Having enjoyed a +university education, and accordingly possessing a corrected and regulated +sentiment, I was naturally inconsolable at the decease of this venerable +relative, who for so long had shown a kindly interest in the poor orphan +lad." + +He stopped to sigh again, and Lady Alicia asked with great interest, "But +your step-parents, you always had them, hadn't you?" + +"Never!" he replied, sadly. + +"Never?" she exclaimed in some bewilderment. + +"Certainly not often," he answered, "and oftener than not, never. If you +had told me beforehand you wished to hear my history, I should have pruned +my family tree into a more presentable shape. But if you will kindly tell +me as I go along which of my relatives you disapprove of, and who you +would like to be introduced, I shall arrange the plot to suit you." + +"I only wish to hear the true story, Mr Hamilton." + +"Fortescue," he corrected. "I certainly prefer to be called by one name at +a time, but never by the same twice running." + +He smiled so agreeably as he said this that Lady Alicia, though puzzled +and a little hurt, could not refrain from smiling back. + +"Let me hear the rest," she said. + +"It is no truer than the first part, but quite as entertaining. So, if you +like, I shall endeavour to recall the series of painful episodes that +brought me to Clankwood," he answered, very seriously. + +Lady Alicia settled herself comfortably into one corner of the sofa and +prepared to feel affected. But at that moment the portly form of Dr +Congleton appeared from the direction of the ballroom with a still more +portly dowager on his arm. + +"My mother!" exclaimed Lady Alicia, rising quickly to her feet. + +"Indeed?" said Mr Beveridge, who still kept his seat. "She certainly looks +handsome enough." + +This speech made Lady Alicia blush very becomingly, and the Countess +looked at her sharply. + +"Where have you been, Alicia?" + +"The room was rather warm, mamma, and----" + +"In short, madam," interrupted Mr Beveridge, rising and bowing, "your +charming daughter wished to study a lunatic at close quarters. I am mad, +and I obligingly raved. Thus----" He ran one hand through his hair so as to +make it fall over his eyes, blew out his cheeks, and uttering a yell, +sprang high into the air, and descended in a sitting posture on the floor. + +"That, madam, is a very common symptom," he explained, with a smile, +smoothing down his hair again, "as our friend Dr Congleton will tell you." + +Both the doctor and the Countess were too astonished to make any reply, so +he turned again to Lady Alicia, and offering his arm, said, "Let me lead +you back to our fellow-fools." + +"Is he safe?" whispered the Countess. + +"I--I believe so," replied Dr Congleton in some confusion; "but I shall +have him watched more carefully." + +As they entered the room Mr Beveridge whispered, "Will you meet a poor +lunatic again?" And the Lady Alicia pressed his arm. + + + + + CHAPTER IV. + + +On the morning after the dance Dr Congleton summoned Dr Escott to his +room. + +"Escott," he began, "we must keep a little sharper eye on Mr Beveridge." + +"Indeed, sir?" said Escott; "he seems to me harmless enough." + +"Nevertheless, he must be watched. Lady Grillyer was considerably alarmed +by his conduct last night, and a client who has confided so many of her +relatives to my care must be treated with the greatest regard. I receive +pheasants at Christmas from no fewer than fourteen families of title, and +my reputation for discretion is too valuable to be risked. When Mr +Beveridge is not under your own eyes you must see that Moggridge always +keeps him in sight." + +Accordingly Moggridge, a burly and seasoned attendant on refractory +patients, was told off to keep an unobtrusive eye on that accomplished +gentleman. His duties appeared light enough, for, as I have said, Mr +Beveridge's eccentricities had hitherto been merely of the most playful +nature. + +After luncheon on this same day he gave Escott twelve breaks and a beating +at billiards, and then having borrowed and approved of one of his cigars, +he strolled into the park. If he intended to escape observation, he +certainly showed the most skilful strategy, for he dodged deviously +through the largest trees, and at last, after a roundabout ramble, struck +a sheltered walk that ran underneath the high, glass-decked outer wall. It +was a sunny winter afternoon. The boughs were stripped, and the leaves lay +littered on the walk or flickered and stirred through the grass. In this +spot the high trees stood so close and the bare branches were so thick +that there was still an air of quiet and seclusion where he paced and +smoked. Every now and then he stopped and listened and looked at his +watch, and as he walked backwards and forwards an amused smile would come +and go. + +All at once he heard something move on the far side of the wall: he paused +to make sure, and then he whistled, the sounds outside ceased, and in a +moment something fell softly behind him. He turned quickly and snatched up +a little buttonhole of flowers with a still smaller note tied to the +stems. + +"An uncommonly happy idea," he said to himself, looking at the missive +with the air of one versed in these matters. Then he leisurely proceeded +to unfold and read the note. + +"To my friend," he read, "if I may call you a friend, since I have known +you only _such a short time_--may I? This is just to express my sympathy, +and although I cannot express it well, still perhaps you will forgive my +feeble effort!!" + +At this point, just as he was regarding the double mark of exclamation +with reminiscent entertainment, a plaintive voice from the other side of +the wall cried in a stage whisper, "Have you got it?" + +Mr Beveridge composed his face, and heaving his shoulders to his ears in +the effort, gave vent to a prodigious sigh. + +"A million thanks, my fairest and kindest of friends," he answered in the +same tone. "I read it now: I drink it in, I----" + +He kissed the back of his hand loudly two or three times, sighed again, +and continued his reading. + +"I wish I could help you," it ran, "but I am afraid I cannot, as the world +is _so censorious_, is it not? So you must accept a friend's sympathy if +it does not seem to you too bold and forward of her!!! Perhaps we may meet +again, as I sometimes go to Clankwood. _Au revoir._--Your sympathetic +well-wisher. A. À. F." + +He folded it up and put it in his waistcoat-pocket, then he exclaimed in +an audible aside, his voice shaking with the most affecting thrill, +"_Perhaps_ we may meet again! Only _perhaps!_ O Alicia!" And then dropping +again into a stage whisper, he asked, "Are you still there, Lady Alicia?" + +A timorous voice replied, "Yes, Mr Fortescue. But I really _must_ go now!" + +"Now? So soon?" + +"I have stayed too long already." + +"'Tis better to have stayed too long than never to wear stays at all," +replied Mr Beveridge. + +There was no response for a moment. Then a low voice, a little hurt and a +good deal puzzled, asked with evident hesitation, "What--what did you say, +Mr Fortescue?" + +"I said that Lady Alicia's stay cannot be too long," he answered, softly. + +"But--but what good can I be?" + +"The good you cannot help being." + +There was another moment's pause, then the voice whispered, "I don't quite +understand you." + +"My Alicia understands me not!" Mr Beveridge soliloquised in another +audible aside. Aloud, or rather in a little lower tone, he answered, "I am +friendless, poor, and imprisoned. What is the good in your staying? Ah, +Lady Alicia! But why should I detain you? Go, fair friend! Go and forget +poor Francis Beveridge!" + +There came a soft, surprised answer, "Francis Beveridge?" + +"Alas! you have guessed my secret. Yes, that is the name of the unhappiest +of mortals." + +As he spoke these melancholy words he threw away the stump of his cigar, +took another from his case, and bit off the end. + +The voice replied, "I shall remember it--among my friends." + +Mr Beveridge struck a match. + +"H'sh! Whatever is that?" cried the voice in alarm. + +"A heart breaking," he replied, lighting his cigar. + +"Don't talk like that," said the voice. "It--it distresses me." There was a +break in the voice. + +"And, alas! between distress and consolation there are fifteen +perpendicular feet of stone and mortar and the relics of twelve hundred +bottles of Bass," he replied. + +"Perhaps,"--the voice hesitated--"perhaps we may see each other some day." + +"Say to-morrow at four o'clock," he suggested, pertinently. "If you could +manage to be passing up the drive at that hour." + +There was another pause. + +"Perhaps----" the voice began. + +At that moment he heard the sharp crack of a branch behind him, and +turning instantly he spied the uncompromising countenance of Moggridge +peering round a tree about twenty paces distant. Lack of presence of mind +and quick decision were not amongst Mr Beveridge's failings. He struck a +theatrical attitude at once, and began in a loud voice, gazing up at the +tops of the trees, "He comes! A stranger comes! Yes, my fair friend, we +may meet again. _Au revoir_, but only for a while! Ah, that a breaking +heart should be lit for a moment and then the lamp be put out!" + +Meanwhile Moggridge was walking towards him. + +"Ha, Moggridge!" he cried. "Good day." + +"Time you was goin' in, sir," said Moggridge, stolidly; and to himself he +muttered, "He's crackeder than I thought, a-shoutin' and a-ravin' to +hisself. Just as well I kept a heye on 'im." + +Like most clever people, Mr Beveridge generally followed the line of least +resistance. He slipped his arm through his attendant's, shouted a farewell +apparently to some imaginary divinity overhead, and turned towards the +house. + +"This is an unexpected pleasure," he remarked. + +"Yes, sir," replied Moggridge. + +"Funny thing your turning up. Out for a walk, I suppose?" + +"For a stroll, sir--that's to say----" he stopped. + +"That on these chilly afternoons the dear good doctor is afraid of my +health?" + +"That's kind o' it, sir." + +"But of course I'm not supposed to notice anything, eh?" + +Moggridge looked a trifle uncomfortable and was discreetly silent. Mr +Beveridge smiled at his own perspicacity, and then began in the most +friendly tone, "Well, I feel flattered that so stout a man has been told +off to take care of me. What an arm you've got, man." + +"Pretty fair, sir," said Moggridge, complacently. + +"And I am thankful, too," continued Mr Beveridge, "that you're a man of +some sense. There are a lot of fools in the world, Moggridge, and I'm +somewhat of an epicure in the matter of heads." + +"Mine 'as been considered pretty sharp," Moggridge admitted, with a +gratified relaxation of his wooden countenance. + +"Have a cigar?" his patient asked, taking out his case. + +"Thank you, sir, I don't mind if I do." + +"You will find it a capital smoke. I don't throw them away on every one." + +Moggridge, completely thawed, lit his cigar and slackened his pace, for +such frank appreciation of his merits was rare in a critical world. + +"You can perhaps believe, Moggridge," said Mr Beveridge, reflectively, +"that one doesn't often have the chance of talking confidentially to a man +of sense in Clankwood." + +"No, sir, I should himagine not." + +"And so one has sometimes to talk to oneself." + +This was said so sadly that Moggridge began to feel uncomfortably +affected. + +"Ah, Moggridge, one cannot always keep silence, even when one least wants +to be overheard. Have you ever been in love, Moggridge?" + +The burly keeper changed countenance a little at this embarrassingly +direct question, and answered diffidently, "Well, sir, to be sure men is +men and woming will be woming." + +"The deuce, they will!" replied Mr Beveridge, cordially; "and it's rather +hard to forget 'em, eh?" + +"Hindeed it is, sir." + +"I remembered this afternoon, but I should like you as a good chap to +forget. You won't mention my moment of weakness, Moggridge?" + +"No, sir," said Moggridge, stoutly. "I suppose I hought to report what I +sees, but I won't this time." + +"Thank you," said Mr Beveridge, pressing his arm. "I had, you know, a +touch of the sun in India, and I sometimes talk when I shouldn't. Though, +after all, that isn't a very uncommon complaint." + +And so it happened that no rumour prejudicial either to his sanity or to +the progress of his friendship with the Lady Alicia reached the ears of +the authorities. + + + + + CHAPTER V. + + +Towards four o'clock on the following afternoon Mr Beveridge and Moggridge +were walking leisurely down the long drive leading from the mansion of +Clankwood to the gate that opened on the humdrum outer world. Finding that +an inelastic matter of yards was all the tether he could hope for, Mr +Beveridge thought it best to take the bull by the horns, and make a +companion of this necessity. So he kept his attendant by his side, and +regaled him for some time with a series of improbable reminiscences and +tolerable cigars, till at last, round a bend of the avenue, a lady on +horseback came into view. As she drew a little nearer he stopped with an +air of great surprise and pleasure. + +"I believe, Moggridge, that must be Lady Alicia à Fyre!" he exclaimed. + +"It looks huncommon like her, sir," replied Moggridge. + +"I must really speak to her. She was"--and Mr Beveridge assumed his +inimitable air of manly sentiment--"she was one of my poor mother's dearest +friends. Do you mind, Moggridge, falling behind a little? In fact, if you +could step behind a tree and wait here for me, it would be pleasanter for +us both. We used to meet under happier circumstances, and, don't you know, +it might distress her to be reminded of my misfortunes." + +Such a reasonable request, beseechingly put by so fine a gentleman, could +scarcely be refused. Moggridge retired behind the trees that lined the +avenue, and Mr Beveridge advanced alone to meet the Lady Alicia. She +blushed very becomingly as he raised his hat. + +"I hardly expected to see you to-day, Mr Beveridge," she began. + +"I, on the other hand, have been thinking of nothing else," he replied. + +She blushed still deeper, but responded a little reprovingly, "It's very +polite of you to say so, but----" + +"Not a bit," said he. "I have a dozen equally well-turned sentences at my +disposal, and, they tell me, a most deluding way of saying them." + +Suddenly out of her depth again, poor Lady Alicia could only strike out at +random. + +"Who tell you?" she managed to say. + +"First, so far as my poor memory goes, my mother's lady's-maid informed me +of the fact; then I think my sister's governess," he replied, ticking off +his informants on his fingers with a half-abstracted air. "After that came +a number of more or less reliable individuals, and lastly the Lady Alicia +à Fyre." + +"Me? I'm sure I never said----" + +"None of them ever _said_," he interrupted. + +"But what have I done, then?" she asked, tightening her reins, and making +her horse fidget a foot or two farther away. + +"You have begun to be a most adorable friend to a most unfortunate man." + +Still Lady Alicia looked at him a little dubiously, and only said, "I--I +hope I'm not too friendly." + +"There are no degrees in friendly," he replied. "There are only aloofly, +friendly, and more than friendly." + +"I--I think I ought to be going on, Mr Beveridge." + +That experienced diplomatist perceived that it was necessary to further +embellish himself. + +"Are you fond of soldiers?" he asked, abruptly. + +"I beg your pardon?" she said in considerable bewilderment. + +"Does a red coat, a medal, and a brass band appeal to you? Are you apt to +be interested in her Majesty's army?" + +"I generally like soldiers," she admitted, still much surprised at the +turn the conversation had taken. + +"Then I was a soldier." + +"But--really?" + +"I held a commission in one of the crackest cavalry regiments," he began +dramatically, and yet with a great air of sincerity. "I was considered one +of the most promising officers in the mess. It nearly broke my heart to +leave the service." + +He turned away his head. Lady Alicia was visibly affected. + +"I am so sorry!" she murmured. + +Still keeping his face turned away, he held out his hand and she pressed +it gently. + +"Sorrow cannot give me my freedom," he said. + +"If there is anything I can do----" she began. + +"Dismount," he said, looking up at her tenderly. + +Lady Alicia never quite knew how it happened, but certainly she found +herself standing on the ground, and the next moment Mr Beveridge was in +her place. + +"An old soldier," he exclaimed, gaily; "I can't resist the temptation of +having a canter." And with that he started at a gallop towards the gate. + +With a blasphemous ejaculation Moggridge sprang from behind his tree, and +set off down the drive in hot pursuit. + +Lady Alicia screamed, "Stop! stop! Francis--I mean, Mr Beveridge; stop, +please!" + +But the favorite of the crack regiment, despite the lady's saddle, sat his +steed well, and rapidly left cries and footsteps far behind. The lodge was +nearly half a mile away, and as the avenue wound between palisades of old +trees, the shouts became muffled, and when he looked over his shoulder he +saw in the stretch behind him no sign of benefactress or pursuer. By +continued exhortations and the point of his penknife he kept his horse at +full stretch; round the next bend he knew he should see the gates. + +"Five to one on the blank things being shut," he muttered. + +He swept round the curve, and there ahead of him he saw the gates grimly +closed, and at the lodge door a dismounted groom, standing beside his +horse. + +Only remarking "Damn!" he reined up, turned, and trotted quietly back +again. Presently he met Moggridge, red in the face, muddy as to his +trousers, and panting hard. + +"Nice little nag this, Moggridge," he remarked, airily. + +"Nice sweat you've give me," rejoined his attendant, wrathfully. + +"You don't mean to say you ran after me?" + +"I does mean to say," Moggridge replied grimly, seizing the reins. + +"Want to lead him? Very well--it makes us look quite like the Derby winner +coming in." + +"Derby loser you means, thanks to them gates bein' shut." + +"Gates shut? Were they? I didn't happen to notice." + +"No, o' course not," said Moggridge, sarcastically; "that there sunstroke +you got in India prevented you, I suppose?" + +"Have a cigar?" + +To this overture Moggridge made no reply. Mr Beveridge laughed and +continued lightly, "I had no idea you were so fond of exercise. I'd have +given you a lead all round the park if I'd known." + +"You'd 'ave given me a lead all round the county if them gates 'ad been +open." + +"It might have been difficult to stop this fiery animal," Mr Beveridge +admitted. "But now, Moggridge, the run is over. I think I can take Lady +Alicia's horse back to her myself." + +Moggridge smiled grimly. + +"You won't let go?" + +"No fears." + +Mr Beveridge put his hand behind his back and silently drove the penknife +a quarter of an inch into his mount's hind quarters. In an instant his +keeper felt himself being lifted nearly off his feet, and in another +actually deposited on his face. Off went the accomplished horseman again +at top speed, but this time back to Lady Alicia. He saw her standing by +the side of the drive, her handkerchief to her eyes, a penitent and +disconsolate little figure. When she heard him coming, she dried her eyes +and looked up, but her face was still tearful. + +"Well, I am back from my ride," he remarked in a perfectly usual voice, +dismounting as he spoke. + +"The man!" she cried, "where is that dreadful man?" + +"What man?" he asked in some surprise. + +"The man who chased you." + +Mr Beveridge laughed aloud, at which Lady Alicia took fresh refuge in her +handkerchief. + +"He follows on foot," he replied. + +"Did he catch you? Oh, why didn't you escape altogether?" she sobbed. + +Mr Beveridge looked at her with growing interest. + +"I had begun to forget my petticoat psychology," he reflected (aloud, +after his unconventional fashion). + +"Oh, here he comes," she shuddered. "All blood! Oh, what have you done to +him?" + +"On my honour, nothing,--I merely haven't washed his face." + +By this time Moggridge was coming close upon them. + +"You won't forget a poor soldier?" said Mr Beveridge in a lower voice. + +There was no reply. + +"A _poor_ soldier," he added, with a sigh, glancing at her from the corner +of his eye. "So poor that even if I had got out, I could only have ridden +till I dropped." + +"Would you accept----?" she began, timidly. + +"What day?" he interrupted, hurriedly. + +"Tuesday," she hesitated. + +"Four o'clock, again. Same place as before. When I whistle throw it over +at once." + +Before they had time to say more, Moggridge, blood- and gravel-stained, +came up. + +"It's all right, miss," he said, coming between them; "I'll see that he +plays no more of 'is tricks. There's nothin' to be afrightened of." + +"Stand back!" she cried; "don't come near me!" + +Moggridge was too staggered at this outburst to say a word. + +"Stand away!" she said, and the bewildered attendant stood away. She +turned to Mr Beveridge. + +"Now, will you help me up?" + +She mounted lightly, said a brief farewell, and, forgetting all about the +call at Clankwood she had ostensibly come to pay, turned her horse's head +towards the lodge. + +"Well, I'm blowed!" said Moggridge. + +"They do blow one," his patient assented. + +Naturally enough the story of this equestrian adventure soon ran through +Clankwood. The exact particulars, however, were a little hard to collect, +for while Moggridge supplied many minute and picturesque details, +illustrating his own activity and presence of mind and the imminent peril +of the Lady Alicia, Mr Beveridge recounted an equally vivid story of a +runaway horse recovered by himself to its fair owner's unbounded +gratitude. Official opinion naturally accepted the official account, and +for the next few days Mr Beveridge became an object of considerable +anxiety and mistrust. + +"I can't make the man out," said Sherlaw to Escott. "I had begun to think +there was nothing much the matter with him." + +"No more there is," replied Escott. "His memory seems to me to have +suffered from something, and he simply supplies its place in conversation +from his imagination, and in action from the inspiration of the moment. +The methods of society are too orthodox for such an aberration, and as his +friends doubtless pay a handsome fee to keep him here, old Congers labels +him mad and locks the door on him." + +A day or two afterwards official opinion was a little disturbed. Lady +Alicia, in reply to anxious inquiries, gave a third version of the +adventure, from which nothing in particular could be gathered except that +nothing in particular had happened. + +"What do you make of this, Escott?" asked Dr Congleton, laying her note +before his assistant. + +"Merely that a woman wrote it." + +"Hum! I suppose that _is_ the explanation." + +Upon which the doctor looked profound and went to lunch. + + + + + CHAPTER VI. + + +"Two five-pound notes, half-a-sovereign, and seven and sixpence in +silver," said Mr Beveridge to himself. "Ah, and a card." + +On the card was written, "From a friend, if you will accept it. A." + +He was standing under the wall, in the secluded walk, holding a little +lady's purse in his hand, and listening to two different footsteps. One +little pair of feet were hurrying away on the farther side of the high +wall, another and larger were approaching him at a run. + +"Wot's he bin up to now, I wonder," Moggridge panted to himself--for the +second pair of feet belonged to him. "Shamming nose-bleed and sending me +in for an 'andkerchief, and then sneaking off here by 'isself!" + +"What a time you've been," said Mr Beveridge, slipping the purse with its +contents into his pocket. "I was so infernally cold I had to take a little +walk. Got the handkerchief?" + +In silence and with a suspicious solemnity Moggridge handed him the +handkerchief, and they turned back for the house. + +"Now for a balloon," Mr Beveridge reflected. + +Certainly it was cold. The frost nipped sharp that night, and next morning +there were ice gardens on the windows, and the park lay white all through +the winter sunshine. + +By evening the private lake was reported to be bearing, and the next day +it hummed under the first skaters. Hardly necessary to say Mr Beveridge +was among the earliest of them, or that he was at once the object of +general admiration and envy. He traced "vines" and "Q's," and performed +wonderful feats on one leg all morning. At lunch he was in the best of +spirits, and was off again at once to the ice. + +When he reached the lake in the afternoon the first person he spied was +Lady Alicia, and five minutes afterwards they were sailing off together +hand in hand. + +"I knew you would come to-day," he remarked. + +"How _could_ you have known? It was by the merest chance I happened to +come." + +"It has always been by the merest chance that any of them have ever come." + +"Who have ever come?" she inquired, with a vague feeling that he had said +something he ought not to have, and that she was doing the same. + +"Many things," he smiled, "including purses. Which reminds me that I am +eternally your debtor." + +She blushed and said, "I hope you didn't mind." + +"Not much," he answered, candidly. "In my present circumstances a +five-pound note is more acceptable than a caress." + +The Lady Alicia again remembered the maidenly proprieties, and tried to +change the subject. + +"What beautiful ice!" she said. + +"The question now is," he continued, paying no heed to this diversion, +"what am I to do next?" + +"What do you mean?" she asked a little faintly, realising dimly that she +was being regarded as a fellow-conspirator in some unlawful project. + +"The wall is high, there is bottle-glass on the top, and I shall find it +hard to bring away a fresh pair of trousers, and probably draughty if I +don't. The gates are always kept closed, and it isn't worth any one's +while to open them for £10, 17s. 6d., less the price of a first-class +ticket up to town. What are we to do?" + +"We?" she gasped. + +"You and I," he explained. + +"But--but I can't _possibly_ do anything." + +" 'Can't possibly' is a phrase I have learned to misunderstand." + +"Really, Mr Beveridge, I mustn't do anything." + +"Mustn't is an invariable preface to a sin. Never use it; it's a +temptation in itself." + +"It wouldn't be right," she said, with quite a show of firmness. + +He looked at her a little curiously. For a moment he almost seemed +puzzled. Then he pressed her hand and asked tenderly, "Why not?" + +And in a half-audible aside he added, "That's the correct move, I think." + +"What did you say?" she asked. + +"I said, 'Why not?' " he answered, with increasing tenderness. + +"But you said something else." + +"I added a brief prayer for pity." + +Lady Alicia sighed and repeated a little less firmly. "It wouldn't be +right of me, Mr Beveridge." + +"But what would be wrong?" + +This was said with even more fervour. + +"My conscience--we are very particular, you know." + +"Who are 'we'?" + +"Papa is _very_ strict High Church." + +An idea seemed to strike Mr Beveridge, for he ruminated in silence. + +"I asked Mr Candles--our curate, you know," Lady Alicia continued, with a +heroic effort to make her position clear. + +"You told him!" he exclaimed. + +"Oh, I didn't say who it was--I mean what it was I thought of doing--I mean +the temptation--that is, the possibility. And he said it was very kind of +me to think of it; but I mustn't do anything, and he advised me to read a +book he gave me, and--and I mustn't think of it, really, Mr Beveridge." + +To himself Mr Beveridge repeated under his breath, "Archbishops, bishops, +deacons, curates, fast in Lent, and an anthem after the Creed. I think I +remember enough to pass." + +Then he assumed a very serious face, and said aloud, "Your scruples do +your heart credit. They have given me an insight into your deep and sweet +character, which emboldens me to make a confession." + +He stopped skating, folded his arms, and continued unblushingly, "I was +educated for the Church, but the prejudices of my parents, the immature +scepticism of youth, and some uncertainty about obtaining my +archbishopric, induced me in an unfortunate moment, which I never ceased +to bitterly regret, to quit my orders." + +"You are in orders?" she exclaimed. + +"I was in several. I cancelled them, and entered the Navy instead." + +"The Navy?" she asked, excusably bewildered by these rapid changes of +occupation. + +"For five years I was never ashore." + +"But," she hesitated--"but you said you were in the Army." + +Mr Beveridge gave her a look full of benignant compassion that made her, +she did not quite know why, feel terribly abashed. + +"My regiment was quartered at sea," he condescended to explain. "But in +time my conscience awoke. I announced my intention of resuming my charge. +My uncle was furious. My enemies were many. I was seized, thrown into this +prison-house, and now my only friend fails me." + +They were both silent. She ventured once to glance up at his face, and it +seemed to her that his eyes were moist--though perhaps it was that her own +were a little dim. + +"Let us skate on," he said abruptly, with a fine air of resignation. + +"By the way," he suddenly added, "I was extremely High Church, in fact +almost freezingly high." + +For five minutes they skated in silence, then Lady Alicia began softly, +"Supposing you--you went away----" + +"What is the use of talking of it?" he exclaimed, melodramatically. "Let +me forget my short-lived hopes!" + +"You _have_ a friend," she said, slowly. + +"A friend who tantalises me by 'supposings'!" + +"But supposing you did, Mr Beveridge, would you go back to your--did you +say you had a parish?" + +"I had: a large, populous, and happy parish. It is my one dream to sit +once more on its council and direct my curate." + +"Of course that makes a difference. Mr Candles didn't know all this." + +They had come by this time to the corner of a little island that lay not +far from the shore; in the channel ahead a board labelled "Danger" marked +a hidden spring; behind them the shining ice was almost bare of skaters, +for all but Dr Escott seemed to be leaving; on the bank they could see +Moggridge prowling about in the gathering dusk, a vigilant reminder of +captivity. Mr Beveridge took the whole scene in with, it is to be feared, +a militant rather than an episcopal eye. Then he suddenly asked, "Are you +alone?" + +"Yes." + +"You drive back?" + +"Ye--es." + +He took out his watch and made a brief calculation. + +"Go now, call at Clankwood or do anything else you like, and pass down the +drive again at a quarter to five." + +This sudden pinning of her irresolution almost took Lady Alicia's breath +away. + +"But I never said----" she began. + +"My dear friend," he interrupted, "in the hour of action only a fool ever +says. Come on." + +And while she still hesitated they were off again. + +"But----" she tried to expostulate. + +"My dearest friend," he whispered, "and my dear old vicarage!" + +He gave her no time to protest. Her skates were off, she was on her way to +her carriage, and he was striking out again for the middle of the lake +before she had time to collect her wits. + +He took out his watch and looked at the time. It was nearly a quarter-past +four. Then he came up to Escott, who by this time was the only other soul +on the ice. + +"About time we were going in," said Escott. + +"Give me half-an-hour more. I'll show you how to do that vine you +admired." + +"All right," assented the doctor. + +A minute or two later Mr Beveridge, as if struck by a sudden reflection, +exclaimed, "By Jove, there's that poor devil Moggridge freezing to death +on shore. Can't you manage to look after so dangerous a lunatic yourself? +It is his tea-time, too." + +"Hallo, so he is," replied Escott; "I'll send him up." + +And so there were only left the two men on the ice. + +For a little the lesson went on, and presently, leaving the doctor to +practise, Mr Beveridge skated away by himself. He first paused opposite a +seat on the bank over which hung Dr Escott's great fur coat. This +spectacle appeared to afford him peculiar pleasure. Then he looked at his +watch. It was half-past four. He shut the watch with a click, threw a +glance at his pupil, and struck out for the island. If the doctor had been +looking, he might have seen him round it in the gloaming. + +Dr Escott, leaning far on his outside edge, met him as he returned. + +"What's that under your coat?" he asked. + +"A picture I intend to ask your opinion on presently," replied Mr +Beveridge; and he added, with his most charming air, "But now, before we +go in, let me give you a ride on one of these chairs, doctor." + +They started off, the pace growing faster and faster, and presently Dr +Escott saw that they were going behind the island. + +"Look out for the spring!" he cried. + +"It must be bearing now," replied Mr Beveridge, striking out harder than +ever; "they have taken away the board." + +"All right," said the doctor, "on you go." + +As he spoke he felt a violent push, and the chair, slewing round as it +went, flew on its course unguided. Mr Beveridge's skates rasped on the ice +with a spray of white powder as he stopped himself suddenly. Ahead of him +there was a rending crack, and Dr Escott and his chair disappeared. Mr +Beveridge laughed cheerfully, and taking from under his coat a board with +the legend "Danger" printed in large characters across its face, he placed +it beside the jagged hole. + +"Here is the picture, doctor," he said, as a dripping, gasping head came +up for the second time. "I must ask a thousand pardons for this--shall I +say, liberty? But, as you know, I'm off my head. Good night. Let me +recommend a hot drink when you come out. There are only five feet of +water, so you won't drown." And with that he skated rapidly away. + +Escott had a glimpse of him vanishing round the corner of the island, and +then the ice broke again, and down he went. Four, five, six times he made +a desperate effort to get out, and every time the thin ice tore under his +hands, and he slipped back again. By the seventh attempt he had broken his +way to the thicker sheet; he got one leg up, slipped, got it up again, and +at last, half numbed and wholly breathless, he was crawling circumspectly +away. When at last he ventured to rise to his feet, he skated with all the +speed he could make to the seat where he had left his coat. A pair of +skates lay there instead, but the coat had vanished. Dr Escott's +philosophical estimate of Mr Beveridge became considerably modified. + +"Thank the Lord, he can't get out of the grounds," he said to himself; +"what a dangerous devil he is! But he'll be sorry for this performance, or +I'm mistaken." + +When he arrived at the house his first inquiries were for his tutor in the +art of vine-cutting, and he was rather surprised to hear that he had not +yet returned, for he only imagined himself the victim of a peculiarly +ill-timed practical joke. + +Men with lanterns were sent out to search the park; and still there was no +sign of Mr Beveridge. Inquiries were made at the lodge, but the gatekeeper +could swear that only a single carriage had passed through. Dr Congleton +refused at first to believe that he could possibly have got out. + +"Our arrangements are perfect,--the thing's absurd," he said, peremptorily. + +"That there man, sir," replied Moggridge, who had been summoned, "is the +slipperiest customer as ever I seed. 'E's hout, sir, I believe." + +"We might at least try the stations," suggested Escott, who had by this +time changed, and indulged in the hot drink recommended. + +The doctor began to be a little shaken. + +"Well, well," said he, "I'll send a man to each of the three stations +within walking distance; and whether he's out or in, we'll have him by +to-morrow morning. I've always taken care that he had no money in his +pockets." + +But what is a doctor's care against a woman's heart? For many to-morrows +Clankwood had to lament the loss of the gifted Francis Beveridge. + + + + + CHAPTER VII. + + +At sixteen minutes to five Mr Beveridge stood by the side of the Clankwood +Avenue, comfortably wrapped in Dr Escort's fur coat, and smoking with the +greatest relish one of Dr Escott's undeniable cigars. + +It was almost dark, the air bit keen, the dim park with its population of +black trees was filled with a frosty, eager stillness. All round the +invisible wall hemmed him in, the ten pounds, seventeen shillings, and +sixpence lay useless in his pocket till that was past, and his one hope +depended on a woman. But Mr Beveridge was an amateur in the sex, and he +smiled complacently as he smoked. + +He had waited barely three minutes when the quick clatter of a pair of +horses fell on his ears, and presently the lights of a carriage and pair, +driving swiftly away from Clankwood, raked the drive on either side. As +they rattled up to him he gave a shout to the coachman to stop, and +stepped right in front of the horses. With something that sounded unlike a +blessing, the pair were thrown almost on their haunches to check them in +time. Never stopping to explain, he threw open the door and sprang in; the +coachman, hearing no sound of protest, whipped up again, and Mr Beveridge +found himself rolling through the park of Clankwood in the Countess of +Grillyer's carriage with a very timid little figure by his side. Even in +that moment of triumphant excitement the excellence of his manners was +remarkable: the first thing he said was, "Do you mind smoking?" + +In her confusion of mind Lady Alicia could only reply "Oh no," and not +till some time afterwards did she remember that the odour of a cigar was +clinging and the Countess's nose unusually sensitive. + +After this first remark he leaned back in silence, gradually filling the +carriage with a blue-grey cloud, and looking out of the windows first on +one side and then on the other. They passed quickly through the lines of +trees and the open spaces of frosty park-land, they drew up at the lodge +for a moment, he heard his prison gates swing open, the harness jingled +and the hoofs began to clatter again, a swift vision of lighted windows +and a man looking on them incuriously swept by, and then they were rolling +over a country road between hedgerows and under the free stars. + +It was the Lady Alicia who spoke first. + +"I never thought you would really come," she said. + +"I have been waiting for that remark," he replied, with his most +irresistible smile; "now for some more practical conversation." + +As he did not immediately begin this conversation himself, her curiosity +overcame her, and she asked, "How did you manage to get out?" + +"As my friend Dr Escott offered no opposition, I walked away." + +"Did he really let you?" + +"He never even expostulated." + +"Then--then it's all right?" she said, with an inexplicable sensation of +disappointment. + +"Perfectly--so far." + +"But--didn't they object?" + +"Not yet," he replied; "objections to my movements are generally made +after they have been performed." + +Somehow she felt immensely relieved at this hint of opposition. + +"I'm so glad you got away," she whispered, and then repented in a flutter. + +"Not more so than I am," he answered, pressing her hand. + +"And now," he added, "I should like to know how near Ashditch Junction you +propose to take me." + +"Where are you going to, Mr Beveridge?" + +The "Mr Beveridge" was thrown in as a corrective to the hand-pressure. + +"To London; where else, my Alicia? With £10, 17s. 6d. in my pocket, I +shall be able to eat at least three good dinners, and, by the third of +them, if I haven't fallen on my feet it will be the first time I have +descended so unluckily." + +"But," she asked, considerably disconcerted, "I thought you were going +back to your parish." + +For a moment he too seemed a trifle put about. Then he replied readily, +"So I am, as soon as I have purchased the necessary outfit, restocked my +ecclesiastical library, and called on my bishop." + +She felt greatly relieved at this justification of her share in the +adventure. + +"Drop me at the nearest point to the station," he said. + +"I am afraid," she began--"I mean I think you had better get out soon. The +first road on the right will take you straight there, and we had better +not pass it." + +"Then I must bid you farewell," and he sighed most effectively. "Farewell, +my benefactress, my dear Alicia! Shall I ever see you, shall I ever hear +of you again?" + +"I might--I might just write once; if you will answer it: I mean if you +would care to hear from such a----" + +She found it difficult to finish, and prudently stopped. + +"Thanks," he replied cheerfully; "do,--I shall live in hopes. I'd better +stop the carriage now." + +He let down the window, when she said hastily, "But I don't know your +address." + +He reflected for an instant. "Care of the Archbishop of York will always +find me," he replied; and as if unwilling to let his emotion be observed, +he immediately put his head out of the window and called on the coachman +to stop. + +"Good-bye," he whispered, tenderly, squeezing her fingers with one hand +and opening the door with the other. + +"Don't quite forget me," she whispered back. + +"Never!" he replied, and was in the act of getting out when he suddenly +turned, and exclaimed, "I must be more out of practice than I thought; I +had almost forgotten the protested salute." + +And without further preamble the Lady Alicia found herself kissed at last. + +He jumped out and shut the door, and the carriage with its faint halo +clattered into the darkness. + +"They are wonderfully alike," he reflected. + +About twenty minutes later he walked leisurely into Ashditch Junction, and +having singled out the station-master, he accosted him with an air of +beneficient consideration and inquired how soon he could catch a train for +London. + +It appeared that the up express was not due for nearly three-quarters of +an hour. + +"A little too long to wait," he said to himself, as he turned up the +collar of his purloined fur coat to keep out the cold, and picked another +cigar from its rightful owner's case. + +By way of further defying the temperature and cementing his acquaintance +with the station-master, he offered to regale that gratified official with +such refreshments as the station bar provided. In the consumption of +whiskies-and-sodas (a beverage difficult to obtain in any quantity at +Clankwood) Mr Beveridge showed himself as accomplished as in every other +feat. In thirty-five minutes he had despatched no fewer than six, besides +completely winning the station-master's heart. As he had little more than +five minutes now to wait, he bade a genial farewell to the lady behind the +bar, and started to purchase his ticket. + +Hardly had he left the door of the refreshment-room when he perceived an +uncomfortably familiar figure just arrived, breathless with running, on +the opposite platform. The light of a lamp fell on his shining face: it +was Moggridge! + +A stout heart might be forgiven for sinking at the sight, but Mr Beveridge +merely turned to his now firm friends and said with his easiest air, "On +the opposite platform I perceive one of my runaway lunatics. Bring a +couple of stout porters as quickly as you can, for he is a person of much +strength and address. My name," he drew a card-case from the pocket of his +fur coat, "is, as you see, Dr Escott of Clankwood." + +Meanwhile Moggridge, after hurriedly investigating the platform he was on, +suddenly spied a tall fur-coated figure on the opposite side. Without a +moment's hesitation he sprang on to the rails, and had just mounted the +other side as the station-master and two porters appeared. + +Seeing his allies by his side Mr Beveridge never said a word, but, +throwing off his hat, he lowered his head, charged his keeper, and picking +him up by the knees threw him heavily on his back. Before he had a chance +of recovering himself the other three were seated on his chest employed in +winding a coil of rope round and round his prostrate form. + +Two minutes later Moggridge was sitting bound hand and foot in the booking +office, addressing an amused audience in a strain of perhaps excusable +exasperation, which however merely served to impress the Ashditch +officials with a growing sense of their address in capturing so dangerous +a lunatic. In the middle of this entertaining scene the London express +steamed in, and Mr Beveridge, courteously thanking the station-master for +his assistance, stepped into a first-class carriage. + +"I should be much obliged," he said, leaning on the door of his +compartment and blowing the smoke of Dr Escott's last Havannah lightly +from his lips, "if you would be kind enough to keep that poor fellow in +the station till to-morrow. It is rather too late to send him back now. +Good night, and many thanks." + +He pressed a coin into the station-master's hand, which that disappointed +official only discovered on emptying his pockets at night to be an +ordinary sixpence, the guard whistled, and one by one, smoothly and slowly +and then in a bright stream, the station lamps slipped by. The last of +them flitted into the night, and the train swung and rattled by a mile a +minute nearer to London town and farther from the high stone wall. There +was no other stop, and for a long hour the adventurer sat with his legs +luxuriously stretched along the cushions looking out into a fainter +duplicate of his carriage, pierced now and then by the glitter of brighter +points as they whisked by some wayside village, or crossed by the black +shadows of trees. The whole time he smiled contentedly, doubtless at the +prospect of his parish work. All at once he seemed stirred, and, turning +in his seat, laid his face upon the window, and pulled down the blind +behind his head, so that he could see into the night. He had spied the +first bright filaments of London. Quickly they spread into a twinkling +network, and then as quickly were shut out by the first line of suburb +houses; through the gaps they grew nearer and flared cheerfully; the train +hooted over an archway, and in the road below he had a glimpse of shop +windows and crowded pavements and moving omnibuses: he was in the world +again, and at the foretaste of all this life he laughed like a delighted +child. Last of all came the spread of shining rails and the red and yellow +lights of many signals, and then the high glass roof and long lamp-lit +platforms of St Euston's Cross. + +Unencumbered by luggage or plans, Mr Francis Beveridge stuck his hands +deep in his pockets and strolled aimlessly enough out of the station into +the tideway of the Euston Road. For a little he stood stock-still on the +pavement watching the throng of people and the perpetual buses and drays +and the jingling hansoms picking their way through it all. + +"For a man of brains," he moralised, "even though he be certified as +insane, for probably the best of reasons, this London has surely fools +enough to provide him with all he needs and more than he deserves. I shall +set out with my lantern like a second Diogenes to look for a foolish man." + +And so he strolled along again to the first opening southwards. That led +him through a region of dingy enough brick by day, but decked now with its +string of lamps and bright shop-windows here and there, and kept alive by +passing buses and cabs going and coming from the station. Farther on the +street grew gloomier, and a dark square with a grove of trees in the +middle opened off one side; but, rattle or quiet, flaring shops or +sad-looking lodgings, he found it all too fresh and amusing to hurry. + +"Back to my parish again," he said to himself, smiling broadly at the +drollery of the idea. "If I'm caught to-morrow, I'll at least have one +merry night in my wicked, humorous old charge." + +He reached Holborn and turned west in the happiest and most enviable of +moods; the very policemen seemed to cast a friendly eye on him; the frosty +air, he thought, made the lights burn brighter and the crowd move more +briskly than ever he had seen them. Suddenly the sight of a hairdresser's +saloon brought an inspiration. He stroked his beard, twisted his +moustaches half regretfully, and then exclaiming, "Exit Mr Beveridge," +turned into the shop. + + + + + + PART II. + + + + + CHAPTER I. + + +The Baron Rudolf von Blitzenberg sat by himself at a table in the +dining-room of the Hôtel Mayonaise, which, as everybody knows, is the +largest and most expensive in London. He was a young man of a florid and +burly Teutonic type and the most ingenuous countenance. Being possessed of +a curious and enterprising disposition, as well as the most ample means, +he had left his ancestral castle in Bavaria to study for a few months the +customs and politics of England. In the language he was already +proficient, and he had promised himself an amusing as well as an +instructive visit. But, although he had only arrived in London that +morning, he was already beginning to feel an uncomfortable apprehension +lest in both respects he should be disappointed. Though his introductions +were the best with which the British Ambassador could supply him, they +were only three or four in number,--for, not wishing to be hampered with +too many acquaintances, he had rather chosen quality than quantity: and +now, in the course of the afternoon, he had found to his chagrin that in +every case the families were out of town. In fact, so far as he could +learn, they were not even at their own country seats. One was abroad, +another gone to the seaside to recover from the mumps, or a third paying a +round of visits. + +The disappointment was sharp, he felt utterly at sea as to what he should +do, and he was already beginning to experience the loneliness of a single +mortal in a crowded hotel. + +As the frosty evening was setting in and the shops were being lit, he had +strolled out into the streets in the vague hope of meeting some strange +foreign adventure, or perhaps even happily lighting upon some +half-forgotten diplomatic acquaintance. But he found the pavements crowded +with a throng who took no notice of him at all, but seemed every man and +most women of them to be pushing steadily, and generally silently, towards +a million mysterious goals. Not that he could tell they were silent except +by their set lips, for the noise of wheels and horses on so many hundreds +of miles of streets, and the cries of busmen and vendors of evening +papers, made such a hubbub that he felt before long in a maze. He lost his +way four times, and was patronisingly set right by beneficent policemen; +and at last, feeling like a man who has fallen off a precipice on to a +soft place--none the worse but quite bewildered--he struggled back to his +hotel. There he spun out his time by watching the people come and go, and +at last dressed with extra deliberation. + +About eight o'clock he sat down to his solitary dinner. The great gilt and +panelled room was full of diners and bustling waiters, but there was not a +face the Baron had ever seen before. He was just finishing a plate of +whitebait when he observed a stranger enter the room and stroll in a very +self-possessed manner down the middle, glancing at the tables round him as +though he was looking either for a friend or a desirable seat. This +gentleman was tall, fair, and clean-shaved; he was dressed in a suit of +well-fitting tweeds, and his air impressed the Baron as being natural and +yet distinguished. At last his eye fell upon the Baron, who felt conscious +of undergoing a quick, critical scrutiny. The table at which that nobleman +sat was laid for two, and coming apparently to a sudden resolution, the +good-looking stranger seated himself in the vacant chair. In an agreeable +voice and with an unmistakably well-bred air he asked a waiter for the +wine-list, and then, like a man with an excellent appetite, fell to upon +the various _hors d'oeuvres_, the entire collection of which, in fact, he +consumed in a wonderfully short space of time. The Baron, being himself no +trifler with his victuals, regarded this feat with sympathetic approval, +and began to feel a little less alone in the world. His naturally open +disposition was warmed besides, owing to a slight misconception he had +fallen into, perfectly excusable however in a foreigner. He thought he had +read somewhere that port was the usual accompaniment to the first courses +of an English dinner, and as his waiter had been somewhat dilatory in +bringing him the more substantial items of the repast, he had already +drunk three claret-glasses of this cheering wine. The chill recollections +of his sixteen quarterings and the exclusiveness he had determined to +maintain as becoming to his rank were already melting, and he met the +stranger's eye with what for the life of him he could not help being a +cordial look. + +His _vis-à-vis_ caught the glance, smiled back, and immediately asked, +with the most charming politeness, "Do you care, sir, to split a bottle of +champagne?" + +"To--er--_shplid?_" said the Baron, with a disappointed consciousness of +having been put at a loss in his English by the very first man who had +spoken to him. + +"I beg your pardon,--I am afraid I was unintelligibly idiomatic. To divide, +I should say, you consuming one-half, I the other. Am I clear, sir?" + +For a moment the Baron was a little taken aback, and then recollecting +that the dining habits of the English were still new to him, he concluded +that the suggestion was probably a customary act of courtesy. He had +already come to the conclusion that the gentleman must be a person of +rank, and he replied affably, "Yah--zat is, vid pleasure. Zanks, very." + +"The pleasure is mine," said the stranger--"and half the bottle," he added, +smiling. + +The Baron, whose perception of humour had been abnormally increased by +this time, laughed hilariously at the infection of his new acquaintance's +smile. + +"Goot, goot!" he cried. "Ach, yah, zo." + +"Am I right, sir, in supposing that, despite the perfection of your +English accent, I cannot be fortunate enough to claim you as a +countryman?" asked the stranger. + +The Baron's resolutions of reticence had vanished altogether before such +unexpected and (he could not but think) un-English friendliness. He +unburdened his heart with a rush. + +"You have ze right. I am Deutsch. I have gom to England zis day for to +lairn and to amuse myself. But mein, vat you call?--introdogtions zey are +not inside, zat is zey are from off. Not von, all, every single gone to ze +gontry or to abroad. I am alone, I eat my dinner in zolitude, I am pleased +to meet you, sare." + +A cork popped and the champagne frothed into the stranger's glass. Raising +it to his lips, he said, "Prosit!" + +"Prosit!" responded the Baron, enthusiastically. "You know ze Deutsch, +sare?" + +"I am safer in English, I confess." + +"Ach, das ist goot, I vant for to practeese. Ve vill talk English." + +"With all my heart," said the stranger. "I, too, am alone, and I hold +myself more than fortunate in making your acquaintance. It's a devilish +dull world when one can't share a bottle--or a brace of them, for the +matter of that." + +"You know London?" asked the Baron. + +"I used to, and I daresay my memory will revive." + +"I know it not, pairhaps you can inform. I haf gom, as I say, to-day." + +"With pleasure," said the stranger, readily. "In fact, if you are ever +disengaged I may possibly be able to act as showman." + +"Showman!" roared the Baron, thinking he had discovered a jest. "Ha, ha, +ha! Goot, zehr goot!" + +The other looked a trifle astonished for an instant, and then as he sipped +his champagne an expression of intense satisfaction came over his face. + +"I can put away my lantern," he said to himself,--"I have found him." + +"May I have the boldness to ask your name, sir?" he asked aloud. + +"Ze Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg," that nobleman replied. "Yours, +sare--may I dare?" + +"Francis Bunker, at your service, Baron." + +"You are noble?" queried the Baron a little anxiously, for his prejudices +on this point were strong. + +"According to your standard I believe I may say so. That's to say, my +family have borne arms for two hundred odd generations; twenty-five per +cent of them have died of good living; and the most malicious have never +accused us of brains. I myself may not be very typical, but I assure you +it isn't my ancestors' fault." + +The latter part of this explanation entirely puzzled the Baron. The first +statement, though eminently satisfactory, was also a little bewildering. + +"Two hondred generations?" he asked, courteously. "Zat is a vary old +family. All bore arms you say, Mistair Bonker?" + +"All," replied Mr Bunker, gravely. "The first few bore tails as well." + +"Ha, ha, ha!" laughed the Baron. "You are a fonny man I pairceive, vat you +call clown, yes?" + +"What my friends call clown, and I call wit," Mr Bunker corrected. + +"Vit! Ha, ha, ha!" roared the Baron, whose mind was now in an El Dorado of +humour when jokes grew like daisies. His loneliness had disappeared as if +by magic; as course succeeded course his contentment showed itself in a +perpetually beaming smile: he ceased to worry even about his friend's +pedigree, convinced in his mind that manners so delightful and +distinguished could only result from repeated quarterings and unoccupied +forefathers. Yet by the time dessert arrived and he had again returned to +his port, he began to feel an extreme curiosity to know more concerning Mr +Bunker. He himself had volunteered a large quantity of miscellaneous +information: about Bavaria, its customs and its people, more especially +the habits and history of the Blitzenberg family; about himself, his +parentage and education; all about his family ghost, his official position +as hereditary carpet-beater to the Bavarian Court, and many other things +equally entertaining and instructive. Mr Bunker, for his part, had so far +confined his confidences to his name. + +"My dear Bonker," said the Baron at last--he had become quite familiar by +this time--"vat make you in London? I fear you are bird of passage. Do you +stay long?" + +Mr Bunker cracked a nut, looking very serious; then he leant on one elbow, +glanced up at the ceiling pensively, and sighed. + +"I hope I do not ask vat I should not," the Baron interposed, courteously. + +"My dear Baron, ask what you like," replied Mr Bunker. "In a city full of +strangers, or of friends who have forgotten me, you alone have my +confidence. My story is a common one of youthful folly and present +repentance, but such as it is, you are welcome to it." + +The Baron gulped down half a glass of port and leaned forward +sympathetically. + +"My father," Mr Bunker continued with an air of half-sad reminiscence, "is +one of the largest landowners and the head of one of the most ancient +families in the north of England. I was his eldest son and heir. I am +still, I have every reason to believe, his eldest son, but my heirship, I +regret to say, is more doubtful. I spent a prodigal youth and a larger sum +of money than my poor father approved of. He was a strict though a kind +parent, and for the good of my health and the replenishment of the family +coffers, which had been sadly drained by my extravagance, he sent me +abroad. There I have led a roving life for the last six years, and at +last, my wild oats sown, reaped, and gathered in (and a well-filled +stackyard they made, I can assure you), I decided to return to England and +become an ornament to respectable society. Like you, I arrived in London +to-day, but only to find to my disgust that my family have gone to winter +in Egypt. So you see that at present I am like a shipwrecked sailor +clinging to a rock and waiting, with what patience I can muster, for a +boat to take me off." + +"You mean," inquired the Baron, anxiously, "that you vish to go to Egypt +at vonce?" + +"I had thought of it; though there is a difficulty in the way, I admit." + +"You vill not stay zen here?" "My dear Baron, why should I? I have neither +friends nor----" + +He stopped abruptly. + +"I do not like to zink I shall lose your company so soon." + +"I admit," allowed Mr Bunker, "that this fortunate meeting tempts me to +stay." + +"Vy not?" said the Baron, cordially. "Can your fader not vait to see you?" + +"I hardly think he will worry about me, I confess." + +"Zen stay, my goot Bonker!" + +"Unfortunately there is the same difficulty as stands in the way of my +going to Egypt." + +"And may I inquire vat zat is?" + +"To tell you the truth," replied Mr Bunker, with an air of reluctant +candour, "my funds are rather low. I had trusted to finding my father at +home, but as he isn't, why----" he shrugged his shoulders and threw himself +back in his chair. + +The Baron seemed struck with an idea which he hesitated to express. + +"Shall we smoke?" his friend suggested. + +"Vaiter!" cried the Baron, "bring here two best cigars and two coffee!" + +"A liqueur, Baron?" + +"Ach, yah. Vat for you?" + +"A liqueur brandy suggests itself." + +"Vaiter! and two brandy." + +"And now," said the Baron, "I haf an idea, Bonker." + + + + + CHAPTER II. + + +The Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg, as I have said, had a warm heart. He +was, besides, alone in one hundred and twenty square miles of strangers +and foreigners when he had happened upon this congenial spirit. He began +in a tone of the most ingenuous friendliness-- + +"I haf no friends here. My introdogtions zey are gone. Bot I haf moch +money, and I vish a, vat you say?--showman, ha, ha, ha! You haf too leetle +money and no friends and you can show. You show and I will loan you vat +you vish. May I dare to suggest?" + +"My dear Baron!" + +"My goot Bonker! I am in airnest, I assure. Vy not? It is vun gentleman +and anozzer." + +"You are far too kind." + +"It is to myself I am kind, zen. I vant a guide, a frient. It is a loan. +Do not scruple. Ven your fader goms you can pay if you please. It is +nozing to me." + +"Well, my dear Baron," said Mr Bunker, like a man persuaded against his +will, "what can I say? I confess I might find a little difficulty in +replenishing my purse without resorting to disagreeable means, and if you +really wish my society, why----" + +"Zen it is a bairgain?" cried the Baron. + +"If you insist----" + +"I insist. Vaiter! Alzo two ozzer liqueur. Ve most drink to ze bairgain, +Bonker." + +They pledged each other cordially, and talked from that moment like old +friends. The Baron was thoroughly pleased with himself, and Mr Bunker +seemed no less gratified at his own good fortune. Half an hour went +quickly by, and then the Baron exclaimed, "Let us do zomzing to-night, +Bonker. I burn for to begin zis show of London." + +"What would you care to do, Baron? It is rather late, I am afraid, to +think of a theatre. What do you say to a music-hall?" + +"Music-hall? I haf seen zem at home. Damned amusing, das ist ze +expression, yes?" + +"It is a perfect description." + +"Bot," continued the Baron, solemnly, "I must not begin vid ze vickedest." + +"And yet," replied his friend, persuasively, "even wickedness needs a +beginning." + +"Bot, if I begin I may not stop. Zomzing more qviet ze first night. Haf +you a club?" + +Mr Bunker pondered for a moment, and a curious smile stole across his +face. Then it vanished, and he answered readily, "Certainly, Baron, an +excellent idea. I haven't been to my club for so long that it never struck +me. Let us come." + +"Goot!" cried the Baron, rising with alacrity. + +They put on their coats (Mr Bunker's, it may be remarked, being a handsome +fur-lined garment), the porter hailed a cab, and the driver was ordered to +take them to the Regent's Club in Pall Mall. The Baron knew it by +reputation as the most exclusive in London, and his opinion of his friend +rose still higher. + +They joined a jingling string of other hansoms and sped swiftly through +the exhilarating bustle of the streets. To the Baron it seemed as if a +great change had come over the city since he wandered disconsolately +before dinner. Carried swiftly to the music of the little bells through +the sharp air and the London night that is brighter than day, with a +friend by his side and a good dinner within, he marked the most +astonishing difference. All the people seemed to talk and laugh, and for +his own part he found it hard to keep his tongue still. + +"I know ze name of ze Regent's," he said; "vun club of ze best, is it +not?" + +"The very best club, Baron." + +"Zey are all noble?" + +"In many cases the receipts for their escutcheons are still in their +pockets." + +Though the precise significance of this explanation was not quite clear to +the Baron, it sounded eminently satisfactory. + +"Zo?" he said. "I shall be moch interested to see zem." + +As they entered the club the porter stared at them curiously, and even +made a movement as though he would step out and address them; but Mr +Bunker, wishing him a courteous good evening, walked briskly up to the +hat-and-cloak racks in the hall. A young man had just hung up his hat, and +as he was divesting himself of his coat, Mr Bunker quickly took the hat +down, glanced at the name inside, and replaced it on its peg. Then he held +out his hand and addressed the young man cordially. + +"Good evening, Transome, how are you?" said he, and, heedless of the look +of surprise on the other's face, he turned towards the Baron and added, +"Let me introduce the Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg--Mr Transome. The Baron +has just come to England, and I thought he couldn't begin better than by a +visit to the Regent's. Let us come into the smoking-room." + +In a few minutes they were all on the best of terms. A certain perplexity, +and almost shyness, that the young man showed at first, vanished rapidly +before the Baron's cordiality and Mr Bunker's well-bred charm of manner. + +They were deeply engrossed in a discussion on the reigning sovereign of +the Baron's native land, a monarch of whose enlightened policy that +nobleman spoke with pardonable pride, when two elderly gentlemen entered +the room. + +"Who are these?" Mr Bunker whispered to Transome. "I know them very well, +but I am always bad at names." + +"Lord Fabrigas and General M'Dermott," replied Transome. + +Instantly Mr Bunker rose and greeted the new-comers. + +"Good evening, Lord Fabrigas; good evening, General. You have just come in +time to be introduced to the Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg, whom you +doubtless know by reputation." + +The Baron rose and bowed, and it struck him that elderly English gentlemen +were singularly stiff and constrained in their manner. Mr Bunker, however, +continued cheerfully, "We are just going to have a smoking concert. Will +you begin, Baron?" + +"I know not English songs," replied the Baron, "bot I should like moch to +hear." + +"You must join in the chorus, then." + +"Certainly, Bonker. I haf a voice zat is considered--vat you +call--deafening, yes?--in ze chorus." + +Mr Bunker cleared his throat, and, just as the General was on the point of +interposing a remark, struck up hastily; and for the first time in its +long and honourable history the smoking-room of the Regent's Club reechoed +to a popular music-hall ditty. + + + "They sometimes call 'em duckies, they sometimes call 'em pets, + And sometimes they refer to 'em as dears + They live on little matters that a gentleman forgets, + In a little world of giggles and of tears; + There are different varieties from which a man may choose, + There are sorts and shapes and sizes without end, + But the kind I'd pick myself is the kind you introduce + By the simple title of 'my lady friend.' " + + +"Chorus, Baron!" And then he trolled in waltz time this edifying refrain-- + + + "My lady friend, my lady friend! + Can't you twig, dear boys, + From the sound of the kisses + She isn't my misses, + She's only my lady friend!" + + +In a voice like a train going over a bridge the Baron chimed in-- + + + "My laty vrient, my laty vrient! + Cannot you tvig, mine boy, + Vrom ze sound of ze kiss, + He is not my miss, + He is only mine laty vrient!" + + +"I am afraid," said Mr Bunker, as they finished the chorus, "that I can't +remember any more. Now, General, it's your turn." + +"Sir," replied that gallant officer, who had listened to this ditty in +purple and petrified astonishment, "I don't know who the devil you are, +but I can tell you, you won't remain a member of this club much longer if +you come into it again in this state." + +"I had forgotten," said Mr Bunker, with even more than his usual +politeness, "that such an admirable music-hall critic was listening to me. +I must apologise for my poor effort." + +Wishing him courteously good-night, he took the Baron by the arm and +walked out. While that somewhat perplexed nobleman was struggling into his +coat, his friend rapidly and dexterously converted all the silk hats he +could see into the condition of collapsed opera hats, and then picked a +small hand-bag off the floor. The Baron walked out through the door first, +but Mr Bunker stopped for an instant opposite the hall-porter's box, and +crying, "Good night to you, sir!" hurled the bag through the glass, rushed +after his friend, and in less time than it takes to tell they were tearing +up Pall Mall in a hansom. + +For a few minutes both were silent; then the Baron said slowly, "I do not +qvite onderstand." + +"My dear Baron," his friend explained gaily, "these practical jokes are +very common in our clubs. They are quite part of our national life, you +know, and I thought you ought to see everything." + +The Baron said nothing, but he began to realise that he was indeed in a +foreign country. + + + + + CHAPTER III. + + +"Vell, Bonker, vat show to-day?" said the Baron. + +Mr Bunker sipped his coffee and smiled back at his friend. + +"What would you like?" said he. + +They were sitting in the Baron's private room finishing one of the +renowned Hôtel Mayonaise breakfasts. Out of the windows they could see the +bright curving river, the bare tops of the Embankment trees, a file of +barges drifting with the tide, and cold-looking clouds hurrying over the +chaos of brick on the opposite shore. It was a bright breezy morning, and +the Baron felt in high good-humour with his surroundings. On maturer +consideration, the entertaining experience of the night before had greatly +raised Mr Bunker in his estimation. He had chuckled his way through a +substantial breakfast, and in such good company felt ready for any +adventure that might turn up. + +He lit a cigar, pushed back his chair, and replied blandly, "I am in your +hands. I am ready to enjoy anyzing." + +"Do you wish instruction or entertainment?" + +"Mix zem, Bonker. Entertain by instrogtion; instrogt by entertaining." + +"You are epigrammatic, Baron, but devilish vague. I presume, however, that +you wish entertaining experience from which a man of your philosophical +temperament can draw a moral--afterwards." + +"Ha, ha!" laughed the Baron. "Excellent! You provide ze experiences--I draw +ze moral." + +"And we share the entertainment. The theory is perfect, but I'm afraid we +need a programme. Now, on my own first visit to London I remember being +taken--by the hand--to Madame Tussaud's Waxworks, the Tower, St Paul's +Cathedral, the fishmarket at Billingsgate, the British Museum, and a +number of other damnably edifying spectacles. You might naturally suppose +that after such a round it would be quite superfluous for me ever to come +up to town again. Yet, surprising as it may appear, most of the knowledge +of London I hope to put at your disposal has been gained in the course of +subsequent visits." + +"Bot zese places--Tousaud, Tower, Paul's--are zey not instrogtif?" + +"If you wish to learn that a great number of years ago a vast quantity of +inconsequent events occurred, or that in an otherwise amusing enough world +there are here and there collected so many roomfuls of cheerless articles, +I can strongly recommend a visit to the Tower of London or the British +Museum." + +"In mine own gontry," said the Baron, thoughtfully, "I can lairn zo moch." + +"Then, my dear Baron, while you are here forget it all." + +"And yet," said the Baron, still thoughtfully, "somzing I should lairn +here." + +"Certainly; you will learn something of what goes on underneath a +waistcoat and a little of the contents of a corset and petticoat. Also of +the strange customs of this city and the excellence of British +institutions." + +"Ha, ha, ha!" laughed the Baron, who thought that if his friend had not +actually made a jest, it was at least time for one to occur. "I see, I +see. I draw ze moral, ha, ha!" + +"This morning," Mr Bunker continued, reflectively, "we might--let me +see--well, we might do a little shopping. To tell you the truth, Baron, my +South African experiences have somewhat exhausted my wardrobe." + +"Ach, zo. Cairtainly ve vill shop. Bot, Bonker, Soud Africa? Vas it not +Soud America?" + +"Did I say Africa? America of course I meant. Well, let us shop if you +have no objections: then we might have a little lunch, and afterwards +visit the Park. For the evening, what do you say to a theatre?" + +"Goot!" cried the Baron. "Make it tzos." + +Mr Bunker's shopping turned out to be a pretty extensive operation. + +"Loan vat you please of money," said his friend. "A gentleman should be +dressed in agreement." + +With now and then an apology for his extravagance, he took full advantage +of the Baron's generosity, and ordered such an assortment of garments that +his tailor could hardly bow low enough to express his gratification. + +After an excellent lunch in the most expensive restaurant to be found, +they walked arm-in-arm westwards along Piccadilly, Mr Bunker pointing out +the various objects of historical or ephemeral interest to be seen in that +thoroughfare, the Baron drinking in this information with the serious air +of the distinguished traveller. + +"And now we come to the Park," said Mr Bunker. "Guard your heart, Baron." + +"Ha, ha, ha!" replied the Baron. "Zo instrogtion is feenished, and now +goms entertainment, ha?" + +"With the moral always running through it, remember." + +"I shall not forget." + +The sunshine had brought out a great many carriages and a sprinkling of +walkers along the railings. The two friends strolled among them, eyeing +the women and stopping now and then to look back at a carriage. + +"I suppose," said the Baron, "zat vile you haf been avay your frients have +forgot you." + +As he spoke a young man looked hard at Mr Bunker, and even made a movement +as though he would stop and speak to him. Mr Bunker looked blandly through +him and walked on. + +"Do you not know zat gentleman?" + +"Which gentleman?" + +"Ze young man zat looked so at you." + +"Some young men have a way of staring here, Baron." + +A few minutes later a lady in a passing carriage looked round sharply at +them with an air of great surprise, and half bowed. + +"Surely," exclaimed the Baron, "zat vas a frient of yours!" + +"I am not a friend of hers, then," Mr Bunker replied with a laugh. "Her +bow I think must have been aimed at you." + +The Baron shook his head, and seemed to be drawing a moral. + +"Baron," his friend exclaimed, suddenly, "let us go back; here comes one +of our most popular phenomena, a London fog. We need not stay in the Park +to observe it." + +The sun was already obscured; there stole a most insidious chill through +the air; like the changing of a scene on the stage they found themselves +in a few minutes walking in a little ring of trees and road and iron +railings instead of a wide sunny park; the roar of the streets came from +behind a wall of mist that opened mysteriously to let a phantom carriage +in and out, and closed silently behind it again. + +"I like not zis," said the Baron, with a shiver. + +By the time they had found Piccadilly again there was nothing at all to be +seen but the light of the nearest lamp, as large and far away as a +struggling sun, and the shadowy people who flitted by. + +Their talk ceased. The Baron turned up his collar and sucked his cigar +lugubriously, and Mr Bunker seemed unusually thoughtful. They had walked +nearly as far as Piccadilly Circus when they were pulled up by a cab +turning down a side-street. There was a lamp-post at the corner, and under +it stood a burly man, his red face quite visible as they came up to his +shoulder. + +In an instant Mr Bunker seized the Baron by the arm, pulled him round, and +began to walk hastily back again. + +"Vat for zis?" said the Baron, in great astonishment. + +"We have come too far, thanks to this infernal fog. We must cross the +street and take the first turning on the other side. I must apologise, +Baron, for my absence of mind." + + * * * * * + +The cab passed by and the red-faced man strolled on. + +"Like lookin' for a needle in a bloomin' haystack," he said to himself. "I +might as well go back to Clankwood. 'E's a good riddance, I say." + + + + + CHAPTER IV. + + +The Baron and Mr Bunker discussed their dinner with the relish of +approving connoisseurs. Mr Bunker commended the hock, and suggested a +second bottle; the Baron praised the _entrées_, and insisted on another +helping. The frequent laughter arising from their table excited general +remark throughout the room, and already the waiters were whispering to the +other guests that this was a German nobleman of royal blood engaged in a +diplomatic mission of importance, and his friend a ducal member of the +English Cabinet, at present, for reasons of state, incognito. + +"Bonker!" exclaimed the Baron, "I am in zat frame of head I vant a +romance, an adventure" (lowering his voice a little), "mit a beautiful +lady, Bonker." + +"It must be a romance, Baron?" + +"A novel, a story to tell to mine frients. In a strange city man expects +strange zings." + +"Well, I'll do my best for you, but I confess the provision of romantic +adventures is a little outside the programme we've arranged." + +"Ha, ha! Ve shall see, ve shall see, Bonker!" + +They arrived at the Corinthian Theatre about the middle of the first act, +for, as Mr Bunker explained, it is always well to produce a good first +impression, and few more effective means can be devised than working one's +way to the middle of a line of stalls with the play already in progress. + +Hardly were they seated when the Baron drove his elbow into his friend's +ribs (draped for the night, it may be remarked, with one of the Baron's +spare dress-coats) and exclaimed in an excited whisper, "Next to you, +Bonker! Ach, zehr hüpsch!" + +Even before this hint Mr Bunker had observed that the lady on the other +side of him was possessed of exceptional attractions. For a little time he +studied her out of the corners of his eyes. He noticed that the stall on +the farther side of her was empty, that she once or twice looked round as +though she expected somebody, and that she seemed not altogether +unconscious of her new neighbours. He further observed that her face was +of a type that is more usually engaged in attack than defence. + +Then he whispered, "Would you like to know her?" + +"Ach, yah!" replied the Baron, eagerly. "Bot--can you?" + +Mr Bunker smiled confidently. A few minutes later he happened to let his +programme fall into her lap. + +"I beg your pardon," he whispered, softly, and glanced into her eyes with +a smile ready. + +His usual discernment had not failed him. She smiled, and instantly he +produced his. + +A little later her opera-glasses happened to slip from her hand, and +though they only slipped slowly, it was no doubt owing to his ready +presence of mind that their fall was averted. + +This time their fingers happened to touch, and they smiled without an +apology. + +He leant towards her, looking, however, at the play. They shared a laugh +over a joke that she might have been excused for not understanding; +presently a criticism of some situation escaped him inadvertently, and she +smiled again; soon after she gave an exclamation and he answered +sympathetically, and at the end of the act the curtain came down on an +acquaintance already begun. As the lights were turned up, and here and +there men began to go out, she again looked at the entrances in some +apparent concern, either lest some one should not come in or lest some one +should. + +"He is late," said Mr Bunker, smiling. + +She gave a very enticing look of surprise, and consented to smile back +before she coyly looked away again. + +"An erring husband, I presume." + +She admitted that it was in fact a husband who had failed her. + +"But," she added, "I'm afraid--I mean I expect he'll come in after the next +act. It's so tiresome of him to disappoint me like this." + +Mr Bunker expressed the deepest sympathy with her unfortunate predicament. + +"He has his ticket, of course?" + +But it seemed that she had both the tickets with her, an arrangement which +he immediately denounced as likely to lead to difficulties when her +husband arrived. He further, in the most obliging manner, suggested that +he should take the ticket for the other seat to the booking office and +leave instructions for its being given to the gentleman on his arrival. +The lady gave him a curious little glance that seemed to imply a mixture +of doubt as to his motives with confidence in his abilities, and then with +many thanks agreed to his suggestion. Mr Bunker took the ticket and rose +at once. + +"That I may be sure you are in good company while I am away," said he, +"permit me to introduce my friend the Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg." + +And the Baron promptly took his vacant seat. + +On his return Mr Bunker found his friend wreathed in smiles and engaged in +the most animated conversation with the lady, and before the last act was +over, he gathered from such scraps of conversation as reached his ears +that Rudolph von Blitzenberg had little to learn in one department of a +nobleman's duties. + +"I wonder where my husband can be," the lady whispered. + +"Ach, heed him not, fair lady," replied the Baron. "Am I not instead of a +hosband?" + +"I'm afraid you're a very naughty man, Baron." + +"Ven I am viz you," the gallant Baron answered, "I forget myself all bot +your charms." + +These advances being made in the most dulcet tones of which the nobleman +was master, and accompanied by the most enamoured expression, it is not +surprising that the lady permitted herself to listen to them with perhaps +too ready an ear. What Mr Bunker's arrangement with the booking clerk had +been was never quite clear, but certainly the erring husband failed to +make his appearance at all, and at the last fall of the curtain she was +easily persuaded to let the Baron escort her home. + +"I know I ought not, but if a husband deserts one so faithlessly, what can +I do?" she said, with a very becoming little shrug of her shoulders and a +captivating lift of her eyebrows. + +"Ah, vat indeed? He desairves not so fair a consort." + +"But won't it be troubling you?" + +"Trouble? Pleasure and captivation!" + +"Excuse me, Baron," said the voice of Mr Bunker at his elbow; "if you will +wait here at the door I shall send up a cab." + +"Goot!" cried the Baron, "a zouzand zanks!" + +"I myself," added Mr Bunker, with a profound bow to the lady, "shall say +good night now. The best of luck, Baron!" + +In a few minutes a hansom drove up, and the Baron, springing in beside his +charge, told the man to drive to 602 Eaton Square. + +"Not too qvickly!" he added, in a stage aside. + +They reached Trafalgar Square, matters inside going harmoniously as a +marriage bell,--almost, in fact, too much suggesting that simile. + +"Why are we going down Whitehall?" the lady exclaimed, suddenly. + +"I know not," replied the Baron, placidly. + +"Ask him where he is going!" she said. + +The Baron, as in duty bound, asked, and the reassuring reply, "All right, +sir," came back through the hole in the roof. + +"I seem to know that man's voice," the lady said. "He must have driven me +before." + +"To me all ze English speak ze same," replied the Baron. "All bot you, my +fairest, viz your sound like a--vat you call?--fiddle, is it?" + +Though his charmer had serious misgivings regarding their cabman's +topographical knowledge, the Baron's company proved so absorbing that it +was not till they were being rapidly driven over Vauxhall Bridge that she +at last took alarm. At first the Baron strove to soothe her by the most +approved Teutonic blandishments, but in time he too began to feel +concerned, and in a voice like thunder he repeatedly called upon the +driver to stop. No reply was vouchsafed, and the pace merely grew the more +reckless. + +"Can't you catch the reins?" cried the lady, who had got into a terrible +fright. + +The Baron twice essayed the feat, but each time a heavy blow over the +knuckles from the butt-end of the whip forced him to desist. The lady +burst into tears. The Baron swore in five languages alternately, and still +the cab pursued its headlong career through deserted midnight streets, +past infrequent policemen and stray belated revellers, on into an unknown +wilderness of brick. + +"Oh, don't let him murder me!" sobbed the lady. + +"Haf cheer, fairest; he shall not vile I am viz you! Gott in himmel, ze +rascal! Parbleu und blood! Goddam! Vait till I catch him, hell and +blitzen! Haf courage, dear!" + +"Oh dear, oh dear!" wailed the lady. "I shall _never_ do it again!" + +They must have covered miles, and still the speed never abated, when +suddenly, as they were rounding a sharp corner, the horse slipped on the +frost-bound road, and in the twinkling of an eye the Baron and the lady +were sitting on opposite sides of their fallen steed, and the cabman was +rubbing his head some yards in front. + +"Teufel!" exclaimed the Baron, rising carefully to his feet. "Ach, mine +dearest vun, art thou hurt?" + +The lady was silent for a moment, as though trying to decide, and then she +burst into hysterical laughter. + +"Ach, zo," said the Baron, much relieved, "zen vill I see ze cabman." + +That individual was still rubbing his head with a rueful air, and the +Baron was about to pour forth all his bottled-up indignation, when at the +sight of the driver's face he started back in blank astonishment. + +"Bonker!" + +"It is I indeed, my dear Baron," replied that gentleman, politely. "I must +ask a thousand pardons for causing you this trifling inconvenience. As to +your friend, I don't know how I am to make my peace with her." + +"Bot--bot vat means zis?" gasped the Baron. + +"I was merely endeavouring to provide the spice of romance you required, +besides giving you the opportunity of making the lady's better +acquaintance. Can I do anything more for you, Baron? And you, my dear +lady, can I assist you in any way?" + +Both, speaking at once and with some heat, gave a decidedly affirmative +answer. + +"Where are we?" asked the lady, who hovered between fright and +indignation. + +Mr Bunker shrugged his shoulders. + +"It would be rash to hazard an opinion," he replied. + +"Well!" cried the lady, her indignation quite overcoming her fright. "Do +you mean to say you've brought us here against our wills and probably got +me into _dreadful_ trouble, and you don't even know where we are?" + +Mr Bunker looked up at the heavens with a studious air. + +"One _ought_ to be able to tell something of our whereabouts from one of +those stars," he replied; "but, to tell the truth, I don't quite know +which. In short, madame, it is not from want of goodwill, but merely +through ignorance, that I cannot direct you." + +The lady turned impatiently to the Baron. + +"_You've_ helped to get me into this mess," she said, tartly. "What do you +propose to do?" + +"My fairest----" + +"Don't!" she interrupted, stamping her foot on the frosty road, and then +inconsequently burst into tears. The Baron and Mr Bunker looked at one +another. + +"It is a fine night for a walk, and the cab, I'm afraid, is smashed beyond +hope of redemption. Give the lady your arm, Baron; we must eventually +arrive somewhere." + +There was really nothing else for it, so leaving the horse and cab to be +recovered by the first policeman who chanced to pass, they set out on +foot. At last, after half an hour's ramble through the solitudes of South +London, a belated cab was hailed and all three got inside. Once on her way +home, the lady's indignation again gave way to fright. + +"What _am_ I to do? What _am_ I to do?" she wailed. "Oh, whatever will my +husband say?" + +In his most confident and irresistible manner Mr Bunker told her he would +make matters all right for her at whatever cost to himself; and so +infectious was his assurance, that, when at last they reached Eaton +Square, she allowed him to come up to the door of number 602. The Baron +prudently remained in the cab, for, as he explained, "My English, he is +unsafe." + +After a prolonged knocking and ringing the door at length opened, and an +irascible-looking, middle-aged gentleman appeared, arrayed in a +dressing-gown. + +"Louisa!" he cried. "What the dev--where on earth have you been? The police +are looking for you all over London. And may I venture to ask who this is +with you?" + +Mr Bunker bowed slightly and raised his hat. + +"My dear sir," he said, "we found this lady in a lamentable state of +intoxication in the Tottenham Court Road, and as I understand you have a +kind of reversionary interest in her, we have brought her here. As for +you, sir, your appearance is so unprepossessing that I am unable to remain +any longer. Good night," and raising his hat again he entered the cab and +drove off, assuring the Baron that matters were satisfactorily arranged. + +"So you have had your adventure, Baron," he added, with a smile. + +For a minute or two the Baron was silent. Then he broke into a cheerful +guffaw, "Ha, ha, ha! You are a fonny devil, Bonker! Ach, bot it vas +pleasant vile it lasted!" + + + + + CHAPTER V. + + +A few days passed in the most entertaining manner. A menu of amusements +was regularly prepared suitable to a catholic taste, and at every turn the +Baron was struck by the enterprise and originality of his friend. He had, +however, a national bent for serious inquiry, and now and then doubts +crossed his mind whether, with all his moral drawing, he was acquiring +quite as much solid information as he had set out to gain. This idea grew +upon him, till one morning, after gazing for some time at the English +newspaper he always made a point of reading, he suddenly exclaimed, +"Bonker, I haf a doubt!" + +"I have many," replied Mr Bunker; "in fact, I have few positive ideas +left." + +"Bot mine is a particulair doubt. Do I lairn enoff?" + +"My own conception of enough learning, Baron, is a thing like a +threepenny-bit--the smallest coin one can do one's marketing with." + +"And yet," said the Baron, solemnly, "for my own share, I am not +satisfied. I vould lairn more of ze British institutions; so far I haf +lairned of ze pleasures only." + +"My dear Baron, they are the British institutions." + +The Baron shook his head and fell to his paper again, while Mr Bunker +stretched himself on the sofa and gazed through his cigar-smoke at the +ceiling. Suddenly the Baron gave an exclamation of horror. + +"My dear Baron, what is the matter?" + +"Yet anozer outrage!" cried the Baron. "Zese anarchists, zey are too +scandalous. At all ze stations zere are detectives, and all ze ships are +being vatched. Ach, it is terrible!" + +Mr Bunker seemed struck with an idea, for he stared at the ceiling without +making any reply, and his eyes, had the Baron seen them, twinkled +curiously. + +At last the Baron laid down his paper. + +"Vell, vat shall ve do?" he asked. + +"Let us come first to Liverpool Street Station, if you don't mind, Baron," +his friend suggested. "I have something in the cloak-room there I want to +pick up." + +"My dear Bonker, I shall go vere you vill; bot remember I vant to-day more +instrogtion and less entertainment." + +"You wish to see the practical side of English life?" + +"Yah--zat is, yes." + +Mr Bunker smiled. + +"Then I must entertain myself." + +As they drove down he was in his wittiest humour, and the Baron, in spite +of his desire for instruction, was more charmed with his friend than ever. + +"Vat fonny zing vill you do next, eh?" he asked, as they walked arm-in-arm +into the station. + +"I am no more the humourist, my dear Baron,--I shall endeavour to edify +you." + +They had arrived at a busy hour, when the platforms were crowded with +passengers and luggage. A train had just come in, and around it the bustle +was at its height, and the confusion most bewildering. + +"Wait for me here," said Mr Bunker; "I shall be back in a minute." + +He started in the direction of the cloak-room, and then, doubling back +through the crowd, walked down the platform and stopped opposite a +luggage-van. An old gentleman, beside himself with irritation, was +struggling with the aid of a porter to collect his luggage, and presently +he left the pile he had got together and made a rush in the direction of a +large portmanteau that was just being tumbled out. Instantly Mr Bunker +picked up a handbag from the heap and walked quickly off with it. + +"Here you are, Baron," he said, as he came up to his friend. "I find there +is something else I must do, so do you mind holding this bag for a few +minutes? If you will walk up and down in front of the refreshment-rooms +here, I'll find you more easily. Is it troubling you too much?" + +"Not vun bit, Bonker. I am in your sairvice." + +He put the bag into the Baron's hand with his pleasantest smile, and +turned away. Rounding a corner, he came cautiously back again through the +crowd and stepped up to a policeman. + +"Keep your eye on that man, officer," he said, in a low confidential +voice, and an air of quiet authority, "and put your plain clothes' men on +his track. I know him for one of the most dangerous anarchists." + +The man started and stared hard at the Baron, and presently that +unconscious nobleman, pacing the platform in growing wonder at Mr Bunker's +lengthy absence, and looking anxiously round him on all sides, noticed +with surprise that a number of quietly dressed men, with no apparent +business in the station, were eyeing him with, it seemed to him, an +interest that approached suspicion. In time he grew annoyed, he returned +their glances with his haughtiest and most indignant look, and finally, +stepping up to one of them, asked in no friendly voice, "Vat for do you +vatch me?" + +The man returned an evasive answer, and passing one of his +fellow-officers, whispered, "Foreign; I was sure of it." + +At last the Baron could stand it no longer, and laying the bag down by the +door of the refreshment-room, turned hastily away. On the instant Mr +Bunker, who had watched these proceedings from a safe distance, cried in a +loud and agonised voice, "Down with your men, sergeant! Down, lie down! It +will explode in twenty seconds!" + +And as he spoke he threw himself flat on his face. So infectious were his +commanding voice and his note of alarm that one after another, detectives, +passengers, and porters, cast themselves at full length on the platform. +The Baron, filled with terror of anarchist plots, was one of the first to +prostrate himself, and at that there could be no further doubt of the +imminence of the peril. + +The cabs rattled and voices sounded from outside; an engine whistled and +shunted at a far platform, but never before at that hour of the day had +Liverpool Street Station been so silent. All held their breath and heard +their hearts thump as they gazed in horrible fascination at that fatal +bag, or with closed eyes stumbled through a hasty prayer. Fully a minute +passed, and the suspense was growing intolerable, when with a loud oath an +old gentleman rose to his feet and walked briskly up to the bag. + +"Have a care, sir! For Heaven's sake have a care!" cried Mr Bunker; but +the old gentleman merely bent over the terrible object, and, picking it +up, exclaimed in bewildered wrath, "It's my bag! Who the devil brought it +here, and what's the meaning of this d--d nonsense?" + +"Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha!" roared Mr Bunker; while like sheepish mushrooms the +people sprang up on all sides. + +"My dear sir," said Mr Bunker, coming up to the old gentleman, and raising +his hat with his most affable air, "permit me to congratulate you on +recovering your lost property, and allow me further to introduce my friend +the Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg." + +"Baron von damned-humbug!" cried the old gentleman. "Did you take my bag, +sir? and if so, are you a thief or a lunatic?" + +For an instant even Mr Bunker himself seemed a trifle taken aback; then he +replied politely, "I am not a thief, sir." + +"Then what _'ave_ you been doing?" demanded the sergeant. + +"Merely demonstrating to my friend the Baron the extraordinary vigilance +of the English police." + +For a time neither the old gentleman nor the sergeant seemed quite capable +of taking the same view of the episode as Mr Bunker, and, curiously +enough, the Baron seemed not disinclined to let his friend extricate +himself as best he could. No one, however, could resist Mr Bunker, and +before very long he and the Baron were driving up Bishopsgate Street +together, with the old gentleman's four-wheeler lumbering in front of +them. + +"Well, Baron, are you satisfied with your morning's instruction?" asked +his friend. + +"A German nobleman is not used to be in soch a position," replied the +Baron, stiffly. + +"You must admit, however, that the object-lesson in the detection of +anarchy was neatly presented." + +"I admit nozing of ze kind," said the Baron, stolidly. + +For the rest of the drive he sat obdurately silent. He went to his room +with the mien of an offended man. During lunch he only opened his lips to +eat. + +On his side Mr Bunker maintained a cheerful composure, and seemed not a +whit put about by his friend's lack of appreciation. + +"Anozzer bottle of claret," said the Baron, gruffly, to a waiter. + +Mr Bunker let him consume it entirely by himself, awaiting the results +with patience. Gradually his face relaxed a little, until all at once, +when the bump in the bottom of the bottle was beginning to appear above +the wine, the whole room was startled by a stentorian, "Ha, ha, ha!" + +"My dear Bonker!" cried the Baron, when he had finished laughing, "forgif +me! I begin for to see ze moral, ha, ha, ha!" + + + + + CHAPTER VI. + + +The Baron expressed no further wish for instruction, but, instead, he +began to show a desire for society. + +"Doesn't one fool suffice?" his friend asked. + +"Ach, yes, my vise fool; ha, ha, ha! Bot sometimes I haf ze craving for +peoples, museec, dancing--in vun vord, society, Bonker!" + +"But this is not the season, Baron. You wouldn't mix with any but the best +society, would you?" + +"Zere are some nobles in town. In my paper I see Lord zis, Duke of zat, in +London. Pairhaps my introdogtions might be here now." + +This suggestion seemed to strike Mr Bunker unfavourably. + +"My company is beginning to pall, is it, Baron?" + +"Ach, no, dear Bonker! I vould merely go out jost vunce or tvice. Haf you +no friends now in town?" + +An idea seemed to seize Mr Bunker. + +"Let me see the paper," he said. + +After perusing it carefully for a little, he at last exclaimed in a tone +of pleased discovery, "Hullo! I see that Lady Tulliwuddle is giving a +reception and dance to-night. Most of the smart people in town just now +are sure to be there. Would you care to go, Baron?" + +"Ach, surely," said the Baron, eagerly. "Bot haf you been invited, +Bonker?" + +"Oh, I used to have a standing invitation to Lady Tulliwuddle's dances, +and I'm certain she would be glad to see me again." + +"Can you take me?" + +"Of course, my dear Baron, she will be honoured." + +"Goot!" cried the Baron. "Ve shall go." + +Mr Bunker explained that it was the proper thing to arrive very late, and +so it was not until after twelve o'clock that they left the Hôtel +Mayonaise for the regions of Belgravia. The Baron, primed with a bottle of +champagne, and arrayed in a costume which Mr Bunker had assured him was +the very latest extreme of fashion, and which included a scarlet watered +silk waistcoat, a pair of white silk socks, and a lavender tie, was in a +condition of cheerfulness verging closely on hilarity. Mr Bunker, that, as +he said, he might better serve as a foil to his friend's splendour, went +more inconspicuously dressed, but was likewise well charged with +champagne. He too was in his happiest vein, and the vision of the Baron's +finery appeared to afford him peculiar gratification. + +Their hansom stopped in front of a large and gaily lit-up mansion, with an +awning leading to the door, and a cluster of carriages and footmen by the +kerbstone. They entered, and having divested themselves of their coats, Mr +Bunker proposed that they should immediately seek the supper-room. + +"Bot should I not be first introduced to mine hostess?" asked the Baron. + +"My dear Baron! a formal reception of the guests is entirely foreign to +English etiquette." + +"Zo? I did not know zat." + +The supper-room was crowded, and having secured a table with some +difficulty, Mr Bunker entered immediately into conversation with a +solitary young gentleman who was consuming a plate of oysters. Before they +had exchanged six sentences the young man had entirely succumbed to Mr +Bunker's address, aided possibly by the young man's supper. + +"Permit me to introduce my friend the Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg, a +nobleman strange as yet to England, but renowned throughout his native +land alike for his talents and his lofty position," said Mr Bunker. + +"Ach, my good friend," exclaimed the Baron, grasping the young man's hand, +"das ist Bonker's vat you call nonsense; bot I am delighted, zehr +delighted, to meet you, and if you gom to Bavaria you most shoot vid me! +Bravo! Ha!" + +From which it may be gathered that the Baron was in a genial humour. + +"Who is that girl?" asked Mr Bunker, pointing to an extremely pretty +damsel just leaving the room. + +"Oh, that's my cousin, Lady Muriel Hilton. She's thought rather pretty, I +believe," answered the young man. + +"Do you mind introducing me?" + +"Certainly," said their new friend. "Come along." + +As they were passing through the room a little incident occurred that, if +the Baron's perceptions had been keener, might have given him cause for +some speculation. Two men standing by the door looked hard at Mr Bunker, +and then at each other, and as the Baron passed them he heard one say, "It +looks devilish like him." + +"He has shaved, then," said the other. + +"Evidently," replied the first speaker; "but I thought he was unlikely to +appear in any society for some time." + +They both laughed, and the Baron heard no more. + +When they reached the ballroom the band was striking up a polka, and +presently Mr Bunker, with his accustomed grace, was tearing round the room +with Lady Muriel, while the Baron--the delight of all eyes in his red +waistcoat--led out her sister. In a very short time the other dancers found +the Baron and his friend's onslaught so vigorous that prudence compelled +them to take shelter along the wall, and from a safe distance admire the +evolutions of these two mysterious guests. + +Mr Bunker was enlivening the monotony of the polka by the judicious +introduction of hornpipe steps, while the Baron, his coat-tails high above +his head, shouted and stamped in his wild career. + +"Do stop for a minute, Baron," gasped his fair partner. + +"Himmel, nein!" roared the Baron. "I haf gom here for to dance! Ha, +Bonker, ha!" + +At last Lady Muriel had to stop through sheer exhaustion, but Mr Bunker, +merely letting her go, pursued his solitary way, double-shuffling and +kicking unimpeded. + +The Baron stopped, breathless, to admire him. Round and round he went, the +only figure in the middle of the room, his arms akimbo, his feet +rat-tatting and kicking to the music, while high above the band resounded +his friend's shouts of "Bravo, Bonker! Wunderschön! Gott in himmel, +higher, higher!" till at length, missing the wall in an attempt to find +support, the Baron dropped with a thud into a sitting posture and +continued his demonstrations from the floor. + +Meanwhile their alarmed hostess was holding a hasty consultation with her +husband, and when the music at last stopped and Mr Bunker was advancing +with his most courteous air towards his late partner, Lord Tulliwuddle +stepped up to him and touched his arm. + +"May I speak to you, sir?" he said. + +"Certainly," replied Mr Bunker. "I shall be honoured. Excuse me for one +moment, Lady Muriel." + +"At whose invitation have you come here to-night?" demanded his host, +sternly. + +"I have the pleasure of addressing Lord Tulliwuddle, have I not?" + +"You have, sir." + +Mr Bunker bent towards him and whispered something in his ear. + +"From Scotland Yard?" exclaimed his lordship. + +"Hush!" said Mr Bunker, glancing cautiously round the room, and then he +added, with an air of impressive gravity, "You have a bathroom on the +third floor, I believe?" + +"I have," replied his host in great surprise. + +"Has it a bell?" + +"No, I believe not." + +"Ah, I thought so. If you will favour me by coming up-stairs for a minute, +my Lord, you will avoid a serious private scandal. Say nothing about it at +present to any one." + +In blank astonishment and some alarm Lord Tulliwuddle went up with him to +the third floor, where the house was still and the sounds of revelry +reached faintly. + +"What does this mean, sir?" he asked. + +"If I am right in my conjectures you will need no explanation from me, my +Lord." + +His lordship opened a door, and turning on an electric light, revealed a +small and ordinary-looking bathroom. + +"Ha, no bell--excellent!" said Mr Bunker. + +"What are you doing with the key?" exclaimed his host. + +"Good night, my Lord. I shall tell them to send up breakfast at nine," +said Mr Bunker, and stepping quickly out, he shut and locked the door. + +A minute later he was back in the ballroom looking anxiously for the +Baron, but that nobleman was nowhere to be seen. + +"The devil!" he said to himself. "Can they have tackled him too?" + +But as he ran downstairs a gust of cheerful laughter set his mind at ease. + +"Ha, ha, ha! Vere is old Bonker? He also vill shoot vid me!" + +"Here I am, my dear Baron," he exclaimed gaily, as he tracked the voice +into the supper-room. + +"Ach, mine dear Bonker!" cried the Baron, folding him in his muscular +embrace, "I haf here met friends, ve are merry! Ve drink to Bavaria, to +England, to everyzing!" + +The "friends" consisted of two highly amused young men and two +half-scandalised, half-hysterical ladies, into the midst of whose +supper-table the Baron had projected himself with infectious hilarity. +They all looked up with great curiosity at Mr Bunker, but that gentleman +was not in the least put about. He bowed politely to the table generally, +and took his friend by the arm. + +"It is time we were going, Baron, I'm afraid," he said. + +"Vat for? Ah, not yet, Bonker, not yet. I am enjoying myself down to ze +floor. I most dance again, Bonker, jost vunce more," pleaded the Baron. + +"My dear Baron, the noblemen of highest rank must always leave first, and +people are talking of going now. Come along, old man." + +"Ha, is zat so?" said the Baron. "Zen vill I go. Good night!" he cried, +waving his hand to the room generally. "Ven you gom to Bavaria you most +all shoot vid me. Bravo, my goot Bonker! Ha! ha!" + +As they turned away from the table, one of the young men, who had been +looking very hard at Mr Bunker, rose and touched his sleeve. + +"I say, aren't you----?" he began. + +"Possibly I am," interrupted Mr Bunker, "only I haven't the slightest +recollection of the fact." + +An astonished lady was indicated by Mr Bunker as the hostess, and to her +the Baron bade an affectionate adieu. He handed a sovereign to the +footman, embraced the butler, and as they sped eastwards in their hansom, +a rousing chorus from the two friends awoke the echoes of Piccadilly. + +"Bravo, Bonker! Himmel, I haf enjoyed myself!" sighed the exhausted Baron. + + + + + CHAPTER VII. + + +The Baron and Mr Bunker discussed a twelve o'clock breakfast with the +relish of men who had done a good night's work. The Baron was full of his +exploits. "Ze lofly Lady Hilton" and his new "friends" seemed to have made +a vivid impression. + +"Zey vill be in ze Park to-day, of course?" he suggested. + +"Possibly," replied Mr Bunker, without any great enthusiasm. + +"But surely." + +"After a dance it is rather unlikely." + +"Ze Lady Hilton did say she vent to ze Park." + +"To-day, Baron?" + +"I do not remember to-day. I did dance so hard I was not perhaps distinct. +But I shall go and see." + +As Mr Bunker's attempts to throw cold water on this scheme proved quite +futile, he made a graceful virtue of necessity, dressed himself with care, +and set out in the afternoon for the Park. They had only walked as far as +Piccadilly Circus when in the crowd at the corner his eye fell upon a +familiar figure. It was the burly, red-faced man. + +"The devil! Moggridge again!" he muttered. + +For a moment he thought they were going to pass unobserved: then the man +turned his head their way, and Mr Bunker saw him start. He never looked +over his shoulder, but after walking a little farther he called the +Baron's attention to a shop window, and they stopped to look at it. Out of +the corner of his eye he saw Moggridge about twenty yards behind them +stopping too. He was glancing towards them very doubtfully. Evidently his +mind was not yet made up, and at once Mr Bunker's fertile brain began to +revolve plans. + +A little farther on they paused before another window, and exactly the +same thing happened. Then Mr Bunker made up his mind. He looked carefully +at the cabs, and at last observed a smart-looking young man driving a +fresh likely horse at a walking pace beside the pavement. + +He caught the driver's eye and raised his stick, and turning suddenly to +the Baron with a gesture of annoyance, exclaimed, "Forgive my rudeness, +Baron, I'm afraid I must leave you. I had clean forgotten an important +engagement in the city for this afternoon." + +"Appointment in ze city?" said the Baron in considerable surprise. "I did +not know you had friends in ze city." + +"I have just heard from my father's man of business, and I'm afraid it +would be impolitic not to see him. Do you mind if I leave you here?" + +"Surely, my dear fellow, I vould not stop you. Already I feel at home by +myself." + +"Then we shall meet at the hotel before dinner. Good luck with the ladies, +Baron." + +Mr Bunker jumped into the cab, saying only to the driver, "To the city, as +quick as you can." + +"What part, sir?" + +"Oh, say the Bank. Hurry up!" + +Then as the man whipped up, Mr Bunker had a glimpse of Moggridge hailing +another cab, and peeping cautiously through the little window at the back +he saw him starting in hot pursuit. He took five shillings out of his +pocket and opened the trap-door in the roof. + +"Do you see that other cab chasing us, with a red-faced man inside?" + +"Yes, sir." + +Mr Bunker handed his driver the money. + +"Get rid of him, then. Take me anywhere through the city you like, and +when he's off the scent let me know." + +"Very good, sir," replied the driver, cracking his whip till his steed +began to move past the buses and the other cabs like a train. + +On they flew, clatter and jingle, twisting like a snipe through the +traffic. Mr Bunker perceived that he had a good horse and a good driver, +and he smiled in pleasant excitement. He lit a cigar, leaned his arms on +the doors, and settled himself to enjoy the race. + +The black lions of Trafalgar Square flew by, then the colossal hotels of +Northumberland Avenue and the railway bridge at Charing Cross, and they +were going at a gallop along the Embankment. He got swift glimpses of +other cabs and foot-passengers, the trees seemed to flit past like +telegraph-posts on a railway, the barges and lighters on the river dropped +one by one behind them: it was a fair course for a race, with never a +check before Blackfriar's Bridge. + +As they turned into Queen Victoria Street he opened the lid and asked, +"Are they still in sight?" + +"Yes, sir; I'm afraid we ain't gaining much yet. But I'll do it, sir, no +fears." + +Mr Bunker lay back and laughed. + +"This is better than the Park," he said to himself. + +They had a fine drive up Queen Victoria Street before they plunged into +the whirlpool of traffic at the Bank. They were slowly making their way +across when the driver, spying an opening in another stream, abruptly +wheeled round for Cornhill, and presently they were off again at top +speed. + +"Thrown them off?" asked Mr Bunker. + +"Tried to, sir, but they were too sharp and got clear away too." + +Mr Bunker saw that it was going to be a stern chase, and laughed again. In +order that he might not show ostensibly that he was running away, he +resisted the temptation of having another peep through the back, and +resigned himself to the chances of the chase. + +Through and through the lanes and byways of the city they drove, and after +each double the answer from the box was always the same. The cab behind +could not be shaken off. + +"Work your way round to Holborn and try a run west," Mr Bunker suggested. + +So after a little they struck Newgate Street, and presently their steed +stretched himself again in Holborn Viaduct. + +"Gaining now, cabby?" + +"A little, sir, I think." + +Mr Bunker sat placidly till they were well along Holborn before he +inquired again. + +"Can't get rid of 'im no 'ow. Afride it ain't much good, sir." + +Mr Bunker passed up five shillings more. + +"Keep your tail up. You'll do it yet," he exhorted. "Try a turn north; you +may bother him among the squares." + +So they doubled north, and as the evening closed in their wearied horse +was lashed through a maze of monotonous streets and tarnished Bloomsbury +Squares. And still the other cab stuck to their trail. But when they +emerged on the Euston Road, Mr Bunker was as cheerful as ever. + +"They can't last much longer," he said to his driver. "Turn up Regent's +Park way." + +A little later he put the usual question and got the same unvarying +answer. + +The horse was evidently beginning to fail, and he saw that this +chariot-race must soon come to an end. The street-lamps and the shop +windows were all lit up by this time, and the dusk was pretty thick. It +seemed to him that he might venture to try his luck on foot, and he began +to look out for an opening where a cab could not follow. + +They were flogging along a noisy stone-paved road where there was little +other traffic; on one side stood an unbroken row of houses, and on the +other were small semi-detached villas with little strips of garden about +them. All at once he saw a doctor's red lamp over the door of one of these +half villas, and an inspiration came upon him. + +"One can always visit a doctor," he said to himself, and smiled in great +amusement at something in the reflection. + +He stopped the cab, handed the man half a sovereign, and saying only, +"Drive away again, quickly," jumped out, glanced at the name on the plate, +and pulled the bell. As he waited on the step he saw the other cab stop a +little way back, and his pursuer emerge. + +A frowsy little servant opened the door. + +"Is Dr Twiddel at home?" he asked. + +"Dr Twiddel's abroad, sir," said the maid. + +"No one in at all, then?" + +"Dr Billson sees 'is patients, sir--w'en there _his_ any." + +"When do you expect Dr Billson?" + +"In about an hour, sir, 'e usually comes hin." + +"Excellent!" thought Mr Bunker. Aloud he said, "Well, I'm a patient. I'll +come in and wait." + +He stepped in, and the door banged behind him. + + + + + CHAPTER VIII. + + +"This w'y, sir," said the maid, and Mr Bunker found himself in the little +room where this story opened. + +The moment he was alone he went to the window and peeped cautiously +between the slats of the venetian blind. + +The street was quiet, both cabs had disappeared, and for a minute or two +he could see nothing even of Moggridge. Then a figure moved carefully from +the shelter of a bush a little way down the railings, and, after a quick +look at the house, stepped back again. + +"He means to play the waiting game," said Mr Bunker to himself. "Long may +you wait, my wary Moggridge!" + +He took a rapid survey of the room. He saw the medical library, the rented +furniture, and the unlit gas-stove; and at last his eye fell upon a box of +cigarettes. To one of these he helped himself and leaned his back against +the mantelpiece. + +"There must be at least one room at the back," he reflected; "that room +must have a window, and beyond that window there is all London to turn to. +Friend Moggridge, I trust you are prepared to spend the evening behind +your bush." + +He had another look through the blind and shook his head. + +"A little too light yet,--I'd better wait for a quarter of an hour or so." + +To while away the time he proceeded to make a tour of the room, for, as he +said to himself, when in an unknown country any information may possibly +come in useful. There was nothing whatever from which he could draw even +the most superficial deduction till he came to the writing-desk. Here a +heap of bills were transfixed by a long skewer, and at his first glance at +the uppermost his face assumed an expression of almost ludicrous +bewilderment. He actually rubbed his eyes before he looked a second time. + +"One dozen shirts," he read, "four under-flannels, four pair socks, one +dozen handkerchiefs, two sleeping-suits--marked Francis Beveridge! the +account rendered to Dr G. Twiddel! What in the name of wonderment is the +meaning of this?" + +He sat down with the bill in his hand and gazed hard at it. + +"Precisely my outfit," he said to himself. + +"Am I--Does it----? What a rum thing!" + +He sat for about ten minutes looking hard at the floor. Then he burst out +laughing, resumed in a moment his air of philosophical opportunism, and +set about a further search of the desk. He looked at the bills and seemed +to find nothing more to interest him. Then he glanced at one or two +letters in the drawers, threw the first few back again, and at last paused +over one. + +"Twiddel to Billson," he said to himself. "This may possibly be worth +looking at." + +It was dated more than a month back from the town of Fogelschloss. + +"Dear Tom," it ran, "we are having an A 1 time. Old Welsh is in splendid +form, doing the part to perfection. He has never given himself away yet, +not even when drunk, which, I am sorry to say, he has been too often. But +then old Welsh is so funny when he is drunk that it makes him all the more +like the original, or at least what the original is supposed to be. + +"Of course we don't dare to venture into places where we would see too +many English. This is quite an amusing place for a German town, some baths +and a kind of a gambling-table, and some pretty girls--for Germans. There +is a sporting aristocrat here, in an old castle, who is very friendly, and +is much impressed with Welsh's account of his family plate and +deer-forest, and has asked us once or twice to come out and see him. We +are no end of swells, I assure you. + +"Ta, ta, old chap. Hope the practice prospers in your hands. Don't kill +_all_ the patients before I come back.--Ever thine, + + GEORGE TWIDDEL." + +"From this I conclude that Dr Twiddel is on the festive side of forty," he +reflected; "there are elements of mystery and a general atmosphere of +alcohol about it, but that's all, I'm afraid." + +He put it back in the drawer, but the bill he slipped into his pocket. + +"And now," thought he, "it is time I made the first move." + +After waiting for a minute or two to make sure that everything was quiet, +he gently stepped out into a little linoleum-carpeted hall. On the right +hand was the front door, on the left two others that must, he thought, +open into rooms on the back. He chose the nearer at a venture, and entered +boldly. It was quite dark. He closed the door again softly, struck a +match, and looked round the room. It seemed to be Dr Twiddel's dining- and +sitting-room. + +"Pipes, photographs, well-sat-in chairs," he observed, "_and_ a window." + +He pulled aside the blind and looked out into the darkness of a strip of +back-garden. For a minute he listened intently, but no sound came from the +house. Then he threw up the sash and scrambled out. It was quite dark by +this time: he was enclosed between two rows of vague, black houses, with +bright windows here and there, and chimney-cans faintly cutting their +uncouth designs among a few pale London stars. The space between was +filled with the two lines of little gardens and the ranks of walls, and in +the middle the black chasm of a railway cutting. + +A frightened cat bolted before him as he hurried down to the foot of the +strip, but that was all the life he saw. He looked over the wall right +into the deep crevasse. A little way off, on the one hand, hung a cluster +of signal-lights, and the shining rails reflected them all along to the +mouth of a tunnel on the other. Turning his head this way and that, there +was nothing to be seen anywhere else but garden wall after garden wall. + +"It's a choice between a hurdle-race through these gardens, a cat-walk +along this wall, and a descent into the cutting," he reflected. "The walls +look devilish high and the cutting devilish deep. Hang me if I know which +road to take." + +While he was still debating this somewhat perplexing question, he felt the +ground begin to quiver under him. Through the hum of London there +gradually arose a louder roar, and in a minute the head-lights of an +engine flashed out of the tunnel. One after another a string of bright +carriages followed it, each more slowly than the carriage in front, till +the whole train was at a standstill below him with the red signal-lamp +against it. + +In an instant his decision was taken. At the peril of life and garments he +scrambled down the rocky bank, picking as he went an empty first-class +compartment, and just as the train began to move again he swung himself up +and sprang into a carriage. + +Unfortunately he had chosen the wrong one in his haste, and as he opened +the door he saw a comical vision of a stout little old gentleman huddling +into the farther corner in the most dire consternation. + +"Who are you, sir? What do you want, sir?" spluttered the old gentleman. +"If you come any nearer me, sir--one step, sir!--I shall instantly +communicate with the guard! I have no money about me. Go away, sir!" + +"I regret to learn that you have no money," replied Mr Bunker, +imperturbably; "but I am sorry that I am not at present in a condition to +offer a loan." + +He sat down and smiled amicably, but the little gentleman was not to be +quieted so easily. Seeing that no violence was apparently intended, his +fright changed into respectable indignation. + +"You needn't try to be funny with me, sir. You are committing an illegal +act. You have placed yourself in an uncommonly serious position, sir." + +"Indeed, sir?" replied Mr Bunker. "I myself should have imagined that by +remaining on the rails I should have been much more seriously situated." + +The old gentleman looked at him like an angry small dog that longs to bite +if it only dared. + +"What is the meaning of this illegal intrusion?" he demanded. "Who are +you? Where did you come from?" + +"I had the misfortune, sir," explained Mr Bunker, politely, "to drop my +hat out of the window of a neighbouring carriage. While I was picking it +up the train started, and I had to enter the first compartment I could +find. I am sorry that my entry frightened you." + +"Frightened me!" spluttered the old gentleman. "I am not afraid, sir. I am +an honest man who need fear no one, sir. I do not believe you dropped your +hat. It is perfectly uninjured." + +"It may be news to you, sir," replied Mr Bunker, "that by gently yet +firmly passing the sleeve of your coat round your hat in the direction of +the nap, it is possible to restore the gloss. Thus," and suiting the +action to the word he took off his hat, drew his coat-sleeve across it, +and with a genial smile at the old gentleman, replaced it on his head. + +But his neighbour was evidently of that truculent disposition which merely +growls at blandishments. He snorted and replied testily, "That is all very +well, sir, but I don't believe a word of it." + +"If you prefer it, then, I fell off the telegraph wires in an attempt to +recover my boots." + +The old gentleman became purple in the face. + +"Have a care, sir! I am a director of this company, and at the next +station I shall see that you give a proper account of yourself. And here +we are, sir. I trust you have a more credible story in readiness." + +As he spoke they drew up beside an underground platform, and the irascible +old gentleman, with a very threatening face that was not yet quite cleared +of alarm, bustled out in a prodigious hurry. Mr Bunker lay back in his +seat and replied with a smile, "I shall be delighted to tell any story +within the bounds of strict propriety." + +But the moment he saw the irate director disappear in the crowd he whipped +out too, and with the least possible delay transferred himself into a +third-class carriage. + +From his seat near the window he watched the old gentleman hurry back with +three officials at his heels, and hastily search each first-class +compartment in turn. The last one was so near him that he could hear his +friend say, "Damn it, the rascal has bolted in the crowd!" And with that +the four of them rushed off to the barrier to intercept or pursue this +suspicious character. Then the whistle blew, and as the train moved off Mr +Bunker remarked complacently, if a little mysteriously, to himself, "Well, +whoever I am, it would seem I'm rather difficult to catch." + + + + + CHAPTER IX. + + +Mr Bunker arrived at the Hôtel Mayonaise in what, from his appearance, was +an unusually reflective state of mind for him. The other visitors, many of +whom had begun to regard him and his noble friend with great interest, saw +him pass through the crowd in the hall and about the lifts with a +thoughtful air. He went straight to the Baron's room. Outside the door he +paused for an instant to set his face in a cheerful smile, and then burst +gaily in upon his friend. + +"Well, my dear Baron!" he cried, "what luck in the Park?" + +The Baron was pulling his moustache over an English novel. He laid down +his book and frowned at Mr Bunker. + +"I do not onderstand your English vays," he replied. + +Mr Bunker perceived that something was very much amiss, nor was he without +a suspicion of the cause. He laughed, however, and asked, "What's the +matter, old man?" + +"I vent to ze Park," said the Baron, with a solemn deliberation that +evidently came hardly to him. "I entered ze Park. I vas dressed, as you +know, viz taste and appropriety. I vas sober, as you know. I valked under +ze trees, and I looked agreeably at ze people. Goddam!" + +"My dear Baron!" expostulated Mr Bunker. + +The Baron resumed his intense composure with a great effort. + +"Not long vas ven I see ze Lady Hilton drive past mit ze ozzer Lady Hilton +and vun old lady. I raise my hat--no bow from zem. 'Pairhaps,' I zink, 'zey +see me not.' Zey stop by ze side to speak viz a gentleman. I gomed up and +again I raise my hat and I say, 'How do you do, Lady Hilton? I hope you +are regovered from ze dance.' Zat was gorrect, vas it not?" + +"Perfectly," replied Mr Bunker, with great gravity. + +"Zen vy did ze Lady Hilton schream and ze ozzer Lady Hilton cry, 'Ach, zat +German man!' And vy did ze old lady schream to ze gentleman, 'Send him +avay! How dare you? Insolence!' and suchlike vords?" + +"What remarkable conduct, my dear Baron!" said Mr Bunker. + +"Remargable!" roared the justly incensed Baron. "Is it not more zan +_remargable?_ Donner und blitzen! Mon Dieu! Blood! I know not ze English +vord so bad enoff for soch conduct." + +"It must have been a joke," his friend suggested, soothingly. + +"Vun dashed bad joke, zen! Ze gentleman said to me, 'Get out of zis, you +rasgal!' 'Vat mean you, sare?' say I. 'You know quite vell,' said he. +'Glear out!' So I gave him my card and tell him I would be glad to see his +frient zat he should send, for zat I vas not used to be called zo. Zen I +raise my hat to ze Lady Hilton and say, 'Adieu, madame, I know now ze +English lady,' and I valk on. Himmel!" + +"What a very extraordinary affair, Baron!" + +The Baron grunted with inarticulate indignation and nearly pulled his +moustache out by the roots. Abruptly he broke out again, "English ladies? +I do not believe zey are ladies! Never haf I been treated zo! Vat do you +mean, Bonker, by taking me among soch peoples?" + +"_I_, my dear Baron? It was not I who introduced you to the Hiltons. I +never saw them before." + +The difficulty of attaching any blame to his friend seemed to have +anything but a soothing effect on the Baron. You could almost fancy that +you heard his tail lash the floor. + +"Zat vas not all," he continued, after a short struggle with his wrath. "I +valked on, and soon I see two of ze frients I made last night at supper." + +"Which two?" + +"Ze yong man zat spoke to you ven you rise from ze table, and vun of ze +ladies. Again I raise my hat and say, 'How do you do? I hope zat you are +regovered from ze dance.' Zat is gorrect, you say?" + +"Under most circumstances." + +"Ze man stared at me, and ze voman--I vill not say lady--says to him zo zat +I can hear, 'Zat awful German!' Ze man says, 'Zo it is,' and laughed. 'I +haf ze pleasure of meeting you last night at ze Lady Tollyvoddle,' I said. +'I remember,' he said; 'but I haf no vish to meet you again.' I take out +my card to gif him, but he only said, 'Go avay, or I vill call ze police!' +'Ze police! To me, Baron von Blitzenberg! Teufel!' I replied." + +"And that was all, Baron?" asked Mr Bunker, in what seemed rather like a +tone of relief. + +"No; suddenly he did turn back and said, 'By ze vay, who vas zat viz you +last night?' To vich I replied, 'If you address me again, my man, I vill +call ze police. Go avay!' " + +"Bravo, Baron! Ha, ha, ha! Excellent!" laughed Mr Bunker. + +This applause served to reinstate the Baron a little in his own good +opinion. He laughed too, though rather noisily than heartily, and suddenly +became grave again. + +"Vat means zis, Bonker? Vat haf I done? Vy should zey treat me zo?" + +"Well, you see, my dear Baron," his friend explained, "I ought to have +warned you that it is not usual in England to address ladies you have met +at a dance without some direct invitation on their part. At the same time, +it is evident that the Hiltons and the other man, who of course must be +connected with the Foreign Office, are aware of some sudden strain in the +diplomatic relations between England and Germany, which as yet is unknown +to the public. Your ancient name and your high rank have naturally led +them to conclude that you are an agent of the German Government, and an +international significance was of course attached to your presence in the +Park. I certainly think they took a most outrageous advantage of a +trifling detail of etiquette to repulse you; but then you must remember, +Baron, that their families might have been seriously compromised with the +Government if they had been seen with so prominent a member of the German +aristocracy in the middle of Hyde Park." + +"Zo?" said the Baron, thoughtfully. "I begin to onderstand. My name, as +you say, is cairtainly distinguished. Bot zen should I remain in London?" + +"Just what I was wondering, Baron. What do you say to a trip down to St +Egbert's-on-Sea? It's a very select watering-place, and we might spend a +week or two there very pleasantly." + +"Egxellent!" said the Baron; "ven shall we start?" + +"To-morrow morning." + +"Goot! zo let it be. I am tired of London and of ze English ladies' +manners. Police to ze Baron von Blitzenberg! Ve shall go to St Egbert's, +Bonker!" + + + + + + PART III. + + + + + CHAPTER I. + + +The Baron and Mr Bunker walked arm-in-arm along the esplanade at St +Egbert's-on-Sea. + +"Aha!" said the Baron, "zis is more fresh zan London!" + +"Yes," replied his friend; "we are now in the presence of that stimulating +element which provides patriotic Britons with music-hall songs, and +dyspeptic Britons with an appetite." + +A stirring breeze swept down the long white esplanade, threatening hats +and troubling skirts; the pale-green south-coast sea rumbled up the +shingle; the day was bright and pleasant for the time of year, and drove +the Baron's mischances from his head; altogether it seemed to Mr Bunker +that the omens were good. They were both dressed in the smartest of tweed +suits, and walked jauntily, like men who knew their own value. Every now +and then, as they passed a pretty face, the Baron would say, "Aha, Bonker! +zat is not so bad, eh?" + +And Mr Bunker, who seemed not unwilling that his friend should find some +entertaining distraction in St Egbert's, would look at the owners of these +faces with a prospector's eye and his own unrivalled assurance. + +They had walked up and down three or four times, when a desire for a +different species of diversion began to overtake the Baron. It was the one +kind of desire that the Baron never even tried to wrestle with. + +"My vriend Bonker," said he, "is it not somevere about time for loncheon, +eh?" + +"I should say it was precisely the hour." + +"Ha, ha! zen, let us gom and eat. Himmel, zis sea is ze fellow to make von +hungry!" + +The Baron had taken a private suite of rooms on the first floor of the +best hotel in St Egbert's, and after a very substantial lunch Mr Bunker +stretched himself on the luxurious sitting-room sofa and announced his +intention of having a nap. + +"I shall go out," said the Baron. "You vill not gom?" + +"I shall leave you to make a single-handed conquest," replied Mr Bunker. +"Besides, I have a little matter I want to look into." + +So the Baron arranged his hat airily, at what he had perceived to be the +most fashionable and effective English angle, and strutted off to the +esplanade. + +It was about two hours later that he burst excitedly into the room, +crying, "Aha, mine Bonker! I haf disgovered zomzing!" and then he stopped +in some surprise. "Ello, vat make you, my vriend?" + +His friend, in fact, seemed to be somewhat singularly employed. Through a +dense cloud of tobacco-smoke you could just pick him out of the depths of +an armchair, his feet resting on the mantelpiece, while his lap and all +the floor round about were covered with immense books. The Baron's +curiosity was still further excited by observing that they consisted +principally of a London and a St Egbert's directory, several volumes of a +Dictionary of National Biography, and one or two peerages and county +family compilations. + +He looked up with a smile. "You may well wonder, my dear Baron. The fact +is, I am looking for a name." + +"A name! vat name?" + +"Alas! if I knew what it was I should stop looking, and I confess I'm +rather sick of the job." + +"Vich vay do you look, zen?" + +"Simply by wading my way through all the lists of names I could steal or +borrow. It's devilish dry work." + +"Ze name of a vriend, is it?" + +"Yes; but I'm afraid I must wait till it comes. And what is this +discovery, Baron? A petticoat, I presume. After all, they are the only +things worth finding," and he shut the books one after another. + +"A petticoat with ze fairest girl inside it!" exclaimed the Baron, +rapturously. + +"Your eyes seem to have been singularly penetrating, Baron. Was she dark +or fair, tall or short, fat or slender, widow, wife, or maid?" + +"Fair, viz blue eyes, short pairhaps but not too short, slender as +a--a--drom-stick, and I vould say a maid; at least I see vun stout old lady +mit her, mozzer and daughter I soppose." + +"And did this piece of perfection seem to appreciate you?" + +"Vy should I know? Zey are ze real ladies and pairtend not to see me, bot +I zink zey notice me all ze same. Not 'lady vriends,' Bonker, ha, ha, ha!" + +Mr Bunker laughed with reminiscent amusement, and inquired, "And how did +the romance end--in a cab, Baron?" + +"Ha, ha, ha!" laughed the Baron; "better zan zat, Bonker--moch better!" + +Mr Bunker raised his eyebrows. + +"It's hardly the time of year for a romance to end in a bathing-machine. +You followed the divinity to her rented heaven, perhaps?" + +The Baron bent forward and answered in a stage whisper, "Zey live in zis +hotel, Bonker!" + +"Then I can only wish you joy, Baron, and if my funds allow me, send her a +wedding present." + +"Ach, not quite so fast, my vriend! I am not caught so easy." + +"My dear fellow, a week at close quarters is sufficient to net any man." + +"Ven I marry," replied the Baron, "moch most be considered. A von +Blitzenberg does not mate viz every vun." + +"A good many families have made the same remark, but one does not always +meet the fathers-in-law." + +"Ha, ha! ve shall see. Bot, Bonker, she is lofly!" + +The Baron awaited dinner with even more than his usual ardour. He dressed +with the greatest care, and at an absurdly early hour was already urging +his friend to come down and take their places. Indeed after a time there +was no withholding him, and they finally took their seats in the +dining-room before anybody else. + +At what seemed to the impatient Baron unconscionably long intervals a few +people dropped in and began to study their menus and glance with an air of +uncomfortable suspicion at their neighbours. + +"I vonder vill she gom," he said three or four times at least. + +"Console yourself, my dear Baron," his friend would reply; "they always +come. That's seldom the difficulty." + +And the Baron would dally with his victuals in the most unwonted fashion, +and growl at the rapidity with which the courses followed one another. + +"Do zey suppose ve vish to eat like----?" he began, and then laying his hand +on his friend's sleeve, he whispered, "She goms!" + +Mr Bunker turned his head just in time to see in the doorway the Countess +of Grillyer and the Lady Alicia à Fyre. + +"Is she not fair?" asked the Baron, excitedly. + +"I entirely approve of your taste, Baron. I have only once seen any one +quite like her before." + +With a gratified smile the Baron filled his glass, while his friend seemed +amused by some humorous reflection of his own. + +The Lady Alicia and her mother had taken their seats at a table a little +way off, and at first their eyes never happened to turn in the direction +of the two friends. But at last, after looking at the ceiling, the carpet, +the walls, the other people, everything else in the room it seemed, Lady +Alicia's glance fell for an instant on the Baron. That nobleman looked as +interesting as a mouthful of roast duck would permit him, but the glance +passed serenely on to Mr Bunker. For a moment it remained serene; suddenly +it became startled and puzzled, and at that instant Mr Bunker turned his +own eyes full upon her, smiled slightly, and raised his glass to his lips. + +The glance fell, and the Lady Alicia blushed down to the diamonds in her +necklace. + +The Baron insisted on lingering over his dinner till the charmer was +finished, and so by a fortuitous coincidence they left the room +immediately behind the Countess. The Baron passed them in the passage, and +a few yards farther he looked round for his friend, and the Countess +turned to look for her daughter. + +They saw Lady Alicia following with an intensely unconscious expression, +while Mr Bunker was in the act of returning to the dining-room. + +"I wanted to secure a table for breakfast," he explained. + + + + + CHAPTER II. + + +The Baron was in high hopes of seeing the fair unknown at breakfast, but +it seemed she must be either breakfasting in her own room or lying long +abed. + +"I think I shall go out for a little constitutional," said Mr Bunker, when +he had finished. "I suppose the hotel has a stronger attraction for you." + +"Ach, yes, I shall remain," his friend replied. "Pairhaps I may see zem." + +"Take care then, Baron!" + +"I shall not propose till you return, Bonker!" + +"No," said Mr Bunker to himself, "I don't think you will." + +Just outside St Egbert's there is a high breezy sweep of downs, falling +suddenly to a chalky seaward cliff. It overlooks the town and the +undulating inland country and a great spread of shining sea; and even +without a spy-glass you can see sail after sail and smoke-wreath after +smoke-wreath go by all day long. + +But Mr Bunker had apparently walked there for other reasons than to see +the view. He did stop once or twice, but it was only to scan the downs +ahead, and at the sight of a fluttering skirt he showed no interest in +anything else, but made a straight line for its owner. For her part, the +lady seemed to await his coming. She gathered her countenance into an +expression of as perfect unconcern as a little heightening of her colour +would allow her, and returned his salute with rather a distant bow. But Mr +Bunker was not to be damped by this hint of barbed wire. He held out his +hand and exclaimed cordially, "My dear Lady Alicia! this is charming of +you!" + +"Of course you understand, Mr Beveridge, it's only----" + +"Perfectly," he interrupted, gaily; "I understand everything I should and +nothing I shouldn't. In fact, I have altered little, except in the +trifling matter of a beard, a moustache or two, and, by the way, a name." + +"A name?" + +"I am now Francis Bunker, but as much at your service as ever." + +"But why--I mean, have you really changed your name?" + +"Circumstances have changed it, just as circumstances shaved me." + +Lady Alicia made a great endeavour to look haughty. "I do not quite +understand, Mr----" + +"Bunker--a temporary title, but suggestive, and simple for the tradesmen." + +"I do not understand your conduct. Why have you changed your name?" + +"Why not?" + +This retort was so evidently unanswerable that Lady Alicia changed her +inquiry. + +"Where have you been?" + +"Till yesterday, in London." + +"Then you didn't go to your own parish?" she demanded, reproachfully. + +"There were difficulties," he replied; "in fact, a certified lunatic is +not in great demand as a parish priest. They seem to prefer them +uncertified." + +"But didn't you try?" + +"Hard, but it was no use. The bishop was out of town, and I had to wait +till his return; besides, my position was somewhat insecure. I have had at +least two remarkable escapes since I saw you last." + +"Are you safe here?" she asked, hurriedly. + +"With your consent, yes." + +She looked a little troubled. "I don't know that I am doing right, Mr +Bev--Bunker, but----" + +"Thank you, my friend," he interrupted, tenderly. + +"Don't," she began, hastily. "You mustn't talk like----" + +"Francis Beveridge?" he interrupted. "The trouble is, this rascal Bunker +bears an unconscionably awkward resemblance to our old friend." + +"You must see that it is quite--ridiculous." + +"Absurd," he agreed,--"perfectly preposterous. I laugh whenever I think of +it!" + +Poor Lady Alicia felt like a man at a telephone who has been connected +with the wrong person. Again she made a desperate shift to fall back on a +becoming pride. + +"What do you mean?" she demanded. + +"If I mean anything at all, which is always rather doubtful," he replied, +candidly, "I mean that Beveridge and his humbug were creatures of an +occasion, just as Bunker and his are of another. The one occasion is +passed, and with it the first entertaining gentleman has vanished into +space. The second gentleman will doubtless follow when his time is up. In +fact, I may be said to be a series of dissolving views." + +"Then isn't what you said true?" + +"I'm afraid you must be more specific; you see I've talked so much." + +"What you said about yourself--and your work." + +He shook his head humorously. "I have no means of checking my statements." + +She looked at him in a troubled way, and then her eyes fell. + +"At least," she said, "you won't--you mustn't treat me as--as you did." + +"As Beveridge did? Certainly not; Bunker is the soul of circumspection. +Besides, he doesn't require to get out of an asylum." + +"Then it was only to get away?" she cried, turning scarlet. + +"Let us call it so," he replied, looking pensively out to sea. + +It seemed wiser to Lady Alicia to change the subject. + +"Who is the friend you are staying with?" she asked, suddenly. + +"My old friend the Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg, and your own most recent +admirer," he replied. "I am at present living with, in fact I may say +upon, him." + +"Does he know?" + +"If you meet him, you had perhaps better not inquire into my past +history." + +"I meant, does he know about--about your knowing me?" + +"Bless them!" thought Mr Bunker; "one forgets they're not _always_ +thinking about us!" + +"My noble friend has no idea that I have been so fortunate," he replied. + +Lady Alicia looked relieved. "Who is he?" she asked. + +"A German nobleman of great wealth, long descent, and the most +accommodating disposition. He is at present exploring England under my +guidance, and I flatter myself that he has already seen and done a number +of things that are not on most programmes." + +Lady Alicia was silent for a minute. Then she said with a little +hesitation, "Didn't you get a letter from me?" + +"A letter? No," he replied, in some surprise. + +"I wrote twice--because you asked me to, and I thought--I wondered if you +were safe." + +"To what address did you write?" + +"The address you gave me." + +"And what was that?" he asked, still evidently puzzled. + +"You said care of the Archbishop of York would find you." + +Mr Bunker abruptly looked the other way. + +"By Jove!" he said, as if lost in speculation, "I must find out what the +matter was. I can't imagine why they haven't been forwarded." + +Lady Alicia appeared a little dissatisfied. + +"Was that a _real_ address?" she asked, suddenly. + +"Perfectly," he replied; "as real as Pentonville Jail or the House of +Commons." ("And as likely to find me," he added to himself.) + +Lady Alicia seemed to hesitate whether to pursue the subject further, but +in the middle of her debate Mr Bunker asked, "By the way, has Lady +Grillyer any recollection of having seen me before?" + +"No, she doesn't remember you at all." + +"Then we shall meet as strangers?" + +"Yes, I think it would be better; don't you?" + +"It will save our imaginations certainly." + +Lady Alicia looked at him as though she expected something more; but as +nothing came, she said, "I think it's time I went back." + +"For the present then _au revoir_, my dear Alicia. I beg your pardon, Lady +Alicia; it was that rascal Beveridge who made the slip. It now remains to +make your formal acquaintance." + +"You--you mustn't try!" + +"The deuce is in these people beginning with B!" he laughed. "They seem to +do things without trying." + +He pressed her hand, raised his hat, and started back to the town. She, on +her part, lingered to let him get a clear start of her, and her blue eyes +looked as though a breeze had blown across and ruffled them. + +Mr Bunker had reached the esplanade, and was sauntering easily back +towards the hotel, looking at the people and smiling now and then to +himself, when he observed with considerable astonishment two familiar +figures strolling towards him. They were none other than the Baron and the +Countess, engaged in animated conversation, and apparently on the very +best terms with each other. At the sight of him the Baron beamed joyfully. + +"Aha, Bonker, so you haf returned!" he cried. "In ze meanvile I haf had +vun great good fortune. Let me present my friend Mr Bonker, ze Lady +Grillyer." + +The Countess bowed most graciously, and raising a pair of +tortoise-shell-rimmed eye-glasses mounted on a stem of the same material, +looked at Mr Bunker through these with a by no means disapproving glance. + +At first sight it was evident that Lady Alicia must "take after" her noble +father. The Countess was aquiline of nose, large of person, and emphatic +in her voice and manner. + +"You are the 'showman,' Mr Bunker, are you not?" she said, with a smile +for which many of her acquaintances would have given a tolerable +percentage of their incomes. + +"It seems," replied Mr Bunker, smiling back agreeably, "that the Baron is +now the showman, and I must congratulate him on his first venture." + +For an instant the Countess seemed a trifle taken aback. It was a +considerable number of years since she had been addressed in precisely +this strain, and in fact at no time had her admirers ventured quite so +dashingly to the attack. But there was something entirely irresistible in +Mr Bunker's manner, partly perhaps because he never made the mistake of +heeding a first rebuff. The Countess coughed, then smiled a little again, +and said to the Baron, "You didn't tell me that your showman supplied the +little speeches as well." + +"I could not know it; zere has not before been ze reason for a pretty +speech," responded the Baron, gallantly. + +If Lady Grillyer had been anybody else, one would have said that she +actually giggled. Certainly a little wave of scandalised satisfaction +rippled all over her. + +"Oh, really!" she cried, "I don't know which of you is the worst +offender." + +All this time, as may be imagined, Mr Bunker had been in a state of high +mystification at his friend's unusual adroitness. + +"How the deuce did he get hold of her?" he said to himself. + +In the next pause the Baron solved the riddle. + +"You vil vunder, Bonker," he said, "how I did gom to know ze Lady +Grillyer." + +"I envied, certainly," replied his friend, with a side glance at the now +purring Countess. + +"She vas of my introdogtions, bot till after you vent out zis morning I +did not lairn her name. Zen I said to myself, 'Ze sun shines, Himmel is +kind! Here now is ze fair Lady Grillyer--my introdogtion!' and zo zat is +how, you see." + +"To think of the Baron being here and our only finding each other out by +chance!" said the Countess. + +"By a fortunate providence for me!" exclaimed the Baron, fervently. + +"Baron," said the Countess, trying hard to look severe, "you must really +keep some of these nice speeches for my daughter. Which reminds me, I +wonder where she can be?" + +"Ach, here she goms!" cried the Baron. + +"Why, how did you know her?" asked the Countess. + +"I--I did see her last night at dinnair," explained the Baron, turning red. + +"Ah, of course, I remember," replied the Countess, in a matter-of-fact +tone; but her motherly eye was sharp, and already it began to look on the +highly eligible Rudolph with more approval than ever. + +"My daughter Alicia, the Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg, Mr Bunker," she +said the next moment. + +The Baron went nearly double as he bowed, and the flourish of his hat +stirred the dust on the esplanade. Mr Bunker's salutation was less +profound, but his face expressed an almost equal degree of interested +respect. Her mother thought that when one of the gentlemen was a nobleman +with an indefinite number of thousands a-year and the other a person of so +much discrimination, Lady Alicia's own bow might have been a trifle less +reserved. But then even the most astute mother cannot know the reasons for +everything. + + + + + CHAPTER III. + + +"Alicia," said the Countess, "it was really a most fortunate coincidence +our meeting the Baron at St Egbert's." + +She paused for a reply and looked expectantly at her daughter. It was not +the first time in the course of the morning that Lady Alicia had listened +to similar observations, and perhaps that was why she answered somewhat +listlessly, "Yes, wasn't it?" + +The Countess frowned, and continued with emphasis, "I consider him one of +the most agreeable and best informed young men I have ever met." + +"Is he?" said Lady Alicia, absently. + +"I wonder, Alicia, you hadn't noticed it," her mother observed, severely; +"you talked with him most of the afternoon. I should have thought that no +observant, well-bred girl would have failed to have been struck with his +air and conversation." + +"I--I thought him very pleasant, mamma." + +"I am glad you had so much sense. He is _extremely_ pleasant." + +As Lady Alicia made no reply, the Countess felt obliged to continue his +list of virtues herself. + +"He is of most excellent family, Alicia, one of the oldest in Bavaria. I +don't remember what I heard his income was in pfennigs, or whatever they +measure money by in Germany, but I know that it is more than £20,000 +a-year in English money. A very large sum nowadays," she added, as if +£20,000 had grown since she was a girl. + +"Yes, mamma." + +"He is considered, besides, an unusually promising and intelligent young +nobleman, and in Germany, where noblemen are still constantly used, that +says a great deal for him." + +"Does it, mamma?" + +"Certainly it does. Education there is so severe that young Englishmen are +beginning to know less than they ever did, and in most cases that isn't +saying much. Compare the Baron with the young men you meet here!" + +She looked at her daughter triumphantly, and Alicia could only reply, +"Yes, mamma?" + +"Compare them and see the difference. Look at the Baron's friend, Mr +Bunker, who is a very agreeable and amusing man, I admit, but look at the +difference!" + +"What is it?" Alicia could not help asking. + +"_What_ is it, Alicia! It is--ah--it's--er--it is, in short, the effect of a +carefully cultivated mind and good blood." + +"But don't you think Mr Bunker cultivated, mamma--and--and--well-bred?" + +"He has an amusing way of saying things,--but then you must remember that +the Baron is doubtless equally entertaining in his native language,--and +possibly a superficial knowledge of a few of the leading questions of the +day; but the Baron talked to me for half an hour on the relations of +something or other in Germany to--er--something else--a very important point, +I assure you." + +"I always thought him very clever," said Lady Alicia with a touch of +warmth, and then instantly changed colour at the horrible slip. + +"You always," said the Countess in alarmed astonishment; "you hardly spoke +to him yesterday, and--had you met him before?" + +"I--I meant the Baron, mamma." + +"But I have just been saying that he was _unusually_ clever." + +"But I thought, I mean it seemed as though you considered him only well +informed." + +Lady Alicia's blushes and confusion deepened. Her mother looked at her +with a softening eye. Suddenly she rose, kissed her affectionately, and +said with the tenderness of triumph, "My _dear_ girl! Of course he is; +clever, well informed, and a most _desirable_ young man. My Alicia could +not do----" + +She stopped, as if she thought this was perhaps a little premature (though +the Countess's methods inclined to the summary and decisive), and again +kissing her daughter affectionately, remarked gaily, "Let me see, why, +it's almost time we went for our little walk! We mustn't really disappoint +those young men. I am in the middle of such an amusing discussion with Mr +Bunker, who is really a very sensible man and quite worthy of the Baron's +judgment." + +Poor Lady Alicia hardly knew whether to feel more relieved at her escape +or dismayed at the construction put upon her explanation. She went out to +meet the Baron, determined to give no further colour to her mother's +unlucky misconception. The Countess was far too experienced and determined +a general to leave it at all doubtful who should walk by whose side, and +who should have the opportunity of appreciating whose merits, but Lady +Alicia was quite resolved that the Baron's blandishments should fall on +stony ground. + +But a soft heart and an undecided mouth are treacherous companions. The +Baron was so amiable and so gallant, that at the end of half an hour she +was obliged to abate the strictness of her resolution. She should treat +him with the friendliness of a brother. She learned that he had no +sisters: her decision was confirmed. + +The enamoured and delighted Baron was in the seventh heaven of happy +loquacity. He poured out particulars of his travels, his more recordable +adventures, his opinions on various social and political matters, and at +last even of the family ghost, the hereditary carpet-beatership, and the +glories of Bavaria. And Lady Alicia listened with what he could not doubt +was an interest touched with tenderness. + +"I wonder," she said, artlessly, "that you find anything to admire in +England--compared with Bavaria, I mean." + +"Two zings I haf not zere," replied the Baron, waving his hand round +towards the horizon. "Vun is ze vet sheet of flowing sea--says not your +poet so? Ze ozzer" (laying his hand on his heart) "is ze Lady Alicia à +Fyre." + +There are some people who catch sentiment whenever it happens to be in the +air, just as others almost equally unfortunate regularly take hay-fever. + +Lady Alicia's reply was much softer than she intended, especially as she +could have told anybody that the Baron's compliment was the merest figure +of speech. + +"You needn't have included me: I'm sure _I'm_ not a great attraction." + +"Ze sea is less, so zat leaves none," the Baron smiled. + +"Didn't you see anybody--I mean, anything in London that attracted you--that +you liked?" + +"Zat I liked, yes, zat pairhaps for the moment attracted me; but not zat +shall still attract me ven I am gone avay." + +The Baron sighed this time, and she felt impelled to reply, with the most +sisterly kindness, "I--we should, of course, like to think that you didn't +forget us _altogether_." + +"You need not fear." + +Then Lady Alicia began to realise that this was more like a second cousin +than a brother, and with sudden sprightliness she cried, "I wonder where +that steamer's going!" + +The Baron turned his eyes towards his first-named attraction, but for a +professed lover of the ocean his interest appeared slight. He only replied +absently, "Ach, zo?" + +A little way behind them walked Mr Bunker and the Countess. The attention +of Lady Grillyer was divided between the agreeable conversation of her +companion and the pleasant spectacle of a fabulous number of pfennigs +a-year bending its titled head over her daughter. In the middle of one of +Mr Bunker's most amusing stories she could not forbear interrupting with a +complacent "they _do_ make a very handsome couple!" + +Mr Bunker politely stopped his narrative, and looked critically from his +friend's gaily checked back to Lady Alicia's trim figure. + +"Pray go on with your story, Mr Bunker," said the Countess, hastily, +realising that she had thought a little too loudly. + +"They are like," responded Mr Bunker, replying to her first remark--"they +are like a pair of gloves." + +The Countess raised her brows and looked at him sharply. + +"I mean, of course, the best quality." + +"I think," said the Countess, suspiciously, "that you spoke a little +carelessly." + +"My simile was a little premature?" + +"I think so," said the Countess, decisively. + +"Let us call them then an odd pair," smiled Mr Bunker, unruffled; "and +only hope that they'll turn out to be the same size and different hands." + +The Countess actually condescended to smile back. + +"She is a _dear_ child," she murmured. + +"His income, I think, is sufficient," he answered. + +Humour was not conspicuous in the Grillyer family. The Countess replied +seriously, "I am one of those out-of-date people, Mr Bunker, who consider +some things come before money, but the Baron's birth and position are +fortunately unimpeachable." + +"While his mental qualities," said Mr Bunker, "are, in my experience, +almost unique." + +The Countess was confirmed in her opinion of Mr Bunker's discrimination. + +Late that night, after they had parted with their friends, the Baron +smoked in the most unwonted silence while Mr Bunker dozed on the sofa. +Several times Rudolph threw restive glances at his friend, as if he had +something on his mind that he needed a helping hand to unburden himself +of. At last the silence grew so intolerable that he screwed up his courage +and with desperate resolution exclaimed, "Bonker!" + +Mr Bunker opened his eyes and sat up. + +"Bonker, I am in loff!" + +Mr Bunker smiled and stretched himself out again. + +"I have also been in love," he replied. + +"You are not now?" + +"Alas! no." + +"Vy alas?" + +"Because follies _without_ illusions get so infernally dull, Baron." + +The Baron smiled a little foolishly. + +"I haf ze illusions, I fear." Then he broke out enthusiastically, "Ach, +bot is she not lofly, Bonker? If she will bot lof me back I shall be ze +happiest man out of heaven!" + +"You have wasted no time, Baron." + +The Baron shook his head in melancholy pleasure. + +"You are quite sure it is really love this time?" his friend pursued. + +"Qvite!" said the Baron, with the firmness of a martyr. + +"There are so many imitations." + +"Not so close zat zey can deceive!" + +"Ha, ha, ha!" laughed Mr Bunker. "These first symptoms are common to them +all, and yet the varieties of the disease are almost beyond counting. I +myself have suffered from it in eight different forms. There was the +virulent, spotted-all-over variety, known as calf-love; there was the kind +that accompanied itself by a course of the Restoration dramatists; another +form I may call the strayed-Platonic, and that may be subdivided into at +least two; then there was----" + +"Schtop! schtop!" cried the Baron. "Ha, ha, ha! Zat will do! Teufel! I +most examine my heart strictly. And yet, Bonker, I zink my loff is anozzer +kind--ze _real!_" + +"They are all that, Baron; but have it your own way. Anything I can do to +make you worse shall be done." + +"Zanks, my best of friends," said the Baron, warmly, seizing his hand; "I +knew you would stand by me!" + +Mr Bunker gave a little laugh, and returning the pressure, replied, "My +dear fellow, I'd do anything to oblige a friend in such an interesting +condition." + + + + + CHAPTER IV. + + +The Baron was a few minutes late in joining the party at lunch, and when +he appeared he held an open letter in his hand. It was only the middle of +the next day, and yet he could have sworn that last night he was +comparatively whole-hearted, he felt so very much more in love already. + +"Yet anozzer introdogtion has found me out," he said as he took his seat. +"I have here a letter of invitation vich I do not zink I shall accept." + +He threw an amorous glance at Lady Alicia, which her watchful mother +rightly interpreted as indicating the cause of his intended refusal. + +"Who is it this time?" asked Mr Bunker. + +"Sir Richard Brierley of Brierley Park, Dampshire. Is zat how you +pronounce it?" + +"Sir Richard Brierley!" exclaimed the Countess; "why, Alicia and I are +going to visit some relatives of ours who live only six miles from +Brierley Park! When has he asked you, Baron?" + +"Ze end of next week." + +"How odd! We are going down to Dampshire at the end of next week too. You +must accept, Baron!" + +"I shall!" exclaimed the overjoyed Baron. "Shall ve go, Bonker?" + +"I'm not asked, I'm afraid." + +"Ach, bot zat is nozzing. I shall tell him." + +"As you please, Baron," replied Mr Bunker, with a half glance at Lady +Alicia. + +The infatuated Baron had already begun to dread the inevitable hour of +separation, and this piece of good fortune put him into the highest +spirits. He felt so amiable towards the whole world that when the four +went out for a stroll in the afternoon he lingered for a minute by Lady +Grillyer's side, and in that minute Mr Bunker and Lady Alicia were out of +hail ahead. The Baron's face fell. + +"Shall I come down to this place?" said Mr Bunker. + +"Would you like to?" + +"I should be sorry," he replied, "to part with--the Baron." + +Lady Alicia had expected a slightly different ending to this sentence, and +so, to tell the truth, Mr Bunker had intended. + +"Oh, if you can't stay away from the Baron, you had better go." + +"It is certainly very hard to tear myself away from so charming a person +as the Baron; perhaps you can feel for me?" + +"I think he is very--nice." + +"He thinks you very nice." + +"Does he?" said Lady Alicia, with great indifference, and a moment later +changed the subject. + +Meanwhile the Baron was growing very uneasy. Of course it was quite +natural that Mr Bunker should find it pleasant to walk for a few minutes +by the side of the fairest creature on earth, and very possibly he was +artfully pleading his friend's cause. Yet the Baron felt uneasy. He +remembered Mr Bunker's invariable success with the gentler sex, his wit, +his happy smile, and his good looks; and he began to wish most sincerely +that these fascinations were being exercised on the now somewhat +breathless Countess, for his efforts to overtake the pair in front had +both annoyed and exhausted Lady Grillyer. + +"Need we walk quite so fast, Baron?" she suggested; and Lady Grillyer's +suggestions were of the kind that are evidently meant to be acted upon. + +"Ach, I did forged," said the Baron, absently, and without further remark +he slackened his pace for a few yards and then was off again. + +"You were telling me," gasped the Countess, "of something you thought +of--doing when--you went--home." + +"Zo? Oh yes, it vas--Teufel! I do not remember." + +"Really, Baron," said the Countess, decidedly, "I cannot go any farther at +this rate. Let us turn. The others will be turning too, in a minute." + +In fact the unlucky Baron had clean run Lady Grillyer's maternal instincts +off their feet, and he suffered for it by seeing nothing of either his +friend or his charmer for an hour and a half. + +That night he accepted Sir Richard's invitation, but said nothing whatever +about bringing a friend. + +For the next week Rudolph was in as many states of mind as there were +hours in each day. He walked and rode and drove with Lady Alicia through +the most romantic spots he could find. He purchased a large assortment of +golf-clubs, and under her tuition essayed to play that most dangerous of +games for mixed couples. In turn he broke every club in his set; the +cavities he hewed in the links are still pointed out to the curious; but +the heart of the Lady Alicia alone he seemed unable to damage. There was +always a moment at which his courage failed him, and in that fatal pause +she invariably changed the subject with the most innocent air in the +world. + +Every now and then the greenest spasms of jealousy would seize him. Why +did she elect to disappear with Mr Bunker on the very morning that he had +resolved should settle his fate? It is true he had made the same +resolution every morning, but on this particular one he had no doubt he +would have put his fate to the touch. And why on a certain moonlight +evening was he left to the unsentimental company of the Countess? + +He made no further reference to the visit to Brierley Park; in fact he +shunned discussion of any kind with his quondam bosom friend. + +The time slipped past, till the visit to St Egbert's was almost at an end. +On the day after to-morrow all four were going to leave (where Mr Bunker +was going, his friend never troubled to inquire). + +They sat together latish in the evening in the Baron's room. That very +afternoon Lady Alicia had spent more time in Mr Bunker's society than in +his, and the Baron felt that the hour had come for an explanation. + +"Bonker, I haf a suspection!" he exclaimed, suddenly. "It is not I, bot +you, who are ze friend to ze beautiful Lady Alicia. You are not doing me +fair!" + +"My dear Baron!" + +"It is so: you are not doing me fair," the Baron reiterated. + +"My dear fellow," replied Mr Bunker, "it is you are so much in love that +you have lost your wonted courage. You don't use your chances." + +"I do not get zem." + +"Nonsense, Baron! I haven't spent one hour in Lady Alicia's company to +your twenty-four, and yet if I'd been matrimonially inclined I could have +proposed twice over. You've had the chance of being accepted fifty times." + +"I haf not been accepted vunce," said the Baron, moodily. + +"Have you put the question?" + +"I haf not dared." + +"Well, my dear Baron, whose fault is that?" + +The Baron was silent. + +"Ask her to-morrow." + +"No, Bonker," said the Baron, sadly; "she treats me not like a lover. She +talks of friendship. I do not vish a frient!" + +Mr Bunker looked thoughtfully up at the ceiling. "You don't think you have +touched her heart?" he asked at length. + +"I fear not." + +"You must try an infallible recipe for winning a woman's heart. You must +be in trouble." + +"In trouble!" + +"I have tried it once myself, with great success." + +"Bot how?" + +"You must fall ill." + +"Bot I cannot; I am too healthful, alas!" + +Mr Bunker smiled artfully. "They come to tea in our rooms to-morrow, you +know. By then, Baron, you must be laid up, ill or not, just as you please. +A grain of Lady Alicia's sympathy is worth more than a ton of even your +wit." + +The standard chosen for the measurement of his wit escaped the Baron, the +scheme delighted him. + +"Ha, Bonker! schön! I tvig! Goot!" he cried. "How shall ve do?" + +"Leave it to me." + +The Baron reflected, and his smile died away. + +"Sopposing," he said, slowly, "zey find out? Is it vise? Is it straight?" + +"They can't find out. They go the next morning, and what's to prevent your +making a quick recovery and pluckily going down to Brierley Park as the +interesting convalescent? She will know that you've made a dangerous +journey on her account." + +The Baron's face cleared again. + +"Let us try!" he said; "anyzing is better zan my present state. Bot, be +careful, Bonker!" + +"I shall take the most minute precautions," replied Mr Bunker. + + + + + CHAPTER V. + + +The next morning the two conspirators breakfasted early. The Baron seemed +a little nervous now that it came so near the venture, but his friend was +as cheerful as a schoolboy, and his confident air soon put fresh courage +into Rudolph. + +Mr Bunker's bedroom opened out of their common sitting-room, and so he +declared that in the afternoon the Baron must be laid up there. + +"Keep your room all morning," he said, "and look as pale as you can. I +shall make my room ready for you." + +When the Baron had retired, he threw himself into a chair and gazed for a +few minutes round his bedroom. Then he rang his bell, ordered the servant +to make the bed immediately, and presently went out to do some shopping. +On the way he sent word to the Countess, telling her only that the Baron +was indisposed, but that in spite of this misfortune he hoped he should +have the pleasure of their company at tea. The rest of the morning he +spent in his bedroom, prudently keeping out of the ladies' way. + +When, after a substantial lunch which he insisted upon getting up to eat, +the Baron was allowed to enter the sick-room, he uttered an exclamation of +astonishment,--and indeed his surprise was natural. The room was as full of +flowers as a conservatory; chairs, wardrobe, and fireplace were most +artistically draped with art hangings; a plate filled with grapes, a large +bottle labelled "Two table-spoonfuls every half hour," and a +medicine-glass were placed conspicuously on a small table; and, most +remarkable feature of all, Mr Bunker's bath filled with water and alive +with goldfish stood by the side of the bed. A couple of canaries sang in a +cage by the window, the half-drawn curtains only permitted the most +delicate light to steal into the room, and in short the whole arrangement +reflected the utmost credit on his ingenious friend. + +The Baron was delighted, but a little puzzled. + +"Vat for are zese fishes and ze canaries?" he asked. + +"To show your love of nature." + +"Vy so?" + +"There is nothing that pleases a woman more." + +"My friend, you zink of everyzing!" exclaimed the Baron, admiringly. + +When four o'clock approached he drew a night-shirt over his other garments +and got into bed. Mr Bunker at first was in favour of a complete change of +attire, but on his friend's expostulating against such a thorough +precaution, he admitted that it would be perhaps rather like the historic +blacking of Othello. + +"Leave it all to me, my dear Baron," he said, reassuringly, as he tucked +him in; and with that he went into the other room and awaited the arrival +of their guests. + +They came punctually. The Countess was full of concern for the "dear +Baron," while Lady Alicia, he could not help thinking, appeared unusually +reserved. In fact, his quick eye soon divined that something was the +matter. + +"She has either been getting a lecture from the dowager or has found +something out," he said to himself. + +However, it seemed that if she had found anything out it could have +nothing to do with the Baron's indisposition, for she displayed the most +ingenuous sympathy, and, he thought, she even appeared to aim it pointedly +at himself. + +"So sudden!" exclaimed the Countess. + +"It is rather sudden, but we'll hope it may pass as quickly as it came," +said Mr Bunker, conveying a skilful impression of deep concern veiled by a +cheerful manner. + +"Tell me honestly, Mr Bunker, is it dangerous?" demanded the countess. + +Mr Bunker hesitated, gave a half-hearted laugh, and replied, "Oh, dear, +no! that is--at present, Lady Grillyer, we have really no reason to be +alarmed." + +"I am _so_ sorry," murmured Lady Alicia. + +Her mother looked at her approvingly. + +"Poor Baron!" she said, in a tone of the greatest commiseration. + +"So far from home!" sighed Mr Bunker. "And yet so cheerful through it +all," he added. + +"What did you say was the matter?" asked the Countess. + +Mr Bunker had thought it both wiser and more effective to maintain a +little mystery round his friend's malady. + +"The doctor hasn't yet given a decided opinion," he replied. + +"Can't we do anything?" said Lady Alicia, softly. + +Mr Bunker thought the guests were nearly worked up to the proper pitch of +sympathy. + +"Poor Rudolph!" he exclaimed. "It would cheer him immensely, I know, and +ease my own anxiety as well, if you would venture in to see him for a few +minutes. In such a case there is no sympathy so welcome as a woman's." + +The Countess glanced at her daughter, and wavered for an instant between +those proprieties for which she was a famous stickler and this admirable +chance of completing the Baron's conquest. + +"His relations are far away," said Mr Bunker, looking pensively out of the +window. + +"We might come in for a few minutes, Alicia?" suggested Lady Grillyer. + +"Yes, mamma," replied Lady Alicia, with an alacrity that rather surprised +their host. + +With a pleasantly dejected air he ushered the ladies into the darkened +sick-room. The Baron, striving to conceal his exultation under a rueful +semblance, greeted them with a languid yet happy smile. + +"Ah, Lady Grillyer, zis is kind indeed! And you, Lady Alicia, how can I +zank you?" + +"My daughter and I are much distressed, Baron, to find our host _hors de +combat_," said the Countess, graciously. + +"Just when you wanted to go away too!" added Lady Alicia, sympathetically. + +The Baron emitted a happy blend of sigh and groan. + +"Alas!" he replied, "it is hard indeed." + +"You must hurry up and get better," said the Countess, in her most +cheering sick-room manner. "It won't do to disappoint the Brierleys, you +know." + +"You must come down for _part_ of the time," smiled her daughter. + +These expressions of sympathy so affected the Baron that he placed his +hand on his brow and turned slightly away to conceal his emotion. At the +same time Mr Bunker, with well-timed dramatic effect, sank wearily into a +chair, and, laying his elbow on the back, hid his own face in his hand. + +Their guests jumped to the most alarming conclusions, and looked from one +to the other with great concern. + +"Dear me!" said the Countess, "surely it isn't so very serious, Mr Bunker; +it isn't _infectious_, is it?" + +The unlucky Baron here made his first mistake: without waiting for his +more diplomatic friend to reply, he answered hastily, "Ach, no, it is bot +a cold." + +Lady Grillyer's expression changed. + +"A cold!" she said. "Dear me, that can't be so very serious, Baron." + +"It is a bad cold," said the Baron. + +By this time the ladies' eyes were growing more used to the dim light, and +Mr Bunker could see that they were taking rapid stock of the garnishings. + +"This, I suppose, is your cough-mixture," said the Countess, examining the +bottle. + +The Baron incautiously admitted it was. + +"Two table-spoonfuls every half hour!" she exclaimed; "why, I never heard +of taking a cough-mixture in such doses. Besides, your cough doesn't seem +so very bad, Baron." + +"Ze doctor told me to take it so," replied the Baron. + +The Countess turned towards Mr Bunker and said, with a touch of suspicion +in her voice, "I thought, Mr Bunker, the doctor had given no opinion." + +The Baron threw a glance of intense ferocity at his friend. + +"In the Baron's desire to spare your feelings," replied Mr Bunker, +gravely, "he has been a little inaccurate; that is not precisely an +ordinary cough-mixture." + +"Oh," said the Countess. + +Lady Alicia's attention had been strongly attracted by the bath, and +suddenly she exclaimed, "Why, there are goldfish in it!" + +The Baron's nerve was fast deserting him. + +"Ze doctor ordered zem," he began--"I mean, I am fond of fishes." + +The Countess looked hard at the unhappy young man, and then turned +severely to his friend. + +"_What_ is the matter with the Baron?" she demanded. + +Mr Bunker saw there was nothing for it but heroic measures. + +"The dog was destroyed at once," he replied, with intense gravity. "It is +therefore impossible to say exactly what is the matter." + +"_The dog!_" cried the two ladies together. + +"By this evening," he continued, "we shall know the worst--or the best." + +"What do you mean?" exclaimed the Countess, withdrawing a step from the +bed. + +"I mean," replied Mr Bunker, with a happy inspiration, "that this bath is +a delicate test. No victim of the dread disease of hydrophobia can bear to +look----" + +But the Countess gave him no time to finish. Even as he was speaking the +Baron's face had passed through a series of the most extraordinary +expressions, which she not unnaturally put down to premonitory symptoms. + +"It's beginning already!" she shrieked. "Alicia, my love, come quickly. +How dare you expose us, sir?" + +"Calm yourselves. I assure you----" pleaded Mr Bunker, coming hastily after +them, but they were at the door before him. + +The hapless Baron could stand it no longer. Crying, "No, no, it is false!" +he sprang out of bed, arrayed in a tweed suit only half concealed by his +night-shirt, and, forgetting all about the bath, descended with a great +splash among the startled goldfish. + +The Countess paused in the half-opened door and looked at him with horror +that rapidly passed into intense indignation. + +"I am not ill!" he cried. "It vos zat rascal Bonker's plot. He made me! I +haf not hydrophobia!" + +Most unkindest cut of all, Lady Alicia went off into hysterical giggles. +For a moment her mother glared at the two young men in silence, and then +only remarking, "I have never been so insulted before," she went out, and +her daughter followed her. + +As the door closed Mr Bunker went off into roar after roar of laughter, +but the humorous side of the situation seemed to appeal very slightly to +his injured friend. + +"You rascal! you villain!" he shouted, "zis is ze end of our friendship, +Bonker! Do you use ze pistols? Tell me, sare!" + +"My dear Baron," gasped Mr Bunker, "I could not put such an inartistic end +to so fine a joke for the world." + +"You vill not fight? Coward! poltroon! I know not ze English name bad +enoff for you!" + +With difficulty Mr Bunker composed himself and replied, still smiling: +"After all, Baron, what harm has been done? I get all the blame, and the +sympathy you wanted is sure to turn to you." + +"False friend!" thundered the Baron. + +"My dear Baron!" said Mr Bunker, mildly, "whose fault was it that the plot +miscarried? If you'd only left it all to me----" + +"Left it to you! Yes, I left too moch to you! Traitor, it vas a trick to +vin ze Lady Alicia for yourself! Speak to me nevermore!" And with that the +infuriated nobleman rushed off to his own room. + +As there was no further sign of him for the next half hour, Mr Bunker, +still smiling to himself at the recollection, went out to take the air; +but just as he was about to descend the stairs he spied Lady Alicia +lingering in a passage. He turned back and went up to her. + +She began at once in a low, hurried voice that seemed to have a strain of +anger running beneath it. + +"I got the two letters I wrote you returned to me to-day through the +dead-letter office. Nothing was known about you at the address you gave." + +"I am not surprised," he replied. + +"Then it was false?" + +"As an address it was perfectly genuine, only it didn't happen to be +mine." + +"Were you _ever_ in the Church?" + +"Not to my personal knowledge." + +"Yet you said you were?" + +"I was in an asylum." + +She looked up at him with fine contempt, while he smiled back at her with +great amusement. + +"You have deceived _me_," she said, "and you have treated your other +friend--who is far too good for you--disgracefully. Have you anything to say +for yourself?" + +"Not a word," he replied, cheerfully. + +"You must _never_ treat me again as--as I let you." + +As a smile played for an instant about his face, she added quickly, "I +don't _suppose_ I shall ever see you again. In future we are not _likely_ +to meet." + +"The lady and the lunatic?" said he. "Well, perhaps not. Good-bye, and +better luck." + +"Good-bye," she answered coldly, and added as they parted, "my mother, of +course, is extremely angry with you." + +"There," he said with a smile, "you see I still come in useful." + +She hurried away, and Mr Bunker walked slowly downstairs and out of the +hotel. + +"It seems to me," he reflected, "that I shall have to set out on my +adventures again alone." + + + + + CHAPTER VI. + + +The Baron's natural good temper might have forgiven his friend, but all +night he was a prey to something against which no temper is proof. The +Baron was bitterly jealous. All through breakfast he never spoke a word, +and when Mr Bunker asked him what train he intended to take, he replied +curtly, as he went to the door, "Ze 5.30." + +"And where do you go now?" + +"Vat is zat to you? I go for a valk. I vould be alone." + +"Good-bye, then, Baron," said Mr Bunker. "I think I shall go up to town." + +"Go, zen," replied the Baron, opening the door; "I haf no furzer vish to +see a treacherous _sponge_ zat vill neizer be true nor fight, bot jost +takes money." + +He slammed the door and went out. If he had waited for a moment, he would +have seen a look in Mr Bunker's face that he had never seen before. He +half started from his chair to follow, and then sat down again and thought +with his lips very tight set. + +All at once they broke into a smile that was grimmer than anything the +Baron had known. + +"I accept your challenge, Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg," he said to +himself; "but the weapons I shall choose myself." + +He took a telegraph form, wrote and despatched a wire, and then with +considerable haste proceeded to pack. Within an hour he had left the +hotel. + + * * * * * + +When a servant, later in the day, was performing, under the Baron's +directions, the same office for him, a series of discoveries that still +further disturbed his peace of mind were jointly made. Not only the more +sporting portions of his wardrobe but his gun and cartridges as well, had +vanished, and, search and storm as he liked, there was not a trace of them +to be found. + +"Ze rascal!" he muttered; "I did not zink he was zief as well." + +It is hardly wonderful that he arrived at Brierley station in anything but +an amiable frame of mind. There, to his great annoyance and surprise, he +found no signs of Sir Richard's carriage; there were no stables near, and, +after fuming for some time on the platform, he was forced to leave his +luggage with the station-master and proceed on foot to Brierley Park. + +He arrived shortly before seven o'clock, after a dark and muddy tramp, +and, still swearing under his breath, pulled the bell with indignant +energy. + +"I am ze Baron von Blitzenberg, bot zere vas no carriage at ze station," +he informed the butler in his haughtiest tones. + +The man looked at him suspiciously. + +"The Baron arrived this morning," he said. + +"Ze Baron? Vat Baron? I am ze Baron!" + +"I shall fetch Sir Richard," said the butler, turning away. + +Presently a stout florid gentleman, accompanied by three friends, all +evidently very curious and amused about something, came to the door, and, +to the poor Baron's amazement and horror, he recognised in one of these +none other than Mr Bunker, arrayed with much splendour in his own ornate +shooting suit. + +"What do you want?" asked the florid gentleman, sternly. + +"Have I ze pleasure of addressing Sir Richard Brierley?" inquired the +Baron, raising his hat and bowing profoundly. + +"You have." + +"Zen I must tell you zat I am ze Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg." + +"Gom, gom, my man!" interposed Mr Bunker. "I know you. Zis man, Sir +Richard, has before annoyed me. He is vat you call impostor, cracked; he +has vollowed me from Germany. Go avay, man!" + +"You are impostor! You scoundrel, Bonker!" shouted the wrathful Baron. "He +is no Baron, Sir Richard! Ha! Vould you again deceive me, Bonker?" + +"You must lock him up, I fear," said Mr Bunker. "To-morrow, my man, you +vill see ze police." + +So completely did the Baron lose his head that he became almost +inarticulate with rage: his protestations, however, were not of the +slightest avail. That morning Sir Richard had received a wire informing +him that the Baron was coming by an earlier train than he had originally +intended, and, since his arrival, the spurious nobleman had so ingratiated +himself with his host that Sir Richard was filled with nothing but +sympathy for him in his persecution. After a desperate struggle the +unfortunate Rudolph was overpowered and conveyed in the undignified +fashion known as the frog's march to a room in a remote wing, there to +pass the night under lock and key. + +"The scoundrelly German impostor!" exclaimed a young man, a fellow visitor +of the Baron Bunker's, to a tall, military-looking gentleman. + +Colonel Savage seemed lost in thought. + +"It is a curious thing, Trelawney," he replied, at length, "that the +footman who attends the Baron should have told my man--who, of course, told +me--that a number of his things are marked 'Francis Beveridge.' It is also +rather strange that this impostor should have known so little of the +Baron's movements as to arrive several hours after him, assuming he had +hatched a plot to impersonate him." + +"But the man's obviously mad." + +"Must be," said the colonel. + +The house party were assembled in the drawing-room waiting for dinner to +be announced. The bogus Baron was engaged in an animated discussion with +Colonel Savage on the subject of Bavarian shootings, and the colonel +having omitted to inform him that he had some personal experience of +these, Mr Bunker was serving up such of his friend's anecdotes as he could +remember with sauce more peculiarly his own. + +"Five hondred vild boars," he was saying, "eight hondred brace of +partridges, many bears, and rabbits so moch zat it took five veeks to bury +zem. All zese ve did shoot before breakfast, colonel. Aftair breakfast +again ve did go out----" + +But at that moment his attention was sharply arrested by a question of +Lady Brierley's. + +"Has Dr Escott arrived?" she asked. + +The Baron Bunker paused, and in spite of his habitual coolness, the +observant colonel noticed that he started ever so slightly. + +"He came half an hour ago," replied Sir Richard. "Ah, here he is." + +As he spoke, a well-remembered figure came into the room, and after a +welcome from his hostess, the dinner procession started. + +"Whoever is that tall fair man in front?" Dr Escott asked his partner as +they crossed the hall. + +"Oh, that's the Baron von Blitzenberg: such an amusing man! We are all in +love with him already." + +All through dinner the spurious Baron saw that Dr Escott's eyes turned +continually and curiously on him; yet never for an instant did his spirits +droop or his conversation flag. Witty and charming as ever, he discoursed +in his comical foreign accent to the amusement of all within hearing, and +by the time the gentlemen adjourned to the billiard-room, he had +established the reputation of being the most delightful German ever seen. +Yet Dr Escott grew more suspicious and bewildered, and Mr Bunker felt that +he was being narrowly watched. The skill at billiards of a certain Francis +Beveridge used to be the object of the doctor's unbounded admiration, and +it was with the liveliest interest that he watched a game between Colonel +Savage and the Baron. + +That nobleman knew well the danger of displaying his old dexterity, and to +the onlookers it soon became apparent that this branch of his education +had been neglected. He not only missed the simplest shots, but seemed very +ignorant of the rules of the English game, and in consequence he came in +for a little good-natured chaff from Sir Richard and Trelawney. When the +colonel's score stood at 90 and the Baron had scarcely reached 25 +Trelawney cried, "I'll bet you ten to one you don't win, Baron!" + +"What in?" asked the Baron, and the colonel noticed that for the first +time be pronounced a _w_ correctly. + +"Sovereigns," said Trelawney, gaily. + +The temptation was irresistible. + +"Done!" said the Baron. With a professional disregard for conventions he +bolted the white into the middle pocket, leaving his own ball nicely +beside the red. Down in its turn went the red, and Mr Bunker was on the +spot. Three followed three in monotonous succession, Trelawney's face +growing longer and Dr Escott getting more and more excited, till with a +smile Mr Bunker laid down his cue, a sensational winner. + +His victory was received in silence: Trelawney handed over two five-pound +notes without a word, and the colonel returned to his whisky-and-soda. Dr +Escott could contain himself no longer, and whispering something to Sir +Richard, the two left the room. + +Imperturbable as ever, Mr Bunker talked gaily for a few minutes to an +unresponsive audience, and then, remarking that he would join the ladies, +left the room. + +A minute or two later Sir Richard, with an anxious face, returned with Dr +Escott. + +"Where is the Baron?" he asked. + +"Gone to join the ladies," replied Trelawney, adding under his breath, +"d---- n him!" + +But the Baron was not with the ladies, nor, search the house as they +might, was there a trace to be seen of that accomplished nobleman. + +"He has gone!" said Sir Richard. + +"What the deuce is the meaning of it?" exclaimed Trelawney. + +Colonel Savage smiled grimly and suggested, "Perhaps he wants to give the +impostor an innings." + +"Dr Escott, I think, can tell you," replied the baronet. + +"Gentlemen," said the doctor, "the man whom you have met as the Baron von +Blitzenberg is none other than a most cunning and determined lunatic. He +escaped from the asylum where I am at present assistant doctor, after all +but murdering me; he has been seen in London since, but how he came to +impersonate the unfortunate gentleman whom you locked up this afternoon I +cannot say." + +Before they broke up for the night the genuine Baron, released from +confinement and soothed by the humblest apologies and a heavy supper, +recounted the main events in Mr Beveridge _alias_ Bunker's brief career in +town. On his exploits in St Egbert's he felt some delicacy in touching, +but at the end of what was after all only a fragmentary and one-sided +narrative, even the defrauded Trelawney could not but admit that, whatever +the departed gentleman's failings, his talents at least were worthy of a +better cause. + + + + + CHAPTER VII. + + +The party at Brierley Park had gone at last to bed. The Baron was +installed in his late usurper's room, and from the clock-tower the hour of +three had just been tolled. Sympathy and Sir Richard's cellar had greatly +mollified the Baron's wrath; he had almost begun to see the humorous side +of his late experience; as a rival Mr Bunker was extinct, and with an easy +mind and a placid smile he had fallen asleep some two hours past. + +The fire burned low, and for long nothing but the occasional sigh of the +wind in the trees disturbed the silence. At length, had the Baron been +awake, he might have heard the stealthiest of footsteps in the corridor +outside. Then they stopped; his door was gently opened, and first a head +and then a whole man slipped in. + +Still the Baron slept, dreaming peacefully of his late companion. They +were driving somewhere in a hansom, Mr Bunker was telling one of his most +amusing stories, when there came a shock, the hansom seemed to turn a +somersault, and the Baron awoke. At first he thought he must be dreaming +still; the electric light had been turned on and the room was bright as +day, but, more bewildering yet, Mr Bunker was seated on his bed, gazing at +him with an expression of thoughtful amusement. + +"Well, Baron," he said, "I trust you are comfortable in these excellent +quarters." + +The Baron, half awake and wholly astonished, was unable to collect his +ideas in time to make any reply. + +"But remember," continued Mr Bunker, "you have a reputation to live up to. +I have set the standard high for Bavarian barons." + +The indignant Baron at last recovered his wits. + +"If you do not go away _at vonce_," he said, raising himself on his +elbows, "I shall raise ze house upon you!" + +"Have you forgotten that you are talking to a dangerous lunatic, who +probably never stirs without his razor?" + +The Baron looked at him and turned a little pale. He made no further +movement, but answered stoutly enough, "Vat do you vant?" + +"In the first place, I want my brush and comb, a few clothes, and my +hand-bag. Events happened rather more quickly this evening than I had +anticipated." + +"Take zem." + +"I should also like," continued Mr Bunker, unmoved, "to have a little talk +with you. I think I owe you some explanation--perhaps an apology or two--and +I'm afraid it's my last chance." + +"Zay it zen." + +"Of course I understand that you make no hostile demonstration till I am +finished? A hunted man must take precautions, you know." + +"I vill let you go." + +"Thanks, Baron." + +Mr Bunker folded his arms, leaned his back against the foot of the bed, +and began in his half-bantering way, "I have amused you, Baron, now and +then, you must admit?" + +The Baron made no reply. + +"That I place to my credit, and I think few debts are better worth +repaying. On the other hand, I confess I have subsisted for some time +entirely on your kindness. I'm afraid that alone counterbalances the debt, +and when it comes to my being the means of your taking a bath in mixed +company and spending an evening in a locked room, there's no doubt the +balance is greatly on your side." + +"I zink so," observed the Baron. + +"So I'll tell you a true story, a favour with which I haven't indulged any +one for some considerable time." + +The Baron coughed, but said nothing. + +"My biography for all practical purposes," Mr Bunker continued, "begins in +that sequestered retreat, Clankwood Asylum. How and with whom I came there +I haven't the very faintest recollection. I simply woke up from an +extraordinary drowsiness to find myself recovering from a sharp attack of +what I may most euphoniously call mental excitement. The original cause of +it is very dim in my mind, and has, so far as I remember, nothing to do +with the rest of the story. The attack was very short, I believe. I soon +came to something more or less like myself; only, Baron, the singular +thing is, that it was to all intents and purposes a new self--whether +better or worse, my faulty memory does not permit me to say. I'd clean +forgotten who I was and all about me. I found myself called Francis +Beveridge, but that wasn't my old name, I know." + +"Ha!" exclaimed the Baron, growing interested despite himself. + +"And the most remarkable thing of all is that up till this day I haven't +the very vaguest notion what my real name is." + +"Zo?" said the Baron. "Bot vy should they change it?" + +"There you've laid your finger on the mystery, Baron. Why? Heaven knows: I +wish I did!" + +The Baron looked at him with undisguised interest. + +"Strange!" he said, thoughtfully. + +"Damnably strange. I found myself compelled to live in an asylum and +answer to a new name, and really, don't you know, under the circumstances +I could give no very valid reason for getting out. I seemed to have +blossomed there like one of the asylum plants. I couldn't possibly have +been more identified with the place. Besides, I'm free to confess that for +some time my reason, taking it all in all, wasn't particularly valid on +any point. By George, I had a funny time! Ha, ha, ha!" + +His mirth was so infectious that the Baron raised his voice in a hearty +"Ha, ha!" and then stopped abruptly, and said cautiously, "Haf a care, +Bonker, zey may hear!" + +"However, Baron," Mr Bunker continued, "out I was determined to get, and +out I came in the manner of which perhaps my friend Escott has already +informed you." + +The Baron grinned and nodded. + +"I came up to town, and on my very first evening I had the good fortune to +meet the Baron Rudolph von Blitzenberg--as perhaps you may remember. In my +own defence, Baron, I may fairly plead that since I could remember nothing +about my past career, I was entitled to supply the details from my +imagination. After all, I have no proof that some of my stories may not +have been correct. I used this privilege freely in Clankwood, and, in a +word, since I couldn't tell the truth if I wanted to, I quenched the +desire." + +"You hombog!" said the Baron, not without a note of admiration. + +"I was, and I gloried in it. Baron, if you ever want to know how ample a +thing life can be, become a certified lunatic! You are quite irresponsible +for your debts, your crimes, and, not least, your words. It certainly +enlarges one's horizon. All this time, I may say, I was racking my +brains--which, by the way, have been steadily growing saner in other +matters--for some recollections of my previous whereabouts, my career, if I +had any, and, above all, of my name." + +"Can you remember nozing?" + +"I can remember a large country house which I think belonged to me, but in +what part of the country it stands I haven't the slightest recollection. I +can't remember any family, and as no one has inquired for me, I don't +suppose I had any. Many incidents--sporting, festive, amusing, and +discreditable--I remember distinctly, and many faces, but there's nothing +to piece them together with. Can you recall one or two incidents in town, +when people spoke to me or bowed to me?" + +"Yes, vell; I vondered zen." + +"I suppose they knew me. In a general sort of way I knew them. But when a +man doesn't know his own name, and will probably be replaced in an asylum +if he's identified, there isn't much encouragement for greeting old +friends. And do you remember my search for a name in the hotel at St +Egbert's?" + +"Yah--zat is, yes." + +"It was for my own I was looking." + +"You found it not?" + +"No. The worst of it is, I can't even remember what letter it began with. +Sometimes I think it was M, or perhaps N, and sometimes I'm almost sure it +was E. It will come to me some day, no doubt, Baron, but till it does I +shall have to wander about a nameless man, looking for it. And after all, +I am not without the consolations of a certain useful, workaday kind of +philosophy." + +He rose from the bed and smiled humorously at his friend. + +"And now, Baron," he said, "it only remains to offer you such thanks and +apologies as a lunatic may, and then clear out before the cock crows. +These are my brushes, I think." + +There was still something on the Baron's mind: he lay for a moment +watching Mr Bunker collect a few odds and ends and put them rapidly into a +small bag, and then blurted out suddenly, "Ze Lady Alicia--do you loff +her?" + +"By Jove!" exclaimed Mr Bunker, "I'd forgotten all about her. I ought to +have told you that I once met her before, when she showed +sympathy--practical sympathy, I may add--for an unfortunate gentleman in +Clankwood. That's all." + +"You do not loff her?" persisted the Baron. + +"I, my dear chap? No. You are most welcome to her--_and_ the countess." + +"Does she not loff you?" + +"On my honour, no. I told her a few early reminiscences; she happened to +discover they were not what is generally known as true, and took so absurd +a view of the case that I doubt whether she would speak to me again if she +met me. In fact, Baron, if I read the omens aright--and I've had some +experience--you only need courage and a voice." + +The bed creaked, there was a volcanic upheaval of the clothes as the Baron +sprang out on to the floor, and the next instant Mr Bunker was clasped in +his embrace. + +"Ach, my own Bonker, forgif me! I haf suspected, I haf not been ze true +friend; you have sairved me right to gom here as ze Baron. I vas too bad a +Baron to gom! You have amused me, you have instrogted, you have varmed my +heart. My dear frient!" + +To tell the truth, Mr Bunker looked, for the first time in their +acquaintance, a little ill at ease. He laughed, but it sounded affected. + +"My dear fellow--hang it! You'd make me out a martyr. As a matter of fact, +I've been such a thorn as very few people would stand in their flesh. +There's nothing to forgive, my dear Baron, and a lot to thank you for." + +"I haf been rude, Bonker; I haf insulted you! You forgif me?" + +"With all my heart, if you think it's needed, but----" + +"And you vill not go now? You vill stay here?" + +"What, two Barons at once? My dear chap, we'd merely confuse the butler." + +"Ach, you vill joke, you hombog! But you most stay!" + +"And what about my friend, Dr Escott? No, Baron, it would only mean +breakfast and the next train to Clankwood." + +"Zey vill not take you ven you tell zem! I shall insist viz Sir Richard!" + +"The law is the law, Baron, and I'm a certified lunatic. Here we must part +till the weather clears; and mind, you mustn't say a word about my coming +to see you." + +The Baron looked at him disconsolately. + +"You most really go, Bonker?" + +"Really, Baron." + +"And vere to?" + +"To London town again by the milk train." + +"And vat vill you do zere?" + +"Look for my name." + +"Bot how?" + +Mr Bunker hesitated. + +"I have a little clue," he said at last, "only a thread, but I'll try it +for what it's worth." + +"Haf you money enoff?" + +"Thanks to your generosity and my skill at billiards, yes, which reminds +me that I must return poor Trelawney's ten pounds some day. At present, I +can't afford to be scrupulous. So, you see, I'm provided for." + +"Cigars at least, Bonker! You most smoke, my frient vizout a name!" + +The Baron, night-shirted and barefooted as he was, dived into his +portmanteau and produced a large box of cigars. + +"You like zese, Bonker. Zey are your own choice. Smoke zem and zink of +me!" + +"A few, Baron, would be a pleasant reminiscence," said his friend, with a +smile, "if you really insist." + +"All, Bonker,--I vill not keep vun! I can get more. No, you most take zem +all!" + +Mr Bunker opened his bag and put in the box without a word. + +"You most write," said the Baron, "tell me vere you are. I shall not tell +any soul, bot ven I can, I shall gom up, and ve shall sup togezzer vunce +more. Pairhaps ve may haf anozzer adventure, ha, ha!" + +The Baron's laugh was almost too hearty to be true. + +"I shall let you know, as soon as I find a room. It won't be in the +Mayonaise this time! Good-bye: good sport and luck in love!" + +"Good-bye, my frient, good-bye," said the Baron, squeezing his hand. + +His friend was half out of the door when he turned, and said with an +intonation quite foreign either to Beveridge or Bunker, and yet which came +very pleasantly, "I forgot to warn you of one thing when I advised you to +try the _rôle_ of certified lunatic--you are not likely to make so good a +friend as I have." + +He shut the door noiselessly and was gone. + +The Baron stood in the middle of the floor for fully five minutes, looking +blankly at the closed door; then with a sigh he turned out the light and +tumbled into bed again. + + + + + + PART IV. + + + + + CHAPTER I. + + +The Dover express was nearing town: evening had begun to draw in, and from +the wayside houses people saw the train roar by like a huge glowworm; but +they could hardly guess that it was hurrying two real actors to the climax +of a real comedy. + +From the opposite sides of a first-class carriage these two looked +cheerfully at one another. The Channel was safely behind them, London was +close ahead, and the piston of the engine seemed to thump a triumphal air. + +"We've done it, Twiddel, my boy!" said the one. + +"Thank Heaven!" replied the other. + +"_And_ myself," added his friend. + +"Yes," said Twiddel; "you played your part uncommonly well, Welsh." + +"It was the deuce of a fine spree!" sighed Welsh. + +"The deuce," assented Twiddel. + +"I'm only sorry it's all over," Welsh went on, gazing regretfully up at +the lamp of the carriage. "I'd give the remains of my character and my +chance of a public funeral to be starting again from Paris by the morning +train!" + +Twiddel laughed. + +"With the same head you had that morning?" + +"Yes, by George! Even with the same mile of dusty gullet!" + +"It's all over now," said Twiddel, philosophically, and yet rather +nervously--"at least the amusing part of it." + +"All the fun, my boy, all the fun. All the dinners and the drinks, and the +touching of hats to the aristocratic travellers, and the girls that +sighed, and the bowing and scraping. Do you remember the sporting baronet +who knew my uncle? Now, I'm plain Robert Welsh, whose uncles, as far as I +am aware, don't know a baronet among 'em." + +He smiled a little sardonically. + +"And the baron at Fogelschloss," said Twiddel. + +"Who insisted on learning my pedigree back to Alfred the Great! Gad, I +gave it him, though, and I doubt whether the real Essington could have +done as much. I'd rather surprise some of these noblemen if I turned up +again in my true character!" + +"Thank the Lord, we're not likely to meet them again!" exclaimed the +doctor, devoutly. + +"No," said Welsh; "here endeth the second lesson." + +His friend, who had been well brought up, looked a trifle uncomfortable at +this quotation. + +"I say," he remarked a few minutes later, "we haven't finished yet. We've +got to get the man out again, and hand him back to his friends." + +"Cured," said Welsh, with a laugh. + +"I wonder how he is?" + +"We'll soon see." + +They fell silent again, while the train hurried nearer and nearer London +town. Welsh seemed to be musing on some nice point, it might be of +conscience, it might also conceivably be of a more practical texture. At +last he said, "There's just one thing, old man. What about the fee?" + +"I'll get a cheque for it, I suppose," his friend replied, with an almost +excessive air of mastery over the problem. + +"Ha, ha!" laughed Welsh; "you know what I mean. It's a delicate question +and all that, but, hang it, it's got to be answered." + +"What has?" + +"The division of the spoil." + +Twiddel looked dignified. + +"I'll see you get your share, old man," he answered, easily. + +"But what share?" + +"You suggested £100, I think." + +"Out of £500--when I've done all the deceiving and told all the lies! Come, +old man!" + +"Well, what do you want?" + +"Do you remember a certain crisis when we'd made a slip----" + +"You'd made a slip!" + +"_We_ had made a slip, and you wanted to chuck the game and bolt? Do you +remember also the terms I proposed when I offered to beard the local god +almighty in his lair and explain it all away, and how he became our bosom +pal and we were saved?" + +"Well?" + +"£300 to me, £200 to you," said Welsh, decisively. + +"Rot, old man. I'll share fairly, if you insist. £250 apiece, will that +do?" + +Welsh said nothing, but his face was no longer the countenance of the +jovial adventurer. + +"It will have to, I suppose," he replied, at length. + +It was with this little cloud on the horizon that they saw the lights of +London twinkle through the windows, and were carried into the clamour of +the platforms. + +They both drove first to Twiddel's rooms; and as they looked out once more +on the life and lights and traffic of the streets, their faces cleared +again. + +"We'll have a merry evening!" cried Welsh. + +"A little supper," suggested Twiddel; "a music-hall----" + +"Et cetera," added Welsh, with a laugh. + +The doctor had written of their coming, and they found a fire in the back +room, and the table laid. + +"Ah," cried Welsh, "this looks devilish comfortable." + +"A letter for me," said Twiddel; "from Billson, I think." + +He read it and threw it to his friend, remarking, "I call this rather cool +of him." + +Welsh read-- + +"DEAR GEORGE,--I am just off for three weeks' holiday. Sorry for leaving +your practice, but I think it can look after itself till you return. + +"You have only had two patients, and one fee between them. The second man +vanished mysteriously. I shall tell you about it when I come back. He +boned a bill, too, I fancy, but the story will keep. + +"I am looking forward to hearing the true tale of your adventures. Good +luck to you.--Yours ever, + + THOMAS BILLSON." + +"Boned a bill?" exclaimed Welsh. "What bill, I wonder?" + +"Something that came when I was away, I suppose. Hang it, I think Billson +might have looked after things better!" + +"It sounds queer," said Welsh, reflectively; "I wonder what it was?" + +"Confound Billson, he might have told me," observed the doctor. "But, I +say, you know we have something more practical to see to." + +"Getting the man out again?" + +"Yes." + +"Well, let's have a little grub first." + +Twiddel rang the bell, and the frowsy little maid entered, carrying a +letter on a tray. + +"Dinner," said he. + +"Please, sir," began the maid, holding out the tray, "this come for you +near a month agow, but Missis she bin and forgot to send it hafter you." + +"Confound her!" said Twiddel, taking the letter. + +He looked at the envelope, and remarked with a little start of nervous +excitement, "From Dr Congleton." + +"News of Mr Beveridge," laughed Welsh. + +The doctor read the first few lines, and then, as if he had got an +electric shock, the letter fell from his hand, and an expression of the +most utter and lively consternation came over his face. + +"Heavens!" he ejaculated, "it's all up." + +"What's up?" cried Welsh, snatching at the letter. + +"He's run away!" + +Welsh looked at him for a moment in some astonishment, and then burst out +laughing. + +"What a joke!" he cried; "I don't see anything to make a fuss about. We're +jolly well rid of him." + +"The fee! I won't get a penny till I bring him back. And the whole thing +will be found out!" + +As the full meaning of this predicament burst upon Welsh, his face +underwent a change by no means pleasant to watch. For a full minute he +swore, and then an ominous silence fell upon the room. + +Twiddel was the first to recover himself. + +"Let me see the letter," he said; "I haven't finished it." + +Welsh read it aloud-- + +"DEAR TWIDDEL,--I regret to inform you that the patient, Francis Beveridge, +whom you placed under my care, has escaped from Clankwood. We have made +every inquiry consistent with strict privacy, but unfortunately have not +yet been able to lay our hands upon him. We only know that he left +Ashditch Junction in the London express, and was seen walking out of St +Euston's Cross. How he has been able to maintain himself in concealment +without money or clothes, I am unable to imagine. + +"As no inquiries have been made for him by his cousin Mr Welsh, or any +other of his friends or relatives, I am writing to you that you may inform +them, and I hope that this letter may follow you abroad without delay. I +may add that the circumstances of his escape showed most unusual cunning, +and could not possibly have been guarded against. + +"Trusting that you are having a pleasant holiday, I am, yours very truly, + + ADOLPHUS S. CONGLETON." + +The two looked at one another in silence for a minute, and then Welsh +said, fiercely, "You must catch him again, Twiddel. Do you think I am +going to have all my risk and trouble for nothing?" + +"_I_ must catch him! Do you suppose _I_ let him loose?" + +"You must catch him, all the same." + +"I shan't bother my head about him," answered Twiddel, with the +recklessness of despair. + +"You won't? You want to have the story known, I suppose?" + +"I don't care if it is." + +Welsh looked at him for a minute: then he jumped up and exclaimed, "You +need a drink, old man. Let's hurry up that slavey." + +With the first course their countenances cleared a little, with the second +they were almost composed, by the end of dinner they had started +plot-hatching hopefully again. + +"It's any odds on the man's still being in town," said Welsh. "He had no +money or clothes, and evidently he hasn't gone to any of his friends, or +the whole story would have been out. Now, there is nowhere where a man can +lie low so well, especially if he is hard up, as London. I can answer from +experience. He is hardly likely to be in the West End, or the best class +of suburbs, so we've something to go upon at once. We must go to a private +inquiry office and put men on his track, and then we must take the town in +beats ourselves. So much is clear; do you see?" + +"And hadn't we better find out whether anything more is known at +Clankwood?" suggested Twiddel. "Dr Congleton wrote a month ago; perhaps +they have caught him by this time." + +"Hardly likely, I'm afraid; he'd have written to you if they had. Still, +we can but ask." + +"But, I say!" the doctor suddenly exclaimed, "people may find out that I'm +back without him." + +Welsh was equal to the emergency. + +"You must leave again at once," he said decisively, rising from the table; +"and there's no good wasting time, either." + +"What do you mean?" asked the bewildered doctor, who had not yet +assimilated the criminal point of view. + +"We'll put our luggage straight on to a cab, drive off to other rooms--I +know a cheap place that will do--and if by any chance inquiries are made, +people must be told that you are still abroad. Nobody must hear of your +coming home to-night." + +"Is it----" began Twiddel, dubiously. + +"Is it what?" snapped his friend. + +"Is it worth it?" + +"Is £500, not to speak of two reputations, worth it! Come on!" + +The unfortunate doctor sighed, and rose too. He was beginning to think +that the nefarious acquisition of fees might have drawbacks after all. + + + + + CHAPTER II. + + +The chronicle must now go back a few days and follow another up-express. + +"I must either be a clergyman or a policeman," Mr Bunker reflected, in the +corner of his carriage; "they seem to me to be on the whole the two least +molested professions. Each certainly has a livery which, if its occupier +is ordinarily judicious, ought to serve as a certificate of sanity. To me +all policemen are precisely alike, but I daresay they know them apart in +the force, and as all the beats and crossings are presumably taken +already, I might excite suspicion by my mere superfluity. Besides, a +theatrical costumier's uniform would possibly lack some ridiculous but +essential detail." + +He lit another cigar and looked humorously out of the window. + +"I shall take orders. An amateur theatrical clergyman's costume will be +more comfortable, and probably less erroneous. They allow them some +latitude, I believe; and I don't suppose there are any visible ordination +scars whose absence would give me away. I shall certainly study the first +reverend brother I meet to see." + +Thus wisely ruminating, he arrived in London at a very early hour on a +chilly morning, and drove straight to a small hotel near King's Cross, +where the landlord was much gratified at receiving so respectable a guest +as the Rev. Alexander Butler. ("I must begin with a B." said Mr Bunker to +himself; "I think it's lucky.") + +It is true the reverend gentleman was in evening clothes, while his hat +and coat had a singularly secular, not to say fashionable, appearance; +but, as he mentioned casually in the course of some extremely affable +remarks, he had been dining in a country house, and had not thought it +worth while changing before he left. After breakfasting he dressed himself +in an equally secular suit of tweeds and went out, he mentioned +incidentally, to call at his tailor's for his professional habit, which he +seemed surprised to learn had not yet been forwarded to the hotel. + +A visit to a certain well-known firm of theatrical costumiers was followed +by his reappearance in a cab accompanied by a bulky brown paper parcel; +and presently he emerged from his room attired more consistently with his +office, much to his own satisfaction, for, as he observed, "I cannot say I +approve of clergymen masquerading as laymen." + +His opinion on the converse circumstance was not expressed. + +Much to his landlord's disappointment, he informed him that he should +probably leave again that afternoon, and then he went out for a walk. + +About half an hour later he was once more in the street where, not so very +long ago, a very exciting cab-race had finished. He strolled slowly past +Dr Twiddel's house. The blinds of the front room were down; at that hour +there was no sign of life about it, and he saw nothing at all to arrest +his attention. Then he looked down the other side of the street, and to +his great satisfaction spied a card, with the legend "Apartments to let," +in one of the first-floor windows of a house immediately opposite. + +He rang the bell, and in a moment a rotund and loquacious landlady +appeared. Yes, the drawing-room was to let; would the reverend gentleman +come up and see it? Mr Bunker went up, and approved. They readily agreed +upon terms, and the landlady, charmed with her new lodger's appearance and +manners, no less than with the respectability of his profession, proceeded +to descant at some length on the quiet, comfort, and numerous other +advantages of the apartments. + +"Just the very plice you wants, sir. We 'ave 'ad clerical gentlemen 'ere +before, sir; in fact, there's one a-staying 'ere now, second floor,--you +may know of 'im, sir,--the Reverend Mr John Duggs; a very pleasant +gentleman you'll find him, sir. I'll tell 'im you're 'ere, sir; 'e'd be +sure to like to meet another gentleman of the syme cloth, has they say." + +Somehow or other the Rev. Mr Butler failed to display the hearty pleasure +at this announcement that the worthy Mrs Gabbon had naturally expected. + +Aloud he merely said, "Indeed," politely, but with no unusual interest. + +Within himself he reflected, "The deuce take Mr John Duggs! However, I +want the rooms, and a man must risk something." + +As a precautionary measure he visited a second-hand bookseller on his way +back, and purchased a small assortment of the severest-looking works on +theology they kept in stock; and these, with his slender luggage, he +brought round to Mrs Gabbon's in the course of the afternoon. + +He looked carefully out of his sitting-room window, but the doctor's +blinds were still down, and he saw no one coming or going about the house; +so he began his inquiries by calling up his landlady. + +"I have been troubled with lumbago, Mrs Gabbon," he began. + +"Dearie me, sir," said Mrs Gabbon, "I'm sorry to 'ear that; you that looks +so 'ealthy too! Well, one never knows what's be'ind a 'appy hexterior, +does one, sir?" + +"No, Mrs Gabbon," replied Mr Bunker, solemnly; "one never knows what even +a clergyman's coat conceals." + +"That's very true, sir. In the midst of life we are in----" + +"Lumbago," interposed Mr Bunker. + +Mrs Gabbon looked a trifle startled. + +"Well," he continued with the same gravity, "I may unfortunately have +occasion to consult a doctor----" + +"There's Dr Smith," interrupted Mrs Gabbon, her equanimity quite restored +by his ecclesiastical tone and the mention of ailments; "'e attended my +poor dear 'usband hall through his last illness; an huncommon clever +doctor, sir, as I ought to know, sir, bein'----" + +"No doubt an excellent man, Mrs Gabbon; but I should like to know of one +as near at hand as possible. Now I see the name of a Dr Twiddel----" + +"I wouldn't recommend 'im, sir," said Mrs Gabbon, pursing her mouth. + +"Indeed? Why not?" + +"'E attended Mrs Brown's servant-girl, sir,--she bein' the lady as has the +'ouse next door,--and what he give _'er_ didn't do no good. Mrs Brown tell +me 'erself." + +"Still, in an emergency----" + +"Besides which, he ain't at 'ome, sir." + +"Where has he gone?" + +"Abroad, they do say, sir; though I don't rightly know much about 'im." + +"Has he been away long?" + +Mrs Gabbon considered. + +"It must 'ave bin before the middle of November he went, sir." + +"Ha!" exclaimed Mr Bunker, keenly, though apparently more to himself than +his landlady. + +"I beg your pardon, sir?" + +"The middle of November, you say? That's a long holiday for a doctor to +take." + +"'E 'avn't no practice to speak of,--not as I knows of, leastways." + +"What sort of a man is he--young or old?" + +"By my opinion, sir, 'e's too young. I don't 'old by them young doctors. +Now Dr Smith, sir----" + +"Dr Twiddel is quite a young man, then?" + +"What I'd call little better than a boy, sir. They tell me they lets 'em +loose very young nowadays." + +"About twenty-five, say?" + +"'E might be that, sir; but I don't know much about 'im, sir. Now Dr +Smith, sir, 'e's different." + +In fact at this point Mrs Gabbon showed such a tendency to turn the +conversation back to the merits of Dr Smith and the precise nature of Mr +Bunker's ailment, that her lodger, in despair, requested her to bring up a +cup of tea as speedily as possible. + +"Before the middle of November," he said to himself. "It is certainly a +curious coincidence." + +To a gentleman of Mr Bunker's sociable habits and active mind, the +prospect of sitting day by day in the company of his theological treatises +and talkative landlady, and watching an apparently uninhabited house, +seemed at first sight even less entertaining than a return to Clankwood. +But, as he said of himself, he possessed a kind of easy workaday +philosophy, and, besides that, an apparently irresistible attraction for +the incidents of life. + +He had barely finished his cup of tea, and was sitting over the fire +smoking one of the Baron's cigars and looking through one of the few books +he had brought that bore no relation to divinity, his feet high upon the +side of the mantelpiece, his ready-made costume perhaps a little more +unbuttoned than the strictest propriety might approve, and a stiff glass +of whisky-and-water at his elbow, when there came a rap at his door. + +In response to his "Come in," a middle-aged gentleman, dressed in clerical +attire, entered. He had a broad, bearded face, a dull eye, and an +indescribably average aspect. + +"The devil! Mr John Duggs himself," thought Mr Bunker, hastily adopting a +more conventional attitude and feeling for his button-holes. + +"Ah--er--Mr Butler, I believe?" said the stranger, with an apologetic air. + +"The same," replied Mr Bunker, smiling affably. + +"I," continued his visitor, advancing with more confidence, "am Mr Duggs. +I am dwelling at present in the apartment immediately above you, and +hearing of the arrival of a fellow-clergyman, through my worthy friend Mrs +Gabbon, I have taken the liberty of calling. She gave me to understand +that you were not undesirous of making my acquaintance, Mr Butler." + +"The deuce, she did!" thought Mr Butler. Aloud he answered most politely, +"I am honoured, Mr Duggs. Won't you sit down?" + +First casting a wary eye upon a chair, Mr Duggs seated himself carefully +on the edge of it. + +"It is quite evident," thought Mr Bunker, "that he has spotted something +wrong. I believe a bobby would have been safer after all." + +He assumed the longest face he could draw, and remarked sententiously, +"The weather has been unpleasantly cold of late, Mr Duggs." + +He flattered himself that his guest seemed instantly more at his ease. +Certainly he replied with as much cordiality as a man with such a dull eye +could be supposed to display. + +"It has, Mr Butler; in fact I have suffered from a chill for some weeks. +Ahem!" + +"Have something to drink," suggested Mr Bunker, sympathetically. "I'm +trying a little whisky myself, as a cure for cold." + +"I--ah--I am sorry. I do not touch spirits." + +"I, on the contrary, am glad to hear it. Too few of our clergymen nowadays +support the cause of temperance by example." + +Mr Bunker felt a little natural pride in this happily expressed sentiment, +but his visitor merely turned his cold eye on the whisky bottle, and +breathed heavily. + +"Confound him!" he thought; "I'll give him something to snort at if he is +going to conduct himself like this." + +"Have a cigar?" he asked aloud. + +Mr Duggs seemed to regard the cigar-box a little less unkindly than the +whisky bottle; but after a careful look at it he replied, "I am afraid +they seem a little too strong for me. I am a light smoker, Mr Butler." + +"Really," smiled Mr Bunker; "so many virtues in one room reminds me of the +virgins of Gomorrah." + +"I beg your pardon? The what?" asked Mr Duggs, with a startled stare. + +Mr Bunker suspected that he had made a slip in his biblical reminiscences, +but he continued to smile imperturbably, and inquired with a perfect air +of surprise, "Haven't you read the novel I referred to?" + +Mr Duggs appeared a little relieved, but he answered blankly enough, +"I--ah--have not. What is the book you refer to?" + +"Oh, don't you know? To tell the truth, I forget the title. It's by a +somewhat well-known lady writer of religious fiction. A Miss--her name +escapes me at this moment." + +In fact, as Mr Bunker had no idea how long his friend might be dwelling in +the apartment immediately above him, he thought it more prudent to make no +statement that could possibly be checked. + +"I am no great admirer of religious fiction of any kind," replied Mr +Duggs, "particularly that written by emotional females." + +"No," said Mr Bunker, pleasantly; "I should imagine your own doctrines +were not apt to err on the sentimental side." + +"I am not aware that I have said anything to you about my--doctrines, as +you call them, Mr Butler." + +"Still, don't you think one can generally tell a man's creed from his +coat, and his sympathies from the way he cocks his hat?" + +"I think," replied Mr Duggs, "that our ideas of our vocation are somewhat +different." + +"Mine is, I admit," said Mr Bunker, who had come to the conclusion that +the strain of playing his part was really too great, and was now being +happily carried along by his tongue. + +Mr Duggs for a moment was evidently disposed to give battle, but thinking +better of it, he contented himself with frowning at his younger opponent, +and abruptly changed the subject. + +"May I ask what position you hold in the church, Mr Butler?" + +"Why," began Mr Bunker, lightly: it was on the tip of his tongue to say "a +clergyman, of course," when he suddenly recollected that he might be +anything from the rank of curate up to the people who wear gaiters (and +who these were precisely he didn't know). An ingenious solution suggested +itself. He replied with a preliminary inquiry, "Have you ever been in the +East, Mr Duggs?" + +"I regret to say I have not hitherto had the opportunity." + +"Thank the Lord for that," thought Mr Bunker. "I have been a missionary," +he said quietly, and looked dreamily into the fire. + +It was a happy move. Mr Duggs was visibly impressed. + +"Ah?" he said. "Indeed? I am much interested to learn this, Mr Butler. +It--ah--gives me perhaps a somewhat different view of your--ah--opinions. +Where did your work lie?" + +"China," replied Mr Bunker, thinking it best to keep as far abroad as +possible. + +"Ha!" exclaimed Mr Duggs. "This is really extremely fortunate. I am at +present, Mr Butler, studying the religions and customs of China at the +British Museum, with a view to going out there myself very shortly. I +already feel I know almost as much about that most interesting country as +if I had lived there. I should like to talk with you at some length on the +subject." + +Mr Bunker saw that it was time to put an end to this conversation, at +whatever minor risk of perturbing his visitor. He had been a little +alarmed, too, by noticing that Mr Duggs' dull eye had wandered frequently +to his theological library, which with his usual foresight he had strewn +conspicuously on the table, and that any expression it had was rather of +suspicious curiosity than gratification. + +"I should like to hear some of your experiences," Mr Duggs continued. "In +what province did you work?" + +"In Hung Hang Ho," replied Mr Bunker. His visitor looked puzzled, but he +continued boldly, "My experiences were somewhat unpleasant. I became +engaged to a mandarin's daughter--a charming girl. I was suspected, +however, of abetting an illicit traffic in Chinese lanterns. My companions +were manicured alive, and I only made my escape in a pagoda, or a junk--I +was in too much of a hurry to notice which--at the imminent peril of my +life. Don't go to China, Mr Duggs." + +Mr Duggs rose. + +"Young man," he said, sternly, "put away that fatal bottle. I can only +suppose that it is under the influence of drink that you have ventured to +tell me such an irreverent and impossible story." + +"Sir," began Mr Bunker, warmly,--for he thought that an outburst of +indignation would probably be the safest way of concluding the +interview,--when he stopped abruptly and listened. All the time his ears +had been alive to anything going on outside, and now he heard a cab rattle +up and stop close by. It might be at Dr Twiddel's, he thought, and, +turning from his visitor, he sprang to the window. + +Remarking distantly, "I hear a cab; it is possibly a friend I am +expecting," Mr Duggs stepped to the other window. + +It was only, however, a hansom at the door of the next house, out of which +a very golden-haired young lady was stepping. "Aha," said Mr Bunker, quite +forgetting the indignant _rôle_ he had begun to play; "rather nice! Is +this your friend, Mr Duggs?" + +Mr Duggs gave him one look of his dull eyes, and walked straight for the +door. As he went out he merely remarked, "Our acquaintance has been brief, +Mr Butler, but it has been quite sufficient." + +"Quite," thought Mr Bunker. + + + + + CHAPTER III. + + +That was Mr Bunker's first and last meeting with the Rev. John Duggs, and +he took no small credit to himself for having so effectually incensed his +neighbour, without, at the same time, bringing suspicion on anything more +pertinent than his sobriety. + +And yet sometimes in the course of the next three days he would have been +thankful to see him again, if only to have another passage-of-arms. The +time passed most wearily; the consulting-room blinds were never raised; no +cabs stopped before the doctor's door; nobody except the little servant +ever moved about the house. + +He could think of no plan better than waiting; and so he waited, showing +himself seldom in the streets, and even sitting behind the curtain while +he watched at the window. After writing at some length to the Baron he had +no further correspondence that he could distract himself with; he was even +forced once or twice to dip into the theological works. Mrs Gabbon had +evidently "'eard sommat" from Mr Duggs, and treated him to little of her +society. The boredom became so excessive that he decided he must make a +move soon, however rash it was. + +The only active step he took, and indeed the only step he saw his way to +take, was a call on Dr Twiddel's _locum_. But luck seemed to run dead +against him. Dr Billson had departed "on his holiday," he was informed, +and would not return for three weeks. So Mr Bunker was driven back to his +window and the Baron's cigars. + +It was the evening of his fourth day in Mrs Gabbon's rooms. He had +finished a modest dinner and was dealing himself hands at piquet with an +old pack of cards, when he heard the rattle of a cab coming up the street. +The usual faint flicker of hope rose: the cab stopped below him, the +flicker burned brighter, and in an instant he was at the window. He opened +the slats of the blind, and the flicker was aflame. Before the doctor's +house a four-wheeled cab was standing laden with luggage, and two men were +going up the steps. He watched the luggage being taken in and the cab +drive away, and then he turned radiantly back to the fire. + +"The curtain is up," he said to himself. "What's the first act to be?" + +Presently he put on his wide-awake hat and went out for a stroll. He +walked slowly past the doctor's house, but there was nothing to be seen or +heard. Remembering the room at the back, he was not surprised to find no +chink of light about the front windows, and thinking it better not to run +the risk of being seen lingering there, he walked on. He was in such good +spirits, and had been cooped up so continually for the last few days, that +he went on and on, and it was not till about a couple of hours had passed +that he approached his rooms again. As he came down the street he was +surprised to see by the light of a lamp that another four-wheeler was +standing before the doctor's house, also laden with luggage. + +Two men jumped in, one after another, and when he had come at his fastest +walk within twenty yards or so, the cabman whipped up and drove rapidly +away, luggage and men and all. + +He looked up and down for a hansom, but there were none to be seen. For a +few yards he set off at a run in pursuit, and then, finding that the horse +was being driven at a great rate, and remembering the paucity of stray +cabs in the quiet streets and roads round about, he stopped and considered +the question. + +"After all," he reflected, "it may not have been Dr Twiddel who drove +away; in fact, if it was he who arrived in the first cab, it's any odds +against it. Pooh! It can't be. Still, it's a curious thing if two cabs +loaded with luggage came to the house in the same evening, and one drove +away without unlading." + +With his spirits a little damped in spite of his philosophy, he went back +to his rooms. + +In the morning the consulting-room blinds were still down, and the house +looked as deserted as ever. + +He waited till lunch, and then he went out boldly and pulled the doctor's +bell. The same little maid appeared, but she evidently did not recognise +the fashionable patient who disappeared so mysteriously in the +demure-looking clergyman at the door. + +"Is Dr Twiddel at home?" + +"No, sir, he ain't back yet." + +"He hasn't been back?" + +"No, sir." + +Mr Bunker looked at her keenly, and then said to himself, "She is lying." + +He thought he would try a chance shot. + +"But he was expected home last night, I believe." + +The maid looked a little staggered. + +"He ain't been," she replied. + +"I happen to have heard that he called here," he hazarded again. + +This time she was evidently put about. + +"He ain't been here--as I knows of." + +He slipped half-a-crown into her hand. + +"Think again," he said, in his most winning accents. + +The poor little maid was obviously in a dilemma. + +"Do you want him particular, sir?" + +"Particularly." + +She fidgeted a little. + +"He told me," he pursued, "that he might look in at his rooms last night. +He left no message for me?" + +"What name, sir?" + +"Mr Butler." + +"No, sir." + +"Then, my dear," said Mr Bunker, with his most insinuating smile, "he was +here for a little, you can't deny?" + +At the maid's embarrassed glance down his long coat, he suddenly realised +that there was perhaps a distinction between lay and clerical smiles. + +"He might have just looked in, sir," she admitted. + +"But he didn't want it known?" + +"No, sir." + +"Quite right, I advised him not to, and you did very well not to tell me +at first." + +He smiled approvingly and made a pretence of turning away. + +"Oh, by the way," he added, stopping as if struck by an after-thought, "Is +he still in town? He promised to leave word for me, but he has evidently +forgotten." + +"I don't know, sir; 'e didn't say." + +"What? He left _no_ word at all?" + +"No, sir." + +Mr Bunker held out another half-crown. + +"It's truth, sir," said the maid, drawing back; "we don't know where 'e +is." + +"Take it, all the same; you have been very discreet. You have no idea?" + +The maid hesitated. + +"I _did_ 'ear Mr Welsh say something about lookin' for rooms," she +allowed. + +"In London?" + +"I expect so, sir; but 'e didn't say no more." + +"Mr Welsh is the friend who came with him, of course?" + +"Yes, sir." + +"Thanks," said Mr Bunker. "By the way, Dr Twiddel might not like your +telling this even to a friend, so you needn't say I called, I'll tell him +myself when I see him, and I won't give you away." + +He smiled benignly, and the little maid thanked him quite gratefully. + +"Evidently," he thought as he went away, "I was meant for something in the +detective line." + +He returned to his rooms to meditate, and the longer he thought the more +puzzled he became, and yet the more convinced that he had taken up a +thread that must lead him somewhere. + +"As for my plan of action," he considered, "I see nothing better for it +than staying where I am--and watching. This mysterious doctor must surely +steal back some night. Now and then I might go round the town and try a +cast in the likeliest bars--oh, hang me, though! I forgot I was a +clergyman." + +That night he had a welcome distraction in the shape of a letter from the +Baron. It was written from Brierley Park, in the Baron's best pointed +German hand, and it ran thus-- + +"MY DEAR BUNKER,--I was greatly more delighted than I am able to express to +you from the amusing correspondence you addressed me. How glad I am, I can +assure you, that you are still in safety and comfort. Remember, my dear +friend, to call for me when need arises, although I do think you can guard +yourself as well as most alone. + +"This leaves me happy and healthful, and in utmost prosperity with the +kind Sir Richard and his charming Lady. You English certainly know well +how to cause time to pass with mirth. About instruction I say less! + +"They have talked of you here. I laugh and keep my tongue when they wonder +who he is and whither gone away. Now that anger is passed and they see I +myself enjoy the joke, they say, and especially do the ladies, (You +humbug, Bunker!) 'How charming was the imitation, Baron!' You can indeed +win the hearts, if wishful so. The Lady Grillyer and her unexpressable +daughter I have often seen. To-day they come here for two nights. I did +suggest it to Lady Brierley, and I fear she did suspect the condition of +my heart; but she charmingly smiled, she asked them, and they come! + +"The Countess, I fear, does not now love you much, my friend; but then she +knows not the truth. The Lady Alicia is strangely silent on the matter of +Mr Bunker, but in time she also doubtless will forgive. (At this Mr Bunker +smiled in some amusement.) + +"When they leave Brierley I also shall take my departure on the following +day, that is in three days. Therefore write hastily, Bunker, and name the +place and hour where we shall meet again and dine festively. I expect a +most reverent clergyman and much instructive discourse. Ah, humbug!--Thine +always, + + RUDOLPH VON BLITZENBERG." + +"_P.S._--She is sometimes more kind and sometimes so distant. Ah, I know +not what to surmise! But to-morrow or the next my fate will be decided. +Give me of your prayers, my reverent friend! + + R. VON B." + +"Dear old Baron!" said Mr Bunker. "Well, I've at least a dinner to look +forward to." + + + + + CHAPTER IV. + + +Dr Twiddel, meanwhile, was no less anxious to make the Rev. Alexander +Butler's acquaintance than the Rev. Alexander Butler was to make his. Not +that he was aware of that gentleman's recent change of identity and +occupation; but most industrious endeavors to find a certain Mr Beveridge +were made in the course of the next few days. He and Welsh were living +modestly and obscurely in the neighbourhood of the Pentonville Road, +scouring the town by day, studying a map and laying the most ingenious +plans at night. Welsh's first effort, as soon as they were established in +their new quarters, was to induce his friend to go down to Clankwood and +make further inquiries, but this Twiddel absolutely declined to do. + +"My dear chap," he answered, "supposing anything were found out, or even +suspected, what am I to say? Old Congleton knows me well, and for his own +sake doesn't want to make a fuss; but if he really spots that something is +wrong, he will be so afraid of his reputation that he'd give me away like +a shot." + +"How are you going to give things away by going down and seeing him?" + +"_If_ they have guessed anything, I'll give it away. I haven't your cheek, +you know, and tact, and that sort of thing; you'd much better go +yourself." + +"_I?_ It isn't my business." + +"You seem to be making it yours. Besides, Dr Congleton thinks it is. You +passed yourself off as the chap's cousin, and it is quite natural for you +to go and inquire." + +Welsh pondered the point. "Hang it," he said at last, "it would do just as +well to write. Perhaps it's safer after all." + +"Well, you write." + +"Why should I, rather than you?" + +"Because you're his cousin." + +Welsh considered again. "Well, I don't suppose it matters much. I'll +write, if you're afraid." + +It was these amiable little touches in his friend's conversation that +helped to make Twiddel's lot at this time so pleasant. In fact, the doctor +was learning a good deal about human nature in cloudy weather. + +With great care Welsh composed a polite note of anxious inquiry, and by +return of post received the following reply:-- + +"MY DEAR SIR,--I regret to inform you that we have not so far recovered +your cousin Mr Beveridge. In all probability, however, this cannot be long +delayed now, as he was seen within the last week at a country house in +Dampshire, and is known to have fled to London immediately on his +recognition, but before he could be secured. He was then clean shaved, and +had been passing under the name of Francis Bunker. We are making strict +inquiries for him in London. + +"Nobody can regret the unfortunate circumstance of his escape more than I, +and, in justice to myself and my institution, I can assure you that it was +only through the most unforeseen and remarkable ingenuity on your cousin's +part that it occurred. + +"Trusting that I may soon be able to inform you of his recovery, I am, +yours very truly, + + "ADOLPHUS S. CONGLETON. + +Their ardour was, if possible, increased by Dr Congleton's letter. Mr +Beveridge was almost certainly in London, and they knew now that they must +look for a clean-shaved man. Two private inquiry detectives were at work; +and on their own account they had mapped the likeliest parts of London +into beats, visiting every bar and restaurant in turn, and occasionally +hanging about stations and the stopping-places for 'buses. + +It was dreadfully hard work, and after four days of it, even Welsh began +to get a little sickened. + +"Hang it," he said in the evening, "I haven't had a decent dinner since we +came back. Mr Bunker can go to the devil for to-night, I'm going to dine +decently. I'm sick of going round pubs, and not even stopping to have a +drink." + +"So am I," replied Twiddel, cordially; "where shall we go?" + +"The Café Maccarroni," suggested Welsh; "we can't afford a West-end place, +and they give one a very decent dinner there." + +The Café Maccarroni in Holborn is nominally of foreign +extraction,--certainly the waiters and the stout proprietor come from +sunnier lands,--and many of the diners you can hear talking in strange +tongues, with quick gesticulations. But for the most part they are +respectable citizens of London, who drink Chianti because it stimulates +cheaply and not unpleasantly. The white-painted room is bright and clean +and seldom very crowded, the British palate can be tickled with tolerable +joints and cutlets, and the foreign with gravy-covered odds and ends. +Altogether, it may be recommended to such as desire to dine comfortably +and not too conspicuously. + +The hour at which the two friends entered was later than most of the +_habitués_ dine, and they had the room almost to themselves. They faced +each other across a small table beside the wall, and very soon the +discomforts of their researches began to seem more tolerable. + +"We'll catch him soon, old man," said Welsh, smiling more affably than he +had smiled since they came back. "A day or two more of this kind of work +and even London won't be able to conceal him any longer." + +"Dash it, we must," replied Twiddel, bravely. "We'll show old Congleton +how to look for a lunatic." + +"Ha, ha!" laughed Welsh, "I think he'll be rather relieved himself. +Waiter! another bottle of the same." + +The bottle arrived, and the waiter was just filling their glasses when a +young clergyman entered the room and walked quietly towards the farther +end. Welsh raised his glass and exclaimed, "Here's luck to ourselves, +Twiddel, old man!" + +At that moment the clergyman was passing their table, and at the mention +of this toast he started almost imperceptibly, and then, throwing a quick +glance at the two, stopped and took a seat at the next table, with his +back turned towards them. Welsh, who was at the farther side, looked at +him with some annoyance, and made a sign to Twiddel to talk a little more +quietly. + +To the waiter, who came with the _menu_, the clergyman explained in a +quiet voice that he was waiting for a friend, and asked for an evening +paper instead, in which he soon appeared to be deeply engrossed. + +At first the conversation went on in a lower tone, but in a few minutes +they insensibly forgot their neighbour, and the voices rose again by +starts. + +"My dear fellow," Welsh was saying, "we can discuss that afterwards; we +haven't caught him yet." + +"I want to settle it now." + +"But I thought it was settled." + +"No, it wasn't," said Twiddel, with a foreign and vinous doggedness. + +"What do you suggest then?" + +"Divide it equally--£250 each." + +"You think you can claim half the credit for the idea and half the +trouble?" + +"I can claim _all_ the risk--practically." + +"Pooh!" said Welsh. "You think I risked nothing? Come, come, let's talk of +something else." + +"Oh, rot!" interrupted Twiddel, who by this time was decidedly flushed. +"You needn't ride the high horse like that, you are not Mr +Mandell-Essington any longer." + +With a violent start, the clergyman brought his fist crash on the table, +and exclaimed aloud, "By Heaven, that's it!" + + + + + CHAPTER V. + + +As one may suppose, everybody in the room started in great astonishment at +this extraordinary outburst. With a sharp "Hollo!" Twiddel turned in his +seat, to see the clergyman standing over him with a look of the keenest +inquiry in his well-favoured face. + +"May I ask, Dr Twiddel, what you know of the gentleman you just named?" he +said, with perfect politeness. + +The conscience-smitten doctor gazed at him blankly, and the colour +suddenly left his face. But Welsh's nerves were stronger; and, as he +looked hard at the stranger, a jubilant light leaped to his eyes. + +"It's our man!" he cried, before his friend could gather his wits. "It's +Beveridge, or Bunker, or whatever he calls himself! Waiter!" + +Instantly three waiters, all agog, hurried at his summons. + +Mr Bunker regarded him with considerable surprise. He had quite expected +that the pair would be thrown into confusion, but not that it would take +this form. + +"Excuse me, sir," he began, but Welsh interrupted him by crying to the +leading waiter-- + +"Fetch a four-wheeled cab and a policeman, quick!" As the man hesitated, +he added, "This man here is an escaped lunatic." + +The waiter was starting for the door, when Mr Bunker stepped out quickly +and interrupted him. + +"Stop one minute, waiter," he said, with a quiet, unruffled air that went +far to establish his sanity. "Do I look like a lunatic? Kindly call the +proprietor first." + +The stout proprietor was already on his way to their table, and the one or +two other diners were beginning to gather round. Mr Bunker's manner had +impressed even Welsh, and after his nature he took refuge in bluster. + +"I say, my man," he cried, "this won't pass. Somebody fetch a cab." + +"Vat is dees about?" asked the proprietor, coming up. + +"Your wine, I'm afraid, has been rather too powerful for this gentleman," +Mr Bunker explained, with a smile. + +"Look here," blustered Welsh, "do you know you've got a lunatic in the +room?" + +"You can perhaps guess it," smiled Mr Bunker, indicating Welsh with his +eyes. + +The waiters began to twitter, and Welsh, with an effort, pulled himself +together. + +"My friend here," he said, "is Dr Twiddel, a well-known practitioner in +London. He can tell you that he certified this man as a lunatic, and that +he afterwards escaped from his asylum. That is so, Twiddel?" + +"Yes," assented Twiddel, whose colour was beginning to come back a little. + +"Who are you, sare?" asked the proprietor. + +"Show him your card, Twiddel," said Welsh, producing his own and handing +it over. + +The proprietor looked at both cards, and then turned to Mr Bunker. + +"And who are you, sare?" + +"My name is Mandell-Essington." + +"His name----" began Welsh. + +"Have you a card?" interposed the proprietor. + +"I am sorry I have not," replied Mr Bunker (to still call him by the name +of his choice). + +"His name is Francis Beveridge," said Welsh. + +"I beg your pardon; it is Mandell-Essington." + +"Any other description?" Welsh asked, with a sneer. + +"A gentleman, I believe." + +"No other occupation?" + +"Not unless you can call a justice of the peace such," replied Mr Bunker, +with a smile. + +"And yet he disguises himself as a clergyman!" exclaimed Welsh, +triumphantly, turning to the proprietor. + +Mr Bunker saw that he was caught, but he merely laughed, and observed, "My +friend here disguises himself in liquor, a much less respectable cloak." + +Unfortunately the humour of this remark was somewhat thrown away on his +present audience; indeed, coming from a professed clergyman, it produced +an unfavourable impression. + +"You are not a clergyman?" said the proprietor, suspiciously. + +"I am glad to say I am not," replied Mr Bunker, frankly. + +"Den vat do you do in dis dress?" + +"I put it on as a compliment to the cloth; I retain it at present for +decency," said Mr Bunker, whose tongue had now got a fair start of him. + +"Mad," remarked Welsh, confidentially, shrugging his shoulders with really +excellent dramatic effect. + +By this time the audience were disposed to agree with him. + +"You can give no better account of yourself dan dis?" asked the +proprietor. + +"I am anxious to," replied Mr Bunker, "but a public restaurant is not the +place in which I choose to give it." + +"Fetch the cab and the policeman," said Welsh to a waiter. + +At this moment another gentleman entered the room, and at the sight of him +Mr Bunker's face brightened, and he stopped the waiter by a cry of, "Wait +one moment; here comes a gentleman who knows me." + +Everybody turned, and beheld a burly, very fashionably dressed young man, +with a fair moustache and a cheerful countenance. + +"Ach, Bonker!" he cried. + +This confirmation of Mr Bunker's _aliases_ ought, one would expect, to +have delighted the two conspirators, but, instead, it produced the most +remarkable effect. Twiddel utterly collapsed, while even Welsh's impudence +at last deserted him. Neither said a word as the Baron von Blitzenberg +greeted his friend with affectionate heartiness. + +"My friend, zis is good for ze heart! Bot, how? vat makes it here?" + +"My dear Baron, the most unfortunate mistake has occurred. Two men here----" +But at this moment he stopped in great surprise, for the Baron was staring +hard first at Welsh and then at Twiddel. + +"Ah!" he exclaimed, "Mr Mandell-Essington, I zink?" + +Welsh hesitated for an instant, and his hesitation was evident to all. +Then he replied, "No, you are mistaken." + +"Surely I cannot be; you did stay in Fogelschloss?" said the Baron. "Is +not zis Dr Twiddel?" + +"No--er--ah--yes," stammered Twiddel, looking feebly at Welsh. + +The Baron looked from the one to the other in great perplexity, when Mr +Bunker, who had been much puzzled by this conversation, broke in, "Did you +call that person Mandell-Essington?" + +"I cairtainly zought it vas." + +"Where did you meet him?" + +"In Bavaria, at my own castle." + +"You are mistaken, sir," said Welsh. + +"One moment, Mr Welsh," said Mr Bunker. "How long ago was this, Baron?" + +"Jost before I gom to London. He travelled viz zis ozzer gentleman, Dr +Twiddel." + +"You are wrong, sir," persisted Welsh. + +"For his health," added the Baron. + +A light began to dawn on Mr Bunker. + +"His health?" he cried, and then smiled politely at Welsh. + +"We will talk this over, Mr Welsh." + +"I am sorry I happen to be going," said Welsh, taking his hat and coat. + +"What, without your lunatic?" asked Mr Bunker. + +"That is Dr Twiddel's affair, not mine. Kindly let me pass, sir." + +"No, Mr Welsh; if you go now, it will be in the company of that policeman +you were so anxious to send for." There was such an unmistakable threat in +Mr Bunker's voice and eye that Welsh hesitated. "We will talk it over, Mr +Welsh," Mr Bunker repeated distinctly. "Kindly sit down. I have several +things to ask you and your friend Dr Twiddel." + +Muttering something under his breath, Welsh hung up his coat and hat, sat +down, and then assuming an air of great impudence, remarked, "Fire away, +Mr Mandell-Essington--Beveridge--Bunker, or whatever you call yourself." + +Without paying the slightest attention to this piece of humour, Mr Bunker +turned to the bewildered proprietor, and, to the intense disappointment of +the audience, said, "You can leave us now, thank you; our talk is likely +to be of a somewhat private nature." As their gallery withdrew, he drew up +a chair for the Baron, and all four sat round the small table. + +"Now," said Mr Bunker to Welsh, "you will perhaps be kind enough to give +me a precise account of your doings since the middle of November." + +"I'm d----d if I do," replied Welsh. + +"Sare," interposed the Baron in his stateliest manner, "I know not now who +you may be, but I see you are no gentleman. Ven you are viz gentlemen--and +noblemen--you vill please to speak respectfully." + +The stare that Welsh attempted in reply was somewhat ineffective. + +"Perhaps, Dr Twiddel, you can give the account I want?" said Mr Bunker. + +The poor doctor looked at his friend, hesitated, and finally stammered +out, "I--I don't see why." + +Mr Bunker pulled a paper out of his pocket and showed it to him. + +"Perhaps this may suggest a why." + +When the doctor saw the bill for Mr Beveridge's linen, the last of his +courage ebbed away. He glanced helplessly at Welsh, but his ally was now +leaning back in his chair with such an irritating assumption of +indifference, and the prospective fee had so obviously vanished, that he +was suddenly seized with the most virtuous resolutions. + +"What do you want to know, sir?" he asked. + +"In the first place, how did you come to have anything to do with me?" + +Welsh, whose sharp wits instantly divined the weak point in the attack, +cut in quickly, "Don't tell him if he doesn't know already!" + +But Twiddel's relapse to virtue was complete. "I was asked to take charge +of you while----" He hesitated. + +"While I was unwell," smiled Mr Bunker. "Yes?" + +"I was to travel with you." + +"Ah!" + +"But I--I didn't like the idea, you see; and so--in fact--Welsh suggested +that I should take him instead." + +"While you locked me up in Clankwood?" + +"Yes." + +"Ha, ha, ha!" laughed Mr Bunker, "I must say it was a devilish humorous +idea." + +At this Twiddel began to take heart again. + +"I am very sorry, sir, for----" he began, when the Baron interrupted +excitedly. + +"Zen vat is your name, Bonker?" + +"_I_ am Mr Mandell-Essington, Baron." + +The Baron looked at the other two in turn with wide-open eyes. + +Then he turned indignantly upon Welsh. + +"You were impostor zen, sare? You gom to my house and call yourself a +gentleman, and impose upon me, and tell of your family and your estates. +You, a low--er--er--vat you say?--a low _cad!_ Bonker, I cannot sit at ze same +table viz zese persons!" + +He rose as he spoke. + +"One moment, Baron! Before we send these gentlemen back to their really +promising career of fraud, I want to ask one or two more questions." He +turned to Twiddel. "What were you to be paid for this?" + +"£500." + +Mr Bunker opened his eyes. "That's the way my money goes? From your +anxiety to recapture me, I presume you have not yet been paid?" + +"No, I assure you, Mr Essington," said Twiddel, eagerly; "I give you my +word." + +"I shall judge by the circumstances rather than your word, sir. It is +perhaps unnecessary to inform you that you have had your trouble for +nothing." He looked at them both as though they were curious animals, and +then continued: "You, Mr Welsh, are a really wonderfully typical rascal. I +am glad to have met you. You can now put on your coat and go." As Welsh +still sat defiantly, he added, "_At once_, sir! or you may possibly find +policemen and four-wheeled cabs outside. I have something else to say to +Dr Twiddel." + +With the best air he could muster, Welsh silently cocked his hat on the +side of his head, threw his coat over his arm, and was walking out, when a +watchful waiter intercepted him. + +"Your bill, sare." + +"My friend is paying." + +"No, Mr Welsh," cried the real Essington; "I think you had better pay for +this dinner yourself." + +Welsh saw the vigilant proprietor already coming towards him, and with a +look that augured ill for Twiddel when they were alone, he put his hand in +his pocket. + +"Ha, ha!" laughed Essington, "the inevitable bill!" + +"And now," he continued, turning to Twiddel, "you, doctor, seem to me a +most unfortunately constructed biped; your nose is just long enough to +enable you to be led into a singularly original adventure, and your brains +just too few to carry it through creditably. Hang me if I wouldn't have +made a better job of the business! But before you disappear from the +company of gentlemen I must ask you to do one favour for me. First thing +to-morrow morning you will go down to Clankwood, tell what lie you please, +and obtain my legal discharge, or whatever it's called. After that you may +go to the devil--or, what comes much to the same thing, to Mr Welsh--for all +I care. You will do this without fail?" + +"Ye--es," stammered Twiddel, "certainly, sir." + +"You may now retire--and the faster the better." + +As the crestfallen doctor followed his ally out of the restaurant, the +Baron exclaimed in disgust, "Ze cads! You are too merciful. You should +punish." + +"My dear Baron, after all I am obliged to these rascals for the most +amusing time I have ever had in my life, and one of the best friends I've +ever made." + +"Ach, Bonker! Bot vat do I say? You are not Bonker no more, and yet may I +call you so, jost for ze sake of pleasant times? It vill be too hard to +change." + +"I'd rather you would, Baron. It will be a perpetual in memoriam record of +my departed virtues." + +"Departed, Bonker?" + +"Departed, Baron," his friend repeated with a sigh; "for how can I ever +hope to have so spacious a field for them again? Believe me, they will +wither in an atmosphere of orthodoxy. And now let us order dinner." + +"But first," said the Baron, blushing, "I haf a piece of news." + +"Baron, I guess it!" + +"Ze Lady Alicia is now mine! Congratulate!" + +"With all my heart, Baron! What could be a fitter finish than the +detection of villainy, the marriage of all the sane people, and the +apotheosis of the lunatic?" + + + + THE END. + + + + + + + ERRATA. + + + PART I. + CHAPTER IV. + Changed: he whistled, *The* sounds outside + To: he whistled, *the* sounds outside + + PART I. + CHAPTER VI. + Changed: Ye*-*es. + To: Ye*--*es. + + PART I. + CHAPTER VII. + Changed: which that *disapponted* official only + To: which that *disappointed* official only + + PART III. + CHAPTER V. + Changed: something out*.*" he said + To: something out*,*" he said + + PART IV. + CHAPTER I. + Changed: to me, *$*200 to you + To: to me, *£*200 to you + + PART IV. + CHAPTER I. + Changed: _I_ let him loose?*'* + To: _I_ let him loose?*"* + + PART IV. + CHAPTER II. + Changed: * *Indeed? Why not?" + To: *"*Indeed? Why not?" + + PART IV. + CHAPTER III. + Changed: on his *wideawake* hat and + To: on his *wide-awake* hat and + + PART IV. + CHAPTER III. + Changed: "What *nime*, sir?" + To: "What *name*, sir?" + + + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LUNATIC AT LARGE*** + + + +CREDITS + + +January 30, 2007 + + Project Gutenberg Edition + Roland Schlenker and + Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + + +A WORD FROM PROJECT GUTENBERG + + +This file should be named 20485-8.txt or 20485-8.zip. + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + + + http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/0/4/8/20485/ + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one -- the old editions will be +renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no one +owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation (and +you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without permission +and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth in the +General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to copying and +distributing Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works to protect the Project +Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered +trademark, and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you +receive specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of +this eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook +for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports, +performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given away +-- you may do practically _anything_ with public domain eBooks. +Redistribution is subject to the trademark license, especially commercial +redistribution. + + + +THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE + + +_Please read this before you distribute or use this work._ + +To protect the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} mission of promoting the free +distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work (or +any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project Gutenberg"), +you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} +License (available with this file or online at +http://www.gutenberg.org/license). + + +Section 1. + + +General Terms of Use & Redistributing Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works + + +1.A. + + +By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic work, +you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to and accept all the +terms of this license and intellectual property (trademark/copyright) +agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all the terms of this +agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy all copies of +Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works in your possession. If you paid a fee +for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic work +and you do not agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement, you may +obtain a refund from the person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set +forth in paragraph 1.E.8. + + +1.B. + + +"Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be used on or +associated in any way with an electronic work by people who agree to be +bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few things that you can +do with most Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works even without complying +with the full terms of this agreement. See paragraph 1.C below. There are +a lot of things you can do with Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works if you +follow the terms of this agreement and help preserve free future access to +Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below. + + +1.C. + + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" or +PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project +Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the +collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an individual +work is in the public domain in the United States and you are located in +the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from copying, +distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative works based on +the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of +course, we hope that you will support the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} mission of +promoting free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project +Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for +keeping the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} name associated with the work. You can +easily comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the +same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License when you +share it without charge with others. + + +1.D. + + +The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern what you +can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in a constant +state of change. If you are outside the United States, check the laws of +your country in addition to the terms of this agreement before +downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or creating +derivative works based on this work or any other Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} work. +The Foundation makes no representations concerning the copyright status of +any work in any country outside the United States. + + +1.E. + + +Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: + + +1.E.1. + + +The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate access +to, the full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License must appear prominently whenever +any copy of a Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} work (any work on which the phrase +"Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" +is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, copied or +distributed: + + + This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with + almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away + or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License + included with this eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org + + +1.E.2. + + +If an individual Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic work is derived from the +public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is posted with +permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied and +distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees or +charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work with the +phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you +must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 +or obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} +trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. + + +1.E.3. + + +If an individual Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic work is posted with the +permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution must comply +with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional terms imposed +by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked to the Project +Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License for all works posted with the permission of the +copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. + + +1.E.4. + + +Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License +terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this work or any +other work associated with Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}. + + +1.E.5. + + +Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this electronic +work, or any part of this electronic work, without prominently displaying +the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with active links or immediate +access to the full terms of the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License. + + +1.E.6. + + +You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, compressed, +marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any word +processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or +distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} work in a format other than +"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version posted +on the official Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} web site (http://www.gutenberg.org), +you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a +copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon +request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other form. +Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License as +specified in paragraph 1.E.1. + + +1.E.7. + + +Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, performing, +copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} works unless you comply +with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. + + +1.E.8. + + +You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing access to or +distributing Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works provided that + + - You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from + the use of Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} works calculated using the method you + already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed to + the owner of the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} trademark, but he has agreed to + donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project Gutenberg + Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid within 60 + days following each date on which you prepare (or are legally + required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty payments + should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project Gutenberg + Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in Section 4, + "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary + Archive Foundation." + + You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies + you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he + does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} License. + You must require such a user to return or destroy all copies of the + works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue all use of and + all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} works. + + You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of + any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the + electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of + receipt of the work. + + You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free + distribution of Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} works. + + +1.E.9. + + +If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic +work or group of works on different terms than are set forth in this +agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from both the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael Hart, the owner of the +Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in +Section 3 below. + + +1.F. + + +1.F.1. + + +Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable effort to +identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread public domain +works in creating the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} collection. Despite these +efforts, Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works, and the medium on which they +may be stored, may contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, +incomplete, inaccurate or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright +or other intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk +or other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot +be read by your equipment. + + +1.F.2. + + +LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES -- Except for the "Right of +Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} +trademark, and any other party distributing a Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} +electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all liability to you for +damages, costs and expenses, including legal fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE +NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH +OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE +FOUNDATION, THE TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT +WILL NOT BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, +PUNITIVE OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY +OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + +1.F.3. + + +LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND -- If you discover a defect in this +electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can receive a refund +of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a written explanation to +the person you received the work from. If you received the work on a +physical medium, you must return the medium with your written explanation. +The person or entity that provided you with the defective work may elect +to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a refund. If you received the +work electronically, the person or entity providing it to you may choose +to give you a second opportunity to receive the work electronically in +lieu of a refund. If the second copy is also defective, you may demand a +refund in writing without further opportunities to fix the problem. + + +1.F.4. + + +Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth in +paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS,' WITH NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. + + +1.F.5. + + +Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied warranties or the +exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. If any disclaimer or +limitation set forth in this agreement violates the law of the state +applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be interpreted to make +the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by the applicable state +law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any provision of this agreement +shall not void the remaining provisions. + + +1.F.6. + + +INDEMNITY -- You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the trademark +owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone providing copies of +Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works in accordance with this agreement, and +any volunteers associated with the production, promotion and distribution +of Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs +and expenses, including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from +any of the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of +this or any Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} work, (b) alteration, modification, or +additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} work, and (c) any Defect +you cause. + + +Section 2. + + + Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} + + +Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} is synonymous with the free distribution of electronic +works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers including +obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists because of the +efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from people in all walks +of life. + +Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the assistance +they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}'s goals and ensuring +that the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} collection will remain freely available for +generations to come. In 2001, the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive +Foundation was created to provide a secure and permanent future for +Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} and future generations. To learn more about the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations +can help, see Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation web page at +http://www.pglaf.org. + + +Section 3. + + + Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation + + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit +501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the state of +Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal Revenue Service. +The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification number is 64-6221541. +Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at +http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf. Contributions to the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full +extent permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. + +The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. +S. Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered +throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809 North +1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email +business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact information +can be found at the Foundation's web site and official page at +http://www.pglaf.org + +For additional contact information: + + + Dr. Gregory B. Newby + Chief Executive and Director + gbnewby@pglaf.org + + +Section 4. + + + Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive + Foundation + + +Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} depends upon and cannot survive without wide spread +public support and donations to carry out its mission of increasing the +number of public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed +in machine readable form accessible by the widest array of equipment +including outdated equipment. Many small donations ($1 to $5,000) are +particularly important to maintaining tax exempt status with the IRS. + +The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating +charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United States. +Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a considerable +effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up with these +requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations where we have not +received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND DONATIONS or +determine the status of compliance for any particular state visit +http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate + +While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we have +not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition against +accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who approach us +with offers to donate. + +International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make any +statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from outside the +United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. + +Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation methods +and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other ways including +checks, online payments and credit card donations. To donate, please +visit: http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate + + +Section 5. + + + General Information About Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} electronic works. + + +Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} +concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared with +anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} +eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. + +Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~} eBooks are often created from several printed editions, +all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. unless a copyright +notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily keep eBooks in compliance +with any particular paper edition. + +Each eBook is in a subdirectory of the same number as the eBook's eBook +number, often in several formats including plain vanilla ASCII, compressed +(zipped), HTML and others. + +Corrected _editions_ of our eBooks replace the old file and take over the +old filename and etext number. The replaced older file is renamed. +_Versions_ based on separate sources are treated as new eBooks receiving +new filenames and etext numbers. + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + + http://www.gutenberg.org + + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg{~TRADE MARK SIGN~}, including how +to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, +how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email +newsletter to hear about new eBooks. + + + + + + +***FINIS*** +
\ No newline at end of file |
