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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50705 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50705)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The de Bercy Affair, by Gordon Holmes
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The de Bercy Affair
-
-Author: Gordon Holmes
-
-Illustrator: Howard Chandler Christy
-
-Release Date: December 17, 2015 [EBook #50705]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DE BERCY AFFAIR ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Suzanne Shell, Ernest Schaal, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- The de Bercy Affair
-
-
-
-
- _By_ GORDON HOLMES
-
- A
- MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCE
-
- THE ARNCLIFFE PUZZLE
- THE LATE TENANT
-
-
- BY FORCE OF CIRCUMSTANCES
-
- THE DE BERCY AFFAIR
-
- THE HOUSE OF SILENCE
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: Osborne came whispering
- _Frontispiece_]
-
-
-
-
- The
- de Bercy Affair
-
- BY
-
- GORDON HOLMES
-
- AUTHOR OF
-
- A MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCE,
- BY FORCE OF CIRCUMSTANCES, ETC., ETC.
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS BY
- HOWARD CHANDLER CHRISTY
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK
-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP
-
- PUBLISHERS
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1910
-
- BY EDWARD J. CLODE
-
- _Entered at Stationers' Hall_
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. SOME PHASES OF THE PROBLEM 1
- II. DARKNESS 16
- III. A CHANGE OF ADDRESS 31
- IV. THE NEW LIFE 51
- V. THE MISSING BLADE 66
- VI. TO TORMOUTH 88
- VII. AT TORMOUTH 107
- VIII. AT THE SUN-DIAL 126
- IX. THE LETTER 148
- X. THE DIARY, AND ROSALIND 169
- XI. ENTRAPPED! 188
- XII. THE SARACEN DAGGER 206
- XIII. OSBORNE MAKES A VOW 224
- XIV. THE ARRESTS 246
- XV. CLEARING THE AIR 265
- XVI. WHEREIN TWO WOMEN TAKE THE FIELD 285
- XVII. THE CLOSING SCENE 304
-
-
-
-
- THE DE BERCY AFFAIR
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- SOME PHASES OF THE PROBLEM
-
-
-Chief Inspector Winter sat in his private office at New Scotland Yard,
-while a constable in uniform, bare-headed, stood near the door in the
-alert attitude of one who awaits the nod of a superior. Nevertheless,
-Mr. Winter, half-turning from a desk littered with documents, eyed the
-man as though he had just said something outrageous, something so
-opposed to the tenets of the Police Manual that the Chief Commissioner
-alone could deal with the offense.
-
-"Have you been to Mr. Furneaux's residence?" he snapped, nibbling one
-end of a mustache already clipped or chewed so short that his strong
-white teeth could barely seize one refractory bristle.
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"Have you telephoned to any of the district stations?"
-
-"Oh, yes, sir--to Vine Street, Marlborough Street, Cannon Row, Tottenham
-Court Road, and half-a-dozen others."
-
-"No news of Mr. Furneaux anywhere? The earth must have opened and
-swallowed him!"
-
-"The station-sergeant at Finchley Road thought he saw Mr. Furneaux jump
-on to a 'bus at St. John's Wood about six o'clock yesterday evening,
-sir; but he could not be sure."
-
-"No, he wouldn't. I know that station-sergeant. He is a fat-head....
-When did you telegraph to Kenterstone?"
-
-"At 6.30, sir."
-
-Mr. Winter whisked a pink telegraphic slip from off the blotting-pad,
-and read:
-
- Inspector Furneaux not here to my knowledge.
- _Police Superintendent_, KENTERSTONE.
-
-"Another legal quibbler--fat, too, I'll be bound," he growled. Then he
-laughed a little in a vein of irritated perplexity, and said:
-
-"Thank you, Johnson. You, at least, seem to have done everything
-possible. Try again in the morning. I _must_ see Mr. Furneaux at the
-earliest moment! Kindly bring me the latest editions of the evening
-papers, and, by the way, help yourself to a cigar."
-
-The gift of a cigar was a sign of the great man's favor, and it was
-always an extraordinarily good one, of which none but himself knew the
-exact brand. Left alone for a few minutes, he glanced through a written
-telephone message which he had thrust under the blotting-pad when Police
-Constable Johnson had entered. It was from Paris, and announced that two
-notorious Anarchists were en route to England by the afternoon train,
-due at Charing Cross at 9.15 p.m.
-
-"Anarchists!" growled the Chief Inspector--"Pooh! Antoine Descartes and
-Émile Janoc--Soho for them--absinthe and French cigarettes--green and
-black poison. Poor devils! they will do themselves more harm than his
-Imperial Majesty. Now, where the deuce _is_ Furneaux? This Feldisham
-Mansions affair is just in his line--Clarke will ruin it."
-
-Johnson came back with a batch of evening papers. Understanding his
-duties--above all, understanding Mr. Winter--he placed them on the
-table, saluted, and withdrew without a word. Soon the floor was littered
-with discarded news-sheets, those quick-moving eyes ever seeking one
-definite item--"The Murder in the West End--Latest"--or some such
-headline, and once only was his attention held by a double-leaded
-paragraph at the top of a column:
-
- A correspondent writes:--"I saw the deceased lady in company
- with a certain popular American millionaire at the International
- Horse Show in June, and was struck by her remarkable resemblance
- to a girl of great beauty resident in Jersey some eight years
- ago. The then village maid was elected Rose Queen at a rural
- fête, I photographed her, and comparison of the photograph with
- the portrait of Mademoiselle de Bercy exhibited in this year's
- Academy served to confirm me in my opinion that she and the
- Jersey Rose Queen were one and the same person. I may add that
- my accidental discovery was made long before the commission of
- the shocking crime of yesterday."
-
- Under present circumstances, of course, we withhold from
- publication the name of the Jersey Rose Queen, but the line of
- inquiry thus indicated may prove illuminative should there be
- any doubt as to the earlier history of the hapless lady whose
- lively wit and personal charm have brought London society to her
- feet since she left the Paris stage last year.
-
-Winter did not hurry. Tucking the cigar comfortably into a corner of his
-mouth, he read each sentence with a quiet deliberation; then he sought a
-telephone number among the editorial announcements, and soon was
-speaking into a transmitter.
-
-"Is that the _Daily Gazette_?... Put me on to the editorial department,
-please.... That you, Arbuthnot? Well, I'm Winter, of Scotland Yard. Your
-evening edition, referring to the Feldisham Mansions tragedy, contains
-an item.... Oh, you expected to hear from me, did you? Well, what is the
-lady's name, and who is your correspondent?... What? Spell it.
-A-r-m-a-u-d. All right; if you feel you _must_ write to the man first,
-save time by asking him to send me the photograph. I will pass it on to
-you exclusively, of course. Thanks. Good-by."
-
-Before the receiver was on its hook, the Chief Inspector was taking a
-notebook from his breast pocket, and he made the following entry:
-
- Mirabel Armaud, Rose Queen, village near St. Heliers,
- summer of 1900.
-
-A knock sounded on the door.
-
-"Oh, if this could only be Furneaux!" groaned Winter. "Come in! Ah! Glad
-to see you, Mr. Clarke. I was hoping you would turn up. Any news?"
-
-"Nothing much, sir--that is to say, nothing really definite. The
-maid-servant is still delirious, and keeps on screaming out that Mr.
-Osborne killed her mistress. I am beginning to believe there is
-something in it----"
-
-Winter's prominent steel blue eyes dwelt on Clarke musingly.
-
-"But haven't we the clearest testimony as to Osborne's movements?" he
-asked. "He quitted Miss de Bercy's flat at 6.25, drove in his motor to
-the Ritz, attended a committee meeting of the International Polo Club at
-6.30, occupied the chair, dined with the committee, and they all went to
-the Empire at nine o'clock. Unless a chauffeur, a hall-porter, a
-head-waiter, two under-waiters, five polo celebrities, a box-office
-clerk, and several other persons, are mixed up in an amazing conspiracy
-to shield Mr. Rupert Osborne, he certainly could not have murdered a
-woman who was alive in Feldisham Mansions at half-past seven."
-
-Clarke pursed his lips sagely. As a study in opposites, no two men could
-manifest more contrasts. Clarke might have had the words "Detective
-Inspector" branded on his forehead: his features sharp, cadaverous, eyes
-deep-set and suspicious, his nose and chin inquisitive, his lips fixed
-as a rat-trap. Wide cheek-bones, low-placed ears, and narrow brows gave
-him a sinister aspect. In his own special department, the hunting out of
-"confidence men," card-sharpers, and similar hawklike pluckers of the
-provincial pigeon fluttering through London's streets, he was unrivaled.
-But Winter more resembled an intellectual prizefighter than the typical
-detective of fiction. His round head, cropped hair, wide-open eyes,
-joined to a powerful physique and singular alertness of glance and
-movement, suggested that he varied the healthy monotony of a gentleman
-farmer's life by attendance at the National Sporting Club and other
-haunts of pugilism. A terror to wrongdoers, he was never disliked by
-them, whereas Clarke was hated. In a word, Winter was a sharp brain,
-Clarke a sharp nose, and that is why Winter groaned inwardly at being
-compelled to intrust the Feldisham Mansions crime to Clarke.
-
-"What is your theory of this affair?" he said, rather by way of making
-conversation than from any hope of being enlightened.
-
-"It is simple enough," said Clarke, his solemn glance resting for a
-moment on the box of cigars. Winter nodded in the same direction. His
-cigars were sometimes burnt offerings as well as rewards.
-
-"Light up," he said, "and tell me what you think."
-
-"Mademoiselle de Bercy was killed by either a disappointed lover or a
-discarded husband. All these foreign actresses marry early, but grow
-tired of matrimony within a year. If, then, there is no chance of
-upsetting Mr. Osborne's alibi, we must get the Paris police to look into
-Miss de Bercy's history. Her husband will probably turn out to be some
-third-rate actor or broken-down manager. Let us find _him_, and see if
-_he_ is as sure of his whereabouts last evening as Mr. Rupert Osborne
-professes to be."
-
-"You seem to harp on Osborne's connection with the affair?"
-
-"And why not, sir? A man like him, with all his money, ought to know
-better than to go gadding about with actresses."
-
-"But he is interested in the theater--he is quite an authority on French
-comedy."
-
-"He can tackle French tragedy now--he is up to the neck in this one."
-
-"You still cling to the shrieking housemaid--to her ravings, I mean?"
-
-"Perhaps I should have mentioned it sooner, sir, but I have come across
-a taxicab driver who picked up a gentleman uncommonly like Mr. Osborne
-at 7.20 p.m. on Tuesday, and drove him from the corner of Berkeley
-Street to Knightsbridge, waited there nearly fifteen minutes, and
-brought him back again to Berkeley Street."
-
-The Chief Inspector came as near being startled as is permissible in
-Scotland Yard.
-
-"That is a very serious statement," he said quietly, wheeling round in
-his chair and scrutinizing his subordinate's lean face with eyes more
-wide-open than ever, if that were possible. "It is tantamount to saying
-that some person resembling Mr. Osborne hired a cab outside the Ritz
-Hotel, was taken to Feldisham Mansions at the very hour Miss de Bercy
-was murdered, and returned to the Ritz in the same vehicle."
-
-"Exactly so," and Clarke pursed his thin lips meaningly.
-
-"So, then, you _have_ discovered something?"
-
-Mr. Winter's tone had suddenly become dryly official, and the other man,
-fearing a reprimand, added:
-
-"I admit, sir, I ought to have told you sooner, but I don't want to make
-too much of the incident. The taxicab chauffeur does not know Mr. Rupert
-Osborne by sight, and I took good care not to mention the name. The
-unknown was dressed like Mr. Osborne, and looked like him--that is all."
-
-"Who is the driver?"
-
-"William Campbell--cab number X L 4001. I have hired him to-morrow
-morning from ten o'clock, and then he will have an opportunity of seeing
-Mr. Osborne----"
-
-"Meet me here at 9.30, and I will keep the appointment for you.
-Until--until I make other arrangements, I intend to take this Feldisham
-Mansions affair into my own hands. Of course, I should have been
-delighted to leave it in your charge, but during the past hour something
-of vastly greater importance has turned up, and I want you to tackle it
-immediately."
-
-"Something more important than a society murder?" Clarke could not help
-saying.
-
-"Yes. You know that the Tsar comes to London from Windsor to-morrow?
-Well, read this," and Winter, with the impressive air of one who
-communicates a state secret, handed the Paris message.
-
-"Ah!" muttered Clarke, gloating over the word "Anarchists."
-
-"Now you understand," murmured Winter darkly. "Unfortunately these men
-are far too well acquainted with me to render it advisable that I should
-shadow them. So I shall accompany you to Charing Cross, point them out,
-and leave them to you. A live monarch is of more account than a dead
-actress, so you see now what confidence I have in you, Mr. Clarke."
-
-Clarke's sallow cheeks flushed a little. Winter might be a genial chief,
-but he seldom praised so openly.
-
-"I quite recognize that, sir," he said. "Of course, I am sorry to drop
-out of this murder case. It has points, first-rate points. I haven't
-told you yet about the stone."
-
-"Why--what stone?"
-
-"The stone that did for Miss de Bercy. The flat was not thoroughly
-searched last night, but this morning I examined every inch of it, and
-under the piano I found--this."
-
-He produced from a pocket something wrapped in a handkerchief. Unfolding
-the linen, he rose and placed on the blotting-pad, under the strong
-light of a shaded lamp, one of those flat stones which the archeologist
-calls "celts," or "flint ax-heads." Indeed, no expert eye was needed to
-determine its character. The cutting edge formed a perfect curve; two
-deep indentations showed how it had been bound on to a handle of bone or
-wood. At the broadest part it measured fully four inches, its length the
-same, thickness about three-quarters of an inch. That it was a genuine
-neolithic flint could not be questioned. A modern lapidary might
-contrive to chip a flint into the same shape, but could not impart that
-curious bloom which apparently exudes from the heart of the stone during
-its thousands of centuries of rest in prehistoric cave or village mound.
-This specimen showed the gloss of antiquity on each smooth facet.
-
-But it showed more. When used in war or the chase by the fearsome being
-who first fashioned it to serve his savage needs, it must often have
-borne a grisly tint, and now _again_ each side of the strangely sharp
-edge was smeared with grewsome daubs, while some black hairs clung to
-the dried clots which clustered on the irregular surfaces.
-
-Sentiment finds little room in the retreat of a Chief Inspector, so
-Winter whistled softly when he set eyes on this weird token of a crime.
-
-"By gad!" he cried, "in my time at the Yard I've seen many queer
-instruments of butchery--ranging from a crusader's mace to the strings
-of a bass fiddle--but this beats the lot."
-
-"It must have come out of some museum," said the other.
-
-"It suggests a tragedy of the British Association," mused Winter aloud.
-
-"It ought to supply a first-rate clew, anyhow," said Clarke.
-
-"Oh, it does; it must. If only----"
-
-Winter checked himself on the very lip of indiscretion, for Clarke
-detested Furneaux. He consulted his watch.
-
-"We must be off now," he said briskly. "Leave the stone with me, and
-while we are walking to Charing Cross I can give you a few pointers
-about these Anarchist pests. Once they are comfortably boxed up in some
-café in Old Compton Street you can come away safely for the night, and
-pick them up again about midday to-morrow. They are absolutely harm--I
-mean they cannot do any harm until the Tsar arrives. From that moment
-you must stick to them like a limpet to a rock; I will arrange for a man
-to relieve you in the evening, nor shall I forget to give your name to
-the Embassy people when they begin to scatter diamond pins around."
-
-When he meant to act a part, Winter was an excellent comedian, and soon
-Clarke was prowling at the heels of those redoubtables, Antoine
-Descartes and Émile Janoc.
-
-Once Clarke was safely shelved, Winter called the first taxicab he met
-and was driven to Feldisham Mansions. An unerring instinct had warned
-him at once that the murder of the actress was no ordinary crime; but
-Clarke had happened to be on duty when the report of it reached the Yard
-a few minutes after eight o'clock the previous evening, and Winter had
-bewailed the mischance which deprived him of the services of Furneaux,
-the one man to whom he could have left the inquiry with confidence.
-
-The very simplicity of the affair was baffling. Mademoiselle Rose de
-Bercy was the leading lady in a company of artistes, largely recruited
-from the Comédie Française, which had played a short season in London
-during September of the past year. She did not accompany the others when
-they returned to Paris, but remained, to become a popular figure in
-London society, and was soon in great demand for her _contes drôles_ at
-private parties. She was now often to be seen in the company of Mr.
-Rupert Osborne, a young American millionaire, whose tastes ordinarily
-followed a less frivolous bent than he showed in seeking the society of
-an undeniably chic and sprightly Frenchwoman. It had been rumored that
-the two would be married before the close of the summer, and color was
-lent to the statement by the lady's withdrawal from professional
-engagements.
-
-So far as Winter's information went, this was the position of affairs
-until a quarter to eight on the night of the first Tuesday in July. At
-that hour, Mademoiselle de Bercy's housemaid either entered or peered
-into her mistress's drawing-room, and saw her lifeless body stretched on
-the floor. Shrieking, the girl fled out into the lobby and down a flight
-of stairs to the hall-porter's little office, which adjoined the
-elevator. By chance, the man had just collected the letters from the
-boxes on each of the six floors of the block of flats, and had gone to
-the post; Mademoiselle de Bercy's personal maid and her cook, having
-obtained permission to visit an open-air exhibition, had, it seemed,
-been absent since six o'clock; the opposite flat on the same story was
-closed, the tenants being at the seaside; and the distraught housemaid,
-pursued by phantoms, forthwith yielded to the strain, so that the
-hall-porter, on his return, found her lying across the threshold of his
-den.
-
-He summoned his wife from the basement, and the frenzied girl soon
-regained a partial consciousness. It was difficult to understand her
-broken words, but, such as they were, they sent the man in hot haste to
-the flat on the first floor. The outer and inner doors were wide open,
-as was the door of the drawing-room, and sufficient daylight streamed in
-through two lofty windows to reveal something of the horror that had
-robbed the housemaid of her wits.
-
-The unfortunate Frenchwoman was lying on her back in the center of the
-room, and the hall-porter's hurried scrutiny found that she had been
-done to death with a brutal ferocity, her face almost unrecognizable.
-
-Not until the return of the French maid, Pauline, from the exhibition,
-could it be determined beyond doubt that robbery was not the motive of
-the crime, for she was able to assure the police that her mistress's
-jewels were untouched. A gold purse was found on a table close to the
-body, a bracelet sparkled on a wrist cruelly bruised, and a brooch
-fastened at the neck the loose wrap worn as a preliminary to dressing
-for the evening.
-
-Owing to the breakdown of the only servant actually present in the flat
-at the time of the murder, it was impossible to learn anything
-intelligible beyond the girl's raving cry that "Mr. Osborne did it."
-Still, there was apparently little difficulty in realizing what had
-happened. The housemaid had been startled while at supper, either by a
-shriek or some noise of moving furniture, had gone to the drawing-room,
-given one glance at the terrifying spectacle that met her eyes, and was
-straightway bereft of her wits.
-
-The Chief Inspector was turning over in his mind the puzzling features
-of the affair when his automobile swept swiftly out of the traffic and
-glare of Knightsbridge into the quiet street in which stood Feldisham
-Mansions. A policeman had just strolled along the pavement to disperse a
-group of curious people gathered near the entrance, so Winter stopped
-his cab at a little distance and alighted unobserved.
-
-He walked rapidly inside and found the hall-porter at his post. When the
-man learnt the visitor's identity he seemed surprised.
-
-"Mr. Clarke has bin here all day, sir," he said, "and, as soon as he
-left, another gentleman kem, though I must say he hasn't bothered _me_
-much----" this with a touch of resentment, for the hall-porter's
-self-importance was enhanced by his connection with the tragedy.
-
-"Another gentleman!"--this was incomprehensible, since Clarke would
-surely place a constable in charge of the flat. "What name did he give?"
-
-"He's up there at this minnit, sir, an' here's his card."
-
-Winter read: "Mr. Charles Furneaux, Criminal Investigation Department,
-Scotland Yard."
-
-"Well, I'm jiggered!" he muttered, and he added fuel to the fire of the
-hall-porter's annoyance by disregarding the elevator and rushing up the
-stairs, three steps at a time.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- DARKNESS
-
-
-Winter felt at once relieved and displeased. Twice during the hour had
-his authority been disregarded. He was willing to ignore Clarke's method
-of doling out important facts because such was the man's secretive
-nature. But Furneaux! The urgent messages sent to every place where they
-might reach him, each and all summoned him to Scotland Yard without the
-slightest reference to the Feldisham Mansions crime. It was with a stiff
-upper lip, therefore, that the Chief Inspector acknowledged the salute
-of the constable who admitted him to the ill-fated Frenchwoman's abode.
-Furneaux was his friend, Furneaux might be admirable, Furneaux was the
-right man in the right place, but Furneaux must first receive an
-official reminder of the claims of discipline.
-
-The subdued electric lights in the hall revealed within a vista of
-Oriental color blended with Western ideals of comfort. Two exquisitely
-fashioned lamps of hammered iron, rifled from a Pekin temple, softened
-by their dragons and lotus leaves the glare of the high-powered globes
-within them. Praying carpets, frayed by the deserts of Araby, covered
-the geometric design of a parquet floor, and bright-hued draperies of
-Mirzapur hid the rigid outlines of British carpentry. A perfume of
-joss-sticks still clung to the air: it suggested the apartments of a
-Sultana rather than the bower of a fashionable lady in the West End of
-London.
-
-First impressions are powerful, and Winter acknowledged the spell of the
-unusual here, but his impassive face showed no sign of this when he
-asked the constable the whereabouts of Mr. Furneaux.
-
-"In there, sir," said the man, pointing to a door.
-
-Winter noted instantly that the floor creaked beneath his light tread.
-The rugs deadened his footsteps, but the parquetry complained of his
-weight. It was, he perceived, almost impossible for anyone to traverse
-an old flooring of that type without revealing the fact to ordinarily
-acute ears. Once when his heel fell on the bare wood, it rang with a
-sharp yet hollow note. It seemed, somehow, that the place was
-empty--that it missed its presiding spirit.
-
-Oddly enough, as he remembered afterwards, he hesitated with
-outstretched hand in front of the closed door. He was doubtful whether
-or not to knock. As a matter of fact, he did tap slightly on a panel
-before turning the handle. Then he received his second vague impression
-of a new and strange element in the history of a crime. The room was in
-complete darkness.
-
-Though Winter never admitted the existence of nerves, he did not even
-try to conceal from his own consciousness that he started distinctly
-when he looked into a blackness rendered all the more striking by the
-glimpse of a few feet of floor revealed by the off-shine from the
-hall-light.
-
-"Are you here, Furneaux?" he forced himself to say quickly.
-
-"Ah, that you, Winter!" came a voice from the interior. "Yes, I was
-dreaming in the dusk, I think. Let me give you a light."
-
-"Dusk, you call it? Gad, it's like a vault!"
-
-Winter's right hand had found the electric switches, and two clusters of
-lamps on wall-brackets leaped alight. Furneaux was standing, his hands
-behind his back, almost in the center, but the Chief Inspector gathered
-that the room's silent occupant had been seated in a corner farthest
-removed from the windows, and that his head had been propped on his
-clenched hands, for the dull red marks of his knuckles were still
-visible on both cheeks.
-
-Each was aware of a whiff of surprise.
-
-"Queer trick, sitting in the dark," Furneaux remarked, his eyes on the
-floor. "I--find I collect my wits better that way--sometimes. Sometimes,
-one cannot have light enough: for instance, the moment I saw fear in
-Lady Holt's face I knew that her diamonds had been stolen by
-herself----"
-
-Winter reflected that light was equally unkind to Furneaux as to "Lady
-Holt," for the dapper little man looked pallid and ill at ease in this
-flood of electric brilliancy.
-
-There was a silence. Then Furneaux volunteered the remark: "In this
-instance, thought is needed, not observation. One might gaze at that for
-twenty years, but it would not reveal the cause of Mademoiselle de
-Bercy's murder."
-
-"_That_" was a dark stain near the center of the golden-brown carpet.
-Winter bent a professional eye on it, but his mind was assimilating two
-new ideas. In the first place, Furneaux was not the cheery colleague
-whose perky chatterings were his most deadly weapons when lulling a
-rogue into fancied security. In the second, he himself had not been
-prepared for the transit from a hall of Eastern gorgeousness to a room
-fastidiously correct in its reproduction of the period labeled by
-connoisseurs "after Louis XV."
-
-The moment was not ripe for an inquiry anent Furneaux's object in
-hastening to Feldisham Mansions without first reporting himself. Winter
-somehow felt that the question would jar just then and there, and though
-not forgotten, it was waived; still, there was a hint of it in his next
-comment.
-
-"I must confess I am glad to find you here," he said. "Clarke has
-cleared the ground somewhat, but--er--he has a heavy hand, and I have
-turned him on to a new job--Anarchists."
-
-He half expected an answering gleam of fun in the dark eyes lifted to
-his, for these two were close friends at all seasons; but Furneaux
-seemed not even to hear! His lips muttered:
-
-"I--wonder."
-
-"Wonder what?"
-
-"What purpose could be served by this girl's death. Who bore her such a
-bitter grudge that not even her death would sate their hatred, but they
-must try also to destroy her beauty?"
-
-Now, the Chief Inspector had learnt that everyone who had seen the dead
-woman expressed this same sentiment, yet it came unexpectedly from
-Furneaux's lips; because Furneaux never said the obvious thing.
-
-"Clarke believes,"--Winter loathed the necessity for this constant
-reference to Clarke--"Clarke believes that she was killed by one of two
-people, either a jealous husband or a dissatisfied lover."
-
-"As usual, Clarke is wrong."
-
-"He may be."
-
-"He is."
-
-In spite of his prior agreement with Furneaux's estimate of their
-colleague's intelligence, Winter felt nettled at this omniscience. From
-the outset, his clear brain had been puzzled by this crime, and
-Furneaux's extraordinary pose was not the least bewildering feature
-about it.
-
-"Oh, come now," he said, "you cannot have been here many minutes, and it
-is early days to speak so positively. I have been hunting you the whole
-afternoon--in fact, ever since I saw what a ticklish business this was
-likely to prove--and I don't suppose you have managed to gather all the
-threads of it into your fingers so rapidly."
-
-"There are so few," muttered Furneaux, looking down on the carpet with
-the morbid eyes of one who saw a terrible vision there.
-
-"Well, it is a good deal to have discovered the instrument with which
-the crime was committed."
-
-Furneaux's mobile face instantly became alive with excitement.
-
-"It was a long, thin dagger," he cried. "Something in the surgical line,
-I imagine. Who found it, and where?"
-
-Some men in Winter's shoes might have smiled in a superior way. He did
-not. He knew Furneaux, profoundly distrusted Clarke.
-
-"There is some mistake," he contented himself with saying. "Miss de
-Bercy was killed by a piece of flint, shaped like an ax-head--one of
-those queer objects of the stone age which is ticketed carefully after
-it is found in an ancient cave, and then put away in a glass case.
-Clarke searched the room this morning, and found it there--tucked away
-underneath," and he turned round to point to the foot of the boudoir
-grand piano, embellished with Watteaux panels on its rosewood, that
-stood in the angle between the door and the nearest window.
-
-The animation died out of Furneaux's features as quickly as it had
-appeared there.
-
-"Useful, of course" he murmured. "Did you bring it?"
-
-"No; it is in my office."
-
-"But Mi--Mademoiselle de Bercy was not killed in that way. She was
-supple, active, lithe. She would have struggled, screamed, probably
-overpowered her adversary. No; the doctor admits that after a hasty
-examination he jumped to conclusions, for not one of the external cuts
-and bruises could have produced unconsciousness--not all of them death.
-Miss de Bercy was stabbed through the right eye by something strong and
-pointed--something with a thin, blunt-edged blade. I urged a thorough
-examination of the head, and the post mortem proved the correctness of
-my theory."
-
-Winter, one of the shrewdest officials who had ever won distinction in
-Scotland Yard, did not fail to notice that curious slip of a syllable
-before "Mademoiselle," but it was explained a moment later when Furneaux
-used the English prefix "Miss" before the name. It was more natural for
-Furneaux to use the French word, however. Winter spoke French
-fluently--like an educated Englishman--but Furneaux spoke it like a
-native of Paris. The difference between the two was clearly shown by
-their pronunciation of "de Bercy." Winter sounded three distinct
-syllables--Furneaux practically two, with a slurred "r" that Winter
-could not have uttered to save his life.
-
-Moreover, he was considerably taken aback by the discovery that Furneaux
-had evidently been working on the case during several hours.
-
-"You have gone into the affair thoroughly, then," he blurted out.
-
-"Oh, yes. I read of the murder this morning, just as I was leaving
-Kenterstone on my way to report at the Yard."
-
-"Kenterstone!"
-
-He was almost minded to inquire if the local superintendent was a fat
-man.
-
-"Sir Peter and Lady Holt left town early in the day, so I went to
-Kenterstone from Brighton late last night.... The pawnbroker who held
-Lady Holt's diamonds was treating himself to a long weekend by the sea,
-and I thought it advisable to see him in person and explain matters."
-
-A memory of the Finchley Road station-sergeant who thought that he had
-seen Furneaux get on a 'bus at 6 p.m. in North London the previous
-evening shot through Winter's mind; but he kept to the main line of
-their talk.
-
-"Do you know who this Rose de Bercy really is?" he suddenly demanded.
-
-For a second Furneaux seemed to hesitate, but the reply came in an even
-tone.
-
-"I have reason to believe that she was born in Jersey, and that her
-maiden name was Mirabel Armaud," he said.
-
-"The Rose Queen of a village fête eight years ago?"
-
-Perhaps it was Furneaux's turn to be surprised, but he showed no sign.
-
-"May I ask how you ascertained that fact?" he asked quietly.
-
-"It is published in one of the evening papers. A man who happened to
-photograph her in Jersey recognized the likeness when he saw the Academy
-portrait of Rose de Bercy. But if you have not seen his statement
-already, how did _you_ come to know that Miss de Bercy was Mirabel
-Armaud?"
-
-"I am a Jersey man by birth, and, although I quitted the island early in
-life, I often go back there. Indeed, I was present at the very fête you
-mention."
-
-"I suppose the young lady was in a carriage and surrounded by a crowd?
-It would be an odd thing if you figured in the photograph," laughed
-Winter.
-
-"There have been more unlikely coincidences, but my early sight of the
-remarkable woman who was killed in this room last night explains my
-intense desire to track her murderer before Clarke had time to baffle my
-efforts. It forms, too, a sort of excuse for my departure from official
-routine. Of course, I would have reported myself this evening, but, up
-to the present, I have been working hard to try and dispel the fog of
-motive that blocks the way."
-
-"You have heard of Rupert Osborne, then?"
-
-Furneaux was certainly not the man whom Winter was accustomed to meet at
-other times. Usually quick as lightning to grasp or discard a point,
-to-night he appeared to experience no little difficulty in focusing his
-attention on the topic of the moment. The mention of Rupert Osborne's
-name did not evoke the characteristically vigorous repudiation that
-Winter looked for. Instead, there was a marked pause, and, when the
-reply came, it was with an effort.
-
-"Yes. I suppose Clarke wants to arrest him?"
-
-"He has thought of it!"
-
-"But Osborne's movements last night are so clearly defined?"
-
-"So one would imagine, but Clarke still doubts."
-
-"Why?"
-
-Winter told of the taxicab driver, and the significant journey taken by
-his fare. Furneaux shook his head.
-
-"Strange, if true," he said; "why should Osborne kill the woman he meant
-to marry?"
-
-"She may have jilted him."
-
-"No, oh, no. It was--it must have been--the aim of her life to secure a
-rich husband. She was beautiful, but cold--she had the eye that weighs
-and measures. Have you ever seen the Monna Lisa in the Louvre?"
-
-Winter did not answer, conscious of a subtle suspicion that Furneaux
-really knew far more of the inner history of this tragedy than had
-appeared hitherto. Clarke, in his own peculiar way, was absurdly
-secretive, but that Furneaux should want to remain silent was certainly
-baffling.
-
-"By the way," said Winter with seeming irrelevance, "if you were in
-Brighton and Kenterstone yesterday afternoon and evening, you had not
-much time to spare in London?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Then the station-sergeant at Finchley Road was mistaken in thinking
-that he saw you in that locality about six o'clock--'jumping on to a
-'bus' was his precise description of your movements."
-
-"I was there at that time."
-
-"How did you manage it? St. John's Wood is far away from either Victoria
-or Charing Cross, and I suppose you reached Kenterstone by way of
-Charing Cross?"
-
-"I returned from Brighton at three o'clock, and did not visit Sir Peter
-Holt until half-past nine at Kenterstone. Had I disturbed him before
-dinner the consequence might have been serious for her ladyship.
-Besides, I wished to avoid the local police at Kenterstone."
-
-Both men smiled constrainedly. There was a barrier between them, and
-Furneaux, apparently, was not inclined to remove it; as for Winter, he
-could not conquer the impression that, thus far, their conversation was
-of a nature that might be looked for between a police official and a
-reluctant witness--assuredly not between colleagues who were also on the
-best of terms as comrades. Furneaux was obviously on guard, controlling
-his face, his words, his very gestures. That so outspoken a man should
-deem it necessary to adopt such a rôle with his close friend was
-annoying, but long years of forced self-repression had taught Winter the
-wisdom of throttling back utterances which might be regretted
-afterwards. Indeed, he tried valiantly to repair the fast-widening
-breach.
-
-"Have a cigar," he said, proffering a well-filled case. "Suppose we just
-sit down and go through the affair from A to Z. Much of our alphabet is
-missing, but we may be able to guess a few additional letters."
-
-Furneaux smiled again. This time there was the faintest ripple of
-amusement in his eyes.
-
-"Now, you know how you hate to see me maltreat a good Havana," he
-protested.
-
-"This time I forgive you before the offense--anything to jolt you into
-your usual rut. Why, man alive, here have I been hunting you all day,
-yet no sooner are you engaged on the very job for which I wanted you,
-than I find myself cross-examining you as though--as though you had
-committed some flagrant error."
-
-The Chief Inspector did not often flounder in his speech as he had done
-twice that night. He was about to say "as though I suspected you of
-killing Rose de Bercy yourself"; but his brain generally worked in front
-of his voice, and he realized that the hypothesis would have sounded
-absurd, almost insane.
-
-Furneaux took the cigar. He did not light it, but deliberately crushed
-the wrapper between thumb and forefinger, and then smelled it with the
-air of one who dallies with a full-scented rose, passing it to and fro
-under his nostrils. Winter, meantime, was darting several small rings of
-smoke through one wide and slowly dissipating circle, both being now
-seated, Winter's bulk, genially aggressive, well thrust forward--but
-Furneaux, small, compact, a bundle of nerves under rigid control, was
-sunk back into the depths of a large and deep-seated chair, and seemed
-to shirk the new task imposed on his powers of endurance. Winter was so
-conscious of this singularly unexpected behavior on his friend's part
-that his conscience smote him.
-
-"I say, old man," he said, "you look thoroughly done up. I hardly
-realized that you had been hard at work all day. Have you eaten
-anything?"
-
-"Had all I wanted," said Furneaux, thawing a little under this
-solicitude.
-
-"Perhaps you didn't want enough. Come, own up. Have you dined?"
-
-"No--I was not hungry."
-
-"Where did you lunch?"
-
-"I ate a good breakfast."
-
-Winter sprang to his feet again.
-
-"By Jove!" he cried, "this affair seems to have taken hold of you--I
-meant to send for the hall-porter and the French maid--Pauline is her
-name, I think; she ought to be able to throw some light on her
-mistress's earlier life--but we can leave all that till to-morrow. Come
-to my club. A cutlet and a glass of wine will make a new man of you."
-
-Furneaux rose at once. Anyone might have believed that he was glad to
-postpone the proposed examination of the servants.
-
-"That will be splendid," he said with an air of relief that compared
-markedly with his reticent mood of the past few minutes. "The mere
-mention of food has given me an appetite. I suppose I am fagged out, or
-as near it as I have ever been. Moreover, I can tell you everything that
-any person in these Mansions knows of what took place here between six
-and eight o'clock last night--a good deal more, by the way, than Clarke
-has found out, though he scored a point over that stone. Where is
-it?--in the office, you said. I should like to see it--in the morning."
-
-"You will see more than that. Clarke has arranged to meet the taxicab
-driver at ten o'clock. He meant to confront him with Rupert Osborne, but
-we must manage things differently. Of course the man's testimony may be
-important. Alibi or no alibi, it will be awkward for Osborne if a
-credible witness swears that he was in this locality for nearly a
-quarter of an hour about the very time that this poor young lady was
-killed."
-
-Furneaux, holding the broken cigar under his nose, offered no comment,
-but, as they entered the hall, he said, glancing at its quaint
-decoration:
-
-"If opportunity makes the thief, so, I imagine, does it sometimes
-inspire the murderer. Given the clear moment, the wish, the fury, can't
-you picture the effect these bizarre surroundings would exercise on a
-mind already strung to the madness of crime? For every willful slayer of
-a fellow human being is mad--mad.... Ah, there was the genius of a
-maniac in the choice of that flint ax to rend Mirabel Armaud's smooth
-skin--yet she had the right to live--perhaps----"
-
-He stopped; and Winter anew felt that this musing Furneaux of to-day was
-a different personality from the Furneaux of his intimate knowledge.
-
-And how compellingly strange it was that he should choose to describe
-Rose de Bercy by the name which she had ceased to bear during many
-years! Winter dispelled the scent of the joss-sticks by a mighty puff of
-honest tobacco smoke.
-
-"Oh, come along," he growled, "let us eat--we are both in need of it.
-The flat is untenanted, of course. Very well, lock the door," he added,
-addressing the policeman. "Leave the key with the hall-porter, and tell
-him not to admit anybody, on any pretext whatsoever, until Mr. Furneaux
-and I come here in the morning."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- A CHANGE OF ADDRESS
-
-
-On the morning after the inquest on Rose de Bercy, the most miserable
-young man in London, in his own estimation, was Mr. Rupert Glendinning
-Osborne. Though utterly downcast and disconsolate, he was in excellent
-health, and might have eaten well of the good things on his breakfast
-table had he not thoughtlessly opened a newspaper while stirring his
-coffee.
-
-Under other circumstances, he might have laughed at the atrocious
-photograph which depicted "Mr. Rupert Osborne arriving at the coroner's
-court." The camera had foreshortened an arm, deprived him of his right
-leg below the knee, discredited his tailor, and given him the hang-dog
-aspect of a convicted pickpocket, for he had been "snapped" at the
-moment of descent from his automobile, when a strong wind was blowing,
-and he had been annoyed by the presence of a gaping crowd.
-
-The camera had lied, of course. In reality, he was a good-looking man of
-thirty, not tall or muscular, but of well-knit figure, elegant though by
-no means effeminate. For a millionaire, and a young one, he was by way
-of being a phenomenon. He cared little for society; drove his own
-horses, but was hardly ever seen in the Park; rode boldly to hounds, yet
-refused to patronize a racing stable. He seldom visited a theater,
-though he wrote well-informed articles on the modern French stage for
-the _New Review_; he preferred a pleasant dinner with a couple of
-friends to a banquet with hundreds of acquaintances; in a word, he
-conducted himself as a staid citizen whether in New York, or London, or
-Paris. Never had a breath of scandal or notoriety attached itself to his
-name until he was dragged into lurid prominence by the stupefying event
-of that fatal Tuesday evening.
-
-Those who knew him best had expressed sheer incredulity when they first
-heard of his contemplated marriage with the French actress. But a man's
-friends, as a rule, are the worst judges of his probable choice of a
-partner for life: and Rupert Osborne was drawn to Rose de Bercy because
-she possessed in superabundance those lively qualities and volatile
-charms in which he was himself deficient.
-
-There could be no manner of doubt, however, that some part of his
-quivering nervous system had been seared by statements made about her
-during the inquest. It was not soothing for a distraught lover to learn
-that Mademoiselle de Bercy's reminiscences of her youth were singularly
-inaccurate. She could not well have been born in a patrician château on
-the Loire, and yet be the daughter of a Jersey potato-grower. Her
-father, Jean Armaud, was stated to be still living on a small farm near
-St. Heliers, whereas her own version of the family history was that
-Monsieur le Comte de Bercy did not survive the crash of the family
-fortunes in the Panama swindle. Other discrepancies were not lacking
-between official fact and romantic narrative. They gave Osborne the
-first glimpse of the abyss into which he had almost plunged. A
-loyal-hearted fellow, he shrank from the hateful consciousness that the
-hapless girl's tragic end had rescued him in all likelihood from another
-tragedy, bitter and long drawn out. But because he had been so foolish
-as to fall in love with a beautiful adventuress there was no reason why
-he should be blind and deaf when tardy common sense began to assert
-itself.
-
-To a man who habitually shrank from the public eye, it was bad enough to
-be dragged into the fierce light that beats on the witness-box in an
-inquiry such as this, but it was far worse to feel in his inmost heart
-that he was now looked upon with suspicion by millions of people in
-England and America.
-
-He could not shirk the meaning of the recorded evidence. The newspapers,
-it is true, had carefully avoided the ugly word alibi; but ninety per
-cent. of their readers could not fail to see that Rupert Osborne had
-escaped arrest solely by reason of the solid phalanx of testimony as to
-his movements on the Tuesday evening before and after the hour of the
-murder; the remaining ten per cent. reviled the police, and protested,
-with more or less forceful adjectives, that "there was one law for the
-rich and another for the poor."
-
-At the inquest itself, Osborne was too sorrow-laden and stunned to
-realize the significance of certain questions which now seemed to leap
-at him viciously from out the printed page.
-
-"How were you dressed when you visited Miss de Bercy that afternoon?"
-the coroner had asked him.
-
-"I wore a dark gray morning suit and black silk hat," he had answered.
-
-"You did not change your clothing before going to the Ritz Hotel?"
-
-"No. I drove straight there from Feldisham Mansions."
-
-"Did you dress for dinner?"
-
-"No. My friends and I discussed certain new regulations as to the
-proposed international polo tournament, and it was nearly eight o'clock
-before we concluded the business of the meeting, so we arranged to dine
-in the grill-room and go to a Vaudeville entertainment afterwards."
-
-That statement had puzzled the coroner. He referred to his notes.
-
-"To the Vaudeville?" he queried. "I thought you went to the Empire
-Theater?" and Osborne explained that Americans spoke of "vaudeville" in
-the same sense as Englishmen use the word "music-hall" or "variety."
-
-"You were with your friends during the whole time between 6.30 p.m. and
-midnight?"
-
-"Practically. I left them for a few minutes before dinner, but only to
-go to the writing-room, where I wrote two short letters."
-
-"At what hour, as nearly as you can recollect?"
-
-"About ten minutes to eight. I glanced at the clock when the letters
-were posted, as I wished to be sure of catching the American mail."
-
-"Were both letters addressed to correspondents in America?"
-
-"No, one only. The other was to a man about a dog."
-
-A slight titter relieved the gray monotony of the court at this
-explanation, but the coroner frowned it down, and Rupert added that he
-was buying a retriever in readiness for the shooting season.
-
-But the coroner's questions suddenly assumed a sinister import when
-William Campbell, driver of taxicab number X L 4001, stated that on the
-Tuesday evening, at 7.20, he had taken a gentleman dressed in a dark
-gray suit and a tall hat from the corner of Berkeley Street (opposite
-the Ritz Hotel) to the end of the street in Knightsbridge in which
-Feldisham Mansions were situated, had waited there for him for about
-fifteen minutes, and had brought him back to Berkeley Street.
-
-"I thought I might know him again, sir, an', as I said yesterday----"
-the man continued, glancing at Rupert, but he was stopped peremptorily.
-
-"Never mind what you said yesterday," broke in the coroner. "You will
-have another opportunity of telling the jury what happened subsequently.
-At present I want you to answer my questions only."
-
-An ominous hush in the court betrayed the public appreciation of the
-issues that might lurk behind this deferred evidence. Rupert remembered
-looking at the driver with a certain vague astonishment, and feeling
-that countless eyes were piercing him without cause.
-
-The hall-porter, too, Simmonds by name, introduced a further element of
-mystery by saying that at least two gentlemen had gone up the stairs
-after Mr. Osborne's departure in his automobile, and that one of them
-bore some resemblance to the young millionaire.
-
-"Are you sure it was not Mr. Osborne?" said the coroner.
-
-"Yes, sir--leastways, I'm nearly positive."
-
-"Why do you say that?"
-
-"Because Mr. Osborne, like all American gentlemen, uses the lift, sir."
-
-"Can any stranger enter the Mansions without telling you their
-business?"
-
-"Not as a rule, sir. But it does so happen that between seven an' eight
-o'clock I have a lot of things to attend to, and I often have to run
-round the corner to get a taxi for ladies and gentlemen goin' out to
-dinner or the theater."
-
-So, there was a doubt, and Rupert Osborne had not realized its deadly
-application to himself until he read question and answer in cold type
-while he toyed with his breakfast on the day after the inquest, which,
-by request of Mr. Winter, had been adjourned for a fortnight.
-
-It was well for such shreds of stoicism as remained in his tortured
-brain that the housemaid was still unable to give evidence, and that no
-mention was made of the stone ax-head found in Rose de Bercy's
-drawing-room. The only official witnesses called were the constable
-first summoned by the hall-porter, and the doctor who made the autopsy.
-The latter--who was positive that Mademoiselle de Bercy had not been
-dead many minutes when he was brought to her flat at ten minutes to
-eight--ascribed the cause of death to "injuries inflicted with a sharp
-instrument," and the coroner, who knew the trend of the inquiry, would
-not sate public curiosity by putting, or permitting the jury to put, any
-additional questions until the adjourned inquest. Neither Clarke nor
-Furneaux was present in court. To all seeming, Chief Inspector Winter
-was in charge of the proceedings on behalf of the police.
-
-Rupert ultimately abandoned the effort to eat, shoved his chair away
-from the table, and determined to reperuse with some show of calmness
-and criticism, the practically verbatim report of the coroner's inquiry.
-
-Then he saw clearly two things--Rose de Bercy had willfully misled him
-as to her past life, and he was now regarded by the public as her
-probable betrayer and certain murderer. There was no blinking the facts.
-He had almost committed the imprudence of marrying a woman unworthy of
-an honorable man's love, and, as if such folly called for condign
-punishment, he must rest under the gravest suspicion until her slayer
-was discovered and brought to justice.
-
-Rupert Osborne's lot had hitherto been cast in pleasant places, but now
-he was face to face with a crisis, and it remained to be seen if the
-force that had kept three generations of ancestors in the forefront of
-the strenuous commercial warfare of Wall Street had weakened or wholly
-vanished in the person of their dilettante descendant.
-
-At any rate, he did not flinch from the drab reality of fact. He read
-on, striving to be candid as to meanings and impartial in weighing them.
-
-At the end of the evidence were two paragraphs setting forth the
-newspaper's own researches. The first of these ran:
-
- Our correspondent at St. Heliers has ascertained that the father
- and sister of the deceased will leave the island by to-day's
- mail steamer for the double purpose of identifying their
- relative and attending the funeral. There can be no question
- that their first sad task will be in the nature of a formality.
- They both admit that Rose de Bercy was none other than Mirabel
- Armaud. Mademoiselle Marguerite Armaud, indeed, bears a striking
- resemblance to her wayward sister, while Monsieur Armaud, though
- crippled with toil and rheumatism, shows the same facial
- characteristics that are so marked in his two daughters. The
- family never revealed to their neighbors in the village any
- knowledge of Mirabel's whereabouts. After her disappearance
- eight years ago her name was seldom, if ever, mentioned to any
- of their friends, and their obvious wishes in the matter soon
- came to be respected by would-be sympathizers. It is certain,
- however, that Marguerite, on one occasion, dared her father's
- anger and went to Paris to plead with her sister and endeavor to
- bring her home. She failed, as might be expected, since Rose de
- Bercy was then attaining the summit of her ambition by playing a
- small part in a play at the Gymnase, though at that period no
- one in Paris was able to foresee the remarkable success she was
- destined to achieve on the stage.
-
-Each word cut like a knife. The printed statements were cruel, but the
-inferences were far worse. Rupert felt sick at heart; nevertheless he
-compelled himself to gather the sense of the next item:
-
- It was a favorite pose of Mademoiselle de Bercy--using the name
- by which the dead actress was best known--to describe herself as
- an Anarchist. It is certain that she attended several Anarchist
- meetings in Paris, probably for amusement or for professional
- study of an interesting type, and in this connection it is a
- somewhat singular coincidence that Detective-Inspector Clarke,
- who was mentioned on Wednesday as being in charge of the police
- investigations into the murder, should have arrested two
- notorious Anarchists on the Thames Embankment yesterday shortly
- before the Tsar passed that way _en route_ to the Guildhall. The
- two men, who refused to give any information as to their
- identity, were said to be none other than Emile Janoc and
- Antoine Descartes, both well-known French revolutionaries. They
- were brought before the Extradition Court, and ordered to be
- deported, the specific charge against them being the carrying of
- fire-arms without a license. It was stated that on each man was
- found an unloaded revolver.
-
-So far as Rupert could judge, the newspaper was merely pandering to the
-craze for sensationalism in bracketing Rose de Bercy with a couple of
-unwashed scoundrels from Montmartre. On one occasion, indeed, she had
-mentioned to him her visits to an Anarchist club; but their object was
-patent when she exhibited a collection of photographs and laudatory
-press notices of herself in the stage part of a Russian lady of high
-rank who masqueraded as a Terrorist in order to save her lover from
-assassination.
-
-"It would have been only fair," he growled savagely, "if the fellow who
-is raking up her past so assiduously had placed on record her appearance
-on the stage as _Marie Dukarovna_. And who is this detective who made
-the arrests? Clarke was not the name of the man I met yesterday."
-
-Then he groaned. His glance had just caught a detailed description of
-himself, his tastes, his family history, and his wealth. It was
-reasonably accurate, and not unkindly in tone, but it grated terribly at
-the moment, and in sheer desperation of spirit he crushed the newspaper
-in his clenched hands.
-
-At that instant his man entered. Even the quiet-voiced and
-impenetrable-faced Jenkins spoke in an awed tone when he announced:
-
-"Chief Inspector Winter, of Scotland Yard, wishes to see you, sir."
-
-"Very well, show him in; and don't be scared, Jenkins. He will not
-arrest _you_."
-
-Rupert must have been stung beyond endurance before he would fling such
-a taunt at his faithful servitor. Jenkins, at a loss for a disclaimer,
-glanced reproachfully at the table.
-
-"You have hardly eaten a morsel, sir," he said. "Shall I bring some
-fresh coffee and an egg?"
-
-Then Rupert laughed grimly.
-
-"Wait till I have seen Mr. Winter," he said. "Perhaps he may join me. If
-he refuses, Jenkins, be prepared for the worst."
-
-But the Chief Inspector did not refuse. He admitted that coffee-drinking
-and smoking were his pet vices, and his breezy cheerfulness at once
-established him on good terms with his host.
-
-"I want you to understand, Mr. Osborne, that my presence here this
-morning is entirely in your interests," he said when they were seated,
-and Rupert was tackling a belated meal. "The more fully we clear up any
-doubtful points as to your proceedings on Tuesday the more easy it will
-be for the police to drop you practically out of the inquiry except as
-an unimportant witness."
-
-Rupert's heart warmed to this genial-mannered official.
-
-"It is very kind of you to put things in that light when every newspaper
-in the country is prepared to announce my arrest at any moment," he
-replied.
-
-Winter was astonished. His face showed it; his big blue eyes positively
-bulged with surprise.
-
-"Arrest!" he cried. "Why should I arrest you, sir?"
-
-"Well, after the chauffeur's evidence----"
-
-"That is exactly what brings me here. Personally, I have no doubt
-whatsoever that you did not leave the Ritz Hotel between half-past six
-and nine o'clock on the evening of the murder. Two of your friends on
-the committee saw you writing those letters, and the clerk at the
-inquiry desk remembers supplying you with stamps. Just as a matter of
-form, you might give me the names of your correspondents?"
-
-Rupert supplied the desired information, which Winter duly scribbled in
-a notebook, but it did not escape the American's usually quick
-perception that his visitor had already verified the statement made
-before the coroner. That being so, some other motive lay behind this
-visit. What was it?
-
-Winter, at the moment, seemed to be fascinated by the leaf-color and
-aroma of the cigar which Jenkins had brought with the coffee. He puffed,
-smelled, pinched, and scrutinized--was completely absorbed, in fact.
-
-"Don't you like it?" asked Osborne, smiling. The suggestion was almost
-staggering to the Chief Inspector.
-
-"Why, of course I do," he cried. "This is a prize cigar. You young
-gentlemen who are lucky enough to command practically unlimited money
-can generally obtain anything you want, but I am bound to say, Mr.
-Osborne, that you could not buy a thousand cigars like this in London
-to-day, no matter what price you paid."
-
-"I imagine you are right," said Rupert. "The estate on which that
-tobacco was grown is one of the smallest in Cuba, but it is on the old
-rich belt. My manager is a scientist. He knows to half an ounce per acre
-how much sulphate of potash to add each year."
-
-"Sulphate of potash?" questioned Winter, ever ready to assimilate fresh
-lore on the subject of the weed.
-
-"Yes, that is the secret of the flavor, plus the requisite conditions of
-soil and climate, of course. The tobacco plant is a great consumer of
-mineral constituents. A rusty nail, a pinch of salt, and a small lump of
-lime, placed respectively near the roots of three plants in the same
-row, will produce three absolutely different varieties of tobacco, but
-all three will be inferior to the plants removed from such influences."
-
-"Dear me!" said Winter, "how very interesting!"
-
-But to his own mind he was saying: "Why in the world did Furneaux refuse
-to meet this nice young fellow? Really, this affair grows more complex
-every hour."
-
-Osborne momentarily forgot his troubles in the company of this affable
-official. It was comforting, too, that his hospitality should be
-accepted. Somehow, he felt certain that Winter would have declined it if
-any particle of suspicion had been attached to the giver, and therein
-his knowledge of men did not deceive him. With a lighter heart,
-therefore, than he would have thought possible a few minutes earlier,
-he, too, lit a cigar.
-
-Winter saw that Rupert was waiting for him to resume the conversation
-momentarily broken. He began with a straightforward question.
-
-"Now, Mr. Osborne," he said, "will you kindly tell me if it is true that
-you were about to marry Mademoiselle de Bercy?"
-
-"It is quite true."
-
-"How long have you known her?"
-
-"Since she came to London last fall."
-
-"I suppose you made no inquiries as to her past life?"
-
-"No, none. I never gave a thought to such a thing."
-
-"I suppose you see now that it would have been wiser had you done
-something of the kind?"
-
-"Wisdom and love seldom go hand in hand."
-
-The Chief Inspector nodded agreement. His profession had failed utterly
-to oust sentiment from his nature.
-
-"At any rate," he said, "her life during the past nine months has been
-an open book to you?"
-
-"We soon became friends. Since early in the spring I think I could tell
-you of every engagement Mademoiselle de Bercy fulfilled, and name almost
-every person she met, barring such trivialities as shopping fixtures and
-the rest."
-
-"Ah; then you would know if she had an enemy?"
-
-"I--think so. I have never heard of one. She had hosts of friends--all
-sympathetic."
-
-"What was the precise object of your visit on Tuesday?"
-
-"I took her a book on Sicily. We--we had practically decided on Taormina
-for our honeymoon. As I would be occupied until a late hour, she
-arranged to dine with Lady Knox-Florestan and go to the opera to hear
-_Pagliacci_. It was played after _Philémon et Baucis_, so the dinner was
-fixed for half-past eight."
-
-"Would anyone except yourself and Lady Knox-Florestan be aware of that
-arrangement?"
-
-"I think not."
-
-"Why did she telephone to Lady Knox-Florestan at 7.30 and plead illness
-as an excuse for not coming to the dinner?"
-
-Rupert looked thoroughly astounded. "That is the first I have heard of
-it," he cried.
-
-"Could she have had any powerful reason for changing her plans?"
-
-"I cannot say. Not to _my_ knowledge, most certainly."
-
-"Did she expect any visitor after your departure?"
-
-"No. Two of her servants were out for the evening, and the housemaid
-would help her to dress."
-
-Winter looked at the American with a gleam of curiosity when the
-housemaid was mentioned.
-
-"Did this girl, the housemaid, open the door when you left?" he asked.
-
-"No. I just rushed away. She admitted me, but I did not see her
-afterwards."
-
-"Then she may have fancied that you took your departure much later?"
-
-"Possibly, though hardly likely, since her room adjoins the entrance,
-and, as it happened, I banged the door accidentally in closing it."
-
-Winter was glad that a man whom he firmly believed to be innocent of any
-share in the crime had made an admission that might have told against
-him under hostile examination.
-
-"Suppose--just suppose--" he said, "that the housemaid, being hysterical
-with fright, gave evidence that you were in Feldisham Mansions at
-half-past seven--how would you explain it?"
-
-"Your own words 'hysterical with fright' might serve as her excuse. At
-half-past seven I was arguing against the ever-increasing height of polo
-ponies, with the rest of the committee against me. Does the girl say any
-such thing?"
-
-"Girls are queer sometimes," commented Winter airily. "But let that
-pass. I understand, Mr. Osborne, that you have given instructions to the
-undertaker?"
-
-Rupert flinched a little.
-
-"What choice had I in the matter?" he demanded. "I thought that
-Mademoiselle de Bercy was an orphan--that all her relatives were dead."
-
-"Ah, yes. Even now, I fancy, you mean to attend the funeral to-morrow?"
-
-"Of course. Do you imagine I would desert my promised wife at such an
-hour--no matter what was revealed----"
-
-"No, Mr. Osborne, I did not think it for one instant. And that brings me
-to the main object of my visit. Please be advised by me--don't go to the
-funeral. Better still, leave London for a few days. Lose yourself till
-the day before the adjourned inquest."
-
-"But why--in Heaven's name?"
-
-"Because appearances are against you. The public mind--I had better be
-quite candid. The man in the street is a marvelous detective, in his own
-opinion. Being an idler, he will turn up in his thousands at Feldisham
-Mansions and Kensal Green Cemetery to-morrow afternoon, and, if you are
-present, there may be a regrettable scene. Moreover, you will meet a
-warped old peasant named Jean Armaud and a narrow-souled village girl in
-his daughter Marguerite. Take my advice--pack a kit-bag, jump into a
-cab, and bury yourself in some seaside town. Let me know where you
-are--as I may want to communicate with you--and--er--when you send your
-address, don't forget to sign your letter in the same way as you sign
-the hotel register."
-
-Rupert rose and looked out of the window. He could not endure that
-another man should see the agony in his face.
-
-"Are you in earnest?" he said, when he felt that his voice might be
-trusted.
-
-"Dead in earnest, Mr. Osborne," came the quiet answer.
-
-"You even advise me to adopt an alias?"
-
-"Call it a _nom de voyage_," said Winter.
-
-"I shall be horribly lonely. May I not take my valet?"
-
-"Take no one. I suppose you can leave some person in charge of your
-affairs?"
-
-"I have a secretary. But she and my servants will think my conduct very
-strange."
-
-"I shall call here to-morrow and tell your secretary you have left
-London for a few days at my request. What is her name?"
-
-"Prout--Miss Hylda Prout. She comes here at 11 a.m. and again at 3 p.m."
-
-"I see. Then I may regard that matter as settled?"
-
-Again there was silence for a time. Oddly enough, Rupert was conscious
-of a distinct feeling of relief.
-
-"Very well," he said at last. "I shall obey you to the letter."
-
-"Thank you. I am sure you are acting for the best."
-
-Winter, whose eyes had noted every detail of the room while Rupert's
-back was turned, rose as if his mission were accomplished.
-
-"Won't you have another cigar?" said Rupert.
-
-"Well, yes. It is a sin to smoke these cigars so early in the day----"
-
-"Let me send you a hundred."
-
-"Oh, no. I am very much obliged, but----"
-
-"Please allow me to do this. Don't you see?--if I tell Jenkins, in your
-presence, to pack and forward them, it will stifle a good deal of the
-gossip which must be going on even in my own household."
-
-"Well--from that point of view, Mr. Osborne----"
-
-"Ah, I cannot express my gratitude, but, when all this wretched business
-is ended, we must meet under happier conditions."
-
-He touched a bell, and Jenkins appeared.
-
-"Send a box of cigars to Chief Inspector Winter, at Scotland Yard, by
-special messenger," said Rupert, with as careless an air as he could
-assume.
-
-Jenkins gurgled something that sounded like "Yes, sir," and went out
-hastily. Rupert spread his hands with a gesture of utmost weariness.
-
-"You are right about the man in the street," he sighed. "Even my own
-valet feared that you had come to arrest me."
-
-"Ha, ha!" laughed Winter.
-
-But when Jenkins, discreetly cheerful, murmured "Good-day, sir," and the
-outer door was closed behind him, Winter's strong face wore its
-prizefighter aspect.
-
-"Clarke _would_ have arrested him," he said to himself. "But that man
-did not kill Mirabel Armaud. Then who did kill her? _I_ don't know, yet
-I believe that Furneaux guesses. _Who_ did it? Damme, it beats me, and
-the greatest puzzle of all is to read the riddle of Furneaux."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- THE NEW LIFE
-
-
-No sooner did Rupert begin to consider ways and means of adopting
-Winter's suggestion than he encountered difficulties. "Pack a kit-bag,
-jump into a cab, and bury yourself in some seaside town" might be the
-best of counsel; but it was administered in tabloid form; when analyzed,
-the ingredients became formidable. For instance, the Chief Inspector had
-apparently not allowed for the fact that a man in Osborne's station
-would certainly carry his name or initials on his clothing, linen, and
-portmanteaux, and on every article in his dressing-case.
-
-Despite his other troubles--which were real enough to a man who loathed
-publicity--Rupert found himself smiling in perplexity when he endeavored
-to plan some means of hoodwinking Jenkins. Moreover, he could not help
-feeling that his identity would be proclaimed instantly when a
-sharp-eyed hotel valet or inquisitive chambermaid examined his
-belongings. He was sure that some of the newspapers would unearth a
-better portrait of himself than the libelous snapshot reproduced that
-day, in which event no very acute intelligence would be needed to
-connect "Osborne" or "R. G. O." with the half-tone picture. Of course,
-he could buy ready-made apparel, but the notion was displeasing;
-ultimately, he abandoned the task and summoned Jenkins.
-
-Jenkins was one of those admirable servants--bred to perfection in
-London only--worthy of a coat of arms with the blazoned motto: "Leave it
-to me." His sallow, almost ascetic, face brightened under the trust
-reposed in him.
-
-"It is now half-past ten, sir," he said. "Will it meet your convenience
-if I have everything ready by two o'clock?"
-
-"I suppose so," said his master ruefully.
-
-"What station shall I bring your luggage to, sir?"
-
-"Oh, any station. Let me see--say Waterloo, main line."
-
-"And you will be absent ten days or thereabouts, sir."
-
-"That is the proposition as it stands now."
-
-"Very well, sir. I shall want some money--not more than twenty
-pounds----"
-
-Rupert opened a door leading to the library. He rented a two-story
-maisonette in Mayfair, with the drawing-room, dining-room, library,
-billiard-room and domestic offices grouped round the hall, while the
-upper floor was given over to bedrooms and dressing-rooms. His secretary
-was not arrived as yet; but he had already glanced through a pile of
-letters with the practiced eye of one who receives daily a large and
-varied correspondence.
-
-He wrote a check for a hundred pounds, and stuffed the book into a
-breast pocket.
-
-"There," he said to Jenkins, "cash that, buy what you want, and bring me
-the balance in five-pound notes."
-
-"Yes, sir, but will you please remember to pack the clothes you are now
-wearing into a parcel, and post them to me this evening?"
-
-"By gad, Jenkins, I should have forgotten that my name is stitched on to
-the back of the coat I am wearing. How will you manage about my other
-things?"
-
-"Rip off the tabs, sir, and get you some new linen, unmarked."
-
-"Good. But I may as well leave my checkbook here."
-
-"No, sir, take it with you. You may want it. If you do, the money will
-be of more importance than the name."
-
-"Right again, Socrates. I wish I might take you along, too, but our
-Scotland Yard friend said 'No,' so you must remain and answer callers."
-
-"I have sent away more than a dozen this morning, sir."
-
-"Oh? Who were they?"
-
-"Newspaper gentlemen, sir, every one of 'em, though they tried various
-dodges to get in and have a word with you. If I were you, sir, I would
-drive openly in the motor to some big hotel, and let your car remain
-outside while you slip out by another door."
-
-"Jenkins, you seem to be up to snuff in these matters."
-
-"Well, sir, I had a good training with Lord Dunningham. His lordship was
-a very free and easy sort of gentleman, and I never did meet his equal
-at slipping a writter. They gave it up at last, and went in for what
-they call substitooted service."
-
-A bell rang, and they heard a servant crossing the hall.
-
-"That will be Miss Prout, sir," said Jenkins. "What shall I tell her?"
-
-"Nothing. Mr. Winter will see her in the morning. Now, let us be off out
-of this before she comes in."
-
-Rupert was most unwilling to frame any subterfuge that might help to
-explain his absence to his secretary. She had been so manifestly
-distressed in his behalf the previous day, that he decided to avoid her
-now, being anxious not to hurt her feelings by any display of reticence
-as to his movements. As soon as the library door closed behind the
-newcomer, he went to his dressing-room and remained there until his
-automobile was in readiness. He was spoken to twice and snapshotted
-three times while he ran down the steps and crossed the pavement; but he
-gave no heed to his tormentors, and his chauffeur, quick to appreciate
-the fact that a couple of taxicabs were following, ran into Hyde Park by
-the nearest gate, thus shaking off pursuit, since vehicles licensed to
-ply for hire are not allowed to enter London's chief pleasure-ground.
-
-"Yes," said Rupert to himself, "Winter is right. The solitary cliff and
-the deserted village for me during the next fortnight. But where are
-they to be found? England, with August approaching, is full to the
-brim."
-
-He decided to trust to chance, and therein lay the germ of complications
-which might well have given him pause, could he have peered into the
-future.
-
-Having successfully performed the trick of the cab "bilker" by leaving
-his motor outside a hotel, Rupert hurried away from the main stream of
-fashion along several narrow streets until his attention was caught by a
-tiny restaurant on which the day's eatables were scrawled in French. It
-was in Soho; an open-air market promised diversion; and he was wondering
-how winkles tasted, extracted from their shells with a pin, when some
-commotion arose at the end of an alley. A four-wheeled cab had wormed
-its way through a swarm of picturesque loafers, and was drawn up close
-to the kerb. Pavement and street were pullulating with child life, and
-the appearance from the interior of the cab of a couple of
-strongly-built, square-shouldered men seemed to send an electric wave
-through adults and children alike.
-
-Instantly there was a rush, and Rupert was pinned in the crowd between a
-stout Frenchwoman and a young Italian who reeked of the kitchen.
-
-"What is it, then?" he asked, addressing madame in her own language.
-
-"They are police agents, those men there," she answered.
-
-"Have they come to make an arrest?"
-
-"But no, monsieur. Two miserables who call themselves Anarchists have
-been sent back to France, and the police are taking their luggage. A
-nice thing, chasing such scarecrows and letting that bad American who
-killed Mademoiselle de Bercy go free. Poor lady! I saw her many times.
-Ah, _mon Dieu_, how I wept when I read of her terrible end!"
-
-Rupert caught his breath. So he was judged and found guilty even in the
-gutter!
-
-"Perhaps the police know that Monsieur Osborne did not kill her," he
-managed to say in a muffled tone.
-
-"Oh, là, là!" cried the woman. "He has money, _ce vilain_ Osborne!"
-
-The ironic phrase was pitiless. It denounced, condemned, explained.
-Rupert forced a laugh.
-
-"Truly, money can do almost anything," he said.
-
-A detective came out of the passage, laden with dilapidated packages.
-The woman smiled broadly, saying:
-
-"My faith, they do not prosper, those Anarchists."
-
-Rupert edged his way through the crowd. On the opposite side of the
-street the contents bills of the early editions of the evening
-newspapers glared at him: "West End murder--Relatives sail from Jersey."
-"Portrait sketch of Osborne"; "Paris Life of Rose de Bercy"; the horror
-of it all suddenly stifled his finer impulses: from that hour Rupert
-squared his shoulders and meant to scowl at the jeering multitude.
-
-Probably because he was very rich, he cultivated simple tastes in the
-matter of food. At one o'clock he ate some fruit and a cake or two,
-drank a glass of milk, and noticed that the girl in the cashier's desk
-was actually looking at his own "portrait sketch" when he tendered her a
-shilling. About half-past one he took a hansom to Waterloo Station,
-where he bought a map and railway guide at the bookstall, and soon
-decided that Tormouth on the coast of Dorset offered some prospect of a
-quiet anchorage.
-
-So, when Jenkins came with a couple of new leather bags, Rupert bought a
-third-class ticket. Traveling in a corridor compartment, he heard the
-Feldisham Mansions crime discussed twice during the afternoon. Once he
-was described as a "reel bad lot--one of them fellers 'oo 'ad too little
-to do an' too much to do it on." When, at Winchester, these critics
-alighted, their places were taken by a couple of young women; and the
-train had hardly started again before the prettier of the two called her
-companion's attention to a page in an illustrated paper.
-
-"Poor thing! Wasn't she a beauty?" she asked, pointing to a print of the
-Academy portrait of Mademoiselle de Bercy.
-
-"You can never tell--them photographs are so touched up," was the reply.
-
-"There's no touching up of Osborne, is there?" giggled the other,
-looking at the motor-car photograph.
-
-"No, indeed. He looks as if he had just done it," said the friend.
-
-A lumbering omnibus took him to Tormouth. At the Swan Hotel he haggled
-about the terms, and chose a room at ten shillings per diem instead of
-the plutocratic apartment first offered at twelve and six. In the
-register he signed "R. Glyn, London," and at once wrote to Winter. He
-almost laughed when he found that Jenkins's address on the label was
-some street in North London, where that excellent man's sister dwelt.
-
-He found that Tormouth possessed one great merit--an abundance of sea
-air. It was a quiet old place, a town of another century, cut off from
-the rush of modern life by the frenzied opposition to railways displayed
-by its local magnates fifty years earlier. Rupert could not have
-selected a better retreat. He dined, slept, ate three hearty meals next
-day, and slept again with a soundness that argued him free from care.
-
-But newspapers reached even Tormouth, and, on the second morning after
-his arrival, Osborne's bitter mood returned when he read an account of
-Rose de Bercy's funeral. The crowds anticipated by Winter were there,
-the reporters duly chronicled Rupert's absence, and there could be no
-gainsaying the eagerness of the press to drag in his name on the
-slightest pretext.
-
-But the arrows of outrageous fortune seemed to be less barbed when he
-found himself on a lonely path that led westward along the cliffs, and
-his eyes dwelt on the far-flung loveliness of a sapphire sea reflecting
-the tint of a turquoise sky. A pleasant breeze that just sufficed to
-chisel the surface of the water into tiny facets flowed lazily from the
-south. From the beach, some twenty feet or less beneath the low cliff,
-came the murmur of a listless tide. On the swelling uplands of Dorset
-shone glorious patches of gold and green, with here and there a hamlet
-or many-ricked farm, while in front, a mile away, the cliff climbed with
-a gentle curve to a fine headland that jutted out from the shore-line
-like some great pier built by a genie for the caravels of giants. It was
-a morning to dispel shadows, and the cloud lifted from Rupert's heart
-under its cheery influence. He stopped to light a cigar, and from that
-moment Rupert's regeneration was complete.
-
-"It is a shame to defile this wonderful atmosphere with tobacco smoke,"
-he mused, "so I must salve my conscience by burning incense to the
-spirit of the place. That sort of spirit is invariably of the female
-gender. Where is the lady? Invisible, of course."
-
-Without the least expectation of discovering either fay or mortal on the
-yellow sands that spread their broad highway between sea and cliff,
-Rupert stepped off the path on to the narrow strip of turf that
-separated it from the edge and looked down at the beach. Greatly to his
-surprise, a girl sat there, painting. She had rigged a big Japanese
-umbrella to shield herself and her easel from the sun. Its green-hued
-paper cover, gay with pink dragons and blue butterflies, brought a
-startling note of color into the placid foreground. The girl, or young
-woman, wore a very smart hat, but her dress was a grayish brown costume,
-sufficiently indeterminate in tint to conceal the stains of rough usage
-in climbing over rocks, or forcing a way through rank vegetation.
-Indeed, it was chosen, in the first instance, so that a dropped brush or
-a blob of paint would not show too vivid traces; and this was well, for
-some telepathic action caused the wearer to lift her eyes to the cliff
-the very instant after Rupert's figure broke the sky-line above the long
-grasses nodding on the verge. The result was lamentable. She squeezed
-half a tube of crimson lake over her skirt in a movement of surprise at
-the apparition.
-
-She was annoyed, and, of course, blamed the man.
-
-"What do you want?" she demanded. "Why creep up in that stealthy
-fashion?"
-
-"I didn't," said Rupert.
-
-"But you did." This with a pout, while she scraped the paint off her
-dress with a palette knife.
-
-"I am very sorry that you should have cause to think so," he said. "Will
-you allow me to explain----"
-
-As he stepped forward, lifting his hat, the girl cried a warning, but
-too late; a square yard of dry earth crumbled into dust beneath him, and
-he fell headlong. Luckily, the strata of shale and marl which formed the
-coast-line at that point had been scooped by the sea into a concavity,
-with a ledge, which Rupert reached before he had dropped half-way. Some
-experience of Alpine climbing had made him quick to decide how best to
-rectify a slip, and he endeavored now to spring rather than roll
-downward to the beach, since he had a fleeting vision of a row of black
-rocks that guarded the foot of the treacherous cliff. He just managed to
-clear an ugly boulder that would have taken cruel toll of bruised skin,
-if no worse, had he struck it, but he landed on a smooth rock coated
-with seaweed. Exactly what next befell neither he nor the girl ever
-knew. He performed some wild gyration, and was brought up forcibly by
-the bamboo shaft of the umbrella, to which he found himself clinging in
-a sitting posture. His trousers were split across both knees, his coat
-was ripped open under the left arm, and he felt badly bruised;
-nevertheless, he looked up into the girl's frightened face, and laughed,
-on which the fright vanished from her eyes, and she, too, laughed, with
-such ready merriment and display of white teeth, that Rupert laughed
-again. He picked himself up and stretched his arms slowly, for something
-had given him a tremendous thump in the ribs.
-
- [Illustration: He found himself clinging to the bamboo shaft
- _Page 61_]
-
-"Are you hurt?" cried the girl, anxiety again chasing the mirth from her
-expressive features.
-
-"No," he said, after a deep breath had convinced him that no bones were
-broken. "I only wished to explain that your word 'stealthy' was
-undeserved."
-
-"I withdraw it, then.... I saw you were a stranger, so it is my fault
-that you fell. I ought to have told you about that dangerous cliff
-instead of pitching into you because you startled me."
-
-"I can't agree with you there," smiled Rupert. "We were both taken by
-surprise, but I might have known better than to stand so near the edge.
-Good job I was not a mile farther west," and he nodded in the direction
-of the distant headland.
-
-"Oh, please don't think of it, or I shall dream to-night of somebody
-falling over the Tor."
-
-"Is that the Tor?" he asked.
-
-"Yes; don't you know? You are visiting Tormouth, I suppose?"
-
-"I have been here since the day before yesterday, but my local knowledge
-is nil."
-
-"Well, if I were you, I should go home and change my clothes. How did
-your coat get torn? Are you sure you are not injured?"
-
-He turned to survey the rock on which his feet had slipped. Between it
-and the umbrella the top of a buried boulder showed through the deep
-sand, ever white and soft at highwater mark.
-
-"I am inclined to believe that I butted into that fellow during the
-hurricane," he said. Then, feeling that an excuse must be forthcoming,
-if he wished to hear more of this girl's voice, and look for a little
-while longer into her face, he threw a plaintive note into a request.
-
-"Would you mind if I sat down for a minute or so?" he asked. "I feel a
-bit shaken. After the briefest sort of rest I shall be off to the Swan."
-
-"Sit down at once," she said with ready sympathy. "Here, take this," and
-she made to give him the canvas chair from which she had risen at the
-first alarm.
-
-He dropped to the sand with suspicious ease.
-
-"I shall be quite comfortable here," he said. "Please go on with your
-painting. I always find it soothing to watch an artist at work."
-
-"I must be going home now," she answered. "I obtain this effect only at
-a certain stage of tide, and early in the day. You see, the Tor changes
-his appearance so rapidly when the sun travels round to the south."
-
-"Do you live at Tormouth?" he ventured to ask.
-
-"Half a mile out."
-
-"Will you allow me to carry something for you? I find that I have broken
-two ribs--of your umbrella," he added instantly, seeing that those
-radiant eyes of hers had turned on him with quick solicitude.
-
-"Pity," she murmured, "bamboo is so much harder to mend than bone.
-No--you will not carry anything. I think, if you are staying at the
-Swan, you will find a path up a little hollow in the cliff about a
-hundred yards from here."
-
-"Yes, and if you, too, are going----"
-
-"In the opposite direction."
-
-"Ah, well," he said, "I am a useless person, it seems. Good-by. May I
-fall at your feet again to-morrow?"
-
-The absurd question brought half a smile to her lips. She began to
-reply: "Worship so headlong----"
-
-Then she saw that which caused her face to blanch.
-
-"Why, your right hand is smothered in blood--something has happened----"
-
-He glanced at his hand, which a pebble had cut on one of the knuckles;
-and he valiantly resisted the temptation that presented itself, and
-stood upright.
-
-"It is a mere scratch," he assured her. "If I wash it in salt water it
-will be healed before I reach Tormouth. Good-by--mermaid. I believe you
-live in a cavern--out there--beneath the Tor. Some day soon I shall swim
-out among the rocks and look for you."
-
-With that he stooped to recover his hat, walked seaward to find a pool,
-and held his hand in the water until the wound was cauterized. Then he
-lit another cigar, and saw out of the tail of his eye that the girl was
-now on the top of the cliff at some distance to the west.
-
-"I wonder who she is," he murmured. "A lady, at any rate, and a very
-charming one."
-
-And the girl was saying:
-
-"Who is he?--A gentleman, I see. American? Something in the accent,
-perhaps. Or perhaps not. Americans don't come to torpid old Tormouth."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- THE MISSING BLADE
-
-
-On that same morning of the meeting on the sands at Tormouth, Inspector
-Clarke, walking southward down St. Martin's Lane toward Scotland Yard,
-had a shock. Clarke was hardly at the moment in his best mood, for to
-the natural vinegar of his temperament a drop of lemon, or of gall, had
-been added within the last few days. That morning at breakfast he had
-explained matters with a sour mouth to Mrs. Clarke.
-
-"Oh, it was all a made-up job between Winter and Furneaux, and I was
-only put on to the Anarchists to make room for Furneaux--that was it.
-The two Anarchists weren't up to any mischief--'Anarchists' was all a
-blind, that's what '_Anarchists_' was. But that's the way things are run
-now in the Yard, and there's no fair play going any more. Furneaux must
-have Feldisham Mansions, of course; Furneaux this, and Furneaux that--of
-course. But wait: he hasn't solved it yet! and he isn't going to; no,
-and I haven't done with it yet, not by a long way.... Now, where do you
-buy these eggs? Just look at this one."
-
-The fact was, now that the two Anarchists, Descartes and Janoc, had been
-deported by the Court, and were gone, Clarke suddenly woke to find
-himself disillusioned, dull, excluded from the fun of the chase. But, as
-he passed down St. Martin's Lane that morning, his underlooking eyes,
-ever on the prowl for the "confidence men" who haunt the West End, saw a
-sight that made him doubt if he was awake. There, in a little by-street
-to the east, under the three balls of a pawnbroker's, he saw, or dreamt
-that he saw--Émile Janoc!--Janoc, whom he _knew_ to be in Holland, and
-Janoc was so deep, so lost, in talk with a girl, that he could not see
-Clarke standing there, looking at him.
-
-And Clarke knew the girl, too! It was Bertha Seward, the late cook of
-the murdered actress, Rose de Bercy.
-
-Could he be mistaken as to Janoc? he asked himself. Could _two_ men be
-so striking to the eye, and so alike--the lank figure, stooping; the
-long wavering legs, the clothes hanging loose on him; the scraggy throat
-with the bone in it; the hair, black and plenteous as the raven's
-breast, draping the sallow-dark face; the eyes so haggard, hungry,
-unresting. Few men were so picturesque: few so greasy, repellent. And
-there could be no mistake as to Bertha Seward--a small, thin creature,
-with whitish hair, and little Chinese eyes that seemed to twinkle with
-fun--it was she!
-
-And how earnest was the talk!
-
-Clarke saw Janoc clasp his two long hands together, and turn up his eyes
-to the sky, seeming to beseech the girl or, through her, the heavens.
-Then he offered her money, which she refused; but, when he cajoled and
-insisted, she took it, smiling. Shaking hands, they parted, and Janoc
-looked after Bertha Seward as she hurried, with a sort of stealthy
-haste, towards the Strand. Then he turned, and found himself face to
-face with Clarke.
-
-For a full half-minute they looked contemplatively, eye to eye, at one
-another.
-
-"Janoc?" said Clarke.
-
-"That is my name for one moment, sare," said Janoc politely in a very
-peculiar though fluent English: "and the yours, sare?"
-
-"Unless you have a very bad memory you know mine! How on earth come you
-to be here, Émile Janoc?"
-
-"England is free country, sare," said Janoc with a shrug; "I see not the
-why I must render you account of movement. Only I tell you this time,
-because you are so singular familiarly with my name of family, you
-deceive yourself as to my little name. I have, it is true, a brother
-named Émile----"
-
-Clarke looked with a hard eye at him. The resemblance, if they were two,
-was certainly very strong. Since it seemed all but impossible that Émile
-Janoc should be in England, he accepted the statement grudgingly.
-
-"Perhaps you wouldn't mind letting me see your papers?" he asked.
-
-Janoc bowed.
-
-"That I will do with big pleasure, sare," he said, and produced a
-passport recently viséd in Holland, by which it appeared that his name
-was not Émile, but Gaston.
-
-They parted with a bow on Janoc's side and a nod on Clarke's; but Clarke
-was puzzled.
-
-"Something queer about this," he thought. "I'll keep my eye on _him_....
-What was he doing talking like that--_so earnest_--to the actress's
-cook? Suppose she was murdered by Anarchists? It is certain that she was
-more or less mixed up with them--more, perhaps, than is known. Why did
-those two come over the night after her murder?--for it's clear that
-they had no design against the Tsar. I'll look into it on my own. Easy,
-now, Clarke, my boy, and may be you'll come out ahead of Furneaux,
-Winter, and all the lot in the end."
-
-When he arrived at his Chief's office in the Yard, he mentioned to
-Winter his curious encounter with the other Janoc, but said not a word
-of Bertha Seward, since the affair of the murder was no longer his
-business, officially.
-
-Winter paid little heed to Janoc, whether Émile or Gaston, for Furneaux
-was there with him, and the two were head to head, discussing the
-murder, and the second sitting of the inquest was soon to come. Indeed,
-Clarke heard Winter say to Furneaux:
-
-"I promised Mr. Osborne to give some sort of excuse to his servants for
-his flight from home. I was so busy that I forgot it. Perhaps you will
-see to that, too, for me."
-
-"Glad you mentioned it. I intended going there at once," Furneaux said
-in that subdued tone which seemed to have all at once come upon him
-since Rose de Bercy was found lying dead in Feldisham Mansions.
-
-"Well, then, from henceforth everything is in your hands," said Winter.
-"Here I hand you over our dumb witness"--and he held out to Furneaux the
-blood-soiled ax-head of flint that had battered Rose de Bercy's face.
-
-He was not sure--he wondered afterwards whether it was positively a
-fact--but he fancied that for the tenth part of a second Furneaux shrank
-from taking, from touching, that object of horror--a notion so odd and
-fantastic that it affected Winter as if he had fancied that the poker
-had lifted its head for the tenth part of a second. But almost before
-the conceit took form, Furneaux was coolly placing the celt in his
-breast-pocket, and standing up to go.
-
-Furneaux drove straight, as he had said, to Mayfair, and soon was being
-ushered into Osborne's library, where he found Miss Prout, the
-secretary, with her hat on, busy opening and sorting the morning's
-correspondence.
-
-He introduced himself, sat beside her, and, while she continued with her
-work, told her what had happened--how Osborne had been advised to
-disappear till the popular gale of ill-will got stilled a little.
-
-"Ah, that's how it was," the girl said, lifting interested eyes to his.
-"I was wondering," and she pinned two letters together with the neatness
-of method and order.
-
-Furneaux sat lingeringly with her, listening to an aviary of linnets
-that prattled to the bright sunlight that flooded the library, and
-asking himself whether he had ever seen hair so glaringly red as the
-lady secretary's--a great mass of it that wrapped her head like a flame.
-
-"And where has Mr. Osborne gone to?" she murmured, making a note in
-shorthand on the back of one little bundle of correspondence.
-
-"Somewhere by the coast--I think," said Furneaux.
-
-"West coast? East coast?"
-
-"He didn't write to me: he wrote to my Chief"--for, though Furneaux well
-knew where Osborne was, his retreat was a secret.
-
-The girl went on with her work, plying the paper-knife, now jotting down
-a memorandum, now placing two or more kindred letters together: for
-every hospital and institution wrote to Osborne, everyone who wanted
-money for a new flying machine, or had a dog or a hunter to sell, or
-intended to dine and speechify, and send round the hat.
-
-"It's quite a large batch of correspondence," Furneaux remarked.
-
-"Half of these," the girl said, "are letters of abuse from people who
-never heard Mr. Osborne's name till the day after that poor woman was
-killed. All England has convicted him before he is tried. It seems
-unfair."
-
-"Yes, no doubt. But 'to understand is to pardon,' as the proverb says.
-They have to think something, and when there is only one thing for them
-to think, they think it--meaning well. It will blow over in time. Don't
-you worry."
-
-"Oh, I!--What do I care what forty millions of vermin choose to say or
-think?"
-
-She pouted her pretty lips saucily.
-
-"Forty--millions--of vermin," cried Furneaux; "that's worse than
-Carlyle."
-
-Hylda Prout's swift hands plied among her papers. She made no answer;
-and Furneaux suddenly stood up.
-
-"Well, you will mention to the valet and the others how the matter
-stands as to Mr. Osborne. He is simply avoiding the crowd--that is all.
-Good-day."
-
-Hylda Prout rose, too, and Furneaux saw now how tall she was,
-well-formed and lithe, with a somewhat small face framed in that nest of
-red hair. Her complexion was spoiled and splashed with freckles, but
-otherwise she was dainty-featured and pretty--mouth, nose, chin, tiny,
-all except the wide-open eyes.
-
-"So," she said to Furneaux as she put out her hand, "you won't let me
-know where Mr. Osborne is? I may want to write to him on business."
-
-"Why, didn't I tell you that he didn't write to me?"
-
-"That was only a blind."
-
-"Dear me! A blind.... It is the truth, Miss Prout."
-
-"Tell that to someone else."
-
-"What, don't you like the truth?"
-
-"All right, keep the information to yourself, then."
-
-"Good-by--I mustn't allow myself to dally in this charming room with the
-linnets, the sunlight, and the lady."
-
-For a few seconds she seemed to hesitate. Then she said suddenly: "Yes,
-it's very nice in here. That door there leads into the morning room, and
-that one yonder, at the side----"
-
-Her voice dropped and stopped; Furneaux appeared hardly to have heard,
-or, if hearing, to be merely making conversation.
-
-"Yes, it leads where?" he asked, looking at her. Now, her eyes, too,
-dropped, and she murmured:
-
-"Into the museum."
-
-"The--! Well, naturally, Mr. Osborne is a connoisseur--quite so, only I
-rather expected you to say 'a picture gallery.' Is it--open to
-inspection? Can one----?"
-
-"It is open, certainly: the door is not locked, But there's nothing
-much----"
-
-"Oh, do let me have a look around, and come with me, if it will not take
-long. No one is more interested in curios than I."
-
-"I--will, if you like," said the girl with a strange note of confidence
-in her voice, and led the way into the museum.
-
-Furneaux found himself in a room, small, but full of riches. On a
-central table were several illuminated missals and old Hoch-Deutsch
-MSS., some ancient timepieces, and a collection of enameled watches of
-Limoges. Around the walls, open or in cabinets, were arms, blades of
-Toledo, minerals arranged on narrow shelves, an embalmed chieftain's
-head from Mexico, and many other bizarre objects.
-
-Hylda Prout knew the name and history of every one, and murmured an
-explanation as Furneaux bent in scrutiny.
-
-"Those are what are called 'celts,'" she said; "they are not very
-uncommon, and are found in every country--made of flint, mostly, and
-used as ax-heads by the ancients. These rough ones on this side are
-called Palæolithic--five hundred thousand years old, some of them; and
-these finer ones on this side are Neolithic, not quite so old--though
-there isn't much to choose in antiquity when it comes to hundreds of
-thousands! Strange to say, one of the Neolithic ones has been missing
-for some days--I don't know whether Mr. Osborne has given it away or
-not?"
-
-The fact that one _was_ missing was, indeed, quite obvious, for the
-celts stood in a row, stuck in holes drilled in the shelf; and right in
-the midst of the rank gaped one empty hole, a dumb little mouth that yet
-spoke.
-
-"Yes, curious things," said Furneaux, bending meditatively over them. "I
-remember seeing pictures of them in books. Every one of these stones is
-stained with blood."
-
-"Blood!" cried the girl in a startled way.
-
-"Well, they were used in war and the chase, weren't they? Every one of
-them has given agony, every one would be red, if we saw it in its true
-color."
-
-Red was also the color of Furneaux's cheek-bones at the moment--red as
-hectic; and he was conscious of it, as he was conscious also that his
-eyes were wildly alight. Hence, he continued a long time bending over
-the "celts" so that Miss Prout might not see his face. His voice,
-however, was calm, since he habitually spoke in jerky, clipped syllables
-that betrayed either no emotion or too much.
-
-When he turned round, it was to move straight to a little rack on the
-left, in which glittered a fine array of daggers--Japanese kokatanas,
-punals of Salamanca, cangiars of Morocco, bowie-knives of old
-California, some with squat blades, coming quickly to a point, some long
-and thin to transfix the body, others meant to cut and gash, each with
-its label of minute writing.
-
-Furneaux's eye had duly noted them before, but he had passed them
-without stopping. Now, after seeing the celts, he went back to them.
-
-To his surprise, Miss Prout did not come with him. She stood looking on
-the ground, her lower lip somewhat protruded, silent, obviously
-distrait.
-
-"And these, Miss Prout?" chirped he, "are they of high value?"
-
-She neither answered nor moved.
-
-"Perhaps you haven't studied their history?" ventured Furneaux again.
-
-Now, all at once, she moved to the rack of daggers, and without saying a
-word, tapped with the fore-finger of her right hand, and kept on
-tapping, a vacant hole in the rack, though her eyes peered deeply into
-Furneaux's face. And for the first time Furneaux made acquaintance with
-the real splendor of her eyes--eyes that lived in sleep, torpid like the
-dormouse; but when they woke, woke to such a lambency of passion that
-they fascinated and commanded like the basilisk's.
-
-With eyes so alight she now kept peering at Furneaux, standing tall
-above him, tapping at the empty hole.
-
-"Oh, I see," muttered Furneaux, _his_ eyes, too, alight like live coals,
-"there's an article missing here, also--one from the celts, one from the
-daggers."
-
-"He is innocent!" suddenly cried Hylda Prout, in a tempest of passionate
-reproach.
-
-"She loves him," thought Furneaux.
-
-And the girl thought: "He knew before now that these things were
-missing. His acting would deceive every man, but not every woman. How
-glad I am that I drew him on!"
-
-Now, though the fact of the discovery of the celt by Inspector Clarke
-under the dead actress's piano had not been published in the papers, the
-fact that she had been stabbed through the eye by a long blade with
-blunt edges was known to all the world. There was nothing strange in
-this fierce outburst of Osborne's trusted secretary, nor that tears
-should spring to her eyes.
-
-"Mr. Furneaux, he is innocent," she wailed in a frenzy. "Oh, he is! You
-noticed me hesitate just now to bring you in here: well, _this_ was the
-reason--this, this, this----" she tapped with her forefinger on the
-empty hole--"for I knew that you would see this, and I knew that you
-would be jumping to some terrible conclusion as to Mr. Osborne."
-
-"Conclusion, no," murmured Furneaux comfortingly--"I avoid conclusions
-as traps for the unwary. Interesting, of course, that's all. Tell me
-what you know, and fear nothing. Conclusion, you say! I don't jump to
-conclusions. Tell me what was the shape of the dagger that has
-disappeared."
-
-She was silent again for many seconds. She was wrung with doubt, whether
-to speak or not to speak.
-
-At last she voiced her agony.
-
-"Either I must refuse to say, or I must tell the truth--and if I tell
-the truth, you will think----"
-
-She stopped again, all her repose of manner fled.
-
-"You don't know what I will think," put in Furneaux. "Sometimes I think
-the most unexpected things. The best way is to give me the plain facts.
-The question is, whether the blade that has gone from there was shaped
-like the one supposed to have committed the crime in the flat?"
-
-"It was labeled 'Saracen Stiletto: about 1150,'" muttered the girl
-brokenly, looking Furneaux straight in the face, though the fire was now
-dead in her eyes. "It had a square bone handle, with a crescent carved
-on one of the four faces--a longish, thin blade, like a skewer, only not
-round--with blunt-edged corners to it."
-
-Furneaux took up a little tube containing radium from a table at his
-hand, looked at it, and put it down again.
-
-Hylda Prout was too distraught to see that his hand shook a little. It
-was half a minute before he spoke.
-
-"Well, all that proves nothing, though it is of interest, of course," he
-said nonchalantly. "How long has that stiletto been lying there?"
-
-"Since--since I entered Mr. Osborne's employment, twelve months ago."
-
-"And you first noticed that it was gone--when?"
-
-"On the second afternoon after the murder, when I noticed that the celt,
-too, was gone."
-
-"The second--I see."
-
-"I wondered what had become of them! I could imagine that Mr. Osborne
-might have given the celt to some friend. But the stiletto was so rare a
-thing--I couldn't think that he would give that. I assumed--I
-assume--that they were stolen. But, then, by whom?"
-
-"That's the question," said Furneaux.
-
-"Was it this same stiletto that I have described to you that the murder
-was done with?" asked Hylda.
-
-"Now, how can I tell that?" said Furneaux. "_I_ wasn't there, you know."
-
-"Was not the weapon, then, found in the unfortunate woman's flat?"
-
-"No--no weapon."
-
-"Well, but that is excessively odd," she said in a low voice.
-
-"Why so excessively odd?" demanded Furneaux.
-
-"Why? Because--don't you see?--the weapon would be blood-stained--of
-course; and I should expect that after committing his horrid deed, the
-murderer would be only too glad to get rid of it, and would leave
-it----"
-
-"Oh, come, that is hardly a good guess, Miss Prout. I shall never make a
-lady detective of you. Murderers don't leave their weapons about behind
-them, for weapons are clews, you see."
-
-He was well aware that if the fact of the discovery of the celt had been
-published in the papers, Hylda might justly have answered: "But _this_
-murderer did leave _one_ of his weapons behind, namely the celt; and it
-is excessively odd that, since he left one, the smaller one, he did not
-leave the other, the larger one."
-
-As it was, the girl took thought, and her comment was shrewd enough:
-
-"All murderers do not act in the same way, for some are a world more
-cunning and alert than others. I say that it _is_ odd that the murderer
-did not leave behind the weapon that pierced the woman's eye, and I will
-prove it to you. If the stiletto was stolen from Mr. Osborne--and it
-really must have been stolen--and if that was the same stiletto that the
-deed was done with, then, the motive of the thief in stealing it was to
-kill Mademoiselle de Bercy with it. But why should one steal a weapon to
-commit a murder? And why should the murderer have chosen _Mr. Osborne_
-to steal his weapon from? Obviously, because he wanted to throw the
-suspicion upon him--in which case he would _naturally_ leave the weapon
-behind as proof of Mr. Osborne's guilt. Now, then, have I proved my
-point?"
-
-Though she spoke almost in italics, and was pale and flurried, she
-looked jauntily at Furneaux, with her head tossed back; and he, with
-half a smile, answered:
-
-"I withdraw my remark as to your detective qualifications, Miss Prout.
-Yes, I think you reason well. If there was a thief, and the thief was
-the murderer, he would very likely have acted as you say."
-
-"Then, why was the stiletto not found in the flat?" she asked.
-
-"The fact that it was not found would seem to show that there was _not_
-a thief," he said; and he added quickly: "Perhaps Mr. Osborne gave it,
-as well as the celt, to someone. I suppose you asked him?"
-
-"He was gone away an hour before I missed them," Hylda answered. She
-hesitated again. When next she spoke it was with a smile that would have
-won a stone.
-
-"Tell me where he is," she pleaded, "and I will write to him about it.
-You may safely tell _me_, you know, for Mr. Osborne has no secrets from
-_me_."
-
-"I wish I could tell you.... Oh, but he will soon be back again, and
-then you will see him and speak to him once more."
-
-Some tone of badinage in these jerky sentences brought a flush to her
-face, but she tried to ward off his scrutiny with a commonplace remark.
-
-"Well, that's some consolation. I must wait in patience till the mob
-finds a new sensation."
-
-Furneaux took a turn through the room, silently meditating.
-
-"Thanks so much for your courtesy, Miss Prout," he said at last. "Our
-conversation has been--fruitful."
-
-"Yes, fruitful in throwing still more suspicion upon an innocent man, if
-that is what you mean. Are not the police _quite_ convinced yet of Mr.
-Osborne's innocence, Inspector Furneaux?"
-
-"Oh, quite, quite," said he hastily, somewhat taken aback by her candor.
-
-"Two 'quites' make a 'not quite,' as two negatives make an affirmative,"
-said she coldly, fingering and looking down at some wistaria in her
-bosom.
-
-She added with sudden warmth: "Oh, but you should, Inspector Furneaux!
-You should. He has suffered; his honest and true heart has been wounded.
-And he has his alibi, which, though in reality it may not be so good as
-you think, is yet quite good enough. But I know what it is that poisons
-your mind against him."
-
-"You are full of statements, Miss Prout," said Furneaux with an
-inclination of the head; "what is it, now, that poisons my mind against
-that gentleman?"
-
-"It is that taxicabman's delusion that he took him from the Ritz Hotel
-to Feldisham Mansions and back, added to the housekeeper's delusion that
-she saw him here----"
-
-Furneaux nearly gasped. Up to that moment he had heard no word about a
-housekeeper's delusion, or of a housekeeper's existence even. A long
-second passed before he could answer.
-
-"Well, she was no doubt mistaken. I have not yet examined her
-personally, but I have every reason to believe that she is in error. At
-what hour, by the way, does she say that she thought she saw him here?"
-
-"_She_ says she thinks it was about five minutes to eight. But at that
-time, I take it from the evidence, he must have been writing those two
-letters at the Ritz. If she were right, that would make out that after
-doing the deed at about 7.40 or so, he would just have time to come back
-here by five to eight, and change his clothes. But he was at the
-Ritz--he was at the Ritz! And Mrs. Bates only saw his back an instant
-going up the stairs--his ghost's back, she means, his double's back, not
-his own. He was at the Ritz, Inspector Furneaux."
-
-"Precisely," said Furneaux, with a voice that at last had a quiver in
-it. "If any fact is clear in a maze of doubt, that, at least, is
-established beyond cavil. And Mrs. Bates's other name--I--forget it?"
-
-"Hester."
-
-"That's it. Is she here now?"
-
-"She is taking a holiday to-day. She was dreadfully upset."
-
-"Thanks. Good-by."
-
-He held out his hand a second time, quite affably. Hylda Prout followed
-him out to the library and, when the street door had closed behind him,
-peeped through the curtains at his alert, natty figure as he hastened
-away.
-
-Furneaux took a motor-bus to Whitehall, and, what was very odd, the 'bus
-carried him beyond his destination, over Westminster Bridge, indeed, he
-was so lost in meditation.
-
-His object now was to see Winter and fling at his chief's head some of
-the amazing things he had just learned.
-
-But when he arrived at Scotland Yard, Winter was not there. At that
-moment, in fact, Winter was at Osborne's house in Mayfair, whither he
-had rushed to meet Furneaux in order to whisper to Furneaux without a
-moment's delay some news just gleaned by the merest chance--the news
-that Pauline Dessaulx, Rose de Bercy's maid, had quarreled with her
-mistress on the morning of the murder, and had been given notice to quit
-Miss de Bercy's service.
-
-When Winter arrived at Osborne's house Furneaux, of course, was gone. To
-his question at the door, "Is Mr. Furneaux here?" the parlor-maid
-answered: "I am not sure, sir--I'll see."
-
-"Perhaps you don't know Mr. Furneaux," said Winter, "a small-built
-gentleman----"
-
-"Oh, yes, sir, I know him," the girl answered. "I let him in this
-morning, as well as when he called some days ago."
-
-No words in the English tongue could have more astonished Winter, for
-Furneaux had not mentioned to him that he had even been to Osborne's.
-What Furneaux could have been doing there "some days ago" was beyond his
-guessing. Before his wonderment could get out another question, the girl
-was leading the way towards the library.
-
-In the library were Miss Prout, writing, and Jenkins handing her a
-letter.
-
-"I came to see if Inspector Furneaux was here," Winter said; "but
-evidently he has gone."
-
-"Only about three minutes," said Hylda Prout, throwing a quick look
-round at him.
-
-"Thanks--I am sorry to have troubled you," he said. Then he added, to
-Jenkins: "Much obliged for the cigars!"
-
-"Do not mention it, sir," said Jenkins.
-
-Winter had reached the library door, when he stopped short.
-
-"By the way, Jenkins, is this Mr. Furneaux's first visit here?--or don't
-you remember?"
-
-"Mr. Furneaux came here once before, sir," said Jenkins in his staid
-official way.
-
-"Ah, I thought perhaps--when was that?"
-
-"Let me see, sir. It was--yes--on the third, the afternoon of the
-murder, I remember."
-
-The third--the afternoon of the murder. Those words ate their way into
-Winter's very brain. They might have been fired from a pistol rather
-than uttered by the placid Jenkins.
-
-"The afternoon, you say," repeated Winter. "Yes--quite so; he wished to
-see Mr. Osborne. At what exact _hour_ about would that be?"
-
-Jenkins again meditated. Then he said: "Mr. Furneaux called, sir, about
-5.45, as far as I can recollect. He wished to see my master, who was
-out, but was expected to return. So Mr. Furneaux was shown in here to
-await him, and he waited a quarter of an hour, if I am right in saying
-that he came at 5.45, because Mr. Osborne telephoned me from Feldisham
-Mansions that he would not be returning, and as I entered the museum
-there, where Mr. Furneaux then was, to tell him, I heard the clock
-strike six, I remember."
-
-At this Hylda Prout whirled round in her chair.
-
-"The museum!" she cried. "How odd, how exceedingly odd! Just now Mr.
-Furneaux seemed to be rather surprised when I told him that there was a
-museum!"
-
-"He doubtless forgot, miss," said Jenkins, "for he had certainly gone in
-there when I entered the library."
-
-"Thanks, thanks," said Winter lightly, "that's how it was--good-day";
-and he went out with the vacant air of a man who has lost something, but
-knows not what.
-
-He drove straight to Scotland Yard. There in the office sat Furneaux.
-
-For a long time they conferred--Winter with hardly a word, one hand on
-his thigh, the other at his mustache, looking at Furneaux with a frown,
-with curious musing eyes, meditating, silent. And Furneaux told how the
-celt and the stiletto were missing from Osborne's museum.
-
-"And the inference?" said Winter, speaking at last, his round eyes
-staring widely at Furneaux.
-
-"The inference, on the face of it, is that Osborne is guilty," said
-Furneaux quietly.
-
-"An innocent man, Furneaux?" said Winter almost with a groan of
-reproach--"an innocent man?"
-
-Furneaux's eyes flashed angrily an instant, and some word leapt to his
-lips, but it was not uttered. He stood up.
-
-"Well, that's how it stands for the moment. Time will show--I must be
-away," he said.
-
-And when he had gone out, Winter rose wearily, and paced with slow steps
-a long time through the room, his head bent quite down, staring.
-Presently he came upon a broken cigar, such as Furneaux delighted in
-smelling. Then a fierce cry broke from him.
-
-"Furneaux, my friend! Why, this is madness! Oh, d--n everything!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- TO TORMOUTH
-
-
-"An absinthe!"
-
-"A packet of Caporal!"
-
-"Un bock pour vous, m'sieur?"
-
-"A vodka!"
-
-A frowsy waiter was hurrying through some such jangle of loud voices
-from the "comrades" scattered among the tables set in a back room in a
-very back street of Soho. The hour was two in the morning, and the light
-in that Anarchist Club was murky and blurred. Only one gas-jet on the
-wall lit the room, and that struggled but feebly through the cigarette
-smoke that choked the air like a fog--air that was foul and close as
-well as dim, for some thirty persons, mostly men but some few women,
-were crowded in there as if there was no place else on earth for them.
-
-One heard the rattle of dice, the whirr of cards being shuffled against
-the thumbs, the grating of glass tumblers against imitation granite. Two
-poor girls, cramped in a corner, were attempting to dance to the rhythm
-of an Italian song. They were laughing with wide mouths, their heads
-thrown back, weary unto death, yet alive with make-believe mirth.
-
-At one of the tables sat Gaston Janoc, the man who had been seen by
-Inspector Clarke talking in St. Martin's Lane to Bertha Seward, one-time
-cook in the Feldisham Mansions flat. Playing vingt-et-un with him was a
-burly Russian-looking man, all red beard and eyebrows; also a small
-Frenchman with an imperial and a crooked nose; while a colored man of
-Martinique made the fourth of a queer quartette. But somehow Janoc and
-the rough, red Russian seemed not to be able to agree in the game. They
-were antagonistic as cat and dog, and three times one or other threw
-down his cards and looked at his adversary, as who should say:
-
-"A little more of you, and my knife talks!"
-
-"Who are you, then, Ruski?" cried Janoc at last, speaking French, since
-the Russian only glared at him when he swore in his quaint English.
-
-Yet the Russian grumbled in English in his beard: "No French."
-
-"And no Italian, and no Spanish, and no German, and very, very small
-English," growled Janoc in English, frowning at him; "Well, then, shall
-we converse, sare?"
-
-"What is that--'_converse_'?" asked the Russian.
-
-Janoc shrugged disgustedly, while the little Frenchman, whose eyes
-twinkled at every tiff between the pair, said politely in French:
-
-"We await your play, m'sieurs."
-
-Twice, on the very edge of the precipice of open hostilities, Janoc and
-the Russian stopped short; but a little after two o'clock, when much
-absinthe and vodka had been drunk, an outbreak took place: for the
-Russian then cried out loudly above the hubbub of tongues:
-
-"Oh, you--how you call it?--_tcheeeet_!"
-
-"Who? I--me?" cried Janoc sharply, pale, half-standing--"cheat?"
-
-"Yes--_tcheeet_, you _tcheeet_!" insisted the bearded Slav. And now the
-little Frenchman with the crooked nose, who foreknew that the table was
-about to be upset, stood up quickly, picked up his thimbleful of
-anisette, and holding it in hand, awaited with merry eyes the outcome.
-
-Instantly Janoc, who was dealing, sent the pack of cards like an assault
-of birds into the Russian's face, the Russian closed with Janoc, and
-forthwith the room reeled into chaos. The struggle need not be
-described. Suffice it to say, that it lasted longer than the Russian had
-probably expected, for Janoc proved to have sinews of steel, though thin
-steel. His lank arms embraced the Russian, squeezing like a cable that
-is being tighter and tighter wound. However, he was overcome by mere
-weight, thumping to the floor among a tumbled dance of tables, chairs,
-and foreign drinks, while the women shrieked, the men bellowed, and the
-scared manager of the den added to the uproar by yelling:
-
-"M'sieurs! M'sieurs! Je vous prie! The police will come!"
-
-Only one soul in the room remained calm, and that was the diminutive
-Frenchman, who kept dodging through the legs and arms of the flood of
-humanity that surged around the two on the floor.
-
-He alone of them all saw that the Russian, in the thick of the struggle,
-was slipping his hand into pocket after pocket of Janoc under him, and
-was very deftly drawing out any papers that he might find there.
-
-In two minutes the row was ended, and the gaming and drinking
-recommenced as if nothing had happened. The Russian had been half led,
-half hustled to the front door, and was gone. Immediately after him had
-slipped out the bright-eyed Frenchman.
-
-The Russian, after pacing down an alley, turned into Old Compton Street,
-twice peering about and behind him, as if disturbed by some instinct
-that he was being shadowed. And this was so--but with a skill so nimble,
-so expert, so inbred, did the Frenchman follow, that in this pursuit the
-true meaning of the word "shadowing" was realized. The Russian did not
-see his follower for the excellent reason that the Frenchman made
-himself an invisibility. He might have put on those magic shoes that
-shadows shoot and dash and slink in, so airily did he glide on the
-trail. Nor could mere genius have accomplished such a feat, and with
-such ease--were it not for the expertness that was wedded to genius.
-
-When the Russian emerged into the wide thoroughfare close to the Palace
-Theater, he stood under a lamp to look at one of the papers picked from
-Janoc's pockets; and only then did he become aware of the Frenchman, who
-rose up out of the ground under his elbow with that pert ease with which
-a cork bobs to the surface of water.
-
-"Got anything of importance?" asked the Frenchman, his twinkling eyes
-radiant with the humor of the chase.
-
-The Russian stared at him half a minute with the hung jaw of
-astonishment. Then, all at once remembering his rôle, he cried hoarsely:
-
-"No English!"
-
-"Oh, chuck it!" remarked the other.
-
-Again the Russian gazed at the unexpected little phenomenon, and his
-voice rumbled:
-
-"What is that--'chuck it'?"
-
-Suddenly the Frenchman snatched Janoc's paper neatly with thumb and
-finger out of the Russian's hand, and ran chuckling across Charing Cross
-Road eastward. The Russian, with a grunt of rage, made after him with
-his long legs. But, from the first, he saw that he was being left behind
-by the nimble pace set up by a good runner. He seemed to understand that
-a miracle was needed, and lo, it occurred, for, as the two crossed the
-road in front of the Palace Theater, the Russian lifted his voice into:
-
-"Stop him! Stop thief! Police! Police!"
-
-Not only did he yell in most lucid English, but he also plucked a police
-whistle from his coat and blew it loudly.
-
-No policeman happened to be near, however, and the deep sleep of London
-echoed their pelting steps eastward, until the Russian saw the
-paper-snatcher vanish from sight in the congeries of streets that
-converge on the top of St. Martin's Lane.
-
-He lost hope then, and slackened a little, panting but swearing in a
-language that would be appreciated by any London cabman. Nevertheless,
-when he, too, ran into St. Martin's Lane, there was the small Frenchman,
-standing, wiping his forehead, awaiting him.
-
-The Russian sprang at him.
-
-"You little whelp!" he roared. "I arrest you----"
-
-"Oh, what's the good, Clarke? You are slow this evening. I just thought
-I'd wake you up."
-
-"Furneaux!"
-
-"Fancy not knowing me!"
-
-"It was _you_!"
-
-"Who else? Here's your Janocy document. You might let me have a look at
-it. Share and share alike."
-
-Clarke tried to retrieve lost prestige, though his hand shook as he took
-the paper.
-
-"Well--I--could have sworn it was you!" he said.
-
-"Of course you could--and did, no doubt. Let's have a glimpse at those
-documents."
-
-"But what were _you_ doing in the Fraternal Club, anyhow? Something on
-in that line?"
-
-"No. An idle hour. Chance of picking up a stray clew. I sometimes do
-dive into those depths without special object. You managed that to a T
-with Janoc. Where are the other papers? Hand them over."
-
-"With pleasure," said Clarke, but there was no pleasure in his surly
-Russian face, in which rage shone notwithstanding a marvelous make-up.
-Still, he opened the paper under the lamp--a sheet of notepaper with
-some lines of writing on the first page; and on the top of it, printed,
-the name of a hotel, "The Swan, Tormouth."
-
-The two detectives peered over it. To the illimitable surprise of both,
-this letter, stolen by Clarke from Janoc's pocket, was addressed to
-Clarke himself--a letter from Rupert Osborne, the millionaire.
-
-And Osborne said in it:
-
- DEAR INSPECTOR CLARKE:--Yours of the 7th duly to hand. In reply
- to your inquiry, I am not aware that the late Mlle. Rose de
- Bercy had any relations with Anarchists, either in London or in
- Paris, other than those which have been mentioned in the
- papers--_i.e._, a purely professional interest for stage
- purposes. I think it unlikely that her connection with them
- extended further.
-
- I am,
- Sincerely yours,
- RUPERT OSBORNE.
-
-Furneaux and Clarke looked at each other in a blank bewilderment that
-was not assumed by either man.
-
-"_Did_ you write to Mr. Osborne, asking that question?" asked Furneaux.
-
-"No," said Clarke--"never. I didn't even know where Osborne was."
-
-"So Janoc must have written to him in your name?" said Furneaux. "Janoc,
-then, wishes to know how much information Osborne can give you as to
-Mademoiselle de Bercy's association with Anarchists. That seems clear.
-But why should Janoc think that _you_ particularly are interested in
-knowing?
-
-Clarke flushed hotly under the paint, being conscious that he was
-investigating the case on his own private account and in a secret way.
-As a matter of fact, he was by this time fully convinced that Rose de
-Bercy's murder was the work of Anarchist hands, but he was so vexed with
-Furneaux's tricking him, and so fearful of official reprimand from
-Winter that he only answered:
-
-"Why Janoc should think that I am interested, I can't imagine. It beats
-me."
-
-"And how can Janoc know where Osborne is, or his assumed name, to write
-to him?" muttered Furneaux. "I thought that that was a secret between
-Osborne, Winter, and myself."
-
-Clarke, equally puzzled, scratched his head under his wig, which had
-been insufferably hot in that stifling room.
-
-"Janoc and his crew must be keeping an eye on Osborne, it seems--for
-some reason," he exclaimed. "Heaven knows why--I don't. I am out of the
-de Bercy case, of course. My interest in the Janoc crowd is--political."
-
-"Let me see the letter again," said Furneaux; and he read it carefully
-once more. Then he opened the sheet, as if seeking additional
-information from the blank pages, turned it over, looked at the
-back--and there at the back he saw something else that was astounding,
-for, written backwards, near the bottom of the page, in Osborne's
-handwriting, was the word "Rosalind."
-
-"Who is 'Rosalind'?" asked Furneaux--"see here, an impression from some
-other letter written at the same time."
-
-"Don't know, I'm sure," said Clarke. "A sister, perhaps."
-
-"A sister. Why, though, should his sister's name appear at the back of a
-note written to Janoc, or to Inspector Clarke, as he thought?" said
-Furneaux to himself, deep in meditation. He suddenly added brightly:
-"Now, Clarke, there's a puzzle for you!"
-
-"I don't see it, see any puzzle, I mean. It might have appeared on any
-other letter, say to his bankers, or to a friend. It was a mere
-accident. There is nothing in that."
-
-"Quite right," grinned Furneaux. "And it was a sister's name, of course.
-'Rosalind.' A pretty name. Poor girl, she will be anxious about her fond
-and doting brother."
-
-"It may be another woman's name," said Clarke sagely--"though, for that
-matter, he'd hardly be on with a new love before the other one is cold
-in her grave, as the saying is."
-
-Furneaux laughed a low, mysterious laugh in his throat. It had a
-peculiar sound, and rang hard and bitter in the ears of the other.
-
-"I'll keep this, if you don't mind," he said, lapsing into the detective
-again.
-
-Meantime, Furneaux knew that there were other papers of Janoc's in
-Clarke's pocket, and he lingered a little to give his colleague a chance
-of exhibiting them. Clarke made no move, however, so he put out his
-hand, saying, "Well, good luck," and disappeared southward, while Clarke
-walked northward toward his residence, Hampstead way. But in Southampton
-Row an overwhelming impatience to see the other Janoc papers overcame
-him, and he commenced to examine them as he went.
-
-Two were bills. A third was a newspaper cutting from the _Matin_
-commenting on the murder in Feldisham Mansions. The fourth had power to
-arrest Clarke's steps. It was a letter of three closely-written
-pages--in French; and though Clarke's French, self-taught, was not
-fluent, it could walk, if it could not fly. In ten minutes he had read
-and understood....
-
- St. Petersburg says that since the secret meeting, a steady
- growth of courage in the rank-and-file is observable. As for the
- Nevski funds, an individual highly placed, whose name is in
- three syllables, is said to be willing to come to the rescue.
- Lastly, as to the traitress, you will see to it that she to
- whose hands vengeance has been intrusted shall fail on the 3rd.
-
-This was in the letter; and as Inspector Clarke's eyes fell on the date,
-"the 3d," his clenched hand rose triumphantly in air. It was on July
-_the 3d_ that Rose de Bercy had been done to death!
-
-When Clarke again walked onward his eyes were alight with a wild
-exultation. He was thinking:
-
-"Now, Allah be praised, that I didn't show Furneaux this thing, as I
-nearly was doing!"
-
-He reached his house with a sense of surprise--he had covered so much
-ground unconsciously, and the dominant thought in his mind was that the
-race was not always to the swift.
-
-"Luck is the thing in a man's career," he said to himself, "not wit, or
-mere sharpness to grasp a point. Slow, and steady, and lucky--that's the
-combination. The British are a race slower of thought than some of the
-others, just as _I_ may be a slower man than Furneaux, but we Britons
-rule the world by luck, as we won the battle of Waterloo by luck. Luck
-and prime beef, they go together somehow, I do believe. And what I am
-to-day I owe to luck, for it's happened to me too often to doubt that
-I've got the gift of it in my marrow."
-
-He put his latch-key into the door with something of a smile; and the
-next morning Mrs. Clarke cried delightedly to him:
-
-"Well, something must have happened to put you in this good temper!"
-
-At that same hour of the morning Furneaux, for his part, was at
-Osborne's house in Mayfair, where he had an appointment with Mrs. Hester
-Bates, Osborne's housekeeper. He was just being admitted into the house
-when the secretary, Miss Prout, walked up to the door--rather to his
-surprise, for it was somewhat before the hour of a secretary's
-attendance. They entered together and passed into the library, where
-Hylda Prout invited him to sit down for a minute.
-
-"I am only here just to collect and answer the morning's letters," she
-explained pleasantly. "There's a tree which I know in Epping Forest--an
-old beech--where I'm taking a book to read. See my picnic
-basket?--tomato and cress sandwiches, half a bottle of Chianti, an
-aluminum folding cup to drink from. I'll send for Mrs. Bates in a
-moment, and leave her to your tender inquiries. But wouldn't you prefer
-Epping Forest on a day like this? Do you like solitude, Inspector
-Furneaux? Dreams?"
-
-"Yes, I like solitude, as boys like piracy, because unattainable. I can
-only just find time to sleep, but not time enough to dream."
-
-Hylda lifted her face beatifically.
-
-"I _love_ to dream!--to be with myself--alone: the world in one
-compartment, I in another, with myself; with silence to hear my heart
-beat in, and time to fathom a little what its beating is madly trying to
-say; an old tree overhead, and breezes breathing through it. Oh, _they_
-know how to soothe; _they_ alone understand, Inspector Furneaux, and
-_they_ forgive."
-
-Furneaux said within himself: "Well, I seem to be in for some charming
-confidences"; and he added aloud: "Quite so; _they_ understand--if it's
-a lady: for Nature is feminine; and only a lady can fathom a lady."
-
-"Oh, women!" Hylda said, with her pretty pout of disdain,--"they are
-nothing, mostly shallow shoppers. Give me a man--if he is a man. And
-there have been a few women, too--in history. But, man or woman, what I
-believe is that for the greater part, we remain foreigners to ourselves
-through life--we never reach that depth in ourselves, 'deeper than ever
-plummet sounded,' where the real _I_ within us lives, the real,
-bare-faced, rabid, savage, divine _I_, naked as an ape, contorted,
-sobbing, bawling what it cannot speak."
-
-Furneaux, who had certainly not suspected this blend of philosopher and
-poet beneath that mass of red hair, listened in silence. For the second
-time he saw this strange girl's eyes take fire, glow, rage a moment like
-a building sweltering in conflagration, and then die down to utter
-dullness.
-
-Though he knew just when to speak, his reply was rather tame.
-
-"There's something in that, too--you are right."
-
-She suddenly smiled, with a pretty air of confusion.
-
-"Surely," she said. "And now to business: first, Mrs. Bates----"
-
-"One moment," broke in Furneaux. "Something has caused me to wish to ask
-you--do you know Mr. Osborne's relatives?"
-
-"I know _of_ them. He has only a younger brother, Ralph, who is at
-Harvard University--and an aunt."
-
-"Aunt's name Rosalind?"
-
-"No--Priscilla--Priscilla Emptage."
-
-"Who, then, may 'Rosalind' be?"
-
-"No connection of _his_. You must have made some mistake."
-
-Furneaux held out the note of Rupert Osborne to Janoc intended for
-Clarke, holding it so folded that the name of the hotel was not
-visible--only the transferred word "Rosalind."
-
-And as Hylda Prout bent over it, perplexed at first by the seeming
-scrawl, Furneaux's eye was on her face. He was aware of the instant when
-she recognized the handwriting, the instant when reasoning and the
-putting of two-and-two together began to work in her mind, the instant
-when her stare began to widen, and her tight-pressed lips to relax, the
-rush of color to fade from her face, and the mask of freckles to stand
-out darkly in strong contrast with her ivory white flesh. When she had
-stared for a long minute, and had had enough, she did not say anything,
-but turned away silently to stand at a window, her back to Furneaux.
-
-He looked at her, thinking: "She guesses, and suffers."
-
-Suddenly she whirled round. "May I--see that letter?" she asked in a low
-voice.
-
-"The whole note?" he said; "I'm afraid that it's private--not _my_
-secret--I regret it--an official document, you know."
-
-"All right," she said quietly. "You may come to me for help yet"--and
-turned to the pile of letters on the desk.
-
-"Anyway, Rosalind is not a relative, to your knowledge?" he persisted.
-
-"No."
-
-She stuffed the letters into a drawer, bowed, and was gone, leaving him
-sorry for her, for he saw a lump working in her throat.
-
-Some minutes after her disappearance, a plump little woman came in--Mrs.
-Hester Bates, housekeeper in the Osborne _ménage_. Her hair lay in
-smooth curves on her brow as on the upturned bulge of a china bowl.
-There was an apprehensive look in her upward-looking eyes, so Furneaux
-spoke comfortingly to her, after seating her near the window.
-
-"Don't be afraid to speak," he said reassuringly. "What you have to say
-is not necessarily against Mr. Osborne's interests. Just state the facts
-simply--you did see him here on the murder night, didn't you?"
-
-She muttered something, as a tear dropped on the ample bosom of her
-black dress.
-
-"Just a little louder," Furneaux said.
-
-"Yes," she sobbed, "I saw his back."
-
-"You were--where?"
-
-"Coming up the kitchen stairs to talk to Mr. Jenkins."
-
-"Don't cry. And when you reached the top of the kitchen stairs you saw
-his back on the house stairs--at the bottom? at the top?"
-
-"He was nearer the top. I only saw him a minute."
-
-"A moment, you mean, I think. And in that one moment you became quite
-sure that it was Mr. Osborne? Though it was only his back you saw?"
-
-"Yes, sir...."
-
-"No, don't cry. It's nothing. Only are you certain sure--that's the
-point?"
-
-"Yes, I am sure enough, but----"
-
-"But what?"
-
-"I thought he was the worse for drink, which was a mad thing."
-
-"Oh, you thought that. Why so?"
-
-"His feet seemed to reel from side to side--almost from under him."
-
-"His feet--I see. From side to side.... Ever saw him the worse for drink
-before?"
-
-"Never in all my life! I was amazed. Afterwards I had a feeling that it
-wasn't Mr. Osborne himself, but his spirit that I had seen. And it may
-have been his spirit! For my Aunt Pruie saw the spirit of her boy one
-Sunday afternoon when he was alive and well in his ship on the sea."
-
-"But a spirit the worse for drink?" murmured Furneaux; "a spirit whose
-feet seemed to reel?"
-
-She dropped her eyes, and presently wept a theory.
-
-"A spirit walks lighter-like than a Christian, sir."
-
-"Did you, though," asked Furneaux, making shorthand signs in his
-notebook, "did you have the impression that it might be a spirit at the
-time, or was it only afterwards?"
-
-"It was only afterwards when I thought matters over," said Mrs. Bates.
-"Even at the time it crossed my mind that there was something in it I
-didn't rightly understand."
-
-"Now, what sort of something?--can't you say?"
-
-"No, sir. I don't know."
-
-"And when you saw Mr. Jenkins immediately afterwards, did you mention to
-him that you had seen Mr. Osborne?"
-
-"No, I didn't say anything to him, nor him to me."
-
-"Pity.... But the hour. You have said, I hear, that it was five minutes
-to eight. Now, the murder was committed between 7.30 and 7.45; and at
-five to eight Mr. Osborne is said by more than one person to have been
-at the Ritz Hotel. If he was there, he couldn't have been here. If he
-was here, he couldn't have been there. Are you sure of the hour--five to
-eight?"
-
-As to that Mrs. Bates was positive. She had reason to remember, having
-looked at the clock _à propos_ of the servants' supper. And Furneaux
-went away from her with eyes in which sparkled a light that some might
-have called wicked, and all would have called cruel, as when the cat
-hears a stirring, and crouches at the hole's rim with her soul crowded
-into an unblinking stare of expectation.
-
-He looked at his watch, took a cab to Waterloo, and while in the vehicle
-again studied that scrawled "Rosalind" on Osborne's letter to Janoc.
-
-"A trip to Tormouth should throw some light on it," he thought. "If it
-can be shown that he is actually in love--again--already----" and as he
-so thought, the cab ran out of St. James's Street into Pall Mall.
-
-"Look! quick! There--in that cab!" hissed a man at that moment to a girl
-with whom he was lurking in a doorway deep under the shadow of an awning
-near the corner. "Look!"
-
-"That's him!"
-
-"Sure? Look well!"
-
-"The very man!"
-
-"Well, of all the fatalities!"
-
-The cab dashed out of sight, and the man--Chief Inspector
-Winter--clapped his hand to his forehead in a spasm of sheer distraction
-and dismay. The woman with him was the murdered actress's cook, Bertha
-Seward, the same whom Inspector Clarke had one morning seen in earnest
-talk with Janoc under the pawnbroker's sign in St. Martin's Lane.
-
-Winter walked away from her, looking on the ground, seeking his lost
-wits there. Then suddenly he turned and overtook her again.
-
-"And you swear to me, Miss Seward," he said gravely, "that that very man
-was with your mistress in her flat on the evening of the murder?"
-
-"I would know him anywhere," answered the slight girl, looking up into
-his face with her oblique Chinese eyes that were always half shut as if
-shy of light. "I thought to myself at the time what a queer, perky
-person he was, and what working eyes the little man had, and I wondered
-who he could be. That's the very man in that cab, I'm positive."
-
-"And when you and Pauline went out to the Exhibition you left him with
-your mistress, you say?"
-
-"Yes, sir. They were in the drawing-room together; and quarreling, too,
-for her voice was raised, and she laughed twice in an angry way."
-
-"Quarreling--in French? You didn't catch--?"
-
-"No, it was in French."
-
-Inspector Winter leant his shoulder against the house-wall, and his head
-slowly sank, and then all at once dropped down with an air of utter
-abandonment, for Furneaux was his friend--he had looked on Furneaux as a
-brother.
-
-Furneaux, meantime, at Waterloo was taking train to Tormouth, and his
-fixed stare boded no good will to Rupert Osborne.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- AT TORMOUTH
-
-
-Furneaux reached Tormouth about three in the afternoon, and went boldly
-to the Swan Hotel, since he was unknown by sight to Osborne. It was an
-old-fashioned place, with a bar opening out of the vestibule, and the
-first person that met his eye was of interest to him--a man sitting in
-the bar-parlor, who had "Neapolitan" written all over him--a face that
-Furneaux had already marked in Soho. He did not know the stranger's
-name, but he would have wagered a large sum that this queer visitor to
-Tormouth was a bird of the Janoc flock.
-
-"What is he doing here?" Furneaux asked himself; and the only answer
-that suggested itself was: "Keeping an eye on Osborne. Perhaps that
-explains how Janoc got hold of the name 'Glyn.'"
-
-When he was left alone in the bedroom which he took, he sat with his two
-hands between his knees, his head bent low, giving ten minutes' thought
-by the clock to the subject of Anarchists. Presently his lips muttered:
-
-"Clarke is investigating the murder on his own account; he suspects that
-Anarchists were at the bottom of it; he has let them see that he
-suspects; and they have taken alarm, knowing that their ill repute can't
-bear any added load of suspicion. Probably she was more mixed up with
-them than is known; probably there was some quarrel between them and
-her; and so, seeing themselves suspected, they are uneasy. Hence Janoc
-wrote to Osborne in Clarke's name, asking how much Osborne knew of her
-connection with Anarchists. He must have managed somehow to have Osborne
-shadowed down here--must be eager to have Osborne proved guilty. Hence,
-perhaps, for some reason, the presence of that fellow below there in the
-parlor. But I, for my part, mustn't allow myself to be drawn off into
-proving _them_ guilty. Another, another, is my prey!"
-
-He stood up sharply, crept to his door, and listened. All the upper part
-of the house was as still as the tomb at that hour. Mr. Glyn--Osborne's
-name on the hotel register--was, Furneaux had been told, out of doors.
-
-He passed out into a corridor, and, though he did not know which was
-Osborne's room, after peering through two doorways discovered it at the
-third, seeing in it a cane with a stag's head which Osborne often
-carried. He slipped within, and in a moment was everywhere at once in
-the room, filling it with his presence, ransacking it with a hundred
-eyes.
-
-In one corner was an antiquated round table in mahogany, with a few
-books on it, and under the books a copper-covered writing-pad. In the
-writing-pad he found a letter--a long one, not yet finished, in
-Osborne's hand, written to "My dear Isadore."
-
-The first words on which Furneaux's eyes fell were "her unstudied
-grace...."
-
- ... her walk has the undulating smoothness that one looks for in
- some untamed creature of the wild.... You are a painter, and a
- poet, and a student of the laws of Beauty. Well, knowing all
- that, I still feel sure that you would be conscious of a certain
- astonishment on seeing her move, she moves so well. I confess I
- did not _know_, till I knew her, that our human flesh could
- express such music. Her waist is small, yet so willowy and
- sinuous that it cannot be trammeled in those unyielding ribs of
- steel and bone in which women love to girdle themselves. For her
- slimness she is tall, perhaps, what you might think a little too
- tall until you stood by her side and saw that her freedom of
- movement had deceived you. Nor is she what you would call _a
- girl_: her age can't be a day under twenty-three. But she does
- not make a motion of the foot that her waist does not answer to
- it in as exact a proportion as though the Angel of Grace was
- there with measuring-tape and rod. If her left foot moves, her
- waist sways by so much to the left; if her right, she sways to
- the right, as surely as a lily on a long stalk swings to the
- will of every wanton wind. But, after all, words cannot express
- the poetry of her being. With her every step, I am confident her
- toe in gliding forward touches the ground steadily, but so
- zephyr-lightly, that only a megaphone could report it to the
- ear. And not only is there a distinct forward bend of the body
- in walking, but with every step her whole being and soul
- walks--the mere physical movements are the least of it! And her
- walk, I repeat, has the security, the lissome elegance of a
- leopard's--her eyes, her mouth, her hair, her neck, those of a
- Naiad balanced on the crest of a curling wave....
-
-"Ah-h-h!..." murmured Furneaux on a long-drawn breath, "'A Naiad'!
-Something more fairy-like than Rose de Bercy!"
-
-He read on.
-
- Soon I shall see her dance--dance _with_ her! and then you shall
- hear. There's a certain Lord Spelding a little way from here
- whom I know through a local doctor, and he is giving a dance at
- his Abbey two evenings hence--she and her mother are to be
- there. She has promised me that she will dance, and I shall tell
- you how. But I expect nothing one whit more consummate in the
- way of charm from her dancing than from her ordinary motions. I
- know beforehand that her dancing will be to her walking what the
- singing of a lovely voice is to its talking--beauty moved to
- enthusiasm, but no increase of beauty; the moon in a halo, but
- still the moon. What, though, do you think of me in all this, my
- dear Isadore? I have asked myself whether words like "fickle,"
- "flighty," "forgetful," will not be in your mind as you read.
- And if you are not tolerant, who will be? She, _the other_, is
- hardly cold yet in her untimely tomb, and here am I ... shall I
- say in love? say, at any rate, enraptured, down, down, on my two
- bended knees. Certainly, the other was bitter to me--she
- deceived, she pitilessly deceived; and I see now with the
- clearest eyes that love was never the name of what I felt for
- her, even if she had not deceived. But, oh, such a fountain of
- pity is in me for her--untimely gone, cut off, the cup of life
- in her hand, her lips purple with its wine--that I cannot help
- reproaching this wandering of my eye from her. It is rather
- shocking, rather horrible. And yet--I appeal to your sympathy--I
- am no more master of myself in this than of something that is
- now happening to the Emperor of China, or that once happened to
- his grandfather.
-
-The corners of Furneaux's lips turned downward, and a lambent fire
-flamed in his eyes. He clutched the paper in his hand as if he would
-strangle its dumb eloquence. Still he glowered at the letter, and read.
-
- But imagine, meanwhile, my false position here! I am known to
- her and to her mother as Mr. Glyn; and _thrice_ has Osborne, the
- millionaire, the probable murderer of Rose de Bercy, been
- discussed between us. Think of it!--the misery, the falseness of
- it. If something were once to whisper to Mrs. Marsh, "this Mr.
- Glyn, to whom you are speaking in a tone of chilly censure of
- such men as Osborne, is _Osborne himself_; that translucent
- porcelain of your teacup has been made impure by his lips; you
- should smash your Venetian vases and Satsuma bowl of hollyhocks,
- since his not-too-immaculate hands have touched them: beware! a
- snake has stolen into your dainty and Puritan nest"--if some imp
- of unhappiness whispered that, what would she do? I can't
- exactly imagine those still lips uttering a scream, but I can
- see her lily fingers--like lilies just getting withered--lifted
- an instant in mild horror of the sacrilege! As it is, her
- admittance of me into the nest has been an unbending on her
- part, an unbending touched with informality, for it was only
- brought about through Richards, the doctor here, to whom I got
- Smythe, one of my bankers, who is likewise Richards' banker, to
- speak of a "Mr. Glyn." And if she now finds that being gracious
- to the stranger smirches her, compromises her in the slightest,
- she will put her thin dry lips together a little, and say "I am
- punished for my laxity in circumspection." And then, ah! no more
- Rosalind for Osborne forever, if he were ten times ten
- millionaires....
-
-"'Rosalind,'" murmured Furneaux, "Rosalind Marsh. That explains the
-scribble on the back of the Janoc letter. He calls her
-Rosalind--breathes her name to the moon--writes it! We shall see,
-though."
-
-At that moment he heard a step outside, and stood alert, ready to hide
-behind a curtain; but it was only some hurrying housemaid who passed
-away. He then put back the letter where he had found it; and instantly
-tackled Osborne's portmanteaux. The larger he found locked, the smaller,
-lying half under the bed, was fastened with straps, but unlocked. He
-quickly ransacked the knicknacks that it contained; and was soon holding
-up to the light between thumb and finger a singular object taken from
-the bottom of the bag--a scrap of lace about six inches long, half of it
-stained with a brown smear that was obviously the smear of--blood.
-
-It was a peculiar lace, Spanish hand-made, and Furneaux knew well, none
-better than he, that the dressing-gown in which Rose de Bercy had been
-murdered, which she had thrown on preparatory to dressing that night,
-was trimmed with Spanish hand-made lace. He looked at this amazing bit
-of evidence with a long interest there in the light from the window,
-holding it away from him, frowning, thinking his own thoughts behind his
-brow, as shadow chases shadow. And presently he muttered the peculiar
-words:
-
-"Now, any detective would swear that this was a clew against him."
-
-He put it back into the bag, went out softly, walked downstairs, and
-passed out into the little town. A policeman told him where the house of
-Mrs. Marsh was to be found, and he hastened half a mile out of Tormouth
-to it.
-
-The house, "St. Briavels," stood on a hillside behind walls and
-wrought-iron gates and leafage, through which peeped several gables rich
-in creepers and ivy. Of Osborne, so far, there was no sign.
-
-Furneaux retraced his steps, came back to Tormouth, sauntered beyond the
-town over the cliffs, with the sea spread out in the sunlight, all
-sparkling with far-flung sprightliness. And all at once he was aware of
-a murmur of voices sounding out of Nowhere, like the hum of bumble-bees
-on a slumbrous afternoon. The ear could not catch if they were right or
-left, above or below. But they became louder; and suddenly there was a
-laugh, a delicious low cadence of a woman's contralto that seemed to
-roll up through an oboe in her throat. And now he realized that the
-speakers were just below him on the sands. He stepped nearer the edge of
-the cliff, and, craning and peering stealthily through its fringe of
-grasses, saw Osborne and a lady walking westward over the sands.
-
-Osborne was carrying an easel and a Japanese umbrella. He was not
-looking where he was going, not seeing the sea, or the sands, or the
-sun, but seeing all things in the lady's face.
-
-Furneaux watched them till they were out of sight behind a bend of the
-coast-line; he saw Osborne once stumble a little over a stone, and right
-himself without glancing at what he had stumbled on, without taking his
-gaze from the woman by his side.
-
-A bitter groan hissed from Furneaux's lips.
-
-"But how about this fair Rosalind?" he muttered half aloud. "Is this
-well for _her_? She should at least be told who her suitor is--his
-name--his true colors--the length and depth of his loves. There is a way
-of stopping this...."
-
-He walked straight back to the hotel, and at once took pen and paper to
-write:
-
- DEAR MISS PROUT:--It has occurred to me that possibly you may be
- putting yourself to the pains of discovering for me the identity
- of the friend of Mr. Osborne, the "Rosalind," as to whom I asked
- you--in which case, to save you any trouble, I am writing to
- tell you that I have now discovered who that lady is. I am, you
- see, at present here in Tormouth, a very agreeable little place.
-
- Yours truly,
- C. E. FURNEAUX.
-
-And, as he directed the envelope, he said to himself with a curious
-crowing of triumph that Winter would have said was not to be expected
-from his friend:
-
-"This should bring her here; and if it does----!"
-
-Whereupon a singular glitter appeared an instant in his eyes.
-
-Having posted the letter, he told the young woman in the bar, who also
-acted as bookkeeper, that, after all, he would not be able to stay the
-night. He paid, nevertheless, for the room, and walked away with his
-bag, no one knew whither, out of Tormouth. Two hours later he returned
-to the hotel, and for the second time that day took the same room, but
-not a soul suspected for a moment that it was the same Furneaux, since
-at present he had the look of a meek old civil servant living on a mite
-of pension, the color all washed out of his flabby cheeks and hanging
-wrinkles.
-
-His very suit-case now had a different physiognomy. He bargained
-stingily for cheap terms, and then ensconced himself in his apartment
-with a senile chuckle, rubbing his palms together with satisfaction at
-having obtained such good quarters so cheaply.
-
-The chambermaid, whom he had tipped well on leaving, sniffed at this new
-visitor. "Not much to be got out of him," she said to her friend, the
-boots.
-
-The next afternoon at three o'clock an elderly lady arrived by the
-London train at Tormouth, and she, too, came to put up at the Swan.
-
-Furneaux, at the moment of her arrival, was strolling to and fro on the
-pavement in front of the hotel, very shaky and old, a man with feeble
-knees, threadbare coat, and shabby hat--so much so that the manager had
-told the young person in the bar to be sure and send in an account on
-Saturday.
-
-Giving one near, clear, piercing glance into the newcomer's face, round
-which trembled a colonnade of iron-gray ringlets, Furneaux was
-satisfied.
-
-"Marvelously well done!" he thought. "She has been on the stage in her
-time, and to some purpose, too."
-
-The lady, without a glance at him, all a rustle of brown silk, passed
-into the hotel.
-
-The same night the old skinflint and the lady of the iron-gray ringlets
-found themselves alone at a table, eating of the same dishes. It was
-impossible not to enter into conversation.
-
-"Your first visit to Tormouth, I think?" began Furneaux.
-
-The lady inclined her head.
-
-"My name is Pugh, William Pugh," he told her. "I was in Tormouth some
-years ago, and know the place rather well. Charming little spot! I shall
-be most happy--if I may--if you will deign----"
-
-"How long have you been here now?" she asked him in a rather mellow and
-subdued voice.
-
-"I only came yesterday," he answered.
-
-"Did you by chance meet here a certain Mr. Furneaux?" she asked.
-
-"Let me see," said he--"Furneaux. I--stay--I believe I did! He was just
-departing at the time of my arrival--little man--sharp, unpleasant
-face--I--I--hope I do not speak of a friend or relative!--but I believe
-I did hear someone say 'Mr. Furneaux.'"
-
-"At any rate, he is not here now?" she demanded, with an air of
-decision.
-
-"No, he is gone."
-
-"Ah!" she murmured, and something in the tone of that "Ah!" made
-Furneaux's eye linger doubtfully upon her an instant.
-
-Then the elderly lady wished to know who else was in the hotel, if there
-was anyone of any interest, and "Mr. Pugh" was apparently eager to
-gossip.
-
-"There is first of all a Mr. Glyn--a young man, an American, I think, of
-whom I have heard a whisper that he is enormously wealthy."
-
-"Is he in the room?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Why is he--invisible?"
-
-"I am told that he has made friends in Tormouth with a lady--a Mrs.
-Marsh--who resides at 'St. Briavels' some way out of town--not to
-mention _Miss_ Marsh--Rosalind is her name--upon whom I hear he is more
-than a little sweet."
-
-He bent forward, shading his lips with his palm to conceal the secret as
-it came out, and it was a strange thing that the newly-arrived visitor
-could not keep her ringlets from shaking with agitation.
-
-"Well," she managed to say, "when young people meet--it is the old
-story. So he is probably at 'St. Briavels' now?"
-
-"Highly probable--if all I hear be true."
-
-The ringleted dame put her knife and fork together, rose, bowed with a
-gracious smile, and walked away. Five minutes later Furneaux followed
-her, went upstairs with soundless steps to his room, and within it stood
-some time listening at a crevice he had left between the door and the
-door-post.
-
-Then he crept out, and spurting with swift suddenness, silent as a cat,
-to Osborne's room, sent the door open with a rush, and instantly was
-bowing profoundly, saying: "My dear madam! how _can_ you pardon me?"
-
-For the lady was also in Osborne's room, as Furneaux had known; and
-though there was no artificial light, enough moonlight flooded the room
-to show that even through her elaborate make-up a pallor was suggested
-in her face, as she stood there suspended, dumb.
-
-Mr. Pugh seemed to be in a very pain of regret.
-
-"I had no idea that it was your room!" he pleaded. "I--do forgive
-me--but I took it for my own!"
-
-Oddly enough, the lady tittered, almost hysterically, though she was
-evidently much relieved to find who it was that had burst in so
-unceremoniously.
-
-"The same accident has happened to me!" she cried. "I took it to be my
-room, but it doesn't seem----"
-
-"Ah, then, we both.... By the way," he added, with a magnificent effort
-to escape an embarrassing situation, "what beautiful moonlight! And the
-Tormouth country under it is like a fairy place. It is a sin to be
-indoors. I am going for a stroll. May I hope to have the pleasure----?"
-
-He wrung his palms wheedlingly together, and his attitude showed that he
-was hanging on her answer.
-
-"Yes, I should like to take a walk--thank you," she answered. Together
-they made for the door; he fluttered to his room, she to hers, to
-prepare. Soon they were outside the hotel, walking slowly under the
-moon. Apparently without definite directive, they turned up the hill in
-the direction of "St. Briavels," nor was it many minutes before Mr. Pugh
-began to prove himself somewhat of a gallant, and gifted in the saying
-of those airy nothings which are supposed to be agreeable to the
-feminine ear. The lady, for her part, was not so thorny and hard of
-heart as one might have thought from the staidness of her air, and a
-good understanding was quickly established between the oddly-assorted
-pair.
-
-"Rather an adventure, this, for people of our age...." she tittered, as
-they began to climb the winding road.
-
-"But, madam, we are not old!" exclaimed the lively Mr. Pugh, who might
-be seventy from his decrepit semblance. "Look at that moon--are not our
-hearts still sensible to its seductive influences? You, for your part,
-may possibly be nearing that charming age of forty----"
-
-"Oh, sir! you flatter me...."
-
-"Madam, no, on my word!--not a day over forty would be given you by
-anyone! And if you have the heart of twenty, as I am sure that you have,
-what matters it if----"
-
-"Hush!" she whispered, as a soft sound of the piano from "St. Briavels"
-reached them.
-
-Before them on the roadway they saw several carriages drawn up near the
-great gates. The tinkle of the piano grew as they approached. Then they
-saw a few lantern lights in the grounds glimmering under the trees. Such
-signs spoke of a party in progress. For once, the English climate was
-gracious to its dupes.
-
-The lady, without saying anything to her companion, stepped into the
-shadow of a yew-tree opposite the manor-close, and stood there, looking
-into the grounds over the bars of a small gate, beyond which a path ran
-through a shrubbery. On the path were three couples, ladies with light
-scarves draped over their décolleté dresses, men, bare-headed and
-smoking cigarettes. They were very dim to her vision, which must have
-been well preserved for one of her age, despite Mr. Pugh's gallantry.
-The overhanging foliage was dense, and only enough moonlight oozed
-through the canopy of leaves to toss moving patterns on the lawn and
-paths.
-
-But the strange lady's eyes were now like gimlets, with the very fire of
-youth burning in them, and it was with the sure fleetness of youth that
-she suddenly ran in a moment of opportunity from the yew to the gate,
-pushed it a little open, and slipped aside into a footpath that ran
-parallel with the lawn on which the "St. Briavels" diners were now
-strolling.
-
-With equal suddenness, or equal disregard of appearance, Mr. Pugh, too,
-became young again, as if both, like Philemon and Baucis, had all at
-once quaffed the elixir of youth; and he was soon by the young-old
-lady's side on the footpath. But her eyes, her ears, were so strained
-toward the lawn before her, that she seemed not to be aware of his
-presence.
-
-"I did not guess that you were interested in the people here," he
-whispered. "That man now coming nearer is Mr. Glyn himself, and with him
-is Miss Rosalind Marsh."
-
-"_Sh-h-h_," came from her lips, a murmur long-drawn, absent-minded, her
-eyes peering keenly forward.
-
-He nudged her.
-
-"Is it fitting that we should be here? We place ourselves in a difficult
-position, if seen."
-
-"Sh-h-h-h-h...."
-
-Still he pestered her.
-
-"Really it is a blunder.... We--we become--eavesdroppers--! Let us--I
-suggest to you----"
-
-"Oh, _do_ keep quiet," she whispered irritably; and in that instant the
-talk of Osborne and Rosalind became audible to her. She heard him say:
-
-"Yes, I confess I have known Osborne, and I believe the man perfectly
-incapable of the act attributed to him by a hasty public opinion."
-
-"Intimately known him?"
-
-Rosalind turned her eyebrows upward in the moonlight. Seen thus, she was
-amazingly beautiful.
-
-"Do we intimately know anyone? Do we intimately know ourselves?" asked
-Osborne as he passed within five yards of the two on the path. "I think
-I may say that I know Osborne about as well as I know anyone, and I am
-confident that he is horribly misjudged. He is a young man of--yes, I
-will say that for him--of good intentions; and he is found guilty,
-without trial, of a wrong which he never could have committed--and the
-wrong which he _has_ committed he is not found guilty of."
-
-"What wrong?" asked Rosalind.
-
-"I have heard--I know, in fact--that in the short time that has passed
-since the murder of Miss de Bercy, Osborne, her acknowledged lover, has
-allowed himself to love another."
-
-Rosalind laughed, with the quiet amusement of well-bred indifference.
-
-"What a weird person!" she said.
-
-And as their words passed beyond hearing, a hiss, like a snake's in the
-grass, rose from the shrubbery behind them, a hiss of venom intensely
-low, and yet loud enough to be heard by Furneaux, who, standing a little
-behind the lady of the ringlets, rubbed his hands together in silent and
-almost mischievous self-congratulation.
-
-The house end of the lawn was not far, the words of the returning pair
-were soon again within earshot. The fiery glance of the watching woman,
-ferreting, peering, dwelt on them--or rather on one of them, for she
-gave no heed to Osborne at all. Her very soul was centered on Rosalind,
-whose walk, whose lips, whose eyes, whose hair, whose voice, she ran
-over and estimated as an expert accountant reckons up a column of
-figures to ascertain their significance. She missed no item in that
-calculation. She noted the over-skirt of Chantilly, the wrap of Venetian
-lace on the girl's head, the white slippers, the roses disposed on her
-corsage with the harmless vanity of the artist's skill, all these that
-fixed stare ravenously devoured and digested while Rosalind took half a
-dozen slow steps.
-
-"But seriously," she heard Osborne say, "what is your opinion of a love
-so apparently fickle and flighty as this of Osborne's?"
-
-"Let me alone with your Osborne," Rosalind retorted with another little
-laugh. "A person of such a mood is merely uninteresting, and below being
-a topic. Let the dead lady's father or somebody horsewhip him--I cannot
-care, I'm afraid. Let us talk about----"
-
-"_Ourselves?_"
-
-"'Ourselves and our king.'"
-
-"I have so much to say about ourselves! Where should I begin? And now
-that I have a few minutes, I am throwing them away. Do you know, I never
-seem to secure you free from interruption. Either yourself or someone
-else intervenes every time, and reduces me to silence and despair----"
-
-Their words passed beyond earshot again in the other direction; and, as
-the lawn was wide between house and screen of shrubbery on the road
-front, it was some time before they were again heard. At last, though,
-they came, and then Rosalind's low tone of earnestness showed that this
-time, at least, Osborne had been listened to.
-
-"I will, since you ask, since you wish"--her voice faltered--"to please
-you. You will be at the Abbey to-morrow evening. And, since you say that
-you so--desire it, I may then hear what you have to say. Now I'll go."
-
-"But when--where----?"
-
-"If the night is fine, I will stroll into the gardens during the
-evening. You will see me when I go. On the south terrace of the Abbey
-there is a sun-dial in the middle of a paved Italian garden. I'll pass
-that way, and give you half an hour."
-
-"Rosalind!"
-
-"Ah, no--not yet."
-
-Her lips sighed. She looked at him with a lingering tenderness
-languishing in her eyes.
-
-"Can I help it?" he murmured, and his voice quivered with passion.
-
-"Are you glad now?"
-
-"Glad!"
-
-"Good-by."
-
-She left him hurriedly and sped with inimitable grace of motion across
-the lawn toward the house, and, while he looked after her, with the rapt
-vision of a man who has communed with a spirit, the two listeners crept
-to the little gate, slipped out when a laughing couple turned their
-heads, and walked back to the hotel.
-
-The lady said never a word. Mr. Pugh was full of chat and merriment, but
-no syllable fell from her tight-pressed lips.
-
-The next day the lady was reported to have a headache--at any rate she
-kept to her room, and saw no one save the "boots" of the establishment,
-with whom during the afternoon she had a lengthy interview upstairs. At
-about seven in the evening she was writing these words:
-
- MISS MARSH:--Are you aware that the "Mr. Glyn" whom you know
- here is no other than Mr. Rupert Osborne, who is in everyone's
- mouth in connection with the Feldisham Mansions Murder? You may
- take this as a positive fact from
- "ONE WHO KNOWS."
-
-She wrote it in a handwriting that was very different from her own,
-inclosed and directed it, and then, about half-past seven, sent for
-"boots" again.
-
-Her instructions were quite explicit:
-
-"Wait in the paved rose garden at the Abbey, the square sunken place
-with a sun-dial in the center," she said. "It is on the south terrace,
-and the lady I have described will surely come. The moment she appears
-hand the note to her, and be off--above all else, answer no questions."
-
-So the youth, with a sovereign in his pocket, hurried away to do Hylda
-Prout's will--or was it Furneaux's? Who might tell?
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- AT THE SUN-DIAL
-
-
-The messenger of evil had waited twenty minutes by the side of the
-sun-dial, when he saw a lady come round the corner from the front of the
-house, and saunter towards him. Moonlight lay weltering on the white
-walks of the terrace, on the whiter slabs of stone, on the water of the
-basin, on the surface of the lake eastward where the lowest of the
-terraces curved into the parkland that the wavelets lapped on. It
-weltered, too, on the lady's hair, deftly coiled and twisted into the
-coiffure of a Greek statue. It shimmered on the powdered blue of her
-gown that made her coming a little ghostly in that light, on the rows of
-pearls around her throat, and on the satin gloss of her shoes. She made
-straight for the dial; and then, all at once, finding some unknown man
-keeping the tryst, half halted.
-
-He ran out to her, touched his cap, saying "Miss Marsh," handed her the
-note, touched his cap again, and was going.
-
-"From whom?" she called after him in some astonishment.
-
-"Lady at the Swan, miss"--and he hurried off even more swiftly, for this
-was a question which he had answered against orders.
-
-She stood a little, looking at the envelope, her breathing labored, an
-apprehension in her heart. Then, hearing the coming of footsteps which
-she knew, she broke it open, and ran her eye over the few words.
-
-Bending slightly, with the flood of the moon on the paper, she could
-easily read the plainly written, message.
-
- ... The Mr. Glyn whom you know is no other than the Mr. Rupert
- Osborne who is in everyone's mouth in connection with the
- Feldisham Mansions Murder....
-
-Now she laughed with a sudden catch of the breath, gasping "Oh!" with a
-sharp impatience of all anonymous scandalizers. But as her head rather
-swam and span, she walked on quickly to the basin, and there found it
-necessary to sit down on the marble. The stab of pain passed in a few
-seconds, and again she sprang up and laughed as lightly as one of the
-little fountains in the basin that tossed its tinted drops to the
-moonbeams.
-
-Not twenty yards away was Osborne coming to her.
-
-She looked at him steadily--her marvelous eyes self-searching for sure
-remembrance of the earnestness with which he had pleaded in favor of the
-lover of Rose de Bercy--how he had said that Osborne had already loved
-again; and how she, Rosalind--oh, how blind and deaf!--heedlessly had
-brushed aside his words, saying that a man of that mood was below being
-a topic....
-
-"Is it half an hour?" Osborne came whispering, with a bending of the
-body that was like an act of worship.
-
-She smiled. In the moonlight he could not perceive how ethereally white
-was her face.
-
-"It is one half-minute!... It was rather quixotic of you to have
-proposed, and of me to have accepted, such a meeting. But I felt sure
-that by this hour others would be strolling about the terraces. As it
-is, you see, we are pioneers without followers. So, till we meet
-again----"
-
-She seemed to be about to hurry away without another word; he stood
-aghast.
-
-"But, Rosalind----"
-
-"What? How dare you call me Rosalind?"
-
-Now her eyes flashed upon him like sudden lightning from a dark blue
-sky, and the scorn in her voice blighted him.
-
-"I--I--don't understand," he stammered, trying to come nearer. She drew
-her skirts aside with a disdain that was terrifying.
-
-Then she laughed softly again; and was gone.
-
-He looked after her as after treasure that one sees sinking into the
-sea, flashing in its descent to the depths. For one mad instant he had
-an impulse to run in vain pursuit, but instead he gave way, sank down
-upon the edge of the marble basin, just where she had dropped a few
-brief seconds earlier, covered his face, and a groan that was half a sob
-broke so loudly from his throat that she heard it. She hesitated, nearly
-stopped, did not look round, scourged herself into resolution, and in
-another moment had turned the corner of the house and was lost to sight.
-
-What had happened to change his Rosalind into this unapproachable
-empress Osborne was too stunned to ask himself explicitly. He knew he
-was banned, and that was enough. Deep in his subconsciousness he
-understood that somehow she had found out his wretched secret--found out
-that he was not the happy Glyn reeling through an insecure dream in
-fairyland, but the unhappy Osborne, heavily tangled in the sordid and
-the commonplace.
-
-And, because he was unhappy and troubled, she left him without pity,
-turned her back eternally upon him. That hurt. As he stood up to walk
-away toward Tormouth, a fierce anger and a gush of self-pity battled in
-his eyes.
-
-He had no more hope. He wandered on through the night, unseeing,
-stricken as never before. At last he reached the hotel, and, as soon as
-he could summon the energy, began to pack his portmanteau to go back to
-London. The day of the postponed inquest now loomed near, and he cared
-not a jot what became of him, only asking dumbly to be taken far from
-Tormouth.
-
-As he was packing the smaller of the bags, he saw the scrap of
-blood-stained lace that Furneaux had already seen, had taken out, and
-had replaced. Osborne, with that same feeling of repulsion with which
-Furneaux had thrust it away from him, held it up to the light. What was
-it? How could it have got into his bag? he asked himself--a bit of lace
-stained with blood! His amazement knew no bounds--and would have been
-still more profound, if possible, had he seen Furneaux's singular act in
-replacing it in the bag after finding it.
-
-He threw the horrible thing from him out of the window, and his very
-fingers tingled with disgust of it. But then came the disturbing
-thought--suppose it had been put into his bag as a trap? by the police,
-perhaps? And suppose any apparent eagerness of his to rid himself of it
-should be regarded as compromising? He was beginning to be circumspect
-now, timorous, ostentatious of that innocence in which a whole world
-disbelieved.
-
-So he glanced out of the window, saw where the lace had dropped upon a
-sloping spread of turf in the hotel grounds, and ran down to get it.
-When he arrived at the spot where he had just seen it, the lace had
-disappeared.
-
-He stood utterly mystified, looking down at the spot where the lace
-should be and was not; then looked around in a maze, to discover on a
-rustic seat that surrounded an oak tree an elderly lady and a bent old
-man sitting there in the shadow. Some distance off, lounging among the
-flower beds in the moonlight, was the figure of a tall man. Osborne was
-about to inquire of the two nearest him if they had seen the lace, when
-the old gentleman hurried nimbly forward out of the tree's shadow and
-asked if he was seeking a piece of something that had dropped from
-above.
-
-"Yes," answered Osborne, "have you seen it?"
-
-"That gentleman walking yonder was just under your window when it
-dropped, and I saw him stoop to pick it up," said the other.
-
-Osborne thanked him, and made for "the gentleman," who turned out to be
-a jauntily-dressed Italian, bony-faced, square in the jaw, his hair
-clipped convict-short, but dandily brushed up at the corner of the
-forehead.
-
-To the question: "Did you by chance pick up a bit of lace just now?" he
-at once bowed, and showing his teeth in a grin, said:
-
-"He dropped right to my feet from the sky; here he is"--and he presented
-the lace with much ceremony.
-
-"I am obliged," said Osborne.
-
-"Do not say it," answered the other politely, and they parted, Osborne
-hurrying back to his room, with the intent to catch a midnight train
-from Tormouth.
-
-As he entered the house again, the older man, incredibly quick on his
-uncertain feet, overtook him, and, touching him on the arm, asked if he
-intended to catch the train that night.
-
-"That is my desire," answered Osborne.
-
-"It is mine, too," said the other; "now, could you give me a seat in
-your conveyance?"
-
-Osborne said, "With pleasure," and they entered the hotel to prepare to
-go.
-
-At the same moment the Italian sauntered up to the oak tree beneath
-which sat Hylda Prout in her Tormouth make-up. Seating himself without
-seeking her permission, he lit a cigarette.
-
-"Good-evening," he said, after enveloping himself in a cloud of smoke.
-She did not answer, but evidently he was not one to be rebuffed.
-
-"Your friend, Mistare Pooh, he is sharp! My! he see all," he said
-affably.
-
-This drew a reply.
-
-"You are quite right," she said. "He sees all, or nearly all. Do you
-mean because he saw you pick up the lace?"
-
-"Now--how _you_ know it was _lace_?" asked the Italian, turning full
-upon her. "You sitting here, you couldn't see it was lace so far--no
-eyes could see that."
-
-This frankness confused the lady a moment; then she laughed a little,
-for he had supplied her with a retort.
-
-"Perhaps I see all, too, like my friend."
-
-There was a silence, but the Italian was apparently waiting only to
-rehearse his English.
-
-"You know Mr. Glyn--yes?" he said.
-
-"No."
-
-"Oh, don't say 'no'!" Reproach was in his ogle, his voice. His tone was
-almost wheedling.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"The way I find you spying after him this morning tell me that you know
-him. And I know that you know him before that."
-
-"What concern is it of _yours_?" she asked, looking at him with a
-lowering of the lids in a quick scrutiny that was almost startled. "What
-is _your_ interest in Mr. Glyn?"
-
-"Say 'Osborne' and be done," he said.
-
-"Well, say 'Osborne,'" she responded.
-
-"Good. We are going to understand the one the other, I can see. But if
-you want to know what is 'my interest' in the man, you on your part will
-tell me first if you are friend or enemy of Osborne."
-
-In one second she had reflected, and said: "Enemy."
-
-His hand shot out in silence to her, and she shook it. The mere action
-drew them closer on the seat.
-
-"I believe you," he whispered, "and I knew it, too, for if you had been
-a friend you would not be in a disguise from him."
-
-"How do you know that I am in a disguise?"
-
-"Since yesterday morning I know," he answered, "when I see you raise
-your blind yonder, not an old woman, but a young and charming lady not
-yet fully dressed, for I was here in the garden, looking out for what I
-could see, and my poor heart was pierced by the vision at the window."
-
-He pressed his palm dramatically on his breast.
-
-"Yes, of course, it is on the left, as usual," said Hylda Prout saucily.
-"But let us confine ourselves to business for the moment. I don't quite
-understand your object. As to the bit of lace----"
-
-"How you _know_ it was lace?"
-
-She looked cautiously all round before answering. "I know because I
-searched Mr. Osborne's room, and saw it."
-
-"Good! Before long we understand the one the other. You be frank, I be
-frank. You spied into the bag, and _I_ put it in the bag."
-
-"I know you did."
-
-"Now, how you know?"
-
-"There was no one else to do it!"
-
-"No? Might not Osborne put it there himself? You know where that bit of
-lace come from?"
-
-"I guess."
-
-"What you guess?"
-
-"I guess that it is from the dress of the dead actress, for it has blood
-on it."
-
-"You guess good--very good. And Osborne killed her--yes?"
-
-She pondered a little. This attack had come on her from a moonlit sky.
-
-"That I don't know. He may have, and he may not," she murmured.
-
-"Which is more likely? That _he_ killed her, or that _I_ killed her?"
-
-"I don't know. I should say it is more likely that you killed her."
-
-"What! You pay me that compliment? Why so?"
-
-"Well, you are in possession of a portion of the dress she wore when she
-was killed, and you put it into someone's belongings to make it seem
-that he killed her, an act which looks a little black against you."
-
-"Ah, ma bella, now you jest," said the Italian, laughing. "The fact that
-I am so frank with you as to say you all this is proof that I not kill
-her."
-
-"Yes, I see that," she agreed. "I was only joking. But since you did not
-kill her, how on earth did you get hold of that piece of her dress?"
-
-"That you are going to know when I have received better proof that you
-are as much as I the enemy of Osborne. Did I not guess good, on seeing
-you yesterday morning at the window, that you are the same young lady
-who is Osborne's secretary in London, where I see you before?"
-
-Hylda Prout admitted that she was the secretary.
-
-"Good, then," said the Italian; "you staying in the house with him have
-every opportunity to find proof of his guilt of the murder; until which
-is proved, the necks of those I am working for are in danger."
-
-With the impulsive gesture of his race he drew his forefinger in ghastly
-mimicry across his throat.
-
-"So bad as that?" asked the woman coolly. "Unfortunately, I don't know
-who 'those' are you are working for. The----?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"The Anarchists?"
-
-"If you call them so."
-
-"Did _they_ kill her?"
-
-"Not they!"
-
-"Did they intend to?"
-
-"Not they!"
-
-"Then, where did you get that bit of lace? And where is the dagger?"
-
-"Dagger! What about dagger now?"
-
-He asked it with a guilty start. At last the talk was taking a turn
-which left Hylda Prout in command.
-
-"If you have that lace, you have the dagger, too. And if you have the
-dagger, what help do you want from me? Produce that, and Osborne is done
-for."
-
-Her voice sank to a whisper. If Furneaux could have been present he must
-have felt proud of her.
-
-"Dagger!" muttered the Italian again in a hushed tone. "You seem to know
-much more----"
-
-"Stay, let us get up and walk. It is not quite safe here.... There are
-too many trees."
-
-The man, who had lost his air of self-confidence, seemed to be unable to
-decide what to do for the best. But Hylda Prout had risen, and he, too,
-stood up. He was compelled to follow her. Together they passed through
-the grounds toward the cliffs.
-
-The same moonlight that saw them strolling there, saw at the same time
-Furneaux and Osborne racing in a trap along the road to Sedgecombe
-Junction to catch the late train on the main line. Furneaux was inclined
-to be chatty, but Osborne answered only in monosyllables, till his
-companion's talk turned upon the murder of the actress, when Osborne,
-with a sudden access of fury, assured him in very emphatic language that
-his ears were weary of that dreadful business, and prayed to be spared
-it. The old gentleman seemed to be shocked, but Osborne only glanced at
-his watch, muttering that they would have to be smart to catch the
-train; and as he put back the watch in its pocket, the other dropped his
-bag over the side of the vehicle.
-
-There was nothing to be done but to stop, and the delinquent, with the
-stiffness and slowness of age, descended to pick it up. Thus some
-precious minutes were wasted. Furneaux, in fact, did not wish Osborne to
-start for London that night at that late hour, since he wanted to
-apprise Winter of Osborne's departure. Hence he had begged a seat in the
-conveyance, and had already lost time at the hotel. A little later, when
-Osborne again glanced at his watch, it was to say: "Oh, well, there is
-no use in going on," and he called to the driver to turn back. Indeed,
-the whistle of the departing train was heard at the station half a mile
-away.
-
-"Well, yes," said Furneaux, curiously pertinacious, when the dog-cart
-was on the homeward road, "one is weary of hearing this murder
-discussed. I only spoke of it to express to you my feeling of
-disapproval of the lover--of the man Osborne. Is it credible to you that
-he was not even at her funeral? No doubt he was advised not to be--no
-doubt it was wise from a certain point of view. But _nothing_ should
-have prevented him, if he had had any affection for her. But he had
-none--he was a liar. Talk of her deceiving him! It was he--it was
-_he_--who deceived her, I say!"
-
-"Have a cigar," said Osborne, presenting his case; "these are rather
-good ones; you will find them soothing."
-
-His hospitality was declined, but there was no more talk, and the trap
-trotted back into Tormouth.
-
-Up at "St. Briavels" that same moment the same moonlight, shining on a
-balcony, illumined yet another scene in the network of events. Rosalind
-Marsh was sitting there alone, her head bent between her clenched hands.
-She had returned home early from the Abbey, and Mrs. Marsh, who had
-silently wondered, presently came out with the softness of a shadow upon
-her, and touched her shoulder.
-
-"What is the matter?" she asked in a murmur of sympathy.
-
-"My head aches a little, mother dear."
-
-"I am sorry. You look tired."
-
-"Well, yes, dear. There are moments of infinite weariness in life. One
-cannot avoid them."
-
-"Did you dance?"
-
-"Only a little."
-
-"Weary of emotions, then?"
-
-The old lady smiled faintly.
-
-"Mother!" whispered Rosalind, and pressed her mother's hand to her
-forehead.
-
-There was silence for a while. When Mrs. Marsh spoke again it was to
-change the subject.
-
-"You have been too long at Tormouth this time. I think you need a
-change. Suppose we took a little of London now? Society might brighten
-you."
-
-"Oh, yes! Let us go from this place!" said Rosalind under her breath,
-her fingers tightly clenched together.
-
-"Well, then, the sooner the better," said Mrs. Marsh. "Let it be
-to-morrow."
-
-Rosalind looked up with gratitude and the moonlight in her eyes.
-
-"Thank you, dear one," she said. "You are always skilled in divining,
-and never fail in being right."
-
-And so it was done. The next forenoon saw the mother and daughter
-driving in an open landau past the Swan to Tormouth station, and, as
-they rolled by in state, Hylda Prout, who was peeping from a window
-after the figure of Osborne on _his_ way to the station, saw them.
-
-A glitter came into her eyes, and the unspoken thought was voiced in
-eloquent gesture: "What, following him so soon?"--for she knew that they
-could only be going by the London train, which had but one
-stopping-place after Tormouth. At once she rushed in a frenzy of haste
-to prepare to travel by that very train.
-
-Some wild ringing of bells and promise of reward brought chambermaid and
-"boots" to her aid.
-
-In her descent to the office to pay her bill she was encountered by her
-new friend, the Italian, who, surprised at her haste, said to her,
-"What, you go?"--to which she, hardly stopping, answered: "Yes--we will
-meet when we said--in two days' time."
-
-"But me, too, I go," he cried, and ran to get ready, the antics of the
-pair creating some stir of interest in the bar parlor.
-
-At this time Furneaux was already at the station, awaiting the train,
-having already wired to Winter in London to meet him at Waterloo. And so
-the same train carried all their various thoughts and purposes and
-secrets in its different compartments on the Londonward journey.
-
-Furneaux, who chose to sit in the compartment with Rosalind and Mrs.
-Marsh, listened to every sigh and syllable of Rosalind, and, with the
-privilege of the aged, addressed some remarks to his fellow-travelers.
-Hylda Prout and the Italian were together--a singular bond of intimacy
-having suddenly forged itself between these two. They were alone, and
-Hylda, who left Tormouth old and iron-gray, arrived at London red-headed
-and young, freckle-splashed and pretty. But as for Osborne, he traveled
-in the dull company of his black thoughts.
-
-The first to alight at Waterloo, before the train stopped, was Furneaux.
-His searching eyes at once discovered Winter waiting on the platform. In
-a moment the Chief Inspector had a wizened old man at his ear, saying:
-"Winter--I'm here. Came with the crowd."
-
-"Hallo," said Winter, and from old-time habit of friendship his hand
-half went out. Furneaux, however, seemed not to notice the action, and
-Winter's hand drew back.
-
-"Osborne is in the train," whispered Furneaux. "I telegraphed because
-there is an object in his smaller bag that I want you to see--as a
-witness, instantly. There he comes; ask him into the first-class
-waiting-room. It is usually empty."
-
-Furneaux himself went straight into the waiting-room and sat in a corner
-behind a newspaper. Soon in came Winter, talking to Osborne with a
-marked deference:
-
-"You will forgive me, I am sure, for this apparent lack of confidence,
-but in an affair of this sort one leaves no stone unturned."
-
-"Do not mention it," said Osborne, who was rather pale. "I think I can
-guess what it is that you wish to see...."
-
-A porter, who had followed them, put the two portmanteaux on a table,
-and went out. Osborne opened the smaller one, and Winter promptly had
-the blood-stained bit of lace in his hand.
-
-"What is it, sir?" asked Winter.
-
-"Heaven knows," came the weary answer. "It was not in my possession when
-I left London, and was put into one of my bags by someone at Tormouth.
-When I found it, I threw it out of the window, as that gentleman there
-can prove," for he had seen Furneaux, but was too jaded to give the
-least thought to his unaccountable presence. "Afterwards I ran down and
-recovered it. _He_ was in the garden...."
-
-The unhappy young man's glance wandered out of the door to see Rosalind
-and her mother go past towards a waiting cab. He cared not a jot if all
-Scotland Yard were dogging his footsteps now.
-
-"Is that so, sir?" asked Winter of Furneaux.
-
-"Exactly as Mr. Glyn says," answered Furneaux, looking at them
-furtively, and darting one very curious glance at Winter's face.
-
-"And who, Mr.--Glyn, was about the place whom you could possibly suspect
-of having placed this object in your bag--someone with a wicked motive
-for throwing suspicion upon you?"
-
-Winter's lips whitened and dwelt with venom upon the word "wicked."
-
-"There was absolutely no one," answered Osborne. "The hotel was rather
-empty. Of course, there was this gentleman----"
-
-"Yes," said Winter after him, "this gentleman."
-
-"An elderly lady, a Mrs. Forbes, I believe, as I happened to read her
-name, a foreigner who probably never saw me before, an invalid girl and
-her sister--all absolutely unconnected with me."
-
-Furneaux's eyes were now glued on Winter's face. They seemed to have a
-queer meaning in them, a meaning not wholly devoid of spite and malice.
-
-"Well, Mr.--Glyn," said Winter, "let me tell you, if you do not know,
-that this bit of lace was certainly part of the dress in which Miss de
-Bercy was murdered. Therefore the man--or woman--who put it into your
-bag was there--on the spot--when the deed was done."
-
-Osborne did then exhibit some perplexed interest in a strange discovery.
-
-"How can you be certain that it was part of her dress?" he asked.
-
-"Because a fragment of lace of this size was torn from the wrap she was
-wearing at the time of the murder--I noticed it at my first sight of the
-body. This piece would just fit into it. So, whoever put it into your
-bag----"
-
-"In that case I may have put it in myself!" said Osborne with a nervous
-laugh, "since I may be the murderer."
-
-Apparently the careless comment annoyed Winter.
-
-"I don't think I need detain you any longer, sir," he said coldly. "As
-for the lace, I'll keep it. I feel very confident that this part of the
-mystery will not baffle me for more than a day or two."
-
-And ever the eyes of Furneaux dwelt upon Winter's face with that queer
-meaning reveling in their underlook.
-
-Osborne turned to go. He did not trouble to call another porter, but
-carried his own luggage. He was about to enter a cab when he caught
-sight of the back of a woman's head among the crowd hurrying to an exit,
-a head which seemed singularly familiar to him. The next moment it was
-gone from his sight, which was a pity, since the head belonged to Hylda
-Prout, who had not anticipated that Osborne would be delayed on the
-platform, and had had to steal past the waiting-room door at a rush,
-since she was no longer an old lady, but herself. She could not wait in
-the train till he was well away, for she thought it well to ascertain
-the whereabouts of Rosalind Marsh in London, and wished to shadow her.
-
-Mrs. Marsh and her daughter carried the usual mountain of ladies'
-luggage, which demanded time and care in stowing safely on the roof of a
-four-wheeler, so Hylda Prout was in time to call a hansom and follow
-them. After her went the Italian, who made off hastily when the train
-arrived, but lurked about until he could follow the girl unseen, for she
-had frightened him.
-
-Now, at the station that day, keeping well in the background, was a
-third detective beside Winter and Furneaux.
-
-Clarke, with his interest in Anarchists, knew that this particular
-Italian was coming from Tormouth either that day or the day after. Two
-nights before, while on a visit to the Fraternal Club in Soho, he had
-overheard the whispered word that "Antonio" would "be back" on the
-Wednesday or the Thursday.
-
-Clarke did not know Antonio's particular retreat in London, and had
-strong reasons for wishing to know it. He, therefore, followed in a cab
-the cab that followed Rosalind's cab. In any other city in the world
-than London such a procession would excite comment--if it passed through
-street after street, that is. But not so in cab-using London, where a
-string of a hundred taxis, hansoms, and four-wheelers may all be going
-in the same direction simultaneously.
-
-As Clarke went westward down the Strand and across Trafalgar Square, he
-was full of meditations.
-
-"What is Antonio doing with Osborne's lady secretary?" he asked himself.
-"For that is the young woman he is after, I'll swear. By Jove, there's
-more in this tangle than meets the eye. It's a case for keeping both
-eyes, and a third, if I had it, wide, wide open!"
-
-Rosalind's and Mrs. Marsh's cab drew up before a house in Porchester
-Gardens. As they got out and went up the steps, the cabs containing
-Antonio and Hylda Prout almost stopped, but each went on again.
-
-"Now, what in the world is the matter?" mused Clarke. "Why are those two
-shadowing a couple of ladies, and sneaking on each other as well?"
-
-He told his own driver to pass the house slowly, as he wished to note
-its number, and the vehicle was exactly opposite the front door when it
-was opened by a girl with a cap on her head to let in Mrs. Marsh and
-Rosalind; Clarke's eye rested on her, and lit with a strange fire. A cry
-of discovery leapt to his lips, but was not uttered. A moment after the
-door had closed upon the two travelers, Clarke's hand was at the
-trap-door in the roof of the hansom, and, careless whether or not he was
-seen, he leaped out, ran up the steps, and rang.
-
-A moment more and the door was opened to him by the same girl, whom he
-had recognized instantly as Pauline Dessaulx, the late lady's-maid of
-Rose de Bercy--a girl for whom he had ransacked London in vain. And not
-he alone, for Pauline had very effectively buried herself from the
-afternoon after the murder, when Clarke had seen her once, and she him,
-to this moment. And there now they stood, Clarke and Pauline, face to
-face.
-
-He, for his part, never saw such a change in a human countenance as now
-took place in this girl's. Her pretty brown cheeks at once, as her eyes
-fell on him, assumed the whiteness of death itself. Her lips, the very
-rims of her eyelids even, looked ghastly. She seemed to be on the verge
-of collapse, and her whole frame trembled in an agony of fear. Why? What
-caused these deadly tremors? Instantly Clarke saw guilt in this excess
-of emotion, and by one of those inspirations vouchsafed sometimes even
-to men of his coarse fiber he did the cleverest act of his life.
-
-Putting out his hand, he said quietly, but roughly:
-
-"Come now, no nonsense! Give it to me!"
-
-What "it" meant he himself had no more notion than the man in the moon.
-His real motive was to set the terrified girl speaking, and thus lead
-her on to yield some chance clew on which his wits might work. But at
-once, like one hypnotized, Pauline Dessaulx, still keeping her eyes
-fixed on his face, slowly moved her right hand to a pocket, slowly drew
-out a little book, and slowly handed it to him.
-
-"All right--you are wise," he said. "I'll see you again." The door
-slammed, and he ran down the steps, his blood tingling with the sense
-that he had blundered upon some tremendous discovery.
-
-Nor was he far wrong. When in the cab he opened the book, he saw it was
-Rose de Bercy's diary. He did not know her handwriting, but he happened
-to open the book at the last written page, and the very first words his
-staring eyes devoured were these:
-
- If I am killed this night, it will be by ---- or by C. E. F.
-
-Where the blank occurred it was evident that some name had been written,
-and heavily scratched through with pen and ink.
-
-But the alternative suggested by the initials! C. E. F.! How grotesque,
-how exquisitely ludicrous! Clarke, gazing at the enigma, was suddenly
-shaken with a spasm of hysterical laughter.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- THE LETTER
-
-
-Two days later, not Britain alone, but no small part of the two
-hemispheres, was stirred to the depths by the adjourned inquest on the
-Feldisham Mansions crime. Nevertheless, though there were sensations in
-plenty, the public felt vaguely a sense of incompleteness in the
-process, and of dissatisfaction with the result. The police seemed to be
-both unready and unconvinced; no one was quite sincere in anything that
-was said; the authorities were swayed by some afterthought; in popular
-phrase, they appeared "to have something up their sleeve."
-
-Furneaux, this time, figured for the police; but Winter, too, was there
-unobtrusively; and, behind, hidden away as a mere spectator, was Clarke,
-smiling the smile that knows more than all the world, his hard mouth set
-in fixed lines like carved wood.
-
-As against Osborne the inquiry went hard. More and more the hearts of
-the witnesses and jury grew hot against him, and, by a kind of electric
-sympathy, the blood of the crowd which gathered outside the court caught
-the fever and became inflamed with its own rage, lashing itself to a
-fury with coarse jibes and bitter revilings.
-
-Furneaux, bringing forth and marshaling evidence on evidence against
-Osborne, let his eye light often on Winter; then he would look away
-hastily as though he feared his face might betray his thoughts.
-
-In that small head of his were working more, by far more, secret things,
-dark intents, unspoken mazy purposes, than in all the heads put together
-in the busy court. He was pale, too, but his pallor was nothing compared
-with the marble forehead of Winter, whose eyes were nailed to the
-ground, and whose forehead was knit in a frown grim and hard as rock.
-
-It was rarely that he so much as glanced up from the reverie of
-pitch-black doubts weltering through his brain like some maelstrom
-drowned in midnight. Once he glanced keenly upon William Campbell, the
-taxicab driver, who kept twirling his motor-cap round and round on his
-finger until an irritated coroner protested; once again did he glance at
-Mrs. Bates, housekeeper, and at the fountain of tears that flowed from
-her eyes.
-
-Campbell was asked to pick out the man whom he had driven from Berkeley
-Street to Feldisham Mansions, if he saw him in court. He pointed
-straight at Osborne.
-
-"You will swear that that is the man?" he was asked.
-
-"No, not swear," he said, and looked round defiantly, as if he knew that
-most of those present were almost disappointed with his non-committal
-answer.
-
-"Just think--look at him well," said the Treasury representative, as
-Osborne stood up to confront the driver with his pale face.
-
-"That gentleman is like him--very like him--that's all I'll swear to.
-His manner of dress, his stand, his height, yes, and his face, his
-mustache, the chin, the few hairs there between the eyebrows--remarkably
-like, sir--for I recollect the man well enough. It may have been his
-double, but I'm not here to swear positively it was Mr. Osborne, because
-I'm not sure."
-
-"We will take it, then, that, assuming there were two men, the one was
-so much like the other that you swear it was either Mr. Osborne or his
-double?" the coroner said.
-
-"Well, I'll go so far as that, sir," agreed Campbell, and, at this
-admission, Furneaux glanced at a veiled figure that sat among the
-witnesses at the back of the court.
-
-He knew that Rosalind Marsh was present, and his expression softened a
-little. Then he looked at another veiled woman--Hylda Prout--and saw
-that her eyes were fastened, not on the witness, but ever on Rosalind
-Marsh, as though there was no object, no interest, in the room but that
-one black-clothed figure of Rosalind.
-
-Campbell's memory of the drive was ransacked, and turned inside out, and
-thrashed and tormented by one and another to weariness; and then it was
-the turn of Hester Bates, all tears, to tell how she had seen someone
-like unto Osborne on the stairs at five to eight, whose feet seemed to
-reel like a drunken man's, and who afterwards impressed her, when she
-thought of it, as a shape rather of limbo and spirit-land than of
-Mayfair and everyday life.
-
-Then the flint ax-head, or celt, was presented to the court, and Hylda
-Prout was called to give evidence against her employer. She told how she
-had missed an ax-head from the museum, and also a Saracen dagger, but
-whether this was the very ax-head that was missing she could not say. It
-was very like it--that was all--and even Osborne showed his amaze at her
-collectedness, her calm indifference to many eyes.
-
-"May I not be allowed to examine it?" he asked his solicitor.
-
-"Why not?" said the coroner, and there was a tense moment when the celt
-was handed him.
-
-He bent over it two seconds, and then said quietly: "This is certainly
-one of my collection of flints!"
-
-His solicitor, taken quite aback, muttered an angry protest, and a queer
-murmur made itself felt. Osborne heard both the lawyer's words and the
-subdued "Ah!" of the others echoing in his aching heart. By this time he
-was as inwardly sensitive to the opinion of the mob as a wretch in the
-hands of inquisitors to the whim and humors of his torturers.
-
-"That evidence will be taken on oath in due course," said the coroner,
-dryly official, and the examination of Miss Prout went on after the
-incident.
-
-"And now as to the dagger," resumed the Treasury solicitor, "tell us of
-that."
-
-She described it, its shape, the blunt edges of the long and pointed
-blade, the handle, the label on it with the date. It was Saracen, and
-it, too, like the celt, had once been used, in all probability, in the
-hands of wild men in shedding blood.
-
-"And you are sure of the date when you first missed it from its place in
-the museum?"
-
-"It was on the third day after the murder"--and Hylda Prout's glance
-traveled for an instant to the veiled, bent head of Rosalind, as it
-seemed to droop lower after every answer that she gave.
-
-"And you are unable to conceive how both the dagger and the celt could
-have vanished from their places about that time?"
-
-"Yes, I conceive that they were stolen," she said--"unless Mr. Osborne
-made them a present to some friend, for I have known him to do that."
-
-"'Stolen,' you say," the Treasury man remarked. "But you have no grounds
-for such a belief? You suggest no motive for a thief to steal these two
-objects and no other from the museum? You know of no one who entered the
-room during those days?"
-
-"No, I know of no one--except Inspector Furneaux, who seems to have
-entered it about six o'clock on the evening of the murder."
-
-The coroner looked up sharply from his notes. This was news to the
-court.
-
-"Oh?" said the examiner. "Let us hear how that came about."
-
-She explained that Furneaux had called to see Mr. Osborne, and, while
-awaiting his coming in the library, had apparently strolled into the
-museum. Jenkins, Mr. Osborne's valet, was her informant. It was not
-evidence, but the statement was out before the court well knew where it
-was leading. Winter's lip quivered with suppressed agitation, and over
-Clarke's face came a strange expression of amazement, a stare of utter
-wonderment widening his eyes, as when one has been violently struck, and
-knows not by what or whom.
-
-When Hylda Prout stepped down, the coroner invited the officer in charge
-of the case to explain the curious bit of intelligence given by the last
-witness.
-
-Furneaux, not one whit disturbed in manner, rose to give his evidence of
-the incident. Oddly enough, his eyes dwelt all the time, with a dull
-deadness of expression in them, upon the lowered face of Winter.
-
-It was true, he told the court, that he had called upon Mr. Osborne that
-evening; it was true that he was asked to wait; and he seemed to
-remember now that he _had_ wandered through a doorway into a room full
-of curios to have a look at them in those idle moments.
-
-"So you knew Mr. Osborne _before_ the murder?" inquired the court.
-
-"Yes. I knew him very well by sight and repute, as a man about town,
-though not to speak to."
-
-"And what was the nature of the business on which you called to see
-him?"
-
-"It was a purely personal matter."
-
-The coroner paused, with the air of a man who suddenly discovers a
-morass where he imagined there was a clear road.
-
-"And did you see Mr. Osborne that evening?" he asked at length.
-
-"No, sir. After I had waited some time the valet entered and told me
-that Mr. Osborne had just telephoned to say that he would not be home
-before dinner. So I came away."
-
-"Have you spoken to Mr. Osborne _since_ then about the matter on which
-you called to see him that evening?"
-
-"No, sir."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Because after that evening there was no longer any need!"
-
-Well, to the more experienced officials in court this explanation had an
-unusual sound, but to Winter, who slowly but surely was gathering the
-threads of the murder in the flat into his hands, it sounded like a
-sentence of death; and to Clarke, too, who had in his possession Rose de
-Bercy's diary taken from Pauline Dessaulx, it sounded so amazing, that
-he could scarce believe his ears.
-
-However, the coroner nodded to Furneaux, and Furneaux turned to
-Osborne's solicitor, who suddenly resolved to ask no questions, so the
-dapper little man seated himself again at the table--much to the relief
-of the jury, who were impatient of any red herring drawn across the
-trail of evidence that led unmistakably to the millionaire.
-
-Then, at last, appeared six witnesses who spoke, no longer against, but
-for Osborne. Four were International polo-players, and two were waiters
-at the Ritz Hotel, and all were positive that at the hour when Mrs.
-Bates saw her employer at home, _they_ saw him elsewhere--or some among
-them saw him, and the others, without seeing him, knew that he was
-elsewhere.
-
-Against this unassailable testimony was the obviously honest cabman, and
-Osborne's own housekeeper: and the jury, level-headed men, fully
-inclined to be just, though perhaps, in this instance, passionate and
-prejudiced, weighed it in their hearts.
-
-But Furneaux, to suit his own purposes, had contrived that the tag of
-lace should come last; and with its mute appeal for vengeance everything
-in favor of Osborne was swept out of the bosom of His Majesty's lieges,
-and only wrath and abhorrence raged there.
-
-Why, if he had actually killed Rose de Bercy, Osborne should carry about
-that incriminating bit of lace in his bag, no one seemed to stop to ask;
-but when the dreadful thing was held up before his eyes, the twelve good
-men and true looked at it and at each other, and a sort of shuddering
-abhorrence pervaded the court.
-
-Even the Italian Antonio, who had contrived to be present as
-representing some obscure paper in Paris--the very man who had put the
-lace into the bag--shook his head over Osborne's guilt, being, as it
-were, carried out of himself by the vigor and rush of the mental
-hurricane which swept around him!
-
-When Osborne, put into the box, repeated that the "celt" was really his,
-this candor now won no sympathy. When he said solemnly that the bit of
-lace had been secreted among his belongings by some unknown hand, the
-small company of men present in court despised him for so childish a
-lie.
-
-His spirit, as he stood in that box, exposed to the animus of so many
-spirits, felt as if it was being hurried by a kind of magnetic gale to
-destruction; his fingers, his knees shivered, his voice cracked in his
-throat; he could not keep his eyes from being wild, his skin from being
-white, and in his heart his own stupefied conscience accused him of the
-sin that his brothers charged him with.
-
-Though the jury soon ascertained from the coroner's injunctions what
-their verdict had to be, they still took twenty minutes to think of it.
-However, they knew well that the coroner had spoken to them under the
-suggestion of the police, who, no doubt, would conduct their own
-business best; so in the end they came in with the verdict of "willful
-murder committed by some person or persons unknown."
-
-And now it was the turn of the mob to have their say. The vast crowd was
-kept in leash until they were vouchsafed just a glimpse of Osborne, in
-the midst of a mass of police guarding him, as he emerged from the court
-to his automobile. Then suddenly, as it were, the hoarse bellow of the
-storm opened to roar him out of the universe--an overpowering load of
-sound for one frail heart to bear without quailing.
-
-But if Osborne's heart quailed, there was one heart there that did not
-quail, one smooth forehead that suddenly flushed and frowned in
-opposition to a world's current, and dared to think and feel alone.
-
-As the mob yelped its execration, Rosalind Marsh cried a protest of
-"Shame, oh, shame!"
-
-For now her woman's bosom smote her with ruth, and her compassion
-championed him, believed in him, refused to admit that he could have
-been so base. If she had been near him she would have raised her veil,
-and gazed into his face with a steady smile!
-
-As she was about to enter the carriage that awaited her, someone said
-close behind her:
-
-"Miss Marsh."
-
-She looked round and saw a small man.
-
-"You know me," he said--"Inspector Furneaux. We have even met and spoken
-together before--you remember the old man who traveled with you in the
-train from Tormouth? That was myself in another aspect."
-
-His eyes smiled, though his voice was respectful, but Rosalind gave him
-the barest inch of condescension in a nod.
-
-"Now, I wish to speak to you," he muttered hurriedly. "I cannot say when
-exactly--I am very occupied just now--but soon.... To speak to you, I
-think, in your own interests--if I may. But I do not know your address."
-
-Very coldly, hardly caring to try and understand his motive, she
-mentioned the house in Porchester Gardens. In another moment she was in
-her carriage.
-
-When she reached home she saw in her mother's face just a shadow of
-inquiry as to where she had been driving during the forenoon; but
-Rosalind said not a word of the inquest. She was, indeed, very silent
-during the whole of that day and the next. She was restless and woefully
-uneasy. Through the night her head was full of strange thoughts, and she
-slept but little, in fitful moments of weariness. Her mother observed
-her with a quiet eye, pondering this unwonted distress in her heart, but
-said nothing.
-
-On the third morning Rosalind was sitting in a rocking-chair, her head
-laid on the back, her eyes closed; and with a motion corresponding with
-the gentle to-and-fro motion of the chair her head moved wearily from
-side to side. This went on for some time; till suddenly she brought her
-hand to her forehead in a rather excited gesture, her eyes opened with
-the weak look of eyes dazzled with light, and she said aloud:
-
-"Oh, I _must_!..."
-
-Now she sprang up in a hurry, hastened to an escritoire, and dashed off
-a letter in a very scamper of haste.
-
-At last, then, the floods had broken their gates, for this is what she
-wrote:
-
- My dear, my dear, I was brutal to you that night at the
- sun-dial. But it was necessary, if I was to maintain the
- severity which I felt that your lack of frankness to me
- deserved. Inwardly there was a terribly weak spot, of which I
- was afraid; and if you had come after me when I left you, and
- had commanded me, or prayed me, or touched me, no doubt it would
- have been all up with me. Forgive me, then, if I seemed over
- harsh where, I'm afraid, I am disposed to be rather too
- infinitely lenient. At present, you see, I quite lack the
- self-restraint to keep from telling you that I am sorry for
- you.... I was present at the inquest.... Pity is like lightning;
- it fills, it burns up, it enlightens ... see me here struck with
- it!... You are not without a friend, one who knows you, judges
- you, and acquits you.... If you want to come to me, come!... I
- once thought well of a Mr. Glyn, but, like a flirt, will forget
- him, if Osborne is of the same manner, speaks with the same
- voice.... My mother is usually good to me....
-
-She enclosed it in a flurry of excitement, ran to the bell-rope, rang,
-and while waiting for a servant held the envelope in the manner of one
-who is on the very point of tearing a paper in two, but halts to see on
-which cheek the wind will hit. In the midst of this suspense of
-indecision the door opened; and now, straightway, she hastened to it,
-and got rid of the letter, saying rapidly in a dropped voice,
-confidentially:
-
-"Pauline, put that in the pillar-box at once for me, will you?"
-
-Another moment and she stood alone there, with a shocked and beating
-heart, the deed done, past recall now.
-
-As for Pauline Dessaulx, she was half-way down the stairs when she
-chanced to look at the envelope. "Rupert Osborne, Esq." She started!
-Everything connected with that name was of infinite interest to her! But
-she had not dreamt that Miss Marsh knew it, save as everyone else knew
-it now, from public gossip and the papers.
-
-She had never seen Rosalind Marsh, or her mother, till the day of their
-arrival from the country. It was but ten days earlier that she had
-become the servant of a Mrs. Prawser, a friend of Mrs. Marsh's, who kept
-a private boarding-house, being in reduced circumstances. Then, after
-but an interval of peace and security, the Marshes had come, and as she
-let them in, and they were being embraced by Mrs. Prawser, Inspector
-Clarke had appeared at the door, nearly striking her dead with
-agitation, and demanding of her the diary, which she had handed him.
-
-Luckily, luckily, she had been wise enough before that to scratch out
-with many thick scratches of the pen the name that had been written by
-the actress before the initials C. E. F. in that passage where the words
-appeared: "If I am killed this night it will be by ---- or by C. E. F."
-But suppose she had not shown such sense and daring, what then? She
-shivered at the thought.
-
-And a new problem now tortured her. Was it somehow owing to the fact
-that Miss Marsh knew Osborne that Inspector Clarke had come upon her at
-the moment of the two ladies' arrival? What was the relation between
-Miss Marsh and Osborne? What was in this letter? It might be well to
-see....
-
-Undecided, Pauline stood on the stairs some seconds, letter in hand, all
-the high color fled from lips and cheeks, her breast rising and falling,
-no mere housemaid now, but a figure of anguish fit for an artist to
-sketch there in her suspense, a well-molded girl of perfect curves and
-graceful poise.
-
-Then it struck her that Miss Marsh might be looking out of the window to
-watch her hurrying with the letter to the pillar-box a little way down
-the street, and at this thought she ran downstairs and out, hurried to
-the pillar-box, raised her arm with the letter, inserted it in the slot,
-drew it out swiftly and hiddenly again, slipped it into her pocket, and
-sped back to the house.
-
-In her rooms half an hour later she steamed the envelope open, and read
-the avowal of another woman's passion and sympathy. It appeared, then,
-that Miss Marsh was now in love with Osborne? Well, that did not
-specially interest or concern her, Pauline. It was a good thing that
-Osborne had so soon forgotten _cette salope_, Rose de Bercy. She,
-Pauline, had conceived a fondness for Miss Marsh; she had detested her
-mistress, the dead actress. At the first chance she crept afresh into
-the street, and posted the letter in grim earnest. But an hour had been
-lost, an hour that meant a great deal in the workings of this tragedy of
-real life and, as a minor happening, some of the gum was dissolved off
-the flap of the envelope.
-
-Inspector Furneaux, as he had promised after the inquest, called upon
-Rosalind during the afternoon. They had an interview of some length in
-Mrs. Prawser's drawing-room, which was otherwise untenanted. Furneaux
-spoke of the picturesqueness of Tormouth, but Rosalind's downright
-questioning forced him to speak of himself in the part of the decrepit
-Mr. Pugh, and why he had been there as such. He had gone to have a look
-at Osborne.
-
-"Is his every step, then, spied on in this fashion?" asked Rosalind.
-
-"No," answered Furneaux. "The truth is that I had had reason to think
-that the man was again playing the lover in that quarter----"
-
-"Ah, playing," said Rosalind with quick sarcasm. "It is an insipid
-phrase for so serious an occupation. But what reason had you for
-thinking that he was playing in that particular mood?"
-
-"The reason is immaterial.... In fact, he had impressed on the back of a
-letter a name--I may tell you it was 'Rosalind'--and sent it off
-inadvertently----"
-
-"Oh, poor fellow! Not so skilled a villain then, after all," she
-murmured.
-
-"But the point was that, if this was so, it was clear to me that he
-could not be much good--I speak frankly----"
-
-"Very, sir."
-
-"And with a good meaning to _you_."
-
-"Let us take it at that. It makes matters easier."
-
-"Well, as I suspected, so I found. And--I was disgusted. I give you my
-assurance that he had professed to Mademoiselle de Bercy that he--loved
-her. He had, he had! And she, so pitifully handled, so butchered, was
-hardly yet cold in her grave. Even assuming his perfect innocence in
-that horrible drama, still, I must confess, I--I--was disgusted; I was
-put against the man forever. And I was more than disgusted with him, I
-was concerned for the lady whose inclinations such a weather-vane might
-win. I was concerned before I saw you; I was ten times more concerned
-afterwards. I travelled to town in the same compartment as you--I heard
-your voice--I enjoyed the privilege of breathing the same air as you and
-your charming mother. Hence--I am here."
-
-Rosalind smiled. She found the detective's compliments almost
-nauseating, but she must ascertain his object.
-
-"Why, precisely?" she asked.
-
-"I want to warn you. I had warned you before: for I had given a certain
-girl whose love Mr. Osborne has inspired a hint of what was going on,
-and I felt sure that she would not fail to tell you who 'Mr. Glyn' was.
-Was I not right?"
-
-Rosalind bent her head a little under this unexpected thrust.
-
-"I received a note," she said. "Who, then, is this 'certain girl, whose
-love Mr. Osborne has inspired,' if one may ask?"
-
-"I may tell you--in confidence. Her name is Prout. She is his
-secretary."
-
-"He is--successful in that way," observed Rosalind coldly, looking down
-at a spray of flowers pinned to her breast.
-
-"Too much so, Miss Marsh. Now, I felt confident that the warning given
-by Miss Prout would effectually quash any friendship between a lady of
-your pride and quality and Mr. Glyn--Osborne. But then, through your
-thick veil I noticed you at the inquest: and I said to myself, 'I am
-older than she is--I'll speak to her in the tone of an old and
-experienced man, if she will let me.'"
-
-"You see, I let you. I even thank you. But then you notice that Mr.
-Osborne is just now vilified and friendless."
-
-"Oh, there is his Miss Prout."
-
-Rosalind's neck stiffened a little.
-
-"That is indefinite," she said. "I know nothing of this lady, except
-that, as you tell me, she is ready to betray her employer to serve her
-own ends. Mr. Osborne is my friend: it is my duty to refuse to credit
-vague statements made against him. It is not possible--it cannot be----"
-
-She stopped, rather in confusion. Furneaux believed he could guess what
-she meant to say.
-
-"It _is_ possible, believe me," he broke in earnestly. "Since it was
-possible, as you know, for him to turn his mind so easily from the dead,
-it is also possible----"
-
-"Oh, the dead deceived him!" she protested with a lively flush. "The
-dead was unworthy of him. He never loved her."
-
-"_He_ deceived _her_," cried Furneaux also in an unaccountable heat--"he
-deceived her. No doubt she was as fully worthy of him as he of her--it
-was a pair of them. And he loved her as much as he can love anyone."
-
-"Women are said to be the best judges in such matters, Inspector
-Furneaux."
-
-"So, then, you will not be guided by me in this?" Furneaux said,
-standing up.
-
-"No. Nevertheless, I thank you for your apparent good intent," answered
-Rosalind.
-
-He was silent a little while, looking down at her. On her part, she did
-not move, and kept her eyes studiously averted.
-
-"Then, for your sake, and to spite him, I accuse him to you of the
-murder!" he almost hissed.
-
-She smiled.
-
-"That is very wrong of you, very unlike an officer of the law. You know
-that he is quite innocent of it."
-
-"Great, indeed, is your faith!" came the taunt. "Well, then," he added
-suddenly, "again for your sake, and again to spite him, I will even let
-you into a police secret. Hear it--listen to it--yesterday, with a
-search-warrant, I raided Mr. Osborne's private apartments. And this is
-what I found--at the bottom of a trunk a suit of clothes, the very
-clothes which the driver of the taxicab described as those of the man
-whom he took from Berkeley Street to Feldisham Mansions on the night of
-the murder. And those clothes, now in the possession of the police, are
-all speckled and spotted with blood. Come, Miss Marsh--what do you say
-now? Is your trust weakened?"
-
-Furneaux's eyes sparkled with a glint of real hatred of Osborne, but
-Rosalind saw nothing of that. She rose, took an unsteady step or two,
-and stared through the window out into the street. Then she heard the
-door of the room being opened. She turned at once. Before a word could
-escape her lips, Furneaux was gone.
-
-One minute later, she was scribbling with furious speed:
-
- Do not read my letter. I will call for it--unopened--in person.
-
- ROSALIND MARSH.
-
-She tugged at the bell-rope. When Pauline appeared, she whispered:
-"Quickly, Pauline, for my sake--this telegram." And as Pauline ran with
-it, she sank into a chair, and sat there with closed eyelids and
-trembling lips, sorely stricken in her pride, yet even more sorely in
-her heart.
-
-Now, if her letter had gone by the post by which she had sent it,
-Osborne would have read it two hours or more before the telegram
-arrived. But it had been kept back by Pauline: and, as it was, the
-letter only arrived five minutes before the telegram.
-
-At that moment Osborne was upstairs in his house. The letter was handed
-to Hylda Prout in the library. She looked at it, and knew the writing,
-for she had found in Osborne's room at Tormouth a note of invitation to
-luncheon from Rosalind to Osborne, and did not scruple to steal it. A
-flood of jealousy now stabbed her heart and inflamed her eyes. It was
-then near five in the afternoon, and she had on a silver tripod a kettle
-simmering for tea, for she was a woman of fads, and held that the
-servants of the establishment brewed poison. She quickly steamed open
-the letter--which had been already steamed open by Pauline--and, every
-second expecting Osborne to enter, ran her eye through it. Then she
-pressed down the flap of the envelope anew.
-
-Two minutes afterwards Rupert made his appearance, and she handed him
-the letter.
-
-He started! He stared at it, his face at one instant pale, at the next
-crimson. And as he so stood, flurried, glad, agitated, there entered
-Jenkins with a telegram on a salver.
-
-"What is it?" muttered Osborne with a gesture of irritation, for he was
-not quite master of himself in these days. Nevertheless, to get the
-telegram off his mind at once before rushing upstairs to read the letter
-in solitude, he snatched at it, tore it open, and ran his eye over it.
-
-"Do not read my letter. I will call for it _unopened_...."
-
-He let his two hands drop in a palsy of anger, the letter in one, the
-telegram in the other--bitter disappointment in his heart, a wild
-longing, a mad temptation....
-
-He lifted the letter to allow his gaze to linger futilely upon it, like
-Tantalus.... In spite of his agitation he could not fail to see that the
-envelope was actually open, for, as a matter of fact, the gum had nearly
-all been steamed away....
-
-It was open! He had but to put in his finger and draw it out, and read,
-and revel, like the parched traveler at the solitary well in the desert.
-Would that be dishonest? Who could blame him for that? He had not opened
-the envelope....
-
-"Miss Prout, just give me the gum-pot," he said, for he could see that
-the gum on the flap was too thin to be of any service.
-
-Hylda Prout handed him a brush, and he pasted down the flap, but with
-fingers so agitated that he made daubs with the gum on the envelope,
-daubs which anyone must notice on examination.
-
-Meantime, he had dropped the telegram upon the table, and Hylda Prout
-read it.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- THE DIARY, AND ROSALIND
-
-
-Strange as a process of nature is the way in which events, themselves
-unimportant, work into one another to produce some foredestined result
-that shall astonish the world.
-
-The sudden appearance of Inspector Clarke before Pauline Dessaulx at the
-front door of Mrs. Marsh's lodgings produced by its shock a thorough
-upset in the girl's moral and physical being. And in Clarke himself that
-diary of Rose de Bercy which Pauline handed him produced a hilarity, an
-almost drunken levity of mind, the results of which levity and of
-Pauline's upset dovetailed one with the other to bring about an effect
-which lost none of its singularity because it was preordained.
-
-To Clarke the diary was a revelation! Moreover, it was one of those
-sweet revelations which placed the fact of his own wit and wisdom in a
-clearer light than he had seen those admitted qualities before, for it
-showed that, though working in the dark, he had been guided aright by
-that special candle of understanding that must have been lit within him
-before his birth.
-
-"Well, fancy that," cried he again and again in a kind of surprise. "I
-was right all the time!"
-
-He sat late at night, coatless and collarless, at a table over the
-diary, Mrs. Clarke in the next room long since asleep, London asleep,
-the very night asleep from earth right up to heaven. Four days before a
-black cat had been adopted into the household. Surely it was _that_
-which had brought him the luck to get hold of the diary!--so easily, so
-unexpectedly. Pussie was now perched on the table, her purr the sole
-sound in the quietude, and Clarke, who would have scoffed at a hint of
-superstition, was stroking her, as he read for the third time those last
-pages written on the day of her death by the unhappy Frenchwoman.
-
- ... I so seldom dream, that it has become the subject of remark,
- and Dr. Naurocki of the Institute said once that it is because I
- am such a "perfect animal." It is well to be a perfect
- _some_thing: but that much I owe only to my father and mother. I
- am afraid I am not a perfect anything else. A perfect liar,
- perhaps; a perfect adventuress; using as stepping-stones those
- whose fond hearts love me; shallow, thin within; made of
- hollow-ringing tin from my skin to the tissue of my liver. Oh,
- perhaps I might have done better for myself! Suppose I had
- stayed with Marguerite and _le père_ Armaud on the farm, and
- helped to milk the two cows, and met some rustic lover at the
- stile at dusk, and married him in muslin? It might have been as
- well! There is something in me that is famished and starved, and
- decayed, something that pines and sighs because of its utter
- thinness--I suppose it is what they call "the soul." I have lied
- until I am become a lie, an unreality, a Nothing. I seem to see
- myself clearly to-day; and if I could repent now, I'd say "I
- will arise and go to my father, and will say to him 'Father.'"
-
- Too late now, I suppose. Marguerite would draw her skirts away
- from touching me, though the cut of the skirt would set me
- smiling; and, if the fatted calf was set before me on a soiled
- table-cloth, I should be ill.
-
- Too late! You can't turn back the clock's hands: the clock
- stops. God help me, I feel horribly remorseful. Why should I
- have dreamt it? I so seldom dream! and I have _never_, I think,
- dreamt with such living vividness. I thought I saw my father and
- Marguerite standing over my dead body, staring at me. I saw
- them, and I saw myself, and my face was all bruised and wounded;
- and Marguerite said: "Well, she sought for it," and my father's
- face twitched, and suddenly he sobbed out: "I wish to Heaven I
- had died for her!" and my dead ears on the bed heard, and my
- dead heart throbbed just once again at him, and then was dead
- for ever.
-
-Clarke did not know that he was reading literature,
-but he did know that this was more exciting than
-any story he had ever set eyes on. He stopped,
-lit a pipe, and resumed.
-
- I saw it, I heard it, though it was in a black world that it
- happened, a world all draped in crape; black, black. But what is
- the matter with me to-day? Is there any other woman so sad in
- this great city, I wonder? I have opened one of the bottles of
- Old Veuve, so there are only seven left now; and I have drunk
- two full glasses of it. But it has made no difference; and I
- have to dine with Lady Knox-Florestan, and go with her to the
- opera; and Osborne may be coming. They will think me a
- death's-head, and catch melancholy from me like a fever. I do
- not know why I dreamt it, and why I cannot forget. It seems
- rather strange. Is anything going to happen to me, really? Oh,
- inside this breast of mine there is a bell tolling, and a
- funeral moving to the tomb this afternoon. It is as if I had
- drunk of some lugubrious drug that turns the human bosom to
- wormwood. Is it my destiny to die suddenly, and lie in an early
- grave? No, not that! Let me be in rags, and shrunken, with old,
- old eyes and toothless gums, but give me life! Let me say I am
- still alive!
-
-"By Jove!" growled Clarke, chewing his pipe, "that rings in my ears!"
-
- Yet I have had curious tokens, hints, fancies, of late. Four
- nights ago, as I was driving down Pall Mall from Lady Sinclair's
- _diner dansant_--it was about eleven-thirty--I saw a man in the
- shadow at a corner who I could have sworn for a moment was F. I
- didn't see his face, for as the carriage approached him, he
- turned his back, and it was that turning of the back, I think,
- that made me observe him. Suppose all the time F. knows of
- me?--knows _who_ Rose de Bercy _is_! I never wanted to have that
- Academy portrait painted, and I must have been mad to consent in
- the end. If F. saw it? If he _knows_? What would he do? His
- nature is capable of ravaging flames of passion! Suppose he
- killed me? But could a poor woman be so unlucky? No, he doesn't
- know, he can't, fate is not so hard. Then there is that wretched
- Pauline--she shan't be in this house another week. My quarrel
- with her this morning was the third, and the most bitter of all.
- Really, that girl knows too much of me to permit of our living
- any longer under one roof; and, what is more, she has twice
- dropped hints lately which certainly seem to bear the
- interpretation that she knows of my work in Berlin for the
- Russian Government. Oh, but that must only be the madness of my
- fancy! Two persons, and two only, in the whole world know of
- it--how could _she_, possibly? Yet she said in her Friday
- passion: "You will not be a long liver, Madame, you have been
- too untrue to your dupes." _Untrue to my dupes!_ Which dupes? My
- God, if she meant the Anarchists!
-
-Clarke's face was a study when he came to that word. It wore the
-beatific expression of the man who is justified in his own judgment.
-
- Just suppose that she knows! For that she is mixed up with some
- of them to some uncertain extent I have guessed for two years.
- And if they knew that I have actually been a Government agent;
- they would do for me, oh, they would, I know, it would be all up
- with me. Three months ago Sauriac Paulus in the _promenoire_ at
- Covent Garden, said to me: "By the way, do you know that you
- have been condemned to death?" I forget _à propos_ of what he
- said it, and have never given it a thought from that day. He was
- bantering me, laughing in the lightest vein, but--God! it never
- struck me like this before!--Suppose there was earnest under the
- jest, deep-hidden under? He is a deep, deep, evil beast, that
- man. Those were his words--I remember distinctly. "By the way,
- do you know that you have been condemned to death?" "By the
- way:" his heavy face shook with chuckling. And it never once
- till now entered my head!--Oh, but, after all, I must be
- horribly ill to be having such thoughts this day! The beast, of
- course, didn't mean anything. Think, though, of saying, "by the
- way?"--the terrible, evil beast. Oh, yes, I am ill. I have begun
- to die. This night, may be, my soul shall be required of me. I
- hear Marguerite saying again, "Well, she sought for it," and my
- father's bitter sobbing, "I wish to Heaven I had died for her!"
- But, if I am killed this day, it will be by ... or by C. E. F....
-
-That last dash after the "F." was not, Clarke saw, meant as a dash, for
-it was a long curved line, as if her elbow had been struck, or she
-herself violently startled. She had probably intended, this time, to
-write the name in full, but the interruption stopped her.
-
-At the spot of the first dash lay thick ink-marks--really made by
-Pauline Dessaulx--and Clarke, cute enough to see this, now commenced to
-scratch out the ink blot with a penknife, and after the black dust was
-scraped away, he used a damp sponge.
-
-It was a delicate, slow operation, his idea being that, since under
-those layers of ink lay a written name, if he removed the layers with
-dainty care, then he would see the name beneath. And this was no doubt
-true in theory, but in practice no care was dainty enough to do the
-trick with much success. He did, however, manage to see the shape of
-some letters, and, partly with the aid of his magnifying glass, partly
-with the aid of his imagination, he seemed to make out the word
-"_Janoc_."
-
-The murder, then, was committed either by Janoc, or by C. E. F.--this,
-as the mantle of the night wore threadbare, and some gray was showing
-through it in the east, Clarke became certain of.
-
-_Who_ was C. E. F.? There was Furneaux, of course. Those were his
-initials, and as the name of Furneaux arose in his mind, Clarke's head
-dropped back over his chair-back, and a long, delicious spasm of
-laughter shook him. For the idea that it _might_, in very truth, be
-Furneaux who was meant never for one instant occurred to him. He assumed
-that it must needs be some French or Russian C. E. F., but the joke of
-the coincidence of the initials with Furneaux's, who had charge of the
-case, into whose hands the case had been given by Winter over his
-(Clarke's) head, was so rich, that he resolved to show the diary to
-Winter, and to try and keep from bursting out laughing, while he said:
-
-"Look here, sir--this is your Furneaux!"
-
-Clarke, indeed, had heard at the inquest how Furneaux had been seen on
-the evening of the murder in Osborne's museum, from which the "celt" and
-the dagger had vanished. Hearing this, his mind had instantly remembered
-the "C. E. F." of the diary, and had been amazed at such a coincidence.
-But his brain never sprang to grapple with the possibility that Rose de
-Bercy might, in truth, be afraid of Furneaux. So, whoever "C. E. F."
-might be, Clarke had no interest in him, never suspected him: his
-thoughts had too long been preoccupied with one idea--Anarchists, Janoc,
-Anarchists--to receive a new bent with real perspicacity and interest.
-And the diary confirmed him in this opinion: for she had actually been
-condemned to death as an agent of the Russian Government months before.
-At last he stood up, stretching his arms in weariness before tumbling
-into bed.
-
-"Well! to think that I was right!" he said again, and again he laughed.
-
-When he was going out in the morning, he put some more ink-marks over
-the "Janoc" in the diary--for he did not mean that any other than
-himself should lay his hand on the murderer of Rose de Bercy--and when
-he arrived at Scotland Yard, he showed the diary to the Chief Inspector.
-
-Winter laid it on the desk before him, and as he read where Clarke's
-finger pointed, his face went as colorless as the paper he was looking
-at.
-
-A laugh broke out behind him.
-
-"Furneaux!"
-
-And Winter, glancing round, saw Clarke's face merry, like carved ivory
-in a state of gayety, showing a tooth or two lacking, and browned fangs.
-For a moment he stared at Clarke, without comprehension, till the absurd
-truth rushed in upon him that Clarke was really taking it in jest. Then
-he, too, laughed even more loudly.
-
-"Ha! ha!--yes, Furneaux! 'Pon my honor, the funniest thing! Furneaux it
-is for sure!"
-
-"Officer in charge of the case!"
-
-"Ripping! By gad, I shall have to apply for a warrant!"
-
-Finding his chief in this rare good humor, Clarke thought to obtain a
-little useful information.
-
-"Do you know any of the Anarchist crowd with those initials, sir?" he
-asked.
-
-"I think I do; yes, a Frenchman. Or it may be a German. There is no
-telling whom she means--no telling. But where on earth did you come
-across this diary?"
-
-"You remember the lady's-maid, Pauline, the girl who couldn't be found
-to give evidence at the inquest? I was following the Anarchist Antonio,
-who seemed to be prowling after some ladies in a cab a day or two ago,
-and the door that was opened to the ladies when their cab stopped was
-opened by--Pauline."
-
-Then he told how he had obtained the diary, and volunteered a theory as
-to the girl's possession of it.
-
-"She must have picked it up in the flat on coming home from the
-Exhibition on the night of the murder, and kept it."
-
-They discussed the circumstances fully, and Clarke went away, his
-conscience clear of having kept the matter dark from headquarters, yet
-confident that he had not put Winter on the track of his own special
-prey, Janoc. And as his footsteps became faint and fainter behind the
-closed door, Winter let his head fall low, almost upon the desk, and so
-he remained, hidden, as it were, from himself, a long while, until
-suddenly springing up with a face all fiery, he cried aloud in a rage:
-
-"Oh, no more sentiment! By the Lord, I'm done with it. From this hour
-Inspector Furneaux is under the eye of the police."
-
-Furneaux himself was then, for the second time that week, at Mrs.
-Marsh's lodgings in Porchester Gardens in secret and urgent talk with
-Rosalind.
-
-"You will think that I am always hunting you down, Miss Marsh," he said
-genially on entering the room.
-
-"You know best how to describe your profession," she murmured a little
-bitterly, for his parting shot at their last meeting had struck deep.
-
-"But this time I come more definitely on business," he said, seating
-himself uninvited, which was a strange thing for Furneaux to do, since
-he was a gentleman by birth and in manners, "and as I am in a whirl of
-occupation just now, I will come at once to the point."
-
-"To say 'I will come at once to the point' is to put off coming to
-it--for while you are saying it----"
-
-"True. The world uses too many words----"
-
-"It is a round world--hence its slowness in coming to a point."
-
-"I take the hint. Yet you leave me rather breathless."
-
-"Pray tell me why, Inspector Furneaux."
-
-"For admiration of so quick and witty a lady. But I shall make you dumb
-by what I am going to suggest to-day. I want to turn you into a
-detective----"
-
-"It _is_ a point, then. You want me to be sharp?"
-
-"You are already that. The question is, what effect did what I last said
-have upon your mind?"
-
-"About your finding the blood-spotted clothes in Mr. Osborne's trunk?"
-she asked, looking down at his tired and worn face from her superior
-height, and suddenly moved to listen to him attentively. "Well, it was
-somewhat astounding at first. In fact, it sounded almost convincing. But
-then, I had already believed in Mr. Osborne's innocence in this matter.
-Nor am I over-easily shaken, I think, in my convictions. If he confessed
-his guilt to me, then I would believe--but not otherwise."
-
-"Good," said Furneaux, "you have said that well, though I am sure he
-does not deserve it. Anyhow, since you persist in believing in his
-innocence, you must also believe that every new truth must be in his
-favor, and so may be willing to turn yourself into the detective I
-suggested.... You have, I think, a servant here named Pauline Dessaulx?"
-
-This girl he had been seeking for some time, and had been gladly
-surprised to have her open the door to him on the day of his first visit
-to Rosalind. "She did not know me," he explained, "but _I_ have twice
-seen her in the streets with her former mistress. Do you know who that
-mistress was? Rose de Bercy!"
-
-Rosalind started as though a whip had cracked across her shoulders. She
-even turned round, looked at the door, tested it by the handle to see if
-it was closed, and stood with her back to it. Furneaux seemingly ignored
-her agitation.
-
-"Now, you were at the inquest, Miss Marsh," he said. "You heard the
-description given by Miss Prout of the Saracen dagger missing from Mr
-Osborne's museum--the dagger with which the crime was probably
-committed. Well, I want to get that into my hands. It is lying in
-Pauline Dessaulx's trunk, and I ask you to secure it for me."
-
-"In Pauline's trunk," Rosalind repeated after him, quite too dazed in
-her astonishment to realize the marvels that this queer little man was
-telling her.
-
-"To be quite accurate," he continued, "I am not altogether sure of what
-I say. But that is where it _should_ be, in her trunk, and with it you
-should find a second dagger, or knife, which I am also anxious to
-obtain, and if you happen to come across a little book, a diary, with a
-blue morocco cover, I shall be extremely pleased to lay my hand on it."
-
-"How can you possibly know all this?" Rosalind asked, her eyes wide open
-with wonder now, and forgetful, for the moment, of the pain he had
-caused her.
-
-"Going up and down in the earth, like Satan, and then sitting and
-thinking of it," he said, with a quick turn of mordant humor. "But is it
-a bargain, now? Of course, I could easily pounce upon the girl's trunk
-myself: but I want the objects to be _stolen_ from her, since I don't
-wish to have her frightened--not quite yet."
-
-"Do you, then, suspect this girl of having--of being--the guilty hand,
-Inspector Furneaux?" asked Rosalind, her very soul aghast at the notion.
-
-"I have already intimated to you the person who is open to suspicion,"
-answered Furneaux promptly, "a man, not a woman--though, if you find
-these objects in the girl's trunk, that _may_ lighten the suspicion
-against the man."
-
-A gleam appeared one instant in his eyes, and died out as quickly, but
-this time Rosalind saw it. She pulled a chair close to him and sat down,
-her fingers clasped tightly over her right knee--eager to serve, to
-help. But, then, to steal, to pry into a servant's boxes, that was not a
-nice action. And this Pauline Dessaulx was a girl who had interested
-her, had shown a singular liking for her.
-
-She mentioned her qualms.
-
-"At the bidding of the police," urged Furneaux--"in the interests of
-justice--to serve a possibly innocent man, who is also a friend--surely
-that is something."
-
-"I might have been able to do it yesterday," murmured Rosalind,
-distraught, "but she is better to-day. I will tell you. For two days the
-girl has been ill--in a kind of hysteria or nervous collapse--a species
-of neurosis, I think--altogether abnormal and strange. I--you may as
-well know--wrote a letter to Mr. Osborne on the day you first came, a
-little before you came. I gave it her to post--she may have seen the
-address. Then you appeared. After you were gone, I sent him a telegram,
-also by Pauline's hand, telling him not to read my letter----"
-
-"Ah, you see you did believe that what I told you proved his guilt----"
-
-"Hear me.... No, I did not believe that. But--you had impressed me with
-the fact that Mr. Osborne has been, may have been, already sufficiently
-successful in attracting the sympathies of young ladies. I had been at
-the inquest--I had seen there in the box his exquisite secretary, of
-whose perfect ways of acting you gave me some knowledge that day, and I
-thought it might be rash of me to seem to be in rivalry with so charming
-a lady. Now you see my motive--I am often frank. So, when you were gone,
-I sent the telegram forbidding the reading of my letter; and the next
-morning I received a very brief note from Mr. Osborne saying that the
-letter was awaiting my wishes unopened."
-
-"How did he know your address, if he did not open the letter?" asked
-Furneaux.
-
-Rosalind started like a child caught in a fault. She was so agitated
-that she had not asked herself that question. As a matter of fact, it
-was Hylda Prout, having tracked Rosalind from Waterloo, who had given
-Osborne the address for her own reasons: Hylda had told Osborne, on
-hearing his fretful exclamation of annoyance, that she knew the address
-of a Miss Marsh from an old gentleman who had apparently come up from
-Tormouth with him and her, and had called to see Osborne when Osborne
-was out.
-
-"He got the address from some source, I don't know what," Rosalind said,
-with a rather wondering gaze at Furneaux's face; "but the point is, that
-the girl, Pauline, saw my letter to him, and the telegram; and last
-night, coming home from an outing in quite a broken-down and enfeebled
-state, she said to me with tears in her eyes: 'Oh, he is innocent! Oh,
-do not judge him harshly, Miss Marsh! Oh, it was not he who did it!' and
-much more of that sort. Then she collapsed and began to scream and kick,
-was got to bed, and a doctor sent for, who said that she had an attack
-of neurasthenia due to mental strain. And I was sitting by her bedside
-quite a long while, so that I might then--if I had known--But I think
-she is better to-day."
-
-"It is not too late, if she is still in bed," said Furneaux. "Sit with
-her again till she is asleep, and then see if the trunk is unlocked, or
-if you can find the key----"
-
-"Only it doesn't seem quite fair to----"
-
-"Oh, quite, in this case, I assure you," said Furneaux. "Whether this
-girl committed that murder with her own hand or not----"
-
-"But how _could_ she? She was at an Exhibition----!"
-
-"Was she? Are you sure? I was saying that whether the girl committed the
-murder with her own hand or not----"
-
-"If _she_ did, it could not have been done by the person you said that
-you suspect!"
-
-"No? Why speak so confidently? Have you not heard of such things as
-accomplices? She might have helped Osborne! _He_ might have helped
-_her_! But I was saying--for the third time--that whether the girl
-committed the murder with her own hand or not, I am in a position to
-give you my assurance that she is not a lawful citizen, and that you
-needn't have the least compunction in doing anything whatever to her
-trunk or her--in the cause of truth."
-
-"Well, if you say so----" Rosalind said, and Furneaux stood up to go.
-
-It was then two o'clock in the afternoon. By five o'clock Rosalind had
-in her hand the Saracen dagger, and another dagger--though not, of
-course, the diary, which Clarke had carried off long ago.
-
-At about three she had gone to sit by Pauline's bedside, and here, with
-the leather trunk strapped down, not two feet from her right hand, had
-remained over an hour. Pauline lay quiet, with a stare in her wide-open
-eyes, gazing up at the ceiling. Every now and again her body would twist
-into a gawky and awkward kind of position, a stupid expression would
-overspread her face, a vacant smile play on her lips; then, after some
-minutes, she would lie naturally again, staring at the ceiling.
-
-Suddenly, about half-past four, she had had a kind of seizure; her body
-stiffened and curved, she uttered shrieks which chilled Rosalind's
-blood, and then her whole frame settled into a steady, strong agitation,
-which set the chamber all in a tremble, and could not be stilled by the
-two servants who had her wrists in their grip. When this was over, she
-dropped off into a deep sleep.
-
-And now, as soon as Rosalind was again left alone with the invalid, she
-went to the trunk, unstrapped it, found it locked. But she was not long
-in discovering the key in the pocket of the gown which Pauline had had
-on when she fell ill. She opened the trunk, looking behind her at the
-closed eyes of the exhausted girl, and then, in feverish haste, she
-ransacked its contents. No daggers, however, and no diary were there.
-She then searched methodically through the room--an improvised
-wardrobe--a painted chest of drawers--kneaded and felt the bed, searched
-underneath--no daggers. She now stood in the middle of the room, her
-forehead knit, her eyes wandering round, all her woman's cunning at work
-in them. Then she walked straight, with decision, to a small shelf on
-the wall, full of cheap books; began to draw out each volume, and on
-drawing out the third, she saw that the daggers were lying there behind
-the row.
-
-Her hand hovered during some seconds of hesitancy over the horrible
-blades, one of which had so lately been stained so vilely. Then she took
-them, and replaced the books. One of the daggers was evidently the
-Saracen weapon that she had heard described. The label was still on it;
-the other was thick-bladed, of an Italian type. She ran out with them,
-put them in a glove box, and, rather flurriedly, almost by stealth, got
-out of the house to take her trophies to Furneaux.
-
-She drove to the address that he had given her, an eagerness in her, a
-gladness that the truth would now appear, and through _her_--most
-unexpectedly! Quite apart from her friendship for Osborne, she had an
-abstract interest in this matter of the murder, since from the first,
-before seeing Osborne, she had said that he was innocent, but her mother
-had seemed to lean to the opposite belief, and they were in hostile
-camps on the subject, like two good-natured people of different
-political convictions dwelling in the same house.
-
-She bade her driver make haste to Furneaux's; but midway, seeing herself
-passing close to Mayfair, gave the man Osborne's address, thinking that
-she would go and get her unopened letter, and, if she saw Osborne
-himself, offer him a word of cheer--an "all will be well."
-
-Her driver rapped for her at the house door, she sitting still in the
-cab, a hope in her that Osborne would come out. It seemed long since she
-had last seen his face, since she had heard that sob of his at the
-sun-dial at the Abbey. The message went inwards that Miss Marsh had
-called for a letter directed to Mr. Osborne by her; and her high spirits
-were damped when Jenkins reappeared at the door to say that the letter
-would be brought her, Mr. Osborne himself having just gone out.
-
-In sober fact, Osborne had not stirred out of the house for days, lest
-her promised call "in person" should occur when he was absent, but at
-last, unable to bear it any longer, he had made a dash to see her, and
-was at that moment venturing to knock at her door.
-
-However, though the news was damping, she had a store of high spirits
-that afternoon, which pushed her to leave a note scribbled with her gold
-pencil on the back of a letter--an act fraught with terrible sufferings
-for her in the sequel. This was her message:
-
- I will write again. Meantime, do not lose hope! I have
- discovered that your purloined dagger has been in the possession
- of the late lady's-maid, Pauline. "A small thing, but mine own!"
- I am now taking it to Inspector Furneaux's.
- R. M.
-
-"What _will_ he think of '_I_ have discovered'?" she asked herself,
-smiling, pleased; "he will say 'a witch'!"
-
-She folded it crossways with a double bend so that it would not open,
-and leaning out of the cab, handed it to Jenkins.
-
-As he disappeared with it, Hylda Prout stood in the doorway with
-Rosalind's letter to Osborne--Hylda's freckles showing strong against
-her rather pale face. She held the flap-side of the envelope forward
-from the first, to show the stains of gum on it.
-
-As she approached the cab, Rosalind's neck stiffened a little. Their
-eyes met malignly, and dwelt together several seconds, in a stillness
-like that of somber skies before lightnings fly out. Truly, Rupert
-Osborne's millions were unable to buy him either happiness or luck, for
-it was the worst of ill-luck that he should not have been at home just
-then.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- ENTRAPPED!
-
-
-When Rosalind's contemptuous eyes abandoned that silent interchange of
-looks, they fell upon the envelope in Hylda Prout's hand, nor could she
-help noticing that round the flap it was clumsily stained with gum. Yet
-Osborne had written her saying that it had been unopened....
-
-The other woman stepped to the door of the cab.
-
-"Miss Marsh?" she inquired, with an assumed lack of knowledge that was
-insolent in itself.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Mr. Osborne left this for you, if you called."
-
-"Thank you."
-
-The business was ended, yet the lady-secretary still stood there,
-staring brazenly at Rosalind's face.
-
-"Drive on----"
-
-Rosalind raised her gloved hand to attract the driver's attention.
-
-"One moment, Miss Marsh," said Hylda, also raising a hand to forbid him
-to move; "I want to tell you something--You are very anxious on poor Mr.
-Osborne's behalf, are you not?"
-
-"I thought he was rich? You are not to say 'poor Mr. Osborne.'"
-
-"Is that why you are so anxious, because he is rich?" and those
-golden-brown eyes suddenly blazed out outrageously.
-
-"Driver, go on, please!" cried Rosalind again.
-
-"Wait, cabman!" cried Hylda imperiously.... "Stay a little--Miss
-Marsh--one word--I cannot let you waste your sympathies as you do. You
-believe that Mr. Osborne is friendless; and you offer him your
-friendship----"
-
-"_I!_"
-
-Rosalind laughed a little, a laugh with a dangerous chuckle in it that
-might have carried a warning to one who knew her.
-
-"Do you not say so in that letter? In it you tell him that since the
-night at the sun-dial, when you were '_brutal_' to him----"
-
-"You know, then, my letter--by heart?" said Rosalind, her eyes sparkling
-and cheeks aflame. "That is quite charming of you! You have been at the
-pains to read it?"
-
-"No, of course, Mr. Osborne wouldn't exactly _show_ it to me, nor did I
-ask him. But I think you guess that I am in Mr. Osborne's confidence."
-
-"Mr. Osborne, it would seem, has--read it? He even thought the contents
-of sufficient importance to repeat them to his typist? Is that so?"
-
-"Mr. Osborne repeats many things to me, Miss Marsh--by habit. You being
-a stranger to him, do not know him well yet, but I have been with him
-some time, you see. As to his reading it, I know that you telegraphed
-him not to, and he received the telegram before the letter, I admit;
-but, the letter once in his hand, it became his private property, of
-course. He had a right to read it."
-
-A stone in Rosalind's bosom where her heart had been ached like a wound;
-yet her lips smiled--a hard smile.
-
-"But then, having read, to be at the pains to seal it down again!" she
-said. "It seems superfluous, a contemptible subterfuge."
-
-"Oh, well," sneered Hylda, with a pouting laugh, "he is not George
-Washington--a little harmless deception."
-
-"But you cry out all his secrets!"
-
-"To you."
-
-"Why to me?"
-
-"I save you from troubling your head about him. He is not so friendless
-as you have imagined."
-
-"Happy man! And was it you who wrote me the anonymous information that
-he was not Glyn but Osborne?"
-
-"No, that was someone else."
-
-And now Rosalind, blighting her with her icy smile, which no inward
-fires could melt, said contemplatively:
-
-"I am afraid you are not speaking the truth. I shall tell Mr. Osborne to
-get rid of you."
-
-The dart was well planted. The paid secretary's lips twitched and
-quivered.
-
-"Try it! He'll laugh at you!" she retorted.
-
-"No, I think he will do it--to please me!"
-
-Sad to relate, our gracious Rosalind was deliberately adding oil to the
-fires of hate and rage that she saw devouring Hylda Prout; and when
-Hylda again spoke it was from a fiery soul that peered out of a ghost's
-face.
-
-"Will he?--to please you?" she said low, hissingly, leaning forward. "He
-has a record in a diary of the girls he has kissed, and the number of
-days from the first sight to the first kiss. He only wanted to see in
-how few days he could secure you."
-
-This vulgarity astonished its hearer. Rosalind shrank a little; her
-smile became forced and strained; she could only murmur:
-
-"Oh, you needn't be so bourgeoise."
-
-Hylda chuckled again maliciously.
-
-"It's the mere truth."
-
-"Still, I think I shall warn him against you, and have you
-dismissed,"--this with that feminine instinct of the dagger that plunged
-deepest, the lash that cut most bitterly.
-
-"You try!" hissed Hylda sharply, as it were secretly, with a nod of
-menace. "I am not anybody! I am not some defenseless housemaid, the only
-rival you have experienced hitherto, perhaps. I am--at any rate, you
-try! You dare! Touch me, and I'll wither your arm----"
-
-"Drive on!" cried Rosalind almost in a scream.
-
-"Wait!" shrilled Hylda--"you _shall_ hear me!"
-
-"Cabman, please----!" wailed Rosalind despairingly.
-
-And now at last the cab was off, Hylda Prout running with it to pant
-into it some final rancor; and when it left her, she remained there on
-the pavement a minute, unable to move, trembling from head to foot,
-watching the vehicle as it sped away from her.
-
-When she re-entered the library the first thing that she saw was
-Rosalind's cross-folded note to Osborne, and, still burning inwardly,
-she snatched it up, tore it open, and read:
-
- I will write again. Meantime, high hope! _I_ have discovered
- that your purloined dagger has been in the possession of the
- late lady's-maid, Pauline. "A small thing but mine own." I am
- now taking it to Inspector Furneaux's.
- R. M.
-
-Hylda dashed the paper to the ground, put her foot on it, then catching
-it up, worried it in her hands to atoms which she threw into a
-waste-paper basket. Then she collapsed into a chair at her desk, her
-arms thrown heedlessly over some documents, and her face buried between
-them.
-
-"I have gone too far, too far, too far----"
-
-Now that her passion had burnt to ashes this was her thought. A crisis,
-it was clear, had come, and something had to be done, to be decided,
-now--that very day. Rosalind would surely tell Osborne what she, Hylda,
-had said, how she had acted, and then all would be up with Hylda, no
-hope left, her whole house in ruins about her, not one stone left
-standing on another. Either she must bind Osborne irrevocably to her at
-once, or her brain must devise some means of keeping Osborne and
-Rosalind from meeting--or both. But how achieve the apparently
-impossible? Osborne, she knew, was at that moment at Rosalind's
-residence, and if Rosalind was now going home ... they would meet! Hylda
-moved her buried head from side to side, woe-ridden, in the grip of a
-hundred fangs and agonies. She had boasted to Rosalind that she was not
-a whimpering housemaid, but of a better texture: and if that was an
-actual truth, the present moment must prove it. Yet she sat there with a
-buried head, weakly weeping....
-
-Suddenly she thought of the words in Rosalind's note to Osborne, which
-she had thrown into the basket: "I have discovered that your purloined
-dagger has been in the possession of the late lady's-maid, Pauline.... I
-am now taking it to Inspector Furneaux's...."
-
-That, then, was the person who had the dagger which had been so sought
-and speculated about--Pauline Dessaulx!
-
-And at the recollection of the name, Hylda's racked brain, driven to
-invent, invented like lightning. Up she sprang, caught at her hat, and
-rushed away, pinning it on to her magnificent red hair in her flight,
-her eyes staring with haste. In the street she leapt into a
-motor-cab--to Soho.
-
-She was soon there. As if pursued by furies she pelted up two foul
-staircases, and at a top back room, rapped pressingly, fiercely, with
-the clenched knuckles of both hands upon the panels. As a man in his
-shirt-sleeves, his braces dropped, smoking a cigarette, opened the door
-to her, she almost fell in on him, and the burning words burst from her
-tongue's tip:
-
-"Antonio!--it's all up with Pauline--the dagger she did it with--has
-been found--by a woman--the same woman from Tormouth whom you and I
-tracked to Porchester Gardens--Pauline is in her employ probably--tell
-Janoc--he has wits--he may do something before it is too late--the woman
-has the dagger--in a motor-cab--in a long, narrow box--she is this
-instant taking it to Inspector Furneaux's house--if _she_ lives, Pauline
-hangs--tell Janoc that, Antonio--don't stare--tell Janoc--it is _she_ or
-Pauline--let him choose----"
-
-"_Grand Dieu!_"
-
-"Don't stare--don't stand--I'm gone."
-
-She ran out; and almost as she was down the stair Antonio had thrown on
-a coat and was flying down behind her.
-
-He ran down three narrow streets to Poland Street, darted up a stair,
-broke into a room; and there on the floor, stretched face downwards, lay
-the lank length of Janoc's body, a map of Europe spread before him, on
-which with an ivory pointer he was marking lines from town to town. He
-glanced at the intruder with a frowning brow, yet he was up like an
-acrobat, as the tidings leapt off Antonio's tongue.
-
-"Found!" he whispered hoarsely, "Pauline found!"
-
-"Yes, and the dagger found, too!"
-
-"Found! dearest of my heart! my sweet sister!"
-
-Janoc clasped to his bosom a phantom form, and kissed thrice at the air.
-
-"Yes, and the dagger found that she did it with----"
-
-"The dagger?"
-
-"Yes, and the lady is this minute taking it to Inspector Furneaux----"
-
-"Lady?--Oh, found! found! dear, sweet sister, why didst thou hide
-thyself from me?"
-
-Janoc spread his arms with a face of rapture. He could only assimilate
-the one great fact in his joy.
-
-"But Janoc--listen--the lady----"
-
-"Lady?"
-
-"The lady who has the dagger! Listen, my friend--she is on the way to
-Inspector Furneaux with Pauline's dagger----"
-
-"_Mille diables!_"
-
-"Janoc, what is to be done? O, arouse yourself, _pour l'amour de
-Dieu_--Pauline will be hanged----"
-
-"Hanged? Yes! They hang women, I know, in England--the only country in
-Europe--this ugly nest of savages. Yes! they hang them by the neck on
-the gallows here--the gallant gentlemen! But they won't hang _her_,
-Antonio! Let them touch her, and _I_, I set all England dancing like a
-sandstorm of the Sahara! Furneaux's house No. 12?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And the lady's address?"
-
-"Porchester Gardens--unfortunately I did not notice the number of the
-house."
-
-"Pity: weak. What is she like, this lady?"
-
-"Middle-size--plentiful brown hair--eyes blue--beautiful in the cold
-English way, elegant, too--yes, a pretty woman--I saw her in
-Tormouth----"
-
-"Come with me"--and Janoc was in action, with a suddenness, a fury, a
-contrast with his previous stillness of listening that was very
-remarkable--as if he had waited for the instant of action to sound, and
-then said: "Here it is! I am ready!"
-
-Out stretched his long leg, as he bent forward into running, catching at
-his cap and revolver with one sweep of his right arm, and at Antonio
-with a snatch of the left; and from that moment his motions were in the
-tone of the forced marches of Napoleon--not an instant lost in the
-business he was at.
-
-He took Antonio in a cab to Furneaux's house in Sinclair Street. There
-he was nudged by Antonio, as they drove up, with a hysterical sob of
-"See! There she is!"
-
-Rosalind was driving away at the moment. She had, then, seen Furneaux?
-told Furneaux? given Furneaux the dagger? In that case, the battle would
-lie between Furneaux and Janoc that day. Janoc's flesh was pale, but it
-was the paleness of iron, his eyes were full of fire. In his heart he
-was a hero, in brain and head an assassin!
-
-He alighted at the detective's house, letting Rosalind go. But the
-landlady of the flat told him that Furneaux had not been at home for two
-hours, and was not expected for another hour. Rosalind, then, had not
-seen him; and the battle swung back to its first ground as between
-Rosalind and Janoc. Had the lady who had just called left any parcel, or
-any weapon for Mr. Furneaux? The answer was "No." He hurried down into
-his cab, to make for Rosalind's boarding-house.
-
-But Antonio had not noted the number, and, to discover it, Janoc started
-off to Osborne's house, to ask it of Miss Prout.
-
-Now, Rosalind was herself driving to the same place. On learning that
-Furneaux was not at home, she had paced his sitting-room a little while,
-undecided whether to wait, or to leave a message and go home. Then the
-new impulse had occurred in her to go to Osborne's in the meantime, and
-then return to Furneaux. Hylda Prout had contrived to put a lump in her
-throat and a firebrand in her bosom, an arrogance, a hot rancor. How
-much of what the hussy had said against Osborne might contain some truth
-she did not know; it had so scorched her, and inflamed her gorge, and
-kindled her eyes, that she had not had time to question its probability
-in her preoccupation with the gall and smart of it. But that Osborne
-should have opened the letter, and then written to say he had not--this
-was a vileness that the slightest reflection found to be incredible. The
-creature with the red hair certainly knew what was in the letter,
-but--might she not have opened it herself? And if any part of her
-statements were false, _all_ might be false. An impatience to see
-Osborne instantly seized and transported Rosalind. He had honest
-eyes--had she not whispered it many a time to her heart? She hurried off
-to him.... And by accident Janoc went after her.
-
-Osborne himself had arrived home some ten minutes before this, after a
-very cold reception from Mrs. Marsh at Porchester Gardens.
-
-As he entered the library, he saw Hylda Prout standing in the middle of
-the room with a face of ecstasy which astonished him. She, lately
-arrived back from her visit to the Italian, had heard him come, and had
-leapt up to confront him, her heart galloping in her throat.
-
-"Anything wrong?" he asked with a quick glance at her.
-
-"Miss Marsh has been here."
-
-"Ah?... Miss Marsh?"
-
-She made a mad step toward him. The words that she uttered rasped
-harshly. She did not recognize her own voice.
-
-"I told her straight out that it is not the slightest good her running
-after you."
-
-"You told her _what_?"
-
-Amazement struggled with indignation in his face. All the world seemed
-to have gone mad when the pale, studiously sedate secretary used such
-words of frenzy.
-
-"I meant to stop--her pursuit of you.... Mr. Osborne--hear me--I--I...."
-Excessive emotion overpowered her. In attempting to say more she panted
-with distress.
-
-"What is it all about, Miss Prout? Calm yourself, please--be quiet"--he
-said it with some effort to express both his resentment and his
-authority.
-
-"Mr. Osborne--I warn you--I cannot endure--any rival----"
-
-"Who can't? you speak of a _rival_!"
-
-"Oh, Heaven, give me strength--words to explain. Ah!..."
-
-She had been standing with her left hand resting on a table, shivering
-like a sail in the wind, and now the hand suddenly gave way under her,
-and she sank after it, falling to the ground in a faint, while her head
-struck the edge of the table in her descent.
-
-"Well, if this isn't the limit," muttered Osborne, as he ran to her,
-calling loudly for Jenkins. He lifted her to a sofa, and, in his flurry,
-not knowing what else to do, wet her forehead with a little water from a
-carafe. Jenkins had not heard his call, and by the time he looked round
-for a bell to summon help, her eyes unclosed themselves, and she smiled
-at him.
-
-"You are there...."
-
-"You feel better now?" He sat on a chair at her head, looking down on
-her, wondering what inane words he should use to extricate both himself
-and her from an absurd position.
-
-"It is all right.... I must have fainted. I have undergone a great
-strain, a dreadful strain. You should be sorry for me. Oh, I have
-loved--much."
-
-"Miss Prout----"
-
-"No, don't call me that, or you kill me. You should be sorry for me, if
-you have any pity, any shred of humanity in your heart. I have--passed
-through flames, and drunk of a cup of fire. Ten women, yes, ten--have
-hungered and wailed in me. I tell _you_--yet to whom should I tell it
-but to you?"
-
-She smiled a ravished smile of pain; her hand fell upon his heavily; her
-restless head swung from side to side.
-
-"Well, I am very sorry," said Osborne, forced to gentleness in spite of
-the anger that had consumed him earlier. "It is impossible not to
-believe you sincere. But, you will admit, all this is very singular and
-unexpected. I am afraid now that I shall have to send you on a trip
-to--Switzerland; or else go myself. Better you--it is chilling there, on
-the glaciers."
-
-Yet the attempt at humor died when he looked at her face with its
-languishing, sick eyes, its expression of swooning luxury. She sighed
-deeply.
-
-"No, you cannot escape me now, I think, or I you," she murmured. "There
-are powers too profound to be run from when once at work, like the
-suction of whirlpools. If you don't love me, my love is a force enough
-for two, for a thousand. It will draw and compel you. Yes, I think so.
-It will either warm you, or burn you to ashes--and myself, too. Oh, I
-swear to Heaven! It will, it shall! You shouldn't have pressed my hand
-that night."
-
-"Pressed your hand! on which night?" asked Osborne, who had now turned
-quite pale, and wanted to run quickly out of the house but could not.
-
-"What, have you _forgotten_?" she asked with tender reproach, gazing
-into his eyes; "the night I was going to see my brother nine months ago,
-and you went with me to Euston, and in saying good-by you----"
-
-She suddenly covered her eyes with her fingers in a rapture at the
-memory.
-
-Osborne stared blankly at her. He recalled the farewell at Euston, which
-was accidental, but he certainly had no memory of having pressed her
-hand.
-
-"I loved you before," her lips just whispered in a pitiful assumption of
-confidence, "but timidly, not admitting it to myself. With that pressure
-of your hand, I was done with maidenhood, my soul rushed to you. After
-that, you were mine, and I was yours."
-
-The words almost fainted on her bitten under lip, and in Osborne, too, a
-rush of soul, or of blood, took place, a little flush of his forehead.
-It was a bewitching woman who lay there before him, with that fair
-freckle-splashed face couched in its cloud of red hair.
-
-"Come, now," he said, valiantly striving after the commonplace, "you are
-ill--you hardly know yet what you are saying."
-
-She half sat up suddenly, bending eagerly toward him.
-
-"Is it pity? Is it 'yes'?"
-
-"Please, please, let us forget that this has ever----"
-
-"It _would_ be 'yes' instantly but for that Tormouth girl! Oh, drive her
-out of your mind! That cannot be--I could never, never permit it! For
-that reason alone--and besides, you are about to be arrested----"
-
-"I!"
-
-"Yes: listen--I know more of what is going on than you know. The man
-Furneaux, who, for his own reasons, hates you, and is eager to injure
-you, has even more proofs against you than you are aware of. _I_ happen
-to know that in his search of your trunks he has discovered something or
-other which he considers conclusive against you. And there is that
-housemaid at Feldisham Mansions, who screamed out 'Mr. Osborne did
-it!'--Furneaux only pretended at the inquest that she was too ill to be
-present, because he did not want to produce the whole weight of his
-evidence just then. But he has her, too, safe up his sleeve, and _she_
-is willing to swear against you. And now he has got hold of your Saracen
-dagger. But don't you fear _him_: I shall know how to foil him at the
-last; I alone have knowledge that will surely make him look a fool.
-Trust in me! I tell you so. But I can't help your being arrested--that
-must happen. Believe me, for I know. And let that once take place, and
-that Tormouth girl will never look at you again. I understand her class,
-with its prides and prejudices--she will never marry you--innocent or
-guilty--if you have once stood in the dock at an assize court. Such as
-she does not know what love is. _I_ would take you if you were a
-thousand times guilty--and I only can prove you innocent--even if you
-were guilty--because I am yours--your preordained wife--oh, I shall die
-of my love--yes, kiss me--yes--now----"
-
-The torrent of words ended in a fierce fight for breath. Her eyes were
-glaring like two lakes of conflagration, her cheeks crimson, her
-forehead pale. Unexpectedly, eagerly, she caught him round the neck in
-an embrace from which there was no escape. She drew him almost to his
-knees, and pressed his lips to hers with a passion that frightened and
-repelled him.
-
-And he was in the thick of this unhappy and ridiculous experience when
-he heard behind him an astonished "Oh!" from someone, while some other
-person seemed to laugh in angry embarrassment.
-
-It was Jenkins who had uttered the "Oh!" and when the horrified Osborne
-glanced round he saw Rosalind's eyes peering over Jenkins's shoulder.
-She it was who had so lightly, so perplexedly, laughed.
-
-Before he could free himself and spring up she was gone. She had
-murmured to Jenkins: "Some other time," and fled.
-
-As she ran out blindly, and was springing into the cab, Janoc, in
-pursuit of her, drove up. In an instant he was looking in through the
-door of the cab.
-
-"Miss Marsh?" he inquired.
-
-"Yes."
-
-His hands met, wringing in distress.
-
-"You are the lady I am searching for, the mistress of the young girl
-Pauline Dessaulx, is it not? I am her brother. You see--you can see--the
-resemblance in our faces. She threatens this instant to commit the
-suicide----"
-
-Rosalind was forced to forget her own sufferings in this new terror.
-
-"Pauline!" she cried, "I am not her employer. Moreover, she is ill--in
-bed----"
-
-"She has escaped to my lodging during your absence from home! Something
-dreadful has happened to her--she speaks of the loss of some weapon--one
-cannot understand her ravings! And unless she sees you--her hands cannot
-be kept from destroying herself--Oh, lady! lady! Come to my sweet
-sister----"
-
-Rosalind looked at him with the scared eyes of one who hears, yet not
-understands. There was a mad probability in all this, since Pauline
-_might_ have discovered the loss of the daggers; and, in her present
-anguish of spirit, the thought that the man's story might only be a
-device to lure her into some trap never entered Rosalind's head. Indeed,
-in her weariness of everything, she regarded the mission of succor as a
-relief.
-
-"Where do you live? I will go with you," she said.
-
-"Lady! Lady! Thank God!" he exclaimed. "It is not far from here, in
-Soho."
-
-"You must come in my cab," said Rosalind.
-
-Janoc ran to pay his own cabman, came back instantly, and they started
-eastward, just as Osborne, with the wild face of a man falling down a
-precipice, rushed to his door, calling after them frantically: "Hi,
-there! Stop! Stop! For Heaven's sake----"
-
-But the cab went on its way.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- THE SARACEN DAGGER
-
-
-Next morning, just as the clock was striking eight, Osborne was rising
-from his bed after a night of unrest when Jenkins rapped at the door and
-came in, deferential and calm.
-
-"Mrs. Marsh below to see you, sir," he announced.
-
-Osborne blinked and stared with the air of a man not thoroughly awake,
-though it was his mind, not his body, that was torpid.
-
-"Mrs.," he said, "not Miss?"
-
-"No, sir, Mrs."
-
-"I'll be there in five minutes," he hissed with a fierce arousing of his
-faculties, and never before had he flung on his clothes in such a flurry
-of haste; in less than five minutes he was flying down the stairs.
-
-"Forgive me!" broke from his lips, as he entered the drawing-room, and
-"Forgive me!" his visitor was saying to him in the same instant.
-
-It was pitiful to see her--she, ever so enthroned in serenity, from whom
-such a thing as agitation had seemed so remote, was wildly agitated now.
-That pathetic pallor of the aged when their heart is in labor now
-underlay her skin. Her lips, her fingers, trembled; the tip of her nose,
-showing under her half-raised veil, was pinched.
-
-"The early hour--it is so distressing--I beg your forgiveness--I am in
-most dreadful trouble----"
-
-"Please sit down," he said, touching her hand, "and let me get you some
-breakfast."
-
-"No, nothing--I couldn't eat--it is Rosalind----"
-
-Now he, too, went a shade paler.
-
-"What of Rosalind?"
-
-"Do you by chance know anything of her whereabouts?"
-
-"No!"
-
-"She has disappeared."
-
-Her head bowed, and a sob broke from her bosom.
-
-"Disappeared"--his lips breathed the word foolishly after her, while he
-looked at her almost stupidly.
-
-Mrs. Marsh's hand dropped with a little nervous fling.
-
-"She has not been at home all night. She left the house apparently
-between four and five yesterday--I was out; then I came in; then you
-called.... She has not come home--it is impossible to conceive...."
-
-"Oh, she has slept with some friend," he said, feeling that the world
-reeled around him.
-
-"No, she has never done that without letting me know.... She would
-surely have telegraphed me.... It is quite impossible even to imagine
-what dispensation of God----"
-
-She stopped, her lips working; suddenly covering her eyes with her hand,
-as another sob gushed from her, she humbly muttered:
-
-"Forgive me. I am nearly out of my senses."
-
-He sprang up, touched a bell, and whispered to Jenkins, who instantly
-was with him: "Brandy--_quick_." Then, running to kneel at the old
-lady's chair, he touched her left hand, saying: "Take heart--trust in
-God's Providence--rely upon _me_."
-
-"You believe, then, that you may find her----?"
-
-"Surely: whatever else I may fail in, I could not fail now.... Just one
-sip of this to oblige me." Jenkins had stolen in, and she drank a little
-out of the glass that Osborne offered.
-
-"You must think it odd," she said, "that I come to you. I could not give
-a reason--but I was so distracted and benumbed. I thought of you, and
-felt impelled----"
-
-"You were right," he said. "I am the proper person to appeal to in this
-case. Besides, she was here yesterday----"
-
-"Rosalind?"
-
-"The fact is----"
-
-"Oh, she was here? Well, that is something discovered! I did well to
-come. Yes--you were saying----"
-
-"I will tell you everything. Three days ago she wrote me a letter----"
-
-"Rosalind?"
-
-"Are you astonished?"
-
-"I understood--I thought--that your friendship with her had suffered
-some--check."
-
-"That is so," said Osborne with a bent head. "You may remember the night
-of the dance at the Abbey down at Tormouth. That night, when I was full
-of hopes of her favor, she suddenly cast me off like a burr from her
-robe--I am not even now sure why--unless she had discovered that my name
-was not Glyn."
-
-"If so, she no doubt considered that a sufficient reason, Mr. Osborne,"
-said Mrs. Marsh, a chill in her tone. "One does not like the names of
-one's friends to be detachable labels."
-
-"Don't think that I blame her one bit!" cried Osborne--"no more than I
-blame myself. I was ordered by--the police to take a name. There seemed
-to be good reason for it. I only blame my baleful fate. Anyway, so it
-was. She dropped me--into the Pit. But she was at the inquest----"
-
-"Indeed? At the inquest. She was there. Singular."
-
-"Deeply veiled. She didn't think, I suppose, that I should know. But I
-should feel her presence in the blackest----"
-
-"Mr. Osborne--I must beg--do not make your declarations to _me_----"
-
-"May I not? Be good--be pitiful. Here am I, charged with guilt,
-conscious of innocence----"
-
-"Let us suppose all that, but are you a man free to make declarations of
-love? One would say that you are, as it were, married for some time to
-come to the lady who has lately been buried."
-
-"True," said Osborne--"in the eyes of the world, in a formal way: but in
-the eyes of those near to me? Oh, I appeal to your indulgence, your
-friendship, your heart. Tell me that you forgive, that you understand
-me! and then I shall be so exuberantly gladsome that in the sweep of my
-exhilaration I shall go straight and find her, wherever she lies
-hidden.... Will you not say 'yes' on those terms?" He smiled wanly, with
-a hungry cajolery, looking into her face.
-
-But she did not unbend.
-
-"Let us first find her! and then other things may be discussed. But to
-find her! it is past all knowing--Oh, deep is the trouble of my soul
-to-day, Mr. Osborne!"
-
-"Wait--hope----"
-
-"But you were speaking of yesterday."
-
-"Yes. She was at the inquest: and when I saw her--think how I felt! I
-said: 'She believes in me.' And three days after that she wrote to
-me----"
-
-"My poor Rosalind!" murmured Mrs. Marsh. "She suffered more than I
-imagined. Her nature is more recondite than the well in which Truth
-dwells. What _could_ she have written to you?"
-
-"That I don't know."
-
-"How----?"
-
-"As I was about to open the letter, a telegram came from her. 'Don't
-read my letter: I will call for it unopened in person,' it said. Picture
-my agony then! And now I am going to tell you something that will move
-you to compassion for me, if you never had it before. Yesterday she
-called for the letter. I was with you at Porchester Gardens at that very
-hour. When I came home, an extraordinary scene awaited me with my
-secretary, a Miss Prout.... I tell you this as to a friend, a Mother,
-who will believe even the incredible. An extraordinary scene.... Without
-the least warning, the least encouragement that I know of, Miss Prout
-declared herself in love with me. While I stood astonished, she fainted.
-I bore her to a sofa. Soon after she opened her eyes, she--drew--me to
-her--no, I will say that I was _not_ to blame; and I was in that
-situation, when the library door opened, and who should be there looking
-at me but--yes--_she_."
-
-Mrs. Marsh's eyes fell. There was a little pressure of the lips that
-revealed scant sympathy with compromising situations. And suddenly a
-thought turned her skin to a ghastlier white. What if the sight of that
-scene accounted for Rosalind's disappearance? If Rosalind was dead--by
-her own act? The old lady had often to admit that she did not know the
-deepest deeps of her daughter's character. But she banished the
-half-thought hurriedly, contenting herself with saying aloud:
-
-"That made the second time she came to you yesterday. Why a second
-time?"
-
-"I have no idea!" was the dismayed reply. "She uttered not one
-word--just turned away, and hurried out to her waiting cab--and by the
-time I could wring myself free, and run after her, the cab was going
-off. I shouted--I ran at top speed--she would not stop. I think a man
-was in the cab with her----"
-
-"A man, you say?"
-
-"I think so. I just caught a glimpse of a face that looked out
-sideways--a dark man he seemed to me--I'm not sure."
-
-"It becomes more and more mysterious!"
-
-"Well, we must be making a move to do something--first, have you
-breakfasted?"
-
-She had eaten nothing! Osborne persuaded her to join him in a hurried
-meal, during which his motor-car arrived, and soon they set off
-together. He was for going straight to the police, but she shrank from
-the notoriety of that final exposure until she had the clear assurance
-that it was absolutely necessary. So they drove from friend to friend of
-the Marshes who might possibly have some information; then drove home to
-Mrs. Prawser's to see if there was news. Osborne had luncheon there--a
-polite pretense at eating, since they were too full of wonder and woe to
-care for food. By this time Mrs. Marsh had unbent somewhat to Osborne,
-and humbly enough had said to him, "Oh, find her, and if she is alive,
-every other consideration shall weigh less than my boundless gratitude
-to you!"
-
-After the luncheon they again drove about London, making inquiries
-without hope wherever the least chance of a clew lay; and finally, near
-six, they went to Scotland Yard.
-
-To Inspector Winter in his office the whole tale was told; and, after
-sitting at his desk in a long silence, frowning upon the story, he said
-at last:
-
-"Well, there is, of course, a great deal more in this than meets the
-eye." He spun round to Mrs. Marsh: "Has your daughter undergone anything
-to upset her at home lately?"
-
-"Nothing," was the answer. "One of the servants in the house has had a
-sort of hysteria: but that did not trouble Rosalind beyond the mere
-exercise of womanly sympathy."
-
-"Any visitors? Any odd circumstance in that way?"
-
-"No unusual visitors--except an Inspector Furneaux, who--twice, I
-think--had interviews with her. She was not very explicit in telling me
-the subject of them."
-
-"Inspector Furneaux," muttered Winter. To himself he said: "I thought
-somehow that this thing was connected with Feldisham Mansions." And at
-once now, with a little start, he asked: "What, by the way, is the name
-of the servant who has had the hysteria?"
-
-"Her name is Pauline," answered Mrs. Marsh--"a French girl."
-
-"Ah, Pauline!" said Winter--"just so."
-
-The fewness of his words gave proof of the activity of his brain. He
-knew how Clarke had obtained the diary of Rose de Bercy from Pauline,
-and he felt that Pauline was in some undetermined way connected with the
-murder. He knew, too, that she was now to be found somewhere in
-Porchester Gardens, and had intended looking her up for general
-inquiries before two days had passed. That Pauline might actually have
-had a hand in the crime had never entered into his speculations--he was
-far too hot in these days on the trail of Furneaux, who was being
-constantly watched by his instructions.
-
-"I think I will see this Pauline to-night," he said. "Meantime, I can
-only recommend you to hope, Mrs. Marsh. These things generally have some
-simple explanation in the end, and turn out less black than they look.
-Expect me, then, at your residence within an hour."
-
-But when Mrs. Marsh and Osborne were gone he was perplexed, remembering
-that this was Thursday evening, for he had promised himself on this very
-evening to be at a spot which he had been told by one of his men that
-Furneaux had visited on two previous Thursday evenings, a spot where he
-would see a sight that would interest him.
-
-While he was on the horns of the dilemma as to going there, or going to
-Pauline, Inspector Clarke entered: and at once Winter shelved upon
-Clarke the business of sounding Pauline.
-
-"You seem to have a lot of power over her--to make her give up the diary
-so promptly," he said to Clarke. "Go to her, then, get at the bottom of
-this business, and see if you cannot hit upon some connection between
-the disappearance of Miss Marsh and the murder of the actress."
-
-Clarke stood up with alacrity, and started off. Presently Winter himself
-was in a cab, making for the Brompton Cemetery.
-
-As for Clarke, the instant he was within sight of Porchester Gardens,
-his whole interest turned from Pauline Dessaulx and the vanished
-Rosalind to two men whom he saw in the street almost opposite the house
-in which Pauline lay. They were Janoc and the Italian, Antonio, and
-Antonio seemed to be reasoning and pleading with Janoc, who had the
-gestures of a man distracted.
-
-Hanging about near them was a third man, whom Clarke hardly noticed--a
-loafer in a long coat of rags, a hat without any crown, and visible
-toes--a diminutive loafer--Furneaux, in fact, who, for his own reasons,
-was also interested in Janoc in these days.
-
-Every now and again Janoc looked up at the windows of Mrs. Marsh's
-residence with frantic gestures, and a crying face--a thing which
-greatly struck Clarke; and anon the loafer passed by Janoc and Antonio,
-unobserved, peering into the gutter for the cast-aside ends of cigars
-and cigarettes.
-
-Instantly Clarke stole down the opposite side of the square into which
-the house faced, looked about him, saw no one, climbed some railings,
-and then through the bushes stole near to the pavement where the
-foreigners stood. There, concealed in the shrubbery, he could clearly
-hear Janoc say:
-
-"Am I never to see her? My little one! But I am about to see her! I will
-knock at that door, and clasp her in my arms."
-
-"My friend, be reasonable!" pleaded Antonio, holding the arm of Janoc,
-who made more show of tearing himself free than he made real
-effort--with that melodramatic excess of gesture to which the Latin
-races are prone. "Be reasonable! Oh, she is wiser than you! She has
-hidden herself from you because she realizes the danger of being seen
-near you even in the dark. Be sure that she has longed to see you as
-keenly as you hunger to see her; but she feels that there must be no
-meeting with so many spying eyes in the world----"
-
-"Let them spy! but they shall not keep me from the embrace of one whom I
-love, of one who has suffered," said Janoc, covering his face. "Oh, when
-I think of your cruelty--you who all the time knew where she was and did
-not tell me!"
-
-"I confess it, but I acted for the best," said Antonio. "She wrote to me
-three days after the murder, so that she might have news of you. I met
-her, and received from her that bit of lace from the actress's dress
-which I put into Osborne's bag at Tormouth, to throw still more doubt
-upon him. But she implored me not to reveal to you where she was, lest,
-if you should be seen with her, suspicion of the murder should fall upon
-you----"
-
-"Her heart's goodness! My sister! My little one!" exclaimed Janoc.
-
-"Only be patient!" wooed Antonio--"do not go to her. Soon she will make
-her escape to France, and you also, and then you will embrace the one
-the other. And now you have no longer cause for much anxiety as to her
-capture, for the dagger cannot be found with her, since it lies safe in
-your room in your own keeping, and to-night you will drop it into the
-river, where it will be buried forever. Do not go to her----"
-
-These were the last words of the dialogue that Clarke heard, for the
-tidings that "the dagger" was in Janoc's room sent him creeping away
-through the bushes. He was soon over the railings and in a cab, making
-for Soho; and behind him in another cab went Furneaux, whose driver,
-looking at his fare's attire, had said, "Pay first, and then I'll take
-you."
-
-Clarke, for his part, had no difficulty in entering Janoc's room with
-his skeleton-keys--indeed, he had been there before! Nor was there any
-difficulty in finding the dagger. There it lay, with another, in the
-narrow cardboard box into which Rosalind had put both weapons on finding
-them behind the shelf of books in Pauline's room.
-
-Clarke's eyes, as they fell at last upon that Saracen blade which he
-knew so well without ever having seen it, pored, gloated over it, with a
-glitter in them.
-
-He relocked the trunk, relocked the door, and with the box held fast,
-ran down the three stairs to his cab--feeling himself a made man, a head
-taller than all Scotland Yard that night. He put his precious find on
-the interior front seat of the cab--a four-wheeler; for in his eagerness
-he had jumped into the first wheeled thing that he had seen, and, having
-lodged the box inside, being anxious to hide it, he made a step forward
-toward the driver, to tell him whither he had now to drive. Then he
-entered, shut the door, and, as the vehicle drove off, put out his hand
-to the box to feast his eyes on its contents again. But the box was
-gone--no daggers were there!
-
-"Stop!" howled Clarke.
-
-The cab stopped, but it was all in vain. The loafer, who had opened the
-other door of the cab with swift deftness while Clarke spoke to the
-driver, had long since turned a near corner with box and daggers, and
-was well away. Clarke, standing in the street, glanced up at the sky,
-down at the ground, and stared round about, like a man who does not know
-in which world he finds himself.
-
-Meantime, Furneaux hailed another cab, again having to pay in advance,
-and started off on the drive to Brompton Cemetery--where Winter was
-already in hiding, awaiting his arrival.
-
-Something like a storm of wind was tearing the night to pieces, and the
-trees of the place of graves gesticulated as if they were wrangling. The
-moon had moved up, all involved in heavy clouds whose grotesque shapes
-her glare struck into garish contrasts of black against silver. Furneaux
-bent his way against the gale, holding on his dilapidated hat, his rags
-fluttering fantastically behind him, till he came to the one grave he
-sought--the cheerless resting-place of Rose de Bercy. The very spirit of
-gloom and loneliness brooded here, in a nook almost inclosed with
-foliage. As yet no stone had been erected. The grave was just a narrow
-oblong of red marl and turf, which the driven rain now made soft and
-yielding. On it lay two withered wreaths.
-
-Furneaux, standing by it, took off his hat, and the rain flecked his
-hair. Then from a breast-pocket of his rags he took out a little funnel
-of paper, out of which he cast some Parma violets upon the mound. This
-was Thursday--and Rose de Bercy had been murdered on a Thursday.
-
- [Illustration: Then from a breast-pocket he took a little funnel of
- paper
- _Page 219_]
-
-After that he stood there perhaps twenty minutes, his head bent in
-meditation.
-
-Then he peered cautiously into the dark about him, took a penknife with
-a good-sized blade from a pocket, and with it set to work to make a
-grave within the grave--a grave just big and deep enough to contain the
-box with the daggers. He buried his singular tribute and covered it
-over.
-
-After this he waited silently, apparently lost in thought, for some ten
-minutes more.
-
-Then, with that curious omniscience which sometimes seemed to belong to
-the man, he sent a strange cry into the gloom.
-
-"Are you anywhere about, Winter?"
-
-Nor was there anything aggressive in the call. It was subdued, sad,
-touched with solemnity, like the voice of a man who had wept, and dried
-his eyes.
-
-There was little delay before Winter appeared out of the shadow of his
-ambush.
-
-"I am!" he said; he was amazed beyond expression, yet his colleague had
-ever been incomprehensible in some things.
-
-"Windy night," said Furneaux, in an absurd affectation of ease.
-
-"And wet," said Winter, utterly at a loss how to take the other.
-
-"Odd that we should both come to visit the poor thing's grave at the
-same hour," remarked Furneaux.
-
-"It _may_ be odd," agreed Winter.
-
-There was a bitter silence.
-
-Then Furneaux's cold voice was heard again.
-
-"I dare say, now, it seems to you a suspicious thing that I should come
-to this grave at all."
-
-"Why should it, Furneaux?" asked his chief bluntly.
-
-"Yes, why?" said Furneaux. "I once knew her. I told you from the first
-that I knew her."
-
-"I remember: you did."
-
-"You asked no questions as to how I came to know her, or how long, or
-under what circumstances. Why did you not ask? Such questions occur
-among friends: and I--might have told you. But you did not ask."
-
-"Tell me now."
-
-"Winter, I'd see you hanged first!"
-
-The words came in a sharp rasp--his first sign of anger.
-
-"Hanged?" repeated Winter, flushing. "You'll see _me_ hanged? _I_
-usually see the hanging, Furneaux!"
-
-"Sometimes you do: sometimes you are not half smart enough!"
-
-Furneaux barked the taunt like a dog at him.
-
-Of the two, the big bluff man of Anglo-Saxon breed, mystified and
-saddened though he was, showed more self-control than the excitable
-little man more French than English.
-
-"This is an occasion when I leave the smartness to you, Furneaux," he
-said bitterly, "though there is a sort of clever duplicity which ought
-to be drained out of the blood, even if it cost a limb, or a life."
-
-"Ah, you prove yourself a trusty friend--loyal to the backbone!"
-
-"For Heaven's sake, make no appeal to our friendship!"
-
-"What! Appeal? I? Oh, this is too much!"
-
-"You are trying me beyond endurance. Can't you understand? Why keep up
-this farce of pretense?"
-
-There was genuine emotion in Winter's voice, but Furneaux's harsh laugh
-mingled with the soughing of the laden branches that tossed in the wind.
-
-"Farce, indeed!" he cried. "I refuse to continue it. Go, then, and be
-punished--you deserve it--you, whom I trusted more than a brother."
-
-He turned on his heel, and made off, a weird figure in those wind-blown
-tatters, and Winter watched him with eyes that had in them some element
-of fear, almost of hope, for in that hour he could have forgiven
-Furneaux were he standing by his corpse.
-
-But the instinct of duty soon came uppermost. He had seen his colleague
-bury something in the grave, and the briefest search brought to light
-the daggers in their cardboard coffin. Even in that overwhelming gloom
-of night and shivering yews he recognized one of the weapons. A groan
-broke from him, as it were, in protest.
-
-"Mad!" he sighed, "stark, staring mad--to leave this here, where he knew
-I must find it. My poor Furneaux! Perhaps that is best. I must defer
-action for a few hours, if only to give him a last chance."
-
-While the Chief Inspector was stumbling to the gate of the
-Cemetery--which was long since closed to all except those who could show
-an official permit--one of his subordinates was viewing the Feldisham
-Mansions crime in a far different light. Inspector Clarke, in whom
-elation at his discovery was chastened by chagrin at his loss, was
-walking towards Scotland Yard and saying to himself:
-
-"I can prove, anyhow, that I took the rotten things from his trunk. So
-now, Monsieur Janoc, the next and main item is to arrest you!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- OSBORNE MAKES A VOW
-
-
-When Inspector Winter returned to his office from the cemetery he sat at
-his desk, gazing at the two daggers before him, and awaiting the coming
-of Clarke, from whom he expected to receive a full report of an
-interview with Pauline Dessaulx in connection with the disappearance of
-Rosalind.
-
-There lay that long sought-for Saracen dagger at last: and Furneaux had
-it, had been caught burying it in the grave of her who had been killed
-by it. Was not this fact, added to the fact that Furneaux was seen in
-Osborne's museum before the murder--was it not enough to
-justify--indeed, enough to demand--Furneaux's arrest straight away? And
-Furneaux had visited Rose de Bercy that night--had been seen by Bertha
-Seward, the actress's cook! And yet Winter hesitated.... What had been
-Furneaux's motive? There was as yet no ray of light as to that, though
-Winter had caused elaborate inquiries to be made in Jersey as to
-Furneaux's earlier career there. And there were _two_ daggers buried,
-not one....
-
-"Where does _this_ come in, this _second_ dagger...?" wondered Winter, a
-maze of doubt and horror clouding his brain.
-
-Just then Clarke arrived, rather breathless, jubilant, excited, but
-Winter had already hidden the daggers instinctively--throwing them into
-a drawer of his writing-desk.
-
-"Well, what news of Miss Marsh?" he asked, with a semblance of official
-calm he was far from feeling.
-
-"The fact is, sir, I haven't been to Pauline Des----"
-
-"What!"
-
-"I was nearly at her door when I came across Gaston Janoc----"
-
-"Oh, Heavens!" muttered Winter in despair. "You and your eternal
-Janocs----"
-
-The smiling Clarke looked at his chief in full confidence that he would
-not be reprimanded for having disobeyed orders. Suddenly making three
-steps on tiptoe, he said in Winter's ear:
-
-"Don't be too startled--here's an amazing piece of information for you,
-sir--_it was Gaston Janoc_ who committed the Feldisham Mansions murder!"
-
-Winter stared at him without real comprehension. "Gaston Janoc!" his
-lips repeated.
-
-"I want to apply to-morrow for a warrant for his arrest," crowed Clarke.
-
-"But, man alive!--don't drive me distracted," cried out Winter; "what
-are you talking about?"
-
-"Oh, I am not acting on any impulse," said Clarke, placidly satisfied,
-enthroned on facts; "I may tell you now that I have been working on the
-Feldisham Mansions affair from the first on my own account. I couldn't
-help it. I was drawn to it as a needle by a magnet, and I now have all
-the threads--ten distinct proofs--in my hands. It was Gaston Janoc did
-it! Just listen to this, sir----"
-
-"Oh, do as you like about your wretched Anarchist, Clarke," said Winter
-pestered, waving him away; "I can't stop now. I sent you to do
-something, and you should have done it. Miss Marsh's mother is half dead
-with fright and grief; the thing is pressing, and I'll go myself."
-
-With a snatch at his hat, he rushed out, Clarke following sullenly to go
-home, though on his way northward, by sheer force of habit, he strolled
-through Soho, looked up at Janoc's windows, and presently, catching
-sight of Janoc himself coming out of the restaurant on the ground floor,
-nodded after him, muttering to himself: "Soon now----" and went off.
-
-But had he shadowed his Janoc just then, it might have been well! The
-Frenchman first went into a French shop labeled "Vins et Comestibles,"
-where he bought slices of sausage and a bottle of cheap wine, from which
-he got the cork drawn--he already carried half a loaf of bread wrapped
-in paper, and with bread, sausage, and wine, bent his way through
-spitting rain and high wind, his coat collar turned up round his neck,
-to a house in Poland Street.
-
-An unoccupied house: its window-glass thicker than itself with grime,
-broken in some of the panes, while in others were roughly daubed the
-words: "To Let." But he possessed a key, went in, picked up a
-candlestick in the passage, and lit the candle-end it contained.
-
-At the end of the passage he went down a narrow staircase of wood, then
-down some stone steps, to the door of a back cellar: and this, too, he
-opened with a key.
-
-Rosalind was crouching on the floor in the corner farthest from the
-door, her head bent down, her feet tucked under her skirt. She had been
-asleep: for the air in there was very heavy, the cellar hardly twelve
-feet square, no windows, and the slightest movement roused a cloud of
-dust. The walls were of rough stone, without break or feature, save
-three little vaulted caves like ovens in the wall facing the door, made
-to contain wine bottles and small barrels: in fact, one barrel and
-several empty bottles now lay about in the dust. Besides, there were
-sardine tins and a tin of mortadel, and relics of sausage and bread,
-with which Janoc had lately supplied his prisoner, with a bottle half
-full of wine, and one of water: all showing very dimly in the feeble
-rays of the candle.
-
-She looked at him, without moving, just raising her scornful eyes and no
-more, and he, holding up the light, looked at her a good time.
-
-"Lady," he said at last, "I have brought you some meat, wine, and
-bread."
-
-She made no answer. He stepped forward, and laid them by her side; then
-walked back to the door, as if to go out, coughing at the dust; but
-stopped and leant his back on the wall near the door, his legs crossed,
-looking down at her.
-
-"Lady," he said presently, "you still remain fixed in your obstinacy?"
-
-No answer: only her wide-open reproving eyes dwelt on him with their
-steady accusation like a conscience, and her hand stuck and stuck many
-times with a hat-pin her hat which lay on her lap. Her gown appeared to
-be very frowsy and unkempt now; her hair was untidy, and quite gray with
-dust on one side, her face was begrimed and stained with the tracks of
-tears; but her lips were firm, and the wonderful eyes, chiding,
-disdainful, gave no sign of a drooping spirit.
-
-"You will say nothing to me?" asked Janoc.
-
-No answer.
-
-"Is it that you think I may relent and let you free, lady, because my
-heart weakens at your suffering? Do not imagine such a thing of me! The
-more you are beautiful, the more you are sublime in your torture, the
-more I adore you, the more my heart pours out tears of blood for you,
-the more I am inflexible in my will. You do not know me--I am a man, I
-am not a wind; a mind, not an emotion. Oh, pity is strong in me, love is
-strong; but what is strongest of all is self-admiration, my worship of
-intelligence. And have I not made it impossible that you should be let
-free without conditions by my confession to you that it was my sister
-Pauline who killed the actress? I tell you again it was Pauline who
-killed her. It was not a murder! It was an assassination--a political
-assassination. Mademoiselle de Bercy had proved a traitress to the group
-of Internationals to which she belonged: she was condemned to death; the
-lot fell upon Pauline to execute the sentence; and on the day appointed
-she executed it, having first stolen from Mr. Osborne the 'celt' and the
-dagger, so as to cast the suspicion upon him. I tell you this of my
-sister--of one who to me is dearest on earth; and, having told you all
-this, is it any longer possible that I should set you free without
-conditions? You see, do you not, that it is impossible?"
-
-No answer.
-
-"I only ask you to promise--to give your simple word--not to say, or
-hint, to anyone that Pauline had the daggers. What a risk I take! What
-trust in you! I do not know you--I but trust blindly in the
-highly-evolved, that divine countenance which is yours; and since it was
-with the object of saving my sister that you came here with me, my
-gratitude to you deepens my trust. Give me, then, this promise, Miss
-Marsh!"
-
-Now her lips opened a little to form the word "No," which he could just
-catch.
-
-"Sublime!" he cried--"and I am no less sublime. If I was rich, if I had
-a fair name, and if I could dare to hope to win the love of a lady such
-as you, how favored of the gods I should be! But that is--a dream. Here,
-then, you will remain, until the day that Pauline is safely hidden in
-France: and on that day--since for myself I care little--I will open
-this door to you: never before. Meanwhile, tell me if you think of
-anything more that I can do for your comfort."
-
-No answer.
-
-"Good-night." He turned to go.
-
-"You made me a promise," she said at the last moment.
-
-"I have kept it," he said. "This afternoon, at great risk to myself, I
-wrote to your mother the words: 'Your daughter is alive and safe.' Are
-you satisfied?"
-
-"Thank you," she said.
-
-"Good-night," he murmured again.
-
-Having locked the door, he waited five minutes outside silently, to hear
-if she sobbed or wailed in there in the utter dark: but no sound came to
-him. He went upstairs, put out the light, put down the candlestick in
-the passage, and was just drawing back the door latch, when he was aware
-of a strong step marching quickly along an almost deserted pavement.
-
-After a little he peeped out and recognized the heavy figure of
-Inspector Winter. Even Janoc, the dreamer, whose dreams took such tragic
-shape, was surprised for an instant.
-
-"How limited is the consciousness of men!" he muttered. "That so-called
-clever detective little guesses what he has just passed by."
-
-But Winter, too, might have indulged in the same reflection: "How
-limited the consciousness of Janoc! He doesn't know where I am passing
-to--to visit and question his sister Pauline!"
-
-Winter, a little further on, took a taxicab to Porchester Gardens, got
-out at the bottom of the street, and was walking on to Mrs. Marsh's
-temporary residence, when he saw Furneaux coming the opposite way.
-
-Winter wished to pretend not to see him, but Furneaux spoke.
-
-"Well, Providence throws us together somehow!"
-
-"Ah! Why blame Providence?" said Winter, with rather a snarl.
-
-"Not two hours ago there was our chance meeting by that graveside----"
-
-The "chance" irritated Winter to the quick.
-
-"You have all the faults of the French nature," he said bitterly,
-"without any of its merits: its levity without its industry, its
-pettiness without its minuteness----"
-
-"And you the English frankness without its honesty. The chief thing
-about a Frenchman is his intelligence. At least you do not deny that I
-am intelligent?"
-
-"I have thought you intelligent. I am damned if I think you so any
-longer."
-
-"Oh, you will again--soon--when I wish it. We met just now at a grave,
-and there was more buried in that grave than the grave-diggers know: and
-we both stood looking at it: but I fancy there were more X-rays in my
-eye to see what was buried there than in yours!"
-
-Driven beyond the bounds of patience, Winter threw out an arm in angry
-protest.
-
-"Ha! ha! ha!" tittered Furneaux.
-
-An important official at Scotland Yard must learn early the value of
-self-control. Consumed with a certain sense of the monstrous in this
-display of untimely mirth, Winter only gnawed a bristle or two of his
-mustache. He looked strangely at Furneaux, and they lingered together,
-loath to part, having still something bitter and rankling to say, but
-not knowing quite what, since men who have been all in all to each other
-cannot quarrel without some childish tone of schoolboy spite mingling in
-the wrangle.
-
-"I believe I know where you are going now!" jeered Furneaux.
-
-"Ah, you were always good at guessing."
-
-"Going to pump the Pauline girl about Miss Marsh."
-
-"True, of course, but not a very profound analysis considering that I am
-just ten yards from the house."
-
-"Don't you even know where Miss Rosalind Marsh is?" asked Furneaux,
-producing a broken cigar from a pocket and sniffing it, simply because
-he was well aware that the trick displeased his superior.
-
-"No. Do you?" Winter jeered back at him.
-
-"I do."
-
-"Oh, the sheerest bluff!"
-
-"No, no bluff. I know."
-
-"Well, let me imagine that it is bluff, anyway: for brute as a man might
-be, I won't give you credit for being _such_ a brute as to keep that
-poor old lady undergoing the torments of hell through a deliberate
-silence of yours."
-
-"Didn't you say that I have all the bad qualities of the Latin
-temperament?" answered Furneaux. "Now, there is something cat-like in
-the Latin; a Spaniard, for example, can be infernally cruel at a
-bullfight; and I'll admit that _I_ can, too. But 'torments of hell' is
-rather an exaggeration, nor will the 'torments' last mortally long, for
-to-morrow afternoon at about four--at the hour that I choose--in the
-hour that I am ready--Miss Marsh will drive up to that door there."
-
-"Evidently you were not born in Jersey, but in Gascony," Winter said
-sourly.
-
-"Wrong again! A Jersey man will bounce any Gascon off his feet," said
-Furneaux. "And, just to pile up the agony, here is another sample for
-you, since you accuse me of bluffing. To-morrow afternoon, at that same
-hour--about four--I shall have that scoundrel Osborne in custody charged
-with the murder in Feldisham Mansions."
-
-"Mr. Osborne?" whispered Winter, towering and frowning above his
-diminutive adversary. "Oh, Furneaux, you drive me to despair by your
-folly. If you are mad, which I hope you are, that explains, I suppose,
-your delusion that others are mad, too."
-
-"Genius is closely allied with insanity," said Furneaux carelessly;
-"yet, you observe that I have never hinted any doubt as to your
-saneness. Wait, you'll see: my case against Osborne is now complete. A
-warrant can't be refused, not even by you, and to-morrow, as sure as you
-stand there, I lay my hand on your protégé's shoulder."
-
-Winter nearly choked in his rage.
-
-"All right! We'll see about that!" he said with a furious nod of menace.
-Furneaux chuckled; and now by a simultaneous impulse they walked apart,
-Furneaux whistling, in Winter a whirlwind of passion blowing the last
-shreds of pity from his soul.
-
-He was soon sitting at the bedside of Pauline Dessaulx, now
-convalescent, though the coming of this strange man threw her afresh
-into a tumult of agitation. But Winter comforted her, smoothed her hand,
-assured her that there was no cause for alarm.
-
-"I know that you took Mademoiselle de Bercy's diary," he said to her,
-"and it was very wrong of you not to give it up to the police, and to
-hide yourself as you did when your evidence was wanted. But, don't be
-frightened--I am here to-night to see if you can throw any light on the
-sad disappearance of Miss Marsh. The suspense is killing her mother, and
-I feel sure that it has some connection with the Feldisham Mansions
-affair. Now, can you help me? Think--tell me."
-
-"Oh, I cannot!" She wrung her hands in a paroxysm of distress--"If I
-could, I would. I cannot imagine----!"
-
-"Well, then, that part of my inquiry is ended. Only, listen to this
-attentively. I want to ask you one other question: Why did you leave the
-Exhibition early on the night of the murder, and where did you go to?"
-
-"_I--I--I_, sir!" she said, pointing to her guiltless breast with a
-gaping mouth; "I, poor me, I _left_----?"
-
-"Oh, come now, don't delude yourself that the police are fools. You went
-to the Exhibition with the cook, Hester Se----"
-
-"And she has said such a thing of me? She has declared that _I_
-left----?"
-
-"Yes, she has. Why trouble to deny it? You did leave--By the way, have
-you a brother or any other relative in London----?"
-
-"_I--I_, sir! A brother? Ah, mon Dieu! Oh, but, sir----!"
-
-"Really you must calm yourself. You went away from the Exhibition at an
-early hour. There is no doubt about it, and you must have a brother or
-some person deeply interested in you, for some man afterwards got hold
-of the cook, Bertha Seward, and begged her for Heaven's sake not to
-mention your departure from the Exhibition that night. He gave her
-money--she told me so. And Inspector Clarke knows it, as well as I, for
-Hester Seward has told me that he went to question her----"
-
-"M'sieur _Clarke_!"--at the name of "Clarke," which she whispered after
-him, the girl's face turned a more ghastly gray, for Clarke was the
-ogre, the griffon, the dragon of her recent life, at the mere mention of
-whom her heart leaped guiltily. Suddenly, abandoning the struggle, she
-fell back from her sitting posture, tried to hide her face in the
-bedclothes, and sobbed wildly:
-
-"I didn't do it! I didn't do it!"
-
-"Do what? Who said you had done anything?" asked Winter. "It isn't _you_
-that Mr. Clarke suspects, you silly child, it is a man named----"
-
-She looked up with frenzied eyes to hear the name--but Winter stopped.
-In his hands the unhappy Pauline was a little hedge-bird in the talons
-of a hawk.
-
-"Named?" she repeated.
-
-"Never mind his name."
-
-She buried her head afresh, giving out another heart-rending sob, and
-from her smothered lips came the words:
-
-"It wasn't I--it was--it was----"
-
-"It was who?" asked Winter.
-
-She shivered through the whole of her delicate frame, and a low murmur
-came from her throat:
-
-"You have seen the diary--it was Monsieur Furneaux."
-
-Oddly enough, despite his own black conviction, this was not what Winter
-expected to hear.
-
-He started, and said sharply:
-
-"Oh, you are stupid. Why are you saying things that you know nothing
-of?"
-
-"May Heaven forgive me for accusing anyone," she sobbed hoarsely. "But
-it was not anybody else. It could not be. You have seen the diary--it
-was Mr. Furneaux, or it was Mr. Osborne."
-
-"Ah, two accusations now," cried Winter. "Furneaux or Osborne! You are
-trying to shield someone? What motive could Mr. Furneaux, or Mr.
-Osborne, have for such an act?"
-
-"Was not Mr. Osborne her lover? And was not Mr. Furneaux her--husband?"
-
-"Her----!"
-
-In that awesome moment Winter hardly realized what he said. Half
-starting out of his chair, he glared in stupor at the shrinking figure
-on the bed, while every drop of blood fled away from his own face.
-
-There was a long silence. Then Winter, bending over her, spoke almost in
-the whisper of those who share a shameful secret.
-
-"You say that Mr. Furneaux was her husband? You know it?"
-
-She trembled violently, but nerved herself to answer:
-
-"Yes, I know it."
-
-"Tell me everything. You must! Do you understand? I order you."
-
-"She told me herself when we were friends. She was married to him in the
-church of St. Germain l'Auxerrois in Paris on the 7th of November in the
-year '98. But she soon left him, since he had not the means to support
-her. I have her marriage certificate in my trunk."
-
-Winter sat some minutes spellbound, his big round eyes staring at the
-girl, but not seeing her, his forehead glistening. This, then, supplied
-the long-sought motive. The unfaithful wife was about to marry another.
-This was the key. An affrighting callousness possessed him. He became
-the cold, unbending official again.
-
-"You must get up at once, and give me that certificate," he said in the
-tone of authority, and went out of the room. In a little while she
-placed the paper in his hands, and he went away with it. Were she not so
-distraught she might have seen that it shook in his fingers.
-
-Now he, like Clarke, held all the threads of an amazing case.
-
-The next afternoon Furneaux was to arrest Osborne--it was for him,
-Winter, then, to anticipate such an outrage by the swift arrest of
-Furneaux. But was he quite ready? He wished he could secure another
-day's grace to collate and systematize each link of his evidence, and he
-hurried to Osborne's house in order to give Osborne a hint to vanish
-again for a day or two. Nevertheless, when at the very door, he paused,
-refrained, thought that he would manage things differently, and went
-away.
-
-On one of the blinds of the library as he passed he saw the shadow of a
-head--of Osborne's head in fact, who in that hour of despair was sitting
-there, bowed down, hopeless now of finding Rosalind, whom he believed to
-be dead.
-
-Though Mrs. Marsh had that evening received a note from Janoc: "Your
-daughter is alive," as yet Osborne knew nothing of it. He was mourning
-his loss in solitude when a letter was brought to him by Jenkins. He
-tore it open. After an uncomprehending glare at the written words he
-suddenly grasped their meaning.
-
- The writer believes that your ex-secretary, Miss Hylda Prout,
- could tell you where Miss Rosalind Marsh is imprisoned.
-
-"Imprisoned!" That was the word that pierced the gloom and struck
-deepest. She was alive, then--that was joy. But a prisoner--in what hole
-of blackness? Subject to what risks? In whose power? In ten seconds he
-was rushing out of the house, and was gone.
-
-During the enforced respite of a journey in a cab he looked again at the
-mysterious note. It was a man's hand; small, neat writing; no signature.
-Who could have written it? But his brain had no room for guessing. He
-looked out to cry to the driver: "A sovereign for a quick run."
-
-To his woe, Hylda Prout was not in her lodgings when he arrived there.
-During the last few days he had known nothing of her movements. After
-that flare-up of passion in the library, the relation of master and
-servant had, of course, come to an end between them; and the lady of the
-house in Holland Park where Hylda rented two rooms told him that Miss
-Prout had gone to see her brother for the weekend, and was not expected
-back till noon on the following day.
-
-And Osborne did not know where her brother lived! His night was dismal
-with a horror of sleeplessness.
-
-Long before midday he was in Hylda's sitting-room, only to pace it to
-and fro in an agony of impatience till two o'clock--and then she came.
-
-"Oh, I have waited hours--weary hours!" he cried with a reproach that
-seemed to sweep aside the need for explanations.
-
-"I am so sorry!--sit here with me."
-
-She touched his hand, leading him to a couch and sitting near him, her
-hat still on, a flush on her pale face.
-
-"Hylda"--her heart leapt: he called her "Hylda"!--"you know where Miss
-Marsh is."
-
-She sprang to her feet in a passion.
-
-"So it is to talk to me about another woman that you have come? I who
-have humbled myself, lost my self-respect----"
-
-Osborne, too, stood up, stung to the quick by this mood of hers, so
-foreign to the disease of impatience and care in which he was being
-consumed.
-
-"My good girl," he said, "are you going to be reasonable?"
-
-"Come, then," she retorted, "let us be reasonable." She sat down again,
-her hands crossed on her lap, a passionate vindictiveness in her pursed
-lips, but a mock humility in her attitude.
-
-"Tell me! tell me! Where shall I find her?" and he bent in eager
-pleading.
-
-"No. How is it possible that I should tell you?"
-
-"But you do know! Somehow you do! I see and feel it. Tell it me, Hylda!
-Where is she?"
-
-She looked up at him with a smiling face which gave no hint of the asp's
-nest of jealousy which the sight of his agony and longing created in her
-bosom. And from those calm lips furious words came out:
-
-"Why, I horribly hate the woman--and since I happen to know that she is
-suffering most vilely, do you think it likely that I would tell you
-where she is?"
-
-He groaned, as his heart sank, his head dropped, his hope died. He moved
-slowly away to a window; then, with a frantic rush was back to her, on
-his knees, telling her of his wealth--it was more than she could
-measure!--and he had a checkbook in his pocket--all, one might say, was
-hers--she had only to name a sum--a hundred thousand, two
-hundred--anything--luxury for life, mansions, position--just for one
-little word, one little act of womanly kindliness.
-
-When he stopped for lack of breath, she covered her eyes with the back
-of her hand, and began to cry; he saw her lips stretched in the tension
-of her emotion.
-
-"Why do you cry?--that achieves nothing--listen----" he panted.
-
-"To be offered money--to be so wounded--I who----" She could not go on.
-
-"My God! Then I offer you--what you will--my friendship--my
-gratitude--my affection--only speak----"
-
-"For another woman! Slave that you are to her! she is sweet to you, is
-she, in your heart? But she shall never have you--be sure of that--not
-while I draw the breath of life! If you want her free, I will sell
-myself for nothing less than yourself--you must marry me!"
-
-Her astounding demand struck him dumb. He picked himself slowly up from
-her feet, walked again to the window, and stood with his back to her--a
-long time. Once she saw his head drop, heard him sob, heard the words:
-"Oh, no, not that"; and she sat, white and silent, watching him.
-
-When he returned to her his eyes were calm, his face of a grim and stern
-pallor. He sat by her, took her hand, laid his lips on it.
-
-"You speak of marriage," he said gently, "but just think what kind of a
-marriage that would be--forced, on one side--I full of resentment
-against you for the rest of my life----"
-
-Thus did he try to reason with her, tried to show her a better way,
-offering to vow not to marry anyone for two years, during which he
-promised to see whether he could not acquire for her those feelings
-which a husband----
-
-But she cut him short coldly. In two years she would be dead without
-him. She would kill herself. Life lived in pain was a thing of no
-value--a human life of no more value than a fly's. If he would marry
-her, she would tell him where Miss Marsh was: and, after the marriage,
-if he did not love her, she knew a way of setting him free--though, even
-in that case, Rosalind Marsh should never have him--she, Hylda, would
-see to that.
-
-For the first time in his life Osborne knew what it was to hate. He, the
-man accused of murder, felt like a murderer, but he had grown strangely
-wise, and realized that this woman would die cheerfully rather than
-reveal her secret. He left her once more, stood ten minutes at the
-window--then laughed harshly.
-
-"I agree," he said quite coolly, turning to her.
-
-She, too, was outwardly cool, though heaven and hell fought together in
-her bosom. She held out to him a Bible. He kissed it.
-
-"When?" she asked.
-
-"This day week," he said.
-
-She wrote on a piece of paper the address of a house in Poland Street;
-and handed it to him.
-
-"Miss Marsh is there," she said, as though she were his secretary of
-former days, in the most business-like way.
-
-He walked straight out without another word, without a bow to her.
-
-When he was well out of the house he began to run madly, for there was
-no cab in sight. But he had not run far when he collided with Inspector
-Furneaux.
-
-"Mr. Osborne," said Furneaux--"one word. I think you are interested in
-the disappearance of Miss Marsh? Well, I am happy to say that I am in a
-position to tell you where that lady is."
-
-He looked with a glitter of really fiendish malice in his eyes at the
-unhappy man who leant against a friendly wall, his face white as death.
-
-"Are you ill, sir?" asked Furneaux, with mock solicitude.
-
-"Why, man, your information is a minute late," muttered Osborne; "I have
-it already--I have bought it." He held out the paper with the address in
-Poland Street.
-
-Furneaux gazed at him steadily as he leant there, looking ready to drop;
-then suddenly, eagerly, he said:
-
-"You say '_bought_': do you mean with money?"
-
-"No, not with money--with my youth, with my life!"
-
-Furneaux seemed to murmur to himself: "As I hoped!" And now the glitter
-of malice passed away from his softened eyes, his forehead flushed a
-little, out went his hand to Osborne, who, in a daze of misery, without
-in the least understanding why, mechanically shook it.
-
-"Surely, Mr. Osborne," said Furneaux, "Miss Marsh would consider that a
-noble deed of you, if she knew it."
-
-"She will never know it."
-
-"Oh, never is a long time. One must be more or less hopeful.
-Unfortunately, I am compelled to inform you that I am here to arrest
-you----"
-
-"Me? At last! For the murder?"
-
-"It was to be, Mr. Osborne. But, come, you shall first have the joy of
-setting free Miss Marsh, to whom you have given so much--there's a
-cab----"
-
-Osborne followed him into the cab with a reeling brain. Yet he smiled
-vacantly.
-
-"I hope I shall be hanged," he said, in a sort of self-communing. "That
-will be better than marriage--better, too, than deserving to be hanged,
-which might have been true of me a few minutes ago. Why, I killed a
-woman in thought just now--killed her, with my hands. Yes, this is
-better. I should hate to have done that wretched thing, but now I am
-safe--safe from--myself."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- THE ARRESTS
-
-
-As Furneaux and Osborne were being driven rapidly to Poland Street, bent
-on the speedy release of Rosalind, Inspector Winter, for his part, was
-seeking for Furneaux in a fury of haste, eager to arrest his colleague
-before the latter could arrest Osborne. At the same time Clarke,
-determined to bring matters to a climax by arresting Janoc, was lurking
-about a corner of Old Compton Street, every moment expecting the passing
-of his quarry. Each man was acting without a warrant. The police are
-empowered to arrest "on suspicion," and each of the three could produce
-proof in plenty to convict his man.
-
-As for Winter, he knew that where Osborne was Furneaux would not be far
-that day. Hence, when in the forenoon he received notice from one of his
-watchers that Furneaux had that morning deliberately fled from
-observation, he bade his man watch Osborne's steps with one eye, while
-the other searched the offing for the shadow of Furneaux, on the sound
-principle that "wheresoever the carcase is, there will the eagles be
-gathered together."
-
-Thus Osborne's ride to Holland Park to see Hylda Prout had been
-followed; and, two hours afterwards, while he was still waiting for
-Hylda's arrival, Winter's spy from behind the frosted glass of a
-public-house bar had watched Furneaux's arrival and long wait on the
-pavement. He promptly telephoned the fact to Winter, and Winter was
-about to set out westward from Scotland Yard when the detective
-telephoned afresh to say that Mr. Osborne had appeared out of the house,
-and had been accosted by Furneaux. The watcher, quite a smart youngster
-from a suburban station, hastened from his hiding-place. Evidently,
-Furneaux was careless of espionage at that moment. He hailed a cab
-without so much as a glance at the man passing close to Osborne and
-himself on the pavement, and it was easy to overhear the address given
-to the driver--a house in Poland Street.
-
-Why to Poland Street Winter could not conceive. At all events, the fact
-that the drive was not to a police-station inspired him with the hope
-that Osborne's arrest was for some reason not yet an accomplished fact,
-and he, too, set off for Poland Street, which happily lay much nearer
-Scotland Yard than Holland Park.
-
-Meantime, Osborne and Furneaux were hastening eastward in silence,
-Osborne with his head bent between his clenched hands, and an expression
-of face as wrenched with pain as that of a man racked with neuralgia. It
-was now that he began to feel in reality the tremendousness of the vow
-he had just made to marry Hylda Prout, in order to set Rosalind free.
-Compared to that his impending arrest was too little a thing for him to
-care about. But as they were spinning along by Kensington Gardens, a
-twinge of curiosity prompted him to ask why he was to be arrested now,
-after being assured repeatedly that the police would not formulate any
-charge against him.
-
-Furneaux looked straight in front of him, and when he answered, his
-voice was metallic.
-
-"There was no escaping it, Mr. Osborne," he said. "But be thankful for
-small mercies. I was waiting there in the street for you, intending to
-pounce on you at once, but when I knew that you had sacrificed yourself
-for Miss Marsh, I thought, 'He deserves to be permitted to release her':
-for, to promise to marry Miss Prout----"
-
-"What are you saying? How could you possibly know that I promised to
-marry Miss Prout?"
-
-Osborne's brain was still seething, but some glimmer of his wonted clear
-judgment warned him of the exceeding oddity of the detective's remark.
-
-"Well, you told me that you had 'bought' the knowledge of her
-whereabouts with 'your youth and your life'--so I assumed that there
-could be no other explanation."
-
-"Still, that is singularly deep guessing----!"
-
-"Well, if you demand greater accuracy, I foresaw exactly what would be
-the result of your interview with your late secretary, in case you
-really did care for Miss Marsh. Therefore, I brought about the interview
-because----"
-
-"_You_ brought it about?" cried Osborne in a crescendo of astonishment.
-
-"Yes. You see I am candid. You are aware that I knew where Miss Marsh
-could be found, and I might have given you the information direct. But I
-preferred to write a note telling you that you must depend on Miss Prout
-for tidings."
-
-"Ah! it was you, then, who sent that note! But how cruel, how savagely
-cruel! Could you not have told me yourself? Don't you realize that your
-detestable action has bound me for life to a woman whom--Oh, I hope,
-since you are about to arrest me, that you will prove me guilty, for if
-I live, life henceforth will hold nothing for me save Dead Sea fruit!"
-
-He covered his eyes, but Furneaux, whose face was twitching curiously,
-laid a hand on his knee, and said in a low voice:
-
-"Do not despair. You are not the only man in the world who suffers. I
-had reasons--and strong reasons--for acting in this manner. One reason
-was that I was uncertain of the depth of your affection for Miss Marsh,
-and I wished to be as certain as you have now made me."
-
-"But how on earth could that concern you, the depth or shallowness of my
-affection for Miss Marsh?" asked Osborne in a white heat of anger and
-indignation.
-
-"Nevertheless, it did concern me," answered Furneaux dryly; "I cannot,
-at present, explain everything to you. I had a suspicion that your
-affection for Miss Marsh was trivial: if it had been, you would then
-have shown a criminal forgetfulness of the dead woman whom so recently
-you said you loved. In that event, you would have found me continuing
-the part I have played in regard to you--anything but a friend. As
-matters stand, I say I may yet earn your gratitude for what to-day you
-call my cruelty."
-
-Osborne passed his hands across his eyes wearily.
-
-"I fear I can neither talk myself, nor quite understand what you mean by
-your words," he murmured. "My poor head is rather in a whirl. You see, I
-have given my promise--I have sworn on the Bible to that woman--nothing
-can ever alter that, or release me now. I am--done for----"
-
-His chin dropped on his breast. He had the semblance of a man who had
-lost all--for whom death had no terrors.
-
-"Nevertheless, I tell you that I forecasted the result of your interview
-with Hylda Prout," persisted Furneaux. "Even now I do not see your
-reason for despair. I knew that Miss Prout had an ardent attachment to
-you; I said to myself: 'She will surely seek to sell the information in
-her possession for what she most longs for, and the possibility is that
-Osborne may yield to her terms--always provided that his attachment to
-the other lady is profound. If it is not profound, I find out by this
-device; if it is profound, he becomes engaged to Miss Prout, which is a
-result that I greatly wish to bring about before his arrest.'"
-
-"My God! why?" asked Osborne, looking up in a tense agony that might
-have moved a less sardonic spirit.
-
-"For certain police reasons," said Furneaux, smiling with the smug air
-of one who has given an irrefutable answer.
-
-"But what a price _I_ pay for these police reasons! Is this fair,
-Inspector Furneaux? Now, in Heaven's name, is this fair? Life-long
-misery on the one hand, and some trick of officialism on the other!"
-
-The detective seemed to think the conversation at an end, since he sat
-in silence and stared blankly out of the window.
-
-Osborne shrank into his corner, quite drooping and pinched with misery,
-and brooded over his misfortunes. Presently he started, and asked
-furiously:
-
-"In what possible way did Hylda Prout come to know where Miss Marsh was
-hidden, to use your own ridiculous word?"
-
-"Miss Prout happens to be a really clever woman," answered Furneaux. "In
-the times of Richelieu she would have governed France from an _alcôve_.
-You had better ask her herself how she obtained her knowledge. Still, I
-don't mind telling you that Miss Marsh has been imprisoned in a
-wine-cellar by a certain Anarchist, a great man in his way, and that
-your former secretary has of late days developed quite an intimate
-acquaintance with Anarchist circles----"
-
-"Anarchist?" gasped Osborne. "My Rosalind--imprisoned in a wine-cellar?"
-
-"It is a tangled skein," purred Furneaux with a self-satisfied smirk; "I
-am afraid we haven't time now to go into it."
-
-The cab crossed Oxford Circus--two minutes more and they were in Soho.
-
-Winter at that moment was on the lookout for Furneaux at the corner of a
-shabby street which traverses Poland Street. As for Clarke, he had
-vanished from the nook in Compton Street where he was loitering in the
-belief that Janoc would soon pass. In order to understand exactly the
-amazing events that were now reaching their crisis it is necessary to go
-back half an hour and see how matters had fared with Clarke....
-
-During his long vigil, he, in turn, had been watched most intently by
-the Italian, Antonio, who, quickly becoming suspicious, hastened to a
-barber's shop, kept by a compatriot, where Janoc was in hiding. Into
-this shop he pitched to pant a frenzied warning.
-
-"Sauriac says that Inspector Clarke has been up your stairs--may have
-entered your rooms--and I myself have just seen him prowling round Old
-Compton Street!"
-
-Agitation mastered Janoc; he, who so despised those bunglers, the
-police, now began to fear them. Out he pelted, careless of consequences,
-and Antonio after him.
-
-He made straight for his third-floor back, and, losing a few seconds in
-his eagerness to unlock the door, rushed to the trunk in which he had
-left the two daggers, meaning to do away with them once and for all.
-
-And now he knew how he had blundered in keeping them. He looked in the
-trunk and saw, not the daggers, but the gallows!
-
-For the first time in his life he nearly fainted. Political desperadoes
-of his type are often neurotic--weak as women when the hour of trial is
-at hand, but strong as women when the spirit has subdued the flesh.
-During some moments of sheer despair he knelt there, broken, swaying,
-with clasped hands and livid face. Then he stood up slowly, with some
-degree of calmness, with no little dignity.
-
-"They are gone," he said to Antonio, pointing tragically.
-
-Antonio's hands tore at his hair, his black eyes glared out of their red
-rims with the look of a hunted animal that hears the hounds baying in
-close pursuit.
-
-"This means the sure conviction either of her or me," went on Janoc. "My
-efforts have failed--I must confess to the murder."
-
-"My friend!" cried Antonio.
-
-"Set free Miss Marsh for me," said Janoc, and he walked down the stairs,
-without haste, yet briskly--Antonio following him at some distance
-behind, with awe, with reverence, as one follows a conqueror.
-
-Janoc went unfalteringly to his doom. Clarke, seeing him come, chuckled
-and lounged toward him.
-
-"It is for me you wait--yes?" said Janoc, pale, but strong.
-
-"There may be something in _that_," said Clarke, though he was slightly
-taken aback by the question.
-
-"You have the daggers--yes?"
-
-This staggered him even more, but he managed to growl:
-
-"You may be sure of that."
-
-"Well, I confess! I did it!"
-
-At last! The garish street suddenly assumed roseate tints in the
-detective's eyes.
-
-"Oh, you do?" he cried thickly. "You confess that you killed Rose de
-Bercy on the night of the 3d of July at Feldisham Mansions?"
-
-"Yes, I confess it."
-
-Clarke laid a hand on Janoc's sleeve, and the two walked away.
-
-As for Antonio, in an ecstasy of excitement he cast his eyes and his
-arms on high together, crying out, "_O Dio mio!_" and the next moment
-was rushing to find a cab to take him to Porchester Gardens. Arrived
-there, he rang, and the instant Pauline appeared, she being now
-sufficiently recovered to attend to her duties, his right hand went out
-in a warning clutch at her shoulder.
-
-"Your brother is arrested!" he cried.
-
-With her clenched fists drawn back, she glared crazily at him, and her
-face reddened for a little while, as if she were furious at the outrage
-and suddenness of his news. Then her cheeks whitened, she went faint,
-sank back into the shelter of the hall, and leant against an inner
-doorway, her eyes closed, her lips parted.
-
-"Oh, Pauline, be brave!" said Antonio, and tears choked his voice.
-
-After a time, without opening her eyes, she asked:
-
-"What proofs have they?"
-
-"They have found the daggers in his trunk."
-
-"But _I_ have the daggers!"
-
-"No, that woman who lived here, your supposed friend, Miss Marsh, stole
-the daggers from you, and Janoc secured them from her."
-
-She moaned, but did not weep. She, who had been timid as a mouse at
-sight of Clarke, was now braver than the man. Presently she whispered:
-
-"Where have they taken him to?"
-
-"He will have been taken to the Marlborough Street police-station."
-
-After another silence she said:
-
-"Thank you, Antonio; leave me."
-
-Passionately he kissed her hand in silence, and went.
-
-She was no sooner alone than she walked up to her room, dressed herself
-in clothes suited for an out-of-door mission, and went out, heedless and
-dumb when a wondering fellow-servant protested. She called a cab--for
-Marlborough Street; and now she was as calm and strong as had been her
-brother when he gave himself up to Clarke.
-
-Her cab crossed Oxford Circus about ten minutes ahead of the vehicle
-which carried Furneaux and Osborne; and as she turned south to enter
-Marlborough Street, she saw Winter, who had lately visited her, standing
-at a corner awaiting the arrival of Furneaux.
-
-"Stop!" Pauline cried to her driver: and she alighted.
-
-"Well, you are better, I see," said Winter, who did not wish to be
-bothered by her at that moment.
-
-"Sir," said Pauline solemnly in her stilted English, "I regret having
-been so unjust as to tell you that it was either Mr. Furneaux or Mr.
-Osborne who committed that murder, since it was I myself who did it."
-
-"What!" roared Winter, stepping backward, and startled most effectually
-out of his official phlegm.
-
-"Sir," said Pauline again, gravely, calmly, "it was not a murder, it was
-an assassination, done for political reasons. As I have no mercy to
-expect, so I have no pardon to ask, and no act to blush at. It was
-political. I give myself into your custody."
-
-Winter stood aghast. His brain seemed suddenly to have curdled;
-everything in the world was topsy-turvy.
-
-"So that was why you left the Exhibition--to kill that poor woman,
-Pauline Dessaulx?" he contrived to say.
-
-"That is the truth, sir. I could bear to keep it secret no longer, and
-was going now to the police-station to give myself up, when I saw you."
-
-Still Winter made no move. He stood there, frowning in thought, staring
-at nothing.
-
-"And all the proofs I have gathered against--against someone else--all
-these are false?" he muttered.
-
-"I am afraid so, sir," said Pauline, "since it was I who did it with my
-own hands."
-
-"And Mr. Osborne's dagger and flint--where do they come in?"
-
-"It was I who stole them from Mr. Osborne's museum, sir, to throw
-suspicion upon him."
-
-"Oh, come along," growled Winter. "I believe, I know, you are lying, but
-this must be inquired into."
-
-Not unkindly, acting more like a man in a dream than an officer of the
-law, he took her arm, led her to the cab from which she had just
-descended, and the two drove away together to the police-station higher
-up the street.
-
-Thus, and thus only, was Inspector Furneaux saved from arrest that day.
-Two minutes later he and Osborne passed the very spot where Pauline
-found Winter, and reached Poland Street without interference.
-
-Furneaux produced a bunch of keys when he ran up the steps of the house.
-He unlocked the door at once, and the two men entered. Evidently
-Furneaux had been there before, for he hurried without hesitation down
-the kitchen stairs, put a key into the cellar door, flung it open, and
-Osborne, peering wildly over his shoulder, caught a glimpse of Rosalind
-sitting on the ground in a corner.
-
-She did not look up when they entered--apparently she thought it was
-Janoc who had come, and with fixed, mournful eyes, like one gazing into
-profundities of vacancy, she continued to stare at the floor. Her face
-and air were so pitiable that the hearts of the men smote them into
-dumbness.
-
- [Illustration: She did not look up when they entered
- _Page 258_]
-
-Then, half conscious of some new thing, she must have caught sight of
-two men instead of the usual one, for she looked up sharply; and in
-another moment was staggering to her feet, all hysterical laughter and
-sobbings, like a dying light that flickers wildly up and burns low
-alternately, trying at one instant to be herself and calm, when she
-laughed, and the next yielding to her distress, when she sobbed. She put
-out her hand to Osborne in a last effort to be graceful and usual; then
-she yielded the struggle, and fainted in his arms.
-
-Furneaux produced a scent-bottle and a crushed cigar, such as it was his
-habit to smell, to present them to her nose....
-
-But she did not revive, so Osborne took her in his arms, and carried
-her, as though she were a child, up the stone steps, and up the wooden,
-and out to the cab. Furneaux allowed him to drive alone with her,
-himself following behind in another cab, which was a most singular
-proceeding on the part of a detective who had arrested a man accused of
-an atrocious murder.
-
-Half-way to Porchester Gardens Rosalind opened her eyes, and a wild,
-heartrending cry came from her parched lips.
-
-"I will have no more wine nor water--let me die!"
-
-"Try and keep still, just a few moments, my dear one!" he murmured,
-smiling a fond smile of pain, and clasping her more tightly in a
-protecting arm. "You are going home, to your mother. You will soon be
-there, safe, with her."
-
-"Oh!"--Then she recognized him, though there was still an uncanny
-wildness in her eyes. "I am free--it is you."
-
-She seemed to falter for words, but raised her hands instinctively to
-her hair, knowing it to be all rumpled and dusty. Instinctively, too,
-she caught her hat from her knee, and put it on hurriedly. She could not
-know what stabs of pain these little feminine anxieties caused her
-lover. No spoken words could have portrayed the sufferings she had
-endured like unto her pitiful efforts to conceal their ravages. At last
-she recovered sufficiently to ask if her mother expected her.
-
-"I am not sure," said Osborne. "I am not your deliverer; Inspector
-Furneaux discovered where you were, and went to your rescue."
-
-"But you are with him?" and an appealing note of love, of complete
-confidence, crept into her voice.
-
-"I merely happen to be with him, because he is now taking me to a
-felon's cell. But he lets me come in the cab with you, because he trusts
-me not to run away."
-
-His smile was very sad and humble, and he laid his disengaged hand on
-hers, yielding to a craving for sympathy in his forlornness. But
-memories were now thronging fast on her mind, and she drew herself away
-from both hand and arm. She recalled that her last sight of him was when
-in the embrace of Hylda Prout in his library; and, mixed with that
-vision of infamy, was a memory of her letter that had been opened, whose
-opening he had denied to her.
-
-And that snatch of her hand as from a toad's touch, that shrinking from
-the pressure of his arm, froze him back into his loneliness of misery.
-They remained silent, each in a corner, a world between them, till the
-cab was nearly at the door in Porchester Gardens. Then he could not help
-saying from the depths of a heavy heart:
-
-"Probably I shall never see you again! It is good-by now; and no more
-Rosalind."
-
-The words were uttered in a tone of such heart-rending sadness that they
-touched some nerve of pity in her. But she could find nothing to say,
-other than a quite irrelevant comment.
-
-"I will tell my mother of your consideration for me. At least, we shall
-thank you."
-
-"If ever you hear anything--of me--that looks black----" he tried to
-tell her, thinking of his coming marriage with Hylda Prout, but the
-explanation choked in his throat; he only managed to gasp in a quick
-appeal of sorrow: "Oh, remember me a little!"
-
-The cab was at the door. She put out her hand, and he shook it; but did
-not offer to escort her inside the house. It was Furneaux who led her up
-the steps, and Osborne heard from within a shrill outcry from Mrs.
-Marsh. Furneaux waited until the door was closed. Then he rejoined
-Osborne. They went, without exchanging a syllable of talk, to
-Marlborough Street police-station, where Janoc and his sister were
-already lodged. Arrived there, Furneaux formally arrested him, "on
-suspicion," charged with the murder of Rose de Bercy.
-
-"But why _now_?" asked Osborne again. "What has happened to implicate me
-now more than before?"
-
-"Oh, many things have happened, and will happen, that as yet you know
-nothing of," said Furneaux, smiling at the stolid station inspector, a
-man incapable of any emotion, even of surprise, and Osborne was led away
-to be searched for concealed weapons, or poison, before being placed in
-a cell.
-
-Half an hour afterwards Furneaux walked into Winter's quarters. His
-chief, writing hard, hardly glanced up, and for some time Furneaux stood
-looking at his one-time friend with the eyes of a scientist who
-contemplates a new fossil.
-
-"Well, I have Osborne safe," he said at last.
-
-"You have, have you?" muttered Winter, scribbling rapidly; but a flush
-of anger rose on his forehead, and he added: "It will cost you your
-reputation, my good fellow!"
-
-"Is that all?" cried Furneaux mockingly. "Why, I was looking out for
-worse things than that!"
-
-Winter threw down his pen.
-
-"You informed me last night," he snarled, "that by this hour Miss Marsh
-would have returned to her home. I need not ask----"
-
-"I have just taken her there," remarked the other coolly.
-
-Winter was thoroughly nonplused. Everybody, everything, seemed to be
-mad. He was staring at Furneaux when Clarke entered. The newcomer's hat
-was tilted a little backward, and there was an air of business-like
-haste in him from the creak of his boot soles to the drops of
-perspiration shining on his brow. He contrived to hold himself back just
-long enough to say, "Hello, Furneaux!" and then his burden of news broke
-from him:
-
-"Well, I've got Janoc under lock and key all right."
-
-"Oh, _you've_ got somebody, too, have you?" groaned Winter. "And on what
-charge, pray, have you collared Janoc?"
-
-"Why, what a question!" cried Clarke. "Didn't I tell you, sir----?"
-
-"So true," said Winter; "I had almost forgotten. _You_'ve grabbed Janoc,
-and the genius of Mr. Furneaux is sated by arresting Mr. Osborne----"
-
-Clarke slapped his thigh vigorously, doubling up in a paroxysm of
-laughter.
-
-"Osborne! Oh, not Osborne at this time of day!" He leered at Furneaux in
-comic wonder--he, who had never dared question aught done by the little
-man, save in the safe privacy of his thoughts.
-
-"And I have arrested Pauline," said Winter in grim irony.
-
-"Who has?" asked Clarke, suddenly agape.
-
-"I, I say. Pauline is _my_ prize. _I_ wouldn't be left out in the cold."
-And he added bitterly: "We've all got one!--_all_ guilty!--a lovely
-story it will make for the newspapers. I suppose, to keep up the
-screaming farce, that we each ought to contrive to have our prisoner
-tried in a different court!"
-
-Clarke's hands went akimbo. He swelled visibly, grew larger, taller, and
-looked down from his Olympus at the others.
-
-"But _I_ never dream at night," he cried. "When _I_ arrest a man for
-murder he is going to be hanged. You see, _Janoc has confessed_--that's
-all: he has confessed!"
-
-Winter leaped up.
-
-"Confessed!" he hissed, unable to believe his ears.
-
-"That's just it," said Clarke--"confessed!"
-
-"But Pauline has confessed, too!" Winter almost screamed, confronting
-his subordinate like an adversary.
-
-And while Clarke shrank, and gaped in dumb wonder, Furneaux, looking
-from one to the other, burst out laughing. Never a word he said, but
-turned in his quick way to leave the room. He was already in the
-corridor when Winter shouted:
-
-"Come back, Furneaux!"
-
-"Not I," was the defiant retort.
-
-"Come back, or I shall have you brought back!"
-
-Winter was in a white rage, but Furneaux pressed on daringly, whistling
-a tune, and never looking round. Clarke, momentarily expecting the roof
-of Scotland Yard to fall in, gazed from Furneaux to Winter and from
-Winter to Furneaux until the diminutive Jersey man had vanished round an
-angle of a long passage.
-
-But nothing happened. Winter was beaten to his knees, and he knew it.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- CLEARING THE AIR
-
-
-Winter was far too strong a man to remain long buried in the pit of
-humiliation into which Furneaux, aided unwittingly by Clarke, had cast
-him. The sounds of Furneaux's jaunty footsteps had barely died away
-before he shoved aside the papers on which he had been engaged
-previously, and reached across the table for a box of cigars.
-
-He took one, and shoved the box towards Clarke, whose face was still
-glistening in evidence of his rush from Marlborough Street
-police-station.
-
-"Here, you crack-pate!" he said, "smoke; it may clear your silly head."
-
-"But I can't repeat too often that Janoc has confessed--_confessed_!"
-and Clarke's voice rose almost to a squeal on that final word.
-
-"So has his sister confessed. In an hour or two, when the silence and
-horror of a cell have done their work, we shall have Osborne confessing,
-too. Oh, man, man, can't you see that Furneaux has twisted each of us
-round his little finger?"
-
-"But--sir----"
-
-"Yes, I know," cried Winter, in a fume of wrath and smoke. "Believe
-these foreign idiots and we shall be hearing of a masked tribunal,
-glistening with daggers, a brace of revolvers in every belt--a dozen or
-more infuriated conspirators, cloaked in gaberdines, gathered in a West
-End flat, while a red-headed woman harangues them. Furneaux has fooled
-us, I tell you--deliberately brought the Yard into discredit--made us
-the laughing-stock of the public. Oh, I shall never----"
-
-He pulled himself up, for Clarke was listening with the ears of a
-rabbit. Luckily, the detective's ideas were too self-concentrated to
-extract much food for thought from these disjointed outpourings.
-
-"I don't wish to seem wanting in respect, sir," he said doggedly, "but
-have you forgotten the diary? Why, Rose de Bercy herself wrote that she
-would be killed either by C. E. F. or Janoc. Now----"
-
-"Did she mention Janoc?" interrupted Winter sharply. "In what passage? I
-certainly _have_ forgotten that."
-
-Clarke, stubborn as a mule, stuck to his point, though he felt that he
-had committed himself.
-
-"Perhaps I did wrong," he growled savagely, "but I couldn't help myself.
-You were against me all along, sir--now, weren't you?"
-
-No answer. Winter waited, and did not even look at him.
-
-"What was I to do?" he went on in desperation. "You took me off the job
-just as I was getting keen in it. Then I happened upon Janoc, and found
-his sister, and when I came across that blacked-out name in the diary I
-scraped it and sponged it until I could read what was written beneath.
-The name was Janoc!"
-
-"Was it?" said Winter, gazing at him at last with a species of contempt.
-"And to throw dust in my eyes--in the eyes of your superior officer--you
-inked it out again?"
-
-"You wouldn't believe," muttered Clarke. "Why, you don't know half this
-story. I haven't told you yet how I found the daggers----"
-
-"You don't say," mocked Winter.
-
-"But I do, I did," cried Clarke, beside himself with excitement. "I took
-them out of Janoc's lodgings, and put them in a cab. I would have them
-in my hands this minute if some d--d thing hadn't occurred, some trick
-of fate----"
-
-Winter stooped and unlocked a drawer in his writing-desk.
-
-"Are these your daggers?" he demanded, though Clarke was shrewd enough,
-if in possession of his usual senses, to have caught the note of
-suppressed astonishment in the Chief Inspector's voice, since this was
-the first he had heard of Furneaux's deliberate pilfering of the weapons
-from his colleague.
-
-But something was singing in Clarke's ears, and his eyes were glued on
-the blades resting there in the drawer. Denial was impossible. He
-recognized them instantly, and all his assurance fled from that moment.
-
-"Well, there!" he murmured, in a curiously broken voice. "I give in! I'm
-done! I'm a baby at this game. Next thing, I suppose, I'll be asked to
-resign--me, who found 'em, and the diary, and the letter telling Janoc
-not to kill her--yet."
-
-He was looking so fixedly at the two daggers that he failed to see the
-smile of relief that flitted over Winter's face. Now, more than ever,
-the Chief Inspector realized that he was dealing with one of the most
-complex and subtle crimes which had come within his twenty years of
-experience. He was well versed in Furneaux's sardonic humor, and the
-close friendship that had existed between them ever since the little
-Jersey man joined the Criminal Investigation Department had alone
-stopped him from resenting it. It was clear now to his quick
-intelligence that Furneaux had actually planned nearly every discovery
-which either he himself or Clarke had made. Why? He could not answer. He
-was moving through a fog, blind-folded, with hands tied behind his back.
-Search where he would, he could not find a motive, unless, indeed,
-Furneaux was impelled by that strangest of all motives, a desire to
-convict himself. At any rate, he did not want Clarke to tread on the
-delicate ground that must now be covered before Furneaux was arrested,
-and the happy accident which had unlocked Clarke's tongue with regard to
-the diary would serve admirably to keep him well under control.
-
-"Now, look here, Inspector Clarke," said Winter severely, after a pause
-that left the other in wretched suspense, "you have erred badly in this
-matter. For once, I am willing to overlook it--because--because you
-fancied you had a grievance. But, remember this--never again! Lack of
-candor is fatal to the best interests of the service. It is for me to
-decide which cases you shall take up and which you shall leave alone.
-You know perfectly well that if, by chance, information reaches you with
-regard to any inquiry which may prove useful to the man in charge of it,
-it is your duty to tell him everything. I say no more now. You
-understand me fully, I have no doubt. You must take it from me, without
-question or protest, that neither Janoc nor his sister was responsible
-for that crime. They may have been mixed up in it--in some manner now
-hidden from me--but they had no share in it personally. Still, seeing
-that you have worked so hard, I don't object to your presence while I
-prove that I am right. Come with me now to Marlborough Street. Mr.
-Osborne must be set at liberty, of course, but I shall confront your
-Anarchist friends with one another, and then you will see for yourself
-my grounds for being so positive as to their innocence."
-
-"But you yourself arrested Pauline, sir," Clarke ventured to say.
-
-"Don't be an ass!" was the cool rejoinder. "Could I refuse to arrest
-her? Suppose you told me now that you had killed the Frenchwoman,
-wouldn't I be compelled to arrest _you_?"
-
-"Ha!" laughed Clarke, in solemn mirth, "what about C. E. F.? Wouldn't it
-be funny if he owned up to it?"
-
-Winter answered not a word. He was busy locking the drawer and rolling
-down the front of the desk. But Clarke did not really mean what he had
-said. His mind was dwelling on the inscrutable mystery of the daggers
-which he had last held in his hands in Soho and now knew to be reposing
-in a locked desk in Scotland Yard.
-
-"Would you mind telling me, sir, how you managed to get hold of 'em?" he
-asked.
-
-Winter did not pretend ignorance.
-
-"You will be surprised to hear that I myself took them, disinterred
-them, from the poor creature's grave in Kensal Green Cemetery," he said.
-
-Clarke's jaw dropped in the most abject amazement. The thing had a
-supernatural sound. He felt himself bewitched.
-
-"From her grave?" he repeated.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"But who put 'em there?"
-
-"Ah," said the other with a new note of sternness in his voice, "who but
-the murderer? But come, we are wasting time--that unfortunate Osborne
-must be half-demented. I suppose the Marlborough Street people will let
-him out on my authority. If not, I must get an order from the
-Commissioner. By gad, there will be a fiendish rumpus about this
-business before it is all settled!"
-
-Clarke shivered. He saw a certain well-belovèd detective inspector
-figuring prominently in that "rumpus," and he was in no mind to seek a
-new career after passing the best part of his life in the C. I. D.
-
-But at Marlborough Street another shock awaited the Chief. He and Clarke
-were entering the street in a taxi when Furneaux crooked a finger at him
-from the pavement. Winter could not, nay, he dared not, ignore that
-demand for an interview.
-
-"Stop here!" he said to Clarke. Then he sprang out, and approached
-Furneaux.
-
-"Well?" he snapped, "have you made up your mind to end this tragic
-farce?"
-
-"I am not its chief buffoon," sneered Furneaux. "In fact, I am mainly a
-looker-on, but I do appreciate its good points to the full."
-
-Winter waved aside these absurdities.
-
-"I have come to free Mr. Osborne," he said. "I was rather hoping that
-your own sense of fair dealing, if you have any left----"
-
-"Exactly what I thought," broke in the other. "That is why _I_ am here.
-I hate correcting your mistakes, because I fancy it does you good to
-discover them for yourself. Still, it is a pity to spoil a good cause.
-Mere professional pride forces me to warn you against liberating
-Osborne."
-
-"Man alive, you try me beyond endurance. Do you believe I don't know the
-truth--that Rose de Bercy was your wife--that _you_ were in that museum
-before the murder--that _you_.... Oh, Furneaux, you wring it from me.
-Get a pistol, man, before it is too late."
-
-"You mean that?" cried Furneaux, his eyes gleaming with a new fire.
-
-"Heaven knows I do!"
-
-"You want to be my friend, then, after all?"
-
-"Friend! If you realized half the torture----"
-
-"Pity!" mused Furneaux aloud. "Why didn't you speak sooner? So you would
-rather I committed suicide than be in your hands a prisoner?"
-
-Winter then awoke to the consciousness that this extraordinary
-conversation was taking place in a crowded thoroughfare, within a
-stone's throw of a police-station in which lay three people charged with
-having committed the very crime he was tacitly accusing Furneaux of,
-while Clarke's ferret eyes must be resting on them with a suspicion
-already half-formed.
-
-"I can say no more," he muttered gruffly. "One must forego friendship
-when duty bars the way. But if you have a grain of humanity left in your
-soul, come with me and release that unhappy young man----"
-
-Some gush of emotion wrung Furneaux's face as if with a spasm of
-physical pain. He held out his right hand.
-
-"Winter, forgive me, I have misjudged you," he said.
-
-"Is it good-by?" came the passionate question.
-
-"No, not good-by. It is an alliance, Winter, a wiping of the slate. You
-don't understand, perhaps, that we are both to blame. But you can take
-my hand, old man. There is no stain of blood on it. I did not murder my
-wife. I am her avenger, her pitiless, implacable avenger--so pitiless,
-so implacable, that I may have erred in my harshness. For Heaven's sake,
-Winter, believe me, and take my hand!"
-
-The man's magnetism was irresistible. Despite the crushing weight of
-proof accumulated against him, the claims of old friendship were not to
-be ignored. Winter took the proffered hand and squeezed it with a
-vehemence that not only showed the tension of his feelings but also
-brought tears of real anguish to Furneaux's eyes.
-
-"I only asked you for a friendly grip, Winter," he complained. "You have
-been more than kind. No matter what happens, don't offer to shake hands
-with me again for twelve months at least."
-
-There was no comprehending him, and Winter abandoned the effort.
-Moreover, Clarke's puzzled brows were bent on them.
-
-"An alliance implies confidence," he said, and the official mask fell on
-his bluff features. "If you can honestly----"
-
-Furneaux laughed, with just a faint touch of that impish humor that the
-other knew so well.
-
-"Not Winter, but Didymus!" he cried. "Well, then, let us proceed to the
-confounding of poor Clarke. _Peste!_ he deserves a better fate, for he
-has worked like a Trojan. But leave Osborne to me. Have no fear--I shall
-explain, a little to him, all to you."
-
-Clarke writhed with jealousy when Winter beckoned to him. While his
-chief was paying the cabman, he jeered at Furneaux.
-
-"I had a notion----" he began, but the other caught his arm
-confidentially.
-
-"I was just telling the guv'nor how much we owe to you in this Feldisham
-Mansions affair," he said. "You were on the right track all the time.
-You've the keenest nose in the Yard, Clarke. You can smell an Anarchist
-through the stoutest wall ever built. Now, not a word! You'll soon see
-how important your investigations have been."
-
-Clarke was overwhelmed by a new flood. Never before had Furneaux praised
-him, unless in some ironic phrase that galled the more because he did
-not always extract its hidden meaning. He blinked with astonishment.
-
-With a newborn trust, which he would have failed ignominiously to
-explain in words, Winter led his colleagues to Marlborough Street
-police-station. There, after a brief but earnest colloquy with the
-station inspector, he asked that Janoc and his sister should be brought
-to the inspector's office.
-
-Janoc came first, pale, languid, high-strung, but evidently prepared to
-be led to his death that instant.
-
-He looked at the four men, three in plain clothes and one in uniform,
-with a superb air of dignity, almost of superiority; in silence he
-awaited the inquisition which he supposed he would be compelled to
-undergo, but when no word was spoken--when even that phantom of evil,
-Clarke, paid no heed to him, he grew manifestly uneasy.
-
-At last steps were heard, the door opened, and Pauline Dessaulx entered.
-Of course, this brother and sister were Gauls to the finger-tips. Each
-screamed, each flew to the other's arms; they raved; they wept, and
-laughed, and uttered incoherent words of utmost affection.
-
-Winter indulged them a few seconds. Then he broke in on their
-transports.
-
-"Now, Janoc," he said brusquely, "have done with this acting! Why have
-you given the police so much trouble?"
-
-"Monsieur, I swear----"
-
-"Oh, have done with your swearing! Your sister didn't kill Mademoiselle
-de Bercy. She wouldn't kill a fly. Come, Pauline, own up!"
-
-"Monsieur," faltered the girl, "I--I----"
-
-"You took the guilt on your shoulders in order to shield your brother?"
-
-Wild-eyed, distraught, she looked from the face of the man who seemed to
-peer into her very soul to that other face so dear to her. She knew not
-what to say. Was this stern-visaged representative of the law merely
-torturing her with a false hope? Dared she say "Yes," or must she
-persist in self-accusation?
-
-"Janoc," thundered Winter, "you ought to be ashamed of yourself. Don't
-you see how she is suffering for your sake? Tell her, then, that you are
-as innocent as she of this murder?"
-
-The dreamer, the man who would reform an evil world by force, had the
-one great quality demanded of a leader--he knew a man when he met him.
-He turned now to Pauline.
-
-"My sister," he said in French, "this gentleman can be trusted. He is no
-trickster. I had no hand in the slaying of the traitress, just though
-her death might be."
-
-"Ah, _Dieu merci_!" she breathed, and fainted.
-
-The police matron was summoned, and the Frenchwoman soon regained
-consciousness. Meanwhile, Janoc admitted readily enough that he did
-really believe in his sister's acceptance of the dread mission imposed
-on her by the revolutionary party in Russia.
-
-"Rose de Bercy was condemned, and my sweet Pauline, alas! was deputed to
-be her executioner," he said. "We had waited long for the hour, and the
-dagger was ready, though I, too, distrusted my sister's courage. Then
-came an urgent letter from St. Petersburg that the traitress was
-respited until a certain list found among her papers was checked----"
-
-"Found?" questioned Winter.
-
-"By Pauline," said Janoc.
-
-"Ah, stolen?"
-
-Janoc brushed aside the substituted word as a quibble.
-
-"Conceive my horror when I heard of the murder!" he cried with hands
-flung wide and eyes that rolled. "I was sure that Pauline had mistaken
-the instructions----"
-
-"Where is the St. Petersburg letter?" broke in Furneaux.
-
-"Sapristi! You will scarce credit. It was taken from me by a man--a
-Russian agent he must have been--one night in the Fraternal Club,
-Soho----"
-
-"Clarke, produce it," said Furneaux, grinning.
-
-Clarke flushed, grew white, nervously thumbed some papers in a
-pocketbook, and handed to Winter the letter which commenced: "St.
-Petersburg says ..." and ended: "You will see to it that she to whose
-hands vengeance has been intrusted shall fail on the 3d."
-
-Winter read, and frowned. Furneaux, too, read.
-
-"The 3d!" he muttered. "Just Heaven, what a fatal date to her!"
-
-"What was I to think?" continued Janoc. "Antonio shared my view. He met
-Pauline at the Exhibition, and was ready, if necessary, to vouch for her
-presence there at the time Rose de Bercy went to her reckoning; but he
-is not in the inner--he had not heard of the Petersburg order."
-
-"Yet he, and the rest of your gang, were prepared to let Mr. Osborne
-hang for this crime," said Winter, surveying the conspirator with a
-condemning eye. But his menace or scorn was alike to Janoc, who threw
-out his arms again.
-
-"Cré nom!" he cried, "why not? Is he not a rich bourgeois like the rest?
-He and his class have crushed us without mercy for many a century. What
-matter if he were hanged by mistake? He could be spared--my Pauline
-could not. He is merely a rich one, my Pauline is a martyr to the
-cause!"
-
-"Listen to me, Janoc," said Winter fiercely. "Spout what rubbish you
-please in your rotten club, but if ever you dare again to plot--even to
-plot, mind you--any sort of crime against life or property in this free
-country, I shall crush you like a beetle--like a beetle, do you hear,
-you wretched--insect! Now, get out!"
-
-"Monsieur, my sister?"
-
-"Wait outside there till she comes. Then leave England, the pair of you,
-or you will try what hard labor in a British prison can do for your
-theories."
-
-Janoc bowed.
-
-"Monsieur," he said, "a prison has made me what I am."
-
-Pauline was candid as her brother. She had, in truth, misunderstood the
-respite given to her mistress, and meant to kill her on the night of the
-3d. The visit to the Exhibition was of her own contriving. She had got
-rid of her English acquaintance, the cook, very easily after meeting
-Antonio by appointment. Then she left him, without giving a reason, and
-hurried back to the mansions, where, owing to her intimate knowledge of
-the internal arrangements, she counted on entering and leaving the flat
-unseen. She did actually succeed in her mission, but found Rose de Bercy
-lying dead.
-
-On the floor, close to the body, was a dagger, and she had no doubt
-whatever that her brother had acted in her stead, so she picked up the
-weapon, secreted it with the dagger given her in readiness for the
-crime, and took the first opportunity of hiding herself, lest the mere
-fact that Janoc was seen in her company should draw suspicion towards
-him.
-
-"Ah, but the lace? What of the piece of blood-stained lace?" demanded
-Furneaux.
-
-"I wished to make sure, monsieur," was the astounding reply. "Had she
-not been dead, but merely wounded, I--_Eh, bien!_ I tore her dress open,
-in order to feel if her heart was beating, and the bit of lace remained
-in my hand. I was so excited that I hardly knew what I was doing. I took
-it away. Afterwards, when Antonio said that the police were cooling in
-their chase of Osborne, I gave it to him; he told me he could use it to
-good effect."
-
-"Phew!" breathed Winter, "you're a pretty lot of cutthroats, I must say.
-Why did you keep the daggers and the diary, sweet maid?"
-
-"The knife that rid us of a traitress was sacred. I thought the diary
-might be useful to the--to our friends."
-
-"Yet you gave it to Mr. Clarke without any demur?"
-
-The girl shot a look at Clarke in which fright was mingled with hatred.
-
-"He--he--I was afraid of him," she stammered.
-
-Winter opened the door.
-
-"There is your brother," he said. "Be off, both of you. Take my advice
-and leave England to-night."
-
-They went forth, hand in hand, in no wise cast down by the loathing they
-had inspired. Clarke looked far more miserable than they, for by their
-going he had lost the prize of his life.
-
-"Now for Osborne," whispered Furneaux. "Leave him to me, Winter. Trust
-me implicitly for five minutes--that is all."
-
-Osborne was brought in by the station inspector, that human ledger who
-would record without an unnecessary word the name of the Prime Minister
-or the Archbishop of Canterbury on any charge preferred against either
-by a responsible member of the force. The young American was calm now,
-completely self-possessed, disdainful of any ignominy that might be
-inflicted on him. He did not even glance at Furneaux, but nodded to
-Winter.
-
-"Your assurances are seemingly of little value," he said coldly.
-
-"Mr. Winter is quite blameless," snapped Furneaux, obviously nettled by
-the implied reproof. "Please attend to me, Mr. Osborne--this affair
-rests wholly between you and me. Learn now, for the first time, I
-imagine, that Rose de Bercy was my wife."
-
-Osborne did truly start at hearing that remarkable statement. Clarke's
-mouth literally fell open; even the uniformed inspector was stirred, and
-began to pare a quill pen with a phenomenally sharp knife, this being
-the only sign of excitement he had ever been known to exhibit.
-
-"Yes, unhappily for her and me, we were married in Paris soon after she
-ran away from home," said Furneaux. "I--I thought--we should be happy.
-She had rare qualities, Mr. Osborne; perhaps you discovered some of
-them, and they fascinated you as they fascinated me. But--she had
-others, which _I_ learnt to my sorrow, while _you_ were spared. I cannot
-explain further at this moment. I have only to say that you are as free
-from the guilt of her death--as _I_ am!"
-
-Winter alone was conscious of a queer note in the little man's voice as
-he dwelt on the comparison. He seemed to be searching for some simile of
-wildest improbability, and to have hit upon himself as supplying it. But
-Osborne was in no mood for bewilderment. He cared absolutely nothing
-about present or future while the horrible past still held the pall it
-had thrown on his prospects of bliss with Rosalind.
-
-"In that event, one might ask why I am here," he said quietly. "Not that
-I am concerned in the solving of the riddle. You have done your worst,
-Mr. Furneaux. You can inflict no deeper injury on me. If you have any
-other vile purpose to serve by telling me these things, by all means go
-right ahead."
-
-Furneaux's eyes glinted, and his wizened cheeks showed some token of
-color, but he kept his voice marvelously under control.
-
-"In time you will come to thank me, Mr. Osborne," he said. "To-day you
-are bitter, and I am not surprised at it, but you could never have been
-happy in your marriage with Miss Rosalind Marsh while the shadow of
-suspicion clung to you. Please do not forget that the world believes you
-killed Rose de Bercy. If you walked forth now into Regent Street, and
-the word went around that you were there, a thousand people would mob
-you in a minute, while ten thousand would be prepared to lynch you
-within ten minutes. I have played with you, I admit--with others, too,
-and now I am sorry--to a certain extent. But in this case, I was at once
-detective, and judge, and executioner. If you wantonly transferred your
-love from the dead woman to the living one, I cared not a straw what you
-suffered or how heavily you were punished. That phase has passed. To-day
-you have justified yourself. Within twenty-four hours you will be free
-to marry Rosalind Marsh, because your name will have lost the smirch now
-placed on it, while your promise to Hylda Prout will be dissolved. But
-for twenty-four hours you must remain here, apparently a prisoner, in
-reality as much at liberty as any man in London. Yes, I vouch for my
-words----" for at last wonder and hope were dawning in Osborne's
-eyes--"my chief, Mr. Winter, will tell you that I have never spoken in
-this manner without making good what I have said--never, I repeat. If I
-could spare you the necessity of passing a night in a cell I would do
-so; but I cannot. You are the decoy duck for the wild creature that I
-mean to lay hands on before another day has closed. Make yourself as
-comfortable as possible--the inspector will see to that--but I _must_
-keep you here, a prisoner in all outward semblance. Are you willing?"
-
-"For Heaven's sake----" began Osborne.
-
-"For Rosalind's sake, too," said Furneaux gravely. "No, I can answer no
-questions. She has more to bear than you. She does not know what to
-believe, whom to trust, whereas you have my solemn assurance that all
-will soon be well with both you and her. You see, I am not craving your
-forgiveness--yet. It suffices that I have forgiven _you_, since your
-tribulation will end quickly, whereas mine remains for the rest of my
-days. I _did_ love Rose de Bercy: you did not.... Ah, bah! I am growing
-sentimental. Winter, have you ever seen me weep? No; then gag me if you
-hear me talking in this strain again. Come, I have much to tell you.
-Good-day, Mr. Osborne. The hours will soon fly; by this time to-morrow
-you will be gay, light-hearted, ready to shout your joy from the
-housetops--ready even to admit that a detective may be bothered with
-that useless incubus--a heart."
-
-Osborne took a step towards him, but Furneaux sprang out and banged the
-door. Winter caught the millionaire by the shoulder.
-
-"I am as thoroughly in the dark as you," he said. "Perhaps not, though.
-I have a glimmer of light; you, too, will begin to see dimly when you
-have collected your thoughts. But you must let Furneaux have his way. It
-may not be your way--it certainly is not mine--but he never fails when
-he promises, and, at any rate, you must now be sure that no manner of
-doubt rests in the minds of the police where you are concerned. It is
-possible, after Furneaux and I have gone into this thing fully, that you
-may be released to-night----"
-
-"Mr. Winter," cried Osborne, in whose veins the blood was coursing
-tumultuously, "let that strange man justify his words concerning Miss
-Marsh, and I shall remain here a month if that will help."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- WHEREIN TWO WOMEN TAKE THE FIELD
-
-
-Some tears, some tea, a bath, a change of clothing--where is the woman
-who will not vie with the Phoenix under such conditions, especially if
-she be sound in mind and limb? An hour after her arrival at Porchester
-Gardens, Rosalind was herself again, a somewhat pale and thin Rosalind,
-to be sure, but each moment regaining vigor, each moment taking huge
-strides back to the normal.
-
-Of course, her ordered thoughts dwelt more and more with Osborne, but
-with clear thinking came a species of confusion that threatened to
-overwhelm her anew in a mass of contradictions. If ever a man loved a
-woman then Osborne loved her, yet she had seen him in the arms of that
-dreadful creature, Hylda Prout. If ever a man had shown devotion by word
-and look, then Osborne was devoted to her, yet he had taken leave of her
-with the manner of one who was going to his doom. Ah, he spoke of "a
-felon's cell." Was that it? Was it true what the world was saying--that
-he had really killed Rose de Bercy? No, that infamy she would never
-believe. Yet Furneaux had arrested him--Furneaux, the strange little man
-who seemed ever to say with his lip what his heart did not credit.
-
-During those weary hours in Poland Street, when she was not dozing or
-faint with anxiety, she had often recalled Furneaux's queer way of
-conducting an inquiry. She knew little or nothing of police methods, yet
-she was sure that British detectives did not badger witnesses with
-denunciations of the suspected person. In newspaper reports, too, she
-had read of clever lawyers who defended those charged with the
-commission of a crime; why, then, was Osborne undefended; what had
-become of the solicitor who appeared in his behalf at the inquest?
-Unfortunately, she had no friend of ripe experience to whom she could
-appeal in London, but she determined, before that day closed, to seek
-those two, the solicitor and Furneaux, bidding the one protect Osborne's
-interests, and demanding of the other an explanation of his gross
-failure to safeguard her when she was actually carrying out his behests.
-
-Mrs. Marsh, far more feeble and unstrung than her daughter, was greatly
-alarmed when Rosalind announced her intention.
-
-"My dear one," she sobbed, "I shall lose you again. How can you dream of
-running fresh risk of meeting those terrible beings who have already
-wreaked their vengeance on you?"
-
-"But, mother darling, you shall come with me--there are lives at
-stake----"
-
-"Of what avail are two women against creatures like these Anarchists?"
-
-"We shall go to Scotland Yard and obtain police protection. Failing
-that, we shall hire men armed with guns to act as our escort. Mother, I
-did not die in that den of misery, but I shall die now of impotent wrath
-if I remain here inactive and let Mr. Osborne lie in prison for my
-sake."
-
-"For your sake? Rosalind? After what you have told me?"
-
-"Oh, it is true, true! I feel it here," and an eager hand pressed close
-to her heart. "My brain says, 'You are foolish--why not believe your
-eyes, your ears?' but my heart bids me be up and doing, for the night
-cometh when no man can work, and I shall dream of death and the grave if
-I sleep this day without striking one blow for the man that loves me."
-
-"Yet he said----"
-
-"Bear with me, mother dear! I cannot explain, I can only feel. A woman's
-intuition may sometimes be trusted when logic points inexorably to the
-exact opposite of her beliefs. And this is a matter that calls for a
-woman's wit. See how inextricably women are tangled in the net which has
-caught Osborne in its meshes. A woman was killed, a woman found the poor
-thing's body, a woman gave the worst evidence against Osborne, a woman
-has sacrificed all womanliness to snatch him from me. Ah, where is
-Pauline Dessaulx? She, too, is mixed up in it. Has she discovered the
-loss of the daggers? Has she fled?"
-
-Rosalind rose to her feet like one inspired, and Mrs. Marsh, fearing for
-her reason, stammered brokenly her willingness to go anywhere and do
-anything that might relieve the strain. When her daughter began to talk
-of "daggers" she was really alarmed. The girl had alluded to them more
-than once, but poor Mrs. Marsh's troubled brain associated "daggers"
-with Anarchists. That any such murderous-sounding weapons should be
-secreted in a servant's bedroom at Porchester Gardens, be found there by
-Rosalind, and carried by her all over London in a cab, never entered her
-mind. Perhaps the sight of Pauline would in itself have a soothing
-effect, since one could not persist in such delusions when the demure
-Frenchwoman, in the cap and apron of respectable domestic service, came
-in answer to the bell. So Mrs. Marsh rang: and another housemaid
-appeared.
-
-"Please send Pauline here," said the white-faced mother.
-
-"Pauline is out, ma'm," came the answer.
-
-"Will she return soon?"
-
-"I don't know, ma'm--I--I think she has run away."
-
-"Run away!"
-
-Two voices repeated those sinister words. To Rosalind they brought a dim
-memory of something said by Janoc, to Mrs. Marsh dismay. The three were
-gazing blankly at each other when the clang of a distant bell was heard.
-
-"That's the front door," exclaimed the maid. "Perhaps Pauline has come
-back."
-
-She hurried away, and returned, breathless.
-
-"It isn't Pauline, ma'm, but a lady to see Miss Rosalind."
-
-"What lady?"
-
-"She wouldn't give a name, miss; she says she wants to see you
-perticular."
-
-"Send her here.... Now, mother, don't be alarmed. This is not Soho. If
-you wish it, I shall get someone to wait in the hall until we learn our
-mysterious visitor's business."
-
-Most certainly, the well-dressed and elegant woman whom the servant
-ushered into the room was not of a type calculated to cause a pang of
-distrust in any household in Porchester Gardens. She was dressed quietly
-but expensively, and, notwithstanding the heat of summer, so heavily
-veiled that her features were not recognizable until she raised her
-veil. Then a pair of golden-brown eyes flashed triumphantly at the
-startled Rosalind, and Hylda Prout said:
-
-"May I have a few words in private with you, Miss Marsh?"
-
-"You can have nothing to say to me that my mother may not hear," said
-Rosalind curtly.
-
-The visitor smiled, and looked graciously at Mrs. Marsh.
-
-"Ah, I am pleased to have this opportunity of meeting you," she said.
-"You may have heard of me. I am Hylda Prout." ... Then, seeing the older
-woman's perplexity, she added: "Since you do not seem to know me by
-name, let me explain that Mr. Rupert Osborne, of whom you must have
-heard a good deal, is my promised husband."
-
-Mrs. Marsh might be ill and worried; but she was a well-bred lady to the
-marrow, and she realized instantly that the stranger's politeness
-covered a studied insult to her daughter.
-
-"Has Mr. Osborne sent you as his ambassador?" she asked.
-
-"No, he could not: he is in prison. But your daughter and I have met
-under conditions that compel me to ask her now not to interfere in the
-efforts I shall make to secure his release."
-
-"Please go!" broke in Rosalind, and she moved as if to summon a servant.
-
-"I am not here from choice," sneered Hylda. "I have really come to plead
-for Mr. Osborne. If you care for him as you say you do I want you to
-understand two things: first, that your pursuit is in vain, since he has
-given his word to marry me within a week, and, secondly, that any
-further interference in his affairs on your part may prove disastrous to
-him. You cannot pretend that I have not warned you. Had you taken my
-advice the other day, Rupert would not now be under arrest."
-
-Mrs. Marsh was sallow with indignation, but Rosalind, though tingling in
-every fiber, controlled herself sufficiently to utter a dignified
-protest.
-
-"You had something else in your mind than Mr. Osborne's safety in coming
-here today: I do not believe one word you have said," she cried.
-
-"Oh, but you shall believe. Wait one short week----"
-
-"I shall not wait one short hour. Mr. Osborne's arrest is a monstrous
-blunder, and I am going this instant to demand his release."
-
-"He has not taken you into his confidence, it would seem. Were it not
-for his promise to me you would still be locked in your den at Poland
-Street."
-
-"Some things may be purchased at a price so degrading that a man pays
-and remains silent. If Mr. Osborne won my liberty by the loss of his
-self-respect I am truly sorry for him, but the fact, if it is a fact,
-only strengthens my resolution to appeal to the authorities in his
-behalf."
-
-"You can achieve nothing, absolutely nothing," shrilled Hylda
-vindictively.
-
-"I shall try to do much, and accomplish far more, perhaps, than you
-imagine."
-
-"You will only succeed in injuring him."
-
-"At any rate, I shall have obeyed the dictates of my conscience, whereas
-your vile purposes have ever been directed by malice. How dare you talk
-of serving him! Since that poor woman was struck dead by some unknown
-hand you have been his worst enemy. In the guise of innocent friendship
-you supplied the police with the only real evidence they possess against
-him. Probably you are responsible now for his arrest, which could not
-have happened had I been at liberty during the past two days. Go, and
-vent your spite as you will--no word of yours can deter me from raising
-such a storm as shall compel Mr. Osborne's release!"
-
-For a second or two those golden-brown eyes blazed with a fire that
-might well have appalled Rosalind could she have read its hidden
-significance. During a tick of the clock she was in mortal peril of her
-life, but Hylda Prout, though partially insane, was not yet in that
-trance of the wounded tiger which recks not of consequences so that it
-gluts its rage.
-
-Mrs. Marsh, really frightened, rushed to the electric bell, and the jar
-of its summons, faintly audible, seemed to banish the grim specter that
-had entered the room, though unseen by other eyes than those of the
-woman who dreamed of death even while she glowered at her rival. Her
-bitter tongue managed to outstrip her murderous thoughts in the race
-back to ordered thought.
-
-"You are powerless," she taunted Rosalind, "but, like every other
-discarded lover, you cling to delusions. Now I shall prove to you how my
-strength compares with your weakness. You speak of appealing to the
-authorities. That means Scotland Yard, I suppose. Very well. I, too,
-shall go there, in your very company, if you choose, and it will then be
-seen which of us two can best help Mr. Osborne."
-
-The housemaid appeared.
-
-"Please show this person out," said Rosalind.
-
-"My carriage is waiting--Rupert's carriage," said Hylda.
-
-"After she has gone, Lizzie," said Rosalind to the maid, "kindly get me
-a taxicab."
-
-Porchester Gardens is well out to the west, so the taxicab, entered in a
-fever of haste by Rosalind and her mother, raced ahead of Osborne's bays
-in the flight to Westminster. Hylda Prout had experienced no difficulty
-in securing the use of the millionaire's carriage. She went to his
-Mayfair flat, paralyzed Jenkins by telling him of his master's arrest,
-assured him, in the same breath, that she alone could prove Osborne's
-innocence, and asked that all the resources of the household should be
-placed at her disposal, since Mr. Osborne meant to marry her within a
-few days. Now, Jenkins had seen things that brought this concluding
-statement inside the bounds of credibility, so he became her willing
-slave in all that concerned Osborne.
-
-Winter was sitting in his office, with Furneaux straddled across a chair
-in one corner, when Johnson, the young policeman who was always at the
-Chief Inspector's beck and call, entered.
-
-"Two ladies to see you, sir," he said.
-
-Furneaux's eyes sparkled, but Winter took the two cards and read: "Mrs.
-Marsh; Miss Rosalind Marsh."
-
-"Bring them here," he said.
-
-"I rather expected the other one first," grinned Furneaux, who was now
-evidently on the best of terms with his Chief.
-
-"Perhaps she won't show up. She must be deep, crafty as a fox, or she
-could never have humbugged me in the way you describe."
-
-"My dear Winter, coincidence is the best dramatist yet evolved. You were
-beaten by coincidence."
-
-"But you were not," and the complaint fell querulously from the lips of
-one who was almost unrivaled in the detection of crime.
-
-"You forget that _I_ supplied the coincidence. Clarke, too, blundered
-with positive genius. I assure you that, in your shoes, I must have
-acted with--with inconceivable folly."
-
-"Thank you," said Winter grimly.
-
-Rosalind and her mother came in. Both ladies had been weeping, but the
-girl's eyes shone with another light than that of tears when she cried
-vehemently:
-
-"You are the responsible official here, I understand. I have no word for
-_that_ man," and she transfixed Furneaux with a tragic finger, "but I do
-appeal to someone who may have a sense of decency----"
-
-"You have come to see me about Mr. Osborne?" broke in Winter, for
-Rosalind's utterance was choked by a sob.
-
-"Yes, of course. Are you aware----"
-
-"I am aware of everything, Miss Marsh. Please be seated; and you, too,
-Mrs. Marsh. Mr. Osborne is in no danger whatsoever. I cannot explain,
-but you must trust the police in this matter."
-
-"Ah, so _he_ said," and Rosalind shot a fiery glance at the unabashed
-Furneaux.
-
-"Seen anybody?" he asked, with an amiable smirk.
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Has anybody been gloating over Mr. Osborne's arrest?"
-
-For the life of her, Rosalind could not conceal the surprise caused by
-this question. She even smothered her resentment in her eagerness.
-
-"Mr. Osborne's typist, a woman named Hylda Prout, has been to see me,"
-she cried.
-
-"Excellent! What did she say?"
-
-"Everything that a mean heart could suggest. But you will soon hear her
-statements. She is coming here herself, or, at least, so she said."
-
-"Great Scott!"
-
-Furneaux sprang up, and ran to the bell. For some reason which neither
-Mrs. Marsh nor her daughter could fathom, the mercurial little Jersey
-man was wild with excitement; even Winter seemed to be disturbed beyond
-expression. Johnson came, and Furneaux literally leaped at him.
-
-"Ring up that number, quick! You know exactly what to say--and do!"
-
-Johnson saluted and vanished again; Winter had chosen him for his
-special duties because he never uttered a needless word. Still, these
-tokens of activity in the police headquarters did not long repress the
-tumult in Rosalind's breast.
-
-"If, as you tell me, Mr. Osborne is in no danger----" she began; but
-Winter held up an impressive hand.
-
-"You are here in order to help him," he said gravely. "Pray believe that
-we appreciate your feelings most fully. If this girl, Hylda Prout, is
-really on her way here we have not a moment to lose. No more appeals, I
-beg of you, Miss Marsh. Tell us every word that passed between you and
-her. You can speak all the more frankly if I assure you that Mr.
-Furneaux, my colleague, has acted throughout in Mr. Osborne's interests.
-Were it not for him this young gentleman, who, I understand, will soon
-become your husband, would never have been cleared of the stigma of a
-dreadful crime.... No, pardon me, not a syllable on that subject....
-What did Hylda Prout say? Why is she coming to Scotland Yard?"
-
-Impressed in spite of herself, Rosalind gave a literal account of the
-interview at Porchester Gardens. She was burning to deliver her soul on
-matters that appeared to be so much more important, such as the finding
-and loss of the daggers, the strange behavior of Pauline Dessaulx, the
-statement, now fiery bright in her mind, made by Janoc when he spoke of
-his sister's guilt--but, somehow, the tense interest displayed by the
-two detectives in Hylda Prout's assertions overbore all else, and
-Rosalind proved herself a splendid witness, one able to interpret moods
-and glances as well as to record the spoken word.
-
-Even while she spoke a lurid fancy flashed through her brain.
-
-"Oh, gracious Heaven!" she cried. "Can it be----"
-
-Winter rose and placed a hand on her shoulder.
-
-"You have endured much, Miss Marsh," he said in a voice of grave
-sympathy. "Now, I trust to your intelligence and power of self-command.
-No matter what suspicions you may have formed, you must hide them.
-Possibly, Mr. Furneaux or I may speak or act within the next half-hour
-in a manner that you deem prejudicial to Mr. Osborne. I want you to
-express your resentment in any way you may determine, short of leaving
-us. Do you understand? We shall act as on the stage; you must do the
-same. You need no cue from us. Defend Mr. Osborne; urge his innocence;
-threaten us with pains and penalties; do anything, in short, that will
-goad Hylda Prout into action in his behalf for fear lest you may prevail
-where she has failed."
-
-A knock was heard at the door. He sank back into his seat.
-
-"Do you promise?" he muttered.
-
-"Yes," she breathed.
-
-"Come in!" cried Winter, and the imperturbable Johnson ushered in Hylda
-Prout. Even in the storm and stress of contending emotions Rosalind knew
-that there was a vital difference between the reception accorded to the
-newcomer and that given to her mother and herself. They had been
-announced, their names scrutinized in advance, as it were, whereas Hylda
-Prout's arrival was expected, provided for; in a word, the policeman on
-guard had his orders and was obeying them.
-
-"Well, this _is_ a surprise, Miss Prout," exclaimed Furneaux before
-anyone else could utter a word.
-
-"Is it?" she asked, smiling scornfully at Rosalind.
-
-"Quite. Miss Marsh told us, of course, of your visit, and I suppose that
-your appearance here is inspired by the same motive as hers. My chief,
-Mr. Winter, has just been telling her that the law brooks no
-interference, yet she persists in demanding Mr. Osborne's release. She
-cannot succeed in obtaining it, unless she brings a positive order from
-the Home Secretary----"
-
-"I shall get it," vowed Rosalind, to whom it seemed that Furneaux's
-dropped voice carried a subtle hint.
-
-"Try, by all means," said Furneaux blandly. "Nevertheless, I strongly
-advise you ladies, all three, to go home and let matters take their
-course."
-
-"Never!" cried Rosalind valiantly. "You must either free Mr. Osborne
-to-night or I drive straight from this office to the House of Commons. I
-have friends there who will secure me a hearing by the Home Secretary."
-
-Furneaux glanced inquiringly at Winter, whose hand was stroking his chin
-as if in doubt. Hylda Prout took a step nearer the Chief Inspector. Her
-dress brushed against the drawer which contained the daggers, and one of
-those grewsome blades had pierced Rose de Bercy's brain through the eye.
-
-"The Home Secretary is merely an official like the rest of you," she
-said bitingly. "Miss Marsh may appeal to whom she thinks fit, but the
-charge against Mr. Osborne will keep him in custody until it is heard by
-a magistrate. Nothing can prevent that--nothing--unless----" and her
-gaze dwelt warily on Furneaux for a fraction of an instant--"unless the
-police themselves are convinced that the evidence on which they rely is
-so flimsy that they run the risk of public ridicule by bringing it
-forward."
-
-"Ha! ha!" laughed Furneaux knowingly.
-
-"I think I am wasting time here," cried Rosalind, half rising.
-
-"One moment, I pray you," put in Winter. "There is some force in Miss
-Prout's remarks, but I am betraying no secret in saying that Mr.
-Osborne's apparently unshakable alibi can be upset, while we have the
-positive identification of at least three people who saw him on the
-night of the crime."
-
-"Meaning the housekeeper, the driver of the taxicab, and the housemaid
-at Feldisham Mansions?" said Hylda coolly, and quite ignoring Rosalind's
-outburst.
-
-"At least those," admitted Winter.
-
-"Are there others, then?"
-
-"Really, Miss Prout, this is most irregular. We are not trying Mr.
-Osborne in this room."
-
-"I see there is nothing for it but to carry my plea for justice to the
-Home Secretary," cried Rosalind, acting as she thought best in obedience
-to a lightning glance from Furneaux. "Come, mother, we shall soon prove
-to these legal-minded persons that they cannot juggle away a man's
-liberty to gratify their pride--and spite."
-
-Hylda's eyes took fire at that last word.
-
-"Go to your Home Secretary," she said with measured venom. "Much good
-may it do you! While _you_ are being dismissed with platitudes _I_ shall
-have rescued my affianced husband from jail."
-
-"Dear me! this is most embarrassing. Your affianced husband?"
-
-Furneaux cackled out each sentence, and looked alternately at Hylda and
-Rosalind. There was no mistaking his meaning. He implied that the one
-woman was callously appropriating a man who was the acknowledged suitor
-of the other.
-
-Hylda laughed shrilly.
-
-"That is news to you, Mr. Furneaux," she cried. "Yet I thought you were
-so clever as to be almost omniscient. Come now with me, and I shall
-prove to you that the so-called identification of Mr. Osborne by Hester
-Bates and Campbell, the chauffeur, is a myth. The hysterical housemaid I
-leave to you."
-
-Winter leaned back in his chair and waved an expostulating hand.
-
-"'Pon my honor, this would be amusing if it were not so terribly serious
-for Osborne," he vowed.
-
-"If that is all, I prefer to depend on the Home Secretary," said
-Rosalind.
-
-"Let her go," purred Hylda contemptuously. "I can make good my boast,
-but she cannot."
-
-"Boasting is of no avail in defeating a charge of murder," said
-Furneaux. "Before we even begin to take you seriously, Miss Prout, we
-must know what you actually mean by your words."
-
-"I mean this--that I, myself, will appear before Hester Bates in such
-guise that she will swear it was me, and not Mr. Osborne, whom she saw
-on the stairs that night. If that does not suffice, I shall meet
-Campbell at the corner of Berkeley Street, if you can arrange for his
-presence there, and tell him to drive me to Feldisham Mansions, and he
-will swear that it was I, and not Mr. Osborne, who gave him that same
-order on the night of the third of July. Surely, if I accomplish so
-much, you will set Rupert at liberty. Believe me, I am not afraid that
-you will commit the crowning blunder of arresting _me_ for the murder,
-after having arrested Janoc, and his sister, _and_ Rupert."
-
-Winter positively started. So did Furneaux. Evidently they were
-perturbed by the extent of her information. Hylda saw the concern
-depicted on their faces; she laughed low, musically, full-throated.
-
-"Well, is it a bargain?" she taunted them.
-
-"Of course----" began Winter, and stopped.
-
-"There is no denying the weakness of our position if you can do all
-that," said Furneaux suavely.
-
-"Pray do not let me detain you from visiting the House of Commons,"
-murmured Hylda to Rosalind.
-
-"Perhaps, in the circumstances, you had better wait till to-morrow,"
-said Winter, rising and looking hard at Rosalind.
-
-This man had won her confidence, and she felt that she was in the
-presence of a tragedy, yet it was hard to yield in the presence of her
-rival. Tears filled her eyes, and she bowed her head to conceal them.
-
-"Come, mother," she said brokenly. "We are powerless here, it would
-seem."
-
-"Allow me to show you the way out," said Winter, and he bustled forward.
-
-In the corridor, when the door was closed, he caught an arm of each and
-bent in a whisper.
-
-"Furneaux was sure she would try some desperate move," he breathed.
-"Rest content now, Miss Marsh. If all goes well, your ill-used friend
-will be with you to-night. Treat him well. He deserves it. He did not
-open your letter. He sacrificed himself in every way for your sake. He
-even promised to marry that woman, that arch-fiend, in order to rescue
-you from Janoc. So, believe him, for he is a true man, the soul of
-honor, and tell him from me that he owes some share of the restitution
-of his good name in the eyes of the public to your splendid devotion
-during the past few minutes."
-
-Not often did the Chief Inspector unbend in this fashion. There was no
-ambiguity in his advice. He meant what he said, and said it so
-convincingly that Rosalind was radiantly hopeful when she drove away
-with her mother.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- THE CLOSING SCENE
-
-
-It was a scared and worried-looking Jenkins who admitted Hylda Prout and
-the two detectives to Osborne's flat in Clarges Street, Mayfair. These
-comings and goings of police officers were disconcerting, to put it
-mildly, and an event had happened but a few minutes earlier which had
-sorely ruffled his usually placid acceptance of life as it presented
-itself. Still, the one dominant thought in his mind was anxiety in his
-master's behalf, and, faithful to its promptings, he behaved like an
-automaton.
-
-Hylda carried herself with the regal air of one who was virtual mistress
-of the house. She had invited the two men to share her carriage, and
-there was an assured authority in her voice when she now directed the
-gray-headed butler to show them into the library while she went upstairs
-to Mr. Osborne's dressing-room.
-
-"And, by the way, Jenkins," she added, "tell Mrs. Bates to come to these
-gentlemen. They wish to ask her a few questions."
-
-"Yes, bring Mrs. Bates," said Furneaux softly. "Don't let her come
-alone. She might be frightened, and snivel, being a believer in ghosts,
-whereas we wish her to remain calm."
-
-Jenkins thought he understood, but said nothing. Hylda Prout sped
-lightly up the stairs, and when Jenkins came with the housekeeper,
-Furneaux crept close to him, pointed to a screened doorway leading to
-the kitchen quarters, and murmured the one word:
-
-"There!"
-
-At once he turned to Mrs. Bates and engaged her in animated chatter,
-going so far as to warn her that the police were trying an experiment
-which might definitely set at rest all doubts as to Mr. Osborne's
-innocence, so she must be prepared to see someone descend the stairs who
-might greatly resemble the person she saw ascending them on the night of
-the murder.
-
-The maisonette rented by the young millionaire was not constructed on
-the lines associated with the modern self-contained flat. It consisted
-of the ground floor, and first story of a mid-Victorian mansion, while
-the kitchen was in a basement. As it happened to be the property of a
-peer who lived next door--a sociable person who entertained
-largely--these lower stories were completely shut off from the three
-upper ones, which were thrown into the neighboring house, thus supplying
-the landlord with several bedrooms and bathrooms that Osborne did not
-need. As a consequence, the entrance hall and main staircase were
-spacious, and the staircase in particular was elaborate, climbing to a
-transverse corridor in two fine flights, of which the lower one sprang
-from the center of the hall and the upper led at a right angle from a
-broad half-landing.
-
-Anyone coming down this upper half of the stairs could be seen full face
-from the screened door used by the servants: but when descending the
-lower half, the view from the same point would be in profile.
-
-At present, however, the curtains were drawn tightly across the passage,
-and the only occupants of the hall and library were the two detectives,
-Jenkins, and Mrs. Bates.
-
-Hylda Prout did not hurry. If she were engaged in a masquerade which
-should achieve its object she evidently meant to leave nothing to
-chance, and a woman cannot exchange her costume for a man's without
-experiencing difficulty with her hair, especially when she is endowed by
-nature with a magnificent chevelure.
-
-Jenkins returned from the mission imposed by Furneaux's
-monosyllable,--insensibly the four deserted the brilliantly lighted
-library and gathered in the somewhat somber hall, whose old oak
-wainscoting and Grinling Gibbons fireplace forbade the use of garish
-lamps. Insensibly, too, their voices lowered. The butler and housekeeper
-hardly knew what to expect, and were creepy and ill at ease, but the two
-police officers realized that they were about to witness a scene of
-unparalleled effrontery, which, in its outcome, might have results
-vastly different from those anticipated.
-
-They were sure now that Hylda Prout had killed Rose de Bercy. Furneaux
-had known that terrible fact since his first meeting with Osborne's
-secretary, whereas Winter had only begun to surmise it when he and
-Furneaux were reconciled on the very threshold of Marlborough Street
-police-station. Now he was as certain of it as Furneaux. Page by page,
-chapter by chapter, his colleague had unfolded a most convincing theory
-of the crime. But theories will not suffice for a judge and jury--there
-must be circumstantial evidence as well--and not only was such evidence
-scanty as against Hylda Prout, but it existed in piles against Osborne,
-against Pauline Dessaulx, and against Furneaux himself. Indeed, Winter
-had been compelled to recall his permission to Janoc and his sister to
-leave England that day. He foresaw that Hylda Prout, if brought to
-trial, would use her knowledge of Rose de Bercy's dealings with the
-Anarchist movement to throw the gravest suspicion on its votaries in
-London, and it would require no great expert in criminal law to break up
-the theoretical case put forward by the police by demonstrating the
-circumstantial one that existed in regard to Pauline Dessaulx.
-
-This line of defense, already strong, would become impregnable if
-neither Janoc nor Pauline were forthcoming as witnesses. So Clarke,
-greatly to his delight, was told off again to supervise their movements,
-after they had been warned not to quit Soho until Winter gave them his
-written permission.
-
-Some of the difficulties ahead, a whole troupe of fantastic imageries
-from the past, crowded in on Winter's mind as he stood there in the hall
-with Furneaux. What a story it would make if published as he could tell
-it! What a romance! It began eight years ago at a _fête champêtre_ in
-Jersey. Then came a brief delirium of wedded life for Furneaux, followed
-by his wife's flight and reappearance as a notable actress. Osborne came
-on the scene, and quickly fell a victim to her beauty and charm of
-manner. It was only when marriage was spoken of that Furneaux decided to
-interfere, and he had actually gone to Osborne's residence in order to
-tell him the truth as to his promised wife on the very day she was
-killed. Failing to meet him, after a long wait in the library and
-museum, during which he had noted the absence of both the Saracen dagger
-and the celt, already purloined for their dread purposes, he had gone to
-Feldisham Mansions.
-
-During a heart-breaking scene with his wife he had forced from her a
-solemn promise to tell Osborne why she could not marry him, and then to
-leave England. The unhappy woman was writing the last word in her diary
-when Furneaux was announced! No wonder she canceled an engagement for
-dinner and the theater. She was sick at heart. A vain creature, the
-wealth and position she craved for had been snatched from her grasp on
-the very moment they seemed most sure.
-
-The murder followed his departure within half an hour. Planned and
-executed by a woman whom none would dream of, it was almost worthy to
-figure as the crime of the century. Hylda Prout had counted on no other
-suspect than the man she loved. She knew he was safe--she assured
-herself, in the first place, that he could offer the most positive proof
-of his innocence--but she reckoned on popular indignation alleging his
-guilt, while she alone would stand by him through every pang of obloquy
-and despair. She was well prepared, guarded from every risk. Her
-open-hearted employer had no secrets from her. She meant to imperil him,
-to cast him into the furnace, and pluck him forth to her own arms.
-
-But fate could plot more deviously and strangely than Hylda Prout. It
-could bring about the meeting of Osborne and Rosalind, the mutual
-despair and self-sacrifice of Janoc and Pauline, the insensate quarrel
-between Winter and Furneaux, and the jealous prying of Clarke, while
-scene after scene of tragic force unfolded itself at Tormouth, in the
-Fraternal Club, in the dismal cemetery, in Porchester Gardens, and in
-the dens of Soho.
-
-Winter sighed deeply at the marvel of it all, and Furneaux heard him.
-
-"She will be here soon," he said coolly. "She is just putting on
-Osborne's boots."
-
-Winter started at the apparent callousness of the man.
-
-"This is rather Frenchified," he whispered. "Reminds one of the
-'reconstructed crime' method of the _juge d'instruction_. I wish we had
-more good, sound, British evidence."
-
-"There is nothing good, or sound, or British about this affair," said
-Furneaux. "It is French from beginning to end--a passionate crime as
-they say--but I shall be glad when it is ended, and I am free."
-
-"Free?"
-
-"Yes. When she is safely dealt with," and he nodded in the direction of
-the dressing-room, "I shall resign, clear off, betake my whims and my
-weaknesses to some other clime."
-
-"Don't be an ass, Furneaux!"
-
-"Can't help it, dear boy. I'm a bit French, too, you know. No Englishman
-could have hounded down Osborne as I have done, merely to gratify my own
-notions of what was due to the memory of my dead wife. And I have played
-with this maniac upstairs as a cat plays with a mouse. I wouldn't have
-done that, though, if she hadn't smashed Mirabel's face. She ought to
-have spared that. Therein she was a tiger rather than a woman. Poor
-Mirabel!"
-
-Not Rose, but Mirabel! His thoughts had bridged the years. He murmured
-the words in a curiously unemotional tone, but Winter was no longer
-deceived. It would be many a day, if ever, before Furneaux became his
-cheery, impish, mercurial self again.
-
-And now there was an opening of a door, and Winter shot one warning
-glance at the curtains which shrouded the passage to the kitchen. A
-man's figure appeared beyond the rails of the upper landing, a man
-attired in a gray frock-coat suit and wearing a silk hat. Mrs. Bates
-uttered a slight scream.
-
-"Well, I never!" she squeaked.
-
-"But you did, once," urged Furneaux, instantly alert. "You see now that
-you might be mistaken when you said you saw Mr. Osborne on that
-evening?"
-
-"Oh, yes, sir; if that is Miss Prout she's the very image----Now, who
-would have believed it?"
-
-"You did," prompted Furneaux again. "But this time you must be more
-careful. Tell us now who it was you saw on the stair, your master, or
-his secretary made up to represent him?"
-
-Mrs. Bates began to cry.
-
-"I wouldn't have said such a thing for a mint of money, sir. It was
-cruel to deceive a poor woman so, real cruel I call it. Of course, it
-was Miss Prout I saw. Well, there! What a horrid creature to behave in
-that way----"
-
-"No comments, please," said Furneaux sternly.
-
-Throughout he was gazing at Hylda Prout with eyes that scintillated. She
-was standing now on the half-landing, and her face had lost some of its
-striking semblance to Osborne's because of the expression of mocking
-triumph that gleamed through its make-up.
-
-"That will do, thank you, Miss Prout," he said. "Now, will you kindly
-walk slowly up again, reeling somewhat, as if you were on the verge of
-collapse after undergoing a tremendous strain?"
-
-A choked cry, or groan, followed by a scuffle, came from the curtained
-doorway, and Hylda turned sharply.
-
-"Who is there?" she demanded, in a sort of quick alarm that contrasted
-oddly with her previous air of complete self-assurance.
-
-"Jenkins," growled Winter, "just go there and see that none of the
-servants are peeping. That door should have been closed. Slam it now!"
-
-The butler hurried with steps that creaked on the parquet floor. Hylda
-leaned over the balusters and watched him. He fumbled with the curtains.
-
-"It is all right, sir," he said thickly.
-
-"Some one is there," she cried. "Who is it? I am not here to be made a
-show of, even to please some stupid policemen."
-
-Winter strode noisily across the hall, talking the while, vowing
-official vengeance on eavesdroppers. He, too, reached the doorway,
-glanced within, and drew back the curtains.
-
-"Some kitchen-maid, I suppose," he said off-handedly. "Anyhow, she has
-run away. You need not wait any longer, Miss Prout. Kindly change your
-clothing as quickly as possible and come with us. You have beaten us.
-Mr. Osborne must be released forthwith."
-
-"Ah!"
-
-Her sudden spasm of fear was dispelled by hearing that promise. She
-forgot to "reel" as she ran upstairs, but Furneaux did not remind her.
-He exchanged glances with Winter, and the latter motioned Jenkins to
-take Mrs. Bates to her own part of the establishment.
-
-"At Vine Street, I think," muttered Winter in Furneaux's ear.
-
-"No, here, I insist; we must strike now. She must realize that we have a
-case. Give her time to gather her energies and we shall never secure a
-conviction."
-
-Winter loathed the necessity of terrifying a woman, but he yielded,
-since he saw no help for it. This time they had not long to wait. Soon
-they heard a rapid, confident tread on the stairs, and Hylda Prout was
-with them in the library. Both men, who had been seated, rose when she
-entered.
-
-"Well," she said jauntily, "are you convinced?"
-
-"Fully," said Winter.
-
-She turned to Furneaux.
-
-"But you, little man, what do _you_ say?"
-
-"I have never needed to be convinced," he answered. "I have known the
-truth since the day when we first met."
-
-Something in his manner seemed to trouble her, but those golden brown
-eyes dwelt on him in a species of scornful surprise.
-
-"Why, then, have you liberated Janoc and his sister?" she demanded.
-
-"Because they are innocent."
-
-She laughed, a nervous, unmirthful laugh.
-
-"But there only remains Mr. Osborne," she protested.
-
-"There is one other, the murderess," he said. Even while she gazed at
-him in wonder he had come quite near. His right hand shot out and
-grasped her arm.
-
-"I arrest you, Hylda Prout," he said. "I charge you with the murder of
-Mirabel Furneaux, otherwise known as Rose de Bercy, at Feldisham
-Mansions, on the night of July 3d."
-
-She looked at him in a panic to which she tried vainly to give a
-semblance of incredulity. Even in that moment of terror a new thought
-throbbed in her dazed brain.
-
-"Mirabel Furneaux!" she managed to gasp.
-
-"Yes, my wife. You committed a needless crime, Hylda Prout. She had
-never done, nor ever could have done, you any injury. But it is my duty
-to warn you that everything you now say will be taken down in writing,
-and may be used in evidence against you."
-
-She tried to wrest herself free, but his fingers clung to her like a
-steel trap. Winter, too, approached, as if to show the folly of
-resistance.
-
-"Let go my arm!" she shrieked, and her eyes blazed redly though the
-color had fled from her cheeks.
-
-"I cannot. I dare not," said Furneaux. "I have reason to believe that
-you carry a weapon, perhaps poison, concealed in your clothing."
-
-"Idiot!" she screamed, now beside herself with rage, "what evidence can
-you produce against me? You will be the laughing stock of London, you
-and your arrests."
-
-"Mrs. Bates knows now who it was she saw on the stairs," said Furneaux
-patiently. "Campbell, the driver of the taxicab, has recognized you as
-the person he drove to and from Feldisham Mansions. Mary Dean, the
-housemaid there, can say at last why she fancied that Mr. Osborne killed
-her mistress. But you'll hear these things in due course. At present you
-must come with me."
-
-"Where to?"
-
-"To Vine Street police-station."
-
-"Shall I not be permitted to see Rupert?"
-
-"No."
-
-A tremor convulsed her lithe body. Then, and not till then, did she
-really understand that the apparently impossible had happened. Still,
-her extraordinary power of self-reliance came to her aid. She ceased to
-struggle, and appealed to Winter.
-
-"This man is acting like a lunatic," she cried. "He says his wife was
-killed, and if that be true he is no fit person to conduct an inquiry
-into the innocence or guilt of those on whom he wreaks his vengeance.
-You know why I came here to-night--merely to prove how you had blundered
-in the past--yet you dare to turn my harmless acting into a
-justification of my arrest. Where are these people, Campbell and the
-woman, whose testimony you bring against me?"
-
-Now, in putting that impassioned question, she was wiser than she knew.
-Furneaux was ever ready to take risks in applying criminal procedure
-that Winter fought shy of. He had seen more than one human vampire slip
-from his grasp because of some alleged unfairness on the part of the
-police, of which a clever counsel had made ingenious use during the
-defense. If Hylda Prout had been identified by others than Mrs. Bates,
-of whose presence alone she was aware, she had every right to be
-confronted with them. He turned aside and told the horrified Jenkins to
-bring the witnesses from the room in which they had taken refuge. As a
-matter of fact, Campbell and Mary Dean, in charge of Police Constable
-Johnson, had been concealed behind the curtains that draped the
-servants' passage, and Johnson had scarce been able to stifle the scream
-that rose to the housemaid's lips when she saw on the stairs the living
-embodiment of her mistress's murderer.
-
-But Furneaux did not mean to allow Hylda Prout to regain the marvelous
-self-possession which had been imperiled by the events of the past
-minute.
-
-"While we are waiting for Campbell and the girl you may as well learn
-the really material thing that condemns you," he said, whispering in her
-ear with quiet menace. "You ought to have destroyed that gray suit which
-you purchased from a second-hand clothes dealer. It was a deadly mistake
-to keep those blood-stained garments. The clothes Osborne wore have been
-produced long since. They were soiled by you two days after the murder,
-a fact which I can prove by half a dozen witnesses. Those which you wore
-to-night, _which you are wearing now_, are spotted with your victim's
-blood. I know, because I have seen them in your lodgings, and they can
-be identified beyond dispute by the man who sold them to you."
-
-Suddenly he raised his voice.
-
-"Winter! Quick! She has the strength of ten women!"
-
-For Hylda Prout, hearing those fateful words, was seized with a fury of
-despair. She had peered into Furneaux's eyes and seen there the pitiless
-purpose which had filled his every waking moment since his wife's
-untimely death. Love and hate had conspired to wreck her life. They had
-mastered her at last. From being their votary she had become their
-victim. An agonizing sigh came from her straining breast. She was
-fighting like a catamount, while Winter held her shoulders and Furneaux
-her wrists; then she collapsed between them, and a thin red stream
-issued from her lips.
-
-They carried her to the sofa on which she had lain when for the first
-and only time in her life those same red lips had met Rupert Osborne's.
-
-Winter hurried to the door, and sent Campbell, coming on tiptoe across
-the hall, flying in his taxi for a doctor. But Furneaux did not move
-from her side. He gazed down at her with something of the judge,
-something of the executioner, in his waxen features.
-
-"All heart!" he muttered, "all heart, controlled by a warped brain!"
-
-"She has broken a blood vessel," said Winter.
-
-"No; she has broken her heart," said Furneaux, hearing, though
-apparently not heeding him.
-
-"A physical impossibility," growled the Chief Inspector, to whom the
-sight of a woman's suffering was peculiarly distressing.
-
-"Her heart has dilated beyond belief. It is twice the normal size. This
-is the end, Winter! She is dying!"
-
-The flow of blood stopped abruptly. She opened her eyes, those
-magnificent eyes which were no longer golden brown but a pathetic
-yellow.
-
-"Oh, forgive!" she muttered. "I--I--loved you, Rupert--with all my
-soul!"
-
-She seemed to sink a little, to shrink, to pass from a struggle to
-peace. The lines of despair fled from her face. She lay there in white
-beauty, a lily whiteness but little marred by traces of the make-up
-hurriedly wiped off her cheeks and forehead.
-
-"May the Lord be merciful to her!" said Furneaux, and without another
-word, he hurried from the room and out of the house.
-
-Winter, having secured some degree of order in a distracted household,
-raced off to Marlborough Street; but Furneaux had been there before him,
-and Osborne, knowing nothing of Hylda Prout's death, had flown to
-Porchester Gardens and Rosalind.
-
-The hour was not so late that the thousand eyes of Scotland Yard could
-not search every nook in which Furneaux might have taken refuge, but in
-vain. Winter, grieving for his friend, fearing the worst, remained all
-night in his office, receiving reports of failure by telephone and
-messenger. At last, when the sun rose, he went wearily to his home, and
-was lying, fully dressed, on his bed, in the state of half-sleep,
-half-exhaustion, which is nature's way of healing the bruised spirit,
-when he seemed to hear Furneaux's voice sobbing:
-
-"My Mirabel, why did you leave me, you whom I loved!"
-
-Instantly he sprang up in a frenzy of action, and ran out into the
-street. At that early hour, soon after six o'clock, there was no vehicle
-to be found except a battered cab which had prowled London during the
-night, but he woke the heavy-witted driver with a promise of double
-fare, and the horse ambled over the slow miles to the yews and laurels
-of Kensal Green Cemetery.
-
-There he found him, kneeling by the side of that one little mound of
-earth, after having walked in solitude through the long hours till the
-gates were opened for the day's digging of graves. Winter said nothing.
-He led his friend away, and had him cared for.
-
-Slowly the cloud lifted. At last, when a heedless public had forgotten
-the crime and its dramatic sequel, there came a day when Furneaux
-appeared at Scotland Yard.
-
-"Hello, Winter," he said, coming in as though the world had grown young
-again.
-
-"Hello, Furneaux, glad to see you," said Winter, pushing the cigar-box
-across the table.
-
-"Had my letter?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Who has taken my place--Clarke?"
-
-"No, not Clarke."
-
-"Who, then?"
-
-"Nobody, yet. The fact is, Furneaux----"
-
-"I've resigned--that is the material fact."
-
-"Yes, I know. But you don't mind giving me your advice."
-
-"No, of course not--just for the sake of old times."
-
-"Well, there is this affair of Lady Harringay's disappearance. It is a
-ticklish business. Seen anything about it in the paper?"
-
-"A line or two."
-
-"I'm at my wits' end to find time myself to deal with it. And I've not a
-man I can give it to----"
-
-"Look here, Winter, I'm out of the force."
-
-"But, to oblige me."
-
-"I would do a great deal on that score."
-
-"Get after her, then, without a moment's delay."
-
-"But there's my resignation."
-
-Winter picked a letter from a bundle, struck a match, set fire to the
-paper, and lighted a cigar with it.
-
-"There goes your resignation!" he said.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the following summer Rosalind Marsh and Rupert Osborne were
-married at Tormouth. It was a quiet wedding, and since that day they
-have led quiet lives, so it is to be presumed that they have settled
-satisfactorily the problem of how to be happy though rich.
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber Notes:
-
-Passages in italics were indicated by _underscores_.
-
-Small caps were replaced with ALL CAPS.
-
-Throughout the document, the oe ligature was replaced with "oe".
-
-Throughout the dialogues, there were words used to mimic accents of the
-speakers. Those words were retained as-is.
-
-The illustrations have been moved so that they do not break up
-paragraphs and so that they are next to the text they illustrate.
-
-Errors in punctuations and inconsistent hyphenation were not corrected
-unless otherwise noted.
-
-On the title page, "DISSAPEARANCE" was replaced with "DISAPPEARANCE".
-
-On page 69, "Emile" was replaced with "Émile".
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The de Bercy Affair, by Gordon Holmes
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The de Bercy Affair
-
-Author: Gordon Holmes
-
-Illustrator: Howard Chandler Christy
-
-Release Date: December 17, 2015 [EBook #50705]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DE BERCY AFFAIR ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Suzanne Shell, Ernest Schaal, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="image-center">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="499" height="700" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<h1>The de Bercy Affair</h1>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<div class="bbox">
-<p class="center"><i>By</i> GORDON HOLMES</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="bbox">
-<p class="cnobmargin">A</p>
-<p class="cnotmargin">MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCE</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE ARNCLIFFE PUZZLE</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE LATE TENANT</p>
-
-<p class="center">BY FORCE OF CIRCUMSTANCES</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE DE BERCY AFFAIR</p>
-
-<p class="center">TTHE HOUSE OF SILENCE</p>
-
-<div class="image-center">
-<img src="images/ill_dec.jpg" width="100" height="64" alt="" />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<div class="image-center">
-<img src= "images/ill001.jpg" width="494" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p class="center">Osborne came whispering</p>
-<p class="right"><i>Frontispiece</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<div class="image-center">
-<img src="images/tp.jpg" width="459" height="700"
-alt="The
-de Bercy Affair
-
-BY
-GORDON HOLMES
-
-AUTHOR OF
-A MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCE,
-BY FORCE OF CIRCUMSTANCES, ETC., ETC.
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS BY
-HOWARD CHANDLER CHRISTY
-
-[Illustration]
-
-NEW YORK
-GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP
-PUBLISHERS
-"
-title="The
-de Bercy Affair
-
-BY
-GORDON HOLMES
-
-AUTHOR OF
-A MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCE,
-BY FORCE OF CIRCUMSTANCES, ETC., ETC.
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS BY
-HOWARD CHANDLER CHRISTY
-
-[Illustration]
-
-NEW YORK
-GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP
-PUBLISHERS"/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="cnobmargin">Copyright, 1910</p>
-<p class="cnomargins">By EDWARD J. CLODE</p>
-<p class="cnotmargin"><i>Entered at Stationers&#39; Hall</i></p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="center">CONTENTS</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="indent">CHAPTER <span class="ralign">PAGE</span></p>
-<p>I. <span class="smcap">Some Phases of the Problem</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page1">1</a></span></p>
-<p>II. <span class="smcap">Darkness</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page16">16</a></span></p>
-<p>III. <span class="smcap">A Change of Address</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page31">31</a></span></p>
-<p>IV. <span class="smcap">The New Life</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page51">51</a></span></p>
-<p>V. <span class="smcap">The Missing Blade</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page66">66</a></span></p>
-<p>VI. <span class="smcap">To Tormouth</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page88">88</a></span></p>
-<p>VII. <span class="smcap">At Tormouth</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page107">107</a></span></p>
-<p>VIII. <span class="smcap">At the Sun-dial</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page126">126</a></span></p>
-<p>IX. <span class="smcap">The Letter</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page148">148</a></span></p>
-<p>X. <span class="smcap">The Diary, and Rosalind</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page169">169</a></span></p>
-<p>XI. <span class="smcap">Entrapped!</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page188">188</a></span></p>
-<p>XII. <span class="smcap">The Saracen Dagger</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page206">206</a></span></p>
-<p>XIII. <span class="smcap">Osborne Makes a Vow</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page224">224</a></span></p>
-<p>XIV. <span class="smcap">The Arrests</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page246">246</a></span></p>
-<p>XV. <span class="smcap">Clearing the Air</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page265">265</a></span></p>
-<p>XVI. <span class="smcap">Wherein Two Women Take the Field</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page285">285</a></span></p>
-<p>XVII. <span class="smcap">The Closing Scene</span> <span class="ralign"><a href="#page304">304</a></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page1" id="page1"></a>[pg&nbsp;1]</span></p>
-
-<p class="h2">THE DE BERCY AFFAIR</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I<br/>
-SOME PHASES OF THE PROBLEM</h2>
-
-<p>CHIEF INSPECTOR WINTER sat in his
-private office at New Scotland Yard, while
-a constable in uniform, bare-headed, stood
-near the door in the alert attitude of one who awaits
-the nod of a superior. Nevertheless, Mr. Winter,
-half-turning from a desk littered with documents,
-eyed the man as though he had just said something
-outrageous, something so opposed to the tenets of
-the Police Manual that the Chief Commissioner alone
-could deal with the offense.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have you been to Mr. Furneaux&#39;s residence?&quot;
-he snapped, nibbling one end of a mustache already
-clipped or chewed so short that his strong white
-teeth could barely seize one refractory bristle.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have you telephoned to any of the district stations?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, yes, sir&mdash;to Vine Street, Marlborough
-Street, Cannon Row, Tottenham Court Road, and
-half-a-dozen others.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2" id="page2"></a>[pg&nbsp;2]</span>
-&quot;No news of Mr. Furneaux anywhere? The
-earth must have opened and swallowed him!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The station-sergeant at Finchley Road thought
-he saw Mr. Furneaux jump on to a &#39;bus at St.
-John&#39;s Wood about six o&#39;clock yesterday evening,
-sir; but he could not be sure.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, he wouldn&#39;t. I know that station-sergeant.
-He is a fat-head.... When did you telegraph
-to Kenterstone?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;At 6.30, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mr. Winter whisked a pink telegraphic slip from
-off the blotting-pad, and read:</p>
-
-
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Inspector Furneaux not here to my knowledge.</span><br />
-<span class="i2"><i>Police Superintendent</i>, <span class="smcap">Kenterstone</span>.</span><br />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Another legal quibbler&mdash;fat, too, I&#39;ll be bound,&quot;
-he growled. Then he laughed a little in a vein of
-irritated perplexity, and said:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thank you, Johnson. You, at least, seem to
-have done everything possible. Try again in the
-morning. I <i>must</i> see Mr. Furneaux at the earliest
-moment! Kindly bring me the latest editions of
-the evening papers, and, by the way, help yourself
-to a cigar.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The gift of a cigar was a sign of the great man&#39;s
-favor, and it was always an extraordinarily good one,
-of which none but himself knew the exact brand.
-Left alone for a few minutes, he glanced through
-a written telephone message which he had thrust
-under the blotting-pad when Police Constable Johnson
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page3" id="page3"></a>[pg&nbsp;3]</span>
-had entered. It was from Paris, and announced
-that two notorious Anarchists were en route to England
-by the afternoon train, due at Charing Cross
-at 9.15 p.m.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Anarchists!&quot; growled the Chief Inspector&mdash;&quot;Pooh!
-Antoine Descartes and Émile Janoc&mdash;Soho
-for them&mdash;absinthe and French cigarettes&mdash;green
-and black poison. Poor devils! they will do themselves
-more harm than his Imperial Majesty. Now,
-where the deuce <i>is</i> Furneaux? This Feldisham
-Mansions affair is just in his line&mdash;Clarke will ruin
-it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Johnson came back with a batch of evening
-papers. Understanding his duties&mdash;above all, understanding
-Mr. Winter&mdash;he placed them on the
-table, saluted, and withdrew without a word. Soon
-the floor was littered with discarded news-sheets,
-those quick-moving eyes ever seeking one definite
-item&mdash;&quot;The Murder in the West End&mdash;Latest&quot;&mdash;or
-some such headline, and once only was his attention
-held by a double-leaded paragraph at the top
-of a column:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">A correspondent writes:&mdash;&quot;I saw the deceased lady in company
-with a certain popular American millionaire at the
-International Horse Show in June, and was struck by her
-remarkable resemblance to a girl of great beauty resident in
-Jersey some eight years ago. The then village maid was
-elected Rose Queen at a rural fête, I photographed her, and
-comparison of the photograph with the portrait of
-Mademoiselle de Bercy exhibited in this year&#39;s Academy
-served to confirm me in my opinion that she and the Jersey
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page4" id="page4"></a>[pg&nbsp;4]</span>
-Rose Queen were one and the same person. I may add that
-my accidental discovery was made long before the commission
-of the shocking crime of yesterday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Under present circumstances, of course, we withhold from
-publication the name of the Jersey Rose Queen, but the line
-of inquiry thus indicated may prove illuminative should
-there be any doubt as to the earlier history of the hapless
-lady whose lively wit and personal charm have brought London
-society to her feet since she left the Paris stage last year.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter did not hurry. Tucking the cigar comfortably
-into a corner of his mouth, he read each
-sentence with a quiet deliberation; then he sought
-a telephone number among the editorial announcements,
-and soon was speaking into a transmitter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is that the <i>Daily Gazette</i>?... Put me on
-to the editorial department, please.... That
-you, Arbuthnot? Well, I&#39;m Winter, of Scotland
-Yard. Your evening edition, referring to the Feldisham
-Mansions tragedy, contains an item....
-Oh, you expected to hear from me, did you? Well,
-what is the lady&#39;s name, and who is your correspondent?...
-What? Spell it. A-r-m-a-u-d. All
-right; if you feel you <i>must</i> write to the man first,
-save time by asking him to send me the photograph.
-I will pass it on to you exclusively, of course.
-Thanks. Good-by.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Before the receiver was on its hook, the Chief
-Inspector was taking a notebook from his breast
-pocket, and he made the following entry:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">Mirabel Armaud, Rose Queen, village near St. Heliers,
-summer of 1900.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page5" id="page5"></a>[pg&nbsp;5]</span>
-A knock sounded on the door.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, if this could only be Furneaux!&quot; groaned
-Winter. &quot;Come in! Ah! Glad to see you, Mr.
-Clarke. I was hoping you would turn up. Any
-news?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nothing much, sir&mdash;that is to say, nothing
-really definite. The maid-servant is still delirious,
-and keeps on screaming out that Mr. Osborne killed
-her mistress. I am beginning to believe there is
-something in it&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter&#39;s prominent steel blue eyes dwelt on Clarke
-musingly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But haven&#39;t we the clearest testimony as to
-Osborne&#39;s movements?&quot; he asked. &quot;He quitted
-Miss de Bercy&#39;s flat at 6.25, drove in his motor
-to the Ritz, attended a committee meeting of the
-International Polo Club at 6.30, occupied the chair,
-dined with the committee, and they all went to the
-Empire at nine o&#39;clock. Unless a chauffeur, a hall-porter,
-a head-waiter, two under-waiters, five polo
-celebrities, a box-office clerk, and several other persons,
-are mixed up in an amazing conspiracy to
-shield Mr. Rupert Osborne, he certainly could not
-have murdered a woman who was alive in Feldisham
-Mansions at half-past seven.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke pursed his lips sagely. As a study in
-opposites, no two men could manifest more contrasts.
-Clarke might have had the words &quot;Detective
-Inspector&quot; branded on his forehead: his
-features sharp, cadaverous, eyes deep-set and suspicious,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page6" id="page6"></a>[pg&nbsp;6]</span>
-his nose and chin inquisitive, his lips fixed
-as a rat-trap. Wide cheek-bones, low-placed ears,
-and narrow brows gave him a sinister aspect. In
-his own special department, the hunting out of &quot;confidence
-men,&quot; card-sharpers, and similar hawklike
-pluckers of the provincial pigeon fluttering through
-London&#39;s streets, he was unrivaled. But Winter
-more resembled an intellectual prizefighter than the
-typical detective of fiction. His round head, cropped
-hair, wide-open eyes, joined to a powerful physique
-and singular alertness of glance and movement, suggested
-that he varied the healthy monotony of a
-gentleman farmer&#39;s life by attendance at the National
-Sporting Club and other haunts of pugilism.
-A terror to wrongdoers, he was never disliked by
-them, whereas Clarke was hated. In a word, Winter
-was a sharp brain, Clarke a sharp nose, and that
-is why Winter groaned inwardly at being compelled
-to intrust the Feldisham Mansions crime to Clarke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is your theory of this affair?&quot; he said,
-rather by way of making conversation than from
-any hope of being enlightened.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is simple enough,&quot; said Clarke, his solemn
-glance resting for a moment on the box of cigars.
-Winter nodded in the same direction. His cigars
-were sometimes burnt offerings as well as rewards.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Light up,&quot; he said, &quot;and tell me what you
-think.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mademoiselle de Bercy was killed by either a
-disappointed lover or a discarded husband. All these
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page7" id="page7"></a>[pg&nbsp;7]</span>
-foreign actresses marry early, but grow tired of
-matrimony within a year. If, then, there is no
-chance of upsetting Mr. Osborne&#39;s alibi, we must
-get the Paris police to look into Miss de Bercy&#39;s
-history. Her husband will probably turn out to
-be some third-rate actor or broken-down manager.
-Let us find <i>him</i>, and see if <i>he</i> is as sure of his whereabouts
-last evening as Mr. Rupert Osborne professes
-to be.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You seem to harp on Osborne&#39;s connection with
-the affair?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And why not, sir? A man like him, with all his
-money, ought to know better than to go gadding
-about with actresses.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But he is interested in the theater&mdash;he is quite
-an authority on French comedy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He can tackle French tragedy now&mdash;he is up
-to the neck in this one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You still cling to the shrieking housemaid&mdash;to
-her ravings, I mean?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Perhaps I should have mentioned it sooner, sir,
-but I have come across a taxicab driver who picked
-up a gentleman uncommonly like Mr. Osborne at
-7.20 p.m. on Tuesday, and drove him from the corner
-of Berkeley Street to Knightsbridge, waited
-there nearly fifteen minutes, and brought him back
-again to Berkeley Street.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Chief Inspector came as near being startled
-as is permissible in Scotland Yard.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That is a very serious statement,&quot; he said
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page8" id="page8"></a>[pg&nbsp;8]</span>
-quietly, wheeling round in his chair and scrutinizing
-his subordinate&#39;s lean face with eyes more wide-open
-than ever, if that were possible. &quot;It is tantamount
-to saying that some person resembling Mr. Osborne
-hired a cab outside the Ritz Hotel, was taken to
-Feldisham Mansions at the very hour Miss de Bercy
-was murdered, and returned to the Ritz in the same
-vehicle.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Exactly so,&quot; and Clarke pursed his thin lips
-meaningly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So, then, you <i>have</i> discovered something?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mr. Winter&#39;s tone had suddenly become dryly
-official, and the other man, fearing a reprimand,
-added:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I admit, sir, I ought to have told you sooner,
-but I don&#39;t want to make too much of the incident.
-The taxicab chauffeur does not know Mr. Rupert
-Osborne by sight, and I took good care not to mention
-the name. The unknown was dressed like Mr.
-Osborne, and looked like him&mdash;that is all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who is the driver?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;William Campbell&mdash;cab number X L 4001. I
-have hired him to-morrow morning from ten o&#39;clock,
-and then he will have an opportunity of seeing Mr.
-Osborne&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Meet me here at 9.30, and I will keep the appointment
-for you. Until&mdash;until I make other arrangements,
-I intend to take this Feldisham Mansions
-affair into my own hands. Of course, I should
-have been delighted to leave it in your charge, but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page9" id="page9"></a>[pg&nbsp;9]</span>
-during the past hour something of vastly greater
-importance has turned up, and I want you to tackle
-it immediately.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Something more important than a society murder?&quot;
-Clarke could not help saying.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes. You know that the Tsar comes to London
-from Windsor to-morrow? Well, read this,&quot; and
-Winter, with the impressive air of one who communicates
-a state secret, handed the Paris message.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah!&quot; muttered Clarke, gloating over the word
-&quot;Anarchists.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now you understand,&quot; murmured Winter
-darkly. &quot;Unfortunately these men are far too well
-acquainted with me to render it advisable that I
-should shadow them. So I shall accompany you to
-Charing Cross, point them out, and leave them to
-you. A live monarch is of more account than a
-dead actress, so you see now what confidence I have
-in you, Mr. Clarke.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke&#39;s sallow cheeks flushed a little. Winter
-might be a genial chief, but he seldom praised so
-openly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I quite recognize that, sir,&quot; he said. &quot;Of
-course, I am sorry to drop out of this murder case.
-It has points, first-rate points. I haven&#39;t told you
-yet about the stone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why&mdash;what stone?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The stone that did for Miss de Bercy. The
-flat was not thoroughly searched last night, but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page10" id="page10"></a>[pg&nbsp;10]</span>
-this morning I examined every inch of it, and under
-the piano I found&mdash;this.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He produced from a pocket something wrapped
-in a handkerchief. Unfolding the linen, he rose and
-placed on the blotting-pad, under the strong light
-of a shaded lamp, one of those flat stones which
-the archeologist calls &quot;celts,&quot; or &quot;flint ax-heads.&quot;
-Indeed, no expert eye was needed to determine its
-character. The cutting edge formed a perfect
-curve; two deep indentations showed how it had been
-bound on to a handle of bone or wood. At the
-broadest part it measured fully four inches, its
-length the same, thickness about three-quarters of
-an inch. That it was a genuine neolithic flint could
-not be questioned. A modern lapidary might contrive
-to chip a flint into the same shape, but could
-not impart that curious bloom which apparently exudes
-from the heart of the stone during its thousands
-of centuries of rest in prehistoric cave or
-village mound. This specimen showed the gloss of
-antiquity on each smooth facet.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But it showed more. When used in war or the
-chase by the fearsome being who first fashioned it
-to serve his savage needs, it must often have borne
-a grisly tint, and now <i>again</i> each side of the
-strangely sharp edge was smeared with grewsome
-daubs, while some black hairs clung to the
-dried clots which clustered on the irregular surfaces.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Sentiment finds little room in the retreat of a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page11" id="page11"></a>[pg&nbsp;11]</span>
-Chief Inspector, so Winter whistled softly when he
-set eyes on this weird token of a crime.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;By gad!&quot; he cried, &quot;in my time at the Yard
-I&#39;ve seen many queer instruments of butchery&mdash;ranging
-from a crusader&#39;s mace to the strings of a bass
-fiddle&mdash;but this beats the lot.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It must have come out of some museum,&quot; said
-the other.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It suggests a tragedy of the British Association,&quot;
-mused Winter aloud.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It ought to supply a first-rate clew, anyhow,&quot;
-said Clarke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, it does; it must. If only&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter checked himself on the very lip of indiscretion,
-for Clarke detested Furneaux. He consulted
-his watch.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We must be off now,&quot; he said briskly. &quot;Leave
-the stone with me, and while we are walking to Charing
-Cross I can give you a few pointers about these
-Anarchist pests. Once they are comfortably boxed
-up in some café in Old Compton Street you can come
-away safely for the night, and pick them up again
-about midday to-morrow. They are absolutely
-harm&mdash;I mean they cannot do any harm until the
-Tsar arrives. From that moment you must stick
-to them like a limpet to a rock; I will arrange for
-a man to relieve you in the evening, nor shall I forget
-to give your name to the Embassy people when they
-begin to scatter diamond pins around.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When he meant to act a part, Winter was an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page12" id="page12"></a>[pg&nbsp;12]</span>
-excellent comedian, and soon Clarke was prowling
-at the heels of those redoubtables, Antoine Descartes
-and Émile Janoc.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Once Clarke was safely shelved, Winter called the
-first taxicab he met and was driven to Feldisham
-Mansions. An unerring instinct had warned him
-at once that the murder of the actress was no ordinary
-crime; but Clarke had happened to be on duty
-when the report of it reached the Yard a few minutes
-after eight o&#39;clock the previous evening, and
-Winter had bewailed the mischance which deprived
-him of the services of Furneaux, the one man to
-whom he could have left the inquiry with confidence.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The very simplicity of the affair was baffling.
-Mademoiselle Rose de Bercy was the leading lady in
-a company of artistes, largely recruited from the
-Comédie Française, which had played a short season
-in London during September of the past year. She
-did not accompany the others when they returned
-to Paris, but remained, to become a popular figure
-in London society, and was soon in great demand
-for her <i>contes drôles</i> at private parties. She was
-now often to be seen in the company of Mr. Rupert
-Osborne, a young American millionaire, whose tastes
-ordinarily followed a less frivolous bent than he
-showed in seeking the society of an undeniably chic
-and sprightly Frenchwoman. It had been rumored
-that the two would be married before the close of
-the summer, and color was lent to the statement by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page13" id="page13"></a>[pg&nbsp;13]</span>
-the lady&#39;s withdrawal from professional engagements.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">So far as Winter&#39;s information went, this was
-the position of affairs until a quarter to eight on
-the night of the first Tuesday in July. At that
-hour, Mademoiselle de Bercy&#39;s housemaid either entered
-or peered into her mistress&#39;s drawing-room,
-and saw her lifeless body stretched on the floor.
-Shrieking, the girl fled out into the lobby and down
-a flight of stairs to the hall-porter&#39;s little office,
-which adjoined the elevator. By chance, the man
-had just collected the letters from the boxes on each
-of the six floors of the block of flats, and had gone
-to the post; Mademoiselle de Bercy&#39;s personal maid
-and her cook, having obtained permission to visit an
-open-air exhibition, had, it seemed, been absent since
-six o&#39;clock; the opposite flat on the same story was
-closed, the tenants being at the seaside; and the
-distraught housemaid, pursued by phantoms, forthwith
-yielded to the strain, so that the hall-porter,
-on his return, found her lying across the threshold
-of his den.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He summoned his wife from the basement, and
-the frenzied girl soon regained a partial consciousness.
-It was difficult to understand her broken
-words, but, such as they were, they sent the man
-in hot haste to the flat on the first floor. The outer
-and inner doors were wide open, as was the door
-of the drawing-room, and sufficient daylight
-streamed in through two lofty windows to reveal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page14" id="page14"></a>[pg&nbsp;14]</span>
-something of the horror that had robbed the housemaid
-of her wits.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The unfortunate Frenchwoman was lying on her
-back in the center of the room, and the hall-porter&#39;s
-hurried scrutiny found that she had been done to
-death with a brutal ferocity, her face almost unrecognizable.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Not until the return of the French maid, Pauline,
-from the exhibition, could it be determined beyond
-doubt that robbery was not the motive of the crime,
-for she was able to assure the police that her mistress&#39;s
-jewels were untouched. A gold purse was
-found on a table close to the body, a bracelet
-sparkled on a wrist cruelly bruised, and a brooch
-fastened at the neck the loose wrap worn as a preliminary
-to dressing for the evening.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Owing to the breakdown of the only servant actually
-present in the flat at the time of the murder,
-it was impossible to learn anything intelligible beyond
-the girl&#39;s raving cry that &quot;Mr. Osborne did
-it.&quot; Still, there was apparently little difficulty in
-realizing what had happened. The housemaid had
-been startled while at supper, either by a shriek or
-some noise of moving furniture, had gone to the
-drawing-room, given one glance at the terrifying
-spectacle that met her eyes, and was straightway
-bereft of her wits.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Chief Inspector was turning over in his mind
-the puzzling features of the affair when his automobile
-swept swiftly out of the traffic and glare of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page15" id="page15"></a>[pg&nbsp;15]</span>
-Knightsbridge into the quiet street in which stood
-Feldisham Mansions. A policeman had just strolled
-along the pavement to disperse a group of curious
-people gathered near the entrance, so Winter
-stopped his cab at a little distance and alighted unobserved.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He walked rapidly inside and found the hall-porter
-at his post. When the man learnt the visitor&#39;s
-identity he seemed surprised.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Clarke has bin here all day, sir,&quot; he said,
-&quot;and, as soon as he left, another gentleman kem,
-though I must say he hasn&#39;t bothered <i>me</i> much&mdash;&mdash;&quot;
-this with a touch of resentment, for the hall-porter&#39;s
-self-importance was enhanced by his connection with
-the tragedy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Another gentleman!&quot;&mdash;this was incomprehensible,
-since Clarke would surely place a constable in
-charge of the flat. &quot;What name did he give?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&#39;s up there at this minnit, sir, an&#39; here&#39;s his
-card.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter read: &quot;Mr. Charles Furneaux, Criminal
-Investigation Department, Scotland Yard.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I&#39;m jiggered!&quot; he muttered, and he added
-fuel to the fire of the hall-porter&#39;s annoyance by
-disregarding the elevator and rushing up the stairs,
-three steps at a time.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page16" id="page16"></a>[pg&nbsp;16]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II<br/>
-DARKNESS</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter felt at once relieved and displeased.
-Twice during the hour had his authority been disregarded.
-He was willing to ignore Clarke&#39;s
-method of doling out important facts because such
-was the man&#39;s secretive nature. But Furneaux!
-The urgent messages sent to every place where they
-might reach him, each and all summoned him to Scotland
-Yard without the slightest reference to the
-Feldisham Mansions crime. It was with a stiff
-upper lip, therefore, that the Chief Inspector acknowledged
-the salute of the constable who admitted
-him to the ill-fated Frenchwoman&#39;s abode. Furneaux
-was his friend, Furneaux might be admirable,
-Furneaux was the right man in the right place, but
-Furneaux must first receive an official reminder of
-the claims of discipline.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The subdued electric lights in the hall revealed
-within a vista of Oriental color blended with Western
-ideals of comfort. Two exquisitely fashioned
-lamps of hammered iron, rifled from a Pekin temple,
-softened by their dragons and lotus leaves the glare
-of the high-powered globes within them. Praying
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page17" id="page17"></a>[pg&nbsp;17]</span>
-carpets, frayed by the deserts of Araby, covered
-the geometric design of a parquet floor, and bright-hued
-draperies of Mirzapur hid the rigid outlines
-of British carpentry. A perfume of joss-sticks still
-clung to the air: it suggested the apartments of
-a Sultana rather than the bower of a fashionable
-lady in the West End of London.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">First impressions are powerful, and Winter acknowledged
-the spell of the unusual here, but his
-impassive face showed no sign of this when he asked
-the constable the whereabouts of Mr. Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In there, sir,&quot; said the man, pointing to a door.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter noted instantly that the floor creaked beneath
-his light tread. The rugs deadened his footsteps,
-but the parquetry complained of his weight.
-It was, he perceived, almost impossible for anyone
-to traverse an old flooring of that type without
-revealing the fact to ordinarily acute ears. Once
-when his heel fell on the bare wood, it rang with
-a sharp yet hollow note. It seemed, somehow, that
-the place was empty&mdash;that it missed its presiding
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Oddly enough, as he remembered afterwards, he
-hesitated with outstretched hand in front of the
-closed door. He was doubtful whether or not to
-knock. As a matter of fact, he did tap slightly on
-a panel before turning the handle. Then he received
-his second vague impression of a new and
-strange element in the history of a crime. The
-room was in complete darkness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page18" id="page18"></a>[pg&nbsp;18]</span>
-Though Winter never admitted the existence of
-nerves, he did not even try to conceal from his own
-consciousness that he started distinctly when he
-looked into a blackness rendered all the more striking
-by the glimpse of a few feet of floor revealed by
-the off-shine from the hall-light.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you here, Furneaux?&quot; he forced himself
-to say quickly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, that you, Winter!&quot; came a voice from the
-interior. &quot;Yes, I was dreaming in the dusk, I
-think. Let me give you a light.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Dusk, you call it? Gad, it&#39;s like a vault!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter&#39;s right hand had found the electric
-switches, and two clusters of lamps on wall-brackets
-leaped alight. Furneaux was standing, his hands
-behind his back, almost in the center, but the Chief
-Inspector gathered that the room&#39;s silent occupant
-had been seated in a corner farthest removed from
-the windows, and that his head had been propped
-on his clenched hands, for the dull red marks of his
-knuckles were still visible on both cheeks.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Each was aware of a whiff of surprise.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Queer trick, sitting in the dark,&quot; Furneaux remarked,
-his eyes on the floor. &quot;I&mdash;find I collect
-my wits better that way&mdash;sometimes. Sometimes,
-one cannot have light enough: for instance, the moment
-I saw fear in Lady Holt&#39;s face I knew that
-her diamonds had been stolen by herself&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter reflected that light was equally unkind
-to Furneaux as to &quot;Lady Holt,&quot; for the dapper
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page19" id="page19"></a>[pg&nbsp;19]</span>
-little man looked pallid and ill at ease in this flood
-of electric brilliancy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was a silence. Then Furneaux volunteered
-the remark: &quot;In this instance, thought is needed,
-not observation. One might gaze at that for twenty
-years, but it would not reveal the cause of Mademoiselle
-de Bercy&#39;s murder.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>That</i>&quot; was a dark stain near the center of the
-golden-brown carpet. Winter bent a professional
-eye on it, but his mind was assimilating two new
-ideas. In the first place, Furneaux was not the
-cheery colleague whose perky chatterings were his
-most deadly weapons when lulling a rogue into fancied
-security. In the second, he himself had not
-been prepared for the transit from a hall of Eastern
-gorgeousness to a room fastidiously correct in its
-reproduction of the period labeled by connoisseurs
-&quot;after Louis XV.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The moment was not ripe for an inquiry anent
-Furneaux&#39;s object in hastening to Feldisham Mansions
-without first reporting himself. Winter somehow
-felt that the question would jar just then and
-there, and though not forgotten, it was waived;
-still, there was a hint of it in his next comment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I must confess I am glad to find you here,&quot;
-he said. &quot;Clarke has cleared the ground somewhat,
-but&mdash;er&mdash;he has a heavy hand, and I have turned
-him on to a new job&mdash;Anarchists.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He half expected an answering gleam of fun in
-the dark eyes lifted to his, for these two were close
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page20" id="page20"></a>[pg&nbsp;20]</span>
-friends at all seasons; but Furneaux seemed not
-even to hear! His lips muttered:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;wonder.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wonder what?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What purpose could be served by this girl&#39;s
-death. Who bore her such a bitter grudge that not
-even her death would sate their hatred, but they
-must try also to destroy her beauty?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now, the Chief Inspector had learnt that everyone
-who had seen the dead woman expressed this
-same sentiment, yet it came unexpectedly from Furneaux&#39;s
-lips; because Furneaux never said the obvious
-thing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Clarke believes,&quot;&mdash;Winter loathed the necessity
-for this constant reference to Clarke&mdash;&quot;Clarke believes
-that she was killed by one of two people, either
-a jealous husband or a dissatisfied lover.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;As usual, Clarke is wrong.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He may be.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He is.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In spite of his prior agreement with Furneaux&#39;s
-estimate of their colleague&#39;s intelligence, Winter felt
-nettled at this omniscience. From the outset, his
-clear brain had been puzzled by this crime, and Furneaux&#39;s
-extraordinary pose was not the least bewildering
-feature about it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, come now,&quot; he said, &quot;you cannot have been
-here many minutes, and it is early days to speak so
-positively. I have been hunting you the whole afternoon&mdash;in
-fact, ever since I saw what a ticklish business
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page21" id="page21"></a>[pg&nbsp;21]</span>
-this was likely to prove&mdash;and I don&#39;t suppose
-you have managed to gather all the threads of it
-into your fingers so rapidly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There are so few,&quot; muttered Furneaux, looking
-down on the carpet with the morbid eyes of one
-who saw a terrible vision there.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, it is a good deal to have discovered the
-instrument with which the crime was committed.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux&#39;s mobile face instantly became alive with
-excitement.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was a long, thin dagger,&quot; he cried. &quot;Something
-in the surgical line, I imagine. Who found it,
-and where?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Some men in Winter&#39;s shoes might have smiled in
-a superior way. He did not. He knew Furneaux,
-profoundly distrusted Clarke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There is some mistake,&quot; he contented himself
-with saying. &quot;Miss de Bercy was killed by a piece
-of flint, shaped like an ax-head&mdash;one of those queer
-objects of the stone age which is ticketed carefully
-after it is found in an ancient cave, and then put
-away in a glass case. Clarke searched the room
-this morning, and found it there&mdash;tucked away underneath,&quot;
-and he turned round to point to the foot
-of the boudoir grand piano, embellished with
-Watteaux panels on its rosewood, that stood
-in the angle between the door and the nearest
-window.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The animation died out of Furneaux&#39;s features as
-quickly as it had appeared there.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page22" id="page22"></a>[pg&nbsp;22]</span>
-&quot;Useful, of course&quot; he murmured. &quot;Did you
-bring it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No; it is in my office.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But Mi&mdash;Mademoiselle de Bercy was not killed
-in that way. She was supple, active, lithe. She
-would have struggled, screamed, probably overpowered
-her adversary. No; the doctor admits that
-after a hasty examination he jumped to conclusions,
-for not one of the external cuts and bruises could
-have produced unconsciousness&mdash;not all of them
-death. Miss de Bercy was stabbed through the
-right eye by something strong and pointed&mdash;something
-with a thin, blunt-edged blade. I urged a
-thorough examination of the head, and the post
-mortem proved the correctness of my theory.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter, one of the shrewdest officials who had ever
-won distinction in Scotland Yard, did not fail to
-notice that curious slip of a syllable before &quot;Mademoiselle,&quot;
-but it was explained a moment later
-when Furneaux used the English prefix &quot;Miss&quot;
-before the name. It was more natural for Furneaux
-to use the French word, however. Winter
-spoke French fluently&mdash;like an educated Englishman&mdash;but
-Furneaux spoke it like a native of Paris.
-The difference between the two was clearly shown
-by their pronunciation of &quot;de Bercy.&quot; Winter
-sounded three distinct syllables&mdash;Furneaux practically
-two, with a slurred &quot;r&quot; that Winter could
-not have uttered to save his life.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Moreover, he was considerably taken aback by the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page23" id="page23"></a>[pg&nbsp;23]</span>
-discovery that Furneaux had evidently been working
-on the case during several hours.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You have gone into the affair thoroughly, then,&quot;
-he blurted out.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, yes. I read of the murder this morning,
-just as I was leaving Kenterstone on my way to
-report at the Yard.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Kenterstone!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He was almost minded to inquire if the local superintendent
-was a fat man.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sir Peter and Lady Holt left town early in the
-day, so I went to Kenterstone from Brighton late
-last night.... The pawnbroker who held Lady
-Holt&#39;s diamonds was treating himself to a long weekend
-by the sea, and I thought it advisable to see
-him in person and explain matters.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A memory of the Finchley Road station-sergeant
-who thought that he had seen Furneaux get on a
-&#39;bus at 6 p.m. in North London the previous evening
-shot through Winter&#39;s mind; but he kept to
-the main line of their talk.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you know who this Rose de Bercy really is?&quot;
-he suddenly demanded.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For a second Furneaux seemed to hesitate, but
-the reply came in an even tone.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have reason to believe that she was born in
-Jersey, and that her maiden name was Mirabel Armaud,&quot;
-he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The Rose Queen of a village fête eight years
-ago?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page24" id="page24"></a>[pg&nbsp;24]</span>
-Perhaps it was Furneaux&#39;s turn to be surprised,
-but he showed no sign.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;May I ask how you ascertained that fact?&quot;
-he asked quietly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is published in one of the evening papers.
-A man who happened to photograph her in Jersey
-recognized the likeness when he saw the Academy
-portrait of Rose de Bercy. But if you have not
-seen his statement already, how did <i>you</i> come to
-know that Miss de Bercy was Mirabel Armaud?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am a Jersey man by birth, and, although I
-quitted the island early in life, I often go back
-there. Indeed, I was present at the very fête you
-mention.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose the young lady was in a carriage and
-surrounded by a crowd? It would be an odd thing
-if you figured in the photograph,&quot; laughed Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There have been more unlikely coincidences, but
-my early sight of the remarkable woman who was
-killed in this room last night explains my intense
-desire to track her murderer before Clarke had time
-to baffle my efforts. It forms, too, a sort of excuse
-for my departure from official routine. Of course,
-I would have reported myself this evening, but, up
-to the present, I have been working hard to try
-and dispel the fog of motive that blocks the way.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You have heard of Rupert Osborne, then?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux was certainly not the man whom Winter
-was accustomed to meet at other times. Usually
-quick as lightning to grasp or discard a point,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page25" id="page25"></a>[pg&nbsp;25]</span>
-to-night he appeared to experience no little difficulty
-in focusing his attention on the topic of the moment.
-The mention of Rupert Osborne&#39;s name did not evoke
-the characteristically vigorous repudiation that
-Winter looked for. Instead, there was a marked
-pause, and, when the reply came, it was with an
-effort.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes. I suppose Clarke wants to arrest him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He has thought of it!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But Osborne&#39;s movements last night are so
-clearly defined?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So one would imagine, but Clarke still doubts.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter told of the taxicab driver, and the significant
-journey taken by his fare. Furneaux shook
-his head.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Strange, if true,&quot; he said; &quot;why should Osborne
-kill the woman he meant to marry?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She may have jilted him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, oh, no. It was&mdash;it must have been&mdash;the
-aim of her life to secure a rich husband. She was
-beautiful, but cold&mdash;she had the eye that weighs
-and measures. Have you ever seen the Monna Lisa
-in the Louvre?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter did not answer, conscious of a subtle suspicion
-that Furneaux really knew far more of the
-inner history of this tragedy than had appeared
-hitherto. Clarke, in his own peculiar way, was absurdly
-secretive, but that Furneaux should want to
-remain silent was certainly baffling.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page26" id="page26"></a>[pg&nbsp;26]</span>
-&quot;By the way,&quot; said Winter with seeming irrelevance,
-&quot;if you were in Brighton and Kenterstone
-yesterday afternoon and evening, you had not much
-time to spare in London?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then the station-sergeant at Finchley Road was
-mistaken in thinking that he saw you in that locality
-about six o&#39;clock&mdash;&#39;jumping on to a &#39;bus&#39; was his
-precise description of your movements.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I was there at that time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How did you manage it? St. John&#39;s Wood is
-far away from either Victoria or Charing Cross,
-and I suppose you reached Kenterstone by way of
-Charing Cross?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I returned from Brighton at three o&#39;clock, and
-did not visit Sir Peter Holt until half-past nine
-at Kenterstone. Had I disturbed him before dinner
-the consequence might have been serious for her
-ladyship. Besides, I wished to avoid the local police
-at Kenterstone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Both men smiled constrainedly. There was a barrier
-between them, and Furneaux, apparently, was
-not inclined to remove it; as for Winter, he could
-not conquer the impression that, thus far, their conversation
-was of a nature that might be looked for
-between a police official and a reluctant witness&mdash;assuredly
-not between colleagues who were also on
-the best of terms as comrades. Furneaux was obviously
-on guard, controlling his face, his words, his
-very gestures. That so outspoken a man should
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page27" id="page27"></a>[pg&nbsp;27]</span>
-deem it necessary to adopt such a rôle with his close
-friend was annoying, but long years of forced self-repression
-had taught Winter the wisdom of throttling
-back utterances which might be regretted afterwards.
-Indeed, he tried valiantly to repair the
-fast-widening breach.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have a cigar,&quot; he said, proffering a well-filled
-case. &quot;Suppose we just sit down and go through
-the affair from A to Z. Much of our alphabet is
-missing, but we may be able to guess a few additional
-letters.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux smiled again. This time there was the
-faintest ripple of amusement in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, you know how you hate to see me maltreat
-a good Havana,&quot; he protested.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This time I forgive you before the offense&mdash;anything
-to jolt you into your usual rut. Why, man
-alive, here have I been hunting you all day, yet
-no sooner are you engaged on the very job for which
-I wanted you, than I find myself cross-examining
-you as though&mdash;as though you had committed some
-flagrant error.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Chief Inspector did not often flounder in his
-speech as he had done twice that night. He was
-about to say &quot;as though I suspected you of killing
-Rose de Bercy yourself&quot;; but his brain generally
-worked in front of his voice, and he realized that the
-hypothesis would have sounded absurd, almost insane.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux took the cigar. He did not light it,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page28" id="page28"></a>[pg&nbsp;28]</span>
-but deliberately crushed the wrapper between thumb
-and forefinger, and then smelled it with the air of
-one who dallies with a full-scented rose, passing it
-to and fro under his nostrils. Winter, meantime,
-was darting several small rings of smoke through
-one wide and slowly dissipating circle, both being
-now seated, Winter&#39;s bulk, genially aggressive, well
-thrust forward&mdash;but Furneaux, small, compact, a
-bundle of nerves under rigid control, was sunk back
-into the depths of a large and deep-seated chair, and
-seemed to shirk the new task imposed on his powers
-of endurance. Winter was so conscious of this
-singularly unexpected behavior on his friend&#39;s part
-that his conscience smote him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I say, old man,&quot; he said, &quot;you look thoroughly
-done up. I hardly realized that you had been hard
-at work all day. Have you eaten anything?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Had all I wanted,&quot; said Furneaux, thawing a
-little under this solicitude.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Perhaps you didn&#39;t want enough. Come, own
-up. Have you dined?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No&mdash;I was not hungry.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where did you lunch?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I ate a good breakfast.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter sprang to his feet again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;By Jove!&quot; he cried, &quot;this affair seems to have
-taken hold of you&mdash;I meant to send for the hall-porter
-and the French maid&mdash;Pauline is her name,
-I think; she ought to be able to throw some light
-on her mistress&#39;s earlier life&mdash;but we can leave all
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page29" id="page29"></a>[pg&nbsp;29]</span>
-that till to-morrow. Come to my club. A cutlet
-and a glass of wine will make a new man of you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux rose at once. Anyone might have believed
-that he was glad to postpone the proposed
-examination of the servants.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That will be splendid,&quot; he said with an air of
-relief that compared markedly with his reticent mood
-of the past few minutes. &quot;The mere mention of
-food has given me an appetite. I suppose I am
-fagged out, or as near it as I have ever been.
-Moreover, I can tell you everything that any person
-in these Mansions knows of what took place here
-between six and eight o&#39;clock last night&mdash;a good
-deal more, by the way, than Clarke has found out,
-though he scored a point over that stone. Where
-is it?&mdash;in the office, you said. I should like to see
-it&mdash;in the morning.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You will see more than that. Clarke has arranged
-to meet the taxicab driver at ten o&#39;clock.
-He meant to confront him with Rupert Osborne,
-but we must manage things differently. Of course
-the man&#39;s testimony may be important. Alibi or
-no alibi, it will be awkward for Osborne if a credible
-witness swears that he was in this locality for nearly
-a quarter of an hour about the very time that this
-poor young lady was killed.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux, holding the broken cigar under his
-nose, offered no comment, but, as they entered the
-hall, he said, glancing at its quaint decoration:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If opportunity makes the thief, so, I imagine,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page30" id="page30"></a>[pg&nbsp;30]</span>
-does it sometimes inspire the murderer. Given the
-clear moment, the wish, the fury, can&#39;t you picture
-the effect these bizarre surroundings would exercise
-on a mind already strung to the madness of crime?
-For every willful slayer of a fellow human being is
-mad&mdash;mad.... Ah, there was the genius of a
-maniac in the choice of that flint ax to rend Mirabel
-Armaud&#39;s smooth skin&mdash;yet she had the right to live&mdash;perhaps&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He stopped; and Winter anew felt that this musing
-Furneaux of to-day was a different personality
-from the Furneaux of his intimate knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And how compellingly strange it was that he
-should choose to describe Rose de Bercy by the name
-which she had ceased to bear during many years!
-Winter dispelled the scent of the joss-sticks by a
-mighty puff of honest tobacco smoke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, come along,&quot; he growled, &quot;let us eat&mdash;we
-are both in need of it. The flat is untenanted,
-of course. Very well, lock the door,&quot; he added, addressing
-the policeman. &quot;Leave the key with the
-hall-porter, and tell him not to admit anybody, on
-any pretext whatsoever, until Mr. Furneaux and I
-come here in the morning.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page31" id="page31"></a>[pg&nbsp;31]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III<br/>
-A CHANGE OF ADDRESS</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">On the morning after the inquest on Rose de
-Bercy, the most miserable young man in London,
-in his own estimation, was Mr. Rupert Glendinning
-Osborne. Though utterly downcast and disconsolate,
-he was in excellent health, and might have
-eaten well of the good things on his breakfast table
-had he not thoughtlessly opened a newspaper while
-stirring his coffee.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Under other circumstances, he might have laughed
-at the atrocious photograph which depicted &quot;Mr.
-Rupert Osborne arriving at the coroner&#39;s court.&quot;
-The camera had foreshortened an arm, deprived him
-of his right leg below the knee, discredited his tailor,
-and given him the hang-dog aspect of a convicted
-pickpocket, for he had been &quot;snapped&quot; at the moment
-of descent from his automobile, when a strong
-wind was blowing, and he had been annoyed by the
-presence of a gaping crowd.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The camera had lied, of course. In reality, he
-was a good-looking man of thirty, not tall or muscular,
-but of well-knit figure, elegant though by no
-means effeminate. For a millionaire, and a young
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page32" id="page32"></a>[pg&nbsp;32]</span>
-one, he was by way of being a phenomenon. He
-cared little for society; drove his own horses, but
-was hardly ever seen in the Park; rode boldly to
-hounds, yet refused to patronize a racing stable.
-He seldom visited a theater, though he wrote well-informed
-articles on the modern French stage for
-the <i>New Review</i>; he preferred a pleasant dinner with
-a couple of friends to a banquet with hundreds of
-acquaintances; in a word, he conducted himself as
-a staid citizen whether in New York, or London, or
-Paris. Never had a breath of scandal or notoriety
-attached itself to his name until he was dragged
-into lurid prominence by the stupefying event of
-that fatal Tuesday evening.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Those who knew him best had expressed sheer incredulity
-when they first heard of his contemplated
-marriage with the French actress. But a man&#39;s
-friends, as a rule, are the worst judges of his probable
-choice of a partner for life: and Rupert Osborne
-was drawn to Rose de Bercy because she possessed
-in superabundance those lively qualities and volatile
-charms in which he was himself deficient.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There could be no manner of doubt, however, that
-some part of his quivering nervous system had been
-seared by statements made about her during the
-inquest. It was not soothing for a distraught lover
-to learn that Mademoiselle de Bercy&#39;s reminiscences
-of her youth were singularly inaccurate. She could
-not well have been born in a patrician château on the
-Loire, and yet be the daughter of a Jersey potato-grower.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page33" id="page33"></a>[pg&nbsp;33]</span>
-Her father, Jean Armaud, was stated to
-be still living on a small farm near St. Heliers,
-whereas her own version of the family history was
-that Monsieur le Comte de Bercy did not survive
-the crash of the family fortunes in the Panama
-swindle. Other discrepancies were not lacking between
-official fact and romantic narrative. They
-gave Osborne the first glimpse of the abyss into
-which he had almost plunged. A loyal-hearted fellow,
-he shrank from the hateful consciousness that
-the hapless girl&#39;s tragic end had rescued him in all
-likelihood from another tragedy, bitter and long
-drawn out. But because he had been so foolish as
-to fall in love with a beautiful adventuress there
-was no reason why he should be blind and deaf when
-tardy common sense began to assert itself.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To a man who habitually shrank from the public
-eye, it was bad enough to be dragged into the fierce
-light that beats on the witness-box in an inquiry
-such as this, but it was far worse to feel in his inmost
-heart that he was now looked upon with suspicion
-by millions of people in England and America.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He could not shirk the meaning of the recorded
-evidence. The newspapers, it is true, had carefully
-avoided the ugly word alibi; but ninety per cent.
-of their readers could not fail to see that Rupert
-Osborne had escaped arrest solely by reason of the
-solid phalanx of testimony as to his movements on
-the Tuesday evening before and after the hour of
-the murder; the remaining ten per cent. reviled the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page34" id="page34"></a>[pg&nbsp;34]</span>
-police, and protested, with more or less forceful
-adjectives, that &quot;there was one law for the rich and
-another for the poor.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At the inquest itself, Osborne was too sorrow-laden
-and stunned to realize the significance of certain
-questions which now seemed to leap at him viciously
-from out the printed page.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How were you dressed when you visited Miss
-de Bercy that afternoon?&quot; the coroner had asked
-him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wore a dark gray morning suit and black
-silk hat,&quot; he had answered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You did not change your clothing before going
-to the Ritz Hotel?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No. I drove straight there from Feldisham
-Mansions.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you dress for dinner?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No. My friends and I discussed certain new
-regulations as to the proposed international polo
-tournament, and it was nearly eight o&#39;clock before
-we concluded the business of the meeting, so we arranged
-to dine in the grill-room and go to a Vaudeville
-entertainment afterwards.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">That statement had puzzled the coroner. He referred
-to his notes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;To the Vaudeville?&quot; he queried. &quot;I thought
-you went to the Empire Theater?&quot; and Osborne explained
-that Americans spoke of &quot;vaudeville&quot; in
-the same sense as Englishmen use the word &quot;music-hall&quot;
-or &quot;variety.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page35" id="page35"></a>[pg&nbsp;35]</span>
-&quot;You were with your friends during the whole
-time between 6.30 p.m. and midnight?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Practically. I left them for a few minutes
-before dinner, but only to go to the writing-room,
-where I wrote two short letters.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;At what hour, as nearly as you can recollect?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;About ten minutes to eight. I glanced at the
-clock when the letters were posted, as I wished to
-be sure of catching the American mail.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Were both letters addressed to correspondents
-in America?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, one only. The other was to a man about
-a dog.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A slight titter relieved the gray monotony of the
-court at this explanation, but the coroner frowned it
-down, and Rupert added that he was buying a retriever
-in readiness for the shooting season.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But the coroner&#39;s questions suddenly assumed a
-sinister import when William Campbell, driver of
-taxicab number X L 4001, stated that on the Tuesday
-evening, at 7.20, he had taken a gentleman
-dressed in a dark gray suit and a tall hat from the
-corner of Berkeley Street (opposite the Ritz Hotel)
-to the end of the street in Knightsbridge in which
-Feldisham Mansions were situated, had waited there
-for him for about fifteen minutes, and had brought
-him back to Berkeley Street.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought I might know him again, sir, an&#39;, as
-I said yesterday&mdash;&mdash;&quot; the man continued, glancing
-at Rupert, but he was stopped peremptorily.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page36" id="page36"></a>[pg&nbsp;36]</span>
-&quot;Never mind what you said yesterday,&quot; broke
-in the coroner. &quot;You will have another opportunity
-of telling the jury what happened subsequently.
-At present I want you to answer my
-questions only.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">An ominous hush in the court betrayed the public
-appreciation of the issues that might lurk behind
-this deferred evidence. Rupert remembered looking
-at the driver with a certain vague astonishment,
-and feeling that countless eyes were piercing him
-without cause.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The hall-porter, too, Simmonds by name, introduced
-a further element of mystery by saying that
-at least two gentlemen had gone up the stairs after
-Mr. Osborne&#39;s departure in his automobile, and that
-one of them bore some resemblance to the young
-millionaire.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you sure it was not Mr. Osborne?&quot; said
-the coroner.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, sir&mdash;leastways, I&#39;m nearly positive.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why do you say that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Because Mr. Osborne, like all American gentlemen,
-uses the lift, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Can any stranger enter the Mansions without
-telling you their business?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not as a rule, sir. But it does so happen that
-between seven an&#39; eight o&#39;clock I have a lot of things
-to attend to, and I often have to run round the
-corner to get a taxi for ladies and gentlemen goin&#39;
-out to dinner or the theater.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page37" id="page37"></a>[pg&nbsp;37]</span>
-So, there was a doubt, and Rupert Osborne had
-not realized its deadly application to himself until
-he read question and answer in cold type while he
-toyed with his breakfast on the day after the inquest,
-which, by request of Mr. Winter, had been
-adjourned for a fortnight.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was well for such shreds of stoicism as remained
-in his tortured brain that the housemaid was still
-unable to give evidence, and that no mention was
-made of the stone ax-head found in Rose de Bercy&#39;s
-drawing-room. The only official witnesses called
-were the constable first summoned by the hall-porter,
-and the doctor who made the autopsy. The latter&mdash;who
-was positive that Mademoiselle de Bercy had
-not been dead many minutes when he was brought
-to her flat at ten minutes to eight&mdash;ascribed the
-cause of death to &quot;injuries inflicted with a sharp
-instrument,&quot; and the coroner, who knew the trend
-of the inquiry, would not sate public curiosity by
-putting, or permitting the jury to put, any additional
-questions until the adjourned inquest.
-Neither Clarke nor Furneaux was present in court.
-To all seeming, Chief Inspector Winter was in
-charge of the proceedings on behalf of the police.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rupert ultimately abandoned the effort to eat,
-shoved his chair away from the table, and determined
-to reperuse with some show of calmness and
-criticism, the practically verbatim report of the coroner&#39;s
-inquiry.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then he saw clearly two things&mdash;Rose de Bercy
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page38" id="page38"></a>[pg&nbsp;38]</span>
-had willfully misled him as to her past life, and he
-was now regarded by the public as her probable
-betrayer and certain murderer. There was no
-blinking the facts. He had almost committed the
-imprudence of marrying a woman unworthy of an
-honorable man&#39;s love, and, as if such folly called
-for condign punishment, he must rest under the
-gravest suspicion until her slayer was discovered and
-brought to justice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rupert Osborne&#39;s lot had hitherto been cast in
-pleasant places, but now he was face to face with
-a crisis, and it remained to be seen if the force
-that had kept three generations of ancestors in the
-forefront of the strenuous commercial warfare of
-Wall Street had weakened or wholly vanished in the
-person of their dilettante descendant.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At any rate, he did not flinch from the drab
-reality of fact. He read on, striving to be candid
-as to meanings and impartial in weighing them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At the end of the evidence were two paragraphs
-setting forth the newspaper&#39;s own researches. The
-first of these ran:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">Our correspondent at St. Heliers has ascertained that the
-father and sister of the deceased will leave the island by
-to-day&#39;s mail steamer for the double purpose of identifying
-their relative and attending the funeral. There can be no
-question that their first sad task will be in the nature of a
-formality. They both admit that Rose de Bercy was none
-other than Mirabel Armaud. Mademoiselle Marguerite
-Armaud, indeed, bears a striking resemblance to her wayward
-sister, while Monsieur Armaud, though crippled with toil and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page39" id="page39"></a>[pg&nbsp;39]</span>
-rheumatism, shows the same facial characteristics that are so
-marked in his two daughters. The family never revealed to
-their neighbors in the village any knowledge of Mirabel&#39;s
-whereabouts. After her disappearance eight years ago her
-name was seldom, if ever, mentioned to any of their friends,
-and their obvious wishes in the matter soon came to be
-respected by would-be sympathizers. It is certain, however,
-that Marguerite, on one occasion, dared her father&#39;s anger
-and went to Paris to plead with her sister and endeavor to
-bring her home. She failed, as might be expected, since Rose
-de Bercy was then attaining the summit of her ambition by
-playing a small part in a play at the Gymnase, though at that
-period no one in Paris was able to foresee the remarkable
-success she was destined to achieve on the stage.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Each word cut like a knife. The printed statements
-were cruel, but the inferences were far worse.
-Rupert felt sick at heart; nevertheless he compelled
-himself to gather the sense of the next item:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">It was a favorite pose of Mademoiselle de Bercy&mdash;using
-the name by which the dead actress was best known&mdash;to
-describe herself as an Anarchist. It is certain that she attended
-several Anarchist meetings in Paris, probably for
-amusement or for professional study of an interesting type,
-and in this connection it is a somewhat singular coincidence
-that Detective-Inspector Clarke, who was mentioned on Wednesday
-as being in charge of the police investigations into
-the murder, should have arrested two notorious Anarchists
-on the Thames Embankment yesterday shortly before the
-Tsar passed that way <i>en route</i> to the Guildhall. The two
-men, who refused to give any information as to their identity,
-were said to be none other than Emile Janoc and Antoine
-Descartes, both well-known French revolutionaries. They
-were brought before the Extradition Court, and ordered to
-be deported, the specific charge against them being the carrying
-of fire-arms without a license. It was stated that on each
-man was found an unloaded revolver.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page40" id="page40"></a>[pg&nbsp;40]</span>
-So far as Rupert could judge, the newspaper
-was merely pandering to the craze for sensationalism
-in bracketing Rose de Bercy with a couple of
-unwashed scoundrels from Montmartre. On one
-occasion, indeed, she had mentioned to him her visits
-to an Anarchist club; but their object was patent
-when she exhibited a collection of photographs and
-laudatory press notices of herself in the stage part
-of a Russian lady of high rank who masqueraded
-as a Terrorist in order to save her lover from assassination.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It would have been only fair,&quot; he growled savagely,
-&quot;if the fellow who is raking up her past so
-assiduously had placed on record her appearance on
-the stage as <i>Marie Dukarovna</i>. And who is this
-detective who made the arrests? Clarke was not
-the name of the man I met yesterday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then he groaned. His glance had just caught a
-detailed description of himself, his tastes, his family
-history, and his wealth. It was reasonably accurate,
-and not unkindly in tone, but it grated terribly at
-the moment, and in sheer desperation of spirit he
-crushed the newspaper in his clenched hands.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At that instant his man entered. Even the quiet-voiced
-and impenetrable-faced Jenkins spoke in an
-awed tone when he announced:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Chief Inspector Winter, of Scotland Yard,
-wishes to see you, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Very well, show him in; and don&#39;t be scared,
-Jenkins. He will not arrest <i>you</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page41" id="page41"></a>[pg&nbsp;41]</span>
-Rupert must have been stung beyond endurance
-before he would fling such a taunt at his faithful
-servitor. Jenkins, at a loss for a disclaimer, glanced
-reproachfully at the table.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You have hardly eaten a morsel, sir,&quot; he said.
-&quot;Shall I bring some fresh coffee and an egg?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then Rupert laughed grimly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wait till I have seen Mr. Winter,&quot; he said.
-&quot;Perhaps he may join me. If he refuses, Jenkins,
-be prepared for the worst.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But the Chief Inspector did not refuse. He admitted
-that coffee-drinking and smoking were his pet
-vices, and his breezy cheerfulness at once established
-him on good terms with his host.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want you to understand, Mr. Osborne, that
-my presence here this morning is entirely in your
-interests,&quot; he said when they were seated, and Rupert
-was tackling a belated meal. &quot;The more fully
-we clear up any doubtful points as to your proceedings
-on Tuesday the more easy it will be for the
-police to drop you practically out of the inquiry
-except as an unimportant witness.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rupert&#39;s heart warmed to this genial-mannered
-official.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is very kind of you to put things in that
-light when every newspaper in the country is
-prepared to announce my arrest at any moment,&quot;
-he replied.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter was astonished. His face showed it; his
-big blue eyes positively bulged with surprise.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page42" id="page42"></a>[pg&nbsp;42]</span>
-&quot;Arrest!&quot; he cried. &quot;Why should I arrest you,
-sir?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, after the chauffeur&#39;s evidence&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That is exactly what brings me here. Personally,
-I have no doubt whatsoever that you did
-not leave the Ritz Hotel between half-past six and
-nine o&#39;clock on the evening of the murder. Two
-of your friends on the committee saw you writing
-those letters, and the clerk at the inquiry desk remembers
-supplying you with stamps. Just as a
-matter of form, you might give me the names of
-your correspondents?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rupert supplied the desired information, which
-Winter duly scribbled in a notebook, but it did not
-escape the American&#39;s usually quick perception that
-his visitor had already verified the statement made
-before the coroner. That being so, some other motive
-lay behind this visit. What was it?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter, at the moment, seemed to be fascinated
-by the leaf-color and aroma of the cigar which
-Jenkins had brought with the coffee. He puffed,
-smelled, pinched, and scrutinized&mdash;was completely
-absorbed, in fact.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t you like it?&quot; asked Osborne, smiling.
-The suggestion was almost staggering to the Chief
-Inspector.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, of course I do,&quot; he cried. &quot;This is a prize
-cigar. You young gentlemen who are lucky
-enough to command practically unlimited money can
-generally obtain anything you want, but I am bound
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page43" id="page43"></a>[pg&nbsp;43]</span>
-to say, Mr. Osborne, that you could not buy a
-thousand cigars like this in London to-day, no matter
-what price you paid.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I imagine you are right,&quot; said Rupert. &quot;The
-estate on which that tobacco was grown is one of
-the smallest in Cuba, but it is on the old rich belt.
-My manager is a scientist. He knows to half an
-ounce per acre how much sulphate of potash to add
-each year.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sulphate of potash?&quot; questioned Winter, ever
-ready to assimilate fresh lore on the subject of the
-weed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, that is the secret of the flavor, plus the
-requisite conditions of soil and climate, of course.
-The tobacco plant is a great consumer of mineral
-constituents. A rusty nail, a pinch of salt, and
-a small lump of lime, placed respectively near the
-roots of three plants in the same row, will produce
-three absolutely different varieties of tobacco, but
-all three will be inferior to the plants removed from
-such influences.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Dear me!&quot; said Winter, &quot;how very interesting!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But to his own mind he was saying: &quot;Why in
-the world did Furneaux refuse to meet this nice
-young fellow? Really, this affair grows more complex
-every hour.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne momentarily forgot his troubles in the
-company of this affable official. It was comforting,
-too, that his hospitality should be accepted. Somehow,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page44" id="page44"></a>[pg&nbsp;44]</span>
-he felt certain that Winter would have declined
-it if any particle of suspicion had been attached to
-the giver, and therein his knowledge of men did not
-deceive him. With a lighter heart, therefore, than
-he would have thought possible a few minutes earlier,
-he, too, lit a cigar.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter saw that Rupert was waiting for him to
-resume the conversation momentarily broken. He
-began with a straightforward question.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, Mr. Osborne,&quot; he said, &quot;will you kindly
-tell me if it is true that you were about to marry
-Mademoiselle de Bercy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is quite true.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How long have you known her?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Since she came to London last fall.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose you made no inquiries as to her past
-life?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, none. I never gave a thought to such a
-thing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose you see now that it would have been
-wiser had you done something of the kind?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wisdom and love seldom go hand in hand.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Chief Inspector nodded agreement. His profession
-had failed utterly to oust sentiment from
-his nature.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;At any rate,&quot; he said, &quot;her life during the past
-nine months has been an open book to you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We soon became friends. Since early in the
-spring I think I could tell you of every engagement
-Mademoiselle de Bercy fulfilled, and name almost
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page45" id="page45"></a>[pg&nbsp;45]</span>
-every person she met, barring such trivialities as
-shopping fixtures and the rest.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah; then you would know if she had an enemy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;think so. I have never heard of one. She
-had hosts of friends&mdash;all sympathetic.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What was the precise object of your visit on
-Tuesday?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I took her a book on Sicily. We&mdash;we had
-practically decided on Taormina for our honeymoon.
-As I would be occupied until a late hour,
-she arranged to dine with Lady Knox-Florestan and
-go to the opera to hear <i>Pagliacci</i>. It was played
-after <i>Philémon et Baucis</i>, so the dinner was fixed for
-half-past eight.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Would anyone except yourself and Lady Knox-Florestan
-be aware of that arrangement?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think not.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why did she telephone to Lady Knox-Florestan
-at 7.30 and plead illness as an excuse for not coming
-to the dinner?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rupert looked thoroughly astounded. &quot;That is
-the first I have heard of it,&quot; he cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Could she have had any powerful reason for
-changing her plans?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I cannot say. Not to <i>my</i> knowledge, most certainly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did she expect any visitor after your departure?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No. Two of her servants were out for the
-evening, and the housemaid would help her to dress.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page46" id="page46"></a>[pg&nbsp;46]</span>
-Winter looked at the American with a gleam of
-curiosity when the housemaid was mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did this girl, the housemaid, open the door when
-you left?&quot; he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No. I just rushed away. She admitted me,
-but I did not see her afterwards.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then she may have fancied that you took your
-departure much later?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Possibly, though hardly likely, since her room
-adjoins the entrance, and, as it happened, I banged
-the door accidentally in closing it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter was glad that a man whom he firmly believed
-to be innocent of any share in the crime had
-made an admission that might have told against
-him under hostile examination.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Suppose&mdash;just suppose&mdash;&quot; he said, &quot;that the
-housemaid, being hysterical with fright, gave evidence
-that you were in Feldisham Mansions at half-past
-seven&mdash;how would you explain it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your own words &#39;hysterical with fright&#39; might
-serve as her excuse. At half-past seven I was arguing
-against the ever-increasing height of polo
-ponies, with the rest of the committee against me.
-Does the girl say any such thing?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Girls are queer sometimes,&quot; commented Winter
-airily. &quot;But let that pass. I understand, Mr.
-Osborne, that you have given instructions to the
-undertaker?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rupert flinched a little.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What choice had I in the matter?&quot; he demanded.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page47" id="page47"></a>[pg&nbsp;47]</span>
-&quot;I thought that Mademoiselle de Bercy was an
-orphan&mdash;that all her relatives were dead.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, yes. Even now, I fancy, you mean to
-attend the funeral to-morrow?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Of course. Do you imagine I would desert
-my promised wife at such an hour&mdash;no matter what
-was revealed&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, Mr. Osborne, I did not think it for one
-instant. And that brings me to the main object of
-my visit. Please be advised by me&mdash;don&#39;t go to
-the funeral. Better still, leave London for a few
-days. Lose yourself till the day before the adjourned
-inquest.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But why&mdash;in Heaven&#39;s name?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Because appearances are against you. The
-public mind&mdash;I had better be quite candid. The
-man in the street is a marvelous detective, in his own
-opinion. Being an idler, he will turn up in his
-thousands at Feldisham Mansions and Kensal Green
-Cemetery to-morrow afternoon, and, if you are present,
-there may be a regrettable scene. Moreover,
-you will meet a warped old peasant named Jean
-Armaud and a narrow-souled village girl in his
-daughter Marguerite. Take my advice&mdash;pack a
-kit-bag, jump into a cab, and bury yourself in some
-seaside town. Let me know where you are&mdash;as I
-may want to communicate with you&mdash;and&mdash;er&mdash;when
-you send your address, don&#39;t forget to sign
-your letter in the same way as you sign the hotel
-register.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page48" id="page48"></a>[pg&nbsp;48]</span>
-Rupert rose and looked out of the window. He
-could not endure that another man should see the
-agony in his face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you in earnest?&quot; he said, when he felt that
-his voice might be trusted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Dead in earnest, Mr. Osborne,&quot; came the quiet
-answer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You even advise me to adopt an alias?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Call it a <i>nom de voyage</i>,&quot; said Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I shall be horribly lonely. May I not take my
-valet?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Take no one. I suppose you can leave some
-person in charge of your affairs?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have a secretary. But she and my servants
-will think my conduct very strange.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I shall call here to-morrow and tell your secretary
-you have left London for a few days at my
-request. What is her name?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Prout&mdash;Miss Hylda Prout. She comes here at
-11 a.m. and again at 3 p.m.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I see. Then I may regard that matter as
-settled?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Again there was silence for a time. Oddly
-enough, Rupert was conscious of a distinct feeling
-of relief.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Very well,&quot; he said at last. &quot;I shall obey you
-to the letter.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thank you. I am sure you are acting for the
-best.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter, whose eyes had noted every detail of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page49" id="page49"></a>[pg&nbsp;49]</span>
-room while Rupert&#39;s back was turned, rose as if his
-mission were accomplished.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Won&#39;t you have another cigar?&quot; said Rupert.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, yes. It is a sin to smoke these cigars so
-early in the day&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let me send you a hundred.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, no. I am very much obliged, but&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Please allow me to do this. Don&#39;t you see?&mdash;if
-I tell Jenkins, in your presence, to pack and forward
-them, it will stifle a good deal of the gossip
-which must be going on even in my own household.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well&mdash;from that point of view, Mr. Osborne&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, I cannot express my gratitude, but, when
-all this wretched business is ended, we must meet
-under happier conditions.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He touched a bell, and Jenkins appeared.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Send a box of cigars to Chief Inspector Winter,
-at Scotland Yard, by special messenger,&quot; said Rupert,
-with as careless an air as he could assume.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Jenkins gurgled something that sounded like
-&quot;Yes, sir,&quot; and went out hastily. Rupert spread
-his hands with a gesture of utmost weariness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are right about the man in the street,&quot;
-he sighed. &quot;Even my own valet feared that you
-had come to arrest me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ha, ha!&quot; laughed Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But when Jenkins, discreetly cheerful, murmured
-&quot;Good-day, sir,&quot; and the outer door was closed behind
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page50" id="page50"></a>[pg&nbsp;50]</span>
-him, Winter&#39;s strong face wore its prizefighter
-aspect.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Clarke <i>would</i> have arrested him,&quot; he said to himself.
-&quot;But that man did not kill Mirabel Armaud.
-Then who did kill her? <i>I</i> don&#39;t know, yet I believe
-that Furneaux guesses. <i>Who</i> did it? Damme, it
-beats me, and the greatest puzzle of all is to read
-the riddle of Furneaux.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page51" id="page51"></a>[pg&nbsp;51]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV<br/>
-THE NEW LIFE</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">No sooner did Rupert begin to consider ways
-and means of adopting Winter&#39;s suggestion than
-he encountered difficulties. &quot;Pack a kit-bag, jump
-into a cab, and bury yourself in some seaside town&quot;
-might be the best of counsel; but it was administered
-in tabloid form; when analyzed, the ingredients became
-formidable. For instance, the Chief Inspector
-had apparently not allowed for the fact that a
-man in Osborne&#39;s station would certainly carry his
-name or initials on his clothing, linen, and portmanteaux,
-and on every article in his dressing-case.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Despite his other troubles&mdash;which were real
-enough to a man who loathed publicity&mdash;Rupert
-found himself smiling in perplexity when he endeavored
-to plan some means of hoodwinking Jenkins.
-Moreover, he could not help feeling that
-his identity would be proclaimed instantly when a
-sharp-eyed hotel valet or inquisitive chambermaid
-examined his belongings. He was sure that some
-of the newspapers would unearth a better portrait
-of himself than the libelous snapshot reproduced
-that day, in which event no very acute intelligence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page52" id="page52"></a>[pg&nbsp;52]</span>
-would be needed to connect &quot;Osborne&quot; or &quot;R. G.
-O.&quot; with the half-tone picture. Of course, he could
-buy ready-made apparel, but the notion was displeasing;
-ultimately, he abandoned the task and
-summoned Jenkins.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Jenkins was one of those admirable servants&mdash;bred
-to perfection in London only&mdash;worthy of a
-coat of arms with the blazoned motto: &quot;Leave it
-to me.&quot; His sallow, almost ascetic, face brightened
-under the trust reposed in him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is now half-past ten, sir,&quot; he said. &quot;Will
-it meet your convenience if I have everything ready
-by two o&#39;clock?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I suppose so,&quot; said his master ruefully.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What station shall I bring your luggage to,
-sir?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, any station. Let me see&mdash;say Waterloo,
-main line.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you will be absent ten days or thereabouts,
-sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That is the proposition as it stands now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Very well, sir. I shall want some money&mdash;not
-more than twenty pounds&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rupert opened a door leading to the library. He
-rented a two-story maisonette in Mayfair, with the
-drawing-room, dining-room, library, billiard-room
-and domestic offices grouped round the hall, while
-the upper floor was given over to bedrooms and
-dressing-rooms. His secretary was not arrived as
-yet; but he had already glanced through a pile of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page53" id="page53"></a>[pg&nbsp;53]</span>
-letters with the practiced eye of one who receives
-daily a large and varied correspondence.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He wrote a check for a hundred pounds, and
-stuffed the book into a breast pocket.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There,&quot; he said to Jenkins, &quot;cash that, buy
-what you want, and bring me the balance in five-pound
-notes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, sir, but will you please remember to pack
-the clothes you are now wearing into a parcel, and
-post them to me this evening?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;By gad, Jenkins, I should have forgotten that
-my name is stitched on to the back of the coat I
-am wearing. How will you manage about my other
-things?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Rip off the tabs, sir, and get you some new
-linen, unmarked.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good. But I may as well leave my checkbook
-here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, sir, take it with you. You may want it.
-If you do, the money will be of more importance
-than the name.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Right again, Socrates. I wish I might take
-you along, too, but our Scotland Yard friend said
-&#39;No,&#39; so you must remain and answer callers.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have sent away more than a dozen this morning,
-sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh? Who were they?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Newspaper gentlemen, sir, every one of &#39;em,
-though they tried various dodges to get in and have
-a word with you. If I were you, sir, I would drive
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page54" id="page54"></a>[pg&nbsp;54]</span>
-openly in the motor to some big hotel, and let your
-car remain outside while you slip out by another
-door.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Jenkins, you seem to be up to snuff in these
-matters.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, sir, I had a good training with Lord
-Dunningham. His lordship was a very free and
-easy sort of gentleman, and I never did meet his
-equal at slipping a writter. They gave it up at
-last, and went in for what they call substitooted
-service.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A bell rang, and they heard a servant crossing the
-hall.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That will be Miss Prout, sir,&quot; said Jenkins.
-&quot;What shall I tell her?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nothing. Mr. Winter will see her in the morning.
-Now, let us be off out of this before she
-comes in.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rupert was most unwilling to frame any subterfuge
-that might help to explain his absence to his
-secretary. She had been so manifestly distressed
-in his behalf the previous day, that he decided to
-avoid her now, being anxious not to hurt her feelings
-by any display of reticence as to his movements.
-As soon as the library door closed behind
-the newcomer, he went to his dressing-room and remained
-there until his automobile was in readiness.
-He was spoken to twice and snapshotted three times
-while he ran down the steps and crossed the pavement;
-but he gave no heed to his tormentors, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page55" id="page55"></a>[pg&nbsp;55]</span>
-his chauffeur, quick to appreciate the fact that a
-couple of taxicabs were following, ran into Hyde
-Park by the nearest gate, thus shaking off
-pursuit, since vehicles licensed to ply for hire
-are not allowed to enter London&#39;s chief pleasure-ground.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes,&quot; said Rupert to himself, &quot;Winter is right.
-The solitary cliff and the deserted village for me
-during the next fortnight. But where are they to
-be found? England, with August approaching, is
-full to the brim.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He decided to trust to chance, and therein lay
-the germ of complications which might well have
-given him pause, could he have peered into the
-future.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Having successfully performed the trick of the
-cab &quot;bilker&quot; by leaving his motor outside a hotel,
-Rupert hurried away from the main stream of
-fashion along several narrow streets until his attention
-was caught by a tiny restaurant on which the
-day&#39;s eatables were scrawled in French. It was in
-Soho; an open-air market promised diversion; and
-he was wondering how winkles tasted, extracted from
-their shells with a pin, when some commotion arose
-at the end of an alley. A four-wheeled cab had
-wormed its way through a swarm of picturesque
-loafers, and was drawn up close to the kerb. Pavement
-and street were pullulating with child life, and
-the appearance from the interior of the cab of a
-couple of strongly-built, square-shouldered men
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page56" id="page56"></a>[pg&nbsp;56]</span>
-seemed to send an electric wave through adults and
-children alike.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Instantly there was a rush, and Rupert was pinned
-in the crowd between a stout Frenchwoman and a
-young Italian who reeked of the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is it, then?&quot; he asked, addressing madame
-in her own language.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They are police agents, those men there,&quot; she
-answered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have they come to make an arrest?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But no, monsieur. Two miserables who call
-themselves Anarchists have been sent back to France,
-and the police are taking their luggage. A nice
-thing, chasing such scarecrows and letting that bad
-American who killed Mademoiselle de Bercy go free.
-Poor lady! I saw her many times. Ah, <i>mon Dieu</i>,
-how I wept when I read of her terrible end!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rupert caught his breath. So he was judged
-and found guilty even in the gutter!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Perhaps the police know that Monsieur Osborne
-did not kill her,&quot; he managed to say in a muffled
-tone.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, là, là!&quot; cried the woman. &quot;He has money,
-<i>ce vilain</i> Osborne!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The ironic phrase was pitiless. It denounced,
-condemned, explained. Rupert forced a laugh.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Truly, money can do almost anything,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A detective came out of the passage, laden with
-dilapidated packages. The woman smiled broadly,
-saying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page57" id="page57"></a>[pg&nbsp;57]</span>
-&quot;My faith, they do not prosper, those Anarchists.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rupert edged his way through the crowd. On
-the opposite side of the street the contents bills of
-the early editions of the evening newspapers glared
-at him: &quot;West End murder&mdash;Relatives sail from
-Jersey.&quot; &quot;Portrait sketch of Osborne&quot;; &quot;Paris
-Life of Rose de Bercy&quot;; the horror of it all suddenly
-stifled his finer impulses: from that hour Rupert
-squared his shoulders and meant to scowl at
-the jeering multitude.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Probably because he was very rich, he cultivated
-simple tastes in the matter of food. At one o&#39;clock
-he ate some fruit and a cake or two, drank a glass
-of milk, and noticed that the girl in the cashier&#39;s
-desk was actually looking at his own &quot;portrait
-sketch&quot; when he tendered her a shilling. About
-half-past one he took a hansom to Waterloo Station,
-where he bought a map and railway guide at the
-bookstall, and soon decided that Tormouth on the
-coast of Dorset offered some prospect of a quiet
-anchorage.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">So, when Jenkins came with a couple of new
-leather bags, Rupert bought a third-class ticket.
-Traveling in a corridor compartment, he heard the
-Feldisham Mansions crime discussed twice during the
-afternoon. Once he was described as a &quot;reel bad
-lot&mdash;one of them fellers &#39;oo &#39;ad too little to do an&#39;
-too much to do it on.&quot; When, at Winchester, these
-critics alighted, their places were taken by a couple
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page58" id="page58"></a>[pg&nbsp;58]</span>
-of young women; and the train had hardly started
-again before the prettier of the two called her
-companion&#39;s attention to a page in an illustrated
-paper.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Poor thing! Wasn&#39;t she a beauty?&quot; she asked,
-pointing to a print of the Academy portrait of
-Mademoiselle de Bercy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You can never tell&mdash;them photographs are so
-touched up,&quot; was the reply.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There&#39;s no touching up of Osborne, is there?&quot;
-giggled the other, looking at the motor-car photograph.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, indeed. He looks as if he had just done
-it,&quot; said the friend.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A lumbering omnibus took him to Tormouth. At
-the Swan Hotel he haggled about the terms, and
-chose a room at ten shillings per diem instead of
-the plutocratic apartment first offered at twelve and
-six. In the register he signed &quot;R. Glyn, London,&quot;
-and at once wrote to Winter. He almost laughed
-when he found that Jenkins&#39;s address on the label
-was some street in North London, where that excellent
-man&#39;s sister dwelt.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He found that Tormouth possessed one great
-merit&mdash;an abundance of sea air. It was a quiet
-old place, a town of another century, cut off from
-the rush of modern life by the frenzied opposition
-to railways displayed by its local magnates fifty
-years earlier. Rupert could not have selected a
-better retreat. He dined, slept, ate three hearty
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page59" id="page59"></a>[pg&nbsp;59]</span>
-meals next day, and slept again with a soundness
-that argued him free from care.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But newspapers reached even Tormouth, and, on
-the second morning after his arrival, Osborne&#39;s bitter
-mood returned when he read an account of Rose
-de Bercy&#39;s funeral. The crowds anticipated by
-Winter were there, the reporters duly chronicled
-Rupert&#39;s absence, and there could be no gainsaying
-the eagerness of the press to drag in his name on
-the slightest pretext.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But the arrows of outrageous fortune seemed to
-be less barbed when he found himself on a lonely
-path that led westward along the cliffs, and his
-eyes dwelt on the far-flung loveliness of a sapphire
-sea reflecting the tint of a turquoise sky. A pleasant
-breeze that just sufficed to chisel the surface of the
-water into tiny facets flowed lazily from the south.
-From the beach, some twenty feet or less beneath
-the low cliff, came the murmur of a listless tide.
-On the swelling uplands of Dorset shone glorious
-patches of gold and green, with here and there a
-hamlet or many-ricked farm, while in front, a mile
-away, the cliff climbed with a gentle curve to a fine
-headland that jutted out from the shore-line like
-some great pier built by a genie for the caravels
-of giants. It was a morning to dispel shadows, and
-the cloud lifted from Rupert&#39;s heart under its cheery
-influence. He stopped to light a cigar, and from
-that moment Rupert&#39;s regeneration was complete.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is a shame to defile this wonderful atmosphere
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page60" id="page60"></a>[pg&nbsp;60]</span>
-with tobacco smoke,&quot; he mused, &quot;so I must salve
-my conscience by burning incense to the spirit of
-the place. That sort of spirit is invariably of the
-female gender. Where is the lady? Invisible, of
-course.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Without the least expectation of discovering
-either fay or mortal on the yellow sands that spread
-their broad highway between sea and cliff, Rupert
-stepped off the path on to the narrow strip of turf
-that separated it from the edge and looked down
-at the beach. Greatly to his surprise, a girl sat
-there, painting. She had rigged a big Japanese
-umbrella to shield herself and her easel from the
-sun. Its green-hued paper cover, gay with pink
-dragons and blue butterflies, brought a startling
-note of color into the placid foreground. The girl,
-or young woman, wore a very smart hat, but her
-dress was a grayish brown costume, sufficiently indeterminate
-in tint to conceal the stains of rough
-usage in climbing over rocks, or forcing a way
-through rank vegetation. Indeed, it was chosen,
-in the first instance, so that a dropped brush or a
-blob of paint would not show too vivid traces; and
-this was well, for some telepathic action caused the
-wearer to lift her eyes to the cliff the very instant
-after Rupert&#39;s figure broke the sky-line above the
-long grasses nodding on the verge. The result was
-lamentable. She squeezed half a tube of crimson
-lake over her skirt in a movement of surprise at the
-apparition.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page61" id="page61"></a>[pg&nbsp;61]</span>
-She was annoyed, and, of course, blamed the man.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What do you want?&quot; she demanded. &quot;Why
-creep up in that stealthy fashion?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t,&quot; said Rupert.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you did.&quot; This with a pout, while she
-scraped the paint off her dress with a palette knife.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am very sorry that you should have cause to
-think so,&quot; he said. &quot;Will you allow me to explain&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As he stepped forward, lifting his hat, the girl
-cried a warning, but too late; a square yard of dry
-earth crumbled into dust beneath him, and he fell
-headlong. Luckily, the strata of shale and marl
-which formed the coast-line at that point had been
-scooped by the sea into a concavity, with a ledge,
-which Rupert reached before he had dropped half-way.
-Some experience of Alpine climbing had made
-him quick to decide how best to rectify a slip, and
-he endeavored now to spring rather than roll downward
-to the beach, since he had a fleeting vision
-of a row of black rocks that guarded the foot of
-the treacherous cliff. He just managed to clear an
-ugly boulder that would have taken cruel toll of
-bruised skin, if no worse, had he struck it, but he
-landed on a smooth rock coated with seaweed. Exactly
-what next befell neither he nor the girl ever
-knew. He performed some wild gyration, and was
-brought up forcibly by the bamboo shaft of the
-umbrella, to which he found himself clinging in a
-sitting posture. His trousers were split across both
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page62" id="page62"></a>[pg&nbsp;62]</span>
-knees, his coat was ripped open under the left arm,
-and he felt badly bruised; nevertheless, he looked up
-into the girl&#39;s frightened face, and laughed, on
-which the fright vanished from her eyes, and she,
-too, laughed, with such ready merriment and display
-of white teeth, that Rupert laughed again.
-He picked himself up and stretched his arms slowly,
-for something had given him a tremendous thump
-in the ribs.</p>
-<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 498px;">
-<img src="images/ill002.jpg" width="498" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p class="center">He found himself clinging to the bamboo shaft</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent"><i>Page 61</i></p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you hurt?&quot; cried the girl, anxiety again
-chasing the mirth from her expressive features.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; he said, after a deep breath had convinced
-him that no bones were broken. &quot;I only wished
-to explain that your word &#39;stealthy&#39; was undeserved.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I withdraw it, then.... I saw you were a
-stranger, so it is my fault that you fell. I ought
-to have told you about that dangerous cliff instead
-of pitching into you because you startled
-me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can&#39;t agree with you there,&quot; smiled Rupert.
-&quot;We were both taken by surprise, but I might have
-known better than to stand so near the edge. Good
-job I was not a mile farther west,&quot; and he nodded
-in the direction of the distant headland.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, please don&#39;t think of it, or I shall dream
-to-night of somebody falling over the Tor.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is that the Tor?&quot; he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes; don&#39;t you know? You are visiting Tormouth,
-I suppose?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page63" id="page63"></a>[pg&nbsp;63]</span>
-&quot;I have been here since the day before yesterday,
-but my local knowledge is nil.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, if I were you, I should go home and
-change my clothes. How did your coat get torn?
-Are you sure you are not injured?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He turned to survey the rock on which his feet
-had slipped. Between it and the umbrella the top
-of a buried boulder showed through the deep sand,
-ever white and soft at highwater mark.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am inclined to believe that I butted into that
-fellow during the hurricane,&quot; he said. Then, feeling
-that an excuse must be forthcoming, if he wished
-to hear more of this girl&#39;s voice, and look for a
-little while longer into her face, he threw a plaintive
-note into a request.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Would you mind if I sat down for a minute or
-so?&quot; he asked. &quot;I feel a bit shaken. After
-the briefest sort of rest I shall be off to the
-Swan.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sit down at once,&quot; she said with ready sympathy.
-&quot;Here, take this,&quot; and she made to give
-him the canvas chair from which she had risen at
-the first alarm.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He dropped to the sand with suspicious ease.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I shall be quite comfortable here,&quot; he said.
-&quot;Please go on with your painting. I always find it
-soothing to watch an artist at work.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I must be going home now,&quot; she answered. &quot;I
-obtain this effect only at a certain stage of
-tide, and early in the day. You see, the Tor
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page64" id="page64"></a>[pg&nbsp;64]</span>
-changes his appearance so rapidly when the sun
-travels round to the south.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you live at Tormouth?&quot; he ventured to ask.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Half a mile out.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will you allow me to carry something for you?
-I find that I have broken two ribs&mdash;of your umbrella,&quot;
-he added instantly, seeing that those radiant
-eyes of hers had turned on him with quick solicitude.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pity,&quot; she murmured, &quot;bamboo is so much
-harder to mend than bone. No&mdash;you will not carry
-anything. I think, if you are staying at the Swan,
-you will find a path up a little hollow in the cliff
-about a hundred yards from here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, and if you, too, are going&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In the opposite direction.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, well,&quot; he said, &quot;I am a useless person, it
-seems. Good-by. May I fall at your feet again
-to-morrow?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The absurd question brought half a smile to her
-lips. She began to reply: &quot;Worship so headlong&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then she saw that which caused her face to blanch.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, your right hand is smothered in blood&mdash;something
-has happened&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He glanced at his hand, which a pebble had cut
-on one of the knuckles; and he valiantly resisted the
-temptation that presented itself, and stood upright.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is a mere scratch,&quot; he assured her. &quot;If I
-wash it in salt water it will be healed before I reach
-Tormouth. Good-by&mdash;mermaid. I believe you live
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page65" id="page65"></a>[pg&nbsp;65]</span>
-in a cavern&mdash;out there&mdash;beneath the Tor. Some
-day soon I shall swim out among the rocks and look
-for you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">With that he stooped to recover his hat, walked
-seaward to find a pool, and held his hand in the water
-until the wound was cauterized. Then he lit another
-cigar, and saw out of the tail of his eye that the
-girl was now on the top of the cliff at some distance
-to the west.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wonder who she is,&quot; he murmured. &quot;A lady,
-at any rate, and a very charming one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And the girl was saying:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who is he?&mdash;A gentleman, I see. American?
-Something in the accent, perhaps. Or perhaps not.
-Americans don&#39;t come to torpid old Tormouth.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page66" id="page66"></a>[pg&nbsp;66]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V<br/>
-THE MISSING BLADE</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">On that same morning of the meeting on the sands
-at Tormouth, Inspector Clarke, walking southward
-down St. Martin&#39;s Lane toward Scotland Yard, had
-a shock. Clarke was hardly at the moment in his
-best mood, for to the natural vinegar of his temperament
-a drop of lemon, or of gall, had been added
-within the last few days. That morning at breakfast
-he had explained matters with a sour mouth to
-Mrs. Clarke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, it was all a made-up job between Winter
-and Furneaux, and I was only put on to the Anarchists
-to make room for Furneaux&mdash;that was it.
-The two Anarchists weren&#39;t up to any mischief&mdash;&#39;Anarchists&#39;
-was all a blind, that&#39;s what &#39;<i>Anarchists</i>&#39;
-was. But that&#39;s the way things are run now
-in the Yard, and there&#39;s no fair play going any
-more. Furneaux must have Feldisham Mansions, of
-course; Furneaux this, and Furneaux that&mdash;of
-course. But wait: he hasn&#39;t solved it yet! and he
-isn&#39;t going to; no, and I haven&#39;t done with it yet, not
-by a long way.... Now, where do you buy these
-eggs? Just look at this one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page67" id="page67"></a>[pg&nbsp;67]</span>
-The fact was, now that the two Anarchists, Descartes
-and Janoc, had been deported by the Court,
-and were gone, Clarke suddenly woke to find himself
-disillusioned, dull, excluded from the fun of the
-chase. But, as he passed down St. Martin&#39;s Lane
-that morning, his underlooking eyes, ever on the
-prowl for the &quot;confidence men&quot; who haunt the West
-End, saw a sight that made him doubt if he was
-awake. There, in a little by-street to the east,
-under the three balls of a pawnbroker&#39;s, he saw, or
-dreamt that he saw&mdash;Émile Janoc!&mdash;Janoc, whom
-he <i>knew</i> to be in Holland, and Janoc was so deep,
-so lost, in talk with a girl, that he could not see
-Clarke standing there, looking at him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And Clarke knew the girl, too! It was Bertha
-Seward, the late cook of the murdered actress, Rose
-de Bercy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Could he be mistaken as to Janoc? he asked himself.
-Could <i>two</i> men be so striking to the eye, and
-so alike&mdash;the lank figure, stooping; the long wavering
-legs, the clothes hanging loose on him; the
-scraggy throat with the bone in it; the hair, black
-and plenteous as the raven&#39;s breast, draping the
-sallow-dark face; the eyes so haggard, hungry, unresting.
-Few men were so picturesque: few so
-greasy, repellent. And there could be no mistake as
-to Bertha Seward&mdash;a small, thin creature, with whitish
-hair, and little Chinese eyes that seemed to twinkle
-with fun&mdash;it was she!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And how earnest was the talk!</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68"></a>[pg&nbsp;68]</span>
-Clarke saw Janoc clasp his two long hands together,
-and turn up his eyes to the sky, seeming to
-beseech the girl or, through her, the heavens. Then
-he offered her money, which she refused; but, when
-he cajoled and insisted, she took it, smiling. Shaking
-hands, they parted, and Janoc looked after Bertha
-Seward as she hurried, with a sort of stealthy
-haste, towards the Strand. Then he turned, and
-found himself face to face with Clarke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For a full half-minute they looked contemplatively,
-eye to eye, at one another.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Janoc?&quot; said Clarke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That is my name for one moment, sare,&quot; said
-Janoc politely in a very peculiar though fluent English:
-&quot;and the yours, sare?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Unless you have a very bad memory you know
-mine! How on earth come you to be here, Émile
-Janoc?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;England is free country, sare,&quot; said Janoc with
-a shrug; &quot;I see not the why I must render you
-account of movement. Only I tell you this time,
-because you are so singular familiarly with
-my name of family, you deceive yourself as to
-my little name. I have, it is true, a brother named
-Émile&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke looked with a hard eye at him. The resemblance,
-if they were two, was certainly very
-strong. Since it seemed all but impossible that
-Émile Janoc should be in England, he accepted the
-statement grudgingly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page69" id="page69"></a>[pg&nbsp;69]</span>
-&quot;Perhaps you wouldn&#39;t mind letting me see your
-papers?&quot; he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Janoc bowed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That I will do with big pleasure, sare,&quot; he said,
-and produced a passport recently viséd in Holland,
-by which it appeared that his name was not Émile,
-but Gaston.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They parted with a bow on Janoc&#39;s side and a nod
-on Clarke&#39;s; but Clarke was puzzled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Something queer about this,&quot; he thought. &quot;I&#39;ll
-keep my eye on <i>him</i>.... What was he doing talking
-like that&mdash;<i>so earnest</i>&mdash;to the actress&#39;s cook?
-Suppose she was murdered by Anarchists? It is
-certain that she was more or less mixed up with them&mdash;more,
-perhaps, than is known. Why did those
-two come over the night after her murder?&mdash;for it&#39;s
-clear that they had no design against the Tsar.
-I&#39;ll look into it on my own. Easy, now, Clarke, my
-boy, and may be you&#39;ll come out ahead of Furneaux,
-Winter, and all the lot in the end.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When he arrived at his Chief&#39;s office in the Yard,
-he mentioned to Winter his curious encounter with
-the other Janoc, but said not a word of Bertha
-Seward, since the affair of the murder was no longer
-his business, officially.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter paid little heed to Janoc, whether Émile
-or Gaston, for Furneaux was there with him, and the
-two were head to head, discussing the murder, and
-the second sitting of the inquest was soon to come.
-Indeed, Clarke heard Winter say to Furneaux:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page70" id="page70"></a>[pg&nbsp;70]</span>
-&quot;I promised Mr. Osborne to give some sort of
-excuse to his servants for his flight from home. I
-was so busy that I forgot it. Perhaps you will see
-to that, too, for me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Glad you mentioned it. I intended going there
-at once,&quot; Furneaux said in that subdued tone which
-seemed to have all at once come upon him since Rose
-de Bercy was found lying dead in Feldisham Mansions.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, then, from henceforth everything is in
-your hands,&quot; said Winter. &quot;Here I hand you over
-our dumb witness&quot;&mdash;and he held out to Furneaux the
-blood-soiled ax-head of flint that had battered Rose
-de Bercy&#39;s face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He was not sure&mdash;he wondered afterwards whether
-it was positively a fact&mdash;but he fancied that for the
-tenth part of a second Furneaux shrank from taking,
-from touching, that object of horror&mdash;a notion
-so odd and fantastic that it affected Winter as if
-he had fancied that the poker had lifted its head
-for the tenth part of a second. But almost before
-the conceit took form, Furneaux was coolly placing
-the celt in his breast-pocket, and standing up to go.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux drove straight, as he had said, to Mayfair,
-and soon was being ushered into Osborne&#39;s
-library, where he found Miss Prout, the secretary,
-with her hat on, busy opening and sorting the morning&#39;s
-correspondence.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He introduced himself, sat beside her, and, while
-she continued with her work, told her what had happened&mdash;how
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page71" id="page71"></a>[pg&nbsp;71]</span>
-Osborne had been advised to disappear
-till the popular gale of ill-will got stilled a little.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, that&#39;s how it was,&quot; the girl said, lifting interested
-eyes to his. &quot;I was wondering,&quot; and she
-pinned two letters together with the neatness of
-method and order.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux sat lingeringly with her, listening to
-an aviary of linnets that prattled to the bright sunlight
-that flooded the library, and asking himself
-whether he had ever seen hair so glaringly red as
-the lady secretary&#39;s&mdash;a great mass of it that wrapped
-her head like a flame.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And where has Mr. Osborne gone to?&quot; she murmured,
-making a note in shorthand on the back of
-one little bundle of correspondence.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Somewhere by the coast&mdash;I think,&quot; said Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;West coast? East coast?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He didn&#39;t write to me: he wrote to my Chief&quot;&mdash;for,
-though Furneaux well knew where Osborne was,
-his retreat was a secret.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The girl went on with her work, plying the paper-knife,
-now jotting down a memorandum, now placing
-two or more kindred letters together: for every
-hospital and institution wrote to Osborne, everyone
-who wanted money for a new flying machine, or had
-a dog or a hunter to sell, or intended to dine and
-speechify, and send round the hat.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s quite a large batch of correspondence,&quot; Furneaux
-remarked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page72" id="page72"></a>[pg&nbsp;72]</span>
-&quot;Half of these,&quot; the girl said, &quot;are letters of
-abuse from people who never heard Mr. Osborne&#39;s
-name till the day after that poor woman was killed.
-All England has convicted him before he is tried.
-It seems unfair.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, no doubt. But &#39;to understand is to pardon,&#39;
-as the proverb says. They have to think something,
-and when there is only one thing for them
-to think, they think it&mdash;meaning well. It will blow
-over in time. Don&#39;t you worry.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I!&mdash;What do I care what forty millions of
-vermin choose to say or think?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She pouted her pretty lips saucily.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Forty&mdash;millions&mdash;of vermin,&quot; cried Furneaux;
-&quot;that&#39;s worse than Carlyle.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda Prout&#39;s swift hands plied among her papers.
-She made no answer; and Furneaux suddenly stood
-up.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you will mention to the valet and the others
-how the matter stands as to Mr. Osborne. He
-is simply avoiding the crowd&mdash;that is all. Good-day.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda Prout rose, too, and Furneaux saw now how
-tall she was, well-formed and lithe, with a somewhat
-small face framed in that nest of red hair. Her
-complexion was spoiled and splashed with freckles,
-but otherwise she was dainty-featured and pretty&mdash;mouth,
-nose, chin, tiny, all except the wide-open
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So,&quot; she said to Furneaux as she put out her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page73" id="page73"></a>[pg&nbsp;73]</span>
-hand, &quot;you won&#39;t let me know where Mr. Osborne
-is? I may want to write to him on business.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, didn&#39;t I tell you that he didn&#39;t write to
-me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That was only a blind.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Dear me! A blind.... It is the truth, Miss
-Prout.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell that to someone else.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What, don&#39;t you like the truth?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right, keep the information to yourself,
-then.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-by&mdash;I mustn&#39;t allow myself to dally in
-this charming room with the linnets, the sunlight,
-and the lady.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For a few seconds she seemed to hesitate. Then
-she said suddenly: &quot;Yes, it&#39;s very nice in here. That
-door there leads into the morning room, and that
-one yonder, at the side&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her voice dropped and stopped; Furneaux appeared
-hardly to have heard, or, if hearing, to be
-merely making conversation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, it leads where?&quot; he asked, looking at her.
-Now, her eyes, too, dropped, and she murmured:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Into the museum.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The&mdash;! Well, naturally, Mr. Osborne is a connoisseur&mdash;quite
-so, only I rather expected you to
-say &#39;a picture gallery.&#39; Is it&mdash;open to inspection?
-Can one&mdash;&mdash;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is open, certainly: the door is not locked,
-But there&#39;s nothing much&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page74" id="page74"></a>[pg&nbsp;74]</span>
-&quot;Oh, do let me have a look around, and come with
-me, if it will not take long. No one is more interested
-in curios than I.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;will, if you like,&quot; said the girl with a strange
-note of confidence in her voice, and led the way into
-the museum.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux found himself in a room, small, but
-full of riches. On a central table were several illuminated
-missals and old Hoch-Deutsch MSS., some
-ancient timepieces, and a collection of enameled
-watches of Limoges. Around the walls, open or
-in cabinets, were arms, blades of Toledo, minerals
-arranged on narrow shelves, an embalmed chieftain&#39;s
-head from Mexico, and many other bizarre objects.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda Prout knew the name and history of every
-one, and murmured an explanation as Furneaux bent
-in scrutiny.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Those are what are called &#39;celts,&#39;&quot; she said;
-&quot;they are not very uncommon, and are found in
-every country&mdash;made of flint, mostly, and used as
-ax-heads by the ancients. These rough ones on this
-side are called Palæolithic&mdash;five hundred thousand
-years old, some of them; and these finer ones on
-this side are Neolithic, not quite so old&mdash;though
-there isn&#39;t much to choose in antiquity when it comes
-to hundreds of thousands! Strange to say, one of
-the Neolithic ones has been missing for some days&mdash;I
-don&#39;t know whether Mr. Osborne has given it away
-or not?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The fact that one <i>was</i> missing was, indeed, quite
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page75" id="page75"></a>[pg&nbsp;75]</span>
-obvious, for the celts stood in a row, stuck in holes
-drilled in the shelf; and right in the midst of the
-rank gaped one empty hole, a dumb little mouth that
-yet spoke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, curious things,&quot; said Furneaux, bending
-meditatively over them. &quot;I remember seeing
-pictures of them in books. Every one of these
-stones is stained with blood.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Blood!&quot; cried the girl in a startled way.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, they were used in war and the chase,
-weren&#39;t they? Every one of them has given agony,
-every one would be red, if we saw it in its true
-color.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Red was also the color of Furneaux&#39;s cheek-bones
-at the moment&mdash;red as hectic; and he was conscious
-of it, as he was conscious also that his eyes were
-wildly alight. Hence, he continued a long time
-bending over the &quot;celts&quot; so that Miss Prout might
-not see his face. His voice, however, was calm,
-since he habitually spoke in jerky, clipped syllables
-that betrayed either no emotion or too much.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When he turned round, it was to move straight to
-a little rack on the left, in which glittered a fine
-array of daggers&mdash;Japanese kokatanas, punals of
-Salamanca, cangiars of Morocco, bowie-knives of old
-California, some with squat blades, coming quickly to
-a point, some long and thin to transfix the body,
-others meant to cut and gash, each with its label
-of minute writing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux&#39;s eye had duly noted them before, but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page76" id="page76"></a>[pg&nbsp;76]</span>
-he had passed them without stopping. Now, after
-seeing the celts, he went back to them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To his surprise, Miss Prout did not come with
-him. She stood looking on the ground, her lower
-lip somewhat protruded, silent, obviously distrait.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And these, Miss Prout?&quot; chirped he, &quot;are they
-of high value?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She neither answered nor moved.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Perhaps you haven&#39;t studied their history?&quot;
-ventured Furneaux again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now, all at once, she moved to the rack of daggers,
-and without saying a word, tapped with the
-fore-finger of her right hand, and kept on tapping, a
-vacant hole in the rack, though her eyes peered
-deeply into Furneaux&#39;s face. And for the first time
-Furneaux made acquaintance with the real splendor
-of her eyes&mdash;eyes that lived in sleep, torpid like the
-dormouse; but when they woke, woke to such a lambency
-of passion that they fascinated and commanded
-like the basilisk&#39;s.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">With eyes so alight she now kept peering at Furneaux,
-standing tall above him, tapping at the empty
-hole.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I see,&quot; muttered Furneaux, <i>his</i> eyes, too,
-alight like live coals, &quot;there&#39;s an article missing here,
-also&mdash;one from the celts, one from the daggers.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He is innocent!&quot; suddenly cried Hylda Prout,
-in a tempest of passionate reproach.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She loves him,&quot; thought Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And the girl thought: &quot;He knew before now that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page77" id="page77"></a>[pg&nbsp;77]</span>
-these things were missing. His acting would deceive
-every man, but not every woman. How glad I am
-that I drew him on!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now, though the fact of the discovery of the celt
-by Inspector Clarke under the dead actress&#39;s piano
-had not been published in the papers, the fact that
-she had been stabbed through the eye by a long
-blade with blunt edges was known to all the world.
-There was nothing strange in this fierce outburst
-of Osborne&#39;s trusted secretary, nor that tears should
-spring to her eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Furneaux, he is innocent,&quot; she wailed in a
-frenzy. &quot;Oh, he is! You noticed me hesitate just
-now to bring you in here: well, <i>this</i> was the reason&mdash;this,
-this, this&mdash;&mdash;&quot; she tapped with her forefinger
-on the empty hole&mdash;&quot;for I knew that you would see
-this, and I knew that you would be jumping to some
-terrible conclusion as to Mr. Osborne.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Conclusion, no,&quot; murmured Furneaux comfortingly&mdash;&quot;I
-avoid conclusions as traps for the unwary.
-Interesting, of course, that&#39;s all. Tell me
-what you know, and fear nothing. Conclusion, you
-say! I don&#39;t jump to conclusions. Tell me what
-was the shape of the dagger that has disappeared.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She was silent again for many seconds. She was
-wrung with doubt, whether to speak or not to speak.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At last she voiced her agony.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Either I must refuse to say, or I must tell the
-truth&mdash;and if I tell the truth, you will think&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She stopped again, all her repose of manner fled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page78" id="page78"></a>[pg&nbsp;78]</span>
-&quot;You don&#39;t know what I will think,&quot; put in Furneaux.
-&quot;Sometimes I think the most unexpected
-things. The best way is to give me the plain facts.
-The question is, whether the blade that has gone
-from there was shaped like the one supposed to have
-committed the crime in the flat?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was labeled &#39;Saracen Stiletto: about 1150,&#39;&quot;
-muttered the girl brokenly, looking Furneaux
-straight in the face, though the fire was now dead
-in her eyes. &quot;It had a square bone handle, with
-a crescent carved on one of the four faces&mdash;a longish,
-thin blade, like a skewer, only not round&mdash;with
-blunt-edged corners to it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux took up a little tube containing radium
-from a table at his hand, looked at it, and put it
-down again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda Prout was too distraught to see that his
-hand shook a little. It was half a minute before
-he spoke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, all that proves nothing, though it is of
-interest, of course,&quot; he said nonchalantly. &quot;How
-long has that stiletto been lying there?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Since&mdash;since I entered Mr. Osborne&#39;s employment,
-twelve months ago.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you first noticed that it was gone&mdash;when?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;On the second afternoon after the murder, when
-I noticed that the celt, too, was gone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The second&mdash;I see.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wondered what had become of them! I could
-imagine that Mr. Osborne might have given the celt
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page79" id="page79"></a>[pg&nbsp;79]</span>
-to some friend. But the stiletto was so rare a
-thing&mdash;I couldn&#39;t think that he would give that. I
-assumed&mdash;I assume&mdash;that they were stolen. But,
-then, by whom?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s the question,&quot; said Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Was it this same stiletto that I have described
-to you that the murder was done with?&quot; asked
-Hylda.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, how can I tell that?&quot; said Furneaux. &quot;<i>I</i>
-wasn&#39;t there, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Was not the weapon, then, found in the unfortunate
-woman&#39;s flat?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No&mdash;no weapon.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, but that is excessively odd,&quot; she said in
-a low voice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why so excessively odd?&quot; demanded Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why? Because&mdash;don&#39;t you see?&mdash;the weapon
-would be blood-stained&mdash;of course; and I should expect
-that after committing his horrid deed, the murderer
-would be only too glad to get rid of it, and
-would leave it&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, come, that is hardly a good guess, Miss
-Prout. I shall never make a lady detective of you.
-Murderers don&#39;t leave their weapons about behind
-them, for weapons are clews, you see.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He was well aware that if the fact of the discovery
-of the celt had been published in the papers, Hylda
-might justly have answered: &quot;But <i>this</i> murderer did
-leave <i>one</i> of his weapons behind, namely the celt;
-and it is excessively odd that, since he left one, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page80" id="page80"></a>[pg&nbsp;80]</span>
-smaller one, he did not leave the other, the larger
-one.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As it was, the girl took thought, and her comment
-was shrewd enough:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All murderers do not act in the same way, for
-some are a world more cunning and alert than others.
-I say that it <i>is</i> odd that the murderer did not leave
-behind the weapon that pierced the woman&#39;s eye,
-and I will prove it to you. If the stiletto was
-stolen from Mr. Osborne&mdash;and it really must have
-been stolen&mdash;and if that was the same stiletto that
-the deed was done with, then, the motive of the thief
-in stealing it was to kill Mademoiselle de Bercy with
-it. But why should one steal a weapon to commit
-a murder? And why should the murderer have
-chosen <i>Mr. Osborne</i> to steal his weapon from? Obviously,
-because he wanted to throw the suspicion
-upon him&mdash;in which case he would <i>naturally</i> leave
-the weapon behind as proof of Mr. Osborne&#39;s guilt.
-Now, then, have I proved my point?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Though she spoke almost in italics, and was pale
-and flurried, she looked jauntily at Furneaux, with
-her head tossed back; and he, with half a smile,
-answered:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I withdraw my remark as to your detective qualifications,
-Miss Prout. Yes, I think you reason well.
-If there was a thief, and the thief was the murderer,
-he would very likely have acted as you say.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then, why was the stiletto not found in the
-flat?&quot; she asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page81" id="page81"></a>[pg&nbsp;81]</span>
-&quot;The fact that it was not found would seem to
-show that there was <i>not</i> a thief,&quot; he said; and he
-added quickly: &quot;Perhaps Mr. Osborne gave it, as
-well as the celt, to someone. I suppose you asked
-him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He was gone away an hour before I missed
-them,&quot; Hylda answered. She hesitated again.
-When next she spoke it was with a smile that would
-have won a stone.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell me where he is,&quot; she pleaded, &quot;and I will
-write to him about it. You may safely tell <i>me</i>,
-you know, for Mr. Osborne has no secrets from
-<i>me</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wish I could tell you.... Oh, but he will
-soon be back again, and then you will see him and
-speak to him once more.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Some tone of badinage in these jerky sentences
-brought a flush to her face, but she tried to ward off
-his scrutiny with a commonplace remark.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, that&#39;s some consolation. I must wait in
-patience till the mob finds a new sensation.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux took a turn through the room, silently
-meditating.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thanks so much for your courtesy, Miss Prout,&quot;
-he said at last. &quot;Our conversation has been&mdash;fruitful.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, fruitful in throwing still more suspicion
-upon an innocent man, if that is what you mean.
-Are not the police <i>quite</i> convinced yet of Mr. Osborne&#39;s
-innocence, Inspector Furneaux?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page82" id="page82"></a>[pg&nbsp;82]</span>
-&quot;Oh, quite, quite,&quot; said he hastily, somewhat taken
-aback by her candor.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Two &#39;quites&#39; make a &#39;not quite,&#39; as two negatives
-make an affirmative,&quot; said she coldly, fingering
-and looking down at some wistaria in her bosom.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She added with sudden warmth: &quot;Oh, but you
-should, Inspector Furneaux! You should. He has
-suffered; his honest and true heart has been wounded.
-And he has his alibi, which, though in reality it
-may not be so good as you think, is yet quite good
-enough. But I know what it is that poisons your
-mind against him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are full of statements, Miss Prout,&quot; said
-Furneaux with an inclination of the head; &quot;what is
-it, now, that poisons my mind against that gentleman?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is that taxicabman&#39;s delusion that he took
-him from the Ritz Hotel to Feldisham Mansions
-and back, added to the housekeeper&#39;s delusion that
-she saw him here&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux nearly gasped. Up to that moment
-he had heard no word about a housekeeper&#39;s delusion,
-or of a housekeeper&#39;s existence even. A long
-second passed before he could answer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, she was no doubt mistaken. I have not
-yet examined her personally, but I have every reason
-to believe that she is in error. At what hour, by
-the way, does she say that she thought she saw
-him here?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>She</i> says she thinks it was about five minutes to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page83" id="page83"></a>[pg&nbsp;83]</span>
-eight. But at that time, I take it from the evidence,
-he must have been writing those two letters at the
-Ritz. If she were right, that would make out that
-after doing the deed at about 7.40 or so, he would
-just have time to come back here by five to eight,
-and change his clothes. But he was at the Ritz&mdash;he
-was at the Ritz! And Mrs. Bates only saw his
-back an instant going up the stairs&mdash;his ghost&#39;s
-back, she means, his double&#39;s back, not his own.
-He was at the Ritz, Inspector Furneaux.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Precisely,&quot; said Furneaux, with a voice that at
-last had a quiver in it. &quot;If any fact is clear in
-a maze of doubt, that, at least, is established beyond
-cavil. And Mrs. Bates&#39;s other name&mdash;I&mdash;forget
-it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hester.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s it. Is she here now?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She is taking a holiday to-day. She was dreadfully
-upset.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thanks. Good-by.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He held out his hand a second time, quite affably.
-Hylda Prout followed him out to the library and,
-when the street door had closed behind him, peeped
-through the curtains at his alert, natty figure as he
-hastened away.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux took a motor-bus to Whitehall, and,
-what was very odd, the &#39;bus carried him beyond his
-destination, over Westminster Bridge, indeed, he
-was so lost in meditation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">His object now was to see Winter and fling at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page84" id="page84"></a>[pg&nbsp;84]</span>
-his chief&#39;s head some of the amazing things he had
-just learned.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But when he arrived at Scotland Yard, Winter
-was not there. At that moment, in fact, Winter
-was at Osborne&#39;s house in Mayfair, whither he had
-rushed to meet Furneaux in order to whisper to Furneaux
-without a moment&#39;s delay some news just
-gleaned by the merest chance&mdash;the news that Pauline
-Dessaulx, Rose de Bercy&#39;s maid, had quarreled
-with her mistress on the morning of the murder,
-and had been given notice to quit Miss de Bercy&#39;s
-service.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When Winter arrived at Osborne&#39;s house Furneaux,
-of course, was gone. To his question at the
-door, &quot;Is Mr. Furneaux here?&quot; the parlor-maid answered:
-&quot;I am not sure, sir&mdash;I&#39;ll see.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Perhaps you don&#39;t know Mr. Furneaux,&quot; said
-Winter, &quot;a small-built gentleman&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, yes, sir, I know him,&quot; the girl answered.
-&quot;I let him in this morning, as well as when he called
-some days ago.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">No words in the English tongue could have more
-astonished Winter, for Furneaux had not mentioned
-to him that he had even been to Osborne&#39;s. What
-Furneaux could have been doing there &quot;some days
-ago&quot; was beyond his guessing. Before his wonderment
-could get out another question, the girl was
-leading the way towards the library.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In the library were Miss Prout, writing, and
-Jenkins handing her a letter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page85" id="page85"></a>[pg&nbsp;85]</span>
-&quot;I came to see if Inspector Furneaux was here,&quot;
-Winter said; &quot;but evidently he has gone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Only about three minutes,&quot; said Hylda Prout,
-throwing a quick look round at him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thanks&mdash;I am sorry to have troubled you,&quot;
-he said. Then he added, to Jenkins: &quot;Much obliged
-for the cigars!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do not mention it, sir,&quot; said Jenkins.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter had reached the library door, when he
-stopped short.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;By the way, Jenkins, is this Mr. Furneaux&#39;s first
-visit here?&mdash;or don&#39;t you remember?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Furneaux came here once before, sir,&quot; said
-Jenkins in his staid official way.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, I thought perhaps&mdash;when was that?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let me see, sir. It was&mdash;yes&mdash;on the third,
-the afternoon of the murder, I remember.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The third&mdash;the afternoon of the murder. Those
-words ate their way into Winter&#39;s very brain. They
-might have been fired from a pistol rather than uttered
-by the placid Jenkins.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The afternoon, you say,&quot; repeated Winter.
-&quot;Yes&mdash;quite so; he wished to see Mr. Osborne. At
-what exact <i>hour</i> about would that be?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Jenkins again meditated. Then he said: &quot;Mr.
-Furneaux called, sir, about 5.45, as far as I can
-recollect. He wished to see my master, who was
-out, but was expected to return. So Mr. Furneaux
-was shown in here to await him, and he waited a
-quarter of an hour, if I am right in saying that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page86" id="page86"></a>[pg&nbsp;86]</span>
-he came at 5.45, because Mr. Osborne telephoned me
-from Feldisham Mansions that he would not be returning,
-and as I entered the museum there, where
-Mr. Furneaux then was, to tell him, I heard the
-clock strike six, I remember.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At this Hylda Prout whirled round in her chair.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The museum!&quot; she cried. &quot;How odd, how
-exceedingly odd! Just now Mr. Furneaux seemed
-to be rather surprised when I told him that there
-was a museum!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He doubtless forgot, miss,&quot; said Jenkins, &quot;for
-he had certainly gone in there when I entered the
-library.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thanks, thanks,&quot; said Winter lightly, &quot;that&#39;s
-how it was&mdash;good-day&quot;; and he went out with the
-vacant air of a man who has lost something, but
-knows not what.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He drove straight to Scotland Yard. There in
-the office sat Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For a long time they conferred&mdash;Winter with
-hardly a word, one hand on his thigh, the other at
-his mustache, looking at Furneaux with a frown, with
-curious musing eyes, meditating, silent. And Furneaux
-told how the celt and the stiletto were missing
-from Osborne&#39;s museum.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And the inference?&quot; said Winter, speaking at
-last, his round eyes staring widely at Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The inference, on the face of it, is that Osborne
-is guilty,&quot; said Furneaux quietly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;An innocent man, Furneaux?&quot; said Winter almost
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page87" id="page87"></a>[pg&nbsp;87]</span>
-with a groan of reproach&mdash;&quot;an innocent
-man?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux&#39;s eyes flashed angrily an instant, and
-some word leapt to his lips, but it was not uttered.
-He stood up.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, that&#39;s how it stands for the moment. Time
-will show&mdash;I must be away,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And when he had gone out, Winter rose wearily,
-and paced with slow steps a long time through the
-room, his head bent quite down, staring. Presently
-he came upon a broken cigar, such as Furneaux
-delighted in smelling. Then a fierce cry broke from
-him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Furneaux, my friend! Why, this is madness!
-Oh, d&mdash;n everything!&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page88" id="page88"></a>[pg&nbsp;88]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI<br/>
-TO TORMOUTH</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;An absinthe!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A packet of Caporal!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Un bock pour vous, m&#39;sieur?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A vodka!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A frowsy waiter was hurrying through some such
-jangle of loud voices from the &quot;comrades&quot; scattered
-among the tables set in a back room in a very
-back street of Soho. The hour was two in the morning,
-and the light in that Anarchist Club was murky
-and blurred. Only one gas-jet on the wall lit the
-room, and that struggled but feebly through the
-cigarette smoke that choked the air like a fog&mdash;air
-that was foul and close as well as dim, for some thirty
-persons, mostly men but some few women, were
-crowded in there as if there was no place else on
-earth for them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">One heard the rattle of dice, the whirr of cards
-being shuffled against the thumbs, the grating of
-glass tumblers against imitation granite. Two poor
-girls, cramped in a corner, were attempting to dance
-to the rhythm of an Italian song. They were laughing
-with wide mouths, their heads thrown back,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page89" id="page89"></a>[pg&nbsp;89]</span>
-weary unto death, yet alive with make-believe mirth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At one of the tables sat Gaston Janoc, the man
-who had been seen by Inspector Clarke talking in
-St. Martin&#39;s Lane to Bertha Seward, one-time cook
-in the Feldisham Mansions flat. Playing vingt-et-un
-with him was a burly Russian-looking man, all red
-beard and eyebrows; also a small Frenchman with an
-imperial and a crooked nose; while a colored man
-of Martinique made the fourth of a queer quartette.
-But somehow Janoc and the rough, red Russian
-seemed not to be able to agree in the game. They
-were antagonistic as cat and dog, and three times
-one or other threw down his cards and looked at his
-adversary, as who should say:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A little more of you, and my knife talks!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who are you, then, Ruski?&quot; cried Janoc at last,
-speaking French, since the Russian only glared at
-him when he swore in his quaint English.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Yet the Russian grumbled in English in his beard:
-&quot;No French.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And no Italian, and no Spanish, and no German,
-and very, very small English,&quot; growled Janoc in
-English, frowning at him; &quot;Well, then, shall we converse,
-sare?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is that&mdash;&#39;<i>converse</i>&#39;?&quot; asked the Russian.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Janoc shrugged disgustedly, while the little
-Frenchman, whose eyes twinkled at every tiff between
-the pair, said politely in French:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We await your play, m&#39;sieurs.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Twice, on the very edge of the precipice of open
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page90" id="page90"></a>[pg&nbsp;90]</span>
-hostilities, Janoc and the Russian stopped short;
-but a little after two o&#39;clock, when much absinthe
-and vodka had been drunk, an outbreak took place:
-for the Russian then cried out loudly above the hubbub
-of tongues:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, you&mdash;how you call it?&mdash;<i>tcheeeet</i>!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who? I&mdash;me?&quot; cried Janoc sharply, pale,
-half-standing&mdash;&quot;cheat?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes&mdash;<i>tcheeet</i>, you <i>tcheeet</i>!&quot; insisted the bearded
-Slav. And now the little Frenchman with the crooked
-nose, who foreknew that the table was about to be
-upset, stood up quickly, picked up his thimbleful of
-anisette, and holding it in hand, awaited with merry
-eyes the outcome.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Instantly Janoc, who was dealing, sent the pack
-of cards like an assault of birds into the Russian&#39;s
-face, the Russian closed with Janoc, and forthwith
-the room reeled into chaos. The struggle need not
-be described. Suffice it to say, that it lasted longer
-than the Russian had probably expected, for Janoc
-proved to have sinews of steel, though thin steel.
-His lank arms embraced the Russian, squeezing like
-a cable that is being tighter and tighter wound.
-However, he was overcome by mere weight, thumping
-to the floor among a tumbled dance of tables, chairs,
-and foreign drinks, while the women shrieked, the
-men bellowed, and the scared manager of the den
-added to the uproar by yelling:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;M&#39;sieurs! M&#39;sieurs! Je vous prie! The police
-will come!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page91" id="page91"></a>[pg&nbsp;91]</span>
-Only one soul in the room remained calm, and
-that was the diminutive Frenchman, who kept dodging
-through the legs and arms of the flood of humanity
-that surged around the two on the floor.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He alone of them all saw that the Russian, in the
-thick of the struggle, was slipping his hand into
-pocket after pocket of Janoc under him, and was very
-deftly drawing out any papers that he might find
-there.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In two minutes the row was ended, and the gaming
-and drinking recommenced as if nothing had happened.
-The Russian had been half led, half hustled
-to the front door, and was gone. Immediately after
-him had slipped out the bright-eyed Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Russian, after pacing down an alley, turned
-into Old Compton Street, twice peering about and
-behind him, as if disturbed by some instinct that he
-was being shadowed. And this was so&mdash;but with
-a skill so nimble, so expert, so inbred, did the Frenchman
-follow, that in this pursuit the true meaning of
-the word &quot;shadowing&quot; was realized. The Russian
-did not see his follower for the excellent reason that
-the Frenchman made himself an invisibility. He
-might have put on those magic shoes that shadows
-shoot and dash and slink in, so airily did he glide on
-the trail. Nor could mere genius have accomplished
-such a feat, and with such ease&mdash;were it not for the
-expertness that was wedded to genius.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When the Russian emerged into the wide thoroughfare
-close to the Palace Theater, he stood under a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page92" id="page92"></a>[pg&nbsp;92]</span>
-lamp to look at one of the papers picked from
-Janoc&#39;s pockets; and only then did he become aware
-of the Frenchman, who rose up out of the ground
-under his elbow with that pert ease with which a
-cork bobs to the surface of water.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Got anything of importance?&quot; asked the Frenchman,
-his twinkling eyes radiant with the humor of
-the chase.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Russian stared at him half a minute with the
-hung jaw of astonishment. Then, all at once remembering
-his rôle, he cried hoarsely:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No English!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, chuck it!&quot; remarked the other.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Again the Russian gazed at the unexpected little
-phenomenon, and his voice rumbled:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is that&mdash;&#39;chuck it&#39;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Suddenly the Frenchman snatched Janoc&#39;s paper
-neatly with thumb and finger out of the Russian&#39;s
-hand, and ran chuckling across Charing Cross Road
-eastward. The Russian, with a grunt of rage, made
-after him with his long legs. But, from the first,
-he saw that he was being left behind by the nimble
-pace set up by a good runner. He seemed to understand
-that a miracle was needed, and lo, it occurred,
-for, as the two crossed the road in front of the Palace
-Theater, the Russian lifted his voice into:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Stop him! Stop thief! Police! Police!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Not only did he yell in most lucid English, but
-he also plucked a police whistle from his coat and
-blew it loudly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page93" id="page93"></a>[pg&nbsp;93]</span>
-No policeman happened to be near, however, and
-the deep sleep of London echoed their pelting steps
-eastward, until the Russian saw the paper-snatcher
-vanish from sight in the congeries of streets that
-converge on the top of St. Martin&#39;s Lane.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He lost hope then, and slackened a little, panting
-but swearing in a language that would be appreciated
-by any London cabman. Nevertheless, when
-he, too, ran into St. Martin&#39;s Lane, there was the
-small Frenchman, standing, wiping his forehead,
-awaiting him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The Russian sprang at him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You little whelp!&quot; he roared. &quot;I arrest
-you&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, what&#39;s the good, Clarke? You are slow this
-evening. I just thought I&#39;d wake you up.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Furneaux!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Fancy not knowing me!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was <i>you</i>!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who else? Here&#39;s your Janocy document. You
-might let me have a look at it. Share and share
-alike.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke tried to retrieve lost prestige, though his
-hand shook as he took the paper.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well&mdash;I&mdash;could have sworn it was you!&quot; he
-said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Of course you could&mdash;and did, no doubt. Let&#39;s
-have a glimpse at those documents.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But what were <i>you</i> doing in the Fraternal Club,
-anyhow? Something on in that line?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page94" id="page94"></a>[pg&nbsp;94]</span>
-&quot;No. An idle hour. Chance of picking up a
-stray clew. I sometimes do dive into those depths
-without special object. You managed that to a T
-with Janoc. Where are the other papers? Hand
-them over.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;With pleasure,&quot; said Clarke, but there was no
-pleasure in his surly Russian face, in which rage
-shone notwithstanding a marvelous make-up. Still,
-he opened the paper under the lamp&mdash;a sheet of
-notepaper with some lines of writing on the first
-page; and on the top of it, printed, the name of a
-hotel, &quot;The Swan, Tormouth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The two detectives peered over it. To the illimitable
-surprise of both, this letter, stolen by
-Clarke from Janoc&#39;s pocket, was addressed to Clarke
-himself&mdash;a letter from Rupert Osborne, the millionaire.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And Osborne said in it:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent"><span class="smcap">Dear Inspector Clarke</span>:&mdash;Yours of the 7th duly to hand.
-In reply to your inquiry, I am not aware that the late Mlle.
-Rose de Bercy had any relations with Anarchists, either in
-London or in Paris, other than those which have been mentioned
-in the papers&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, a purely professional interest for
-stage purposes. I think it unlikely that her connection with
-them extended further.</p>
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">I am,</span><br />
-<span class="i0">Sincerely yours,</span><br />
-<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Rupert Osborne</span>.</span><br />
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux and Clarke looked at each other in a
-blank bewilderment that was not assumed by either
-man.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page95" id="page95"></a>[pg&nbsp;95]</span>
-&quot;<i>Did</i> you write to Mr. Osborne, asking that question?&quot;
-asked Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; said Clarke&mdash;&quot;never. I didn&#39;t even know
-where Osborne was.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So Janoc must have written to him in your
-name?&quot; said Furneaux. &quot;Janoc, then, wishes to
-know how much information Osborne can give you
-as to Mademoiselle de Bercy&#39;s association with Anarchists.
-That seems clear. But why should Janoc
-think that <i>you</i> particularly are interested in knowing?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke flushed hotly under the paint, being conscious
-that he was investigating the case on his own
-private account and in a secret way. As a matter
-of fact, he was by this time fully convinced that
-Rose de Bercy&#39;s murder was the work of Anarchist
-hands, but he was so vexed with Furneaux&#39;s tricking
-him, and so fearful of official reprimand from Winter
-that he only answered:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why Janoc should think that I am interested,
-I can&#39;t imagine. It beats me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And how can Janoc know where Osborne is, or
-his assumed name, to write to him?&quot; muttered Furneaux.
-&quot;I thought that that was a secret between
-Osborne, Winter, and myself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke, equally puzzled, scratched his head under
-his wig, which had been insufferably hot in that
-stifling room.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Janoc and his crew must be keeping an eye on
-Osborne, it seems&mdash;for some reason,&quot; he exclaimed.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page96" id="page96"></a>[pg&nbsp;96]</span>
-&quot;Heaven knows why&mdash;I don&#39;t. I am out of the
-de Bercy case, of course. My interest in the Janoc
-crowd is&mdash;political.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let me see the letter again,&quot; said Furneaux;
-and he read it carefully once more. Then he opened
-the sheet, as if seeking additional information from
-the blank pages, turned it over, looked at the back&mdash;and
-there at the back he saw something else that
-was astounding, for, written backwards, near the
-bottom of the page, in Osborne&#39;s handwriting, was
-the word &quot;Rosalind.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who is &#39;Rosalind&#39;?&quot; asked Furneaux&mdash;&quot;see
-here, an impression from some other letter written
-at the same time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t know, I&#39;m sure,&quot; said Clarke. &quot;A sister,
-perhaps.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A sister. Why, though, should his sister&#39;s name
-appear at the back of a note written to Janoc, or
-to Inspector Clarke, as he thought?&quot; said Furneaux
-to himself, deep in meditation. He suddenly added
-brightly: &quot;Now, Clarke, there&#39;s a puzzle for you!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t see it, see any puzzle, I mean. It might
-have appeared on any other letter, say to his bankers,
-or to a friend. It was a mere accident. There
-is nothing in that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Quite right,&quot; grinned Furneaux. &quot;And it was
-a sister&#39;s name, of course. &#39;Rosalind.&#39; A pretty
-name. Poor girl, she will be anxious about her fond
-and doting brother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It may be another woman&#39;s name,&quot; said Clarke
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page97" id="page97"></a>[pg&nbsp;97]</span>
-sagely&mdash;&quot;though, for that matter, he&#39;d hardly be
-on with a new love before the other one is cold in
-her grave, as the saying is.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux laughed a low, mysterious laugh in his
-throat. It had a peculiar sound, and rang hard and
-bitter in the ears of the other.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll keep this, if you don&#39;t mind,&quot; he said, lapsing
-into the detective again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Meantime, Furneaux knew that there were other
-papers of Janoc&#39;s in Clarke&#39;s pocket, and he lingered
-a little to give his colleague a chance of exhibiting
-them. Clarke made no move, however, so he put out
-his hand, saying, &quot;Well, good luck,&quot; and disappeared
-southward, while Clarke walked northward toward
-his residence, Hampstead way. But in Southampton
-Row an overwhelming impatience to see the other
-Janoc papers overcame him, and he commenced to
-examine them as he went.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Two were bills. A third was a newspaper cutting
-from the <i>Matin</i> commenting on the murder in Feldisham
-Mansions. The fourth had power to arrest
-Clarke&#39;s steps. It was a letter of three closely-written
-pages&mdash;in French; and though Clarke&#39;s
-French, self-taught, was not fluent, it could walk, if
-it could not fly. In ten minutes he had read and
-understood....</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">St. Petersburg says that since the secret meeting, a steady
-growth of courage in the rank-and-file is observable. As for
-the Nevski funds, an individual highly placed, whose name
-is in three syllables, is said to be willing to come to the rescue.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page98" id="page98"></a>[pg&nbsp;98]</span>
-Lastly, as to the traitress, you will see to it that she to whose
-hands vengeance has been intrusted shall fail on the 3rd.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">This was in the letter; and as Inspector Clarke&#39;s
-eyes fell on the date, &quot;the 3d,&quot; his clenched hand
-rose triumphantly in air. It was on July <i>the 3d</i>
-that Rose de Bercy had been done to death!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When Clarke again walked onward his eyes were
-alight with a wild exultation. He was thinking:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, Allah be praised, that I didn&#39;t show Furneaux
-this thing, as I nearly was doing!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He reached his house with a sense of surprise&mdash;he
-had covered so much ground unconsciously, and
-the dominant thought in his mind was that the race
-was not always to the swift.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Luck is the thing in a man&#39;s career,&quot; he said to
-himself, &quot;not wit, or mere sharpness to grasp a
-point. Slow, and steady, and lucky&mdash;that&#39;s the combination.
-The British are a race slower of thought
-than some of the others, just as <i>I</i> may be a slower
-man than Furneaux, but we Britons rule the world
-by luck, as we won the battle of Waterloo by luck.
-Luck and prime beef, they go together somehow, I
-do believe. And what I am to-day I owe to luck,
-for it&#39;s happened to me too often to doubt that I&#39;ve
-got the gift of it in my marrow.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He put his latch-key into the door with something
-of a smile; and the next morning Mrs. Clarke cried
-delightedly to him:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, something must have happened to put you
-in this good temper!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page99" id="page99"></a>[pg&nbsp;99]</span>
-At that same hour of the morning Furneaux, for
-his part, was at Osborne&#39;s house in Mayfair, where
-he had an appointment with Mrs. Hester Bates, Osborne&#39;s
-housekeeper. He was just being admitted
-into the house when the secretary, Miss Prout, walked
-up to the door&mdash;rather to his surprise, for it was
-somewhat before the hour of a secretary&#39;s attendance.
-They entered together and passed into the
-library, where Hylda Prout invited him to sit down
-for a minute.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am only here just to collect and answer
-the morning&#39;s letters,&quot; she explained pleasantly.
-&quot;There&#39;s a tree which I know in Epping Forest&mdash;an
-old beech&mdash;where I&#39;m taking a book to read. See
-my picnic basket?&mdash;tomato and cress sandwiches,
-half a bottle of Chianti, an aluminum folding cup
-to drink from. I&#39;ll send for Mrs. Bates in a moment,
-and leave her to your tender inquiries. But
-wouldn&#39;t you prefer Epping Forest on a day like
-this? Do you like solitude, Inspector Furneaux?
-Dreams?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I like solitude, as boys like piracy, because
-unattainable. I can only just find time to sleep,
-but not time enough to dream.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda lifted her face beatifically.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I <i>love</i> to dream!&mdash;to be with myself&mdash;alone: the
-world in one compartment, I in another, with myself;
-with silence to hear my heart beat in, and time
-to fathom a little what its beating is madly trying
-to say; an old tree overhead, and breezes breathing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" id="page100"></a>[pg&nbsp;100]</span>
-through it. Oh, <i>they</i> know how to soothe; <i>they</i> alone
-understand, Inspector Furneaux, and <i>they</i> forgive.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux said within himself: &quot;Well, I seem to
-be in for some charming confidences&quot;; and he added
-aloud: &quot;Quite so; <i>they</i> understand&mdash;if it&#39;s a lady:
-for Nature is feminine; and only a lady can fathom
-a lady.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, women!&quot; Hylda said, with her pretty pout
-of disdain,&mdash;&quot;they are nothing, mostly shallow shoppers.
-Give me a man&mdash;if he is a man. And there
-have been a few women, too&mdash;in history. But, man
-or woman, what I believe is that for the greater part,
-we remain foreigners to ourselves through life&mdash;we
-never reach that depth in ourselves, &#39;deeper than
-ever plummet sounded,&#39; where the real <i>I</i> within us
-lives, the real, bare-faced, rabid, savage, divine <i>I</i>,
-naked as an ape, contorted, sobbing, bawling what
-it cannot speak.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux, who had certainly not suspected this
-blend of philosopher and poet beneath that mass of
-red hair, listened in silence. For the second time
-he saw this strange girl&#39;s eyes take fire, glow, rage
-a moment like a building sweltering in conflagration,
-and then die down to utter dullness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Though he knew just when to speak, his reply was
-rather tame.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There&#39;s something in that, too&mdash;you are right.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She suddenly smiled, with a pretty air of confusion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" id="page101"></a>[pg&nbsp;101]</span>
-&quot;Surely,&quot; she said. &quot;And now to business: first,
-Mrs. Bates&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;One moment,&quot; broke in Furneaux. &quot;Something
-has caused me to wish to ask you&mdash;do you know Mr.
-Osborne&#39;s relatives?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know <i>of</i> them. He has only a younger brother,
-Ralph, who is at Harvard University&mdash;and an
-aunt.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Aunt&#39;s name Rosalind?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No&mdash;Priscilla&mdash;Priscilla Emptage.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who, then, may &#39;Rosalind&#39; be?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No connection of <i>his</i>. You must have made
-some mistake.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux held out the note of Rupert Osborne to
-Janoc intended for Clarke, holding it so folded that
-the name of the hotel was not visible&mdash;only the transferred
-word &quot;Rosalind.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And as Hylda Prout bent over it, perplexed at
-first by the seeming scrawl, Furneaux&#39;s eye was on
-her face. He was aware of the instant when she
-recognized the handwriting, the instant when reasoning
-and the putting of two-and-two together began
-to work in her mind, the instant when her stare began
-to widen, and her tight-pressed lips to relax,
-the rush of color to fade from her face, and the
-mask of freckles to stand out darkly in strong contrast
-with her ivory white flesh. When she had
-stared for a long minute, and had had enough, she
-did not say anything, but turned away silently to
-stand at a window, her back to Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page102" id="page102"></a>[pg&nbsp;102]</span>
-He looked at her, thinking: &quot;She guesses, and
-suffers.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Suddenly she whirled round. &quot;May I&mdash;see that
-letter?&quot; she asked in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The whole note?&quot; he said; &quot;I&#39;m afraid that it&#39;s
-private&mdash;not <i>my</i> secret&mdash;I regret it&mdash;an official
-document, you know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right,&quot; she said quietly. &quot;You may come
-to me for help yet&quot;&mdash;and turned to the pile of letters
-on the desk.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Anyway, Rosalind is not a relative, to your
-knowledge?&quot; he persisted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She stuffed the letters into a drawer, bowed, and
-was gone, leaving him sorry for her, for he saw
-a lump working in her throat.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Some minutes after her disappearance, a plump
-little woman came in&mdash;Mrs. Hester Bates, housekeeper
-in the Osborne <i>ménage</i>. Her hair lay in
-smooth curves on her brow as on the upturned bulge
-of a china bowl. There was an apprehensive look
-in her upward-looking eyes, so Furneaux spoke comfortingly
-to her, after seating her near the window.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t be afraid to speak,&quot; he said reassuringly.
-&quot;What you have to say is not necessarily against
-Mr. Osborne&#39;s interests. Just state the facts simply&mdash;you
-did see him here on the murder night, didn&#39;t
-you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She muttered something, as a tear dropped on
-the ample bosom of her black dress.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page103" id="page103"></a>[pg&nbsp;103]</span>
-&quot;Just a little louder,&quot; Furneaux said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes,&quot; she sobbed, &quot;I saw his back.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You were&mdash;where?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Coming up the kitchen stairs to talk to Mr.
-Jenkins.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t cry. And when you reached the top of
-the kitchen stairs you saw his back on the house
-stairs&mdash;at the bottom? at the top?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He was nearer the top. I only saw him a
-minute.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A moment, you mean, I think. And in that
-one moment you became quite sure that it was Mr.
-Osborne? Though it was only his back you
-saw?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, sir....&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, don&#39;t cry. It&#39;s nothing. Only are you
-certain sure&mdash;that&#39;s the point?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I am sure enough, but&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But what?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought he was the worse for drink, which
-was a mad thing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, you thought that. Why so?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;His feet seemed to reel from side to side&mdash;almost
-from under him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;His feet&mdash;I see. From side to side.... Ever
-saw him the worse for drink before?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Never in all my life! I was amazed. Afterwards
-I had a feeling that it wasn&#39;t Mr. Osborne
-himself, but his spirit that I had seen. And it may
-have been his spirit! For my Aunt Pruie saw the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" id="page104"></a>[pg&nbsp;104]</span>
-spirit of her boy one Sunday afternoon when he was
-alive and well in his ship on the sea.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But a spirit the worse for drink?&quot; murmured
-Furneaux; &quot;a spirit whose feet seemed to reel?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She dropped her eyes, and presently wept a theory.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A spirit walks lighter-like than a Christian, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you, though,&quot; asked Furneaux, making
-shorthand signs in his notebook, &quot;did you have the
-impression that it might be a spirit at the time, or
-was it only afterwards?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was only afterwards when I thought matters
-over,&quot; said Mrs. Bates. &quot;Even at the time it crossed
-my mind that there was something in it I didn&#39;t
-rightly understand.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, what sort of something?&mdash;can&#39;t you say?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, sir. I don&#39;t know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And when you saw Mr. Jenkins immediately
-afterwards, did you mention to him that you had
-seen Mr. Osborne?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I didn&#39;t say anything to him, nor him to
-me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pity.... But the hour. You have said, I
-hear, that it was five minutes to eight. Now, the
-murder was committed between 7.30 and 7.45; and
-at five to eight Mr. Osborne is said by more than
-one person to have been at the Ritz Hotel. If he
-was there, he couldn&#39;t have been here. If he was
-here, he couldn&#39;t have been there. Are you sure of
-the hour&mdash;five to eight?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As to that Mrs. Bates was positive. She had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page105" id="page105"></a>[pg&nbsp;105]</span>
-reason to remember, having looked at the clock
-<i>à propos</i> of the servants&#39; supper. And Furneaux
-went away from her with eyes in which sparkled a
-light that some might have called wicked, and all
-would have called cruel, as when the cat hears a
-stirring, and crouches at the hole&#39;s rim with her
-soul crowded into an unblinking stare of expectation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He looked at his watch, took a cab to Waterloo,
-and while in the vehicle again studied that scrawled
-&quot;Rosalind&quot; on Osborne&#39;s letter to Janoc.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A trip to Tormouth should throw some light on
-it,&quot; he thought. &quot;If it can be shown that he is
-actually in love&mdash;again&mdash;already&mdash;&mdash;&quot; and as he so
-thought, the cab ran out of St. James&#39;s Street into
-Pall Mall.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Look! quick! There&mdash;in that cab!&quot; hissed
-a man at that moment to a girl with whom
-he was lurking in a doorway deep under the shadow
-of an awning near the corner. &quot;Look!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s him!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sure? Look well!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The very man!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, of all the fatalities!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The cab dashed out of sight, and the man&mdash;Chief
-Inspector Winter&mdash;clapped his hand to his forehead
-in a spasm of sheer distraction and dismay. The
-woman with him was the murdered actress&#39;s cook,
-Bertha Seward, the same whom Inspector Clarke had
-one morning seen in earnest talk with Janoc under
-the pawnbroker&#39;s sign in St. Martin&#39;s Lane.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page106" id="page106"></a>[pg&nbsp;106]</span>
-Winter walked away from her, looking on the
-ground, seeking his lost wits there. Then suddenly
-he turned and overtook her again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you swear to me, Miss Seward,&quot; he said
-gravely, &quot;that that very man was with your mistress
-in her flat on the evening of the murder?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I would know him anywhere,&quot; answered the
-slight girl, looking up into his face with her oblique
-Chinese eyes that were always half shut as if shy
-of light. &quot;I thought to myself at the time what
-a queer, perky person he was, and what working eyes
-the little man had, and I wondered who he could be.
-That&#39;s the very man in that cab, I&#39;m positive.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And when you and Pauline went out to the Exhibition
-you left him with your mistress, you say?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, sir. They were in the drawing-room together;
-and quarreling, too, for her voice was raised,
-and she laughed twice in an angry way.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Quarreling&mdash;in French? You didn&#39;t catch&mdash;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, it was in French.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Inspector Winter leant his shoulder against the
-house-wall, and his head slowly sank, and then all
-at once dropped down with an air of utter abandonment,
-for Furneaux was his friend&mdash;he had looked
-on Furneaux as a brother.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux, meantime, at Waterloo was taking
-train to Tormouth, and his fixed stare boded no good
-will to Rupert Osborne.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" id="page107"></a>[pg&nbsp;107]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII<br/>
-AT TORMOUTH</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux reached Tormouth about three in the
-afternoon, and went boldly to the Swan Hotel, since
-he was unknown by sight to Osborne. It was an
-old-fashioned place, with a bar opening out of the
-vestibule, and the first person that met his eye was
-of interest to him&mdash;a man sitting in the bar-parlor,
-who had &quot;Neapolitan&quot; written all over him&mdash;a face
-that Furneaux had already marked in Soho. He
-did not know the stranger&#39;s name, but he would have
-wagered a large sum that this queer visitor to Tormouth
-was a bird of the Janoc flock.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is he doing here?&quot; Furneaux asked himself;
-and the only answer that suggested itself was:
-&quot;Keeping an eye on Osborne. Perhaps that explains
-how Janoc got hold of the name &#39;Glyn.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When he was left alone in the bedroom which he
-took, he sat with his two hands between his knees,
-his head bent low, giving ten minutes&#39; thought by
-the clock to the subject of Anarchists. Presently
-his lips muttered:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Clarke is investigating the murder on his own
-account; he suspects that Anarchists were at the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" id="page108"></a>[pg&nbsp;108]</span>
-bottom of it; he has let them see that he suspects;
-and they have taken alarm, knowing that their ill
-repute can&#39;t bear any added load of suspicion. Probably
-she was more mixed up with them than is known;
-probably there was some quarrel between them and
-her; and so, seeing themselves suspected, they are
-uneasy. Hence Janoc wrote to Osborne in Clarke&#39;s
-name, asking how much Osborne knew of her connection
-with Anarchists. He must have managed
-somehow to have Osborne shadowed down here&mdash;must
-be eager to have Osborne proved guilty. Hence,
-perhaps, for some reason, the presence of that fellow
-below there in the parlor. But I, for my
-part, mustn&#39;t allow myself to be drawn off into
-proving <i>them</i> guilty. Another, another, is my
-prey!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He stood up sharply, crept to his door, and listened.
-All the upper part of the house was as still
-as the tomb at that hour. Mr. Glyn&mdash;Osborne&#39;s
-name on the hotel register&mdash;was, Furneaux had been
-told, out of doors.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He passed out into a corridor, and, though he
-did not know which was Osborne&#39;s room, after peering
-through two doorways discovered it at the third,
-seeing in it a cane with a stag&#39;s head which Osborne
-often carried. He slipped within, and in a moment
-was everywhere at once in the room, filling it
-with his presence, ransacking it with a hundred
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In one corner was an antiquated round table in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" id="page109"></a>[pg&nbsp;109]</span>
-mahogany, with a few books on it, and under the
-books a copper-covered writing-pad. In the writing-pad
-he found a letter&mdash;a long one, not yet finished,
-in Osborne&#39;s hand, written to &quot;My dear Isadore.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The first words on which Furneaux&#39;s eyes fell were
-&quot;her unstudied grace....&quot;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">... her walk has the undulating smoothness that one
-looks for in some untamed creature of the wild.... You
-are a painter, and a poet, and a student of the laws of Beauty.
-Well, knowing all that, I still feel sure that you would be
-conscious of a certain astonishment on seeing her move, she
-moves so well. I confess I did not <i>know</i>, till I knew her, that
-our human flesh could express such music. Her waist is small,
-yet so willowy and sinuous that it cannot be trammeled in
-those unyielding ribs of steel and bone in which women love
-to girdle themselves. For her slimness she is tall, perhaps,
-what you might think a little too tall until you stood by her
-side and saw that her freedom of movement had deceived you.
-Nor is she what you would call <i>a girl</i>: her age can&#39;t be a
-day under twenty-three. But she does not make a motion of
-the foot that her waist does not answer to it in as exact a
-proportion as though the Angel of Grace was there with
-measuring-tape and rod. If her left foot moves, her waist
-sways by so much to the left; if her right, she sways to the
-right, as surely as a lily on a long stalk swings to the will of
-every wanton wind. But, after all, words cannot express the
-poetry of her being. With her every step, I am confident
-her toe in gliding forward touches the ground steadily, but
-so zephyr-lightly, that only a megaphone could report it to the
-ear. And not only is there a distinct forward bend of the
-body in walking, but with every step her whole being and
-soul walks&mdash;the mere physical movements are the least of it!
-And her walk, I repeat, has the security, the lissome elegance
-of a leopard&#39;s&mdash;her eyes, her mouth, her hair, her neck, those
-of a Naiad balanced on the crest of a curling wave....</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" id="page110"></a>[pg&nbsp;110]</span>
-&quot;Ah-h-h!...&quot; murmured Furneaux on a long-drawn
-breath, &quot;&#39;A Naiad&#39;! Something more fairy-like
-than Rose de Bercy!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He read on.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">Soon I shall see her dance&mdash;dance <i>with</i> her! and then you
-shall hear. There&#39;s a certain Lord Spelding a little way from
-here whom I know through a local doctor, and he is giving a
-dance at his Abbey two evenings hence&mdash;she and her mother
-are to be there. She has promised me that she will dance,
-and I shall tell you how. But I expect nothing one whit
-more consummate in the way of charm from her dancing than
-from her ordinary motions. I know beforehand that her
-dancing will be to her walking what the singing of a lovely
-voice is to its talking&mdash;beauty moved to enthusiasm, but no
-increase of beauty; the moon in a halo, but still the moon.
-What, though, do you think of me in all this, my dear Isadore?
-I have asked myself whether words like &quot;fickle,&quot; &quot;flighty,&quot;
-&quot;forgetful,&quot; will not be in your mind as you read. And if
-you are not tolerant, who will be? She, <i>the other</i>, is hardly
-cold yet in her untimely tomb, and here am I ... shall I
-say in love? say, at any rate, enraptured, down, down, on my
-two bended knees. Certainly, the other was bitter to me&mdash;she
-deceived, she pitilessly deceived; and I see now with the
-clearest eyes that love was never the name of what I felt for
-her, even if she had not deceived. But, oh, such a fountain
-of pity is in me for her&mdash;untimely gone, cut off, the cup of
-life in her hand, her lips purple with its wine&mdash;that I cannot
-help reproaching this wandering of my eye from her. It is
-rather shocking, rather horrible. And yet&mdash;I appeal to your
-sympathy&mdash;I am no more master of myself in this than of
-something that is now happening to the Emperor of China,
-or that once happened to his grandfather.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">The corners of Furneaux&#39;s lips turned downward,
-and a lambent fire flamed in his eyes. He clutched
-the paper in his hand as if he would strangle its
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" id="page111"></a>[pg&nbsp;111]</span>
-dumb eloquence. Still he glowered at the letter,
-and read.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">But imagine, meanwhile, my false position here! I am
-known to her and to her mother as Mr. Glyn; and <i>thrice</i> has
-Osborne, the millionaire, the probable murderer of Rose de
-Bercy, been discussed between us. Think of it!&mdash;the misery,
-the falseness of it. If something were once to whisper to
-Mrs. Marsh, &quot;this Mr. Glyn, to whom you are speaking in a
-tone of chilly censure of such men as Osborne, is <i>Osborne
-himself</i>; that translucent porcelain of your teacup has been
-made impure by his lips; you should smash your Venetian
-vases and Satsuma bowl of hollyhocks, since his not-too-immaculate
-hands have touched them: beware! a snake has
-stolen into your dainty and Puritan nest&quot;&mdash;if some imp of
-unhappiness whispered that, what would she do? I can&#39;t
-exactly imagine those still lips uttering a scream, but I can
-see her lily fingers&mdash;like lilies just getting withered&mdash;lifted
-an instant in mild horror of the sacrilege! As it is, her
-admittance of me into the nest has been an unbending on her
-part, an unbending touched with informality, for it was only
-brought about through Richards, the doctor here, to whom I
-got Smythe, one of my bankers, who is likewise Richards&#39;
-banker, to speak of a &quot;Mr. Glyn.&quot; And if she now finds that
-being gracious to the stranger smirches her, compromises her
-in the slightest, she will put her thin dry lips together a little,
-and say &quot;I am punished for my laxity in circumspection.&quot;
-And then, ah! no more Rosalind for Osborne forever, if he
-were ten times ten millionaires....</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;&#39;Rosalind,&#39;&quot; murmured Furneaux, &quot;Rosalind
-Marsh. That explains the scribble on the back of
-the Janoc letter. He calls her Rosalind&mdash;breathes
-her name to the moon&mdash;writes it! We shall see,
-though.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At that moment he heard a step outside, and stood
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page112" id="page112"></a>[pg&nbsp;112]</span>
-alert, ready to hide behind a curtain; but it was
-only some hurrying housemaid who passed away.
-He then put back the letter where he had found it;
-and instantly tackled Osborne&#39;s portmanteaux. The
-larger he found locked, the smaller, lying half under
-the bed, was fastened with straps, but unlocked. He
-quickly ransacked the knicknacks that it contained;
-and was soon holding up to the light between thumb
-and finger a singular object taken from the bottom
-of the bag&mdash;a scrap of lace about six inches long,
-half of it stained with a brown smear that was obviously
-the smear of&mdash;blood.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was a peculiar lace, Spanish hand-made, and
-Furneaux knew well, none better than he, that the
-dressing-gown in which Rose de Bercy had been murdered,
-which she had thrown on preparatory to dressing
-that night, was trimmed with Spanish hand-made
-lace. He looked at this amazing bit of evidence
-with a long interest there in the light from the window,
-holding it away from him, frowning, thinking
-his own thoughts behind his brow, as shadow chases
-shadow. And presently he muttered the peculiar
-words:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, any detective would swear that this was
-a clew against him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He put it back into the bag, went out softly,
-walked downstairs, and passed out into the little town.
-A policeman told him where the house of Mrs. Marsh
-was to be found, and he hastened half a mile out of
-Tormouth to it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page113" id="page113"></a>[pg&nbsp;113]</span>
-The house, &quot;St. Briavels,&quot; stood on a hillside behind
-walls and wrought-iron gates and leafage,
-through which peeped several gables rich in creepers
-and ivy. Of Osborne, so far, there was no sign.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux retraced his steps, came back to Tormouth,
-sauntered beyond the town over the cliffs,
-with the sea spread out in the sunlight, all sparkling
-with far-flung sprightliness. And all at once he was
-aware of a murmur of voices sounding out of Nowhere,
-like the hum of bumble-bees on a slumbrous
-afternoon. The ear could not catch if they were
-right or left, above or below. But they became
-louder; and suddenly there was a laugh, a delicious
-low cadence of a woman&#39;s contralto that seemed to
-roll up through an oboe in her throat. And now
-he realized that the speakers were just below him
-on the sands. He stepped nearer the edge of the
-cliff, and, craning and peering stealthily through its
-fringe of grasses, saw Osborne and a lady walking
-westward over the sands.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne was carrying an easel and a Japanese
-umbrella. He was not looking where he was going,
-not seeing the sea, or the sands, or the sun, but seeing
-all things in the lady&#39;s face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux watched them till they were out of sight
-behind a bend of the coast-line; he saw Osborne once
-stumble a little over a stone, and right himself without
-glancing at what he had stumbled on, without
-taking his gaze from the woman by his side.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A bitter groan hissed from Furneaux&#39;s lips.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page114" id="page114"></a>[pg&nbsp;114]</span>
-&quot;But how about this fair Rosalind?&quot; he muttered
-half aloud. &quot;Is this well for <i>her</i>? She should at
-least be told who her suitor is&mdash;his name&mdash;his true
-colors&mdash;the length and depth of his loves. There
-is a way of stopping this....&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He walked straight back to the hotel, and at once
-took pen and paper to write:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent"><span class="smcap">Dear Miss Prout</span>:&mdash;It has occurred to me that possibly you may
-be putting yourself to the pains of discovering for me the
-identity of the friend of Mr. Osborne, the &quot;Rosalind,&quot; as to
-whom I asked you&mdash;in which case, to save you any trouble, I am
-writing to tell you that I have now discovered who that lady is.
-I am, you see, at present here in Tormouth, a very agreeable
-little place.</p>
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Yours truly,</span><br />
-<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">C. E. Furneaux</span>.</span><br />
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">And, as he directed the envelope, he said to himself
-with a curious crowing of triumph that Winter
-would have said was not to be expected from his
-friend:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This should bring her here; and if it does&mdash;&mdash;!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Whereupon a singular glitter appeared an instant
-in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Having posted the letter, he told the young woman
-in the bar, who also acted as bookkeeper, that, after
-all, he would not be able to stay the night. He
-paid, nevertheless, for the room, and walked away
-with his bag, no one knew whither, out of Tormouth.
-Two hours later he returned to the hotel, and for
-the second time that day took the same room, but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page115" id="page115"></a>[pg&nbsp;115]</span>
-not a soul suspected for a moment that it was the
-same Furneaux, since at present he had the look of
-a meek old civil servant living on a mite of pension,
-the color all washed out of his flabby cheeks and
-hanging wrinkles.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">His very suit-case now had a different physiognomy.
-He bargained stingily for cheap terms, and
-then ensconced himself in his apartment with a senile
-chuckle, rubbing his palms together with satisfaction
-at having obtained such good quarters so
-cheaply.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The chambermaid, whom he had tipped well on
-leaving, sniffed at this new visitor. &quot;Not much
-to be got out of him,&quot; she said to her friend, the
-boots.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The next afternoon at three o&#39;clock an elderly
-lady arrived by the London train at Tormouth, and
-she, too, came to put up at the Swan.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux, at the moment of her arrival, was strolling
-to and fro on the pavement in front of the
-hotel, very shaky and old, a man with feeble knees,
-threadbare coat, and shabby hat&mdash;so much so that
-the manager had told the young person in the bar
-to be sure and send in an account on Saturday.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Giving one near, clear, piercing glance into the
-newcomer&#39;s face, round which trembled a colonnade
-of iron-gray ringlets, Furneaux was satisfied.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Marvelously well done!&quot; he thought. &quot;She has
-been on the stage in her time, and to some purpose,
-too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page116" id="page116"></a>[pg&nbsp;116]</span>
-The lady, without a glance at him, all a rustle of
-brown silk, passed into the hotel.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The same night the old skinflint and the lady of
-the iron-gray ringlets found themselves alone at a
-table, eating of the same dishes. It was impossible
-not to enter into conversation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your first visit to Tormouth, I think?&quot; began
-Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The lady inclined her head.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My name is Pugh, William Pugh,&quot; he told her.
-&quot;I was in Tormouth some years ago, and know the
-place rather well. Charming little spot! I shall
-be most happy&mdash;if I may&mdash;if you will deign&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How long have you been here now?&quot; she asked
-him in a rather mellow and subdued voice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I only came yesterday,&quot; he answered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you by chance meet here a certain Mr. Furneaux?&quot;
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let me see,&quot; said he&mdash;&quot;Furneaux. I&mdash;stay&mdash;I
-believe I did! He was just departing at the time of
-my arrival&mdash;little man&mdash;sharp, unpleasant face&mdash;I&mdash;I&mdash;hope
-I do not speak of a friend or relative!&mdash;but
-I believe I did hear someone say &#39;Mr. Furneaux.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;At any rate, he is not here now?&quot; she demanded,
-with an air of decision.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, he is gone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah!&quot; she murmured, and something in the tone
-of that &quot;Ah!&quot; made Furneaux&#39;s eye linger doubtfully
-upon her an instant.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page117" id="page117"></a>[pg&nbsp;117]</span>
-Then the elderly lady wished to know who else
-was in the hotel, if there was anyone of any interest,
-and &quot;Mr. Pugh&quot; was apparently eager to gossip.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There is first of all a Mr. Glyn&mdash;a young man,
-an American, I think, of whom I have heard a whisper
-that he is enormously wealthy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is he in the room?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why is he&mdash;invisible?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am told that he has made friends in Tormouth
-with a lady&mdash;a Mrs. Marsh&mdash;who resides at &#39;St.
-Briavels&#39; some way out of town&mdash;not to mention
-<i>Miss</i> Marsh&mdash;Rosalind is her name&mdash;upon whom I
-hear he is more than a little sweet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He bent forward, shading his lips with his palm
-to conceal the secret as it came out, and it was a
-strange thing that the newly-arrived visitor could
-not keep her ringlets from shaking with agitation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well,&quot; she managed to say, &quot;when young people
-meet&mdash;it is the old story. So he is probably at &#39;St.
-Briavels&#39; now?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Highly probable&mdash;if all I hear be true.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The ringleted dame put her knife and fork together,
-rose, bowed with a gracious smile, and
-walked away. Five minutes later Furneaux followed
-her, went upstairs with soundless steps to his
-room, and within it stood some time listening at
-a crevice he had left between the door and the door-post.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then he crept out, and spurting with swift suddenness,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page118" id="page118"></a>[pg&nbsp;118]</span>
-silent as a cat, to Osborne&#39;s room, sent the
-door open with a rush, and instantly was bowing
-profoundly, saying: &quot;My dear madam! how <i>can</i> you
-pardon me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For the lady was also in Osborne&#39;s room, as Furneaux
-had known; and though there was no artificial
-light, enough moonlight flooded the room to show
-that even through her elaborate make-up a pallor
-was suggested in her face, as she stood there suspended,
-dumb.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mr. Pugh seemed to be in a very pain of regret.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I had no idea that it was your room!&quot; he
-pleaded. &quot;I&mdash;do forgive me&mdash;but I took it for
-my own!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Oddly enough, the lady tittered, almost hysterically,
-though she was evidently much relieved to find
-who it was that had burst in so unceremoniously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The same accident has happened to me!&quot; she
-cried. &quot;I took it to be my room, but it doesn&#39;t
-seem&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, then, we both.... By the way,&quot; he added,
-with a magnificent effort to escape an embarrassing
-situation, &quot;what beautiful moonlight! And the
-Tormouth country under it is like a fairy place. It
-is a sin to be indoors. I am going for a stroll.
-May I hope to have the pleasure&mdash;&mdash;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He wrung his palms wheedlingly together, and his
-attitude showed that he was hanging on her answer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I should like to take a walk&mdash;thank you,&quot;
-she answered. Together they made for the door;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page119" id="page119"></a>[pg&nbsp;119]</span>
-he fluttered to his room, she to hers, to prepare.
-Soon they were outside the hotel, walking slowly
-under the moon. Apparently without definite directive,
-they turned up the hill in the direction of
-&quot;St. Briavels,&quot; nor was it many minutes before Mr.
-Pugh began to prove himself somewhat of a gallant,
-and gifted in the saying of those airy nothings which
-are supposed to be agreeable to the feminine ear.
-The lady, for her part, was not so thorny and hard
-of heart as one might have thought from the staidness
-of her air, and a good understanding was quickly
-established between the oddly-assorted pair.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Rather an adventure, this, for people of our
-age....&quot; she tittered, as they began to climb the
-winding road.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But, madam, we are not old!&quot; exclaimed the
-lively Mr. Pugh, who might be seventy from his
-decrepit semblance. &quot;Look at that moon&mdash;are not
-our hearts still sensible to its seductive influences?
-You, for your part, may possibly be nearing that
-charming age of forty&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, sir! you flatter me....&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Madam, no, on my word!&mdash;not a day over forty
-would be given you by anyone! And if you have
-the heart of twenty, as I am sure that you have,
-what matters it if&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hush!&quot; she whispered, as a soft sound of the
-piano from &quot;St. Briavels&quot; reached them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Before them on the roadway they saw several carriages
-drawn up near the great gates. The tinkle
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page120" id="page120"></a>[pg&nbsp;120]</span>
-of the piano grew as they approached. Then they
-saw a few lantern lights in the grounds glimmering
-under the trees. Such signs spoke of a party in
-progress. For once, the English climate was gracious
-to its dupes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The lady, without saying anything to her companion,
-stepped into the shadow of a yew-tree opposite
-the manor-close, and stood there, looking into
-the grounds over the bars of a small gate, beyond
-which a path ran through a shrubbery. On the
-path were three couples, ladies with light scarves
-draped over their décolleté dresses, men, bare-headed
-and smoking cigarettes. They were very dim to
-her vision, which must have been well preserved for
-one of her age, despite Mr. Pugh&#39;s gallantry. The
-overhanging foliage was dense, and only enough
-moonlight oozed through the canopy of leaves to toss
-moving patterns on the lawn and paths.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But the strange lady&#39;s eyes were now like gimlets,
-with the very fire of youth burning in them, and it
-was with the sure fleetness of youth that she suddenly
-ran in a moment of opportunity from the yew to the
-gate, pushed it a little open, and slipped aside into
-a footpath that ran parallel with the lawn on which
-the &quot;St. Briavels&quot; diners were now strolling.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">With equal suddenness, or equal disregard of appearance,
-Mr. Pugh, too, became young again, as
-if both, like Philemon and Baucis, had all at once
-quaffed the elixir of youth; and he was soon by the
-young-old lady&#39;s side on the footpath. But her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page121" id="page121"></a>[pg&nbsp;121]</span>
-eyes, her ears, were so strained toward the lawn
-before her, that she seemed not to be aware of his
-presence.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I did not guess that you were interested in
-the people here,&quot; he whispered. &quot;That man now
-coming nearer is Mr. Glyn himself, and with him
-is Miss Rosalind Marsh.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>Sh-h-h</i>,&quot; came from her lips, a murmur long-drawn,
-absent-minded, her eyes peering keenly forward.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He nudged her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is it fitting that we should be here? We place
-ourselves in a difficult position, if seen.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sh-h-h-h-h....&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Still he pestered her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Really it is a blunder.... We&mdash;we become&mdash;eavesdroppers&mdash;!
-Let us&mdash;I suggest to
-you&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, <i>do</i> keep quiet,&quot; she whispered irritably; and
-in that instant the talk of Osborne and Rosalind
-became audible to her. She heard him say:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I confess I have known Osborne, and I
-believe the man perfectly incapable of the act attributed
-to him by a hasty public opinion.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Intimately known him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind turned her eyebrows upward in the moonlight.
-Seen thus, she was amazingly beautiful.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do we intimately know anyone? Do we intimately
-know ourselves?&quot; asked Osborne as he
-passed within five yards of the two on the path. &quot;I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page122" id="page122"></a>[pg&nbsp;122]</span>
-think I may say that I know Osborne about as well
-as I know anyone, and I am confident that he is
-horribly misjudged. He is a young man of&mdash;yes,
-I will say that for him&mdash;of good intentions; and he
-is found guilty, without trial, of a wrong which he
-never could have committed&mdash;and the wrong which
-he <i>has</i> committed he is not found guilty of.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What wrong?&quot; asked Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have heard&mdash;I know, in fact&mdash;that in the short
-time that has passed since the murder of Miss de
-Bercy, Osborne, her acknowledged lover, has allowed
-himself to love another.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind laughed, with the quiet amusement of
-well-bred indifference.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What a weird person!&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And as their words passed beyond hearing, a hiss,
-like a snake&#39;s in the grass, rose from the shrubbery
-behind them, a hiss of venom intensely low, and yet
-loud enough to be heard by Furneaux, who, standing
-a little behind the lady of the ringlets, rubbed his
-hands together in silent and almost mischievous self-congratulation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The house end of the lawn was not far, the words
-of the returning pair were soon again within earshot.
-The fiery glance of the watching woman,
-ferreting, peering, dwelt on them&mdash;or rather on one
-of them, for she gave no heed to Osborne at all.
-Her very soul was centered on Rosalind, whose walk,
-whose lips, whose eyes, whose hair, whose voice, she
-ran over and estimated as an expert accountant
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page123" id="page123"></a>[pg&nbsp;123]</span>
-reckons up a column of figures to ascertain their significance.
-She missed no item in that calculation.
-She noted the over-skirt of Chantilly, the wrap of
-Venetian lace on the girl&#39;s head, the white slippers,
-the roses disposed on her corsage with the harmless
-vanity of the artist&#39;s skill, all these that fixed stare
-ravenously devoured and digested while Rosalind took
-half a dozen slow steps.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But seriously,&quot; she heard Osborne say, &quot;what is
-your opinion of a love so apparently fickle and flighty
-as this of Osborne&#39;s?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let me alone with your Osborne,&quot; Rosalind retorted
-with another little laugh. &quot;A person of such
-a mood is merely uninteresting, and below being a
-topic. Let the dead lady&#39;s father or somebody
-horsewhip him&mdash;I cannot care, I&#39;m afraid. Let us
-talk about&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>Ourselves?</i>&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;&#39;Ourselves and our king.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have so much to say about ourselves! Where
-should I begin? And now that I have a few minutes,
-I am throwing them away. Do you know, I never
-seem to secure you free from interruption. Either
-yourself or someone else intervenes every time, and
-reduces me to silence and despair&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Their words passed beyond earshot again in the
-other direction; and, as the lawn was wide between
-house and screen of shrubbery on the road front,
-it was some time before they were again heard. At
-last, though, they came, and then Rosalind&#39;s low
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page124" id="page124"></a>[pg&nbsp;124]</span>
-tone of earnestness showed that this time, at least,
-Osborne had been listened to.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will, since you ask, since you wish&quot;&mdash;her voice
-faltered&mdash;&quot;to please you. You will be at the Abbey
-to-morrow evening. And, since you say that you
-so&mdash;desire it, I may then hear what you have to
-say. Now I&#39;ll go.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But when&mdash;where&mdash;&mdash;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If the night is fine, I will stroll into the gardens
-during the evening. You will see me when I go.
-On the south terrace of the Abbey there is a sun-dial
-in the middle of a paved Italian garden. I&#39;ll
-pass that way, and give you half an hour.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Rosalind!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, no&mdash;not yet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her lips sighed. She looked at him with a lingering
-tenderness languishing in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Can I help it?&quot; he murmured, and his voice
-quivered with passion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you glad now?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Glad!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-by.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She left him hurriedly and sped with inimitable
-grace of motion across the lawn toward the house,
-and, while he looked after her, with the rapt vision
-of a man who has communed with a spirit, the two
-listeners crept to the little gate, slipped out when
-a laughing couple turned their heads, and walked
-back to the hotel.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The lady said never a word. Mr. Pugh was full
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page125" id="page125"></a>[pg&nbsp;125]</span>
-of chat and merriment, but no syllable fell from
-her tight-pressed lips.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The next day the lady was reported to have a
-headache&mdash;at any rate she kept to her room, and
-saw no one save the &quot;boots&quot; of the establishment,
-with whom during the afternoon she had a lengthy
-interview upstairs. At about seven in the evening
-she was writing these words:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent"><span class="smcap">Miss Marsh</span>:&mdash;Are you aware that the &quot;Mr. Glyn&quot; whom
-you know here is no other than Mr. Rupert Osborne, who is
-in everyone&#39;s mouth in connection with the Feldisham
-Mansions Murder? You may take this as a positive fact
-from</p>
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">&quot;<span class="smcap">One Who Knows</span>.&quot;</span><br />
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">She wrote it in a handwriting that was very different
-from her own, inclosed and directed it, and
-then, about half-past seven, sent for &quot;boots&quot; again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her instructions were quite explicit:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wait in the paved rose garden at the Abbey,
-the square sunken place with a sun-dial in the center,&quot;
-she said. &quot;It is on the south terrace, and the
-lady I have described will surely come. The moment
-she appears hand the note to her, and be off&mdash;above
-all else, answer no questions.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">So the youth, with a sovereign in his pocket, hurried
-away to do Hylda Prout&#39;s will&mdash;or was it Furneaux&#39;s?
-Who might tell?</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page126" id="page126"></a>[pg&nbsp;126]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br/>
-AT THE SUN-DIAL</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">The messenger of evil had waited twenty minutes
-by the side of the sun-dial, when he saw a lady come
-round the corner from the front of the house, and
-saunter towards him. Moonlight lay weltering on
-the white walks of the terrace, on the whiter slabs
-of stone, on the water of the basin, on the surface
-of the lake eastward where the lowest of the terraces
-curved into the parkland that the wavelets lapped
-on. It weltered, too, on the lady&#39;s hair, deftly coiled
-and twisted into the coiffure of a Greek statue. It
-shimmered on the powdered blue of her gown that
-made her coming a little ghostly in that light, on
-the rows of pearls around her throat, and on the
-satin gloss of her shoes. She made straight for the
-dial; and then, all at once, finding some unknown
-man keeping the tryst, half halted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He ran out to her, touched his cap, saying &quot;Miss
-Marsh,&quot; handed her the note, touched his cap again,
-and was going.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;From whom?&quot; she called after him in some
-astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Lady at the Swan, miss&quot;&mdash;and he hurried off
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page127" id="page127"></a>[pg&nbsp;127]</span>
-even more swiftly, for this was a question which he
-had answered against orders.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She stood a little, looking at the envelope, her
-breathing labored, an apprehension in her heart.
-Then, hearing the coming of footsteps which she
-knew, she broke it open, and ran her eye over the
-few words.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Bending slightly, with the flood of the moon on
-the paper, she could easily read the plainly written,
-message.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">... The Mr. Glyn whom you know is no other than the
-Mr. Rupert Osborne who is in everyone&#39;s mouth in connection
-with the Feldisham Mansions Murder....</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Now she laughed with a sudden catch of the breath,
-gasping &quot;Oh!&quot; with a sharp impatience of all
-anonymous scandalizers. But as her head rather
-swam and span, she walked on quickly to the basin,
-and there found it necessary to sit down on the
-marble. The stab of pain passed in a few seconds,
-and again she sprang up and laughed as lightly as
-one of the little fountains in the basin that tossed
-its tinted drops to the moonbeams.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Not twenty yards away was Osborne coming to
-her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She looked at him steadily&mdash;her marvelous eyes
-self-searching for sure remembrance of the earnestness
-with which he had pleaded in favor of the lover
-of Rose de Bercy&mdash;how he had said that Osborne
-had already loved again; and how she, Rosalind&mdash;oh,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page128" id="page128"></a>[pg&nbsp;128]</span>
-how blind and deaf!&mdash;heedlessly had brushed
-aside his words, saying that a man of that mood was
-below being a topic....</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is it half an hour?&quot; Osborne came whispering,
-with a bending of the body that was like an act of
-worship.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She smiled. In the moonlight he could not perceive
-how ethereally white was her face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is one half-minute!... It was rather quixotic
-of you to have proposed, and of me to have
-accepted, such a meeting. But I felt sure that by
-this hour others would be strolling about the terraces.
-As it is, you see, we are pioneers without followers.
-So, till we meet again&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She seemed to be about to hurry away without another
-word; he stood aghast.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But, Rosalind&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What? How dare you call me Rosalind?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now her eyes flashed upon him like sudden lightning
-from a dark blue sky, and the scorn in her
-voice blighted him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&mdash;I&mdash;don&#39;t understand,&quot; he stammered, trying
-to come nearer. She drew her skirts aside with a
-disdain that was terrifying.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then she laughed softly again; and was gone.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He looked after her as after treasure that one sees
-sinking into the sea, flashing in its descent to the
-depths. For one mad instant he had an impulse
-to run in vain pursuit, but instead he gave way, sank
-down upon the edge of the marble basin, just where
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page129" id="page129"></a>[pg&nbsp;129]</span>
-she had dropped a few brief seconds earlier, covered
-his face, and a groan that was half a sob broke so
-loudly from his throat that she heard it. She hesitated,
-nearly stopped, did not look round, scourged
-herself into resolution, and in another moment had
-turned the corner of the house and was lost to
-sight.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">What had happened to change his Rosalind into
-this unapproachable empress Osborne was too
-stunned to ask himself explicitly. He knew he was
-banned, and that was enough. Deep in his subconsciousness
-he understood that somehow she had
-found out his wretched secret&mdash;found out that he
-was not the happy Glyn reeling through an insecure
-dream in fairyland, but the unhappy Osborne, heavily
-tangled in the sordid and the commonplace.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And, because he was unhappy and troubled, she
-left him without pity, turned her back eternally upon
-him. That hurt. As he stood up to walk away
-toward Tormouth, a fierce anger and a gush of
-self-pity battled in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He had no more hope. He wandered on through
-the night, unseeing, stricken as never before. At
-last he reached the hotel, and, as soon as he could
-summon the energy, began to pack his portmanteau
-to go back to London. The day of the postponed
-inquest now loomed near, and he cared not a jot
-what became of him, only asking dumbly to be taken
-far from Tormouth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As he was packing the smaller of the bags, he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page130" id="page130"></a>[pg&nbsp;130]</span>
-saw the scrap of blood-stained lace that Furneaux
-had already seen, had taken out, and had replaced.
-Osborne, with that same feeling of repulsion with
-which Furneaux had thrust it away from him, held
-it up to the light. What was it? How could it
-have got into his bag? he asked himself&mdash;a bit of
-lace stained with blood! His amazement knew no
-bounds&mdash;and would have been still more profound,
-if possible, had he seen Furneaux&#39;s singular act in
-replacing it in the bag after finding it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He threw the horrible thing from him out of the
-window, and his very fingers tingled with disgust of
-it. But then came the disturbing thought&mdash;suppose
-it had been put into his bag as a trap? by
-the police, perhaps? And suppose any apparent
-eagerness of his to rid himself of it should be regarded
-as compromising? He was beginning to
-be circumspect now, timorous, ostentatious of that
-innocence in which a whole world disbelieved.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">So he glanced out of the window, saw where the
-lace had dropped upon a sloping spread of turf
-in the hotel grounds, and ran down to get it. When
-he arrived at the spot where he had just seen it, the
-lace had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He stood utterly mystified, looking down at the
-spot where the lace should be and was not; then
-looked around in a maze, to discover on a rustic seat
-that surrounded an oak tree an elderly lady and a
-bent old man sitting there in the shadow. Some
-distance off, lounging among the flower beds in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page131" id="page131"></a>[pg&nbsp;131]</span>
-moonlight, was the figure of a tall man. Osborne
-was about to inquire of the two nearest him if they
-had seen the lace, when the old gentleman hurried
-nimbly forward out of the tree&#39;s shadow and asked
-if he was seeking a piece of something that had
-dropped from above.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes,&quot; answered Osborne, &quot;have you seen it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That gentleman walking yonder was just under
-your window when it dropped, and I saw him stoop
-to pick it up,&quot; said the other.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne thanked him, and made for &quot;the gentleman,&quot;
-who turned out to be a jauntily-dressed
-Italian, bony-faced, square in the jaw, his hair
-clipped convict-short, but dandily brushed up at the
-corner of the forehead.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To the question: &quot;Did you by chance pick up
-a bit of lace just now?&quot; he at once bowed, and
-showing his teeth in a grin, said:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He dropped right to my feet from the sky; here
-he is&quot;&mdash;and he presented the lace with much ceremony.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am obliged,&quot; said Osborne.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do not say it,&quot; answered the other politely, and
-they parted, Osborne hurrying back to his room,
-with the intent to catch a midnight train from Tormouth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As he entered the house again, the older man, incredibly
-quick on his uncertain feet, overtook him,
-and, touching him on the arm, asked if he intended
-to catch the train that night.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page132" id="page132"></a>[pg&nbsp;132]</span>
-&quot;That is my desire,&quot; answered Osborne.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is mine, too,&quot; said the other; &quot;now, could you
-give me a seat in your conveyance?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne said, &quot;With pleasure,&quot; and they entered
-the hotel to prepare to go.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At the same moment the Italian sauntered up to
-the oak tree beneath which sat Hylda Prout in her
-Tormouth make-up. Seating himself without seeking
-her permission, he lit a cigarette.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-evening,&quot; he said, after enveloping himself
-in a cloud of smoke. She did not answer, but
-evidently he was not one to be rebuffed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your friend, Mistare Pooh, he is sharp! My!
-he see all,&quot; he said affably.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This drew a reply.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are quite right,&quot; she said. &quot;He sees all,
-or nearly all. Do you mean because he saw you
-pick up the lace?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now&mdash;how <i>you</i> know it was <i>lace</i>?&quot; asked the
-Italian, turning full upon her. &quot;You sitting here,
-you couldn&#39;t see it was lace so far&mdash;no eyes could see
-that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This frankness confused the lady a moment; then
-she laughed a little, for he had supplied her with
-a retort.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Perhaps I see all, too, like my friend.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was a silence, but the Italian was apparently
-waiting only to rehearse his English.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You know Mr. Glyn&mdash;yes?&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page133" id="page133"></a>[pg&nbsp;133]</span>
-&quot;Oh, don&#39;t say &#39;no&#39;!&quot; Reproach was in his ogle,
-his voice. His tone was almost wheedling.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why not?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The way I find you spying after him this morning
-tell me that you know him. And I know that
-you know him before that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What concern is it of <i>yours</i>?&quot; she asked, looking
-at him with a lowering of the lids in a quick
-scrutiny that was almost startled. &quot;What is <i>your</i>
-interest in Mr. Glyn?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Say &#39;Osborne&#39; and be done,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, say &#39;Osborne,&#39;&quot; she responded.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good. We are going to understand the one the
-other, I can see. But if you want to know what is
-&#39;my interest&#39; in the man, you on your part will
-tell me first if you are friend or enemy of Osborne.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In one second she had reflected, and said:
-&quot;Enemy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">His hand shot out in silence to her, and she shook
-it. The mere action drew them closer on the seat.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I believe you,&quot; he whispered, &quot;and I knew it,
-too, for if you had been a friend you would not be
-in a disguise from him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How do you know that I am in a disguise?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Since yesterday morning I know,&quot; he answered,
-&quot;when I see you raise your blind yonder, not an
-old woman, but a young and charming lady not yet
-fully dressed, for I was here in the garden, looking
-out for what I could see, and my poor heart was
-pierced by the vision at the window.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page134" id="page134"></a>[pg&nbsp;134]</span>
-He pressed his palm dramatically on his breast.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, of course, it is on the left, as usual,&quot; said
-Hylda Prout saucily. &quot;But let us confine ourselves
-to business for the moment. I don&#39;t quite understand
-your object. As to the bit of lace&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How you <i>know</i> it was lace?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She looked cautiously all round before answering.
-&quot;I know because I searched Mr. Osborne&#39;s room,
-and saw it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good! Before long we understand the one the
-other. You be frank, I be frank. You spied into
-the bag, and <i>I</i> put it in the bag.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know you did.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, how you know?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There was no one else to do it!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No? Might not Osborne put it there himself?
-You know where that bit of lace come
-from?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What you guess?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I guess that it is from the dress of the dead
-actress, for it has blood on it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You guess good&mdash;very good. And Osborne
-killed her&mdash;yes?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She pondered a little. This attack had come on
-her from a moonlit sky.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That I don&#39;t know. He may have, and he may
-not,&quot; she murmured.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Which is more likely? That <i>he</i> killed her, or
-that <i>I</i> killed her?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page135" id="page135"></a>[pg&nbsp;135]</span>
-&quot;I don&#39;t know. I should say it is more likely
-that you killed her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What! You pay me that compliment? Why
-so?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you are in possession of a portion of the
-dress she wore when she was killed, and you put it
-into someone&#39;s belongings to make it seem that he
-killed her, an act which looks a little black against
-you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, ma bella, now you jest,&quot; said the Italian,
-laughing. &quot;The fact that I am so frank with you
-as to say you all this is proof that I not kill her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I see that,&quot; she agreed. &quot;I was only joking.
-But since you did not kill her, how on earth
-did you get hold of that piece of her dress?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That you are going to know when I have received
-better proof that you are as much as I the enemy
-of Osborne. Did I not guess good, on seeing you
-yesterday morning at the window, that you are the
-same young lady who is Osborne&#39;s secretary in London,
-where I see you before?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda Prout admitted that she was the secretary.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good, then,&quot; said the Italian; &quot;you staying in
-the house with him have every opportunity to find
-proof of his guilt of the murder; until which is
-proved, the necks of those I am working for are in
-danger.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">With the impulsive gesture of his race he drew
-his forefinger in ghastly mimicry across his throat.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So bad as that?&quot; asked the woman coolly. &quot;Unfortunately,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page136" id="page136"></a>[pg&nbsp;136]</span>
-I don&#39;t know who &#39;those&#39; are you are
-working for. The&mdash;&mdash;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The Anarchists?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you call them so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did <i>they</i> kill her?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not they!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did they intend to?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not they!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then, where did you get that bit of lace? And
-where is the dagger?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Dagger! What about dagger now?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He asked it with a guilty start. At last the talk
-was taking a turn which left Hylda Prout in command.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If you have that lace, you have the dagger, too.
-And if you have the dagger, what help do you want
-from me? Produce that, and Osborne is done for.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her voice sank to a whisper. If Furneaux could
-have been present he must have felt proud of her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Dagger!&quot; muttered the Italian again in a
-hushed tone. &quot;You seem to know much more&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Stay, let us get up and walk. It is not quite
-safe here.... There are too many trees.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The man, who had lost his air of self-confidence,
-seemed to be unable to decide what to do for the
-best. But Hylda Prout had risen, and he, too,
-stood up. He was compelled to follow her. Together
-they passed through the grounds toward the
-cliffs.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page137" id="page137"></a>[pg&nbsp;137]</span>
-The same moonlight that saw them strolling there,
-saw at the same time Furneaux and Osborne racing
-in a trap along the road to Sedgecombe Junction
-to catch the late train on the main line. Furneaux
-was inclined to be chatty, but Osborne answered only
-in monosyllables, till his companion&#39;s talk turned
-upon the murder of the actress, when Osborne, with
-a sudden access of fury, assured him in very emphatic
-language that his ears were weary of that
-dreadful business, and prayed to be spared it. The
-old gentleman seemed to be shocked, but Osborne
-only glanced at his watch, muttering that they would
-have to be smart to catch the train; and as he put
-back the watch in its pocket, the other dropped his
-bag over the side of the vehicle.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was nothing to be done but to stop, and
-the delinquent, with the stiffness and slowness of age,
-descended to pick it up. Thus some precious minutes
-were wasted. Furneaux, in fact, did not wish Osborne
-to start for London that night at that late
-hour, since he wanted to apprise Winter of Osborne&#39;s
-departure. Hence he had begged a seat in the conveyance,
-and had already lost time at the hotel. A
-little later, when Osborne again glanced at his watch,
-it was to say: &quot;Oh, well, there is no use in going
-on,&quot; and he called to the driver to turn back. Indeed,
-the whistle of the departing train was heard at
-the station half a mile away.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, yes,&quot; said Furneaux, curiously pertinacious,
-when the dog-cart was on the homeward road,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page138" id="page138"></a>[pg&nbsp;138]</span>
-&quot;one is weary of hearing this murder discussed.
-I only spoke of it to express to you my feeling of
-disapproval of the lover&mdash;of the man Osborne. Is
-it credible to you that he was not even at her funeral?
-No doubt he was advised not to be&mdash;no doubt it
-was wise from a certain point of view. But <i>nothing</i>
-should have prevented him, if he had had any affection
-for her. But he had none&mdash;he was a liar. Talk
-of her deceiving him! It was he&mdash;it was <i>he</i>&mdash;who
-deceived her, I say!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have a cigar,&quot; said Osborne, presenting his case;
-&quot;these are rather good ones; you will find them
-soothing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">His hospitality was declined, but there was no
-more talk, and the trap trotted back into Tormouth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Up at &quot;St. Briavels&quot; that same moment the same
-moonlight, shining on a balcony, illumined yet another
-scene in the network of events. Rosalind
-Marsh was sitting there alone, her head bent between
-her clenched hands. She had returned home early
-from the Abbey, and Mrs. Marsh, who had silently
-wondered, presently came out with the softness of a
-shadow upon her, and touched her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is the matter?&quot; she asked in a murmur of
-sympathy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My head aches a little, mother dear.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am sorry. You look tired.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, yes, dear. There are moments of infinite
-weariness in life. One cannot avoid them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did you dance?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page139" id="page139"></a>[pg&nbsp;139]</span>
-&quot;Only a little.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Weary of emotions, then?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The old lady smiled faintly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mother!&quot; whispered Rosalind, and pressed her
-mother&#39;s hand to her forehead.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was silence for a while. When Mrs. Marsh
-spoke again it was to change the subject.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You have been too long at Tormouth this time.
-I think you need a change. Suppose we took a
-little of London now? Society might brighten you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, yes! Let us go from this place!&quot; said
-Rosalind under her breath, her fingers tightly
-clenched together.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, then, the sooner the better,&quot; said Mrs.
-Marsh. &quot;Let it be to-morrow.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind looked up with gratitude and the moonlight
-in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thank you, dear one,&quot; she said. &quot;You are
-always skilled in divining, and never fail in being
-right.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And so it was done. The next forenoon saw the
-mother and daughter driving in an open landau
-past the Swan to Tormouth station, and, as they
-rolled by in state, Hylda Prout, who was peeping
-from a window after the figure of Osborne on <i>his</i>
-way to the station, saw them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A glitter came into her eyes, and the unspoken
-thought was voiced in eloquent gesture: &quot;What, following
-him so soon?&quot;&mdash;for she knew that they could
-only be going by the London train, which had but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page140" id="page140"></a>[pg&nbsp;140]</span>
-one stopping-place after Tormouth. At once she
-rushed in a frenzy of haste to prepare to travel by
-that very train.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Some wild ringing of bells and promise of reward
-brought chambermaid and &quot;boots&quot; to her aid.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In her descent to the office to pay her bill she
-was encountered by her new friend, the Italian, who,
-surprised at her haste, said to her, &quot;What, you go?&quot;&mdash;to
-which she, hardly stopping, answered: &quot;Yes&mdash;we
-will meet when we said&mdash;in two days&#39; time.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But me, too, I go,&quot; he cried, and ran to get
-ready, the antics of the pair creating some stir of
-interest in the bar parlor.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At this time Furneaux was already at the station,
-awaiting the train, having already wired to Winter
-in London to meet him at Waterloo. And so the
-same train carried all their various thoughts and
-purposes and secrets in its different compartments
-on the Londonward journey.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux, who chose to sit in the compartment
-with Rosalind and Mrs. Marsh, listened to every
-sigh and syllable of Rosalind, and, with the privilege
-of the aged, addressed some remarks to his fellow-travelers.
-Hylda Prout and the Italian were together&mdash;a
-singular bond of intimacy having suddenly
-forged itself between these two. They were
-alone, and Hylda, who left Tormouth old and iron-gray,
-arrived at London red-headed and young,
-freckle-splashed and pretty. But as for Osborne,
-he traveled in the dull company of his black thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page141" id="page141"></a>[pg&nbsp;141]</span>
-The first to alight at Waterloo, before the train
-stopped, was Furneaux. His searching eyes at once
-discovered Winter waiting on the platform. In a
-moment the Chief Inspector had a wizened old man
-at his ear, saying: &quot;Winter&mdash;I&#39;m here. Came with
-the crowd.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hallo,&quot; said Winter, and from old-time habit
-of friendship his hand half went out. Furneaux,
-however, seemed not to notice the action, and Winter&#39;s
-hand drew back.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Osborne is in the train,&quot; whispered Furneaux.
-&quot;I telegraphed because there is an object in his
-smaller bag that I want you to see&mdash;as a witness,
-instantly. There he comes; ask him into the first-class
-waiting-room. It is usually empty.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux himself went straight into the waiting-room
-and sat in a corner behind a newspaper. Soon
-in came Winter, talking to Osborne with a marked
-deference:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You will forgive me, I am sure, for this apparent
-lack of confidence, but in an affair of this sort one
-leaves no stone unturned.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do not mention it,&quot; said Osborne, who was rather
-pale. &quot;I think I can guess what it is that you
-wish to see....&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A porter, who had followed them, put the two
-portmanteaux on a table, and went out. Osborne
-opened the smaller one, and Winter promptly had
-the blood-stained bit of lace in his hand.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is it, sir?&quot; asked Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page142" id="page142"></a>[pg&nbsp;142]</span>
-&quot;Heaven knows,&quot; came the weary answer. &quot;It
-was not in my possession when I left London, and
-was put into one of my bags by someone at Tormouth.
-When I found it, I threw it out of the
-window, as that gentleman there can prove,&quot; for he
-had seen Furneaux, but was too jaded to give the
-least thought to his unaccountable presence. &quot;Afterwards
-I ran down and recovered it. <i>He</i> was in the
-garden....&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The unhappy young man&#39;s glance wandered out
-of the door to see Rosalind and her mother go past
-towards a waiting cab. He cared not a jot if all
-Scotland Yard were dogging his footsteps now.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is that so, sir?&quot; asked Winter of Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Exactly as Mr. Glyn says,&quot; answered Furneaux,
-looking at them furtively, and darting one very
-curious glance at Winter&#39;s face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And who, Mr.&mdash;Glyn, was about the place whom
-you could possibly suspect of having placed this
-object in your bag&mdash;someone with a wicked motive
-for throwing suspicion upon you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter&#39;s lips whitened and dwelt with venom upon
-the word &quot;wicked.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There was absolutely no one,&quot; answered Osborne.
-&quot;The hotel was rather empty. Of course, there
-was this gentleman&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes,&quot; said Winter after him, &quot;this gentleman.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;An elderly lady, a Mrs. Forbes, I believe, as
-I happened to read her name, a foreigner who probably
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page143" id="page143"></a>[pg&nbsp;143]</span>
-never saw me before, an invalid girl and her
-sister&mdash;all absolutely unconnected with me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux&#39;s eyes were now glued on Winter&#39;s
-face. They seemed to have a queer meaning in
-them, a meaning not wholly devoid of spite and
-malice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, Mr.&mdash;Glyn,&quot; said Winter, &quot;let me tell
-you, if you do not know, that this bit of lace was
-certainly part of the dress in which Miss de Bercy
-was murdered. Therefore the man&mdash;or woman&mdash;who
-put it into your bag was there&mdash;on the spot&mdash;when
-the deed was done.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne did then exhibit some perplexed interest
-in a strange discovery.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How can you be certain that it was part of her
-dress?&quot; he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Because a fragment of lace of this size was torn
-from the wrap she was wearing at the time of the
-murder&mdash;I noticed it at my first sight of the body.
-This piece would just fit into it. So, whoever put
-it into your bag&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In that case I may have put it in myself!&quot; said
-Osborne with a nervous laugh, &quot;since I may be the
-murderer.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Apparently the careless comment annoyed Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t think I need detain you any longer, sir,&quot;
-he said coldly. &quot;As for the lace, I&#39;ll keep it. I
-feel very confident that this part of the mystery will
-not baffle me for more than a day or two.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And ever the eyes of Furneaux dwelt upon Winter&#39;s
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page144" id="page144"></a>[pg&nbsp;144]</span>
-face with that queer meaning reveling in their
-underlook.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne turned to go. He did not trouble to call
-another porter, but carried his own luggage. He
-was about to enter a cab when he caught sight of
-the back of a woman&#39;s head among the crowd hurrying
-to an exit, a head which seemed singularly
-familiar to him. The next moment it was gone
-from his sight, which was a pity, since the head belonged
-to Hylda Prout, who had not anticipated
-that Osborne would be delayed on the platform, and
-had had to steal past the waiting-room door at a
-rush, since she was no longer an old lady, but herself.
-She could not wait in the train till he was
-well away, for she thought it well to ascertain the
-whereabouts of Rosalind Marsh in London, and
-wished to shadow her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mrs. Marsh and her daughter carried the usual
-mountain of ladies&#39; luggage, which demanded time
-and care in stowing safely on the roof of a four-wheeler,
-so Hylda Prout was in time to call a hansom
-and follow them. After her went the Italian, who
-made off hastily when the train arrived, but lurked
-about until he could follow the girl unseen, for she
-had frightened him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now, at the station that day, keeping well in
-the background, was a third detective beside Winter
-and Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke, with his interest in Anarchists, knew that
-this particular Italian was coming from Tormouth
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page145" id="page145"></a>[pg&nbsp;145]</span>
-either that day or the day after. Two nights before,
-while on a visit to the Fraternal Club in Soho, he had
-overheard the whispered word that &quot;Antonio&quot; would
-&quot;be back&quot; on the Wednesday or the Thursday.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke did not know Antonio&#39;s particular retreat
-in London, and had strong reasons for wishing to
-know it. He, therefore, followed in a cab the cab
-that followed Rosalind&#39;s cab. In any other city
-in the world than London such a procession would
-excite comment&mdash;if it passed through street after
-street, that is. But not so in cab-using London,
-where a string of a hundred taxis, hansoms, and
-four-wheelers may all be going in the same direction
-simultaneously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As Clarke went westward down the Strand and
-across Trafalgar Square, he was full of meditations.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is Antonio doing with Osborne&#39;s lady secretary?&quot;
-he asked himself. &quot;For that is the young
-woman he is after, I&#39;ll swear. By Jove, there&#39;s
-more in this tangle than meets the eye. It&#39;s a case
-for keeping both eyes, and a third, if I had it, wide,
-wide open!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind&#39;s and Mrs. Marsh&#39;s cab drew up before
-a house in Porchester Gardens. As they got out
-and went up the steps, the cabs containing Antonio
-and Hylda Prout almost stopped, but each went on
-again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, what in the world is the matter?&quot; mused
-Clarke. &quot;Why are those two shadowing a couple
-of ladies, and sneaking on each other as well?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page146" id="page146"></a>[pg&nbsp;146]</span>
-He told his own driver to pass the house slowly,
-as he wished to note its number, and the vehicle was
-exactly opposite the front door when it was opened
-by a girl with a cap on her head to let in Mrs. Marsh
-and Rosalind; Clarke&#39;s eye rested on her, and lit
-with a strange fire. A cry of discovery leapt to
-his lips, but was not uttered. A moment after the
-door had closed upon the two travelers, Clarke&#39;s hand
-was at the trap-door in the roof of the hansom, and,
-careless whether or not he was seen, he leaped out,
-ran up the steps, and rang.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A moment more and the door was opened to him
-by the same girl, whom he had recognized instantly
-as Pauline Dessaulx, the late lady&#39;s-maid of Rose
-de Bercy&mdash;a girl for whom he had ransacked London
-in vain. And not he alone, for Pauline had very
-effectively buried herself from the afternoon after
-the murder, when Clarke had seen her once, and she
-him, to this moment. And there now they stood,
-Clarke and Pauline, face to face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He, for his part, never saw such a change in a
-human countenance as now took place in this girl&#39;s.
-Her pretty brown cheeks at once, as her eyes fell
-on him, assumed the whiteness of death itself. Her
-lips, the very rims of her eyelids even, looked ghastly.
-She seemed to be on the verge of collapse, and her
-whole frame trembled in an agony of fear. Why?
-What caused these deadly tremors? Instantly
-Clarke saw guilt in this excess of emotion, and by
-one of those inspirations vouchsafed sometimes even
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page147" id="page147"></a>[pg&nbsp;147]</span>
-to men of his coarse fiber he did the cleverest act of
-his life.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Putting out his hand, he said quietly, but roughly:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come now, no nonsense! Give it to me!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">What &quot;it&quot; meant he himself had no more notion
-than the man in the moon. His real motive was to
-set the terrified girl speaking, and thus lead her on
-to yield some chance clew on which his wits might
-work. But at once, like one hypnotized, Pauline
-Dessaulx, still keeping her eyes fixed on his face,
-slowly moved her right hand to a pocket, slowly drew
-out a little book, and slowly handed it to him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right&mdash;you are wise,&quot; he said. &quot;I&#39;ll see
-you again.&quot; The door slammed, and he ran down
-the steps, his blood tingling with the sense that he
-had blundered upon some tremendous discovery.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nor was he far wrong. When in the cab he
-opened the book, he saw it was Rose de Bercy&#39;s diary.
-He did not know her handwriting, but he happened
-to open the book at the last written page, and the
-very first words his staring eyes devoured were these:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">If I am killed this night, it will be by &mdash;&mdash; or by C. E. F.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Where the blank occurred it was evident that some
-name had been written, and heavily scratched through
-with pen and ink.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But the alternative suggested by the initials!
-C. E. F.! How grotesque, how exquisitely ludicrous!
-Clarke, gazing at the enigma, was suddenly shaken
-with a spasm of hysterical laughter.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page148" id="page148"></a>[pg&nbsp;148]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX<br/>
-THE LETTER</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Two days later, not Britain alone, but no small
-part of the two hemispheres, was stirred to the depths
-by the adjourned inquest on the Feldisham Mansions
-crime. Nevertheless, though there were sensations
-in plenty, the public felt vaguely a sense of incompleteness
-in the process, and of dissatisfaction with
-the result. The police seemed to be both unready
-and unconvinced; no one was quite sincere in anything
-that was said; the authorities were swayed by
-some afterthought; in popular phrase, they appeared
-&quot;to have something up their sleeve.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux, this time, figured for the police; but
-Winter, too, was there unobtrusively; and, behind,
-hidden away as a mere spectator, was Clarke, smiling
-the smile that knows more than all the world, his
-hard mouth set in fixed lines like carved wood.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As against Osborne the inquiry went hard. More
-and more the hearts of the witnesses and jury grew
-hot against him, and, by a kind of electric sympathy,
-the blood of the crowd which gathered outside the
-court caught the fever and became inflamed with its
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page149" id="page149"></a>[pg&nbsp;149]</span>
-own rage, lashing itself to a fury with coarse jibes
-and bitter revilings.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux, bringing forth and marshaling evidence
-on evidence against Osborne, let his eye light often
-on Winter; then he would look away hastily as
-though he feared his face might betray his thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In that small head of his were working more, by
-far more, secret things, dark intents, unspoken mazy
-purposes, than in all the heads put together in the
-busy court. He was pale, too, but his pallor was
-nothing compared with the marble forehead of Winter,
-whose eyes were nailed to the ground, and whose
-forehead was knit in a frown grim and hard as rock.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was rarely that he so much as glanced up from
-the reverie of pitch-black doubts weltering through
-his brain like some maelstrom drowned in midnight.
-Once he glanced keenly upon William Campbell, the
-taxicab driver, who kept twirling his motor-cap round
-and round on his finger until an irritated coroner
-protested; once again did he glance at Mrs. Bates,
-housekeeper, and at the fountain of tears that flowed
-from her eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Campbell was asked to pick out the man whom
-he had driven from Berkeley Street to Feldisham
-Mansions, if he saw him in court. He pointed
-straight at Osborne.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You will swear that that is the man?&quot; he was
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, not swear,&quot; he said, and looked round defiantly,
-as if he knew that most of those present
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page150" id="page150"></a>[pg&nbsp;150]</span>
-were almost disappointed with his non-committal answer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Just think&mdash;look at him well,&quot; said the Treasury
-representative, as Osborne stood up to confront the
-driver with his pale face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That gentleman is like him&mdash;very like him&mdash;that&#39;s
-all I&#39;ll swear to. His manner of dress, his
-stand, his height, yes, and his face, his mustache, the
-chin, the few hairs there between the eyebrows&mdash;remarkably
-like, sir&mdash;for I recollect the man well
-enough. It may have been his double, but I&#39;m not
-here to swear positively it was Mr. Osborne, because
-I&#39;m not sure.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We will take it, then, that, assuming there were
-two men, the one was so much like the other that
-you swear it was either Mr. Osborne or his double?&quot;
-the coroner said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I&#39;ll go so far as that, sir,&quot; agreed Campbell,
-and, at this admission, Furneaux glanced at a
-veiled figure that sat among the witnesses at the back
-of the court.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He knew that Rosalind Marsh was present, and
-his expression softened a little. Then he looked at
-another veiled woman&mdash;Hylda Prout&mdash;and saw that
-her eyes were fastened, not on the witness, but ever
-on Rosalind Marsh, as though there was no object,
-no interest, in the room but that one black-clothed
-figure of Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Campbell&#39;s memory of the drive was ransacked,
-and turned inside out, and thrashed and tormented
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page151" id="page151"></a>[pg&nbsp;151]</span>
-by one and another to weariness; and then it was
-the turn of Hester Bates, all tears, to tell how she
-had seen someone like unto Osborne on the stairs at
-five to eight, whose feet seemed to reel like a drunken
-man&#39;s, and who afterwards impressed her, when she
-thought of it, as a shape rather of limbo and spirit-land
-than of Mayfair and everyday life.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then the flint ax-head, or celt, was presented to
-the court, and Hylda Prout was called to give evidence
-against her employer. She told how she had
-missed an ax-head from the museum, and also a Saracen
-dagger, but whether this was the very ax-head
-that was missing she could not say. It was very
-like it&mdash;that was all&mdash;and even Osborne showed his
-amaze at her collectedness, her calm indifference to
-many eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;May I not be allowed to examine it?&quot; he asked
-his solicitor.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why not?&quot; said the coroner, and there was a
-tense moment when the celt was handed him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He bent over it two seconds, and then said quietly:
-&quot;This is certainly one of my collection of flints!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">His solicitor, taken quite aback, muttered an angry
-protest, and a queer murmur made itself felt.
-Osborne heard both the lawyer&#39;s words and the subdued
-&quot;Ah!&quot; of the others echoing in his aching
-heart. By this time he was as inwardly sensitive
-to the opinion of the mob as a wretch in the hands
-of inquisitors to the whim and humors of his torturers.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page152" id="page152"></a>[pg&nbsp;152]</span>
-&quot;That evidence will be taken on oath in due
-course,&quot; said the coroner, dryly official, and the examination
-of Miss Prout went on after the incident.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And now as to the dagger,&quot; resumed the Treasury
-solicitor, &quot;tell us of that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She described it, its shape, the blunt edges of the
-long and pointed blade, the handle, the label on it
-with the date. It was Saracen, and it, too, like the
-celt, had once been used, in all probability, in the
-hands of wild men in shedding blood.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you are sure of the date when you first
-missed it from its place in the museum?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was on the third day after the murder&quot;&mdash;and
-Hylda Prout&#39;s glance traveled for an instant
-to the veiled, bent head of Rosalind, as it seemed to
-droop lower after every answer that she gave.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you are unable to conceive how both the
-dagger and the celt could have vanished from their
-places about that time?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I conceive that they were stolen,&quot; she said&mdash;&quot;unless
-Mr. Osborne made them a present to some
-friend, for I have known him to do that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;&#39;Stolen,&#39; you say,&quot; the Treasury man remarked.
-&quot;But you have no grounds for such a belief? You
-suggest no motive for a thief to steal these two objects
-and no other from the museum? You know
-of no one who entered the room during those days?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, I know of no one&mdash;except Inspector Furneaux,
-who seems to have entered it about six o&#39;clock
-on the evening of the murder.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page153" id="page153"></a>[pg&nbsp;153]</span>
-The coroner looked up sharply from his notes.
-This was news to the court.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh?&quot; said the examiner. &quot;Let us hear how
-that came about.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She explained that Furneaux had called to see Mr.
-Osborne, and, while awaiting his coming in the library,
-had apparently strolled into the museum.
-Jenkins, Mr. Osborne&#39;s valet, was her informant. It
-was not evidence, but the statement was out before
-the court well knew where it was leading. Winter&#39;s
-lip quivered with suppressed agitation, and over
-Clarke&#39;s face came a strange expression of amazement,
-a stare of utter wonderment widening his eyes,
-as when one has been violently struck, and knows
-not by what or whom.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When Hylda Prout stepped down, the coroner
-invited the officer in charge of the case to explain the
-curious bit of intelligence given by the last witness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux, not one whit disturbed in manner, rose
-to give his evidence of the incident. Oddly enough,
-his eyes dwelt all the time, with a dull deadness of
-expression in them, upon the lowered face of Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was true, he told the court, that he had called
-upon Mr. Osborne that evening; it was true that he
-was asked to wait; and he seemed to remember now
-that he <i>had</i> wandered through a doorway into a room
-full of curios to have a look at them in those idle
-moments.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So you knew Mr. Osborne <i>before</i> the murder?&quot;
-inquired the court.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page154" id="page154"></a>[pg&nbsp;154]</span>
-&quot;Yes. I knew him very well by sight and repute,
-as a man about town, though not to speak to.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And what was the nature of the business on
-which you called to see him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was a purely personal matter.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The coroner paused, with the air of a man who
-suddenly discovers a morass where he imagined there
-was a clear road.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And did you see Mr. Osborne that evening?&quot;
-he asked at length.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, sir. After I had waited some time the valet
-entered and told me that Mr. Osborne had just telephoned
-to say that he would not be home before
-dinner. So I came away.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Have you spoken to Mr. Osborne <i>since</i> then
-about the matter on which you called to see him that
-evening?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why not?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Because after that evening there was no longer
-any need!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Well, to the more experienced officials in court this
-explanation had an unusual sound, but to Winter,
-who slowly but surely was gathering the threads of
-the murder in the flat into his hands, it sounded like
-a sentence of death; and to Clarke, too, who had in
-his possession Rose de Bercy&#39;s diary taken from Pauline
-Dessaulx, it sounded so amazing, that he could
-scarce believe his ears.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">However, the coroner nodded to Furneaux, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page155" id="page155"></a>[pg&nbsp;155]</span>
-Furneaux turned to Osborne&#39;s solicitor, who suddenly
-resolved to ask no questions, so the dapper
-little man seated himself again at the table&mdash;much
-to the relief of the jury, who were impatient of any
-red herring drawn across the trail of evidence that
-led unmistakably to the millionaire.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then, at last, appeared six witnesses who spoke,
-no longer against, but for Osborne. Four were International
-polo-players, and two were waiters at the
-Ritz Hotel, and all were positive that at the hour
-when Mrs. Bates saw her employer at home, <i>they</i>
-saw him elsewhere&mdash;or some among them saw him,
-and the others, without seeing him, knew that he was
-elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Against this unassailable testimony was the obviously
-honest cabman, and Osborne&#39;s own housekeeper:
-and the jury, level-headed men, fully inclined
-to be just, though perhaps, in this instance, passionate
-and prejudiced, weighed it in their hearts.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But Furneaux, to suit his own purposes, had contrived
-that the tag of lace should come last; and
-with its mute appeal for vengeance everything in
-favor of Osborne was swept out of the bosom of
-His Majesty&#39;s lieges, and only wrath and abhorrence
-raged there.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Why, if he had actually killed Rose de Bercy,
-Osborne should carry about that incriminating bit
-of lace in his bag, no one seemed to stop to ask; but
-when the dreadful thing was held up before his eyes,
-the twelve good men and true looked at it and at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page156" id="page156"></a>[pg&nbsp;156]</span>
-each other, and a sort of shuddering abhorrence pervaded
-the court.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Even the Italian Antonio, who had contrived to
-be present as representing some obscure paper in
-Paris&mdash;the very man who had put the lace into the
-bag&mdash;shook his head over Osborne&#39;s guilt, being, as
-it were, carried out of himself by the vigor and rush
-of the mental hurricane which swept around him!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When Osborne, put into the box, repeated that
-the &quot;celt&quot; was really his, this candor now won no
-sympathy. When he said solemnly that the bit of
-lace had been secreted among his belongings by some
-unknown hand, the small company of men present in
-court despised him for so childish a lie.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">His spirit, as he stood in that box, exposed to the
-animus of so many spirits, felt as if it was being
-hurried by a kind of magnetic gale to destruction;
-his fingers, his knees shivered, his voice cracked in
-his throat; he could not keep his eyes from being
-wild, his skin from being white, and in his heart
-his own stupefied conscience accused him of the sin
-that his brothers charged him with.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Though the jury soon ascertained from the coroner&#39;s
-injunctions what their verdict had to be, they
-still took twenty minutes to think of it. However,
-they knew well that the coroner had spoken to them
-under the suggestion of the police, who, no doubt,
-would conduct their own business best; so in the
-end they came in with the verdict of &quot;willful murder
-committed by some person or persons unknown.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page157" id="page157"></a>[pg&nbsp;157]</span>
-And now it was the turn of the mob to have their
-say. The vast crowd was kept in leash until they
-were vouchsafed just a glimpse of Osborne, in the
-midst of a mass of police guarding him, as he
-emerged from the court to his automobile. Then
-suddenly, as it were, the hoarse bellow of the storm
-opened to roar him out of the universe&mdash;an overpowering
-load of sound for one frail heart to bear
-without quailing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But if Osborne&#39;s heart quailed, there was one heart
-there that did not quail, one smooth forehead that
-suddenly flushed and frowned in opposition to a
-world&#39;s current, and dared to think and feel alone.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As the mob yelped its execration, Rosalind Marsh
-cried a protest of &quot;Shame, oh, shame!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For now her woman&#39;s bosom smote her with ruth,
-and her compassion championed him, believed in him,
-refused to admit that he could have been so base.
-If she had been near him she would have raised her
-veil, and gazed into his face with a steady smile!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As she was about to enter the carriage that awaited
-her, someone said close behind her:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Miss Marsh.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She looked round and saw a small man.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You know me,&quot; he said&mdash;&quot;Inspector Furneaux.
-We have even met and spoken together before&mdash;you
-remember the old man who traveled with you in the
-train from Tormouth? That was myself in another
-aspect.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">His eyes smiled, though his voice was respectful,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page158" id="page158"></a>[pg&nbsp;158]</span>
-but Rosalind gave him the barest inch of condescension
-in a nod.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, I wish to speak to you,&quot; he muttered hurriedly.
-&quot;I cannot say when exactly&mdash;I am very
-occupied just now&mdash;but soon.... To speak to
-you, I think, in your own interests&mdash;if I may. But
-I do not know your address.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Very coldly, hardly caring to try and understand
-his motive, she mentioned the house in Porchester
-Gardens. In another moment she was in her carriage.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When she reached home she saw in her mother&#39;s
-face just a shadow of inquiry as to where she had
-been driving during the forenoon; but Rosalind said
-not a word of the inquest. She was, indeed, very
-silent during the whole of that day and the next.
-She was restless and woefully uneasy. Through
-the night her head was full of strange thoughts, and
-she slept but little, in fitful moments of weariness.
-Her mother observed her with a quiet eye, pondering
-this unwonted distress in her heart, but said nothing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On the third morning Rosalind was sitting in a
-rocking-chair, her head laid on the back, her eyes
-closed; and with a motion corresponding with the gentle
-to-and-fro motion of the chair her head moved
-wearily from side to side. This went on for some time;
-till suddenly she brought her hand to her forehead
-in a rather excited gesture, her eyes opened with the
-weak look of eyes dazzled with light, and she said
-aloud:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page159" id="page159"></a>[pg&nbsp;159]</span>
-&quot;Oh, I <i>must</i>!...&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now she sprang up in a hurry, hastened to an
-escritoire, and dashed off a letter in a very scamper
-of haste.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At last, then, the floods had broken their gates,
-for this is what she wrote:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">My dear, my dear, I was brutal to you that night at the
-sun-dial. But it was necessary, if I was to maintain the
-severity which I felt that your lack of frankness to me
-deserved. Inwardly there was a terribly weak spot, of which
-I was afraid; and if you had come after me when I left you,
-and had commanded me, or prayed me, or touched me, no
-doubt it would have been all up with me. Forgive me, then,
-if I seemed over harsh where, I&#39;m afraid, I am disposed to
-be rather too infinitely lenient. At present, you see, I quite
-lack the self-restraint to keep from telling you that I am
-sorry for you.... I was present at the inquest.... Pity
-is like lightning; it fills, it burns up, it enlightens ... see
-me here struck with it!... You are not without a friend,
-one who knows you, judges you, and acquits you.... If
-you want to come to me, come!... I once thought well of
-a Mr. Glyn, but, like a flirt, will forget him, if Osborne is of
-the same manner, speaks with the same voice.... My
-mother is usually good to me....</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">She enclosed it in a flurry of excitement, ran to
-the bell-rope, rang, and while waiting for a servant
-held the envelope in the manner of one who is on the
-very point of tearing a paper in two, but halts to
-see on which cheek the wind will hit. In the midst
-of this suspense of indecision the door opened; and
-now, straightway, she hastened to it, and got rid
-of the letter, saying rapidly in a dropped voice, confidentially:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page160" id="page160"></a>[pg&nbsp;160]</span>
-&quot;Pauline, put that in the pillar-box at once for
-me, will you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Another moment and she stood alone there, with a
-shocked and beating heart, the deed done, past recall
-now.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As for Pauline Dessaulx, she was half-way down
-the stairs when she chanced to look at the envelope.
-&quot;Rupert Osborne, Esq.&quot; She started! Everything
-connected with that name was of infinite interest to
-her! But she had not dreamt that Miss Marsh
-knew it, save as everyone else knew it now, from
-public gossip and the papers.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She had never seen Rosalind Marsh, or her mother,
-till the day of their arrival from the country. It
-was but ten days earlier that she had become the
-servant of a Mrs. Prawser, a friend of Mrs. Marsh&#39;s,
-who kept a private boarding-house, being in reduced
-circumstances. Then, after but an interval of peace
-and security, the Marshes had come, and as she let
-them in, and they were being embraced by Mrs.
-Prawser, Inspector Clarke had appeared at the
-door, nearly striking her dead with agitation, and
-demanding of her the diary, which she had handed
-him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Luckily, luckily, she had been wise enough before
-that to scratch out with many thick scratches of
-the pen the name that had been written by the actress
-before the initials C. E. F. in that passage where
-the words appeared: &quot;If I am killed this night it
-will be by &mdash;&mdash; or by C. E. F.&quot; But suppose
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page161" id="page161"></a>[pg&nbsp;161]</span>
-she had not shown such sense and daring, what then?
-She shivered at the thought.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And a new problem now tortured her. Was it
-somehow owing to the fact that Miss Marsh knew
-Osborne that Inspector Clarke had come upon her
-at the moment of the two ladies&#39; arrival? What
-was the relation between Miss Marsh and Osborne?
-What was in this letter? It might be well to
-see....</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Undecided, Pauline stood on the stairs some seconds,
-letter in hand, all the high color fled from lips
-and cheeks, her breast rising and falling, no mere
-housemaid now, but a figure of anguish fit for an
-artist to sketch there in her suspense, a well-molded
-girl of perfect curves and graceful poise.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then it struck her that Miss Marsh might be
-looking out of the window to watch her hurrying
-with the letter to the pillar-box a little way down
-the street, and at this thought she ran downstairs
-and out, hurried to the pillar-box, raised her arm
-with the letter, inserted it in the slot, drew it out
-swiftly and hiddenly again, slipped it into her pocket,
-and sped back to the house.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In her rooms half an hour later she steamed the
-envelope open, and read the avowal of another
-woman&#39;s passion and sympathy. It appeared, then,
-that Miss Marsh was now in love with Osborne? Well,
-that did not specially interest or concern her, Pauline.
-It was a good thing that Osborne had so soon
-forgotten <i>cette salope</i>, Rose de Bercy. She, Pauline,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page162" id="page162"></a>[pg&nbsp;162]</span>
-had conceived a fondness for Miss Marsh; she
-had detested her mistress, the dead actress. At the
-first chance she crept afresh into the street, and
-posted the letter in grim earnest. But an hour had
-been lost, an hour that meant a great deal in the
-workings of this tragedy of real life and, as a minor
-happening, some of the gum was dissolved off the
-flap of the envelope.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Inspector Furneaux, as he had promised after the
-inquest, called upon Rosalind during the afternoon.
-They had an interview of some length in Mrs. Prawser&#39;s
-drawing-room, which was otherwise untenanted.
-Furneaux spoke of the picturesqueness of Tormouth,
-but Rosalind&#39;s downright questioning forced him to
-speak of himself in the part of the decrepit Mr.
-Pugh, and why he had been there as such. He had
-gone to have a look at Osborne.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is his every step, then, spied on in this fashion?&quot;
-asked Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No,&quot; answered Furneaux. &quot;The truth is that
-I had had reason to think that the man was again
-playing the lover in that quarter&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, playing,&quot; said Rosalind with quick sarcasm.
-&quot;It is an insipid phrase for so serious an occupation.
-But what reason had you for thinking that he was
-playing in that particular mood?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The reason is immaterial.... In fact, he
-had impressed on the back of a letter a name&mdash;I
-may tell you it was &#39;Rosalind&#39;&mdash;and sent it off
-inadvertently&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page163" id="page163"></a>[pg&nbsp;163]</span>
-&quot;Oh, poor fellow! Not so skilled a villain then,
-after all,&quot; she murmured.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But the point was that, if this was so, it was
-clear to me that he could not be much good&mdash;I speak
-frankly&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Very, sir.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And with a good meaning to <i>you</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let us take it at that. It makes matters easier.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, as I suspected, so I found. And&mdash;I was
-disgusted. I give you my assurance that he had
-professed to Mademoiselle de Bercy that he&mdash;loved
-her. He had, he had! And she, so pitifully handled,
-so butchered, was hardly yet cold in her grave. Even
-assuming his perfect innocence in that horrible
-drama, still, I must confess, I&mdash;I&mdash;was disgusted;
-I was put against the man forever. And I was more
-than disgusted with him, I was concerned for the
-lady whose inclinations such a weather-vane might
-win. I was concerned before I saw you; I was ten
-times more concerned afterwards. I travelled to
-town in the same compartment as you&mdash;I heard your
-voice&mdash;I enjoyed the privilege of breathing the same
-air as you and your charming mother. Hence&mdash;I am
-here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind smiled. She found the detective&#39;s compliments
-almost nauseating, but she must ascertain
-his object.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, precisely?&quot; she asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want to warn you. I had warned you before:
-for I had given a certain girl whose love Mr. Osborne
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page164" id="page164"></a>[pg&nbsp;164]</span>
-has inspired a hint of what was going on, and I
-felt sure that she would not fail to tell you who
-&#39;Mr. Glyn&#39; was. Was I not right?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind bent her head a little under this unexpected
-thrust.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I received a note,&quot; she said. &quot;Who, then, is
-this &#39;certain girl, whose love Mr. Osborne has inspired,&#39;
-if one may ask?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I may tell you&mdash;in confidence. Her name is
-Prout. She is his secretary.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He is&mdash;successful in that way,&quot; observed Rosalind
-coldly, looking down at a spray of flowers pinned
-to her breast.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Too much so, Miss Marsh. Now, I felt confident
-that the warning given by Miss Prout would effectually
-quash any friendship between a lady of your
-pride and quality and Mr. Glyn&mdash;Osborne. But
-then, through your thick veil I noticed you at the
-inquest: and I said to myself, &#39;I am older than she
-is&mdash;I&#39;ll speak to her in the tone of an old and experienced
-man, if she will let me.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You see, I let you. I even thank you. But
-then you notice that Mr. Osborne is just now vilified
-and friendless.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, there is his Miss Prout.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind&#39;s neck stiffened a little.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That is indefinite,&quot; she said. &quot;I know nothing
-of this lady, except that, as you tell me, she is ready
-to betray her employer to serve her own ends. Mr.
-Osborne is my friend: it is my duty to refuse to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page165" id="page165"></a>[pg&nbsp;165]</span>
-credit vague statements made against him. It is
-not possible&mdash;it cannot be&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She stopped, rather in confusion. Furneaux believed
-he could guess what she meant to say.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It <i>is</i> possible, believe me,&quot; he broke in earnestly.
-&quot;Since it was possible, as you know, for him to turn
-his mind so easily from the dead, it is also possible&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, the dead deceived him!&quot; she protested with
-a lively flush. &quot;The dead was unworthy of him.
-He never loved her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>He</i> deceived <i>her</i>,&quot; cried Furneaux also in an unaccountable
-heat&mdash;&quot;he deceived her. No doubt she
-was as fully worthy of him as he of her&mdash;it was
-a pair of them. And he loved her as much as he
-can love anyone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Women are said to be the best judges in such
-matters, Inspector Furneaux.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So, then, you will not be guided by me in this?&quot;
-Furneaux said, standing up.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No. Nevertheless, I thank you for your apparent
-good intent,&quot; answered Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He was silent a little while, looking down at her.
-On her part, she did not move, and kept her eyes
-studiously averted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Then, for your sake, and to spite him, I
-accuse him to you of the murder!&quot; he almost
-hissed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She smiled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That is very wrong of you, very unlike an officer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page166" id="page166"></a>[pg&nbsp;166]</span>
-of the law. You know that he is quite innocent
-of it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Great, indeed, is your faith!&quot; came the taunt.
-&quot;Well, then,&quot; he added suddenly, &quot;again for your
-sake, and again to spite him, I will even let you into
-a police secret. Hear it&mdash;listen to it&mdash;yesterday,
-with a search-warrant, I raided Mr. Osborne&#39;s private
-apartments. And this is what I found&mdash;at the bottom
-of a trunk a suit of clothes, the very clothes which
-the driver of the taxicab described as those of the man
-whom he took from Berkeley Street to Feldisham
-Mansions on the night of the murder. And those
-clothes, now in the possession of the police, are all
-speckled and spotted with blood. Come, Miss Marsh&mdash;what
-do you say now? Is your trust weakened?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux&#39;s eyes sparkled with a glint of real
-hatred of Osborne, but Rosalind saw nothing of that.
-She rose, took an unsteady step or two, and stared
-through the window out into the street. Then she
-heard the door of the room being opened. She turned
-at once. Before a word could escape her lips, Furneaux
-was gone.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">One minute later, she was scribbling with furious
-speed:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">Do not read my letter. I will call for it&mdash;unopened&mdash;in
-person.</p>
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Rosalind Marsh.</span></span><br />
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">She tugged at the bell-rope. When Pauline appeared,
-she whispered: &quot;Quickly, Pauline, for my
-sake&mdash;this telegram.&quot; And as Pauline ran with it,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page167" id="page167"></a>[pg&nbsp;167]</span>
-she sank into a chair, and sat there with closed eyelids
-and trembling lips, sorely stricken in her pride,
-yet even more sorely in her heart.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now, if her letter had gone by the post by which
-she had sent it, Osborne would have read it two hours
-or more before the telegram arrived. But it had
-been kept back by Pauline: and, as it was, the letter
-only arrived five minutes before the telegram.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At that moment Osborne was upstairs in his house.
-The letter was handed to Hylda Prout in the library.
-She looked at it, and knew the writing, for she had
-found in Osborne&#39;s room at Tormouth a note of
-invitation to luncheon from Rosalind to Osborne, and
-did not scruple to steal it. A flood of jealousy now
-stabbed her heart and inflamed her eyes. It was
-then near five in the afternoon, and she had on a
-silver tripod a kettle simmering for tea, for she was
-a woman of fads, and held that the servants of the
-establishment brewed poison. She quickly steamed
-open the letter&mdash;which had been already steamed
-open by Pauline&mdash;and, every second expecting Osborne
-to enter, ran her eye through it. Then she
-pressed down the flap of the envelope anew.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Two minutes afterwards Rupert made his appearance,
-and she handed him the letter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He started! He stared at it, his face at one
-instant pale, at the next crimson. And as he so
-stood, flurried, glad, agitated, there entered Jenkins
-with a telegram on a salver.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is it?&quot; muttered Osborne with a gesture
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page168" id="page168"></a>[pg&nbsp;168]</span>
-of irritation, for he was not quite master of himself
-in these days. Nevertheless, to get the telegram off
-his mind at once before rushing upstairs to read the
-letter in solitude, he snatched at it, tore it open, and
-ran his eye over it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do not read my letter. I will call for it <i>unopened</i>....&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He let his two hands drop in a palsy of anger, the
-letter in one, the telegram in the other&mdash;bitter disappointment
-in his heart, a wild longing, a mad
-temptation....</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He lifted the letter to allow his gaze to linger
-futilely upon it, like Tantalus.... In spite of his
-agitation he could not fail to see that the envelope
-was actually open, for, as a matter of fact, the gum
-had nearly all been steamed away....</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was open! He had but to put in his finger and
-draw it out, and read, and revel, like the parched
-traveler at the solitary well in the desert. Would
-that be dishonest? Who could blame him for that?
-He had not opened the envelope....</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Miss Prout, just give me the gum-pot,&quot; he said,
-for he could see that the gum on the flap was too thin
-to be of any service.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda Prout handed him a brush, and he pasted
-down the flap, but with fingers so agitated that he
-made daubs with the gum on the envelope, daubs
-which anyone must notice on examination.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Meantime, he had dropped the telegram upon the
-table, and Hylda Prout read it.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page169" id="page169"></a>[pg&nbsp;169]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X<br/>
-THE DIARY, AND ROSALIND</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Strange as a process of nature is the way in which
-events, themselves unimportant, work into one another
-to produce some foredestined result that shall
-astonish the world.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The sudden appearance of Inspector Clarke before
-Pauline Dessaulx at the front door of Mrs. Marsh&#39;s
-lodgings produced by its shock a thorough upset in
-the girl&#39;s moral and physical being. And in Clarke
-himself that diary of Rose de Bercy which Pauline
-handed him produced a hilarity, an almost drunken
-levity of mind, the results of which levity and of
-Pauline&#39;s upset dovetailed one with the other to bring
-about an effect which lost none of its singularity
-because it was preordained.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To Clarke the diary was a revelation! Moreover,
-it was one of those sweet revelations which placed the
-fact of his own wit and wisdom in a clearer light
-than he had seen those admitted qualities before, for
-it showed that, though working in the dark, he had
-been guided aright by that special candle of understanding
-that must have been lit within him before
-his birth.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page170" id="page170"></a>[pg&nbsp;170]</span>
-&quot;Well, fancy that,&quot; cried he again and again
-in a kind of surprise. &quot;I was right all the
-time!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He sat late at night, coatless and collarless, at
-a table over the diary, Mrs. Clarke in the next room
-long since asleep, London asleep, the very night
-asleep from earth right up to heaven. Four days
-before a black cat had been adopted into the household.
-Surely it was <i>that</i> which had brought him
-the luck to get hold of the diary!&mdash;so easily, so
-unexpectedly. Pussie was now perched on the table,
-her purr the sole sound in the quietude, and Clarke,
-who would have scoffed at a hint of superstition,
-was stroking her, as he read for the third time those
-last pages written on the day of her death by the
-unhappy Frenchwoman.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">... I so seldom dream, that it has become the subject of
-remark, and Dr. Naurocki of the Institute said once that it is
-because I am such a &quot;perfect animal.&quot; It is well to be a
-perfect <i>some</i>thing: but that much I owe only to my father
-and mother. I am afraid I am not a perfect anything else.
-A perfect liar, perhaps; a perfect adventuress; using as stepping-stones
-those whose fond hearts love me; shallow, thin
-within; made of hollow-ringing tin from my skin to the
-tissue of my liver. Oh, perhaps I might have done better
-for myself! Suppose I had stayed with Marguerite and <i>le
-pre</i> Armaud on the farm, and helped to milk the two cows,
-and met some rustic lover at the stile at dusk, and married
-him in muslin? It might have been as well! There is something
-in me that is famished and starved, and decayed, something
-that pines and sighs because of its utter thinness&mdash;I
-suppose it is what they call &quot;the soul.&quot; I have lied until I
-am become a lie, an unreality, a Nothing. I seem to see myself
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page171" id="page171"></a>[pg&nbsp;171]</span>
-clearly to-day; and if I could repent now, I&#39;d say &quot;I will
-arise and go to my father, and will say to him &#39;Father.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Too late now, I suppose. Marguerite would draw her skirts
-away from touching me, though the cut of the skirt would
-set me smiling; and, if the fatted calf was set before me on
-a soiled table-cloth, I should be ill.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Too late! You can&#39;t turn back the clock&#39;s hands: the clock
-stops. God help me, I feel horribly remorseful. Why should I
-have dreamt it? I so seldom dream! and I have <i>never</i>, I think,
-dreamt with such living vividness. I thought I saw my father
-and Marguerite standing over my dead body, staring at me.
-I saw them, and I saw myself, and my face was all bruised
-and wounded; and Marguerite said: &quot;Well, she sought for
-it,&quot; and my father&#39;s face twitched, and suddenly he sobbed
-out: &quot;I wish to Heaven I had died for her!&quot; and my dead
-ears on the bed heard, and my dead heart throbbed just
-once again at him, and then was dead for ever.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke did not know that he was reading literature,
-but he did know that this was more exciting than
-any story he had ever set eyes on. He stopped,
-lit a pipe, and resumed.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">I saw it, I heard it, though it was in a black world that it
-happened, a world all draped in crape; black, black. But
-what is the matter with me to-day? Is there any other
-woman so sad in this great city, I wonder? I have opened one
-of the bottles of Old Veuve, so there are only seven left now;
-and I have drunk two full glasses of it. But it has made no
-difference; and I have to dine with Lady Knox-Florestan, and
-go with her to the opera; and Osborne may be coming. They
-will think me a death&#39;s-head, and catch melancholy from me
-like a fever. I do not know why I dreamt it, and why I cannot
-forget. It seems rather strange. Is anything going to
-happen to me, really? Oh, inside this breast of mine there
-is a bell tolling, and a funeral moving to the tomb this afternoon.
-It is as if I had drunk of some lugubrious drug that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page172" id="page172"></a>[pg&nbsp;172]</span>
-turns the human bosom to wormwood. Is it my destiny to die
-suddenly, and lie in an early grave? No, not that! Let me
-be in rags, and shrunken, with old, old eyes and toothless
-gums, but give me life! Let me say I am still alive!</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;By Jove!&quot; growled Clarke, chewing his pipe,
-&quot;that rings in my ears!&quot;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">Yet I have had curious tokens, hints, fancies, of late. Four
-nights ago, as I was driving down Pall Mall from Lady Sinclair&#39;s
-<i>diner dansant</i>&mdash;it was about eleven-thirty&mdash;I saw a man
-in the shadow at a corner who I could have sworn for a
-moment was F. I didn&#39;t see his face, for as the carriage approached
-him, he turned his back, and it was that turning of
-the back, I think, that made me observe him. Suppose all the
-time F. knows of me?&mdash;knows <i>who</i> Rose de Bercy <i>is</i>! I never
-wanted to have that Academy portrait painted, and I must
-have been mad to consent in the end. If F. saw it? If he
-<i>knows</i>? What would he do? His nature is capable of ravaging
-flames of passion! Suppose he killed me? But could a
-poor woman be so unlucky? No, he doesn&#39;t know, he can&#39;t,
-fate is not so hard. Then there is that wretched Pauline&mdash;she
-shan&#39;t be in this house another week. My quarrel with
-her this morning was the third, and the most bitter of all.
-Really, that girl knows too much of me to permit of our living
-any longer under one roof; and, what is more, she has twice
-dropped hints lately which certainly seem to bear the interpretation
-that she knows of my work in Berlin for the
-Russian Government. Oh, but that must only be the madness
-of my fancy! Two persons, and two only, in the whole world
-know of it&mdash;how could <i>she</i>, possibly? Yet she said in her
-Friday passion: &quot;You will not be a long liver, Madame, you
-have been too untrue to your dupes.&quot; <i>Untrue to my dupes!</i>
-Which dupes? My God, if she meant the Anarchists!</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke&#39;s face was a study when he came to that
-word. It wore the beatific expression of the man
-who is justified in his own judgment.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page173" id="page173"></a>[pg&nbsp;173]</span></p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">Just suppose that she knows! For that she is mixed up
-with some of them to some uncertain extent I have guessed
-for two years. And if they knew that I have actually been
-a Government agent; they would do for me, oh, they would,
-I know, it would be all up with me. Three months ago
-Sauriac Paulus in the <i>promenoire</i> at Covent Garden, said to
-me: &quot;By the way, do you know that you have been condemned
-to death?&quot; I forget <i>à propos</i> of what he said it, and have
-never given it a thought from that day. He was bantering
-me, laughing in the lightest vein, but&mdash;God! it never struck me
-like this before!&mdash;Suppose there was earnest under the jest,
-deep-hidden under? He is a deep, deep, evil beast, that
-man. Those were his words&mdash;I remember distinctly. &quot;By
-the way, do you know that you have been condemned to
-death?&quot; &quot;By the way:&quot; his heavy face shook with chuckling.
-And it never once till now entered my head!&mdash;Oh, but, after
-all, I must be horribly ill to be having such thoughts this
-day! The beast, of course, didn&#39;t mean anything. Think,
-though, of saying, &quot;by the way?&quot;&mdash;the terrible, evil beast.
-Oh, yes, I am ill. I have begun to die. This night, may be,
-my soul shall be required of me. I hear Marguerite saying
-again, &quot;Well, she sought for it,&quot; and my father&#39;s bitter sobbing,
-&quot;I wish to Heaven I had died for her!&quot; But, if I am killed
-this day, it will be by ... or by C. E. F....</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">That last dash after the &quot;F.&quot; was not, Clarke
-saw, meant as a dash, for it was a long curved line,
-as if her elbow had been struck, or she herself violently
-startled. She had probably intended, this time,
-to write the name in full, but the interruption stopped
-her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At the spot of the first dash lay thick ink-marks&mdash;really
-made by Pauline Dessaulx&mdash;and Clarke, cute
-enough to see this, now commenced to scratch out the
-ink blot with a penknife, and after the black dust
-was scraped away, he used a damp sponge.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page174" id="page174"></a>[pg&nbsp;174]</span>
-It was a delicate, slow operation, his idea being
-that, since under those layers of ink lay a written
-name, if he removed the layers with dainty care, then
-he would see the name beneath. And this was no
-doubt true in theory, but in practice no care was
-dainty enough to do the trick with much success.
-He did, however, manage to see the shape of some
-letters, and, partly with the aid of his magnifying
-glass, partly with the aid of his imagination, he
-seemed to make out the word &quot;<i>Janoc</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The murder, then, was committed either by Janoc,
-or by C. E. F.&mdash;this, as the mantle of the night
-wore threadbare, and some gray was showing through
-it in the east, Clarke became certain of.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><i>Who</i> was C. E. F.? There was Furneaux, of
-course. Those were his initials, and as the name
-of Furneaux arose in his mind, Clarke&#39;s head dropped
-back over his chair-back, and a long, delicious spasm
-of laughter shook him. For the idea that it <i>might</i>,
-in very truth, be Furneaux who was meant never
-for one instant occurred to him. He assumed that
-it must needs be some French or Russian C. E. F.,
-but the joke of the coincidence of the initials with
-Furneaux&#39;s, who had charge of the case, into whose
-hands the case had been given by Winter over his
-(Clarke&#39;s) head, was so rich, that he resolved to show
-the diary to Winter, and to try and keep from bursting
-out laughing, while he said:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Look here, sir&mdash;this is your Furneaux!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke, indeed, had heard at the inquest how Furneaux
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page175" id="page175"></a>[pg&nbsp;175]</span>
-had been seen on the evening of the murder in
-Osborne&#39;s museum, from which the &quot;celt&quot; and the
-dagger had vanished. Hearing this, his mind had
-instantly remembered the &quot;C. E. F.&quot; of the diary,
-and had been amazed at such a coincidence. But
-his brain never sprang to grapple with the possibility
-that Rose de Bercy might, in truth, be afraid of
-Furneaux. So, whoever &quot;C. E. F.&quot; might be, Clarke
-had no interest in him, never suspected him: his
-thoughts had too long been preoccupied with one
-idea&mdash;Anarchists, Janoc, Anarchists&mdash;to receive a
-new bent with real perspicacity and interest. And
-the diary confirmed him in this opinion: for she had
-actually been condemned to death as an agent of the
-Russian Government months before. At last he
-stood up, stretching his arms in weariness before
-tumbling into bed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well! to think that I was right!&quot; he said again,
-and again he laughed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When he was going out in the morning, he put
-some more ink-marks over the &quot;Janoc&quot; in the diary&mdash;for
-he did not mean that any other than himself
-should lay his hand on the murderer of Rose de
-Bercy&mdash;and when he arrived at Scotland Yard, he
-showed the diary to the Chief Inspector.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter laid it on the desk before him, and as he
-read where Clarke&#39;s finger pointed, his face went as
-colorless as the paper he was looking at.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A laugh broke out behind him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Furneaux!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page176" id="page176"></a>[pg&nbsp;176]</span>
-And Winter, glancing round, saw Clarke&#39;s face
-merry, like carved ivory in a state of gayety, showing
-a tooth or two lacking, and browned fangs. For
-a moment he stared at Clarke, without comprehension,
-till the absurd truth rushed in upon him that
-Clarke was really taking it in jest. Then he, too,
-laughed even more loudly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ha! ha!&mdash;yes, Furneaux! &#39;Pon my honor, the
-funniest thing! Furneaux it is for sure!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Officer in charge of the case!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ripping! By gad, I shall have to apply for a
-warrant!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Finding his chief in this rare good humor, Clarke
-thought to obtain a little useful information.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you know any of the Anarchist crowd with
-those initials, sir?&quot; he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think I do; yes, a Frenchman. Or it may be
-a German. There is no telling whom she means&mdash;no
-telling. But where on earth did you come across
-this diary?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You remember the lady&#39;s-maid, Pauline, the girl
-who couldn&#39;t be found to give evidence at the inquest?
-I was following the Anarchist Antonio, who seemed
-to be prowling after some ladies in a cab a day or
-two ago, and the door that was opened to the ladies
-when their cab stopped was opened by&mdash;Pauline.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then he told how he had obtained the diary, and
-volunteered a theory as to the girl&#39;s possession
-of it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She must have picked it up in the flat on coming
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page177" id="page177"></a>[pg&nbsp;177]</span>
-home from the Exhibition on the night of the murder,
-and kept it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They discussed the circumstances fully, and Clarke
-went away, his conscience clear of having kept the
-matter dark from headquarters, yet confident that
-he had not put Winter on the track of his own special
-prey, Janoc. And as his footsteps became faint
-and fainter behind the closed door, Winter let his
-head fall low, almost upon the desk, and so he remained,
-hidden, as it were, from himself, a long while,
-until suddenly springing up with a face all fiery, he
-cried aloud in a rage:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, no more sentiment! By the Lord, I&#39;m done
-with it. From this hour Inspector Furneaux is
-under the eye of the police.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux himself was then, for the second time
-that week, at Mrs. Marsh&#39;s lodgings in Porchester
-Gardens in secret and urgent talk with Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You will think that I am always hunting you
-down, Miss Marsh,&quot; he said genially on entering the
-room.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You know best how to describe your profession,&quot;
-she murmured a little bitterly, for his parting shot
-at their last meeting had struck deep.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But this time I come more definitely on business,&quot;
-he said, seating himself uninvited, which was a
-strange thing for Furneaux to do, since he was a
-gentleman by birth and in manners, &quot;and as I am
-in a whirl of occupation just now, I will come at
-once to the point.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page178" id="page178"></a>[pg&nbsp;178]</span>
-&quot;To say &#39;I will come at once to the point&#39; is
-to put off coming to it&mdash;for while you are saying
-it&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;True. The world uses too many words&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is a round world&mdash;hence its slowness in coming
-to a point.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I take the hint. Yet you leave me rather breathless.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pray tell me why, Inspector Furneaux.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For admiration of so quick and witty a lady.
-But I shall make you dumb by what I am going to
-suggest to-day. I want to turn you into a detective&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It <i>is</i> a point, then. You want me to be sharp?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are already that. The question is, what
-effect did what I last said have upon your mind?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;About your finding the blood-spotted clothes in
-Mr. Osborne&#39;s trunk?&quot; she asked, looking down at
-his tired and worn face from her superior height, and
-suddenly moved to listen to him attentively. &quot;Well,
-it was somewhat astounding at first. In fact, it
-sounded almost convincing. But then, I had already
-believed in Mr. Osborne&#39;s innocence in this matter.
-Nor am I over-easily shaken, I think, in my convictions.
-If he confessed his guilt to me, then I
-would believe&mdash;but not otherwise.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good,&quot; said Furneaux, &quot;you have said that well,
-though I am sure he does not deserve it. Anyhow,
-since you persist in believing in his innocence, you
-must also believe that every new truth must be in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page179" id="page179"></a>[pg&nbsp;179]</span>
-his favor, and so may be willing to turn yourself
-into the detective I suggested.... You have, I
-think, a servant here named Pauline Dessaulx?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This girl he had been seeking for some time, and
-had been gladly surprised to have her open the door
-to him on the day of his first visit to Rosalind. &quot;She
-did not know me,&quot; he explained, &quot;but <i>I</i> have twice
-seen her in the streets with her former mistress.
-Do you know who that mistress was? Rose de
-Bercy!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind started as though a whip had cracked
-across her shoulders. She even turned round, looked
-at the door, tested it by the handle to see if it was
-closed, and stood with her back to it. Furneaux
-seemingly ignored her agitation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, you were at the inquest, Miss Marsh,&quot; he
-said. &quot;You heard the description given by Miss
-Prout of the Saracen dagger missing from Mr Osborne&#39;s
-museum&mdash;the dagger with which the crime
-was probably committed. Well, I want to get that
-into my hands. It is lying in Pauline Dessaulx&#39;s
-trunk, and I ask you to secure it for me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In Pauline&#39;s trunk,&quot; Rosalind repeated after him,
-quite too dazed in her astonishment to realize the
-marvels that this queer little man was telling her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;To be quite accurate,&quot; he continued, &quot;I am not
-altogether sure of what I say. But that is where it
-<i>should</i> be, in her trunk, and with it you should find
-a second dagger, or knife, which I am also anxious
-to obtain, and if you happen to come across a little
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page180" id="page180"></a>[pg&nbsp;180]</span>
-book, a diary, with a blue morocco cover, I shall be
-extremely pleased to lay my hand on it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How can you possibly know all this?&quot; Rosalind
-asked, her eyes wide open with wonder now, and
-forgetful, for the moment, of the pain he had caused
-her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Going up and down in the earth, like Satan, and
-then sitting and thinking of it,&quot; he said, with a quick
-turn of mordant humor. &quot;But is it a bargain, now?
-Of course, I could easily pounce upon the girl&#39;s trunk
-myself: but I want the objects to be <i>stolen</i> from her,
-since I don&#39;t wish to have her frightened&mdash;not quite
-yet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you, then, suspect this girl of having&mdash;of
-being&mdash;the guilty hand, Inspector Furneaux?&quot;
-asked Rosalind, her very soul aghast at the notion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have already intimated to you the person who
-is open to suspicion,&quot; answered Furneaux promptly,
-&quot;a man, not a woman&mdash;though, if you find these
-objects in the girl&#39;s trunk, that <i>may</i> lighten the
-suspicion against the man.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A gleam appeared one instant in his eyes, and died
-out as quickly, but this time Rosalind saw it. She
-pulled a chair close to him and sat down, her fingers
-clasped tightly over her right knee&mdash;eager to serve,
-to help. But, then, to steal, to pry into a servant&#39;s
-boxes, that was not a nice action. And this Pauline
-Dessaulx was a girl who had interested her, had
-shown a singular liking for her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She mentioned her qualms.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page181" id="page181"></a>[pg&nbsp;181]</span>
-&quot;At the bidding of the police,&quot; urged Furneaux&mdash;&quot;in
-the interests of justice&mdash;to serve a possibly
-innocent man, who is also a friend&mdash;surely that is
-something.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I might have been able to do it yesterday,&quot; murmured
-Rosalind, distraught, &quot;but she is better to-day.
-I will tell you. For two days the girl has
-been ill&mdash;in a kind of hysteria or nervous collapse&mdash;a
-species of neurosis, I think&mdash;altogether abnormal
-and strange. I&mdash;you may as well know&mdash;wrote a
-letter to Mr. Osborne on the day you first came,
-a little before you came. I gave it her to post&mdash;she
-may have seen the address. Then you appeared.
-After you were gone, I sent him a telegram, also
-by Pauline&#39;s hand, telling him not to read my
-letter&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, you see you did believe that what I told
-you proved his guilt&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hear me.... No, I did not believe that.
-But&mdash;you had impressed me with the fact that Mr.
-Osborne has been, may have been, already sufficiently
-successful in attracting the sympathies of young
-ladies. I had been at the inquest&mdash;I had seen there
-in the box his exquisite secretary, of whose perfect
-ways of acting you gave me some knowledge that
-day, and I thought it might be rash of me to seem
-to be in rivalry with so charming a lady. Now you
-see my motive&mdash;I am often frank. So, when you
-were gone, I sent the telegram forbidding the reading
-of my letter; and the next morning I received a very
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page182" id="page182"></a>[pg&nbsp;182]</span>
-brief note from Mr. Osborne saying that the letter
-was awaiting my wishes unopened.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How did he know your address, if he did not
-open the letter?&quot; asked Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind started like a child caught in a fault.
-She was so agitated that she had not asked herself
-that question. As a matter of fact, it was Hylda
-Prout, having tracked Rosalind from Waterloo, who
-had given Osborne the address for her own reasons:
-Hylda had told Osborne, on hearing his fretful exclamation
-of annoyance, that she knew the address
-of a Miss Marsh from an old gentleman who had
-apparently come up from Tormouth with him and
-her, and had called to see Osborne when Osborne was
-out.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He got the address from some source, I don&#39;t
-know what,&quot; Rosalind said, with a rather wondering
-gaze at Furneaux&#39;s face; &quot;but the point is, that the
-girl, Pauline, saw my letter to him, and the telegram;
-and last night, coming home from an outing in quite
-a broken-down and enfeebled state, she said to me
-with tears in her eyes: &#39;Oh, he is innocent! Oh, do
-not judge him harshly, Miss Marsh! Oh, it was
-not he who did it!&#39; and much more of that sort.
-Then she collapsed and began to scream and kick,
-was got to bed, and a doctor sent for, who said that
-she had an attack of neurasthenia due to mental
-strain. And I was sitting by her bedside quite a
-long while, so that I might then&mdash;if I had known&mdash;But
-I think she is better to-day.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page183" id="page183"></a>[pg&nbsp;183]</span>
-&quot;It is not too late, if she is still in bed,&quot; said
-Furneaux. &quot;Sit with her again till she is asleep,
-and then see if the trunk is unlocked, or if you can
-find the key&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Only it doesn&#39;t seem quite fair to&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, quite, in this case, I assure you,&quot; said Furneaux.
-&quot;Whether this girl committed that murder
-with her own hand or not&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But how <i>could</i> she? She was at an Exhibition&mdash;&mdash;!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Was she? Are you sure? I was saying that
-whether the girl committed the murder with her own
-hand or not&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If <i>she</i> did, it could not have been done by the
-person you said that you suspect!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No? Why speak so confidently? Have you
-not heard of such things as accomplices? She
-might have helped Osborne! <i>He</i> might have helped
-<i>her</i>! But I was saying&mdash;for the third time&mdash;that
-whether the girl committed the murder with her own
-hand or not, I am in a position to give you my assurance
-that she is not a lawful citizen, and that you
-needn&#39;t have the least compunction in doing anything
-whatever to her trunk or her&mdash;in the cause of
-truth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, if you say so&mdash;&mdash;&quot; Rosalind said, and
-Furneaux stood up to go.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was then two o&#39;clock in the afternoon. By
-five o&#39;clock Rosalind had in her hand the Saracen
-dagger, and another dagger&mdash;though not, of course,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page184" id="page184"></a>[pg&nbsp;184]</span>
-the diary, which Clarke had carried off long
-ago.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At about three she had gone to sit by Pauline&#39;s
-bedside, and here, with the leather trunk strapped
-down, not two feet from her right hand, had remained
-over an hour. Pauline lay quiet, with a
-stare in her wide-open eyes, gazing up at the ceiling.
-Every now and again her body would twist into a
-gawky and awkward kind of position, a stupid expression
-would overspread her face, a vacant smile
-play on her lips; then, after some minutes, she would
-lie naturally again, staring at the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Suddenly, about half-past four, she had had a
-kind of seizure; her body stiffened and curved, she
-uttered shrieks which chilled Rosalind&#39;s blood, and
-then her whole frame settled into a steady, strong
-agitation, which set the chamber all in a tremble,
-and could not be stilled by the two servants who had
-her wrists in their grip. When this was over, she
-dropped off into a deep sleep.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And now, as soon as Rosalind was again left
-alone with the invalid, she went to the trunk, unstrapped
-it, found it locked. But she was not long
-in discovering the key in the pocket of the gown
-which Pauline had had on when she fell ill. She
-opened the trunk, looking behind her at the closed
-eyes of the exhausted girl, and then, in feverish
-haste, she ransacked its contents. No daggers, however,
-and no diary were there. She then searched
-methodically through the room&mdash;an improvised wardrobe&mdash;a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page185" id="page185"></a>[pg&nbsp;185]</span>
-painted chest of drawers&mdash;kneaded and felt
-the bed, searched underneath&mdash;no daggers. She
-now stood in the middle of the room, her forehead
-knit, her eyes wandering round, all her woman&#39;s
-cunning at work in them. Then she walked straight,
-with decision, to a small shelf on the wall, full of
-cheap books; began to draw out each volume, and
-on drawing out the third, she saw that the daggers
-were lying there behind the row.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her hand hovered during some seconds of hesitancy
-over the horrible blades, one of which had so
-lately been stained so vilely. Then she took them,
-and replaced the books. One of the daggers was
-evidently the Saracen weapon that she had heard
-described. The label was still on it; the other was
-thick-bladed, of an Italian type. She ran out with
-them, put them in a glove box, and, rather flurriedly,
-almost by stealth, got out of the house to take her
-trophies to Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She drove to the address that he had given her, an
-eagerness in her, a gladness that the truth would
-now appear, and through <i>her</i>&mdash;most unexpectedly!
-Quite apart from her friendship for Osborne, she
-had an abstract interest in this matter of the murder,
-since from the first, before seeing Osborne, she had
-said that he was innocent, but her mother had seemed
-to lean to the opposite belief, and they were in hostile
-camps on the subject, like two good-natured people
-of different political convictions dwelling in the same
-house.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page186" id="page186"></a>[pg&nbsp;186]</span>
-She bade her driver make haste to Furneaux&#39;s;
-but midway, seeing herself passing close to Mayfair,
-gave the man Osborne&#39;s address, thinking that she
-would go and get her unopened letter, and, if she
-saw Osborne himself, offer him a word of cheer&mdash;an
-&quot;all will be well.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her driver rapped for her at the house door, she
-sitting still in the cab, a hope in her that Osborne
-would come out. It seemed long since she had last
-seen his face, since she had heard that sob of his
-at the sun-dial at the Abbey. The message went
-inwards that Miss Marsh had called for a letter
-directed to Mr. Osborne by her; and her high spirits
-were damped when Jenkins reappeared at the door
-to say that the letter would be brought her, Mr.
-Osborne himself having just gone out.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In sober fact, Osborne had not stirred out of the
-house for days, lest her promised call &quot;in person&quot;
-should occur when he was absent, but at last, unable
-to bear it any longer, he had made a dash to see
-her, and was at that moment venturing to knock at
-her door.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">However, though the news was damping, she had
-a store of high spirits that afternoon, which pushed
-her to leave a note scribbled with her gold pencil
-on the back of a letter&mdash;an act fraught with terrible
-sufferings for her in the sequel. This was her message:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">I will write again. Meantime, do not lose hope! I have
-discovered that your purloined dagger has been in the possession
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page187" id="page187"></a>[pg&nbsp;187]</span>
-of the late lady&#39;s-maid, Pauline. &quot;A small thing, but
-mine own!&quot; I am now taking it to Inspector Furneaux&#39;s.</p>
-<p class="right">R. M.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What <i>will</i> he think of &#39;<i>I</i> have discovered&#39;?&quot; she
-asked herself, smiling, pleased; &quot;he will say &#39;a
-witch&#39;!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She folded it crossways with a double bend so
-that it would not open, and leaning out of the cab,
-handed it to Jenkins.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As he disappeared with it, Hylda Prout stood
-in the doorway with Rosalind&#39;s letter to Osborne&mdash;Hylda&#39;s
-freckles showing strong against her rather
-pale face. She held the flap-side of the envelope
-forward from the first, to show the stains of gum
-on it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As she approached the cab, Rosalind&#39;s neck stiffened
-a little. Their eyes met malignly, and dwelt
-together several seconds, in a stillness like that of
-somber skies before lightnings fly out. Truly, Rupert
-Osborne&#39;s millions were unable to buy him either
-happiness or luck, for it was the worst of ill-luck
-that he should not have been at home just then.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page188" id="page188"></a>[pg&nbsp;188]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI<br/>
-ENTRAPPED!</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">When Rosalind&#39;s contemptuous eyes abandoned
-that silent interchange of looks, they fell upon the
-envelope in Hylda Prout&#39;s hand, nor could she help
-noticing that round the flap it was clumsily stained
-with gum. Yet Osborne had written her saying that
-it had been unopened....</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The other woman stepped to the door of the cab.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Miss Marsh?&quot; she inquired, with an assumed
-lack of knowledge that was insolent in itself.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Osborne left this for you, if you called.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thank you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The business was ended, yet the lady-secretary still
-stood there, staring brazenly at Rosalind&#39;s face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Drive on&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind raised her gloved hand to attract the
-driver&#39;s attention.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;One moment, Miss Marsh,&quot; said Hylda, also
-raising a hand to forbid him to move; &quot;I want to
-tell you something&mdash;You are very anxious on poor
-Mr. Osborne&#39;s behalf, are you not?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I thought he was rich? You are not to say
-&#39;poor Mr. Osborne.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page189" id="page189"></a>[pg&nbsp;189]</span>
-&quot;Is that why you are so anxious, because he is
-rich?&quot; and those golden-brown eyes suddenly blazed
-out outrageously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Driver, go on, please!&quot; cried Rosalind again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wait, cabman!&quot; cried Hylda imperiously....
-&quot;Stay a little&mdash;Miss Marsh&mdash;one word&mdash;I cannot
-let you waste your sympathies as you do. You
-believe that Mr. Osborne is friendless; and you offer
-him your friendship&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>I!</i>&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind laughed a little, a laugh with a dangerous
-chuckle in it that might have carried a warning to
-one who knew her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you not say so in that letter? In it you tell
-him that since the night at the sun-dial, when you
-were &#39;<i>brutal</i>&#39; to him&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You know, then, my letter&mdash;by heart?&quot; said
-Rosalind, her eyes sparkling and cheeks aflame.
-&quot;That is quite charming of you! You have been
-at the pains to read it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, of course, Mr. Osborne wouldn&#39;t exactly
-<i>show</i> it to me, nor did I ask him. But I think you
-guess that I am in Mr. Osborne&#39;s confidence.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Osborne, it would seem, has&mdash;read it? He
-even thought the contents of sufficient importance to
-repeat them to his typist? Is that so?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Osborne repeats many things to me, Miss
-Marsh&mdash;by habit. You being a stranger to him,
-do not know him well yet, but I have been with him
-some time, you see. As to his reading it, I know
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page190" id="page190"></a>[pg&nbsp;190]</span>
-that you telegraphed him not to, and he received the
-telegram before the letter, I admit; but, the letter
-once in his hand, it became his private property, of
-course. He had a right to read it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A stone in Rosalind&#39;s bosom where her heart had
-been ached like a wound; yet her lips smiled&mdash;a hard
-smile.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But then, having read, to be at the pains to seal
-it down again!&quot; she said. &quot;It seems superfluous,
-a contemptible subterfuge.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, well,&quot; sneered Hylda, with a pouting laugh,
-&quot;he is not George Washington&mdash;a little harmless
-deception.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you cry out all his secrets!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;To you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why to me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I save you from troubling your head about him.
-He is not so friendless as you have imagined.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Happy man! And was it you who wrote me the
-anonymous information that he was not Glyn but
-Osborne?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, that was someone else.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And now Rosalind, blighting her with her icy
-smile, which no inward fires could melt, said contemplatively:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am afraid you are not speaking the truth.
-I shall tell Mr. Osborne to get rid of you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The dart was well planted. The paid secretary&#39;s
-lips twitched and quivered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Try it! He&#39;ll laugh at you!&quot; she retorted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page191" id="page191"></a>[pg&nbsp;191]</span>
-&quot;No, I think he will do it&mdash;to please me!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Sad to relate, our gracious Rosalind was deliberately
-adding oil to the fires of hate and rage that
-she saw devouring Hylda Prout; and when Hylda
-again spoke it was from a fiery soul that peered out
-of a ghost&#39;s face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will he?&mdash;to please you?&quot; she said low, hissingly,
-leaning forward. &quot;He has a record in a diary of
-the girls he has kissed, and the number of
-days from the first sight to the first kiss. He only
-wanted to see in how few days he could secure
-you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This vulgarity astonished its hearer. Rosalind
-shrank a little; her smile became forced and strained;
-she could only murmur:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, you needn&#39;t be so bourgeoise.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda chuckled again maliciously.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It&#39;s the mere truth.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Still, I think I shall warn him against you, and
-have you dismissed,&quot;&mdash;this with that feminine instinct
-of the dagger that plunged deepest, the lash
-that cut most bitterly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You try!&quot; hissed Hylda sharply, as it were
-secretly, with a nod of menace. &quot;I am not anybody!
-I am not some defenseless housemaid, the
-only rival you have experienced hitherto, perhaps.
-I am&mdash;at any rate, you try! You dare! Touch
-me, and I&#39;ll wither your arm&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Drive on!&quot; cried Rosalind almost in a scream.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wait!&quot; shrilled Hylda&mdash;&quot;you <i>shall</i> hear me!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page192" id="page192"></a>[pg&nbsp;192]</span>
-&quot;Cabman, please&mdash;&mdash;!&quot; wailed Rosalind despairingly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And now at last the cab was off, Hylda Prout
-running with it to pant into it some final rancor;
-and when it left her, she remained there on the pavement
-a minute, unable to move, trembling from head
-to foot, watching the vehicle as it sped away from
-her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When she re-entered the library the first thing
-that she saw was Rosalind&#39;s cross-folded note to
-Osborne, and, still burning inwardly, she snatched
-it up, tore it open, and read:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">I will write again. Meantime, high hope! <i>I</i> have discovered
-that your purloined dagger has been in the possession of the
-late lady&#39;s-maid, Pauline. &quot;A small thing but mine own.&quot;
-I am now taking it to Inspector Furneaux&#39;s.</p>
-<div class="poem">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">R. M.</span><br />
-</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda dashed the paper to the ground, put her
-foot on it, then catching it up, worried it in her
-hands to atoms which she threw into a waste-paper
-basket. Then she collapsed into a chair
-at her desk, her arms thrown heedlessly over
-some documents, and her face buried between
-them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have gone too far, too far, too far&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now that her passion had burnt to ashes this was
-her thought. A crisis, it was clear, had come, and
-something had to be done, to be decided, now&mdash;that
-very day. Rosalind would surely tell Osborne what
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page193" id="page193"></a>[pg&nbsp;193]</span>
-she, Hylda, had said, how she had acted, and then
-all would be up with Hylda, no hope left, her whole
-house in ruins about her, not one stone left standing
-on another. Either she must bind Osborne irrevocably
-to her at once, or her brain must devise some
-means of keeping Osborne and Rosalind from meeting&mdash;or
-both. But how achieve the apparently impossible?
-Osborne, she knew, was at that moment
-at Rosalind&#39;s residence, and if Rosalind was now
-going home ... they would meet! Hylda moved
-her buried head from side to side, woe-ridden, in
-the grip of a hundred fangs and agonies. She had
-boasted to Rosalind that she was not a whimpering
-housemaid, but of a better texture: and if that was
-an actual truth, the present moment must prove it.
-Yet she sat there with a buried head, weakly weeping....</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Suddenly she thought of the words in Rosalind&#39;s
-note to Osborne, which she had thrown into the
-basket: &quot;I have discovered that your purloined dagger
-has been in the possession of the late lady&#39;s-maid,
-Pauline.... I am now taking it to Inspector Furneaux&#39;s....&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">That, then, was the person who had the dagger
-which had been so sought and speculated about&mdash;Pauline
-Dessaulx!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And at the recollection of the name, Hylda&#39;s racked
-brain, driven to invent, invented like lightning. Up
-she sprang, caught at her hat, and rushed away,
-pinning it on to her magnificent red hair in her
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page194" id="page194"></a>[pg&nbsp;194]</span>
-flight, her eyes staring with haste. In the street
-she leapt into a motor-cab&mdash;to Soho.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She was soon there. As if pursued by furies she
-pelted up two foul staircases, and at a top back room,
-rapped pressingly, fiercely, with the clenched
-knuckles of both hands upon the panels. As a man
-in his shirt-sleeves, his braces dropped, smoking a
-cigarette, opened the door to her, she almost fell
-in on him, and the burning words burst from her
-tongue&#39;s tip:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Antonio!&mdash;it&#39;s all up with Pauline&mdash;the dagger
-she did it with&mdash;has been found&mdash;by a woman&mdash;the
-same woman from Tormouth whom you and I tracked
-to Porchester Gardens&mdash;Pauline is in her employ
-probably&mdash;tell Janoc&mdash;he has wits&mdash;he may do something
-before it is too late&mdash;the woman has the dagger&mdash;in
-a motor-cab&mdash;in a long, narrow box&mdash;she
-is this instant taking it to Inspector Furneaux&#39;s
-house&mdash;if <i>she</i> lives, Pauline hangs&mdash;tell Janoc that,
-Antonio&mdash;don&#39;t stare&mdash;tell Janoc&mdash;it is <i>she</i> or Pauline&mdash;let
-him choose&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>Grand Dieu!</i>&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t stare&mdash;don&#39;t stand&mdash;I&#39;m gone.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She ran out; and almost as she was down the
-stair Antonio had thrown on a coat and was flying
-down behind her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He ran down three narrow streets to Poland Street,
-darted up a stair, broke into a room; and there on
-the floor, stretched face downwards, lay the lank
-length of Janoc&#39;s body, a map of Europe spread
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page195" id="page195"></a>[pg&nbsp;195]</span>
-before him, on which with an ivory pointer he was
-marking lines from town to town. He glanced at
-the intruder with a frowning brow, yet he was up
-like an acrobat, as the tidings leapt off Antonio&#39;s
-tongue.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Found!&quot; he whispered hoarsely, &quot;Pauline
-found!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, and the dagger found, too!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Found! dearest of my heart! my sweet sister!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Janoc clasped to his bosom a phantom form, and
-kissed thrice at the air.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, and the dagger found that she did it
-with&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The dagger?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, and the lady is this minute taking it to
-Inspector Furneaux&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Lady?&mdash;Oh, found! found! dear, sweet sister,
-why didst thou hide thyself from me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Janoc spread his arms with a face of rapture.
-He could only assimilate the one great fact in his
-joy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But Janoc&mdash;listen&mdash;the lady&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Lady?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The lady who has the dagger! Listen, my
-friend&mdash;she is on the way to Inspector Furneaux
-with Pauline&#39;s dagger&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>Mille diables!</i>&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Janoc, what is to be done? O, arouse yourself,
-<i>pour l&#39;amour de Dieu</i>&mdash;Pauline will be hanged&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hanged? Yes! They hang women, I know,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page196" id="page196"></a>[pg&nbsp;196]</span>
-in England&mdash;the only country in Europe&mdash;this ugly
-nest of savages. Yes! they hang them by the neck
-on the gallows here&mdash;the gallant gentlemen! But
-they won&#39;t hang <i>her</i>, Antonio! Let them touch her,
-and <i>I</i>, I set all England dancing like a sandstorm
-of the Sahara! Furneaux&#39;s house No. 12?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And the lady&#39;s address?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Porchester Gardens&mdash;unfortunately I did not
-notice the number of the house.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pity: weak. What is she like, this lady?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Middle-size&mdash;plentiful brown hair&mdash;eyes blue&mdash;beautiful
-in the cold English way, elegant, too&mdash;yes,
-a pretty woman&mdash;I saw her in Tormouth&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come with me&quot;&mdash;and Janoc was in action, with
-a suddenness, a fury, a contrast with his previous
-stillness of listening that was very remarkable&mdash;as
-if he had waited for the instant of action to sound,
-and then said: &quot;Here it is! I am ready!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Out stretched his long leg, as he bent forward
-into running, catching at his cap and revolver with
-one sweep of his right arm, and at Antonio with a
-snatch of the left; and from that moment his
-motions were in the tone of the forced marches of
-Napoleon&mdash;not an instant lost in the business he
-was at.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He took Antonio in a cab to Furneaux&#39;s house
-in Sinclair Street. There he was nudged by Antonio,
-as they drove up, with a hysterical sob of
-&quot;See! There she is!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page197" id="page197"></a>[pg&nbsp;197]</span>
-Rosalind was driving away at the moment. She
-had, then, seen Furneaux? told Furneaux? given
-Furneaux the dagger? In that case, the battle
-would lie between Furneaux and Janoc that day.
-Janoc&#39;s flesh was pale, but it was the paleness of
-iron, his eyes were full of fire. In his heart he was
-a hero, in brain and head an assassin!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He alighted at the detective&#39;s house, letting Rosalind
-go. But the landlady of the flat told him
-that Furneaux had not been at home for two hours,
-and was not expected for another hour. Rosalind,
-then, had not seen him; and the battle swung back
-to its first ground as between Rosalind and Janoc.
-Had the lady who had just called left any parcel,
-or any weapon for Mr. Furneaux? The answer was
-&quot;No.&quot; He hurried down into his cab, to make for
-Rosalind&#39;s boarding-house.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But Antonio had not noted the number, and, to
-discover it, Janoc started off to Osborne&#39;s house, to
-ask it of Miss Prout.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now, Rosalind was herself driving to the same
-place. On learning that Furneaux was not at home,
-she had paced his sitting-room a little while, undecided
-whether to wait, or to leave a message and
-go home. Then the new impulse had occurred in
-her to go to Osborne&#39;s in the meantime, and then
-return to Furneaux. Hylda Prout had contrived
-to put a lump in her throat and a firebrand in her
-bosom, an arrogance, a hot rancor. How much
-of what the hussy had said against Osborne might
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page198" id="page198"></a>[pg&nbsp;198]</span>
-contain some truth she did not know; it had so
-scorched her, and inflamed her gorge, and kindled
-her eyes, that she had not had time to question its
-probability in her preoccupation with the gall and
-smart of it. But that Osborne should have opened
-the letter, and then written to say he had not&mdash;this
-was a vileness that the slightest reflection found
-to be incredible. The creature with the red hair
-certainly knew what was in the letter, but&mdash;might
-she not have opened it herself? And if any part
-of her statements were false, <i>all</i> might be false. An
-impatience to see Osborne instantly seized and transported
-Rosalind. He had honest eyes&mdash;had she not
-whispered it many a time to her heart? She hurried
-off to him.... And by accident Janoc went after
-her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne himself had arrived home some ten minutes
-before this, after a very cold reception from Mrs.
-Marsh at Porchester Gardens.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As he entered the library, he saw Hylda Prout
-standing in the middle of the room with a face of
-ecstasy which astonished him. She, lately arrived
-back from her visit to the Italian, had heard him
-come, and had leapt up to confront him, her heart
-galloping in her throat.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Anything wrong?&quot; he asked with a quick glance
-at her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Miss Marsh has been here.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah?... Miss Marsh?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She made a mad step toward him. The words
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page199" id="page199"></a>[pg&nbsp;199]</span>
-that she uttered rasped harshly. She did not recognize
-her own voice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I told her straight out that it is not the slightest
-good her running after you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You told her <i>what</i>?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Amazement struggled with indignation in his face.
-All the world seemed to have gone mad when the
-pale, studiously sedate secretary used such words of
-frenzy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I meant to stop&mdash;her pursuit of you.... Mr.
-Osborne&mdash;hear me&mdash;I&mdash;I....&quot; Excessive emotion
-overpowered her. In attempting to say more
-she panted with distress.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What is it all about, Miss Prout? Calm yourself,
-please&mdash;be quiet&quot;&mdash;he said it with some effort
-to express both his resentment and his authority.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Osborne&mdash;I warn you&mdash;I cannot endure&mdash;any
-rival&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who can&#39;t? you speak of a <i>rival</i>!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Heaven, give me strength&mdash;words to explain.
-Ah!...&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She had been standing with her left hand resting
-on a table, shivering like a sail in the wind, and now
-the hand suddenly gave way under her, and she sank
-after it, falling to the ground in a faint, while her
-head struck the edge of the table in her descent.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, if this isn&#39;t the limit,&quot; muttered Osborne,
-as he ran to her, calling loudly for Jenkins. He
-lifted her to a sofa, and, in his flurry, not knowing
-what else to do, wet her forehead with a little water
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page200" id="page200"></a>[pg&nbsp;200]</span>
-from a carafe. Jenkins had not heard his call, and
-by the time he looked round for a bell to summon
-help, her eyes unclosed themselves, and she smiled
-at him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are there....&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You feel better now?&quot; He sat on a chair at
-her head, looking down on her, wondering what inane
-words he should use to extricate both himself and
-her from an absurd position.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is all right.... I must have fainted. I
-have undergone a great strain, a dreadful strain.
-You should be sorry for me. Oh, I have loved&mdash;much.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Miss Prout&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, don&#39;t call me that, or you kill me. You
-should be sorry for me, if you have any pity, any
-shred of humanity in your heart. I have&mdash;passed
-through flames, and drunk of a cup of fire. Ten
-women, yes, ten&mdash;have hungered and wailed in me.
-I tell <i>you</i>&mdash;yet to whom should I tell it but to
-you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She smiled a ravished smile of pain; her hand fell
-upon his heavily; her restless head swung from side
-to side.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I am very sorry,&quot; said Osborne, forced to
-gentleness in spite of the anger that had consumed
-him earlier. &quot;It is impossible not to believe you
-sincere. But, you will admit, all this is very singular
-and unexpected. I am afraid now that I shall have
-to send you on a trip to&mdash;Switzerland; or else go
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page201" id="page201"></a>[pg&nbsp;201]</span>
-myself. Better you&mdash;it is chilling there, on the
-glaciers.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Yet the attempt at humor died when he looked at
-her face with its languishing, sick eyes, its expression
-of swooning luxury. She sighed deeply.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, you cannot escape me now, I think, or I
-you,&quot; she murmured. &quot;There are powers too profound
-to be run from when once at work, like the
-suction of whirlpools. If you don&#39;t love me, my
-love is a force enough for two, for a thousand. It
-will draw and compel you. Yes, I think so. It
-will either warm you, or burn you to ashes&mdash;and
-myself, too. Oh, I swear to Heaven! It will, it
-shall! You shouldn&#39;t have pressed my hand that
-night.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pressed your hand! on which night?&quot; asked Osborne,
-who had now turned quite pale, and wanted
-to run quickly out of the house but could not.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What, have you <i>forgotten</i>?&quot; she asked with
-tender reproach, gazing into his eyes; &quot;the night
-I was going to see my brother nine months ago, and
-you went with me to Euston, and in saying good-by
-you&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She suddenly covered her eyes with her fingers
-in a rapture at the memory.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne stared blankly at her. He recalled the
-farewell at Euston, which was accidental, but he certainly
-had no memory of having pressed her hand.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I loved you before,&quot; her lips just whispered in
-a pitiful assumption of confidence, &quot;but timidly, not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page202" id="page202"></a>[pg&nbsp;202]</span>
-admitting it to myself. With that pressure of your
-hand, I was done with maidenhood, my soul rushed
-to you. After that, you were mine, and I was
-yours.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The words almost fainted on her bitten under lip,
-and in Osborne, too, a rush of soul, or of blood, took
-place, a little flush of his forehead. It was a bewitching
-woman who lay there before him, with that
-fair freckle-splashed face couched in its cloud of red
-hair.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come, now,&quot; he said, valiantly striving after the
-commonplace, &quot;you are ill&mdash;you hardly know yet
-what you are saying.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She half sat up suddenly, bending eagerly toward
-him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is it pity? Is it &#39;yes&#39;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Please, please, let us forget that this has
-ever&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It <i>would</i> be &#39;yes&#39; instantly but for that Tormouth
-girl! Oh, drive her out of your mind! That
-cannot be&mdash;I could never, never permit it! For that
-reason alone&mdash;and besides, you are about to be arrested&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes: listen&mdash;I know more of what is going on
-than you know. The man Furneaux, who, for his
-own reasons, hates you, and is eager to injure you,
-has even more proofs against you than you are aware
-of. <i>I</i> happen to know that in his search of your
-trunks he has discovered something or other which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page203" id="page203"></a>[pg&nbsp;203]</span>
-he considers conclusive against you. And there is
-that housemaid at Feldisham Mansions, who screamed
-out &#39;Mr. Osborne did it!&#39;&mdash;Furneaux only pretended
-at the inquest that she was too ill to be present,
-because he did not want to produce the whole
-weight of his evidence just then. But he has her,
-too, safe up his sleeve, and <i>she</i> is willing to swear
-against you. And now he has got hold of your
-Saracen dagger. But don&#39;t you fear <i>him</i>: I shall
-know how to foil him at the last; I alone have knowledge
-that will surely make him look a fool. Trust
-in me! I tell you so. But I can&#39;t help your being
-arrested&mdash;that must happen. Believe me, for I
-know. And let that once take place, and that Tormouth
-girl will never look at you again. I understand
-her class, with its prides and prejudices&mdash;she
-will never marry you&mdash;innocent or guilty&mdash;if you
-have once stood in the dock at an assize court. Such
-as she does not know what love is. <i>I</i> would take
-you if you were a thousand times guilty&mdash;and I
-only can prove you innocent&mdash;even if you were guilty&mdash;because
-I am yours&mdash;your preordained wife&mdash;oh,
-I shall die of my love&mdash;yes, kiss me&mdash;yes&mdash;now&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The torrent of words ended in a fierce fight for
-breath. Her eyes were glaring like two lakes of
-conflagration, her cheeks crimson, her forehead pale.
-Unexpectedly, eagerly, she caught him round the
-neck in an embrace from which there was no escape.
-She drew him almost to his knees, and pressed his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page204" id="page204"></a>[pg&nbsp;204]</span>
-lips to hers with a passion that frightened and repelled
-him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And he was in the thick of this unhappy and ridiculous
-experience when he heard behind him an
-astonished &quot;Oh!&quot; from someone, while some other
-person seemed to laugh in angry embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was Jenkins who had uttered the &quot;Oh!&quot; and
-when the horrified Osborne glanced round he saw
-Rosalind&#39;s eyes peering over Jenkins&#39;s shoulder. She
-it was who had so lightly, so perplexedly, laughed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Before he could free himself and spring up she
-was gone. She had murmured to Jenkins: &quot;Some
-other time,&quot; and fled.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As she ran out blindly, and was springing into
-the cab, Janoc, in pursuit of her, drove up. In an
-instant he was looking in through the door of the
-cab.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Miss Marsh?&quot; he inquired.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">His hands met, wringing in distress.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are the lady I am searching for, the mistress
-of the young girl Pauline Dessaulx, is it not? I am
-her brother. You see&mdash;you can see&mdash;the resemblance
-in our faces. She threatens this instant to
-commit the suicide&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind was forced to forget her own sufferings
-in this new terror.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pauline!&quot; she cried, &quot;I am not her employer.
-Moreover, she is ill&mdash;in bed&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She has escaped to my lodging during your absence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page205" id="page205"></a>[pg&nbsp;205]</span>
-from home! Something dreadful has happened
-to her&mdash;she speaks of the loss of some weapon&mdash;one
-cannot understand her ravings! And unless
-she sees you&mdash;her hands cannot be kept from destroying
-herself&mdash;Oh, lady! lady! Come to my sweet
-sister&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind looked at him with the scared eyes of one
-who hears, yet not understands. There was a mad
-probability in all this, since Pauline <i>might</i> have discovered
-the loss of the daggers; and, in her present
-anguish of spirit, the thought that the man&#39;s story
-might only be a device to lure her into some trap
-never entered Rosalind&#39;s head. Indeed, in her weariness
-of everything, she regarded the mission of succor
-as a relief.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where do you live? I will go with you,&quot; she
-said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Lady! Lady! Thank God!&quot; he exclaimed.
-&quot;It is not far from here, in Soho.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You must come in my cab,&quot; said Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Janoc ran to pay his own cabman, came back instantly,
-and they started eastward, just as Osborne,
-with the wild face of a man falling down a precipice,
-rushed to his door, calling after them frantically:
-&quot;Hi, there! Stop! Stop! For Heaven&#39;s sake&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But the cab went on its way.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page206" id="page206"></a>[pg&nbsp;206]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII<br/>
-THE SARACEN DAGGER</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Next morning, just as the clock was striking
-eight, Osborne was rising from his bed after a night
-of unrest when Jenkins rapped at the door and came
-in, deferential and calm.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mrs. Marsh below to see you, sir,&quot; he announced.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne blinked and stared with the air of a man
-not thoroughly awake, though it was his mind, not
-his body, that was torpid.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mrs.,&quot; he said, &quot;not Miss?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, sir, Mrs.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ll be there in five minutes,&quot; he hissed with a
-fierce arousing of his faculties, and never before had
-he flung on his clothes in such a flurry of haste;
-in less than five minutes he was flying down the stairs.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Forgive me!&quot; broke from his lips, as he entered
-the drawing-room, and &quot;Forgive me!&quot; his visitor
-was saying to him in the same instant.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It was pitiful to see her&mdash;she, ever so enthroned in
-serenity, from whom such a thing as agitation had
-seemed so remote, was wildly agitated now. That
-pathetic pallor of the aged when their heart is in
-labor now underlay her skin. Her lips, her fingers,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page207" id="page207"></a>[pg&nbsp;207]</span>
-trembled; the tip of her nose, showing under her
-half-raised veil, was pinched.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The early hour&mdash;it is so distressing&mdash;I beg your
-forgiveness&mdash;I am in most dreadful trouble&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Please sit down,&quot; he said, touching her hand,
-&quot;and let me get you some breakfast.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, nothing&mdash;I couldn&#39;t eat&mdash;it is Rosalind&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now he, too, went a shade paler.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What of Rosalind?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do you by chance know anything of her whereabouts?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She has disappeared.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her head bowed, and a sob broke from her bosom.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Disappeared&quot;&mdash;his lips breathed the word foolishly
-after her, while he looked at her almost stupidly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mrs. Marsh&#39;s hand dropped with a little nervous
-fling.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She has not been at home all night. She left
-the house apparently between four and five yesterday&mdash;I
-was out; then I came in; then you called....
-She has not come home&mdash;it is impossible to conceive....&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, she has slept with some friend,&quot; he said,
-feeling that the world reeled around him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, she has never done that without letting me
-know.... She would surely have telegraphed me....
-It is quite impossible even to imagine what
-dispensation of God&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page208" id="page208"></a>[pg&nbsp;208]</span>
-She stopped, her lips working; suddenly covering
-her eyes with her hand, as another sob gushed from
-her, she humbly muttered:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Forgive me. I am nearly out of my senses.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He sprang up, touched a bell, and whispered to
-Jenkins, who instantly was with him: &quot;Brandy&mdash;<i>quick</i>.&quot;
-Then, running to kneel at the old lady&#39;s
-chair, he touched her left hand, saying: &quot;Take heart&mdash;trust
-in God&#39;s Providence&mdash;rely upon <i>me</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You believe, then, that you may find her&mdash;&mdash;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Surely: whatever else I may fail in, I could not
-fail now.... Just one sip of this to oblige me.&quot;
-Jenkins had stolen in, and she drank a little out of
-the glass that Osborne offered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You must think it odd,&quot; she said, &quot;that I come
-to you. I could not give a reason&mdash;but I was so
-distracted and benumbed. I thought of you, and
-felt impelled&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You were right,&quot; he said. &quot;I am the proper
-person to appeal to in this case. Besides, she was
-here yesterday&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Rosalind?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The fact is&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, she was here? Well, that is something discovered!
-I did well to come. Yes&mdash;you were saying&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will tell you everything. Three days ago she
-wrote me a letter&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Rosalind?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you astonished?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page209" id="page209"></a>[pg&nbsp;209]</span>
-&quot;I understood&mdash;I thought&mdash;that your friendship
-with her had suffered some&mdash;check.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That is so,&quot; said Osborne with a bent head.
-&quot;You may remember the night of the dance at the
-Abbey down at Tormouth. That night, when I
-was full of hopes of her favor, she suddenly cast
-me off like a burr from her robe&mdash;I am not even
-now sure why&mdash;unless she had discovered that my
-name was not Glyn.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If so, she no doubt considered that a sufficient
-reason, Mr. Osborne,&quot; said Mrs. Marsh, a chill in
-her tone. &quot;One does not like the names of one&#39;s
-friends to be detachable labels.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t think that I blame her one bit!&quot; cried
-Osborne&mdash;&quot;no more than I blame myself. I was
-ordered by&mdash;the police to take a name. There
-seemed to be good reason for it. I only blame my
-baleful fate. Anyway, so it was. She dropped me&mdash;into
-the Pit. But she was at the inquest&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Indeed? At the inquest. She was there.
-Singular.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Deeply veiled. She didn&#39;t think, I suppose, that
-I should know. But I should feel her presence in
-the blackest&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Osborne&mdash;I must beg&mdash;do not make your
-declarations to <i>me</i>&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;May I not? Be good&mdash;be pitiful. Here am I,
-charged with guilt, conscious of innocence&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let us suppose all that, but are you a man free
-to make declarations of love? One would say that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page210" id="page210"></a>[pg&nbsp;210]</span>
-you are, as it were, married for some time to come
-to the lady who has lately been buried.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;True,&quot; said Osborne&mdash;&quot;in the eyes of the world,
-in a formal way: but in the eyes of those near to
-me? Oh, I appeal to your indulgence, your friendship,
-your heart. Tell me that you forgive, that
-you understand me! and then I shall be so exuberantly
-gladsome that in the sweep of my exhilaration
-I shall go straight and find her, wherever
-she lies hidden.... Will you not say &#39;yes&#39; on
-those terms?&quot; He smiled wanly, with a hungry
-cajolery, looking into her face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But she did not unbend.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let us first find her! and then other things may
-be discussed. But to find her! it is past all knowing&mdash;Oh,
-deep is the trouble of my soul to-day, Mr.
-Osborne!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wait&mdash;hope&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you were speaking of yesterday.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes. She was at the inquest: and when I saw
-her&mdash;think how I felt! I said: &#39;She believes in
-me.&#39; And three days after that she wrote to
-me&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My poor Rosalind!&quot; murmured Mrs. Marsh.
-&quot;She suffered more than I imagined. Her nature
-is more recondite than the well in which Truth dwells.
-What <i>could</i> she have written to you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That I don&#39;t know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How&mdash;&mdash;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;As I was about to open the letter, a telegram
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page211" id="page211"></a>[pg&nbsp;211]</span>
-came from her. &#39;Don&#39;t read my letter: I will call
-for it unopened in person,&#39; it said. Picture my agony
-then! And now I am going to tell you something
-that will move you to compassion for me, if you
-never had it before. Yesterday she called for the
-letter. I was with you at Porchester Gardens at that
-very hour. When I came home, an extraordinary
-scene awaited me with my secretary, a Miss
-Prout.... I tell you this as to a friend, a
-Mother, who will believe even the incredible. An
-extraordinary scene.... Without the least warning,
-the least encouragement that I know of, Miss
-Prout declared herself in love with me. While I stood
-astonished, she fainted. I bore her to a sofa. Soon
-after she opened her eyes, she&mdash;drew&mdash;me to her&mdash;no,
-I will say that I was <i>not</i> to blame; and I was in
-that situation, when the library door opened, and who
-should be there looking at me but&mdash;yes&mdash;<i>she</i>.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mrs. Marsh&#39;s eyes fell. There was a little pressure
-of the lips that revealed scant sympathy with
-compromising situations. And suddenly a thought
-turned her skin to a ghastlier white. What if the
-sight of that scene accounted for Rosalind&#39;s disappearance?
-If Rosalind was dead&mdash;by her own
-act? The old lady had often to admit that she did
-not know the deepest deeps of her daughter&#39;s character.
-But she banished the half-thought hurriedly,
-contenting herself with saying aloud:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That made the second time she came to you
-yesterday. Why a second time?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page212" id="page212"></a>[pg&nbsp;212]</span>
-&quot;I have no idea!&quot; was the dismayed reply. &quot;She
-uttered not one word&mdash;just turned away, and hurried
-out to her waiting cab&mdash;and by the time I could
-wring myself free, and run after her, the cab was
-going off. I shouted&mdash;I ran at top speed&mdash;she
-would not stop. I think a man was in the cab with
-her&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A man, you say?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think so. I just caught a glimpse of a face
-that looked out sideways&mdash;a dark man he seemed to
-me&mdash;I&#39;m not sure.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It becomes more and more mysterious!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, we must be making a move to do something&mdash;first,
-have you breakfasted?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She had eaten nothing! Osborne persuaded her
-to join him in a hurried meal, during which his
-motor-car arrived, and soon they set off together.
-He was for going straight to the police, but she
-shrank from the notoriety of that final exposure
-until she had the clear assurance that it was absolutely
-necessary. So they drove from friend to
-friend of the Marshes who might possibly have some
-information; then drove home to Mrs. Prawser&#39;s to
-see if there was news. Osborne had luncheon there&mdash;a
-polite pretense at eating, since they were too
-full of wonder and woe to care for food. By this
-time Mrs. Marsh had unbent somewhat to Osborne,
-and humbly enough had said to him, &quot;Oh, find her,
-and if she is alive, every other consideration shall
-weigh less than my boundless gratitude to you!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page213" id="page213"></a>[pg&nbsp;213]</span>
-After the luncheon they again drove about London,
-making inquiries without hope wherever the
-least chance of a clew lay; and finally, near six, they
-went to Scotland Yard.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To Inspector Winter in his office the whole tale
-was told; and, after sitting at his desk in a long
-silence, frowning upon the story, he said at last:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, there is, of course, a great deal more in
-this than meets the eye.&quot; He spun round to Mrs.
-Marsh: &quot;Has your daughter undergone anything to
-upset her at home lately?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nothing,&quot; was the answer. &quot;One of the
-servants in the house has had a sort of hysteria:
-but that did not trouble Rosalind beyond the mere
-exercise of womanly sympathy.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Any visitors? Any odd circumstance in that
-way?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No unusual visitors&mdash;except an Inspector Furneaux,
-who&mdash;twice, I think&mdash;had interviews with her.
-She was not very explicit in telling me the subject
-of them.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Inspector Furneaux,&quot; muttered Winter. To
-himself he said: &quot;I thought somehow that this thing
-was connected with Feldisham Mansions.&quot; And at
-once now, with a little start, he asked: &quot;What, by
-the way, is the name of the servant who has had the
-hysteria?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Her name is Pauline,&quot; answered Mrs. Marsh&mdash;&quot;a French girl.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, Pauline!&quot; said Winter&mdash;&quot;just so.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page214" id="page214"></a>[pg&nbsp;214]</span>
-The fewness of his words gave proof of the activity
-of his brain. He knew how Clarke had obtained
-the diary of Rose de Bercy from Pauline, and he
-felt that Pauline was in some undetermined way connected
-with the murder. He knew, too, that she
-was now to be found somewhere in Porchester Gardens,
-and had intended looking her up for general
-inquiries before two days had passed. That Pauline
-might actually have had a hand in the crime had
-never entered into his speculations&mdash;he was far too
-hot in these days on the trail of Furneaux, who
-was being constantly watched by his instructions.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think I will see this Pauline to-night,&quot; he said.
-&quot;Meantime, I can only recommend you to hope, Mrs.
-Marsh. These things generally have some simple
-explanation in the end, and turn out less black than
-they look. Expect me, then, at your residence within
-an hour.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But when Mrs. Marsh and Osborne were gone he
-was perplexed, remembering that this was Thursday
-evening, for he had promised himself on this very
-evening to be at a spot which he had been told by
-one of his men that Furneaux had visited on two
-previous Thursday evenings, a spot where he would
-see a sight that would interest him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">While he was on the horns of the dilemma as to
-going there, or going to Pauline, Inspector Clarke
-entered: and at once Winter shelved upon Clarke
-the business of sounding Pauline.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page215" id="page215"></a>[pg&nbsp;215]</span>
-&quot;You seem to have a lot of power over her&mdash;to
-make her give up the diary so promptly,&quot; he said
-to Clarke. &quot;Go to her, then, get at the bottom
-of this business, and see if you cannot hit upon some
-connection between the disappearance of Miss Marsh
-and the murder of the actress.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke stood up with alacrity, and started off.
-Presently Winter himself was in a cab, making for
-the Brompton Cemetery.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As for Clarke, the instant he was within sight of
-Porchester Gardens, his whole interest turned from
-Pauline Dessaulx and the vanished Rosalind to two
-men whom he saw in the street almost opposite the
-house in which Pauline lay. They were Janoc and
-the Italian, Antonio, and Antonio seemed to be reasoning
-and pleading with Janoc, who had the gestures
-of a man distracted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hanging about near them was a third man, whom
-Clarke hardly noticed&mdash;a loafer in a long coat of
-rags, a hat without any crown, and visible toes&mdash;a
-diminutive loafer&mdash;Furneaux, in fact, who, for his
-own reasons, was also interested in Janoc in these
-days.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Every now and again Janoc looked up at the
-windows of Mrs. Marsh&#39;s residence with frantic
-gestures, and a crying face&mdash;a thing which greatly
-struck Clarke; and anon the loafer passed by Janoc
-and Antonio, unobserved, peering into the gutter for
-the cast-aside ends of cigars and cigarettes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Instantly Clarke stole down the opposite side of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page216" id="page216"></a>[pg&nbsp;216]</span>
-the square into which the house faced, looked about
-him, saw no one, climbed some railings, and then
-through the bushes stole near to the pavement where
-the foreigners stood. There, concealed in the shrubbery,
-he could clearly hear Janoc say:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Am I never to see her? My little one! But
-I am about to see her! I will knock at that door,
-and clasp her in my arms.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My friend, be reasonable!&quot; pleaded Antonio,
-holding the arm of Janoc, who made more show of
-tearing himself free than he made real effort&mdash;with
-that melodramatic excess of gesture to which the
-Latin races are prone. &quot;Be reasonable! Oh, she
-is wiser than you! She has hidden herself from you
-because she realizes the danger of being seen near
-you even in the dark. Be sure that she has longed
-to see you as keenly as you hunger to see her; but
-she feels that there must be no meeting with so many
-spying eyes in the world&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let them spy! but they shall not keep me from
-the embrace of one whom I love, of one who has
-suffered,&quot; said Janoc, covering his face. &quot;Oh, when
-I think of your cruelty&mdash;you who all the time knew
-where she was and did not tell me!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I confess it, but I acted for the best,&quot; said Antonio.
-&quot;She wrote to me three days after the
-murder, so that she might have news of you. I met
-her, and received from her that bit of lace from the
-actress&#39;s dress which I put into Osborne&#39;s bag at
-Tormouth, to throw still more doubt upon him. But
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page217" id="page217"></a>[pg&nbsp;217]</span>
-she implored me not to reveal to you where she was,
-lest, if you should be seen with her, suspicion of the
-murder should fall upon you&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Her heart&#39;s goodness! My sister! My little
-one!&quot; exclaimed Janoc.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Only be patient!&quot; wooed Antonio&mdash;&quot;do not
-go to her. Soon she will make her escape to France,
-and you also, and then you will embrace the one
-the other. And now you have no longer cause for
-much anxiety as to her capture, for the dagger cannot
-be found with her, since it lies safe in your room
-in your own keeping, and to-night you will drop it
-into the river, where it will be buried forever. Do
-not go to her&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">These were the last words of the dialogue that
-Clarke heard, for the tidings that &quot;the dagger&quot;
-was in Janoc&#39;s room sent him creeping away through
-the bushes. He was soon over the railings and in
-a cab, making for Soho; and behind him in another
-cab went Furneaux, whose driver, looking at his
-fare&#39;s attire, had said, &quot;Pay first, and then I&#39;ll take
-you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke, for his part, had no difficulty in entering
-Janoc&#39;s room with his skeleton-keys&mdash;indeed, he had
-been there before! Nor was there any difficulty in
-finding the dagger. There it lay, with another, in
-the narrow cardboard box into which Rosalind had
-put both weapons on finding them behind the shelf
-of books in Pauline&#39;s room.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke&#39;s eyes, as they fell at last upon that Saracen
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page218" id="page218"></a>[pg&nbsp;218]</span>
-blade which he knew so well without ever having
-seen it, pored, gloated over it, with a glitter in
-them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He relocked the trunk, relocked the door, and with
-the box held fast, ran down the three stairs to his
-cab&mdash;feeling himself a made man, a head taller than
-all Scotland Yard that night. He put his precious
-find on the interior front seat of the cab&mdash;a four-wheeler;
-for in his eagerness he had jumped into the
-first wheeled thing that he had seen, and, having
-lodged the box inside, being anxious to hide it, he
-made a step forward toward the driver, to tell him
-whither he had now to drive. Then he entered,
-shut the door, and, as the vehicle drove off, put out
-his hand to the box to feast his eyes on its contents
-again. But the box was gone&mdash;no daggers were
-there!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Stop!&quot; howled Clarke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The cab stopped, but it was all in vain. The
-loafer, who had opened the other door of the cab
-with swift deftness while Clarke spoke to the driver,
-had long since turned a near corner with box and
-daggers, and was well away. Clarke, standing in
-the street, glanced up at the sky, down at the ground,
-and stared round about, like a man who does not
-know in which world he finds himself.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Meantime, Furneaux hailed another cab, again
-having to pay in advance, and started off on the drive
-to Brompton Cemetery&mdash;where Winter was already
-in hiding, awaiting his arrival.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page219" id="page219"></a>[pg&nbsp;219]</span>
-Something like a storm of wind was tearing the
-night to pieces, and the trees of the place of graves
-gesticulated as if they were wrangling. The moon
-had moved up, all involved in heavy clouds whose
-grotesque shapes her glare struck into garish contrasts
-of black against silver. Furneaux bent his
-way against the gale, holding on his dilapidated
-hat, his rags fluttering fantastically behind him, till
-he came to the one grave he sought&mdash;the cheerless
-resting-place of Rose de Bercy. The very spirit of
-gloom and loneliness brooded here, in a nook almost
-inclosed with foliage. As yet no stone had been
-erected. The grave was just a narrow oblong of
-red marl and turf, which the driven rain now
-made soft and yielding. On it lay two withered
-wreaths.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux, standing by it, took off his hat, and
-the rain flecked his hair. Then from a breast-pocket
-of his rags he took out a little funnel of
-paper, out of which he cast some Parma violets upon
-the mound. This was Thursday&mdash;and Rose de
-Bercy had been murdered on a Thursday.</p>
-<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 488px;">
-<img src="images/ill003.jpg" width="488" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p class="center">Then from a breast-pocket he took a little funnel of paper</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><i>Page 219</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="indent">After that he stood there perhaps twenty minutes,
-his head bent in meditation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then he peered cautiously into the dark about him,
-took a penknife with a good-sized blade from a
-pocket, and with it set to work to make a grave
-within the grave&mdash;a grave just big and deep enough
-to contain the box with the daggers. He buried his
-singular tribute and covered it over.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page220" id="page220"></a>[pg&nbsp;220]</span>
-After this he waited silently, apparently lost in
-thought, for some ten minutes more.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then, with that curious omniscience which sometimes
-seemed to belong to the man, he sent a strange
-cry into the gloom.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you anywhere about, Winter?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Nor was there anything aggressive in the call.
-It was subdued, sad, touched with solemnity, like the
-voice of a man who had wept, and dried his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was little delay before Winter appeared
-out of the shadow of his ambush.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am!&quot; he said; he was amazed beyond expression,
-yet his colleague had ever been incomprehensible
-in some things.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Windy night,&quot; said Furneaux, in an absurd affectation
-of ease.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And wet,&quot; said Winter, utterly at a loss how to
-take the other.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Odd that we should both come to visit the poor
-thing&#39;s grave at the same hour,&quot; remarked Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It <i>may</i> be odd,&quot; agreed Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was a bitter silence.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Then Furneaux&#39;s cold voice was heard again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I dare say, now, it seems to you a suspicious thing
-that I should come to this grave at all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why should it, Furneaux?&quot; asked his chief
-bluntly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, why?&quot; said Furneaux. &quot;I once knew her.
-I told you from the first that I knew her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I remember: you did.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page221" id="page221"></a>[pg&nbsp;221]</span>
-&quot;You asked no questions as to how I came to
-know her, or how long, or under what circumstances.
-Why did you not ask? Such questions occur among
-friends: and I&mdash;might have told you. But you did
-not ask.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell me now.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Winter, I&#39;d see you hanged first!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The words came in a sharp rasp&mdash;his first sign of
-anger.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hanged?&quot; repeated Winter, flushing. &quot;You&#39;ll
-see <i>me</i> hanged? <i>I</i> usually see the hanging, Furneaux!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sometimes you do: sometimes you are not half
-smart enough!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux barked the taunt like a dog at him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Of the two, the big bluff man of Anglo-Saxon
-breed, mystified and saddened though he was, showed
-more self-control than the excitable little man more
-French than English.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This is an occasion when I leave the smartness
-to you, Furneaux,&quot; he said bitterly, &quot;though there
-is a sort of clever duplicity which ought to be
-drained out of the blood, even if it cost a limb, or
-a life.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, you prove yourself a trusty friend&mdash;loyal to
-the backbone!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For Heaven&#39;s sake, make no appeal to our friendship!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What! Appeal? I? Oh, this is too much!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are trying me beyond endurance. Can&#39;t
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page222" id="page222"></a>[pg&nbsp;222]</span>
-you understand? Why keep up this farce of pretense?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was genuine emotion in Winter&#39;s voice, but
-Furneaux&#39;s harsh laugh mingled with the soughing
-of the laden branches that tossed in the wind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Farce, indeed!&quot; he cried. &quot;I refuse to continue
-it. Go, then, and be punished&mdash;you deserve
-it&mdash;you, whom I trusted more than a brother.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He turned on his heel, and made off, a weird figure
-in those wind-blown tatters, and Winter watched him
-with eyes that had in them some element of fear,
-almost of hope, for in that hour he could have forgiven
-Furneaux were he standing by his corpse.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But the instinct of duty soon came uppermost.
-He had seen his colleague bury something in the
-grave, and the briefest search brought to light the
-daggers in their cardboard coffin. Even in that
-overwhelming gloom of night and shivering yews he
-recognized one of the weapons. A groan broke from
-him, as it were, in protest.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mad!&quot; he sighed, &quot;stark, staring mad&mdash;to
-leave this here, where he knew I must find it. My
-poor Furneaux! Perhaps that is best. I must
-defer action for a few hours, if only to give him a
-last chance.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">While the Chief Inspector was stumbling to the
-gate of the Cemetery&mdash;which was long since closed
-to all except those who could show an official permit&mdash;one
-of his subordinates was viewing the Feldisham
-Mansions crime in a far different light. Inspector
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page223" id="page223"></a>[pg&nbsp;223]</span>
-Clarke, in whom elation at his discovery was chastened
-by chagrin at his loss, was walking towards
-Scotland Yard and saying to himself:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can prove, anyhow, that I took the rotten
-things from his trunk. So now, Monsieur Janoc,
-the next and main item is to arrest you!&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page224" id="page224"></a>[pg&nbsp;224]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII<br/>
-OSBORNE MAKES A VOW</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">When Inspector Winter returned to his office from
-the cemetery he sat at his desk, gazing at the two
-daggers before him, and awaiting the coming of
-Clarke, from whom he expected to receive a full report
-of an interview with Pauline Dessaulx in connection
-with the disappearance of Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There lay that long sought-for Saracen dagger
-at last: and Furneaux had it, had been caught burying
-it in the grave of her who had been killed by it.
-Was not this fact, added to the fact that Furneaux
-was seen in Osborne&#39;s museum before the murder&mdash;was
-it not enough to justify&mdash;indeed, enough to demand&mdash;Furneaux&#39;s
-arrest straight away? And
-Furneaux had visited Rose de Bercy that night&mdash;had
-been seen by Bertha Seward, the actress&#39;s cook!
-And yet Winter hesitated.... What had been
-Furneaux&#39;s motive? There was as yet no ray of
-light as to that, though Winter had caused elaborate
-inquiries to be made in Jersey as to Furneaux&#39;s
-earlier career there. And there were <i>two</i> daggers
-buried, not one....</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page225" id="page225"></a>[pg&nbsp;225]</span>
-&quot;Where does <i>this</i> come in, this <i>second</i> dagger...?&quot;
-wondered Winter, a maze of doubt and
-horror clouding his brain.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Just then Clarke arrived, rather breathless, jubilant,
-excited, but Winter had already hidden the daggers
-instinctively&mdash;throwing them into a drawer of
-his writing-desk.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, what news of Miss Marsh?&quot; he asked,
-with a semblance of official calm he was far from
-feeling.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The fact is, sir, I haven&#39;t been to Pauline
-Des&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I was nearly at her door when I came across
-Gaston Janoc&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Heavens!&quot; muttered Winter in despair.
-&quot;You and your eternal Janocs&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The smiling Clarke looked at his chief in full confidence
-that he would not be reprimanded for having
-disobeyed orders. Suddenly making three steps on
-tiptoe, he said in Winter&#39;s ear:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t be too startled&mdash;here&#39;s an amazing piece
-of information for you, sir&mdash;<i>it was Gaston Janoc</i>
-who committed the Feldisham Mansions murder!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter stared at him without real comprehension.
-&quot;Gaston Janoc!&quot; his lips repeated.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I want to apply to-morrow for a warrant for
-his arrest,&quot; crowed Clarke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But, man alive!&mdash;don&#39;t drive me distracted,&quot;
-cried out Winter; &quot;what are you talking about?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page226" id="page226"></a>[pg&nbsp;226]</span>
-&quot;Oh, I am not acting on any impulse,&quot; said
-Clarke, placidly satisfied, enthroned on facts; &quot;I
-may tell you now that I have been working on the Feldisham
-Mansions affair from the first on my own
-account. I couldn&#39;t help it. I was drawn to it
-as a needle by a magnet, and I now have all the
-threads&mdash;ten distinct proofs&mdash;in my hands. It
-was Gaston Janoc did it! Just listen to this,
-sir&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, do as you like about your wretched Anarchist,
-Clarke,&quot; said Winter pestered, waving him
-away; &quot;I can&#39;t stop now. I sent you to do something,
-and you should have done it. Miss Marsh&#39;s
-mother is half dead with fright and grief; the thing
-is pressing, and I&#39;ll go myself.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">With a snatch at his hat, he rushed out, Clarke
-following sullenly to go home, though on his way
-northward, by sheer force of habit, he strolled
-through Soho, looked up at Janoc&#39;s windows, and
-presently, catching sight of Janoc himself coming
-out of the restaurant on the ground floor, nodded
-after him, muttering to himself: &quot;Soon now&mdash;&mdash;&quot;
-and went off.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But had he shadowed his Janoc just then, it might
-have been well! The Frenchman first went into a
-French shop labeled &quot;Vins et Comestibles,&quot; where he
-bought slices of sausage and a bottle of cheap wine,
-from which he got the cork drawn&mdash;he already carried
-half a loaf of bread wrapped in paper, and with
-bread, sausage, and wine, bent his way through
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page227" id="page227"></a>[pg&nbsp;227]</span>
-spitting rain and high wind, his coat collar
-turned up round his neck, to a house in Poland
-Street.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">An unoccupied house: its window-glass thicker
-than itself with grime, broken in some of the panes,
-while in others were roughly daubed the words: &quot;To
-Let.&quot; But he possessed a key, went in, picked up
-a candlestick in the passage, and lit the candle-end
-it contained.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At the end of the passage he went down a narrow
-staircase of wood, then down some stone steps, to
-the door of a back cellar: and this, too, he opened
-with a key.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind was crouching on the floor in the corner
-farthest from the door, her head bent down, her feet
-tucked under her skirt. She had been asleep: for
-the air in there was very heavy, the cellar hardly
-twelve feet square, no windows, and the slightest
-movement roused a cloud of dust. The walls were
-of rough stone, without break or feature, save three
-little vaulted caves like ovens in the wall facing the
-door, made to contain wine bottles and small barrels:
-in fact, one barrel and several empty bottles now lay
-about in the dust. Besides, there were sardine tins
-and a tin of mortadel, and relics of sausage and
-bread, with which Janoc had lately supplied his prisoner,
-with a bottle half full of wine, and one of
-water: all showing very dimly in the feeble rays of
-the candle.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She looked at him, without moving, just raising
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page228" id="page228"></a>[pg&nbsp;228]</span>
-her scornful eyes and no more, and he, holding up
-the light, looked at her a good time.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Lady,&quot; he said at last, &quot;I have brought you
-some meat, wine, and bread.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She made no answer. He stepped forward, and
-laid them by her side; then walked back to the door,
-as if to go out, coughing at the dust; but stopped
-and leant his back on the wall near the door, his
-legs crossed, looking down at her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Lady,&quot; he said presently, &quot;you still remain fixed
-in your obstinacy?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">No answer: only her wide-open reproving eyes
-dwelt on him with their steady accusation like a conscience,
-and her hand stuck and stuck many times
-with a hat-pin her hat which lay on her lap. Her
-gown appeared to be very frowsy and unkempt now;
-her hair was untidy, and quite gray with dust on
-one side, her face was begrimed and stained with
-the tracks of tears; but her lips were firm, and the
-wonderful eyes, chiding, disdainful, gave no sign of
-a drooping spirit.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You will say nothing to me?&quot; asked Janoc.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">No answer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is it that you think I may relent and let you
-free, lady, because my heart weakens at your suffering?
-Do not imagine such a thing of me! The
-more you are beautiful, the more you are sublime in
-your torture, the more I adore you, the more my
-heart pours out tears of blood for you, the more
-I am inflexible in my will. You do not know me&mdash;I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page229" id="page229"></a>[pg&nbsp;229]</span>
-am a man, I am not a wind; a mind, not an emotion.
-Oh, pity is strong in me, love is strong; but
-what is strongest of all is self-admiration, my worship
-of intelligence. And have I not made it impossible
-that you should be let free without conditions
-by my confession to you that it was my sister
-Pauline who killed the actress? I tell you again it
-was Pauline who killed her. It was not a murder!
-It was an assassination&mdash;a political assassination.
-Mademoiselle de Bercy had proved a traitress to the
-group of Internationals to which she belonged: she
-was condemned to death; the lot fell upon Pauline
-to execute the sentence; and on the day appointed
-she executed it, having first stolen from Mr. Osborne
-the &#39;celt&#39; and the dagger, so as to cast the suspicion
-upon him. I tell you this of my sister&mdash;of one
-who to me is dearest on earth; and, having told you
-all this, is it any longer possible that I should set
-you free without conditions? You see, do you not,
-that it is impossible?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">No answer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I only ask you to promise&mdash;to give your simple
-word&mdash;not to say, or hint, to anyone that Pauline
-had the daggers. What a risk I take! What trust
-in you! I do not know you&mdash;I but trust blindly
-in the highly-evolved, that divine countenance which
-is yours; and since it was with the object of saving
-my sister that you came here with me, my gratitude
-to you deepens my trust. Give me, then, this promise,
-Miss Marsh!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page230" id="page230"></a>[pg&nbsp;230]</span>
-Now her lips opened a little to form the word
-&quot;No,&quot; which he could just catch.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sublime!&quot; he cried&mdash;&quot;and I am no less sublime.
-If I was rich, if I had a fair name, and if I could
-dare to hope to win the love of a lady such as you,
-how favored of the gods I should be! But that is&mdash;a
-dream. Here, then, you will remain, until the
-day that Pauline is safely hidden in France: and on
-that day&mdash;since for myself I care little&mdash;I will open
-this door to you: never before. Meanwhile, tell me
-if you think of anything more that I can do for your
-comfort.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">No answer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-night.&quot; He turned to go.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You made me a promise,&quot; she said at the last
-moment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have kept it,&quot; he said. &quot;This afternoon, at
-great risk to myself, I wrote to your mother the
-words: &#39;Your daughter is alive and safe.&#39; Are you
-satisfied?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thank you,&quot; she said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Good-night,&quot; he murmured again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Having locked the door, he waited five minutes outside
-silently, to hear if she sobbed or wailed in there
-in the utter dark: but no sound came to him. He
-went upstairs, put out the light, put down the candlestick
-in the passage, and was just drawing back
-the door latch, when he was aware of a strong step
-marching quickly along an almost deserted pavement.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page231" id="page231"></a>[pg&nbsp;231]</span>
-After a little he peeped out and recognized the
-heavy figure of Inspector Winter. Even Janoc, the
-dreamer, whose dreams took such tragic shape, was
-surprised for an instant.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;How limited is the consciousness of men!&quot; he
-muttered. &quot;That so-called clever detective little
-guesses what he has just passed by.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But Winter, too, might have indulged in the same
-reflection: &quot;How limited the consciousness of Janoc!
-He doesn&#39;t know where I am passing to&mdash;to visit
-and question his sister Pauline!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter, a little further on, took a taxicab to Porchester
-Gardens, got out at the bottom of the street,
-and was walking on to Mrs. Marsh&#39;s temporary residence,
-when he saw Furneaux coming the opposite
-way.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter wished to pretend not to see him, but Furneaux
-spoke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, Providence throws us together somehow!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah! Why blame Providence?&quot; said Winter,
-with rather a snarl.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not two hours ago there was our chance meeting
-by that graveside&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The &quot;chance&quot; irritated Winter to the quick.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You have all the faults of the French nature,&quot;
-he said bitterly, &quot;without any of its merits: its levity
-without its industry, its pettiness without its minuteness&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And you the English frankness without its honesty.
-The chief thing about a Frenchman is his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page232" id="page232"></a>[pg&nbsp;232]</span>
-intelligence. At least you do not deny that I am
-intelligent?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have thought you intelligent. I am damned
-if I think you so any longer.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, you will again&mdash;soon&mdash;when I wish it. We
-met just now at a grave, and there was more buried
-in that grave than the grave-diggers know: and we
-both stood looking at it: but I fancy there were more
-X-rays in my eye to see what was buried there than
-in yours!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Driven beyond the bounds of patience, Winter
-threw out an arm in angry protest.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ha! ha! ha!&quot; tittered Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">An important official at Scotland Yard must learn
-early the value of self-control. Consumed with a
-certain sense of the monstrous in this display of untimely
-mirth, Winter only gnawed a bristle or two
-of his mustache. He looked strangely at Furneaux,
-and they lingered together, loath to part, having
-still something bitter and rankling to say, but not
-knowing quite what, since men who have been all in
-all to each other cannot quarrel without some childish
-tone of schoolboy spite mingling in the wrangle.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I believe I know where you are going now!&quot;
-jeered Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, you were always good at guessing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Going to pump the Pauline girl about Miss
-Marsh.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;True, of course, but not a very profound analysis
-considering that I am just ten yards from the house.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page233" id="page233"></a>[pg&nbsp;233]</span>
-&quot;Don&#39;t you even know where Miss Rosalind Marsh
-is?&quot; asked Furneaux, producing a broken cigar from
-a pocket and sniffing it, simply because he was well
-aware that the trick displeased his superior.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No. Do you?&quot; Winter jeered back at him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I do.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, the sheerest bluff!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, no bluff. I know.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, let me imagine that it is bluff, anyway:
-for brute as a man might be, I won&#39;t give you credit
-for being <i>such</i> a brute as to keep that poor old lady
-undergoing the torments of hell through a deliberate
-silence of yours.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Didn&#39;t you say that I have all the bad qualities
-of the Latin temperament?&quot; answered Furneaux.
-&quot;Now, there is something cat-like in the Latin; a
-Spaniard, for example, can be infernally cruel at a
-bullfight; and I&#39;ll admit that <i>I</i> can, too. But &#39;torments
-of hell&#39; is rather an exaggeration, nor will
-the &#39;torments&#39; last mortally long, for to-morrow
-afternoon at about four&mdash;at the hour that I choose&mdash;in
-the hour that I am ready&mdash;Miss Marsh will
-drive up to that door there.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Evidently you were not born in Jersey, but in
-Gascony,&quot; Winter said sourly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wrong again! A Jersey man will bounce any
-Gascon off his feet,&quot; said Furneaux. &quot;And, just to
-pile up the agony, here is another sample for you,
-since you accuse me of bluffing. To-morrow afternoon,
-at that same hour&mdash;about four&mdash;I shall have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page234" id="page234"></a>[pg&nbsp;234]</span>
-that scoundrel Osborne in custody charged with the
-murder in Feldisham Mansions.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Osborne?&quot; whispered Winter, towering and
-frowning above his diminutive adversary. &quot;Oh,
-Furneaux, you drive me to despair by your folly.
-If you are mad, which I hope you are, that explains,
-I suppose, your delusion that others are mad, too.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Genius is closely allied with insanity,&quot; said Furneaux
-carelessly; &quot;yet, you observe that I have never
-hinted any doubt as to your saneness. Wait, you&#39;ll
-see: my case against Osborne is now complete. A
-warrant can&#39;t be refused, not even by you, and to-morrow,
-as sure as you stand there, I lay my hand
-on your protégé&#39;s shoulder.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter nearly choked in his rage.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All right! We&#39;ll see about that!&quot; he said with
-a furious nod of menace. Furneaux chuckled; and
-now by a simultaneous impulse they walked apart,
-Furneaux whistling, in Winter a whirlwind of passion
-blowing the last shreds of pity from his soul.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He was soon sitting at the bedside of Pauline Dessaulx,
-now convalescent, though the coming of this
-strange man threw her afresh into a tumult of agitation.
-But Winter comforted her, smoothed her
-hand, assured her that there was no cause for alarm.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I know that you took Mademoiselle de Bercy&#39;s
-diary,&quot; he said to her, &quot;and it was very wrong of
-you not to give it up to the police, and to hide yourself
-as you did when your evidence was wanted. But,
-don&#39;t be frightened&mdash;I am here to-night to see if you
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page235" id="page235"></a>[pg&nbsp;235]</span>
-can throw any light on the sad disappearance of Miss
-Marsh. The suspense is killing her mother, and I
-feel sure that it has some connection with the Feldisham
-Mansions affair. Now, can you help me?
-Think&mdash;tell me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I cannot!&quot; She wrung her hands in a
-paroxysm of distress&mdash;&quot;If I could, I would. I cannot
-imagine&mdash;&mdash;!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, then, that part of my inquiry is ended.
-Only, listen to this attentively. I want to ask you
-one other question: Why did you leave the Exhibition
-early on the night of the murder, and where did you
-go to?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>I&mdash;I&mdash;I</i>, sir!&quot; she said, pointing to her guiltless
-breast with a gaping mouth; &quot;I, poor me, I
-<i>left</i>&mdash;&mdash;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, come now, don&#39;t delude yourself that the
-police are fools. You went to the Exhibition with
-the cook, Hester Se&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And she has said such a thing of me? She has
-declared that <i>I</i> left&mdash;&mdash;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, she has. Why trouble to deny it? You
-did leave&mdash;By the way, have you a brother or any
-other relative in London&mdash;&mdash;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>I&mdash;I</i>, sir! A brother? Ah, mon Dieu! Oh,
-but, sir&mdash;&mdash;!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Really you must calm yourself. You went away
-from the Exhibition at an early hour. There is no
-doubt about it, and you must have a brother or some
-person deeply interested in you, for some man afterwards
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page236" id="page236"></a>[pg&nbsp;236]</span>
-got hold of the cook, Bertha Seward, and
-begged her for Heaven&#39;s sake not to mention your
-departure from the Exhibition that night. He gave
-her money&mdash;she told me so. And Inspector Clarke
-knows it, as well as I, for Hester Seward has told
-me that he went to question her&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;M&#39;sieur <i>Clarke</i>!&quot;&mdash;at the name of &quot;Clarke,&quot;
-which she whispered after him, the girl&#39;s face turned
-a more ghastly gray, for Clarke was the ogre, the
-griffon, the dragon of her recent life, at the mere
-mention of whom her heart leaped guiltily. Suddenly,
-abandoning the struggle, she fell back from
-her sitting posture, tried to hide her face in the bedclothes,
-and sobbed wildly:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I didn&#39;t do it! I didn&#39;t do it!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do what? Who said you had done anything?&quot;
-asked Winter. &quot;It isn&#39;t <i>you</i> that Mr. Clarke suspects,
-you silly child, it is a man named&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She looked up with frenzied eyes to hear the name&mdash;but
-Winter stopped. In his hands the unhappy
-Pauline was a little hedge-bird in the talons of a hawk.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Named?&quot; she repeated.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Never mind his name.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She buried her head afresh, giving out another
-heart-rending sob, and from her smothered lips came
-the words:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It wasn&#39;t I&mdash;it was&mdash;it was&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was who?&quot; asked Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She shivered through the whole of her delicate
-frame, and a low murmur came from her throat:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page237" id="page237"></a>[pg&nbsp;237]</span>
-&quot;You have seen the diary&mdash;it was Monsieur Furneaux.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Oddly enough, despite his own black conviction,
-this was not what Winter expected to hear.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He started, and said sharply:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, you are stupid. Why are you saying things
-that you know nothing of?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;May Heaven forgive me for accusing anyone,&quot;
-she sobbed hoarsely. &quot;But it was not anybody else.
-It could not be. You have seen the diary&mdash;it was
-Mr. Furneaux, or it was Mr. Osborne.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, two accusations now,&quot; cried Winter. &quot;Furneaux
-or Osborne! You are trying to shield someone?
-What motive could Mr. Furneaux, or Mr.
-Osborne, have for such an act?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Was not Mr. Osborne her lover? And was not
-Mr. Furneaux her&mdash;husband?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Her&mdash;&mdash;!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In that awesome moment Winter hardly realized
-what he said. Half starting out of his chair, he
-glared in stupor at the shrinking figure on the bed,
-while every drop of blood fled away from his own
-face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was a long silence. Then Winter, bending
-over her, spoke almost in the whisper of those who
-share a shameful secret.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You say that Mr. Furneaux was her husband?
-You know it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She trembled violently, but nerved herself to answer:</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page238" id="page238"></a>[pg&nbsp;238]</span>
-&quot;Yes, I know it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell me everything. You must! Do you understand?
-I order you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She told me herself when we were friends. She
-was married to him in the church of St. Germain
-l&#39;Auxerrois in Paris on the 7th of November in the
-year &#39;98. But she soon left him, since he had not
-the means to support her. I have her marriage certificate
-in my trunk.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter sat some minutes spellbound, his big round
-eyes staring at the girl, but not seeing her, his forehead
-glistening. This, then, supplied the long-sought
-motive. The unfaithful wife was about to
-marry another. This was the key. An affrighting
-callousness possessed him. He became the cold, unbending
-official again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You must get up at once, and give me that certificate,&quot;
-he said in the tone of authority, and went
-out of the room. In a little while she placed the
-paper in his hands, and he went away with it. Were
-she not so distraught she might have seen that it
-shook in his fingers.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now he, like Clarke, held all the threads of an
-amazing case.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The next afternoon Furneaux was to arrest Osborne&mdash;it
-was for him, Winter, then, to anticipate
-such an outrage by the swift arrest of Furneaux.
-But was he quite ready? He wished he could secure
-another day&#39;s grace to collate and systematize each
-link of his evidence, and he hurried to Osborne&#39;s
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page239" id="page239"></a>[pg&nbsp;239]</span>
-house in order to give Osborne a hint to vanish again
-for a day or two. Nevertheless, when at the very
-door, he paused, refrained, thought that he would
-manage things differently, and went away.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On one of the blinds of the library as he passed
-he saw the shadow of a head&mdash;of Osborne&#39;s head in
-fact, who in that hour of despair was sitting there,
-bowed down, hopeless now of finding Rosalind, whom
-he believed to be dead.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Though Mrs. Marsh had that evening received a
-note from Janoc: &quot;Your daughter is alive,&quot; as yet
-Osborne knew nothing of it. He was mourning his
-loss in solitude when a letter was brought to him by
-Jenkins. He tore it open. After an uncomprehending
-glare at the written words he suddenly
-grasped their meaning.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="indent">The writer believes that your ex-secretary, Miss Hylda
-Prout, could tell you where Miss Rosalind Marsh is imprisoned.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Imprisoned!&quot; That was the word that pierced
-the gloom and struck deepest. She was alive, then&mdash;that
-was joy. But a prisoner&mdash;in what hole of
-blackness? Subject to what risks? In whose power?
-In ten seconds he was rushing out of the house, and
-was gone.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">During the enforced respite of a journey in a cab
-he looked again at the mysterious note. It was a
-man&#39;s hand; small, neat writing; no signature. Who
-could have written it? But his brain had no room
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page240" id="page240"></a>[pg&nbsp;240]</span>
-for guessing. He looked out to cry to the driver:
-&quot;A sovereign for a quick run.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To his woe, Hylda Prout was not in her lodgings
-when he arrived there. During the last few days
-he had known nothing of her movements. After that
-flare-up of passion in the library, the relation of
-master and servant had, of course, come to an end
-between them; and the lady of the house in Holland
-Park where Hylda rented two rooms told him that
-Miss Prout had gone to see her brother for the weekend,
-and was not expected back till noon on the
-following day.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And Osborne did not know where her brother lived!
-His night was dismal with a horror of sleeplessness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Long before midday he was in Hylda&#39;s sitting-room,
-only to pace it to and fro in an agony of
-impatience till two o&#39;clock&mdash;and then she came.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, I have waited hours&mdash;weary hours!&quot; he cried
-with a reproach that seemed to sweep aside the need
-for explanations.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am so sorry!&mdash;sit here with me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She touched his hand, leading him to a couch and
-sitting near him, her hat still on, a flush on her
-pale face.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hylda&quot;&mdash;her heart leapt: he called her
-&quot;Hylda&quot;!&mdash;&quot;you know where Miss Marsh is.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She sprang to her feet in a passion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So it is to talk to me about another woman that
-you have come? I who have humbled myself, lost
-my self-respect&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page241" id="page241"></a>[pg&nbsp;241]</span>
-Osborne, too, stood up, stung to the quick by this
-mood of hers, so foreign to the disease of impatience
-and care in which he was being consumed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My good girl,&quot; he said, &quot;are you going to be
-reasonable?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come, then,&quot; she retorted, &quot;let us be reasonable.&quot;
-She sat down again, her hands crossed on her lap,
-a passionate vindictiveness in her pursed lips, but a
-mock humility in her attitude.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Tell me! tell me! Where shall I find her?&quot; and
-he bent in eager pleading.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No. How is it possible that I should tell you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you do know! Somehow you do! I see
-and feel it. Tell it me, Hylda! Where is she?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She looked up at him with a smiling face which
-gave no hint of the asp&#39;s nest of jealousy which the
-sight of his agony and longing created in her bosom.
-And from those calm lips furious words came out:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, I horribly hate the woman&mdash;and since I
-happen to know that she is suffering most vilely, do
-you think it likely that I would tell you where she
-is?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He groaned, as his heart sank, his head dropped,
-his hope died. He moved slowly away to a window;
-then, with a frantic rush was back to her, on his
-knees, telling her of his wealth&mdash;it was more than
-she could measure!&mdash;and he had a checkbook in his
-pocket&mdash;all, one might say, was hers&mdash;she had only
-to name a sum&mdash;a hundred thousand, two hundred&mdash;anything&mdash;luxury
-for life, mansions, position&mdash;just
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page242" id="page242"></a>[pg&nbsp;242]</span>
-for one little word, one little act of womanly kindliness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When he stopped for lack of breath, she covered
-her eyes with the back of her hand, and began to
-cry; he saw her lips stretched in the tension of her
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why do you cry?&mdash;that achieves nothing&mdash;listen&mdash;&mdash;&quot;
-he panted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;To be offered money&mdash;to be so wounded&mdash;I
-who&mdash;&mdash;&quot; She could not go on.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My God! Then I offer you&mdash;what you will&mdash;my
-friendship&mdash;my gratitude&mdash;my affection&mdash;only
-speak&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For another woman! Slave that you are to her!
-she is sweet to you, is she, in your heart? But she
-shall never have you&mdash;be sure of that&mdash;not while I
-draw the breath of life! If you want her free, I
-will sell myself for nothing less than yourself&mdash;you
-must marry me!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her astounding demand struck him dumb. He
-picked himself slowly up from her feet, walked again
-to the window, and stood with his back to her&mdash;a
-long time. Once she saw his head drop, heard him
-sob, heard the words: &quot;Oh, no, not that&quot;; and she
-sat, white and silent, watching him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When he returned to her his eyes were calm, his
-face of a grim and stern pallor. He sat by her,
-took her hand, laid his lips on it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You speak of marriage,&quot; he said gently, &quot;but
-just think what kind of a marriage that would be&mdash;forced,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page243" id="page243"></a>[pg&nbsp;243]</span>
-on one side&mdash;I full of resentment against
-you for the rest of my life&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Thus did he try to reason with her, tried to show
-her a better way, offering to vow not to marry anyone
-for two years, during which he promised to see
-whether he could not acquire for her those feelings
-which a husband&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But she cut him short coldly. In two years she
-would be dead without him. She would kill herself.
-Life lived in pain was a thing of no value&mdash;a human
-life of no more value than a fly&#39;s. If he would marry
-her, she would tell him where Miss Marsh was: and,
-after the marriage, if he did not love her, she knew
-a way of setting him free&mdash;though, even in that
-case, Rosalind Marsh should never have him&mdash;she,
-Hylda, would see to that.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For the first time in his life Osborne knew what
-it was to hate. He, the man accused of murder,
-felt like a murderer, but he had grown strangely
-wise, and realized that this woman would die cheerfully
-rather than reveal her secret. He left her
-once more, stood ten minutes at the window&mdash;then
-laughed harshly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I agree,&quot; he said quite coolly, turning to
-her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She, too, was outwardly cool, though heaven and
-hell fought together in her bosom. She held out
-to him a Bible. He kissed it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;When?&quot; she asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This day week,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page244" id="page244"></a>[pg&nbsp;244]</span>
-She wrote on a piece of paper the address of a
-house in Poland Street; and handed it to him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Miss Marsh is there,&quot; she said, as though she
-were his secretary of former days, in the most business-like
-way.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He walked straight out without another word,
-without a bow to her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When he was well out of the house he began to
-run madly, for there was no cab in sight. But he
-had not run far when he collided with Inspector
-Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Osborne,&quot; said Furneaux&mdash;&quot;one word. I
-think you are interested in the disappearance of Miss
-Marsh? Well, I am happy to say that I am in a
-position to tell you where that lady is.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He looked with a glitter of really fiendish malice
-in his eyes at the unhappy man who leant against a
-friendly wall, his face white as death.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are you ill, sir?&quot; asked Furneaux, with mock
-solicitude.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, man, your information is a minute late,&quot;
-muttered Osborne; &quot;I have it already&mdash;I have
-bought it.&quot; He held out the paper with the address
-in Poland Street.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux gazed at him steadily as he leant there,
-looking ready to drop; then suddenly, eagerly, he
-said:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You say &#39;<i>bought</i>&#39;: do you mean with money?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, not with money&mdash;with my youth, with my
-life!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page245" id="page245"></a>[pg&nbsp;245]</span>
-Furneaux seemed to murmur to himself: &quot;As I
-hoped!&quot; And now the glitter of malice passed away
-from his softened eyes, his forehead flushed a little,
-out went his hand to Osborne, who, in a daze of
-misery, without in the least understanding why, mechanically
-shook it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Surely, Mr. Osborne,&quot; said Furneaux, &quot;Miss
-Marsh would consider that a noble deed of you, if
-she knew it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She will never know it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, never is a long time. One must be more
-or less hopeful. Unfortunately, I am compelled to
-inform you that I am here to arrest you&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Me? At last! For the murder?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was to be, Mr. Osborne. But, come, you
-shall first have the joy of setting free Miss Marsh,
-to whom you have given so much&mdash;there&#39;s a cab&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne followed him into the cab with a reeling
-brain. Yet he smiled vacantly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I hope I shall be hanged,&quot; he said, in a sort of
-self-communing. &quot;That will be better than marriage&mdash;better,
-too, than deserving to be hanged,
-which might have been true of me a few minutes ago.
-Why, I killed a woman in thought just now&mdash;killed
-her, with my hands. Yes, this is better. I should
-hate to have done that wretched thing, but now I am
-safe&mdash;safe from&mdash;myself.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page246" id="page246"></a>[pg&nbsp;246]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV<br/>
-THE ARRESTS</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">As Furneaux and Osborne were being driven rapidly
-to Poland Street, bent on the speedy release of
-Rosalind, Inspector Winter, for his part, was seeking
-for Furneaux in a fury of haste, eager to arrest
-his colleague before the latter could arrest Osborne.
-At the same time Clarke, determined to bring matters
-to a climax by arresting Janoc, was lurking about
-a corner of Old Compton Street, every moment expecting
-the passing of his quarry. Each man was
-acting without a warrant. The police are empowered
-to arrest &quot;on suspicion,&quot; and each of the three
-could produce proof in plenty to convict his man.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As for Winter, he knew that where Osborne was
-Furneaux would not be far that day. Hence, when
-in the forenoon he received notice from one of his
-watchers that Furneaux had that morning deliberately
-fled from observation, he bade his man watch
-Osborne&#39;s steps with one eye, while the other searched
-the offing for the shadow of Furneaux, on the sound
-principle that &quot;wheresoever the carcase is, there will
-the eagles be gathered together.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Thus Osborne&#39;s ride to Holland Park to see Hylda
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page247" id="page247"></a>[pg&nbsp;247]</span>
-Prout had been followed; and, two hours afterwards,
-while he was still waiting for Hylda&#39;s arrival, Winter&#39;s
-spy from behind the frosted glass of a public-house
-bar had watched Furneaux&#39;s arrival and long
-wait on the pavement. He promptly telephoned the
-fact to Winter, and Winter was about to set out
-westward from Scotland Yard when the detective
-telephoned afresh to say that Mr. Osborne had appeared
-out of the house, and had been accosted by
-Furneaux. The watcher, quite a smart youngster
-from a suburban station, hastened from his hiding-place.
-Evidently, Furneaux was careless of espionage
-at that moment. He hailed a cab without
-so much as a glance at the man passing close to
-Osborne and himself on the pavement, and it was
-easy to overhear the address given to the driver&mdash;a
-house in Poland Street.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Why to Poland Street Winter could not conceive.
-At all events, the fact that the drive was not to a
-police-station inspired him with the hope that Osborne&#39;s
-arrest was for some reason not yet an accomplished
-fact, and he, too, set off for Poland Street,
-which happily lay much nearer Scotland Yard than
-Holland Park.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Meantime, Osborne and Furneaux were hastening
-eastward in silence, Osborne with his head bent between
-his clenched hands, and an expression of face
-as wrenched with pain as that of a man racked with
-neuralgia. It was now that he began to feel in
-reality the tremendousness of the vow he had just
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page248" id="page248"></a>[pg&nbsp;248]</span>
-made to marry Hylda Prout, in order to set Rosalind
-free. Compared to that his impending arrest
-was too little a thing for him to care about. But
-as they were spinning along by Kensington Gardens,
-a twinge of curiosity prompted him to ask why he
-was to be arrested now, after being assured repeatedly
-that the police would not formulate any charge
-against him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux looked straight in front of him, and
-when he answered, his voice was metallic.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There was no escaping it, Mr. Osborne,&quot; he said.
-&quot;But be thankful for small mercies. I was waiting
-there in the street for you, intending to pounce on
-you at once, but when I knew that you had sacrificed
-yourself for Miss Marsh, I thought, &#39;He deserves
-to be permitted to release her&#39;: for, to promise to
-marry Miss Prout&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What are you saying? How could you possibly
-know that I promised to marry Miss Prout?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne&#39;s brain was still seething, but some glimmer
-of his wonted clear judgment warned him of the
-exceeding oddity of the detective&#39;s remark.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you told me that you had &#39;bought&#39; the
-knowledge of her whereabouts with &#39;your youth and
-your life&#39;&mdash;so I assumed that there could be no other
-explanation.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Still, that is singularly deep guessing&mdash;&mdash;!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, if you demand greater accuracy, I foresaw
-exactly what would be the result of your interview
-with your late secretary, in case you really did care
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page249" id="page249"></a>[pg&nbsp;249]</span>
-for Miss Marsh. Therefore, I brought about the
-interview because&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;<i>You</i> brought it about?&quot; cried Osborne in a
-crescendo of astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes. You see I am candid. You are aware
-that I knew where Miss Marsh could be found, and I
-might have given you the information direct. But
-I preferred to write a note telling you that you must
-depend on Miss Prout for tidings.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah! it was you, then, who sent that note! But
-how cruel, how savagely cruel! Could you not have
-told me yourself? Don&#39;t you realize that your detestable
-action has bound me for life to a woman
-whom&mdash;Oh, I hope, since you are about to arrest me,
-that you will prove me guilty, for if I live, life henceforth
-will hold nothing for me save Dead Sea fruit!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He covered his eyes, but Furneaux, whose face was
-twitching curiously, laid a hand on his knee, and said
-in a low voice:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Do not despair. You are not the only man in
-the world who suffers. I had reasons&mdash;and strong
-reasons&mdash;for acting in this manner. One reason
-was that I was uncertain of the depth of your affection
-for Miss Marsh, and I wished to be as certain
-as you have now made me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But how on earth could that concern you, the
-depth or shallowness of my affection for Miss
-Marsh?&quot; asked Osborne in a white heat of anger
-and indignation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nevertheless, it did concern me,&quot; answered Furneaux
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page250" id="page250"></a>[pg&nbsp;250]</span>
-dryly; &quot;I cannot, at present, explain everything
-to you. I had a suspicion that your affection
-for Miss Marsh was trivial: if it had been, you would
-then have shown a criminal forgetfulness of the dead
-woman whom so recently you said you loved. In
-that event, you would have found me continuing the
-part I have played in regard to you&mdash;anything
-but a friend. As matters stand, I say I may yet
-earn your gratitude for what to-day you call my
-cruelty.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne passed his hands across his eyes wearily.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I fear I can neither talk myself, nor quite understand
-what you mean by your words,&quot; he murmured.
-&quot;My poor head is rather in a whirl. You see, I have
-given my promise&mdash;I have sworn on the Bible to that
-woman&mdash;nothing can ever alter that, or release me
-now. I am&mdash;done for&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">His chin dropped on his breast. He had the
-semblance of a man who had lost all&mdash;for whom death
-had no terrors.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nevertheless, I tell you that I forecasted the result
-of your interview with Hylda Prout,&quot; persisted
-Furneaux. &quot;Even now I do not see your reason
-for despair. I knew that Miss Prout had an ardent
-attachment to you; I said to myself: &#39;She will surely
-seek to sell the information in her possession for
-what she most longs for, and the possibility is that
-Osborne may yield to her terms&mdash;always provided
-that his attachment to the other lady is profound.
-If it is not profound, I find out by this device;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page251" id="page251"></a>[pg&nbsp;251]</span>
-if it is profound, he becomes engaged to Miss Prout,
-which is a result that I greatly wish to bring about
-before his arrest.&#39;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My God! why?&quot; asked Osborne, looking up in
-a tense agony that might have moved a less sardonic
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For certain police reasons,&quot; said Furneaux, smiling
-with the smug air of one who has given an irrefutable
-answer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But what a price <i>I</i> pay for these police reasons!
-Is this fair, Inspector Furneaux? Now, in Heaven&#39;s
-name, is this fair? Life-long misery on the one
-hand, and some trick of officialism on the other!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The detective seemed to think the conversation at
-an end, since he sat in silence and stared blankly out
-of the window.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne shrank into his corner, quite drooping and
-pinched with misery, and brooded over his misfortunes.
-Presently he started, and asked furiously:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In what possible way did Hylda Prout come to
-know where Miss Marsh was hidden, to use your own
-ridiculous word?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Miss Prout happens to be a really clever woman,&quot;
-answered Furneaux. &quot;In the times of Richelieu she
-would have governed France from an <i>alcôve</i>. You
-had better ask her herself how she obtained her knowledge.
-Still, I don&#39;t mind telling you that Miss
-Marsh has been imprisoned in a wine-cellar by a
-certain Anarchist, a great man in his way, and that
-your former secretary has of late days developed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page252" id="page252"></a>[pg&nbsp;252]</span>
-quite an intimate acquaintance with Anarchist
-circles&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Anarchist?&quot; gasped Osborne. &quot;My Rosalind&mdash;imprisoned
-in a wine-cellar?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is a tangled skein,&quot; purred Furneaux with a
-self-satisfied smirk; &quot;I am afraid we haven&#39;t time
-now to go into it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The cab crossed Oxford Circus&mdash;two minutes
-more and they were in Soho.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter at that moment was on the lookout for
-Furneaux at the corner of a shabby street which
-traverses Poland Street. As for Clarke, he had
-vanished from the nook in Compton Street where he
-was loitering in the belief that Janoc would soon
-pass. In order to understand exactly the amazing
-events that were now reaching their crisis it is necessary
-to go back half an hour and see how matters
-had fared with Clarke....</p>
-
-<p class="indent">During his long vigil, he, in turn, had been watched
-most intently by the Italian, Antonio, who, quickly
-becoming suspicious, hastened to a barber&#39;s shop,
-kept by a compatriot, where Janoc was in hiding.
-Into this shop he pitched to pant a frenzied
-warning.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sauriac says that Inspector Clarke has been
-up your stairs&mdash;may have entered your rooms&mdash;and
-I myself have just seen him prowling round Old
-Compton Street!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Agitation mastered Janoc; he, who so despised
-those bunglers, the police, now began to fear them.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page253" id="page253"></a>[pg&nbsp;253]</span>
-Out he pelted, careless of consequences, and Antonio
-after him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He made straight for his third-floor back, and,
-losing a few seconds in his eagerness to unlock the
-door, rushed to the trunk in which he had left the
-two daggers, meaning to do away with them once
-and for all.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And now he knew how he had blundered in keeping
-them. He looked in the trunk and saw, not the
-daggers, but the gallows!</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For the first time in his life he nearly fainted.
-Political desperadoes of his type are often neurotic&mdash;weak
-as women when the hour of trial is at hand,
-but strong as women when the spirit has subdued
-the flesh. During some moments of sheer despair
-he knelt there, broken, swaying, with clasped hands
-and livid face. Then he stood up slowly, with some
-degree of calmness, with no little dignity.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They are gone,&quot; he said to Antonio, pointing
-tragically.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Antonio&#39;s hands tore at his hair, his black eyes
-glared out of their red rims with the look of a hunted
-animal that hears the hounds baying in close pursuit.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This means the sure conviction either of her or
-me,&quot; went on Janoc. &quot;My efforts have failed&mdash;I
-must confess to the murder.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My friend!&quot; cried Antonio.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Set free Miss Marsh for me,&quot; said Janoc, and he
-walked down the stairs, without haste, yet briskly&mdash;Antonio
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page254" id="page254"></a>[pg&nbsp;254]</span>
-following him at some distance behind, with
-awe, with reverence, as one follows a conqueror.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Janoc went unfalteringly to his doom. Clarke,
-seeing him come, chuckled and lounged toward him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is for me you wait&mdash;yes?&quot; said Janoc, pale,
-but strong.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There may be something in <i>that</i>,&quot; said Clarke,
-though he was slightly taken aback by the question.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You have the daggers&mdash;yes?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This staggered him even more, but he managed
-to growl:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You may be sure of that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I confess! I did it!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At last! The garish street suddenly assumed
-roseate tints in the detective&#39;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, you do?&quot; he cried thickly. &quot;You confess
-that you killed Rose de Bercy on the night of the
-3d of July at Feldisham Mansions?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I confess it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke laid a hand on Janoc&#39;s sleeve, and the two
-walked away.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">As for Antonio, in an ecstasy of excitement he
-cast his eyes and his arms on high together, crying
-out, &quot;<i>O Dio mio!</i>&quot; and the next moment was rushing
-to find a cab to take him to Porchester Gardens.
-Arrived there, he rang, and the instant Pauline appeared,
-she being now sufficiently recovered to attend
-to her duties, his right hand went out in a warning
-clutch at her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your brother is arrested!&quot; he cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page255" id="page255"></a>[pg&nbsp;255]</span>
-With her clenched fists drawn back, she glared
-crazily at him, and her face reddened for a little
-while, as if she were furious at the outrage and suddenness
-of his news. Then her cheeks whitened, she
-went faint, sank back into the shelter of the hall,
-and leant against an inner doorway, her eyes closed,
-her lips parted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, Pauline, be brave!&quot; said Antonio, and tears
-choked his voice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">After a time, without opening her eyes, she asked:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What proofs have they?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;They have found the daggers in his trunk.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But <i>I</i> have the daggers!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, that woman who lived here, your supposed
-friend, Miss Marsh, stole the daggers from you, and
-Janoc secured them from her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She moaned, but did not weep. She, who had been
-timid as a mouse at sight of Clarke, was now braver
-than the man. Presently she whispered:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where have they taken him to?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He will have been taken to the Marlborough
-Street police-station.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">After another silence she said:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thank you, Antonio; leave me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Passionately he kissed her hand in silence, and
-went.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She was no sooner alone than she walked up to
-her room, dressed herself in clothes suited for an out-of-door
-mission, and went out, heedless and dumb when
-a wondering fellow-servant protested. She called
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page256" id="page256"></a>[pg&nbsp;256]</span>
-a cab&mdash;for Marlborough Street; and now she was
-as calm and strong as had been her brother when he
-gave himself up to Clarke.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Her cab crossed Oxford Circus about ten minutes
-ahead of the vehicle which carried Furneaux and
-Osborne; and as she turned south to enter Marlborough
-Street, she saw Winter, who had lately visited
-her, standing at a corner awaiting the arrival of
-Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Stop!&quot; Pauline cried to her driver: and she
-alighted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, you are better, I see,&quot; said Winter, who
-did not wish to be bothered by her at that moment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sir,&quot; said Pauline solemnly in her stilted English,
-&quot;I regret having been so unjust as to tell you
-that it was either Mr. Furneaux or Mr. Osborne who
-committed that murder, since it was I myself who
-did it.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What!&quot; roared Winter, stepping backward, and
-startled most effectually out of his official phlegm.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sir,&quot; said Pauline again, gravely, calmly, &quot;it
-was not a murder, it was an assassination, done for
-political reasons. As I have no mercy to expect,
-so I have no pardon to ask, and no act to blush
-at. It was political. I give myself into your
-custody.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter stood aghast. His brain seemed suddenly
-to have curdled; everything in the world was topsy-turvy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So that was why you left the Exhibition&mdash;to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page257" id="page257"></a>[pg&nbsp;257]</span>
-kill that poor woman, Pauline Dessaulx?&quot; he contrived
-to say.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That is the truth, sir. I could bear to keep it
-secret no longer, and was going now to the police-station
-to give myself up, when I saw you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Still Winter made no move. He stood there,
-frowning in thought, staring at nothing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And all the proofs I have gathered against&mdash;against
-someone else&mdash;all these are false?&quot; he muttered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am afraid so, sir,&quot; said Pauline, &quot;since it was
-I who did it with my own hands.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And Mr. Osborne&#39;s dagger and flint&mdash;where do
-they come in?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It was I who stole them from Mr. Osborne&#39;s
-museum, sir, to throw suspicion upon him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, come along,&quot; growled Winter. &quot;I believe,
-I know, you are lying, but this must be inquired
-into.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Not unkindly, acting more like a man in a dream
-than an officer of the law, he took her arm, led her
-to the cab from which she had just descended, and
-the two drove away together to the police-station
-higher up the street.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Thus, and thus only, was Inspector Furneaux
-saved from arrest that day. Two minutes later he
-and Osborne passed the very spot where Pauline
-found Winter, and reached Poland Street without
-interference.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux produced a bunch of keys when he ran
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page258" id="page258"></a>[pg&nbsp;258]</span>
-up the steps of the house. He unlocked the door
-at once, and the two men entered. Evidently Furneaux
-had been there before, for he hurried without
-hesitation down the kitchen stairs, put a key into
-the cellar door, flung it open, and Osborne, peering
-wildly over his shoulder, caught a glimpse of Rosalind
-sitting on the ground in a corner.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She did not look up when they entered&mdash;apparently
-she thought it was Janoc who had come, and
-with fixed, mournful eyes, like one gazing into profundities
-of vacancy, she continued to stare at the
-floor. Her face and air were so pitiable that the
-hearts of the men smote them into dumbness.</p>
-<div class="image-center" style="max-width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/ill004.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p class="center">She did not look up when they entered</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><i>Page 258</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="indent">Then, half conscious of some new thing, she must
-have caught sight of two men instead of the usual
-one, for she looked up sharply; and in another moment
-was staggering to her feet, all hysterical laughter
-and sobbings, like a dying light that flickers
-wildly up and burns low alternately, trying at one
-instant to be herself and calm, when she laughed,
-and the next yielding to her distress, when she sobbed.
-She put out her hand to Osborne in a last effort to
-be graceful and usual; then she yielded the struggle,
-and fainted in his arms.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux produced a scent-bottle and a crushed
-cigar, such as it was his habit to smell, to present
-them to her nose....</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But she did not revive, so Osborne took her in
-his arms, and carried her, as though she were a child,
-up the stone steps, and up the wooden, and out to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page259" id="page259"></a>[pg&nbsp;259]</span>
-the cab. Furneaux allowed him to drive alone with
-her, himself following behind in another cab, which
-was a most singular proceeding on the part of a
-detective who had arrested a man accused of an
-atrocious murder.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Half-way to Porchester Gardens Rosalind opened
-her eyes, and a wild, heartrending cry came from
-her parched lips.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will have no more wine nor water&mdash;let me die!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Try and keep still, just a few moments, my dear
-one!&quot; he murmured, smiling a fond smile of pain,
-and clasping her more tightly in a protecting arm.
-&quot;You are going home, to your mother. You will
-soon be there, safe, with her.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh!&quot;&mdash;Then she recognized him, though there
-was still an uncanny wildness in her eyes. &quot;I am
-free&mdash;it is you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She seemed to falter for words, but raised her
-hands instinctively to her hair, knowing it to be all
-rumpled and dusty. Instinctively, too, she caught
-her hat from her knee, and put it on hurriedly. She
-could not know what stabs of pain these little feminine
-anxieties caused her lover. No spoken words
-could have portrayed the sufferings she had endured
-like unto her pitiful efforts to conceal their ravages.
-At last she recovered sufficiently to ask if her mother
-expected her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am not sure,&quot; said Osborne. &quot;I am not your
-deliverer; Inspector Furneaux discovered where you
-were, and went to your rescue.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page260" id="page260"></a>[pg&nbsp;260]</span>
-&quot;But you are with him?&quot; and an appealing note
-of love, of complete confidence, crept into her voice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I merely happen to be with him, because he is
-now taking me to a felon&#39;s cell. But he lets me
-come in the cab with you, because he trusts me not
-to run away.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">His smile was very sad and humble, and he laid
-his disengaged hand on hers, yielding to a craving
-for sympathy in his forlornness. But memories were
-now thronging fast on her mind, and she drew herself
-away from both hand and arm. She recalled
-that her last sight of him was when in the embrace
-of Hylda Prout in his library; and, mixed with that
-vision of infamy, was a memory of her letter that
-had been opened, whose opening he had denied to her.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And that snatch of her hand as from a toad&#39;s
-touch, that shrinking from the pressure of his arm,
-froze him back into his loneliness of misery. They
-remained silent, each in a corner, a world between
-them, till the cab was nearly at the door in Porchester
-Gardens. Then he could not help saying
-from the depths of a heavy heart:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Probably I shall never see you again! It is
-good-by now; and no more Rosalind.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The words were uttered in a tone of such heart-rending
-sadness that they touched some nerve of
-pity in her. But she could find nothing to say,
-other than a quite irrelevant comment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I will tell my mother of your consideration for
-me. At least, we shall thank you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page261" id="page261"></a>[pg&nbsp;261]</span>
-&quot;If ever you hear anything&mdash;of me&mdash;that looks
-black&mdash;&mdash;&quot; he tried to tell her, thinking of his coming
-marriage with Hylda Prout, but the explanation
-choked in his throat; he only managed to gasp in a
-quick appeal of sorrow: &quot;Oh, remember me a little!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The cab was at the door. She put out her hand,
-and he shook it; but did not offer to escort her
-inside the house. It was Furneaux who led her up
-the steps, and Osborne heard from within a shrill
-outcry from Mrs. Marsh. Furneaux waited until
-the door was closed. Then he rejoined Osborne.
-They went, without exchanging a syllable of talk,
-to Marlborough Street police-station, where Janoc
-and his sister were already lodged. Arrived there,
-Furneaux formally arrested him, &quot;on suspicion,&quot;
-charged with the murder of Rose de Bercy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But why <i>now</i>?&quot; asked Osborne again. &quot;What
-has happened to implicate me now more than before?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, many things have happened, and will happen,
-that as yet you know nothing of,&quot; said Furneaux,
-smiling at the stolid station inspector, a man
-incapable of any emotion, even of surprise, and Osborne
-was led away to be searched for concealed
-weapons, or poison, before being placed in a cell.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Half an hour afterwards Furneaux walked into
-Winter&#39;s quarters. His chief, writing hard, hardly
-glanced up, and for some time Furneaux stood looking
-at his one-time friend with the eyes of a scientist
-who contemplates a new fossil.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page262" id="page262"></a>[pg&nbsp;262]</span>
-&quot;Well, I have Osborne safe,&quot; he said at last.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You have, have you?&quot; muttered Winter, scribbling
-rapidly; but a flush of anger rose on his forehead,
-and he added: &quot;It will cost you your reputation,
-my good fellow!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is that all?&quot; cried Furneaux mockingly. &quot;Why,
-I was looking out for worse things than that!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter threw down his pen.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You informed me last night,&quot; he snarled, &quot;that
-by this hour Miss Marsh would have returned to her
-home. I need not ask&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have just taken her there,&quot; remarked the other
-coolly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter was thoroughly nonplused. Everybody,
-everything, seemed to be mad. He was staring at
-Furneaux when Clarke entered. The newcomer&#39;s
-hat was tilted a little backward, and there was an
-air of business-like haste in him from the creak of
-his boot soles to the drops of perspiration shining
-on his brow. He contrived to hold himself back just
-long enough to say, &quot;Hello, Furneaux!&quot; and then
-his burden of news broke from him:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I&#39;ve got Janoc under lock and key all
-right.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, <i>you&#39;ve</i> got somebody, too, have you?&quot;
-groaned Winter. &quot;And on what charge, pray, have
-you collared Janoc?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, what a question!&quot; cried Clarke. &quot;Didn&#39;t
-I tell you, sir&mdash;&mdash;?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So true,&quot; said Winter; &quot;I had almost forgotten.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page263" id="page263"></a>[pg&nbsp;263]</span>
-<i>You</i>&#39;ve grabbed Janoc, and the genius of Mr. Furneaux
-is sated by arresting Mr. Osborne&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke slapped his thigh vigorously, doubling up
-in a paroxysm of laughter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Osborne! Oh, not Osborne at this time of day!&quot;
-He leered at Furneaux in comic wonder&mdash;he, who
-had never dared question aught done by the little
-man, save in the safe privacy of his thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And I have arrested Pauline,&quot; said Winter in
-grim irony.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who has?&quot; asked Clarke, suddenly agape.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I, I say. Pauline is <i>my</i> prize. <i>I</i> wouldn&#39;t be
-left out in the cold.&quot; And he added bitterly: &quot;We&#39;ve
-all got one!&mdash;<i>all</i> guilty!&mdash;a lovely story it will make
-for the newspapers. I suppose, to keep up the
-screaming farce, that we each ought to contrive to
-have our prisoner tried in a different court!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke&#39;s hands went akimbo. He swelled visibly,
-grew larger, taller, and looked down from his Olympus
-at the others.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But <i>I</i> never dream at night,&quot; he cried. &quot;When
-<i>I</i> arrest a man for murder he is going to be hanged.
-You see, <i>Janoc has confessed</i>&mdash;that&#39;s all: he has confessed!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter leaped up.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Confessed!&quot; he hissed, unable to believe his ears.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s just it,&quot; said Clarke&mdash;&quot;confessed!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But Pauline has confessed, too!&quot; Winter almost
-screamed, confronting his subordinate like an adversary.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page264" id="page264"></a>[pg&nbsp;264]</span>
-And while Clarke shrank, and gaped in dumb wonder,
-Furneaux, looking from one to the other, burst
-out laughing. Never a word he said, but turned in
-his quick way to leave the room. He was already
-in the corridor when Winter shouted:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come back, Furneaux!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not I,&quot; was the defiant retort.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come back, or I shall have you brought back!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter was in a white rage, but Furneaux pressed
-on daringly, whistling a tune, and never looking
-round. Clarke, momentarily expecting the roof of
-Scotland Yard to fall in, gazed from Furneaux to
-Winter and from Winter to Furneaux until the diminutive
-Jersey man had vanished round an angle
-of a long passage.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But nothing happened. Winter was beaten to his
-knees, and he knew it.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page265" id="page265"></a>[pg&nbsp;265]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV<br/>
-CLEARING THE AIR</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter was far too strong a man to remain long
-buried in the pit of humiliation into which Furneaux,
-aided unwittingly by Clarke, had cast him. The
-sounds of Furneaux&#39;s jaunty footsteps had barely
-died away before he shoved aside the papers on which
-he had been engaged previously, and reached across
-the table for a box of cigars.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He took one, and shoved the box towards Clarke,
-whose face was still glistening in evidence of his
-rush from Marlborough Street police-station.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Here, you crack-pate!&quot; he said, &quot;smoke; it may
-clear your silly head.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But I can&#39;t repeat too often that Janoc has
-confessed&mdash;<i>confessed</i>!&quot; and Clarke&#39;s voice rose almost
-to a squeal on that final word.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;So has his sister confessed. In an hour or two,
-when the silence and horror of a cell have done their
-work, we shall have Osborne confessing, too. Oh,
-man, man, can&#39;t you see that Furneaux has twisted
-each of us round his little finger?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But&mdash;sir&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I know,&quot; cried Winter, in a fume of wrath
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page266" id="page266"></a>[pg&nbsp;266]</span>
-and smoke. &quot;Believe these foreign idiots and we
-shall be hearing of a masked tribunal, glistening
-with daggers, a brace of revolvers in every belt&mdash;a
-dozen or more infuriated conspirators, cloaked in
-gaberdines, gathered in a West End flat, while a red-headed
-woman harangues them. Furneaux has fooled
-us, I tell you&mdash;deliberately brought the Yard into
-discredit&mdash;made us the laughing-stock of the public.
-Oh, I shall never&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He pulled himself up, for Clarke was listening with
-the ears of a rabbit. Luckily, the detective&#39;s ideas
-were too self-concentrated to extract much food for
-thought from these disjointed outpourings.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t wish to seem wanting in respect, sir,&quot;
-he said doggedly, &quot;but have you forgotten the
-diary? Why, Rose de Bercy herself wrote that she
-would be killed either by C. E. F. or Janoc.
-Now&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Did she mention Janoc?&quot; interrupted Winter
-sharply. &quot;In what passage? I certainly <i>have</i> forgotten
-that.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke, stubborn as a mule, stuck to his point,
-though he felt that he had committed himself.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Perhaps I did wrong,&quot; he growled savagely,
-&quot;but I couldn&#39;t help myself. You were against me
-all along, sir&mdash;now, weren&#39;t you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">No answer. Winter waited, and did not even look
-at him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What was I to do?&quot; he went on in desperation.
-&quot;You took me off the job just as I was getting
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page267" id="page267"></a>[pg&nbsp;267]</span>
-keen in it. Then I happened upon Janoc, and found
-his sister, and when I came across that blacked-out
-name in the diary I scraped it and sponged it until
-I could read what was written beneath. The name
-was Janoc!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Was it?&quot; said Winter, gazing at him at last
-with a species of contempt. &quot;And to throw dust
-in my eyes&mdash;in the eyes of your superior officer&mdash;you
-inked it out again?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You wouldn&#39;t believe,&quot; muttered Clarke. &quot;Why,
-you don&#39;t know half this story. I haven&#39;t told you
-yet how I found the daggers&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You don&#39;t say,&quot; mocked Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But I do, I did,&quot; cried Clarke, beside himself
-with excitement. &quot;I took them out of Janoc&#39;s
-lodgings, and put them in a cab. I would have them
-in my hands this minute if some d&mdash;d thing hadn&#39;t
-occurred, some trick of fate&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter stooped and unlocked a drawer in his writing-desk.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are these your daggers?&quot; he demanded, though
-Clarke was shrewd enough, if in possession of his
-usual senses, to have caught the note of suppressed
-astonishment in the Chief Inspector&#39;s voice, since
-this was the first he had heard of Furneaux&#39;s
-deliberate pilfering of the weapons from his colleague.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But something was singing in Clarke&#39;s ears, and
-his eyes were glued on the blades resting there in
-the drawer. Denial was impossible. He recognized
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page268" id="page268"></a>[pg&nbsp;268]</span>
-them instantly, and all his assurance fled from
-that moment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, there!&quot; he murmured, in a curiously
-broken voice. &quot;I give in! I&#39;m done! I&#39;m a baby
-at this game. Next thing, I suppose, I&#39;ll be asked
-to resign&mdash;me, who found &#39;em, and the diary,
-and the letter telling Janoc not to kill her&mdash;yet.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He was looking so fixedly at the two daggers that
-he failed to see the smile of relief that flitted over
-Winter&#39;s face. Now, more than ever, the Chief Inspector
-realized that he was dealing with one of the
-most complex and subtle crimes which had come
-within his twenty years of experience. He was well
-versed in Furneaux&#39;s sardonic humor, and the close
-friendship that had existed between them ever since
-the little Jersey man joined the Criminal Investigation
-Department had alone stopped him from resenting
-it. It was clear now to his quick intelligence
-that Furneaux had actually planned nearly every
-discovery which either he himself or Clarke had made.
-Why? He could not answer. He was moving
-through a fog, blind-folded, with hands tied behind
-his back. Search where he would, he could not find
-a motive, unless, indeed, Furneaux was impelled by
-that strangest of all motives, a desire to convict
-himself. At any rate, he did not want Clarke to
-tread on the delicate ground that must now be covered
-before Furneaux was arrested, and the happy
-accident which had unlocked Clarke&#39;s tongue with regard
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page269" id="page269"></a>[pg&nbsp;269]</span>
-to the diary would serve admirably to keep
-him well under control.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, look here, Inspector Clarke,&quot; said Winter
-severely, after a pause that left the other in wretched
-suspense, &quot;you have erred badly in this matter. For
-once, I am willing to overlook it&mdash;because&mdash;because
-you fancied you had a grievance. But, remember
-this&mdash;never again! Lack of candor is fatal to the
-best interests of the service. It is for me to decide
-which cases you shall take up and which you shall
-leave alone. You know perfectly well that if, by
-chance, information reaches you with regard to any
-inquiry which may prove useful to the man in charge
-of it, it is your duty to tell him everything. I say
-no more now. You understand me fully, I have no
-doubt. You must take it from me, without question
-or protest, that neither Janoc nor his sister was
-responsible for that crime. They may have been
-mixed up in it&mdash;in some manner now hidden from
-me&mdash;but they had no share in it personally. Still,
-seeing that you have worked so hard, I don&#39;t object
-to your presence while I prove that I am right. Come
-with me now to Marlborough Street. Mr. Osborne
-must be set at liberty, of course, but I shall confront
-your Anarchist friends with one another, and then
-you will see for yourself my grounds for being so
-positive as to their innocence.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you yourself arrested Pauline, sir,&quot; Clarke
-ventured to say.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t be an ass!&quot; was the cool rejoinder.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page270" id="page270"></a>[pg&nbsp;270]</span>
-&quot;Could I refuse to arrest her? Suppose you told
-me now that you had killed the Frenchwoman,
-wouldn&#39;t I be compelled to arrest <i>you</i>?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ha!&quot; laughed Clarke, in solemn mirth, &quot;what
-about C. E. F.? Wouldn&#39;t it be funny if he owned
-up to it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter answered not a word. He was busy locking
-the drawer and rolling down the front of the
-desk. But Clarke did not really mean what he had
-said. His mind was dwelling on the inscrutable mystery
-of the daggers which he had last held in his
-hands in Soho and now knew to be reposing in a
-locked desk in Scotland Yard.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Would you mind telling me, sir, how you managed
-to get hold of &#39;em?&quot; he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter did not pretend ignorance.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You will be surprised to hear that I myself took
-them, disinterred them, from the poor creature&#39;s
-grave in Kensal Green Cemetery,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke&#39;s jaw dropped in the most abject amazement.
-The thing had a supernatural sound. He
-felt himself bewitched.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;From her grave?&quot; he repeated.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But who put &#39;em there?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah,&quot; said the other with a new note of sternness
-in his voice, &quot;who but the murderer? But
-come, we are wasting time&mdash;that unfortunate Osborne
-must be half-demented. I suppose the Marlborough
-Street people will let him out on my authority.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page271" id="page271"></a>[pg&nbsp;271]</span>
-If not, I must get an order from the Commissioner.
-By gad, there will be a fiendish rumpus
-about this business before it is all settled!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke shivered. He saw a certain well-belovd
-detective inspector figuring prominently in that
-&quot;rumpus,&quot; and he was in no mind to seek a new
-career after passing the best part of his life in the
-C. I. D.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But at Marlborough Street another shock awaited
-the Chief. He and Clarke were entering the street
-in a taxi when Furneaux crooked a finger at him
-from the pavement. Winter could not, nay, he dared
-not, ignore that demand for an interview.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Stop here!&quot; he said to Clarke. Then he sprang
-out, and approached Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well?&quot; he snapped, &quot;have you made up your
-mind to end this tragic farce?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am not its chief buffoon,&quot; sneered Furneaux.
-&quot;In fact, I am mainly a looker-on, but I do appreciate
-its good points to the full.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter waved aside these absurdities.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have come to free Mr. Osborne,&quot; he said. &quot;I
-was rather hoping that your own sense of fair dealing,
-if you have any left&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Exactly what I thought,&quot; broke in the other.
-&quot;That is why <i>I</i> am here. I hate correcting your
-mistakes, because I fancy it does you good to discover
-them for yourself. Still, it is a pity to
-spoil a good cause. Mere professional pride forces
-me to warn you against liberating Osborne.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page272" id="page272"></a>[pg&nbsp;272]</span>
-&quot;Man alive, you try me beyond endurance. Do
-you believe I don&#39;t know the truth&mdash;that Rose de
-Bercy was your wife&mdash;that <i>you</i> were in that museum
-before the murder&mdash;that <i>you</i>.... Oh, Furneaux,
-you wring it from me. Get a pistol, man, before it
-is too late.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You mean that?&quot; cried Furneaux, his eyes
-gleaming with a new fire.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Heaven knows I do!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You want to be my friend, then, after all?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Friend! If you realized half the torture&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pity!&quot; mused Furneaux aloud. &quot;Why didn&#39;t
-you speak sooner? So you would rather I committed
-suicide than be in your hands a prisoner?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter then awoke to the consciousness that this
-extraordinary conversation was taking place in a
-crowded thoroughfare, within a stone&#39;s throw of a
-police-station in which lay three people charged with
-having committed the very crime he was tacitly accusing
-Furneaux of, while Clarke&#39;s ferret eyes must
-be resting on them with a suspicion already half-formed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I can say no more,&quot; he muttered gruffly. &quot;One
-must forego friendship when duty bars the way.
-But if you have a grain of humanity left in your
-soul, come with me and release that unhappy young
-man&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Some gush of emotion wrung Furneaux&#39;s face as
-if with a spasm of physical pain. He held out his
-right hand.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page273" id="page273"></a>[pg&nbsp;273]</span>
-&quot;Winter, forgive me, I have misjudged you,&quot; he
-said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is it good-by?&quot; came the passionate question.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, not good-by. It is an alliance, Winter, a
-wiping of the slate. You don&#39;t understand, perhaps,
-that we are both to blame. But you can take my
-hand, old man. There is no stain of blood on it.
-I did not murder my wife. I am her avenger, her
-pitiless, implacable avenger&mdash;so pitiless, so implacable,
-that I may have erred in my harshness. For
-Heaven&#39;s sake, Winter, believe me, and take my
-hand!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The man&#39;s magnetism was irresistible. Despite
-the crushing weight of proof accumulated against
-him, the claims of old friendship were not to be
-ignored. Winter took the proffered hand and
-squeezed it with a vehemence that not only showed
-the tension of his feelings but also brought tears
-of real anguish to Furneaux&#39;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I only asked you for a friendly grip, Winter,&quot;
-he complained. &quot;You have been more than
-kind. No matter what happens, don&#39;t offer to
-shake hands with me again for twelve months at
-least.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There was no comprehending him, and Winter
-abandoned the effort. Moreover, Clarke&#39;s puzzled
-brows were bent on them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;An alliance implies confidence,&quot; he said, and the
-official mask fell on his bluff features. &quot;If you
-can honestly&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page274" id="page274"></a>[pg&nbsp;274]</span>
-Furneaux laughed, with just a faint touch
-of that impish humor that the other knew so
-well.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Not Winter, but Didymus!&quot; he cried. &quot;Well,
-then, let us proceed to the confounding of poor
-Clarke. <i>Peste!</i> he deserves a better fate, for he has
-worked like a Trojan. But leave Osborne to me.
-Have no fear&mdash;I shall explain, a little to him, all
-to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke writhed with jealousy when Winter beckoned
-to him. While his chief was paying the cabman,
-he jeered at Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I had a notion&mdash;&mdash;&quot; he began, but the other
-caught his arm confidentially.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I was just telling the guv&#39;nor how much we owe
-to you in this Feldisham Mansions affair,&quot; he said.
-&quot;You were on the right track all the time. You&#39;ve
-the keenest nose in the Yard, Clarke. You can
-smell an Anarchist through the stoutest wall ever
-built. Now, not a word! You&#39;ll soon see how important
-your investigations have been.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke was overwhelmed by a new flood. Never
-before had Furneaux praised him, unless in some
-ironic phrase that galled the more because he did
-not always extract its hidden meaning. He blinked
-with astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">With a newborn trust, which he would have failed
-ignominiously to explain in words, Winter led his
-colleagues to Marlborough Street police-station.
-There, after a brief but earnest colloquy with the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page275" id="page275"></a>[pg&nbsp;275]</span>
-station inspector, he asked that Janoc and his sister
-should be brought to the inspector&#39;s office.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Janoc came first, pale, languid, high-strung, but
-evidently prepared to be led to his death that instant.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">He looked at the four men, three in plain clothes
-and one in uniform, with a superb air of dignity,
-almost of superiority; in silence he awaited the inquisition
-which he supposed he would be compelled to
-undergo, but when no word was spoken&mdash;when even
-that phantom of evil, Clarke, paid no heed to him,
-he grew manifestly uneasy.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At last steps were heard, the door opened, and
-Pauline Dessaulx entered. Of course, this brother
-and sister were Gauls to the finger-tips. Each
-screamed, each flew to the other&#39;s arms; they raved;
-they wept, and laughed, and uttered incoherent words
-of utmost affection.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter indulged them a few seconds. Then he
-broke in on their transports.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now, Janoc,&quot; he said brusquely, &quot;have done with
-this acting! Why have you given the police so much
-trouble?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Monsieur, I swear&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, have done with your swearing! Your sister
-didn&#39;t kill Mademoiselle de Bercy. She wouldn&#39;t kill
-a fly. Come, Pauline, own up!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Monsieur,&quot; faltered the girl, &quot;I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You took the guilt on your shoulders in order
-to shield your brother?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Wild-eyed, distraught, she looked from the face
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page276" id="page276"></a>[pg&nbsp;276]</span>
-of the man who seemed to peer into her very soul
-to that other face so dear to her. She knew not
-what to say. Was this stern-visaged representative
-of the law merely torturing her with a false hope?
-Dared she say &quot;Yes,&quot; or must she persist in self-accusation?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Janoc,&quot; thundered Winter, &quot;you ought to be
-ashamed of yourself. Don&#39;t you see how she is
-suffering for your sake? Tell her, then, that you
-are as innocent as she of this murder?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The dreamer, the man who would reform an evil
-world by force, had the one great quality demanded
-of a leader&mdash;he knew a man when he met him. He
-turned now to Pauline.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My sister,&quot; he said in French, &quot;this gentleman
-can be trusted. He is no trickster. I had no hand
-in the slaying of the traitress, just though her death
-might be.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, <i>Dieu merci</i>!&quot; she breathed, and fainted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The police matron was summoned, and the Frenchwoman
-soon regained consciousness. Meanwhile,
-Janoc admitted readily enough that he did really
-believe in his sister&#39;s acceptance of the dread mission
-imposed on her by the revolutionary party in Russia.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Rose de Bercy was condemned, and my sweet
-Pauline, alas! was deputed to be her executioner,&quot;
-he said. &quot;We had waited long for the hour, and
-the dagger was ready, though I, too, distrusted my
-sister&#39;s courage. Then came an urgent letter from
-St. Petersburg that the traitress was respited until
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page277" id="page277"></a>[pg&nbsp;277]</span>
-a certain list found among her papers was
-checked&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Found?&quot; questioned Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;By Pauline,&quot; said Janoc.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, stolen?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Janoc brushed aside the substituted word as a
-quibble.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Conceive my horror when I heard of the murder!&quot;
-he cried with hands flung wide and eyes that
-rolled. &quot;I was sure that Pauline had mistaken the
-instructions&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where is the St. Petersburg letter?&quot; broke in
-Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Sapristi! You will scarce credit. It was taken
-from me by a man&mdash;a Russian agent he must have
-been&mdash;one night in the Fraternal Club, Soho&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Clarke, produce it,&quot; said Furneaux, grinning.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Clarke flushed, grew white, nervously thumbed
-some papers in a pocketbook, and handed to Winter
-the letter which commenced: &quot;St. Petersburg says
-...&quot; and ended: &quot;You will see to it that she to
-whose hands vengeance has been intrusted shall fail
-on the 3d.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter read, and frowned. Furneaux, too, read.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The 3d!&quot; he muttered. &quot;Just Heaven, what
-a fatal date to her!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What was I to think?&quot; continued Janoc. &quot;Antonio
-shared my view. He met Pauline at the Exhibition,
-and was ready, if necessary, to vouch for
-her presence there at the time Rose de Bercy went to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page278" id="page278"></a>[pg&nbsp;278]</span>
-her reckoning; but he is not in the inner&mdash;he had
-not heard of the Petersburg order.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yet he, and the rest of your gang, were prepared
-to let Mr. Osborne hang for this crime,&quot; said
-Winter, surveying the conspirator with a condemning
-eye. But his menace or scorn was alike to Janoc,
-who threw out his arms again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Cré nom!&quot; he cried, &quot;why not? Is he not a rich
-bourgeois like the rest? He and his class have
-crushed us without mercy for many a century. What
-matter if he were hanged by mistake? He could
-be spared&mdash;my Pauline could not. He is merely a
-rich one, my Pauline is a martyr to the cause!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Listen to me, Janoc,&quot; said Winter fiercely.
-&quot;Spout what rubbish you please in your rotten club,
-but if ever you dare again to plot&mdash;even to plot,
-mind you&mdash;any sort of crime against life or property
-in this free country, I shall crush you like
-a beetle&mdash;like a beetle, do you hear, you wretched&mdash;insect!
-Now, get out!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Monsieur, my sister?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Wait outside there till she comes. Then leave
-England, the pair of you, or you will try what hard
-labor in a British prison can do for your theories.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Janoc bowed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Monsieur,&quot; he said, &quot;a prison has made me what
-I am.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Pauline was candid as her brother. She had, in
-truth, misunderstood the respite given to her mistress,
-and meant to kill her on the night of the 3d. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page279" id="page279"></a>[pg&nbsp;279]</span>
-visit to the Exhibition was of her own contriving.
-She had got rid of her English acquaintance, the
-cook, very easily after meeting Antonio by appointment.
-Then she left him, without giving a reason,
-and hurried back to the mansions, where, owing to
-her intimate knowledge of the internal arrangements,
-she counted on entering and leaving the flat unseen.
-She did actually succeed in her mission, but found
-Rose de Bercy lying dead.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On the floor, close to the body, was a dagger,
-and she had no doubt whatever that her brother had
-acted in her stead, so she picked up the weapon, secreted
-it with the dagger given her in readiness for
-the crime, and took the first opportunity of hiding
-herself, lest the mere fact that Janoc was seen in her
-company should draw suspicion towards him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, but the lace? What of the piece of blood-stained
-lace?&quot; demanded Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wished to make sure, monsieur,&quot; was the
-astounding reply. &quot;Had she not been dead, but
-merely wounded, I&mdash;<i>Eh, bien!</i> I tore her dress open,
-in order to feel if her heart was beating, and the bit
-of lace remained in my hand. I was so excited that
-I hardly knew what I was doing. I took it away.
-Afterwards, when Antonio said that the police were
-cooling in their chase of Osborne, I gave it to him;
-he told me he could use it to good effect.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Phew!&quot; breathed Winter, &quot;you&#39;re a pretty lot
-of cutthroats, I must say. Why did you keep the
-daggers and the diary, sweet maid?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page280" id="page280"></a>[pg&nbsp;280]</span>
-&quot;The knife that rid us of a traitress was sacred.
-I thought the diary might be useful to the&mdash;to our
-friends.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yet you gave it to Mr. Clarke without any
-demur?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The girl shot a look at Clarke in which fright was
-mingled with hatred.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He&mdash;he&mdash;I was afraid of him,&quot; she stammered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter opened the door.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There is your brother,&quot; he said. &quot;Be off, both
-of you. Take my advice and leave England to-night.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They went forth, hand in hand, in no wise cast
-down by the loathing they had inspired. Clarke
-looked far more miserable than they, for by their
-going he had lost the prize of his life.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Now for Osborne,&quot; whispered Furneaux. &quot;Leave
-him to me, Winter. Trust me implicitly for five
-minutes&mdash;that is all.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne was brought in by the station inspector,
-that human ledger who would record without an unnecessary
-word the name of the Prime Minister or
-the Archbishop of Canterbury on any charge preferred
-against either by a responsible member of the
-force. The young American was calm now, completely
-self-possessed, disdainful of any ignominy
-that might be inflicted on him. He did not even
-glance at Furneaux, but nodded to Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Your assurances are seemingly of little value,&quot;
-he said coldly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page281" id="page281"></a>[pg&nbsp;281]</span>
-&quot;Mr. Winter is quite blameless,&quot; snapped Furneaux,
-obviously nettled by the implied reproof.
-&quot;Please attend to me, Mr. Osborne&mdash;this affair rests
-wholly between you and me. Learn now, for the
-first time, I imagine, that Rose de Bercy was my wife.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne did truly start at hearing that remarkable
-statement. Clarke&#39;s mouth literally fell open;
-even the uniformed inspector was stirred, and began
-to pare a quill pen with a phenomenally sharp knife,
-this being the only sign of excitement he had ever
-been known to exhibit.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, unhappily for her and me, we were married
-in Paris soon after she ran away from home,&quot; said
-Furneaux. &quot;I&mdash;I thought&mdash;we should be happy.
-She had rare qualities, Mr. Osborne; perhaps you
-discovered some of them, and they fascinated you
-as they fascinated me. But&mdash;she had others, which
-<i>I</i> learnt to my sorrow, while <i>you</i> were spared. I
-cannot explain further at this moment. I have only
-to say that you are as free from the guilt of her
-death&mdash;as <i>I</i> am!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter alone was conscious of a queer note in the
-little man&#39;s voice as he dwelt on the comparison. He
-seemed to be searching for some simile of wildest
-improbability, and to have hit upon himself as supplying
-it. But Osborne was in no mood for bewilderment.
-He cared absolutely nothing about
-present or future while the horrible past still held
-the pall it had thrown on his prospects of bliss with
-Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page282" id="page282"></a>[pg&nbsp;282]</span>
-&quot;In that event, one might ask why I am here,&quot;
-he said quietly. &quot;Not that I am concerned in the
-solving of the riddle. You have done your worst,
-Mr. Furneaux. You can inflict no deeper injury on
-me. If you have any other vile purpose to serve
-by telling me these things, by all means go right
-ahead.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux&#39;s eyes glinted, and his wizened cheeks
-showed some token of color, but he kept his voice
-marvelously under control.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;In time you will come to thank me, Mr. Osborne,&quot;
-he said. &quot;To-day you are bitter, and I am not
-surprised at it, but you could never have been happy
-in your marriage with Miss Rosalind Marsh while
-the shadow of suspicion clung to you. Please do
-not forget that the world believes you killed Rose
-de Bercy. If you walked forth now into Regent
-Street, and the word went around that you were
-there, a thousand people would mob you in a minute,
-while ten thousand would be prepared to lynch you
-within ten minutes. I have played with you, I admit&mdash;with
-others, too, and now I am sorry&mdash;to a certain
-extent. But in this case, I was at once detective,
-and judge, and executioner. If you wantonly transferred
-your love from the dead woman to the living
-one, I cared not a straw what you suffered or how
-heavily you were punished. That phase has passed.
-To-day you have justified yourself. Within twenty-four
-hours you will be free to marry Rosalind Marsh,
-because your name will have lost the smirch now
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page283" id="page283"></a>[pg&nbsp;283]</span>
-placed on it, while your promise to Hylda Prout will
-be dissolved. But for twenty-four hours you must
-remain here, apparently a prisoner, in reality as
-much at liberty as any man in London. Yes, I
-vouch for my words&mdash;&mdash;&quot; for at last wonder and
-hope were dawning in Osborne&#39;s eyes&mdash;&quot;my chief,
-Mr. Winter, will tell you that I have never spoken
-in this manner without making good what I have
-said&mdash;never, I repeat. If I could spare you the
-necessity of passing a night in a cell I would do
-so; but I cannot. You are the decoy duck for the
-wild creature that I mean to lay hands on before
-another day has closed. Make yourself as comfortable
-as possible&mdash;the inspector will see to that&mdash;but
-I <i>must</i> keep you here, a prisoner in all outward semblance.
-Are you willing?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For Heaven&#39;s sake&mdash;&mdash;&quot; began Osborne.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For Rosalind&#39;s sake, too,&quot; said Furneaux
-gravely. &quot;No, I can answer no questions. She
-has more to bear than you. She does not know
-what to believe, whom to trust, whereas you have
-my solemn assurance that all will soon be well with
-both you and her. You see, I am not craving your
-forgiveness&mdash;yet. It suffices that I have forgiven
-<i>you</i>, since your tribulation will end quickly, whereas
-mine remains for the rest of my days. I <i>did</i> love
-Rose de Bercy: you did not.... Ah, bah! I am
-growing sentimental. Winter, have you ever seen
-me weep? No; then gag me if you hear me talking
-in this strain again. Come, I have much to tell you.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page284" id="page284"></a>[pg&nbsp;284]</span>
-Good-day, Mr. Osborne. The hours will soon fly;
-by this time to-morrow you will be gay, light-hearted,
-ready to shout your joy from the housetops&mdash;ready
-even to admit that a detective may be bothered with
-that useless incubus&mdash;a heart.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Osborne took a step towards him, but Furneaux
-sprang out and banged the door. Winter caught
-the millionaire by the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am as thoroughly in the dark as you,&quot; he said.
-&quot;Perhaps not, though. I have a glimmer of light;
-you, too, will begin to see dimly when you have
-collected your thoughts. But you must let Furneaux
-have his way. It may not be your way&mdash;it
-certainly is not mine&mdash;but he never fails when he
-promises, and, at any rate, you must now be sure that
-no manner of doubt rests in the minds of the police
-where you are concerned. It is possible, after Furneaux
-and I have gone into this thing fully, that you
-may be released to-night&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Winter,&quot; cried Osborne, in whose veins the
-blood was coursing tumultuously, &quot;let that strange
-man justify his words concerning Miss Marsh, and
-I shall remain here a month if that will help.&quot;</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page285" id="page285"></a>[pg&nbsp;285]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI<br/>
-WHEREIN TWO WOMEN TAKE THE FIELD</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Some tears, some tea, a bath, a change of clothing&mdash;where
-is the woman who will not vie with the
-Ph&oelig;nix under such conditions, especially if she be
-sound in mind and limb? An hour after her arrival
-at Porchester Gardens, Rosalind was herself again,
-a somewhat pale and thin Rosalind, to be sure, but
-each moment regaining vigor, each moment taking
-huge strides back to the normal.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Of course, her ordered thoughts dwelt more and
-more with Osborne, but with clear thinking came a
-species of confusion that threatened to overwhelm her
-anew in a mass of contradictions. If ever a man
-loved a woman then Osborne loved her, yet she had
-seen him in the arms of that dreadful creature, Hylda
-Prout. If ever a man had shown devotion by word
-and look, then Osborne was devoted to her, yet he
-had taken leave of her with the manner of one who
-was going to his doom. Ah, he spoke of &quot;a felon&#39;s
-cell.&quot; Was that it? Was it true what the world
-was saying&mdash;that he had really killed Rose de Bercy?
-No, that infamy she would never believe. Yet Furneaux
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page286" id="page286"></a>[pg&nbsp;286]</span>
-had arrested him&mdash;Furneaux, the strange little man
-who seemed ever to say with his lip what
-his heart did not credit.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">During those weary hours in Poland Street, when
-she was not dozing or faint with anxiety, she had
-often recalled Furneaux&#39;s queer way of conducting
-an inquiry. She knew little or nothing of police
-methods, yet she was sure that British detectives did
-not badger witnesses with denunciations of the suspected
-person. In newspaper reports, too, she had
-read of clever lawyers who defended those charged
-with the commission of a crime; why, then, was Osborne
-undefended; what had become of the solicitor
-who appeared in his behalf at the inquest? Unfortunately,
-she had no friend of ripe experience to
-whom she could appeal in London, but she determined,
-before that day closed, to seek those two, the
-solicitor and Furneaux, bidding the one protect Osborne&#39;s
-interests, and demanding of the other an explanation
-of his gross failure to safeguard her when
-she was actually carrying out his behests.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mrs. Marsh, far more feeble and unstrung than
-her daughter, was greatly alarmed when Rosalind
-announced her intention.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My dear one,&quot; she sobbed, &quot;I shall lose you
-again. How can you dream of running fresh risk
-of meeting those terrible beings who have already
-wreaked their vengeance on you?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But, mother darling, you shall come with me&mdash;there
-are lives at stake&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page287" id="page287"></a>[pg&nbsp;287]</span>
-&quot;Of what avail are two women against creatures
-like these Anarchists?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;We shall go to Scotland Yard and obtain police
-protection. Failing that, we shall hire men armed
-with guns to act as our escort. Mother, I did not
-die in that den of misery, but I shall die now of
-impotent wrath if I remain here inactive and let Mr.
-Osborne lie in prison for my sake.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;For your sake? Rosalind? After what you
-have told me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, it is true, true! I feel it here,&quot; and an
-eager hand pressed close to her heart. &quot;My brain
-says, &#39;You are foolish&mdash;why not believe your eyes,
-your ears?&#39; but my heart bids me be up and doing,
-for the night cometh when no man can work, and I
-shall dream of death and the grave if I sleep this
-day without striking one blow for the man that loves
-me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yet he said&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bear with me, mother dear! I cannot explain,
-I can only feel. A woman&#39;s intuition may sometimes
-be trusted when logic points inexorably to the
-exact opposite of her beliefs. And this is a matter
-that calls for a woman&#39;s wit. See how inextricably
-women are tangled in the net which has caught Osborne
-in its meshes. A woman was killed, a woman
-found the poor thing&#39;s body, a woman gave the worst
-evidence against Osborne, a woman has sacrificed all
-womanliness to snatch him from me. Ah, where is
-Pauline Dessaulx? She, too, is mixed up in it. Has
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page288" id="page288"></a>[pg&nbsp;288]</span>
-she discovered the loss of the daggers? Has she
-fled?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind rose to her feet like one inspired, and
-Mrs. Marsh, fearing for her reason, stammered
-brokenly her willingness to go anywhere and do anything
-that might relieve the strain. When her
-daughter began to talk of &quot;daggers&quot; she was really
-alarmed. The girl had alluded to them more than
-once, but poor Mrs. Marsh&#39;s troubled brain associated
-&quot;daggers&quot; with Anarchists. That any such
-murderous-sounding weapons should be secreted in
-a servant&#39;s bedroom at Porchester Gardens, be found
-there by Rosalind, and carried by her all over London
-in a cab, never entered her mind. Perhaps the
-sight of Pauline would in itself have a soothing
-effect, since one could not persist in such delusions
-when the demure Frenchwoman, in the cap and apron
-of respectable domestic service, came in answer to the
-bell. So Mrs. Marsh rang: and another housemaid
-appeared.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Please send Pauline here,&quot; said the white-faced
-mother.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pauline is out, ma&#39;m,&quot; came the answer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Will she return soon?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I don&#39;t know, ma&#39;m&mdash;I&mdash;I think she has run
-away.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Run away!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Two voices repeated those sinister words. To
-Rosalind they brought a dim memory of something
-said by Janoc, to Mrs. Marsh dismay. The three
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page289" id="page289"></a>[pg&nbsp;289]</span>
-were gazing blankly at each other when the clang of
-a distant bell was heard.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That&#39;s the front door,&quot; exclaimed the maid.
-&quot;Perhaps Pauline has come back.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She hurried away, and returned, breathless.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It isn&#39;t Pauline, ma&#39;m, but a lady to see Miss
-Rosalind.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What lady?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She wouldn&#39;t give a name, miss; she says she
-wants to see you perticular.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Send her here.... Now, mother, don&#39;t be
-alarmed. This is not Soho. If you wish it, I shall
-get someone to wait in the hall until we learn our
-mysterious visitor&#39;s business.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Most certainly, the well-dressed and elegant woman
-whom the servant ushered into the room was not
-of a type calculated to cause a pang of distrust
-in any household in Porchester Gardens. She was
-dressed quietly but expensively, and, notwithstanding
-the heat of summer, so heavily veiled that her features
-were not recognizable until she raised her veil.
-Then a pair of golden-brown eyes flashed triumphantly
-at the startled Rosalind, and Hylda Prout
-said:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;May I have a few words in private with you,
-Miss Marsh?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You can have nothing to say to me that my
-mother may not hear,&quot; said Rosalind curtly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The visitor smiled, and looked graciously at Mrs.
-Marsh.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page290" id="page290"></a>[pg&nbsp;290]</span>
-&quot;Ah, I am pleased to have this opportunity of
-meeting you,&quot; she said. &quot;You may have heard of
-me. I am Hylda Prout.&quot; ... Then, seeing the
-older woman&#39;s perplexity, she added: &quot;Since you do
-not seem to know me by name, let me explain that
-Mr. Rupert Osborne, of whom you must have heard a
-good deal, is my promised husband.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mrs. Marsh might be ill and worried; but she was
-a well-bred lady to the marrow, and she realized instantly
-that the stranger&#39;s politeness covered a
-studied insult to her daughter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Has Mr. Osborne sent you as his ambassador?&quot;
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, he could not: he is in prison. But your
-daughter and I have met under conditions that compel
-me to ask her now not to interfere in the efforts
-I shall make to secure his release.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Please go!&quot; broke in Rosalind, and she moved as
-if to summon a servant.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am not here from choice,&quot; sneered Hylda. &quot;I
-have really come to plead for Mr. Osborne. If you
-care for him as you say you do I want you to understand
-two things: first, that your pursuit is in vain,
-since he has given his word to marry me within a
-week, and, secondly, that any further interference
-in his affairs on your part may prove disastrous to
-him. You cannot pretend that I have not warned
-you. Had you taken my advice the other day,
-Rupert would not now be under arrest.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mrs. Marsh was sallow with indignation, but Rosalind,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page291" id="page291"></a>[pg&nbsp;291]</span>
-though tingling in every fiber, controlled herself
-sufficiently to utter a dignified protest.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You had something else in your mind than Mr.
-Osborne&#39;s safety in coming here today: I do not
-believe one word you have said,&quot; she cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, but you shall believe. Wait one short
-week&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I shall not wait one short hour. Mr. Osborne&#39;s
-arrest is a monstrous blunder, and I am going this
-instant to demand his release.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;He has not taken you into his confidence, it
-would seem. Were it not for his promise to me
-you would still be locked in your den at Poland
-Street.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Some things may be purchased at a price so degrading
-that a man pays and remains silent. If
-Mr. Osborne won my liberty by the loss of his self-respect
-I am truly sorry for him, but the fact, if it
-is a fact, only strengthens my resolution to appeal
-to the authorities in his behalf.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You can achieve nothing, absolutely nothing,&quot;
-shrilled Hylda vindictively.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I shall try to do much, and accomplish far more,
-perhaps, than you imagine.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You will only succeed in injuring him.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;At any rate, I shall have obeyed the dictates of
-my conscience, whereas your vile purposes have ever
-been directed by malice. How dare you talk of
-serving him! Since that poor woman was struck
-dead by some unknown hand you have been his worst
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page292" id="page292"></a>[pg&nbsp;292]</span>
-enemy. In the guise of innocent friendship you
-supplied the police with the only real evidence they
-possess against him. Probably you are responsible
-now for his arrest, which could not have happened
-had I been at liberty during the past two days.
-Go, and vent your spite as you will&mdash;no word of
-yours can deter me from raising such a storm as
-shall compel Mr. Osborne&#39;s release!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For a second or two those golden-brown eyes
-blazed with a fire that might well have appalled
-Rosalind could she have read its hidden significance.
-During a tick of the clock she was in mortal peril
-of her life, but Hylda Prout, though partially insane,
-was not yet in that trance of the wounded tiger
-which recks not of consequences so that it gluts its
-rage.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mrs. Marsh, really frightened, rushed to the electric
-bell, and the jar of its summons, faintly audible,
-seemed to banish the grim specter that had entered
-the room, though unseen by other eyes than those
-of the woman who dreamed of death even while she
-glowered at her rival. Her bitter tongue managed
-to outstrip her murderous thoughts in the race back
-to ordered thought.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are powerless,&quot; she taunted Rosalind, &quot;but,
-like every other discarded lover, you cling to delusions.
-Now I shall prove to you how my strength
-compares with your weakness. You speak of appealing
-to the authorities. That means Scotland Yard,
-I suppose. Very well. I, too, shall go there, in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page293" id="page293"></a>[pg&nbsp;293]</span>
-your very company, if you choose, and it will
-then be seen which of us two can best help Mr.
-Osborne.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The housemaid appeared.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Please show this person out,&quot; said Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My carriage is waiting&mdash;Rupert&#39;s carriage,&quot;
-said Hylda.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;After she has gone, Lizzie,&quot; said Rosalind to
-the maid, &quot;kindly get me a taxicab.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Porchester Gardens is well out to the west, so
-the taxicab, entered in a fever of haste by Rosalind
-and her mother, raced ahead of Osborne&#39;s bays in
-the flight to Westminster. Hylda Prout had experienced
-no difficulty in securing the use of the millionaire&#39;s
-carriage. She went to his Mayfair flat,
-paralyzed Jenkins by telling him of his master&#39;s
-arrest, assured him, in the same breath, that she
-alone could prove Osborne&#39;s innocence, and asked that
-all the resources of the household should be placed
-at her disposal, since Mr. Osborne meant to marry
-her within a few days. Now, Jenkins had seen things
-that brought this concluding statement inside the
-bounds of credibility, so he became her willing slave
-in all that concerned Osborne.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter was sitting in his office, with Furneaux
-straddled across a chair in one corner, when Johnson,
-the young policeman who was always at the Chief
-Inspector&#39;s beck and call, entered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Two ladies to see you, sir,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux&#39;s eyes sparkled, but Winter took the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page294" id="page294"></a>[pg&nbsp;294]</span>
-two cards and read: &quot;Mrs. Marsh; Miss Rosalind
-Marsh.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Bring them here,&quot; he said.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I rather expected the other one first,&quot; grinned
-Furneaux, who was now evidently on the best of
-terms with his Chief.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Perhaps she won&#39;t show up. She must be deep,
-crafty as a fox, or she could never have humbugged
-me in the way you describe.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My dear Winter, coincidence is the best dramatist
-yet evolved. You were beaten by coincidence.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you were not,&quot; and the complaint fell
-querulously from the lips of one who was almost
-unrivaled in the detection of crime.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You forget that <i>I</i> supplied the coincidence.
-Clarke, too, blundered with positive genius. I assure
-you that, in your shoes, I must have acted with&mdash;with
-inconceivable folly.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Thank you,&quot; said Winter grimly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Rosalind and her mother came in. Both ladies
-had been weeping, but the girl&#39;s eyes shone with
-another light than that of tears when she cried vehemently:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are the responsible official here, I understand.
-I have no word for <i>that</i> man,&quot; and she
-transfixed Furneaux with a tragic finger, &quot;but I do
-appeal to someone who may have a sense of decency&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You have come to see me about Mr. Osborne?&quot;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page295" id="page295"></a>[pg&nbsp;295]</span>
-broke in Winter, for Rosalind&#39;s utterance was choked
-by a sob.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, of course. Are you aware&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I am aware of everything, Miss Marsh. Please
-be seated; and you, too, Mrs. Marsh. Mr. Osborne
-is in no danger whatsoever. I cannot explain, but
-you must trust the police in this matter.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah, so <i>he</i> said,&quot; and Rosalind shot a fiery glance
-at the unabashed Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Seen anybody?&quot; he asked, with an amiable
-smirk.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;What do you mean?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Has anybody been gloating over Mr. Osborne&#39;s
-arrest?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For the life of her, Rosalind could not conceal
-the surprise caused by this question. She even
-smothered her resentment in her eagerness.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mr. Osborne&#39;s typist, a woman named Hylda
-Prout, has been to see me,&quot; she cried.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Excellent! What did she say?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Everything that a mean heart could suggest.
-But you will soon hear her statements. She is coming
-here herself, or, at least, so she said.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Great Scott!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux sprang up, and ran to the bell. For
-some reason which neither Mrs. Marsh nor her daughter
-could fathom, the mercurial little Jersey man was
-wild with excitement; even Winter seemed to be disturbed
-beyond expression. Johnson came, and Furneaux
-literally leaped at him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page296" id="page296"></a>[pg&nbsp;296]</span>
-&quot;Ring up that number, quick! You know exactly
-what to say&mdash;and do!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Johnson saluted and vanished again; Winter had
-chosen him for his special duties because he never
-uttered a needless word. Still, these tokens of activity
-in the police headquarters did not long repress
-the tumult in Rosalind&#39;s breast.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If, as you tell me, Mr. Osborne is in no danger&mdash;&mdash;&quot;
-she began; but Winter held up an impressive
-hand.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You are here in order to help him,&quot; he said
-gravely. &quot;Pray believe that we appreciate your
-feelings most fully. If this girl, Hylda Prout, is
-really on her way here we have not a moment to
-lose. No more appeals, I beg of you, Miss Marsh.
-Tell us every word that passed between you and
-her. You can speak all the more frankly if I assure
-you that Mr. Furneaux, my colleague, has acted
-throughout in Mr. Osborne&#39;s interests. Were it not
-for him this young gentleman, who, I understand,
-will soon become your husband, would never have
-been cleared of the stigma of a dreadful crime....
-No, pardon me, not a syllable on that subject....
-What did Hylda Prout say? Why is she coming to
-Scotland Yard?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Impressed in spite of herself, Rosalind gave a
-literal account of the interview at Porchester Gardens.
-She was burning to deliver her soul on matters
-that appeared to be so much more important,
-such as the finding and loss of the daggers, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page297" id="page297"></a>[pg&nbsp;297]</span>
-strange behavior of Pauline Dessaulx, the statement,
-now fiery bright in her mind, made by Janoc when
-he spoke of his sister&#39;s guilt&mdash;but, somehow, the tense
-interest displayed by the two detectives in Hylda
-Prout&#39;s assertions overbore all else, and Rosalind
-proved herself a splendid witness, one able to interpret
-moods and glances as well as to record the
-spoken word.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Even while she spoke a lurid fancy flashed through
-her brain.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, gracious Heaven!&quot; she cried. &quot;Can it
-be&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter rose and placed a hand on her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You have endured much, Miss Marsh,&quot; he said
-in a voice of grave sympathy. &quot;Now, I trust to
-your intelligence and power of self-command. No
-matter what suspicions you may have formed, you
-must hide them. Possibly, Mr. Furneaux or I may
-speak or act within the next half-hour in a manner
-that you deem prejudicial to Mr. Osborne. I want
-you to express your resentment in any way you may
-determine, short of leaving us. Do you understand?
-We shall act as on the stage; you must do the same.
-You need no cue from us. Defend Mr. Osborne;
-urge his innocence; threaten us with pains and penalties;
-do anything, in short, that will goad Hylda
-Prout into action in his behalf for fear lest you may
-prevail where she has failed.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A knock was heard at the door. He sank back
-into his seat.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page298" id="page298"></a>[pg&nbsp;298]</span>
-&quot;Do you promise?&quot; he muttered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes,&quot; she breathed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come in!&quot; cried Winter, and the imperturbable
-Johnson ushered in Hylda Prout. Even in the storm
-and stress of contending emotions Rosalind knew
-that there was a vital difference between the reception
-accorded to the newcomer and that given to her
-mother and herself. They had been announced, their
-names scrutinized in advance, as it were, whereas
-Hylda Prout&#39;s arrival was expected, provided for;
-in a word, the policeman on guard had his orders
-and was obeying them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, this <i>is</i> a surprise, Miss Prout,&quot; exclaimed
-Furneaux before anyone else could utter a word.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Is it?&quot; she asked, smiling scornfully at Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Quite. Miss Marsh told us, of course, of your
-visit, and I suppose that your appearance here is
-inspired by the same motive as hers. My chief, Mr.
-Winter, has just been telling her that the law brooks
-no interference, yet she persists in demanding Mr.
-Osborne&#39;s release. She cannot succeed in obtaining
-it, unless she brings a positive order from the Home
-Secretary&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I shall get it,&quot; vowed Rosalind, to whom it seemed
-that Furneaux&#39;s dropped voice carried a subtle hint.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Try, by all means,&quot; said Furneaux blandly.
-&quot;Nevertheless, I strongly advise you ladies, all three,
-to go home and let matters take their course.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Never!&quot; cried Rosalind valiantly. &quot;You must
-either free Mr. Osborne to-night or I drive straight
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page299" id="page299"></a>[pg&nbsp;299]</span>
-from this office to the House of Commons. I have
-friends there who will secure me a hearing by the
-Home Secretary.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux glanced inquiringly at Winter, whose
-hand was stroking his chin as if in doubt. Hylda
-Prout took a step nearer the Chief Inspector. Her
-dress brushed against the drawer which contained
-the daggers, and one of those grewsome blades had
-pierced Rose de Bercy&#39;s brain through the eye.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;The Home Secretary is merely an official like the
-rest of you,&quot; she said bitingly. &quot;Miss Marsh may
-appeal to whom she thinks fit, but the charge against
-Mr. Osborne will keep him in custody until it is heard
-by a magistrate. Nothing can prevent that&mdash;nothing&mdash;unless&mdash;&mdash;&quot;
-and her gaze dwelt warily on Furneaux
-for a fraction of an instant&mdash;&quot;unless the
-police themselves are convinced that the evidence on
-which they rely is so flimsy that they run the risk
-of public ridicule by bringing it forward.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ha! ha!&quot; laughed Furneaux knowingly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I think I am wasting time here,&quot; cried Rosalind,
-half rising.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;One moment, I pray you,&quot; put in Winter.
-&quot;There is some force in Miss Prout&#39;s remarks, but
-I am betraying no secret in saying that Mr. Osborne&#39;s
-apparently unshakable alibi can be upset, while we
-have the positive identification of at least three people
-who saw him on the night of the crime.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Meaning the housekeeper, the driver of the taxicab,
-and the housemaid at Feldisham Mansions?&quot;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page300" id="page300"></a>[pg&nbsp;300]</span>
-said Hylda coolly, and quite ignoring Rosalind&#39;s outburst.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;At least those,&quot; admitted Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Are there others, then?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Really, Miss Prout, this is most irregular. We
-are not trying Mr. Osborne in this room.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I see there is nothing for it but to carry my
-plea for justice to the Home Secretary,&quot; cried Rosalind,
-acting as she thought best in obedience to a
-lightning glance from Furneaux. &quot;Come, mother,
-we shall soon prove to these legal-minded persons that
-they cannot juggle away a man&#39;s liberty to gratify
-their pride&mdash;and spite.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda&#39;s eyes took fire at that last word.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Go to your Home Secretary,&quot; she said with
-measured venom. &quot;Much good may it do you!
-While <i>you</i> are being dismissed with platitudes <i>I</i> shall
-have rescued my affianced husband from jail.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Dear me! this is most embarrassing. Your affianced
-husband?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Furneaux cackled out each sentence, and looked
-alternately at Hylda and Rosalind. There was no
-mistaking his meaning. He implied that the one
-woman was callously appropriating a man who was
-the acknowledged suitor of the other.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda laughed shrilly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That is news to you, Mr. Furneaux,&quot; she cried.
-&quot;Yet I thought you were so clever as to be almost
-omniscient. Come now with me, and I shall prove
-to you that the so-called identification of Mr. Osborne
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page301" id="page301"></a>[pg&nbsp;301]</span>
-by Hester Bates and Campbell, the chauffeur,
-is a myth. The hysterical housemaid I leave to
-you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter leaned back in his chair and waved an expostulating
-hand.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;&#39;Pon my honor, this would be amusing if it were
-not so terribly serious for Osborne,&quot; he vowed.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;If that is all, I prefer to depend on the Home
-Secretary,&quot; said Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let her go,&quot; purred Hylda contemptuously. &quot;I
-can make good my boast, but she cannot.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Boasting is of no avail in defeating a charge
-of murder,&quot; said Furneaux. &quot;Before we even begin
-to take you seriously, Miss Prout, we must know
-what you actually mean by your words.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I mean this&mdash;that I, myself, will appear before
-Hester Bates in such guise that she will swear it was
-me, and not Mr. Osborne, whom she saw on the stairs
-that night. If that does not suffice, I shall meet
-Campbell at the corner of Berkeley Street, if you can
-arrange for his presence there, and tell him to drive
-me to Feldisham Mansions, and he will swear that it
-was I, and not Mr. Osborne, who gave him that same
-order on the night of the third of July. Surely,
-if I accomplish so much, you will set Rupert at liberty.
-Believe me, I am not afraid that you will
-commit the crowning blunder of arresting <i>me</i> for the
-murder, after having arrested Janoc, and his sister,
-<i>and</i> Rupert.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter positively started. So did Furneaux.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page302" id="page302"></a>[pg&nbsp;302]</span>
-Evidently they were perturbed by the extent of her
-information. Hylda saw the concern depicted on
-their faces; she laughed low, musically, full-throated.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, is it a bargain?&quot; she taunted them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Of course&mdash;&mdash;&quot; began Winter, and stopped.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There is no denying the weakness of our position
-if you can do all that,&quot; said Furneaux suavely.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Pray do not let me detain you from visiting the
-House of Commons,&quot; murmured Hylda to Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Perhaps, in the circumstances, you had better
-wait till to-morrow,&quot; said Winter, rising and looking
-hard at Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This man had won her confidence, and she felt that
-she was in the presence of a tragedy, yet it was hard
-to yield in the presence of her rival. Tears filled
-her eyes, and she bowed her head to conceal them.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Come, mother,&quot; she said brokenly. &quot;We are
-powerless here, it would seem.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Allow me to show you the way out,&quot; said Winter,
-and he bustled forward.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">In the corridor, when the door was closed, he
-caught an arm of each and bent in a whisper.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Furneaux was sure she would try some desperate
-move,&quot; he breathed. &quot;Rest content now, Miss
-Marsh. If all goes well, your ill-used friend will
-be with you to-night. Treat him well. He deserves
-it. He did not open your letter. He sacrificed
-himself in every way for your sake. He even promised
-to marry that woman, that arch-fiend, in order
-to rescue you from Janoc. So, believe him, for he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page303" id="page303"></a>[pg&nbsp;303]</span>
-is a true man, the soul of honor, and tell him from
-me that he owes some share of the restitution of his
-good name in the eyes of the public to your splendid
-devotion during the past few minutes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Not often did the Chief Inspector unbend in this
-fashion. There was no ambiguity in his advice. He
-meant what he said, and said it so convincingly that
-Rosalind was radiantly hopeful when she drove away
-with her mother.</p>
-
-<hr class="hr2" />
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page304" id="page304"></a>[pg&nbsp;304]</span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII<br/>
-THE CLOSING SCENE</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">It was a scared and worried-looking Jenkins who
-admitted Hylda Prout and the two detectives to Osborne&#39;s
-flat in Clarges Street, Mayfair. These comings
-and goings of police officers were disconcerting,
-to put it mildly, and an event had happened but a
-few minutes earlier which had sorely ruffled his
-usually placid acceptance of life as it presented itself.
-Still, the one dominant thought in his mind
-was anxiety in his master&#39;s behalf, and, faithful to its
-promptings, he behaved like an automaton.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda carried herself with the regal air of one
-who was virtual mistress of the house. She had invited
-the two men to share her carriage, and there
-was an assured authority in her voice when she now
-directed the gray-headed butler to show them into
-the library while she went upstairs to Mr. Osborne&#39;s
-dressing-room.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;And, by the way, Jenkins,&quot; she added, &quot;tell
-Mrs. Bates to come to these gentlemen. They wish
-to ask her a few questions.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, bring Mrs. Bates,&quot; said Furneaux softly.
-&quot;Don&#39;t let her come alone. She might be frightened,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page305" id="page305"></a>[pg&nbsp;305]</span>
-and snivel, being a believer in ghosts, whereas we wish
-her to remain calm.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Jenkins thought he understood, but said nothing.
-Hylda Prout sped lightly up the stairs, and when
-Jenkins came with the housekeeper, Furneaux crept
-close to him, pointed to a screened doorway leading
-to the kitchen quarters, and murmured the one word:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At once he turned to Mrs. Bates and engaged her
-in animated chatter, going so far as to warn her that
-the police were trying an experiment which might
-definitely set at rest all doubts as to Mr. Osborne&#39;s
-innocence, so she must be prepared to see someone
-descend the stairs who might greatly resemble the
-person she saw ascending them on the night of the
-murder.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The maisonette rented by the young millionaire
-was not constructed on the lines associated with the
-modern self-contained flat. It consisted of the
-ground floor, and first story of a mid-Victorian
-mansion, while the kitchen was in a basement. As it
-happened to be the property of a peer who lived next
-door&mdash;a sociable person who entertained largely&mdash;these
-lower stories were completely shut off from the
-three upper ones, which were thrown into the neighboring
-house, thus supplying the landlord with
-several bedrooms and bathrooms that Osborne did
-not need. As a consequence, the entrance hall and
-main staircase were spacious, and the staircase in
-particular was elaborate, climbing to a transverse
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page306" id="page306"></a>[pg&nbsp;306]</span>
-corridor in two fine flights, of which the lower one
-sprang from the center of the hall and the upper led
-at a right angle from a broad half-landing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Anyone coming down this upper half of the stairs
-could be seen full face from the screened door used
-by the servants: but when descending the lower half,
-the view from the same point would be in profile.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">At present, however, the curtains were drawn
-tightly across the passage, and the only occupants
-of the hall and library were the two detectives, Jenkins,
-and Mrs. Bates.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Hylda Prout did not hurry. If she were engaged
-in a masquerade which should achieve its object she
-evidently meant to leave nothing to chance, and a
-woman cannot exchange her costume for a man&#39;s
-without experiencing difficulty with her hair, especially
-when she is endowed by nature with a magnificent
-chevelure.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Jenkins returned from the mission imposed by Furneaux&#39;s
-monosyllable,&mdash;insensibly the four deserted
-the brilliantly lighted library and gathered in the
-somewhat somber hall, whose old oak wainscoting and
-Grinling Gibbons fireplace forbade the use of garish
-lamps. Insensibly, too, their voices lowered. The
-butler and housekeeper hardly knew what to expect,
-and were creepy and ill at ease, but the two police
-officers realized that they were about to witness a
-scene of unparalleled effrontery, which, in its outcome,
-might have results vastly different from those
-anticipated.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page307" id="page307"></a>[pg&nbsp;307]</span>
-They were sure now that Hylda Prout had killed
-Rose de Bercy. Furneaux had known that terrible
-fact since his first meeting with Osborne&#39;s secretary,
-whereas Winter had only begun to surmise it when
-he and Furneaux were reconciled on the very threshold
-of Marlborough Street police-station. Now
-he was as certain of it as Furneaux. Page by page,
-chapter by chapter, his colleague had unfolded a
-most convincing theory of the crime. But theories
-will not suffice for a judge and jury&mdash;there must be
-circumstantial evidence as well&mdash;and not only was
-such evidence scanty as against Hylda Prout, but
-it existed in piles against Osborne, against Pauline
-Dessaulx, and against Furneaux himself. Indeed,
-Winter had been compelled to recall his permission
-to Janoc and his sister to leave England that day.
-He foresaw that Hylda Prout, if brought to trial,
-would use her knowledge of Rose de Bercy&#39;s dealings
-with the Anarchist movement to throw the gravest
-suspicion on its votaries in London, and it would
-require no great expert in criminal law to break up
-the theoretical case put forward by the police by
-demonstrating the circumstantial one that existed in
-regard to Pauline Dessaulx.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This line of defense, already strong, would become
-impregnable if neither Janoc nor Pauline were forthcoming
-as witnesses. So Clarke, greatly to his delight,
-was told off again to supervise their movements,
-after they had been warned not to quit Soho
-until Winter gave them his written permission.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page308" id="page308"></a>[pg&nbsp;308]</span>
-Some of the difficulties ahead, a whole troupe of
-fantastic imageries from the past, crowded in on
-Winter&#39;s mind as he stood there in the hall with
-Furneaux. What a story it would make if published
-as he could tell it! What a romance! It
-began eight years ago at a <i>fête champtre</i> in Jersey.
-Then came a brief delirium of wedded life for Furneaux,
-followed by his wife&#39;s flight and reappearance
-as a notable actress. Osborne came on the
-scene, and quickly fell a victim to her beauty and
-charm of manner. It was only when marriage was
-spoken of that Furneaux decided to interfere, and
-he had actually gone to Osborne&#39;s residence in order
-to tell him the truth as to his promised wife on the
-very day she was killed. Failing to meet him, after
-a long wait in the library and museum, during which
-he had noted the absence of both the Saracen dagger
-and the celt, already purloined for their dread purposes,
-he had gone to Feldisham Mansions.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">During a heart-breaking scene with his wife he
-had forced from her a solemn promise to tell Osborne
-why she could not marry him, and then to leave
-England. The unhappy woman was writing the last
-word in her diary when Furneaux was announced!
-No wonder she canceled an engagement for dinner
-and the theater. She was sick at heart. A vain
-creature, the wealth and position she craved for had
-been snatched from her grasp on the very moment
-they seemed most sure.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The murder followed his departure within half an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page309" id="page309"></a>[pg&nbsp;309]</span>
-hour. Planned and executed by a woman whom none
-would dream of, it was almost worthy to figure as
-the crime of the century. Hylda Prout had counted
-on no other suspect than the man she loved. She
-knew he was safe&mdash;she assured herself, in the first
-place, that he could offer the most positive proof
-of his innocence&mdash;but she reckoned on popular indignation
-alleging his guilt, while she alone would
-stand by him through every pang of obloquy and
-despair. She was well prepared, guarded from every
-risk. Her open-hearted employer had no secrets
-from her. She meant to imperil him, to cast him
-into the furnace, and pluck him forth to her own
-arms.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But fate could plot more deviously and strangely
-than Hylda Prout. It could bring about the meeting
-of Osborne and Rosalind, the mutual despair
-and self-sacrifice of Janoc and Pauline, the insensate
-quarrel between Winter and Furneaux, and the jealous
-prying of Clarke, while scene after scene of
-tragic force unfolded itself at Tormouth, in the Fraternal
-Club, in the dismal cemetery, in Porchester
-Gardens, and in the dens of Soho.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter sighed deeply at the marvel of it all, and
-Furneaux heard him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She will be here soon,&quot; he said coolly. &quot;She is
-just putting on Osborne&#39;s boots.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter started at the apparent callousness of the
-man.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This is rather Frenchified,&quot; he whispered. &quot;Reminds
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page310" id="page310"></a>[pg&nbsp;310]</span>
-one of the &#39;reconstructed crime&#39; method of
-the <i>juge d&#39;instruction</i>. I wish we had more good,
-sound, British evidence.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There is nothing good, or sound, or British about
-this affair,&quot; said Furneaux. &quot;It is French from
-beginning to end&mdash;a passionate crime as they say&mdash;but
-I shall be glad when it is ended, and I am free.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Free?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes. When she is safely dealt with,&quot; and he
-nodded in the direction of the dressing-room, &quot;I shall
-resign, clear off, betake my whims and my weaknesses
-to some other clime.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Don&#39;t be an ass, Furneaux!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Can&#39;t help it, dear boy. I&#39;m a bit French, too,
-you know. No Englishman could have hounded
-down Osborne as I have done, merely to gratify my
-own notions of what was due to the memory of my
-dead wife. And I have played with this maniac
-upstairs as a cat plays with a mouse. I wouldn&#39;t
-have done that, though, if she hadn&#39;t smashed Mirabel&#39;s
-face. She ought to have spared that. Therein
-she was a tiger rather than a woman. Poor Mirabel!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Not Rose, but Mirabel! His thoughts had bridged
-the years. He murmured the words in a curiously
-unemotional tone, but Winter was no longer deceived.
-It would be many a day, if ever, before Furneaux
-became his cheery, impish, mercurial self again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And now there was an opening of a door, and
-Winter shot one warning glance at the curtains
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page311" id="page311"></a>[pg&nbsp;311]</span>
-which shrouded the passage to the kitchen. A man&#39;s
-figure appeared beyond the rails of the upper landing,
-a man attired in a gray frock-coat suit and
-wearing a silk hat. Mrs. Bates uttered a slight
-scream.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, I never!&quot; she squeaked.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you did, once,&quot; urged Furneaux, instantly
-alert. &quot;You see now that you might be mistaken
-when you said you saw Mr. Osborne on that evening?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, yes, sir; if that is Miss Prout she&#39;s the very
-image&mdash;&mdash;Now, who would have believed it?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;You did,&quot; prompted Furneaux again. &quot;But
-this time you must be more careful. Tell us now
-who it was you saw on the stair, your master, or
-his secretary made up to represent him?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mrs. Bates began to cry.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I wouldn&#39;t have said such a thing for a mint of
-money, sir. It was cruel to deceive a poor woman
-so, real cruel I call it. Of course, it was Miss Prout
-I saw. Well, there! What a horrid creature to
-behave in that way&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No comments, please,&quot; said Furneaux sternly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Throughout he was gazing at Hylda Prout with
-eyes that scintillated. She was standing now on
-the half-landing, and her face had lost some of its
-striking semblance to Osborne&#39;s because of the expression
-of mocking triumph that gleamed through
-its make-up.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;That will do, thank you, Miss Prout,&quot; he said.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page312" id="page312"></a>[pg&nbsp;312]</span>
-&quot;Now, will you kindly walk slowly up again, reeling
-somewhat, as if you were on the verge of collapse
-after undergoing a tremendous strain?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A choked cry, or groan, followed by a scuffle, came
-from the curtained doorway, and Hylda turned
-sharply.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who is there?&quot; she demanded, in a sort of quick
-alarm that contrasted oddly with her previous air of
-complete self-assurance.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Jenkins,&quot; growled Winter, &quot;just go there and
-see that none of the servants are peeping. That
-door should have been closed. Slam it now!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The butler hurried with steps that creaked on
-the parquet floor. Hylda leaned over the balusters
-and watched him. He fumbled with the curtains.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;It is all right, sir,&quot; he said thickly.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Some one is there,&quot; she cried. &quot;Who is it?
-I am not here to be made a show of, even to please
-some stupid policemen.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter strode noisily across the hall, talking the
-while, vowing official vengeance on eavesdroppers.
-He, too, reached the doorway, glanced within, and
-drew back the curtains.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Some kitchen-maid, I suppose,&quot; he said off-handedly.
-&quot;Anyhow, she has run away. You need
-not wait any longer, Miss Prout. Kindly change
-your clothing as quickly as possible and come with
-us. You have beaten us. Mr. Osborne must be
-released forthwith.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Ah!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page313" id="page313"></a>[pg&nbsp;313]</span>
-Her sudden spasm of fear was dispelled by hearing
-that promise. She forgot to &quot;reel&quot; as she
-ran upstairs, but Furneaux did not remind her. He
-exchanged glances with Winter, and the latter motioned
-Jenkins to take Mrs. Bates to her own part
-of the establishment.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;At Vine Street, I think,&quot; muttered Winter in
-Furneaux&#39;s ear.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, here, I insist; we must strike now. She must
-realize that we have a case. Give her time to gather
-her energies and we shall never secure a conviction.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter loathed the necessity of terrifying a
-woman, but he yielded, since he saw no help for it.
-This time they had not long to wait. Soon they
-heard a rapid, confident tread on the stairs, and
-Hylda Prout was with them in the library. Both
-men, who had been seated, rose when she entered.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well,&quot; she said jauntily, &quot;are you convinced?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Fully,&quot; said Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She turned to Furneaux.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But you, little man, what do <i>you</i> say?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I have never needed to be convinced,&quot; he answered.
-&quot;I have known the truth since the day
-when we first met.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Something in his manner seemed to trouble her,
-but those golden brown eyes dwelt on him in a species
-of scornful surprise.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Why, then, have you liberated Janoc and his
-sister?&quot; she demanded.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page314" id="page314"></a>[pg&nbsp;314]</span>
-&quot;Because they are innocent.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She laughed, a nervous, unmirthful laugh.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But there only remains Mr. Osborne,&quot; she protested.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There is one other, the murderess,&quot; he said.
-Even while she gazed at him in wonder he had come
-quite near. His right hand shot out and grasped
-her arm.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I arrest you, Hylda Prout,&quot; he said. &quot;I charge
-you with the murder of Mirabel Furneaux, otherwise
-known as Rose de Bercy, at Feldisham Mansions,
-on the night of July 3d.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She looked at him in a panic to which she tried
-vainly to give a semblance of incredulity. Even in
-that moment of terror a new thought throbbed in her
-dazed brain.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mirabel Furneaux!&quot; she managed to gasp.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, my wife. You committed a needless crime,
-Hylda Prout. She had never done, nor ever could
-have done, you any injury. But it is my duty to
-warn you that everything you now say will be taken
-down in writing, and may be used in evidence against
-you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She tried to wrest herself free, but his fingers
-clung to her like a steel trap. Winter, too, approached,
-as if to show the folly of resistance.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Let go my arm!&quot; she shrieked, and her eyes
-blazed redly though the color had fled from her
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I cannot. I dare not,&quot; said Furneaux. &quot;I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page315" id="page315"></a>[pg&nbsp;315]</span>
-have reason to believe that you carry a weapon, perhaps
-poison, concealed in your clothing.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Idiot!&quot; she screamed, now beside herself with
-rage, &quot;what evidence can you produce against me?
-You will be the laughing stock of London, you and
-your arrests.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Mrs. Bates knows now who it was she saw on
-the stairs,&quot; said Furneaux patiently. &quot;Campbell,
-the driver of the taxicab, has recognized you as the
-person he drove to and from Feldisham Mansions.
-Mary Dean, the housemaid there, can say at last why
-she fancied that Mr. Osborne killed her mistress.
-But you&#39;ll hear these things in due course. At
-present you must come with me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Where to?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;To Vine Street police-station.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Shall I not be permitted to see Rupert?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">A tremor convulsed her lithe body. Then, and
-not till then, did she really understand that the apparently
-impossible had happened. Still, her extraordinary
-power of self-reliance came to her aid.
-She ceased to struggle, and appealed to Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;This man is acting like a lunatic,&quot; she cried.
-&quot;He says his wife was killed, and if that be true
-he is no fit person to conduct an inquiry into the
-innocence or guilt of those on whom he wreaks his
-vengeance. You know why I came here to-night&mdash;merely
-to prove how you had blundered in the past&mdash;yet
-you dare to turn my harmless acting into a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page316" id="page316"></a>[pg&nbsp;316]</span>
-justification of my arrest. Where are these people,
-Campbell and the woman, whose testimony you bring
-against me?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now, in putting that impassioned question, she
-was wiser than she knew. Furneaux was ever ready
-to take risks in applying criminal procedure that
-Winter fought shy of. He had seen more than one
-human vampire slip from his grasp because of some
-alleged unfairness on the part of the police, of which
-a clever counsel had made ingenious use during the
-defense. If Hylda Prout had been identified by
-others than Mrs. Bates, of whose presence alone she
-was aware, she had every right to be confronted
-with them. He turned aside and told the horrified
-Jenkins to bring the witnesses from the room in
-which they had taken refuge. As a matter of fact,
-Campbell and Mary Dean, in charge of Police Constable
-Johnson, had been concealed behind the curtains
-that draped the servants&#39; passage, and Johnson
-had scarce been able to stifle the scream that
-rose to the housemaid&#39;s lips when she saw on the
-stairs the living embodiment of her mistress&#39;s murderer.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But Furneaux did not mean to allow Hylda Prout
-to regain the marvelous self-possession which had
-been imperiled by the events of the past minute.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;While we are waiting for Campbell and the girl
-you may as well learn the really material thing that
-condemns you,&quot; he said, whispering in her ear with
-quiet menace. &quot;You ought to have destroyed that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page317" id="page317"></a>[pg&nbsp;317]</span>
-gray suit which you purchased from a second-hand
-clothes dealer. It was a deadly mistake to keep
-those blood-stained garments. The clothes Osborne
-wore have been produced long since. They were
-soiled by you two days after the murder, a fact which
-I can prove by half a dozen witnesses. Those which
-you wore to-night, <i>which you are wearing now</i>, are
-spotted with your victim&#39;s blood. I know, because
-I have seen them in your lodgings, and they can be
-identified beyond dispute by the man who sold them
-to you.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Suddenly he raised his voice.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Winter! Quick! She has the strength of ten
-women!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">For Hylda Prout, hearing those fateful words,
-was seized with a fury of despair. She had peered
-into Furneaux&#39;s eyes and seen there the pitiless purpose
-which had filled his every waking moment since
-his wife&#39;s untimely death. Love and hate had conspired
-to wreck her life. They had mastered her
-at last. From being their votary she had become
-their victim. An agonizing sigh came from her
-straining breast. She was fighting like a catamount,
-while Winter held her shoulders and Furneaux her
-wrists; then she collapsed between them, and a thin
-red stream issued from her lips.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">They carried her to the sofa on which she had lain
-when for the first and only time in her life those same
-red lips had met Rupert Osborne&#39;s.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter hurried to the door, and sent Campbell,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page318" id="page318"></a>[pg&nbsp;318]</span>
-coming on tiptoe across the hall, flying in his taxi
-for a doctor. But Furneaux did not move from her
-side. He gazed down at her with something of the
-judge, something of the executioner, in his waxen
-features.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;All heart!&quot; he muttered, &quot;all heart, controlled
-by a warped brain!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;She has broken a blood vessel,&quot; said Winter.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No; she has broken her heart,&quot; said Furneaux,
-hearing, though apparently not heeding
-him.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A physical impossibility,&quot; growled the Chief Inspector,
-to whom the sight of a woman&#39;s suffering
-was peculiarly distressing.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Her heart has dilated beyond belief. It is twice
-the normal size. This is the end, Winter! She is
-dying!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The flow of blood stopped abruptly. She opened
-her eyes, those magnificent eyes which were no longer
-golden brown but a pathetic yellow.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Oh, forgive!&quot; she muttered. &quot;I&mdash;I&mdash;loved
-you, Rupert&mdash;with all my soul!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">She seemed to sink a little, to shrink, to pass from
-a struggle to peace. The lines of despair fled from
-her face. She lay there in white beauty, a lily
-whiteness but little marred by traces of the make-up
-hurriedly wiped off her cheeks and forehead.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;May the Lord be merciful to her!&quot; said Furneaux,
-and without another word, he hurried from
-the room and out of the house.</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page319" id="page319"></a>[pg&nbsp;319]</span>
-Winter, having secured some degree of order in a
-distracted household, raced off to Marlborough
-Street; but Furneaux had been there before him, and
-Osborne, knowing nothing of Hylda Prout&#39;s death,
-had flown to Porchester Gardens and Rosalind.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The hour was not so late that the thousand eyes
-of Scotland Yard could not search every nook in
-which Furneaux might have taken refuge, but in
-vain. Winter, grieving for his friend, fearing the
-worst, remained all night in his office, receiving reports
-of failure by telephone and messenger. At
-last, when the sun rose, he went wearily to his home,
-and was lying, fully dressed, on his bed, in the state
-of half-sleep, half-exhaustion, which is nature&#39;s way
-of healing the bruised spirit, when he seemed to hear
-Furneaux&#39;s voice sobbing:</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;My Mirabel, why did you leave me, you whom
-I loved!&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Instantly he sprang up in a frenzy of action, and
-ran out into the street. At that early hour, soon
-after six o&#39;clock, there was no vehicle to be found
-except a battered cab which had prowled London
-during the night, but he woke the heavy-witted driver
-with a promise of double fare, and the horse ambled
-over the slow miles to the yews and laurels of Kensal
-Green Cemetery.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">There he found him, kneeling by the side of that
-one little mound of earth, after having walked in
-solitude through the long hours till the gates were
-opened for the day&#39;s digging of graves. Winter
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page320" id="page320"></a>[pg&nbsp;320]</span>
-said nothing. He led his friend away, and had him
-cared for.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Slowly the cloud lifted. At last, when a heedless
-public had forgotten the crime and its dramatic
-sequel, there came a day when Furneaux appeared
-at Scotland Yard.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hello, Winter,&quot; he said, coming in as though the
-world had grown young again.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Hello, Furneaux, glad to see you,&quot; said Winter,
-pushing the cigar-box across the table.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Had my letter?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who has taken my place&mdash;Clarke?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, not Clarke.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Who, then?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Nobody, yet. The fact is, Furneaux&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;ve resigned&mdash;that is the material fact.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Yes, I know. But you don&#39;t mind giving me
-your advice.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;No, of course not&mdash;just for the sake of old
-times.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Well, there is this affair of Lady Harringay&#39;s
-disappearance. It is a ticklish business. Seen anything
-about it in the paper?&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;A line or two.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I&#39;m at my wits&#39; end to find time myself to deal
-with it. And I&#39;ve not a man I can give it to&mdash;&mdash;&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;Look here, Winter, I&#39;m out of the force.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But, to oblige me.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;I would do a great deal on that score.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="pagenum"><a name="page321" id="page321"></a>[pg&nbsp;321]</span>
-&quot;Get after her, then, without a moment&#39;s delay.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;But there&#39;s my resignation.&quot;</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Winter picked a letter from a bundle, struck a
-match, set fire to the paper, and lighted a cigar
-with it.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">&quot;There goes your resignation!&quot; he said.</p>
-<hr />
-
-<p class="indent">During the following summer Rosalind Marsh and
-Rupert Osborne were married at Tormouth. It was
-a quiet wedding, and since that day they have led
-quiet lives, so it is to be presumed that they have
-settled satisfactorily the problem of how to be happy
-though rich.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-<div class="tnote">
-<h2>Transcriber Notes:</h2>
-
-<p class="indent">Passages in italics were indicated by _underscores_.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Passages in bold were indicated by =equal signs=.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Small caps were replaced with ALL CAPS.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Throughout the document, the &oelig; ligature was replaced with &quot;oe&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Throughout the dialogues, there were words used to mimic accents of
-the speakers. Those words were retained as-is.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The illustrations have been moved so that they do not break up
-paragraphs and so that they are next to the text they illustrate.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Errors in punctuations and inconsistent hyphenation were not corrected
-unless otherwise noted.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On the title page, &quot;DISSAPEARANCE&quot; was replaced with &quot;DISAPPEARANCE&quot;.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">On page 69, &quot;Emile&quot; was replaced with &quot;Émile&quot;.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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