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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51307 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51307)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of This House To Let, by William Le Queux
-
-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: This House To Let
-
-Author: William Le Queux
-
-Release Date: February 24, 2016 [EBook #51307]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THIS HOUSE TO LET ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THIS HOUSE TO LET
-
-By William Le Queux
-
-Hodder And Stoughton Limited
-
-London
-
-1921
-
-
-
-
-PROLOGUE
-
-
-|Very early on a July morning in 1919 Constable Brown was on his beat in
-Kensington, in the immediate neighbourhood of Cathcart Square.
-
-Cathcart Square was an old-fashioned backwater of this highly
-respectable suburb. It had not been built on any regular lines. Small,
-narrow houses nestled comfortably by the side of what might be called
-mansions. At the entrance to the Square itself, a narrow-fronted
-milk-shop stood next door to a palatial residence. The dairy was very
-old, and the Square, with its strange agglomeration of houses, had been
-built round it.
-
-Constable Brown, a tall, strapping young fellow, took his duties easily.
-He was quite contented with his lot, and not thirsting for promotion; he
-had no overweening sense of his own abilities. He was friendly with all
-the cooks on his beat, and from them he received very choice tit-bits.
-In his case, the policeman's lot was a fairly happy one.
-
-The morning was a very bright one, a somewhat powerful summer sun had
-just risen, and flooded the streets with light.
-
-He had no need of his lantern, early in the morning as it was. He
-strolled slowly round the Square, turning observant eyes on an the
-houses. In his patrol, he met nobody. The busy world of commerce was not
-yet astir. Only from afar he heard the distant rumbling of market-carts
-on their way to Covent Garden, market-carts laden with fruit and
-vegetables.
-
-The Square was sleeping. In a few more hours it would wake to vigorous
-life. The dairy shop would take down its shutters, and show signs of
-animation. And when the dairy shop took down its shutters, Constable
-Brown would be relieved, and go home to enjoy his well-earned rest.
-
-All was quiet in the Square. Brown had patrolled it several times in his
-nightly vigil, and had discovered no signs of marauders.
-
-He paused opposite No. 10, one of the few big houses. He looked
-contemplatively at the board announcing in large type--THIS HOUSE TO
-LET: FURNISHED-with the agent's name displayed prominently at the foot
-of the bill.
-
-"Only house to let in the Square," ruminated Brown, as he stood reading
-the bill for perhaps the hundredth time. "It's been empty now for over
-three months. It ought to have been snapped up long ago."
-
-He was right. Houses in Cathcart Square did not wait long for tenants.
-Mr. Brown ruminated further, and provided his own solution.
-
-"Old Miles, the caretaker, has got too comfortable quarters, he doesn't
-want to flit. When people come to view, he talks to them about damp, or
-ghosts or beetles, and chokes them off. Artful old devil, Miles, and a
-bit too fond of drink."
-
-Having finished his patrol of the Square itself, he passed along the
-backs, abutting on a somewhat mean street, for a rather undesirable
-neighbourhood had built itself around these somewhat stately houses.
-
-His perambulations brought him to the back of No. 10, the house to let.
-His trained eye, accustomed to take in the smallest details, noticed
-a broken pane of glass in the scullery window. He climbed over the low
-railing which shut off the back premises from the mean street on which
-they looked, and peered at the broken window-pane. From a general point
-of view there was not much in it. Window-panes are broken every day. But
-this was an empty house, looked after by a somewhat bibulous caretaker
-of the name of Miles. A hundred chances to one that Miles had stumbled
-against it, and broken it with his elbow.
-
-But although Constable Brown was not very brilliant, he was painstaking
-and methodical; his mind was slow but tenacious. He did not accept facts
-at their face value.
-
-After peering through the broken pane, he proceeded to further
-experiments. He lifted the window, and it went up easily. He drew his
-deductions swiftly. Somebody had entered the empty house. That somebody
-had smashed the pane in order to get at the latch, had entered the
-house, later emerged through the window and forgotten to fasten it.
-
-But why enter an empty house, where there was nothing to steal except
-the heavy furniture left by the late tenant, a Mr. Washington, who was
-abroad? Brown knew for a fact from the caretaker that all silver and
-plate had been lodged at Mr. Washington's bank. It was a puzzle.
-
-One thing was clear: his duty lay straight before him. He must go
-over that empty house. A careful examination might reveal something or
-nothing.
-
-But he was a very cautious man, and with no great belief in his own
-powers. He would not make the examination alone. He blew his whistle for
-further assistance.
-
-In a few seconds, a fellow constable, a smart young fellow, hurried up
-to him. Brown pointed to the broken pane, the uplifted window. The smart
-young man projected himself through the open space. Brown followed,
-explaining as he went.
-
-They searched the basement, the ground floor, and the floor above--with
-no result.
-
-"Now for the caretaker," said the younger and the more quick-witted of
-the two policemen.
-
-"He sleeps up at the top," answered Brown. "He generally comes home
-half-seas over. If a regiment was hammering at the door he would not
-wake till his sleep was done."
-
-They went up to the caretaker's room on the top floor. The bed was
-empty. Miles had evidently taken a holiday.
-
-The young constable grunted. "Seems a reliable sort of chap, doesn't he?
-I wonder how long he has been away? The house agents can tell us if
-they have sent any clients to view the house during the last twenty-four
-hours, and whether they have been able to get in or not. Anyway, for the
-present, he seems out of this job."
-
-Brown assented. He did not talk as much as his quicker-witted colleague,
-but his rather slow mind was working at its normal speed.
-
-"We've got to examine the other floors, you know. I've made up my mind
-to one thing--whoever came in here, robbery wasn't the object."
-
-"There I quite agree," remarked the younger man.
-
-They made their way down from the top floor, which consisted of three
-attics. On the floor beneath this, they searched every room and found
-nothing.
-
-But on the floor underneath their search was rewarded. In a small
-dressing-room, leading off the bedroom which fronted the square, they
-found a gruesome sight--the lifeless body of a man, comparatively young,
-somewhere about thirty-five or so, a deep gash in his throat, in his
-stiffened hand a razor.
-
-The two men gazed, horrified. It was an early summer morning, the sun
-was shining through the windows, the birds were twittering in the trees.
-Shortly the whole world would be astir. And here, in the small room, lay
-the senseless clay, oblivious of all these signs of awakening life and
-vigour.
-
-Brown was the first to speak. "Suicide!" he said hoarsely. "The poor
-devil wanted to make an end of it, and crept in here, knowing it was an
-empty house."
-
-The younger man spoke less convincingly. "It looks like it. Suicide,
-as you say." He paused a moment, and then spoke slowly: "I think
-it's suicide, but it might be--mind you, I only say might be--a very
-carefully planned murder. And now, let us overhaul his pockets, we may
-find something to establish identification."
-
-Together they bent down, and rummaged the dead man's pockets. They found
-plenty of material for identification.
-
-As they were engaged in their gruesome task, they heard the sound of a
-latch-key being put in the front-door. They heard the door banged to,
-and heavy footsteps ascended the staircase.
-
-"Miles come back after his spree," whispered Constable Brown to the
-younger man.
-
-Miles, all unsuspecting of what had taken place during his absence, came
-heavily up the stairs. It could not be said that he was by any means
-drunk, but he was not absolutely sober. He was slowly recovering from
-the previous night's debauch.
-
-Arrived on the floor where the two policemen were conducting their
-investigations, absolute sobriety came back to him. He saw the open
-door of the dressing-room, two men in uniform kneeling by the side of an
-inanimate object. His brain cleared as if by magic. He recognised in one
-of the kneeling constables his old friend Brown.
-
-He indulged in a little profanity, born of his emotion, which need not
-be set down here. Shorn of certain expletives, natural to a man of his
-class, he inquired of Brown what was the matter.
-
-Brown on his side was cool and explicit, and instead of answering the
-caretaker's questions, he preferred to put a few of his own.
-
-"Nice sort of caretaker you are," he said in a contemptuous voice.
-"You're paid to look after this house, aren't you? Where were you
-all last night I should like to know? You can see what has happened.
-Somebody has got in through the back, either to commit suicide, or with
-a companion who brought him here to murder him. That's got to be found
-out before the Coroner."
-
-Miles pulled himself together. He was by no means a fool when sober, and
-in sight of this ghastly object the fumes of last night's intoxication
-had absolutely cleared.
-
-"I can show an alibi right enough," he said doggedly.
-
-The younger and readier-witted of the two constables looked up and spoke
-sharply. "So far, my friend, we have not accused you, but you may as
-well tell us the details of your alibi."
-
-Miles's explanation, delivered in the somewhat halting way of his class,
-bore the ring of truth. An old acquaintance of his, whose name and
-address he gave, had looked him up the day before and asked him to spend
-a day with him at Shepperton, where the said acquaintance kept a small
-shop. Miles had succumbed to the temptation. .
-
-"It drives a man fair off his blooming chump to be tied by the leg in a
-hole like this," he interpolated in the midst of his narrative, "waiting
-for would-be tenants who never call. I daresay you chaps do your eight
-or ten hours a day, but you're out in the open air, not looking on four
-walls. You see a bit of life, I don't."
-
-Constable Brown cut across his narrative swiftly.
-
-"Never mind your grievances, Miles. If you could get a better job, I
-guess you would take it. Where did you spend the night?"
-
-"At the same old show, down at Shepperton," replied the unabashed Miles.
-"My old pal's a sport, I can tell you. When he shut up his shop, he plied
-me with some of the best. I wasn't backward, I admit. I missed the
-last train back, and slept on the sofa in the back room. When I woke, I
-remembered things a bit, and got an early train home. Here I am. My old
-pal Jack will tell you I'm speaking gospel truth."
-
-Neither of the two men listening to him had any doubt that his narrative
-was a true one. He was a poor, weak, bibulous creature, but by no
-stretch of the imagination could he be an accessory to the gruesome
-happenings at No. 10.
-
-Even had he been at his post, as he should have been on this particular
-night, he would have been sunk in a stertorous sleep, and have heard
-nothing.
-
-But to make everything sure, Constable Brown pulled him along and forced
-him to look at the dead man.
-
-"You have never seen him before, Miles? I mean he has not called to look
-over the house or anything?"
-
-"No." Miles, looking shudderingly at the ghastly sight, was ready to
-swear he had never seen him before.
-
-He turned his frightened gaze away. "It will be all over the town
-to-night," he said ruefully. "We shall never let the house after this."
-
-"It will still be a soft job for you, Miles," retorted Brown, a little
-spitefully. "You won't have to play up the damp and the beetles. You are
-here for life, old man."
-
-"I know," said Miles in a gloomy tone. "But I shall see him staring at
-me every minute of the day and night."
-
-The body was removed to the mortuary. The evening newspapers had
-flaring headlines: "Gruesome Discovery in No. 10 Cathcart Square." An
-enterprising journalist had got hold of Miles, and speedily discovering
-his weakness, had taken him to the nearest public-house, and plied him
-plentifully with liquor, with a view to a sensational article.
-
-The enterprising reporter made the best of his material, but it did not
-amount to much.
-
-The caretaker knew nothing about the dead man, he was armed at all
-points with his alibi. As regards the house itself, invested with
-so much tragedy, the present tenant was a Mr. Washington, a man of
-considerable means, now abroad. Mr. Washington was prepared to let it
-furnished. The furniture was very valuable.
-
-To a public greedily anxious for the smallest details, the astute
-journalist served up a nice little article, describing the expensive
-furniture, and adding a short life-history of Mr. Washington, as
-supplied by the reminiscent Miles. The public swallowed this article
-eagerly and awaited further developments.
-
-These came with the inquest, and there was a somewhat tame ending to
-what had promised to be a very sensational case.
-
-Some three months previously, a certain man named Reginald Davis had
-been suspected of committing a murder while driving a motor-car
-in Cornwall. The evidence, although circumstantial, had been very
-convincing. The police had been on his track, but not quickly enough.
-The man had eluded their vigilance, and run to earth somewhere.
-
-On the body of the dead man in Cathcart Square, the two constables had
-found three letters addressed to Reginald Davis. Also a letter,
-signed Reginald Davis, addressed to the Coroner in which he avowed his
-intention of committing suicide at the earliest opportunity.
-
-It was fairly evident from this that the wretched man, hunted by the
-police, and recognising that capture was imminent in the course of a few
-days, had resolved upon the fatal step, had effected his entrance into
-the lonely house in Cathcart Square, had found it even more deserted
-than he imagined, and in that little dressing-room cheated the law.
-
-But, in addition to this overpowering evidence, there was added the fact
-of identification.
-
-A tall, handsome young woman, giving the name of Caroline Masters, had
-been to the mortuary, and identified the body as that of her brother,
-Reginald Davis.
-
-She gave her evidence before the Coroner with commendable composure,
-broken now and again with a little natural grief. Her disclosures were
-briefly as follows.
-
-Reginald had always been the black sheep of the family, not naturally
-vicious, but impetuous, fiery-tempered and ungovernable. If he was
-guilty of the murder in Cornwall, it had been due to no natural criminal
-instinct, but to a fit of unbridled passion. Her theory was that remorse
-had weighed upon him for this unpremeditated crime, and that, through
-remorse and the fear of justice overtaking him, he had crept into this
-lonely house and passed sentence on himself.
-
-She made a very great impression on the Court by the calm and dignified
-way in which she gave her evidence. The Coroner put to her a few
-questions. She was quite certain that the body was that of her brother,
-Reginald Davis? Were there any other members of the family who could
-support her in her identification?
-
-No, there were no other members of the family alive. There was another
-brother dead, and a sister of whose whereabouts she knew nothing. Her
-father had been a strange man, he had quarrelled with all the members
-of his family, and she had never known one of them. Her mother had died
-some years ago. Her voice broke a little as she related these touching
-circumstances of her domestic life, more especially when she added she
-was a widow, her husband having been killed in the Great War.
-
-There seemed but one possible verdict. The dead man, it was clearly
-established, was Reginald Davis, first by the letters found upon him,
-secondly by his sister's identification.
-
-It was also clear that Reginald Davis, hunted by the police, and knowing
-that it was only a question of days or weeks before he would be run to
-earth, had considered the two alternatives of self-destruction or the
-extreme penalty of the law--and that he had chosen the former.
-
-The verdict was recorded. Mrs. Masters was complimented on the way
-in which she had given her evidence. The Coroner assured her that the
-sympathy of the Court was with her. The tears Welled into her eyes
-as she listened to the Coroner's well-chosen phrases. She bowed her
-grateful thanks.
-
-Constable Brown was waiting in the corridor as she came out. Beside
-him stood the younger policeman who had assisted him on that very
-well-remembered night in Cathcart Square.
-
-Brown touched his helmet. "A very trying time for you, ma'am," he said,
-"a very trying time. You went through it bravely."
-
-She smiled Wanly. "My poor brother! He had so many good points. But it
-is better as it is. I shudder to think of what might have been, if he
-had not done this dreadful thing."
-
-"Much the best way, ma'am, much the best way," corroborated Brown.
-
-She went out, a graceful figure, and Brown turned to his younger
-colleague.
-
-"A remarkable case, old chap. As we said all along, suicide."
-
-The younger man paused a little before he replied. It may be mentioned
-that a few months later he was promoted to the detective force in
-consequence of some rather clever work connected with a gang of coiners
-in an obscure corner of the West End.
-
-"It looks like it, but I'm not quite as sure as you are," he said
-laconically.
-
-Brown stared, but made no comment. A verdict was a verdict. His young
-colleague had the inexperience and the vanity of youth, and thought he
-was more clever than other people, perhaps!
-
-But on one thing the young constable had made up his mind, and that was
-that Miles, the bibulous caretaker, had not told the truth when in the
-witness-box. He came to this conclusion from his demeanour. Miles swore
-that he had no knowledge of the dead man, but the constable believed
-this to be a lie.
-
-And with the tame ending of the Coroner's inquest, the mystery of No.
-10 Cathcart Square ceased to hold the public interest. Plenty of other
-things came on to attract their attention.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-|In the year before the Great War, when to all appearance there was not
-a cloud upon the horizon, when only a few statesmen felt "profoundly
-uneasy," the secret of that uneasiness being carefully locked away in
-their own breasts, and hidden from the general public--in that year of
-1913, in the month of March, the Twenty-fifth Lancers were quartered at
-the town of Blankfield, in Yorkshire.
-
-The Twenty-fifth was a crack regiment. Most of the officers were
-members of the aristocracy, a few of the plutocracy, that portion of
-the plutocracy which on account of its wealth had been adopted into a
-superior world by marriage with its aristocratic daughters.
-
-They were a fine set of clean-minded, healthy living, sporting young
-fellows. They rode to hounds, they played polo when there was any going,
-they shot over the coverts of their friends, they made love to all the
-pretty girls they came across in a gallant and desultory fashion, loving
-and riding away.
-
-It cannot be said that they took their professional duties in too
-serious a fashion. But they were brave as lions, and when the time came
-to prove their mettle, none of their relatives had cause to blush for
-their record.
-
-The memories of most of them were enshrined deeply in the hearts of
-wailing mothers and weeping sweethearts, when the great holocaust came.
-
-Foremost amongst this band of gay spirits and resolute sportsmen was
-a certain Captain Murchison, "Hughie," as he was always called by his
-intimates.
-
-"Hughie" was not a pure aristocrat. His father, a man of fabulous
-wealth, was the head of the great brewing firm of Murchison, Delaroyd &
-Co., the fourth in succession, for the big brewery had been founded over
-a hundred years ago.
-
-It is supposed, in the case of self-made men, that it requires three
-generations to make a gentleman. Anyway, the present Sir Hugh had won
-his spurs by the fact of belonging to the fourth. And he had further
-firmly established his position by marrying Lady Gertrude Marchmont,
-a daughter of the Earl of Mounthaven. The Marchmonts had blue blood in
-profusion, they ere one of the oldest families in the Kingdom, only just
-being beaten by such superior people as the Howards, the Talbots, and
-the Nevilles.
-
-Captain Murchison was, therefore, plutocrat on the father's side,
-aristocrat of aristocrat on the mother's. But he did not owe his
-popularity to these adventitious circumstances. The fact that he was the
-most popular man in his regiment was due to his own sterling qualities.
-
-In the first place, he was a man of the most unbounded generosity and
-the most serene good-humour. He had captained the Eleven at Eton, and
-he was one of the best shots, also one of the best polo-players, in
-England. Needless to say that he was a man's man. The fact that he was
-also equally a woman's man can be easily explained. He boasted more than
-ordinary good looks, and he had a charming, deferential way with women
-that captivated them at once.
-
-The Twenty-fifth had a very good time at Blankfield, on the whole. The
-houses of the "county" were, of course, open to such a distinguished
-regiment, but perhaps they had a rather jollier time amongst the rather
-limited circle of rich townsfolk whom they condescended to visit:
-the people who, at the best, had only a nodding acquaintance with the
-"county."
-
-Murchison was a born sportsman. Hunting, polo, shooting, cricket,
-occupied nearly all his waking thoughts, except those few that were
-claimed by his professional duties. Popular as he was with women, not
-a single member of the weaker and more charming sex had made any real
-impression on him up to the present.
-
-He had had several flirtations with charming girls, of course: he might
-have indulged in a few sentimental passages with certain more or less
-detached, or semi-detached, married women. The latter very rarely, for
-although by no means a saint he was a very clean-minded young man, and
-held rather rigid notions as to what might be done, and what ought not
-to be done.
-
-Anyway at this particular moment he was quite heart-whole.
-
-And then, one day, in this rather sleepy town of Blankfield, an
-adventure befell him. It was not strictly a common or garden adventure,
-for more than one reason.
-
-The woman, or rather girl, who was concerned in it, for looking at her
-in a severe light she did not appeal to be more than twenty, bore upon
-her no marks of the shameless adventuress. It was easy to see that she
-was not a member of his own world, the world of plutocracy mingled
-into aristocracy by judicious intermarriage. The "county" would not,
-of course, open their doors to her. According to her own account, the
-respectable "villadom" of the sleepy old town had not called upon her,
-on account of the absence of convincing credentials.
-
-The meeting happened in this way. Hugh found himself with a blank
-afternoon, an afternoon that had not been filled up. He could call
-at lots of houses and get tea. But, at this period, he was becoming a
-little fed-up with the Blankfield teas, the simpering girls, the astute
-mothers who wanted to take the heir of the Murchison millions off his
-guard, and hook him for a son-in-law.
-
-Coming from a long line of successful tradesmen, Hugh had rather less
-brains than he ought to have acquired by heredity. Still, he was no
-fool. As long as a proposition was not too complex, he could size it
-up pretty accurately. And he sized up the Blankfield hospitality at its
-true worth.
-
-He walked down the High Street, and turned into the first tea-shop.
-It was a well-known establishment, and the dashing members of the
-Twenty-fifth were wont to invite hither for tea some of the Blankfield
-maidens who Were not too particular as to chaperonage.
-
-He expected to find here a good few of his brother officers. To his
-surprise, he did not see one. But the room was very full. To a casual
-observer, every table seemed occupied. He was about to turn away, when a
-waitress, who knew him well, touched him on the arm.
-
-"It's quite all right, Captain Murchison,"--Hugh had arrived at
-seniority very early: "there's a table up there at the far end. There's
-only a young lady there, and she has very nearly finished her tea."
-
-The young lady in question was quite young; Hugh decided from the first
-swift glance at her that she could not be more than twenty. She was
-exceedingly pretty, with wavy light hair and soft brown eyes. She wore
-an air of composure remarkable in one so youthful.
-
-The young man knew her well by sight, as did his brother officers. She
-was frequently to be seen in the High Street, flitting in and out
-shops, sometimes alone, sometimes accompanied by a rather common-looking
-person, some ten years her senior. It was said they were brother and
-sister and their name was Burton.
-
-They had arrived in Blankfield about a couple of months ago, and taken a
-moderate sized house on the London Road, a little in the outskirts of
-the town. But though they had been here for these two months, they knew
-nobody. Not a soul had called upon them: for the villadom of Blankfield
-was very select, and had to know something about newcomers before it
-stretched out a welcoming hand. About the Burtons nothing seemed to be
-known, and until some reliable information was forthcoming, they would
-be ostracised.
-
-The shop was very crowded, and most girls of her age might have felt
-embarrassed by her loneliness. But, although many admiring glances
-were levelled at her from the few masculine occupants, she seemed quite
-unperturbed and unconscious, looking neither to the right nor the
-left, but taking in everything that was going on, under lowered eyelids
-veiling those pretty brown eyes.
-
-She gave him one swift glance as he sat down, and then went on
-composedly with her tea. There was nothing in the glance that was either
-provocative or inviting. Of the two, Hugh felt much more embarrassed
-than she did. He wondered if she was as stand-offish as she looked. If
-he addressed a remark to her, would she snub him?
-
-Anyway he determined to put it to the proof. "I do hope I am not
-intruding, but it was Hobson's choice, you know; this is the only vacant
-table."
-
-No, she was not going to snub him. On the contrary, she gave him a very
-pleasant smile, and he noted with satisfaction that her voice was a
-refined and pleasant one.
-
-"There is hardly any question of intruding in a public place like this.
-I cannot expect them to turn customers away in order that I may sit by
-myself."
-
-It was not a bad beginning, thought Hugh. It was evident she was not
-disinclined to enter into a little desultory conversation with a man who
-she knew was a gentleman, and not likely to take undue advantage of her
-absence of conventionality.
-
-Hugh went on with growing boldness. He had often said to his great chum
-Jack Pomfret that it was a thousand pities this pretty girl was not in
-Blankfield Society, she seemed so much more attractive than the other
-girls who were in it.
-
-"We haven't been introduced, of course, but I know you very well by
-sight. There is hardly a day that I do not meet you about here. And I
-know your name, too. You are Miss Burton, are you not? And you live with
-your brother at that nice little house on the London Road."
-
-"Quite right." Miss Burton nodded her pretty head. She added with a
-little silvery laugh: "we can't be introduced, unless the waitress took
-the kind office upon herself, for I don't know a soul in the place.
-we have been here two months, and we have been let severely alone. I
-suppose if we stayed here for twenty years it would be the same. Of
-course, we didn't expect to get into 'county' Society, but we must be
-quite as good as heaps of people in the town and outskirts."
-
-Hugh was a little embarrassed by these very frank remarks. He observed
-lamely that it was a shame, and indulged in some rather inane remarks on
-the snobbishness of provincial towns.
-
-"You must find it awfully dull," he ventured after a brief pause. During
-the short silence, Miss Burton had ordered herself some more tea. It was
-evident that she was not desirous of abruptly terminating this pleasant
-_tête-à-tête_. The waitress drew her own conclusions from the further
-order, and smiled a little as she turned away.
-
-"I should be a hypocrite if I pretended the contrary. Of course,
-housekeeping takes up a good bit of my time, and I read a good deal, and
-do a lot of fancy-work. But all the same, it is a state of isolation,
-not an outside person to speak to from one week-end to the other. Of
-course I hear all that is going on from the tradespeople, and I know
-the names of the principal persons here whom I constantly meet and never
-speak to. I know, for instance, that you are Captain Murchison. I think
-I know the names of all your brother officers."
-
-"What made you come here, if it is not a rude question?" asked Hugh
-bluntly. "It was surely a risky experiment, landing yourself in a town
-like this, without any introductions."
-
-"I told my brother so when he first proposed it," replied Miss Burton
-calmly. "But, although he is one of the best fellows in the world, he
-is frightfully obstinate. He had stayed at an hotel here for a few days
-some years ago, and he had taken a violent fancy to the place. He was
-quite sure everybody would make a rush for us, the moment we arrived."
-
-Miss Burton proceeded to draw on her gloves. During this explanatory
-conversation, she had consumed her second cup of tea. She called the
-waitress and paid her bill.
-
-"I must be going now," she said. "I have quite enjoyed this little chat,
-although I am sure you will think very badly of me for having confided
-so much to a stranger. I really don't know what made me do it--I suppose
-I got tired of having kept silence for so long."
-
-Yes, he could understand that. Poor, pretty little girl, just at an age
-when all the pleasures of youth should be open to her, and to have to
-pass her life in the society of that rather common-looking brother, good
-fellow as she declared him to be.
-
-"I have enjoyed the meeting immensely, too," said Hugh heartily. "I only
-wish we could come across each other at some of these Blankfield houses,
-stupid and dull as they generally are."
-
-And then, the pretty Miss Burton fired her last shot as she rose to
-leave:
-
-"I have been unconventional enough from the beginning, and if I can do
-it without blushing, I am going to be more unconventional still. If you
-cared to come up to Rosemount one afternoon, I am sure my brother would
-be pleased to see you."
-
-Murchison was very embarrassed by the suggestion, although she did not
-proffer it in any bold fashion.
-
-"I shall be delighted," he stammered. "I will run up one afternoon."
-Of course when he said this he had very little intention of keeping his
-promise. To enjoy a mild sort of flirtation with an exceedingly pretty
-girl was one thing. To go to her house and make the acquaintance of her
-brother, who he was certain was not a gentleman, was quite a
-different proposition, and might land him in all sorts of unpleasant
-complications.
-
-He also had an uneasy conviction that Miss Burton was remarkably
-self-assured for such a young woman. She had spoken of blushing when
-she gave him the invitation, but she had not done so. Not the faintest
-colour showed on her cheek, and the glance that met his was perfectly
-steady and unwavering. She must either be very innocent, or, young as
-she was, she had acquired the experience and self-possession of a much
-older woman. He would like to think it all out.
-
-The girl nodded in a friendly fashion, and tripped away, leaving Hugh
-Murchison to finish his tea, and ponder over what had happened.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-|When Hugh got back to his quarters the first thing he did was to
-hunt up his great friend Jack Pomfret. He found that young gentleman
-stretched in front of a blazing fire--ft was a very chilly March--and
-smoking a cigar nearly as big as himself. Jack Pomfret, it may be
-said, was quite a small man, of about the size and weight that would be
-associated with the coxswain of a 'Varsity boat.
-
-Next to Murchison, perhaps Pomfret was the most popular man in the
-regiment. He was certainly the poorest, for although he came of an
-aristocratic family, the said family had very little to bless themselves
-with.
-
-If it had been left to his immediate relatives, Jack would have had to
-enter a line regiment, and subsist on his pay, supplemented by more or
-less regular small remittances from his hard-up father.
-
-But fortune had smiled on Jack when he was in his cradle. A rich
-great-aunt had been his godmother, and from the date of his christening
-had taken him under her wing. She had been crossed in love when quite
-a girl, would never marry. Jack Pomfret had a handsome, but not an
-extravagant, allowance now, and he would come into his great-aunt's
-fortune when she died.
-
-Jack always complained that his aunt was a bit thrifty, and did not
-fully understand the imperative necessities of a young subaltern in an
-expensive regiment like the Twenty-fifth.
-
-As a matter of fact, Miss Harding, his mother's youngest sister,
-suffered from acute indigestion, existed principally on soda-water and
-biscuits, lived in a comparatively small house with one manservant and
-two maids, and saved a great deal every year out of a large income. She
-loved Jack very much, but she had little or no sympathy with the follies
-and indiscretions of youth. She had a hazy sort of idea that an officer
-should live within his pay, as she lived well within her income.
-Needless to say that Jack had long disabused her of this silly idea.
-
-"Great tidings, old man," cried Murchison, breaking in upon the
-meditative little man, blowing great clouds of smoke. "I'll give you six
-guesses."
-
-"Not in a guessing mood," returned Jack shortly. "All my brain-power is
-used up. I am trying to concoct a letter to the dear old aunt--God bless
-her, she is one of the best!--insinuating gently that a cheque for a
-couple of hundred would be very convenient at the present moment."
-
-Murchison took a seat. "Silly old ass," he said in a kindly tone, "if
-you want a couple of hundred have it from me, and don't worry about
-the aunt. You can pay me when she stumps-up. From what you have told me
-about your respected relative, it might be a lengthy business. I suppose
-you will plead debts. She might offer to discharge them, and ask the
-names of the creditors. In that case, old chap, you wouldn't handle much
-personally, would you?"
-
-Pomfret laughed genially. He was always very hard-up, but he was never
-depressed for very long. There was always a silver lining to every
-cloud.
-
-"She's the sweetest, dearest soul on God's earth," he said in a tone of
-conviction. "But you know, Hughie old man, she doesn't understand--I say
-emphatically, she doesn't understand--you know what I mean. She is
-early Victorian. As to your suggestion, I appreciate it very much, but
-emphatically, no." He added, with a whimsical smile: "Yours is a loan,
-I should have to pay back; Heaven knows when I could do so. The dear old
-aunt, well, it is a gift, no question of paying back. I haven't thought
-it all out yet, but in the early cool of to-morrow morning, I shall
-write her a beautiful and touching letter. I know by experience it will
-bring a cheque."
-
-"You're an artful young devil, I know," said Murchison. Straight as
-a die himself, he was not too appreciative of his friend's diplomatic
-methods.
-
-On the other hand, was he justified in criticising? He had a magnificent
-allowance from his opulent father. Poor Jack, with a somewhat
-puritanical and niggardly aunt at his back, had just to worry along, and
-live in this expensive regiment from hand to mouth.
-
-There was no more to be said on this subject.
-
-"Well, Jack, are you in a mood to listen to my news?"
-
-Pomfret leaned forward, and flicked the ash oft his cigar. "Yes, I
-think I am. Begone dull care! I shall write that letter the first thing
-to-morrow morning."
-
-"Well, I have made the acquaintance of that pretty Burton girl, whom
-nobody in Blankfield visits."
-
-Mr. Pomfret emitted a little chuckling sound. "Lucky devil. How did you
-do it? I thought she was unapproachable. She walks down the High Street,
-'with a haughty stare, and her nose in the air,' and looks neither to
-left nor right. How did you manage it, old man?"
-
-Hugh laughed. "Oh, as easy as anything. Just dropped in to Winkley's,
-expecting to see a lot of you fellows with your best girls. Not a soul
-there I knew. Room full--every table full, save for one at which Miss
-Burton was sitting alone--sat at the one table, _vis-à-vis_ with Miss
-Burton. There it is in a nutshell."
-
-Mr. Pomfret grinned broadly. "Oh, Hughie, what I would have given for
-your chance. You know I am awfully gone on that girl, she is so sweet
-and dainty, far and away the prettiest girl in Blankfield. What did you
-make of your chance?"
-
-"As much as could be made in five or ten minutes. She told me a lot
-about things, her disappointment in finding that the Blankfield people
-would not call upon her, and that, excepting her brother, she had not a
-soul to speak to."
-
-"Poor little soul!" said Mr. Pomfret, in a voice of the deepest
-sympathy. "Poor little soul!" he repeated.
-
-"Well, we talked for some little time, some ten minutes perhaps, I don't
-think it could have been much longer. And then--then--you will never
-believe it, Jack--she asked me to call, and be introduced to her
-brother."
-
-Mr. Pomfret was quite young, in fact he was the baby of the regiment.
-But having been educated at a public school, he had learned a certain
-amount of worldly wisdom rather early. He gave expression to it now.
-
-"If she were living with her mother, or a maiden aunt, Hughie, the thing
-would be so easy. But the brother, we have seen him walking beside that
-lovely girl. It would be difficult to class him. It would be perhaps too
-much to say he was either a bounder or a cad--he's not boisterous enough
-for the one or common enough for the other. But clearly, he's not a
-gentleman or the imitation of one."
-
-"No," answered Hugh. "Your description of the brother quite fits. He is
-neither fish, flesh, fowl, nor good red-herring, as the old saw has
-it. Then the girl is so different. She is, to an extent, frank and
-unconventional."
-
-"She must be, or she wouldn't have asked you to call upon her,"
-interrupted the astute Mr. Pomfret.
-
-"Quite so, I perfectly agree. But upon my soul, Jack, she has the most
-perfect manners. She does these sort of things in such a way that you
-cease to wonder why she does them."
-
-"I understand." Mr. Pomfret looked very wise. "There's a wonderful
-fascination about the girl. She radiates it, even when you pass her in
-the street. By Gad, there's not a young woman in Blankfield who can
-hold a candle to her. Well, Hughie, what are you going to do about the
-invitation?"
-
-"I'm in two minds, old man, to go or stay away. There's the brother, you
-see."
-
-"There's the brother," repeated Mr. Pomfret, "and a dashed disappointing
-sort of a brother, too. If it had only been a mother, or a maiden aunt!
-what a priceless opportunity! And yet it seems a bit too good to be
-lost."
-
-"But the brother, what about him?" Hugh insisted.
-
-"The brother is, of course, a stumbling-block. You can't ask him to
-Mess. 'Old Fireworks' will stand more from you than anybody, but he
-would never stand Burton. He would be calling him 'Your Grace' or 'Your
-worship' or something."
-
-"Old Fireworks," it may be explained, was the nickname of the respected
-Colonel of the gallant Twenty-fifth Lancers. It had been conferred
-upon him, on account of his explosive temper. He was also a rigid
-disciplinarian.
-
-"I shall not go," said Hugh after a brief pause.
-
-Mr. Pomfret was thinking deeply. He pulled at his big cigar in a
-meditative fashion. Then at length, out of his wisdom, he spoke:
-
-"Let us reason this out, my well-beloved friend. A very pretty girl asks
-you to go and see her, she is unfortunately hampered by an undesirable
-brother. You accept their hospitality, but you know he is not a man
-you can ask to Mess. But you can take him to an hotel, and feed him up
-there. Tell him the Colonel's kicked up rough about guests, any lie you
-like, to save his _amour propre_."
-
-"A good idea, Jack. Have you anything more to say? Don't forget that
-if I go to Rosemount, the news will be all over Blankfield in five
-minutes."
-
-Mr. Pomfret snapped his fingers. "Who cares a fig for the Blankfield
-people? Everybody knows, or ought to know, that a soldier loves and
-rides away. And the Blankfield girls are dull enough, Heaven knows, I
-wouldn't give a thought to them."
-
-"Then you advise me to call, and be introduced to the brother, eh?"
-
-"Of course, we shall be off in another two months, and leave only tender
-memories behind us." Mr. Pomfret was a practical person, if ever
-there was one. "Let us seize the passing day. By the way, have you any
-objection to taking me up to call with you, when you go? Say no, if you
-have the slightest objection."
-
-Hugh Murchison looked at him squarely. "No, old chap, not the slightest.
-The girl interests me in a way, chiefly, I think, because I can't
-quite make her out, can't determine whether she is very cunning or very
-simple, but I am not attracted in the ordinary sense. I take it you
-are."
-
-Pomfret's look of indifference changed to one of gravity. "Yes, Hughie,
-I am. I would like to see that girl at close quarters."
-
-Hugh rose. "Right, we will call together, and in the meantime we will
-keep it from the other fellows?"
-
-"Good Heavens, I should think so, we should be chaffed to death," was
-Jack's fervent answer.
-
-A few days later, the two young men walked to Rosemount. It was a villa
-sort of house, set in a small garden, very carefully kept. The windows
-were ornamented with boxes of flowers. Small as the establishment was,
-there was an air of elegance about it, an elegance perhaps of restricted
-means but of refined taste.
-
-Pomfret nudged his senior officer. "I say, they've turned it into a very
-decent sort of little crib, haven't they? I should say that is due to
-the girl."
-
-Hugh laughed. "Perhaps it is the brother after all. He might be an
-artist, you know. Artists are often very rum-looking chaps."
-
-"Artist be hanged," said Pomfret emphatically. "I'll bet you a fiver he
-isn't an artist, whatever he is. A 'bookie' or a 'bookie's' tout, more
-likely."
-
-At the end of this short colloquy, they had reached the hall door.
-A very smart maidservant, in a becoming cap and apron, opened it. In
-answer to their inquiry, Miss Burton was in.
-
-They were shown into the drawing-room. The young mistress of the house
-was reclining in an easy-chair; an open book lay on her lap.
-
-She advanced towards them with that peculiar air of self-possession
-which had so impressed Hugh on his first meeting in the tea-shop. A
-hostess with years of social experience could not have been more at her
-ease than this young girl.
-
-"How nice of you to come, after that very vague invitation," she said,
-in her clear, silvery voice.
-
-She addressed Murchison first, and then turned swiftly to Pomfret, in
-whose eyes she doubtless recognised frank admiration of her peculiar
-attractiveness.
-
-"I know your friend is going to introduce you in proper form. But it is
-really quite unnecessary. I know you are Mr. Pomfret. I have learned the
-names of all the officers from the tradespeople, also, my only friends
-in Blankfield. Perhaps Captain Murchison has told you what I confided
-to him the other day, that we are as isolated here as if we were on a
-desert island."
-
-Mr. Pomfret sat down beside her on a small Chesterfield. From his
-vantage point he could gaze into the beautiful eyes, he could note the
-lustre of that fair, wavy hair.
-
-"A beastly shame," growled the young subaltern, at a loss for
-appropriate words to express the enormities of Blankfield Society.
-
-She turned away lightly, as if the subject interested her no further.
-
-"I think we will have tea. My brother is engaged in scientific pursuits.
-when he can tear himself away, he will join us. Captain Murchison, will
-you kindly ring the bell?"
-
-Truly, she had the manners of a woman of the world. She took the homage
-of the two men as an accomplished fact. The villadom of Blankfield
-could not produce such a hostess, so free from fussiness or exaggerated
-hospitality. You would have to go to the "county" to find her parallel.
-The two men exchanged appreciative glances. Whatever her origin, Miss
-Burton could shine in any circle in which she found herself permanently,
-or temporarily, located.
-
-The tea was served, and over the tea-cups they chatted in desultory
-fashion. Then the drawing-room door opened, and Mr. Burton appeared.
-From the moment of his appearance, the atmosphere seemed to be changed.
-He advanced towards them with outstretched hands. His manner was
-extremely cordial, but it went beyond the limits of good taste. His
-tones were breezy but blusterous. There was a rasping and a vulgar ring
-in his voice.
-
-"Welcome to our humble abode, gentlemen. It is very brave of you to come
-and visit the boycotted ones."
-
-Hugh and Jack Pomfret fidgeted in their chairs. This common-looking
-young man was a bit too communicative about his private affairs. They
-had a slight suspicion that he had been indulging in alcohol, his manner
-was so unrestrained.
-
-Mr. Burton sank down in his chair, and took a cup of tea from the hands
-of his attentive sister. The visitors did not see it, but she shot a
-warning glance at him, and in face of that warning glance, Mr. Burton,
-by a strong effort, pulled himself together.
-
-"You see, gentlemen, I feel very sore about this matter; my sister has a
-calmer temperament, and she takes things as they come. Here we came from
-the North of Ireland, from a little town where we were highly looked up
-to, where we knew every man, woman and child in the place. We came here,
-and, as I say, we are boycotted."
-
-Miss Burton looked at him severely. "George, I do not think it is very
-good taste of you to inflict your grievances upon these gentlemen, who
-have just come to make an afternoon call. Don't you think you could
-soothe your nerves better by getting back to your laboratory, or
-whatever you call it?"
-
-Mr. Burton accepted the hint, and rose. He waved a genial hand towards
-the visitors.
-
-"You will excuse me for a few moments. I have a most important
-experiment on. But I shall be back very shortly: I shall see you again
-before you leave."
-
-The two young men devoutly wished that they might not see him again.
-The man was a confirmed and innate vulgarian. Both he and his sister,
-no doubt, felt very sore about their social ostracism, but how different
-were the methods of expression indulged in by the two. She explained
-the situation with a proud dignity, hiding her chagrin with a show of
-indifference. He was exposing his gaping wounds to the public eye with
-an air of ostentation.
-
-"I must ask you to excuse my brother," said Miss Burton when
-her ebullient relative had left the room. "He has the true Irish
-temperament, it is impossible for him to conceal his feelings. He would
-like to go down the High Street, trailing his coat behind him, and
-inviting the residents to tread upon it, in real Irish fashion, so that
-he could indulge in a free fight with them."
-
-The young men laughed cordially. They felt that a somewhat awkward
-situation had been saved by her ready tact, her rather humorous
-explanation.
-
-But Murchison, the more level-headed of the two, looked at her very
-fixedly, as he said, "But you are Irish, too. How is it that you have
-learned to control your feelings so successfully?"
-
-At such a direct question, he would have expected her to flush a little;
-at any rate, show some slight symptoms of embarrassment. But this
-remarkably self-possessed girl of twenty or thereabouts was as cool as a
-cucumber. She laughed her little silvery laugh.
-
-"My brother and I are as wide apart as the North and South Poles," she
-said lightly. "Many people have commented on the fact. Would you like to
-know the reason?"
-
-She directed a rather challenging glance in the direction of Pomfret,
-whom she rightly judged to be more susceptible to feminine influence
-than his friend.
-
-"I should like to very much," was the subaltern's answer. That eloquent
-glance had completely subjugated the young man.
-
-"Well, listen. My father was a hard-riding, gambling, hard-drinking
-Irish squire, who squandered his money and left little but debts behind
-him. My brother takes after him in certain qualities, thank Heaven
-not his least desirables ones. My mother was an Englishwoman, rather
-a puritanical sort of woman, who fell in love, perhaps a little
-injudiciously, and I think wore her life out in the attempt to curb my
-father's unhappy propensities. I take after my mother. You understand?
-George is really my half-brother by my father's first wife."
-
-Pomfret nodded his head gravely. "I quite understand," he said, and his
-tone was one of conviction. Murchison preserved a benevolent attitude of
-neutrality. He was still thinking it all out.
-
-Miss Burton was very pretty, nay, more than pretty, very charming, very
-attractive, gifted with a marvellous self-possession, very clever,
-very adroit. But was she as genuine and frank as she seemed? Pomfret
-evidently thought so, but Murchison was not quite sure.
-
-Mr. George Burton, who took after his Irish father in several respects,
-according to his sister's account, made a re-appearance before the
-visitors left. There had been just a little suspicion at first that he
-had been indulging in the hard-drinking habits of his male parent. If
-so, that suspicion must be at once removed. He was bright, breezy and
-blusterous, but he was certainly master of himself. He advanced with the
-most cordial air.
-
-"Gentlemen, I feel I owe you an apology. I had no right to intrude my
-private grievances upon you, even although I am very possessed with
-them. Please put it down to my Irish temperament. You will forgive me, I
-am sure."
-
-He stretched out appealing hands, the hands of the plebeian as Murchison
-was quick to notice, nails bitten to the quick, coarse fingers and
-thumbs.
-
-Murchison quietly ignored the outstretched hand. So did Pomfret,
-subjugated as he was with the charm and attractiveness of Miss Burton.
-He did not quite feel that he wanted to shake hands with this very
-terrible brother, who took after his Irish father.
-
-"I apologise most sincerely, gentlemen," he repeated, "for my outburst
-just now. I had no right to inflict upon you a recital of my private
-grievances against the inhabitants of this wretched town. But I am a
-wild, excitable Irishman, whatever is in my mind has to come out. Please
-forgive me; I know my sister Norah never will."
-
-He looked appealingly at the girl who sat there, calm and self-possessed
-as always, with a slight expression of contempt upon her charming face.
-
-"I have already made excuses for you to Captain Murchison and Mr.
-Pomfret," she said coldly.
-
-The visitors were very much embarrassed. What could they say to this
-dreadful person who seemed so utterly lacking in all the qualities
-of good breeding? Hugh remained silent, Pomfret opened his lips and
-murmured something about the whole affair being very regrettable.
-
-But these somewhat incoherent remarks were quite enough to restore Mr.
-Burton to his normal state of easy buoyancy. He smiled affably.
-
-"So that is all over. Well, I am delighted to see you, and it will not
-be my fault if your first visit is your last. Now, I propose you come
-round and have a little bit of dinner with us soon, so that we may get
-to know each other better. Any night that you are at liberty will suit
-us. _We_ are not overwhelmed with invitations, as you can understand
-from what I have told you."
-
-If Murchison had been by himself, he would have politely shelved the
-invitation. Miss Burton, who took after her English mother, was quite
-decent and ladylike. The brother was insufferable. Vulgarity, so to
-speak, oozed from him. He was offensive even in his geniality. In short,
-he was impossible.
-
-But Pomfret took the wind out of his senior's sails.
-
-"Sorry we are quite full up this week, but hardly anything on next.
-Shall we say Monday?"
-
-Miss Burton took the matter out of her brother's hands by turning
-directly to Murchison.
-
-"Monday, of course, will suit us. Will it suit you?" she asked him
-pointedly.
-
-Taken by surprise, the unhappy young man could only mutter a reluctant
-affirmative. A few minutes later they left, pledged to partake of the
-Burtons' hospitality on the following Monday.
-
-When they were safely outside, Murchison spoke severely to his brother
-officer.
-
-"You've let us in for a nice thing. If you had left it to me, I would
-have got out of that dinner somehow."
-
-"But I didn't want to get out of it," replied the unabashed junior.
-"We knew the brother was pretty bad all along. I don't know that on the
-whole he is much worse than we imagined. But she's a ripping girl. I
-want to see more of her."
-
-"You silly young ass," growled Murchison; "I believe you've fallen head
-over ears in love with her."
-
-And Pomfret, one of the most mercurial and light-hearted of subalterns,
-answered quite gravely:
-
-"I rather fancy I have. I've never met a girl who appealed to me in
-quite the same sort of way."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-|As a result of his visit to Rosemount, Hugh Murchison was very
-perturbed in his mind. He blamed himself severely for having been
-tempted into that rather intimate conversation at the tea-shop. Miss
-Burton was attractive enough, and lady-like enough, to excuse any man
-for taking advantage of his obvious opportunities, but he had been a
-fool to go farther. He ought never to have set his foot in the house of
-people of whom he knew nothing.
-
-It was all Jack Pomfret's fault, he decided hastily. It was his
-influence, his keen desire to make the girl's acquaintance, that had
-weighed down his friend's prudence. For, if left to himself, Hugh was
-quite sure that he would have dallied and dallied till all inclination
-to call at Rosemount had died down.
-
-And Pomfret had owned to being greatly impressed with the fair young
-chatelaine. He had admitted that he had never met a girl who had
-appealed to him in quite the same sort of way. In fact, it was easy to
-see he had fallen desperately in love with her.
-
-And Jack was just one of those light-hearted, susceptible sort of chaps
-who have not an atom of common-sense in their composition, who will obey
-their impulses, regardless of consequences.
-
-And he was not his own master. His career was practically at the
-disposal of his somewhat puritanical aunt. It was just on the cards that
-Jack would be mad enough to propose to this girl who had so bewitched
-him. One could imagine how the aunt would receive such a communication.
-
-There was one little ray of hope, however. If Jack did commit such a
-crowning folly, he would be far too honourable not to acquaint Miss
-Burton with his circumstances. Hugh was fairly convinced that the young
-lady knew how to take care of herself. And, even if she did fall in love
-with Jack, as he had done with her, and be inclined to make a fool of
-herself, there was the objectionable brother to be reckoned with. He
-would certainly not allow his sister to engage herself to a man, except
-with the consent of that man's family.
-
-All the same, it was as well to avoid any embarrassing entanglements,
-if possible. It is easy to retrace your steps when you have only just
-started.
-
-With this object in view, Murchison sought his friend on the Sunday
-preceding the day on which they were to present themselves at Rosemount.
-
-"Jack, old man, I have been thinking----" he began.
-
-Mr. Pomfret lifted a warning finger. "My dear friend and mentor, don't
-indulge in such violent processes. It's very bad for you."
-
-"Don't be an ass, Jack. You are not really funny when you say that sort
-of thing. I've been thinking over this business to-morrow, and, frankly,
-I don't relish the prospect. We had better cut it out."
-
-Pomfret's face took on an obstinate expression. "You are speaking
-for yourself, of course. For my part, I don't intend to break my
-appointment. In my opinion, it would be an awfully low-down thing to do.
-If you didn't want to go, you shouldn't have accepted."
-
-It was evident the young man was not in a very reasonable frame of mind,
-equally evident he would require very careful handling.
-
-"Now, Jack, don't get off the handles. You know you are an awfully
-impetuous chap, and that I have much the cooler head of the two. I have
-been thinking it all out the last day or two, and I don't like the look
-of it."
-
-"You informed me just now that you had been thinking," replied Mr.
-Pomfret in the same sarcastic strain. "There is no need to dwell upon
-the fact. It is obvious."
-
-But the elder man was not to be ruffled. If anything unpleasant came of
-this sudden acquaintance he would lay the blame on himself for having
-mentioned that little incident of the tea-shop, and inspired the
-mercurial Jack's love of the daring and adventurous.
-
-"I don't know that I did accept, as a matter of fact, except by
-implication. I was about to return an evasive answer, leave it in the
-air, so to speak, when you cut in and jumped at the invitation for
-both."
-
-This was true, and Mr. Pomfret's air lost a little of its jaunty
-confidence. "Well, if you think I lugged you in, get out of it yourself.
-Of course you will have to tell some beastly lie that they will see
-through at once. Anyway I am going, and that's flat."
-
-"If you go, I shall go," said Hugh firmly. "But I would like you to
-listen to me for a few moments, and put things before you as they
-present themselves to me."
-
-"Fire away, then," was Pomfret's answer, but it was delivered in a very
-ungracious tone.
-
-"Of course we are both agreed about the brother," began Hugh mildly.
-
-The other interrupted impatiently: "The brother be hanged. We are not
-going to the house for the brother's sake, but because of the sister.
-what's the use of blinking the fact? If you had met him in the tea-shop
-instead of her, I don't suppose you would have wasted a word on him, no
-more should I. But I don't see why that pretty girl should be ostracised
-because of him."
-
-"I don't quite see, under the circumstances, how you can separate them,"
-pursued the obstinate Hugh. "I should like to turn off, just for a
-moment to the sister, and consider her."
-
-"Go ahead," said Mr. Pomfret in a somewhat sullen tone. He was keeping
-his impulsive and fiery nature under control, out of his great respect
-for his friend. But it was very doubtful if he would stand much
-criticism even from one so respected.
-
-"I have not a word to say against her appearance or her manners. I will
-go further, and say there is not a girl in Blankfield, or for the matter
-of that in the 'county' itself, who gives the impression of a thorough
-gentlewoman more convincingly than she does." Pomfret's face brightened
-at these words. "Oh, then you admit that, and you have knocked about the
-world a few years longer than I have. I am of the same opinion, but if
-you say it, it must be so."
-
-"I do say it unhesitatingly, but mind you, I am only judging from
-outside appearances. Now, how comes it that such a refined and ladylike
-girl as that should have such a bounder of a brother? There is a mystery
-there."
-
-Jack Pomfret prepared to argue. "I don't quite agree that he is a
-bounder, he is not quite boisterous enough for that. Let us agree on a
-common definition--namely, that he is bad form. That fits him, I think."
-
-"And the sister is very good form. You can't deny that there is a
-mystery."
-
-But the young subaltern developed a quite surprising ingenuity in
-argument.
-
-"She just simply calls him her brother," sharply, "but she has told you
-he is her halfbrother by a first marriage--father a gentleman, mother a
-common person, hence the bad form. A second time, the father married a
-woman of his own class, hence Norah Burton. Norah knows him for a good
-sort, if a bit rough, and sticks to him. That's a reasonable theory,
-anyway."
-
-"More ingenious than reasonable perhaps," commented Murchison with an
-amused smile.
-
-Pomfret went on, warming to his subject. "And, hang it all, if we speak
-of bounders--and mind you, I won't admit he is a bounder in the strict
-sense of the term--is there a family in England without them?"
-
-"Quite the same sort, do you think?" was Hugh's question.
-
-"Look here, I'm not going to be impertinent, and ask if you can point to
-any amongst your own connections, but I know something of my own family.
-I've got a cousin, good blood on both sides. He's been a bounder from
-the time he learned to talk, sets your teeth on edge; as some fellow
-said, every time he opens his mouth he puts his foot into it. By Gad,
-this fellow Burton is a polished gentleman to him. If George showed his
-nose in this regiment they would send him to Coventry in five minutes."
-
-"As they did that chap last year," remarked Hugh, alluding to an
-offensive young man who had been compelled to send in his papers, owing
-to the fact that his general demeanour had not come up to the somewhat
-exalted standard of the gallant Twenty-fifth.
-
-"Precisely," assented Pomfret. "But you were going to give me some views
-about the girl. Again I say, fire away."
-
-"Well, to go back to that meeting in the tea-shop. It was, to say the
-least, a little unconventional for a young girl to invite an utter
-stranger to call upon her."
-
-"You were not an utter stranger," retorted Jack doggedly. "She had
-heard who you were, perhaps from the tradespeople. She knew you were a
-gentleman, she knew your name, Captain Murchison. Hang it all, if you
-had met her in one of these dull Blankfield houses, and she had been
-introduced by a hostess about whom you both knew precious little, and
-asked you to call, being the mistress of her brother's house, you would
-have thought it quite the correct and proper thing. So would every man
-in the barracks. Don't people strike up acquaintances in hotels, and
-sometimes trains?"
-
-"They generally find out something about each other before they pursue
-the acquaintance," suggested Murchison. "Look here, old man, you know as
-well as I do, you are arguing all round the point. It would be precious
-easy for the Burtons to say who and what they were, and furnish some
-proper credentials. If they did that, I daresay all Blankfield would
-call upon them, and swallow the brother for the sake of the very
-charming sister."
-
-"Well, I'll pump her to-night, and get out all you want to know,"
-retorted Mr. Pomfret confidently. "I don't go so far as to say they will
-be able to refer us to Burke or Debrett. Decent middle-class people, I
-expect."
-
-It was useless to argue with such an optimist. "You've accounted for the
-brother, I remember, by your ingenious theory. Well, you've made up your
-mind to go then?"
-
-"Most certainly I have. You do as you like, but while we are on the
-subject of good form, it is not a pretty thing to accept an invitation,
-and then excuse yourself at the eleventh hour by an obvious lie."
-
-"Under ordinary circumstances, you would be quite right. It has not
-occurred to you that we were rather rushed into this dinner, then--that
-we were, so to speak, jumped at?"
-
-"It might look like it at first blush," admitted Mr. Pomfret
-reluctantly. "But here are two poor devils, marooned, as it were, in
-this snobbish town, and they naturally jump at the first people who show
-them the slightest civility. They must simply be aching to exchange a
-word with their fellow-creatures. Well, I am going to exchange several
-with them, I promise you."
-
-Hugh felt it was useless. When Pomfret got in these moods, it was waste
-of time to reason with him. He felt uneasy, however. He had promised his
-family to look after him, and he felt a certain responsibility. It was
-to be hoped the sudden infatuation for a pretty face would expire as
-quickly as it had been born.
-
-Perhaps a closer association with the bounder brother would produce a
-chastening influence. But then Jack seemed bounder-proof. Had he not
-alluded to a well-born cousin, beside whom Burton shone as a polished
-gentleman?
-
-Anyway, he must not desert his young and very impulsive friend. But it
-was with considerable reluctance that he accompanied him to Rosemount on
-the Monday night.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-|Eight o'clock was the hour appointed for dinner, this fact scoring
-in the Burtons' favour, as evincing a knowledge of the habits of good
-society. Even a few of the most select hostesses in Blankville, who
-ought to have known better, made a base compromise with half-past seven.
-
-The two men arrived about five minutes before the time. The young
-hostess was awaiting them in the drawing-room, attired in some filmy
-creation that made her look very charming and ethereal. Soft lights from
-shaded lamps played about her, and lent a touch of perfection to the
-picture.
-
-Mr. Burton was attired in the usual conventional evening dress of the
-English gentleman. One would have guessed him the sort of man who would
-wear a ready-made tie. Not at all. He had tied the bow himself, and with
-a masterly hand. Pomfret even, who was admitted to be the Beau Brummel of
-his regiment, could not have done it better.
-
-It is generally supposed that a common man looks more common still when
-he dons evening attire. "George" was an exception to the rule. His black
-clothes became him, and lent him a certain air of dignity, which was
-wanting when he assumed everyday garments. Even Murchison, prejudiced
-as he was against him, was forced to admit to himself that the "bounder"
-for once looked quite respectable. Pomfret, ever leaning to the
-charitable side, felt quite enthusiastic over him, and contrasted him
-favourably with his own cousin, who could boast blue blood on both
-sides.
-
-Norah Burton played the hostess as to the manner born, greeting the
-visitors with just the right degree of cordiality, quite free from the
-effusiveness of most of the Blankfield hostesses. And Burton, taking his
-cue from her, was hearty without boisterousness.
-
-The young subaltern's heart warmed to her, she was so gracious,
-so sweet, and about her there hovered such an air of calm dignity.
-Rosemount, no doubt, was honoured by the introduction of such
-distinguished visitors, viewed merely from the social point of view,
-but she did not permit a suspicion of this to escape her. Rather,
-judging by her demeanour, the visitors were honoured by being admitted
-to Rosemount.
-
-"Rather reminds me of a young queen entertaining her subjects," Pomfret
-remarked afterwards to his friend in a rather enthusiastic outburst.
-"I'm not speaking of the 'county' of course, but these Blankfield women
-make you feel they are overwhelmed with your condescension in coming
-to their houses, that they are hardly fit to sit at the same table with
-you."
-
-The dinner was plain, but well cooked. The appointments were perfect,
-snowy napery, elegant glass and cutlery. One neat-handed maidservant
-waited, and waited well. Mr. Burton carved the dishes that were
-carvable, there was no pretence at an _à la Russe_ banquet. Their small
-establishment could not cope with that, and they did not attempt it.
-There was a generous supply of wines: hock, burgundy and champagne.
-
-And Mr. Burton, strangely subdued, was quite a good host, hospitable but
-not pressing. Murchison thought he must have been having some lessons
-from his sister, who seemed intuitively to do the right thing Still
-suspicious, he was sure that she had been steadily coaching him how to
-comport himself on this important night.
-
-For, after all, it must be a feather in their caps, that after having
-been coldly cast aside by the _élite_ of Blankfield, they had captured
-for their dining acquaintance two of the most popular officers of the
-exclusive Twenty-fifth.
-
-And Murchison, ever on the watch for any little sign or symptom to
-confirm his suspicions, had to admit the pair were behaving perfectly.
-Not the slightest sign of elation at the small social triumph manifested
-itself in the demeanour of either. Dinner-parties like this might be a
-common occurrence for all they showed to the contrary.
-
-The substantial portion of the meal was over. Dessert was brought in,
-with port, claret and sherry, all of the most excellent vintage. The
-house was a small one, and not over-staffed, but there was no evidence
-of lack of means. Perhaps the Burtons were wise people in not keeping
-up a great show, but spending the greater part of their income on their
-personal enjoyments.
-
-While the men were still lingering over their dessert, Miss Burton rose.
-
-"There are no ladies to support me, so I shall feel quite lonely by
-myself," she said in her pretty, softly modulated voice. "Shall we have
-coffee in the drawing-room? You men can smoke. It is quite Liberty Hall
-here. My brother smokes in every room of the house."
-
-Murchison noted the subtle difference between the brother and sister.
-If Burton had given the invitation, he would certainly have said, "you
-gentlemen." The beautiful Norah would not make a mistake like that.
-
-Five minutes afterwards, the three men trooped into the pretty
-drawing-room with its subdued, shaded lights. Norah was sitting at a
-small table, on which were set the coffee equipage with an assortment
-of liqueurs. Decidedly, the Burtons knew how to do things when they
-received guests.
-
-The "bounder" brother, as Hugh always called him to himself, had drunk
-very heavily at dinner of every wine: hock, burgundy and champagne. But
-evidently he could carry a big quantity. It would take more than a
-small dinner-party like this to knock him over. When he entered the
-drawing-room his mien was as subdued as when he had first received his
-visitors.
-
-They drank their coffee round the fair-sized octagonal table, and then
-they broke up. Miss Burton retired to a Chesterfield, whither Pom-fret
-followed her, as he was bound to do.
-
-Burton bustled out of the room, and returned with a huge box of
-expensive cigars. He offered the box to Hugh, who took one with a
-deprecating look at the young hostess.
-
-"We dare not, Miss Burton. Think of your curtains in the morning."
-
-"Don't trouble, Captain Murchison," she said, with her charming smile.
-"The curtains have to take what comes in this house. George doesn't
-often sit in this room, but when he does he always smokes cigars. I told
-you this was Liberty Hall, you know."
-
-The box was offered to Pomfret, who took one. "Do you smoke, Miss
-Burton?" he asked.
-
-"Once in a blue moon. I think I will have one to-night, as a little
-treat. It is terribly tempting, when I see all you men smoking." The
-enamoured Pomfret fetched her a cigarette, hovered over her with a
-match, till it was properly lighted, and settled himself again on the
-Chesterfield. If that silly old Hugh didn't butt in, he was going to
-have a nice little chat with this charming girl, who had played the
-young hostess to such perfection.
-
-But Hugh was safely out of the way. Burton had piloted him to a
-comfortable easy-chair at the extreme end of the drawing-room, and
-these two antipathetic persons were apparently engaged in an interesting
-conversation. Anyway, Murchison's laugh rang out frequently.
-
-Pomfret, it must be confessed, was not very great at conversation. If
-the ball were opened, he could set it rolling, but he lacked initiative.
-He looked at Miss Burton with admiring eyes, but although he had got her
-comfortably to himself on that convenient Chesterfield, he could think
-of nothing to say to her.
-
-And then a brilliant inspiration came to him. "I say, how gracefully you
-smoke." The young woman burst into a pleasant peal of quite spontaneous
-laughter. She always had a ready smile at command, but her laughter was
-generally a little forced. This time it was perfectly genuine.
-
-"Oh, you are really comical," she cried. "How can any girl smoke a
-cigarette gracefully? In the first place, it is a most unfeminine thing
-to do. All people must smoke them in the same way, and there can never
-be anything graceful in the act."
-
-"Women don't smoke them the same way," replied the young subaltern, with
-the air of a man who has observed and learned. "Most of them chew them,
-and hold them at arm's length, as if they were afraid of being bitten."
-
-"It's because they don't like smoking, really, and only do it to be in
-the fashion. Now, when I am quite in the mood, I actually revel in a
-cigarette. I am in the mood to-night."
-
-Pomfret leaned forward, with a tender expression on his rather homely,
-but good-humoured, countenance.
-
-"That means that you feel happy to-night, eh?"
-
-She nodded brightly. "Oh, ever so happy! It is seeing new faces, you
-know, after weeks of isolation," she added with a touch of almost
-girlish gaiety. "It seems such ages since we gave a dinner-party. And
-you and Captain Murchison are so nice. It seems almost like a family
-gathering."
-
-"You like my friend Murchison, then? I am glad, because it is to him I
-owe the pleasure of your acquaintance."
-
-"I think he is a dear, he seems so honest, straightforward, and so
-reliable." She spoke with apparent conviction. "Were you not dreadfully
-shocked when he told you, for of course he must have told you, how we
-got to know each other?"
-
-"Not in the least," said Mr. Pomfret stoutly. "I explained to him that
-people can become acquainted, without being properly introduced in the
-conventional sort of way."
-
-"Ah, then, he had some doubts himself?" flashed Miss Burton. "I expect
-he was a little shocked, if you were not."
-
-"Not in the slightest, I assure you," replied Mr. Pomfret easily. He was
-not above telling a white lie upon occasions. He remembered too well
-the remarks that his friend had made upon the girl's unconventional
-behaviour, but he was not going to admit anything.
-
-Miss Burton spoke softly, after a brief pause. "You and Captain
-Murchison are very great friends, are you not?"
-
-"Awful pals," was the genuine response. "You see, he knows all my
-family. And when I joined the regiment, they deputed him to look after
-me. He has got a hard task," he added with a laugh.
-
-"Oh, not so very hard really, I am sure of that." Norah's voice was very
-sweet, very caressing. "But you and your friend are of very different
-temperaments."
-
-"In what way?"
-
-She smiled. "Oh, in half a hundred ways. Captain Murchison is as true as
-steel, but also as hard as steel. You, now, are not in the least hard.
-You are very kind and compassionate, you think the best of everybody."
-
-"Don't flatter me too much, please," interjected the bashful Pomfret.
-
-"Oh, pardon me, I know just the kind of man you are." The sweet face
-was very close to his own, the beautiful, rather sad eyes were looking
-steadily into his. "You are a rich man, or you would not be in this
-expensive regiment. But, if you were a poor man, and you had only ten
-pounds in your pocket, you would lend an impecunious friend five of
-them, and not trouble whether he repaid you or not."
-
-"I think you have fitted me, Miss Burton. My dear old chum Hugh is never
-tired of telling me I am an awful ass."
-
-"You are both right, really," answered Miss Burton.
-
-"You see, we look at life from two different standpoints."
-
-"I fancy you come from two different classes?" queried the charming
-young woman.
-
-Pomfret felt a little embarrassed. He did not want to give away his
-particular chum. But there were no doubt certain inherited commercial
-instincts in Hugh that sometimes offended the descendant of a more
-careless and aristocratic family.
-
-"You see, Hugh has come from the trading class, originally. His
-ancestors, no doubt, were close-fisted people. Hugh is not close-fisted
-himself: he is, in a certain way, the soul of generosity, but sometimes
-the old Adam peeps out in little things."
-
-He had a swift pang of remorse when he had said this. For he suddenly
-remembered Hugh's generous offer of the two hundred which Pomfret, by
-a very diplomatic letter, was going to cajole out of the octogenarian
-great-aunt.
-
-"Believe me," added he fervently, "Hugh is one of the best. He is a
-little peculiar sometimes in small things. I ought not to have spoken as
-I have done. I am more than sorry if I have conveyed a wrong impression
-of him."
-
-"But you have not," cried Norah Burton swiftly. "He would be hard in
-some things: I am sure--for instance--he would never forgive a really
-dishonourable action, even in the case of his best friend."
-
-"No, I am sure he would not," assented Pomfret. "But I don't fancy he
-has been much tried that way. We don't get many 'rotters' amongst our
-lot."
-
-"_Noblesse oblige_," quoted Miss Burton, lightly. Then she added more
-seriously: "And I am sure he is very kind-hearted and thoughtful. I
-was impressed with his reluctance to smoke because of the curtains. Of
-course, he did not remember that it did not matter in the least, as we
-never have callers."
-
-She was getting on the theme of their social isolation, but Pomfret was
-sure that, unlike her brother, strangely subdued to-night from his usual
-boisterousness, she would handle the subject with her customary tact and
-good taste.
-
-"Ah, of course, all that is very regrettable. It is not so much your
-loss, as the loss of Blankfield. I suppose you won't stay very long
-here."
-
-For a moment there came a blazing light in the soft, beautiful eyes.
-"A few days ago, I advised my brother to pack up and clear out. The
-snobbish plutocracy of Blankfield had beaten us, made up of retired
-shopkeepers and merchants. To-night, with you and Captain Murchison as
-our guests, I think we have beaten Blankfield with its fat mothers and
-plain daughters."
-
-She looked superb, as she drew her slender form up to its full height,
-the glow of indignant triumph blazing on her cheek. At the moment she
-was extremely beautiful. If Pomfret had been attracted before, he was
-infatuated now.
-
-"I will help you to beat the Blankfield people, for whom I don't care a
-row of pins. I will come, whenever you want me."
-
-"And your friend Captain Murchison, will he come, too?"
-
-Pomfret smiled whimsically. "Oh yes, he will come, if I make a point
-of it. Old Hugh thinks he leads me, but I really lead him." She leaned
-forward eagerly. "Can you bring some of your brother officers, Mr.
-Pomfret? Please don't think I am bold and forward and presumptuous. But
-I do long to be even with these Blankfield people. I would love to make
-a little sort of _salon_ of my own. I know it is useless to expect the
-women at present, but they might come in time. Mind you, I don't want
-them."
-
-"I will try," said Pomfret slowly. "I think I may say that Hugh and I
-are the two most popular men in the regiment; I say it without vanity.
-And I don't suppose we care a snap of the fingers about the Blankfield
-people. Still, I don't want to raise hopes that may never be fulfilled.
-I can only say, I will try." There was a pause. Then she spoke, and
-there was a far-away look in her eyes. "You hesitate, I see. Oh, I quite
-believe you when you say you will try. But there is some stumbling-block
-in the way, isn't there?" Pomfret had perforce to dissemble. "There is
-no stumbling-block that I know of, except running the risk of offending
-Blankfield. That is not a great one, as we shall be out of here in about
-two months."
-
-She leaned closer to him, and her voice sank to a whisper. "There is a
-stumbling-block, I know. You are too kind and generous to state what it
-is, you could not, as to-night he is your host. It is my brother."
-
-And then poor, infatuated Pomfret sought no further refuge in
-subterfuge. He blurted out the truth. "Some of our chaps wouldn't stand
-him, you know," he said simply.
-
-There was a little convulsive movement of the delicate hands. "And he
-is such a dear good fellow at heart, wanting I know in the little
-delicacies that mark a real gentleman. You see a great difference
-between us, don't you?"
-
-"A very distinct difference," assented Pomfret.
-
-"I will explain it to you in a few words. My father was a harum-scarum
-sort of person, as I told you last time you were here, hard-riding and
-hard-drinking. When he was a boy of twenty-five he married a woman out
-of his own class, a shop-girl or a barmaid, I am not quite sure which.
-George is many years older than myself, as I told you he is really my
-halfbrother. The first wife died, my father married again, this time
-a lady. I am the daughter of the second marriage. Now, I think you
-understand."
-
-Pomfret was delighted at this avowal, it proved his own prescience.
-
-"I am so glad you told me, but as it happens, it was just what I
-guessed."
-
-Miss Burton looked at him with admiring eyes. "You are really very
-clever, you know. Well, I will not exactly say this is a secret, but you
-will whisper it about discreetly. You need not be quite so frank as I
-have been about details, but you can hint at a _mésalliance_. I hate to
-have to tell you so much, for my brother has been so good to me."
-
-"Ah!" Mr. Pomfret's air plainly showed that he was eager for further
-information.
-
-And Miss Burton was quite willing to gratify him. The young man was a
-pleasant, comfortable sort of person to talk to. He was an admirable
-listener, and never broke in with unnecessary, or irritating
-interruptions.
-
-"When my father died he left little behind him but debts; my mother had
-preceded him some ten years. Poor George had gone into a stockbroker's
-office, through the good offices of a distant connection. His salary was
-very small, but he made a home for me. He would not hear of my earning
-my own living."
-
-"That could not have been very long ago," remarked Pomfret, "because you
-are not very old now."
-
-"No, it was not long," answered the girl, not committing herself to any
-definite dates. "Well, we had a very hard time, as you can imagine. Then
-suddenly our luck changed. An uncle of George's on his mother's side had
-gone out to Australia as a boy, and amassed, we won't say a fortune from
-your point of view, but what we should look upon as wealth. He had never
-married, and when he died, a will was found in which he left all he was
-possessed of to his sister's children. George was the only child, so he
-took it all."
-
-"So he threw up business and went in for a country life."
-
-"Well, he has thrown it up for a time. I am not quite certain he will
-not get tired of inactivity, and go back to it. Now that he has capital,
-it would be easy for him to embark in something that would keep him
-occupied, and pay him well."
-
-"Not a sportsman, I suppose, he doesn't care for hunting or shooting?
-The country is slow for a man if he doesn't do something in that line."
-
-The pretty girl smiled; there was a faint touch of humour in the smile.
-"Oh, he's not rich enough to indulge in luxuries of that sort. Besides,"
-she added hastily, "he has such wretched sight, he would be no good at
-sport."
-
-Pomfret thought it had been a very pleasant, enlightening conversation.
-Norah seemed to have been perfectly frank about their past and their
-present position. She did not pretend to be anything but what she was,
-the daughter of a spendthrift father, living on what was practically the
-charity of a good-hearted brother. And that brother was indebted for his
-good fortune to a relative who must have been a man of the people.
-
-While the two young people were having this confidential chat, Mr.
-Burton was making himself agreeable to the other guest, in his doubtless
-well-meant, but somewhat undiplomatic, fashion.
-
-"I do envy you young fellows when I see you walking about as if the
-world belonged to you."
-
-Hugh drew himself up stiffly. "I was not in the least aware that any one
-of us conveyed that impression."
-
-"No offence meant, I assure you." Hugh's tone showed him that he had
-been guilty of bad taste: a blessing Norah had not heard--she would have
-given him a bad quarter of an hour later on. "But all army men, I think,
-get a certain kind of swagger. Oh, nothing overbearing or unpleasant
-about it, of course. They are made so much of that there is no wonder
-if they do fancy themselves a bit. I'm sure I should if I were one of
-them."
-
-Murchison made no comment on this frank statement, and the other man
-rambled on in desultory fashion.
-
-"It's the life I wanted. As a boy I longed to grow up quickly and go
-into the army. There was a fair chance of it then, when the old man had
-still got a bit of money left. But by the time I was old enough the idea
-had to be knocked on the head. I had to go into a dingy stockbroking
-office instead."
-
-Hugh pricked up his ears at the announcement. He had not suspected that
-the man would be so communicative about his past. Of course he had gone
-as a clerk. If his father was not well-off enough to put him in the army
-neither could he have afforded to buy him a share in a business.
-
-"Yes," pursued Mr. Burton, "it was an awful come down after the dreams I
-had indulged in."
-
-"It must have been a very bitter disappointment," assented Hugh
-politely, in spite of his firm conviction that the army was the very
-last profession in the world suited to a man of his host's obvious
-peculiarities.
-
-"I should have been awfully keen on soldiering," pursued Mr. Burton,
-under the impression that he had discovered a sympathetic listener.
-"Don't you consider it a splendid life?"
-
-"There are many things in its favour, certainly," was the rather frigid
-reply.
-
-"But, after all, I don't think I should have cared to be in the line;
-there's not the same glamour about it, is there? You fellows in the
-cavalry, in a crack regiment like yours, must see the rosy side of
-life." He heaved a sigh. "And, of course, you've all got pots of money
-to grease the wheels."
-
-Hugh fidgeted perceptibly. How very vulgar the man was, with an innate
-vulgarity that nothing would ever eradicate. But his host, absorbed in
-his own reflections, did not observe the movement.
-
-"Of course, we know all about you, about the great house of Murchison,
-you are tiled-in all right." He lowered his voice to a confidential
-whisper: "What about that young chap yonder? I suppose he's rolling in
-money, too?"
-
-It was growing insufferable. For two pins Hugh would have got up and
-bidden him goodnight then and there, but he shrank from making a scene.
-what a fool he had been to come here, to allow his kindly feeling for
-that susceptible young donkey of a Pomfret to expose him to such an
-ordeal as this.
-
-"Really, Mr. Burton," he said in a cutting voice, "I do not discuss the
-private affairs of my friends on such a brief acquaintance. If you
-are really anxious to know, I believe Mr. Pomfret has considerable
-expectations from an old aunt who is fairly wealthy. Those expectations
-depend, I understand, upon his conforming generally to her wishes in all
-respects."
-
-"Ah, I understand," said the unabashed Burton. "Sorry if my question
-gave you offence. What really put it in my head was the difference
-between his position and mine when I was his age."
-
-There was silence for some little time, while the two men applied
-themselves steadily to their cigars. Then Burton jumped up suddenly.
-
-"This must be a bit slow for you and your friend, and the night is
-young. What do you say to a game at bridge?"
-
-Yes, Captain Murchison would welcome a game of bridge, anything as a
-relief to this vulgarian's conversation.
-
-They played for over two hours, Murchison keenly alert from certain
-suspicions that had been forming in his mind. At present there was no
-foundation for these vague suspicions. They played for small stakes,
-but the visitors rose up the winners, not by a great amount, but still
-winners.
-
-It was a fine night, the two men walked back to their quarters.
-
-"How did you get on with the charmer? I saw you seemed very confidential
-together," asked the older man.
-
-"Splendidly, old chap. She told me a lot about her history." Pomfret
-related all he had been told in full. "And how did you get on with the
-brother?"
-
-"Don't ask me," replied Hugh with a groan. "He's the most insufferable
-creature I ever came across. I don't really think I can go there again.
-At the beginning of the evening he started fairly well, but later he
-reverted to type."
-
-"Well, I may as well tell you straight, I shall. The next time we go
-I'll take a share of the brother."
-
-When Pomfret spoke in that tone he meant what he said, and Hugh knew he
-would have his own wilful way.
-
-There was one piece of information which the young subaltern had not
-imparted to his friend.
-
-It was this--that after much pressing, and more than one refusal, Miss
-Burton had agreed to meet him to-morrow afternoon at a very sequestered
-spot about a mile and a half from Blankfield, with the view of pursuing
-their acquaintance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-|From the night of that dinner-party Murchison noted a subtle difference
-in his young friend's demeanour. Pomfret had always been a harum-scarum
-sort of young fellow, accustomed to follow erratic and injudicious
-impulses, not absolutely devoid of brains of a certain order, but of
-imperfect and ill-balanced mentality.
-
-But in his wildest escapades he had always been frank and above-board.
-And he was ever the first, when he had overstepped the border-line,
-to admit that he was in the wrong. And on such occasions, far from
-justifying his exploits, he had been ready to deplore them.
-
-But his frankness seemed to have departed from that night. He seemed
-rather to avoid than seek the society of his old friend and mentor. When
-Hugh brought up the subject of the Burtons, Pomfret seemed anxious to
-avoid it, to say as little as possible. He seemed to shut himself up
-within his own soul.
-
-Hugh, of course, was profoundly uneasy. Such a transparent creature as
-Pomfret would not be likely to retire within his own shell unless there
-were cogent reasons for the withdrawal. And the reasons were inspired
-by the attractive personality of the fascinating siren at Rosemount,
-the charming young woman who explained the presence of an undesirable
-brother by the narrative of her father's first unfortunate marriage.
-
-Pomfret had invited the brother and sister to a dinner at the principal
-hotel in the place, and Hugh had been his friend's guest. Ladies, of
-course, could not be asked to the Mess. It had been a happy solution
-of a somewhat awkward position. Mr. Burton no doubt understood, but he
-accepted the situation with alacrity.
-
-From the dinner they had adjourned to Rosemount. Here they had played
-cards as before, but they left off fairly even. Hugh's suspicions about
-card-sharping were dissipated as before. At the same time, he was still
-resolved to keep a watchful eye upon the pair. It was firmly engrained
-upon his mind, and only, of course, from the purest instinct, that he
-did not trust either of them.
-
-Much to his surprise, they left without having been asked to a return
-dinner. It was the turn of the Burtons. And judging from the haste with
-which Burton had jumped at them on the first visit, the omission was a
-little noticeable. It could not be that these new isolated dwellers in
-Blankfield wanted to shelve an acquaintance which must have brightened
-their dull and unvisited existence.
-
-Another fact presented itself to Murchison's rather acute intelligence.
-There seemed already established between Pomfret and the attractive
-Norah a certain kind of freemasonry, a certain sort of easy relations.
-And once in the course of the evening he was sure that he heard the
-young man, in the course of a whispered conversation, address her by her
-Christian name. They had been sitting together on the Chesterfield, and
-their remarks to each other had been addressed in a very low tone. But
-Hugh's hearing was wonderfully acute, and he had surprised a sudden
-expression of rebuke in Miss Burton's eyes when Pomfret made the slip.
-
-And here, for a moment, this story must leave Hugh Murchison with his
-honest doubts and suspicions, while it follows the fortunes of his young
-friend and the attractive Norah Burton.
-
-For, truth to tell, at this particular juncture, young Pomfret, for
-all his apparent guilelessness, was pursuing a double game. Madly,
-overwhelmingly, in love with Norah, he was meeting her clandestinely,
-sometimes at her own house, sometimes in sequestered spots in the
-surrounding neighbourhood. And of these visits and meetings Hugh knew
-nothing.
-
-Pomfret was not free from a few pangs of self-reproach, from the fact
-that he was not running quite straight with good old Hugh, to whom he
-had always, hitherto, confessed all his difficulties and troubles.
-
-But then Hugh, although one of the best, was such a practical old stick.
-And if he told him the whole truth, there was no knowing what course
-Hugh might not think it was his duty to take. He might write to his
-family and bring them down in an avalanche on him, or even to the
-octogenarian aunt.
-
-Love taught him deep cunning, and what he lacked in this subtle quality
-was ably supplemented by Miss Burton, this young girl with the
-rather sad expression, and the candid eyes that always met your gaze
-unfalteringly.
-
-From the first clandestine meeting, arranged in whispers on the night of
-the dinner at Rose-mount, Pomfret had made the running very fast. He had
-given Norah to understand that he thought her the most desirable girl he
-had ever met, that no other woman had appealed, would or could appeal,
-to him as she did. There was a good drop of Irish blood in his own
-veins, and he certainly made a most fervent lover.
-
-Norah listened with a modest bashfulness that enchanted him. He was
-sure from her demeanour that she had never been made love to before. She
-seemed so overwhelmed that she could hardly say a word. If one were not
-so much in love, one might almost have thought she was stupid.
-
-She was not so stupid, however, as not to preserve her wits sufficiently
-to make another appointment, this time at Rosemount. Pomfret consented
-gladly, but he made a certain stipulation, which his companion was more
-than pleased to agree to.
-
-"We mustn't let old Hugh know about this, though, or he'll think he's
-left out in the cold. You see, it was really through him I knew you. You
-must tell your brother not to let it out."
-
-Miss Burton promised that, so far as she and her brother were concerned,
-Captain Murchison would be none the wiser. It only remained for Mr.
-Pomfret--although entreated to do so, she could not at this early stage
-address him as "Jack"--to surround his movements with a proper degree of
-mystery.
-
-When the two parted, and the meeting had been rather a brief one, for
-it was always a little dangerous lingering long about the environs
-of Blankfield, in case of unexpected intruders, Miss Burton made a
-significant remark.
-
-"I am quite sure your friend Captain Murchison does not like me. In
-fact, I think his real feeling is one of dislike."
-
-Mr. Pomfret was young enough to blush; he did so upon this occasion. He
-guessed the real truth, that Murchison did not dislike her at all, on
-the contrary, he rather admired her--but he had a certain distrust of
-her.
-
-"Fancy on your part, fancy, I'm quite sure," he answered glibly. "I
-expect he is a little bit sore, you know, about the whole thing, thinks
-I have cut him out with you."
-
-"Perhaps," assented Norah, easily. But in her own heart she knew it was
-nothing of the kind. She recognised at once the difference between the
-two men. Murchison was a thorough gentleman, kind and chivalrous, but
-he was a man of the world, with a certain hard strain in him, a man who
-would submit everything to the test of cold, practical reasoning, not to
-be hoodwinked or led astray.
-
-This poor babbling boy, with his unrestrained impulses, that Celtic
-leaven in his blood, would fall an easy prey to any woman who was clever
-enough to cast her spells over him. He would never reason, he would only
-feel.
-
-After that first meeting, the precursor of many others, the affair
-progressed briskly. Pomfret made love with great ardour, Norah received
-his advances with a shy sort of acquiescence that inflamed him the
-more. He was sure, oh very sure, he was the first who had touched that
-innocent heart.
-
-From these delightful confidences Murchison was shut out. It would not
-be wise to ignore him altogether, for such a course of action would have
-intensified his suspicions. But the invitations to Rosemount from either
-host or hostess were few and far between.
-
-He was not, however, so easily gulled as the three conspirators thought.
-Pomfret's preoccupied mood, the air of a man who had much on his mind,
-his frequent and unexplained absences, gave to his friend much food for
-thought. He felt certain that the easy-going, irresponsible young
-man was entangling himself. But in such a state of affairs he felt
-powerless. Short of invoking the influence of the Colonel, or writing to
-the elderly aunt, he could do nothing.
-
-It cannot be said that the course of true love was running very
-smoothly, even from the point of view of the ardent and enamoured suitor
-himself. In spite of his impulsive temperament, his disinclination to
-look hard facts squarely in the face, there was in him a slight leaven
-of common-sense.
-
-Save for the bounty and goodwill of this generous, if somewhat
-narrow-minded, aunt he was an absolute pauper. There was no hope of
-marrying without her consent. And he was quite sure that in a case like
-this her consent would never be given. A _fiancée_, to be received by
-her with approval, must present some sort of credentials.
-
-And there was the difficulty. Poor Jack had exhausted all his
-simple cunning to extract from them some convincing details of their
-antecedents. But even he, infatuated as he was, had to admit that
-they had parried inquiries with great adroitness. They maintained a
-persistent reticence as to names and places. Even he was forced to
-conclude that, for some reason or another, they did not choose to be
-frank about their past.
-
-These obvious facts, however, did not lessen his infatuation. To marry
-her was the one dominating object of his life, in spite of all that his
-few remaining remnants of common-sense could urge against such a step.
-
-More than once the rash idea occurred to him that he would marry her in
-secret, and when the marriage was an accomplished fact, throw himself
-upon his aunt's forgiveness.
-
-He mooted the idea to Norah, to whom, of course, he had already made a
-frank statement of his position, as befitted the honourable gentleman
-he was. But she did not receive the suggestion with enthusiasm, although
-she professed to fully reciprocate his ardent affection.
-
-"If I were a selfish girl, and only thought of my immediate happiness, I
-should say 'Yes,'" she said with a little tremulous smile, that made
-her look more desirable than ever in her lover's eyes. "But I could not
-allow _you_ to run such a terrible risk. Old people are very strange and
-very touchy when they think they have been slighted. Suppose she cast
-you off."
-
-"I suppose I could work, as thousands have to do," replied Jack, with a
-touch of his old doggedness.
-
-She shook her head. "My poor Jack! It is easy to talk of working, but
-you have got to find an employer. And you have been brought up to an
-idle life. What could you turn your hand to?" She paused a moment, and
-then added as an after-thought: "And besides, my brother would never
-sanction it."
-
-Even to Pomfret's slow revolving mind, the worldly taint in her just
-peeped forth in those sensible remarks.
-
-"If I am prepared to risk my aunt's displeasure, you can surely afford
-to risk your brother's?" he queried angrily.
-
-But Norah disarmed him with one of her sweetest smiles.
-
-"Be reasonable, dearest; we must not behave like a pair of silly
-children. And besides, there is a certain moral obligation on both
-sides. You owe everything to your aunt. I owe everything to my brother.
-It would be very base to ignore them."
-
-Jack was touched by the nobility of these last sentiments. "You are much
-better than I am, Norah, much less selfish."
-
-She caressed his curly head with her hand. "We must have patience, Jack.
-You have told me as plainly as your dear, kind heart would allow you to
-tell me that, for reasons which I don't want you to explain, your aunt
-would never give her consent to your marriage with me. Well, we must
-wait."
-
-In plain English her meaning was that they must possess their souls in
-patience till such time as this excellent old lady had departed this
-life. The suggestion was certainly a coldblooded one, but in his present
-infatuated mood Jack did not take any notice of that. Norah made a
-feeble attempt to gloss over the callousness of her remarks by adding
-that, although it was a very horrible thing to have to wait for the
-shoes of dead people, a person of Miss Harding's great age must expect
-to very shortly pay the debt of nature.
-
-Two days later, Jack received a telegram which seemed to give a certain
-air of prophecy to the young woman's forebodings. It was dispatched
-to him from his aunt's home in Cheshire by the local doctor, who had
-attended her for years. It informed him that she was seriously ill and
-requested his immediate attendance.
-
-He sought the Colonel at once and obtained leave. There was no time
-to call at Rose-mount, but he scribbled a hasty note to Miss Burton
-explaining matters. On his arrival, he found his aged relative very bad
-indeed.
-
-She had had a severe stroke, the second in two years, and Doctor
-Jephson was very doubtful as to whether her vitality would enable her to
-recover. He added that she had a marvellous constitution, and in such a
-case one could not absolutely say there was no hope. Of a feebler woman
-he would have said at once a few hours would see the end.
-
-Pomfret stayed there as long as the result was in doubt. At the end of
-three days the brave old lady rallied in the most wonderful way, and was
-able to hold a little conversation with her beloved nephew. He did not
-leave till the doctor assured him that she was out of danger.
-
-"It's a wonderful recovery," said Doctor Jephson as he shook hands at
-parting with the young man. "But it's the beginning of the end. I don't
-give her very long now, a few months at the most. Well, she has had a
-wonderful life, hardly an ache or a pain till the last few years, and
-then nothing very severe. But, of course, the machinery is worn out."
-
-All the way back to Blankfield those words kept repeating themselves in
-his ears: "I don't give her very long now, a few months at the most."
-
-And then an idea began to form in his mind. He was not so callous that
-he wanted his poor old aunt to die quickly, but it was obvious the time
-could not be long delayed when he would find himself possessed of her
-fortune, the master of his own destinies. Was there any reason why he
-should not forestall that period by the rather daring expedient of a
-secret marriage? They were both young. Even if the doctor was wrong,
-and they had to wait four or five years, it was not a great sacrifice
-of their youth. At least that was his way of looking at it. Of course he
-did not know how she would take the suggestion.
-
-She appeared to listen to him with deep interest and attention when he
-unfolded his plans.
-
-He explained that he had a very handsome allowance, which up to the
-present he had generally exceeded. Now that could all be altered. He
-would declare that he was sick of the army, and send in his papers.
-Through his family influence, he would get some Government appointment
-which necessitated his living in London. He would take inexpensive
-chambers for himself, rent a small house for her in some pleasant and
-not too remote suburb, and spend as much of his time as possible with
-her.
-
-"You don't think your aunt would reduce your allowance if you left
-the army?" was the one pertinent question she put to him when he had
-finished.
-
-"On the contrary, she would be more likely to increase it," was the
-confident rejoinder. "She would always have preferred that I should go
-in for something that meant real work. She thinks the army is an idle
-life."
-
-Miss Burton, no doubt, rapidly calculated the pros and cons of such a
-daring step. Jack had named a very handsome sum for her maintenance.
-If she could put up with the clandestine nature of the connection, till
-such time as a certain event happened, she would be better off than at
-Rosemount. She begged for time to think it over, and of course she would
-have to consult her brother before taking such an unusual step.
-
-That was only natural; it was impossible for Jack to insist that she
-should settle the matter herself without reference to the one person
-who, whatever his social defects, had behaved to her with unexampled
-kindness and generosity.
-
-Brother and sister no doubt talked it over very thoroughly, for it was
-three days before she told her lover that, although George would have
-preferred a longer period of waiting, he trusted him sufficiently to
-entrust Norah to his keeping, on the terms proposed.
-
-She did suggest that they should wait till Jack had left the army and
-settled himself in London. But he fought this idea stubbornly. He
-was mad to tie her to himself, for fear that somebody else with
-more immediate prospects might step in and carry her off. A little
-common-sense, of course, might have told him that if she was as fatally
-attractive to others as to himself, she would have been carried off
-before this.
-
-He was so terribly jealous of her, that he had never made the slightest
-effort to bring any of his brother officers round to Rose-mount. He even
-kept Hugh away as much as he could.
-
-The lovers worked out their little plot very nicely. Miss Burton would
-leave Blankfield for a couple of weeks, ostensibly to pay a visit to a
-relative. Her destination would be London. Jack would take a few days'
-leave of absence in due course, and procure a special licence. They
-would return on separate days and resume their normal life, until such
-time as they perfected their after arrangements.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-|Miss Burton arrived home on a Monday by a mid-day train; her attentive
-brother met her at the station. She was one of those girls who look
-smart and neat under the most trying circumstances. Although it was a
-long journey, she bore no signs or stains of travel.
-
-"When does Jack arrive, not too soon, I hope?" commented George, as he
-assisted her into a cab, and sat down beside her.
-
-"He wanted to come down to-night, but I vetoed that," responded the
-girl. "I told him people might put two and two together. He will get
-here mid-day to-morrow. I shall meet him casually in the High Street.
-He is going to bring Murchison along with him. And I shall give them an
-impromptu invitation to dinner."
-
-"I don't know that I am very keen on having Murchison to dinner,"
-remarked Mr. Burton in rather a growling tone.
-
-Miss Burton shrugged her shoulders. "And, perhaps, of the two, I am less
-keen than you are. But we have got to play it pretty quiet down here,
-till the whole lot of us clear out. Better to let Murchison come. He
-is pretty suspicious, as it is, but if we shut him out, he'll be more
-suspicious still."
-
-Mr. Burton chuckled in a grim fashion.
-
-"Well, our inquisitive friend, the whole lot of them as a matter of
-fact, can't do you much harm now. You've got him tight enough. And I'll
-say this for him, he's a bit soft and all that sort of thing, but he'll
-always play the game."
-
-The girl did not reply for a moment, then she spoke in a voice that was
-low and soft:
-
-"Yes, he's a dear little chap, he'll always play the game."
-
-"He can afford to," was the rather ungracious comment. Clearly Mr.
-Burton was not in one of his best moods to-day.
-
-Mr. Pomfret returned from his short leave on the following day, and at
-once sought his friend.
-
-"Glad to be back, old man, got fed-up with London," he cried cheerfully.
-His excuse for his visit was that he had to go up to see his aunt's
-solicitors, on some pressing affairs which the old lady had entrusted to
-him, after her temporary recovery from her dangerous illness.
-
-Now Murchison was pretty quick. He already had a shrewd suspicion that
-Jack had been making a great many surreptitious visits to Rosemount,
-that Hugh had been asked there now and again as a blind. And when he
-happened to be present, he had noticed that Jack and Norah had taken
-very little notice of each other. Jack had cultivated the brother, and
-left his friend to entertain the attractive young woman. In itself, this
-rather obvious attitude was suspicious. It confirmed his impression that
-there was a private understanding between the young people, and that
-they were throwing dust in his eyes.
-
-He had already put two and two together, with regard to the concurrent
-absences. Mr. Burton, meeting him in the High Street two days after
-Norah's departure, had told him his sister was paying a visit to a
-married relative who lived at Brighton. He would have not believed Mr.
-Burton on his oath.
-
-And Jack had taken his few days' leave, with the ostensible object of
-attending to his aunt's affairs.
-
-Hugh was pretty certain that the silly young ass, as he affectionately
-designated Jack in his own mind, had arranged to meet Miss Burton for
-a day or two in London, in order to enjoy her society, free from
-interruption or espionage. Of course, he was far from guessing the
-truth. He would not have thought Pomfret capable of any such daring
-action.
-
-Jack had just expressed himself fed-up with London, and yet his
-demeanour was jubilant and hilarious. Of course, Hugh could not dream
-his attitude was that of the exultant bridegroom, almost intoxicated
-with the knowledge of having gained his heart's desire. There had been a
-couple of lunches, perhaps a couple of dinners with a theatre thrown in.
-The buoyant Jack was living on these blissful memories.
-
-Later in the day, the two men walked down the High Street, of course in
-accordance with a pre-arranged plan decided upon by the artful lovers.
-The first person they met was Miss Burton, sauntering along slowly; Miss
-Burton, now Mrs. Pomfret, as fast as the ecclesiastical law of England
-could make her.
-
-She welcomed them with her ready and charming smile. "What strangers
-we are," she cried gaily. "And how nice to meet my only two friends in
-Blankfield."
-
-Pomfret did a little finessing on his own. 661 have been away for a few
-days, too,'' he explained glibly. "Had to go up to London to look
-after some business of my poor old aunt's; only got back by the mid-day
-train."
-
-"Did you enjoy your visit?" inquired Hugh of Norah, with that stiffness
-which he could never quite dissociate from his manner when addressing
-either brother or sister.
-
-"Yes and No," was the answer. "On the whole, I had quite a good time,
-but I am not sorry to get back to Rosemount, and my little household
-gods. Knowing you both has made such a difference to my life here."
-
-She was laying it on a little bit thick, Hugh thought, and he fancied
-she looked more at Pomfret than himself, as she said it. But he made a
-suitable and courteous reply.
-
-She was just about to turn away, when a sudden thought seemed to strike
-her.
-
-"As Mr. Pomfret and I have been such wanderers, would it not be nice to
-celebrate our return? will you both come to dinner to-night, and we can
-relate our experiences?"
-
-Pomfret jumped at the invitation, and Hugh had to follow suit. As a
-matter of fact, he was rather eager to go. They were both playing their
-parts very well, but he was quite convinced they _were_ playing a part.
-He was more certain about Jack than about her. Jack had been a bit too
-glib, had over-acted, as it were. They had met in London, if only for a
-few hours; he would have bet a thousand pounds on that.
-
-Jack declared that he would walk back to Rosemount with Miss Burton. He
-did not now care a farthing what members of Blank-field Society he met.
-Very shortly, the army would know him no more, and he would take up a
-new life with this fearless girl whom he had married on the sly.
-
-Hugh strolled on, and looked in at the various shops. The High Street
-happened to be rather empty on this particular afternoon, the _élite_ of
-Blankfield Society had not yet turned out for its usual promenade.
-
-Turning away from a jeweller's shop window, where he was inspecting some
-sleeve-links, he was confronted by a tall, sturdily built man of about
-fifty years of age, who raised his hat.
-
-"I believe I have the pleasure of addressing Captain Murchison?" he
-inquired politely.
-
-Hugh directed a swift glance at him. He was not exactly a common person,
-on the other hand he was certainly not a gentleman. There was something
-military in his bearing; he might have been a retired Sergeant-Major.
-
-"That is my name," answered Hugh a little curtly. "And who are you,
-please?"
-
-The tall man took a card from his waistcoat pocket and presented it.
-"Those are my credentials, sir."
-
-Hugh ran his eye over it swiftly. He saw the name, Davidson, a common
-one enough, and, in the corner, Scotland Yard. Why the deuce should this
-agent of the police want to accost him? And how did he know his name was
-Murchison?
-
-"I think you are acquainted with a family of the name of Burton, brother
-and sister they call themselves, who live at a house a little way out
-called Rosemount?"
-
-"Of course I know them, that is to say, in a casual sort of way."
-Needless to say that Murchison had never been more surprised in his
-life. "Why are you asking these questions?"
-
-Mr. Davidson darted a keen glance up and down the comparatively empty
-High Street. "This is rather an exposed place in which to talk, but I
-have something to tell you which I am sure you will be interested to
-listen to. I am staying at the 'Anchor,' in a side street from this. If
-you will do me the honour to follow me, I can take you into a private
-room there, where we shall not be observed nor overheard."
-
-Like a man in a dream, Hugh found himself following Mr. Davidson to the
-"Anchor," one of the second-class hotels in the town. He was quite
-sure that this tall, military looking person was going to clear up the
-mystery of the couple whom Blankfield, in its wisdom, had refused to
-visit, and whose acquaintance he owed to a random meeting at a tea-shop.
-
-There were only one or two idlers in the entrance-hall of the hotel,
-which was of what is known as the "Commercial" kind. Murchison was glad
-to find that he did not seem to attract their observation, as he rapidly
-crossed over to where his new acquaintance was standing in a rather dark
-corner.
-
-Davidson piloted him into a little sitting-room which opened out of a
-long narrow passage. He rang the bell, and ordered refreshments with the
-manner of a man who was acquainted with the usages of polite society.
-
-It would be quite safe to say that Hugh, the heir to a great fortune,
-brought up in the lap of luxury, an aristocrat by adoption, if not
-exactly by birth, had never found himself up till now in such an
-environment. He could not truthfully declare that it was an experience
-he wished to repeat.
-
-Still, he could blame nobody but himself, his foolish action in taking
-up with a couple of persons whom Blankfield, in its superior worldly
-wisdom, had decided to ignore. As he was in for it, and nothing could
-undo the past, it was better to go through with it. Let him accommodate
-himself to the situation, drink his whisky-and-soda in this dingy little
-parlour of a second-rate hotel, and treat the detective with genial
-courtesy.
-
-After the first mouthful of his drink, Davidson began to explain.
-
-"Of course, sir, I quite understand this is not the sort of thing or
-the sort of place to which you are accustomed," he said, waving
-a deprecatory hand round the shabby little parlour. "But in this
-particular case, I and my friend--that friend I may say at the moment
-is elsewhere taking his observations--wanted to lie low. It didn't
-enter into our scheme to put up at a swagger hotel, and run the risk of
-gossip. It might have reached the ears of those we are after, and scared
-them off." Hugh listened attentively. There was something very serious
-in the wind now, and the dwellers at Rosemount were as yet unaware of
-what was impending.
-
-His surprise expressed itself in the direct question which he shot at
-the detective: "I take it you are here to arrest them, then?"
-
-"One of them, the man," corrected Mr. Davidson, quietly; "we know a good
-deal about the girl, but we have no evidence that implicates her beyond
-the fact of her association with him, and from our point of view that
-means nothing in a Court of Law."
-
-"What is his offence?" asked the startled Hugh.
-
-"Forgery," was the laconic answer. "He belongs to a pretty well-known
-gang, and we have had our suspicions of him for a long time now, but he
-was devilish clever and cunning. Several of his pals were caught, but it
-was always difficult to rope him in. We shouldn't have got him now but
-for the fact of one of his pals peaching. And even now, although the
-evidence is strong enough for us, I doubt if it is strong enough to get
-him more than a comparatively light sentence. If he can lay hold of a
-clever counsel, and there will be some money at the back of him, if not
-a great deal, he won't come off so badly."
-
-So Mr. Burton was a criminal, and had been living in Blankfield on the
-proceeds of his nefarious calling. The rich uncle in Australia who had
-left him a comfortable fortune was a myth.
-
-"I suppose he has been on the 'crook' all his life?" queried Hugh.
-
-"Ever since he has come under our observation," was the reply of the
-detective. "Before he joined the present gang, a few of whom we have
-collared from time to time, card-sharping was his lay. Once he rented an
-expensive flat in Paris, and I believe made a tidy bit out of it. That
-is where the young lady first appeared upon the scene."
-
-"But how long ago is that? She doesn't look more than twenty."
-
-"I know," said Mr. Davidson. "She looks wonderfully young, that is one
-of her assets. As a matter of fact I should say she was twenty-four at
-the least. The Parisian episode occurred about five years ago, making
-her nineteen at the time. He was there about twelve months, at the end
-of which time he got an introduction to the forging gang, and chucked
-the cards in favour of a more remunerative game."
-
-"She acted, I suppose, as a decoy and confederate?"
-
-"So I am given to understand. She very seldom played herself, but used
-to signal the opponents' cards to him."
-
-"What a precious pair," groaned Hugh. He had long been doubtful of them,
-but he had never anticipated this.
-
-"Now, Captain Murchison, there is a little question I want to ask you,"
-said the detective briskly, after a brief pause. "My pal and I only
-arrived here yesterday, but we have not been idle, we have picked up
-a good deal. We have discovered that nobody in Blankfield visits them,
-except yourself and another officer, a Mr. Pomfret. That is true, is it
-not?"
-
-"Quite true," assented Murchison.
-
-"You frequently go to their house together. But perhaps I may be telling
-you something you don't know when I say that Mr. Pomfret more frequently
-has gone alone."
-
-"I have had my suspicions some time," was Hugh's answer.
-
-"Now tell me, please; I suppose in the evenings you played cards, or
-roulette, or some game of chance. I thought so. Did you lose much? Had
-you any suspicions they were rooking you?"
-
-"On my first visit, a suspicion that they might do so crossed my mind.
-But nothing of the sort was attempted. I should say that, up to the
-present, my friend and I stand a bit to the good. Evidently, that was
-not their object."
-
-"Clearly," assented the shrewd detective, "they had a deeper game than
-that on. They wanted to catch this young friend of yours for a husband,
-and failing that, to entrap him, so that they could blackmail him on the
-threat of a breach of promise case."
-
-"It looks as if that was their object."
-
-"Now, Captain Murchison, may I ask you if your friend is a man likely
-to fall into the trap? I saw him in the High Street this afternoon
-with you: and if I may say so without offence, he doesn't give me the
-impression of a very strong or self-reliant person."
-
-Hugh shook his head. "I fear he is very weak, very impulsive, very
-emotional, a ready prey for a designing woman."
-
-"Have you any idea how far the thing has gone?"
-
-To this question Hugh could only reply in the negative. His one hope was
-that the foolish boy had seen her so often that there was no necessity
-to write incriminating letters.
-
-"Well, Captain Murchison, my object in asking you to grant me an
-interview was two-fold. In the first place, I wanted to know if there
-had been any card-sharping. Then, as I am aware you go to the house, I
-wished to tell you that I and my friend are going to take him to-night.
-It might happen that you would be going there, and of course, you will
-not want to be on the stage when we play our little comedy."
-
-"We have promised to go to dinner tonight. She asked us both when we met
-her this afternoon."
-
-"And of course now, you will not go. I will take him before dinner-time,
-so you need not send round any excuses."
-
-Poor Hugh felt very miserable. What he especially shirked was having to
-tell this sordid narrative to Pomfret. He expressed to the detective his
-shrinking from the unwelcome task.
-
-"I quite understand, sir, but it's got to be done," replied the
-detective, firmly. For a few seconds after he had spoken, he seemed to
-be thinking deeply. Then he came out with a startling proposition.
-
-"Look here, Captain Murchison, something has just occurred to me. I am
-not sure whether you will think it a good plan. Just now I thought it
-would be better for you not to be there. But if this young gentleman
-is so gone on the girl, it might make a deeper impression on him, bring
-home to him more strongly the sense of her unworthiness, if he were
-actually present at the scene. And it would spare you any painful
-explanations, beforehand. Afterwards you can tell him or not, as you
-please, about our interview here."
-
-Hugh made a gesture of disgust. "You propose that we should carry out
-our original intention of dining there and of sitting at the table of a
-criminal? I don't think I could bring myself to it."
-
-If Mr. Davidson did not quite agree with the young man's scruples, he
-was open-minded enough to see the matter from Hugh's point of view.
-
-"I quite understand, sir. But I think I can manage it all right. You
-say they dine at eight. Get there with your friend a quarter of an hour
-before. I will be there with my friend at five minutes to, before the
-dinner is served. You then won't have to sit at his table, you see."
-
-Hugh was still hesitating. Mr. Davidson proceeded to clinch his
-argument.
-
-"You see, sir, it will be so much better for Mr. Pomfret to see with
-his own eyes and hear with his own ears. When he has seen us clap
-the darbies on Burton, and listened to what I can tell him about the
-girl--you can just give me a lead there, if you don't mind--I think he
-will be cured of his calf-love on the spot. As far as he is concerned,
-we want to make a swift and sudden cure, to kill his affection at once."
-
-Yes, on the whole, after a little further reflection Murchison was
-disposed to fall in with this new suggestion. Pomfret, however deep his
-infatuation, could not resist the evidence of his own senses. He would
-be much more strongly impressed than by a mere bald narration of the
-facts as conveyed to his friend by the detective.
-
-So it was settled. Hugh would bring Pomfret to Rosemount at twenty
-minutes or a quarter to eight. At five minutes to, Davidson and his
-colleague would present themselves to execute their painful errand.
-
-"Just a word before I go," said the young man as he turned towards the
-door. "Is the man's name really Burton, or only an alias?"
-
-"That is his real name. Of course he has had aliases. His family, I
-understand, are respectable people of the lower middle-class. He was the
-black sheep, born with crooked and criminal instincts."
-
-"And the girl, is she really his sister?"
-
-"On that point, I have no positive information," replied Davidson. "She
-has passed as such ever since the Paris days. But I should very much
-doubt it. I am informed that they are very unlike in manners and
-appearance, that he is a rough sort of fellow, while she would pass
-anywhere for a lady."
-
-Hugh went back to the barracks, more than rejoiced at the fact that the
-detective seemed to have appeared on the scene in the very nick of time.
-If marriage was contemplated as the result of this clandestine wooing,
-what a terrible tragedy would be averted from the unlucky Pomfret!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-|It was twenty minutes to eight as the two young men rang at the
-door-bell of Rosemount. Pomfret was always a slow dresser. It was only
-by extraordinary efforts that Hugh had got him off in time.
-
-Brother and sister were awaiting them in the pretty drawing-room, lit
-with softly shaded lamps. Miss Burton rose to meet them, she extended
-a hand to each, in her pretty graceful way, as if she looked upon them
-both as her dearest friends, and would make no difference between them
-in her greeting.
-
-But Hugh was very wide-awake, after his meeting with the detective, and
-he did notice that the left hand which she extended to Pomfret lingered
-a little longer in his responsive clasp than did the right which she had
-given to him.
-
-Yes, it was obvious that their acquaintance had gone far. There was
-even, he fancied, an intelligent sympathy in their mutual glances.
-Pomfret was the lover, Hugh Murchison was simply the friend.
-
-Mr. Burton welcomed them heartily. "Just like old times," he cried in
-his rough, breezy fashion. "I've been like a fish out of water during
-Norah's absence. It was just like her to organise a little party, simply
-us four, to celebrate her return."
-
-It struck Hugh that his conviviality was just a trifle forced, that he
-seemed "jumpy" and nervous. Had he by chance spotted those two strangers
-in the High Street, and wondered what manner of men they were?
-
-Pomfret settled himself on the chesterfield beside Norah, in spite
-of her rather obvious signals to preserve a more discreet attitude.
-Ignorant of what was going to happen a few minutes hence, her great
-object was to conceal the fact that Jack should take the position of an
-acknowledged lover.
-
-In her secret heart, she was very apprehensive of Murchison. She knew he
-was suspicious of her, and he had a sort of elder brother affection for
-Pomfret. She was not by any means sure as to the lengths to which this
-fraternal feeling might lead him. It might even inspire him to evoke the
-assistance of the Pomfret family, and then the security of her present
-position might be menaced.
-
-The secret marriage was, after all, in the nature of a gamble. If things
-turned out as she expected, if the old aunt died in reasonable time, the
-odds were in her favour. She could twist Jack round her little finger.
-But nobody knew better than this astute young woman of the world that
-there is many a slip betwixt the cup and the lip. Something that she had
-not calculated, not foreseen, might happen at any moment, and her house
-of cards might tumble to the ground. Her adventurous life had taught her
-never to be too sure of momentary prosperity.
-
-She was a little bit nervous and "jumpy," like her brother, to-night.
-Her smile was a little forced, her high spirits rather assumed. The
-wedding-ring, the marriage certificate hidden from sight, were great
-assets. And yet, was it all just a little too good to be quite true?
-
-Murchison talked with the brother, desultory sort of talk, hardly
-conscious of what he was saying. His ears were straining for the sound
-of that eletric-bell which would herald the arrival of Davidson and his
-colleague.
-
-And it came very quickly. There was a loud, imperative peal. Burton
-started from his seat, and forgot his assumed good manners.
-
-"Who the devil is that?" he cried fiercely. "Do they want to knock the
-house down?" It was the vulgar exclamation of a very vulgar man.
-
-Miss Burton was more mistress of herself, but Hugh observed that her
-cheek went a shade paler. Well, it was only natural. These two had been
-living in fear of the law for more years than they cared to remember.
-And they had thought they were safely in harbour. Poor fools!
-
-She turned to Pomfret, and forced a wan smile. "It is really quite
-alarming, Mr. Pomfret, visitors at this time of the evening. And you
-know so well that nobody in Blankfield, except yourselves, ever crosses
-our threshold."
-
-The happy Jack, the husband of a few short hours, was quite unperturbed.
-He smiled back at her confidently.
-
-"Somebody come to the wrong house, I should say. Why, you have gone
-quite pale! What a nervous little thing it is!" He whispered the last
-sentence in a lover-like tone.
-
-Murchison felt every nerve in his body tingling. Jack was in a state of
-ignorance. The brother and sister, he was sure, were filled with vague
-and undefined alarms. He, alone out of the four sitting in that charming
-little drawing-room awaiting the announcement of dinner, was sure of
-what was going to happen.
-
-He stole a look across at Pomfret with the happy, fatuous smile of the
-successful lover on his face. Poor devil! In another couple of minutes
-he would be terribly disillusioned.
-
-There was a heavy trampling of feet across the hall. The visitors,
-whoever they were, had pushed past the trim and ladylike parlourmaid.
-
-The drawing-room door was flung open, and the two big men, Davidson and
-his colleague, advanced towards Burton who was standing in the middle of
-the room.
-
-The detective spoke in a clear, ringing voice. "It's all up, Mr. Burton,
-I won't trouble to recount your various aliases. I've a warrant here to
-arrest you on a charge of forgery. You've gone free for some time, but
-one of your old pals has peached upon you. Hard luck for you, otherwise
-you might have been playing still, perhaps for ever, this nice little
-'stunt' at Blankfield. I suppose you will come quietly?"
-
-For a few seconds George Burton indulged in some horrible imprecations.
-In the same breath he protested his absolute innocence, and denounced
-the "pal" who had betrayed him. Mr. Davidson cut him short, as he
-fastened the handcuffs on his wrist.
-
-"Stow it, old man! Be a sport. It's a fair cop, isn't it? You knew the
-risk you ran when you went into this business."
-
-Mr. Burton subsided. "Yes, it's a fair cop," he growled. "I don't blame
-you, you are only doing your duty. I've no grudge against you. But by
-Heaven, when I come out, I'll do for that swine who has given me away,
-if I have to swing for it."
-
-Pomfret had risen from his seat on the chesterfield at the dramatic
-entrance of the two strangers. Norah had risen also. In the few seconds
-that elapsed between their entrance and the clapping of the handcuffs
-on Burton, she stretched out appealing arms to him, and cried out in a
-voice of despair:
-
-"Stand by me, Jack, stand by me. I knew nothing of this. It is as great
-a surprise to me as to you. Oh, my poor brother! He has done this for
-love of me."
-
-Murchison heard the impassioned tones, the despairing appeal. They
-would have melted a heart of stone. What effect would they have upon the
-unsuspicious Jack?
-
-Pomfret withdrew himself, almost coldly, from the proffered embrace. In
-a few seconds, as it seemed to Hugh, he had grown from a boy to a man.
-
-He turned to the detective, and Hugh was delighted at the sudden dignity
-that seemed to have come to him.
-
-"You seem to know a great deal about this man whom you have handcuffed,
-and who admits you are only doing your duty. Do you know anything about
-his sister, Miss Burton?"
-
-Mr. Davidson glanced significantly at Murchison. They had arranged
-a little conversation between themselves, but Jack's frankness had
-rendered this unnecessary.
-
-"What I know of the young lady, sir, I am sorry to tell you, is not to
-her credit. She has been associated with this man for some years. She
-started with him in Paris some time ago, when he was a card-sharper, and
-running a gambling-saloon. But to be fair, she is not in this business
-with him, and I have nothing against her."
-
-"Are they what they represent themselves to be, brother and sister?"
-Pomfret's voice was very quiet, but there was in it a suppressed note
-of agony. How he had loved this girl, and a few hours ago he had clasped
-her in his arms as his wife!
-
-The keen eyes of the detective softened as he looked at Jack, who was
-hiding the most intense agitation under an apparently stoical demeanour.
-
-"I have no accurate information on that point, sir, but I should very
-much doubt the fact of their relationship."
-
-While this brief conversation was taking place between Pomfret and
-Davidson, Norah was still standing with arms outstretched.
-
-Again there came forth the appealing, impassioned cry: "Jack, stand by
-me! Jack, stand by me!" She sank down on the sofa, and put her hands
-before her face. "Stay with me, wait till they have all gone, and I will
-explain everything. I have nothing to do with this."
-
-But Pomfret stood like a man turned to stone. Then suddenly, Norah gave
-a little gurgling cry, and fainted. Pomfret made a step towards her, and
-halted. His great love for her had been killed. Perhaps at this moment
-he hated her more than he had ever loved her.
-
-The parlour-maid, with a white face, was peeping in the room. Davidson
-beckoned to her.
-
-"My colleague will help you to take her up to her room. Look after her.
-She's as game as they make them, but to-night's t been too much for her.
-She has been playing for big stakes, and she has lost."
-
-The maid and Davidson's burly assistant lifted up the recumbent form.
-And when they had carried her out, Pomfret's self-control seemed to give
-way. He suddenly clutched at his throat and turned to Hugh.
-
-"Old man, I have had as much as I can stand. For Heaven's sake, take me
-from this accursed house."
-
-Hugh put his arm under his to steady him.
-
-The boy's nerve had gone, he was trembling like a man stricken with the
-ague. There was no cab or taxi to be got in this outlying district. They
-had to walk back to the barracks.
-
-Hugh planted him in an easy-chair in his own quarters, and mixed him a
-stiff peg. Even Dutch courage was better than nothing. Pom-fret drank it
-in two big gulps. Then he pulled himself together.
-
-"I have been an infernal fool, old man," he gasped, "an infernal fool."
-
-Hugh spoke soothingly. "Of course you have. But the folly is over. You
-now know Norah Burton and her rascally brother for what they are, a pair
-of criminals and adventurers."
-
-"But you don't know all," groaned the unfortunate Jack. "Norah Burton is
-my wife. I married her secretly the other day, by special licence, while
-I was up in London."
-
-Hugh leapt to his feet in astonishment. He had his own ideas of that
-visit to London, coupled with Norah's absence. But that Pom-fret, weak
-and impressionable as he was, should have made such a fool of himself,
-was beyond the limits of his comprehension.
-
-In a moment he pulled himself together. The poor lad was in a big mess
-enough, it was no time to rub it in. "Tell me all about it, old chap,"
-he said quietly.
-
-And Pomfret told him. He made it clear, perfect gentleman as he
-was, that Norah had been the least to blame in the matter, that
-the suggestion had come from himself, that Norah had insisted upon
-consulting her brother before yielding to his wishes.
-
-Yes, of course, Hugh could understand all that. They had known just the
-kind of man they were dealing with. They had hooked and landed their
-fish well. To a woman in her uncertain state, a husband with some
-prospects was better than her insecure position with a scoundrel like
-George Burton.
-
-Hugh filled a big pipe full up with a very strong and potent tobacco.
-He thought better when he was smoking, and this was a situation that
-demanded a good deal of thought.
-
-After a while he spoke. "Well, Jack, let us look facts in the face. What
-is done can't be undone. You have married this woman, and as long as she
-lives she is entitled to call herself Mrs. Pomfret, and you will have to
-keep her. There is no getting over that."
-
-The unhappy Jack groaned. There was no getting over that. This
-attractive, charming young woman, sister or confederate, or whatever
-relationship she stood in to this wretched criminal, was his legal wife,
-and, if she chose, she could make things very uncomfortable for him.
-
-"Well, old man, you have made a hash of your life at the very beginning
-of it. As I say, that can't be undone. You've got to make the best of
-it. I suppose you have entered into some financial arrangements with
-her."
-
-"Seven hundred a year till I come into my aunt's money. After that,
-of course, our marriage was to be acknowledged, and we would live
-together."
-
-"I see," said Hugh, assuming a cheerfulness he did not quite feel.
-"Well, I should not say she would try for more than her seven hundred a
-year at present. When your aunt dies she will of course fight for a bit
-more. I take it, after to-night's work, you will never want to live with
-her, cajoling and attractive as she is."
-
-Pomfret shuddered. "After what that fellow said, my love for her died.
-But, by Heaven, Hugh, I did love her while I believed in her."
-
-"Of course, of course. Have you signed any document about that seven
-hundred, by the way?"
-
-"Not yet. My solicitor is sending me the document to-day, it will reach
-me to-morrow morning."
-
-"It will make it a little easier to deal with her, then. Are you going
-to leave yourself in my hands? I don't think she will be very full of
-fight for the next few days."
-
-"Certainly I will, Hugh. Do your best for me. I never want to see her
-again, of that you may be sure."
-
-Murchison reflected deeply before he spoke again. "I doubt if she will
-trouble you very much. It won't be very difficult to compromise with
-her, she has too much to hide. And now for yourself."
-
-"Yes," groaned the unhappy Pomfret, in a hollow voice. "And now for
-myself. What do you suggest?"
-
-"There's only one thing to do, and that is to put the past behind
-you. As long as this woman lives, you can never marry. But many men go
-through life and remain bachelors, and are not altogether unhappy. You
-must make up your mind to be one of the bachelors, Jack."
-
-But Jack looked very despairing. The shock had been a terrible one. In
-spite of the stiff peg he had taken, his face was still livid, and his
-hands were shaking.
-
-Hugh looked at him anxiously. He was very weak; had the occurrences
-of this terrible night driven him over the border line that separates
-sanity from insanity?
-
-Presently he muttered, almost as if to himself, certain disjointed
-phrases. Hugh caught a few of them, repeated again and again.
-
-"Tied to her for life, she will outlive me, tied to her for life. She
-will never let me go. My poor family! I have always been a fool, but up
-to now have never brought disgrace to them. And God forgive me, I was
-reckoning on the death of my poor old generous aunt, it is idle to say
-I did not speculate on it. And for what, for what?--the pretended
-affection, the bought kisses of this adventuress, a card-sharper's
-decoy, who told me lying tales about the way in which her criminal
-associate had inherited his money."
-
-He rambled on like this for some quarter of an hour, and Murchison
-judged it was better to let him ease his mind in such a fashion.
-
-In a way, the poor foolish boy's brain had cleared up to a point; he was
-able to look the facts squarely in the face. His infatuation might have
-been so deep that he might, under these damning circumstances, have
-fallen a victim to her wiles a second time. She would no doubt have
-been prepared, if he had given her the opportunity, to have sworn her
-innocence, to have protested that she was the victim of circumstantial
-evidence, that she had believed what her brother had told her, that she
-had never been a partner in, or a confidant of, his criminal schemes.
-
-No, so far the rude shock had cleared his brain, made him see and think
-more clearly. But Murchison very much feared that the agonising remorse
-for his folly was obscuring it in another direction.
-
-He seemed to look upon himself as something unclean in having allowed
-himself to be contaminated by association with such a wretched
-adventuress. He was also acutely conscious that, at the best, he would
-have to take this horrible secret with him to the grave, unless it
-sprang suddenly to light, as such secrets have a knack of doing. Above
-all, he keenly felt the disgrace he had inflicted on his family.
-
-There was a great deal more desultory talk, and Hugh gave him the best
-advice he could under the unhappy circumstances--a reiteration of the
-"put it behind you and live it down" philosophy. This would have come
-easy to a man of the rocky and stolid type to which Murchison belonged
-by temperament. But Jack was highly-strung and impulsive. There was no
-ballast in him.
-
-Hugh almost had to push him out of the room. But, before doing so, he
-mixed the boy another stiff peg, with the hope that it would induce
-sleep and purchase him the oblivion of a few hours.
-
-"Now then, old man, toddle off. Get a good night's rest, and when you
-wake tomorrow, you will find things look pretty black, but not quite so
-black as now. If this young woman contemplates a deep game, and wants to
-insist overmuch on her rights as your wife, I will deal with her on your
-behalf. I'll warrant I bring her to reason."
-
-The poor distraught boy clasped his friend's hand convulsively. "Hugh,
-old chap, you are the best friend a man could ever have, true as steel."
-
-"Don't say that," replied Hugh with a little break in his voice. "I am
-bound to do the best for you. It was owing to my infernal folly that you
-ever set foot in that cursed house. I am older and stronger than you, I
-ought to have known better. Well, good old Jack, good-night! I tell you,
-things won't look quite as black to-morrow."
-
-But to Hugh's intense grief and remorse, there was no morrow for the
-unhappy boy, whose mind had been quite unhinged by the events of
-that terrible night. One could only surmise that he had found sleep
-impossible, and in a fit of frenzy had taken his life to escape from a
-future so black and discouraging.
-
-When his servant went to call him in the morning, he found his master
-lying on the floor, with a bullet-hole in the middle of his forehead.
-Everybody in the barracks had been fast asleep when the poor boy had
-fired the shot that was to take him out of his troubles, and nobody had
-heard the report.
-
-At the inquest, the whole miserable story came out. Of course it came
-through Hugh, the only person who was in possession of it. He narrated
-the details of his acquaintance with the Burtons, the introduction
-of Jack Pomfret to the house, the scene at Rosemount when the two
-detectives had taken the man, Jack's confession that he had made the
-girl his wife a few hours previously.
-
-Hugh never forgot that interview with the Colonel, in which "Old
-Fireworks" poured out his wrath in no measured terms. He roundly called
-him an infernal fool for mixing himself up with people of whom he knew
-nothing, and whom Blankfield in its ignorance of their antecedents had
-declined to visit--and very wisely.
-
-"If it had been poor Jack, a dear lad but a foolish, I could have found
-it in my heart to forgive him," he ended. "But you are a man of another
-sort, you have got your wits about you, if you choose to exercise them.
-I will never pardon you that day's work. You can play with fire and not
-be scorched, but he couldn't. That poor boy's death lies at your door,
-sir. I hope you realise it."
-
-Yes, Hugh did realise it. He stood with bowed head, and could not utter
-a word in self-defence.
-
-The news, of course, was all over the town the next morning, or rather
-the double news--that George Burton had been arrested by two detectives
-from Scotland Yard, and that in the early morning of the following
-day Jack Pomfret had blown out his brains. The evidence at the inquest
-explained the double event.
-
-The news of her young husband's suicide reached Norah early in the
-morning. She had gambled and lost. The old adventurous life was in front
-of her again.
-
-She took the buffets of fate with the stoicism of her kind and class.
-She had a comfortable little nest-egg put by which stood between her and
-present want. If only Jack had been less emotional, she would not have
-troubled him much, been content with quite a little. It is to be feared
-that, in her bitter disappointment, she felt a little sore against Jack
-for his moral cowardice in getting comfortably out of it himself, and
-leaving her in the lurch.
-
-Anyway, she faced the situation with a courage that one could not refuse
-to admire. By two o'clock that same day the servants had been paid their
-wages, the keys of the furnished house handed over to the agent, and
-Mrs. Pomfret had departed for London.
-
-Murchison could never forget that terrible time till something came
-that seemed to dwarf all other things. In August, nineteen hundred and
-fourteen, there burst the first storm of the war which shook the world
-to its centre. In the blood-soaked plains of France he forgot everything
-except his country.
-
-Jack Pomfret and Norah Burton seemed dim memories in those strenuous
-times of the world's upheaval. And yet, when he had a moment's leisure
-to think of the past, he felt a savage longing to be even with that
-fair-faced, smiling adventuress who had driven his poor young friend to
-a suicide's grave.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-|It's a good proposition, old man. You couldn't employ a couple of hours
-better. I have been in London Society of all sorts for the best part of
-my life, and I tell you that Stella Keane is the most charming girl I
-have ever met."
-
-The speaker was little Tommy Esmond, short, genial, and rotund of
-person. Tommy knew everybody who was anybody, and everybody knew the
-mercurial Tommy.
-
-Guy Spencer puffed leisurely at his cigar, and regarded his rotund
-little friend with an amused smile. Spencer was about thirty, Tommy was
-old enough to be his father. But he wore well.
-
-"Most excellent Tommy, how many times have I heard you say the same
-thing? Every girl you come across is the most charming you have ever
-met--until one sees you the next week. And then, the last girl has the
-super-charm--like the young lady you just mentioned, Miss Stella Keane."
-
-But Esmond was not to be rebuffed by a clumsy attempt at humour on the
-part of a young man so much his junior. Besides, Tommy was impervious
-to humour. It fell off him, like water from a duck's back. In his way he
-was a very strenuous little man, he had no time to frivol.
-
-"Don't try to be funny, old man: it doesn't suit you. Be sensible, and
-come round with me to Mrs. L'Estrange's flat and be introduced to Miss
-Keane."
-
-"It's an interesting suggestion, Tommy, but before I decide tell me
-first--who is Mrs. L'Estrange, and secondly, who and what is Miss
-Keane?"
-
-And Tommy Esmond launched forth on a full flow of narrative. Mrs.
-L'Estrange was the first cousin of a well-known Irish earl, and
-was--well, in somewhat reduced circumstances, and had a snug little flat
-in the Cadogan district.
-
-"Mrs. L'Estrange is quite satisfactorily explained," remarked Guy,
-interrupting his rather voluble friend. "Now what do you really know
-about Miss Keane?"
-
-Here, Esmond was a little less precise. Mrs. L'Estrange he knew quite
-well, had known her ever since he had been in London; her ancestry and
-connections were unimpeachable.
-
-Miss Keane, it would appear, had been suddenly projected into the
-L'Estrange household, as it were, from space. He understood that she
-was a distant connection, a far-off cousin, but he could give no
-particulars.
-
-Tommy, with the born instinct of the true diplomatist, was always ready
-to present everything in its best light, but he lacked the one essential
-quality of the born diplomatist--he was not very successful when he came
-to camouflaging facts.
-
-Spencer's smile was more amused than ever, as he regarded his genial
-friend. Spencer was only thirty, and Tommy was at least old enough to
-be his father. But there were times when the younger man thought he saw
-more clearly than the elder.
-
-"Let us put it at this, Tommy. Mrs. L'Estrange, being in somewhat
-straitened circumstances, supplements her meagre income by card-playing,
-at which I have no doubt she is an adept."
-
-And here, the usually placid Tommy interposed hotly: "You may say
-of Mrs. L'Estrange what you like. But, if you propose to offer any
-derogatory remarks about Miss Keane, I would rather not listen to them."
-
-And Spencer kept a curb on his tongue. Was this fat, comical-looking
-little man, a most unromantic figure, violently in love with Miss Stella
-Keane, and her sworn champion? Far be it from him to disturb his faith
-in this seductive siren, if it were so.
-
-"It's all right, old chap," he said quietly. "I am not going to make any
-remarks, derogatory or otherwise, about Miss Keane. I think I will adopt
-your suggestion. Let us adjourn to Mrs. L'Estrange's flat. If one loses
-fifty or a hundred one may have a good time."
-
-"You will see the most charming girl in London," cried Esmond in
-enthusiastic tones. It struck Spencer, as a peculiar phase of his t
-friend's detachment, that, being in love with the girl himself, he
-should be so anxious to introduce her to a younger man, who might,
-presumably, be his rival.
-
-For there could be no question of rivalry between the two men, apart
-from their ages. Spencer was tall, athletic, handsome: Tommy
-Esmond was--just Tommy Esmond--rotund, comical in appearance, and
-insignificant.
-
-Moreover, Spencer had other qualifications which are not without their
-influence on the fair sex. He had a considerable fortune, and he was the
-next in succession to an ancient earldom. If the Earl of Southleigh, a
-widower, did not marry again, he would succeed to the title and estates.
-He was, in every sense of the term, an eligible _parti_.
-
-The long, weary war was drawing to its close. The two men were dining
-at the fashionable "Excelsior" and were now about half-way through their
-dinner.
-
-Spencer had the bearing of a soldier, and he would have been at the
-Front long ago, but no doctor could be found who would pass him. To all
-appearance, he possessed the thews and sinews of an athlete, but the
-stalwart, manly frame covered an incurably weak heart, which played him
-strange tricks at times. He was serving his country in the best way open
-to him, and doing good, sound clerical work in a Government Office.
-
-"When do you suggest we should put in an appearance at Mrs.
-L'Estrange's?" he asked presently.
-
-"It will take us another half-hour to get through this abundant meal.
-You will then have your coffee, and you will want a good and long
-cigar. We began rather late, you will remember. By the time you have got
-through your smoke, we will make a move. We shall then find them in full
-swing."
-
-Guy nodded, and went on with his dinner. He was quite willing to go to
-the L'Estrange flat: he had no other engagement this evening, and
-it would be something to do. But he was not greatly interested about
-meeting the most beautiful girl in London. In spite of his friend's
-almost lyrical outbursts, he expected that Miss Stella Keane would prove
-a very ordinary young woman.
-
-Suddenly Tommy Esmond uttered an exclamation. "Look, there they are," he
-whispered excitedly across the table. "Mrs. L'Estrange and her cousin.
-The man with them is Colonel Desmond, the man who won the Victoria Cross
-in the Boer war."
-
-Tommy's round face was red with pleasurable emotion. Was there any
-doubt, thought Spencer, that the little man was tremendously smitten by
-the beautiful Miss Keane? would it result in a marriage, he wondered?
-Tommy was well-off, and a person of some importance in his little social
-world. And if Miss Keane was as lovely as his fond imagination painted
-her, it was quite evident that she was poor. Penniless young girls have
-before now accepted the shelter of a safe home, even when offered by
-comical-looking little elderly men.
-
-The three newcomers moved to a vacant table; Mrs. L'Estrange, a woman of
-middle age, dressed rather more youthfully than was quite in good taste,
-their escort, a tall figure in khaki, very upright and soldierly in his
-bearing, in spite of his sixty years, and last, but by no means least,
-the beautiful Miss Keane.
-
-Yes, at the first glance, the young man decided that she fully deserved
-his friend's somewhat extravagant praise. If everybody in London was not
-raving over her, it was simply due to the fact that her cousin's circle
-was not important, and that she had found nobody of sufficient social
-influence to launch her with the necessary _cachet_.
-
-If she had made her _début_ at one of the great houses, stamped with
-the approval of any one of London's distinguished hostesses, Society
-journals would have gone into rhapsodies over her, and she would have
-been one of the reigning beauties of the hour, far, far beyond the
-aspirations of little Tommy Esmond.
-
-His own special taste rather inclined towards fair women, his cousin,
-Lady Nina, of whom he was very fond, being a charming specimen of that
-type. But he was no bigot in the matter of feminine beauty, and he was
-prepared to admit that there were some dark women who could compare
-favourably with their blonde sisters.
-
-But Stella Keane was not very dark. She had soft brown eyes, glossy
-dark hair, and a beautiful creamy complexion, a mouth like Cupid's bow,
-revealing when she smiled, teeth of a dazzling ivory. Her figure would
-have been pronounced perfect by the most critical and fastidious artist.
-
-"What do you think of her?" asked the delighted Tommy, after he had
-given his friend a decent time for his inspection.
-
-Tommy was a man whose friends had got into the habit of smiling at him,
-even when they agreed with him. Spencer smiled at him quite as often as
-any of his acquaintance, but at this moment he was perfectly grave.
-
-"You are quite right, old man, this time," he said quietly. "She is
-really beautiful, and her carriage is splendid. She looks like a young
-Empress--or, rather, she fulfils one's idea of what a young Empress
-should be."
-
-Tommy beamed. He drank in the words of unstinted praise like wine. The
-little blue eyes, usually devoid of expression, seemed suffused with
-a soft emotion. There was something pathetic in his devotion to this
-radiant young woman who looked like a youthful Empress.
-
-"And she is as good and sweet as she looks," he murmured in a voice that
-he could not keep steady. "When she talks to you seriously and lets
-you know what she really thinks and feels, by gad, Spencer, it makes a
-battered old worldling like myself feel unworthy to be in her presence.
-For she has a beautiful soul and mind as well as a beautiful body."
-
-Spencer could only look sympathetic. Poor little Tommy, he certainly
-seemed to talk like a lover. And what did Miss Keane think of it all?
-She must have more than a mere tolerance for him, or she would not have
-allowed him those peeps into her mind and soul to which he alluded with
-such unrestrained rapture.
-
-It was some time before Esmond's intense gaze attracted the attention
-of the party, and when it did, he was rewarded with a most affable smile
-from Mrs. L'Estrange, and one of quite pronounced friendliness from Miss
-Keane. The Colonel also bestowed a genial nod.
-
-After a pause, Tommy spoke somewhat ruefully. "I'm afraid this rather
-upsets our little plans. Mrs. L'Estrange is a most conscientious diner:
-she will be here, at the lowest calculation, for an hour and a half,
-counting the coffee and cigarettes. They won't be back at the flat under
-a couple. You wouldn't care to wait so long."
-
-He looked rather wistfully at his companion. He, for his own part, would
-have waited half the night.
-
-"Don't let us commit ourselves, old man, but await events. We haven't
-finished our dinner yet, and the service is deucedly slow. We can put
-in a lot more time. You can pay your respects at a fitting moment, and
-perhaps they will ask us to their table. I must confess I should like
-to see Miss Keane at closer quarters, and talk to her. Although I don't
-expect she will reveal as much to me as she does to you."
-
-Tommy looked pleased again; he was very bent upon introducing Spencer to
-his beautiful young friend. It would come about presently: if not here,
-in the lounge. Already, Mrs. L'Estrange had sent a few covert glances
-in the direction of their table. There was little doubt she knew who
-his companion was, and would be quite pleased to number him amongst her
-acquaintance.
-
-"Has Miss Keane many admirers? She should have," remarked Spencer
-presently. He noticed that Esmond's eyes were always turned in the
-direction of that particular table.
-
-"Not any serious ones, I fancy. A few young fellows send her flowers,
-but nothing more. It is quite an unsuitable _ménage_ for a girl of her
-attractions. The majority of the _habitués_ are middle-aged men who
-go there simply to gamble. The few young ones come for a flutter, and
-disappear when they have had enough."
-
-"Does the young lady play?"
-
-"I have never seen her. She has told me scores of times that she loathes
-gambling. Her father ruined himself by it. I believe she is really very
-unhappy there. And I gather Mrs. L'Estrange has not the best of tempers,
-particularly when she has had bad luck."
-
-"Hobson's choice, I expect," suggested Spencer sympathetically. Miss
-Keane was facing him, giving him ample opportunity to examine the
-beautiful countenance, and it struck him that there was an underlying
-expression of sadness on the perfect features, especially when in
-repose.
-
-"I fear so," was Esmond's answer. "She is very reticent about her own
-affairs, as any gentlewoman would be. But from certain things she has
-let drop, I make out her own means are very slender, and her cousin's
-hospitality is a boon to her."
-
-Half an hour passed, and Spencer lit a big cigar. The two men chatted
-on various topics. Mrs. L'Estrange and the Colonel were still doing full
-justice to the excellent dishes offered them. Miss Keane was apparently
-satisfied, and sat quietly watching her companions, and throwing in an
-occasional remark.
-
-And suddenly came the loud sound of maroons. Everybody started. A few
-seconds later the clamour and roaring of our own guns burst forth. There
-was no doubt as to what was happening. The Germans were making one of
-their unwelcome visits.
-
-"By heavens, it's a raid, and we are in the thick of it," cried Tommy
-Esmond, rising excitedly. He was a nervous little man, and his face had
-grown a shade pale at the sound of the first boom.
-
-In a few moments there was a stampede from the dining-room. The guests
-hurried as fast as they could to the basement and cellars.
-
-Tommy, in his progress, was impeded by two burly men who were making
-their way leisurely. Spencer was a few feet in front of him, making for
-the crowd that surged round the doors. As he looked around the deserted
-tables, he saw Miss Keane standing alone, her eyes almost rigid with
-terror, her hands clutching convulsively the back of the chair on
-which she had been sitting. It was evident that the Colonel had quickly
-removed Mrs. L'Estrange from the scene of danger, and she had been too
-panic-stricken to follow them.
-
-He crossed over to her. "Excuse me," he said gently. "I am a friend of
-Mr. Esmond's. How is it you are alone? Did your companions desert you?"
-
-"Colonel Desmond took my cousin, and told me to keep close behind them.
-when I got up, my limbs seemed unable to move. I feel as if I were
-paralysed."
-
-He took her arm and put it through his. It was evident she had been
-rendered immobile by terror.
-
-"I will take care of you," he said soothingly. "Downstairs you will be
-quite safe. But we will let this crowd get through first."
-
-Tommy Esmond came bustling up, all anxiety. Truth to tell, he did
-not feel over brave, but his anxiety for himself was lost in the
-contemplation of her white face and stricken eyes.
-
-Slowly, cheered by the presence of the two men, a little colour flowed
-back into her cheeks, and she smiled wanly.
-
-"I am a fearful coward," she explained. "I go all to pieces in even the
-mildest thunderstorm."
-
-And it was in this wise, amid the crash of falling bombs, and the roar
-and clamour of our own guns, that Guy Spencer made the acquaintance of
-Stella Keane.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-|They found shelter in one of the big cellars of the Restaurant, and
-Miss Keane by degrees got back some of her courage. There were about
-twenty other persons in the same refuge, and she probably derived
-fortitude from their temporary companionship, and common danger. Tommy
-Esmond recovered himself very quickly, and hastened to observe the
-conventions.
-
-"It is a queer time and place in which to make introductions," he
-remarked genially. "But even in times of peril, one should preserve
-the usages of good society. I don't suppose you know the name of
-your gallant rescuer. Let me make you known, in a formal fashion. Mr.
-Spencer--Miss Keane."
-
-The beautiful Stella bowed her dark head, and the ghost of a smile
-flitted over her still pale face.
-
-"I know Mr. Spencer very well by sight. When I have recovered my wits, I
-will thank him properly and prettily. Perhaps he will come and see us at
-my cousin's flat."
-
-"I was bringing him on there to-night, as a matter of fact," explained
-Esmond. "But I presume all that is knocked on the head, even supposing
-we get out of this disgusting hole in reasonable time. Mrs. L'Estrange
-won't be in a mood to receive visitors, after this disquieting
-experience, I am sure."
-
-"I am afraid you don't know Mrs. L'Estrange," replied the girl, with a
-little mocking laugh. Her tones were not yet quite steady, but she
-was rapidly recovering herself. "The card tables were laid before we
-started, and we intended to be back early. If we get out safely from
-this disgusting hole, as you call it, my cousin will resume her ordinary
-pursuits, as if nothing had occurred to disturb them."
-
-Desultory conversation, the irresponsible chatter of the drawing-room
-kind, was almost impossible under the circumstances. And although Miss
-Keane did her best to assume a brave front, it was easy to see that
-she was inwardly quivering. At every roar of the guns, she shivered all
-over, and her cheek alternately flushed and then grew deadly pale with
-her inward terror.
-
-"Poor child," whispered Spencer to his companion; "she must be a bundle
-of nerves. Every second, she is experiencing the pangs of death in
-anticipation. By the way, the gallant Desmond doesn't seem to have
-troubled himself much about her. If I hadn't taken her forcibly away, I
-believe she would be rooted to that chair now."
-
-Esmond shrugged his shoulders. "Of course, a chap like Desmond doesn't
-know the meaning of fear, and he can't understand the sensation in
-others. The other woman took possession of him, and dragged him away.
-No doubt, he thought she was following. Mrs. L'Estrange, so far as I can
-judge, would never think of anything but number one."
-
-And as Spencer's glance stole to the fair face, he felt a strange
-feeling of pity for her. The poignant happenings of the last few moments
-had revealed to him her loneliness, the tragedy of her dependence upon
-others. In a supreme moment of peril, she, who ought to have lovers
-and friends by the score, was left by herself, and thrown upon the
-compassion of a stranger.
-
-An anxious half-hour passed, and then messengers came down with
-tidings of a reassuring nature. The raiders had been driven off, after
-inflicting considerable damage. Gay London was free to pursue its
-natural course of pleasure.
-
-At once the tension was relaxed. Drooping forms resumed an erect
-carriage, the roses bloomed again in the pale cheeks of the women. There
-was a flutter, a stir. They all moved away from the refuge which had
-been so welcome, and now had become unbearable.
-
-In the hall they encountered the Colonel, cool and collected, as if he
-were on parade, Mrs. L'Estrange fluttering and full of protestations.
-
-"Oh, my poor Stella! I have been distracted about you. Why did you not
-follow us? I thought you were close behind us all the time, till we got
-to one of these abominable cellars, and looked back to find you were
-missing."
-
-The Colonel pulled at his moustache a little nervously.
-
-"I shall never forgive myself, Miss Keane, not to have assured myself
-you were with us at the start. I would have come back to search for you,
-but Mrs. L'Estrange was in such a nervous state I could not leave her."
-
-Miss Keane answered him very coldly, and to her cousin she did not
-vouchsafe any reply.
-
-"Please do not apologise. It was a question of _sauve qui peut_.
-Fortunately, I found some kind friends who took compassion on a forlorn
-damsel, shaking and terror-stricken." She turned to Mrs. L'Estrange.
-"Mr. Esmond is, of course, an old friend. But you do not know Mr.
-Spencer who got to me first."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange was quite equal to the occasion; she extended her
-perfectly-gloved hand with an air of effusive cordiality.
-
-"A thousand thanks to you both. My darling Stella was fortunate in
-finding such protectors. We are both terrible cowards, I don't know
-which is the greater."
-
-"I, without question," flashed out Miss Keane. "Otherwise I should have
-had the sense to scurry away like yourself. We were both frightened
-rabbits, but you could run to a place of safety while I stood
-paralysed."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange turned away the awkward thrust with a charming smile.
-"I have made up my mind to one thing," she remarked with an air of
-conviction. "Never, so long as the War lasts, will I dine out of my own
-home. This night's experience has taught me a lesson. I don't want a
-second one."
-
-At this juncture, Tommy Esmond interposed. "I was going to bring my
-friend Spencer round to you to-night. But I suppose you feel a bit too
-shattered, eh? You would like to get home and rest."
-
-"Oh dear, no!" replied the lady vivaciously. "I never alter my habits
-for anything or anybody. Let us all go along at once. I will go with
-Colonel Desmond. You and Mr. Spencer can continue your charge of
-Stella."
-
-But Guy had a small duty to perform. "I think if you will excuse me,
-I will join you a little later. I want to go round to inquire after my
-uncle and cousin. He is a very old man, and I should like to know he is
-quite safe."
-
-So it was arranged. The others drove off to Mrs. L'Estrange's flat, and
-Spencer, finding he would have some time to wait for a taxi, walked to
-Carlton House Terrace, where Lord South-leigh had his town house.
-
-The footman who opened the door informed him that his lordship and Lady
-Nina were still in the dining-room with a small party. The earl had
-taken it all very calmly, and his daughter, who, unlike poor Stella
-Keane, was a young woman of remarkable courage, had not been disturbed
-at all.
-
-"Are they alone, Robert?"
-
-"No, sir, two old friends of his lordship's came to dinner to-night and
-are still with them. But, of course, they will be glad to see you."
-
-However, his duty being performed, and learning that all was
-satisfactory, Spencer thought he might as well get along to the flat.
-He had been strangely attracted by the beautiful girl, whom even her
-obvious terror and lack of self-control could not deprive of her charm.
-
-"No, I won't come in. Tell them I called round to make sure they were
-all safe. And say to her ladyship I will look in to-morrow afternoon
-about tea-time."
-
-He went into his club for a few moments to see if there were any
-letters, and half an hour later was at Mrs. L'Estrange's door.
-
-She occupied the first floor of an imposing block of flats, recently
-erected in one of the semi-fashionable quarters of London. She might not
-be in very affluent circumstances, as Esmond had hinted, but she would
-have to pay a very handsome rent for her abode.
-
-The door was opened by a decorous-looking butler, with the air of one
-who had served in good families. A man passed out as Spencer entered. He
-was a good-looking young fellow of about twenty-five, in khaki. Spencer
-knew him well by sight as the eldest son and heir of a rich brewer.
-
-His face did not wear a very happy expression. It did not require a
-Sherlock Holmes to surmise that his visit had been an expensive one, and
-that he was hurrying away to avoid further temptation.
-
-In the centre of a rather spacious hall, Stella Keane and Tommy Esmond
-stood chatting.
-
-She greeted the newcomer with a bright and friendly smile. She no longer
-looked pale, in fact he thought there was a slight suspicion of rouge
-on the fair cheeks. She was too goodlooking to need the aid of art, but
-perhaps she wanted to conceal the ravages inflicted on her beauty by
-that terrible time at the "Excelsior."
-
-"You are not very long after us. I conclude you found your friends were
-quite safe."
-
-She had gathered from the garrulous Tommy what she had not known before,
-that Spencer was next in succession to the earldom, also that Lord
-Southleigh had a very pretty daughter, who was an accomplished young
-sportswoman, a daring rider to hounds, an adept at golf, fishing, and
-other pastimes of a strenuous nature.
-
-She had pricked up her ears at mention of the cousin. Artfully she
-pumped Tommy as to whether there was any tender feeling between the
-relatives.
-
-But Tommy could give no information on this point. Spencer was a very
-reticent man about his private affairs, he explained. Personally, he
-should not consider him particularly susceptible to female influence.
-But he had heard that the old earl, who had a shockingly weak heart, and
-was likely to go off at any moment, would have viewed a marriage between
-the cousins with favour.
-
-She mused over his words. He did not think him particularly susceptible
-to female influence. And yet she was sure there was admiration,
-open, undisguised admiration, in the glances he had bestowed upon her
-to-night. He was evidently not deeply in love with his pretty sporting
-cousin, or she would have been Mrs. Guy Spencer before now, assuming, of
-course, that she was ready to obey her father's wishes.
-
-It was after a short silence that Miss Keane put a somewhat abrupt
-question to him: "Are you fond of play, Mr. Spencer? Everybody is who
-comes here."
-
-"Not really. I am a very lukewarm gambler. I don't mind a little flutter
-now and then, as a diversion. I always enjoy a small gamble at Monte
-Carlo, for example, but I never get carried away. When I have lost
-enough, I stop. Nothing could induce me to stake another _sou_."
-
-"Can you stop as easily when you are winning? That, I fancy, is where
-the selfcontrol comes in. But I think I am rather glad you are not one
-of the infatuated ones. I was brought up in an atmosphere of gambling."
-
-There was a pathetic shadow in the beautiful brown eyes as she spoke.
-Spencer's interest in her, a girl he had only known for a couple of
-hours, quickened. The glance he turned on her was full of sympathy,
-although he did not utter a word. It said as plainly as if he had
-spoken: "Tell me more about yourself, you will find an attentive
-listener."
-
-"My father and mother were both desperate gamblers. They staked and lost
-everything they had at cards, on the race-course, at Monte Carlo. My
-poor cousin, Mrs. L'Estrange, has the same fever in her veins."
-
-Now that he had invited her confidence, he was a little embarrassed
-by it. He did not know her well enough to condole with her. By way of
-relieving the tension, he uttered a few trite remarks on the subject of
-gambling generally.
-
-"Very sad when people are bitten by it to that extent. In my small
-experience, and I am only speaking of cards, I have found that, at the
-end of twelve months, you leave off pretty well where you started, good
-players or bad. You lose a hundred this week, you win a hundred the
-next, and so on, and so forth. If you are a good player, you get bad
-cards; if a duffer, you get good cards. And so the bad player has a
-pretty even chance with his more skilful opponent."
-
-Miss Keane threw aside her momentary sadness, and laughed at his
-scientific exposition.
-
-"You have evidently thought it all out," she said brightly. "But please
-don't inflict these cheerful theories on my cousin. She is a most tragic
-being when she loses. She thinks herself, and I believe is, one of the
-most scientific bridge-players in England, and she cannot be brought to
-understand why the duffers should have a look in."
-
-At this juncture Tommy Esmond interposed. It may have occurred to him
-that they were wasting precious time. They had come here for the special
-purpose of gambling.
-
-"What do you say to joining the others? We are in the very temple of
-gambling, and I know my young friend would like a little flutter."
-
-"Certainly. When I last peeped in, Amy looked the spirit of despair. I
-think she must have been losing heavily."
-
-She turned to lead the way, but at that instant the door-bell rang, and
-she halted, in readiness to greet the visitor, whoever it might be; and
-there entered a florid-looking, stout man, who advanced towards her with
-effusion, and both hands outstretched.
-
-"My dear Stella, I have been thinking of you ever since the raid began;
-I know how terribly you suffer when they are on. And I knew you were
-dining out to-night. I am rejoiced to see you safe and sound. I came
-round here the moment I could get away."
-
-Miss Keane flushed slightly as he took her hands and wrung them
-impressively to show his gratitude at her escape from peril. Tommy
-Esmond had given him a cool nod. But she felt Spencer's calm, critical
-gaze upon this ebullient expression of young English manhood.
-
-It was not so much what he said, as his manner of saying it. Bounder was
-written all over him, in his appearance, his manners, his gestures.
-
-She answered him very briefly, almost curtly, as if she were
-administering a cold douche. Then the flush deepened as she turned to
-Spencer.
-
-"May I introduce my cousin, Mr. Dutton?"
-
-The florid man bowed with an exaggerated air of cordiality. Spencer,
-who had taken a violent dislike to him from the first second he saw
-him, acknowledged the salutation with chilling gravity; and Stella Keane
-could almost read his thoughts, as his gaze travelled from one to the
-other.
-
-How could this imperial-looking girl have such an unmitigated bounder
-for a relative? What was the mystery about her that could make a
-creature like this claim kinship with her?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-|Mrs. L'Estrange was evidently a great believer in light: the electric
-bulbs glowed softly, but brilliantly, over the two rooms devoted to the
-service of the card-players.
-
-On the sideboards were arranged decanters of whisky, and soda-water in
-bottles and syphons. Whether he lost or won, the gambler, triumphant or
-despairing, could quaff to his success, or solace his despair.
-
-The elderly, youthfully-dressed woman advanced towards the new visitors,
-with a beaming expression of countenance.
-
-"Mr. Spencer, you will join us. What is your favourite game?"
-
-"Bridge," said Spencer, shortly. He was already a bit in love with
-Stella Keane, but he was by no means favourably inclined to her gushing,
-elderly cousin.
-
-He soon formed a party of four, and became absorbed, for the moment,
-in the game. Tommy Esmond was playing the same game, at a table
-some distance from him. Tommy was not supposed to be wealthy, but he
-evidently had money enough to indulge in a quiet gamble now and then.
-
-He remembered every incident of that night. His partner was a
-subordinate member of the Government, and a good sound player, lacking
-a little perhaps in the qualities of initiative and rapid decision.
-His opponents were a young man in the Foreign Office, and a slender,
-hawk-nosed young woman of about thirty.
-
-All through he held abominable cards, but, truth to tell, he was not
-very interested in the game. Whether he won or lost a hundred pounds did
-not interest him very greatly.
-
-But what did interest him, to every fibre of his being, was that Stella
-Keane hovered about his table. His eyes continually sought hers, and she
-did not seem to avoid his glance. At times he was sure he could detect
-a slight smile of intimacy. After all, had he not rescued her, half dead
-with fright, in the dining-room of the "Excelsior"?
-
-Once she bent over him and whispered, her cool, fragrant breath fanning
-his cheek: "You are having shocking bad luck. You haven't held a single
-decent card."
-
-He whispered back: "What did I tell you a little time ago? I flatter
-myself I am a fairly good bridge-player, but what could one do with
-those cards of mine?"
-
-She fluttered away, with still the shadow of that intimate smile upon
-her beautiful mouth, the smile that seemed to say they had only known
-each other for a few hours, under romantic and dramatic circumstances,
-but there was between them an affinity of spirit.
-
-He played on steadily for over an hour, and then a halt was cried. The
-young gentleman from the Foreign Office and the hawknosed young woman
-had scored. Guy Spencer rose from the table, the poorer by a hundred
-and fifty pounds. He wrote his cheque with a light heart. A hundred and
-fifty pounds was not a great price to pay for the introduction to Stella
-Keane.
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange came impressively towards him.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Spencer, I hope you have not lost. If so, I fear you will never
-come near me again." His glance roved in the direction of Stella,
-talking, as it appeared earnestly, to that bounder of a cousin. There
-came a steely look into his clear, resolute eyes.
-
-"If you will allow me, I shall be delighted to come here often to see
-you and Miss Keane. I suppose I had better pick up my old friend Tommy
-Esmond, if he is not too engrossed." But when he approached Esmond, that
-little rotund gentleman waved him away, in most genial fashion.
-
-"Run away, dear boy. It is Eclipse first, and the rest nowhere. I am
-winning hands down." Certainly he bore the mien of a conqueror. And
-there, behind his chair, stood Stella Keane.
-
-She welcomed Spencer with that faint, intimate smile which had already
-stirred his pulses.
-
-"I fear I brought you bad luck," she said, in her low, caressing voice.
-"But to Mr. Esmond I have been the harbinger of good fortune. Are you
-really going?"
-
-"I always go when I have won enough, or lost enough. You remember I gave
-you a little homily on gambling generally, not so long ago."
-
-She took her hand off Esmond's chair. "Well, I will leave my good
-influence behind, and look after the parting guest."
-
-She walked leisurely with him in the direction of the hall. It was
-deserted, but the light was brilliant, as it was in every other corner
-of the flat.
-
-She held out her hand impulsively. "Mr. Spencer, I have not thanked you
-properly for your kindness to me to-night. Terror-stricken, paralysed
-with fear, I should have been clinging to that chair now, if you had not
-rescued me in time. How can I thank you?"
-
-Spencer laughed lightly. "One would think from your excessive gratitude
-that you had not experienced a great deal of kindness in your life. And
-yet that would be impossible."
-
-She flushed a little; his gaze was perhaps more full of admiration, of
-frank and open compliment than could be justified by the briefness
-of their acquaintance. And yet it only expressed what he was inwardly
-thinking.
-
-Here was a girl who had only to look at her mirror to learn she was
-endowed with singular beauty. She must also know that she combined with
-her more than ordinary fairness an unusual charm of manner.
-
-How had it come about that one with such striking qualifications should
-exhibit a certain underlying sadness, as if the world had already proved
-a very disappointing place? Youth and good looks usually secure for
-their owner a good time. Girls with half her attractions could find
-plenty of admirers. What evil fate dogged her that she had to regard
-a perfectly common act of kindness as something to be exceptionally
-grateful for?
-
-"I have never been petted nor spoiled, even as a child," she answered
-gravely. "My father and mother were ignorant of the duties, as they were
-of the instincts, of parenthood. And since my poor pretence of a home
-was broken up, I have been a derelict and a wanderer, sometimes a
-tolerated guest, rarely, I fear, a very welcome one in the houses of
-other people."
-
-"But you are happy here, surely?" he suggested. After saying so much,
-she could hardly regard the question as an impertinent one. He longed to
-hear her history. Well, if he came and cultivated her, and let her see
-how sympathetic he could be, one day she would tell him.
-
-She shrugged her shoulders with an air of indifference.
-
-"My cousin is peculiar in many ways, and her devotion to play is an
-obsession. We have very little in common; still, it would not be fair to
-say she was difficult to get on with. I have been with her now for more
-than eighteen months, and although we have often held totally different
-opinions, I cannot remember that we have ever had a real quarrel. And,
-anyway, it is a home and a shelter, and that is something."
-
-Not much enthusiasm here, certainly. Mrs. L'Estrange had been dismissed
-with a very negative kind of faint praise. Her excellence seemed to lie
-rather in the absence of bad qualities than the possession of good ones.
-
-And yet, he could not bring himself to believe that Miss Keane was an
-ill-natured girl, or of an unresponsive temperament. He had to admit
-that his impressions of his hostess were not too favourable.
-
-She was outwardly genial, and at times gushing. Yet he fancied he could
-read behind this plausible exterior the signs of a hard, worldly nature.
-There was no softness in her glance, no tenderness in her rather hard,
-staccato tones.
-
-A girl with those glorious eyes, and mobile face, with the delicate
-complexion that flushed and paled by turns, must surely be sweet and
-sympathetic, and responsive to affection. How her voice had thrilled
-with emotion when she thanked him. If she was disappointed in her
-cousin, it must be the fault of the elder woman, who could not give what
-was demanded by the younger and more ardent temperament.
-
-He would have lingered longer, trying to pierce the riddle from these
-disjointed remarks, but they were interrupted by Tommy Esmond, who came
-bustling into the hall, flushed with victory.
-
-"Never had such luck in my life. Just wiped the floor with them," he
-explained excitedly. "You left your good influence behind, Miss Keane. A
-few minutes sufficed for victory."
-
-"I am very glad, but I think my powers for good must be very limited,
-for I brought bad luck to your friend," was her smiling rejoinder.
-
-He turned briskly to the young man. "It is a perfect night, Spencer.
-Shall we walk down to the Club to get a breath of fresh air, and turn in
-there for a quiet smoke?"
-
-Spencer nodded assent, and held out his hand to Miss Keane.
-
-"Well, good-bye for the present."
-
-"And I hope you will come and see us again soon. Don't wait for Mr.
-Esmond to bring you: after our thrilling experiences of tonight, we are
-more than ordinary acquaintances. We are at home nearly every night,
-if you want to gamble. And, if you would like a little rational chat
-instead, come in one afternoon to tea."
-
-"Thanks, I will. My card-playing fit has passed for a little time. Once
-again, goodbye."
-
-And, as soon as they were in the street, Esmond burst in with the
-question he was longing to ask.
-
-"Well, what do you think of her? Did I exaggerate?"
-
-"Not in the least," answered Spencer, speaking less seriously than he
-felt, he did not quite know for what reason, unless it was that with a
-man of his friend's calibre, he always had a tendency to discuss things
-lightly. "No, I don't think you have exaggerated a bit this time; so
-many of your swans have been geese, but this is a real swan, at last.
-She is very lovely; even in her terror she looked beautiful, and she has
-a peculiar, elusive charm. She makes you want to know more of her, and
-penetrate the mystery which seems to hover around her.59
-
-"I can't say I see any mystery, myself." Esmond spoke rather sharply,
-for such a good-natured little man.
-
-"Perhaps it is too strong a word. But I take it, you know something
-of the ménage, and can enlighten me on one point. What is her position
-there: paid companion, a passing guest, or does she share the flat with
-her cousin on some sort of terms?"
-
-It was a little time before Esmond answered. "I have never rightly got
-at that myself. Sometimes I have thought one thing, sometimes another.
-But I am pretty sure she is poor: in fact, she has admitted as much."
-
-"Poverty is relative after all, and it depends on how she was brought
-up. She seems to dress well, and that cannot be done without money."
-
-Yes, Esmond admitted that she was turned out well. But he either could
-not, or would not express any positive opinion upon the delicate subject
-of Miss Keane's finances.
-
-"Does she ever play? She didn't touch a card while we were there, only
-flitted about from table to table."
-
-No, Esmond had never seen her play since he had frequented the house. It
-was clear, therefore, she did not make any pocket-money out of gambling.
-He had to admit that she seemed to act as deputy hostess, and, he
-believed, wrote most of her cousin's notes; in other words, made herself
-useful.
-
-All this information, such as it was, he imparted, as it seemed to
-Spencer, with some reluctance. Perhaps his keen admiration prompted him
-to hide anything that served to show her in a dependent position. And
-Spencer desisted from any further crossexamination on this head.
-
-On one point, however, he was determined to elicit a positive expression
-of opinion from the cautious little man.
-
-"What is the mystery of the bounder cousin? You must admit he has cad
-stamped all over him, his speech, his person, his gestures."
-
-Tommy could establish no defence for the gentleman in question. "No, he
-is past criticism, I allow. The result of some _mésalliance_, I suppose;
-his mother a very common person doubtless. But then, many highly
-respectable people have skeletons like that in their cupboards."
-
-"The mystery is that he finds his way, cousin as he may be, into any
-decent house. Mrs. L'Estrange we know to be a woman of good family. You
-would think she would lock and bolt the door against a creature like
-that. What is he supposed to be, if he has any profession beyond that of
-his intense bounderism?"
-
-"Something in the City, I am told," replied Esmond shortly. "Something
-connected with finance; stockbroker or something."
-
-"It must be a shady kind of finance, if he has anything to do with it,"
-growled the young man. "To think of his claiming relationship with that
-exquisite girl."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-|It would be idle to assume that a man of Guy Spencer's natural
-advantages had reached the age of thirty without experiencing a few
-affairs of the heart. But he had never been deeply touched, and
-his friend Tommy Esmond was right when he described him as not very
-susceptible to feminine influence.
-
-The one feeling which had lasted for some years, was a pronounced
-affection for his cousin Nina. He felt as much at home with her as he
-would have done with a favourite sister, had he possessed one. But the
-regard had a warmth in it that is lacking in fraternal relations.
-
-He knew that Lady Nina was not indifferent to him, that she allowed him
-to assume a certain air of proprietorship in the disposal of dances, in
-the claim to her society when he was disposed to enjoy it. He knew also
-that it was a match which would be warmly approved of by his invalid
-uncle.
-
-Without being guilty of undue vanity, he felt pretty certain that if he
-proposed he would be accepted. And once or twice he had been very near
-to taking the decisive step. He never could quite understand what it was
-that made him hesitate.
-
-The fact of his hesitation proved to himself, as well as to the young
-lady concerned, that much as he might like his cousin, he was certainly
-far from being deeply in love with her.
-
-She was a pretty, winsome girl, possessing an upright, straightforward
-nature, and quite attractive in a simple, frank fashion. There was
-nothing subtle or mysterious about her, you could read her like an open
-book. She was a good daughter, she was the type of girl who could not
-help making a good wife.
-
-Some day, no doubt, he would put the fateful question, and by her
-acceptance be made, in conventional parlance, the happiest of men. But
-although he would know he had chosen very wisely, and look forward to
-a placid kind of happiness, he was doubtful if Nina's smiles and kisses
-would ever thrill him, if with her he would ever learn the meaning of
-real love.
-
-He was not by any means sure that he was capable of very strong
-attachment. He had indulged in a few fancies, but they had only
-exercised a very small portion of his thoughts. Up to the present, he
-had certainly not experienced the wild ecstasies, the mingled joy and
-pain of the true lover.
-
-For the first time in his life, he had been seriously perturbed by the
-advent of Stella Keane. He had not fashioned in his imagination any
-particular ideal, any special type of woman who would make to him an
-irresistible appeal. But, if she had been Lady Nina, if he had met her
-in his own world, he would have owned at once this was the girl for whom
-he had been waiting.
-
-Her image pursued him persistently in his waking and his leisure hours.
-He could recall every word she had spoken during the short time they
-had spent together. He could see her a dozen times a day standing in the
-"Excelsior" dining-room, paralysed with terror.
-
-He remembered the break in her voice, the mist in her beautiful eyes,
-when she had thanked him. And ever and again, he longed to fathom the
-mystery of her loneliness, the cause of that sadness that was always
-lurking underneath.
-
-Was it wise to pursue the acquaintance, with the pretty certain result
-of intensifying the interest he already felt in her? He had no liking
-for Mrs. L'Estrange, a woman merely on the fringe of his world, or her
-gambling circle. If he wanted to lose or win money, there were plenty of
-other houses where he could indulge his fancy.
-
-And he knew nothing of Miss Keane's antecedents. The only thing he did
-know was that she had a cousin who was obviously a bounder of the first
-water. Tommy Esmond knew nothing about her either, or, if he did know,
-would not tell.
-
-For three days he wavered, one moment eager to rush off to the flat,
-the next determining that it would be better not to renew the brief
-acquaintance.
-
-On the fourth day, his impulse conquered his prudence. He told himself
-soothingly that his visit was due to curiosity, that he merely wanted to
-penetrate the mystery of her loneliness, her unprotected position.
-
-The bounder cousin was coming out as he entered. Mr. Dutton nodded
-affably to him with a greasy and familiar smile. Spencer acknowledged
-him in the coolest fashion compatible with bare civility. Why were
-there people, he wondered, whom you instinctively wanted to kick, for no
-apparently sufficient reason?
-
-Miss Keane was alone. Mrs. L'Estrange, she explained, was in bed with
-a racking headache. She had lost heavily the night before, and this was
-the usual penalty she paid for losing.
-
-"Hardly worth the candle, is it?" he said lightly, as he took his cup of
-tea from her. A slight frown crossed his brow as he observed the empty
-cup of "the bounder" on the table. Did he come here often? was his
-thought. Perhaps he was in love with her. But it was surely beyond the
-limits of possibility that she could ever return the affection of such a
-creature.
-
-He would see what he could get out of her. "I met your cousin as I came
-in. I suppose he is a frequent visitor?"
-
-She did not look in the least conscious or embarrassed by the question.
-"Oh yes, he comes very often. He is about the only one of my relatives
-I have any acquaintance with. My father's mode of life estranged all the
-others."
-
-Spencer thought it would have been a good thing if Mr. Dutton had been
-as sensitive to the disqualifications of the late Mr. Keane as the rest
-of her connections. But, of course, he could not say so.
-
-"He is not in the least like you." Then, after a pause, he added boldly,
-and perhaps a little rudely: "I should never have dreamed you were
-related."
-
-She quite understood what he meant, and there was a lurking humour in
-her smile, as she answered:
-
-"Poor old George, he is a good sort, but quite a rough diamond. His
-mother married a self-made man, of course, for his money. That may
-account for a great deal you have noticed."
-
-Spencer had the grace to look confused. It was evident he had conveyed
-his private impression of Mr. Dutton very distinctly to her clear young
-vision. But she did not seem offended, only slightly amused, at the poor
-figure cut by Cousin George in the estimation of a person in a superior
-world.
-
-Anyway, that little mystery was explained. There was nothing unusual
-in poor gentlewomen marrying self-made men, for the sake of money. The
-noble family of Southleigh had many such _mésalliances_ amongst its
-aristocratic records.
-
-But it was a relief to find Stella herself under no delusions concerning
-the young man in question. He did not think it possible she could, but
-as diplomatically as was possible, she admitted that Mr. Dutton was not
-what is, technically called, a gentleman.
-
-"He is the only relative with whom I am on speaking terms," she added,
-after a pause, "for reasons of which I have already given you a hint.
-And I think I have grown rather to look forward to his visits."
-
-Her observant eyes noticed a quick stiffening in his manner. She could
-guess his thoughts. How was it possible for a refined young woman to
-ever look forward to the visits of a person like Mr. Dutton, cousin
-though he might be?
-
-"You, of course, have heaps of relations; you can pick and choose," she
-went on, as if eager to explain to his fastidious taste her toleration
-of a man, so obviously the denizen of an inferior world. "You cannot, I
-daresay, imagine the loneliness of a girl of my age, debarred, through
-no fault of her own, from the society of her own kith and kin." Here
-was an opportunity to engage her in personal talk. He had not hoped she
-would take him into her confidence on his first visit.
-
-He leaned forward, and there was an eager note in his voice. "I formed
-an idea of you in the first few moments of our acquaintance, that you
-were not happy, that you were, in a sense, isolated, and that you had
-known more of sorrow than joy in your short life."
-
-She mused a moment, and then answered him in grave tones:
-
-"You were quite right. I feel it is the impression I must convey to
-either friend or stranger, an impression I shall always convey. For, if
-a great and overwhelming happiness were to come to me to-morrow, I could
-never forget the past years of sadness."
-
-"But, surely, you must have some happy memories? There were gleams of
-brightness in your childhood?"
-
-"No," she said, and there was a fierce vehemence in her voice. "They
-were the most miserable--an indifferent mother, a careless father, a
-roof and a shelter, food and clothing sufficient, if not in abundance,
-but no home, as it is understood by more fortunate children."
-
-"And when that home, or the wretched pretence of it, was broken up,
-you were thrown upon the mercy of the world," he questioned, "with no
-kindred, no friends to stretch out a helping hand?"
-
-"Our relatives had long before ceased to take any interest in the
-daughter of a ruined gambler. I was thrown, in a certain sense, on the
-mercy of the world. But for a small pittance, which my father could not
-deprive me of, I should have starved, for he left nothing behind him but
-debts."
-
-She was not, then, absolutely penniless. Something had been saved from
-the wreck. He wondered if Esmond knew this. And yet, if she told a
-comparative stranger this at their first real interview, she must have
-told him, who seemed to be on the footing of a friend of the house.
-
-"I had no real friends," she went on; "but in the course of a wandering
-life--when my father owed too much in one place he removed to another--I
-had picked up a few acquaintances. With these I made a home, on and off,
-for longer or shorter periods."
-
-"And you have come to anchor here with Mrs. L'Estrange, who is your
-cousin, one of the few relatives who did not visit the sins of the
-fathers on the children."
-
-Her voice was a little scornful. "The cousinship is a very distant one.
-And, as she is an inveterate gambler herself, but more lucky than my
-father, she could hardly look upon gambling in another as a deadly sin."
-He nodded his head in agreement. He did not want to talk himself,
-for fear he should interrupt the flow of her reminiscences; she was
-evidently in a confidential mood this afternoon.
-
-"I saw her a few times when quite a child, and then she vanished like
-the others. A couple of years ago, we met in Devonshire at the house of
-a mutual acquaintance. She seemed to take a fancy to me. In the end, she
-proposed that I should, for the present, make my home with her. She has
-only one interest in life, _play_. She is a very lazy woman. She hates
-writing the briefest note, and housekeeping is abhorrent to her. I
-attend to her correspondence, I order the dinner and look after the
-servants. I am not exactly eating the bread of charity," she concluded
-with a little mirthless laugh, "because I give some work in exchange for
-my food. My own little pittance provides me with clothes."
-
-He wondered what the little pittance represented in annual hard cash.
-She was dressed quietly but in good taste, and he was judge enough of
-woman's apparel to know that the material of her dress was expensive. On
-her slender fingers glittered a few valuable rings, heirlooms probably
-saved from the clutches of the gambling father. She did not convey the
-impression of poverty, but perhaps she was clever, and knew how to make
-the best of a small income.
-
-There was a long silence, and it almost seemed as if she had forgotten
-his presence. For she sat with a musing look in her beautiful eyes,
-her thoughts evidently in the past, conjuring up Heaven knows how many
-painful memories.
-
-Then she came back to herself, and turned to him with an apologetic
-smile. "I am afraid I have bored you to tears with my stupid personal
-history, but I will finish by telling you one little thing that may
-amuse you."
-
-He protested, of course, that he had not been in the least bored, only
-too painfully interested.
-
-"Well, I am not a person easily crushed, and although a physical coward
-and frightened of raids and thunderstorms, I am not a moral one. When
-I began to review my position, I tried to hit upon some way of making
-money."
-
-Was she fond of money, he wondered? Well, perhaps, like most women, she
-wanted money to buy herself pretty things. There was nothing unusual in
-that.
-
-"When I was a schoolgirl, I was supposed to show some artistic talent; I
-got several prizes. So I set to work and painted some half-a-dozen small
-things, in what I conceived to be a popular style, and took them
-round to as many dealers. In a week my hopes were shattered. One
-straightforward creature told me frankly that they just attained the
-school-girl level of excellence, but that I should never become an
-artist. It was not in me."
-
-"A crushing blow, indeed," said Spencer sympathetically.
-
-"I then turned to writing. Here, at any rate, was a profession that
-required no previous painful training, only powers of observation, some
-imagination, and a certain fluency of expression. I wrote some short
-stories which I thought good, which I still think good. History repeated
-itself. I sent them to a dozen editors, one after another. In every
-case, they were declined with thanks."
-
-"I daresay they were quite good, and they were not taken because you
-didn't happen to be in the ring," was Spencer's consoling comment.
-
-"Well," she exclaimed brightly, "there is an end of my reminiscences for
-to-day. Let us talk of anything and everything else. Have you seen Mr.
-Esmond lately? He has not been near us since the night he came with
-you."
-
-Shortly afterwards he took his leave, he had stayed unconsciously long
-as it was.
-
-"I shall come again soon, if I may, to listen to some more
-reminiscences," he said, as he shook hands. And she had given him
-permission, with the brightest of smiles.
-
-He had not learned half as much as he wanted, but he had gathered
-something. The bounder cousin was the son of a self-made man, a
-_parvenu_. And Stella Keane was not absolutely penniless, she had enough
-money to buy herself clothes. Did Tommy Esmond know as much as this? And
-if he did, why had he not said so?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-|Although unsuspicious by nature, Guy Spencer had mixed much in the
-world and seen a good deal of life. Attracted as he was by the charming
-Stella, there was a something about the atmosphere of that flat in
-Elsinore Gardens which created an unfavourable impression.
-
-Of Mrs. L'Estrange's antecedents there was no question. She was a woman
-of good family, she could produce chapter and verse for her ancestors.
-And yet, why was she not in a better environment?
-
-Clearly, she was on the downward slope. But was there anything
-remarkable in that? Heaps of members of aristocratic families were
-in the same sort of predicament, from various causes, through certain
-circumstances.
-
-Had he not received a letter a few days ago from the daughter of a
-well-known earl, imploring him for a loan of ten pounds, for the sake of
-old friendship?
-
-The writer was some twenty years his senior, and she had tipped him when
-he was at Eton. She now dated her letter from a suburb in the extreme
-west of Kensington. If she, with all her advantages of birth and
-connection, had fallen by the wayside, why not a comparatively obscure
-person like Mrs. L'Estrange?
-
-It was very easy to see it. Mrs. L'Estrange was of a Bohemian
-temperament, and probably a great spendthrift. She had made considerable
-inroads into whatever fortune she originally possessed, and had
-developed into an adept card-player, with a view to supplementing the
-little income that was left to her.
-
-And Stella Keane, that beautiful, sad girl, with the tragic history of
-worthless parents behind her, was the victim of fate. She was not happy
-in her cousin's home, amidst this gambling, card-playing set. She, at
-least, was pure, whoever else might be defiled. On that he would stake
-his existence.
-
-For a few days he thought a great deal about the subject, and during
-those few days he kept away from Elsinore Gardens and denied himself
-the pleasure of listening to a further instalment of Miss Keane's
-reminiscences of her unhappy history.
-
-If he were going to fall in love, he told himself sternly, he would
-fall in love with a woman of his own world, not with a girl, however
-beautiful and interesting she might be, who was only a hanger-on of a
-woman well-born, but evidently _déclassée_, a woman no longer moving in
-the sphere to which she had been accustomed. In these reflections, he
-showed sound sense.
-
-But for a certain event that happened in the course of the next few
-days, he might have adhered to his good resolutions and have finally
-dismissed Miss Keane from his serious thoughts. And, in that case, this
-story would not have been written.
-
-And then the event happened. Returning home to his rooms one night,
-about twelve o'clock, his man told him that Mr. Esmond was waiting for
-him in the sitting-room.
-
-He found the little rotund man sitting in an easy-chair, white-faced,
-the marks of agitation written all over his countenance.
-
-Wondering at this unusual spectacle--Tommy was frequently fussy, but
-always self-contained--Spencer advanced, and held out his hand.
-
-"What's up, Tommy? You're a late visitor, but always welcome." He
-pointed to the decanters standing on the sideboard. "I hope you have
-helped yourself?"
-
-To Spencer's great surprise, the little man did not take the proffered
-hand. He spoke in a hoarse, choking voice, his lips twitching.
-
-"I've helped myself once too often, Spencer. And I can't take the hand
-of an honest man, for reasons. You've got it at once."
-
-Spencer had average brains, but he was not very quick to realise the
-meaning of unexpected situations. At first, he thought the little man
-had been drinking.
-
-"Sit down, Tommy, and get it off your chest. What in the name of wonder
-is the matter?" he said kindly. He was rather fond of Tommy in a casual
-sort of way.
-
-Esmond did not sit down at once, but went over to the sideboard, and
-mixed himself a stiff tumbler of whisky-and-soda. He gulped it down at a
-draught, and then took an armchair.
-
-"You won't begrudge me that, I know," he said, speaking in the same
-strained, hoarse voice. "It's the last drink I'll have in your rooms,
-the last drink in any house in England, I should say. I'm done for, old
-man, tomorrow I clear out, eat my heart away in some beastly foreign
-hole."
-
-No, Spencer's first surmise had been incorrect. The man was not drunk,
-not even elevated. His face was chalk-white, and he was trembling all
-over as if he had been stricken with palsy. But he was perfectly sober.
-
-Spencer took a chair himself, and spoke a little sternly. "Pull yourself
-together, old man, and speak out. At first I thought you had had a
-drop too much. But I see that's not the case. Out with it. You've been
-waiting some time, my man informs me. You want to tell me something.
-Tell it."
-
-Tommy Esmond moistened his dry lips with his tongue, and spoke.
-
-"I don't quite know what instinct prompted me to come to you. We haven't
-known each other so very intimately, after all, but I always felt you
-were a bit more of a Christian than the other chaps I have known, less
-of a Pharisee--that you would be more likely to find excuses for a poor
-devil who had yielded to temptation."
-
-"Do get on," said Spencer a little impatiently. He did not at all like
-the turn the conversation was taking.
-
-Tommy spoke brokenly, he could not put his words together very
-coherently, it appeared. But his halting utterance was simply due to
-emotion.
-
-"I was at Elsinore Gardens to-night, playing cards. You know Elsinore
-Gardens, Mrs. L'Estrange's flat?"
-
-He was quite sober, but his agitation made him wander a bit, or he would
-not have put the question.
-
-"Of course I know Mrs. L'Estrange's flat. It was you who took me there,"
-said Spencer.
-
-"Yes, we went there on the night of the raid, but I was not playing at
-your table. I remember you lost, and I won. Well, somebody has to lose,
-and somebody else has to win."
-
-Spencer made no comment on this obvious truism. Tommy Esmond again
-moistened his dry lips with his tongue. He was a long time in coming to
-the point, but he came to it at last.
-
-"Well, old man, I was playing with an old pal of mine, with whom I have
-been in business for years. We had a nice code of signals arranged. I
-was as cautious as I could be, but my partner had been dining out, and
-he was a bit indiscreet. There were three or four men watching us, they
-caught us both, although, as I tell you, I was cautious. But I made one
-slip, and they were down on me like a knife. You don't know my partner.
-It is the end of him. But it is the end of Tommy Esmond also."
-
-To say that Spencer was disgusted would be to convey a faint idea of his
-feelings. And yet, as he looked at the huddled, trembling form in the
-chair, his sentiment was rather one of compassion than loathing.
-what was there behind? what tragedy of circumstance had driven this
-apparently lighthearted, butterfly little creature to such crooked ways?
-
-"You're an old hand, then? It's not the first time you've cheated?"
-
-Tommy Esmond smiled wanly. He did not answer the question at once.
-
-"What age do you guess me, Spencer?"
-
-"At a casual glance, a little over fifty. You may be older. Looking at
-you closely, you do seem a bit made up, dye and all that sort of thing."
-
-"My dear sir, I am old enough to be your father. I shall never see sixty
-again."
-
-"And when did you take to this game?" Esmond thought a little before he
-replied, he was evidently counting the years.
-
-"When I was twenty-two I got an _entrée_ into society. I was then
-enjoying an income of two pounds a week, I was a clerk in an insurance
-office. At twenty-four I left the insurance business and started
-cheating for a living."
-
-Spencer uttered a horrified ejaculation. He had never come across
-anything quite like this, at any rate, in actual experience.
-
-"Would you like to know something of my history, or would you like to
-kick me out at once, and have done with it?" asked Esmond quietly.
-
-But there were still some remnants of compassion in Spencer. And he was
-also a little curious. He was dealing, after all, with a human document.
-Tommy's revelations would add to his experience of life.
-
-"Tell me all you would like to say," he said.
-
-"It will be a relief to unbosom myself, after the years I have led this
-life," was Esmond's answer. "When I left Elsinore Gardens with my life
-in ruins, I felt I could have shrieked it all out to the policeman
-standing at the corner. I came on here, because I thought you would
-listen to me, because I felt sure you were not a Pharisee."
-
-Spencer motioned him to the sideboard. "Mix yourself another stiff peg,
-and steady your nerves. Then tell me as much as you like."
-
-Esmond went over and helped himself. After a few seconds the ague-like
-trembling ceased, and he was able to speak in a fairly steady voice.
-
-"My father was a solicitor in a small way of business in an obscure town
-in the west of England. There were three children--an elder brother,
-myself, and a sister. My elder brother succeeded to the practice and is
-still in the same place, making both ends meet on a microscopic income.
-My sister is dead.
-
-"My father was a God-fearing, deeply religious man, and did more
-than his duty by his family. He scraped and pinched to give us a good
-education, that being the only capital he could leave us. I was placed
-in an insurance office, the head of which was a distant connection of my
-mother's.
-
-"If I had chosen to be content with my lot I daresay in time I might
-have done fairly well, as I had more than average abilities, and gave
-complete satisfaction in the performance of my duties.
-
-"Unfortunately, I ran across, by the purest accident, a young man some
-couple of years my senior. His father, a man of very good family, had
-died a short time previously and left him a very decent income of about
-two thousand a year. He had been at a private school with me when we
-were boys.
-
-"This young man took a violent fancy to me, I was slim and not bad
-looking in those days. He had the _entrée_ to some of the best houses
-in London through his aristocratic connections. He took me with him
-everywhere, as his bosom friend. I had certain social instincts, derived
-from Heaven knows where, and I soon found my feet. In twelve months I
-was able to run alone, sometimes I was able to get into houses where
-even he could not gain a footing. He laughingly declared that I had
-beaten him in the social race, but he was a good-natured fellow, without
-a particle of envy or meanness in his nature, and he was rather proud
-than otherwise that the pupil had outstripped the master."
-
-He paused for a moment. It was evident, that having kept silence for so
-many years, it was an enormous relief to unbosom himself.
-
-In spite of his disgust, Spencer could not but feel interested in this
-bit of life-history. He had often felt curious as to Tommy Esmond's
-past, and now that curiosity was going to be satisfied. He understood
-now why the little man had never made any but the most distant allusions
-to his home or his relatives.
-
-"The life suited me down to the ground, but there was always the
-terrible problem of ways and means, good clothes, travelling, expensive
-flowers, etc., etc. I had got to three pounds a week, but that doesn't
-go far in the circles to which I had been transplanted. It began to dawn
-upon me that, delightful as the life was, I was playing the fool, and
-neglecting the substance for the shadow. People asked me to their big
-parties, often to their dinners and to week-ends, but there was no
-money in it. In fact, I was getting out of my depth. I had already been
-obliged to borrow small sums from money-lenders to cover my expenses.
-
-"Bitterly I made up my mind that sooner or later I must cut it, and take
-life seriously, like the poor man I was. I belonged to a good club
-where I had all my letters addressed. I lodged in a little street in
-Bloomsbury, in cheap apartments. My friend alone knew this address.
-
-"He would have helped me to a considerable extent, but, strange to say,
-considering what I did afterwards, I shrank from accepting actual cash
-from him."
-
-Spencer interrupted him for a second. "You would not sponge upon your
-friend, instead you took to cheating your acquaintance. I take it that
-is what you are going to tell me."
-
-Esmond nodded. "Quite right. I had made up my mind to cut it, and
-disappear from a world in which I had no right to intrude. I had even
-made up my mind as to the exact date at the close of the season when
-I would disappear, and return to the humdrum life from which my friend
-roused me.
-
-"A few days before that date, something very strange happened; my life
-has always been full of surprises. A few weeks before the fixed date,
-I had made the acquaintance of a young nobleman, a member of one of the
-best-known families in England. He was then about thirty, very handsome,
-very popular with both men and women. He is dead now, but, of course, I
-shall not mention his name, which would startle you if you heard it.
-
-"As I have said, his family was a very distinguished one, but poor for
-its position. My friend, whom for the sake of convenience I will call
-Lord Frederick, lived in good style, never seemed short of cash, and
-paid his debts promptly. Those who knew were sure that he got little or
-no help from his family, yet he betted at race-meetings, played cards
-nearly every night, and lived generally the life of a man with a fair
-income.
-
-"His own explanation was, that he had some intimate friends on the Stock
-Exchange who put him on to any good thing going. In the course of the
-year, according to his own account, he made a considerable sum out of
-racing.
-
-"Lord Frederick, like my first friend, took considerable notice of me
-after we had become acquainted. Several times he invited me to his club.
-Afterwards he told me that he had a premonition I should be useful to
-him.
-
-"I shall never forget that night when the deadly temptation came to me,
-when I learned what manner of rascal he was. It was the close of the
-season. In a very few days more I should have looked my last on this gay
-and alluring existence, should have ceased to lead this double life of a
-poor clerk by day, a young man of fashion by night."
-
-Spencer suddenly interrupted. "But was there not a great risk of
-detection? were you never recognised in the City by some chance west End
-acquaintance."
-
-"Up to then, no. Of course, I must have been found out in time, if
-only from the suspicious circumstance that I could never accept any day
-invitations. This was one of the reasons that weighed most strongly with
-me in the resolve to give it up. I could not bear the thought that
-the Tommy Esmond who bore himself so bravely in his new world, who
-had managed to outlive all curiosity as to his antecedents, should
-be discovered in his true colours, a poor City drudge in an insurance
-office.
-
-"To return to my story. I had dined with Lord Frederick at the---- No, I
-will not give the name of the club, one of the most exclusive in London:
-it might put you on his track. He had ordered a choice dinner, and he
-plied me liberally with wine. My heart was very full at the prospect of
-having to say good-bye to this luxurious life, in a very few days' time.
-
-"After dinner we went into the smoking-room, which was nearly empty,
-as most of the members had left London. There were only two other
-occupants, and they were at the far end of the apartment. Practically,
-we had the place to ourselves.
-
-"He urged me strongly to take a trip over to Paris as his guest. I
-should have loved to go, but the wrench had to be made some time, it
-might as well be made now. Besides, I was heavily in debt, for a poor
-man, and I had not the cash to purchase the necessary outfit for such a
-trip.
-
-"He would not accept my first refusal, but tried to persuade me into
-reconsidering. When I still persisted, he bluntly asked me my reasons.
-
-"As I have said, I was very depressed that night at the prospect of all
-I was saying goodbye to. This mood was responsible for my blurting out a
-great portion of the absolute truth.
-
-"I explained to him that I had already accepted too much of his
-hospitality, which my circumstances did not enable me to return, that I
-could no longer take advantage of his generosity.
-
-"After this avowal, he did not speak for some little time, all the while
-regarding me with an intense gaze that embarrassed me very much.
-
-"'Thanks for telling me the truth,' he said at length. 'Your confidence
-is quite safe with me.' He added after a pause, 'So you are a poor man,
-in spite of the fact that your appearance does not suggest the fact.
-well, I may tell you that from the first moment I made your acquaintance
-I was pretty certain you were.'
-
-"I told him a little more. 'I am so poor,' I said frankly, 'that I
-cannot afford to keep up appearances any longer. In a few days I shall
-leave a world I ought never to have entered. Anyway, it is the last time
-I shall dine with you, and I don't suppose we shall ever meet again,
-unless we run across each other by chance in a very different sphere.'"
-
-"'You have absolutely made up your mind to do this, for the reasons you
-have given?' he asked presently.
-
-"'Absolutely,' I replied. 'I may say it is Hobson's choice. I am heavily
-in debt. If I cut my wants down to next to nothing, it will take me a
-year to pay off what I owe.' I laughed bitterly--'Unless I turned thief,
-I could not possibly go on.'
-
-"'I don't want to force your confidence,' was Lord Frederick's next
-remark. 'But having had a taste of this rather glittering world, I
-presume you will leave it with considerable regret.'
-
-"'I dare not say what I feel,' I said with conviction. 'It seems to me
-that in the old life to which I am returning I shall suffer the tortures
-of lost souls.'
-
-"Then he shot at me an extraordinary question. 'I wonder whether you
-would care to become a partner in my business?'
-
-"My heart suddenly grew light. Was there a chance that I could still
-keep on, that through his assistance I could find a decently paid
-occupation? After all, I only wanted a few hundreds a year more. A
-bachelor can live in the best society on comparatively little, but he
-must have that little, and the insurance office did not furnish it.
-
-"'If I were competent enough,' I faltered.
-
-"He smiled; I thought there was a little touch of a sneer in that smile.
-'Oh, I think you would be competent enough. But I am not at all sure
-that you would like the business sufficiently.'
-
-"'I can't say positively, of course, till I know the nature of it. But
-I don't think I should be very difficult to please, nor do I want any
-extravagant remuneration, just enough to keep up a decent appearance.'
-
-"'The share would be half, neither more nor less,' he said curtly; then
-he relapsed into a long silence, as if he were thinking very hard.
-
-"When he spoke it was in a low, strained voice. 'Look here, Esmond, I
-don't know very much of you. But I believe you to be a gentleman. The
-business I am engaged in is a very peculiar one, and it is more than
-probable it will not appeal to you. If you refuse, you are to give
-me your word of honour that this conversation between us shall be
-forgotten.'
-
-"I gave him more than my word, I added my solemn oath that I would never
-divulge a syllable.
-
-"I had for some little time felt that there was a mystery about him.
-I hazarded to myself that he was perhaps engaged in some spying work
-repugnant to any man of fine susceptibilities but quite remunerative.
-
-"I was startled, and to an extent horrified, by what he told me. He
-was a professional card-sharper, made his living by robbing his rich
-acquaintances. He had been at the game since he was twenty-five.
-
-"'I do pretty well, as you can guess, by the way in which I live,' he
-remarked at the conclusion of his strange confession. 'But with a smart
-confederate, and I am sure you would prove one, I could quadruple my
-gains. One is hampered by working alone. It's a scoundrel's business, of
-course. But I can always persuade myself I am not really doing very much
-harm, certainly not as much as the swindling sort of company-promoter.
-I win money from rich fools, rob them, if you like; it does at least as
-much good in my pockets as theirs.'
-
-"I suppose there was already some moral kink in me waiting to blossom
-forth under proper encouragement. For though I was very much startled, I
-cannot say that I was profoundly shocked, as I might have been by a less
-subtle form of robbery.
-
-"I did not accept or refuse that night, I wanted to think. I knew it
-was the turning of the ways. On the one hand well-paid roguery, with the
-accompanying delights of the fashionable world, on the other the deadly,
-drab life of the poor City drudge. In the morning my mind was made up. I
-went into partnership with my new friend."
-
-"And you made a fortune, I suppose?" asked Spencer, in a very cold
-voice.
-
-Esmond shook his head, and Spencer was not at all sure that the next
-words were truthful ones.
-
-"No, a comfortable living, nothing more. We made a good deal, but we had
-to lose a good deal, too, in order to avert suspicion."
-
-"Your friend is dead, you say. So you went on with it after his death?"
-
-"Yes, for a little time alone. Then I, too, got in a partner, the man
-who was with me to-night."
-
-There was a long silence between the two men. Spencer broke it first.
-
-"And what are your plans?" he asked.
-
-"I shall sneak out of the country to-morrow morning and make my way to
-France. I shall hide myself in some little out-of-the-way village under
-an assumed name, and rust out." The little man rose and looked at his
-former friend with an embarrassed air. "Well, thanks for having listened
-to me so patiently. It has been a tremendous relief to me to pour it all
-out."
-
-He did not offer his hand, for he felt certain it would not be taken.
-Spencer stopped him as he was at the door.
-
-"You have money, I suppose, something put by out of your--your
-winnings?"
-
-Esmond's voice was hesitating. Again it was very doubtful if he was
-speaking the truth. "Hardly a _sou_ out of them. It was lightly come,
-lightly go, all the time. But my father left me a little bit which will
-keep me going in a cheap place."
-
-Spencer did not believe him. The probability was he had put away safely
-a snug little nest-egg, in view of the detection which might come at any
-moment of such a hazardous occupation.
-
-"One word before you go," said the young man finally. "Is there much
-cheating going on at Elsinore Gardens?"
-
-Esmond turned and looked the speaker straight in the face. This time
-he certainly seemed to be speaking the truth, but he might be a most
-accomplished liar.
-
-"None at all, except when I and my partner were there. If there had
-been, I should have spotted it. I'm awfully sorry for Mrs. L'Estrange,
-for it having happened at her house, for I daresay people will hint
-nasty things."
-
-"She didn't suspect anything, then?"
-
-"Not a bit," replied Esmond. "We didn't play there more than about twice
-a week, and we never went in for high stakes. And, of course, we had to
-lose pretty often, to make things look square."
-
-"And Miss Keane suspected nothing either." As he remembered the girl's
-beautiful face, and sad history, Spencer felt almost ashamed of himself
-for putting the question.
-
-"Bless your soul, no, a thousand times no." The little rogue seemed to
-speak with unusual warmth. "Why, she loathes cards, she never can be got
-to join in. She has suffered too much from gambling."
-
-He went out of the room slowly and into the night. Spencer half pitied
-the poor devil who had made such a hash of his life through his desire
-to step out of his own class. He sat down and ruminated a long time over
-the strange history which had been unfolded to him.
-
-The next morning, the fugitive, Tommy Esmond, caught the morning train
-from Charing Cross. He looked very sad and woebegone, a pitiable figure,
-friendless and alone.
-
-But not quite friendless. A young woman closely-veiled and dressed very
-plainly rose up from one of the seats as he came on the platform, and
-touched him lightly on the arm. He recognised her, and glanced round
-anxiously.
-
-"It was very dear and sweet of you to come, Stella, but very imprudent.
-You might be seen by half a dozen people."
-
-"I know," answered Miss Keane, for the closely-veiled woman was she. "I
-got your letter this morning and could not bear you should go without a
-last good-bye. Well, I can see you are anxious. I will say it, and get
-back."
-
-She lifted the veil for a second, and held up her face. The little man
-kissed her hastily, and then made for his train.
-
-It was evident he had one friend left in the London he was flying from
-as a fugitive and outlaw, one woman who pitied him.
-
-And, at the same time that Stella was walking swiftly from the station,
-Guy Spencer was making up his mind that he would pay a visit to Elsinore
-Gardens in the afternoon, to see how the land lay there.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-|About five o'clock on the afternoon of the day following Esmond's
-confession, Guy Spencer rang the bell at Mrs. L'Estrange's flat in
-Elsinore Gardens.
-
-The decorous-looking butler opened the door. He seemed to wear a sad
-and chastened demeanour, as if overborne with the tragic events of the
-previous night. Of course, all servants know what is going on in the
-house of their employers. A scandal such as this must have quickly
-penetrated to them.
-
-"Is Mrs. L'Estrange at home?"
-
-The sad-faced butler answered at once; he could tell a lie with as much
-grace as anybody, but here there was no need to lie.
-
-"Mrs. L'Estrange is at home, sir, in a manner of speaking, but she
-is very ill, as a matter of fact in bed. Of course she cannot see any
-visitors."
-
-"Oh, I quite understand," said Spencer hastily. "Is Miss Keane in? If
-so, I would like to see her for a few moments."
-
-The melancholy man in black opened the door a few inches. "Miss Keane is
-in, sir, but I am afraid she is not very well, either. Will you kindly
-step in, sir, and I will find out if she can see you?"
-
-It was evident that Tommy Esmond and his equally nefarious partner had
-cast a gloom over the whole establishment. Spencer was ushered into the
-pretty drawing-room. In a few moments, Stella Keane came in. She was
-evidently under the stress of great emotion. There were dark shadows
-round the eyes, as if she had passed a sleepless night. Even her perfect
-mouth had a listless droop.
-
-But, in spite of her pallor, the dark shadows round her eyes, and that
-pathetic droop, she was still very beautiful. Pathos became her. Guy
-Spencer's heart gave a great leap as he saw her. There was about her an
-overpowering, an irresistible fascination.
-
-She advanced towards him with outstretched hands. She spoke in a broken
-voice, the perfectly moulded lips trembled:
-
-"It is so sweet of you to come. Of course you have heard? It is all over
-the town by now. Oh, this thrice-accursed gambling, the love of which
-induces decent men to cheat, and become outcasts from their world."
-
-She spoke with the deepest emotion, her bosom heaving, her voice broken
-by the catchings of the breath.
-
-"He was such a good little man, he was always so kind to me," she went
-on. "And last night those awful happenings. Branded a cheat, he and his
-friend, and they could not deny it. They had to slink out. I have
-hardly closed my eyes during the night, Mr. Spencer; my poor cousin is
-prostrated." She added with a shudder: "My girlhood was passed amidst a
-gambling set, but I never had an experience like this."
-
-She collected herself, and rang for tea. "You will sit down," she said.
-"You can understand I should have denied myself to anybody but you, I am
-so terribly upset. It is still like a nightmare."
-
-Spencer sat down as he was bidden. "I had a visit from Esmond last
-night," he said briefly. "He came straight on from Elsinore Gardens. He
-told me what had happened, he told me the whole history of the terrible
-thing, how he has been making his living by cheating at cards, since he
-was a young man." Miss Keane raised her hands in mute deprecation. "How
-awful! That, of course, I did not know. I had a letter from him this
-morning, apologising, if one can apologise for such a thing, telling me
-he was going to live abroad under an assumed name. It was a very short
-letter. His chief concern seemed to be that he had, incidentally, made
-it unpleasant for Mrs. L'Estrange."
-
-"How does Mrs. L'Estrange take it?"
-
-Miss Keane shrugged her shoulders. "She is a little bit hysterical, you
-know. One moment, she vows she will shut up the flat and go abroad, for
-fear of the nasty things that people will say. The next moment, she says
-that, confident in her perfect innocence, she will stay and face the
-music, and give her parties as usual."
-
-"Has she asked your advice?" queried Spencer.
-
-"She has, and my advice is to go on as usual. It is not her fault that
-blacklegs have crept into her circle. They creep into the best houses,
-the best clubs. So long as this curséd gambling goes on, there will be
-sharpers."
-
-"That's true," remarked Spencer, remembering a few episodes that had
-occurred in his time. "And, I suppose, you will still cast in your lot
-with her?"
-
-The look on the beautiful face grew more pathetic than ever.
-
-"What can I do, Mr. Spencer? I have told you my position. I wish
-my cousin were a different woman altogether, I wish she were not so
-infatuated with this horrible gambling. But I cannot influence her. She
-is too old and set to turn over a new leaf."
-
-Every moment the girl's fascination took a deeper hold of him. She
-was so very beautiful, so very seductive. But he still kept himself in
-check.
-
-"Tell me what actually happened last night. How were Esmond and his
-partner found out?"
-
-There was a little interruption by the solemn-faced butler who brought
-in tea. Miss Keane busied herself amongst the cups before she replied.
-
-"It is, as I told you, all a nightmare to me. I was wandering aimlessly
-about; as I have told you before, I never play, I loathe cards too much.
-Suddenly there was a scene at the table where Mr. Esmond and his partner
-were playing. Three men were standing watching the game, they had come
-here often, I knew their names."
-
-"They were friends of Mrs. L'Estrange?" queried Spencer.
-
-Just a faint shade of hesitation crept into the low voice.
-
-"Oh yes, friends of my cousin."
-
-"Straight sort of chaps, of course."
-
-"I have no doubt of that. They accused Mr. Esmond and his partner,
-Major Golightly, of cheating. Of course the charge was denied, but
-very half-heartedly. These three men were backed by others who had seen
-something suspicious. It seems Mr. Esmond and his partner had aroused
-suspicion before. Finally they confessed, and slunk out of the house."
-
-She paused a moment, and then laid her hand impulsively on his arm.
-
-"That first night you came to our house, you lost. Did you play at the
-same table with Tommy Esmond? I forget."
-
-The answer came straight. "No, I lost something, what was it?--something
-about a hundred and fifty. But Tommy Esmond did not rook me that time,
-he was playing at another table. I remember he was very cock-a-hoop,
-he was winning hand over fist. I say, I know I am putting a very
-impertinent question, but were Tommy Esmond and his partner, this
-Major Golightly, the only sharpers who came to this flat? Did I lose my
-hundred and fifty, or whatever it was, quite honestly?"
-
-Miss Keane covered her face with her hands for a few seconds, and when
-she took them away, he could see that tears were slowly trickling down
-her cheeks.
-
-"Heaven knows, Mr. Spencer, I don't. My cousin is a strange woman. She
-is fond of gaiety, of excitement. She asks people about whom she knows
-nothing to her flat, I think," she added with an hysterical laugh; "she
-fancies she is making herself a queen of Society. If she can get her
-rooms full that is all she wants. When she does that, she fancies
-herself the Duchess."
-
-"I think I understand," said Spencer gravely. "And I take it you would
-give heaven and earth to get out of this environment?"
-
-"If you only knew how I loathe it," she cried, in a fervent tone.
-"Sometimes I think I would rather run away and be a shopgirl or a
-waitress, to get rid of this horrible atmosphere."
-
-Guy Spencer was very perturbed. He rose and walked up and down the
-room--it was his habit to walk about, even in confined spaces, when he
-was in an emotional mood.
-
-At length he turned, and faced her squarely. "Look here, Miss Keane.
-It's rather nonsense talking about being a waitress or a shop-girl. You
-told me you had a small income saved from the wreck. How much is it?
-I am asking in no spirit of impertinent curiosity. I have a reason for
-asking."
-
-She hesitated for a moment before she replied: "Something like a
-hundred a year--paid to me quarterly by my cousin, Mr. Dutton, who is my
-trustee."
-
-"Then you are not exactly a pauper. Shopgirls and waitresses don't earn
-that."
-
-"But it would help," said Miss Keane, in a stifled voice. "A hundred a
-year does not go far; with clothes and everything."
-
-He longed to take her in his arms there and then and ask her to be his
-wife, so far was he subjugated by her subtle fascination. But certain
-things occurred to him. He thought of his old ancestry, his uncle whose
-heir he would be, even a faint idea of his cousin Nina flashed through
-his mind. What would his relatives say to a marriage like that, the
-marriage with a girl, however beautiful, picked up in a flat, owned by a
-woman of good family but doubtful reputation?
-
-But he could not afford to lose her. He was rich, he could indulge any
-passing whim. Out of his new-born ideas he spoke.
-
-"Miss Keane, I am very interested in you. Will you agree to look upon me
-as a friend?"
-
-She looked up at him from under downcast eyes.
-
-"Mr. Spencer, somehow I have always looked upon you as a friend, as
-something different from the ordinary man I meet in a place like this."
-
-"You want to get out of this atmosphere, away from your card-playing
-cousin, who cannot keep her parties free from disgraceful scandals."
-
-"I have told you how fervently I long to say good-bye to it all."
-
-Spencer had made up his mind as to what he was going to do. It was
-quixotic, but then he was a quixotic person. And, anyway, he was marking
-time. He would ask her to marry him in the end, but, at the moment, he
-did not clearly see his way to do so.
-
-"Suppose a woman friend offered to lend you five hundred pounds, to
-enable you to get clear of this stifling atmosphere, what would you say?
-You could go and live where you like and look around."
-
-"If a woman friend asked me that I think I should say, yes."
-
-"You have agreed that I am your friend, true, a man friend," said Guy.
-"Suppose I made you the same offer, what is your answer?"
-
-"From a man friend I fear my answer must be an unhesitating 'no,' even
-to you."
-
-He admired her answer. He could gather from it that she respected
-herself too much to snatch at any offer that came along.
-
-But he would play with her still. "Why?" he asked.
-
-The beautiful eyes, still a little clouded with her tears, met his
-unfalteringly.
-
-"You know as well as I do," was her answer. "I am poor, Mr. Spencer, but
-I am very proud."
-
-He sat down beside her, and took her hand in his.
-
-"I admire you for that answer, Stella. I may call you Stella, may I not?
-But I am not quite the ordinary type of man. I am going to speak quite
-plainly to you. If you accept that five hundred pounds, I am not going
-to ask you for any return. I want you to understand that."
-
-She shot at him a swift glance from under the downcast eyes.
-
-"You are a man out of a thousand, nay, out of ten thousand," she said,
-and in her voice there was a note of great appreciation. If Stella Keane
-ever felt a good impulse in her life, it was towards this man who was
-doing his best to befriend her.
-
-"Listen to me," said Spencer persuasively, her delicate hand still lying
-in his. "I don't know that I have done much good to other people in my
-life, but I do want to help you. I should like to get you out of
-this beastly hole. My proposal is, that I shall take for you a little
-furnished flat and supplement your income, or give you the five hundred
-pounds down, to do what you like with. It is for you to choose."
-
-"You would do this for me?" said Stella softly. "You must really like
-me, then! Men don't do this sort of thing for women unless they like
-them."
-
-"I like you very much, Stella, and I want to help you."
-
-He knew that he could take her in his arms and kiss her at his will. But
-he forebore. He was not going to spoil this somewhat idyllic wooing.
-
-"It cannot take place for a week or so," she said presently. "I cannot
-quite leave my cousin in the lurch. I must give her some sort of notice.
-Of course, I can make the excuse that the events of last night have
-completely shattered my nerve."
-
-"I don't wonder," was Spencer's comment. "Now, about this little matter
-we have been speaking of. I think it would be better if I paid this
-money into your bank, and left you to make your own arrangements. I
-suppose you have a bank?"
-
-Yes, Miss Keane had a banking-account, a very small one. She smilingly
-remarked that it would give the manager a shock when such a large sum
-was paid into it.
-
-"I will draw the money in cash to-morrow and bring it to you," said
-Spencer. "Then nobody will be able to guess from whom it comes."
-
-He rose, he could not trust himself to stay very much longer. At any
-moment his reserve might break down. He might be impelled to change the
-rôle of the benevolent friend into that of the ardent lover.
-
-And for a long time after he had left, Stella Keane sat absorbed in the
-most serious thoughts.
-
-There was no doubt he was ardently in love with her. But he was not yet
-quite prepared to screw up his courage to the sticking place.
-
-It was easy to understand. The obligations he owed his family were
-weighing on his mind.
-
-The woman he made his wife would one day be the Countess of Southleigh.
-He had to think of all this. And all he knew about her was learned from
-her own statement, and she had a cousin who was, from his point of view,
-certainly not a gentleman.
-
-Above all things, Stella Keane was a very business-like young woman, and
-never shrank from looking facts squarely in the face. She must play
-a waiting game. Guy Spencer was very deeply in love, but he was not a
-hotheaded, impetuous boy, the sort of amorous youth who runs off with a
-chorus girl, regardless of consequences. Lovers of this kind were very
-rarely met with.
-
-If Guy Spencer did marry her, and she could not at the moment be sure
-he would, he would be fully conscious of the disadvantages to himself
-entailed by such a marriage. Would her fascination be strong enough to
-conquer his better judgment?
-
-At any rate, for the present he was prepared to advance her five hundred
-pounds, and ask nothing but her friendship in return. It was an offer
-that she would have been a fool to refuse.
-
-Presently she rose and went up to Mrs. L'Estrange's bedroom. That sorely
-perturbed lady had risen, flung on a dressing-gown, and was reclining on
-a sofa.
-
-"I can't sleep, I only fidget and fidget about," was the explanation.
-"So I thought I might as well get up."
-
-"Very wise," said Stella calmly. "You're a little bit too hysterical,
-you know. You should keep your nerves in order as I do mine."
-
-"Not always," was the sarcastic rejoinder. "They go to pieces in
-thunderstorms and air raids, don't they?"
-
-"The exception proves the rule, my dear lady. Well, I haven't come up
-here to indulge in a sparring match. I have some very great news for
-you. Mr. Spencer called this afternoon; he hasn't left me very long."
-
-The elder woman became interested at once. "You don't mean to say he has
-asked you to marry him?"
-
-Stella laughed. "No, he hasn't, although it will not be my fault if he
-doesn't later on. It seems Tommy Esmond called on him last night, and
-made a clean breast of his whole history."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange frowned. "Then I think he was a great fool. Everybody,
-of course, will know what actually happened, that he was discovered
-cheating. But he need not go and tell him more than he would learn from
-general rumour.'"
-
-Stella's face hardened a little. "You must make some allowances for him.
-He must have been in a terrible state of tension when he felt that his
-career was ended. He was so very proud, you know, of the position in
-society that he had won for himself. He must have felt like a man on the
-eve of execution. He was hardly responsible for his thoughts or actions.
-He is very highly-strung."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange spoke more gently. "Yes, of course. I am sorry I said
-that, my dear. And after all, it doesn't make any difference how much
-he told or how little. The result to him is the same. And now for your
-great news, what are they? You say Spencer has not asked you to marry
-him."
-
-Stella told her of Guy's suggestion, and her acceptance of it. "It is
-too good a chance to refuse. So, my dear, I shall have to leave you at
-the earliest possible moment."
-
-It was some time before the elder woman seemed quite able to grasp it.
-when she did, her astonishment seemed unbounded.
-
-"Of all the strange things I have ever heard," she began, but Stella cut
-her short with a little mocking laugh.
-
-"Not quite so strange when you think it quietly out," she said. "If
-he really knew anything about me, if I could produce a few respectable
-relatives, if I had some of your blue blood in my veins, he would have
-proposed this afternoon."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange nodded her rather dishevelled head. "I think I see."
-
-"He is very much in love with me," went on Stella quietly. "Anyway, so
-much so that he doesn't want to lose sight of me, while he is making up
-his mind. Hence his offer."
-
-"But he could see you here."
-
-Stella shook her head. "He would loathe this house after what occurred
-last night, and he thinks I am in an unholy set. He really is an awful
-dear, you know, so high-minded and upright. His great aim is to get me
-away from the environment."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange settled herself comfortably amongst her sofa cushions.
-She was an excitable and fussy person about trifles, but she took the
-great things of life with a calm and equal mind.
-
-"Well, my dear, go as soon as it suits yourself. You have been a good
-pal to me, and I shall be sorry to lose you. But if you have got a
-decent chance you would be a fool not to take it."
-
-Miss Keane was strongly of the same opinion. Anyway she was glad the
-interview was over, that Mrs. L'Estrange had taken everything in such
-good part. She might have turned nasty if the mood had seized her.
-
-Later on, Miss Keane wrote a long letter to Tommy Esmond to an address
-which he had communicated to her in his note of the morning.
-
-The same evening, she held a long conversation with her cousin and
-trustee, Mr. Dutton, who came to Elsinore Gardens in obedience to an
-urgent summons on the telephone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-|Lady Nina Spencer sat in the drawing-room of the big house in Carlton
-House Terrace, awaiting the few guests who had been invited to a small,
-informal dinner-party. Her father, very infirm for his years, sat
-opposite to her in a big easy-chair.
-
-The Earl spoke in his low, quavering voice: "I have nothing to say
-against the woman herself, judging from what little we have seen of her.
-She has very perfect manners, just a trifle too perfect. I can quite
-understand that for the average man she possesses considerable charm,
-and she has great good looks. Many people would call her beautiful.
-But I can only repeat what I said on the day I received Guy's letter
-announcing his clandestine marriage: 'The pity of it.'"
-
-Lady Nina was a quiet, robust and practical young person, fond of
-looking facts in the face, and looking at them very squarely.
-
-She had been as much shocked at her cousin's rash marriage as the Earl
-himself, but it was an accomplished fact. Only two courses were open:
-the first to have nothing more to do with Guy and his wife, the second
-to admit the wife to a guarded intimacy.
-
-Lord Southleigh had declared warmly, in his first disgust, that he would
-never look upon his young kinsman's face again. But Nina had prevailed
-with milder counsels. Guy was his heir, and in the course of Nature
-would succeed to the family honours. They would not cut themselves
-adrift from him, and they must make up their minds to tolerate this
-wife, of whose antecedents he could give no satisfactory account. The
-one fact he did mention, that she was a cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange, did
-not weigh much with them.
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange came of a fairly good family, so far as birth counted,
-but it was both impecunious and addicted to making unfortunate
-alliances. One of her sisters had run away with a good-looking young
-fellow who had been her father's valet. She was a woman who would have
-a good many undesirable relatives knocking about. Miss Stella Keane, the
-daughter of an impoverished Irishman, might well belong to this band of
-undesirables. More especially as Guy's statements about her antecedents
-were of the most bald and unsatisfactory nature.
-
-It was all very sad and regrettable from every point of view, but,
-as Nina calmly pointed out, several young heirs to peerages had been
-running amok lately, in the matrimonial sense, and taking their wives
-from very questionable quarters. Guy might have married some coarse and
-common creature from the music-halls. It was unfortunate, in a way, that
-he had a considerable fortune of his own, and could snap his fingers at
-the displeasure of his relatives, if they presumed to show it.
-
-But, somehow, knowing Guy as well as she did, Nina did not believe that
-the future Countess of Southleigh, who would, in due course, wear
-the family jewels, was likely to be coarse or common. Guy was too
-fastidious, too innately a gentleman, to be snared by a creature of that
-kind.
-
-And, on her first introduction, the young wife made a much more
-favourable impression than might have been anticipated, considering the
-prejudices arrayed against her.
-
-She was not in the least servile or obsequious in the presence of these
-two very aristocratic persons, but she bore herself with a certain kind
-of shrinking modesty, as if asking pardon for having intruded into the
-family. Her attitude to her husband appeared to be one of shy adoration,
-tempered with perfect good taste. Her deep affection for him, while
-not obtrusive or ostentatious, seemed to express itself in her tender
-glances, the soft cadences of her voice when she addressed him.
-
-Nina made up her mind to one thing, that, if she was not genuinely
-and devotedly in love with him, she must be one of the most perfect
-actresses to be met with off the stage.
-
-And Guy was still infatuated. When he had made her that strange offer,
-he knew that he was drifting, but he had still left some small remnant
-of self-control. But her fascination had proved too strong. Every day
-she wove the chains more strongly round him.
-
-And then there came a time when absence from her was unbearable, when he
-took to counting the hours that elapsed between their next meeting. The
-end was inevitable. The moment came when he definitely made up his
-mind that he could not break away; that existence without her would be
-intolerable.
-
-They were married quietly before the registrar, a strange wedding for
-the heir to the Southleigh earldom. No relatives of his were present,
-as he had foreborne to give them any notice of his intention. She
-was unattended also. Even her cousin, Mr. Dutton, did not put in an
-appearance. Knowing her future husband's dislike of the young man, she
-had not paid him the compliment of requesting his attendance.
-
-The day before the marriage, she spoke to him in a tremulous voice and
-with tears in her eyes.
-
-"Guy, darling, I have said very little about this before, but you must
-not think I am blind to the sacrifices you are making. From to-morrow
-I bid adieu to my past life, to all the few friends and acquaintances I
-have made; I know that you will be happier by my doing so. Henceforth
-I devote my whole life to you. Your people shall be my people, if they
-will forgive me and have me."
-
-He clasped her to his breast with a lover's rapture. How sweet and
-womanly she looked as she uttered those words in her low, broken tones.
-He understood what she meant. For his sake she was going to give up all
-that shady L'Estrange crew, to see as little of her objectionable cousin
-as possible. She explained, later on, that she could not ignore him
-altogether, as he had the management of her small affairs in his hands.
-But all this could be conducted by correspondence.
-
-Guy was delighted. He knew well enough that his own world would not
-accept his marriage kindly, that they would never take his wife to their
-offended bosom. But they would rub along somehow. There were plenty of
-men he could bring to their house, and perhaps a few decent women who
-were perfectly respectable, but not too strait-laced. And, anyway, the
-world was well lost for love like this.
-
-It cannot be said that, on the social side, their existence was a very
-brilliant one. It did not matter so much to Guy, he had never been
-over-fond of society. He liked his men friends, and having been a
-bachelor so long, he was fond of club life. He got quite as much
-amusement and distraction as he wanted.
-
-His wife had many lonely hours, but she was wise in this respect that
-she never sought to chain him to her side. Whenever he came home he
-found her there waiting for him, affectionate and welcoming. Perhaps,
-after her stormy and chequered past, what would have been dullness to
-others seemed to her the peace she had been longing for.
-
-She got on very well with her husband's male friends, most of whom
-openly expressed amongst themselves their admiration for her.
-
-If she had been a woman of a flirtatious temperament she could have had
-a good time without overstepping the bounds of decorum. But she never
-exceeded the limits of strict friendship. She never indulged in an
-intimacy that could have the least element of danger in it. The general
-vote was, that she was very beautiful, very charming, in a quiet,
-elusive way, but naturally of a cold and unimpassionable nature. Only
-for her husband did her glance take on a warmer expression, her voice a
-tenderer tone.
-
-The few women who came to the house found her unsatisfactory. The
-impression made upon them--and women are pretty shrewd when dissecting
-one of their own sex--was that she was a person who lived too much
-within herself, had a rooted disinclination "to let herself go" in
-those little confidential chats which are indulged in when no men
-are present. And for that studied reticence there must be some cogent
-reason. Above all, she never referred to her girlhood, never made any
-allusions to her family. The general impression was that Mrs. Spencer
-had something to hide.
-
-Anyway, after many months of married life, Guy was still as much in love
-with her as ever, and he was always profoundly touched by the pretty and
-impressive way in which she insisted that all the advantages were on her
-side, that she could never repay him sufficiently for the sacrifices he
-had so cheerfully made.
-
-Of course Guy knew nothing of what his friends were saying; the men
-who admired her beauty, and were disappointed at the negative qualities
-which accompanied it; the women who found her unsatisfactory and were
-determined that she had something to hide.
-
-All he knew, and was content in knowing, was this--that after many
-months of matrimony, for they had been married few weeks before the
-Armistice was proclaimed--that Armistice which was to be the precursor
-of a golden era--he was quite happy. She was a perfect wife, from his
-point of view, and he never looked back with the faintest misgiving.
-What he had done then, he would do again to-day, in spite of the fact
-that her reticence with regard to the past was as profound with him as
-with the various acquaintances who occasionally visited her.
-
-Not even the close intimacy of married life had elicited any of those
-allusions and confidences which enable one to piece together, in some
-measure, the life-history of the person who makes them. But Guy had
-a generous nature, and was one of the least suspicious of men. He
-attributed this strange reticence to the fact that the past contained
-nothing but painful memories, that even to the man she loved she could
-not reopen the old wounds.
-
-On this particular night, Lady Nina was awaiting her guests. It was a
-little dinnerparty to meet the young married couple, six in all, herself
-and father, Mr. and Mrs. Spencer, a young woman friend of the hostess,
-and an old friend of the Southleigh family, Hugh Murchison, already met
-with in the early chapters of this history.
-
-Murchison was the first arrival. He walked with a slight limp, the
-result of a bad wound in the leg. He had been laid-up for a very long
-time at his own home with the effects of shell-shock. He had only been
-in London for a few days, and it was ages since the Southleighs had seen
-him. They welcomed him warmly.
-
-After a little desultory conversation Nina spoke:
-
-"You know from my note that you are here to-night especially to meet
-Guy and his wife, the wife that he sprang upon us in such a sudden and
-dramatic manner."
-
-"Yes, I understood that. You know I have been out of the world so long,
-and more than half the time not in my right senses, that I had heard
-nothing of the details till, a day or two ago, I picked it up from club
-gossip. Then I was told that Guy had picked up a girl from nowhere,
-about whom nothing was known, and married her on the sly at a
-registry-office. I suppose it would be too unkind to assume that Guy had
-gone off his head?"
-
-Lord Southleigh growled out from his easy-chair. "Of course he was off
-his head when he did it. And the devil of it is he seems just as much
-off his head now. They are like turtle-doves, my dear boy, after several
-months of marriage."
-
-Lady Nina laughed. "My dear father gets more cynical every day. He
-insinuates as a general proposition, anyway it can be deduced from
-his remarks, that every man who marries a girl for love ought to be
-disillusioned shortly after the honeymoon. Well, certainly Guy is as
-much in love as ever, and, to be quite fair, she seems just as much in
-love with him."
-
-"She's putting it on, I suppose," suggested Hugh, who in a less
-obtrusive fashion was nearly as cynical as his host. "If she came from
-nowhere, and nobody knows anything about her, we may safely assume
-that she married him for his money, and that he was too infatuated to
-recognise the fact. Is she very bewitching?"
-
-"She is certainly very good-looking," was Nina's reply. "Many people say
-she is beautiful. From a man's point of view, she would be considered
-very charming in a subtle and elusive sort of way. Of course, my father
-hates her, it is a terrible shock to his pride to think she is going
-to inherit the family honours. Guy could have married anybody, although
-there would always have been still the danger that he would have been
-married for his money. When it comes to this point, there is not much
-difference between the well-born and low-born adventuress."
-
-From which remarks it will be gathered that the Lady Nina Spencer was
-a young woman of independent opinions, and not too strongly imbued with
-caste prejudices.
-
-Hugh reflected for a few moments. His thoughts had travelled back to
-those days at Blankfield, which now seemed so very far oft. What folly
-will not a certain type of man commit for the sake of a pretty woman?
-Jack Pomfret, in a moment of frenzy, had taken his life when he found he
-was tied up to a girl the accomplice and the decoy of a criminal.
-
-And Guy Spencer, a man of a very different type from the easy-going,
-pleasure-loving Pomfret, had made a hash of his opportunities, flouted
-his family obligations, to pursue the desire of the moment, to marry out
-of his own class.
-
-"What I hear is, that there is something very mysterious about her, that
-she preserves a strange reticence as to her past, makes no allusion to
-family or relatives. Does Guy know what other people do not know, and
-is he keeping his mouth shut? It is strange. Even if a man marries a
-ballet-girl, it comes out sooner or later that her father was a railway
-porter, or something of that sort." He pulled himself up suddenly,
-and added, awkwardly: "I say, you know, I am afraid I have been very
-indiscreet. I forgot for the moment that she is one of the family now."
-
-A deep growl came from the Earl's armchair: "She is not one of the
-family, she never will be. If the young fool had not been left that
-money by his godmother he would never have dared to do this disgraceful
-thing. By gad, Hugh, it is over a hundred years since there was such a
-_mésalliance_ in our family: please Heaven it will be a hundred years
-before there is another."
-
-Nina took up the conversation at the point where her angry father left
-it.
-
-"Of course, Hugh, you can say what you like. You are our old friend;
-you are Guy's for that matter, and we are prepared to discuss this thing
-with you quite frankly. Guy may know more than we imagine; personally, I
-think he knows very little, and only what she has told him."
-
-"But surely, she must have given some particulars of herself," cried
-Hugh, in amazement that a man like his friend Spencer, endowed with a
-fair share of common-sense, should take a wife upon trust, as it were.
-To be sure, Pomfret had done the same thing, but then poor old Jack,
-possessor of many excellent qualities, was singularly deficient in
-brain-power. He was one of those who never looked before they leaped.
-
-Nina shrugged her shoulders. "All we know is that she was a Miss Stella
-Keane, the daughter of a man who gambled away his fortune at cards
-and on the race-course. As for relatives, she has for cousin a Mrs.
-L'Estrange, a woman of good birth, but of somewhat shady reputation, who
-no longer mixes with her own class. There is another cousin, a man whose
-name I forget. I gather more from what has been omitted than what is
-actually said, that he is not a very desirable person, and has not
-visited Mrs. Spencer since her marriage. That is all I have learned
-during these many months."
-
-"Not much, certainly. And I suppose the lady dries up when you try to
-approach her on the subject."
-
-"Oh yes, her manner then is very marked," was Nina's answer. "At the
-slightest question she seems to become frozen, to shut herself up within
-her shell. You know, Hugh, I was prepared to make the best of it all
-for Guy's sake, although, of course, I quite sympathise with my father's
-resentment. I have nothing to say against her manners or her appearance.
-If not a lady, she is most ladylike, and she never offends. But all
-the same, I can't take to her. To me there seems something about her
-secretive and underhand. She appears to adore Guy, but, as you have
-suggested, that may be very accomplished acting."
-
-At this point, Miss Crichton, Lady Nina's friend, was announced. She
-was not in the inner counsels of the Southleigh family, so no further
-allusion was made to Guy's wife.
-
-A few moments later the Spencers arrived. Guy shook his old friend
-Murchison warmly by the hand, they had met of late years only once or
-twice during Hugh's brief leave from the Front. When they had exchanged
-a few mutual inquiries, the young husband turned to his wife, looking
-very slender and elegant in a filmy cream confection.
-
-"Stella, one of my oldest friends, Hugh Murchison. We were boys
-together. You must have heard me speak of him."
-
-The young woman held out her hand with a charming smile that lighted up
-the rather sad face, and made her look what so many of her admirers said
-she was, quite beautiful.
-
-"Yes, Major Murchison, I have heard of you from my husband, and how much
-you have suffered in this cruel war. You must come and see us, and renew
-your old friendship."
-
-For a moment Hugh could not speak. The room seemed suddenly peopled with
-ghosts of the past, summoned by the soft tones of that charming voice,
-so low and sweetly modulated. Then, collecting himself with a great
-effort, he dropped her hand, and made some formal answer. And at that
-moment the butler announced that dinner was served.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-|Small and informal dinner-parties can be either very lively or very
-dull, depending, no doubt, upon the careful selection of the guests,
-also on the personality of the host and hostess, who can sometimes
-exercise magnetic influence.
-
-Nina was, as a rule, a very vivacious hostess. Her father was uncertain.
-If he were in a congenial atmosphere, amongst his old friends and
-comrades, he would radiate geniality. But if there was one guest who
-did not quite hit it off with him, between whom and himself there was an
-undefined spirit of personal antagonism, he dried up at once, and became
-gloomy and morose.
-
-To-night, as his guest of honour, sitting at his right hand, he had the
-niece-in-law whose entrance into the family he had so bitterly resented.
-During the long courses he hardly spoke a word. He was rude almost to
-boorishness.
-
-But although Stella was fully conscious that she was there on
-sufferance, her admirable self-control enabled her to comport herself
-with unruffled demeanour. If this spiteful old man hoped that he was
-annoying her with his churlish behaviour, she would not give him the
-satisfaction of knowing that she was hurt. She ignored him, as he
-purposely ignored her.
-
-Miss Crichton, a cheerful, chatty young woman, whose flow of good
-spirits made her welcome at many houses, sat on the other side of the
-host. Finding Lord Southleigh disinclined to conversation, and guessing
-the reason of it, she divided her remarks between Stella Spencer and
-Murchison, who sat next her.
-
-A good-hearted girl, she felt just a little bit sorry for Stella.
-Lord Southleigh was not playing the game. His attitude was altogether
-illogical. It was open to him to refuse to receive his unwelcome niece
-at all, that would have been perfectly comprehensible. But having
-admitted her to his house, it was in the worst possible taste to so
-openly proclaim his dislike and detestation.
-
-Lady Nina talked brightly to her cousin Guy, in the random flashes of
-her conversation, taking in the others, with the solitary exception of
-her father, who sat there glum and silent, in one of his blackest
-and most unapproachable moods. And Miss Crichton did her best, really
-working very hard to counteract the sombre influence of the taciturn
-host.
-
-But in spite of the brave efforts of the two young women there was no
-exhilaration in the air, only a sort of well-defined depression, such as
-is felt in the atmosphere before the faint rumblings of a thunderstorm.
-Nobody really felt comfortable, not a single guest would feel anything
-but relief when the tedious evening drew to a close.
-
-Guy Spencer was relieved, in a way, that his uncle had ostensibly buried
-the hatchet, but still he never felt happy in that uncle's house. The
-strong disapproval was there, if suppressed for the sake of politeness.
-
-These little informal dinners, given at long intervals to impress upon
-him that he was still a recognised member of the family, bored him
-extremely. They were always strictly limited as to numbers, and the
-other guests were generally people of no importance, on the outer fringe
-of that society in which the Southleighs moved.
-
-It was difficult to know what Stella was feeling, for she had such
-admirable self-control. But if she was a sensitive woman she must have
-been cut to the heart by the behaviour of her elderly relative. And
-her suffering must have been more poignant from the fact that this
-contemptuous behaviour must be apparent to every other member of the
-party.
-
-While the two young women were chattering away, battling, as it were,
-against the general depression, Hugh Murchison was trying to collect his
-thoughts.
-
-Strange that his recollections had harked back to that tragedy at
-Blankfield while Nina was speaking of the young Mrs. Spencer. And, if
-his memory and his eyesight were not playing him false, he was sitting
-opposite to the unhappy Pomfret's widow.
-
-Six years make a considerable difference in the personal appearance of
-any man or woman, and they had made a difference in her. If he had met
-her in the street, he would not have known her. Perhaps he would not
-have known her to-night, but for that sudden accidental throwing back
-of the memory of old times. In other words, if his mind had not been
-accidentally diverted to Jack Pomfret, he would have failed to recognise
-the woman whom he once knew under the name of Norah Burton.
-
-And yet could he be sure? Let him think a little. Six years ago Norah
-Burton looked twenty, and Davidson the detective assured him she was at
-least four years older than she looked--the appearance of youth, he had
-added, was one of her assets.
-
-This young woman did not look a day older than twenty-six, and taking
-the computation of the years, she must be at least thirty. But if she
-were Norah Burton, and had retained that priceless asset of youth, she
-would still have that four years' advantage.
-
-Then Norah Burton's hair was fair and wavy, Stella Spencer's was dark.
-Still it is easy for a woman to alter the colour or the appearance
-of her hair. If Stella Keane had arisen, like the phoenix, from Norah
-Burton, she would alter herself in every detail, so far as Nature
-permitted her.
-
-Still, it is said that everybody in the world has a double. Often in
-his own experience he had claimed acquaintance with somebody whom he
-had mistaken for an old friend, and smilingly apologised for his error.
-Norah's good looks had been of a rather uncommon kind, but there must be
-dozens of women in the world more or less like her.
-
-Then, as Miss Crichton's harmless chatter flowed on, he thought of other
-things. Norah had an obscure past, on which such guarded confidences as
-she permitted herself to indulge in threw little or no light. It would
-appear that Stella Keane's history moved much on the same lines. There
-were only vague intimations, nothing definite, nothing satisfactory.
-
-There was another point of resemblance. Norah had one male relative who
-came out into the open for inspection, in her case a brother, afterwards
-discovered to be a criminal. Stella Keane had one male relative also,
-in her case a cousin, of whom nothing was known, except that he was an
-undesirable person who had not visited his relative's house since her
-marriage, no doubt for reasons well known to himself and Stella.
-
-_Ergo_ the undesirable cousin was lying low, as George Burton would have
-lain low, when Jack Pomfret had openly acknowledged Norah as his wife.
-
-And yet--and yet--was there anything in these suspicions? was he
-not allowing himself to be misled by a chance resemblance, by random
-coincidences?
-
-He stole a look at Guy Spencer chatting amiably with his cousin, the
-cousin whom rumour had persistently designed as the future Countess of
-Southleigh. He seemed the happy contented young married man; there was
-no hint of trouble or regret in his assured, placid demeanour. Evidently
-he was suffering from no self-reproach, no suspicion of the beautiful
-young woman he had made his wife. The calmness of his aspect gave the
-lie to any such disquieting suggestions.
-
-And the current of Murchison's thoughts ran swiftly along. They had been
-married some time now. If Stella Keane was the impostor Hugh suspected
-her to be, from that striking resemblance to Norah Burton the heroine of
-that tragic Blankville episode, surely in the close intimacy of wedded
-life something would have escaped her that would have aroused her
-husband's suspicions, have set him inquiring more closely into the past.
-
-Granting that she was a clever actress, still the most accomplished
-performer in the world could not wear the mask all day. There must
-come one moment, if not several moments, when that mask would be
-inadvertently dropped.
-
-No, he must be mistaken. The resemblance must be accidental. The brother
-in the one case, the cousin in the other, were equally accidental
-coincidences.
-
-He had got to this frame of mind when the men joined the ladies after
-dinner. In the spacious drawing-room, the atmosphere seemed to have
-cleared, the tension to be relaxed, with the change of scene.
-
-This was readily comprehensible. During dinner, Lord Southleigh,
-frowning and morose, in close juxtaposition with his guests, had in a
-very real sense dominated the scene, and communicated a sense of his
-hostility and displeasure to all round him, not least to the unhappy
-young woman who had inspired those wrathful feelings.
-
-Upstairs he was less in evidence. He retreated to the far end of the
-room, flung himself in a deep armchair, and, in a way, removed
-himself from the proceedings. There was nobody to whom he felt himself
-constrained to be civil. Murchison he had known from a boy; he could
-afford to be uncivil, to play the rôle of churlish host. Miss Crichton
-was more or less a social hanger-on, grateful for invitations to good
-houses; she did not count. Guy had forfeited all claim to consideration.
-His wife ought to be made to feel her position every moment of her life.
-
-Murchison gravitated to Miss Crichton. Well born, she was very poor, and
-by no means proud. She accepted in a meek spirit the social crumbs that
-were thrown at her by her wealthy superiors. She was always obliging and
-amiable. She never grumbled at being asked to join a dinner-party at
-the eleventh hour, when some other guest had failed. She never resented
-being put in a small bedroom at a country house-party, while a rich girl
-with no ancestry was given a luxurious apartment.
-
-On account of this excessive amiability, this indifference to studied
-and unstudied slights, she was immensely popular. All her friends
-declared her not only to be amiable, but "so sensible!"
-
-Hugh had known her for years, and in a way he pitied her, much more
-really than she pitied herself, for she had long since grown accustomed
-to her lot. But what he did know was, that she was as shrewd as she was
-amiable, that under that gay and smiling exterior she concealed a very
-acute intelligence.
-
-He wanted particularly to know her opinion of Mrs. Spencer, if she were
-frank enough to give it, for she had especially developed the bump of
-caution. She heard a great deal, but what she heard she generally kept
-to herself. It would have been fatal to her somewhat insecure position
-if it could have been said of her, with regard to any particular
-scandal, "Of course, you will never give me away, but Laura Crichton was
-my informant."
-
-He replied in a general way, "I was very interested, to-night, in my old
-friend Guy Spencer's wife. She is a little bit on the quiet side, but
-she is very beautiful, and there is certainly a wonderful charm about
-her. Of course, Lord Southleigh behaved abominably. I rather wonder she
-did not fling herself out of the room. One can understand his feelings,
-in a certain way. But why does he not take one attitude or the other?
-If he elects to receive her, for the sake of avoiding an open breach, he
-ought to put his hostility in his pocket."
-
-Miss Crichton smiled her worldly and diplomatic smile: "Dear Lord
-Southleigh is never very successful at hiding his real feelings."
-
-"Do you see much of her?" asked Hugh presently.
-
-"Oh, very little. I have met her a few times here, at these little
-informal gatherings. Lord Southleigh won't have her at their big
-parties, as I daresay you know. I have called on her a few times, and
-she has called back. That is all."
-
-"Well, you have seen enough to form some opinion of her. I should dearly
-like to know what that is."
-
-Miss Crichton looked at him quizzically. "Oh, the artfulness of you men!
-Do you think I don't see that you are trying to draw me? Well, I have
-formed the same conclusion that you have--she is very beautiful, and,
-from a man's point of view, has a subtle charm. Will that content you?"
-
-Hugh regarded her with a smile as quizzical as her own. "No, I'm
-afraid it won't. Now, look here, we are very old friends," he said
-persuasively, "and I am pretty near as discreet as you are, I never
-repeat what is told me in confidence. I should like to put a plain
-question to you."
-
-"Put it: I don't promise to answer it, you know."
-
-"Of course not. But I am very much interested in this strange marriage
-of Guy's. And, please don't think I am laying it on with a trowel, but
-I have very great faith in your judgment, I would trust it more than I
-would that of nine-tenths of the women I know."
-
-Of course she knew he was flattering her to obtain his purpose; but
-then--was the most sensible woman absolutely impervious to flattery?
-
-"Ask me your question," she answered briefly.
-
-Hugh sank his voice to a whisper. "We hear a great deal about her
-reticence as to the past. Do you think, in a few words, that Stella
-Spencer is a good and straight woman in the general sense in which we
-understand the expression?"
-
-For a moment Miss Crichton hesitated, then she looked him straight in
-the face. He had compelled her to a most unusual frankness.
-
-"You will, of course, never breathe a word of this to anybody. Suppose
-I say I refuse to reply to your question. Will you take that refusal as
-the answer you really want?"
-
-"I will--a thousand thanks. The subject is closed between us," was
-Hugh's grateful reply.
-
-A diversion was caused by the approach of Guy Spencer.
-
-"Hugh, old man, I am aching for a long crack with you. Come and dine
-quietly with us next week. I suggest Tuesday if that will suit you?"
-
-"Perfectly; I am free on Tuesday, Guy."
-
-"Right, then. But to make sure, if Miss Crichton will excuse us, we will
-go over to Stella and see if I have forgotten something, if we are free
-that night. I can't always carry these things in my head."
-
-They crossed over to the beautiful young woman, who was sustaining a
-somewhat listless conversation with her young hostess.
-
-"Stella," cried her husband, "I have asked Hugh to dine with us on
-Tuesday. My recollection is that we have nothing on for that night. But
-I thought you had better confirm it. You carry these things in your head
-so much better than I do."
-
-Young Mrs. Spencer smiled at Hugh her sweet smile, and as she did so
-her likeness to Norah Burton was overwhelming, the Norah Burton who had
-smiled at him in just the same way six years ago, in the tea-shop at
-Blankfield.
-
-"We are quite free, Major Murchison, and shall be delighted to see you."
-
-For a few moments he sat down beside her; and very shortly another
-coincidence happened.
-
-Mrs. Spencer made use of a certain word which is always pronounced in
-a certain way by educated people, and in another way by people who are
-only partially educated. Norah Burton had pronounced this particular
-word in the same way as Stella.
-
-Hugh had commented upon the fact to Pomfret, and that easy-going young
-man had remarked to him that he failed to see it much mattered, that she
-was at liberty to pronounce the word as she thought fit.
-
-When he got home, he passed a very restless night. When he had gone up
-into the drawingroom after dinner, he had been half prepared to dismiss
-the matter from his mind as a mere fantasy. And then had come his
-brief interview with Laura Crichton, in which she gave him plainly to
-understand that, in her opinion, Stella Spencer was not a good or a
-straight woman.
-
-And then had come that corroborative little piece of evidence of the
-mispronunciation of a certain word, establishing another link in the
-chain of evidence that Stella Keane and Norah Burton were one and the
-same person.
-
-And if it were so, what was his duty? If he could prove her to be Norah
-Burton, and her undesirable relative, George Burton, now freed from
-jail, could he permit such an adventuress to pass another day in the
-house of this honest gentleman whom she had so skilfully entrapped, as
-six years ago she had entrapped the guileless and trusting Jack Pomfret?
-
-The morning dawned and found him still in the throes of anxious thought.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-|As Murchison thought over matters in the cold, clear light of the
-morning, when the brain is at its freshest, he cursed the fate that ever
-seemed to mix him up in the private affairs of his friends. First had
-been that unhappy episode of poor Jack Pomfret, who had not strength
-of mind to survive the disgrace he had brought upon himself by his
-impetuous folly.
-
-Now there was this affair of Guy Spencer's, which he felt he must
-go through with and prove to the bottom. He must find out definitely
-whether the likeness to Norah Burton was accidental, or whether that
-scheming adventuress had, for the second time, ensnared a trusting and
-unsuspicious man.
-
-On Tuesday night when he dined in Eaton Place with the Spencers, he
-would seize an opportunity of putting to her a few leading questions.
-They would be of such a nature, that if his suspicions were correct,
-they would shake her self-possession.
-
-Certainly, she had betrayed no embarrassment at the sight of him, and
-that was a point in her favour. For, assuming that she was Norah Burton,
-the name of Murchison would be quite familiar to her, even if she had
-forgotten his appearance after the lapse of those six years.
-
-In the meantime he would get as much information about Stella Keane as
-he could before the date of the dinner. There was a man at his club,
-Gregory Fairfax, a middle-aged gossip, who was to be found in the
-smoking-room every day at a certain hour.
-
-Fairfax was a man of leisure and means, who had the reputation of
-knowing more people, and all about them, than anybody in town. He mixed
-in a dozen different sets: smart, fast, and Bohemian. He was equally
-at home in Belgravia, Mayfair, South Kensington, and several other
-quarters. He belonged to most of the best clubs, and many more that
-had no pretensions to social distinction. His knowledge of the various
-phases of London life was wide and extensive. He had also a marvellous
-memory. He never forgot a face or the minutest details of a scandal.
-
-To this gentleman, with whom he was on quite intimate terms, having
-known him from his first introduction to the London world, Hugh
-repaired, in the hope of getting to know all there was to know about
-this mysterious young woman who had so suddenly and clandestinely
-projected herself into the Southleigh family.
-
-After a few casual remarks, he opened the ball. It was an easy task,
-for there was nothing pleased Fairfax more than to place his extensive
-social knowledge at the service of any friend or acquaintance who was in
-search of details.
-
-"I say, Fairfax, I think you can help me in a little matter, because you
-have the reputation of knowing everything about everybody."
-
-Mr. Fairfax smiled genially. He was very proud of his profound social
-knowledge, and nothing pleased him more than to have his well-earned
-reputation alluded to in flattering terms.
-
-"Fire away, my young friend. I think I have picked up a bit in my
-twenty-five years of London life. Who is it you want to ask me about?"
-
-"I dined last night with my old friends the Southleighs; and there, for
-the first time, I met Mrs. Guy Spencer. I had heard of the marriage,
-of course, but no particulars of the young lady until I came to town
-a little while ago. All I have learned is that she was a Miss Stella
-Keane, and that she gives no very detailed account of her family
-history. I gather the general impression is that there is a mystery
-about her, which she refuses to allow anybody to penetrate. Do you know
-anything about her yourself?"
-
-Fairfax assumed an air of great gravity and importance. He was now in
-his element, about to pour out his stores of knowledge to an interested
-and grateful listener.
-
-"There may be one or two people who know as much as I know--always
-remembering that there is no first-hand knowledge, but the chances are
-a hundred to one you would not come across them. It happens that I was
-a good deal in that rather queer set which frequented Mrs. L'Estrange's
-flat."
-
-"She was supposed to|be a well-bred woman, was she not?"
-
-"Oh, certainly, so far as family went. But, judging in the light of
-subsequent events, there is no doubt she was a wrong'un. The place, from
-the start, was simply a gambling saloon. Sometimes, the play was very
-moderate. I am fond of a bit of a flutter myself, but I must own that I
-never lost very much, and for a long time I never had any suspicions of
-foul play."
-
-"Ah, but you had later on?" interrupted Hugh.
-
-"I'll come to that before we get on to Miss Stella Keane. Then one night
-something happened. Do you remember a little chap named Esmond, who used
-to go about everywhere?"
-
-Yes, Hugh remembered Tommy Esmond, although his acquaintance with him
-had been of the slightest.
-
-"He was a funny little man, very genial and popular with everybody. Like
-myself, he didn't stick to any one particular set, but went into a dozen
-different ones. One night he would be dining at a swagger club with a
-peer, the next he would be hobnobbing at a pot-house sort of a place
-with a fifth-rate actor. Very eclectic was Tommy, and nobody ever knew
-where the deuce he came from. He had been so long about that people
-forgot to inquire, and looked upon him as a sort of institution, and
-took him for granted, as it were.
-
-"Well, one night, one dreadful night, Tommy was discovered cheating by
-a couple of chaps who were too sharp for him. They were common sort of
-fellows, might have been crooks themselves for all I know, and kicked up
-a deuce of a row. They went so far as to insinuate that Mrs. L'Estrange
-was not altogether innocent, and had a hand in the plunder. Result,
-Tommy had to make a bolt of it."
-
-"What was your own opinion about it? Was it an accident?"
-
-"I might not have believed it, but a similar thing took place about a
-couple of months later. Another man was found cheating, and this
-time Mrs. L'Estrange refused to face the music. She closed down, and
-disappeared from London. I have never met anybody who has seen or heard
-anything of her since. I expect she's to be found on the Continent like
-her friend Tommy."
-
-"And Miss Keane was an inmate of this suspicious household?"
-
-"Yes, ever since I went to the house, up to a few days after Tommy
-bolted. She left suddenly, and Mrs. L'Estrange was very reticent as to
-where she had gone to. The next I heard was that she had been married
-quietly to Guy Spencer."
-
-"Did any suspicions attach to her?"
-
-"No, it would not be fair to say that they did. She never played
-herself, but she had a great knack of hovering about the tables. And
-after the Esmond episode one or two men whispered that she had been
-hovering about them too much, and that Mrs. L'Estrange thought she had
-better get rid of her, might be so or not."
-
-"Did you ever come across a cousin of hers there, a man named Dutton?"
-
-"Oh yes, a dozen or more times, for I went to the flat pretty
-frequently. A common, under-bred fellow, not in the least like her, for
-in addition to being remarkably good-looking, her manners and appearance
-were those of a lady."
-
-"Do you know what has become of him?"
-
-"Yes, he's an outside stockbroker, with a small office in the City. I
-ran against him only last week. I don't know whether he recognised me
-or not, but I looked the other way. With one or two exceptions, the
-L'Estrange _clientèle_ was not one that you cared to recognise when
-outside the flat."
-
-Fairfax had finished his narrative. Hugh thanked him warmly. Still, he
-had not learned anything really of importance. There was no evidence
-that Miss Keane had cheated, or helped others to cheat. The hovering
-round the card-table was not a particularly suspicious action if taken
-by itself. She might be signalling to her confederates, of course, but
-there was no evidence on which to convict her.
-
-A sudden thought struck Murchison which prompted him to put a question
-to Fairfax.
-
-"She might have been a decoy, to lure rich men to this gambling place,
-in order that they might be rooked by her accomplices." The middle-aged
-man shook his head. "I don't think so. She had no scope for that sort of
-game. Mrs. L'Estrange hardly knew anybody in her own world, for reasons
-which I daresay could be very satisfactorily explained, I should guess a
-not too clean or reputable past. She could not get the girl into houses
-where she would pick up rich men."
-
-"But you say some men came there who played heavily."
-
-"A few," answered Fairfax. "But I always had a notion that Dutton picked
-those up, in the course of his shady business, a mug here, a mug there,
-who had a few thousands to throw away either on the Stock Exchange or
-in gambling. If the flat was run on the crook, and it is even betting
-it was, I should say the proprietors--or the syndicate, call it what
-you like--were contented with quite small profits. I daresay a couple of
-thousand a year would keep Mrs. L'Estrange in luxury, and I suppose she
-must have had a bit of money of her own."
-
-"And, assuming that they were all in league, Tommy Esmond and others
-would want their bit," suggested Hugh.
-
-"Certainly," assented Fairfax; "but always granting that the show was
-run on the crook, it wouldn't be difficult to romp in thirty or forty
-pounds a night, with even the small players and the occasional mugs
-who were well-lined. Quite a decent amount to divide at the end of the
-week."
-
-"Well, I am awfully obliged for all you have told me, Fairfax."
-
-"But it doesn't help you much, eh?" queried the elder man, who detected
-a certain note of disappointment in his companion's tone.
-
-"Well, candidly, it doesn't, but of course, that is no fault of yours.
-We may dismiss the L'Estrange business, there is no evidence there. She
-might have signalled to her confederates or not. It might have been a
-perfectly innocent action. She didn't play herself, she just hovered
-round the tables to kill the time."
-
-"Of course, either theory will fit," remarked the shrewd man of the
-world, who had picked up so much knowledge of life in his forty-five
-strenuous years.
-
-He paused for a few moments before he spoke again.
-
-"Now look here, Murchison, I can read you like a book. I haven't
-told you very much more than you know yourself, or could have pieced
-together. You are disappointed because I couldn't tell you anything of
-her history prior to her appearance in the L'Estrange household. Well,
-there, I am at fault. And you have a particular reason for wanting to
-know. In other words, you have some suspicions of your own."
-
-Hugh felt he must be cautious. In connecting Mrs. Spencer with Norah
-Burton he might be on the wrong track altogether, have been deceived
-by a striking, but purely accidental, resemblance. He could not be too
-frank with a man of Fairfax's temperament. Rumour had it that he would
-always respect a confidence, but his general reputation was that of a
-chatterbox. He spoke guardedly.
-
-"Yes, certain undefined ones, quite undefined, please understand that."
-Then, speaking a little more frankly, "What I dearly want to know is,
-was she a straight woman before she charmed my friend Guy Spencer into
-marrying her."
-
-Fairfax smiled his slow, wise smile: "I am glad you have put your cards
-on the table. Of course I guessed from the beginning that it was what
-you were after. Well, I shan't breathe a word of this to anybody; I
-can hold my tongue when I have a mind. You have a deep interest in the
-matter for the sake of the Southleigh family, eh?"
-
-Hugh had to admit that it was so.
-
-"Well, I am going to tell you something that, up to the present, I have
-not told to anybody else, and, to tell you the truth, I was not in the
-least interested in Guy Spencer's marriage. If he chose to marry a girl
-without a past, that was his affair. But I see you are keen."
-
-"Yes, I am very keen."
-
-"Good! well, I will give you a little information, from which you can
-draw your own inferences. They are as open to you as to me, and I
-shall just state the bare facts. As you know, Esmond had to bolt to the
-Continent. On a certain morning I came up from the country by an early
-train, landing at Charing Cross. I went to the bookstall to buy a few
-papers. I must tell you that I am one of those persons who have eyes at
-the back of their head, and see everything going on around them."
-
-Yes, Hugh knew that Fairfax had a wonderful gift of observation, in
-addition to his many other gifts.
-
-"As I turned away, I saw Esmond slink into the station, glancing
-furtively from right to left, as fearful of being seen. Of course, I
-had not heard the news, and I was not present at the _débâcle_, but I
-guessed something was up from his furtive appearance. As he slunk along,
-a young woman heavily-veiled walked swiftly forward, and laid her hand
-upon his arm. They were only together for a few seconds, Esmond was
-evidently urging her to leave him for fear of recognition. When they
-parted, she kissed him affectionately. In spite of the heavy veiling, I
-recognised her."
-
-"Stella Keane, of course," cried Hugh.
-
-"Stella Keane. Fortunately, neither of them saw me, I expect they were
-both too agitated. Well, there is the fact; as I said just now, you can
-draw your own inferences, and perhaps answer the question whether she
-was a good woman before she married your friend."
-
-"It is answered," said Hugh sternly. "A good woman would not trouble to
-go to the station to say good-bye to a derelict card-sharper, and kiss
-him affectionately, unless there had been some close and dishonourable
-relationship between them."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-|Murchison arrived at Eaton Place about twenty minutes before the dinner
-hour. His expectation was that he would find Mrs. Spencer alone in the
-drawing-room, and in this hope he was not disappointed.
-
-Stella, beautifully gowned, was seated in a luxurious easy-chair,
-reading. As he was announced, she rose and threw her novel down. She
-advanced to him with outstretched hand and that ever-charming smile.
-
-"Oh, how sweet of you to come in good time, not rush in just a moment
-before dinner is served. We can have a comfortable chat before Guy
-comes. He takes an awful time to dress, you know. His ties bother him
-really; he discards about half a dozen before he gets the proper bow.
-Isn't it silly?"
-
-She was very girlish to-night, quite different from what she had been at
-the Southleigh party, staid, demure, a little resentful, and averse from
-conversation.
-
-Murchison's thoughts flew back to that day at Blankfield when he had met
-a certain girl by chance at the tea-shop. Norah Burton had been just
-as girlish then as Mrs. Spencer was now, allowing for the six years'
-interval.
-
-She crossed over to a Chesterfield, and motioned him to a seat beside
-her. Hugh obeyed her invitation, but he felt sure that she had done this
-with a motive. She was about to exercise her subtle fascination on her
-husband's friend.
-
-"Now, please tell me all about yourself," she said. "You are Guy's
-friend, and I have a right to know. His friends are mine. I know what
-you have done in the war: you have suffered very terribly. But before
-that; please enlighten me."
-
-It was a challenge. Did she desire to know as much of his past as he
-desired to know of hers? He looked at her very steadily.
-
-"You know, Mrs. Spencer, it is a little difficult to go back to anything
-before those awful years of war. But I remember, as in a sort of dream,
-that, quite as a young man, I was gazetted to the Twenty-fifth Lancers."
-
-"A crack regiment, was it not?" queried Mrs. Spencer. "My dear father
-was in the Twenty-fourth."
-
-She was keeping it up bravely, he thought. He remembered Fairfax's
-story. The woman who had said good-bye to a fugitive card-sharper at
-Charing Cross Station, and kissed him affectionately, was hardly likely
-to be the daughter of an officer in the Twenty-fourth Lancers. He
-was not sure of very much, but of this one incident he was absolutely
-positive: Fairfax was a man who was always certain of his facts.
-
-"I can't remember much about the early years; I expect I went through
-the usual trials and troubles of a young subaltern, was subjected to
-a good deal of ragging. Well, somehow, promotion came: I was Captain
-at quite a youthful age. The one thing that sticks in my mind, in those
-pre-war days, is the fact that we were quartered at Blankfield."
-
-Mrs. Spencer lifted calm, inquiring eyes. "At Blankfield! And where is
-that?"
-
-"You don't mean to say you haven't heard of Blankfield?"
-
-Mrs. Spencer shook her dark head. "No; I dare say it shows great
-ignorance, but I was never good at geography. I was brought up so
-quietly; I have never travelled. I know next to nothing of my own
-country, and nothing of any other."
-
-She uttered these remarks with a disarming and appealing smile, as if
-asking pardon from a man of the world for having led such an uneventful
-and sequestered life--she, as he thought sardonically, the mysterious
-cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange, the affectionate friend of the card-sharper
-Tommie Esmond.
-
-"Blankfield is rather a well-known town in Yorkshire; it is also a
-garrison town. As I said, it was my lot to be quartered there."
-
-"Was it a nice place?" queried Mrs. Spencer with an air of polite
-interest.
-
-"In a way, yes; we had a good time. But my recollections of it
-are distinctly unpleasant. For I had the misfortune to assist at a
-tragedy--nay, more, to play a part in it--which has left an ineffaceable
-record upon my memory." Stella Spencer leaned forward. There was no
-momentary change of expression upon the clear-cut, charming face; her
-eyes met his own with a calm, steady gaze. But he thought--and after all
-that might be fancy--he detected a restless movement of her hands.
-
-"I shall like to hear about that tragedy, if it is not too painful for
-you to recall it," she said softly. If she were really what he
-believed her to be, she was playing the rôle of sympathetic listener to
-perfection.
-
-"I had a young chum of the name of Pomfret, a mere boy, impulsive,
-high-spirited, generous, unsuspicious, little versed in the ways of
-the world, absolutely unversed in the ways of women. I had promised
-his family to look after him. Looking back at this distance of years,
-I realise how badly I fulfilled my trust; how, in a sense, I was
-unwittingly the cause of the tragedy that befell him. I wonder if you
-ever came across my friend, Jack Pomfret."
-
-"Never; but, of course, I have met so few people. And you know the
-truth, as well as everybody else, I was not brought up in my husband's
-world, in your world and that of the Southleighs. I could never claim
-to be more than respectable middle-class. I take it, your friend was a
-member of some old family."
-
-The voice was steady, but he thought he noticed an increased
-restlessness in the movements of the hands. And the admission that she
-was a member of the respectable middle-class struck him as conveying a
-false note intentionally. If what she alleged was true, that her father
-had been an officer in the Twenty-fourth Lancers, she was a grade higher
-than the respectable middle-class. Clever as she was, she had made a
-false step there.
-
-"You want to hear the history of that tragedy, of the terrible
-circumstances which cut short the life of my poor young friend. Well, it
-is hardly necessary to say that a woman was the cause. Women, I suppose,
-have been at the bottom of most of the tragedies that have happened to
-men ever since the days of Eve."
-
-"I know that is the general opinion, but I have always been very
-doubtful as to whether it is a true one."
-
-She spoke lightly, but it seemed to him her tone was not quite so
-assured as it had been a moment ago. Anyway, she was evidently intensely
-interested in the forthcoming narrative.
-
-"At Blankfield I happened to make the acquaintance of a very charming
-young woman, who was not received in the Society of the place, for the
-reason that nothing was known about her. The acquaintance was made in
-the most unconventional fashion. She asked me to call upon her and her
-brother. I told all this to Pomfret, who knew the girl by sight, and
-he asked me to take him along with me. He had met her very often in the
-High Street, and was immensely attracted by her appearance."
-
-"And were you attracted, too, by this formidable young lady, Major
-Murchison?" interrupted Stella.
-
-"In a way. But, honestly, more curious than attracted. Well, to cut my
-story as short as I can, Pomfret soon arrived at an understanding with
-the young woman, to a great extent without my knowledge. They were
-married secretly; there were family reasons why he could not marry her
-openly."
-
-"But this--but this"--was she speaking a little nervously, or was it
-only his fancy?--"was quite romantic and charming. No doubt they were
-deeply in love with each other. Surely there was no tragedy to follow
-such a delightful wooing?"
-
-"But there was. This innocent-faced, charming girl was an adventuress
-of the first water. She was the accomplice of her criminal brother, if
-brother he was. A day or two after the wedding, Pomfret and I went
-to dine with this wretched pair. Before we sat down to dinner, two
-detectives entered the room and arrested the so-called brother on a
-charge of forgery."
-
-Mrs. Spencer shuddered. "How horrible, how appalling! And what happened
-to the girl? was she arrested, too?"
-
-"No; she fainted, and I dragged my friend away. At the time I did not
-know he had married her. When I got him back to the barracks, he told me
-his miserable story. That same night, or some time in the next morning,
-he shot himself. It was perhaps a cowardly way in which to avoid the
-consequences of his folly, but then he was always rash and impulsive."
-
-Mrs. Spencer spoke, and there was a far-away look in her eyes. "Your
-poor friend! No wonder that memory haunts you. And yet, he was not very
-wise. This poor adventuress might have been easy to deal with; she
-might not have troubled him any further if he had made her some small
-allowance; would, so to speak, have slunk out of his life. And she might
-have been innocent herself, unable to break away from this wretched
-criminal of a brother."
-
-"You are very charitable, Mrs. Spencer," said Hugh coldly. "But I fear
-I cannot agree with you. If the girl had been naturally and innately
-honest, she would rather have swept a crossing than have lived upon the
-gains of that creature--brother, or lover, or whatever he was."
-
-Stella spoke with dignity. "You are, I see, very much moved, Major
-Murchison, and you can judge better than I. I cannot pretend
-to understand the mentality of adventuresses and their criminal
-associates," she added with a light laugh, "but I should say that
-sweeping a crossing is a most uncongenial occupation, especially in the
-cold weather."
-
-"In other words, if you had been in her place, you would have preferred
-to live on the earnings of a rogue?" queried Hugh, perhaps a little too
-warmly. As soon as he spoke, he regretted his words. He had given her an
-advantage, of which she was not slow to avail herself.
-
-She drew herself up proudly. "Major Murchison, are you not saying a
-little too much in presuming to place me on the level of the adventuress
-you have spoken of? I think it will be more consistent with my
-self-respect to leave your question unanswered."
-
-And then suddenly her proud mood vanished, and a softer one took its
-place. Her voice trembled as she spoke; there was a suspicious moisture
-in her eyes.
-
-"I see that I was very wrong when I suffered Guy to persuade me to marry
-him. I have alienated him from his friends and family, and, alas! I have
-none of my own to bring him in exchange. His uncle loathes me; Lady Nina
-is polite and tolerates me. And you--you, his old friend, who have known
-him from boyhood--you dislike me also. But--" and here her voice swelled
-into a proud note--"my husband loves and trusts me. While he does that,
-Major Murchison, I can snap my fingers at the rest of the world."
-
-Murchison bowed respectfully; he felt he had got to recover a good deal
-of lost ground. So far the woman had the advantage, but he did not fail
-to notice the vulgarity of the last phrase, "snap my fingers."
-
-"I am very sorry if I have offended you, Mrs. Spencer, by my indiscreet
-remarks. If you are secure in Guy's love, as I am sure you are, you have
-a very happy possession."
-
-She sank back on the sofa, and in a second recovered the composure which
-had been momentarily disturbed.
-
-"Forgive me if I have spoken a little warmly," she said, "but I could
-not overlook what you said just now."
-
-And then Hugh shot at her his last bolt. "I have not yet told you the
-name of the girl who drove my poor young friend Pomfret to his death."
-
-"Tell it me, if you please, but I shall be no more likely to know it
-than the name of your friend, Mr. Pomfret. As I told you, I am a member
-of the respectable middle-class; I cannot boast that I am acquainted
-with the aristocracy, except through my husband."
-
-"And yet your father, you told me just now, was an officer in the
-Twenty-fourth Lancers. Those officers were all recruited from the
-aristocracy, or at worst the upper middle-class."
-
-"Oh, you are trying to cross-examine me and trap me," she cried
-bitterly.
-
-But Hugh was inexorable. "The name of that woman was Norah Burton; her
-accomplice, her brother as she called him, was George Burton; he had
-other aliases," he thundered.
-
-He had shot his last bolt, but Stella was not shaken. She rose up,
-quivering a little. He noticed that, but it might be due to the
-agitation of wronged innocence.
-
-"The name conveys nothing to me. Your attitude during these few minutes
-has been very strange. You have insinuated that I am an adventuress on
-the same level with your Miss Norah something. Well, so far, poor dear
-Guy has not shot himself, and I will take good care he doesn't."
-
-"You have much to gain by his living, if you love him--the title and
-everything. I have no doubt he has made his will. You would gain a good
-deal by his death. I cannot say, at the moment, which alternative would
-suit you better."
-
-"You are intolerable, you are insulting. If I tell my husband this when
-he comes down, he will kick you out of the house."
-
-"But I don't think you will tell your husband," retorted Hugh coolly.
-
-"And why not? My word will outweigh yours. I have only to tell him that
-you brand me as an adventuress, of the same class as this Miss Nora
-Burton, and you will see what he will say."
-
-"But you will not tell him," repeated Hugh. "Mrs. Spencer, I did not
-think we should go so far as we have done. But I will put my cards
-on the table at once, and I do so from certain indications in your
-demeanour to-night. I will not say all I have in my mind; I am going to
-collect further evidence first. But I will say this: you are not what
-you seem." He had touched her now. Her calm had gone, her breast was
-heaving, her hands were moving more restlessly.
-
-"Put your cards on the table and have done. I was Stella Keane when I
-married my husband. I defy you to disprove that."
-
-"At present, no. You are the same Stella Keane who saw Tommie Esmond,
-a discovered card-sharper, off at the Charing Cross Station, and kissed
-him an affectionate farewell. If you were on such intimate terms with
-that man, you are no fit wife for my friend Guy Spencer."
-
-He had touched her at last. "How did you find that out?" she gasped, and
-her face for a second went livid. She was surprised beyond the point of
-denial.
-
-And at that moment the door opened and Guy Spencer entered. She
-recovered herself immediately; went up to her husband and laid a
-caressing hand on his shoulder.
-
-"A perfect tie, dearest; it was worth the time. Your friend, Major
-Murchison, has been distressing me with a terrible story of some tragedy
-that happened when he was quartered at Blankfield."
-
-Guy Spencer smiled cheerfully. "Dear old Hugh is good at stories. He
-must tell it me after dinner."
-
-As she looked up into her husband's face, Hugh noticed the tender light
-in her eyes. Lady Nina had said that if she was not devotedly in love
-with Guy, she must be the most consummate actress off the stage. Loving
-wife or consummate actress, which was she?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-|When Hugh reflected over that interview in the drawing-room before
-dinner, he came to the conclusion that he had not played his cards very
-well, that he had been a little too precipitate. Whether she was Norah
-Burton or not, she was a very clever young woman, and he had just put
-her on her guard by that rather indiscreet allusion to Tommy Esmond. If
-he had no further evidence to go on than that incident, she would give
-her husband a plausible explanation of it. And Hugh believed his old
-friend Guy was still deeply in love enough with his wife to believe
-anything she told him.
-
-He could imagine her telling that convincing story to Guy, probably with
-her arms round his neck, and her pretty eyes looking up to his with the
-love-light in them. Esmond had been a kind friend to her, had done her
-many a good turn. Much as she deplored his baseness, she could not bear
-the thought of his slinking out of the country, a branded fugitive,
-without a forgiving hand stretched out to him.
-
-Backwards and forwards he revolved the matter in his mind, till he came
-to the conclusion that the problem was one he could not solve himself.
-And then he suddenly thought of his old acquaintance, Davidson of
-Scotland Yard, the tall man of military aspect who had arrested George
-Burton on that memorable night at Rosemount.
-
-He went round to Scotland Yard, presented his card, and inquired for Mr.
-Davidson. His old acquaintance was dead; a man named Bryant had taken
-his place. Would Major Murchison care to see him?
-
-In a few seconds Hugh was ushered into Bryant's room. To his surprise
-and relief Bryant was the man who had accompanied Davidson to
-Blankfield. It was pretty certain he would recall to the minutest detail
-the circumstances of that visit.
-
-"Good-day, Mr. Bryant. You know my name by my card, of course, but I am
-not so sure you remember anything of the time and place where we last
-met."
-
-But the detective was able to reassure him on this point.
-
-"In our profession, sir, we remember everything and everybody, and we
-never forget a face. It is some years ago, it is true, but I recall
-the incidents of our meeting as if they had happened yesterday. Poor
-Davidson and I came down to collar that slim rascal George Burton,
-who, by the way, got off with a light sentence. Davidson saw you in the
-afternoon and gave you the option of staying away. You talked it over,
-and came to the conclusion that, for certain reasons, you would rather
-be in at the finish. Those reasons were connected with your young friend
-Mr. Pomfret, who was infatuated with the young woman."
-
-"You remember everything as well as I do, Mr. Bryant. I must
-congratulate you on your marvellous memory, for I suppose this is only
-one out of hundreds of cases."
-
-Mr. Bryant smiled, well pleased at this tribute to his capacity.
-
-"We cultivate our small gifts, sir, in this direction. Well, we took the
-slim George. The girl fainted. You dragged Mr. Pomfret out of the house,
-and he shot himself in the small hours of the morning. It came out that
-he had married the young woman a day or two before, and could not face
-the exposure." Hugh paid a second tribute to the detective's marvellous
-memory. "And now, Mr. Bryant, have you any knowledge of what has
-become of them? People like that are never quite submerged: some day or
-another, like the scum they are, they will be found floating on the top
-again."
-
-Bryant shook his head. "No, sir, I cannot say I have. They have not
-come under our observation again. Probably they are abroad under assumed
-names, engaged in rascally business, of course, but doing it very much
-_sub rosa_."
-
-"Mind you, at present I have very little to go on," said Hugh. "I
-may have been deceived by a chance resemblance. But I have a strong
-intuition I am on their track."
-
-Bryant's attitude became alert at once. "You say you have no evidence.
-well, tell me your suspicions, and I will tell you what weight I attach
-to them."
-
-"First of all, before I do that, let me know if you would recognise
-Norah Burton and George Burton again, in spite of the passage of years.
-Norah had fair hair; the one I am on the track of has dark hair. The man
-I have not seen; this time he is a cousin, not a brother."
-
-"Ah!" Mr. Bryant drew a deep breath. "If they are the people you think,
-sir, and I once saw them, no disguises would take me in. Now tell me all
-you know."
-
-Thus exhorted, Murchison launched into a copious narrative. He explained
-that on the night of the dinner with the Southleighs at Carlton House
-Terrace, he had met for the first time the wife of his old friend Guy
-Spencer, that he had detected in her an extraordinary likeness to Norah
-Burton. The marriage had been hastily contracted; next to nothing was
-known about the young woman's antecedents, apart from the very vague
-details with which she furnished them.
-
-In the background was a cousin, by all accounts a very common fellow,
-who had never visited the house since the marriage. Then there was the
-episode of Tommy Esmond being found cheating at cards at the L'Estrange
-flat, and Stella Keane's farewell meeting with him at Charing Cross
-Station.
-
-Mr. Bryant made copious notes. When the narrative was finished he made
-his comments.
-
-"There are, of course, coincidences that may mean nothing or a great
-deal, Major Murchison. However, assuming that the lady in question is
-not our old friend Norah Burton, she is evidently not a very estimable
-member of society. She was in a shady set at Mrs. L'Estrange's, and
-Tommy Esmond must have been a pretty close pal."
-
-"Well, I want you to take this case on for me, and find out what you
-can."
-
-But Bryant shook his head. "Sorry, sir, but in my position I can't take
-on private business. It is not a public matter, you see, unless you can
-accuse them of anything." Hugh's face fell. "I forgot that. What am I to
-do? Can you recommend me to a private detective?"
-
-"Half a dozen, sir, all keen fellows. But you can't stir very much
-without me, in the first instance. You want me to identify them. Well,
-I will go so far as that, in memory of the time when we were together
-in the original job. Mrs. Spencer, you say, lives in Eaton Place. I will
-keep a watch on that house till I see her coming out or going in. If I
-agree that she was Norah Burton, we have got the first step. Now, what
-do you know about this cousin, Dutton?"
-
-"Only that he is an outside stockbroker, with an office, or offices, in
-the City."
-
-"Good." Mr. Bryant opened a telephone book and rapidly turned over
-the pages. "Here he is, right enough--George Dutton--George, mark
-you--share- and stock-broker, Bartholomew Court. Well, sir, to oblige
-you, I will run down to the City and get a peep at Mr. George Dutton.
-If my recollection agrees with yours, I will put you on to one of my
-friends, and you can have the precious pair watched. If they are the
-persons you think they are, you may depend upon it they won't keep long
-apart; they will make opportunities of meeting each other. Anyway,
-they must be pretty thick together, or he would not put up with being
-excluded from the house."
-
-Hugh left with a great sense of relief. He felt that the matter was
-in very capable hands. If Bryant told him that he was following a
-will-o'-the-wisp, then the whole matter could drop. The fact of Mrs.
-Spencer's relations with Tommy Esmond were hardly important enough to
-justify him in disturbing his friend's domestic felicity.
-
-At the end of three days the detective rang him up. The message was
-brief: "Come and see me."
-
-Bryant received him in his room. "Well, Major Murchison, your suspicions
-are quite correct. I have been very close to the interesting pair. Mrs.
-Spencer has camouflaged herself very well, but beyond doubt she is Norah
-Burton. Our gaol-bird, George Burton, has been less particular. He
-has not disguised himself at all; the few years have made little or no
-impression on him. He has hid himself in the City, trusting that nobody
-he ever knew would come across him."
-
-"Then I was right, after all, Mr. Bryant. And now what would you advise
-me to do? This woman is the worst type of adventuress card-sharper all
-through--at least a confederate, in Paris with Burton, in London with
-Tommy Esmond. To be fair, we cannot say how much or how little she knew
-of his forgery business."
-
-"Your idea is to turn her out of her husband's house, with or without
-scandal?" queried the detective.
-
-"Without scandal, if possible. I would prefer that. I suppose you would
-back me up by saying that you have recognised her and this scoundrel who
-was yesterday her brother and is to-day her cousin?"
-
-"If you push me to it, I will, Major Murchison, for the sake of our old
-acquaintance. But, for reasons which I stated last time we met, I don't
-want to mix myself up in a purely private affair. The woman caught hold
-of a fool in your friend Pomfret; she has caught hold of another equally
-silly fool in your friend Mr. Spencer. Please forgive my blunt language,
-but it is so, is it not?"
-
-"You are quite right, Bryant," groaned poor Hugh. "I seem fated to be
-mixed up in these matters. At the present moment I have a little stunt
-on, in which I don't require any help. A younger brother of mine has got
-mixed up with a young harpy in the chorus of a third-rate theatre. The
-young fool has written compromising letters to her. I am trying to buy
-these letters. I need hardly tell you she is asking a high price. I
-can't see her at my own place, for fear of my brother popping in. I have
-taken rooms in a suburb where I see her to carry on the bargaining."
-
-Mr. Bryant raised his hands. "Well, sir, when a woman once begins to
-twist a man round her little finger there is no knowing to what length
-he will go."
-
-"Profoundly true, Mr. Bryant. Well, what do you advise me to do?"
-
-"For the moment, nothing. Get a little more evidence. When I watched
-this couple, I took my old friend Parkinson with me. He knows them now.
-Get him to watch them. He will tell you where they meet, and how often.
-Here is his card. He will wait on you at your convenience."
-
-"I quite see," said Hugh, as he took the proffered card. "If I can prove
-that they are meeting on the sly it will strengthen my hands, eh?"
-
-"That is the idea. Of course, at the moment, I don't know which you are
-going to tackle first, the husband or the wife."
-
-"I can't say myself, my mind is in such a whirl. But I feel I must
-avenge poor Jack Pomfret's death."
-
-Mr. Bryant rose. "You will excuse me, Major Murchison, but I have a very
-busy day. Make use of Parkinson; he is as keen as mustard. And if it
-comes to this, that you want me for purposes of identification, I am at
-your disposal, in Eaton Place or elsewhere."
-
-Murchison left, but not before he had pressed a substantial cheque into
-Bryant's somewhat reluctant hand.
-
-The next day he interviewed Parkinson, a lean, ascetic-looking man of
-the true sleuth-hound breed. He took his instructions.
-
-"Give me a fortnight, if you please, sir; a week is hardly long enough.
-I'll warrant, from what our friend Bryant has hinted to me, I will have
-something to report."
-
-And he had. At the end of the fortnight he appeared. He produced a small
-pocket-book.
-
-"I'm glad you didn't stipulate for only a week, sir; it was rather
-a blank one--only one meeting. I expect the lady couldn't get away
-comfortably. But the week after I was rewarded. Three meetings in that
-second week."
-
-"Ah! where do they meet?"
-
-"At quite humble little restaurants and queer places in the City. I
-fancy the bucket-shop business is not very flourishing just now. For on
-the last two occasions when I followed them in, and sat at a table
-where I could observe them, I saw Mrs. Spencer slip an envelope into his
-hand."
-
-"Good Heavens!" cried Murchison in a tone of disgust. "She is keeping
-this criminal with her husband's money."
-
-Mr. Parkinson shrugged his shoulders. "A common enough case, sir, if you
-had seen as much of life as I have."
-
-Hugh shuddered. The woman was depraved to the core. She could leave her
-house in Eaton Place, where she had been installed by her devoted and
-trustful husband, and journey down to some obscure eating-house in the
-City to meet this criminal who lived upon her bounty.
-
-Well, the chain of evidence was complete. Bryant would swear to the
-identification, and Parkinson would swear that Mrs. Guy Spencer, once
-Norah Burton, had met George Burton clandestinely four times in a
-fortnight, and had supplied him with money.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-|It was in his blackest and most grim mood that Hugh Murchison walked
-to Eaton Place, for the purpose of paying an afternoon call upon Mrs.
-Spencer. He had not been near her since the night of the dinner, had
-only left cards. And, very fortunately, he had not come across Guy in
-the interval.
-
-On that particular night he had reproached himself with indiscretion.
-He had availed himself of Fairfax's information to tax her with meeting
-Tommie Esmond at Charing Cross Station on the morning of his flight to
-the Continent.
-
-And at the moment that he had made that dramatic announcement, the
-drawing-room door had opened to admit the unsuspecting husband. Hugh had
-left shortly after dinner, on the plea of another engagement. Had Mrs.
-Spencer tried to take the wind out of his sails by volunteering some
-plausible explanation about her meeting with Esmond? She was a clever
-young woman; she might try to forestall him. On the other hand, she
-might sit tight till he forced her hand. Anyway, he was going to force
-it to-day, armed with the new evidence that had been furnished to him.
-
-Mrs. Spencer was not looking well. Her eyes had lost their brightness,
-her once charming smile was forced and mechanical.
-
-She rose as he was announced, and advanced to him with outstretched
-hands, with an exaggerated air of cordiality.
-
-"I thought you had forgotten us." She seated herself on the Chesterfield
-and motioned him to sit beside her. "Major Murchison, I fear I was a
-little rude to you the other night, you remember, just before Guy came
-in." She clasped her hands nervously together. "I do trust we are going
-to be friends."
-
-Hugh looked at her grimly. He had no compassion for this shameless
-adventuress who had driven the poor foolish Pomfret to his grave, who
-had ensnared Guy Spencer, a man of stronger fibre, but equally powerless
-in the hands of an unscrupulous woman.
-
-"Mrs. Spencer--to call you by one of the many names by which you are
-known--we were not friends the last time I was at this house. To-day we
-are bitter enemies."
-
-"What do you mean?" she faltered. "You are speaking in riddles. Why
-should you, the old friend of my husband, be the bitter enemy of his
-innocent wife?"
-
-"His innocent wife!" repeated Hugh sternly. "Dare you look me in the
-face and say that my name, even if you fail to recognise me after these
-years, does not recall to you certain tragic episodes at Blankfield?"
-
-"I know nothing of Blankfield." The voice was low but very unsteady.
-"You put that question to me the other night in a roundabout sort of
-way. My answer is the same--I know nothing of Blankfield."
-
-There was a long pause. Hugh continued to look at her with his steady
-and disconcerting gaze. Suddenly she rose, and paced restlessly up and
-down the long drawing-room.
-
-"Major Murchison, put your cards on the table. You have come into this
-house, an old friend of my husband's; I have done my best to make you
-welcome. But you have some spite against me. Of what do you accuse me?"
-
-"I will put my cards on the table," answered Hugh in his inflexible
-voice. "On the night I met you at Carlton House Terrace I had my
-suspicions; no two women could be so exactly alike. Since that night
-I have been picking up information here and there. I have now got a
-complete chain of evidence."
-
-"Evidence of what?" she gasped, still pursuing her restless walk up and
-down the room. "Of my having met Tommie Esmond at Charing Cross Station?
-would you like to hear the true history of that?"
-
-"I shall be pleased to hear any explanation you like to offer, with the
-reservation that I must please myself as to whether I accept it or not."
-
-"You are very hard, Major Murchison. As you are not prepared to believe
-me, perhaps it would be better if I did not embark on this history. But
-Tommie Esmond is really my uncle, my mother's brother. When I was in
-low water he was very kind to me. I could not turn my back on him in
-his distress." She spoke with sudden passion. "Of course, you, with your
-pharisaical way of looking at things, would say I should have forgotten
-all his previous kindness."
-
-"The Tommie Esmond affair is, comparatively, a trivial one, Mrs.
-Spencer. I am coming in a moment to graver issues. You still say that
-the name of Murchison conveys nothing to you. Oh, think well before you
-answer! Remember, I have told you I have overwhelming evidence. And,
-believe me, the task I have set out upon is far from a welcome one."
-
-"I still say that the name of Murchison conveys nothing to me." She
-spoke with a certain air of assurance, but he could see that she was
-quivering all over.
-
-"Carry your memory back to that night at Blankfield when your so-called
-brother, George Burton, was arrested on a charge of forgery. You had
-been his decoy and accomplice in a gambling saloon in Paris. You had
-inveigled my poor friend, Jack Pomfret, into a clandestine marriage a
-few days before. Jack, unable to survive his folly and disgrace, blew
-his brains out. If not in the eyes of the law, you were, morally, a
-murderess."
-
-"You are mad, raving mad!" she cried, but her voice seemed strangled as
-she made the bold denial.
-
-"Not mad, Mrs. Spencer, but very sane, as I will show you in a few
-seconds. As I told you, I recognised you that night at the South-leigh
-dinner-party, in spite of the pains you had taken to camouflage
-yourself. But I waited for corroborative evidence. The detective who
-arrested your so-called brother, George Burton, has seen you and is
-prepared to swear to your identity as Norah Burton."
-
-Then suddenly she gave way, fell on her knees before him, and stretched
-out appealing hands.
-
-"Oh, you are very clever; I see you have found it all out. But you will
-be merciful, you will not drive an unhappy woman to despair, just when
-she has got into safe harbour. Will you be kind enough to listen to my
-miserable history?"
-
-"I will listen to anything you have got to say."
-
-"My childhood and girlhood were most wretched and unhappy. At a time
-when most girls are tasting the sweets and joys of life, I had to live
-by my wits. I fell under the influence of a good-natured, but very
-wicked man."
-
-"In other words, George Burton?" queried Hugh.
-
-"In other words, George Burton," she repeated in the low, strangled
-voice that did not move Hugh very much. "I was starving when he met me
-and took me up. He was genuinely sorry for me. Mind you, I knew nothing
-of his nefarious schemes. He hid those very carefully away from me."
-
-"But you were his decoy, if not his confederate, in the gambling saloon
-in Paris?"
-
-"His decoy, perhaps, unconsciously, but never his confederate."
-
-"And when did Tommie Esmond appear on the scene?" queried Hugh.
-
-"Oh, much later. George got into low water and had not enough for
-himself. I then hunted up my uncle, who received me with open arms."
-
-Hugh was developing the instincts of a crossexaminer. "And Tommie
-Esmond, I suppose, introduced you to the card-sharping crew at the
-Elsinore flat, and you were launched as the cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange,
-who presided over this delectable establishment?"
-
-"I was a distant cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange on my dear mother's side,"
-was the answer.
-
-She was lying terribly, he felt assured. But he had a card or two up his
-sleeve yet. Still, it was wise to see how far she would go.
-
-"And when did you part with the so-called brother, George Burton?"
-
-"Oh, very shortly after he came out of prison. I had one interview with
-him; I could not do less after his kindness to me. And in the meantime I
-had hunted up poor old Tommie Esmond."
-
-"And what did you do after that night at Blankfield? I think you cleared
-out the next day. I heard you had paid everything up."
-
-"Thank Heaven, yes. There was just a little money left. My life after
-that was a nightmare. Amongst other humiliations, I was a waitress in
-a tea-shop." A smile of vanity broke over the charming face. "The wages
-were very small, but I got a lot of tips." Perhaps in this particular
-instance she was not lying, if it was true that she had been in a
-tea-shop at all.
-
-There was a little pause, and then Murchison spoke in his stern,
-inflexible voice:
-
-"And how long is it since you saw George Burton?"
-
-She had answered the question before, but he was hoping to entrap her
-into some unguarded admission. He could see that she was considerably
-thrown oft her balance, clever and ready as she was, by the extent of
-his knowledge.
-
-"I told you just now, soon after he came out of prison."
-
-And then Hugh rose in his wrath. And then she, seeing in his face that
-he had another and a stronger card to play, got up from her kneeling
-position and watched him with an agonised countenance.
-
-"I am sorry to use such harsh words to a woman, even such a woman as you
-are, Mrs. Spencer. But when you say that you are lying miserably, and
-you know it as well as I do." Her face went livid. She assumed a tone of
-indignation, but her voice died away in a sob. "How dare you say that?"
-
-"I am not the sort of man to make a statement unless I can prove it up
-to the hilt. Your so-called cousin, George Dutton, keeps a bucket-shop
-in the City; from certain evidence in my possession, I should say it was
-not a very paying business."
-
-Stella did not attempt to reply to this last shot, but she recognised
-that he had gone about the business very thoroughly.
-
-"George Dutton, the bucket-shop keeper, is George Burton, the forger,
-come to life again, still, I take it, on the same criminal tack, perhaps
-in a lesser degree. Do you admit," he cried vehemently, "that George
-Burton and George Dutton are one and the same?"
-
-"Yes, since you seem to have proof, I admit it," was the somewhat sullen
-answer.
-
-"That is as well; it clears the ground, up to a certain point. You say
-you parted from Burton soon after his release from prison, and have not
-seen him since. When was that--how long ago? You met him frequently as
-George Dutton at Elsinore Gardens."
-
-The courage of despair seemed to come to her, and she ceased to tremble.
-"I will answer no more questions. Tell me what you allege and I will
-admit or deny. Of course, you have employed a detective; you have had me
-watched."
-
-"Of course. I should not presume to cope single-handed with a clever
-woman like yourself. You have met George Dutton, alias George Burton,
-four times within the last fortnight at obscure restaurants in the City,
-and there is a strong presumption that you were handing to him envelopes
-containing money."
-
-She seemed now to recognise that the game was up. Her self-possession
-returned to her. She sat down, and motioned to him to seat himself.
-
-"You are much too clever for me, Major Murchison. You have handled the
-matter very well, so well that you have turned your vague suspicions
-into absolute certainty. Well, what action are you going to take? As a
-matter of course, you intend to turn me out of my husband's house?"
-
-"If not at the moment, very speedily. You will admit, I think, with
-your clever brain, that you should not remain under the roof of such an
-honourable English, gentleman as he is a day longer than necessary."
-
-"I will admit it, from your point of view, if you like. Oh, believe me,
-I can see your side," replied this remarkable young woman. "But you will
-forgive me, Major Murchison, if I say that, from my point of view, I
-would have preferred that you had never been born. Guy is very happy; he
-believes in me and trusts me. It will be a great blow to him as to me."
-
-"I know. I wish it were in my power to spare him this misery. But, in
-common honesty, I cannot."
-
-"And have you thought of what is to become of me when I am turned out of
-my husband's house?" she inquired in a composed voice. Her adroit mind
-had evidently adapted itself to the altered circumstances, and was now
-busied in turning them, as far as possible, to her own advantage.
-
-"You have George Dutton to fall back upon, also Tommie Esmond," was
-Murchison's retort.
-
-She snapped her fingers in a fashion that was almost vulgar, and she was
-so free from vulgar actions.
-
-"George is thankful that I can, from time to time, fling him a ten-pound
-note; his luck has deserted him. Tommie Esmond, I believe, saved a bit
-out of the wreck, but he has not more than enough to keep body and soul
-together."
-
-"Guy is not a man to behave ungenerously, however deeply he has been
-wronged," said Hugh, after he had reflected a few moments. He added more
-hesitatingly, "And if Guy should take an obdurate attitude, it is
-possible I might come to your assistance. I have hunted you down, but I
-do not want to drive you into the gutter."
-
-"But a man must support his wife, even if her past has not been quite so
-respectable as it might have been," she cried defiantly.
-
-Hugh directed upon her a searching look. "Mrs. Spencer, it is in my mind
-that you may not be Guy's wife after all. If I probed a little deeper,
-I might get at your real relations with this George Dutton, or rather
-Burton."
-
-"Oh, this time you are really pursuing a will-o'-the-wisp, I assure
-you. George has never been anything to me but brother or cousin, as the
-occasion demanded."
-
-She paused a second, and there was a terrified look in her eyes as she
-added, "But even if your suspicions were correct, which they are not,
-you would not go back from your own promise. If Guy proved obdurate, you
-would not drive me to the gutter. You promised me that."
-
-"I shall keep my promise, Mrs. Spencer, and I will give it you in
-writing, if you wish."
-
-"It would be as well. And you will want something from me in writing
-also, I expect," she concluded shrewdly.
-
-"Certainly I shall," said Hugh steadily. "I shall draw up a full
-confession for you to sign, to prevent you from ever troubling your
-husband again--if, as I suggested just now, he is your husband."
-
-Mrs. Spencer rose. It seemed that there was a sense of relief in the
-fact that the interview was ending so amicably.
-
-"I would have preferred to remain as I am, but, on the whole, the life
-doesn't suit me, luxurious as it is. I am very fond of Guy really, he
-has been so good to me, but I have alienated him from his friends. And
-I have to sit here hour after hour by myself, with only my thoughts for
-company."
-
-"Let us say one week from now I will have that confession ready to
-sign."
-
-"And you will bring it here?" suggested Stella.
-
-"I think not. It will take some time to read through, and we might be
-interrupted," was Hugh's answer.
-
-"At your hotel, then, I suppose?" was the young woman's next suggestion.
-
-"The same objection applies."
-
-He scribbled down an address on a piece of paper. "Meet me there this
-day week at the hour I have appointed. Nobody will interrupt us, I will
-take care of that."
-
-And Mrs. Spencer lay awake half the night, working out a problem that
-had suggested itself to her in a flash.
-
-The next day she lunched with George Dutton in the City. The detective
-might be watching her, but did it matter? whatever happened at the end
-of the week, she had burned her boats.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-|Two months had elapsed since the meeting between Major Murchison and
-Stella Spencer, recorded in the last chapter.
-
-A handsome, well-set-up man of about thirty was travelling up from
-Manchester to London. The reason of his journey was his desire to
-visit his sister, Caroline Masters, who occupied a small flat in the
-neighbourhood of King's Cross.
-
-Up to a short time ago this handsome, well-set-up man had been leading a
-very quiet life in the busy city of Manchester. He was an electrician
-by trade, and a very clever one. He was civil, well-spoken, intelligent
-beyond his station, but he had not forgathered much with his
-fellow-workers, had kept himself very much to himself. And yet, strange
-to say, this self-isolation had not provoked suspicion or resentment on
-the part of his daily associates.
-
-Reginald Davis, for such was his name, had been unjustly suspected of
-murder, and the police had been hot on his track. Then had come the
-suicide in No. 10 Cathcart Square, and his sister, Caroline Masters, had
-identified the dead body as that of her brother.
-
-Caroline Masters had always been a plucky, resourceful girl, and devoted
-to him. The dead man, no doubt, bore some resemblance to himself,
-and she had taken advantage of the opportunity to swear to a false
-identification, and remove from him the sleepless vigilance of the
-police. This much she had conveyed to him in a guarded letter.
-
-Reginald Davis, the man falsely accused of murder, was dead in the eyes
-of the law: in a sense, he had nothing further to fear. But at the same
-time, caution must be observed. The few friends he had were in London;
-at any time he might run across one or more of them. So, taking another
-name, he had hidden himself in Manchester, and corresponded secretly
-with the one of the two sisters he could trust, Caroline Masters.
-
-And then, suddenly, the burden had been lifted from his soul. There was
-a small paragraph in the evening newspapers, afterwards reproduced in
-the morning ones, which told him that he need not skulk through the
-world any longer.
-
-A man lying under sentence of death for a brutal murder and without hope
-of reprieve, had confessed to the crime of which Davis had been falsely
-accused. In the paragraph, which was, of course, essentially the same
-in all the papers, were a few words of sympathy for the unfortunate
-Reginald Davis who had stolen into No. 10 Cathcart Square and committed
-suicide, under a sense of abject terror. The police had carefully
-investigated the statements of the condemned man, with the result that
-they found the late Reginald Davis absolutely innocent.
-
-The late Reginald Davis, very alive and well, knocked at the door of
-his sister's flat. She had been apprised of his coming, and greeted him
-affectionately. She sat him down before a well-cooked supper. He was
-hungry and ate heartily. She did not disturb him with much conversation
-till he had finished. Then she spoke.
-
-"Well, Reggie, that was a bit of luck indeed." She was, of course,
-alluding to the confession of the real murderer. "Now you are as free as
-air. You were always a bit of a bad egg, old boy, but never a criminal
-to that extent."
-
-"No, hang it all, I am not particular in a general way, but murder
-was not in my line," he answered briefly. "It was hard lines to get
-scot-free of the other things, and then to be suspected of that at the
-end."
-
-He looked at her admiringly. "By Jove! Carrie, you were always the
-cleverest of the lot of us. That was a brain-wave of yours, walking in
-and identifying me as the suicide." Mrs. Masters smiled appreciatively.
-"Yes, it came to me in a flash. I read the account in the papers. It
-struck me I might do something useful. I went up to the court with the
-tale of a missing brother. I saw the body; the poor creature might have
-been your twin. Of course, I swore it was you, and gave you a new lease
-of life." She added severely, "I hope you have taken advantage of what
-I did, and become a reformed character." Davis spoke very gravely. "Yes,
-Carrie, I swear to you I have. That shock was the making of me. I have
-lain very low, worked hard, and put by money."
-
-He pulled out an envelope from his breastpocket, and thrust it into her
-hand; it was full of one-pound notes.
-
-"Fifty of the best, old girl, for a little nest-egg. I have not
-forgotten my best pal, you see."
-
-The tears came into Mrs. Masters' eyes. He had been a bad egg, but he
-had a good heart at bottom.
-
-"That is very sweet of you, Reggie; it will come in very useful. And now
-to go back for a moment to Cathart Square. Who was the poor devil
-who killed himself there? He was as like you as two peas are like each
-other."
-
-"I think we have got to find that out," said Reginald Davis gravely.
-"Nor, reading the account in the papers, am I quite sure that it was a
-suicide."
-
-"But that was the verdict," interrupted the sister.
-
-"I know, but there are peculiar things about the case. Letters addressed
-to Reginald Davis were found on him; there was a letter signed Reginald
-Davis, addressed to the Coroner, announcing his intention to commit
-suicide. Those letters had been placed there by the person who murdered
-him, and that person who murdered him was somebody who knew me, unless
-it was the accidental taking of a common name."
-
-"But the razor was clutched in his hand, Reggie!"
-
-"Quite easy," replied Davis, who, if not a murderer himself, could
-easily project himself, apparently, into the mind of one. "We will
-assume, for the moment, it was a man. He cut the poor devil's throat,
-and then thrust the razor into his stiffening hand, to convey the idea
-of suicide."
-
-"It might be," agreed Mrs. Masters.
-
-"Well, Carrie, one thing I have fixed on, and it is one of the things
-for which I have come up. I go to Scotland Yard to-morrow, tell them
-straight I am Reginald Davis, without a stain upon my character, explain
-to them that you were misled by a close resemblance. We will have that
-body exhumed. I am firmly convinced it was a murder."
-
-"Let sleeping dogs lie, Reggie," advised Mrs. Masters, who had a horror
-of the law and its subtle ways. "Never mind who was the poor devil who
-was found there, whether he was murdered or committed suicide. It is no
-affair of yours."
-
-"It is an affair of mine in this way," replied Davis in a dogged tone.
-"The person who murdered the poor devil, as you call him, knew something
-about me, and took a liberty with my name."
-
-"It served you a good turn, Reggie, anyway."
-
-"I know; I admit that. But the murderer did not know he was doing me,
-thanks to you, a good turn when he killed the other fellow."
-
-Mrs. Masters thought deeply for a few moments. "Reggie, you have been a
-very bad egg, I am sure. I shall never guess a quarter of what you have
-been guilty of."
-
-He laid his hand affectionately on her arm. "Well for you, old girl, you
-can't. That is all past and done with. By the way, that letter found on
-the poor chap, announcing his intention to commit suicide, did they ask
-you to identify my handwriting? Of course, the others addressed to him
-didn't matter much. Anybody could have written them. But my letter was a
-forgery. Did they ask you to identify that particular letter?"
-
-"They did, Reggie, and my brain was in such a whirl that I could hardly
-read it. I said that I believed it was in your handwriting. It was
-certainly very like, although, as you can imagine, I looked at it
-through a sort of mist. Anyway, it was as like your handwriting as the
-dead man was like you." Davis ruminated for a few moments. "That letter
-was forged by somebody who knew me and could imitate my hand to a
-nicety. I am thinking of all the wrong'uns I knew in the old days. I
-think I can fix him."
-
-"Yes," said Mrs. Masters breathlessly. She was capable of great daring
-in the cause and the service of those she loved, but she was not
-habituated to the ways of hardened criminals.
-
-"A man I was a bit associated with in the old days; luckily he didn't
-drag me in far enough. He was an expert forger. We used to call him
-'George the Penman.'"
-
-Mrs. Masters shuddered. "Oh, you poor weak soul, you were so near it as
-that?"
-
-"Very near, Carrie. The shock of the false accusation of murder pulled
-me up straight. I saw where I was drifting, and made up my mind that
-the straight path was the surest." At the moment that Mr. Davis gave
-utterance to this honourable sentiment there was a ring at the bell.
-
-Mrs. Masters rose at once. "It is Iris. I dropped her a note to say you
-were coming. She will be so pleased to see you."
-
-There floated into the small sitting-room a very dainty and ethereal
-figure, Miss Iris Deane, a charming member of the chorus at the
-Frivolity Theatre.
-
-She flung her arms round the neck of her handsome brother. "Oh Reggie,
-dear, what a treat to see you! And all this dreadful thing is lifted
-from you."
-
-Iris was not his favourite sister. She was clever in a worldly way, and
-had made good. But she had not the sterling loyalty of Caroline.
-
-Davis gently checked her enthusiasm. "And how have you been getting on,
-Iris? Always floating on the top as usual?"
-
-Miss Iris showed her dimples. "Always floating on the top, as you
-say, dear old boy. A silly, soft chap fell in love with me; wrote most
-impassioned love-letters. Well, he was too soppy for me to care much
-about him, and when his rich brother came along, offering me a price for
-his love-letters, I can tell you I just jumped at the chance."
-
-"Did you get a good price?" queried her brother.
-
-"I stuck out for ten thousand," explained the capable Iris; "but this
-chap was a good bargainer, and I let them go at seven. It was better on
-the whole. If I had married Roddie, I should have been so fed-up in a
-month that I should have run away from him, and then Heaven knows where
-I might have ended."
-
-Davis looked at his sister approvingly. There was enough of the old Adam
-left in him to entertain a slight envy of his sister's chances. Seven
-thousand pounds, a little fortune in itself, was a good bit of work, a
-handsome reward for the display of her dimples.
-
-"Roddie who, dear? You might tell us his other name," queried Mrs.
-Masters, who perhaps was also smitten with a sense of envy.
-
-"That's telling," answered the sprightly Iris, who was not given to be
-too frank about her own affairs. "But if either of you two dear things
-want a little ready, apply to me. Of course, you will remember I have
-got to take care of myself, to make provision for my old age."
-
-Davis and Carrie exchanged glances. They knew the volatile Iris of old.
-As a child she had always been mean and grasping. Not much of the seven
-thousand would come their way, if they were on the verge of starvation.
-
-Carrie spoke in cold accents. "You are really too generous, Iris. But
-we shall not have to trespass upon your generosity. I have enough for my
-humble wants. And Reggie has been able to put by, so much so that he has
-been kind enough to make me a very handsome money present to-night."
-
-"Dear old Reggie," said the sweetly smiling Iris. "I am so glad you have
-made good."
-
-And then Davis spoke: "Thanks, in great part, to Carrie, who told that
-splendid lie about the suicide, or murder, at 10 Cathcart Square. You
-remember that, of course?"
-
-"Suicide, wasn't it?" said Iris, but her cheek had grown a little pale.
-
-"I don't think so. There was a forged letter purporting to be written by
-me. I am going to Scotland Yard to-morrow, stating frankly who I am,
-and urging them to exhume the body. We will find out who the man, buried
-under the name of Reginald Davis, really was."
-
-And then the agitation of his younger sister became extreme. She
-clutched convulsively at his arm.
-
-"Reggie, you will not do this. What does it matter to you who the man
-was? Go under some other name, and let sleeping dogs lie." Unconsciously
-she had used the same expression as Mrs. Masters, but from different
-motives.
-
-"I have been under a different name for a longer time than I care to
-remember," answered Davis doggedly. "I have a fancy to resume my own,
-and make a clean breast of it to the police. They have nothing else to
-charge me with."
-
-Iris fell on her knees, and the tears rained down her cheeks.
-
-"For my sake, Reggie, if not for your own."
-
-"And why for your sake? Tell us what you mean," demanded her brother
-sternly.
-
-And Iris spoke as clearly as she could speak amidst her strangled sobs.
-
-"If you try and unearth that mystery at Cathcart Square, I might be
-dragged in, and it might be very awkward for me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-|Davis directed a keen glance at his elder sister over the bowed head of
-Iris. The younger woman was by no means of an emotional nature. Light,
-frivolous and volatile, she had danced through life, and, on the whole,
-had had a good time. One could not picture her in a tragic mood.
-
-And yet, she was the personification of deep emotion now. She could
-hardly speak for those convulsive sobs, and in her frightened eyes
-there was a deep and haunting terror. At what point, and through what
-circumstances, had tragedy touched this little selfish, self-centred
-butterfly, gifted with a certain amount of cunning and sharpness, but
-utterly brainless.
-
-"What do you know of No. 10 Cathcart Square, except what you gleaned
-from the newspapers?" demanded her brother sternly. "How can you be
-implicated in the murder of the unknown man whom Carrie mistook for me?"
-
-"But Carrie did not mistake him for you," wailed Iris. "She told me
-afterwards that the idea suggested itself in a flash, and when she
-read the newspaper she was not sure whether it was you who had crept in
-there, according to the evidence, and made away with yourself, through
-fear of the police."
-
-"Leave Carrie out of it for the moment," said Davis. "Whatever she did
-was well thought out. Of course, we both know her object was to identify
-me, if possible, and put Scotland Yard off the scent. What we want to
-know is, how did you come to be acquainted with the house? what do you
-mean by saying that, if further investigations are made, you might be
-dragged in?"
-
-"I was there on four occasions: on the last a few days before the
-murder, or suicide, whatever it was."
-
-Davis gasped, and Carrie lifted her hands in horror. What did this
-confession mean? It was impossible that this slim, weak girl had herself
-been the murderess, could have killed a big, powerful man of the same
-build as the supposed Davis, with those slim, weak hands.
-
-She saw the horror in their faces, and hastened to reassure them. "Oh
-no, not that, I swear to you. I am no more a murderess than you were a
-murderer, Reggie. But if the whole thing is raked up, and the man whom
-I believe it to be, accurately identified this time, things might look
-very black for me."
-
-Davis lifted her from her kneeling position, and placed her in an
-easy-chair. "Calm yourself, and tell us the whole story of why and how
-you came to be in Cathcart Square at all."
-
-Iris waited a few moments till the convulsive sobbing ceased. She spoke
-with little occasional gasps, but it was very evident it was a relief to
-unbosom herself.
-
-"It is a very long story," she began tremulously.
-
-"If the telling of it lasts till midnight, we must have it," said her
-brother in an inflexible voice.
-
-And compelled by his resolute manner, the girl, whom they had always
-regarded as a frivolous butterfly, embarked upon her strange and
-thrilling narrative.
-
-"It all arose out of the sale of those letters I spoke to you about.
-Carrie just now asked me the name of the man who wrote them. Well, I
-didn't get further than Roddie, which doesn't carry you very far. If it
-had not been for your threat of going to Scotland Yard, I should have
-stopped at that. A still tongue makes a wise head, you know."
-
-They could quite believe that. In spite of her ceaseless chatter, Iris
-had always been very reticent about her own affairs. She had seen next
-to nothing of her brother for a few years, not very much of Carrie
-Masters. And, on these occasions, she had always avoided, in a marked
-manner, any allusion to her private affairs.
-
-"I told you of a soppy young chap who started to make love to me last
-year. I didn't care a snap for him, but he was very persistent, and at
-last wrote me most urgent letters imploring me to be his wife. His full
-name was Roderick Murchison, a member of the great brewing family; his
-father has been dead for some time, he died during the war, and Roddie
-came in for tons of money, although he was not the eldest son. I don't
-know if you have ever heard of him?"
-
-No, neither Davis nor Carrie had known of the existence of such a young
-man. They had a hazy idea that there was a big brewing firm of that
-name, that was all.
-
-"Well, as I say, I didn't care a snap for him, although he was awfully
-good and generous, overwhelmed me with, all kinds of lovely presents:
-rings, bracelets, fur coats, etc. In our life, you know, one accepts
-these things from the mugs who are gone on us without attaching very
-much importance to the fact."
-
-It was evident that Miss Iris had struck out her own line of life, and
-made a very good thing out of it.
-
-"Well, then, Roddie began to grow desperate, and declared he couldn't
-live without me. It was all so genuine that at last I began to think
-seriously of it. There were tons of money, and although I didn't cotton
-much to the sort of life I should have to lead as his wife, still there
-were worse things than being Mrs. Roderick Murchison, with the future
-well assured, and a handsome settlement."
-
-Davis and his elder sister exchanged wondering glances. So this
-butterfly little girl, whom they had always regarded as rather shallow
-and feather-brained, had had this wonderful chance of marrying a
-gentleman and a rich man.
-
-"It was difficult to bring myself up to the scratch, in spite of the
-advantages, for he was so soft and soppy that he irritated me in a
-thousand-and-one ways, and I knew in a very short time I should grow to
-hate and despise him. Then one night, after a very excellent champagne
-supper at the 'Excelsior,' he got me in a yielding mood, and I promised
-to marry him."
-
-Brother and sister could only marvel at the girl's extraordinary good
-fortune, reluctant as she seemed to avail herself of it.
-
-"He told me that before he went to bed that night he wrote to his family
-acquainting them with the news, anticipating fully their objections,
-but expressing his strong determination to brook no interference or
-remonstrance. You see he was his own master, nobody could take his money
-away from him, and he didn't care whether his relatives were offended or
-not."
-
-"And how did the family take it?" queried Davis.
-
-"I am coming to that," replied Iris. She was growing much calmer now. It
-was a relief to unburden her secret to an audience whom she could trust.
-For she was sure that neither her brother nor sister would ever allow
-her to put herself into real danger.
-
-"I am coming to that," she repeated. "A few days after he had written
-those letters, one to his widowed mother, one to his elder brother, who
-had inherited the bulk of the big fortune, the elder brother called upon
-me in my flat. He was a very handsome, well-set-up man, although he had
-been through a good deal in the war. He was very like you, Reggie."
-
-"Ah," ejaculated Mr. Davis. He looked at Carrie, keenly watching her
-sister, with a glance that suggested they would soon be coming to the
-real pith of this rambling confession.
-
-"He begged the favour of a short conversation. He was perfectly open and
-above-board. He told me straight he was Roddie's elder brother, and that
-his name was Hugh Murchison. He pointed out to me very kindly that
-his brother was an impetuous young ass--a judgment which I privately
-endorsed--that Roddie had been infatuated, in his short day, with quite
-a number of other girls, although, perhaps, not to the same extent
-as with me." Iris, getting back rapidly into her light mind, let her
-volatile and easily impressed nature peep out in her next words.
-
-"Oh, Hugh Murchison was a darling, so quiet, so sensible, and so strong.
-If he had been fool enough to ask me to marry him, I would not have
-given him up for seven thousand pounds."
-
-"But you were prepared to chuck Roddie for that?" suggested her brother
-quietly.
-
-"I think I let him go a bit too cheap," answered the fair Iris in
-a reflective voice. "Many girls have got more than I asked for
-compromising a breach of promise. But to tell the absolute truth, Hugh
-Murchison hypnotised me a bit. He was so quiet and yet so strong that I
-felt he could twist me round his little finger."
-
-"We want to get to Cathcart Square," interjected Davis a little
-impatiently. "We don't seem to be near it yet."
-
-"I must tell my story my own way, it is no use driving me," replied
-Iris, pouting a little. "Well, as I tell you, he called that day at my
-flat--that was the beginning of negotiations. Where were we to meet
-to discuss details? I couldn't have him at my flat, because Roddie was
-always popping in and out. He couldn't have me at his hotel, because
-nobody knew whom we might come across, and Roddie was always coming
-there. He said he would think out a plan and telephone or wire me."
-
-"Ah," said Carrie, with a sigh of relief: she was a very practical
-person. "Now, I suppose we are coming to it."
-
-Iris, heedless of the interruption, went on with her story.
-
-"Next day he 'phoned me up, and after ascertaining that I was quite
-alone, told me to meet him at 10 Cathcart Square to resume our
-conversation."
-
-"Why, in the name of all that is wonderful----" began Reginald Davis,
-but his sister motioned him to silence.
-
-"Don't interrupt, please, you will know everything in a few minutes. I
-went to No. 10 Cathcart Square at the time appointed. He opened the
-door himself. It was a big house in an old-fashioned square, ages old, I
-should say, and in the front court was an agent's board, intimating that
-this particular house was to let, furnished."
-
-"I know Cathcart Square well, it's in an old-world quarter of
-Kensington," interrupted Davis. He added grimly, "I know it well,
-although I did not have the misfortune to commit suicide there."
-
-"He told me a very funny story. The afternoon of the day before, he had
-been up to Kensington to visit an old nurse of the family who lived
-near by. He had strolled round to Cathcart Square to fill up an idle
-half-hour. He had been struck by the appearance of the house, and
-loitered before it, when suddenly the door opened, and a somewhat
-bibulous-looking caretaker came out."
-
-Davis indulged in a sigh of relief. "We are really coming to it now,
-then?"
-
-"Yes, you are coming to it. He told me a sudden idea had occurred to
-him. Here would be a quiet little spot for our meetings, a place where
-Roddie would never dream of following us. He accosted the caretaker,
-evidently a drunken and corrupt creature. He explained that he wanted to
-rent a couple of rooms where he could receive a certain visitor he was
-expecting in the course of the next week or fortnight. It was no
-use going to the house agents for that, they would turn down such a
-proposition. The caretaker, with a couple of five-pound notes in his
-hand, took an intelligent view of the situation. He gave Hugh a key,
-and intimated that, if he had sufficient notice, he would make himself
-scarce on the occasions when the visitor was expected."
-
-"Of all the mad things----" began Davis, but his sister for the second
-time motioned her brother to silence.
-
-"Not quite so mad as you think. I fancy I can see into his mind. We
-could have met at a dozen different restaurants in London, but Roddie
-was here, there and everywhere: at any moment he might have come across
-us. He would never get as far as Kensington." David nodded his sagacious
-head. "I think I see. Go on."
-
-"I met him there, in all four times, the last meeting was a few days
-before the tragedy."
-
-"And what took place at that meeting?"
-
-"He paid me the seven thousand pounds in notes. I signed a paper
-agreeing to give Roddie up. I carried out my bargain. I wrote Roddie
-that same night, giving him his dismissal, and assuring him that nothing
-he could urge would induce me to reconsider my determination. He sent me
-frantic telegrams the next day, but I replied to the same effect. After
-taking his seven thousand pounds, I could not break faith with Hugh,
-could I?"
-
-Davis was not quite sure that Iris would not break faith with anybody if
-it suited her purpose. But clearly Hugh Murchison had subjugated her to
-the extent of respecting an honourable bargain. No doubt she had fallen
-in love with him, so far as a person of her shallow temperament could
-fall in love.
-
-"And what has become of Roddie?"
-
-"I don't know, and I don't care. He has bored me to extinction for over
-nine months. I am glad to be shut of him."
-
-Davis put a question. "You say Hugh Murchison paid you in notes. What
-have you done with them? His bank will have the numbers."
-
-"Will they?" cried Iris, the frightened look again coming into her eyes;
-she knew nothing of business methods. "I paid them into my own account.
-Now, you see, if you rake this up I might be implicated."
-
-"Your opinion is, then, that the man found in No. 10 Cathcart Square was
-Hugh Murchison?"
-
-"I am as nearly sure as I can be, after reading the caretaker's
-evidence. He had some other stunt on beside my own. I was not the only
-visitor he received."
-
-Davis thought deeply before he spoke. "If I have him dug up, and he is
-identified by those who know him, a lot will come to light. Your notes
-will be traced, for one thing."
-
-"I am afraid of everything, Reggie. For the love of Heaven, let him rest
-where he is." Caroline Masters breathed softly to herself. "You were
-half in love with him, or perhaps three-quarters, and you don't want to
-know the real truth. Oh, you miserable little, paltry soul!"
-
-And then a sudden thought came to Davis. "Now, Iris, you could never
-think very clearly about things when they got a little bit complicated.
-You are quite sure the last occasion on which you saw him was a few days
-before the discovery of the body?"
-
-"I will swear to it," cried Iris firmly.
-
-"The date of his cheque, which the Bank has, will show that. He probably
-cashed it himself on the day he paid you, any way the day before. Now,
-on the day preceding and the day following that tragedy, can you prove
-where you were?"
-
-Iris began to see light. "Of course I can. The day after I had the
-notes, I got up a sprained ankle, an obliging doctor, an old (or rather
-young) friend of mine, sent a certificate to the theatre. I motored down
-to Brighton with Johnny Lascelles--who, by the way, used to make Roddie
-fearfully jealous. We joined a jolly little party at 'The Old Ship.' I
-came back the day after the discovery in Cathcart Square."
-
-Davis rose and gave a great shout: "You have witnesses who can swear to
-that?"
-
-"Of course," answered Iris, not even yet comprehending the full drift of
-the question. "Johnny Lascelles motored me there and drove me back. Then
-there was Cissy Monteith, Katie Havard, Jack Legard and others who were
-with me all the time."
-
-"You silly little idiot," cried Reginald Davis. "And what the deuce do
-you mean by saying that you might be implicated?"
-
-"The notes," she faltered. "My meeting him alone in that empty house.
-They might suggest I murdered him, if you say he was murdered."
-
-Davis smote his forehead in impotent anger at her denseness. "How could
-you have murdered him when you were at Brighton all the time?"
-
-He smote the palms of his hands together.
-
-"I will find out who the dead man was, and also the man who forged my
-name to that letter to the Coroner."
-
-He turned to his sister: "As for you, young woman, it may be you will
-have a bad quarter of an hour, if it all comes out about Roddie. But
-never mind, you will have a splendid advertisement. The next bunch of
-letters you get hold of, the price will be twice seven thousand pounds."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-|The following morning Reginald Davis, resolved to unearth the mystery
-of 10 Cath-cart Square, stood in the private room of Mr. Bryant of
-Scotland Yard.
-
-He had easily overcome his younger sister's scruples, her terror at
-having to give evidence in a court of justice, and being forced to
-disclose certain transactions not too creditable to herself. She had
-come to see from the point of view artfully suggested by Davis, that, on
-the whole, it would be a very good advertisement. It might even take
-her from her place in the chorus to a small acting part, and then her
-fortune would be made. She might be able to come across another rich man
-whom she would like well enough to marry, a man quite different from the
-somewhat invertebrate Roddie.
-
-Bryant looked up from his papers, and regarded the young man with his
-keen and steady gaze. Davis's good looks, and frank air impressed him
-favourably.
-
-"Well, my man, what do you want with me? I don't usually see strangers
-who approach me in such a mysterious fashion. You would neither state
-your name nor business, only said vaguely that you wanted to interview
-me on a matter of great urgency."
-
-"I wished to keep my business for your private ear, sir. Can you throw
-your mind back to a certain gruesome affair that happened at 10 Cathcart
-Square?"
-
-"Certainly, although I was not in charge of the matter. The man was
-identified as Reginald Davis, who was wanted on a charge of murder,
-the circumstantial evidence against him being very strong; the verdict
-returned was one of suicide. If I recollect rightly, he had broken a
-pane of glass in one of the back windows of the house, unhasped the
-latch of the window, and cut his throat upstairs after he got inside.
-The facts were accepted at the time as conclusive evidence of his
-guilt."
-
-"And you recollect, sir, what happened a short time ago with regard to
-the crime of which Reginald Davis was accused?"
-
-"Perfectly. The real criminal has confessed. And this poor devil,
-overwhelmed no doubt by the circumstantial evidence which told so
-strongly against him, acted too hastily."
-
-"If the police had caught him, he would probably have been hanged by
-now," said Davis a little bitterly.
-
-Mr. Bryant looked a little uneasy. "I should say it is more than
-probable from what I remember of the case; well, you know, the law makes
-mistakes at times, I will admit."
-
-"And juries at inquests make mistakes at times, also," remarked Davis
-quietly. "This particular jury made a mistake. The dead man was no more
-Reginald Davis than you are."
-
-It was not easy to startle Mr. Bryant, he had been through too many
-strange experiences for that, but he exhibited a mild surprise as he put
-the question: "And what authority have you for saying that?"
-
-"I think you will admit the best. I who stand before you am the Reginald
-Davis who was wanted on that false charge of murder, and branded by that
-intelligent jury as a suicide."
-
-"You can prove this, of course. I mean that you are the real Reginald
-Davis."
-
-"Of course I can, sir; I can bring a dozen witnesses, if necessary, half
-of whom have known me since a boy."
-
-Needless to say that a man of Bryant's experience did not, as a rule,
-believe one quarter of what he was told. But this man's face--this man's
-tones--convinced him that he was listening to the truth.
-
-He rose from his chair. "Wait here a moment, please, while I hunt up the
-particulars of this case. As I told you just now, I was not in charge of
-it, and I should like to refresh my memory as to certain details."
-
-He came back after a few moments. "I know it all now, from A to Z.
-You were identified by a married sister, a Mrs. Masters, who gave some
-details of your career, which did not seem to have been a very healthy
-one. She was also shown a letter which you were supposed to have written
-to the Coroner, and she believed it to be in your handwriting. This
-wants some explanation, I think, Mr. Davis, to call you by the name
-which you say is your right one."
-
-"Quite so, sir," answered Reginald composedly. "It certainly requires
-a good deal of explanation, but if you will listen to me with a little
-patience, I think I can convince you that the thing is more natural than
-it appears." The Inspector threw himself back in his chair: "I have no
-doubt it was your sister who identified you, but how did she come to
-mistake the actual suicide for you?"
-
-And Mr. Davis gave the explanation which Bryant might believe or not, or
-believe in part, as he chose.
-
-"My sister Caroline was deeply attached to me. She was in despair when
-she heard that I was suspected of murder, and was being hunted by the
-police. As day after day, week after week, went by, and there was no
-news of my capture, she got it firmly fixed in her mind that I had
-committed suicide. She hunted the newspapers every morning to find some
-paragraph that would confirm her fears. And then one day she read about
-what had happened at Cathcart Square."
-
-Mr. Bryant was now deeply interested. He leaned forward in his chair,
-and his attitude betokened his eagerness.
-
-"It is possible that her mind had become a little unhinged by her
-anxiety. She expected to find me, and she found a man who might have
-passed for my twin brother. So she tells me now that I have revealed
-myself, for, of course, I lay very low until this belated confession of
-the real murderer."
-
-Bryant only made a brief comment on this particular portion of the
-narrative which Davis was twisting about with some skill. Of course,
-Mrs. Masters had not been deceived by the accidental resemblance, but in
-pretending to be she had given that brother a new lease of life.
-
-"You say that the man was so like you that the sister, who had known you
-from childhood, was ready to swear he was her brother?"
-
-"There is no doubt, sir, that at the time her mind was clouded. She went
-there expecting to find me, and as a not altogether unnatural result,
-she found what she expected."
-
-"We will let that pass," said the Inspector drily. "No doubt, under
-extraordinary circumstances, strange hallucinations are apt to occur. It
-was very fortunate for you that your sister made that mistake, and that
-it was accepted. As you admitted just now, if you had been caught and
-tried it would have gone very hardly with you."
-
-Whatever Bryant thought in his own mind, it was evident that he was
-prepared to admit that Mrs. Masters had acted in good faith when she
-swore that the dead man was her brother. Davis could see there would be
-no trouble on that score.
-
-"Now we come to the letter," pursued Davis. "I questioned my sister very
-closely about that last night. She says she was so overwhelmed with the
-discovery that she read that letter through a mist, as it were, but she
-is positive that it closely resembled my handwriting."
-
-"Another hallucination, I suppose, or an accidental resemblance. Well,
-if you will leave a specimen of your own caligraphy with us, we can
-compare them," said Bryant.
-
-"And I suppose, sir, you will have the body exhumed, for the purpose of
-discovering who the man really was?"
-
-"I suppose so," replied the Inspector a little unwillingly. "Although
-I don't expect we shall ever find out. Nobody came forward at the time
-when your sister made that mistake. Is it likely anybody will come
-forward now? Some poor derelict, weary of life I suppose, without kith
-or kin to claim him at the end. There are scores of suicides in the
-year, Mr. Davis, who are buried unidentified."
-
-He added, after a moment's pause: "Of course, before taking any such
-steps, we must formally prove, from unimpeachable testimony, that not
-only are you Reginald Davis, but the particular Reginald Davis who was
-falsely accused of murder."
-
-"I quite understand," answered Davis a little stiffly. "Before I
-leave this room, I will indicate the quarters where you can obtain the
-information you want."
-
-"Then, when I have verified that, I will ask you to come and see me
-again." Bryant's manner as he said these words, indicated that the
-interview was at an end.
-
-But Davis kept his seat, he had not finished yet.
-
-"May I take the liberty of detaining you for a few moments longer, sir,
-to impress upon you the importance of having that body exhumed? You may
-be correct in your theory it is that of some poor derelict, but I have a
-different theory altogether."
-
-The Inspector looked sharply at him, and drew a deep breath. "Ah, then,
-you have some knowledge of something: your visit to me has been leading
-up to this, eh?"
-
-"No actual knowledge, sir, but a surmise that has, I venture to think,
-some foundation. I have two sisters. The elder one I have already spoken
-of to you."
-
-There was a slight note of sarcasm in the Inspector's voice as he
-replied, "Yes, Mrs. Masters, whose fortunate mistake was of such
-excellent service to you, during the time you were waiting for the real
-criminal's confession." Davis did not suffer himself to resent this.
-Of course, a man of the world like Bryant did not believe in this
-camouflaged story. Mrs. Masters was a clever young woman, and had
-taken advantage of an accidental resemblance to get her brother out of
-jeopardy.
-
-"My other sister, Iris Deane, is in the chorus of the Frivolity Theatre.
-I don't suppose you have ever heard of her?"
-
-Mr. Bryant shook his head. He knew a great deal about all classes of
-criminals, but young ladies in the chorus of the Frivolity, or any other
-theatre, were not in his line.
-
-"She was at Mrs. Masters's house last night. She came over especially
-to welcome me, on my reintroduction to the world which I was supposed
-to have quitted. She made to us a very startling confession, and that
-confession is intimately associated with the events at Cathcart Square."
-
-And this time, Bryant was genuinely surprised, and was at no pains to
-conceal it. Reginald Davis--he was beginning to believe in the man's
-identity now--was evidently a member of a very remarkable family.
-
-"You astound me, Mr. Davis. Yourself and both your sisters mixed up with
-what happened there! It sounds like a romance. Pray proceed!"
-
-Davis told the story as Iris had told him, carefully concealing the
-names of the two men concerned in it for the moment. He was careful
-to point out that on the night of the suicide she could establish a
-complete and unquestioned alibi.
-
-Bryant turned on him sharply. "It occurs to me that you don't think it
-was a suicide, Mr. Davis."
-
-"I don't, sir, and at present I can't quite tell you why."
-
-"But you must have some reason for thinking that," said Bryant in the
-same sharp tone.
-
-"My only reason is this--if the man who was buried under the name of
-Reginald Davis is the man I believe him to be, there was no earthly
-reason why he should commit suicide. To the best of my belief, he was
-murdered for some motive that I cannot guess, and the murderer, after
-cutting his throat, put the razor in his stiffening hand."
-
-"It is a theory worth thinking about," said Bryant, who was beginning to
-appreciate his visitor very much. "And now, Mr. Davis, the name of the
-man whom your sister met in the empty house?"
-
-"I have kept that to the last, to surprise you. You will know the name,
-but I don't suppose you ever came across the man. It was Major Hugh
-Murchison."
-
-At this startling announcement, the Inspector literally jumped from his
-chair.
-
-"But I do know Major Hugh Murchison," he cried. "He was in my office not
-so very long ago. Let me see, when was it?"
-
-He turned to his diary and verified the date, and gave it to Reginald
-Davis. It was longer back than he thought.
-
-"And you have not seen him since that day?"
-
-"No," answered the Inspector. "Wait a moment till I ring up my friend
-Parkinson. I couldn't undertake the job he called on, as it was quite a
-private matter. I handed it over to Parkinson."
-
-He rang up his old friend and former colleague. Davis could gather
-enough from the conversation on Bryant's side to be sure that a
-considerable interval had elapsed since Parkinson had seen his client.
-
-Bryant sat down in his chair. "Mr. Davis, I cannot say how much obliged
-I am to you for your visit, and the information you have given me. Now,
-I know a great deal more than you do about the proceedings and movements
-of Major Murchison, I know on what business he was engaged, in addition
-to that little matter of your sister's. I will go into the inquiries
-concerning yourself, and please hold yourself at my disposal, give me an
-address where I can communicate with you readily."
-
-Davis did so, and said good-bye to the Inspector.
-
-After he had left, Bryant gave instructions he was not to be disturbed
-for an hour. And during that hour he did the hardest bit of thinking he
-had ever done in his life.
-
-And now that Davis had mentioned it, the man did bear a superficial
-resemblance to Hugh Murchison.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-|It was a very hard nut he had to crack. Thanks to his peculiar
-position, he was in possession of reliable and exclusive information
-from more than one quarter. He held several threads in his capable
-hands, but would he be able to weave them into a net wide enough for his
-purpose?
-
-His recent interview with Davis had established the fact that four
-persons were connected with the mystery of Cathcart Square--Davis
-himself, Caroline Masters (the elder sister), Iris Deane (the younger
-sister), and, most important of all, Hugh Murchison.
-
-He dismissed, for the moment, the first three from his mind. But Hugh
-Murchison, with his resemblance to Reginald Davis, was the connecting
-link between them and another set of actors.
-
-Murchison had consulted him with the view of identifying Mrs. Spencer
-and George Dutton with the Norah and George Burton of those far-off days
-at Blankfield, and he had identified them as the same persons. He had
-then handed over the Major to the astute Parkinson, who would find out
-as much as he could with regard to the present relations between the
-precious pair.
-
-Bryant had been very busy of late, and he had almost dismissed the
-Murchison episode from his mind. But when the Major had completed his
-investigations he would undoubtedly take steps to turn such a scheming
-and unscrupulous adventuress out of her husband's house. As to the way
-in which he would proceed to accomplish that purpose, Bryant, of course,
-had no knowledge. Neither did he know which Murchison would approach
-first, the husband or the wife. Perhaps both together.
-
-One thing stood out pretty clearly, from the evidence of Iris Deane,
-that she had met Murchison alone at the house in Cathcart Square a few
-days before the discovery of the dead body.
-
-Another thing also stood out equally clearly, that the dead man bore a
-remarkable likeness to Reginald Davis. If not, Caroline Masters would
-not have dared to perjure herself as she had done. And he himself had
-recognised the superficial resemblance between the two men.
-
-Assuming that it was a murder, and not a suicide, and Bryant was
-beginning to incline, like Davis, to the former theory, why had the
-murderer fixed upon the name of Reginald Davis, and forged a letter
-to the Coroner? He must have been somebody who had known Davis at some
-time, and was acquainted with his handwriting. Like Caroline Masters, he
-must have been inclined to do the hunted fugitive a good turn, and have
-trusted to his gratitude to keep a silent tongue.
-
-An hour's steady thinking had cleared his brain. The conclusions
-he arrived at were as follows: Hugh Murchison had been murdered by
-somebody, and buried as a suicide under the name of Reginald Davis.
-The next question was who was the murderer, and what was the motive
-for committing the murder? Here he could make a pretty shrewd guess. If
-Murchison had gone about his mission in a straightforward, but rather
-blundering, fashion the motive was clear enough.
-
-With Bryant to think was to act. Davis was having a week's holiday in
-London, staying with his sister, Mrs. Masters. That same afternoon the
-young man was again in the Inspector's room, in response to an urgent
-summons on the telephone.
-
-"Now, Mr. Davis, I have been thinking deeply over this rather
-complicated affair of Cathcart Square, and I am beginning to see a
-streak or two of daylight. I told you this morning I know a bit more
-about Major Murchison than you do, and there is just a chance you might
-help me. I take it you have had a somewhat adventurous career, your
-sister admitted as much at the inquest. She said in fact that you had
-been the black sheep of the family."
-
-Davis hung his head in a shame-faced fashion. "I have to admit it, sir.
-It's no use attempting to deny it, when Carrie gave me away like that."
-
-"I have no desire to pry into your past, except so far as it helps me in
-my present quest. But I expect, in your time, you have associated with
-a few undesirable characters." Reginald Davis admitted the fact quite
-frankly.
-
-"Now, of course, it is only just a chance. But did you ever come across
-a man named George Burton, and a young woman who passed as his sister?
-My first knowledge of them is that they ran a gambling saloon in
-Paris, she a good-looking girl, acting as decoy. Then he quitted the
-card-sharping game and went in for more criminal pursuits."
-
-"I did know them, sir. If I tell you what I do know, am I letting myself
-in for anything?" queried Mr. Davis cautiously. "You see, since that
-awful thing happened, I have turned over a new leaf. Nobody could tempt
-me to go the least bit on the crook."
-
-"Make your mind quite easy, Davis. We have nothing against you. You know
-that, or you would have hardly dared to come to life again."
-
-"Well, sir, I did know George Burton pretty intimately at one time,
-after he left Paris. He was in the forgery business and he tried to drag
-me in, but I was clever enough to keep out of it. They used, in his own
-set, to call him 'George the Penman.'"
-
-"Good," said Bryant; "and what did you know about the girl?"
-
-"Not very much, sir. She passed as his sister, but one or two of his
-pals believed her to be his wife, although there was no evidence of it."
-
-"Did you ever learn anything of her origin?"
-
-"Well, one chap who seemed to know more about them than their other
-pals, told me that she was by way of being a lady, the illegitimate
-daughter of a man well-known in London Society."
-
-"Do you know the name of the man?"
-
-Davis tapped his forehead in the effort of recollection.
-
-"It's on the tip of my tongue, sir: it will come to me in a moment--a
-man who was mixed up in a gambling scandal, and had to leave the
-country. Ah, I have got it now, he was known familiarly as Tommie
-Esmond."
-
-Mr. Bryant rose. He had got all he could out of his new acquaintance.
-The threads in his hand were drawing closer into a web.
-
-"Well, Mr. Davis, good-day. Many thanks for the information you have
-given me, it has been very helpful. I will keep in touch with you."
-
-"And you think, with me, it was a murder, and not a suicide?" questioned
-Davis as he left.
-
-But Bryant was not the man to express a decided opinion until he was
-fully justified by the facts. He kept his thoughts to himself till the
-last moment.
-
-He smiled pleasantly. "Time will show. I shall have that body exhumed,
-as soon as I have made a few further inquiries."
-
-Davis had to be content with this oracular utterance, and bowed himself
-out. He solaced himself by narrating all that had occurred to the
-wondering Carrie.
-
-The matter had now become one for the activities of Scotland Yard.
-The first thing to be done was to ascertain the whereabouts of Hugh
-Murchison, that is to say, if he was still in the land of the living.
-Some time had elapsed since he had communicated with Parkinson. Of
-course, in itself, there would be nothing strange in that. Parkinson had
-got the information that was required, been paid for it, and with that
-payment, their relations had ended.
-
-Bryant went to the hotel where the Major had stayed, at any rate up
-to the time that the detective had last seen him, and interviewed the
-manager, whom he had known for some years in his professional capacity.
-This person, a genial and cosmopolitan Italian, readily answered his
-questions.
-
-Yes, the Major had stayed there for some little time. When he came,
-he explained that he was only paying a flying visit to London. Had he
-brought a servant with him? No, he had not. A somewhat strange omission
-for a man in his position, was it not? The circumstance was easily
-explained. The Major had had to dismiss his late valet for theft, and
-was not in a hurry, for the present, to suit himself with a fresh one.
-This he had told the manager and he was valeted at the hotel.
-
-He had left some time. How long? The manager would find out the exact
-date. This he did. On the afternoon of the fourth of July.
-
-The Major had taken his things down to Victoria Station in a cab with
-the view of depositing them there, as he was going to take an evening
-train to Brighton.
-
-Bryant brightened up at this information. The discovery of the dead body
-at Cathcart Square had taken place early on the morning of the fifth.
-
-Now arose the question, had the Major got through his business with the
-Spencers before the fourth of July? In that case Mrs. Spencer was hardly
-likely to be still living at Eaton Place with her husband.
-
-Inquiries at Eaton Place soon established the fact that Mrs. Spencer was
-still there. What had happened? Had the Major communicated the result of
-his research to the husband, with the result that, infatuated with his
-wife, that husband had refused to credit the story and accepted Stella's
-denials?
-
-It was a fairly plausible theory. When men are deeply in love, women
-can twist them round their little finger. In that case, it was easy to
-understand that, disgusted with the failure of his intervention, the
-Major had made up his mind to leave London at once.
-
-One other thing was to be done, to ascertain if the Major had intimated
-to any of his friends his intention of leaving London so abruptly. For
-this purpose, Bryant sought out the brother Roderick, who had rooms in
-Jermyn Street.
-
-Yes, Roderick had met the Major in Bond Street in the morning, and
-learned of the proposed journey to Brighton. The young man added that
-his brother was very erratic in his movements, and sometimes would
-disappear for weeks at a stretch without communicating with any of his
-friends or relatives.
-
-There was now one of two theories that stood out: the first one that Guy
-Spencer had been told, and refused to believe the true facts about his
-wife. The second was, that the Major had shirked the unpleasantness of
-a personal interview of such a delicate character, and had gone down to
-Brighton intending to write privately to Spencer from there.
-
-Further inquiries elicited the fact that the Major had never made that
-projected journey to Brighton. His belongings had never been claimed,
-they were still lying in the cloak room at Victoria Station.
-
-There was now no further doubt as to what steps had to be taken.
-The Major had disappeared at a date practically coinciding with the
-discovery of the dead body at Cathcart Square, the dead body which had
-been wrongly identified as that of Reginald Davis, whose likeness to the
-Major was so pronounced. Of that fact, Bryant himself was aware.
-
-The authorities were applied to, and gave permission for the body to be
-exhumed. As the living Reginald Davis had established his identity to
-the satisfaction of Scotland Yard, it was necessary to find out, if
-possible, that of the man who had been mistaken for him.
-
-The body was exhumed and pronounced by half-a-dozen people, including
-Guy Spencer, to be that of the Major.
-
-It had now become clearly a case of murder, and although those in charge
-of the case had little or no doubt as to the guilty persons, it might
-have been very difficult to prove, but for one convincing fact, supplied
-by the murdered man himself.
-
-But this evidence, which was overwhelming, the police kept to themselves
-for some little time, for their own good reasons.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-|The luggage which had been left at Victoria Station on the fatal day
-was, of course, seized by the police. They searched it thoroughly in
-the hope that they would find something useful to them in the shape of
-letters or memoranda.
-
-Of letters there were only two, brief ones from Iris Deane, in which she
-expressed her determination of sticking out for her ten thousand pounds.
-As we know, in the end she gave way and accepted seven.
-
-But they did find one priceless thing, and that was a diary, bound in
-red leather, a small volume as to the size of the page, but very bulky.
-It had evidently been the dead man's habit to keep a fairly close record
-of his doings, for it was numbered, and contained entries from some
-date in May 1919 up to July 3rd, the day before he left the hotel,
-and announced to the manager that he intended to take a late train to
-Brighton.
-
-For the twentieth time since he had discovered this important piece
-of evidence, Mr. Bryant sat in his room at Scotland Yard, reading and
-re-reading the entries which he knew almost by heart.
-
-With the entries, before the visit to London, Bryant had no concern.
-They recorded trifling events which had no reference to the tragedy
-at Cathcart Square. There was, of course, allusion to the letter from
-Roderick which had so startled his family, the letter announcing his
-engagement to the chorus girl, Iris Deane, and his fixed resolve to make
-her his wife. There was a note of a family council, in which the elder
-brother was deputed to approach the young woman herself, with the object
-of buying her off.
-
-There were a few records of his first days in London, after a long
-absence, his visits to his clubs, his meeting with old pre-war
-acquaintances, his first interview with Iris Deane, the difficulty of
-arranging further interviews either at his hotel or her flat, owing to
-the fear of Roddie popping in unexpectedly.
-
-Then came the whimsical record of his strolling round Kensington,
-halting opposite the house with the board announcing that it was to be
-let furnished, his interview with the accommodating caretaker who, in
-return for a very handsome _douceur_, gave him a duplicate key to enter
-the house at any time he liked. He had casually mentioned to Miles that
-his name was Sanderson.
-
-The Major seemed childishly pleased over what he considered a very
-astute move, especially the giving of another name. Here in this quiet
-backwater of the world, for so it would seem to a man of his wealth and
-position, he could continue his negotiations with the somewhat obstinate
-Iris. In the portion of the diary concerned with the grasping and
-frivolous young chorus-girl, Bryant was not greatly interested. He had
-learned this already from Iris Deane, whom he had interviewed a few
-times, and Reginald Davis.
-
-He turned from the bulky little volume, the pages of which were covered
-with the Major's small, rather methodical handwriting, to a slenderer
-book lying beside him. Into this had been copied all the extracts
-bearing on the relations between the dead man and Mrs. Spencer,
-otherwise Stella Keane, otherwise Norah Burton.
-
-The first entry recorded the dinner-party at Carlton House Terrace, when
-he had been struck by the remarkable likeness of his friend's wife to
-the pretty adventuress at Blankfield, who had driven his old friend,
-Jack Pomfret, to his death; his endeavours to startle her by allusions
-to that garrison town.
-
-An important entry was that of his interview with his old acquaintance
-at the club, Gilbert Fairfax, from whom he had learned something of the
-atmosphere of the L'Estrange flat in Elsinore Gardens, the branding of
-Tommie Esmond as a card-sharper, the flight of the fat little man to the
-Continent, the visit of Stella Keane to Charing Cross Station to bid the
-detected cheat farewell. There was a comment upon this fact: "Whether
-she is Norah Burton or not, her intimacy with the L'Estrange set, her
-solicitude for Tommie Esmond, are sufficient to make her unfit to be the
-wife of a straight, honest fellow like my old friend Guy Spencer."
-
-There followed further entries, relating his interview with Bryant, the
-confirmation by the detective that Stella Keane was Norah Burton, that
-George Dutton, the keeper of the obscure little bucket-shop in the City,
-was the same George Burton who had been arrested at Blank-field on a
-charge of forgery, and who, thanks to one of the cleverest advocates at
-the criminal bar, had got off with a very light sentence.
-
-There was a full record of the long interview with Mrs. Spencer, in
-which she had been finally confounded, and forced to confession, of her
-acceptance of his terms, of the words she had uttered when, while rather
-regretting that things could not go on as they were, lamenting the fact
-that her accuser had ever been born, she was not at all satisfied with
-her present environment, and would experience a certain measure of
-relief in quitting it for a more congenial sphere.
-
-On the day he had parted from her, the day on which she had yielded to
-his inflexible determination that she must remain under her husband's
-roof as short a time as possible, he recorded the fact that, up to the
-present moment, he had not made up his mind as to the precise way in
-which he was going to bring about the separation. He wanted to choose
-the way which would least hurt Guy.
-
-There had flashed through his mind that, in addition to the confession
-she was about to make to him of her whole career, she should confess to
-her husband that she was not legally his wife, being in reality the wife
-of George Burton, alias George Dutton. There followed here a note. "I am
-convinced she and this rascal were married, the sister and cousin dodges
-were always a fake. I must see Parkinson to find out if he can ferret
-out anything on that point. But the time is short. In a week I must be
-ready for action."
-
-A further entry showed that he had called on Parkinson with this object,
-only to learn that the detective had gone on an important mission
-abroad, and could undertake no further work till his return, which would
-be some ten days hence. That idea therefore had to be dismissed. He must
-think out some other plan.
-
-Then came the last and most important entry of all, dated on the fourth
-of July, written no doubt a few hours before he took his luggage to
-Victoria Station.
-
-"I meet Norah Burton, I always think of her by that old name, at
-Cathcart Square at six o'clock to-night. I have given the caretaker a
-holiday to keep him out of the way. I have drawn up two copies of
-the confession, one of which she is to sign. I have also drawn up an
-undertaking on my part to keep her from want in case Guy should prove
-obdurate. But this I am sure he will not do. Besides, if she is his
-wife, and thinking it over, I have my doubts as to whether she was ever
-really married to Burton, he would have to support her, in spite of her
-unsavoury associations."
-
-Bryant paused for a moment as he finished this paragraph to reflect a
-little. Personally, he did not believe that she was the wife of George
-Burton; in his opinion, their association had been the result of mutual
-interests. With this knowledge hanging over her head, she would hardly
-have been daring enough to go through the ceremony of marriage with two
-other men. Anyway, it was a debatable point.
-
-Moreover, Burton, like most criminals, would be very wide awake and
-calculating. To marry her would be to handicap himself. He could get
-more out of her by marrying her to a rich man.
-
-Then came the last paragraph of all.
-
-"Now, for my action after the final interview of to-night, when she has
-signed the confession. I may do one of two things, forbid her to return
-to her husband's house, and go myself straight to Eaton Place, and break
-the news to Spencer without any preamble. In that case, I shall take
-with me some ready money to hand to her, as she will probably have very
-little upon her.
-
-"And yet I rather shrink from this course; it would be painful for me to
-watch his agony while I struck such a terrible blow. I will run down
-to Brighton, drop him a note telling him that an important letter will
-reach him at his club by registered post to-morrow, that he is on no
-account to let his wife know he has heard from me till he has read the
-contents of that registered packet.
-
-"I shall post him the copy of the confession, telling him he can inspect
-the original at any time he likes, meeting me either in Brighton or
-London, leaving him to deal with her as he chooses. After all, his is
-the right to dispose of his private affairs, my duty really ends when I
-have put him in possession of the facts. My first method must have the
-effect of creating open scandal at once, by my insisting upon her not
-returning to Eaton Place.
-
-"He may wish to devise some plan that will create a scandal less open,
-to save, as far as he can, the disgrace to himself and his family. If I
-know the man, and here, perhaps, I am arguing from the knowledge only of
-my own temperament, I should say his love would turn to hatred after he
-reads that confession. Jack Pomfret was a weaker man than Guy, but he
-acted as I should have done under the circumstances, and refused all
-further communication with her, refused to give her the opportunity of
-denial or explanation.
-
-"Still, there is no knowing to what lengths a deep-rooted infatuation
-for a fascinating woman will lead a man. In this respect, Guy may be
-less adamant than Pomfret, although I am sure he will never imitate poor
-Jack's final weakness. He is too sturdily built for that.
-
-"When confronted with that confession she may plead artfully, and,
-perhaps to him, convincingly, that while she admits everything contained
-in it, she was more sinned against than sinning, that she tried to
-escape from her odious bondage by marrying Jack, and that with his
-suicide and the frustration of her hopes, she was compelled to return
-to an environment which she loathed. He might consent to believe and
-forgive, although to me such a thing seems incredible, impossible."
-
-Bryant closed the book on the last entry. That little red-leather volume
-threw a lurid light on the mystery of Cathcart Square. The exhumed body
-was found to be that of Major Murchison, wrongly identified in the first
-instance as that of Reginald Davis. It was all very clear.
-
-That meeting had taken place, and the unfortunate man had been done
-to death by the precious pair, Norah Burton and the scoundrel brother,
-cousin or life-long lover, whichever he was. Reginald Davis was an old
-acquaintance of theirs, had been possibly a more intimate one than
-the cautious Davis was prepared to admit. They took with them letters
-addressed to their old friend, they forged a letter from him intimating
-his intention to commit suicide.
-
-If Davis read of all this in the papers, he was too concerned with his
-own danger to emerge from his hiding-place and publish the truth to the
-world. He would be thankful that, through the villainy of others, he
-could take a new lease of life, unmenaced by detection. Of course, they
-had never thought of the possibility that Davis would be cleared by the
-confession of the real criminal. Like Scotland Yard, they were sure he
-was guilty, and his silence was a matter of certainty.
-
-And slowly Bryant, drawing from the stores of his vast experience, began
-to construct in his own mind the details of the murder, executed by
-two desperate criminals, almost driven to the verge of madness by the
-knowledge that their carefully-laid plans were about to be frustrated by
-the action of one man.
-
-The woman, the weaker of the two, was probably more disposed to yield to
-the force and strength of circumstances. Once before, in her marriage to
-Jack Pomfret, she had had the cup snatched from her lips, and bowed
-to the inevitable. From the few words recorded in the Major's accusing
-diary, it would seem that, secured of a modest competence, she was ready
-a second time to accept her fate.
-
-And then, in that week's interval, it was easy to guess what had
-happened. She had consulted her old partner in crime, George Burton. He
-had reasoned, as it turned out, a little shallowly, remove Murchison,
-and the danger will be past. The resemblance of Murchison to Reginald
-Davis had occurred to the pair, hence the cunningly prepared letters.
-
-And how was the actual murder accomplished? Had they gone to Cathcart
-Square together, or had Burton followed her, getting in by means of that
-broken window-pane at the back? And did they know the Major was alone?
-In that last interview with Mrs. Spencer, had he let out the fact
-that he had given the caretaker a holiday, so that they should not be
-disturbed?
-
-These were side problems that could not be solved at the moment. Only
-two persons could solve them, and those two, in all probability, would
-never speak.
-
-But how had they killed him? The Major was a strong, muscular fellow who
-would fight tenaciously for his life. Norah Burton was a slender woman,
-almost verging on frailness, George Dutton, to call him by his latest
-name, was certainly of a muscular build, although of only average
-height.
-
-Well, of course, they had foreseen and prepared for all that.
-while talking to him, she had sprayed over him the essence of some
-overpowering and stupefying drug, and while he was staggering about,
-dazed and blinded, the man had stepped in and done the rest.
-
-Owing to the absence of the caretaker, they had plenty of time. They had
-rifled his pockets, taking out of them the money which, according to
-his diary, he had brought along with him, his personal belongings, the
-ticket which he had received at the luggage room of Victoria Station,
-and, of course, the confession which Norah Burton had or had not signed.
-No doubt, they had also examined his linen and underclothing to make
-sure that his name was not on them. If it had been, they would have
-dealt with it by stripping the body.
-
-They had carried it out pretty well, on the whole. There were two things
-they had not reckoned on. One was the resuscitation of Reginald Davis.
-The other was the fact that Murchison kept a diary, one of the last
-things that a man of his sort was likely to do.
-
-Bryant, although not a very emotional man, felt very depressed as he
-came to the result of his meditations. He felt sure that, if Norah
-Burton could have had her own way, she would have accepted her fate,
-gone forth on the world again with the slender pittance that either of
-the two men, her husband or his friend, would have allowed her.
-
-She had suffered herself to be dominated by a more reckless and criminal
-spirit, with the result that the life of an honourable man had been
-taken, and she was already standing at the foot of the gallows.
-
-The pair, only knowing that the body had been exhumed and proved to
-be that of Hugh Murchison--a terribly disturbing thought to them--but
-ignorant of the discovery of that incriminating diary, were being
-closely watched. But they felt sure that nothing could be traced to
-them, they had hidden their tracks so cleverly, as they thought.
-
-It was now only a question of a few hours as to when they should be
-taken. And Bryant felt that Guy Spencer should know the truth before
-anybody else. Poor fellow! He would soften the blow to him as much as he
-could.
-
-That same evening he went round to Eaton Place, about seven o'clock.
-He reckoned that he would catch Spencer before he went up to dress for
-dinner. "Poor devil," thought Bryant, "he won't have much appetite for
-dinner after he has read through that diary!"
-
-Spencer was in the library, and the detective, whom he had met before
-in connection with the mystery of Cathcart Square, was shown in. Spencer
-welcomed him with his usual cordiality.
-
-"Good-evening, Mr. Bryant. Any fresh light upon this terrible thing?"
-
-The footman had left the library door slightly open, after showing
-Bryant in, and had retired swiftly to his quarters.
-
-He was hardly out of the hall when Stella opened the front-door with
-her key, and glided noiselessly in. All her movements were noiseless,
-suggesting, as somebody had once remarked of her, the silent motions of
-a snake. She always carried a key, declaring that she could not be kept
-waiting for servants to answer the door.
-
-The library door was open, through the aperture she heard voices, and
-one of them she recognised. It was that of the Scotland Yard detective,
-who had cross-examined her very closely as to her various meetings with
-the dead man. She had been afraid of Bryant. He had looked at her so
-searchingly, and his manner always conveyed that he knew so much more
-than he was prepared to disclose.
-
-Bryant was speaking in a low, but very clear voice. Her hearing was
-singularly acute, and she could catch every word.
-
-"I am come on a very painful errand, Mr. Spencer. There is a small
-volume here which throws a very clear light on what happened at Cathcart
-Square on that fatal evening of July the fourth."
-
-Guy's cheerful accents rang out. "You mean you have got a clue, Mr.
-Bryant. But why painful to me? If you are on the track of the murderer
-of my poor old friend, nobody will be more rejoiced than I."
-
-Again the low, grave tones of Bryant:
-
-"Mr. Spencer, you will be a very stricken man when you have read through
-it. Your poor friend left behind him a very copious diary, made up to
-the morning of the day on which he was murdered. The original is at my
-office, you can inspect it at any time you like. This is a copy of the
-entries relating to Cathcart Square. It touches your domestic life very
-closely, in addition to proving why and by whom he was murdered."
-
-Stella waited to hear no more. Her face had gone livid, she felt shaking
-in every limb. That her old enemy, Murchison, had left a diary! They
-had never thought of that possibility. The game was up. She had staked
-something on her marriage as Norah Burton with Jack Pomfret, and had
-lost. This time she had staked everything and lost again, but now she
-had lost liberty and life in addition. There was but one end. She must
-seek at once the man who had, in a way, been a good and faithful friend,
-but also her evil genius.
-
-She stole as quietly out of the hall as she had entered it, and hailed
-a passing taxi. She knew she would never enter the house at Eaton Place
-again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-|Mrs. Spencer had plenty of money in her pocket. She was always
-accustomed to carry a large sum about her. Her adventurous life had
-taught her that it was always wiser to have a good amount of cash in her
-possession. The time might come at any moment when you were in a tight
-corner. She had promised a handsome reward to the taxi-cab driver if he
-could get to a certain destination within the speed limit.
-
-That destination was Kew Bridge, where it abuts on a little-known
-neighbourhood called Strand-on-the-Green.
-
-At the foot of Kew Bridge, the wretched and hunted woman halted, and
-paid the driver his extravagant fare. What did it matter what she paid
-to-night? To-morrow she might not be able to pay. She shuddered as she
-thought of that to-morrow.
-
-The taxi-driver drove slowly out of sight. She waited, from a sense of
-habitual caution, till he was well out of the way. And then, remembering
-everything, she smiled bitterly. Was there any need of caution now?
-
-She went down a narrow lane, halted at the door of a small cottage, and
-rang the front-door bell. As she did so, she was aware of a man a few
-yards away from her, who seemed to be strolling aimlessly about, a man
-dressed in ill-fitting clothes, and heavy boots.
-
-A detective certainly! This man had followed her from Eaton Place in a
-taxi almost as swift as her own. Bryant knew his business, he was not
-going to lose sight of her, or of her reputed cousin, George Dutton.
-
-The door was opened cautiously by George Dutton, alias George Burton.
-
-It was a small furnished cottage that he had rented for some months
-past, at a rent commensurate with his means. He kept no servant; a
-feeble old woman came in the morning to clean him up and prepare his
-breakfast. When he came back at night from the not very prosperous
-bucket-shop, he looked after himself, and cooked over a gas-stove his
-evening meal.
-
-The evenings were drawing in, and it was rather a dark night. He peered
-for a moment at his visitor, before he recognised her.
-
-"Stella, by all that is wonderful." He called her by the new name,
-not the old one of Norah. "Come in, dear, but your arrival in this
-unexpected fashion does not suggest good news."
-
-She passed hastily through the open doorway. "Shut it quick," she said,
-in a low, hoarse voice. "There is a man watching outside, I am sure he
-is a detective."
-
-As a matter of fact, there were two detectives within a few feet of each
-other, but in her agitation she had not observed the second man, who was
-deputed to keep watch on the movements of Mr. George Dutton.
-
-George Dutton was an old hand, and not to be lightly disturbed by small
-incidents. But he recognised the significance of this visit. His ruddy
-colour died away.
-
-"You have bad news," he said quietly.
-
-"The worst, George. Bryant, the detective, paid a visit to Guy this
-evening. I came in just in the nick of time. The library door was ajar,
-I heard what Bryant said. The Major has left a diary behind him, and, of
-course, he had put it all down, up to the arranged meeting in Cathcart
-Square. The game is up, you will recognise that."
-
-Dutton's mentality was a little bit slower than her own. "Did you hear
-any extracts read from the diary?"
-
-"What a fool you are!" she cried indignantly. "Why should I wait to
-hear? If the man kept a diary, is it not easy to guess that he would
-have related every incident connected with me, from our first meeting at
-the Southleigh dinner-party? Bryant is watching me, there is a detective
-waiting outside. No doubt he is watching you, too. He is just waiting to
-pounce."
-
-"Then why has he gone to your husband?"
-
-"Oh, you are too dense for worlds. Just to soften the blow. Can't you
-understand that he wants to warn him beforehand of the shame that is
-going to fall upon him, the discovery that his wife is a murderess?"
-
-And then Mr. Dutton understood. He stretched out appealing arms to her.
-"My poor little girl, my ever faithful pal! And I have brought you to
-this!"
-
-"You have brought me to this," she said bitterly. "Did I not implore you
-upon my knees to accept the Major's terms, and you were so obstinate,
-so set. You would insist upon the other way because it seemed better to
-you. And I, fool that I was, always yielding to your sinister influence,
-gave way as I always have done."
-
-Scoundrel and criminal as he was, hardened by years of evil-doing, the
-man's self-control gave way at that accusation. He drew her to him, and,
-strange to say, she did not shrink from his embrace..
-
-"My poor Stella, I have tried to do my best for you always, even
-sacrificed myself. But the end has come."
-
-He recognised that, as she did.
-
-"Yes," she said stoically, "as you say, the end has come. You have
-always been very adept in falling into holes, and then digging yourself
-out again. How are you going to dig yourself and me out of this hole, in
-the face of that incriminating diary?"
-
-Dutton walked up and down, his face working, his hands and his body
-trembling. He was up against the gravest problem of his adventurous
-career. The shadow of the prison had always hovered over him, but now
-there was a more ghastly menace, the shadow of the gallows. From the
-prison, he could return. There was no return from the other.
-
-He paused in his restless pacing, and came to a halt before the stricken
-woman. He had recovered himself to a certain extent. He had gambled and
-lost, he was prepared to accept the fate of the unsuccessful gambler.
-
-"You are brave, old girl?" he asked briefly.
-
-She looked up at him with a wan smile.
-
-"Yes, I think I am brave. I can guess what you are about to suggest,
-with the detectives watching us outside." She burst into a little sob.
-"Oh, you always thought you were so clever, and yet, if I had had the
-management of affairs, things might have been so different."
-
-He spoke humbly. "I think you are right, Norah. I was always full of
-arrogance and self-conceit. You were weaker in character than I was, but
-you had always more brains. And I was a blind fool not to admit it. Many
-a time you gave me your advice, and I rejected it."
-
-"And what do you suggest now?" she asked, in a voice that had sunk to a
-whisper.
-
-He looked at her steadily. He had screwed up his courage to the sticking
-point. Could he count upon an equal fortitude in her?
-
-"It is the finish, old girl. You say the detectives are waiting outside.
-Bryant has got a good case, and the diary will hang us. There is no
-getting over that."
-
-"You propose----" she said falteringly.
-
-He spoke quite steadily. The end had come, he had made up his mind, so
-far as regards himself.
-
-"We neither of us want to hang for the murder of Hugh Murchison?"
-
-She shuddered, and hid her face with her hands. "Oh, that awful evening!
-It has been like a nightmare ever since."
-
-"I know," said Dutton soothingly. "It was one of my fatal mistakes. But
-it is no use crying over spilt milk. To-night we are face to face with
-facts. We have gambled, and we have lost, and we have got to pay the
-penalty."
-
-The wretched woman rose up, and wrung her hands. "And to think I might
-have been the Countess of Southleigh."
-
-"I know; don't think I am not reckoning up all that," replied Dutton.
-"But we have got to deal with facts to-night, with the detectives
-waiting outside. The game is up, you know that as well as I do. We have
-only a few hours before us, perhaps a few minutes, in which to make the
-choice."
-
-"I know," she answered. "You mean our only alternative is to cheat the
-law."
-
-He looked at her steadily. "That is the only way. If we suffer ourselves
-to be taken, we have not got a dog's chance."
-
-Weak woman as she was, she gathered something of his iron resolution.
-Yes, they must die and die together, to cheat the law. Such was to be
-the end of the brilliant adventuress who had inveigled two men into
-marriage, Jack Pomfret and Guy Spencer, with her subtle and elusive
-charm.
-
-"And what do you suggest, George? You have thought of these things more
-than I have."
-
-"I have always thought of them," said Dutton gloomily. "Well, there are
-various ways I can suggest to you. I can shoot you first, and myself
-afterwards."
-
-She shuddered. "Some other way than that."
-
-"I can give you some tabloids."
-
-"Is there any pain?" she queried.
-
-"Hardly any."
-
-She shuddered again. "Hardly any. That does not sound very convincing."
-
-He proposed a third alternative. "You can come up to my room, and lie on
-the bed. I will paper up all the doors and cracks and turn up the gas.
-You will simply go to sleep and never wake."
-
-"That is the best," she said.
-
-"If we had plenty of time. But they may take us in a few minutes. Bryant
-has seen your husband, he will not wait long after that interview."
-
-"The tabloids, then," she said firmly.
-
-Yes, it had come to this, she must cheat the law. Twice, she had had
-her chance, once as the wife of Jack Pomfret, again as the wife of Guy
-Spencer. And twice had the cup of triumph been snatched from her lips.
-
-She must die, like a rat in a hole, in this obscure little cottage at
-Strand-on-the-Green, in the company of the man who had always been her
-evil genius.
-
-Dutton went across to a small cupboard built in the wall of the shabby
-parlour, and brought out a little bottle filled with capsules. He
-extracted one and handed it to the shrinking woman.
-
-"Take yours first, dear, I will take mine after." There was a look of
-infinite compassion in the scoundrel's face as he offered it to her.
-
-Bravely she took it, and swallowed it with a great gulp, sitting in the
-shabby easy-chair. The effect was almost instantaneous, and when Dutton
-had made sure that she was beyond human aid, he took a similar tabloid
-himself, with the same result.
-
-An hour later there was a thundering knock at the door of the cottage.
-One of the detectives had gone to a telephone office and informed Bryant
-that the woman had come to Strand-on-the-Green, and was with Dutton. The
-order came back from Bryant, who had only stayed a few minutes at Eaton
-Place, that the pair were to be arrested at once.
-
-Of course there was no response. After waiting for a few moments, the
-men broke in the frail door. But they were too late.
-
-Norah Burton, and the man who had been so long associated with
-her--brother, cousin, lover, whatever he might be--had gone to their
-judgment.
-
-It was a nine-days' wonder, and while his friends and acquaintances were
-still discussing it at clubs and over tea-tables, Guy Spencer slipped
-quietly abroad. When he returned to England, at the end of twelve
-months, these tragic happenings had become little more than a memory to
-his world.
-
-He stayed a week with the Southleighs at their ancestral home in Sussex,
-and at the end of that week their friends read an important announcement
-in _The Morning Post_:
-
-"A marriage has been arranged and will shortly take place between Mr.
-Guy Spencer and his cousin, Lady Nina, only daughter and child of the
-Earl of Southleigh."
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of This House To Let, by William Le Queux
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- <head>
- <title>
- This House to Let, by William Le Queux
- </title>
- <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
-
- body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
- P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of This House To Let, by William Le Queux
-
-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: This House To Let
-
-Author: William Le Queux
-
-Release Date: February 24, 2016 [EBook #51307]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THIS HOUSE TO LET ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- THIS HOUSE TO LET
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By William Le Queux
- </h2>
- <h4>
- Hodder And Stoughton Limited
- </h4>
- <h4>
- London
- </h4>
- <h3>
- 1921
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>CONTENTS</b>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_PROL"> PROLOGUE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_PROL" id="link2H_PROL"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- PROLOGUE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">V</span>ery early on a
- July morning in 1919 Constable Brown was on his beat in Kensington, in the
- immediate neighbourhood of Cathcart Square.
- </p>
- <p>
- Cathcart Square was an old-fashioned backwater of this highly respectable
- suburb. It had not been built on any regular lines. Small, narrow houses
- nestled comfortably by the side of what might be called mansions. At the
- entrance to the Square itself, a narrow-fronted milk-shop stood next door
- to a palatial residence. The dairy was very old, and the Square, with its
- strange agglomeration of houses, had been built round it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Constable Brown, a tall, strapping young fellow, took his duties easily.
- He was quite contented with his lot, and not thirsting for promotion; he
- had no overweening sense of his own abilities. He was friendly with all
- the cooks on his beat, and from them he received very choice tit-bits. In
- his case, the policeman's lot was a fairly happy one.
- </p>
- <p>
- The morning was a very bright one, a somewhat powerful summer sun had just
- risen, and flooded the streets with light.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had no need of his lantern, early in the morning as it was. He strolled
- slowly round the Square, turning observant eyes on an the houses. In his
- patrol, he met nobody. The busy world of commerce was not yet astir. Only
- from afar he heard the distant rumbling of market-carts on their way to
- Covent Garden, market-carts laden with fruit and vegetables.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Square was sleeping. In a few more hours it would wake to vigorous
- life. The dairy shop would take down its shutters, and show signs of
- animation. And when the dairy shop took down its shutters, Constable Brown
- would be relieved, and go home to enjoy his well-earned rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- All was quiet in the Square. Brown had patrolled it several times in his
- nightly vigil, and had discovered no signs of marauders.
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused opposite No. 10, one of the few big houses. He looked
- contemplatively at the board announcing in large type&mdash;THIS HOUSE TO
- LET: FURNISHED-with the agent's name displayed prominently at the foot of
- the bill.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Only house to let in the Square," ruminated Brown, as he stood reading
- the bill for perhaps the hundredth time. "It's been empty now for over
- three months. It ought to have been snapped up long ago."
- </p>
- <p>
- He was right. Houses in Cathcart Square did not wait long for tenants. Mr.
- Brown ruminated further, and provided his own solution.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Old Miles, the caretaker, has got too comfortable quarters, he doesn't
- want to flit. When people come to view, he talks to them about damp, or
- ghosts or beetles, and chokes them off. Artful old devil, Miles, and a bit
- too fond of drink."
- </p>
- <p>
- Having finished his patrol of the Square itself, he passed along the
- backs, abutting on a somewhat mean street, for a rather undesirable
- neighbourhood had built itself around these somewhat stately houses.
- </p>
- <p>
- His perambulations brought him to the back of No. 10, the house to let.
- His trained eye, accustomed to take in the smallest details, noticed a
- broken pane of glass in the scullery window. He climbed over the low
- railing which shut off the back premises from the mean street on which
- they looked, and peered at the broken window-pane. From a general point of
- view there was not much in it. Window-panes are broken every day. But this
- was an empty house, looked after by a somewhat bibulous caretaker of the
- name of Miles. A hundred chances to one that Miles had stumbled against
- it, and broken it with his elbow.
- </p>
- <p>
- But although Constable Brown was not very brilliant, he was painstaking
- and methodical; his mind was slow but tenacious. He did not accept facts
- at their face value.
- </p>
- <p>
- After peering through the broken pane, he proceeded to further
- experiments. He lifted the window, and it went up easily. He drew his
- deductions swiftly. Somebody had entered the empty house. That somebody
- had smashed the pane in order to get at the latch, had entered the house,
- later emerged through the window and forgotten to fasten it.
- </p>
- <p>
- But why enter an empty house, where there was nothing to steal except the
- heavy furniture left by the late tenant, a Mr. Washington, who was abroad?
- Brown knew for a fact from the caretaker that all silver and plate had
- been lodged at Mr. Washington's bank. It was a puzzle.
- </p>
- <p>
- One thing was clear: his duty lay straight before him. He must go over
- that empty house. A careful examination might reveal something or nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- But he was a very cautious man, and with no great belief in his own
- powers. He would not make the examination alone. He blew his whistle for
- further assistance.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a few seconds, a fellow constable, a smart young fellow, hurried up to
- him. Brown pointed to the broken pane, the uplifted window. The smart
- young man projected himself through the open space. Brown followed,
- explaining as he went.
- </p>
- <p>
- They searched the basement, the ground floor, and the floor above&mdash;with
- no result.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now for the caretaker," said the younger and the more quick-witted of the
- two policemen.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He sleeps up at the top," answered Brown. "He generally comes home
- half-seas over. If a regiment was hammering at the door he would not wake
- till his sleep was done."
- </p>
- <p>
- They went up to the caretaker's room on the top floor. The bed was empty.
- Miles had evidently taken a holiday.
- </p>
- <p>
- The young constable grunted. "Seems a reliable sort of chap, doesn't he? I
- wonder how long he has been away? The house agents can tell us if they
- have sent any clients to view the house during the last twenty-four hours,
- and whether they have been able to get in or not. Anyway, for the present,
- he seems out of this job."
- </p>
- <p>
- Brown assented. He did not talk as much as his quicker-witted colleague,
- but his rather slow mind was working at its normal speed.
- </p>
- <p>
- "We've got to examine the other floors, you know. I've made up my mind to
- one thing&mdash;whoever came in here, robbery wasn't the object."
- </p>
- <p>
- "There I quite agree," remarked the younger man.
- </p>
- <p>
- They made their way down from the top floor, which consisted of three
- attics. On the floor beneath this, they searched every room and found
- nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- But on the floor underneath their search was rewarded. In a small
- dressing-room, leading off the bedroom which fronted the square, they
- found a gruesome sight&mdash;the lifeless body of a man, comparatively
- young, somewhere about thirty-five or so, a deep gash in his throat, in
- his stiffened hand a razor.
- </p>
- <p>
- The two men gazed, horrified. It was an early summer morning, the sun was
- shining through the windows, the birds were twittering in the trees.
- Shortly the whole world would be astir. And here, in the small room, lay
- the senseless clay, oblivious of all these signs of awakening life and
- vigour.
- </p>
- <p>
- Brown was the first to speak. "Suicide!" he said hoarsely. "The poor devil
- wanted to make an end of it, and crept in here, knowing it was an empty
- house."
- </p>
- <p>
- The younger man spoke less convincingly. "It looks like it. Suicide, as
- you say." He paused a moment, and then spoke slowly: "I think it's
- suicide, but it might be&mdash;mind you, I only say might be&mdash;a very
- carefully planned murder. And now, let us overhaul his pockets, we may
- find something to establish identification."
- </p>
- <p>
- Together they bent down, and rummaged the dead man's pockets. They found
- plenty of material for identification.
- </p>
- <p>
- As they were engaged in their gruesome task, they heard the sound of a
- latch-key being put in the front-door. They heard the door banged to, and
- heavy footsteps ascended the staircase.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Miles come back after his spree," whispered Constable Brown to the
- younger man.
- </p>
- <p>
- Miles, all unsuspecting of what had taken place during his absence, came
- heavily up the stairs. It could not be said that he was by any means
- drunk, but he was not absolutely sober. He was slowly recovering from the
- previous night's debauch.
- </p>
- <p>
- Arrived on the floor where the two policemen were conducting their
- investigations, absolute sobriety came back to him. He saw the open door
- of the dressing-room, two men in uniform kneeling by the side of an
- inanimate object. His brain cleared as if by magic. He recognised in one
- of the kneeling constables his old friend Brown.
- </p>
- <p>
- He indulged in a little profanity, born of his emotion, which need not be
- set down here. Shorn of certain expletives, natural to a man of his class,
- he inquired of Brown what was the matter.
- </p>
- <p>
- Brown on his side was cool and explicit, and instead of answering the
- caretaker's questions, he preferred to put a few of his own.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Nice sort of caretaker you are," he said in a contemptuous voice. "You're
- paid to look after this house, aren't you? Where were you all last night I
- should like to know? You can see what has happened. Somebody has got in
- through the back, either to commit suicide, or with a companion who
- brought him here to murder him. That's got to be found out before the
- Coroner."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miles pulled himself together. He was by no means a fool when sober, and
- in sight of this ghastly object the fumes of last night's intoxication had
- absolutely cleared.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I can show an alibi right enough," he said doggedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The younger and readier-witted of the two constables looked up and spoke
- sharply. "So far, my friend, we have not accused you, but you may as well
- tell us the details of your alibi."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miles's explanation, delivered in the somewhat halting way of his class,
- bore the ring of truth. An old acquaintance of his, whose name and address
- he gave, had looked him up the day before and asked him to spend a day
- with him at Shepperton, where the said acquaintance kept a small shop.
- Miles had succumbed to the temptation. .
- </p>
- <p>
- "It drives a man fair off his blooming chump to be tied by the leg in a
- hole like this," he interpolated in the midst of his narrative, "waiting
- for would-be tenants who never call. I daresay you chaps do your eight or
- ten hours a day, but you're out in the open air, not looking on four
- walls. You see a bit of life, I don't."
- </p>
- <p>
- Constable Brown cut across his narrative swiftly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Never mind your grievances, Miles. If you could get a better job, I guess
- you would take it. Where did you spend the night?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "At the same old show, down at Shepperton," replied the unabashed Miles.
- "My old pal's a sport, I can tell you. When he shut up his shop, he plied
- me with some of the best. I wasn't backward, I admit. I missed the last
- train back, and slept on the sofa in the back room. When I woke, I
- remembered things a bit, and got an early train home. Here I am. My old
- pal Jack will tell you I'm speaking gospel truth."
- </p>
- <p>
- Neither of the two men listening to him had any doubt that his narrative
- was a true one. He was a poor, weak, bibulous creature, but by no stretch
- of the imagination could he be an accessory to the gruesome happenings at
- No. 10.
- </p>
- <p>
- Even had he been at his post, as he should have been on this particular
- night, he would have been sunk in a stertorous sleep, and have heard
- nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- But to make everything sure, Constable Brown pulled him along and forced
- him to look at the dead man.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You have never seen him before, Miles? I mean he has not called to look
- over the house or anything?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "No." Miles, looking shudderingly at the ghastly sight, was ready to swear
- he had never seen him before.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned his frightened gaze away. "It will be all over the town
- to-night," he said ruefully. "We shall never let the house after this."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It will still be a soft job for you, Miles," retorted Brown, a little
- spitefully. "You won't have to play up the damp and the beetles. You are
- here for life, old man."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know," said Miles in a gloomy tone. "But I shall see him staring at me
- every minute of the day and night."
- </p>
- <p>
- The body was removed to the mortuary. The evening newspapers had flaring
- headlines: "Gruesome Discovery in No. 10 Cathcart Square." An enterprising
- journalist had got hold of Miles, and speedily discovering his weakness,
- had taken him to the nearest public-house, and plied him plentifully with
- liquor, with a view to a sensational article.
- </p>
- <p>
- The enterprising reporter made the best of his material, but it did not
- amount to much.
- </p>
- <p>
- The caretaker knew nothing about the dead man, he was armed at all points
- with his alibi. As regards the house itself, invested with so much
- tragedy, the present tenant was a Mr. Washington, a man of considerable
- means, now abroad. Mr. Washington was prepared to let it furnished. The
- furniture was very valuable.
- </p>
- <p>
- To a public greedily anxious for the smallest details, the astute
- journalist served up a nice little article, describing the expensive
- furniture, and adding a short life-history of Mr. Washington, as supplied
- by the reminiscent Miles. The public swallowed this article eagerly and
- awaited further developments.
- </p>
- <p>
- These came with the inquest, and there was a somewhat tame ending to what
- had promised to be a very sensational case.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some three months previously, a certain man named Reginald Davis had been
- suspected of committing a murder while driving a motor-car in Cornwall.
- The evidence, although circumstantial, had been very convincing. The
- police had been on his track, but not quickly enough. The man had eluded
- their vigilance, and run to earth somewhere.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the body of the dead man in Cathcart Square, the two constables had
- found three letters addressed to Reginald Davis. Also a letter, signed
- Reginald Davis, addressed to the Coroner in which he avowed his intention
- of committing suicide at the earliest opportunity.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was fairly evident from this that the wretched man, hunted by the
- police, and recognising that capture was imminent in the course of a few
- days, had resolved upon the fatal step, had effected his entrance into the
- lonely house in Cathcart Square, had found it even more deserted than he
- imagined, and in that little dressing-room cheated the law.
- </p>
- <p>
- But, in addition to this overpowering evidence, there was added the fact
- of identification.
- </p>
- <p>
- A tall, handsome young woman, giving the name of Caroline Masters, had
- been to the mortuary, and identified the body as that of her brother,
- Reginald Davis.
- </p>
- <p>
- She gave her evidence before the Coroner with commendable composure,
- broken now and again with a little natural grief. Her disclosures were
- briefly as follows.
- </p>
- <p>
- Reginald had always been the black sheep of the family, not naturally
- vicious, but impetuous, fiery-tempered and ungovernable. If he was guilty
- of the murder in Cornwall, it had been due to no natural criminal
- instinct, but to a fit of unbridled passion. Her theory was that remorse
- had weighed upon him for this unpremeditated crime, and that, through
- remorse and the fear of justice overtaking him, he had crept into this
- lonely house and passed sentence on himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- She made a very great impression on the Court by the calm and dignified
- way in which she gave her evidence. The Coroner put to her a few
- questions. She was quite certain that the body was that of her brother,
- Reginald Davis? Were there any other members of the family who could
- support her in her identification?
- </p>
- <p>
- No, there were no other members of the family alive. There was another
- brother dead, and a sister of whose whereabouts she knew nothing. Her
- father had been a strange man, he had quarrelled with all the members of
- his family, and she had never known one of them. Her mother had died some
- years ago. Her voice broke a little as she related these touching
- circumstances of her domestic life, more especially when she added she was
- a widow, her husband having been killed in the Great War.
- </p>
- <p>
- There seemed but one possible verdict. The dead man, it was clearly
- established, was Reginald Davis, first by the letters found upon him,
- secondly by his sister's identification.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was also clear that Reginald Davis, hunted by the police, and knowing
- that it was only a question of days or weeks before he would be run to
- earth, had considered the two alternatives of self-destruction or the
- extreme penalty of the law&mdash;and that he had chosen the former.
- </p>
- <p>
- The verdict was recorded. Mrs. Masters was complimented on the way in
- which she had given her evidence. The Coroner assured her that the
- sympathy of the Court was with her. The tears Welled into her eyes as she
- listened to the Coroner's well-chosen phrases. She bowed her grateful
- thanks.
- </p>
- <p>
- Constable Brown was waiting in the corridor as she came out. Beside him
- stood the younger policeman who had assisted him on that very
- well-remembered night in Cathcart Square.
- </p>
- <p>
- Brown touched his helmet. "A very trying time for you, ma'am," he said, "a
- very trying time. You went through it bravely."
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled Wanly. "My poor brother! He had so many good points. But it is
- better as it is. I shudder to think of what might have been, if he had not
- done this dreadful thing."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Much the best way, ma'am, much the best way," corroborated Brown.
- </p>
- <p>
- She went out, a graceful figure, and Brown turned to his younger
- colleague.
- </p>
- <p>
- "A remarkable case, old chap. As we said all along, suicide."
- </p>
- <p>
- The younger man paused a little before he replied. It may be mentioned
- that a few months later he was promoted to the detective force in
- consequence of some rather clever work connected with a gang of coiners in
- an obscure corner of the West End.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It looks like it, but I'm not quite as sure as you are," he said
- laconically.
- </p>
- <p>
- Brown stared, but made no comment. A verdict was a verdict. His young
- colleague had the inexperience and the vanity of youth, and thought he was
- more clever than other people, perhaps!
- </p>
- <p>
- But on one thing the young constable had made up his mind, and that was
- that Miles, the bibulous caretaker, had not told the truth when in the
- witness-box. He came to this conclusion from his demeanour. Miles swore
- that he had no knowledge of the dead man, but the constable believed this
- to be a lie.
- </p>
- <p>
- And with the tame ending of the Coroner's inquest, the mystery of No. 10
- Cathcart Square ceased to hold the public interest. Plenty of other things
- came on to attract their attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>n the year before
- the Great War, when to all appearance there was not a cloud upon the
- horizon, when only a few statesmen felt "profoundly uneasy," the secret of
- that uneasiness being carefully locked away in their own breasts, and
- hidden from the general public&mdash;in that year of 1913, in the month of
- March, the Twenty-fifth Lancers were quartered at the town of Blankfield,
- in Yorkshire.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Twenty-fifth was a crack regiment. Most of the officers were members
- of the aristocracy, a few of the plutocracy, that portion of the
- plutocracy which on account of its wealth had been adopted into a superior
- world by marriage with its aristocratic daughters.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were a fine set of clean-minded, healthy living, sporting young
- fellows. They rode to hounds, they played polo when there was any going,
- they shot over the coverts of their friends, they made love to all the
- pretty girls they came across in a gallant and desultory fashion, loving
- and riding away.
- </p>
- <p>
- It cannot be said that they took their professional duties in too serious
- a fashion. But they were brave as lions, and when the time came to prove
- their mettle, none of their relatives had cause to blush for their record.
- </p>
- <p>
- The memories of most of them were enshrined deeply in the hearts of
- wailing mothers and weeping sweethearts, when the great holocaust came.
- </p>
- <p>
- Foremost amongst this band of gay spirits and resolute sportsmen was a
- certain Captain Murchison, "Hughie," as he was always called by his
- intimates.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Hughie" was not a pure aristocrat. His father, a man of fabulous wealth,
- was the head of the great brewing firm of Murchison, Delaroyd &amp; Co.,
- the fourth in succession, for the big brewery had been founded over a
- hundred years ago.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is supposed, in the case of self-made men, that it requires three
- generations to make a gentleman. Anyway, the present Sir Hugh had won his
- spurs by the fact of belonging to the fourth. And he had further firmly
- established his position by marrying Lady Gertrude Marchmont, a daughter
- of the Earl of Mounthaven. The Marchmonts had blue blood in profusion,
- they ere one of the oldest families in the Kingdom, only just being beaten
- by such superior people as the Howards, the Talbots, and the Nevilles.
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Murchison was, therefore, plutocrat on the father's side,
- aristocrat of aristocrat on the mother's. But he did not owe his
- popularity to these adventitious circumstances. The fact that he was the
- most popular man in his regiment was due to his own sterling qualities.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the first place, he was a man of the most unbounded generosity and the
- most serene good-humour. He had captained the Eleven at Eton, and he was
- one of the best shots, also one of the best polo-players, in England.
- Needless to say that he was a man's man. The fact that he was also equally
- a woman's man can be easily explained. He boasted more than ordinary good
- looks, and he had a charming, deferential way with women that captivated
- them at once.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Twenty-fifth had a very good time at Blankfield, on the whole. The
- houses of the "county" were, of course, open to such a distinguished
- regiment, but perhaps they had a rather jollier time amongst the rather
- limited circle of rich townsfolk whom they condescended to visit: the
- people who, at the best, had only a nodding acquaintance with the
- "county."
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison was a born sportsman. Hunting, polo, shooting, cricket, occupied
- nearly all his waking thoughts, except those few that were claimed by his
- professional duties. Popular as he was with women, not a single member of
- the weaker and more charming sex had made any real impression on him up to
- the present.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had had several flirtations with charming girls, of course: he might
- have indulged in a few sentimental passages with certain more or less
- detached, or semi-detached, married women. The latter very rarely, for
- although by no means a saint he was a very clean-minded young man, and
- held rather rigid notions as to what might be done, and what ought not to
- be done.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anyway at this particular moment he was quite heart-whole.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, one day, in this rather sleepy town of Blankfield, an adventure
- befell him. It was not strictly a common or garden adventure, for more
- than one reason.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman, or rather girl, who was concerned in it, for looking at her in
- a severe light she did not appeal to be more than twenty, bore upon her no
- marks of the shameless adventuress. It was easy to see that she was not a
- member of his own world, the world of plutocracy mingled into aristocracy
- by judicious intermarriage. The "county" would not, of course, open their
- doors to her. According to her own account, the respectable "villadom" of
- the sleepy old town had not called upon her, on account of the absence of
- convincing credentials.
- </p>
- <p>
- The meeting happened in this way. Hugh found himself with a blank
- afternoon, an afternoon that had not been filled up. He could call at lots
- of houses and get tea. But, at this period, he was becoming a little
- fed-up with the Blankfield teas, the simpering girls, the astute mothers
- who wanted to take the heir of the Murchison millions off his guard, and
- hook him for a son-in-law.
- </p>
- <p>
- Coming from a long line of successful tradesmen, Hugh had rather less
- brains than he ought to have acquired by heredity. Still, he was no fool.
- As long as a proposition was not too complex, he could size it up pretty
- accurately. And he sized up the Blankfield hospitality at its true worth.
- </p>
- <p>
- He walked down the High Street, and turned into the first tea-shop. It was
- a well-known establishment, and the dashing members of the Twenty-fifth
- were wont to invite hither for tea some of the Blankfield maidens who Were
- not too particular as to chaperonage.
- </p>
- <p>
- He expected to find here a good few of his brother officers. To his
- surprise, he did not see one. But the room was very full. To a casual
- observer, every table seemed occupied. He was about to turn away, when a
- waitress, who knew him well, touched him on the arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It's quite all right, Captain Murchison,"&mdash;Hugh had arrived at
- seniority very early: "there's a table up there at the far end. There's
- only a young lady there, and she has very nearly finished her tea."
- </p>
- <p>
- The young lady in question was quite young; Hugh decided from the first
- swift glance at her that she could not be more than twenty. She was
- exceedingly pretty, with wavy light hair and soft brown eyes. She wore an
- air of composure remarkable in one so youthful.
- </p>
- <p>
- The young man knew her well by sight, as did his brother officers. She was
- frequently to be seen in the High Street, flitting in and out shops,
- sometimes alone, sometimes accompanied by a rather common-looking person,
- some ten years her senior. It was said they were brother and sister and
- their name was Burton.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had arrived in Blankfield about a couple of months ago, and taken a
- moderate sized house on the London Road, a little in the outskirts of the
- town. But though they had been here for these two months, they knew
- nobody. Not a soul had called upon them: for the villadom of Blankfield
- was very select, and had to know something about newcomers before it
- stretched out a welcoming hand. About the Burtons nothing seemed to be
- known, and until some reliable information was forthcoming, they would be
- ostracised.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shop was very crowded, and most girls of her age might have felt
- embarrassed by her loneliness. But, although many admiring glances were
- levelled at her from the few masculine occupants, she seemed quite
- unperturbed and unconscious, looking neither to the right nor the left,
- but taking in everything that was going on, under lowered eyelids veiling
- those pretty brown eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- She gave him one swift glance as he sat down, and then went on composedly
- with her tea. There was nothing in the glance that was either provocative
- or inviting. Of the two, Hugh felt much more embarrassed than she did. He
- wondered if she was as stand-offish as she looked. If he addressed a
- remark to her, would she snub him?
- </p>
- <p>
- Anyway he determined to put it to the proof. "I do hope I am not
- intruding, but it was Hobson's choice, you know; this is the only vacant
- table."
- </p>
- <p>
- No, she was not going to snub him. On the contrary, she gave him a very
- pleasant smile, and he noted with satisfaction that her voice was a
- refined and pleasant one.
- </p>
- <p>
- "There is hardly any question of intruding in a public place like this. I
- cannot expect them to turn customers away in order that I may sit by
- myself."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not a bad beginning, thought Hugh. It was evident she was not
- disinclined to enter into a little desultory conversation with a man who
- she knew was a gentleman, and not likely to take undue advantage of her
- absence of conventionality.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh went on with growing boldness. He had often said to his great chum
- Jack Pomfret that it was a thousand pities this pretty girl was not in
- Blankfield Society, she seemed so much more attractive than the other
- girls who were in it.
- </p>
- <p>
- "We haven't been introduced, of course, but I know you very well by sight.
- There is hardly a day that I do not meet you about here. And I know your
- name, too. You are Miss Burton, are you not? And you live with your
- brother at that nice little house on the London Road."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Quite right." Miss Burton nodded her pretty head. She added with a little
- silvery laugh: "we can't be introduced, unless the waitress took the kind
- office upon herself, for I don't know a soul in the place. we have been
- here two months, and we have been let severely alone. I suppose if we
- stayed here for twenty years it would be the same. Of course, we didn't
- expect to get into 'county' Society, but we must be quite as good as heaps
- of people in the town and outskirts."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh was a little embarrassed by these very frank remarks. He observed
- lamely that it was a shame, and indulged in some rather inane remarks on
- the snobbishness of provincial towns.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You must find it awfully dull," he ventured after a brief pause. During
- the short silence, Miss Burton had ordered herself some more tea. It was
- evident that she was not desirous of abruptly terminating this pleasant <i>tête-à-tête</i>.
- The waitress drew her own conclusions from the further order, and smiled a
- little as she turned away.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I should be a hypocrite if I pretended the contrary. Of course,
- housekeeping takes up a good bit of my time, and I read a good deal, and
- do a lot of fancy-work. But all the same, it is a state of isolation, not
- an outside person to speak to from one week-end to the other. Of course I
- hear all that is going on from the tradespeople, and I know the names of
- the principal persons here whom I constantly meet and never speak to. I
- know, for instance, that you are Captain Murchison. I think I know the
- names of all your brother officers."
- </p>
- <p>
- "What made you come here, if it is not a rude question?" asked Hugh
- bluntly. "It was surely a risky experiment, landing yourself in a town
- like this, without any introductions."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I told my brother so when he first proposed it," replied Miss Burton
- calmly. "But, although he is one of the best fellows in the world, he is
- frightfully obstinate. He had stayed at an hotel here for a few days some
- years ago, and he had taken a violent fancy to the place. He was quite
- sure everybody would make a rush for us, the moment we arrived."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Burton proceeded to draw on her gloves. During this explanatory
- conversation, she had consumed her second cup of tea. She called the
- waitress and paid her bill.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I must be going now," she said. "I have quite enjoyed this little chat,
- although I am sure you will think very badly of me for having confided so
- much to a stranger. I really don't know what made me do it&mdash;I suppose
- I got tired of having kept silence for so long."
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, he could understand that. Poor, pretty little girl, just at an age
- when all the pleasures of youth should be open to her, and to have to pass
- her life in the society of that rather common-looking brother, good fellow
- as she declared him to be.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have enjoyed the meeting immensely, too," said Hugh heartily. "I only
- wish we could come across each other at some of these Blankfield houses,
- stupid and dull as they generally are."
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, the pretty Miss Burton fired her last shot as she rose to leave:
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have been unconventional enough from the beginning, and if I can do it
- without blushing, I am going to be more unconventional still. If you cared
- to come up to Rosemount one afternoon, I am sure my brother would be
- pleased to see you."
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison was very embarrassed by the suggestion, although she did not
- proffer it in any bold fashion.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I shall be delighted," he stammered. "I will run up one afternoon." Of
- course when he said this he had very little intention of keeping his
- promise. To enjoy a mild sort of flirtation with an exceedingly pretty
- girl was one thing. To go to her house and make the acquaintance of her
- brother, who he was certain was not a gentleman, was quite a different
- proposition, and might land him in all sorts of unpleasant complications.
- </p>
- <p>
- He also had an uneasy conviction that Miss Burton was remarkably
- self-assured for such a young woman. She had spoken of blushing when she
- gave him the invitation, but she had not done so. Not the faintest colour
- showed on her cheek, and the glance that met his was perfectly steady and
- unwavering. She must either be very innocent, or, young as she was, she
- had acquired the experience and self-possession of a much older woman. He
- would like to think it all out.
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl nodded in a friendly fashion, and tripped away, leaving Hugh
- Murchison to finish his tea, and ponder over what had happened.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hen Hugh got back
- to his quarters the first thing he did was to hunt up his great friend
- Jack Pomfret. He found that young gentleman stretched in front of a
- blazing fire&mdash;ft was a very chilly March&mdash;and smoking a cigar
- nearly as big as himself. Jack Pomfret, it may be said, was quite a small
- man, of about the size and weight that would be associated with the
- coxswain of a 'Varsity boat.
- </p>
- <p>
- Next to Murchison, perhaps Pomfret was the most popular man in the
- regiment. He was certainly the poorest, for although he came of an
- aristocratic family, the said family had very little to bless themselves
- with.
- </p>
- <p>
- If it had been left to his immediate relatives, Jack would have had to
- enter a line regiment, and subsist on his pay, supplemented by more or
- less regular small remittances from his hard-up father.
- </p>
- <p>
- But fortune had smiled on Jack when he was in his cradle. A rich
- great-aunt had been his godmother, and from the date of his christening
- had taken him under her wing. She had been crossed in love when quite a
- girl, would never marry. Jack Pomfret had a handsome, but not an
- extravagant, allowance now, and he would come into his great-aunt's
- fortune when she died.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack always complained that his aunt was a bit thrifty, and did not fully
- understand the imperative necessities of a young subaltern in an expensive
- regiment like the Twenty-fifth.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a matter of fact, Miss Harding, his mother's youngest sister, suffered
- from acute indigestion, existed principally on soda-water and biscuits,
- lived in a comparatively small house with one manservant and two maids,
- and saved a great deal every year out of a large income. She loved Jack
- very much, but she had little or no sympathy with the follies and
- indiscretions of youth. She had a hazy sort of idea that an officer should
- live within his pay, as she lived well within her income. Needless to say
- that Jack had long disabused her of this silly idea.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Great tidings, old man," cried Murchison, breaking in upon the meditative
- little man, blowing great clouds of smoke. "I'll give you six guesses."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not in a guessing mood," returned Jack shortly. "All my brain-power is
- used up. I am trying to concoct a letter to the dear old aunt&mdash;God
- bless her, she is one of the best!&mdash;insinuating gently that a cheque
- for a couple of hundred would be very convenient at the present moment."
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison took a seat. "Silly old ass," he said in a kindly tone, "if you
- want a couple of hundred have it from me, and don't worry about the aunt.
- You can pay me when she stumps-up. From what you have told me about your
- respected relative, it might be a lengthy business. I suppose you will
- plead debts. She might offer to discharge them, and ask the names of the
- creditors. In that case, old chap, you wouldn't handle much personally,
- would you?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret laughed genially. He was always very hard-up, but he was never
- depressed for very long. There was always a silver lining to every cloud.
- </p>
- <p>
- "She's the sweetest, dearest soul on God's earth," he said in a tone of
- conviction. "But you know, Hughie old man, she doesn't understand&mdash;I
- say emphatically, she doesn't understand&mdash;you know what I mean. She
- is early Victorian. As to your suggestion, I appreciate it very much, but
- emphatically, no." He added, with a whimsical smile: "Yours is a loan, I
- should have to pay back; Heaven knows when I could do so. The dear old
- aunt, well, it is a gift, no question of paying back. I haven't thought it
- all out yet, but in the early cool of to-morrow morning, I shall write her
- a beautiful and touching letter. I know by experience it will bring a
- cheque."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You're an artful young devil, I know," said Murchison. Straight as a die
- himself, he was not too appreciative of his friend's diplomatic methods.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the other hand, was he justified in criticising? He had a magnificent
- allowance from his opulent father. Poor Jack, with a somewhat puritanical
- and niggardly aunt at his back, had just to worry along, and live in this
- expensive regiment from hand to mouth.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no more to be said on this subject.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, Jack, are you in a mood to listen to my news?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret leaned forward, and flicked the ash oft his cigar. "Yes, I think I
- am. Begone dull care! I shall write that letter the first thing to-morrow
- morning."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, I have made the acquaintance of that pretty Burton girl, whom
- nobody in Blankfield visits."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Pomfret emitted a little chuckling sound. "Lucky devil. How did you do
- it? I thought she was unapproachable. She walks down the High Street,
- 'with a haughty stare, and her nose in the air,' and looks neither to left
- nor right. How did you manage it, old man?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh laughed. "Oh, as easy as anything. Just dropped in to Winkley's,
- expecting to see a lot of you fellows with your best girls. Not a soul
- there I knew. Room full&mdash;every table full, save for one at which Miss
- Burton was sitting alone&mdash;sat at the one table, <i>vis-à-vis</i> with
- Miss Burton. There it is in a nutshell."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Pomfret grinned broadly. "Oh, Hughie, what I would have given for your
- chance. You know I am awfully gone on that girl, she is so sweet and
- dainty, far and away the prettiest girl in Blankfield. What did you make
- of your chance?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "As much as could be made in five or ten minutes. She told me a lot about
- things, her disappointment in finding that the Blankfield people would not
- call upon her, and that, excepting her brother, she had not a soul to
- speak to."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Poor little soul!" said Mr. Pomfret, in a voice of the deepest sympathy.
- "Poor little soul!" he repeated.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, we talked for some little time, some ten minutes perhaps, I don't
- think it could have been much longer. And then&mdash;then&mdash;you will
- never believe it, Jack&mdash;she asked me to call, and be introduced to
- her brother."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Pomfret was quite young, in fact he was the baby of the regiment. But
- having been educated at a public school, he had learned a certain amount
- of worldly wisdom rather early. He gave expression to it now.
- </p>
- <p>
- "If she were living with her mother, or a maiden aunt, Hughie, the thing
- would be so easy. But the brother, we have seen him walking beside that
- lovely girl. It would be difficult to class him. It would be perhaps too
- much to say he was either a bounder or a cad&mdash;he's not boisterous
- enough for the one or common enough for the other. But clearly, he's not a
- gentleman or the imitation of one."
- </p>
- <p>
- "No," answered Hugh. "Your description of the brother quite fits. He is
- neither fish, flesh, fowl, nor good red-herring, as the old saw has it.
- Then the girl is so different. She is, to an extent, frank and
- unconventional."
- </p>
- <p>
- "She must be, or she wouldn't have asked you to call upon her,"
- interrupted the astute Mr. Pomfret.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Quite so, I perfectly agree. But upon my soul, Jack, she has the most
- perfect manners. She does these sort of things in such a way that you
- cease to wonder why she does them."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I understand." Mr. Pomfret looked very wise. "There's a wonderful
- fascination about the girl. She radiates it, even when you pass her in the
- street. By Gad, there's not a young woman in Blankfield who can hold a
- candle to her. Well, Hughie, what are you going to do about the
- invitation?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I'm in two minds, old man, to go or stay away. There's the brother, you
- see."
- </p>
- <p>
- "There's the brother," repeated Mr. Pomfret, "and a dashed disappointing
- sort of a brother, too. If it had only been a mother, or a maiden aunt!
- what a priceless opportunity! And yet it seems a bit too good to be lost."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But the brother, what about him?" Hugh insisted.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The brother is, of course, a stumbling-block. You can't ask him to Mess.
- 'Old Fireworks' will stand more from you than anybody, but he would never
- stand Burton. He would be calling him 'Your Grace' or 'Your worship' or
- something."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Old Fireworks," it may be explained, was the nickname of the respected
- Colonel of the gallant Twenty-fifth Lancers. It had been conferred upon
- him, on account of his explosive temper. He was also a rigid
- disciplinarian.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I shall not go," said Hugh after a brief pause.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Pomfret was thinking deeply. He pulled at his big cigar in a
- meditative fashion. Then at length, out of his wisdom, he spoke:
- </p>
- <p>
- "Let us reason this out, my well-beloved friend. A very pretty girl asks
- you to go and see her, she is unfortunately hampered by an undesirable
- brother. You accept their hospitality, but you know he is not a man you
- can ask to Mess. But you can take him to an hotel, and feed him up there.
- Tell him the Colonel's kicked up rough about guests, any lie you like, to
- save his <i>amour propre</i>."
- </p>
- <p>
- "A good idea, Jack. Have you anything more to say? Don't forget that if I
- go to Rosemount, the news will be all over Blankfield in five minutes."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Pomfret snapped his fingers. "Who cares a fig for the Blankfield
- people? Everybody knows, or ought to know, that a soldier loves and rides
- away. And the Blankfield girls are dull enough, Heaven knows, I wouldn't
- give a thought to them."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Then you advise me to call, and be introduced to the brother, eh?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course, we shall be off in another two months, and leave only tender
- memories behind us." Mr. Pomfret was a practical person, if ever there was
- one. "Let us seize the passing day. By the way, have you any objection to
- taking me up to call with you, when you go? Say no, if you have the
- slightest objection."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh Murchison looked at him squarely. "No, old chap, not the slightest.
- The girl interests me in a way, chiefly, I think, because I can't quite
- make her out, can't determine whether she is very cunning or very simple,
- but I am not attracted in the ordinary sense. I take it you are."
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret's look of indifference changed to one of gravity. "Yes, Hughie, I
- am. I would like to see that girl at close quarters."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh rose. "Right, we will call together, and in the meantime we will keep
- it from the other fellows?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Good Heavens, I should think so, we should be chaffed to death," was
- Jack's fervent answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few days later, the two young men walked to Rosemount. It was a villa
- sort of house, set in a small garden, very carefully kept. The windows
- were ornamented with boxes of flowers. Small as the establishment was,
- there was an air of elegance about it, an elegance perhaps of restricted
- means but of refined taste.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret nudged his senior officer. "I say, they've turned it into a very
- decent sort of little crib, haven't they? I should say that is due to the
- girl."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh laughed. "Perhaps it is the brother after all. He might be an artist,
- you know. Artists are often very rum-looking chaps."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Artist be hanged," said Pomfret emphatically. "I'll bet you a fiver he
- isn't an artist, whatever he is. A 'bookie' or a 'bookie's' tout, more
- likely."
- </p>
- <p>
- At the end of this short colloquy, they had reached the hall door. A very
- smart maidservant, in a becoming cap and apron, opened it. In answer to
- their inquiry, Miss Burton was in.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were shown into the drawing-room. The young mistress of the house was
- reclining in an easy-chair; an open book lay on her lap.
- </p>
- <p>
- She advanced towards them with that peculiar air of self-possession which
- had so impressed Hugh on his first meeting in the tea-shop. A hostess with
- years of social experience could not have been more at her ease than this
- young girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- "How nice of you to come, after that very vague invitation," she said, in
- her clear, silvery voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- She addressed Murchison first, and then turned swiftly to Pomfret, in
- whose eyes she doubtless recognised frank admiration of her peculiar
- attractiveness.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know your friend is going to introduce you in proper form. But it is
- really quite unnecessary. I know you are Mr. Pomfret. I have learned the
- names of all the officers from the tradespeople, also, my only friends in
- Blankfield. Perhaps Captain Murchison has told you what I confided to him
- the other day, that we are as isolated here as if we were on a desert
- island."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Pomfret sat down beside her on a small Chesterfield. From his vantage
- point he could gaze into the beautiful eyes, he could note the lustre of
- that fair, wavy hair.
- </p>
- <p>
- "A beastly shame," growled the young subaltern, at a loss for appropriate
- words to express the enormities of Blankfield Society.
- </p>
- <p>
- She turned away lightly, as if the subject interested her no further.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I think we will have tea. My brother is engaged in scientific pursuits.
- when he can tear himself away, he will join us. Captain Murchison, will
- you kindly ring the bell?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Truly, she had the manners of a woman of the world. She took the homage of
- the two men as an accomplished fact. The villadom of Blankfield could not
- produce such a hostess, so free from fussiness or exaggerated hospitality.
- You would have to go to the "county" to find her parallel. The two men
- exchanged appreciative glances. Whatever her origin, Miss Burton could
- shine in any circle in which she found herself permanently, or
- temporarily, located.
- </p>
- <p>
- The tea was served, and over the tea-cups they chatted in desultory
- fashion. Then the drawing-room door opened, and Mr. Burton appeared. From
- the moment of his appearance, the atmosphere seemed to be changed. He
- advanced towards them with outstretched hands. His manner was extremely
- cordial, but it went beyond the limits of good taste. His tones were
- breezy but blusterous. There was a rasping and a vulgar ring in his voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Welcome to our humble abode, gentlemen. It is very brave of you to come
- and visit the boycotted ones."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh and Jack Pomfret fidgeted in their chairs. This common-looking young
- man was a bit too communicative about his private affairs. They had a
- slight suspicion that he had been indulging in alcohol, his manner was so
- unrestrained.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Burton sank down in his chair, and took a cup of tea from the hands of
- his attentive sister. The visitors did not see it, but she shot a warning
- glance at him, and in face of that warning glance, Mr. Burton, by a strong
- effort, pulled himself together.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You see, gentlemen, I feel very sore about this matter; my sister has a
- calmer temperament, and she takes things as they come. Here we came from
- the North of Ireland, from a little town where we were highly looked up
- to, where we knew every man, woman and child in the place. We came here,
- and, as I say, we are boycotted."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Burton looked at him severely. "George, I do not think it is very
- good taste of you to inflict your grievances upon these gentlemen, who
- have just come to make an afternoon call. Don't you think you could soothe
- your nerves better by getting back to your laboratory, or whatever you
- call it?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Burton accepted the hint, and rose. He waved a genial hand towards the
- visitors.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You will excuse me for a few moments. I have a most important experiment
- on. But I shall be back very shortly: I shall see you again before you
- leave."
- </p>
- <p>
- The two young men devoutly wished that they might not see him again. The
- man was a confirmed and innate vulgarian. Both he and his sister, no
- doubt, felt very sore about their social ostracism, but how different were
- the methods of expression indulged in by the two. She explained the
- situation with a proud dignity, hiding her chagrin with a show of
- indifference. He was exposing his gaping wounds to the public eye with an
- air of ostentation.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I must ask you to excuse my brother," said Miss Burton when her ebullient
- relative had left the room. "He has the true Irish temperament, it is
- impossible for him to conceal his feelings. He would like to go down the
- High Street, trailing his coat behind him, and inviting the residents to
- tread upon it, in real Irish fashion, so that he could indulge in a free
- fight with them."
- </p>
- <p>
- The young men laughed cordially. They felt that a somewhat awkward
- situation had been saved by her ready tact, her rather humorous
- explanation.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Murchison, the more level-headed of the two, looked at her very
- fixedly, as he said, "But you are Irish, too. How is it that you have
- learned to control your feelings so successfully?"
- </p>
- <p>
- At such a direct question, he would have expected her to flush a little;
- at any rate, show some slight symptoms of embarrassment. But this
- remarkably self-possessed girl of twenty or thereabouts was as cool as a
- cucumber. She laughed her little silvery laugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- "My brother and I are as wide apart as the North and South Poles," she
- said lightly. "Many people have commented on the fact. Would you like to
- know the reason?"
- </p>
- <p>
- She directed a rather challenging glance in the direction of Pomfret, whom
- she rightly judged to be more susceptible to feminine influence than his
- friend.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I should like to very much," was the subaltern's answer. That eloquent
- glance had completely subjugated the young man.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, listen. My father was a hard-riding, gambling, hard-drinking Irish
- squire, who squandered his money and left little but debts behind him. My
- brother takes after him in certain qualities, thank Heaven not his least
- desirables ones. My mother was an Englishwoman, rather a puritanical sort
- of woman, who fell in love, perhaps a little injudiciously, and I think
- wore her life out in the attempt to curb my father's unhappy propensities.
- I take after my mother. You understand? George is really my half-brother
- by my father's first wife."
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret nodded his head gravely. "I quite understand," he said, and his
- tone was one of conviction. Murchison preserved a benevolent attitude of
- neutrality. He was still thinking it all out.
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Burton was very pretty, nay, more than pretty, very charming, very
- attractive, gifted with a marvellous self-possession, very clever, very
- adroit. But was she as genuine and frank as she seemed? Pomfret evidently
- thought so, but Murchison was not quite sure.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. George Burton, who took after his Irish father in several respects,
- according to his sister's account, made a re-appearance before the
- visitors left. There had been just a little suspicion at first that he had
- been indulging in the hard-drinking habits of his male parent. If so, that
- suspicion must be at once removed. He was bright, breezy and blusterous,
- but he was certainly master of himself. He advanced with the most cordial
- air.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Gentlemen, I feel I owe you an apology. I had no right to intrude my
- private grievances upon you, even although I am very possessed with them.
- Please put it down to my Irish temperament. You will forgive me, I am
- sure."
- </p>
- <p>
- He stretched out appealing hands, the hands of the plebeian as Murchison
- was quick to notice, nails bitten to the quick, coarse fingers and thumbs.
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison quietly ignored the outstretched hand. So did Pomfret,
- subjugated as he was with the charm and attractiveness of Miss Burton. He
- did not quite feel that he wanted to shake hands with this very terrible
- brother, who took after his Irish father.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I apologise most sincerely, gentlemen," he repeated, "for my outburst
- just now. I had no right to inflict upon you a recital of my private
- grievances against the inhabitants of this wretched town. But I am a wild,
- excitable Irishman, whatever is in my mind has to come out. Please forgive
- me; I know my sister Norah never will."
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked appealingly at the girl who sat there, calm and self-possessed
- as always, with a slight expression of contempt upon her charming face.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have already made excuses for you to Captain Murchison and Mr.
- Pomfret," she said coldly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The visitors were very much embarrassed. What could they say to this
- dreadful person who seemed so utterly lacking in all the qualities of good
- breeding? Hugh remained silent, Pomfret opened his lips and murmured
- something about the whole affair being very regrettable.
- </p>
- <p>
- But these somewhat incoherent remarks were quite enough to restore Mr.
- Burton to his normal state of easy buoyancy. He smiled affably.
- </p>
- <p>
- "So that is all over. Well, I am delighted to see you, and it will not be
- my fault if your first visit is your last. Now, I propose you come round
- and have a little bit of dinner with us soon, so that we may get to know
- each other better. Any night that you are at liberty will suit us. <i>We</i>
- are not overwhelmed with invitations, as you can understand from what I
- have told you."
- </p>
- <p>
- If Murchison had been by himself, he would have politely shelved the
- invitation. Miss Burton, who took after her English mother, was quite
- decent and ladylike. The brother was insufferable. Vulgarity, so to speak,
- oozed from him. He was offensive even in his geniality. In short, he was
- impossible.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Pomfret took the wind out of his senior's sails.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Sorry we are quite full up this week, but hardly anything on next. Shall
- we say Monday?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Burton took the matter out of her brother's hands by turning directly
- to Murchison.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Monday, of course, will suit us. Will it suit you?" she asked him
- pointedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Taken by surprise, the unhappy young man could only mutter a reluctant
- affirmative. A few minutes later they left, pledged to partake of the
- Burtons' hospitality on the following Monday.
- </p>
- <p>
- When they were safely outside, Murchison spoke severely to his brother
- officer.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You've let us in for a nice thing. If you had left it to me, I would have
- got out of that dinner somehow."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But I didn't want to get out of it," replied the unabashed junior. "We
- knew the brother was pretty bad all along. I don't know that on the whole
- he is much worse than we imagined. But she's a ripping girl. I want to see
- more of her."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You silly young ass," growled Murchison; "I believe you've fallen head
- over ears in love with her."
- </p>
- <p>
- And Pomfret, one of the most mercurial and light-hearted of subalterns,
- answered quite gravely:
- </p>
- <p>
- "I rather fancy I have. I've never met a girl who appealed to me in quite
- the same sort of way."
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>s a result of his
- visit to Rosemount, Hugh Murchison was very perturbed in his mind. He
- blamed himself severely for having been tempted into that rather intimate
- conversation at the tea-shop. Miss Burton was attractive enough, and
- lady-like enough, to excuse any man for taking advantage of his obvious
- opportunities, but he had been a fool to go farther. He ought never to
- have set his foot in the house of people of whom he knew nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was all Jack Pomfret's fault, he decided hastily. It was his influence,
- his keen desire to make the girl's acquaintance, that had weighed down his
- friend's prudence. For, if left to himself, Hugh was quite sure that he
- would have dallied and dallied till all inclination to call at Rosemount
- had died down.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Pomfret had owned to being greatly impressed with the fair young
- chatelaine. He had admitted that he had never met a girl who had appealed
- to him in quite the same sort of way. In fact, it was easy to see he had
- fallen desperately in love with her.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Jack was just one of those light-hearted, susceptible sort of chaps
- who have not an atom of common-sense in their composition, who will obey
- their impulses, regardless of consequences.
- </p>
- <p>
- And he was not his own master. His career was practically at the disposal
- of his somewhat puritanical aunt. It was just on the cards that Jack would
- be mad enough to propose to this girl who had so bewitched him. One could
- imagine how the aunt would receive such a communication.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was one little ray of hope, however. If Jack did commit such a
- crowning folly, he would be far too honourable not to acquaint Miss Burton
- with his circumstances. Hugh was fairly convinced that the young lady knew
- how to take care of herself. And, even if she did fall in love with Jack,
- as he had done with her, and be inclined to make a fool of herself, there
- was the objectionable brother to be reckoned with. He would certainly not
- allow his sister to engage herself to a man, except with the consent of
- that man's family.
- </p>
- <p>
- All the same, it was as well to avoid any embarrassing entanglements, if
- possible. It is easy to retrace your steps when you have only just
- started.
- </p>
- <p>
- With this object in view, Murchison sought his friend on the Sunday
- preceding the day on which they were to present themselves at Rosemount.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Jack, old man, I have been thinking&mdash;&mdash;" he began.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Pomfret lifted a warning finger. "My dear friend and mentor, don't
- indulge in such violent processes. It's very bad for you."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Don't be an ass, Jack. You are not really funny when you say that sort of
- thing. I've been thinking over this business to-morrow, and, frankly, I
- don't relish the prospect. We had better cut it out."
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret's face took on an obstinate expression. "You are speaking for
- yourself, of course. For my part, I don't intend to break my appointment.
- In my opinion, it would be an awfully low-down thing to do. If you didn't
- want to go, you shouldn't have accepted."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was evident the young man was not in a very reasonable frame of mind,
- equally evident he would require very careful handling.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now, Jack, don't get off the handles. You know you are an awfully
- impetuous chap, and that I have much the cooler head of the two. I have
- been thinking it all out the last day or two, and I don't like the look of
- it."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You informed me just now that you had been thinking," replied Mr. Pomfret
- in the same sarcastic strain. "There is no need to dwell upon the fact. It
- is obvious."
- </p>
- <p>
- But the elder man was not to be ruffled. If anything unpleasant came of
- this sudden acquaintance he would lay the blame on himself for having
- mentioned that little incident of the tea-shop, and inspired the mercurial
- Jack's love of the daring and adventurous.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I don't know that I did accept, as a matter of fact, except by
- implication. I was about to return an evasive answer, leave it in the air,
- so to speak, when you cut in and jumped at the invitation for both."
- </p>
- <p>
- This was true, and Mr. Pomfret's air lost a little of its jaunty
- confidence. "Well, if you think I lugged you in, get out of it yourself.
- Of course you will have to tell some beastly lie that they will see
- through at once. Anyway I am going, and that's flat."
- </p>
- <p>
- "If you go, I shall go," said Hugh firmly. "But I would like you to listen
- to me for a few moments, and put things before you as they present
- themselves to me."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Fire away, then," was Pomfret's answer, but it was delivered in a very
- ungracious tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course we are both agreed about the brother," began Hugh mildly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The other interrupted impatiently: "The brother be hanged. We are not
- going to the house for the brother's sake, but because of the sister.
- what's the use of blinking the fact? If you had met him in the tea-shop
- instead of her, I don't suppose you would have wasted a word on him, no
- more should I. But I don't see why that pretty girl should be ostracised
- because of him."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I don't quite see, under the circumstances, how you can separate them,"
- pursued the obstinate Hugh. "I should like to turn off, just for a moment
- to the sister, and consider her."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Go ahead," said Mr. Pomfret in a somewhat sullen tone. He was keeping his
- impulsive and fiery nature under control, out of his great respect for his
- friend. But it was very doubtful if he would stand much criticism even
- from one so respected.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have not a word to say against her appearance or her manners. I will go
- further, and say there is not a girl in Blankfield, or for the matter of
- that in the 'county' itself, who gives the impression of a thorough
- gentlewoman more convincingly than she does." Pomfret's face brightened at
- these words. "Oh, then you admit that, and you have knocked about the
- world a few years longer than I have. I am of the same opinion, but if you
- say it, it must be so."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I do say it unhesitatingly, but mind you, I am only judging from outside
- appearances. Now, how comes it that such a refined and ladylike girl as
- that should have such a bounder of a brother? There is a mystery there."
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack Pomfret prepared to argue. "I don't quite agree that he is a bounder,
- he is not quite boisterous enough for that. Let us agree on a common
- definition&mdash;namely, that he is bad form. That fits him, I think."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And the sister is very good form. You can't deny that there is a
- mystery."
- </p>
- <p>
- But the young subaltern developed a quite surprising ingenuity in
- argument.
- </p>
- <p>
- "She just simply calls him her brother," sharply, "but she has told you he
- is her halfbrother by a first marriage&mdash;father a gentleman, mother a
- common person, hence the bad form. A second time, the father married a
- woman of his own class, hence Norah Burton. Norah knows him for a good
- sort, if a bit rough, and sticks to him. That's a reasonable theory,
- anyway."
- </p>
- <p>
- "More ingenious than reasonable perhaps," commented Murchison with an
- amused smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret went on, warming to his subject. "And, hang it all, if we speak of
- bounders&mdash;and mind you, I won't admit he is a bounder in the strict
- sense of the term&mdash;is there a family in England without them?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Quite the same sort, do you think?" was Hugh's question.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Look here, I'm not going to be impertinent, and ask if you can point to
- any amongst your own connections, but I know something of my own family.
- I've got a cousin, good blood on both sides. He's been a bounder from the
- time he learned to talk, sets your teeth on edge; as some fellow said,
- every time he opens his mouth he puts his foot into it. By Gad, this
- fellow Burton is a polished gentleman to him. If George showed his nose in
- this regiment they would send him to Coventry in five minutes."
- </p>
- <p>
- "As they did that chap last year," remarked Hugh, alluding to an offensive
- young man who had been compelled to send in his papers, owing to the fact
- that his general demeanour had not come up to the somewhat exalted
- standard of the gallant Twenty-fifth.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Precisely," assented Pomfret. "But you were going to give me some views
- about the girl. Again I say, fire away."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, to go back to that meeting in the tea-shop. It was, to say the
- least, a little unconventional for a young girl to invite an utter
- stranger to call upon her."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You were not an utter stranger," retorted Jack doggedly. "She had heard
- who you were, perhaps from the tradespeople. She knew you were a
- gentleman, she knew your name, Captain Murchison. Hang it all, if you had
- met her in one of these dull Blankfield houses, and she had been
- introduced by a hostess about whom you both knew precious little, and
- asked you to call, being the mistress of her brother's house, you would
- have thought it quite the correct and proper thing. So would every man in
- the barracks. Don't people strike up acquaintances in hotels, and
- sometimes trains?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "They generally find out something about each other before they pursue the
- acquaintance," suggested Murchison. "Look here, old man, you know as well
- as I do, you are arguing all round the point. It would be precious easy
- for the Burtons to say who and what they were, and furnish some proper
- credentials. If they did that, I daresay all Blankfield would call upon
- them, and swallow the brother for the sake of the very charming sister."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, I'll pump her to-night, and get out all you want to know," retorted
- Mr. Pomfret confidently. "I don't go so far as to say they will be able to
- refer us to Burke or Debrett. Decent middle-class people, I expect."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was useless to argue with such an optimist. "You've accounted for the
- brother, I remember, by your ingenious theory. Well, you've made up your
- mind to go then?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Most certainly I have. You do as you like, but while we are on the
- subject of good form, it is not a pretty thing to accept an invitation,
- and then excuse yourself at the eleventh hour by an obvious lie."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Under ordinary circumstances, you would be quite right. It has not
- occurred to you that we were rather rushed into this dinner, then&mdash;that
- we were, so to speak, jumped at?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "It might look like it at first blush," admitted Mr. Pomfret reluctantly.
- "But here are two poor devils, marooned, as it were, in this snobbish
- town, and they naturally jump at the first people who show them the
- slightest civility. They must simply be aching to exchange a word with
- their fellow-creatures. Well, I am going to exchange several with them, I
- promise you."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh felt it was useless. When Pomfret got in these moods, it was waste of
- time to reason with him. He felt uneasy, however. He had promised his
- family to look after him, and he felt a certain responsibility. It was to
- be hoped the sudden infatuation for a pretty face would expire as quickly
- as it had been born.
- </p>
- <p>
- Perhaps a closer association with the bounder brother would produce a
- chastening influence. But then Jack seemed bounder-proof. Had he not
- alluded to a well-born cousin, beside whom Burton shone as a polished
- gentleman?
- </p>
- <p>
- Anyway, he must not desert his young and very impulsive friend. But it was
- with considerable reluctance that he accompanied him to Rosemount on the
- Monday night.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">E</span>ight o'clock was
- the hour appointed for dinner, this fact scoring in the Burtons' favour,
- as evincing a knowledge of the habits of good society. Even a few of the
- most select hostesses in Blankville, who ought to have known better, made
- a base compromise with half-past seven.
- </p>
- <p>
- The two men arrived about five minutes before the time. The young hostess
- was awaiting them in the drawing-room, attired in some filmy creation that
- made her look very charming and ethereal. Soft lights from shaded lamps
- played about her, and lent a touch of perfection to the picture.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Burton was attired in the usual conventional evening dress of the
- English gentleman. One would have guessed him the sort of man who would
- wear a ready-made tie. Not at all. He had tied the bow himself, and with a
- masterly hand. Pomfret even, who was admitted to be the Beau Brummel of
- his regiment, could not have done it better.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is generally supposed that a common man looks more common still when he
- dons evening attire. "George" was an exception to the rule. His black
- clothes became him, and lent him a certain air of dignity, which was
- wanting when he assumed everyday garments. Even Murchison, prejudiced as
- he was against him, was forced to admit to himself that the "bounder" for
- once looked quite respectable. Pomfret, ever leaning to the charitable
- side, felt quite enthusiastic over him, and contrasted him favourably with
- his own cousin, who could boast blue blood on both sides.
- </p>
- <p>
- Norah Burton played the hostess as to the manner born, greeting the
- visitors with just the right degree of cordiality, quite free from the
- effusiveness of most of the Blankfield hostesses. And Burton, taking his
- cue from her, was hearty without boisterousness.
- </p>
- <p>
- The young subaltern's heart warmed to her, she was so gracious, so sweet,
- and about her there hovered such an air of calm dignity. Rosemount, no
- doubt, was honoured by the introduction of such distinguished visitors,
- viewed merely from the social point of view, but she did not permit a
- suspicion of this to escape her. Rather, judging by her demeanour, the
- visitors were honoured by being admitted to Rosemount.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Rather reminds me of a young queen entertaining her subjects," Pomfret
- remarked afterwards to his friend in a rather enthusiastic outburst. "I'm
- not speaking of the 'county' of course, but these Blankfield women make
- you feel they are overwhelmed with your condescension in coming to their
- houses, that they are hardly fit to sit at the same table with you."
- </p>
- <p>
- The dinner was plain, but well cooked. The appointments were perfect,
- snowy napery, elegant glass and cutlery. One neat-handed maidservant
- waited, and waited well. Mr. Burton carved the dishes that were carvable,
- there was no pretence at an <i>à la Russe</i> banquet. Their small
- establishment could not cope with that, and they did not attempt it. There
- was a generous supply of wines: hock, burgundy and champagne.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Mr. Burton, strangely subdued, was quite a good host, hospitable but
- not pressing. Murchison thought he must have been having some lessons from
- his sister, who seemed intuitively to do the right thing Still suspicious,
- he was sure that she had been steadily coaching him how to comport himself
- on this important night.
- </p>
- <p>
- For, after all, it must be a feather in their caps, that after having been
- coldly cast aside by the <i>élite</i> of Blankfield, they had captured for
- their dining acquaintance two of the most popular officers of the
- exclusive Twenty-fifth.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Murchison, ever on the watch for any little sign or symptom to confirm
- his suspicions, had to admit the pair were behaving perfectly. Not the
- slightest sign of elation at the small social triumph manifested itself in
- the demeanour of either. Dinner-parties like this might be a common
- occurrence for all they showed to the contrary.
- </p>
- <p>
- The substantial portion of the meal was over. Dessert was brought in, with
- port, claret and sherry, all of the most excellent vintage. The house was
- a small one, and not over-staffed, but there was no evidence of lack of
- means. Perhaps the Burtons were wise people in not keeping up a great
- show, but spending the greater part of their income on their personal
- enjoyments.
- </p>
- <p>
- While the men were still lingering over their dessert, Miss Burton rose.
- </p>
- <p>
- "There are no ladies to support me, so I shall feel quite lonely by
- myself," she said in her pretty, softly modulated voice. "Shall we have
- coffee in the drawing-room? You men can smoke. It is quite Liberty Hall
- here. My brother smokes in every room of the house."
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison noted the subtle difference between the brother and sister. If
- Burton had given the invitation, he would certainly have said, "you
- gentlemen." The beautiful Norah would not make a mistake like that.
- </p>
- <p>
- Five minutes afterwards, the three men trooped into the pretty
- drawing-room with its subdued, shaded lights. Norah was sitting at a small
- table, on which were set the coffee equipage with an assortment of
- liqueurs. Decidedly, the Burtons knew how to do things when they received
- guests.
- </p>
- <p>
- The "bounder" brother, as Hugh always called him to himself, had drunk
- very heavily at dinner of every wine: hock, burgundy and champagne. But
- evidently he could carry a big quantity. It would take more than a small
- dinner-party like this to knock him over. When he entered the drawing-room
- his mien was as subdued as when he had first received his visitors.
- </p>
- <p>
- They drank their coffee round the fair-sized octagonal table, and then
- they broke up. Miss Burton retired to a Chesterfield, whither Pom-fret
- followed her, as he was bound to do.
- </p>
- <p>
- Burton bustled out of the room, and returned with a huge box of expensive
- cigars. He offered the box to Hugh, who took one with a deprecating look
- at the young hostess.
- </p>
- <p>
- "We dare not, Miss Burton. Think of your curtains in the morning."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Don't trouble, Captain Murchison," she said, with her charming smile.
- "The curtains have to take what comes in this house. George doesn't often
- sit in this room, but when he does he always smokes cigars. I told you
- this was Liberty Hall, you know."
- </p>
- <p>
- The box was offered to Pomfret, who took one. "Do you smoke, Miss Burton?"
- he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Once in a blue moon. I think I will have one to-night, as a little treat.
- It is terribly tempting, when I see all you men smoking." The enamoured
- Pomfret fetched her a cigarette, hovered over her with a match, till it
- was properly lighted, and settled himself again on the Chesterfield. If
- that silly old Hugh didn't butt in, he was going to have a nice little
- chat with this charming girl, who had played the young hostess to such
- perfection.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Hugh was safely out of the way. Burton had piloted him to a
- comfortable easy-chair at the extreme end of the drawing-room, and these
- two antipathetic persons were apparently engaged in an interesting
- conversation. Anyway, Murchison's laugh rang out frequently.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret, it must be confessed, was not very great at conversation. If the
- ball were opened, he could set it rolling, but he lacked initiative. He
- looked at Miss Burton with admiring eyes, but although he had got her
- comfortably to himself on that convenient Chesterfield, he could think of
- nothing to say to her.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then a brilliant inspiration came to him. "I say, how gracefully you
- smoke." The young woman burst into a pleasant peal of quite spontaneous
- laughter. She always had a ready smile at command, but her laughter was
- generally a little forced. This time it was perfectly genuine.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, you are really comical," she cried. "How can any girl smoke a
- cigarette gracefully? In the first place, it is a most unfeminine thing to
- do. All people must smoke them in the same way, and there can never be
- anything graceful in the act."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Women don't smoke them the same way," replied the young subaltern, with
- the air of a man who has observed and learned. "Most of them chew them,
- and hold them at arm's length, as if they were afraid of being bitten."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It's because they don't like smoking, really, and only do it to be in the
- fashion. Now, when I am quite in the mood, I actually revel in a
- cigarette. I am in the mood to-night."
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret leaned forward, with a tender expression on his rather homely, but
- good-humoured, countenance.
- </p>
- <p>
- "That means that you feel happy to-night, eh?"
- </p>
- <p>
- She nodded brightly. "Oh, ever so happy! It is seeing new faces, you know,
- after weeks of isolation," she added with a touch of almost girlish
- gaiety. "It seems such ages since we gave a dinner-party. And you and
- Captain Murchison are so nice. It seems almost like a family gathering."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You like my friend Murchison, then? I am glad, because it is to him I owe
- the pleasure of your acquaintance."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I think he is a dear, he seems so honest, straightforward, and so
- reliable." She spoke with apparent conviction. "Were you not dreadfully
- shocked when he told you, for of course he must have told you, how we got
- to know each other?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not in the least," said Mr. Pomfret stoutly. "I explained to him that
- people can become acquainted, without being properly introduced in the
- conventional sort of way."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ah, then, he had some doubts himself?" flashed Miss Burton. "I expect he
- was a little shocked, if you were not."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not in the slightest, I assure you," replied Mr. Pomfret easily. He was
- not above telling a white lie upon occasions. He remembered too well the
- remarks that his friend had made upon the girl's unconventional behaviour,
- but he was not going to admit anything.
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Burton spoke softly, after a brief pause. "You and Captain Murchison
- are very great friends, are you not?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Awful pals," was the genuine response. "You see, he knows all my family.
- And when I joined the regiment, they deputed him to look after me. He has
- got a hard task," he added with a laugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, not so very hard really, I am sure of that." Norah's voice was very
- sweet, very caressing. "But you and your friend are of very different
- temperaments."
- </p>
- <p>
- "In what way?"
- </p>
- <p>
- She smiled. "Oh, in half a hundred ways. Captain Murchison is as true as
- steel, but also as hard as steel. You, now, are not in the least hard. You
- are very kind and compassionate, you think the best of everybody."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Don't flatter me too much, please," interjected the bashful Pomfret.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, pardon me, I know just the kind of man you are." The sweet face was
- very close to his own, the beautiful, rather sad eyes were looking
- steadily into his. "You are a rich man, or you would not be in this
- expensive regiment. But, if you were a poor man, and you had only ten
- pounds in your pocket, you would lend an impecunious friend five of them,
- and not trouble whether he repaid you or not."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I think you have fitted me, Miss Burton. My dear old chum Hugh is never
- tired of telling me I am an awful ass."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You are both right, really," answered Miss Burton.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You see, we look at life from two different standpoints."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I fancy you come from two different classes?" queried the charming young
- woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret felt a little embarrassed. He did not want to give away his
- particular chum. But there were no doubt certain inherited commercial
- instincts in Hugh that sometimes offended the descendant of a more
- careless and aristocratic family.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You see, Hugh has come from the trading class, originally. His ancestors,
- no doubt, were close-fisted people. Hugh is not close-fisted himself: he
- is, in a certain way, the soul of generosity, but sometimes the old Adam
- peeps out in little things."
- </p>
- <p>
- He had a swift pang of remorse when he had said this. For he suddenly
- remembered Hugh's generous offer of the two hundred which Pomfret, by a
- very diplomatic letter, was going to cajole out of the octogenarian
- great-aunt.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Believe me," added he fervently, "Hugh is one of the best. He is a little
- peculiar sometimes in small things. I ought not to have spoken as I have
- done. I am more than sorry if I have conveyed a wrong impression of him."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But you have not," cried Norah Burton swiftly. "He would be hard in some
- things: I am sure&mdash;for instance&mdash;he would never forgive a really
- dishonourable action, even in the case of his best friend."
- </p>
- <p>
- "No, I am sure he would not," assented Pomfret. "But I don't fancy he has
- been much tried that way. We don't get many 'rotters' amongst our lot."
- </p>
- <p>
- "<i>Noblesse oblige</i>," quoted Miss Burton, lightly. Then she added more
- seriously: "And I am sure he is very kind-hearted and thoughtful. I was
- impressed with his reluctance to smoke because of the curtains. Of course,
- he did not remember that it did not matter in the least, as we never have
- callers."
- </p>
- <p>
- She was getting on the theme of their social isolation, but Pomfret was
- sure that, unlike her brother, strangely subdued to-night from his usual
- boisterousness, she would handle the subject with her customary tact and
- good taste.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ah, of course, all that is very regrettable. It is not so much your loss,
- as the loss of Blankfield. I suppose you won't stay very long here."
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment there came a blazing light in the soft, beautiful eyes. "A
- few days ago, I advised my brother to pack up and clear out. The snobbish
- plutocracy of Blankfield had beaten us, made up of retired shopkeepers and
- merchants. To-night, with you and Captain Murchison as our guests, I think
- we have beaten Blankfield with its fat mothers and plain daughters."
- </p>
- <p>
- She looked superb, as she drew her slender form up to its full height, the
- glow of indignant triumph blazing on her cheek. At the moment she was
- extremely beautiful. If Pomfret had been attracted before, he was
- infatuated now.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will help you to beat the Blankfield people, for whom I don't care a
- row of pins. I will come, whenever you want me."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And your friend Captain Murchison, will he come, too?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret smiled whimsically. "Oh yes, he will come, if I make a point of
- it. Old Hugh thinks he leads me, but I really lead him." She leaned
- forward eagerly. "Can you bring some of your brother officers, Mr.
- Pomfret? Please don't think I am bold and forward and presumptuous. But I
- do long to be even with these Blankfield people. I would love to make a
- little sort of <i>salon</i> of my own. I know it is useless to expect the
- women at present, but they might come in time. Mind you, I don't want
- them."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will try," said Pomfret slowly. "I think I may say that Hugh and I are
- the two most popular men in the regiment; I say it without vanity. And I
- don't suppose we care a snap of the fingers about the Blankfield people.
- Still, I don't want to raise hopes that may never be fulfilled. I can only
- say, I will try." There was a pause. Then she spoke, and there was a
- far-away look in her eyes. "You hesitate, I see. Oh, I quite believe you
- when you say you will try. But there is some stumbling-block in the way,
- isn't there?" Pomfret had perforce to dissemble. "There is no
- stumbling-block that I know of, except running the risk of offending
- Blankfield. That is not a great one, as we shall be out of here in about
- two months."
- </p>
- <p>
- She leaned closer to him, and her voice sank to a whisper. "There is a
- stumbling-block, I know. You are too kind and generous to state what it
- is, you could not, as to-night he is your host. It is my brother."
- </p>
- <p>
- And then poor, infatuated Pomfret sought no further refuge in subterfuge.
- He blurted out the truth. "Some of our chaps wouldn't stand him, you
- know," he said simply.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a little convulsive movement of the delicate hands. "And he is
- such a dear good fellow at heart, wanting I know in the little delicacies
- that mark a real gentleman. You see a great difference between us, don't
- you?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "A very distinct difference," assented Pomfret.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will explain it to you in a few words. My father was a harum-scarum
- sort of person, as I told you last time you were here, hard-riding and
- hard-drinking. When he was a boy of twenty-five he married a woman out of
- his own class, a shop-girl or a barmaid, I am not quite sure which. George
- is many years older than myself, as I told you he is really my
- halfbrother. The first wife died, my father married again, this time a
- lady. I am the daughter of the second marriage. Now, I think you
- understand."
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret was delighted at this avowal, it proved his own prescience.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am so glad you told me, but as it happens, it was just what I guessed."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Burton looked at him with admiring eyes. "You are really very clever,
- you know. Well, I will not exactly say this is a secret, but you will
- whisper it about discreetly. You need not be quite so frank as I have been
- about details, but you can hint at a <i>mésalliance</i>. I hate to have to
- tell you so much, for my brother has been so good to me."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ah!" Mr. Pomfret's air plainly showed that he was eager for further
- information.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Miss Burton was quite willing to gratify him. The young man was a
- pleasant, comfortable sort of person to talk to. He was an admirable
- listener, and never broke in with unnecessary, or irritating
- interruptions.
- </p>
- <p>
- "When my father died he left little behind him but debts; my mother had
- preceded him some ten years. Poor George had gone into a stockbroker's
- office, through the good offices of a distant connection. His salary was
- very small, but he made a home for me. He would not hear of my earning my
- own living."
- </p>
- <p>
- "That could not have been very long ago," remarked Pomfret, "because you
- are not very old now."
- </p>
- <p>
- "No, it was not long," answered the girl, not committing herself to any
- definite dates. "Well, we had a very hard time, as you can imagine. Then
- suddenly our luck changed. An uncle of George's on his mother's side had
- gone out to Australia as a boy, and amassed, we won't say a fortune from
- your point of view, but what we should look upon as wealth. He had never
- married, and when he died, a will was found in which he left all he was
- possessed of to his sister's children. George was the only child, so he
- took it all."
- </p>
- <p>
- "So he threw up business and went in for a country life."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, he has thrown it up for a time. I am not quite certain he will not
- get tired of inactivity, and go back to it. Now that he has capital, it
- would be easy for him to embark in something that would keep him occupied,
- and pay him well."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not a sportsman, I suppose, he doesn't care for hunting or shooting? The
- country is slow for a man if he doesn't do something in that line."
- </p>
- <p>
- The pretty girl smiled; there was a faint touch of humour in the smile.
- "Oh, he's not rich enough to indulge in luxuries of that sort. Besides,"
- she added hastily, "he has such wretched sight, he would be no good at
- sport."
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret thought it had been a very pleasant, enlightening conversation.
- Norah seemed to have been perfectly frank about their past and their
- present position. She did not pretend to be anything but what she was, the
- daughter of a spendthrift father, living on what was practically the
- charity of a good-hearted brother. And that brother was indebted for his
- good fortune to a relative who must have been a man of the people.
- </p>
- <p>
- While the two young people were having this confidential chat, Mr. Burton
- was making himself agreeable to the other guest, in his doubtless
- well-meant, but somewhat undiplomatic, fashion.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I do envy you young fellows when I see you walking about as if the world
- belonged to you."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh drew himself up stiffly. "I was not in the least aware that any one
- of us conveyed that impression."
- </p>
- <p>
- "No offence meant, I assure you." Hugh's tone showed him that he had been
- guilty of bad taste: a blessing Norah had not heard&mdash;she would have
- given him a bad quarter of an hour later on. "But all army men, I think,
- get a certain kind of swagger. Oh, nothing overbearing or unpleasant about
- it, of course. They are made so much of that there is no wonder if they do
- fancy themselves a bit. I'm sure I should if I were one of them."
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison made no comment on this frank statement, and the other man
- rambled on in desultory fashion.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It's the life I wanted. As a boy I longed to grow up quickly and go into
- the army. There was a fair chance of it then, when the old man had still
- got a bit of money left. But by the time I was old enough the idea had to
- be knocked on the head. I had to go into a dingy stockbroking office
- instead."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh pricked up his ears at the announcement. He had not suspected that
- the man would be so communicative about his past. Of course he had gone as
- a clerk. If his father was not well-off enough to put him in the army
- neither could he have afforded to buy him a share in a business.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes," pursued Mr. Burton, "it was an awful come down after the dreams I
- had indulged in."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It must have been a very bitter disappointment," assented Hugh politely,
- in spite of his firm conviction that the army was the very last profession
- in the world suited to a man of his host's obvious peculiarities.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I should have been awfully keen on soldiering," pursued Mr. Burton, under
- the impression that he had discovered a sympathetic listener. "Don't you
- consider it a splendid life?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "There are many things in its favour, certainly," was the rather frigid
- reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- "But, after all, I don't think I should have cared to be in the line;
- there's not the same glamour about it, is there? You fellows in the
- cavalry, in a crack regiment like yours, must see the rosy side of life."
- He heaved a sigh. "And, of course, you've all got pots of money to grease
- the wheels."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh fidgeted perceptibly. How very vulgar the man was, with an innate
- vulgarity that nothing would ever eradicate. But his host, absorbed in his
- own reflections, did not observe the movement.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course, we know all about you, about the great house of Murchison, you
- are tiled-in all right." He lowered his voice to a confidential whisper:
- "What about that young chap yonder? I suppose he's rolling in money, too?"
- </p>
- <p>
- It was growing insufferable. For two pins Hugh would have got up and
- bidden him goodnight then and there, but he shrank from making a scene.
- what a fool he had been to come here, to allow his kindly feeling for that
- susceptible young donkey of a Pomfret to expose him to such an ordeal as
- this.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Really, Mr. Burton," he said in a cutting voice, "I do not discuss the
- private affairs of my friends on such a brief acquaintance. If you are
- really anxious to know, I believe Mr. Pomfret has considerable
- expectations from an old aunt who is fairly wealthy. Those expectations
- depend, I understand, upon his conforming generally to her wishes in all
- respects."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ah, I understand," said the unabashed Burton. "Sorry if my question gave
- you offence. What really put it in my head was the difference between his
- position and mine when I was his age."
- </p>
- <p>
- There was silence for some little time, while the two men applied
- themselves steadily to their cigars. Then Burton jumped up suddenly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "This must be a bit slow for you and your friend, and the night is young.
- What do you say to a game at bridge?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, Captain Murchison would welcome a game of bridge, anything as a
- relief to this vulgarian's conversation.
- </p>
- <p>
- They played for over two hours, Murchison keenly alert from certain
- suspicions that had been forming in his mind. At present there was no
- foundation for these vague suspicions. They played for small stakes, but
- the visitors rose up the winners, not by a great amount, but still
- winners.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a fine night, the two men walked back to their quarters.
- </p>
- <p>
- "How did you get on with the charmer? I saw you seemed very confidential
- together," asked the older man.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Splendidly, old chap. She told me a lot about her history." Pomfret
- related all he had been told in full. "And how did you get on with the
- brother?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Don't ask me," replied Hugh with a groan. "He's the most insufferable
- creature I ever came across. I don't really think I can go there again. At
- the beginning of the evening he started fairly well, but later he reverted
- to type."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, I may as well tell you straight, I shall. The next time we go I'll
- take a share of the brother."
- </p>
- <p>
- When Pomfret spoke in that tone he meant what he said, and Hugh knew he
- would have his own wilful way.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was one piece of information which the young subaltern had not
- imparted to his friend.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was this&mdash;that after much pressing, and more than one refusal,
- Miss Burton had agreed to meet him to-morrow afternoon at a very
- sequestered spot about a mile and a half from Blankfield, with the view of
- pursuing their acquaintance.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>rom the night of
- that dinner-party Murchison noted a subtle difference in his young
- friend's demeanour. Pomfret had always been a harum-scarum sort of young
- fellow, accustomed to follow erratic and injudicious impulses, not
- absolutely devoid of brains of a certain order, but of imperfect and
- ill-balanced mentality.
- </p>
- <p>
- But in his wildest escapades he had always been frank and above-board. And
- he was ever the first, when he had overstepped the border-line, to admit
- that he was in the wrong. And on such occasions, far from justifying his
- exploits, he had been ready to deplore them.
- </p>
- <p>
- But his frankness seemed to have departed from that night. He seemed
- rather to avoid than seek the society of his old friend and mentor. When
- Hugh brought up the subject of the Burtons, Pomfret seemed anxious to
- avoid it, to say as little as possible. He seemed to shut himself up
- within his own soul.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh, of course, was profoundly uneasy. Such a transparent creature as
- Pomfret would not be likely to retire within his own shell unless there
- were cogent reasons for the withdrawal. And the reasons were inspired by
- the attractive personality of the fascinating siren at Rosemount, the
- charming young woman who explained the presence of an undesirable brother
- by the narrative of her father's first unfortunate marriage.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret had invited the brother and sister to a dinner at the principal
- hotel in the place, and Hugh had been his friend's guest. Ladies, of
- course, could not be asked to the Mess. It had been a happy solution of a
- somewhat awkward position. Mr. Burton no doubt understood, but he accepted
- the situation with alacrity.
- </p>
- <p>
- From the dinner they had adjourned to Rosemount. Here they had played
- cards as before, but they left off fairly even. Hugh's suspicions about
- card-sharping were dissipated as before. At the same time, he was still
- resolved to keep a watchful eye upon the pair. It was firmly engrained
- upon his mind, and only, of course, from the purest instinct, that he did
- not trust either of them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Much to his surprise, they left without having been asked to a return
- dinner. It was the turn of the Burtons. And judging from the haste with
- which Burton had jumped at them on the first visit, the omission was a
- little noticeable. It could not be that these new isolated dwellers in
- Blankfield wanted to shelve an acquaintance which must have brightened
- their dull and unvisited existence.
- </p>
- <p>
- Another fact presented itself to Murchison's rather acute intelligence.
- There seemed already established between Pomfret and the attractive Norah
- a certain kind of freemasonry, a certain sort of easy relations. And once
- in the course of the evening he was sure that he heard the young man, in
- the course of a whispered conversation, address her by her Christian name.
- They had been sitting together on the Chesterfield, and their remarks to
- each other had been addressed in a very low tone. But Hugh's hearing was
- wonderfully acute, and he had surprised a sudden expression of rebuke in
- Miss Burton's eyes when Pomfret made the slip.
- </p>
- <p>
- And here, for a moment, this story must leave Hugh Murchison with his
- honest doubts and suspicions, while it follows the fortunes of his young
- friend and the attractive Norah Burton.
- </p>
- <p>
- For, truth to tell, at this particular juncture, young Pomfret, for all
- his apparent guilelessness, was pursuing a double game. Madly,
- overwhelmingly, in love with Norah, he was meeting her clandestinely,
- sometimes at her own house, sometimes in sequestered spots in the
- surrounding neighbourhood. And of these visits and meetings Hugh knew
- nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret was not free from a few pangs of self-reproach, from the fact that
- he was not running quite straight with good old Hugh, to whom he had
- always, hitherto, confessed all his difficulties and troubles.
- </p>
- <p>
- But then Hugh, although one of the best, was such a practical old stick.
- And if he told him the whole truth, there was no knowing what course Hugh
- might not think it was his duty to take. He might write to his family and
- bring them down in an avalanche on him, or even to the octogenarian aunt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Love taught him deep cunning, and what he lacked in this subtle quality
- was ably supplemented by Miss Burton, this young girl with the rather sad
- expression, and the candid eyes that always met your gaze unfalteringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- From the first clandestine meeting, arranged in whispers on the night of
- the dinner at Rose-mount, Pomfret had made the running very fast. He had
- given Norah to understand that he thought her the most desirable girl he
- had ever met, that no other woman had appealed, would or could appeal, to
- him as she did. There was a good drop of Irish blood in his own veins, and
- he certainly made a most fervent lover.
- </p>
- <p>
- Norah listened with a modest bashfulness that enchanted him. He was sure
- from her demeanour that she had never been made love to before. She seemed
- so overwhelmed that she could hardly say a word. If one were not so much
- in love, one might almost have thought she was stupid.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was not so stupid, however, as not to preserve her wits sufficiently
- to make another appointment, this time at Rosemount. Pomfret consented
- gladly, but he made a certain stipulation, which his companion was more
- than pleased to agree to.
- </p>
- <p>
- "We mustn't let old Hugh know about this, though, or he'll think he's left
- out in the cold. You see, it was really through him I knew you. You must
- tell your brother not to let it out."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Burton promised that, so far as she and her brother were concerned,
- Captain Murchison would be none the wiser. It only remained for Mr.
- Pomfret&mdash;although entreated to do so, she could not at this early
- stage address him as "Jack"&mdash;to surround his movements with a proper
- degree of mystery.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the two parted, and the meeting had been rather a brief one, for it
- was always a little dangerous lingering long about the environs of
- Blankfield, in case of unexpected intruders, Miss Burton made a
- significant remark.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am quite sure your friend Captain Murchison does not like me. In fact,
- I think his real feeling is one of dislike."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Pomfret was young enough to blush; he did so upon this occasion. He
- guessed the real truth, that Murchison did not dislike her at all, on the
- contrary, he rather admired her&mdash;but he had a certain distrust of
- her.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Fancy on your part, fancy, I'm quite sure," he answered glibly. "I expect
- he is a little bit sore, you know, about the whole thing, thinks I have
- cut him out with you."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Perhaps," assented Norah, easily. But in her own heart she knew it was
- nothing of the kind. She recognised at once the difference between the two
- men. Murchison was a thorough gentleman, kind and chivalrous, but he was a
- man of the world, with a certain hard strain in him, a man who would
- submit everything to the test of cold, practical reasoning, not to be
- hoodwinked or led astray.
- </p>
- <p>
- This poor babbling boy, with his unrestrained impulses, that Celtic leaven
- in his blood, would fall an easy prey to any woman who was clever enough
- to cast her spells over him. He would never reason, he would only feel.
- </p>
- <p>
- After that first meeting, the precursor of many others, the affair
- progressed briskly. Pomfret made love with great ardour, Norah received
- his advances with a shy sort of acquiescence that inflamed him the more.
- He was sure, oh very sure, he was the first who had touched that innocent
- heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- From these delightful confidences Murchison was shut out. It would not be
- wise to ignore him altogether, for such a course of action would have
- intensified his suspicions. But the invitations to Rosemount from either
- host or hostess were few and far between.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was not, however, so easily gulled as the three conspirators thought.
- Pomfret's preoccupied mood, the air of a man who had much on his mind, his
- frequent and unexplained absences, gave to his friend much food for
- thought. He felt certain that the easy-going, irresponsible young man was
- entangling himself. But in such a state of affairs he felt powerless.
- Short of invoking the influence of the Colonel, or writing to the elderly
- aunt, he could do nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- It cannot be said that the course of true love was running very smoothly,
- even from the point of view of the ardent and enamoured suitor himself. In
- spite of his impulsive temperament, his disinclination to look hard facts
- squarely in the face, there was in him a slight leaven of common-sense.
- </p>
- <p>
- Save for the bounty and goodwill of this generous, if somewhat
- narrow-minded, aunt he was an absolute pauper. There was no hope of
- marrying without her consent. And he was quite sure that in a case like
- this her consent would never be given. A <i>fiancée</i>, to be received by
- her with approval, must present some sort of credentials.
- </p>
- <p>
- And there was the difficulty. Poor Jack had exhausted all his simple
- cunning to extract from them some convincing details of their antecedents.
- But even he, infatuated as he was, had to admit that they had parried
- inquiries with great adroitness. They maintained a persistent reticence as
- to names and places. Even he was forced to conclude that, for some reason
- or another, they did not choose to be frank about their past.
- </p>
- <p>
- These obvious facts, however, did not lessen his infatuation. To marry her
- was the one dominating object of his life, in spite of all that his few
- remaining remnants of common-sense could urge against such a step.
- </p>
- <p>
- More than once the rash idea occurred to him that he would marry her in
- secret, and when the marriage was an accomplished fact, throw himself upon
- his aunt's forgiveness.
- </p>
- <p>
- He mooted the idea to Norah, to whom, of course, he had already made a
- frank statement of his position, as befitted the honourable gentleman he
- was. But she did not receive the suggestion with enthusiasm, although she
- professed to fully reciprocate his ardent affection.
- </p>
- <p>
- "If I were a selfish girl, and only thought of my immediate happiness, I
- should say 'Yes,'" she said with a little tremulous smile, that made her
- look more desirable than ever in her lover's eyes. "But I could not allow
- <i>you</i> to run such a terrible risk. Old people are very strange and
- very touchy when they think they have been slighted. Suppose she cast you
- off."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I suppose I could work, as thousands have to do," replied Jack, with a
- touch of his old doggedness.
- </p>
- <p>
- She shook her head. "My poor Jack! It is easy to talk of working, but you
- have got to find an employer. And you have been brought up to an idle
- life. What could you turn your hand to?" She paused a moment, and then
- added as an after-thought: "And besides, my brother would never sanction
- it."
- </p>
- <p>
- Even to Pomfret's slow revolving mind, the worldly taint in her just
- peeped forth in those sensible remarks.
- </p>
- <p>
- "If I am prepared to risk my aunt's displeasure, you can surely afford to
- risk your brother's?" he queried angrily.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Norah disarmed him with one of her sweetest smiles.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Be reasonable, dearest; we must not behave like a pair of silly children.
- And besides, there is a certain moral obligation on both sides. You owe
- everything to your aunt. I owe everything to my brother. It would be very
- base to ignore them."
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack was touched by the nobility of these last sentiments. "You are much
- better than I am, Norah, much less selfish."
- </p>
- <p>
- She caressed his curly head with her hand. "We must have patience, Jack.
- You have told me as plainly as your dear, kind heart would allow you to
- tell me that, for reasons which I don't want you to explain, your aunt
- would never give her consent to your marriage with me. Well, we must
- wait."
- </p>
- <p>
- In plain English her meaning was that they must possess their souls in
- patience till such time as this excellent old lady had departed this life.
- The suggestion was certainly a coldblooded one, but in his present
- infatuated mood Jack did not take any notice of that. Norah made a feeble
- attempt to gloss over the callousness of her remarks by adding that,
- although it was a very horrible thing to have to wait for the shoes of
- dead people, a person of Miss Harding's great age must expect to very
- shortly pay the debt of nature.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two days later, Jack received a telegram which seemed to give a certain
- air of prophecy to the young woman's forebodings. It was dispatched to him
- from his aunt's home in Cheshire by the local doctor, who had attended her
- for years. It informed him that she was seriously ill and requested his
- immediate attendance.
- </p>
- <p>
- He sought the Colonel at once and obtained leave. There was no time to
- call at Rose-mount, but he scribbled a hasty note to Miss Burton
- explaining matters. On his arrival, he found his aged relative very bad
- indeed.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had had a severe stroke, the second in two years, and Doctor Jephson
- was very doubtful as to whether her vitality would enable her to recover.
- He added that she had a marvellous constitution, and in such a case one
- could not absolutely say there was no hope. Of a feebler woman he would
- have said at once a few hours would see the end.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret stayed there as long as the result was in doubt. At the end of
- three days the brave old lady rallied in the most wonderful way, and was
- able to hold a little conversation with her beloved nephew. He did not
- leave till the doctor assured him that she was out of danger.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It's a wonderful recovery," said Doctor Jephson as he shook hands at
- parting with the young man. "But it's the beginning of the end. I don't
- give her very long now, a few months at the most. Well, she has had a
- wonderful life, hardly an ache or a pain till the last few years, and then
- nothing very severe. But, of course, the machinery is worn out."
- </p>
- <p>
- All the way back to Blankfield those words kept repeating themselves in
- his ears: "I don't give her very long now, a few months at the most."
- </p>
- <p>
- And then an idea began to form in his mind. He was not so callous that he
- wanted his poor old aunt to die quickly, but it was obvious the time could
- not be long delayed when he would find himself possessed of her fortune,
- the master of his own destinies. Was there any reason why he should not
- forestall that period by the rather daring expedient of a secret marriage?
- They were both young. Even if the doctor was wrong, and they had to wait
- four or five years, it was not a great sacrifice of their youth. At least
- that was his way of looking at it. Of course he did not know how she would
- take the suggestion.
- </p>
- <p>
- She appeared to listen to him with deep interest and attention when he
- unfolded his plans.
- </p>
- <p>
- He explained that he had a very handsome allowance, which up to the
- present he had generally exceeded. Now that could all be altered. He would
- declare that he was sick of the army, and send in his papers. Through his
- family influence, he would get some Government appointment which
- necessitated his living in London. He would take inexpensive chambers for
- himself, rent a small house for her in some pleasant and not too remote
- suburb, and spend as much of his time as possible with her.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You don't think your aunt would reduce your allowance if you left the
- army?" was the one pertinent question she put to him when he had finished.
- </p>
- <p>
- "On the contrary, she would be more likely to increase it," was the
- confident rejoinder. "She would always have preferred that I should go in
- for something that meant real work. She thinks the army is an idle life."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Burton, no doubt, rapidly calculated the pros and cons of such a
- daring step. Jack had named a very handsome sum for her maintenance. If
- she could put up with the clandestine nature of the connection, till such
- time as a certain event happened, she would be better off than at
- Rosemount. She begged for time to think it over, and of course she would
- have to consult her brother before taking such an unusual step.
- </p>
- <p>
- That was only natural; it was impossible for Jack to insist that she
- should settle the matter herself without reference to the one person who,
- whatever his social defects, had behaved to her with unexampled kindness
- and generosity.
- </p>
- <p>
- Brother and sister no doubt talked it over very thoroughly, for it was
- three days before she told her lover that, although George would have
- preferred a longer period of waiting, he trusted him sufficiently to
- entrust Norah to his keeping, on the terms proposed.
- </p>
- <p>
- She did suggest that they should wait till Jack had left the army and
- settled himself in London. But he fought this idea stubbornly. He was mad
- to tie her to himself, for fear that somebody else with more immediate
- prospects might step in and carry her off. A little common-sense, of
- course, might have told him that if she was as fatally attractive to
- others as to himself, she would have been carried off before this.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was so terribly jealous of her, that he had never made the slightest
- effort to bring any of his brother officers round to Rose-mount. He even
- kept Hugh away as much as he could.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lovers worked out their little plot very nicely. Miss Burton would
- leave Blankfield for a couple of weeks, ostensibly to pay a visit to a
- relative. Her destination would be London. Jack would take a few days'
- leave of absence in due course, and procure a special licence. They would
- return on separate days and resume their normal life, until such time as
- they perfected their after arrangements.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>iss Burton arrived
- home on a Monday by a mid-day train; her attentive brother met her at the
- station. She was one of those girls who look smart and neat under the most
- trying circumstances. Although it was a long journey, she bore no signs or
- stains of travel.
- </p>
- <p>
- "When does Jack arrive, not too soon, I hope?" commented George, as he
- assisted her into a cab, and sat down beside her.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He wanted to come down to-night, but I vetoed that," responded the girl.
- "I told him people might put two and two together. He will get here
- mid-day to-morrow. I shall meet him casually in the High Street. He is
- going to bring Murchison along with him. And I shall give them an
- impromptu invitation to dinner."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I don't know that I am very keen on having Murchison to dinner," remarked
- Mr. Burton in rather a growling tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Burton shrugged her shoulders. "And, perhaps, of the two, I am less
- keen than you are. But we have got to play it pretty quiet down here, till
- the whole lot of us clear out. Better to let Murchison come. He is pretty
- suspicious, as it is, but if we shut him out, he'll be more suspicious
- still."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Burton chuckled in a grim fashion.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, our inquisitive friend, the whole lot of them as a matter of fact,
- can't do you much harm now. You've got him tight enough. And I'll say this
- for him, he's a bit soft and all that sort of thing, but he'll always play
- the game."
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl did not reply for a moment, then she spoke in a voice that was
- low and soft:
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, he's a dear little chap, he'll always play the game."
- </p>
- <p>
- "He can afford to," was the rather ungracious comment. Clearly Mr. Burton
- was not in one of his best moods to-day.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Pomfret returned from his short leave on the following day, and at
- once sought his friend.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Glad to be back, old man, got fed-up with London," he cried cheerfully.
- His excuse for his visit was that he had to go up to see his aunt's
- solicitors, on some pressing affairs which the old lady had entrusted to
- him, after her temporary recovery from her dangerous illness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now Murchison was pretty quick. He already had a shrewd suspicion that
- Jack had been making a great many surreptitious visits to Rosemount, that
- Hugh had been asked there now and again as a blind. And when he happened
- to be present, he had noticed that Jack and Norah had taken very little
- notice of each other. Jack had cultivated the brother, and left his friend
- to entertain the attractive young woman. In itself, this rather obvious
- attitude was suspicious. It confirmed his impression that there was a
- private understanding between the young people, and that they were
- throwing dust in his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had already put two and two together, with regard to the concurrent
- absences. Mr. Burton, meeting him in the High Street two days after
- Norah's departure, had told him his sister was paying a visit to a married
- relative who lived at Brighton. He would have not believed Mr. Burton on
- his oath.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Jack had taken his few days' leave, with the ostensible object of
- attending to his aunt's affairs.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh was pretty certain that the silly young ass, as he affectionately
- designated Jack in his own mind, had arranged to meet Miss Burton for a
- day or two in London, in order to enjoy her society, free from
- interruption or espionage. Of course, he was far from guessing the truth.
- He would not have thought Pomfret capable of any such daring action.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack had just expressed himself fed-up with London, and yet his demeanour
- was jubilant and hilarious. Of course, Hugh could not dream his attitude
- was that of the exultant bridegroom, almost intoxicated with the knowledge
- of having gained his heart's desire. There had been a couple of lunches,
- perhaps a couple of dinners with a theatre thrown in. The buoyant Jack was
- living on these blissful memories.
- </p>
- <p>
- Later in the day, the two men walked down the High Street, of course in
- accordance with a pre-arranged plan decided upon by the artful lovers. The
- first person they met was Miss Burton, sauntering along slowly; Miss
- Burton, now Mrs. Pomfret, as fast as the ecclesiastical law of England
- could make her.
- </p>
- <p>
- She welcomed them with her ready and charming smile. "What strangers we
- are," she cried gaily. "And how nice to meet my only two friends in
- Blankfield."
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret did a little finessing on his own. 661 have been away for a few
- days, too,'' he explained glibly. "Had to go up to London to look after
- some business of my poor old aunt's; only got back by the mid-day train."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Did you enjoy your visit?" inquired Hugh of Norah, with that stiffness
- which he could never quite dissociate from his manner when addressing
- either brother or sister.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes and No," was the answer. "On the whole, I had quite a good time, but
- I am not sorry to get back to Rosemount, and my little household gods.
- Knowing you both has made such a difference to my life here."
- </p>
- <p>
- She was laying it on a little bit thick, Hugh thought, and he fancied she
- looked more at Pomfret than himself, as she said it. But he made a
- suitable and courteous reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was just about to turn away, when a sudden thought seemed to strike
- her.
- </p>
- <p>
- "As Mr. Pomfret and I have been such wanderers, would it not be nice to
- celebrate our return? will you both come to dinner to-night, and we can
- relate our experiences?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret jumped at the invitation, and Hugh had to follow suit. As a matter
- of fact, he was rather eager to go. They were both playing their parts
- very well, but he was quite convinced they <i>were</i> playing a part. He
- was more certain about Jack than about her. Jack had been a bit too glib,
- had over-acted, as it were. They had met in London, if only for a few
- hours; he would have bet a thousand pounds on that.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack declared that he would walk back to Rosemount with Miss Burton. He
- did not now care a farthing what members of Blank-field Society he met.
- Very shortly, the army would know him no more, and he would take up a new
- life with this fearless girl whom he had married on the sly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh strolled on, and looked in at the various shops. The High Street
- happened to be rather empty on this particular afternoon, the <i>élite</i>
- of Blankfield Society had not yet turned out for its usual promenade.
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning away from a jeweller's shop window, where he was inspecting some
- sleeve-links, he was confronted by a tall, sturdily built man of about
- fifty years of age, who raised his hat.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I believe I have the pleasure of addressing Captain Murchison?" he
- inquired politely.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh directed a swift glance at him. He was not exactly a common person,
- on the other hand he was certainly not a gentleman. There was something
- military in his bearing; he might have been a retired Sergeant-Major.
- </p>
- <p>
- "That is my name," answered Hugh a little curtly. "And who are you,
- please?"
- </p>
- <p>
- The tall man took a card from his waistcoat pocket and presented it.
- "Those are my credentials, sir."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh ran his eye over it swiftly. He saw the name, Davidson, a common one
- enough, and, in the corner, Scotland Yard. Why the deuce should this agent
- of the police want to accost him? And how did he know his name was
- Murchison?
- </p>
- <p>
- "I think you are acquainted with a family of the name of Burton, brother
- and sister they call themselves, who live at a house a little way out
- called Rosemount?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course I know them, that is to say, in a casual sort of way." Needless
- to say that Murchison had never been more surprised in his life. "Why are
- you asking these questions?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Davidson darted a keen glance up and down the comparatively empty High
- Street. "This is rather an exposed place in which to talk, but I have
- something to tell you which I am sure you will be interested to listen to.
- I am staying at the 'Anchor,' in a side street from this. If you will do
- me the honour to follow me, I can take you into a private room there,
- where we shall not be observed nor overheard."
- </p>
- <p>
- Like a man in a dream, Hugh found himself following Mr. Davidson to the
- "Anchor," one of the second-class hotels in the town. He was quite sure
- that this tall, military looking person was going to clear up the mystery
- of the couple whom Blankfield, in its wisdom, had refused to visit, and
- whose acquaintance he owed to a random meeting at a tea-shop.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were only one or two idlers in the entrance-hall of the hotel, which
- was of what is known as the "Commercial" kind. Murchison was glad to find
- that he did not seem to attract their observation, as he rapidly crossed
- over to where his new acquaintance was standing in a rather dark corner.
- </p>
- <p>
- Davidson piloted him into a little sitting-room which opened out of a long
- narrow passage. He rang the bell, and ordered refreshments with the manner
- of a man who was acquainted with the usages of polite society.
- </p>
- <p>
- It would be quite safe to say that Hugh, the heir to a great fortune,
- brought up in the lap of luxury, an aristocrat by adoption, if not exactly
- by birth, had never found himself up till now in such an environment. He
- could not truthfully declare that it was an experience he wished to
- repeat.
- </p>
- <p>
- Still, he could blame nobody but himself, his foolish action in taking up
- with a couple of persons whom Blankfield, in its superior worldly wisdom,
- had decided to ignore. As he was in for it, and nothing could undo the
- past, it was better to go through with it. Let him accommodate himself to
- the situation, drink his whisky-and-soda in this dingy little parlour of a
- second-rate hotel, and treat the detective with genial courtesy.
- </p>
- <p>
- After the first mouthful of his drink, Davidson began to explain.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course, sir, I quite understand this is not the sort of thing or the
- sort of place to which you are accustomed," he said, waving a deprecatory
- hand round the shabby little parlour. "But in this particular case, I and
- my friend&mdash;that friend I may say at the moment is elsewhere taking
- his observations&mdash;wanted to lie low. It didn't enter into our scheme
- to put up at a swagger hotel, and run the risk of gossip. It might have
- reached the ears of those we are after, and scared them off." Hugh
- listened attentively. There was something very serious in the wind now,
- and the dwellers at Rosemount were as yet unaware of what was impending.
- </p>
- <p>
- His surprise expressed itself in the direct question which he shot at the
- detective: "I take it you are here to arrest them, then?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "One of them, the man," corrected Mr. Davidson, quietly; "we know a good
- deal about the girl, but we have no evidence that implicates her beyond
- the fact of her association with him, and from our point of view that
- means nothing in a Court of Law."
- </p>
- <p>
- "What is his offence?" asked the startled Hugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Forgery," was the laconic answer. "He belongs to a pretty well-known
- gang, and we have had our suspicions of him for a long time now, but he
- was devilish clever and cunning. Several of his pals were caught, but it
- was always difficult to rope him in. We shouldn't have got him now but for
- the fact of one of his pals peaching. And even now, although the evidence
- is strong enough for us, I doubt if it is strong enough to get him more
- than a comparatively light sentence. If he can lay hold of a clever
- counsel, and there will be some money at the back of him, if not a great
- deal, he won't come off so badly."
- </p>
- <p>
- So Mr. Burton was a criminal, and had been living in Blankfield on the
- proceeds of his nefarious calling. The rich uncle in Australia who had
- left him a comfortable fortune was a myth.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I suppose he has been on the 'crook' all his life?" queried Hugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ever since he has come under our observation," was the reply of the
- detective. "Before he joined the present gang, a few of whom we have
- collared from time to time, card-sharping was his lay. Once he rented an
- expensive flat in Paris, and I believe made a tidy bit out of it. That is
- where the young lady first appeared upon the scene."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But how long ago is that? She doesn't look more than twenty."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know," said Mr. Davidson. "She looks wonderfully young, that is one of
- her assets. As a matter of fact I should say she was twenty-four at the
- least. The Parisian episode occurred about five years ago, making her
- nineteen at the time. He was there about twelve months, at the end of
- which time he got an introduction to the forging gang, and chucked the
- cards in favour of a more remunerative game."
- </p>
- <p>
- "She acted, I suppose, as a decoy and confederate?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "So I am given to understand. She very seldom played herself, but used to
- signal the opponents' cards to him."
- </p>
- <p>
- "What a precious pair," groaned Hugh. He had long been doubtful of them,
- but he had never anticipated this.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now, Captain Murchison, there is a little question I want to ask you,"
- said the detective briskly, after a brief pause. "My pal and I only
- arrived here yesterday, but we have not been idle, we have picked up a
- good deal. We have discovered that nobody in Blankfield visits them,
- except yourself and another officer, a Mr. Pomfret. That is true, is it
- not?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Quite true," assented Murchison.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You frequently go to their house together. But perhaps I may be telling
- you something you don't know when I say that Mr. Pomfret more frequently
- has gone alone."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have had my suspicions some time," was Hugh's answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now tell me, please; I suppose in the evenings you played cards, or
- roulette, or some game of chance. I thought so. Did you lose much? Had you
- any suspicions they were rooking you?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "On my first visit, a suspicion that they might do so crossed my mind. But
- nothing of the sort was attempted. I should say that, up to the present,
- my friend and I stand a bit to the good. Evidently, that was not their
- object."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Clearly," assented the shrewd detective, "they had a deeper game than
- that on. They wanted to catch this young friend of yours for a husband,
- and failing that, to entrap him, so that they could blackmail him on the
- threat of a breach of promise case."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It looks as if that was their object."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now, Captain Murchison, may I ask you if your friend is a man likely to
- fall into the trap? I saw him in the High Street this afternoon with you:
- and if I may say so without offence, he doesn't give me the impression of
- a very strong or self-reliant person."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh shook his head. "I fear he is very weak, very impulsive, very
- emotional, a ready prey for a designing woman."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Have you any idea how far the thing has gone?"
- </p>
- <p>
- To this question Hugh could only reply in the negative. His one hope was
- that the foolish boy had seen her so often that there was no necessity to
- write incriminating letters.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, Captain Murchison, my object in asking you to grant me an interview
- was two-fold. In the first place, I wanted to know if there had been any
- card-sharping. Then, as I am aware you go to the house, I wished to tell
- you that I and my friend are going to take him to-night. It might happen
- that you would be going there, and of course, you will not want to be on
- the stage when we play our little comedy."
- </p>
- <p>
- "We have promised to go to dinner tonight. She asked us both when we met
- her this afternoon."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And of course now, you will not go. I will take him before dinner-time,
- so you need not send round any excuses."
- </p>
- <p>
- Poor Hugh felt very miserable. What he especially shirked was having to
- tell this sordid narrative to Pomfret. He expressed to the detective his
- shrinking from the unwelcome task.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I quite understand, sir, but it's got to be done," replied the detective,
- firmly. For a few seconds after he had spoken, he seemed to be thinking
- deeply. Then he came out with a startling proposition.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Look here, Captain Murchison, something has just occurred to me. I am not
- sure whether you will think it a good plan. Just now I thought it would be
- better for you not to be there. But if this young gentleman is so gone on
- the girl, it might make a deeper impression on him, bring home to him more
- strongly the sense of her unworthiness, if he were actually present at the
- scene. And it would spare you any painful explanations, beforehand.
- Afterwards you can tell him or not, as you please, about our interview
- here."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh made a gesture of disgust. "You propose that we should carry out our
- original intention of dining there and of sitting at the table of a
- criminal? I don't think I could bring myself to it."
- </p>
- <p>
- If Mr. Davidson did not quite agree with the young man's scruples, he was
- open-minded enough to see the matter from Hugh's point of view.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I quite understand, sir. But I think I can manage it all right. You say
- they dine at eight. Get there with your friend a quarter of an hour
- before. I will be there with my friend at five minutes to, before the
- dinner is served. You then won't have to sit at his table, you see."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh was still hesitating. Mr. Davidson proceeded to clinch his argument.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You see, sir, it will be so much better for Mr. Pomfret to see with his
- own eyes and hear with his own ears. When he has seen us clap the darbies
- on Burton, and listened to what I can tell him about the girl&mdash;you
- can just give me a lead there, if you don't mind&mdash;I think he will be
- cured of his calf-love on the spot. As far as he is concerned, we want to
- make a swift and sudden cure, to kill his affection at once."
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, on the whole, after a little further reflection Murchison was
- disposed to fall in with this new suggestion. Pomfret, however deep his
- infatuation, could not resist the evidence of his own senses. He would be
- much more strongly impressed than by a mere bald narration of the facts as
- conveyed to his friend by the detective.
- </p>
- <p>
- So it was settled. Hugh would bring Pomfret to Rosemount at twenty minutes
- or a quarter to eight. At five minutes to, Davidson and his colleague
- would present themselves to execute their painful errand.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Just a word before I go," said the young man as he turned towards the
- door. "Is the man's name really Burton, or only an alias?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "That is his real name. Of course he has had aliases. His family, I
- understand, are respectable people of the lower middle-class. He was the
- black sheep, born with crooked and criminal instincts."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And the girl, is she really his sister?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "On that point, I have no positive information," replied Davidson. "She
- has passed as such ever since the Paris days. But I should very much doubt
- it. I am informed that they are very unlike in manners and appearance,
- that he is a rough sort of fellow, while she would pass anywhere for a
- lady."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh went back to the barracks, more than rejoiced at the fact that the
- detective seemed to have appeared on the scene in the very nick of time.
- If marriage was contemplated as the result of this clandestine wooing,
- what a terrible tragedy would be averted from the unlucky Pomfret!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was twenty
- minutes to eight as the two young men rang at the door-bell of Rosemount.
- Pomfret was always a slow dresser. It was only by extraordinary efforts
- that Hugh had got him off in time.
- </p>
- <p>
- Brother and sister were awaiting them in the pretty drawing-room, lit with
- softly shaded lamps. Miss Burton rose to meet them, she extended a hand to
- each, in her pretty graceful way, as if she looked upon them both as her
- dearest friends, and would make no difference between them in her
- greeting.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Hugh was very wide-awake, after his meeting with the detective, and he
- did notice that the left hand which she extended to Pomfret lingered a
- little longer in his responsive clasp than did the right which she had
- given to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, it was obvious that their acquaintance had gone far. There was even,
- he fancied, an intelligent sympathy in their mutual glances. Pomfret was
- the lover, Hugh Murchison was simply the friend.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Burton welcomed them heartily. "Just like old times," he cried in his
- rough, breezy fashion. "I've been like a fish out of water during Norah's
- absence. It was just like her to organise a little party, simply us four,
- to celebrate her return."
- </p>
- <p>
- It struck Hugh that his conviviality was just a trifle forced, that he
- seemed "jumpy" and nervous. Had he by chance spotted those two strangers
- in the High Street, and wondered what manner of men they were?
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret settled himself on the chesterfield beside Norah, in spite of her
- rather obvious signals to preserve a more discreet attitude. Ignorant of
- what was going to happen a few minutes hence, her great object was to
- conceal the fact that Jack should take the position of an acknowledged
- lover.
- </p>
- <p>
- In her secret heart, she was very apprehensive of Murchison. She knew he
- was suspicious of her, and he had a sort of elder brother affection for
- Pomfret. She was not by any means sure as to the lengths to which this
- fraternal feeling might lead him. It might even inspire him to evoke the
- assistance of the Pomfret family, and then the security of her present
- position might be menaced.
- </p>
- <p>
- The secret marriage was, after all, in the nature of a gamble. If things
- turned out as she expected, if the old aunt died in reasonable time, the
- odds were in her favour. She could twist Jack round her little finger. But
- nobody knew better than this astute young woman of the world that there is
- many a slip betwixt the cup and the lip. Something that she had not
- calculated, not foreseen, might happen at any moment, and her house of
- cards might tumble to the ground. Her adventurous life had taught her
- never to be too sure of momentary prosperity.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was a little bit nervous and "jumpy," like her brother, to-night. Her
- smile was a little forced, her high spirits rather assumed. The
- wedding-ring, the marriage certificate hidden from sight, were great
- assets. And yet, was it all just a little too good to be quite true?
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison talked with the brother, desultory sort of talk, hardly
- conscious of what he was saying. His ears were straining for the sound of
- that eletric-bell which would herald the arrival of Davidson and his
- colleague.
- </p>
- <p>
- And it came very quickly. There was a loud, imperative peal. Burton
- started from his seat, and forgot his assumed good manners.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Who the devil is that?" he cried fiercely. "Do they want to knock the
- house down?" It was the vulgar exclamation of a very vulgar man.
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Burton was more mistress of herself, but Hugh observed that her cheek
- went a shade paler. Well, it was only natural. These two had been living
- in fear of the law for more years than they cared to remember. And they
- had thought they were safely in harbour. Poor fools!
- </p>
- <p>
- She turned to Pomfret, and forced a wan smile. "It is really quite
- alarming, Mr. Pomfret, visitors at this time of the evening. And you know
- so well that nobody in Blankfield, except yourselves, ever crosses our
- threshold."
- </p>
- <p>
- The happy Jack, the husband of a few short hours, was quite unperturbed.
- He smiled back at her confidently.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Somebody come to the wrong house, I should say. Why, you have gone quite
- pale! What a nervous little thing it is!" He whispered the last sentence
- in a lover-like tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison felt every nerve in his body tingling. Jack was in a state of
- ignorance. The brother and sister, he was sure, were filled with vague and
- undefined alarms. He, alone out of the four sitting in that charming
- little drawing-room awaiting the announcement of dinner, was sure of what
- was going to happen.
- </p>
- <p>
- He stole a look across at Pomfret with the happy, fatuous smile of the
- successful lover on his face. Poor devil! In another couple of minutes he
- would be terribly disillusioned.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a heavy trampling of feet across the hall. The visitors, whoever
- they were, had pushed past the trim and ladylike parlourmaid.
- </p>
- <p>
- The drawing-room door was flung open, and the two big men, Davidson and
- his colleague, advanced towards Burton who was standing in the middle of
- the room.
- </p>
- <p>
- The detective spoke in a clear, ringing voice. "It's all up, Mr. Burton, I
- won't trouble to recount your various aliases. I've a warrant here to
- arrest you on a charge of forgery. You've gone free for some time, but one
- of your old pals has peached upon you. Hard luck for you, otherwise you
- might have been playing still, perhaps for ever, this nice little 'stunt'
- at Blankfield. I suppose you will come quietly?"
- </p>
- <p>
- For a few seconds George Burton indulged in some horrible imprecations. In
- the same breath he protested his absolute innocence, and denounced the
- "pal" who had betrayed him. Mr. Davidson cut him short, as he fastened the
- handcuffs on his wrist.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Stow it, old man! Be a sport. It's a fair cop, isn't it? You knew the
- risk you ran when you went into this business."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Burton subsided. "Yes, it's a fair cop," he growled. "I don't blame
- you, you are only doing your duty. I've no grudge against you. But by
- Heaven, when I come out, I'll do for that swine who has given me away, if
- I have to swing for it."
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret had risen from his seat on the chesterfield at the dramatic
- entrance of the two strangers. Norah had risen also. In the few seconds
- that elapsed between their entrance and the clapping of the handcuffs on
- Burton, she stretched out appealing arms to him, and cried out in a voice
- of despair:
- </p>
- <p>
- "Stand by me, Jack, stand by me. I knew nothing of this. It is as great a
- surprise to me as to you. Oh, my poor brother! He has done this for love
- of me."
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison heard the impassioned tones, the despairing appeal. They would
- have melted a heart of stone. What effect would they have upon the
- unsuspicious Jack?
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret withdrew himself, almost coldly, from the proffered embrace. In a
- few seconds, as it seemed to Hugh, he had grown from a boy to a man.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned to the detective, and Hugh was delighted at the sudden dignity
- that seemed to have come to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You seem to know a great deal about this man whom you have handcuffed,
- and who admits you are only doing your duty. Do you know anything about
- his sister, Miss Burton?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Davidson glanced significantly at Murchison. They had arranged a
- little conversation between themselves, but Jack's frankness had rendered
- this unnecessary.
- </p>
- <p>
- "What I know of the young lady, sir, I am sorry to tell you, is not to her
- credit. She has been associated with this man for some years. She started
- with him in Paris some time ago, when he was a card-sharper, and running a
- gambling-saloon. But to be fair, she is not in this business with him, and
- I have nothing against her."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Are they what they represent themselves to be, brother and sister?"
- Pomfret's voice was very quiet, but there was in it a suppressed note of
- agony. How he had loved this girl, and a few hours ago he had clasped her
- in his arms as his wife!
- </p>
- <p>
- The keen eyes of the detective softened as he looked at Jack, who was
- hiding the most intense agitation under an apparently stoical demeanour.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have no accurate information on that point, sir, but I should very much
- doubt the fact of their relationship."
- </p>
- <p>
- While this brief conversation was taking place between Pomfret and
- Davidson, Norah was still standing with arms outstretched.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again there came forth the appealing, impassioned cry: "Jack, stand by me!
- Jack, stand by me!" She sank down on the sofa, and put her hands before
- her face. "Stay with me, wait till they have all gone, and I will explain
- everything. I have nothing to do with this."
- </p>
- <p>
- But Pomfret stood like a man turned to stone. Then suddenly, Norah gave a
- little gurgling cry, and fainted. Pomfret made a step towards her, and
- halted. His great love for her had been killed. Perhaps at this moment he
- hated her more than he had ever loved her.
- </p>
- <p>
- The parlour-maid, with a white face, was peeping in the room. Davidson
- beckoned to her.
- </p>
- <p>
- "My colleague will help you to take her up to her room. Look after her.
- She's as game as they make them, but to-night's t been too much for her.
- She has been playing for big stakes, and she has lost."
- </p>
- <p>
- The maid and Davidson's burly assistant lifted up the recumbent form. And
- when they had carried her out, Pomfret's self-control seemed to give way.
- He suddenly clutched at his throat and turned to Hugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Old man, I have had as much as I can stand. For Heaven's sake, take me
- from this accursed house."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh put his arm under his to steady him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The boy's nerve had gone, he was trembling like a man stricken with the
- ague. There was no cab or taxi to be got in this outlying district. They
- had to walk back to the barracks.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh planted him in an easy-chair in his own quarters, and mixed him a
- stiff peg. Even Dutch courage was better than nothing. Pom-fret drank it
- in two big gulps. Then he pulled himself together.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have been an infernal fool, old man," he gasped, "an infernal fool."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh spoke soothingly. "Of course you have. But the folly is over. You now
- know Norah Burton and her rascally brother for what they are, a pair of
- criminals and adventurers."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But you don't know all," groaned the unfortunate Jack. "Norah Burton is
- my wife. I married her secretly the other day, by special licence, while I
- was up in London."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh leapt to his feet in astonishment. He had his own ideas of that visit
- to London, coupled with Norah's absence. But that Pom-fret, weak and
- impressionable as he was, should have made such a fool of himself, was
- beyond the limits of his comprehension.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a moment he pulled himself together. The poor lad was in a big mess
- enough, it was no time to rub it in. "Tell me all about it, old chap," he
- said quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Pomfret told him. He made it clear, perfect gentleman as he was, that
- Norah had been the least to blame in the matter, that the suggestion had
- come from himself, that Norah had insisted upon consulting her brother
- before yielding to his wishes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, of course, Hugh could understand all that. They had known just the
- kind of man they were dealing with. They had hooked and landed their fish
- well. To a woman in her uncertain state, a husband with some prospects was
- better than her insecure position with a scoundrel like George Burton.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh filled a big pipe full up with a very strong and potent tobacco. He
- thought better when he was smoking, and this was a situation that demanded
- a good deal of thought.
- </p>
- <p>
- After a while he spoke. "Well, Jack, let us look facts in the face. What
- is done can't be undone. You have married this woman, and as long as she
- lives she is entitled to call herself Mrs. Pomfret, and you will have to
- keep her. There is no getting over that."
- </p>
- <p>
- The unhappy Jack groaned. There was no getting over that. This attractive,
- charming young woman, sister or confederate, or whatever relationship she
- stood in to this wretched criminal, was his legal wife, and, if she chose,
- she could make things very uncomfortable for him.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, old man, you have made a hash of your life at the very beginning of
- it. As I say, that can't be undone. You've got to make the best of it. I
- suppose you have entered into some financial arrangements with her."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Seven hundred a year till I come into my aunt's money. After that, of
- course, our marriage was to be acknowledged, and we would live together."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I see," said Hugh, assuming a cheerfulness he did not quite feel. "Well,
- I should not say she would try for more than her seven hundred a year at
- present. When your aunt dies she will of course fight for a bit more. I
- take it, after to-night's work, you will never want to live with her,
- cajoling and attractive as she is."
- </p>
- <p>
- Pomfret shuddered. "After what that fellow said, my love for her died.
- But, by Heaven, Hugh, I did love her while I believed in her."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course, of course. Have you signed any document about that seven
- hundred, by the way?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not yet. My solicitor is sending me the document to-day, it will reach me
- to-morrow morning."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It will make it a little easier to deal with her, then. Are you going to
- leave yourself in my hands? I don't think she will be very full of fight
- for the next few days."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Certainly I will, Hugh. Do your best for me. I never want to see her
- again, of that you may be sure."
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison reflected deeply before he spoke again. "I doubt if she will
- trouble you very much. It won't be very difficult to compromise with her,
- she has too much to hide. And now for yourself."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes," groaned the unhappy Pomfret, in a hollow voice. "And now for
- myself. What do you suggest?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "There's only one thing to do, and that is to put the past behind you. As
- long as this woman lives, you can never marry. But many men go through
- life and remain bachelors, and are not altogether unhappy. You must make
- up your mind to be one of the bachelors, Jack."
- </p>
- <p>
- But Jack looked very despairing. The shock had been a terrible one. In
- spite of the stiff peg he had taken, his face was still livid, and his
- hands were shaking.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh looked at him anxiously. He was very weak; had the occurrences of
- this terrible night driven him over the border line that separates sanity
- from insanity?
- </p>
- <p>
- Presently he muttered, almost as if to himself, certain disjointed
- phrases. Hugh caught a few of them, repeated again and again.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Tied to her for life, she will outlive me, tied to her for life. She will
- never let me go. My poor family! I have always been a fool, but up to now
- have never brought disgrace to them. And God forgive me, I was reckoning
- on the death of my poor old generous aunt, it is idle to say I did not
- speculate on it. And for what, for what?&mdash;the pretended affection,
- the bought kisses of this adventuress, a card-sharper's decoy, who told me
- lying tales about the way in which her criminal associate had inherited
- his money."
- </p>
- <p>
- He rambled on like this for some quarter of an hour, and Murchison judged
- it was better to let him ease his mind in such a fashion.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a way, the poor foolish boy's brain had cleared up to a point; he was
- able to look the facts squarely in the face. His infatuation might have
- been so deep that he might, under these damning circumstances, have fallen
- a victim to her wiles a second time. She would no doubt have been
- prepared, if he had given her the opportunity, to have sworn her
- innocence, to have protested that she was the victim of circumstantial
- evidence, that she had believed what her brother had told her, that she
- had never been a partner in, or a confidant of, his criminal schemes.
- </p>
- <p>
- No, so far the rude shock had cleared his brain, made him see and think
- more clearly. But Murchison very much feared that the agonising remorse
- for his folly was obscuring it in another direction.
- </p>
- <p>
- He seemed to look upon himself as something unclean in having allowed
- himself to be contaminated by association with such a wretched
- adventuress. He was also acutely conscious that, at the best, he would
- have to take this horrible secret with him to the grave, unless it sprang
- suddenly to light, as such secrets have a knack of doing. Above all, he
- keenly felt the disgrace he had inflicted on his family.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a great deal more desultory talk, and Hugh gave him the best
- advice he could under the unhappy circumstances&mdash;a reiteration of the
- "put it behind you and live it down" philosophy. This would have come easy
- to a man of the rocky and stolid type to which Murchison belonged by
- temperament. But Jack was highly-strung and impulsive. There was no
- ballast in him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh almost had to push him out of the room. But, before doing so, he
- mixed the boy another stiff peg, with the hope that it would induce sleep
- and purchase him the oblivion of a few hours.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now then, old man, toddle off. Get a good night's rest, and when you wake
- tomorrow, you will find things look pretty black, but not quite so black
- as now. If this young woman contemplates a deep game, and wants to insist
- overmuch on her rights as your wife, I will deal with her on your behalf.
- I'll warrant I bring her to reason."
- </p>
- <p>
- The poor distraught boy clasped his friend's hand convulsively. "Hugh, old
- chap, you are the best friend a man could ever have, true as steel."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Don't say that," replied Hugh with a little break in his voice. "I am
- bound to do the best for you. It was owing to my infernal folly that you
- ever set foot in that cursed house. I am older and stronger than you, I
- ought to have known better. Well, good old Jack, good-night! I tell you,
- things won't look quite as black to-morrow."
- </p>
- <p>
- But to Hugh's intense grief and remorse, there was no morrow for the
- unhappy boy, whose mind had been quite unhinged by the events of that
- terrible night. One could only surmise that he had found sleep impossible,
- and in a fit of frenzy had taken his life to escape from a future so black
- and discouraging.
- </p>
- <p>
- When his servant went to call him in the morning, he found his master
- lying on the floor, with a bullet-hole in the middle of his forehead.
- Everybody in the barracks had been fast asleep when the poor boy had fired
- the shot that was to take him out of his troubles, and nobody had heard
- the report.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the inquest, the whole miserable story came out. Of course it came
- through Hugh, the only person who was in possession of it. He narrated the
- details of his acquaintance with the Burtons, the introduction of Jack
- Pomfret to the house, the scene at Rosemount when the two detectives had
- taken the man, Jack's confession that he had made the girl his wife a few
- hours previously.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh never forgot that interview with the Colonel, in which "Old
- Fireworks" poured out his wrath in no measured terms. He roundly called
- him an infernal fool for mixing himself up with people of whom he knew
- nothing, and whom Blankfield in its ignorance of their antecedents had
- declined to visit&mdash;and very wisely.
- </p>
- <p>
- "If it had been poor Jack, a dear lad but a foolish, I could have found it
- in my heart to forgive him," he ended. "But you are a man of another sort,
- you have got your wits about you, if you choose to exercise them. I will
- never pardon you that day's work. You can play with fire and not be
- scorched, but he couldn't. That poor boy's death lies at your door, sir. I
- hope you realise it."
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, Hugh did realise it. He stood with bowed head, and could not utter a
- word in self-defence.
- </p>
- <p>
- The news, of course, was all over the town the next morning, or rather the
- double news&mdash;that George Burton had been arrested by two detectives
- from Scotland Yard, and that in the early morning of the following day
- Jack Pomfret had blown out his brains. The evidence at the inquest
- explained the double event.
- </p>
- <p>
- The news of her young husband's suicide reached Norah early in the
- morning. She had gambled and lost. The old adventurous life was in front
- of her again.
- </p>
- <p>
- She took the buffets of fate with the stoicism of her kind and class. She
- had a comfortable little nest-egg put by which stood between her and
- present want. If only Jack had been less emotional, she would not have
- troubled him much, been content with quite a little. It is to be feared
- that, in her bitter disappointment, she felt a little sore against Jack
- for his moral cowardice in getting comfortably out of it himself, and
- leaving her in the lurch.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anyway, she faced the situation with a courage that one could not refuse
- to admire. By two o'clock that same day the servants had been paid their
- wages, the keys of the furnished house handed over to the agent, and Mrs.
- Pomfret had departed for London.
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison could never forget that terrible time till something came that
- seemed to dwarf all other things. In August, nineteen hundred and
- fourteen, there burst the first storm of the war which shook the world to
- its centre. In the blood-soaked plains of France he forgot everything
- except his country.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack Pomfret and Norah Burton seemed dim memories in those strenuous times
- of the world's upheaval. And yet, when he had a moment's leisure to think
- of the past, he felt a savage longing to be even with that fair-faced,
- smiling adventuress who had driven his poor young friend to a suicide's
- grave.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VIII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t's a good
- proposition, old man. You couldn't employ a couple of hours better. I have
- been in London Society of all sorts for the best part of my life, and I
- tell you that Stella Keane is the most charming girl I have ever met."
- </p>
- <p>
- The speaker was little Tommy Esmond, short, genial, and rotund of person.
- Tommy knew everybody who was anybody, and everybody knew the mercurial
- Tommy.
- </p>
- <p>
- Guy Spencer puffed leisurely at his cigar, and regarded his rotund little
- friend with an amused smile. Spencer was about thirty, Tommy was old
- enough to be his father. But he wore well.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Most excellent Tommy, how many times have I heard you say the same thing?
- Every girl you come across is the most charming you have ever met&mdash;until
- one sees you the next week. And then, the last girl has the super-charm&mdash;like
- the young lady you just mentioned, Miss Stella Keane."
- </p>
- <p>
- But Esmond was not to be rebuffed by a clumsy attempt at humour on the
- part of a young man so much his junior. Besides, Tommy was impervious to
- humour. It fell off him, like water from a duck's back. In his way he was
- a very strenuous little man, he had no time to frivol.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Don't try to be funny, old man: it doesn't suit you. Be sensible, and
- come round with me to Mrs. L'Estrange's flat and be introduced to Miss
- Keane."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It's an interesting suggestion, Tommy, but before I decide tell me first&mdash;who
- is Mrs. L'Estrange, and secondly, who and what is Miss Keane?"
- </p>
- <p>
- And Tommy Esmond launched forth on a full flow of narrative. Mrs.
- L'Estrange was the first cousin of a well-known Irish earl, and was&mdash;well,
- in somewhat reduced circumstances, and had a snug little flat in the
- Cadogan district.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mrs. L'Estrange is quite satisfactorily explained," remarked Guy,
- interrupting his rather voluble friend. "Now what do you really know about
- Miss Keane?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Here, Esmond was a little less precise. Mrs. L'Estrange he knew quite
- well, had known her ever since he had been in London; her ancestry and
- connections were unimpeachable.
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Keane, it would appear, had been suddenly projected into the
- L'Estrange household, as it were, from space. He understood that she was a
- distant connection, a far-off cousin, but he could give no particulars.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tommy, with the born instinct of the true diplomatist, was always ready to
- present everything in its best light, but he lacked the one essential
- quality of the born diplomatist&mdash;he was not very successful when he
- came to camouflaging facts.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer's smile was more amused than ever, as he regarded his genial
- friend. Spencer was only thirty, and Tommy was at least old enough to be
- his father. But there were times when the younger man thought he saw more
- clearly than the elder.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Let us put it at this, Tommy. Mrs. L'Estrange, being in somewhat
- straitened circumstances, supplements her meagre income by card-playing,
- at which I have no doubt she is an adept."
- </p>
- <p>
- And here, the usually placid Tommy interposed hotly: "You may say of Mrs.
- L'Estrange what you like. But, if you propose to offer any derogatory
- remarks about Miss Keane, I would rather not listen to them."
- </p>
- <p>
- And Spencer kept a curb on his tongue. Was this fat, comical-looking
- little man, a most unromantic figure, violently in love with Miss Stella
- Keane, and her sworn champion? Far be it from him to disturb his faith in
- this seductive siren, if it were so.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It's all right, old chap," he said quietly. "I am not going to make any
- remarks, derogatory or otherwise, about Miss Keane. I think I will adopt
- your suggestion. Let us adjourn to Mrs. L'Estrange's flat. If one loses
- fifty or a hundred one may have a good time."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You will see the most charming girl in London," cried Esmond in
- enthusiastic tones. It struck Spencer, as a peculiar phase of his t
- friend's detachment, that, being in love with the girl himself, he should
- be so anxious to introduce her to a younger man, who might, presumably, be
- his rival.
- </p>
- <p>
- For there could be no question of rivalry between the two men, apart from
- their ages. Spencer was tall, athletic, handsome: Tommy Esmond was&mdash;just
- Tommy Esmond&mdash;rotund, comical in appearance, and insignificant.
- </p>
- <p>
- Moreover, Spencer had other qualifications which are not without their
- influence on the fair sex. He had a considerable fortune, and he was the
- next in succession to an ancient earldom. If the Earl of Southleigh, a
- widower, did not marry again, he would succeed to the title and estates.
- He was, in every sense of the term, an eligible <i>parti</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- The long, weary war was drawing to its close. The two men were dining at
- the fashionable "Excelsior" and were now about half-way through their
- dinner.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer had the bearing of a soldier, and he would have been at the Front
- long ago, but no doctor could be found who would pass him. To all
- appearance, he possessed the thews and sinews of an athlete, but the
- stalwart, manly frame covered an incurably weak heart, which played him
- strange tricks at times. He was serving his country in the best way open
- to him, and doing good, sound clerical work in a Government Office.
- </p>
- <p>
- "When do you suggest we should put in an appearance at Mrs. L'Estrange's?"
- he asked presently.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It will take us another half-hour to get through this abundant meal. You
- will then have your coffee, and you will want a good and long cigar. We
- began rather late, you will remember. By the time you have got through
- your smoke, we will make a move. We shall then find them in full swing."
- </p>
- <p>
- Guy nodded, and went on with his dinner. He was quite willing to go to the
- L'Estrange flat: he had no other engagement this evening, and it would be
- something to do. But he was not greatly interested about meeting the most
- beautiful girl in London. In spite of his friend's almost lyrical
- outbursts, he expected that Miss Stella Keane would prove a very ordinary
- young woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly Tommy Esmond uttered an exclamation. "Look, there they are," he
- whispered excitedly across the table. "Mrs. L'Estrange and her cousin. The
- man with them is Colonel Desmond, the man who won the Victoria Cross in
- the Boer war."
- </p>
- <p>
- Tommy's round face was red with pleasurable emotion. Was there any doubt,
- thought Spencer, that the little man was tremendously smitten by the
- beautiful Miss Keane? would it result in a marriage, he wondered? Tommy
- was well-off, and a person of some importance in his little social world.
- And if Miss Keane was as lovely as his fond imagination painted her, it
- was quite evident that she was poor. Penniless young girls have before now
- accepted the shelter of a safe home, even when offered by comical-looking
- little elderly men.
- </p>
- <p>
- The three newcomers moved to a vacant table; Mrs. L'Estrange, a woman of
- middle age, dressed rather more youthfully than was quite in good taste,
- their escort, a tall figure in khaki, very upright and soldierly in his
- bearing, in spite of his sixty years, and last, but by no means least, the
- beautiful Miss Keane.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, at the first glance, the young man decided that she fully deserved
- his friend's somewhat extravagant praise. If everybody in London was not
- raving over her, it was simply due to the fact that her cousin's circle
- was not important, and that she had found nobody of sufficient social
- influence to launch her with the necessary <i>cachet</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- If she had made her <i>début</i> at one of the great houses, stamped with
- the approval of any one of London's distinguished hostesses, Society
- journals would have gone into rhapsodies over her, and she would have been
- one of the reigning beauties of the hour, far, far beyond the aspirations
- of little Tommy Esmond.
- </p>
- <p>
- His own special taste rather inclined towards fair women, his cousin, Lady
- Nina, of whom he was very fond, being a charming specimen of that type.
- But he was no bigot in the matter of feminine beauty, and he was prepared
- to admit that there were some dark women who could compare favourably with
- their blonde sisters.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Stella Keane was not very dark. She had soft brown eyes, glossy dark
- hair, and a beautiful creamy complexion, a mouth like Cupid's bow,
- revealing when she smiled, teeth of a dazzling ivory. Her figure would
- have been pronounced perfect by the most critical and fastidious artist.
- </p>
- <p>
- "What do you think of her?" asked the delighted Tommy, after he had given
- his friend a decent time for his inspection.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tommy was a man whose friends had got into the habit of smiling at him,
- even when they agreed with him. Spencer smiled at him quite as often as
- any of his acquaintance, but at this moment he was perfectly grave.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You are quite right, old man, this time," he said quietly. "She is really
- beautiful, and her carriage is splendid. She looks like a young Empress&mdash;or,
- rather, she fulfils one's idea of what a young Empress should be."
- </p>
- <p>
- Tommy beamed. He drank in the words of unstinted praise like wine. The
- little blue eyes, usually devoid of expression, seemed suffused with a
- soft emotion. There was something pathetic in his devotion to this radiant
- young woman who looked like a youthful Empress.
- </p>
- <p>
- "And she is as good and sweet as she looks," he murmured in a voice that
- he could not keep steady. "When she talks to you seriously and lets you
- know what she really thinks and feels, by gad, Spencer, it makes a
- battered old worldling like myself feel unworthy to be in her presence.
- For she has a beautiful soul and mind as well as a beautiful body."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer could only look sympathetic. Poor little Tommy, he certainly
- seemed to talk like a lover. And what did Miss Keane think of it all? She
- must have more than a mere tolerance for him, or she would not have
- allowed him those peeps into her mind and soul to which he alluded with
- such unrestrained rapture.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was some time before Esmond's intense gaze attracted the attention of
- the party, and when it did, he was rewarded with a most affable smile from
- Mrs. L'Estrange, and one of quite pronounced friendliness from Miss Keane.
- The Colonel also bestowed a genial nod.
- </p>
- <p>
- After a pause, Tommy spoke somewhat ruefully. "I'm afraid this rather
- upsets our little plans. Mrs. L'Estrange is a most conscientious diner:
- she will be here, at the lowest calculation, for an hour and a half,
- counting the coffee and cigarettes. They won't be back at the flat under a
- couple. You wouldn't care to wait so long."
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked rather wistfully at his companion. He, for his own part, would
- have waited half the night.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Don't let us commit ourselves, old man, but await events. We haven't
- finished our dinner yet, and the service is deucedly slow. We can put in a
- lot more time. You can pay your respects at a fitting moment, and perhaps
- they will ask us to their table. I must confess I should like to see Miss
- Keane at closer quarters, and talk to her. Although I don't expect she
- will reveal as much to me as she does to you."
- </p>
- <p>
- Tommy looked pleased again; he was very bent upon introducing Spencer to
- his beautiful young friend. It would come about presently: if not here, in
- the lounge. Already, Mrs. L'Estrange had sent a few covert glances in the
- direction of their table. There was little doubt she knew who his
- companion was, and would be quite pleased to number him amongst her
- acquaintance.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Has Miss Keane many admirers? She should have," remarked Spencer
- presently. He noticed that Esmond's eyes were always turned in the
- direction of that particular table.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not any serious ones, I fancy. A few young fellows send her flowers, but
- nothing more. It is quite an unsuitable <i>ménage</i> for a girl of her
- attractions. The majority of the <i>habitués</i> are middle-aged men who
- go there simply to gamble. The few young ones come for a flutter, and
- disappear when they have had enough."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Does the young lady play?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have never seen her. She has told me scores of times that she loathes
- gambling. Her father ruined himself by it. I believe she is really very
- unhappy there. And I gather Mrs. L'Estrange has not the best of tempers,
- particularly when she has had bad luck."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Hobson's choice, I expect," suggested Spencer sympathetically. Miss Keane
- was facing him, giving him ample opportunity to examine the beautiful
- countenance, and it struck him that there was an underlying expression of
- sadness on the perfect features, especially when in repose.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I fear so," was Esmond's answer. "She is very reticent about her own
- affairs, as any gentlewoman would be. But from certain things she has let
- drop, I make out her own means are very slender, and her cousin's
- hospitality is a boon to her."
- </p>
- <p>
- Half an hour passed, and Spencer lit a big cigar. The two men chatted on
- various topics. Mrs. L'Estrange and the Colonel were still doing full
- justice to the excellent dishes offered them. Miss Keane was apparently
- satisfied, and sat quietly watching her companions, and throwing in an
- occasional remark.
- </p>
- <p>
- And suddenly came the loud sound of maroons. Everybody started. A few
- seconds later the clamour and roaring of our own guns burst forth. There
- was no doubt as to what was happening. The Germans were making one of
- their unwelcome visits.
- </p>
- <p>
- "By heavens, it's a raid, and we are in the thick of it," cried Tommy
- Esmond, rising excitedly. He was a nervous little man, and his face had
- grown a shade pale at the sound of the first boom.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a few moments there was a stampede from the dining-room. The guests
- hurried as fast as they could to the basement and cellars.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tommy, in his progress, was impeded by two burly men who were making their
- way leisurely. Spencer was a few feet in front of him, making for the
- crowd that surged round the doors. As he looked around the deserted
- tables, he saw Miss Keane standing alone, her eyes almost rigid with
- terror, her hands clutching convulsively the back of the chair on which
- she had been sitting. It was evident that the Colonel had quickly removed
- Mrs. L'Estrange from the scene of danger, and she had been too
- panic-stricken to follow them.
- </p>
- <p>
- He crossed over to her. "Excuse me," he said gently. "I am a friend of Mr.
- Esmond's. How is it you are alone? Did your companions desert you?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Colonel Desmond took my cousin, and told me to keep close behind them.
- when I got up, my limbs seemed unable to move. I feel as if I were
- paralysed."
- </p>
- <p>
- He took her arm and put it through his. It was evident she had been
- rendered immobile by terror.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will take care of you," he said soothingly. "Downstairs you will be
- quite safe. But we will let this crowd get through first."
- </p>
- <p>
- Tommy Esmond came bustling up, all anxiety. Truth to tell, he did not feel
- over brave, but his anxiety for himself was lost in the contemplation of
- her white face and stricken eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slowly, cheered by the presence of the two men, a little colour flowed
- back into her cheeks, and she smiled wanly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am a fearful coward," she explained. "I go all to pieces in even the
- mildest thunderstorm."
- </p>
- <p>
- And it was in this wise, amid the crash of falling bombs, and the roar and
- clamour of our own guns, that Guy Spencer made the acquaintance of Stella
- Keane.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IX
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hey found shelter
- in one of the big cellars of the Restaurant, and Miss Keane by degrees got
- back some of her courage. There were about twenty other persons in the
- same refuge, and she probably derived fortitude from their temporary
- companionship, and common danger. Tommy Esmond recovered himself very
- quickly, and hastened to observe the conventions.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It is a queer time and place in which to make introductions," he remarked
- genially. "But even in times of peril, one should preserve the usages of
- good society. I don't suppose you know the name of your gallant rescuer.
- Let me make you known, in a formal fashion. Mr. Spencer&mdash;Miss Keane."
- </p>
- <p>
- The beautiful Stella bowed her dark head, and the ghost of a smile flitted
- over her still pale face.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know Mr. Spencer very well by sight. When I have recovered my wits, I
- will thank him properly and prettily. Perhaps he will come and see us at
- my cousin's flat."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I was bringing him on there to-night, as a matter of fact," explained
- Esmond. "But I presume all that is knocked on the head, even supposing we
- get out of this disgusting hole in reasonable time. Mrs. L'Estrange won't
- be in a mood to receive visitors, after this disquieting experience, I am
- sure."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am afraid you don't know Mrs. L'Estrange," replied the girl, with a
- little mocking laugh. Her tones were not yet quite steady, but she was
- rapidly recovering herself. "The card tables were laid before we started,
- and we intended to be back early. If we get out safely from this
- disgusting hole, as you call it, my cousin will resume her ordinary
- pursuits, as if nothing had occurred to disturb them."
- </p>
- <p>
- Desultory conversation, the irresponsible chatter of the drawing-room
- kind, was almost impossible under the circumstances. And although Miss
- Keane did her best to assume a brave front, it was easy to see that she
- was inwardly quivering. At every roar of the guns, she shivered all over,
- and her cheek alternately flushed and then grew deadly pale with her
- inward terror.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Poor child," whispered Spencer to his companion; "she must be a bundle of
- nerves. Every second, she is experiencing the pangs of death in
- anticipation. By the way, the gallant Desmond doesn't seem to have
- troubled himself much about her. If I hadn't taken her forcibly away, I
- believe she would be rooted to that chair now."
- </p>
- <p>
- Esmond shrugged his shoulders. "Of course, a chap like Desmond doesn't
- know the meaning of fear, and he can't understand the sensation in others.
- The other woman took possession of him, and dragged him away. No doubt, he
- thought she was following. Mrs. L'Estrange, so far as I can judge, would
- never think of anything but number one."
- </p>
- <p>
- And as Spencer's glance stole to the fair face, he felt a strange feeling
- of pity for her. The poignant happenings of the last few moments had
- revealed to him her loneliness, the tragedy of her dependence upon others.
- In a supreme moment of peril, she, who ought to have lovers and friends by
- the score, was left by herself, and thrown upon the compassion of a
- stranger.
- </p>
- <p>
- An anxious half-hour passed, and then messengers came down with tidings of
- a reassuring nature. The raiders had been driven off, after inflicting
- considerable damage. Gay London was free to pursue its natural course of
- pleasure.
- </p>
- <p>
- At once the tension was relaxed. Drooping forms resumed an erect carriage,
- the roses bloomed again in the pale cheeks of the women. There was a
- flutter, a stir. They all moved away from the refuge which had been so
- welcome, and now had become unbearable.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the hall they encountered the Colonel, cool and collected, as if he
- were on parade, Mrs. L'Estrange fluttering and full of protestations.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, my poor Stella! I have been distracted about you. Why did you not
- follow us? I thought you were close behind us all the time, till we got to
- one of these abominable cellars, and looked back to find you were
- missing."
- </p>
- <p>
- The Colonel pulled at his moustache a little nervously.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I shall never forgive myself, Miss Keane, not to have assured myself you
- were with us at the start. I would have come back to search for you, but
- Mrs. L'Estrange was in such a nervous state I could not leave her."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Keane answered him very coldly, and to her cousin she did not
- vouchsafe any reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Please do not apologise. It was a question of <i>sauve qui peut</i>.
- Fortunately, I found some kind friends who took compassion on a forlorn
- damsel, shaking and terror-stricken." She turned to Mrs. L'Estrange. "Mr.
- Esmond is, of course, an old friend. But you do not know Mr. Spencer who
- got to me first."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. L'Estrange was quite equal to the occasion; she extended her
- perfectly-gloved hand with an air of effusive cordiality.
- </p>
- <p>
- "A thousand thanks to you both. My darling Stella was fortunate in finding
- such protectors. We are both terrible cowards, I don't know which is the
- greater."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I, without question," flashed out Miss Keane. "Otherwise I should have
- had the sense to scurry away like yourself. We were both frightened
- rabbits, but you could run to a place of safety while I stood paralysed."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. L'Estrange turned away the awkward thrust with a charming smile. "I
- have made up my mind to one thing," she remarked with an air of
- conviction. "Never, so long as the War lasts, will I dine out of my own
- home. This night's experience has taught me a lesson. I don't want a
- second one."
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture, Tommy Esmond interposed. "I was going to bring my friend
- Spencer round to you to-night. But I suppose you feel a bit too shattered,
- eh? You would like to get home and rest."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh dear, no!" replied the lady vivaciously. "I never alter my habits for
- anything or anybody. Let us all go along at once. I will go with Colonel
- Desmond. You and Mr. Spencer can continue your charge of Stella."
- </p>
- <p>
- But Guy had a small duty to perform. "I think if you will excuse me, I
- will join you a little later. I want to go round to inquire after my uncle
- and cousin. He is a very old man, and I should like to know he is quite
- safe."
- </p>
- <p>
- So it was arranged. The others drove off to Mrs. L'Estrange's flat, and
- Spencer, finding he would have some time to wait for a taxi, walked to
- Carlton House Terrace, where Lord South-leigh had his town house.
- </p>
- <p>
- The footman who opened the door informed him that his lordship and Lady
- Nina were still in the dining-room with a small party. The earl had taken
- it all very calmly, and his daughter, who, unlike poor Stella Keane, was a
- young woman of remarkable courage, had not been disturbed at all.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Are they alone, Robert?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "No, sir, two old friends of his lordship's came to dinner to-night and
- are still with them. But, of course, they will be glad to see you."
- </p>
- <p>
- However, his duty being performed, and learning that all was satisfactory,
- Spencer thought he might as well get along to the flat. He had been
- strangely attracted by the beautiful girl, whom even her obvious terror
- and lack of self-control could not deprive of her charm.
- </p>
- <p>
- "No, I won't come in. Tell them I called round to make sure they were all
- safe. And say to her ladyship I will look in to-morrow afternoon about
- tea-time."
- </p>
- <p>
- He went into his club for a few moments to see if there were any letters,
- and half an hour later was at Mrs. L'Estrange's door.
- </p>
- <p>
- She occupied the first floor of an imposing block of flats, recently
- erected in one of the semi-fashionable quarters of London. She might not
- be in very affluent circumstances, as Esmond had hinted, but she would
- have to pay a very handsome rent for her abode.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door was opened by a decorous-looking butler, with the air of one who
- had served in good families. A man passed out as Spencer entered. He was a
- good-looking young fellow of about twenty-five, in khaki. Spencer knew him
- well by sight as the eldest son and heir of a rich brewer.
- </p>
- <p>
- His face did not wear a very happy expression. It did not require a
- Sherlock Holmes to surmise that his visit had been an expensive one, and
- that he was hurrying away to avoid further temptation.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the centre of a rather spacious hall, Stella Keane and Tommy Esmond
- stood chatting.
- </p>
- <p>
- She greeted the newcomer with a bright and friendly smile. She no longer
- looked pale, in fact he thought there was a slight suspicion of rouge on
- the fair cheeks. She was too goodlooking to need the aid of art, but
- perhaps she wanted to conceal the ravages inflicted on her beauty by that
- terrible time at the "Excelsior."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You are not very long after us. I conclude you found your friends were
- quite safe."
- </p>
- <p>
- She had gathered from the garrulous Tommy what she had not known before,
- that Spencer was next in succession to the earldom, also that Lord
- Southleigh had a very pretty daughter, who was an accomplished young
- sportswoman, a daring rider to hounds, an adept at golf, fishing, and
- other pastimes of a strenuous nature.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had pricked up her ears at mention of the cousin. Artfully she pumped
- Tommy as to whether there was any tender feeling between the relatives.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Tommy could give no information on this point. Spencer was a very
- reticent man about his private affairs, he explained. Personally, he
- should not consider him particularly susceptible to female influence. But
- he had heard that the old earl, who had a shockingly weak heart, and was
- likely to go off at any moment, would have viewed a marriage between the
- cousins with favour.
- </p>
- <p>
- She mused over his words. He did not think him particularly susceptible to
- female influence. And yet she was sure there was admiration, open,
- undisguised admiration, in the glances he had bestowed upon her to-night.
- He was evidently not deeply in love with his pretty sporting cousin, or
- she would have been Mrs. Guy Spencer before now, assuming, of course, that
- she was ready to obey her father's wishes.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was after a short silence that Miss Keane put a somewhat abrupt
- question to him: "Are you fond of play, Mr. Spencer? Everybody is who
- comes here."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not really. I am a very lukewarm gambler. I don't mind a little flutter
- now and then, as a diversion. I always enjoy a small gamble at Monte
- Carlo, for example, but I never get carried away. When I have lost enough,
- I stop. Nothing could induce me to stake another <i>sou</i>."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Can you stop as easily when you are winning? That, I fancy, is where the
- selfcontrol comes in. But I think I am rather glad you are not one of the
- infatuated ones. I was brought up in an atmosphere of gambling."
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a pathetic shadow in the beautiful brown eyes as she spoke.
- Spencer's interest in her, a girl he had only known for a couple of hours,
- quickened. The glance he turned on her was full of sympathy, although he
- did not utter a word. It said as plainly as if he had spoken: "Tell me
- more about yourself, you will find an attentive listener."
- </p>
- <p>
- "My father and mother were both desperate gamblers. They staked and lost
- everything they had at cards, on the race-course, at Monte Carlo. My poor
- cousin, Mrs. L'Estrange, has the same fever in her veins."
- </p>
- <p>
- Now that he had invited her confidence, he was a little embarrassed by it.
- He did not know her well enough to condole with her. By way of relieving
- the tension, he uttered a few trite remarks on the subject of gambling
- generally.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Very sad when people are bitten by it to that extent. In my small
- experience, and I am only speaking of cards, I have found that, at the end
- of twelve months, you leave off pretty well where you started, good
- players or bad. You lose a hundred this week, you win a hundred the next,
- and so on, and so forth. If you are a good player, you get bad cards; if a
- duffer, you get good cards. And so the bad player has a pretty even chance
- with his more skilful opponent."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Keane threw aside her momentary sadness, and laughed at his
- scientific exposition.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You have evidently thought it all out," she said brightly. "But please
- don't inflict these cheerful theories on my cousin. She is a most tragic
- being when she loses. She thinks herself, and I believe is, one of the
- most scientific bridge-players in England, and she cannot be brought to
- understand why the duffers should have a look in."
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture Tommy Esmond interposed. It may have occurred to him that
- they were wasting precious time. They had come here for the special
- purpose of gambling.
- </p>
- <p>
- "What do you say to joining the others? We are in the very temple of
- gambling, and I know my young friend would like a little flutter."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Certainly. When I last peeped in, Amy looked the spirit of despair. I
- think she must have been losing heavily."
- </p>
- <p>
- She turned to lead the way, but at that instant the door-bell rang, and
- she halted, in readiness to greet the visitor, whoever it might be; and
- there entered a florid-looking, stout man, who advanced towards her with
- effusion, and both hands outstretched.
- </p>
- <p>
- "My dear Stella, I have been thinking of you ever since the raid began; I
- know how terribly you suffer when they are on. And I knew you were dining
- out to-night. I am rejoiced to see you safe and sound. I came round here
- the moment I could get away."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Keane flushed slightly as he took her hands and wrung them
- impressively to show his gratitude at her escape from peril. Tommy Esmond
- had given him a cool nod. But she felt Spencer's calm, critical gaze upon
- this ebullient expression of young English manhood.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not so much what he said, as his manner of saying it. Bounder was
- written all over him, in his appearance, his manners, his gestures.
- </p>
- <p>
- She answered him very briefly, almost curtly, as if she were administering
- a cold douche. Then the flush deepened as she turned to Spencer.
- </p>
- <p>
- "May I introduce my cousin, Mr. Dutton?"
- </p>
- <p>
- The florid man bowed with an exaggerated air of cordiality. Spencer, who
- had taken a violent dislike to him from the first second he saw him,
- acknowledged the salutation with chilling gravity; and Stella Keane could
- almost read his thoughts, as his gaze travelled from one to the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- How could this imperial-looking girl have such an unmitigated bounder for
- a relative? What was the mystery about her that could make a creature like
- this claim kinship with her?
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER X
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>rs. L'Estrange was
- evidently a great believer in light: the electric bulbs glowed softly, but
- brilliantly, over the two rooms devoted to the service of the
- card-players.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the sideboards were arranged decanters of whisky, and soda-water in
- bottles and syphons. Whether he lost or won, the gambler, triumphant or
- despairing, could quaff to his success, or solace his despair.
- </p>
- <p>
- The elderly, youthfully-dressed woman advanced towards the new visitors,
- with a beaming expression of countenance.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Spencer, you will join us. What is your favourite game?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Bridge," said Spencer, shortly. He was already a bit in love with Stella
- Keane, but he was by no means favourably inclined to her gushing, elderly
- cousin.
- </p>
- <p>
- He soon formed a party of four, and became absorbed, for the moment, in
- the game. Tommy Esmond was playing the same game, at a table some distance
- from him. Tommy was not supposed to be wealthy, but he evidently had money
- enough to indulge in a quiet gamble now and then.
- </p>
- <p>
- He remembered every incident of that night. His partner was a subordinate
- member of the Government, and a good sound player, lacking a little
- perhaps in the qualities of initiative and rapid decision. His opponents
- were a young man in the Foreign Office, and a slender, hawk-nosed young
- woman of about thirty.
- </p>
- <p>
- All through he held abominable cards, but, truth to tell, he was not very
- interested in the game. Whether he won or lost a hundred pounds did not
- interest him very greatly.
- </p>
- <p>
- But what did interest him, to every fibre of his being, was that Stella
- Keane hovered about his table. His eyes continually sought hers, and she
- did not seem to avoid his glance. At times he was sure he could detect a
- slight smile of intimacy. After all, had he not rescued her, half dead
- with fright, in the dining-room of the "Excelsior"?
- </p>
- <p>
- Once she bent over him and whispered, her cool, fragrant breath fanning
- his cheek: "You are having shocking bad luck. You haven't held a single
- decent card."
- </p>
- <p>
- He whispered back: "What did I tell you a little time ago? I flatter
- myself I am a fairly good bridge-player, but what could one do with those
- cards of mine?"
- </p>
- <p>
- She fluttered away, with still the shadow of that intimate smile upon her
- beautiful mouth, the smile that seemed to say they had only known each
- other for a few hours, under romantic and dramatic circumstances, but
- there was between them an affinity of spirit.
- </p>
- <p>
- He played on steadily for over an hour, and then a halt was cried. The
- young gentleman from the Foreign Office and the hawknosed young woman had
- scored. Guy Spencer rose from the table, the poorer by a hundred and fifty
- pounds. He wrote his cheque with a light heart. A hundred and fifty pounds
- was not a great price to pay for the introduction to Stella Keane.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. L'Estrange came impressively towards him.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, Mr. Spencer, I hope you have not lost. If so, I fear you will never
- come near me again." His glance roved in the direction of Stella, talking,
- as it appeared earnestly, to that bounder of a cousin. There came a steely
- look into his clear, resolute eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- "If you will allow me, I shall be delighted to come here often to see you
- and Miss Keane. I suppose I had better pick up my old friend Tommy Esmond,
- if he is not too engrossed." But when he approached Esmond, that little
- rotund gentleman waved him away, in most genial fashion.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Run away, dear boy. It is Eclipse first, and the rest nowhere. I am
- winning hands down." Certainly he bore the mien of a conqueror. And there,
- behind his chair, stood Stella Keane.
- </p>
- <p>
- She welcomed Spencer with that faint, intimate smile which had already
- stirred his pulses.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I fear I brought you bad luck," she said, in her low, caressing voice.
- "But to Mr. Esmond I have been the harbinger of good fortune. Are you
- really going?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I always go when I have won enough, or lost enough. You remember I gave
- you a little homily on gambling generally, not so long ago."
- </p>
- <p>
- She took her hand off Esmond's chair. "Well, I will leave my good
- influence behind, and look after the parting guest."
- </p>
- <p>
- She walked leisurely with him in the direction of the hall. It was
- deserted, but the light was brilliant, as it was in every other corner of
- the flat.
- </p>
- <p>
- She held out her hand impulsively. "Mr. Spencer, I have not thanked you
- properly for your kindness to me to-night. Terror-stricken, paralysed with
- fear, I should have been clinging to that chair now, if you had not
- rescued me in time. How can I thank you?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer laughed lightly. "One would think from your excessive gratitude
- that you had not experienced a great deal of kindness in your life. And
- yet that would be impossible."
- </p>
- <p>
- She flushed a little; his gaze was perhaps more full of admiration, of
- frank and open compliment than could be justified by the briefness of
- their acquaintance. And yet it only expressed what he was inwardly
- thinking.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here was a girl who had only to look at her mirror to learn she was
- endowed with singular beauty. She must also know that she combined with
- her more than ordinary fairness an unusual charm of manner.
- </p>
- <p>
- How had it come about that one with such striking qualifications should
- exhibit a certain underlying sadness, as if the world had already proved a
- very disappointing place? Youth and good looks usually secure for their
- owner a good time. Girls with half her attractions could find plenty of
- admirers. What evil fate dogged her that she had to regard a perfectly
- common act of kindness as something to be exceptionally grateful for?
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have never been petted nor spoiled, even as a child," she answered
- gravely. "My father and mother were ignorant of the duties, as they were
- of the instincts, of parenthood. And since my poor pretence of a home was
- broken up, I have been a derelict and a wanderer, sometimes a tolerated
- guest, rarely, I fear, a very welcome one in the houses of other people."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But you are happy here, surely?" he suggested. After saying so much, she
- could hardly regard the question as an impertinent one. He longed to hear
- her history. Well, if he came and cultivated her, and let her see how
- sympathetic he could be, one day she would tell him.
- </p>
- <p>
- She shrugged her shoulders with an air of indifference.
- </p>
- <p>
- "My cousin is peculiar in many ways, and her devotion to play is an
- obsession. We have very little in common; still, it would not be fair to
- say she was difficult to get on with. I have been with her now for more
- than eighteen months, and although we have often held totally different
- opinions, I cannot remember that we have ever had a real quarrel. And,
- anyway, it is a home and a shelter, and that is something."
- </p>
- <p>
- Not much enthusiasm here, certainly. Mrs. L'Estrange had been dismissed
- with a very negative kind of faint praise. Her excellence seemed to lie
- rather in the absence of bad qualities than the possession of good ones.
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet, he could not bring himself to believe that Miss Keane was an
- ill-natured girl, or of an unresponsive temperament. He had to admit that
- his impressions of his hostess were not too favourable.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was outwardly genial, and at times gushing. Yet he fancied he could
- read behind this plausible exterior the signs of a hard, worldly nature.
- There was no softness in her glance, no tenderness in her rather hard,
- staccato tones.
- </p>
- <p>
- A girl with those glorious eyes, and mobile face, with the delicate
- complexion that flushed and paled by turns, must surely be sweet and
- sympathetic, and responsive to affection. How her voice had thrilled with
- emotion when she thanked him. If she was disappointed in her cousin, it
- must be the fault of the elder woman, who could not give what was demanded
- by the younger and more ardent temperament.
- </p>
- <p>
- He would have lingered longer, trying to pierce the riddle from these
- disjointed remarks, but they were interrupted by Tommy Esmond, who came
- bustling into the hall, flushed with victory.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Never had such luck in my life. Just wiped the floor with them," he
- explained excitedly. "You left your good influence behind, Miss Keane. A
- few minutes sufficed for victory."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am very glad, but I think my powers for good must be very limited, for
- I brought bad luck to your friend," was her smiling rejoinder.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned briskly to the young man. "It is a perfect night, Spencer. Shall
- we walk down to the Club to get a breath of fresh air, and turn in there
- for a quiet smoke?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer nodded assent, and held out his hand to Miss Keane.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, good-bye for the present."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And I hope you will come and see us again soon. Don't wait for Mr. Esmond
- to bring you: after our thrilling experiences of tonight, we are more than
- ordinary acquaintances. We are at home nearly every night, if you want to
- gamble. And, if you would like a little rational chat instead, come in one
- afternoon to tea."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Thanks, I will. My card-playing fit has passed for a little time. Once
- again, goodbye."
- </p>
- <p>
- And, as soon as they were in the street, Esmond burst in with the question
- he was longing to ask.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, what do you think of her? Did I exaggerate?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not in the least," answered Spencer, speaking less seriously than he
- felt, he did not quite know for what reason, unless it was that with a man
- of his friend's calibre, he always had a tendency to discuss things
- lightly. "No, I don't think you have exaggerated a bit this time; so many
- of your swans have been geese, but this is a real swan, at last. She is
- very lovely; even in her terror she looked beautiful, and she has a
- peculiar, elusive charm. She makes you want to know more of her, and
- penetrate the mystery which seems to hover around her.59
- </p>
- <p>
- "I can't say I see any mystery, myself." Esmond spoke rather sharply, for
- such a good-natured little man.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Perhaps it is too strong a word. But I take it, you know something of the
- ménage, and can enlighten me on one point. What is her position there:
- paid companion, a passing guest, or does she share the flat with her
- cousin on some sort of terms?"
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a little time before Esmond answered. "I have never rightly got at
- that myself. Sometimes I have thought one thing, sometimes another. But I
- am pretty sure she is poor: in fact, she has admitted as much."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Poverty is relative after all, and it depends on how she was brought up.
- She seems to dress well, and that cannot be done without money."
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, Esmond admitted that she was turned out well. But he either could
- not, or would not express any positive opinion upon the delicate subject
- of Miss Keane's finances.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Does she ever play? She didn't touch a card while we were there, only
- flitted about from table to table."
- </p>
- <p>
- No, Esmond had never seen her play since he had frequented the house. It
- was clear, therefore, she did not make any pocket-money out of gambling.
- He had to admit that she seemed to act as deputy hostess, and, he
- believed, wrote most of her cousin's notes; in other words, made herself
- useful.
- </p>
- <p>
- All this information, such as it was, he imparted, as it seemed to
- Spencer, with some reluctance. Perhaps his keen admiration prompted him to
- hide anything that served to show her in a dependent position. And Spencer
- desisted from any further crossexamination on this head.
- </p>
- <p>
- On one point, however, he was determined to elicit a positive expression
- of opinion from the cautious little man.
- </p>
- <p>
- "What is the mystery of the bounder cousin? You must admit he has cad
- stamped all over him, his speech, his person, his gestures."
- </p>
- <p>
- Tommy could establish no defence for the gentleman in question. "No, he is
- past criticism, I allow. The result of some <i>mésalliance</i>, I suppose;
- his mother a very common person doubtless. But then, many highly
- respectable people have skeletons like that in their cupboards."
- </p>
- <p>
- "The mystery is that he finds his way, cousin as he may be, into any
- decent house. Mrs. L'Estrange we know to be a woman of good family. You
- would think she would lock and bolt the door against a creature like that.
- What is he supposed to be, if he has any profession beyond that of his
- intense bounderism?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Something in the City, I am told," replied Esmond shortly. "Something
- connected with finance; stockbroker or something."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It must be a shady kind of finance, if he has anything to do with it,"
- growled the young man. "To think of his claiming relationship with that
- exquisite girl."
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t would be idle to
- assume that a man of Guy Spencer's natural advantages had reached the age
- of thirty without experiencing a few affairs of the heart. But he had
- never been deeply touched, and his friend Tommy Esmond was right when he
- described him as not very susceptible to feminine influence.
- </p>
- <p>
- The one feeling which had lasted for some years, was a pronounced
- affection for his cousin Nina. He felt as much at home with her as he
- would have done with a favourite sister, had he possessed one. But the
- regard had a warmth in it that is lacking in fraternal relations.
- </p>
- <p>
- He knew that Lady Nina was not indifferent to him, that she allowed him to
- assume a certain air of proprietorship in the disposal of dances, in the
- claim to her society when he was disposed to enjoy it. He knew also that
- it was a match which would be warmly approved of by his invalid uncle.
- </p>
- <p>
- Without being guilty of undue vanity, he felt pretty certain that if he
- proposed he would be accepted. And once or twice he had been very near to
- taking the decisive step. He never could quite understand what it was that
- made him hesitate.
- </p>
- <p>
- The fact of his hesitation proved to himself, as well as to the young lady
- concerned, that much as he might like his cousin, he was certainly far
- from being deeply in love with her.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was a pretty, winsome girl, possessing an upright, straightforward
- nature, and quite attractive in a simple, frank fashion. There was nothing
- subtle or mysterious about her, you could read her like an open book. She
- was a good daughter, she was the type of girl who could not help making a
- good wife.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some day, no doubt, he would put the fateful question, and by her
- acceptance be made, in conventional parlance, the happiest of men. But
- although he would know he had chosen very wisely, and look forward to a
- placid kind of happiness, he was doubtful if Nina's smiles and kisses
- would ever thrill him, if with her he would ever learn the meaning of real
- love.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was not by any means sure that he was capable of very strong
- attachment. He had indulged in a few fancies, but they had only exercised
- a very small portion of his thoughts. Up to the present, he had certainly
- not experienced the wild ecstasies, the mingled joy and pain of the true
- lover.
- </p>
- <p>
- For the first time in his life, he had been seriously perturbed by the
- advent of Stella Keane. He had not fashioned in his imagination any
- particular ideal, any special type of woman who would make to him an
- irresistible appeal. But, if she had been Lady Nina, if he had met her in
- his own world, he would have owned at once this was the girl for whom he
- had been waiting.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her image pursued him persistently in his waking and his leisure hours. He
- could recall every word she had spoken during the short time they had
- spent together. He could see her a dozen times a day standing in the
- "Excelsior" dining-room, paralysed with terror.
- </p>
- <p>
- He remembered the break in her voice, the mist in her beautiful eyes, when
- she had thanked him. And ever and again, he longed to fathom the mystery
- of her loneliness, the cause of that sadness that was always lurking
- underneath.
- </p>
- <p>
- Was it wise to pursue the acquaintance, with the pretty certain result of
- intensifying the interest he already felt in her? He had no liking for
- Mrs. L'Estrange, a woman merely on the fringe of his world, or her
- gambling circle. If he wanted to lose or win money, there were plenty of
- other houses where he could indulge his fancy.
- </p>
- <p>
- And he knew nothing of Miss Keane's antecedents. The only thing he did
- know was that she had a cousin who was obviously a bounder of the first
- water. Tommy Esmond knew nothing about her either, or, if he did know,
- would not tell.
- </p>
- <p>
- For three days he wavered, one moment eager to rush off to the flat, the
- next determining that it would be better not to renew the brief
- acquaintance.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the fourth day, his impulse conquered his prudence. He told himself
- soothingly that his visit was due to curiosity, that he merely wanted to
- penetrate the mystery of her loneliness, her unprotected position.
- </p>
- <p>
- The bounder cousin was coming out as he entered. Mr. Dutton nodded affably
- to him with a greasy and familiar smile. Spencer acknowledged him in the
- coolest fashion compatible with bare civility. Why were there people, he
- wondered, whom you instinctively wanted to kick, for no apparently
- sufficient reason?
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Keane was alone. Mrs. L'Estrange, she explained, was in bed with a
- racking headache. She had lost heavily the night before, and this was the
- usual penalty she paid for losing.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Hardly worth the candle, is it?" he said lightly, as he took his cup of
- tea from her. A slight frown crossed his brow as he observed the empty cup
- of "the bounder" on the table. Did he come here often? was his thought.
- Perhaps he was in love with her. But it was surely beyond the limits of
- possibility that she could ever return the affection of such a creature.
- </p>
- <p>
- He would see what he could get out of her. "I met your cousin as I came
- in. I suppose he is a frequent visitor?"
- </p>
- <p>
- She did not look in the least conscious or embarrassed by the question.
- "Oh yes, he comes very often. He is about the only one of my relatives I
- have any acquaintance with. My father's mode of life estranged all the
- others."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer thought it would have been a good thing if Mr. Dutton had been as
- sensitive to the disqualifications of the late Mr. Keane as the rest of
- her connections. But, of course, he could not say so.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He is not in the least like you." Then, after a pause, he added boldly,
- and perhaps a little rudely: "I should never have dreamed you were
- related."
- </p>
- <p>
- She quite understood what he meant, and there was a lurking humour in her
- smile, as she answered:
- </p>
- <p>
- "Poor old George, he is a good sort, but quite a rough diamond. His mother
- married a self-made man, of course, for his money. That may account for a
- great deal you have noticed."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer had the grace to look confused. It was evident he had conveyed his
- private impression of Mr. Dutton very distinctly to her clear young
- vision. But she did not seem offended, only slightly amused, at the poor
- figure cut by Cousin George in the estimation of a person in a superior
- world.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anyway, that little mystery was explained. There was nothing unusual in
- poor gentlewomen marrying self-made men, for the sake of money. The noble
- family of Southleigh had many such <i>mésalliances</i> amongst its
- aristocratic records.
- </p>
- <p>
- But it was a relief to find Stella herself under no delusions concerning
- the young man in question. He did not think it possible she could, but as
- diplomatically as was possible, she admitted that Mr. Dutton was not what
- is, technically called, a gentleman.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He is the only relative with whom I am on speaking terms," she added,
- after a pause, "for reasons of which I have already given you a hint. And
- I think I have grown rather to look forward to his visits."
- </p>
- <p>
- Her observant eyes noticed a quick stiffening in his manner. She could
- guess his thoughts. How was it possible for a refined young woman to ever
- look forward to the visits of a person like Mr. Dutton, cousin though he
- might be?
- </p>
- <p>
- "You, of course, have heaps of relations; you can pick and choose," she
- went on, as if eager to explain to his fastidious taste her toleration of
- a man, so obviously the denizen of an inferior world. "You cannot, I
- daresay, imagine the loneliness of a girl of my age, debarred, through no
- fault of her own, from the society of her own kith and kin." Here was an
- opportunity to engage her in personal talk. He had not hoped she would
- take him into her confidence on his first visit.
- </p>
- <p>
- He leaned forward, and there was an eager note in his voice. "I formed an
- idea of you in the first few moments of our acquaintance, that you were
- not happy, that you were, in a sense, isolated, and that you had known
- more of sorrow than joy in your short life."
- </p>
- <p>
- She mused a moment, and then answered him in grave tones:
- </p>
- <p>
- "You were quite right. I feel it is the impression I must convey to either
- friend or stranger, an impression I shall always convey. For, if a great
- and overwhelming happiness were to come to me to-morrow, I could never
- forget the past years of sadness."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But, surely, you must have some happy memories? There were gleams of
- brightness in your childhood?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "No," she said, and there was a fierce vehemence in her voice. "They were
- the most miserable&mdash;an indifferent mother, a careless father, a roof
- and a shelter, food and clothing sufficient, if not in abundance, but no
- home, as it is understood by more fortunate children."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And when that home, or the wretched pretence of it, was broken up, you
- were thrown upon the mercy of the world," he questioned, "with no kindred,
- no friends to stretch out a helping hand?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Our relatives had long before ceased to take any interest in the daughter
- of a ruined gambler. I was thrown, in a certain sense, on the mercy of the
- world. But for a small pittance, which my father could not deprive me of,
- I should have starved, for he left nothing behind him but debts."
- </p>
- <p>
- She was not, then, absolutely penniless. Something had been saved from the
- wreck. He wondered if Esmond knew this. And yet, if she told a comparative
- stranger this at their first real interview, she must have told him, who
- seemed to be on the footing of a friend of the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I had no real friends," she went on; "but in the course of a wandering
- life&mdash;when my father owed too much in one place he removed to another&mdash;I
- had picked up a few acquaintances. With these I made a home, on and off,
- for longer or shorter periods."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And you have come to anchor here with Mrs. L'Estrange, who is your
- cousin, one of the few relatives who did not visit the sins of the fathers
- on the children."
- </p>
- <p>
- Her voice was a little scornful. "The cousinship is a very distant one.
- And, as she is an inveterate gambler herself, but more lucky than my
- father, she could hardly look upon gambling in another as a deadly sin."
- He nodded his head in agreement. He did not want to talk himself, for fear
- he should interrupt the flow of her reminiscences; she was evidently in a
- confidential mood this afternoon.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I saw her a few times when quite a child, and then she vanished like the
- others. A couple of years ago, we met in Devonshire at the house of a
- mutual acquaintance. She seemed to take a fancy to me. In the end, she
- proposed that I should, for the present, make my home with her. She has
- only one interest in life, <i>play</i>. She is a very lazy woman. She
- hates writing the briefest note, and housekeeping is abhorrent to her. I
- attend to her correspondence, I order the dinner and look after the
- servants. I am not exactly eating the bread of charity," she concluded
- with a little mirthless laugh, "because I give some work in exchange for
- my food. My own little pittance provides me with clothes."
- </p>
- <p>
- He wondered what the little pittance represented in annual hard cash. She
- was dressed quietly but in good taste, and he was judge enough of woman's
- apparel to know that the material of her dress was expensive. On her
- slender fingers glittered a few valuable rings, heirlooms probably saved
- from the clutches of the gambling father. She did not convey the
- impression of poverty, but perhaps she was clever, and knew how to make
- the best of a small income.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a long silence, and it almost seemed as if she had forgotten his
- presence. For she sat with a musing look in her beautiful eyes, her
- thoughts evidently in the past, conjuring up Heaven knows how many painful
- memories.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then she came back to herself, and turned to him with an apologetic smile.
- "I am afraid I have bored you to tears with my stupid personal history,
- but I will finish by telling you one little thing that may amuse you."
- </p>
- <p>
- He protested, of course, that he had not been in the least bored, only too
- painfully interested.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, I am not a person easily crushed, and although a physical coward
- and frightened of raids and thunderstorms, I am not a moral one. When I
- began to review my position, I tried to hit upon some way of making
- money."
- </p>
- <p>
- Was she fond of money, he wondered? Well, perhaps, like most women, she
- wanted money to buy herself pretty things. There was nothing unusual in
- that.
- </p>
- <p>
- "When I was a schoolgirl, I was supposed to show some artistic talent; I
- got several prizes. So I set to work and painted some half-a-dozen small
- things, in what I conceived to be a popular style, and took them round to
- as many dealers. In a week my hopes were shattered. One straightforward
- creature told me frankly that they just attained the school-girl level of
- excellence, but that I should never become an artist. It was not in me."
- </p>
- <p>
- "A crushing blow, indeed," said Spencer sympathetically.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I then turned to writing. Here, at any rate, was a profession that
- required no previous painful training, only powers of observation, some
- imagination, and a certain fluency of expression. I wrote some short
- stories which I thought good, which I still think good. History repeated
- itself. I sent them to a dozen editors, one after another. In every case,
- they were declined with thanks."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I daresay they were quite good, and they were not taken because you
- didn't happen to be in the ring," was Spencer's consoling comment.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well," she exclaimed brightly, "there is an end of my reminiscences for
- to-day. Let us talk of anything and everything else. Have you seen Mr.
- Esmond lately? He has not been near us since the night he came with you."
- </p>
- <p>
- Shortly afterwards he took his leave, he had stayed unconsciously long as
- it was.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I shall come again soon, if I may, to listen to some more reminiscences,"
- he said, as he shook hands. And she had given him permission, with the
- brightest of smiles.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had not learned half as much as he wanted, but he had gathered
- something. The bounder cousin was the son of a self-made man, a <i>parvenu</i>.
- And Stella Keane was not absolutely penniless, she had enough money to buy
- herself clothes. Did Tommy Esmond know as much as this? And if he did, why
- had he not said so?
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>lthough
- unsuspicious by nature, Guy Spencer had mixed much in the world and seen a
- good deal of life. Attracted as he was by the charming Stella, there was a
- something about the atmosphere of that flat in Elsinore Gardens which
- created an unfavourable impression.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of Mrs. L'Estrange's antecedents there was no question. She was a woman of
- good family, she could produce chapter and verse for her ancestors. And
- yet, why was she not in a better environment?
- </p>
- <p>
- Clearly, she was on the downward slope. But was there anything remarkable
- in that? Heaps of members of aristocratic families were in the same sort
- of predicament, from various causes, through certain circumstances.
- </p>
- <p>
- Had he not received a letter a few days ago from the daughter of a
- well-known earl, imploring him for a loan of ten pounds, for the sake of
- old friendship?
- </p>
- <p>
- The writer was some twenty years his senior, and she had tipped him when
- he was at Eton. She now dated her letter from a suburb in the extreme west
- of Kensington. If she, with all her advantages of birth and connection,
- had fallen by the wayside, why not a comparatively obscure person like
- Mrs. L'Estrange?
- </p>
- <p>
- It was very easy to see it. Mrs. L'Estrange was of a Bohemian temperament,
- and probably a great spendthrift. She had made considerable inroads into
- whatever fortune she originally possessed, and had developed into an adept
- card-player, with a view to supplementing the little income that was left
- to her.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Stella Keane, that beautiful, sad girl, with the tragic history of
- worthless parents behind her, was the victim of fate. She was not happy in
- her cousin's home, amidst this gambling, card-playing set. She, at least,
- was pure, whoever else might be defiled. On that he would stake his
- existence.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a few days he thought a great deal about the subject, and during those
- few days he kept away from Elsinore Gardens and denied himself the
- pleasure of listening to a further instalment of Miss Keane's
- reminiscences of her unhappy history.
- </p>
- <p>
- If he were going to fall in love, he told himself sternly, he would fall
- in love with a woman of his own world, not with a girl, however beautiful
- and interesting she might be, who was only a hanger-on of a woman
- well-born, but evidently <i>déclassée</i>, a woman no longer moving in the
- sphere to which she had been accustomed. In these reflections, he showed
- sound sense.
- </p>
- <p>
- But for a certain event that happened in the course of the next few days,
- he might have adhered to his good resolutions and have finally dismissed
- Miss Keane from his serious thoughts. And, in that case, this story would
- not have been written.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then the event happened. Returning home to his rooms one night, about
- twelve o'clock, his man told him that Mr. Esmond was waiting for him in
- the sitting-room.
- </p>
- <p>
- He found the little rotund man sitting in an easy-chair, white-faced, the
- marks of agitation written all over his countenance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wondering at this unusual spectacle&mdash;Tommy was frequently fussy, but
- always self-contained&mdash;Spencer advanced, and held out his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- "What's up, Tommy? You're a late visitor, but always welcome." He pointed
- to the decanters standing on the sideboard. "I hope you have helped
- yourself?"
- </p>
- <p>
- To Spencer's great surprise, the little man did not take the proffered
- hand. He spoke in a hoarse, choking voice, his lips twitching.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I've helped myself once too often, Spencer. And I can't take the hand of
- an honest man, for reasons. You've got it at once."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer had average brains, but he was not very quick to realise the
- meaning of unexpected situations. At first, he thought the little man had
- been drinking.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Sit down, Tommy, and get it off your chest. What in the name of wonder is
- the matter?" he said kindly. He was rather fond of Tommy in a casual sort
- of way.
- </p>
- <p>
- Esmond did not sit down at once, but went over to the sideboard, and mixed
- himself a stiff tumbler of whisky-and-soda. He gulped it down at a
- draught, and then took an armchair.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You won't begrudge me that, I know," he said, speaking in the same
- strained, hoarse voice. "It's the last drink I'll have in your rooms, the
- last drink in any house in England, I should say. I'm done for, old man,
- tomorrow I clear out, eat my heart away in some beastly foreign hole."
- </p>
- <p>
- No, Spencer's first surmise had been incorrect. The man was not drunk, not
- even elevated. His face was chalk-white, and he was trembling all over as
- if he had been stricken with palsy. But he was perfectly sober.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer took a chair himself, and spoke a little sternly. "Pull yourself
- together, old man, and speak out. At first I thought you had had a drop
- too much. But I see that's not the case. Out with it. You've been waiting
- some time, my man informs me. You want to tell me something. Tell it."
- </p>
- <p>
- Tommy Esmond moistened his dry lips with his tongue, and spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I don't quite know what instinct prompted me to come to you. We haven't
- known each other so very intimately, after all, but I always felt you were
- a bit more of a Christian than the other chaps I have known, less of a
- Pharisee&mdash;that you would be more likely to find excuses for a poor
- devil who had yielded to temptation."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Do get on," said Spencer a little impatiently. He did not at all like the
- turn the conversation was taking.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tommy spoke brokenly, he could not put his words together very coherently,
- it appeared. But his halting utterance was simply due to emotion.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I was at Elsinore Gardens to-night, playing cards. You know Elsinore
- Gardens, Mrs. L'Estrange's flat?"
- </p>
- <p>
- He was quite sober, but his agitation made him wander a bit, or he would
- not have put the question.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course I know Mrs. L'Estrange's flat. It was you who took me there,"
- said Spencer.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, we went there on the night of the raid, but I was not playing at
- your table. I remember you lost, and I won. Well, somebody has to lose,
- and somebody else has to win."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer made no comment on this obvious truism. Tommy Esmond again
- moistened his dry lips with his tongue. He was a long time in coming to
- the point, but he came to it at last.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, old man, I was playing with an old pal of mine, with whom I have
- been in business for years. We had a nice code of signals arranged. I was
- as cautious as I could be, but my partner had been dining out, and he was
- a bit indiscreet. There were three or four men watching us, they caught us
- both, although, as I tell you, I was cautious. But I made one slip, and
- they were down on me like a knife. You don't know my partner. It is the
- end of him. But it is the end of Tommy Esmond also."
- </p>
- <p>
- To say that Spencer was disgusted would be to convey a faint idea of his
- feelings. And yet, as he looked at the huddled, trembling form in the
- chair, his sentiment was rather one of compassion than loathing. what was
- there behind? what tragedy of circumstance had driven this apparently
- lighthearted, butterfly little creature to such crooked ways?
- </p>
- <p>
- "You're an old hand, then? It's not the first time you've cheated?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Tommy Esmond smiled wanly. He did not answer the question at once.
- </p>
- <p>
- "What age do you guess me, Spencer?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "At a casual glance, a little over fifty. You may be older. Looking at you
- closely, you do seem a bit made up, dye and all that sort of thing."
- </p>
- <p>
- "My dear sir, I am old enough to be your father. I shall never see sixty
- again."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And when did you take to this game?" Esmond thought a little before he
- replied, he was evidently counting the years.
- </p>
- <p>
- "When I was twenty-two I got an <i>entrée</i> into society. I was then
- enjoying an income of two pounds a week, I was a clerk in an insurance
- office. At twenty-four I left the insurance business and started cheating
- for a living."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer uttered a horrified ejaculation. He had never come across anything
- quite like this, at any rate, in actual experience.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Would you like to know something of my history, or would you like to kick
- me out at once, and have done with it?" asked Esmond quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- But there were still some remnants of compassion in Spencer. And he was
- also a little curious. He was dealing, after all, with a human document.
- Tommy's revelations would add to his experience of life.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Tell me all you would like to say," he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It will be a relief to unbosom myself, after the years I have led this
- life," was Esmond's answer. "When I left Elsinore Gardens with my life in
- ruins, I felt I could have shrieked it all out to the policeman standing
- at the corner. I came on here, because I thought you would listen to me,
- because I felt sure you were not a Pharisee."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer motioned him to the sideboard. "Mix yourself another stiff peg,
- and steady your nerves. Then tell me as much as you like."
- </p>
- <p>
- Esmond went over and helped himself. After a few seconds the ague-like
- trembling ceased, and he was able to speak in a fairly steady voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- "My father was a solicitor in a small way of business in an obscure town
- in the west of England. There were three children&mdash;an elder brother,
- myself, and a sister. My elder brother succeeded to the practice and is
- still in the same place, making both ends meet on a microscopic income. My
- sister is dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- "My father was a God-fearing, deeply religious man, and did more than his
- duty by his family. He scraped and pinched to give us a good education,
- that being the only capital he could leave us. I was placed in an
- insurance office, the head of which was a distant connection of my
- mother's.
- </p>
- <p>
- "If I had chosen to be content with my lot I daresay in time I might have
- done fairly well, as I had more than average abilities, and gave complete
- satisfaction in the performance of my duties.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Unfortunately, I ran across, by the purest accident, a young man some
- couple of years my senior. His father, a man of very good family, had died
- a short time previously and left him a very decent income of about two
- thousand a year. He had been at a private school with me when we were
- boys.
- </p>
- <p>
- "This young man took a violent fancy to me, I was slim and not bad looking
- in those days. He had the <i>entrée</i> to some of the best houses in
- London through his aristocratic connections. He took me with him
- everywhere, as his bosom friend. I had certain social instincts, derived
- from Heaven knows where, and I soon found my feet. In twelve months I was
- able to run alone, sometimes I was able to get into houses where even he
- could not gain a footing. He laughingly declared that I had beaten him in
- the social race, but he was a good-natured fellow, without a particle of
- envy or meanness in his nature, and he was rather proud than otherwise
- that the pupil had outstripped the master."
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused for a moment. It was evident, that having kept silence for so
- many years, it was an enormous relief to unbosom himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- In spite of his disgust, Spencer could not but feel interested in this bit
- of life-history. He had often felt curious as to Tommy Esmond's past, and
- now that curiosity was going to be satisfied. He understood now why the
- little man had never made any but the most distant allusions to his home
- or his relatives.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The life suited me down to the ground, but there was always the terrible
- problem of ways and means, good clothes, travelling, expensive flowers,
- etc., etc. I had got to three pounds a week, but that doesn't go far in
- the circles to which I had been transplanted. It began to dawn upon me
- that, delightful as the life was, I was playing the fool, and neglecting
- the substance for the shadow. People asked me to their big parties, often
- to their dinners and to week-ends, but there was no money in it. In fact,
- I was getting out of my depth. I had already been obliged to borrow small
- sums from money-lenders to cover my expenses.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Bitterly I made up my mind that sooner or later I must cut it, and take
- life seriously, like the poor man I was. I belonged to a good club where I
- had all my letters addressed. I lodged in a little street in Bloomsbury,
- in cheap apartments. My friend alone knew this address.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He would have helped me to a considerable extent, but, strange to say,
- considering what I did afterwards, I shrank from accepting actual cash
- from him."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer interrupted him for a second. "You would not sponge upon your
- friend, instead you took to cheating your acquaintance. I take it that is
- what you are going to tell me."
- </p>
- <p>
- Esmond nodded. "Quite right. I had made up my mind to cut it, and
- disappear from a world in which I had no right to intrude. I had even made
- up my mind as to the exact date at the close of the season when I would
- disappear, and return to the humdrum life from which my friend roused me.
- </p>
- <p>
- "A few days before that date, something very strange happened; my life has
- always been full of surprises. A few weeks before the fixed date, I had
- made the acquaintance of a young nobleman, a member of one of the
- best-known families in England. He was then about thirty, very handsome,
- very popular with both men and women. He is dead now, but, of course, I
- shall not mention his name, which would startle you if you heard it.
- </p>
- <p>
- "As I have said, his family was a very distinguished one, but poor for its
- position. My friend, whom for the sake of convenience I will call Lord
- Frederick, lived in good style, never seemed short of cash, and paid his
- debts promptly. Those who knew were sure that he got little or no help
- from his family, yet he betted at race-meetings, played cards nearly every
- night, and lived generally the life of a man with a fair income.
- </p>
- <p>
- "His own explanation was, that he had some intimate friends on the Stock
- Exchange who put him on to any good thing going. In the course of the
- year, according to his own account, he made a considerable sum out of
- racing.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Lord Frederick, like my first friend, took considerable notice of me
- after we had become acquainted. Several times he invited me to his club.
- Afterwards he told me that he had a premonition I should be useful to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I shall never forget that night when the deadly temptation came to me,
- when I learned what manner of rascal he was. It was the close of the
- season. In a very few days more I should have looked my last on this gay
- and alluring existence, should have ceased to lead this double life of a
- poor clerk by day, a young man of fashion by night."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer suddenly interrupted. "But was there not a great risk of
- detection? were you never recognised in the City by some chance west End
- acquaintance."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Up to then, no. Of course, I must have been found out in time, if only
- from the suspicious circumstance that I could never accept any day
- invitations. This was one of the reasons that weighed most strongly with
- me in the resolve to give it up. I could not bear the thought that the
- Tommy Esmond who bore himself so bravely in his new world, who had managed
- to outlive all curiosity as to his antecedents, should be discovered in
- his true colours, a poor City drudge in an insurance office.
- </p>
- <p>
- "To return to my story. I had dined with Lord Frederick at the&mdash;&mdash;
- No, I will not give the name of the club, one of the most exclusive in
- London: it might put you on his track. He had ordered a choice dinner, and
- he plied me liberally with wine. My heart was very full at the prospect of
- having to say good-bye to this luxurious life, in a very few days' time.
- </p>
- <p>
- "After dinner we went into the smoking-room, which was nearly empty, as
- most of the members had left London. There were only two other occupants,
- and they were at the far end of the apartment. Practically, we had the
- place to ourselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He urged me strongly to take a trip over to Paris as his guest. I should
- have loved to go, but the wrench had to be made some time, it might as
- well be made now. Besides, I was heavily in debt, for a poor man, and I
- had not the cash to purchase the necessary outfit for such a trip.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He would not accept my first refusal, but tried to persuade me into
- reconsidering. When I still persisted, he bluntly asked me my reasons.
- </p>
- <p>
- "As I have said, I was very depressed that night at the prospect of all I
- was saying goodbye to. This mood was responsible for my blurting out a
- great portion of the absolute truth.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I explained to him that I had already accepted too much of his
- hospitality, which my circumstances did not enable me to return, that I
- could no longer take advantage of his generosity.
- </p>
- <p>
- "After this avowal, he did not speak for some little time, all the while
- regarding me with an intense gaze that embarrassed me very much.
- </p>
- <p>
- "'Thanks for telling me the truth,' he said at length. 'Your confidence is
- quite safe with me.' He added after a pause, 'So you are a poor man, in
- spite of the fact that your appearance does not suggest the fact. well, I
- may tell you that from the first moment I made your acquaintance I was
- pretty certain you were.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "I told him a little more. 'I am so poor,' I said frankly, 'that I cannot
- afford to keep up appearances any longer. In a few days I shall leave a
- world I ought never to have entered. Anyway, it is the last time I shall
- dine with you, and I don't suppose we shall ever meet again, unless we run
- across each other by chance in a very different sphere.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- "'You have absolutely made up your mind to do this, for the reasons you
- have given?' he asked presently.
- </p>
- <p>
- "'Absolutely,' I replied. 'I may say it is Hobson's choice. I am heavily
- in debt. If I cut my wants down to next to nothing, it will take me a year
- to pay off what I owe.' I laughed bitterly&mdash;'Unless I turned thief, I
- could not possibly go on.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "'I don't want to force your confidence,' was Lord Frederick's next
- remark. 'But having had a taste of this rather glittering world, I presume
- you will leave it with considerable regret.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "'I dare not say what I feel,' I said with conviction. 'It seems to me
- that in the old life to which I am returning I shall suffer the tortures
- of lost souls.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "Then he shot at me an extraordinary question. 'I wonder whether you would
- care to become a partner in my business?'
- </p>
- <p>
- "My heart suddenly grew light. Was there a chance that I could still keep
- on, that through his assistance I could find a decently paid occupation?
- After all, I only wanted a few hundreds a year more. A bachelor can live
- in the best society on comparatively little, but he must have that little,
- and the insurance office did not furnish it.
- </p>
- <p>
- "'If I were competent enough,' I faltered.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He smiled; I thought there was a little touch of a sneer in that smile.
- 'Oh, I think you would be competent enough. But I am not at all sure that
- you would like the business sufficiently.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "'I can't say positively, of course, till I know the nature of it. But I
- don't think I should be very difficult to please, nor do I want any
- extravagant remuneration, just enough to keep up a decent appearance.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "'The share would be half, neither more nor less,' he said curtly; then he
- relapsed into a long silence, as if he were thinking very hard.
- </p>
- <p>
- "When he spoke it was in a low, strained voice. 'Look here, Esmond, I
- don't know very much of you. But I believe you to be a gentleman. The
- business I am engaged in is a very peculiar one, and it is more than
- probable it will not appeal to you. If you refuse, you are to give me your
- word of honour that this conversation between us shall be forgotten.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "I gave him more than my word, I added my solemn oath that I would never
- divulge a syllable.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I had for some little time felt that there was a mystery about him. I
- hazarded to myself that he was perhaps engaged in some spying work
- repugnant to any man of fine susceptibilities but quite remunerative.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I was startled, and to an extent horrified, by what he told me. He was a
- professional card-sharper, made his living by robbing his rich
- acquaintances. He had been at the game since he was twenty-five.
- </p>
- <p>
- "'I do pretty well, as you can guess, by the way in which I live,' he
- remarked at the conclusion of his strange confession. 'But with a smart
- confederate, and I am sure you would prove one, I could quadruple my
- gains. One is hampered by working alone. It's a scoundrel's business, of
- course. But I can always persuade myself I am not really doing very much
- harm, certainly not as much as the swindling sort of company-promoter. I
- win money from rich fools, rob them, if you like; it does at least as much
- good in my pockets as theirs.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "I suppose there was already some moral kink in me waiting to blossom
- forth under proper encouragement. For though I was very much startled, I
- cannot say that I was profoundly shocked, as I might have been by a less
- subtle form of robbery.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I did not accept or refuse that night, I wanted to think. I knew it was
- the turning of the ways. On the one hand well-paid roguery, with the
- accompanying delights of the fashionable world, on the other the deadly,
- drab life of the poor City drudge. In the morning my mind was made up. I
- went into partnership with my new friend."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And you made a fortune, I suppose?" asked Spencer, in a very cold voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Esmond shook his head, and Spencer was not at all sure that the next words
- were truthful ones.
- </p>
- <p>
- "No, a comfortable living, nothing more. We made a good deal, but we had
- to lose a good deal, too, in order to avert suspicion."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Your friend is dead, you say. So you went on with it after his death?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, for a little time alone. Then I, too, got in a partner, the man who
- was with me to-night."
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a long silence between the two men. Spencer broke it first.
- </p>
- <p>
- "And what are your plans?" he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I shall sneak out of the country to-morrow morning and make my way to
- France. I shall hide myself in some little out-of-the-way village under an
- assumed name, and rust out." The little man rose and looked at his former
- friend with an embarrassed air. "Well, thanks for having listened to me so
- patiently. It has been a tremendous relief to me to pour it all out."
- </p>
- <p>
- He did not offer his hand, for he felt certain it would not be taken.
- Spencer stopped him as he was at the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You have money, I suppose, something put by out of your&mdash;your
- winnings?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Esmond's voice was hesitating. Again it was very doubtful if he was
- speaking the truth. "Hardly a <i>sou</i> out of them. It was lightly come,
- lightly go, all the time. But my father left me a little bit which will
- keep me going in a cheap place."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer did not believe him. The probability was he had put away safely a
- snug little nest-egg, in view of the detection which might come at any
- moment of such a hazardous occupation.
- </p>
- <p>
- "One word before you go," said the young man finally. "Is there much
- cheating going on at Elsinore Gardens?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Esmond turned and looked the speaker straight in the face. This time he
- certainly seemed to be speaking the truth, but he might be a most
- accomplished liar.
- </p>
- <p>
- "None at all, except when I and my partner were there. If there had been,
- I should have spotted it. I'm awfully sorry for Mrs. L'Estrange, for it
- having happened at her house, for I daresay people will hint nasty
- things."
- </p>
- <p>
- "She didn't suspect anything, then?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not a bit," replied Esmond. "We didn't play there more than about twice a
- week, and we never went in for high stakes. And, of course, we had to lose
- pretty often, to make things look square."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And Miss Keane suspected nothing either." As he remembered the girl's
- beautiful face, and sad history, Spencer felt almost ashamed of himself
- for putting the question.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Bless your soul, no, a thousand times no." The little rogue seemed to
- speak with unusual warmth. "Why, she loathes cards, she never can be got
- to join in. She has suffered too much from gambling."
- </p>
- <p>
- He went out of the room slowly and into the night. Spencer half pitied the
- poor devil who had made such a hash of his life through his desire to step
- out of his own class. He sat down and ruminated a long time over the
- strange history which had been unfolded to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next morning, the fugitive, Tommy Esmond, caught the morning train
- from Charing Cross. He looked very sad and woebegone, a pitiable figure,
- friendless and alone.
- </p>
- <p>
- But not quite friendless. A young woman closely-veiled and dressed very
- plainly rose up from one of the seats as he came on the platform, and
- touched him lightly on the arm. He recognised her, and glanced round
- anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It was very dear and sweet of you to come, Stella, but very imprudent.
- You might be seen by half a dozen people."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know," answered Miss Keane, for the closely-veiled woman was she. "I
- got your letter this morning and could not bear you should go without a
- last good-bye. Well, I can see you are anxious. I will say it, and get
- back."
- </p>
- <p>
- She lifted the veil for a second, and held up her face. The little man
- kissed her hastily, and then made for his train.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was evident he had one friend left in the London he was flying from as
- a fugitive and outlaw, one woman who pitied him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And, at the same time that Stella was walking swiftly from the station,
- Guy Spencer was making up his mind that he would pay a visit to Elsinore
- Gardens in the afternoon, to see how the land lay there.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>bout five o'clock
- on the afternoon of the day following Esmond's confession, Guy Spencer
- rang the bell at Mrs. L'Estrange's flat in Elsinore Gardens.
- </p>
- <p>
- The decorous-looking butler opened the door. He seemed to wear a sad and
- chastened demeanour, as if overborne with the tragic events of the
- previous night. Of course, all servants know what is going on in the house
- of their employers. A scandal such as this must have quickly penetrated to
- them.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Is Mrs. L'Estrange at home?"
- </p>
- <p>
- The sad-faced butler answered at once; he could tell a lie with as much
- grace as anybody, but here there was no need to lie.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mrs. L'Estrange is at home, sir, in a manner of speaking, but she is very
- ill, as a matter of fact in bed. Of course she cannot see any visitors."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, I quite understand," said Spencer hastily. "Is Miss Keane in? If so,
- I would like to see her for a few moments."
- </p>
- <p>
- The melancholy man in black opened the door a few inches. "Miss Keane is
- in, sir, but I am afraid she is not very well, either. Will you kindly
- step in, sir, and I will find out if she can see you?"
- </p>
- <p>
- It was evident that Tommy Esmond and his equally nefarious partner had
- cast a gloom over the whole establishment. Spencer was ushered into the
- pretty drawing-room. In a few moments, Stella Keane came in. She was
- evidently under the stress of great emotion. There were dark shadows round
- the eyes, as if she had passed a sleepless night. Even her perfect mouth
- had a listless droop.
- </p>
- <p>
- But, in spite of her pallor, the dark shadows round her eyes, and that
- pathetic droop, she was still very beautiful. Pathos became her. Guy
- Spencer's heart gave a great leap as he saw her. There was about her an
- overpowering, an irresistible fascination.
- </p>
- <p>
- She advanced towards him with outstretched hands. She spoke in a broken
- voice, the perfectly moulded lips trembled:
- </p>
- <p>
- "It is so sweet of you to come. Of course you have heard? It is all over
- the town by now. Oh, this thrice-accursed gambling, the love of which
- induces decent men to cheat, and become outcasts from their world."
- </p>
- <p>
- She spoke with the deepest emotion, her bosom heaving, her voice broken by
- the catchings of the breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He was such a good little man, he was always so kind to me," she went on.
- "And last night those awful happenings. Branded a cheat, he and his
- friend, and they could not deny it. They had to slink out. I have hardly
- closed my eyes during the night, Mr. Spencer; my poor cousin is
- prostrated." She added with a shudder: "My girlhood was passed amidst a
- gambling set, but I never had an experience like this."
- </p>
- <p>
- She collected herself, and rang for tea. "You will sit down," she said.
- "You can understand I should have denied myself to anybody but you, I am
- so terribly upset. It is still like a nightmare."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer sat down as he was bidden. "I had a visit from Esmond last night,"
- he said briefly. "He came straight on from Elsinore Gardens. He told me
- what had happened, he told me the whole history of the terrible thing, how
- he has been making his living by cheating at cards, since he was a young
- man." Miss Keane raised her hands in mute deprecation. "How awful! That,
- of course, I did not know. I had a letter from him this morning,
- apologising, if one can apologise for such a thing, telling me he was
- going to live abroad under an assumed name. It was a very short letter.
- His chief concern seemed to be that he had, incidentally, made it
- unpleasant for Mrs. L'Estrange."
- </p>
- <p>
- "How does Mrs. L'Estrange take it?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Keane shrugged her shoulders. "She is a little bit hysterical, you
- know. One moment, she vows she will shut up the flat and go abroad, for
- fear of the nasty things that people will say. The next moment, she says
- that, confident in her perfect innocence, she will stay and face the
- music, and give her parties as usual."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Has she asked your advice?" queried Spencer.
- </p>
- <p>
- "She has, and my advice is to go on as usual. It is not her fault that
- blacklegs have crept into her circle. They creep into the best houses, the
- best clubs. So long as this curséd gambling goes on, there will be
- sharpers."
- </p>
- <p>
- "That's true," remarked Spencer, remembering a few episodes that had
- occurred in his time. "And, I suppose, you will still cast in your lot
- with her?"
- </p>
- <p>
- The look on the beautiful face grew more pathetic than ever.
- </p>
- <p>
- "What can I do, Mr. Spencer? I have told you my position. I wish my cousin
- were a different woman altogether, I wish she were not so infatuated with
- this horrible gambling. But I cannot influence her. She is too old and set
- to turn over a new leaf."
- </p>
- <p>
- Every moment the girl's fascination took a deeper hold of him. She was so
- very beautiful, so very seductive. But he still kept himself in check.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Tell me what actually happened last night. How were Esmond and his
- partner found out?"
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a little interruption by the solemn-faced butler who brought in
- tea. Miss Keane busied herself amongst the cups before she replied.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It is, as I told you, all a nightmare to me. I was wandering aimlessly
- about; as I have told you before, I never play, I loathe cards too much.
- Suddenly there was a scene at the table where Mr. Esmond and his partner
- were playing. Three men were standing watching the game, they had come
- here often, I knew their names."
- </p>
- <p>
- "They were friends of Mrs. L'Estrange?" queried Spencer.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just a faint shade of hesitation crept into the low voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh yes, friends of my cousin."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Straight sort of chaps, of course."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have no doubt of that. They accused Mr. Esmond and his partner, Major
- Golightly, of cheating. Of course the charge was denied, but very
- half-heartedly. These three men were backed by others who had seen
- something suspicious. It seems Mr. Esmond and his partner had aroused
- suspicion before. Finally they confessed, and slunk out of the house."
- </p>
- <p>
- She paused a moment, and then laid her hand impulsively on his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- "That first night you came to our house, you lost. Did you play at the
- same table with Tommy Esmond? I forget."
- </p>
- <p>
- The answer came straight. "No, I lost something, what was it?&mdash;something
- about a hundred and fifty. But Tommy Esmond did not rook me that time, he
- was playing at another table. I remember he was very cock-a-hoop, he was
- winning hand over fist. I say, I know I am putting a very impertinent
- question, but were Tommy Esmond and his partner, this Major Golightly, the
- only sharpers who came to this flat? Did I lose my hundred and fifty, or
- whatever it was, quite honestly?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Keane covered her face with her hands for a few seconds, and when she
- took them away, he could see that tears were slowly trickling down her
- cheeks.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Heaven knows, Mr. Spencer, I don't. My cousin is a strange woman. She is
- fond of gaiety, of excitement. She asks people about whom she knows
- nothing to her flat, I think," she added with an hysterical laugh; "she
- fancies she is making herself a queen of Society. If she can get her rooms
- full that is all she wants. When she does that, she fancies herself the
- Duchess."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I think I understand," said Spencer gravely. "And I take it you would
- give heaven and earth to get out of this environment?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "If you only knew how I loathe it," she cried, in a fervent tone.
- "Sometimes I think I would rather run away and be a shopgirl or a
- waitress, to get rid of this horrible atmosphere."
- </p>
- <p>
- Guy Spencer was very perturbed. He rose and walked up and down the room&mdash;it
- was his habit to walk about, even in confined spaces, when he was in an
- emotional mood.
- </p>
- <p>
- At length he turned, and faced her squarely. "Look here, Miss Keane. It's
- rather nonsense talking about being a waitress or a shop-girl. You told me
- you had a small income saved from the wreck. How much is it? I am asking
- in no spirit of impertinent curiosity. I have a reason for asking."
- </p>
- <p>
- She hesitated for a moment before she replied: "Something like a hundred a
- year&mdash;paid to me quarterly by my cousin, Mr. Dutton, who is my
- trustee."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Then you are not exactly a pauper. Shopgirls and waitresses don't earn
- that."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But it would help," said Miss Keane, in a stifled voice. "A hundred a
- year does not go far; with clothes and everything."
- </p>
- <p>
- He longed to take her in his arms there and then and ask her to be his
- wife, so far was he subjugated by her subtle fascination. But certain
- things occurred to him. He thought of his old ancestry, his uncle whose
- heir he would be, even a faint idea of his cousin Nina flashed through his
- mind. What would his relatives say to a marriage like that, the marriage
- with a girl, however beautiful, picked up in a flat, owned by a woman of
- good family but doubtful reputation?
- </p>
- <p>
- But he could not afford to lose her. He was rich, he could indulge any
- passing whim. Out of his new-born ideas he spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Miss Keane, I am very interested in you. Will you agree to look upon me
- as a friend?"
- </p>
- <p>
- She looked up at him from under downcast eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Spencer, somehow I have always looked upon you as a friend, as
- something different from the ordinary man I meet in a place like this."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You want to get out of this atmosphere, away from your card-playing
- cousin, who cannot keep her parties free from disgraceful scandals."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have told you how fervently I long to say good-bye to it all."
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer had made up his mind as to what he was going to do. It was
- quixotic, but then he was a quixotic person. And, anyway, he was marking
- time. He would ask her to marry him in the end, but, at the moment, he did
- not clearly see his way to do so.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Suppose a woman friend offered to lend you five hundred pounds, to enable
- you to get clear of this stifling atmosphere, what would you say? You
- could go and live where you like and look around."
- </p>
- <p>
- "If a woman friend asked me that I think I should say, yes."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You have agreed that I am your friend, true, a man friend," said Guy.
- "Suppose I made you the same offer, what is your answer?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "From a man friend I fear my answer must be an unhesitating 'no,' even to
- you."
- </p>
- <p>
- He admired her answer. He could gather from it that she respected herself
- too much to snatch at any offer that came along.
- </p>
- <p>
- But he would play with her still. "Why?" he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- The beautiful eyes, still a little clouded with her tears, met his
- unfalteringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You know as well as I do," was her answer. "I am poor, Mr. Spencer, but I
- am very proud."
- </p>
- <p>
- He sat down beside her, and took her hand in his.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I admire you for that answer, Stella. I may call you Stella, may I not?
- But I am not quite the ordinary type of man. I am going to speak quite
- plainly to you. If you accept that five hundred pounds, I am not going to
- ask you for any return. I want you to understand that."
- </p>
- <p>
- She shot at him a swift glance from under the downcast eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You are a man out of a thousand, nay, out of ten thousand," she said, and
- in her voice there was a note of great appreciation. If Stella Keane ever
- felt a good impulse in her life, it was towards this man who was doing his
- best to befriend her.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Listen to me," said Spencer persuasively, her delicate hand still lying
- in his. "I don't know that I have done much good to other people in my
- life, but I do want to help you. I should like to get you out of this
- beastly hole. My proposal is, that I shall take for you a little furnished
- flat and supplement your income, or give you the five hundred pounds down,
- to do what you like with. It is for you to choose."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You would do this for me?" said Stella softly. "You must really like me,
- then! Men don't do this sort of thing for women unless they like them."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I like you very much, Stella, and I want to help you."
- </p>
- <p>
- He knew that he could take her in his arms and kiss her at his will. But
- he forebore. He was not going to spoil this somewhat idyllic wooing.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It cannot take place for a week or so," she said presently. "I cannot
- quite leave my cousin in the lurch. I must give her some sort of notice.
- Of course, I can make the excuse that the events of last night have
- completely shattered my nerve."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I don't wonder," was Spencer's comment. "Now, about this little matter we
- have been speaking of. I think it would be better if I paid this money
- into your bank, and left you to make your own arrangements. I suppose you
- have a bank?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, Miss Keane had a banking-account, a very small one. She smilingly
- remarked that it would give the manager a shock when such a large sum was
- paid into it.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will draw the money in cash to-morrow and bring it to you," said
- Spencer. "Then nobody will be able to guess from whom it comes."
- </p>
- <p>
- He rose, he could not trust himself to stay very much longer. At any
- moment his reserve might break down. He might be impelled to change the
- rôle of the benevolent friend into that of the ardent lover.
- </p>
- <p>
- And for a long time after he had left, Stella Keane sat absorbed in the
- most serious thoughts.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no doubt he was ardently in love with her. But he was not yet
- quite prepared to screw up his courage to the sticking place.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was easy to understand. The obligations he owed his family were
- weighing on his mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman he made his wife would one day be the Countess of Southleigh. He
- had to think of all this. And all he knew about her was learned from her
- own statement, and she had a cousin who was, from his point of view,
- certainly not a gentleman.
- </p>
- <p>
- Above all things, Stella Keane was a very business-like young woman, and
- never shrank from looking facts squarely in the face. She must play a
- waiting game. Guy Spencer was very deeply in love, but he was not a
- hotheaded, impetuous boy, the sort of amorous youth who runs off with a
- chorus girl, regardless of consequences. Lovers of this kind were very
- rarely met with.
- </p>
- <p>
- If Guy Spencer did marry her, and she could not at the moment be sure he
- would, he would be fully conscious of the disadvantages to himself
- entailed by such a marriage. Would her fascination be strong enough to
- conquer his better judgment?
- </p>
- <p>
- At any rate, for the present he was prepared to advance her five hundred
- pounds, and ask nothing but her friendship in return. It was an offer that
- she would have been a fool to refuse.
- </p>
- <p>
- Presently she rose and went up to Mrs. L'Estrange's bedroom. That sorely
- perturbed lady had risen, flung on a dressing-gown, and was reclining on a
- sofa.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I can't sleep, I only fidget and fidget about," was the explanation. "So
- I thought I might as well get up."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Very wise," said Stella calmly. "You're a little bit too hysterical, you
- know. You should keep your nerves in order as I do mine."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not always," was the sarcastic rejoinder. "They go to pieces in
- thunderstorms and air raids, don't they?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "The exception proves the rule, my dear lady. Well, I haven't come up here
- to indulge in a sparring match. I have some very great news for you. Mr.
- Spencer called this afternoon; he hasn't left me very long."
- </p>
- <p>
- The elder woman became interested at once. "You don't mean to say he has
- asked you to marry him?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Stella laughed. "No, he hasn't, although it will not be my fault if he
- doesn't later on. It seems Tommy Esmond called on him last night, and made
- a clean breast of his whole history."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. L'Estrange frowned. "Then I think he was a great fool. Everybody, of
- course, will know what actually happened, that he was discovered cheating.
- But he need not go and tell him more than he would learn from general
- rumour.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- Stella's face hardened a little. "You must make some allowances for him.
- He must have been in a terrible state of tension when he felt that his
- career was ended. He was so very proud, you know, of the position in
- society that he had won for himself. He must have felt like a man on the
- eve of execution. He was hardly responsible for his thoughts or actions.
- He is very highly-strung."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. L'Estrange spoke more gently. "Yes, of course. I am sorry I said
- that, my dear. And after all, it doesn't make any difference how much he
- told or how little. The result to him is the same. And now for your great
- news, what are they? You say Spencer has not asked you to marry him."
- </p>
- <p>
- Stella told her of Guy's suggestion, and her acceptance of it. "It is too
- good a chance to refuse. So, my dear, I shall have to leave you at the
- earliest possible moment."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was some time before the elder woman seemed quite able to grasp it.
- when she did, her astonishment seemed unbounded.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of all the strange things I have ever heard," she began, but Stella cut
- her short with a little mocking laugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not quite so strange when you think it quietly out," she said. "If he
- really knew anything about me, if I could produce a few respectable
- relatives, if I had some of your blue blood in my veins, he would have
- proposed this afternoon."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. L'Estrange nodded her rather dishevelled head. "I think I see."
- </p>
- <p>
- "He is very much in love with me," went on Stella quietly. "Anyway, so
- much so that he doesn't want to lose sight of me, while he is making up
- his mind. Hence his offer."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But he could see you here."
- </p>
- <p>
- Stella shook her head. "He would loathe this house after what occurred
- last night, and he thinks I am in an unholy set. He really is an awful
- dear, you know, so high-minded and upright. His great aim is to get me
- away from the environment."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. L'Estrange settled herself comfortably amongst her sofa cushions. She
- was an excitable and fussy person about trifles, but she took the great
- things of life with a calm and equal mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, my dear, go as soon as it suits yourself. You have been a good pal
- to me, and I shall be sorry to lose you. But if you have got a decent
- chance you would be a fool not to take it."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Keane was strongly of the same opinion. Anyway she was glad the
- interview was over, that Mrs. L'Estrange had taken everything in such good
- part. She might have turned nasty if the mood had seized her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Later on, Miss Keane wrote a long letter to Tommy Esmond to an address
- which he had communicated to her in his note of the morning.
- </p>
- <p>
- The same evening, she held a long conversation with her cousin and
- trustee, Mr. Dutton, who came to Elsinore Gardens in obedience to an
- urgent summons on the telephone.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>ady Nina Spencer
- sat in the drawing-room of the big house in Carlton House Terrace,
- awaiting the few guests who had been invited to a small, informal
- dinner-party. Her father, very infirm for his years, sat opposite to her
- in a big easy-chair.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Earl spoke in his low, quavering voice: "I have nothing to say against
- the woman herself, judging from what little we have seen of her. She has
- very perfect manners, just a trifle too perfect. I can quite understand
- that for the average man she possesses considerable charm, and she has
- great good looks. Many people would call her beautiful. But I can only
- repeat what I said on the day I received Guy's letter announcing his
- clandestine marriage: 'The pity of it.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- Lady Nina was a quiet, robust and practical young person, fond of looking
- facts in the face, and looking at them very squarely.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had been as much shocked at her cousin's rash marriage as the Earl
- himself, but it was an accomplished fact. Only two courses were open: the
- first to have nothing more to do with Guy and his wife, the second to
- admit the wife to a guarded intimacy.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lord Southleigh had declared warmly, in his first disgust, that he would
- never look upon his young kinsman's face again. But Nina had prevailed
- with milder counsels. Guy was his heir, and in the course of Nature would
- succeed to the family honours. They would not cut themselves adrift from
- him, and they must make up their minds to tolerate this wife, of whose
- antecedents he could give no satisfactory account. The one fact he did
- mention, that she was a cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange, did not weigh much with
- them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. L'Estrange came of a fairly good family, so far as birth counted, but
- it was both impecunious and addicted to making unfortunate alliances. One
- of her sisters had run away with a good-looking young fellow who had been
- her father's valet. She was a woman who would have a good many undesirable
- relatives knocking about. Miss Stella Keane, the daughter of an
- impoverished Irishman, might well belong to this band of undesirables.
- More especially as Guy's statements about her antecedents were of the most
- bald and unsatisfactory nature.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was all very sad and regrettable from every point of view, but, as Nina
- calmly pointed out, several young heirs to peerages had been running amok
- lately, in the matrimonial sense, and taking their wives from very
- questionable quarters. Guy might have married some coarse and common
- creature from the music-halls. It was unfortunate, in a way, that he had a
- considerable fortune of his own, and could snap his fingers at the
- displeasure of his relatives, if they presumed to show it.
- </p>
- <p>
- But, somehow, knowing Guy as well as she did, Nina did not believe that
- the future Countess of Southleigh, who would, in due course, wear the
- family jewels, was likely to be coarse or common. Guy was too fastidious,
- too innately a gentleman, to be snared by a creature of that kind.
- </p>
- <p>
- And, on her first introduction, the young wife made a much more favourable
- impression than might have been anticipated, considering the prejudices
- arrayed against her.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was not in the least servile or obsequious in the presence of these
- two very aristocratic persons, but she bore herself with a certain kind of
- shrinking modesty, as if asking pardon for having intruded into the
- family. Her attitude to her husband appeared to be one of shy adoration,
- tempered with perfect good taste. Her deep affection for him, while not
- obtrusive or ostentatious, seemed to express itself in her tender glances,
- the soft cadences of her voice when she addressed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nina made up her mind to one thing, that, if she was not genuinely and
- devotedly in love with him, she must be one of the most perfect actresses
- to be met with off the stage.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Guy was still infatuated. When he had made her that strange offer, he
- knew that he was drifting, but he had still left some small remnant of
- self-control. But her fascination had proved too strong. Every day she
- wove the chains more strongly round him.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then there came a time when absence from her was unbearable, when he
- took to counting the hours that elapsed between their next meeting. The
- end was inevitable. The moment came when he definitely made up his mind
- that he could not break away; that existence without her would be
- intolerable.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were married quietly before the registrar, a strange wedding for the
- heir to the Southleigh earldom. No relatives of his were present, as he
- had foreborne to give them any notice of his intention. She was unattended
- also. Even her cousin, Mr. Dutton, did not put in an appearance. Knowing
- her future husband's dislike of the young man, she had not paid him the
- compliment of requesting his attendance.
- </p>
- <p>
- The day before the marriage, she spoke to him in a tremulous voice and
- with tears in her eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Guy, darling, I have said very little about this before, but you must not
- think I am blind to the sacrifices you are making. From to-morrow I bid
- adieu to my past life, to all the few friends and acquaintances I have
- made; I know that you will be happier by my doing so. Henceforth I devote
- my whole life to you. Your people shall be my people, if they will forgive
- me and have me."
- </p>
- <p>
- He clasped her to his breast with a lover's rapture. How sweet and womanly
- she looked as she uttered those words in her low, broken tones. He
- understood what she meant. For his sake she was going to give up all that
- shady L'Estrange crew, to see as little of her objectionable cousin as
- possible. She explained, later on, that she could not ignore him
- altogether, as he had the management of her small affairs in his hands.
- But all this could be conducted by correspondence.
- </p>
- <p>
- Guy was delighted. He knew well enough that his own world would not accept
- his marriage kindly, that they would never take his wife to their offended
- bosom. But they would rub along somehow. There were plenty of men he could
- bring to their house, and perhaps a few decent women who were perfectly
- respectable, but not too strait-laced. And, anyway, the world was well
- lost for love like this.
- </p>
- <p>
- It cannot be said that, on the social side, their existence was a very
- brilliant one. It did not matter so much to Guy, he had never been
- over-fond of society. He liked his men friends, and having been a bachelor
- so long, he was fond of club life. He got quite as much amusement and
- distraction as he wanted.
- </p>
- <p>
- His wife had many lonely hours, but she was wise in this respect that she
- never sought to chain him to her side. Whenever he came home he found her
- there waiting for him, affectionate and welcoming. Perhaps, after her
- stormy and chequered past, what would have been dullness to others seemed
- to her the peace she had been longing for.
- </p>
- <p>
- She got on very well with her husband's male friends, most of whom openly
- expressed amongst themselves their admiration for her.
- </p>
- <p>
- If she had been a woman of a flirtatious temperament she could have had a
- good time without overstepping the bounds of decorum. But she never
- exceeded the limits of strict friendship. She never indulged in an
- intimacy that could have the least element of danger in it. The general
- vote was, that she was very beautiful, very charming, in a quiet, elusive
- way, but naturally of a cold and unimpassionable nature. Only for her
- husband did her glance take on a warmer expression, her voice a tenderer
- tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- The few women who came to the house found her unsatisfactory. The
- impression made upon them&mdash;and women are pretty shrewd when
- dissecting one of their own sex&mdash;was that she was a person who lived
- too much within herself, had a rooted disinclination "to let herself go"
- in those little confidential chats which are indulged in when no men are
- present. And for that studied reticence there must be some cogent reason.
- Above all, she never referred to her girlhood, never made any allusions to
- her family. The general impression was that Mrs. Spencer had something to
- hide.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anyway, after many months of married life, Guy was still as much in love
- with her as ever, and he was always profoundly touched by the pretty and
- impressive way in which she insisted that all the advantages were on her
- side, that she could never repay him sufficiently for the sacrifices he
- had so cheerfully made.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course Guy knew nothing of what his friends were saying; the men who
- admired her beauty, and were disappointed at the negative qualities which
- accompanied it; the women who found her unsatisfactory and were determined
- that she had something to hide.
- </p>
- <p>
- All he knew, and was content in knowing, was this&mdash;that after many
- months of matrimony, for they had been married few weeks before the
- Armistice was proclaimed&mdash;that Armistice which was to be the
- precursor of a golden era&mdash;he was quite happy. She was a perfect
- wife, from his point of view, and he never looked back with the faintest
- misgiving. What he had done then, he would do again to-day, in spite of
- the fact that her reticence with regard to the past was as profound with
- him as with the various acquaintances who occasionally visited her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not even the close intimacy of married life had elicited any of those
- allusions and confidences which enable one to piece together, in some
- measure, the life-history of the person who makes them. But Guy had a
- generous nature, and was one of the least suspicious of men. He attributed
- this strange reticence to the fact that the past contained nothing but
- painful memories, that even to the man she loved she could not reopen the
- old wounds.
- </p>
- <p>
- On this particular night, Lady Nina was awaiting her guests. It was a
- little dinnerparty to meet the young married couple, six in all, herself
- and father, Mr. and Mrs. Spencer, a young woman friend of the hostess, and
- an old friend of the Southleigh family, Hugh Murchison, already met with
- in the early chapters of this history.
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison was the first arrival. He walked with a slight limp, the result
- of a bad wound in the leg. He had been laid-up for a very long time at his
- own home with the effects of shell-shock. He had only been in London for a
- few days, and it was ages since the Southleighs had seen him. They
- welcomed him warmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- After a little desultory conversation Nina spoke:
- </p>
- <p>
- "You know from my note that you are here to-night especially to meet Guy
- and his wife, the wife that he sprang upon us in such a sudden and
- dramatic manner."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, I understood that. You know I have been out of the world so long,
- and more than half the time not in my right senses, that I had heard
- nothing of the details till, a day or two ago, I picked it up from club
- gossip. Then I was told that Guy had picked up a girl from nowhere, about
- whom nothing was known, and married her on the sly at a registry-office. I
- suppose it would be too unkind to assume that Guy had gone off his head?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Lord Southleigh growled out from his easy-chair. "Of course he was off his
- head when he did it. And the devil of it is he seems just as much off his
- head now. They are like turtle-doves, my dear boy, after several months of
- marriage."
- </p>
- <p>
- Lady Nina laughed. "My dear father gets more cynical every day. He
- insinuates as a general proposition, anyway it can be deduced from his
- remarks, that every man who marries a girl for love ought to be
- disillusioned shortly after the honeymoon. Well, certainly Guy is as much
- in love as ever, and, to be quite fair, she seems just as much in love
- with him."
- </p>
- <p>
- "She's putting it on, I suppose," suggested Hugh, who in a less obtrusive
- fashion was nearly as cynical as his host. "If she came from nowhere, and
- nobody knows anything about her, we may safely assume that she married him
- for his money, and that he was too infatuated to recognise the fact. Is
- she very bewitching?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "She is certainly very good-looking," was Nina's reply. "Many people say
- she is beautiful. From a man's point of view, she would be considered very
- charming in a subtle and elusive sort of way. Of course, my father hates
- her, it is a terrible shock to his pride to think she is going to inherit
- the family honours. Guy could have married anybody, although there would
- always have been still the danger that he would have been married for his
- money. When it comes to this point, there is not much difference between
- the well-born and low-born adventuress."
- </p>
- <p>
- From which remarks it will be gathered that the Lady Nina Spencer was a
- young woman of independent opinions, and not too strongly imbued with
- caste prejudices.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh reflected for a few moments. His thoughts had travelled back to those
- days at Blankfield, which now seemed so very far oft. What folly will not
- a certain type of man commit for the sake of a pretty woman? Jack Pomfret,
- in a moment of frenzy, had taken his life when he found he was tied up to
- a girl the accomplice and the decoy of a criminal.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Guy Spencer, a man of a very different type from the easy-going,
- pleasure-loving Pomfret, had made a hash of his opportunities, flouted his
- family obligations, to pursue the desire of the moment, to marry out of
- his own class.
- </p>
- <p>
- "What I hear is, that there is something very mysterious about her, that
- she preserves a strange reticence as to her past, makes no allusion to
- family or relatives. Does Guy know what other people do not know, and is
- he keeping his mouth shut? It is strange. Even if a man marries a
- ballet-girl, it comes out sooner or later that her father was a railway
- porter, or something of that sort." He pulled himself up suddenly, and
- added, awkwardly: "I say, you know, I am afraid I have been very
- indiscreet. I forgot for the moment that she is one of the family now."
- </p>
- <p>
- A deep growl came from the Earl's armchair: "She is not one of the family,
- she never will be. If the young fool had not been left that money by his
- godmother he would never have dared to do this disgraceful thing. By gad,
- Hugh, it is over a hundred years since there was such a <i>mésalliance</i>
- in our family: please Heaven it will be a hundred years before there is
- another."
- </p>
- <p>
- Nina took up the conversation at the point where her angry father left it.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course, Hugh, you can say what you like. You are our old friend; you
- are Guy's for that matter, and we are prepared to discuss this thing with
- you quite frankly. Guy may know more than we imagine; personally, I think
- he knows very little, and only what she has told him."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But surely, she must have given some particulars of herself," cried Hugh,
- in amazement that a man like his friend Spencer, endowed with a fair share
- of common-sense, should take a wife upon trust, as it were. To be sure,
- Pomfret had done the same thing, but then poor old Jack, possessor of many
- excellent qualities, was singularly deficient in brain-power. He was one
- of those who never looked before they leaped.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nina shrugged her shoulders. "All we know is that she was a Miss Stella
- Keane, the daughter of a man who gambled away his fortune at cards and on
- the race-course. As for relatives, she has for cousin a Mrs. L'Estrange, a
- woman of good birth, but of somewhat shady reputation, who no longer mixes
- with her own class. There is another cousin, a man whose name I forget. I
- gather more from what has been omitted than what is actually said, that he
- is not a very desirable person, and has not visited Mrs. Spencer since her
- marriage. That is all I have learned during these many months."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not much, certainly. And I suppose the lady dries up when you try to
- approach her on the subject."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh yes, her manner then is very marked," was Nina's answer. "At the
- slightest question she seems to become frozen, to shut herself up within
- her shell. You know, Hugh, I was prepared to make the best of it all for
- Guy's sake, although, of course, I quite sympathise with my father's
- resentment. I have nothing to say against her manners or her appearance.
- If not a lady, she is most ladylike, and she never offends. But all the
- same, I can't take to her. To me there seems something about her secretive
- and underhand. She appears to adore Guy, but, as you have suggested, that
- may be very accomplished acting."
- </p>
- <p>
- At this point, Miss Crichton, Lady Nina's friend, was announced. She was
- not in the inner counsels of the Southleigh family, so no further allusion
- was made to Guy's wife.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few moments later the Spencers arrived. Guy shook his old friend
- Murchison warmly by the hand, they had met of late years only once or
- twice during Hugh's brief leave from the Front. When they had exchanged a
- few mutual inquiries, the young husband turned to his wife, looking very
- slender and elegant in a filmy cream confection.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Stella, one of my oldest friends, Hugh Murchison. We were boys together.
- You must have heard me speak of him."
- </p>
- <p>
- The young woman held out her hand with a charming smile that lighted up
- the rather sad face, and made her look what so many of her admirers said
- she was, quite beautiful.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, Major Murchison, I have heard of you from my husband, and how much
- you have suffered in this cruel war. You must come and see us, and renew
- your old friendship."
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment Hugh could not speak. The room seemed suddenly peopled with
- ghosts of the past, summoned by the soft tones of that charming voice, so
- low and sweetly modulated. Then, collecting himself with a great effort,
- he dropped her hand, and made some formal answer. And at that moment the
- butler announced that dinner was served.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>mall and informal
- dinner-parties can be either very lively or very dull, depending, no
- doubt, upon the careful selection of the guests, also on the personality
- of the host and hostess, who can sometimes exercise magnetic influence.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nina was, as a rule, a very vivacious hostess. Her father was uncertain.
- If he were in a congenial atmosphere, amongst his old friends and
- comrades, he would radiate geniality. But if there was one guest who did
- not quite hit it off with him, between whom and himself there was an
- undefined spirit of personal antagonism, he dried up at once, and became
- gloomy and morose.
- </p>
- <p>
- To-night, as his guest of honour, sitting at his right hand, he had the
- niece-in-law whose entrance into the family he had so bitterly resented.
- During the long courses he hardly spoke a word. He was rude almost to
- boorishness.
- </p>
- <p>
- But although Stella was fully conscious that she was there on sufferance,
- her admirable self-control enabled her to comport herself with unruffled
- demeanour. If this spiteful old man hoped that he was annoying her with
- his churlish behaviour, she would not give him the satisfaction of knowing
- that she was hurt. She ignored him, as he purposely ignored her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Crichton, a cheerful, chatty young woman, whose flow of good spirits
- made her welcome at many houses, sat on the other side of the host.
- Finding Lord Southleigh disinclined to conversation, and guessing the
- reason of it, she divided her remarks between Stella Spencer and
- Murchison, who sat next her.
- </p>
- <p>
- A good-hearted girl, she felt just a little bit sorry for Stella. Lord
- Southleigh was not playing the game. His attitude was altogether
- illogical. It was open to him to refuse to receive his unwelcome niece at
- all, that would have been perfectly comprehensible. But having admitted
- her to his house, it was in the worst possible taste to so openly proclaim
- his dislike and detestation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lady Nina talked brightly to her cousin Guy, in the random flashes of her
- conversation, taking in the others, with the solitary exception of her
- father, who sat there glum and silent, in one of his blackest and most
- unapproachable moods. And Miss Crichton did her best, really working very
- hard to counteract the sombre influence of the taciturn host.
- </p>
- <p>
- But in spite of the brave efforts of the two young women there was no
- exhilaration in the air, only a sort of well-defined depression, such as
- is felt in the atmosphere before the faint rumblings of a thunderstorm.
- Nobody really felt comfortable, not a single guest would feel anything but
- relief when the tedious evening drew to a close.
- </p>
- <p>
- Guy Spencer was relieved, in a way, that his uncle had ostensibly buried
- the hatchet, but still he never felt happy in that uncle's house. The
- strong disapproval was there, if suppressed for the sake of politeness.
- </p>
- <p>
- These little informal dinners, given at long intervals to impress upon him
- that he was still a recognised member of the family, bored him extremely.
- They were always strictly limited as to numbers, and the other guests were
- generally people of no importance, on the outer fringe of that society in
- which the Southleighs moved.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was difficult to know what Stella was feeling, for she had such
- admirable self-control. But if she was a sensitive woman she must have
- been cut to the heart by the behaviour of her elderly relative. And her
- suffering must have been more poignant from the fact that this
- contemptuous behaviour must be apparent to every other member of the
- party.
- </p>
- <p>
- While the two young women were chattering away, battling, as it were,
- against the general depression, Hugh Murchison was trying to collect his
- thoughts.
- </p>
- <p>
- Strange that his recollections had harked back to that tragedy at
- Blankfield while Nina was speaking of the young Mrs. Spencer. And, if his
- memory and his eyesight were not playing him false, he was sitting
- opposite to the unhappy Pomfret's widow.
- </p>
- <p>
- Six years make a considerable difference in the personal appearance of any
- man or woman, and they had made a difference in her. If he had met her in
- the street, he would not have known her. Perhaps he would not have known
- her to-night, but for that sudden accidental throwing back of the memory
- of old times. In other words, if his mind had not been accidentally
- diverted to Jack Pomfret, he would have failed to recognise the woman whom
- he once knew under the name of Norah Burton.
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet could he be sure? Let him think a little. Six years ago Norah
- Burton looked twenty, and Davidson the detective assured him she was at
- least four years older than she looked&mdash;the appearance of youth, he
- had added, was one of her assets.
- </p>
- <p>
- This young woman did not look a day older than twenty-six, and taking the
- computation of the years, she must be at least thirty. But if she were
- Norah Burton, and had retained that priceless asset of youth, she would
- still have that four years' advantage.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then Norah Burton's hair was fair and wavy, Stella Spencer's was dark.
- Still it is easy for a woman to alter the colour or the appearance of her
- hair. If Stella Keane had arisen, like the phoenix, from Norah Burton, she
- would alter herself in every detail, so far as Nature permitted her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Still, it is said that everybody in the world has a double. Often in his
- own experience he had claimed acquaintance with somebody whom he had
- mistaken for an old friend, and smilingly apologised for his error.
- Norah's good looks had been of a rather uncommon kind, but there must be
- dozens of women in the world more or less like her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then, as Miss Crichton's harmless chatter flowed on, he thought of other
- things. Norah had an obscure past, on which such guarded confidences as
- she permitted herself to indulge in threw little or no light. It would
- appear that Stella Keane's history moved much on the same lines. There
- were only vague intimations, nothing definite, nothing satisfactory.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was another point of resemblance. Norah had one male relative who
- came out into the open for inspection, in her case a brother, afterwards
- discovered to be a criminal. Stella Keane had one male relative also, in
- her case a cousin, of whom nothing was known, except that he was an
- undesirable person who had not visited his relative's house since her
- marriage, no doubt for reasons well known to himself and Stella.
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>Ergo</i> the undesirable cousin was lying low, as George Burton would
- have lain low, when Jack Pomfret had openly acknowledged Norah as his
- wife.
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;was there anything in these suspicions? was he
- not allowing himself to be misled by a chance resemblance, by random
- coincidences?
- </p>
- <p>
- He stole a look at Guy Spencer chatting amiably with his cousin, the
- cousin whom rumour had persistently designed as the future Countess of
- Southleigh. He seemed the happy contented young married man; there was no
- hint of trouble or regret in his assured, placid demeanour. Evidently he
- was suffering from no self-reproach, no suspicion of the beautiful young
- woman he had made his wife. The calmness of his aspect gave the lie to any
- such disquieting suggestions.
- </p>
- <p>
- And the current of Murchison's thoughts ran swiftly along. They had been
- married some time now. If Stella Keane was the impostor Hugh suspected her
- to be, from that striking resemblance to Norah Burton the heroine of that
- tragic Blankville episode, surely in the close intimacy of wedded life
- something would have escaped her that would have aroused her husband's
- suspicions, have set him inquiring more closely into the past.
- </p>
- <p>
- Granting that she was a clever actress, still the most accomplished
- performer in the world could not wear the mask all day. There must come
- one moment, if not several moments, when that mask would be inadvertently
- dropped.
- </p>
- <p>
- No, he must be mistaken. The resemblance must be accidental. The brother
- in the one case, the cousin in the other, were equally accidental
- coincidences.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had got to this frame of mind when the men joined the ladies after
- dinner. In the spacious drawing-room, the atmosphere seemed to have
- cleared, the tension to be relaxed, with the change of scene.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was readily comprehensible. During dinner, Lord Southleigh, frowning
- and morose, in close juxtaposition with his guests, had in a very real
- sense dominated the scene, and communicated a sense of his hostility and
- displeasure to all round him, not least to the unhappy young woman who had
- inspired those wrathful feelings.
- </p>
- <p>
- Upstairs he was less in evidence. He retreated to the far end of the room,
- flung himself in a deep armchair, and, in a way, removed himself from the
- proceedings. There was nobody to whom he felt himself constrained to be
- civil. Murchison he had known from a boy; he could afford to be uncivil,
- to play the rôle of churlish host. Miss Crichton was more or less a social
- hanger-on, grateful for invitations to good houses; she did not count. Guy
- had forfeited all claim to consideration. His wife ought to be made to
- feel her position every moment of her life.
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison gravitated to Miss Crichton. Well born, she was very poor, and
- by no means proud. She accepted in a meek spirit the social crumbs that
- were thrown at her by her wealthy superiors. She was always obliging and
- amiable. She never grumbled at being asked to join a dinner-party at the
- eleventh hour, when some other guest had failed. She never resented being
- put in a small bedroom at a country house-party, while a rich girl with no
- ancestry was given a luxurious apartment.
- </p>
- <p>
- On account of this excessive amiability, this indifference to studied and
- unstudied slights, she was immensely popular. All her friends declared her
- not only to be amiable, but "so sensible!"
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh had known her for years, and in a way he pitied her, much more really
- than she pitied herself, for she had long since grown accustomed to her
- lot. But what he did know was, that she was as shrewd as she was amiable,
- that under that gay and smiling exterior she concealed a very acute
- intelligence.
- </p>
- <p>
- He wanted particularly to know her opinion of Mrs. Spencer, if she were
- frank enough to give it, for she had especially developed the bump of
- caution. She heard a great deal, but what she heard she generally kept to
- herself. It would have been fatal to her somewhat insecure position if it
- could have been said of her, with regard to any particular scandal, "Of
- course, you will never give me away, but Laura Crichton was my informant."
- </p>
- <p>
- He replied in a general way, "I was very interested, to-night, in my old
- friend Guy Spencer's wife. She is a little bit on the quiet side, but she
- is very beautiful, and there is certainly a wonderful charm about her. Of
- course, Lord Southleigh behaved abominably. I rather wonder she did not
- fling herself out of the room. One can understand his feelings, in a
- certain way. But why does he not take one attitude or the other? If he
- elects to receive her, for the sake of avoiding an open breach, he ought
- to put his hostility in his pocket."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Crichton smiled her worldly and diplomatic smile: "Dear Lord
- Southleigh is never very successful at hiding his real feelings."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Do you see much of her?" asked Hugh presently.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, very little. I have met her a few times here, at these little
- informal gatherings. Lord Southleigh won't have her at their big parties,
- as I daresay you know. I have called on her a few times, and she has
- called back. That is all."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, you have seen enough to form some opinion of her. I should dearly
- like to know what that is."
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Crichton looked at him quizzically. "Oh, the artfulness of you men!
- Do you think I don't see that you are trying to draw me? Well, I have
- formed the same conclusion that you have&mdash;she is very beautiful, and,
- from a man's point of view, has a subtle charm. Will that content you?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh regarded her with a smile as quizzical as her own. "No, I'm afraid it
- won't. Now, look here, we are very old friends," he said persuasively,
- "and I am pretty near as discreet as you are, I never repeat what is told
- me in confidence. I should like to put a plain question to you."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Put it: I don't promise to answer it, you know."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course not. But I am very much interested in this strange marriage of
- Guy's. And, please don't think I am laying it on with a trowel, but I have
- very great faith in your judgment, I would trust it more than I would that
- of nine-tenths of the women I know."
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course she knew he was flattering her to obtain his purpose; but then&mdash;was
- the most sensible woman absolutely impervious to flattery?
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ask me your question," she answered briefly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh sank his voice to a whisper. "We hear a great deal about her
- reticence as to the past. Do you think, in a few words, that Stella
- Spencer is a good and straight woman in the general sense in which we
- understand the expression?"
- </p>
- <p>
- For a moment Miss Crichton hesitated, then she looked him straight in the
- face. He had compelled her to a most unusual frankness.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You will, of course, never breathe a word of this to anybody. Suppose I
- say I refuse to reply to your question. Will you take that refusal as the
- answer you really want?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will&mdash;a thousand thanks. The subject is closed between us," was
- Hugh's grateful reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- A diversion was caused by the approach of Guy Spencer.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Hugh, old man, I am aching for a long crack with you. Come and dine
- quietly with us next week. I suggest Tuesday if that will suit you?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Perfectly; I am free on Tuesday, Guy."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Right, then. But to make sure, if Miss Crichton will excuse us, we will
- go over to Stella and see if I have forgotten something, if we are free
- that night. I can't always carry these things in my head."
- </p>
- <p>
- They crossed over to the beautiful young woman, who was sustaining a
- somewhat listless conversation with her young hostess.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Stella," cried her husband, "I have asked Hugh to dine with us on
- Tuesday. My recollection is that we have nothing on for that night. But I
- thought you had better confirm it. You carry these things in your head so
- much better than I do."
- </p>
- <p>
- Young Mrs. Spencer smiled at Hugh her sweet smile, and as she did so her
- likeness to Norah Burton was overwhelming, the Norah Burton who had smiled
- at him in just the same way six years ago, in the tea-shop at Blankfield.
- </p>
- <p>
- "We are quite free, Major Murchison, and shall be delighted to see you."
- </p>
- <p>
- For a few moments he sat down beside her; and very shortly another
- coincidence happened.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Spencer made use of a certain word which is always pronounced in a
- certain way by educated people, and in another way by people who are only
- partially educated. Norah Burton had pronounced this particular word in
- the same way as Stella.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh had commented upon the fact to Pomfret, and that easy-going young man
- had remarked to him that he failed to see it much mattered, that she was
- at liberty to pronounce the word as she thought fit.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he got home, he passed a very restless night. When he had gone up
- into the drawingroom after dinner, he had been half prepared to dismiss
- the matter from his mind as a mere fantasy. And then had come his brief
- interview with Laura Crichton, in which she gave him plainly to understand
- that, in her opinion, Stella Spencer was not a good or a straight woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then had come that corroborative little piece of evidence of the
- mispronunciation of a certain word, establishing another link in the chain
- of evidence that Stella Keane and Norah Burton were one and the same
- person.
- </p>
- <p>
- And if it were so, what was his duty? If he could prove her to be Norah
- Burton, and her undesirable relative, George Burton, now freed from jail,
- could he permit such an adventuress to pass another day in the house of
- this honest gentleman whom she had so skilfully entrapped, as six years
- ago she had entrapped the guileless and trusting Jack Pomfret?
- </p>
- <p>
- The morning dawned and found him still in the throes of anxious thought.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>s Murchison
- thought over matters in the cold, clear light of the morning, when the
- brain is at its freshest, he cursed the fate that ever seemed to mix him
- up in the private affairs of his friends. First had been that unhappy
- episode of poor Jack Pomfret, who had not strength of mind to survive the
- disgrace he had brought upon himself by his impetuous folly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now there was this affair of Guy Spencer's, which he felt he must go
- through with and prove to the bottom. He must find out definitely whether
- the likeness to Norah Burton was accidental, or whether that scheming
- adventuress had, for the second time, ensnared a trusting and unsuspicious
- man.
- </p>
- <p>
- On Tuesday night when he dined in Eaton Place with the Spencers, he would
- seize an opportunity of putting to her a few leading questions. They would
- be of such a nature, that if his suspicions were correct, they would shake
- her self-possession.
- </p>
- <p>
- Certainly, she had betrayed no embarrassment at the sight of him, and that
- was a point in her favour. For, assuming that she was Norah Burton, the
- name of Murchison would be quite familiar to her, even if she had
- forgotten his appearance after the lapse of those six years.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the meantime he would get as much information about Stella Keane as he
- could before the date of the dinner. There was a man at his club, Gregory
- Fairfax, a middle-aged gossip, who was to be found in the smoking-room
- every day at a certain hour.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fairfax was a man of leisure and means, who had the reputation of knowing
- more people, and all about them, than anybody in town. He mixed in a dozen
- different sets: smart, fast, and Bohemian. He was equally at home in
- Belgravia, Mayfair, South Kensington, and several other quarters. He
- belonged to most of the best clubs, and many more that had no pretensions
- to social distinction. His knowledge of the various phases of London life
- was wide and extensive. He had also a marvellous memory. He never forgot a
- face or the minutest details of a scandal.
- </p>
- <p>
- To this gentleman, with whom he was on quite intimate terms, having known
- him from his first introduction to the London world, Hugh repaired, in the
- hope of getting to know all there was to know about this mysterious young
- woman who had so suddenly and clandestinely projected herself into the
- Southleigh family.
- </p>
- <p>
- After a few casual remarks, he opened the ball. It was an easy task, for
- there was nothing pleased Fairfax more than to place his extensive social
- knowledge at the service of any friend or acquaintance who was in search
- of details.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I say, Fairfax, I think you can help me in a little matter, because you
- have the reputation of knowing everything about everybody."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Fairfax smiled genially. He was very proud of his profound social
- knowledge, and nothing pleased him more than to have his well-earned
- reputation alluded to in flattering terms.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Fire away, my young friend. I think I have picked up a bit in my
- twenty-five years of London life. Who is it you want to ask me about?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I dined last night with my old friends the Southleighs; and there, for
- the first time, I met Mrs. Guy Spencer. I had heard of the marriage, of
- course, but no particulars of the young lady until I came to town a little
- while ago. All I have learned is that she was a Miss Stella Keane, and
- that she gives no very detailed account of her family history. I gather
- the general impression is that there is a mystery about her, which she
- refuses to allow anybody to penetrate. Do you know anything about her
- yourself?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Fairfax assumed an air of great gravity and importance. He was now in his
- element, about to pour out his stores of knowledge to an interested and
- grateful listener.
- </p>
- <p>
- "There may be one or two people who know as much as I know&mdash;always
- remembering that there is no first-hand knowledge, but the chances are a
- hundred to one you would not come across them. It happens that I was a
- good deal in that rather queer set which frequented Mrs. L'Estrange's
- flat."
- </p>
- <p>
- "She was supposed to|be a well-bred woman, was she not?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, certainly, so far as family went. But, judging in the light of
- subsequent events, there is no doubt she was a wrong'un. The place, from
- the start, was simply a gambling saloon. Sometimes, the play was very
- moderate. I am fond of a bit of a flutter myself, but I must own that I
- never lost very much, and for a long time I never had any suspicions of
- foul play."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ah, but you had later on?" interrupted Hugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I'll come to that before we get on to Miss Stella Keane. Then one night
- something happened. Do you remember a little chap named Esmond, who used
- to go about everywhere?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, Hugh remembered Tommy Esmond, although his acquaintance with him had
- been of the slightest.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He was a funny little man, very genial and popular with everybody. Like
- myself, he didn't stick to any one particular set, but went into a dozen
- different ones. One night he would be dining at a swagger club with a
- peer, the next he would be hobnobbing at a pot-house sort of a place with
- a fifth-rate actor. Very eclectic was Tommy, and nobody ever knew where
- the deuce he came from. He had been so long about that people forgot to
- inquire, and looked upon him as a sort of institution, and took him for
- granted, as it were.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, one night, one dreadful night, Tommy was discovered cheating by a
- couple of chaps who were too sharp for him. They were common sort of
- fellows, might have been crooks themselves for all I know, and kicked up a
- deuce of a row. They went so far as to insinuate that Mrs. L'Estrange was
- not altogether innocent, and had a hand in the plunder. Result, Tommy had
- to make a bolt of it."
- </p>
- <p>
- "What was your own opinion about it? Was it an accident?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I might not have believed it, but a similar thing took place about a
- couple of months later. Another man was found cheating, and this time Mrs.
- L'Estrange refused to face the music. She closed down, and disappeared
- from London. I have never met anybody who has seen or heard anything of
- her since. I expect she's to be found on the Continent like her friend
- Tommy."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And Miss Keane was an inmate of this suspicious household?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, ever since I went to the house, up to a few days after Tommy bolted.
- She left suddenly, and Mrs. L'Estrange was very reticent as to where she
- had gone to. The next I heard was that she had been married quietly to Guy
- Spencer."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Did any suspicions attach to her?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "No, it would not be fair to say that they did. She never played herself,
- but she had a great knack of hovering about the tables. And after the
- Esmond episode one or two men whispered that she had been hovering about
- them too much, and that Mrs. L'Estrange thought she had better get rid of
- her, might be so or not."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Did you ever come across a cousin of hers there, a man named Dutton?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh yes, a dozen or more times, for I went to the flat pretty frequently.
- A common, under-bred fellow, not in the least like her, for in addition to
- being remarkably good-looking, her manners and appearance were those of a
- lady."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Do you know what has become of him?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, he's an outside stockbroker, with a small office in the City. I ran
- against him only last week. I don't know whether he recognised me or not,
- but I looked the other way. With one or two exceptions, the L'Estrange <i>clientèle</i>
- was not one that you cared to recognise when outside the flat."
- </p>
- <p>
- Fairfax had finished his narrative. Hugh thanked him warmly. Still, he had
- not learned anything really of importance. There was no evidence that Miss
- Keane had cheated, or helped others to cheat. The hovering round the
- card-table was not a particularly suspicious action if taken by itself.
- She might be signalling to her confederates, of course, but there was no
- evidence on which to convict her.
- </p>
- <p>
- A sudden thought struck Murchison which prompted him to put a question to
- Fairfax.
- </p>
- <p>
- "She might have been a decoy, to lure rich men to this gambling place, in
- order that they might be rooked by her accomplices." The middle-aged man
- shook his head. "I don't think so. She had no scope for that sort of game.
- Mrs. L'Estrange hardly knew anybody in her own world, for reasons which I
- daresay could be very satisfactorily explained, I should guess a not too
- clean or reputable past. She could not get the girl into houses where she
- would pick up rich men."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But you say some men came there who played heavily."
- </p>
- <p>
- "A few," answered Fairfax. "But I always had a notion that Dutton picked
- those up, in the course of his shady business, a mug here, a mug there,
- who had a few thousands to throw away either on the Stock Exchange or in
- gambling. If the flat was run on the crook, and it is even betting it was,
- I should say the proprietors&mdash;or the syndicate, call it what you like&mdash;were
- contented with quite small profits. I daresay a couple of thousand a year
- would keep Mrs. L'Estrange in luxury, and I suppose she must have had a
- bit of money of her own."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And, assuming that they were all in league, Tommy Esmond and others would
- want their bit," suggested Hugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Certainly," assented Fairfax; "but always granting that the show was run
- on the crook, it wouldn't be difficult to romp in thirty or forty pounds a
- night, with even the small players and the occasional mugs who were
- well-lined. Quite a decent amount to divide at the end of the week."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, I am awfully obliged for all you have told me, Fairfax."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But it doesn't help you much, eh?" queried the elder man, who detected a
- certain note of disappointment in his companion's tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, candidly, it doesn't, but of course, that is no fault of yours. We
- may dismiss the L'Estrange business, there is no evidence there. She might
- have signalled to her confederates or not. It might have been a perfectly
- innocent action. She didn't play herself, she just hovered round the
- tables to kill the time."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course, either theory will fit," remarked the shrewd man of the world,
- who had picked up so much knowledge of life in his forty-five strenuous
- years.
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused for a few moments before he spoke again.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now look here, Murchison, I can read you like a book. I haven't told you
- very much more than you know yourself, or could have pieced together. You
- are disappointed because I couldn't tell you anything of her history prior
- to her appearance in the L'Estrange household. Well, there, I am at fault.
- And you have a particular reason for wanting to know. In other words, you
- have some suspicions of your own."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh felt he must be cautious. In connecting Mrs. Spencer with Norah
- Burton he might be on the wrong track altogether, have been deceived by a
- striking, but purely accidental, resemblance. He could not be too frank
- with a man of Fairfax's temperament. Rumour had it that he would always
- respect a confidence, but his general reputation was that of a chatterbox.
- He spoke guardedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, certain undefined ones, quite undefined, please understand that."
- Then, speaking a little more frankly, "What I dearly want to know is, was
- she a straight woman before she charmed my friend Guy Spencer into
- marrying her."
- </p>
- <p>
- Fairfax smiled his slow, wise smile: "I am glad you have put your cards on
- the table. Of course I guessed from the beginning that it was what you
- were after. Well, I shan't breathe a word of this to anybody; I can hold
- my tongue when I have a mind. You have a deep interest in the matter for
- the sake of the Southleigh family, eh?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh had to admit that it was so.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, I am going to tell you something that, up to the present, I have
- not told to anybody else, and, to tell you the truth, I was not in the
- least interested in Guy Spencer's marriage. If he chose to marry a girl
- without a past, that was his affair. But I see you are keen."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, I am very keen."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Good! well, I will give you a little information, from which you can draw
- your own inferences. They are as open to you as to me, and I shall just
- state the bare facts. As you know, Esmond had to bolt to the Continent. On
- a certain morning I came up from the country by an early train, landing at
- Charing Cross. I went to the bookstall to buy a few papers. I must tell
- you that I am one of those persons who have eyes at the back of their
- head, and see everything going on around them."
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, Hugh knew that Fairfax had a wonderful gift of observation, in
- addition to his many other gifts.
- </p>
- <p>
- "As I turned away, I saw Esmond slink into the station, glancing furtively
- from right to left, as fearful of being seen. Of course, I had not heard
- the news, and I was not present at the <i>débâcle</i>, but I guessed
- something was up from his furtive appearance. As he slunk along, a young
- woman heavily-veiled walked swiftly forward, and laid her hand upon his
- arm. They were only together for a few seconds, Esmond was evidently
- urging her to leave him for fear of recognition. When they parted, she
- kissed him affectionately. In spite of the heavy veiling, I recognised
- her."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Stella Keane, of course," cried Hugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Stella Keane. Fortunately, neither of them saw me, I expect they were
- both too agitated. Well, there is the fact; as I said just now, you can
- draw your own inferences, and perhaps answer the question whether she was
- a good woman before she married your friend."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It is answered," said Hugh sternly. "A good woman would not trouble to go
- to the station to say good-bye to a derelict card-sharper, and kiss him
- affectionately, unless there had been some close and dishonourable
- relationship between them."
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>urchison arrived
- at Eaton Place about twenty minutes before the dinner hour. His
- expectation was that he would find Mrs. Spencer alone in the drawing-room,
- and in this hope he was not disappointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Stella, beautifully gowned, was seated in a luxurious easy-chair, reading.
- As he was announced, she rose and threw her novel down. She advanced to
- him with outstretched hand and that ever-charming smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, how sweet of you to come in good time, not rush in just a moment
- before dinner is served. We can have a comfortable chat before Guy comes.
- He takes an awful time to dress, you know. His ties bother him really; he
- discards about half a dozen before he gets the proper bow. Isn't it
- silly?"
- </p>
- <p>
- She was very girlish to-night, quite different from what she had been at
- the Southleigh party, staid, demure, a little resentful, and averse from
- conversation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison's thoughts flew back to that day at Blankfield when he had met a
- certain girl by chance at the tea-shop. Norah Burton had been just as
- girlish then as Mrs. Spencer was now, allowing for the six years'
- interval.
- </p>
- <p>
- She crossed over to a Chesterfield, and motioned him to a seat beside her.
- Hugh obeyed her invitation, but he felt sure that she had done this with a
- motive. She was about to exercise her subtle fascination on her husband's
- friend.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now, please tell me all about yourself," she said. "You are Guy's friend,
- and I have a right to know. His friends are mine. I know what you have
- done in the war: you have suffered very terribly. But before that; please
- enlighten me."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a challenge. Did she desire to know as much of his past as he
- desired to know of hers? He looked at her very steadily.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You know, Mrs. Spencer, it is a little difficult to go back to anything
- before those awful years of war. But I remember, as in a sort of dream,
- that, quite as a young man, I was gazetted to the Twenty-fifth Lancers."
- </p>
- <p>
- "A crack regiment, was it not?" queried Mrs. Spencer. "My dear father was
- in the Twenty-fourth."
- </p>
- <p>
- She was keeping it up bravely, he thought. He remembered Fairfax's story.
- The woman who had said good-bye to a fugitive card-sharper at Charing
- Cross Station, and kissed him affectionately, was hardly likely to be the
- daughter of an officer in the Twenty-fourth Lancers. He was not sure of
- very much, but of this one incident he was absolutely positive: Fairfax
- was a man who was always certain of his facts.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I can't remember much about the early years; I expect I went through the
- usual trials and troubles of a young subaltern, was subjected to a good
- deal of ragging. Well, somehow, promotion came: I was Captain at quite a
- youthful age. The one thing that sticks in my mind, in those pre-war days,
- is the fact that we were quartered at Blankfield."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Spencer lifted calm, inquiring eyes. "At Blankfield! And where is
- that?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "You don't mean to say you haven't heard of Blankfield?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Spencer shook her dark head. "No; I dare say it shows great
- ignorance, but I was never good at geography. I was brought up so quietly;
- I have never travelled. I know next to nothing of my own country, and
- nothing of any other."
- </p>
- <p>
- She uttered these remarks with a disarming and appealing smile, as if
- asking pardon from a man of the world for having led such an uneventful
- and sequestered life&mdash;she, as he thought sardonically, the mysterious
- cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange, the affectionate friend of the card-sharper
- Tommie Esmond.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Blankfield is rather a well-known town in Yorkshire; it is also a
- garrison town. As I said, it was my lot to be quartered there."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Was it a nice place?" queried Mrs. Spencer with an air of polite
- interest.
- </p>
- <p>
- "In a way, yes; we had a good time. But my recollections of it are
- distinctly unpleasant. For I had the misfortune to assist at a tragedy&mdash;nay,
- more, to play a part in it&mdash;which has left an ineffaceable record
- upon my memory." Stella Spencer leaned forward. There was no momentary
- change of expression upon the clear-cut, charming face; her eyes met his
- own with a calm, steady gaze. But he thought&mdash;and after all that
- might be fancy&mdash;he detected a restless movement of her hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I shall like to hear about that tragedy, if it is not too painful for you
- to recall it," she said softly. If she were really what he believed her to
- be, she was playing the rôle of sympathetic listener to perfection.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I had a young chum of the name of Pomfret, a mere boy, impulsive,
- high-spirited, generous, unsuspicious, little versed in the ways of the
- world, absolutely unversed in the ways of women. I had promised his family
- to look after him. Looking back at this distance of years, I realise how
- badly I fulfilled my trust; how, in a sense, I was unwittingly the cause
- of the tragedy that befell him. I wonder if you ever came across my
- friend, Jack Pomfret."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Never; but, of course, I have met so few people. And you know the truth,
- as well as everybody else, I was not brought up in my husband's world, in
- your world and that of the Southleighs. I could never claim to be more
- than respectable middle-class. I take it, your friend was a member of some
- old family."
- </p>
- <p>
- The voice was steady, but he thought he noticed an increased restlessness
- in the movements of the hands. And the admission that she was a member of
- the respectable middle-class struck him as conveying a false note
- intentionally. If what she alleged was true, that her father had been an
- officer in the Twenty-fourth Lancers, she was a grade higher than the
- respectable middle-class. Clever as she was, she had made a false step
- there.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You want to hear the history of that tragedy, of the terrible
- circumstances which cut short the life of my poor young friend. Well, it
- is hardly necessary to say that a woman was the cause. Women, I suppose,
- have been at the bottom of most of the tragedies that have happened to men
- ever since the days of Eve."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know that is the general opinion, but I have always been very doubtful
- as to whether it is a true one."
- </p>
- <p>
- She spoke lightly, but it seemed to him her tone was not quite so assured
- as it had been a moment ago. Anyway, she was evidently intensely
- interested in the forthcoming narrative.
- </p>
- <p>
- "At Blankfield I happened to make the acquaintance of a very charming
- young woman, who was not received in the Society of the place, for the
- reason that nothing was known about her. The acquaintance was made in the
- most unconventional fashion. She asked me to call upon her and her
- brother. I told all this to Pomfret, who knew the girl by sight, and he
- asked me to take him along with me. He had met her very often in the High
- Street, and was immensely attracted by her appearance."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And were you attracted, too, by this formidable young lady, Major
- Murchison?" interrupted Stella.
- </p>
- <p>
- "In a way. But, honestly, more curious than attracted. Well, to cut my
- story as short as I can, Pomfret soon arrived at an understanding with the
- young woman, to a great extent without my knowledge. They were married
- secretly; there were family reasons why he could not marry her openly."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But this&mdash;but this"&mdash;was she speaking a little nervously, or
- was it only his fancy?&mdash;"was quite romantic and charming. No doubt
- they were deeply in love with each other. Surely there was no tragedy to
- follow such a delightful wooing?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "But there was. This innocent-faced, charming girl was an adventuress of
- the first water. She was the accomplice of her criminal brother, if
- brother he was. A day or two after the wedding, Pomfret and I went to dine
- with this wretched pair. Before we sat down to dinner, two detectives
- entered the room and arrested the so-called brother on a charge of
- forgery."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Spencer shuddered. "How horrible, how appalling! And what happened to
- the girl? was she arrested, too?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "No; she fainted, and I dragged my friend away. At the time I did not know
- he had married her. When I got him back to the barracks, he told me his
- miserable story. That same night, or some time in the next morning, he
- shot himself. It was perhaps a cowardly way in which to avoid the
- consequences of his folly, but then he was always rash and impulsive."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Spencer spoke, and there was a far-away look in her eyes. "Your poor
- friend! No wonder that memory haunts you. And yet, he was not very wise.
- This poor adventuress might have been easy to deal with; she might not
- have troubled him any further if he had made her some small allowance;
- would, so to speak, have slunk out of his life. And she might have been
- innocent herself, unable to break away from this wretched criminal of a
- brother."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You are very charitable, Mrs. Spencer," said Hugh coldly. "But I fear I
- cannot agree with you. If the girl had been naturally and innately honest,
- she would rather have swept a crossing than have lived upon the gains of
- that creature&mdash;brother, or lover, or whatever he was."
- </p>
- <p>
- Stella spoke with dignity. "You are, I see, very much moved, Major
- Murchison, and you can judge better than I. I cannot pretend to understand
- the mentality of adventuresses and their criminal associates," she added
- with a light laugh, "but I should say that sweeping a crossing is a most
- uncongenial occupation, especially in the cold weather."
- </p>
- <p>
- "In other words, if you had been in her place, you would have preferred to
- live on the earnings of a rogue?" queried Hugh, perhaps a little too
- warmly. As soon as he spoke, he regretted his words. He had given her an
- advantage, of which she was not slow to avail herself.
- </p>
- <p>
- She drew herself up proudly. "Major Murchison, are you not saying a little
- too much in presuming to place me on the level of the adventuress you have
- spoken of? I think it will be more consistent with my self-respect to
- leave your question unanswered."
- </p>
- <p>
- And then suddenly her proud mood vanished, and a softer one took its
- place. Her voice trembled as she spoke; there was a suspicious moisture in
- her eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I see that I was very wrong when I suffered Guy to persuade me to marry
- him. I have alienated him from his friends and family, and, alas! I have
- none of my own to bring him in exchange. His uncle loathes me; Lady Nina
- is polite and tolerates me. And you&mdash;you, his old friend, who have
- known him from boyhood&mdash;you dislike me also. But&mdash;" and here her
- voice swelled into a proud note&mdash;"my husband loves and trusts me.
- While he does that, Major Murchison, I can snap my fingers at the rest of
- the world."
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison bowed respectfully; he felt he had got to recover a good deal of
- lost ground. So far the woman had the advantage, but he did not fail to
- notice the vulgarity of the last phrase, "snap my fingers."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am very sorry if I have offended you, Mrs. Spencer, by my indiscreet
- remarks. If you are secure in Guy's love, as I am sure you are, you have a
- very happy possession."
- </p>
- <p>
- She sank back on the sofa, and in a second recovered the composure which
- had been momentarily disturbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Forgive me if I have spoken a little warmly," she said, "but I could not
- overlook what you said just now."
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Hugh shot at her his last bolt. "I have not yet told you the name
- of the girl who drove my poor young friend Pomfret to his death."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Tell it me, if you please, but I shall be no more likely to know it than
- the name of your friend, Mr. Pomfret. As I told you, I am a member of the
- respectable middle-class; I cannot boast that I am acquainted with the
- aristocracy, except through my husband."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And yet your father, you told me just now, was an officer in the
- Twenty-fourth Lancers. Those officers were all recruited from the
- aristocracy, or at worst the upper middle-class."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, you are trying to cross-examine me and trap me," she cried bitterly.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Hugh was inexorable. "The name of that woman was Norah Burton; her
- accomplice, her brother as she called him, was George Burton; he had other
- aliases," he thundered.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had shot his last bolt, but Stella was not shaken. She rose up,
- quivering a little. He noticed that, but it might be due to the agitation
- of wronged innocence.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The name conveys nothing to me. Your attitude during these few minutes
- has been very strange. You have insinuated that I am an adventuress on the
- same level with your Miss Norah something. Well, so far, poor dear Guy has
- not shot himself, and I will take good care he doesn't."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You have much to gain by his living, if you love him&mdash;the title and
- everything. I have no doubt he has made his will. You would gain a good
- deal by his death. I cannot say, at the moment, which alternative would
- suit you better."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You are intolerable, you are insulting. If I tell my husband this when he
- comes down, he will kick you out of the house."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But I don't think you will tell your husband," retorted Hugh coolly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "And why not? My word will outweigh yours. I have only to tell him that
- you brand me as an adventuress, of the same class as this Miss Nora
- Burton, and you will see what he will say."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But you will not tell him," repeated Hugh. "Mrs. Spencer, I did not think
- we should go so far as we have done. But I will put my cards on the table
- at once, and I do so from certain indications in your demeanour to-night.
- I will not say all I have in my mind; I am going to collect further
- evidence first. But I will say this: you are not what you seem." He had
- touched her now. Her calm had gone, her breast was heaving, her hands were
- moving more restlessly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Put your cards on the table and have done. I was Stella Keane when I
- married my husband. I defy you to disprove that."
- </p>
- <p>
- "At present, no. You are the same Stella Keane who saw Tommie Esmond, a
- discovered card-sharper, off at the Charing Cross Station, and kissed him
- an affectionate farewell. If you were on such intimate terms with that
- man, you are no fit wife for my friend Guy Spencer."
- </p>
- <p>
- He had touched her at last. "How did you find that out?" she gasped, and
- her face for a second went livid. She was surprised beyond the point of
- denial.
- </p>
- <p>
- And at that moment the door opened and Guy Spencer entered. She recovered
- herself immediately; went up to her husband and laid a caressing hand on
- his shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- "A perfect tie, dearest; it was worth the time. Your friend, Major
- Murchison, has been distressing me with a terrible story of some tragedy
- that happened when he was quartered at Blankfield."
- </p>
- <p>
- Guy Spencer smiled cheerfully. "Dear old Hugh is good at stories. He must
- tell it me after dinner."
- </p>
- <p>
- As she looked up into her husband's face, Hugh noticed the tender light in
- her eyes. Lady Nina had said that if she was not devotedly in love with
- Guy, she must be the most consummate actress off the stage. Loving wife or
- consummate actress, which was she?
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVIII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hen Hugh reflected
- over that interview in the drawing-room before dinner, he came to the
- conclusion that he had not played his cards very well, that he had been a
- little too precipitate. Whether she was Norah Burton or not, she was a
- very clever young woman, and he had just put her on her guard by that
- rather indiscreet allusion to Tommy Esmond. If he had no further evidence
- to go on than that incident, she would give her husband a plausible
- explanation of it. And Hugh believed his old friend Guy was still deeply
- in love enough with his wife to believe anything she told him.
- </p>
- <p>
- He could imagine her telling that convincing story to Guy, probably with
- her arms round his neck, and her pretty eyes looking up to his with the
- love-light in them. Esmond had been a kind friend to her, had done her
- many a good turn. Much as she deplored his baseness, she could not bear
- the thought of his slinking out of the country, a branded fugitive,
- without a forgiving hand stretched out to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Backwards and forwards he revolved the matter in his mind, till he came to
- the conclusion that the problem was one he could not solve himself. And
- then he suddenly thought of his old acquaintance, Davidson of Scotland
- Yard, the tall man of military aspect who had arrested George Burton on
- that memorable night at Rosemount.
- </p>
- <p>
- He went round to Scotland Yard, presented his card, and inquired for Mr.
- Davidson. His old acquaintance was dead; a man named Bryant had taken his
- place. Would Major Murchison care to see him?
- </p>
- <p>
- In a few seconds Hugh was ushered into Bryant's room. To his surprise and
- relief Bryant was the man who had accompanied Davidson to Blankfield. It
- was pretty certain he would recall to the minutest detail the
- circumstances of that visit.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Good-day, Mr. Bryant. You know my name by my card, of course, but I am
- not so sure you remember anything of the time and place where we last
- met."
- </p>
- <p>
- But the detective was able to reassure him on this point.
- </p>
- <p>
- "In our profession, sir, we remember everything and everybody, and we
- never forget a face. It is some years ago, it is true, but I recall the
- incidents of our meeting as if they had happened yesterday. Poor Davidson
- and I came down to collar that slim rascal George Burton, who, by the way,
- got off with a light sentence. Davidson saw you in the afternoon and gave
- you the option of staying away. You talked it over, and came to the
- conclusion that, for certain reasons, you would rather be in at the
- finish. Those reasons were connected with your young friend Mr. Pomfret,
- who was infatuated with the young woman."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You remember everything as well as I do, Mr. Bryant. I must congratulate
- you on your marvellous memory, for I suppose this is only one out of
- hundreds of cases."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Bryant smiled, well pleased at this tribute to his capacity.
- </p>
- <p>
- "We cultivate our small gifts, sir, in this direction. Well, we took the
- slim George. The girl fainted. You dragged Mr. Pomfret out of the house,
- and he shot himself in the small hours of the morning. It came out that he
- had married the young woman a day or two before, and could not face the
- exposure." Hugh paid a second tribute to the detective's marvellous
- memory. "And now, Mr. Bryant, have you any knowledge of what has become of
- them? People like that are never quite submerged: some day or another,
- like the scum they are, they will be found floating on the top again."
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant shook his head. "No, sir, I cannot say I have. They have not come
- under our observation again. Probably they are abroad under assumed names,
- engaged in rascally business, of course, but doing it very much <i>sub
- rosa</i>."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mind you, at present I have very little to go on," said Hugh. "I may have
- been deceived by a chance resemblance. But I have a strong intuition I am
- on their track."
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant's attitude became alert at once. "You say you have no evidence.
- well, tell me your suspicions, and I will tell you what weight I attach to
- them."
- </p>
- <p>
- "First of all, before I do that, let me know if you would recognise Norah
- Burton and George Burton again, in spite of the passage of years. Norah
- had fair hair; the one I am on the track of has dark hair. The man I have
- not seen; this time he is a cousin, not a brother."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ah!" Mr. Bryant drew a deep breath. "If they are the people you think,
- sir, and I once saw them, no disguises would take me in. Now tell me all
- you know."
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus exhorted, Murchison launched into a copious narrative. He explained
- that on the night of the dinner with the Southleighs at Carlton House
- Terrace, he had met for the first time the wife of his old friend Guy
- Spencer, that he had detected in her an extraordinary likeness to Norah
- Burton. The marriage had been hastily contracted; next to nothing was
- known about the young woman's antecedents, apart from the very vague
- details with which she furnished them.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the background was a cousin, by all accounts a very common fellow, who
- had never visited the house since the marriage. Then there was the episode
- of Tommy Esmond being found cheating at cards at the L'Estrange flat, and
- Stella Keane's farewell meeting with him at Charing Cross Station.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Bryant made copious notes. When the narrative was finished he made his
- comments.
- </p>
- <p>
- "There are, of course, coincidences that may mean nothing or a great deal,
- Major Murchison. However, assuming that the lady in question is not our
- old friend Norah Burton, she is evidently not a very estimable member of
- society. She was in a shady set at Mrs. L'Estrange's, and Tommy Esmond
- must have been a pretty close pal."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, I want you to take this case on for me, and find out what you can."
- </p>
- <p>
- But Bryant shook his head. "Sorry, sir, but in my position I can't take on
- private business. It is not a public matter, you see, unless you can
- accuse them of anything." Hugh's face fell. "I forgot that. What am I to
- do? Can you recommend me to a private detective?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Half a dozen, sir, all keen fellows. But you can't stir very much without
- me, in the first instance. You want me to identify them. Well, I will go
- so far as that, in memory of the time when we were together in the
- original job. Mrs. Spencer, you say, lives in Eaton Place. I will keep a
- watch on that house till I see her coming out or going in. If I agree that
- she was Norah Burton, we have got the first step. Now, what do you know
- about this cousin, Dutton?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Only that he is an outside stockbroker, with an office, or offices, in
- the City."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Good." Mr. Bryant opened a telephone book and rapidly turned over the
- pages. "Here he is, right enough&mdash;George Dutton&mdash;George, mark
- you&mdash;share- and stock-broker, Bartholomew Court. Well, sir, to oblige
- you, I will run down to the City and get a peep at Mr. George Dutton. If
- my recollection agrees with yours, I will put you on to one of my friends,
- and you can have the precious pair watched. If they are the persons you
- think they are, you may depend upon it they won't keep long apart; they
- will make opportunities of meeting each other. Anyway, they must be pretty
- thick together, or he would not put up with being excluded from the
- house."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh left with a great sense of relief. He felt that the matter was in
- very capable hands. If Bryant told him that he was following a
- will-o'-the-wisp, then the whole matter could drop. The fact of Mrs.
- Spencer's relations with Tommy Esmond were hardly important enough to
- justify him in disturbing his friend's domestic felicity.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the end of three days the detective rang him up. The message was brief:
- "Come and see me."
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant received him in his room. "Well, Major Murchison, your suspicions
- are quite correct. I have been very close to the interesting pair. Mrs.
- Spencer has camouflaged herself very well, but beyond doubt she is Norah
- Burton. Our gaol-bird, George Burton, has been less particular. He has not
- disguised himself at all; the few years have made little or no impression
- on him. He has hid himself in the City, trusting that nobody he ever knew
- would come across him."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Then I was right, after all, Mr. Bryant. And now what would you advise me
- to do? This woman is the worst type of adventuress card-sharper all
- through&mdash;at least a confederate, in Paris with Burton, in London with
- Tommy Esmond. To be fair, we cannot say how much or how little she knew of
- his forgery business."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Your idea is to turn her out of her husband's house, with or without
- scandal?" queried the detective.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Without scandal, if possible. I would prefer that. I suppose you would
- back me up by saying that you have recognised her and this scoundrel who
- was yesterday her brother and is to-day her cousin?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "If you push me to it, I will, Major Murchison, for the sake of our old
- acquaintance. But, for reasons which I stated last time we met, I don't
- want to mix myself up in a purely private affair. The woman caught hold of
- a fool in your friend Pomfret; she has caught hold of another equally
- silly fool in your friend Mr. Spencer. Please forgive my blunt language,
- but it is so, is it not?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "You are quite right, Bryant," groaned poor Hugh. "I seem fated to be
- mixed up in these matters. At the present moment I have a little stunt on,
- in which I don't require any help. A younger brother of mine has got mixed
- up with a young harpy in the chorus of a third-rate theatre. The young
- fool has written compromising letters to her. I am trying to buy these
- letters. I need hardly tell you she is asking a high price. I can't see
- her at my own place, for fear of my brother popping in. I have taken rooms
- in a suburb where I see her to carry on the bargaining."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Bryant raised his hands. "Well, sir, when a woman once begins to twist
- a man round her little finger there is no knowing to what length he will
- go."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Profoundly true, Mr. Bryant. Well, what do you advise me to do?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "For the moment, nothing. Get a little more evidence. When I watched this
- couple, I took my old friend Parkinson with me. He knows them now. Get him
- to watch them. He will tell you where they meet, and how often. Here is
- his card. He will wait on you at your convenience."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I quite see," said Hugh, as he took the proffered card. "If I can prove
- that they are meeting on the sly it will strengthen my hands, eh?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "That is the idea. Of course, at the moment, I don't know which you are
- going to tackle first, the husband or the wife."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I can't say myself, my mind is in such a whirl. But I feel I must avenge
- poor Jack Pomfret's death."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Bryant rose. "You will excuse me, Major Murchison, but I have a very
- busy day. Make use of Parkinson; he is as keen as mustard. And if it comes
- to this, that you want me for purposes of identification, I am at your
- disposal, in Eaton Place or elsewhere."
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison left, but not before he had pressed a substantial cheque into
- Bryant's somewhat reluctant hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day he interviewed Parkinson, a lean, ascetic-looking man of the
- true sleuth-hound breed. He took his instructions.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Give me a fortnight, if you please, sir; a week is hardly long enough.
- I'll warrant, from what our friend Bryant has hinted to me, I will have
- something to report."
- </p>
- <p>
- And he had. At the end of the fortnight he appeared. He produced a small
- pocket-book.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I'm glad you didn't stipulate for only a week, sir; it was rather a blank
- one&mdash;only one meeting. I expect the lady couldn't get away
- comfortably. But the week after I was rewarded. Three meetings in that
- second week."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ah! where do they meet?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "At quite humble little restaurants and queer places in the City. I fancy
- the bucket-shop business is not very flourishing just now. For on the last
- two occasions when I followed them in, and sat at a table where I could
- observe them, I saw Mrs. Spencer slip an envelope into his hand."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Good Heavens!" cried Murchison in a tone of disgust. "She is keeping this
- criminal with her husband's money."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Parkinson shrugged his shoulders. "A common enough case, sir, if you
- had seen as much of life as I have."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh shuddered. The woman was depraved to the core. She could leave her
- house in Eaton Place, where she had been installed by her devoted and
- trustful husband, and journey down to some obscure eating-house in the
- City to meet this criminal who lived upon her bounty.
- </p>
- <p>
- Well, the chain of evidence was complete. Bryant would swear to the
- identification, and Parkinson would swear that Mrs. Guy Spencer, once
- Norah Burton, had met George Burton clandestinely four times in a
- fortnight, and had supplied him with money.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIX
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was in his
- blackest and most grim mood that Hugh Murchison walked to Eaton Place, for
- the purpose of paying an afternoon call upon Mrs. Spencer. He had not been
- near her since the night of the dinner, had only left cards. And, very
- fortunately, he had not come across Guy in the interval.
- </p>
- <p>
- On that particular night he had reproached himself with indiscretion. He
- had availed himself of Fairfax's information to tax her with meeting
- Tommie Esmond at Charing Cross Station on the morning of his flight to the
- Continent.
- </p>
- <p>
- And at the moment that he had made that dramatic announcement, the
- drawing-room door had opened to admit the unsuspecting husband. Hugh had
- left shortly after dinner, on the plea of another engagement. Had Mrs.
- Spencer tried to take the wind out of his sails by volunteering some
- plausible explanation about her meeting with Esmond? She was a clever
- young woman; she might try to forestall him. On the other hand, she might
- sit tight till he forced her hand. Anyway, he was going to force it
- to-day, armed with the new evidence that had been furnished to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Spencer was not looking well. Her eyes had lost their brightness, her
- once charming smile was forced and mechanical.
- </p>
- <p>
- She rose as he was announced, and advanced to him with outstretched hands,
- with an exaggerated air of cordiality.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I thought you had forgotten us." She seated herself on the Chesterfield
- and motioned him to sit beside her. "Major Murchison, I fear I was a
- little rude to you the other night, you remember, just before Guy came
- in." She clasped her hands nervously together. "I do trust we are going to
- be friends."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh looked at her grimly. He had no compassion for this shameless
- adventuress who had driven the poor foolish Pomfret to his grave, who had
- ensnared Guy Spencer, a man of stronger fibre, but equally powerless in
- the hands of an unscrupulous woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mrs. Spencer&mdash;to call you by one of the many names by which you are
- known&mdash;we were not friends the last time I was at this house. To-day
- we are bitter enemies."
- </p>
- <p>
- "What do you mean?" she faltered. "You are speaking in riddles. Why should
- you, the old friend of my husband, be the bitter enemy of his innocent
- wife?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "His innocent wife!" repeated Hugh sternly. "Dare you look me in the face
- and say that my name, even if you fail to recognise me after these years,
- does not recall to you certain tragic episodes at Blankfield?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know nothing of Blankfield." The voice was low but very unsteady. "You
- put that question to me the other night in a roundabout sort of way. My
- answer is the same&mdash;I know nothing of Blankfield."
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a long pause. Hugh continued to look at her with his steady and
- disconcerting gaze. Suddenly she rose, and paced restlessly up and down
- the long drawing-room.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Major Murchison, put your cards on the table. You have come into this
- house, an old friend of my husband's; I have done my best to make you
- welcome. But you have some spite against me. Of what do you accuse me?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will put my cards on the table," answered Hugh in his inflexible voice.
- "On the night I met you at Carlton House Terrace I had my suspicions; no
- two women could be so exactly alike. Since that night I have been picking
- up information here and there. I have now got a complete chain of
- evidence."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Evidence of what?" she gasped, still pursuing her restless walk up and
- down the room. "Of my having met Tommie Esmond at Charing Cross Station?
- would you like to hear the true history of that?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I shall be pleased to hear any explanation you like to offer, with the
- reservation that I must please myself as to whether I accept it or not."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You are very hard, Major Murchison. As you are not prepared to believe
- me, perhaps it would be better if I did not embark on this history. But
- Tommie Esmond is really my uncle, my mother's brother. When I was in low
- water he was very kind to me. I could not turn my back on him in his
- distress." She spoke with sudden passion. "Of course, you, with your
- pharisaical way of looking at things, would say I should have forgotten
- all his previous kindness."
- </p>
- <p>
- "The Tommie Esmond affair is, comparatively, a trivial one, Mrs. Spencer.
- I am coming in a moment to graver issues. You still say that the name of
- Murchison conveys nothing to you. Oh, think well before you answer!
- Remember, I have told you I have overwhelming evidence. And, believe me,
- the task I have set out upon is far from a welcome one."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I still say that the name of Murchison conveys nothing to me." She spoke
- with a certain air of assurance, but he could see that she was quivering
- all over.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Carry your memory back to that night at Blankfield when your so-called
- brother, George Burton, was arrested on a charge of forgery. You had been
- his decoy and accomplice in a gambling saloon in Paris. You had inveigled
- my poor friend, Jack Pomfret, into a clandestine marriage a few days
- before. Jack, unable to survive his folly and disgrace, blew his brains
- out. If not in the eyes of the law, you were, morally, a murderess."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You are mad, raving mad!" she cried, but her voice seemed strangled as
- she made the bold denial.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not mad, Mrs. Spencer, but very sane, as I will show you in a few
- seconds. As I told you, I recognised you that night at the South-leigh
- dinner-party, in spite of the pains you had taken to camouflage yourself.
- But I waited for corroborative evidence. The detective who arrested your
- so-called brother, George Burton, has seen you and is prepared to swear to
- your identity as Norah Burton."
- </p>
- <p>
- Then suddenly she gave way, fell on her knees before him, and stretched
- out appealing hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, you are very clever; I see you have found it all out. But you will be
- merciful, you will not drive an unhappy woman to despair, just when she
- has got into safe harbour. Will you be kind enough to listen to my
- miserable history?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will listen to anything you have got to say."
- </p>
- <p>
- "My childhood and girlhood were most wretched and unhappy. At a time when
- most girls are tasting the sweets and joys of life, I had to live by my
- wits. I fell under the influence of a good-natured, but very wicked man."
- </p>
- <p>
- "In other words, George Burton?" queried Hugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- "In other words, George Burton," she repeated in the low, strangled voice
- that did not move Hugh very much. "I was starving when he met me and took
- me up. He was genuinely sorry for me. Mind you, I knew nothing of his
- nefarious schemes. He hid those very carefully away from me."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But you were his decoy, if not his confederate, in the gambling saloon in
- Paris?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "His decoy, perhaps, unconsciously, but never his confederate."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And when did Tommie Esmond appear on the scene?" queried Hugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, much later. George got into low water and had not enough for himself.
- I then hunted up my uncle, who received me with open arms."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh was developing the instincts of a crossexaminer. "And Tommie Esmond,
- I suppose, introduced you to the card-sharping crew at the Elsinore flat,
- and you were launched as the cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange, who presided over
- this delectable establishment?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I was a distant cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange on my dear mother's side," was
- the answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- She was lying terribly, he felt assured. But he had a card or two up his
- sleeve yet. Still, it was wise to see how far she would go.
- </p>
- <p>
- "And when did you part with the so-called brother, George Burton?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, very shortly after he came out of prison. I had one interview with
- him; I could not do less after his kindness to me. And in the meantime I
- had hunted up poor old Tommie Esmond."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And what did you do after that night at Blankfield? I think you cleared
- out the next day. I heard you had paid everything up."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Thank Heaven, yes. There was just a little money left. My life after that
- was a nightmare. Amongst other humiliations, I was a waitress in a
- tea-shop." A smile of vanity broke over the charming face. "The wages were
- very small, but I got a lot of tips." Perhaps in this particular instance
- she was not lying, if it was true that she had been in a tea-shop at all.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a little pause, and then Murchison spoke in his stern,
- inflexible voice:
- </p>
- <p>
- "And how long is it since you saw George Burton?"
- </p>
- <p>
- She had answered the question before, but he was hoping to entrap her into
- some unguarded admission. He could see that she was considerably thrown
- oft her balance, clever and ready as she was, by the extent of his
- knowledge.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I told you just now, soon after he came out of prison."
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Hugh rose in his wrath. And then she, seeing in his face that he
- had another and a stronger card to play, got up from her kneeling position
- and watched him with an agonised countenance.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am sorry to use such harsh words to a woman, even such a woman as you
- are, Mrs. Spencer. But when you say that you are lying miserably, and you
- know it as well as I do." Her face went livid. She assumed a tone of
- indignation, but her voice died away in a sob. "How dare you say that?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am not the sort of man to make a statement unless I can prove it up to
- the hilt. Your so-called cousin, George Dutton, keeps a bucket-shop in the
- City; from certain evidence in my possession, I should say it was not a
- very paying business."
- </p>
- <p>
- Stella did not attempt to reply to this last shot, but she recognised that
- he had gone about the business very thoroughly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "George Dutton, the bucket-shop keeper, is George Burton, the forger, come
- to life again, still, I take it, on the same criminal tack, perhaps in a
- lesser degree. Do you admit," he cried vehemently, "that George Burton and
- George Dutton are one and the same?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, since you seem to have proof, I admit it," was the somewhat sullen
- answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- "That is as well; it clears the ground, up to a certain point. You say you
- parted from Burton soon after his release from prison, and have not seen
- him since. When was that&mdash;how long ago? You met him frequently as
- George Dutton at Elsinore Gardens."
- </p>
- <p>
- The courage of despair seemed to come to her, and she ceased to tremble.
- "I will answer no more questions. Tell me what you allege and I will admit
- or deny. Of course, you have employed a detective; you have had me
- watched."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course. I should not presume to cope single-handed with a clever woman
- like yourself. You have met George Dutton, alias George Burton, four times
- within the last fortnight at obscure restaurants in the City, and there is
- a strong presumption that you were handing to him envelopes containing
- money."
- </p>
- <p>
- She seemed now to recognise that the game was up. Her self-possession
- returned to her. She sat down, and motioned to him to seat himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You are much too clever for me, Major Murchison. You have handled the
- matter very well, so well that you have turned your vague suspicions into
- absolute certainty. Well, what action are you going to take? As a matter
- of course, you intend to turn me out of my husband's house?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "If not at the moment, very speedily. You will admit, I think, with your
- clever brain, that you should not remain under the roof of such an
- honourable English, gentleman as he is a day longer than necessary."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will admit it, from your point of view, if you like. Oh, believe me, I
- can see your side," replied this remarkable young woman. "But you will
- forgive me, Major Murchison, if I say that, from my point of view, I would
- have preferred that you had never been born. Guy is very happy; he
- believes in me and trusts me. It will be a great blow to him as to me."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know. I wish it were in my power to spare him this misery. But, in
- common honesty, I cannot."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And have you thought of what is to become of me when I am turned out of
- my husband's house?" she inquired in a composed voice. Her adroit mind had
- evidently adapted itself to the altered circumstances, and was now busied
- in turning them, as far as possible, to her own advantage.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You have George Dutton to fall back upon, also Tommie Esmond," was
- Murchison's retort.
- </p>
- <p>
- She snapped her fingers in a fashion that was almost vulgar, and she was
- so free from vulgar actions.
- </p>
- <p>
- "George is thankful that I can, from time to time, fling him a ten-pound
- note; his luck has deserted him. Tommie Esmond, I believe, saved a bit out
- of the wreck, but he has not more than enough to keep body and soul
- together."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Guy is not a man to behave ungenerously, however deeply he has been
- wronged," said Hugh, after he had reflected a few moments. He added more
- hesitatingly, "And if Guy should take an obdurate attitude, it is possible
- I might come to your assistance. I have hunted you down, but I do not want
- to drive you into the gutter."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But a man must support his wife, even if her past has not been quite so
- respectable as it might have been," she cried defiantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hugh directed upon her a searching look. "Mrs. Spencer, it is in my mind
- that you may not be Guy's wife after all. If I probed a little deeper, I
- might get at your real relations with this George Dutton, or rather
- Burton."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, this time you are really pursuing a will-o'-the-wisp, I assure you.
- George has never been anything to me but brother or cousin, as the
- occasion demanded."
- </p>
- <p>
- She paused a second, and there was a terrified look in her eyes as she
- added, "But even if your suspicions were correct, which they are not, you
- would not go back from your own promise. If Guy proved obdurate, you would
- not drive me to the gutter. You promised me that."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I shall keep my promise, Mrs. Spencer, and I will give it you in writing,
- if you wish."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It would be as well. And you will want something from me in writing also,
- I expect," she concluded shrewdly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Certainly I shall," said Hugh steadily. "I shall draw up a full
- confession for you to sign, to prevent you from ever troubling your
- husband again&mdash;if, as I suggested just now, he is your husband."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Spencer rose. It seemed that there was a sense of relief in the fact
- that the interview was ending so amicably.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I would have preferred to remain as I am, but, on the whole, the life
- doesn't suit me, luxurious as it is. I am very fond of Guy really, he has
- been so good to me, but I have alienated him from his friends. And I have
- to sit here hour after hour by myself, with only my thoughts for company."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Let us say one week from now I will have that confession ready to sign."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And you will bring it here?" suggested Stella.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I think not. It will take some time to read through, and we might be
- interrupted," was Hugh's answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- "At your hotel, then, I suppose?" was the young woman's next suggestion.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The same objection applies."
- </p>
- <p>
- He scribbled down an address on a piece of paper. "Meet me there this day
- week at the hour I have appointed. Nobody will interrupt us, I will take
- care of that."
- </p>
- <p>
- And Mrs. Spencer lay awake half the night, working out a problem that had
- suggested itself to her in a flash.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day she lunched with George Dutton in the City. The detective
- might be watching her, but did it matter? whatever happened at the end of
- the week, she had burned her boats.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XX
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>wo months had
- elapsed since the meeting between Major Murchison and Stella Spencer,
- recorded in the last chapter.
- </p>
- <p>
- A handsome, well-set-up man of about thirty was travelling up from
- Manchester to London. The reason of his journey was his desire to visit
- his sister, Caroline Masters, who occupied a small flat in the
- neighbourhood of King's Cross.
- </p>
- <p>
- Up to a short time ago this handsome, well-set-up man had been leading a
- very quiet life in the busy city of Manchester. He was an electrician by
- trade, and a very clever one. He was civil, well-spoken, intelligent
- beyond his station, but he had not forgathered much with his
- fellow-workers, had kept himself very much to himself. And yet, strange to
- say, this self-isolation had not provoked suspicion or resentment on the
- part of his daily associates.
- </p>
- <p>
- Reginald Davis, for such was his name, had been unjustly suspected of
- murder, and the police had been hot on his track. Then had come the
- suicide in No. 10 Cathcart Square, and his sister, Caroline Masters, had
- identified the dead body as that of her brother.
- </p>
- <p>
- Caroline Masters had always been a plucky, resourceful girl, and devoted
- to him. The dead man, no doubt, bore some resemblance to himself, and she
- had taken advantage of the opportunity to swear to a false identification,
- and remove from him the sleepless vigilance of the police. This much she
- had conveyed to him in a guarded letter.
- </p>
- <p>
- Reginald Davis, the man falsely accused of murder, was dead in the eyes of
- the law: in a sense, he had nothing further to fear. But at the same time,
- caution must be observed. The few friends he had were in London; at any
- time he might run across one or more of them. So, taking another name, he
- had hidden himself in Manchester, and corresponded secretly with the one
- of the two sisters he could trust, Caroline Masters.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, suddenly, the burden had been lifted from his soul. There was a
- small paragraph in the evening newspapers, afterwards reproduced in the
- morning ones, which told him that he need not skulk through the world any
- longer.
- </p>
- <p>
- A man lying under sentence of death for a brutal murder and without hope
- of reprieve, had confessed to the crime of which Davis had been falsely
- accused. In the paragraph, which was, of course, essentially the same in
- all the papers, were a few words of sympathy for the unfortunate Reginald
- Davis who had stolen into No. 10 Cathcart Square and committed suicide,
- under a sense of abject terror. The police had carefully investigated the
- statements of the condemned man, with the result that they found the late
- Reginald Davis absolutely innocent.
- </p>
- <p>
- The late Reginald Davis, very alive and well, knocked at the door of his
- sister's flat. She had been apprised of his coming, and greeted him
- affectionately. She sat him down before a well-cooked supper. He was
- hungry and ate heartily. She did not disturb him with much conversation
- till he had finished. Then she spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, Reggie, that was a bit of luck indeed." She was, of course,
- alluding to the confession of the real murderer. "Now you are as free as
- air. You were always a bit of a bad egg, old boy, but never a criminal to
- that extent."
- </p>
- <p>
- "No, hang it all, I am not particular in a general way, but murder was not
- in my line," he answered briefly. "It was hard lines to get scot-free of
- the other things, and then to be suspected of that at the end."
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked at her admiringly. "By Jove! Carrie, you were always the
- cleverest of the lot of us. That was a brain-wave of yours, walking in and
- identifying me as the suicide." Mrs. Masters smiled appreciatively. "Yes,
- it came to me in a flash. I read the account in the papers. It struck me I
- might do something useful. I went up to the court with the tale of a
- missing brother. I saw the body; the poor creature might have been your
- twin. Of course, I swore it was you, and gave you a new lease of life."
- She added severely, "I hope you have taken advantage of what I did, and
- become a reformed character." Davis spoke very gravely. "Yes, Carrie, I
- swear to you I have. That shock was the making of me. I have lain very
- low, worked hard, and put by money."
- </p>
- <p>
- He pulled out an envelope from his breastpocket, and thrust it into her
- hand; it was full of one-pound notes.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Fifty of the best, old girl, for a little nest-egg. I have not forgotten
- my best pal, you see."
- </p>
- <p>
- The tears came into Mrs. Masters' eyes. He had been a bad egg, but he had
- a good heart at bottom.
- </p>
- <p>
- "That is very sweet of you, Reggie; it will come in very useful. And now
- to go back for a moment to Cathart Square. Who was the poor devil who
- killed himself there? He was as like you as two peas are like each other."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I think we have got to find that out," said Reginald Davis gravely. "Nor,
- reading the account in the papers, am I quite sure that it was a suicide."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But that was the verdict," interrupted the sister.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know, but there are peculiar things about the case. Letters addressed
- to Reginald Davis were found on him; there was a letter signed Reginald
- Davis, addressed to the Coroner, announcing his intention to commit
- suicide. Those letters had been placed there by the person who murdered
- him, and that person who murdered him was somebody who knew me, unless it
- was the accidental taking of a common name."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But the razor was clutched in his hand, Reggie!"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Quite easy," replied Davis, who, if not a murderer himself, could easily
- project himself, apparently, into the mind of one. "We will assume, for
- the moment, it was a man. He cut the poor devil's throat, and then thrust
- the razor into his stiffening hand, to convey the idea of suicide."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It might be," agreed Mrs. Masters.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, Carrie, one thing I have fixed on, and it is one of the things for
- which I have come up. I go to Scotland Yard to-morrow, tell them straight
- I am Reginald Davis, without a stain upon my character, explain to them
- that you were misled by a close resemblance. We will have that body
- exhumed. I am firmly convinced it was a murder."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Let sleeping dogs lie, Reggie," advised Mrs. Masters, who had a horror of
- the law and its subtle ways. "Never mind who was the poor devil who was
- found there, whether he was murdered or committed suicide. It is no affair
- of yours."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It is an affair of mine in this way," replied Davis in a dogged tone.
- "The person who murdered the poor devil, as you call him, knew something
- about me, and took a liberty with my name."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It served you a good turn, Reggie, anyway."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know; I admit that. But the murderer did not know he was doing me,
- thanks to you, a good turn when he killed the other fellow."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Masters thought deeply for a few moments. "Reggie, you have been a
- very bad egg, I am sure. I shall never guess a quarter of what you have
- been guilty of."
- </p>
- <p>
- He laid his hand affectionately on her arm. "Well for you, old girl, you
- can't. That is all past and done with. By the way, that letter found on
- the poor chap, announcing his intention to commit suicide, did they ask
- you to identify my handwriting? Of course, the others addressed to him
- didn't matter much. Anybody could have written them. But my letter was a
- forgery. Did they ask you to identify that particular letter?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "They did, Reggie, and my brain was in such a whirl that I could hardly
- read it. I said that I believed it was in your handwriting. It was
- certainly very like, although, as you can imagine, I looked at it through
- a sort of mist. Anyway, it was as like your handwriting as the dead man
- was like you." Davis ruminated for a few moments. "That letter was forged
- by somebody who knew me and could imitate my hand to a nicety. I am
- thinking of all the wrong'uns I knew in the old days. I think I can fix
- him."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes," said Mrs. Masters breathlessly. She was capable of great daring in
- the cause and the service of those she loved, but she was not habituated
- to the ways of hardened criminals.
- </p>
- <p>
- "A man I was a bit associated with in the old days; luckily he didn't drag
- me in far enough. He was an expert forger. We used to call him 'George the
- Penman.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Masters shuddered. "Oh, you poor weak soul, you were so near it as
- that?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Very near, Carrie. The shock of the false accusation of murder pulled me
- up straight. I saw where I was drifting, and made up my mind that the
- straight path was the surest." At the moment that Mr. Davis gave utterance
- to this honourable sentiment there was a ring at the bell.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Masters rose at once. "It is Iris. I dropped her a note to say you
- were coming. She will be so pleased to see you."
- </p>
- <p>
- There floated into the small sitting-room a very dainty and ethereal
- figure, Miss Iris Deane, a charming member of the chorus at the Frivolity
- Theatre.
- </p>
- <p>
- She flung her arms round the neck of her handsome brother. "Oh Reggie,
- dear, what a treat to see you! And all this dreadful thing is lifted from
- you."
- </p>
- <p>
- Iris was not his favourite sister. She was clever in a worldly way, and
- had made good. But she had not the sterling loyalty of Caroline.
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis gently checked her enthusiasm. "And how have you been getting on,
- Iris? Always floating on the top as usual?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Iris showed her dimples. "Always floating on the top, as you say,
- dear old boy. A silly, soft chap fell in love with me; wrote most
- impassioned love-letters. Well, he was too soppy for me to care much about
- him, and when his rich brother came along, offering me a price for his
- love-letters, I can tell you I just jumped at the chance."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Did you get a good price?" queried her brother.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I stuck out for ten thousand," explained the capable Iris; "but this chap
- was a good bargainer, and I let them go at seven. It was better on the
- whole. If I had married Roddie, I should have been so fed-up in a month
- that I should have run away from him, and then Heaven knows where I might
- have ended."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis looked at his sister approvingly. There was enough of the old Adam
- left in him to entertain a slight envy of his sister's chances. Seven
- thousand pounds, a little fortune in itself, was a good bit of work, a
- handsome reward for the display of her dimples.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Roddie who, dear? You might tell us his other name," queried Mrs.
- Masters, who perhaps was also smitten with a sense of envy.
- </p>
- <p>
- "That's telling," answered the sprightly Iris, who was not given to be too
- frank about her own affairs. "But if either of you two dear things want a
- little ready, apply to me. Of course, you will remember I have got to take
- care of myself, to make provision for my old age."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis and Carrie exchanged glances. They knew the volatile Iris of old. As
- a child she had always been mean and grasping. Not much of the seven
- thousand would come their way, if they were on the verge of starvation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Carrie spoke in cold accents. "You are really too generous, Iris. But we
- shall not have to trespass upon your generosity. I have enough for my
- humble wants. And Reggie has been able to put by, so much so that he has
- been kind enough to make me a very handsome money present to-night."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Dear old Reggie," said the sweetly smiling Iris. "I am so glad you have
- made good."
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Davis spoke: "Thanks, in great part, to Carrie, who told that
- splendid lie about the suicide, or murder, at 10 Cathcart Square. You
- remember that, of course?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Suicide, wasn't it?" said Iris, but her cheek had grown a little pale.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I don't think so. There was a forged letter purporting to be written by
- me. I am going to Scotland Yard to-morrow, stating frankly who I am, and
- urging them to exhume the body. We will find out who the man, buried under
- the name of Reginald Davis, really was."
- </p>
- <p>
- And then the agitation of his younger sister became extreme. She clutched
- convulsively at his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Reggie, you will not do this. What does it matter to you who the man was?
- Go under some other name, and let sleeping dogs lie." Unconsciously she
- had used the same expression as Mrs. Masters, but from different motives.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have been under a different name for a longer time than I care to
- remember," answered Davis doggedly. "I have a fancy to resume my own, and
- make a clean breast of it to the police. They have nothing else to charge
- me with."
- </p>
- <p>
- Iris fell on her knees, and the tears rained down her cheeks.
- </p>
- <p>
- "For my sake, Reggie, if not for your own."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And why for your sake? Tell us what you mean," demanded her brother
- sternly.
- </p>
- <p>
- And Iris spoke as clearly as she could speak amidst her strangled sobs.
- </p>
- <p>
- "If you try and unearth that mystery at Cathcart Square, I might be
- dragged in, and it might be very awkward for me."
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>avis directed a
- keen glance at his elder sister over the bowed head of Iris. The younger
- woman was by no means of an emotional nature. Light, frivolous and
- volatile, she had danced through life, and, on the whole, had had a good
- time. One could not picture her in a tragic mood.
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet, she was the personification of deep emotion now. She could hardly
- speak for those convulsive sobs, and in her frightened eyes there was a
- deep and haunting terror. At what point, and through what circumstances,
- had tragedy touched this little selfish, self-centred butterfly, gifted
- with a certain amount of cunning and sharpness, but utterly brainless.
- </p>
- <p>
- "What do you know of No. 10 Cathcart Square, except what you gleaned from
- the newspapers?" demanded her brother sternly. "How can you be implicated
- in the murder of the unknown man whom Carrie mistook for me?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "But Carrie did not mistake him for you," wailed Iris. "She told me
- afterwards that the idea suggested itself in a flash, and when she read
- the newspaper she was not sure whether it was you who had crept in there,
- according to the evidence, and made away with yourself, through fear of
- the police."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Leave Carrie out of it for the moment," said Davis. "Whatever she did was
- well thought out. Of course, we both know her object was to identify me,
- if possible, and put Scotland Yard off the scent. What we want to know is,
- how did you come to be acquainted with the house? what do you mean by
- saying that, if further investigations are made, you might be dragged in?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I was there on four occasions: on the last a few days before the murder,
- or suicide, whatever it was."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis gasped, and Carrie lifted her hands in horror. What did this
- confession mean? It was impossible that this slim, weak girl had herself
- been the murderess, could have killed a big, powerful man of the same
- build as the supposed Davis, with those slim, weak hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- She saw the horror in their faces, and hastened to reassure them. "Oh no,
- not that, I swear to you. I am no more a murderess than you were a
- murderer, Reggie. But if the whole thing is raked up, and the man whom I
- believe it to be, accurately identified this time, things might look very
- black for me."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis lifted her from her kneeling position, and placed her in an
- easy-chair. "Calm yourself, and tell us the whole story of why and how you
- came to be in Cathcart Square at all."
- </p>
- <p>
- Iris waited a few moments till the convulsive sobbing ceased. She spoke
- with little occasional gasps, but it was very evident it was a relief to
- unbosom herself.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It is a very long story," she began tremulously.
- </p>
- <p>
- "If the telling of it lasts till midnight, we must have it," said her
- brother in an inflexible voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- And compelled by his resolute manner, the girl, whom they had always
- regarded as a frivolous butterfly, embarked upon her strange and thrilling
- narrative.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It all arose out of the sale of those letters I spoke to you about.
- Carrie just now asked me the name of the man who wrote them. Well, I
- didn't get further than Roddie, which doesn't carry you very far. If it
- had not been for your threat of going to Scotland Yard, I should have
- stopped at that. A still tongue makes a wise head, you know."
- </p>
- <p>
- They could quite believe that. In spite of her ceaseless chatter, Iris had
- always been very reticent about her own affairs. She had seen next to
- nothing of her brother for a few years, not very much of Carrie Masters.
- And, on these occasions, she had always avoided, in a marked manner, any
- allusion to her private affairs.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I told you of a soppy young chap who started to make love to me last
- year. I didn't care a snap for him, but he was very persistent, and at
- last wrote me most urgent letters imploring me to be his wife. His full
- name was Roderick Murchison, a member of the great brewing family; his
- father has been dead for some time, he died during the war, and Roddie
- came in for tons of money, although he was not the eldest son. I don't
- know if you have ever heard of him?"
- </p>
- <p>
- No, neither Davis nor Carrie had known of the existence of such a young
- man. They had a hazy idea that there was a big brewing firm of that name,
- that was all.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, as I say, I didn't care a snap for him, although he was awfully
- good and generous, overwhelmed me with, all kinds of lovely presents:
- rings, bracelets, fur coats, etc. In our life, you know, one accepts these
- things from the mugs who are gone on us without attaching very much
- importance to the fact."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was evident that Miss Iris had struck out her own line of life, and
- made a very good thing out of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, then, Roddie began to grow desperate, and declared he couldn't live
- without me. It was all so genuine that at last I began to think seriously
- of it. There were tons of money, and although I didn't cotton much to the
- sort of life I should have to lead as his wife, still there were worse
- things than being Mrs. Roderick Murchison, with the future well assured,
- and a handsome settlement."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis and his elder sister exchanged wondering glances. So this butterfly
- little girl, whom they had always regarded as rather shallow and
- feather-brained, had had this wonderful chance of marrying a gentleman and
- a rich man.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It was difficult to bring myself up to the scratch, in spite of the
- advantages, for he was so soft and soppy that he irritated me in a
- thousand-and-one ways, and I knew in a very short time I should grow to
- hate and despise him. Then one night, after a very excellent champagne
- supper at the 'Excelsior,' he got me in a yielding mood, and I promised to
- marry him."
- </p>
- <p>
- Brother and sister could only marvel at the girl's extraordinary good
- fortune, reluctant as she seemed to avail herself of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He told me that before he went to bed that night he wrote to his family
- acquainting them with the news, anticipating fully their objections, but
- expressing his strong determination to brook no interference or
- remonstrance. You see he was his own master, nobody could take his money
- away from him, and he didn't care whether his relatives were offended or
- not."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And how did the family take it?" queried Davis.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am coming to that," replied Iris. She was growing much calmer now. It
- was a relief to unburden her secret to an audience whom she could trust.
- For she was sure that neither her brother nor sister would ever allow her
- to put herself into real danger.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am coming to that," she repeated. "A few days after he had written
- those letters, one to his widowed mother, one to his elder brother, who
- had inherited the bulk of the big fortune, the elder brother called upon
- me in my flat. He was a very handsome, well-set-up man, although he had
- been through a good deal in the war. He was very like you, Reggie."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ah," ejaculated Mr. Davis. He looked at Carrie, keenly watching her
- sister, with a glance that suggested they would soon be coming to the real
- pith of this rambling confession.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He begged the favour of a short conversation. He was perfectly open and
- above-board. He told me straight he was Roddie's elder brother, and that
- his name was Hugh Murchison. He pointed out to me very kindly that his
- brother was an impetuous young ass&mdash;a judgment which I privately
- endorsed&mdash;that Roddie had been infatuated, in his short day, with
- quite a number of other girls, although, perhaps, not to the same extent
- as with me." Iris, getting back rapidly into her light mind, let her
- volatile and easily impressed nature peep out in her next words.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, Hugh Murchison was a darling, so quiet, so sensible, and so strong.
- If he had been fool enough to ask me to marry him, I would not have given
- him up for seven thousand pounds."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But you were prepared to chuck Roddie for that?" suggested her brother
- quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I think I let him go a bit too cheap," answered the fair Iris in a
- reflective voice. "Many girls have got more than I asked for compromising
- a breach of promise. But to tell the absolute truth, Hugh Murchison
- hypnotised me a bit. He was so quiet and yet so strong that I felt he
- could twist me round his little finger."
- </p>
- <p>
- "We want to get to Cathcart Square," interjected Davis a little
- impatiently. "We don't seem to be near it yet."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I must tell my story my own way, it is no use driving me," replied Iris,
- pouting a little. "Well, as I tell you, he called that day at my flat&mdash;that
- was the beginning of negotiations. Where were we to meet to discuss
- details? I couldn't have him at my flat, because Roddie was always popping
- in and out. He couldn't have me at his hotel, because nobody knew whom we
- might come across, and Roddie was always coming there. He said he would
- think out a plan and telephone or wire me."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ah," said Carrie, with a sigh of relief: she was a very practical person.
- "Now, I suppose we are coming to it."
- </p>
- <p>
- Iris, heedless of the interruption, went on with her story.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Next day he 'phoned me up, and after ascertaining that I was quite alone,
- told me to meet him at 10 Cathcart Square to resume our conversation."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Why, in the name of all that is wonderful&mdash;&mdash;" began Reginald
- Davis, but his sister motioned him to silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Don't interrupt, please, you will know everything in a few minutes. I
- went to No. 10 Cathcart Square at the time appointed. He opened the door
- himself. It was a big house in an old-fashioned square, ages old, I should
- say, and in the front court was an agent's board, intimating that this
- particular house was to let, furnished."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know Cathcart Square well, it's in an old-world quarter of Kensington,"
- interrupted Davis. He added grimly, "I know it well, although I did not
- have the misfortune to commit suicide there."
- </p>
- <p>
- "He told me a very funny story. The afternoon of the day before, he had
- been up to Kensington to visit an old nurse of the family who lived near
- by. He had strolled round to Cathcart Square to fill up an idle half-hour.
- He had been struck by the appearance of the house, and loitered before it,
- when suddenly the door opened, and a somewhat bibulous-looking caretaker
- came out."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis indulged in a sigh of relief. "We are really coming to it now,
- then?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, you are coming to it. He told me a sudden idea had occurred to him.
- Here would be a quiet little spot for our meetings, a place where Roddie
- would never dream of following us. He accosted the caretaker, evidently a
- drunken and corrupt creature. He explained that he wanted to rent a couple
- of rooms where he could receive a certain visitor he was expecting in the
- course of the next week or fortnight. It was no use going to the house
- agents for that, they would turn down such a proposition. The caretaker,
- with a couple of five-pound notes in his hand, took an intelligent view of
- the situation. He gave Hugh a key, and intimated that, if he had
- sufficient notice, he would make himself scarce on the occasions when the
- visitor was expected."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of all the mad things&mdash;&mdash;" began Davis, but his sister for the
- second time motioned her brother to silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not quite so mad as you think. I fancy I can see into his mind. We could
- have met at a dozen different restaurants in London, but Roddie was here,
- there and everywhere: at any moment he might have come across us. He would
- never get as far as Kensington." David nodded his sagacious head. "I think
- I see. Go on."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I met him there, in all four times, the last meeting was a few days
- before the tragedy."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And what took place at that meeting?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "He paid me the seven thousand pounds in notes. I signed a paper agreeing
- to give Roddie up. I carried out my bargain. I wrote Roddie that same
- night, giving him his dismissal, and assuring him that nothing he could
- urge would induce me to reconsider my determination. He sent me frantic
- telegrams the next day, but I replied to the same effect. After taking his
- seven thousand pounds, I could not break faith with Hugh, could I?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis was not quite sure that Iris would not break faith with anybody if
- it suited her purpose. But clearly Hugh Murchison had subjugated her to
- the extent of respecting an honourable bargain. No doubt she had fallen in
- love with him, so far as a person of her shallow temperament could fall in
- love.
- </p>
- <p>
- "And what has become of Roddie?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I don't know, and I don't care. He has bored me to extinction for over
- nine months. I am glad to be shut of him."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis put a question. "You say Hugh Murchison paid you in notes. What have
- you done with them? His bank will have the numbers."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Will they?" cried Iris, the frightened look again coming into her eyes;
- she knew nothing of business methods. "I paid them into my own account.
- Now, you see, if you rake this up I might be implicated."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Your opinion is, then, that the man found in No. 10 Cathcart Square was
- Hugh Murchison?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am as nearly sure as I can be, after reading the caretaker's evidence.
- He had some other stunt on beside my own. I was not the only visitor he
- received."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis thought deeply before he spoke. "If I have him dug up, and he is
- identified by those who know him, a lot will come to light. Your notes
- will be traced, for one thing."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am afraid of everything, Reggie. For the love of Heaven, let him rest
- where he is." Caroline Masters breathed softly to herself. "You were half
- in love with him, or perhaps three-quarters, and you don't want to know
- the real truth. Oh, you miserable little, paltry soul!"
- </p>
- <p>
- And then a sudden thought came to Davis. "Now, Iris, you could never think
- very clearly about things when they got a little bit complicated. You are
- quite sure the last occasion on which you saw him was a few days before
- the discovery of the body?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will swear to it," cried Iris firmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The date of his cheque, which the Bank has, will show that. He probably
- cashed it himself on the day he paid you, any way the day before. Now, on
- the day preceding and the day following that tragedy, can you prove where
- you were?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Iris began to see light. "Of course I can. The day after I had the notes,
- I got up a sprained ankle, an obliging doctor, an old (or rather young)
- friend of mine, sent a certificate to the theatre. I motored down to
- Brighton with Johnny Lascelles&mdash;who, by the way, used to make Roddie
- fearfully jealous. We joined a jolly little party at 'The Old Ship.' I
- came back the day after the discovery in Cathcart Square."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis rose and gave a great shout: "You have witnesses who can swear to
- that?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course," answered Iris, not even yet comprehending the full drift of
- the question. "Johnny Lascelles motored me there and drove me back. Then
- there was Cissy Monteith, Katie Havard, Jack Legard and others who were
- with me all the time."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You silly little idiot," cried Reginald Davis. "And what the deuce do you
- mean by saying that you might be implicated?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "The notes," she faltered. "My meeting him alone in that empty house. They
- might suggest I murdered him, if you say he was murdered."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis smote his forehead in impotent anger at her denseness. "How could
- you have murdered him when you were at Brighton all the time?"
- </p>
- <p>
- He smote the palms of his hands together.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will find out who the dead man was, and also the man who forged my name
- to that letter to the Coroner."
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned to his sister: "As for you, young woman, it may be you will have
- a bad quarter of an hour, if it all comes out about Roddie. But never
- mind, you will have a splendid advertisement. The next bunch of letters
- you get hold of, the price will be twice seven thousand pounds."
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he following
- morning Reginald Davis, resolved to unearth the mystery of 10 Cath-cart
- Square, stood in the private room of Mr. Bryant of Scotland Yard.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had easily overcome his younger sister's scruples, her terror at having
- to give evidence in a court of justice, and being forced to disclose
- certain transactions not too creditable to herself. She had come to see
- from the point of view artfully suggested by Davis, that, on the whole, it
- would be a very good advertisement. It might even take her from her place
- in the chorus to a small acting part, and then her fortune would be made.
- She might be able to come across another rich man whom she would like well
- enough to marry, a man quite different from the somewhat invertebrate
- Roddie.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant looked up from his papers, and regarded the young man with his keen
- and steady gaze. Davis's good looks, and frank air impressed him
- favourably.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, my man, what do you want with me? I don't usually see strangers who
- approach me in such a mysterious fashion. You would neither state your
- name nor business, only said vaguely that you wanted to interview me on a
- matter of great urgency."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I wished to keep my business for your private ear, sir. Can you throw
- your mind back to a certain gruesome affair that happened at 10 Cathcart
- Square?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Certainly, although I was not in charge of the matter. The man was
- identified as Reginald Davis, who was wanted on a charge of murder, the
- circumstantial evidence against him being very strong; the verdict
- returned was one of suicide. If I recollect rightly, he had broken a pane
- of glass in one of the back windows of the house, unhasped the latch of
- the window, and cut his throat upstairs after he got inside. The facts
- were accepted at the time as conclusive evidence of his guilt."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And you recollect, sir, what happened a short time ago with regard to the
- crime of which Reginald Davis was accused?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Perfectly. The real criminal has confessed. And this poor devil,
- overwhelmed no doubt by the circumstantial evidence which told so strongly
- against him, acted too hastily."
- </p>
- <p>
- "If the police had caught him, he would probably have been hanged by now,"
- said Davis a little bitterly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Bryant looked a little uneasy. "I should say it is more than probable
- from what I remember of the case; well, you know, the law makes mistakes
- at times, I will admit."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And juries at inquests make mistakes at times, also," remarked Davis
- quietly. "This particular jury made a mistake. The dead man was no more
- Reginald Davis than you are."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not easy to startle Mr. Bryant, he had been through too many
- strange experiences for that, but he exhibited a mild surprise as he put
- the question: "And what authority have you for saying that?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I think you will admit the best. I who stand before you am the Reginald
- Davis who was wanted on that false charge of murder, and branded by that
- intelligent jury as a suicide."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You can prove this, of course. I mean that you are the real Reginald
- Davis."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of course I can, sir; I can bring a dozen witnesses, if necessary, half
- of whom have known me since a boy."
- </p>
- <p>
- Needless to say that a man of Bryant's experience did not, as a rule,
- believe one quarter of what he was told. But this man's face&mdash;this
- man's tones&mdash;convinced him that he was listening to the truth.
- </p>
- <p>
- He rose from his chair. "Wait here a moment, please, while I hunt up the
- particulars of this case. As I told you just now, I was not in charge of
- it, and I should like to refresh my memory as to certain details."
- </p>
- <p>
- He came back after a few moments. "I know it all now, from A to Z. You
- were identified by a married sister, a Mrs. Masters, who gave some details
- of your career, which did not seem to have been a very healthy one. She
- was also shown a letter which you were supposed to have written to the
- Coroner, and she believed it to be in your handwriting. This wants some
- explanation, I think, Mr. Davis, to call you by the name which you say is
- your right one."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Quite so, sir," answered Reginald composedly. "It certainly requires a
- good deal of explanation, but if you will listen to me with a little
- patience, I think I can convince you that the thing is more natural than
- it appears." The Inspector threw himself back in his chair: "I have no
- doubt it was your sister who identified you, but how did she come to
- mistake the actual suicide for you?"
- </p>
- <p>
- And Mr. Davis gave the explanation which Bryant might believe or not, or
- believe in part, as he chose.
- </p>
- <p>
- "My sister Caroline was deeply attached to me. She was in despair when she
- heard that I was suspected of murder, and was being hunted by the police.
- As day after day, week after week, went by, and there was no news of my
- capture, she got it firmly fixed in her mind that I had committed suicide.
- She hunted the newspapers every morning to find some paragraph that would
- confirm her fears. And then one day she read about what had happened at
- Cathcart Square."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Bryant was now deeply interested. He leaned forward in his chair, and
- his attitude betokened his eagerness.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It is possible that her mind had become a little unhinged by her anxiety.
- She expected to find me, and she found a man who might have passed for my
- twin brother. So she tells me now that I have revealed myself, for, of
- course, I lay very low until this belated confession of the real
- murderer."
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant only made a brief comment on this particular portion of the
- narrative which Davis was twisting about with some skill. Of course, Mrs.
- Masters had not been deceived by the accidental resemblance, but in
- pretending to be she had given that brother a new lease of life.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You say that the man was so like you that the sister, who had known you
- from childhood, was ready to swear he was her brother?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "There is no doubt, sir, that at the time her mind was clouded. She went
- there expecting to find me, and as a not altogether unnatural result, she
- found what she expected."
- </p>
- <p>
- "We will let that pass," said the Inspector drily. "No doubt, under
- extraordinary circumstances, strange hallucinations are apt to occur. It
- was very fortunate for you that your sister made that mistake, and that it
- was accepted. As you admitted just now, if you had been caught and tried
- it would have gone very hardly with you."
- </p>
- <p>
- Whatever Bryant thought in his own mind, it was evident that he was
- prepared to admit that Mrs. Masters had acted in good faith when she swore
- that the dead man was her brother. Davis could see there would be no
- trouble on that score.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now we come to the letter," pursued Davis. "I questioned my sister very
- closely about that last night. She says she was so overwhelmed with the
- discovery that she read that letter through a mist, as it were, but she is
- positive that it closely resembled my handwriting."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Another hallucination, I suppose, or an accidental resemblance. Well, if
- you will leave a specimen of your own caligraphy with us, we can compare
- them," said Bryant.
- </p>
- <p>
- "And I suppose, sir, you will have the body exhumed, for the purpose of
- discovering who the man really was?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I suppose so," replied the Inspector a little unwillingly. "Although I
- don't expect we shall ever find out. Nobody came forward at the time when
- your sister made that mistake. Is it likely anybody will come forward now?
- Some poor derelict, weary of life I suppose, without kith or kin to claim
- him at the end. There are scores of suicides in the year, Mr. Davis, who
- are buried unidentified."
- </p>
- <p>
- He added, after a moment's pause: "Of course, before taking any such
- steps, we must formally prove, from unimpeachable testimony, that not only
- are you Reginald Davis, but the particular Reginald Davis who was falsely
- accused of murder."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I quite understand," answered Davis a little stiffly. "Before I leave
- this room, I will indicate the quarters where you can obtain the
- information you want."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Then, when I have verified that, I will ask you to come and see me
- again." Bryant's manner as he said these words, indicated that the
- interview was at an end.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Davis kept his seat, he had not finished yet.
- </p>
- <p>
- "May I take the liberty of detaining you for a few moments longer, sir, to
- impress upon you the importance of having that body exhumed? You may be
- correct in your theory it is that of some poor derelict, but I have a
- different theory altogether."
- </p>
- <p>
- The Inspector looked sharply at him, and drew a deep breath. "Ah, then,
- you have some knowledge of something: your visit to me has been leading up
- to this, eh?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "No actual knowledge, sir, but a surmise that has, I venture to think,
- some foundation. I have two sisters. The elder one I have already spoken
- of to you."
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a slight note of sarcasm in the Inspector's voice as he replied,
- "Yes, Mrs. Masters, whose fortunate mistake was of such excellent service
- to you, during the time you were waiting for the real criminal's
- confession." Davis did not suffer himself to resent this. Of course, a man
- of the world like Bryant did not believe in this camouflaged story. Mrs.
- Masters was a clever young woman, and had taken advantage of an accidental
- resemblance to get her brother out of jeopardy.
- </p>
- <p>
- "My other sister, Iris Deane, is in the chorus of the Frivolity Theatre. I
- don't suppose you have ever heard of her?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Bryant shook his head. He knew a great deal about all classes of
- criminals, but young ladies in the chorus of the Frivolity, or any other
- theatre, were not in his line.
- </p>
- <p>
- "She was at Mrs. Masters's house last night. She came over especially to
- welcome me, on my reintroduction to the world which I was supposed to have
- quitted. She made to us a very startling confession, and that confession
- is intimately associated with the events at Cathcart Square."
- </p>
- <p>
- And this time, Bryant was genuinely surprised, and was at no pains to
- conceal it. Reginald Davis&mdash;he was beginning to believe in the man's
- identity now&mdash;was evidently a member of a very remarkable family.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You astound me, Mr. Davis. Yourself and both your sisters mixed up with
- what happened there! It sounds like a romance. Pray proceed!"
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis told the story as Iris had told him, carefully concealing the names
- of the two men concerned in it for the moment. He was careful to point out
- that on the night of the suicide she could establish a complete and
- unquestioned alibi.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant turned on him sharply. "It occurs to me that you don't think it was
- a suicide, Mr. Davis."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I don't, sir, and at present I can't quite tell you why."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But you must have some reason for thinking that," said Bryant in the same
- sharp tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- "My only reason is this&mdash;if the man who was buried under the name of
- Reginald Davis is the man I believe him to be, there was no earthly reason
- why he should commit suicide. To the best of my belief, he was murdered
- for some motive that I cannot guess, and the murderer, after cutting his
- throat, put the razor in his stiffening hand."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It is a theory worth thinking about," said Bryant, who was beginning to
- appreciate his visitor very much. "And now, Mr. Davis, the name of the man
- whom your sister met in the empty house?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have kept that to the last, to surprise you. You will know the name,
- but I don't suppose you ever came across the man. It was Major Hugh
- Murchison."
- </p>
- <p>
- At this startling announcement, the Inspector literally jumped from his
- chair.
- </p>
- <p>
- "But I do know Major Hugh Murchison," he cried. "He was in my office not
- so very long ago. Let me see, when was it?"
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned to his diary and verified the date, and gave it to Reginald
- Davis. It was longer back than he thought.
- </p>
- <p>
- "And you have not seen him since that day?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "No," answered the Inspector. "Wait a moment till I ring up my friend
- Parkinson. I couldn't undertake the job he called on, as it was quite a
- private matter. I handed it over to Parkinson."
- </p>
- <p>
- He rang up his old friend and former colleague. Davis could gather enough
- from the conversation on Bryant's side to be sure that a considerable
- interval had elapsed since Parkinson had seen his client.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant sat down in his chair. "Mr. Davis, I cannot say how much obliged I
- am to you for your visit, and the information you have given me. Now, I
- know a great deal more than you do about the proceedings and movements of
- Major Murchison, I know on what business he was engaged, in addition to
- that little matter of your sister's. I will go into the inquiries
- concerning yourself, and please hold yourself at my disposal, give me an
- address where I can communicate with you readily."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis did so, and said good-bye to the Inspector.
- </p>
- <p>
- After he had left, Bryant gave instructions he was not to be disturbed for
- an hour. And during that hour he did the hardest bit of thinking he had
- ever done in his life.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now that Davis had mentioned it, the man did bear a superficial
- resemblance to Hugh Murchison.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIII
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was a very hard
- nut he had to crack. Thanks to his peculiar position, he was in possession
- of reliable and exclusive information from more than one quarter. He held
- several threads in his capable hands, but would he be able to weave them
- into a net wide enough for his purpose?
- </p>
- <p>
- His recent interview with Davis had established the fact that four persons
- were connected with the mystery of Cathcart Square&mdash;Davis himself,
- Caroline Masters (the elder sister), Iris Deane (the younger sister), and,
- most important of all, Hugh Murchison.
- </p>
- <p>
- He dismissed, for the moment, the first three from his mind. But Hugh
- Murchison, with his resemblance to Reginald Davis, was the connecting link
- between them and another set of actors.
- </p>
- <p>
- Murchison had consulted him with the view of identifying Mrs. Spencer and
- George Dutton with the Norah and George Burton of those far-off days at
- Blankfield, and he had identified them as the same persons. He had then
- handed over the Major to the astute Parkinson, who would find out as much
- as he could with regard to the present relations between the precious
- pair.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant had been very busy of late, and he had almost dismissed the
- Murchison episode from his mind. But when the Major had completed his
- investigations he would undoubtedly take steps to turn such a scheming and
- unscrupulous adventuress out of her husband's house. As to the way in
- which he would proceed to accomplish that purpose, Bryant, of course, had
- no knowledge. Neither did he know which Murchison would approach first,
- the husband or the wife. Perhaps both together.
- </p>
- <p>
- One thing stood out pretty clearly, from the evidence of Iris Deane, that
- she had met Murchison alone at the house in Cathcart Square a few days
- before the discovery of the dead body.
- </p>
- <p>
- Another thing also stood out equally clearly, that the dead man bore a
- remarkable likeness to Reginald Davis. If not, Caroline Masters would not
- have dared to perjure herself as she had done. And he himself had
- recognised the superficial resemblance between the two men.
- </p>
- <p>
- Assuming that it was a murder, and not a suicide, and Bryant was beginning
- to incline, like Davis, to the former theory, why had the murderer fixed
- upon the name of Reginald Davis, and forged a letter to the Coroner? He
- must have been somebody who had known Davis at some time, and was
- acquainted with his handwriting. Like Caroline Masters, he must have been
- inclined to do the hunted fugitive a good turn, and have trusted to his
- gratitude to keep a silent tongue.
- </p>
- <p>
- An hour's steady thinking had cleared his brain. The conclusions he
- arrived at were as follows: Hugh Murchison had been murdered by somebody,
- and buried as a suicide under the name of Reginald Davis. The next
- question was who was the murderer, and what was the motive for committing
- the murder? Here he could make a pretty shrewd guess. If Murchison had
- gone about his mission in a straightforward, but rather blundering,
- fashion the motive was clear enough.
- </p>
- <p>
- With Bryant to think was to act. Davis was having a week's holiday in
- London, staying with his sister, Mrs. Masters. That same afternoon the
- young man was again in the Inspector's room, in response to an urgent
- summons on the telephone.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now, Mr. Davis, I have been thinking deeply over this rather complicated
- affair of Cathcart Square, and I am beginning to see a streak or two of
- daylight. I told you this morning I know a bit more about Major Murchison
- than you do, and there is just a chance you might help me. I take it you
- have had a somewhat adventurous career, your sister admitted as much at
- the inquest. She said in fact that you had been the black sheep of the
- family."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis hung his head in a shame-faced fashion. "I have to admit it, sir.
- It's no use attempting to deny it, when Carrie gave me away like that."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have no desire to pry into your past, except so far as it helps me in
- my present quest. But I expect, in your time, you have associated with a
- few undesirable characters." Reginald Davis admitted the fact quite
- frankly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now, of course, it is only just a chance. But did you ever come across a
- man named George Burton, and a young woman who passed as his sister? My
- first knowledge of them is that they ran a gambling saloon in Paris, she a
- good-looking girl, acting as decoy. Then he quitted the card-sharping game
- and went in for more criminal pursuits."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I did know them, sir. If I tell you what I do know, am I letting myself
- in for anything?" queried Mr. Davis cautiously. "You see, since that awful
- thing happened, I have turned over a new leaf. Nobody could tempt me to go
- the least bit on the crook."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Make your mind quite easy, Davis. We have nothing against you. You know
- that, or you would have hardly dared to come to life again."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, sir, I did know George Burton pretty intimately at one time, after
- he left Paris. He was in the forgery business and he tried to drag me in,
- but I was clever enough to keep out of it. They used, in his own set, to
- call him 'George the Penman.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Good," said Bryant; "and what did you know about the girl?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not very much, sir. She passed as his sister, but one or two of his pals
- believed her to be his wife, although there was no evidence of it."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Did you ever learn anything of her origin?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, one chap who seemed to know more about them than their other pals,
- told me that she was by way of being a lady, the illegitimate daughter of
- a man well-known in London Society."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Do you know the name of the man?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis tapped his forehead in the effort of recollection.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It's on the tip of my tongue, sir: it will come to me in a moment&mdash;a
- man who was mixed up in a gambling scandal, and had to leave the country.
- Ah, I have got it now, he was known familiarly as Tommie Esmond."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Bryant rose. He had got all he could out of his new acquaintance. The
- threads in his hand were drawing closer into a web.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, Mr. Davis, good-day. Many thanks for the information you have given
- me, it has been very helpful. I will keep in touch with you."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And you think, with me, it was a murder, and not a suicide?" questioned
- Davis as he left.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Bryant was not the man to express a decided opinion until he was fully
- justified by the facts. He kept his thoughts to himself till the last
- moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- He smiled pleasantly. "Time will show. I shall have that body exhumed, as
- soon as I have made a few further inquiries."
- </p>
- <p>
- Davis had to be content with this oracular utterance, and bowed himself
- out. He solaced himself by narrating all that had occurred to the
- wondering Carrie.
- </p>
- <p>
- The matter had now become one for the activities of Scotland Yard. The
- first thing to be done was to ascertain the whereabouts of Hugh Murchison,
- that is to say, if he was still in the land of the living. Some time had
- elapsed since he had communicated with Parkinson. Of course, in itself,
- there would be nothing strange in that. Parkinson had got the information
- that was required, been paid for it, and with that payment, their
- relations had ended.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant went to the hotel where the Major had stayed, at any rate up to the
- time that the detective had last seen him, and interviewed the manager,
- whom he had known for some years in his professional capacity. This
- person, a genial and cosmopolitan Italian, readily answered his questions.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, the Major had stayed there for some little time. When he came, he
- explained that he was only paying a flying visit to London. Had he brought
- a servant with him? No, he had not. A somewhat strange omission for a man
- in his position, was it not? The circumstance was easily explained. The
- Major had had to dismiss his late valet for theft, and was not in a hurry,
- for the present, to suit himself with a fresh one. This he had told the
- manager and he was valeted at the hotel.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had left some time. How long? The manager would find out the exact
- date. This he did. On the afternoon of the fourth of July.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major had taken his things down to Victoria Station in a cab with the
- view of depositing them there, as he was going to take an evening train to
- Brighton.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant brightened up at this information. The discovery of the dead body
- at Cathcart Square had taken place early on the morning of the fifth.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now arose the question, had the Major got through his business with the
- Spencers before the fourth of July? In that case Mrs. Spencer was hardly
- likely to be still living at Eaton Place with her husband.
- </p>
- <p>
- Inquiries at Eaton Place soon established the fact that Mrs. Spencer was
- still there. What had happened? Had the Major communicated the result of
- his research to the husband, with the result that, infatuated with his
- wife, that husband had refused to credit the story and accepted Stella's
- denials?
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a fairly plausible theory. When men are deeply in love, women can
- twist them round their little finger. In that case, it was easy to
- understand that, disgusted with the failure of his intervention, the Major
- had made up his mind to leave London at once.
- </p>
- <p>
- One other thing was to be done, to ascertain if the Major had intimated to
- any of his friends his intention of leaving London so abruptly. For this
- purpose, Bryant sought out the brother Roderick, who had rooms in Jermyn
- Street.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, Roderick had met the Major in Bond Street in the morning, and learned
- of the proposed journey to Brighton. The young man added that his brother
- was very erratic in his movements, and sometimes would disappear for weeks
- at a stretch without communicating with any of his friends or relatives.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was now one of two theories that stood out: the first one that Guy
- Spencer had been told, and refused to believe the true facts about his
- wife. The second was, that the Major had shirked the unpleasantness of a
- personal interview of such a delicate character, and had gone down to
- Brighton intending to write privately to Spencer from there.
- </p>
- <p>
- Further inquiries elicited the fact that the Major had never made that
- projected journey to Brighton. His belongings had never been claimed, they
- were still lying in the cloak room at Victoria Station.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was now no further doubt as to what steps had to be taken. The Major
- had disappeared at a date practically coinciding with the discovery of the
- dead body at Cathcart Square, the dead body which had been wrongly
- identified as that of Reginald Davis, whose likeness to the Major was so
- pronounced. Of that fact, Bryant himself was aware.
- </p>
- <p>
- The authorities were applied to, and gave permission for the body to be
- exhumed. As the living Reginald Davis had established his identity to the
- satisfaction of Scotland Yard, it was necessary to find out, if possible,
- that of the man who had been mistaken for him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The body was exhumed and pronounced by half-a-dozen people, including Guy
- Spencer, to be that of the Major.
- </p>
- <p>
- It had now become clearly a case of murder, and although those in charge
- of the case had little or no doubt as to the guilty persons, it might have
- been very difficult to prove, but for one convincing fact, supplied by the
- murdered man himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- But this evidence, which was overwhelming, the police kept to themselves
- for some little time, for their own good reasons.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he luggage which
- had been left at Victoria Station on the fatal day was, of course, seized
- by the police. They searched it thoroughly in the hope that they would
- find something useful to them in the shape of letters or memoranda.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of letters there were only two, brief ones from Iris Deane, in which she
- expressed her determination of sticking out for her ten thousand pounds.
- As we know, in the end she gave way and accepted seven.
- </p>
- <p>
- But they did find one priceless thing, and that was a diary, bound in red
- leather, a small volume as to the size of the page, but very bulky. It had
- evidently been the dead man's habit to keep a fairly close record of his
- doings, for it was numbered, and contained entries from some date in May
- 1919 up to July 3rd, the day before he left the hotel, and announced to
- the manager that he intended to take a late train to Brighton.
- </p>
- <p>
- For the twentieth time since he had discovered this important piece of
- evidence, Mr. Bryant sat in his room at Scotland Yard, reading and
- re-reading the entries which he knew almost by heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the entries, before the visit to London, Bryant had no concern. They
- recorded trifling events which had no reference to the tragedy at Cathcart
- Square. There was, of course, allusion to the letter from Roderick which
- had so startled his family, the letter announcing his engagement to the
- chorus girl, Iris Deane, and his fixed resolve to make her his wife. There
- was a note of a family council, in which the elder brother was deputed to
- approach the young woman herself, with the object of buying her off.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were a few records of his first days in London, after a long
- absence, his visits to his clubs, his meeting with old pre-war
- acquaintances, his first interview with Iris Deane, the difficulty of
- arranging further interviews either at his hotel or her flat, owing to the
- fear of Roddie popping in unexpectedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then came the whimsical record of his strolling round Kensington, halting
- opposite the house with the board announcing that it was to be let
- furnished, his interview with the accommodating caretaker who, in return
- for a very handsome <i>douceur</i>, gave him a duplicate key to enter the
- house at any time he liked. He had casually mentioned to Miles that his
- name was Sanderson.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Major seemed childishly pleased over what he considered a very astute
- move, especially the giving of another name. Here in this quiet backwater
- of the world, for so it would seem to a man of his wealth and position, he
- could continue his negotiations with the somewhat obstinate Iris. In the
- portion of the diary concerned with the grasping and frivolous young
- chorus-girl, Bryant was not greatly interested. He had learned this
- already from Iris Deane, whom he had interviewed a few times, and Reginald
- Davis.
- </p>
- <p>
- He turned from the bulky little volume, the pages of which were covered
- with the Major's small, rather methodical handwriting, to a slenderer book
- lying beside him. Into this had been copied all the extracts bearing on
- the relations between the dead man and Mrs. Spencer, otherwise Stella
- Keane, otherwise Norah Burton.
- </p>
- <p>
- The first entry recorded the dinner-party at Carlton House Terrace, when
- he had been struck by the remarkable likeness of his friend's wife to the
- pretty adventuress at Blankfield, who had driven his old friend, Jack
- Pomfret, to his death; his endeavours to startle her by allusions to that
- garrison town.
- </p>
- <p>
- An important entry was that of his interview with his old acquaintance at
- the club, Gilbert Fairfax, from whom he had learned something of the
- atmosphere of the L'Estrange flat in Elsinore Gardens, the branding of
- Tommie Esmond as a card-sharper, the flight of the fat little man to the
- Continent, the visit of Stella Keane to Charing Cross Station to bid the
- detected cheat farewell. There was a comment upon this fact: "Whether she
- is Norah Burton or not, her intimacy with the L'Estrange set, her
- solicitude for Tommie Esmond, are sufficient to make her unfit to be the
- wife of a straight, honest fellow like my old friend Guy Spencer."
- </p>
- <p>
- There followed further entries, relating his interview with Bryant, the
- confirmation by the detective that Stella Keane was Norah Burton, that
- George Dutton, the keeper of the obscure little bucket-shop in the City,
- was the same George Burton who had been arrested at Blank-field on a
- charge of forgery, and who, thanks to one of the cleverest advocates at
- the criminal bar, had got off with a very light sentence.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a full record of the long interview with Mrs. Spencer, in which
- she had been finally confounded, and forced to confession, of her
- acceptance of his terms, of the words she had uttered when, while rather
- regretting that things could not go on as they were, lamenting the fact
- that her accuser had ever been born, she was not at all satisfied with her
- present environment, and would experience a certain measure of relief in
- quitting it for a more congenial sphere.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the day he had parted from her, the day on which she had yielded to his
- inflexible determination that she must remain under her husband's roof as
- short a time as possible, he recorded the fact that, up to the present
- moment, he had not made up his mind as to the precise way in which he was
- going to bring about the separation. He wanted to choose the way which
- would least hurt Guy.
- </p>
- <p>
- There had flashed through his mind that, in addition to the confession she
- was about to make to him of her whole career, she should confess to her
- husband that she was not legally his wife, being in reality the wife of
- George Burton, alias George Dutton. There followed here a note. "I am
- convinced she and this rascal were married, the sister and cousin dodges
- were always a fake. I must see Parkinson to find out if he can ferret out
- anything on that point. But the time is short. In a week I must be ready
- for action."
- </p>
- <p>
- A further entry showed that he had called on Parkinson with this object,
- only to learn that the detective had gone on an important mission abroad,
- and could undertake no further work till his return, which would be some
- ten days hence. That idea therefore had to be dismissed. He must think out
- some other plan.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then came the last and most important entry of all, dated on the fourth of
- July, written no doubt a few hours before he took his luggage to Victoria
- Station.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I meet Norah Burton, I always think of her by that old name, at Cathcart
- Square at six o'clock to-night. I have given the caretaker a holiday to
- keep him out of the way. I have drawn up two copies of the confession, one
- of which she is to sign. I have also drawn up an undertaking on my part to
- keep her from want in case Guy should prove obdurate. But this I am sure
- he will not do. Besides, if she is his wife, and thinking it over, I have
- my doubts as to whether she was ever really married to Burton, he would
- have to support her, in spite of her unsavoury associations."
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant paused for a moment as he finished this paragraph to reflect a
- little. Personally, he did not believe that she was the wife of George
- Burton; in his opinion, their association had been the result of mutual
- interests. With this knowledge hanging over her head, she would hardly
- have been daring enough to go through the ceremony of marriage with two
- other men. Anyway, it was a debatable point.
- </p>
- <p>
- Moreover, Burton, like most criminals, would be very wide awake and
- calculating. To marry her would be to handicap himself. He could get more
- out of her by marrying her to a rich man.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then came the last paragraph of all.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now, for my action after the final interview of to-night, when she has
- signed the confession. I may do one of two things, forbid her to return to
- her husband's house, and go myself straight to Eaton Place, and break the
- news to Spencer without any preamble. In that case, I shall take with me
- some ready money to hand to her, as she will probably have very little
- upon her.
- </p>
- <p>
- "And yet I rather shrink from this course; it would be painful for me to
- watch his agony while I struck such a terrible blow. I will run down to
- Brighton, drop him a note telling him that an important letter will reach
- him at his club by registered post to-morrow, that he is on no account to
- let his wife know he has heard from me till he has read the contents of
- that registered packet.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I shall post him the copy of the confession, telling him he can inspect
- the original at any time he likes, meeting me either in Brighton or
- London, leaving him to deal with her as he chooses. After all, his is the
- right to dispose of his private affairs, my duty really ends when I have
- put him in possession of the facts. My first method must have the effect
- of creating open scandal at once, by my insisting upon her not returning
- to Eaton Place.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He may wish to devise some plan that will create a scandal less open, to
- save, as far as he can, the disgrace to himself and his family. If I know
- the man, and here, perhaps, I am arguing from the knowledge only of my own
- temperament, I should say his love would turn to hatred after he reads
- that confession. Jack Pomfret was a weaker man than Guy, but he acted as I
- should have done under the circumstances, and refused all further
- communication with her, refused to give her the opportunity of denial or
- explanation.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Still, there is no knowing to what lengths a deep-rooted infatuation for
- a fascinating woman will lead a man. In this respect, Guy may be less
- adamant than Pomfret, although I am sure he will never imitate poor Jack's
- final weakness. He is too sturdily built for that.
- </p>
- <p>
- "When confronted with that confession she may plead artfully, and, perhaps
- to him, convincingly, that while she admits everything contained in it,
- she was more sinned against than sinning, that she tried to escape from
- her odious bondage by marrying Jack, and that with his suicide and the
- frustration of her hopes, she was compelled to return to an environment
- which she loathed. He might consent to believe and forgive, although to me
- such a thing seems incredible, impossible."
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant closed the book on the last entry. That little red-leather volume
- threw a lurid light on the mystery of Cathcart Square. The exhumed body
- was found to be that of Major Murchison, wrongly identified in the first
- instance as that of Reginald Davis. It was all very clear.
- </p>
- <p>
- That meeting had taken place, and the unfortunate man had been done to
- death by the precious pair, Norah Burton and the scoundrel brother, cousin
- or life-long lover, whichever he was. Reginald Davis was an old
- acquaintance of theirs, had been possibly a more intimate one than the
- cautious Davis was prepared to admit. They took with them letters
- addressed to their old friend, they forged a letter from him intimating
- his intention to commit suicide.
- </p>
- <p>
- If Davis read of all this in the papers, he was too concerned with his own
- danger to emerge from his hiding-place and publish the truth to the world.
- He would be thankful that, through the villainy of others, he could take a
- new lease of life, unmenaced by detection. Of course, they had never
- thought of the possibility that Davis would be cleared by the confession
- of the real criminal. Like Scotland Yard, they were sure he was guilty,
- and his silence was a matter of certainty.
- </p>
- <p>
- And slowly Bryant, drawing from the stores of his vast experience, began
- to construct in his own mind the details of the murder, executed by two
- desperate criminals, almost driven to the verge of madness by the
- knowledge that their carefully-laid plans were about to be frustrated by
- the action of one man.
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman, the weaker of the two, was probably more disposed to yield to
- the force and strength of circumstances. Once before, in her marriage to
- Jack Pomfret, she had had the cup snatched from her lips, and bowed to the
- inevitable. From the few words recorded in the Major's accusing diary, it
- would seem that, secured of a modest competence, she was ready a second
- time to accept her fate.
- </p>
- <p>
- And then, in that week's interval, it was easy to guess what had happened.
- She had consulted her old partner in crime, George Burton. He had
- reasoned, as it turned out, a little shallowly, remove Murchison, and the
- danger will be past. The resemblance of Murchison to Reginald Davis had
- occurred to the pair, hence the cunningly prepared letters.
- </p>
- <p>
- And how was the actual murder accomplished? Had they gone to Cathcart
- Square together, or had Burton followed her, getting in by means of that
- broken window-pane at the back? And did they know the Major was alone? In
- that last interview with Mrs. Spencer, had he let out the fact that he had
- given the caretaker a holiday, so that they should not be disturbed?
- </p>
- <p>
- These were side problems that could not be solved at the moment. Only two
- persons could solve them, and those two, in all probability, would never
- speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- But how had they killed him? The Major was a strong, muscular fellow who
- would fight tenaciously for his life. Norah Burton was a slender woman,
- almost verging on frailness, George Dutton, to call him by his latest
- name, was certainly of a muscular build, although of only average height.
- </p>
- <p>
- Well, of course, they had foreseen and prepared for all that. while
- talking to him, she had sprayed over him the essence of some overpowering
- and stupefying drug, and while he was staggering about, dazed and blinded,
- the man had stepped in and done the rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- Owing to the absence of the caretaker, they had plenty of time. They had
- rifled his pockets, taking out of them the money which, according to his
- diary, he had brought along with him, his personal belongings, the ticket
- which he had received at the luggage room of Victoria Station, and, of
- course, the confession which Norah Burton had or had not signed. No doubt,
- they had also examined his linen and underclothing to make sure that his
- name was not on them. If it had been, they would have dealt with it by
- stripping the body.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had carried it out pretty well, on the whole. There were two things
- they had not reckoned on. One was the resuscitation of Reginald Davis. The
- other was the fact that Murchison kept a diary, one of the last things
- that a man of his sort was likely to do.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant, although not a very emotional man, felt very depressed as he came
- to the result of his meditations. He felt sure that, if Norah Burton could
- have had her own way, she would have accepted her fate, gone forth on the
- world again with the slender pittance that either of the two men, her
- husband or his friend, would have allowed her.
- </p>
- <p>
- She had suffered herself to be dominated by a more reckless and criminal
- spirit, with the result that the life of an honourable man had been taken,
- and she was already standing at the foot of the gallows.
- </p>
- <p>
- The pair, only knowing that the body had been exhumed and proved to be
- that of Hugh Murchison&mdash;a terribly disturbing thought to them&mdash;but
- ignorant of the discovery of that incriminating diary, were being closely
- watched. But they felt sure that nothing could be traced to them, they had
- hidden their tracks so cleverly, as they thought.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was now only a question of a few hours as to when they should be taken.
- And Bryant felt that Guy Spencer should know the truth before anybody
- else. Poor fellow! He would soften the blow to him as much as he could.
- </p>
- <p>
- That same evening he went round to Eaton Place, about seven o'clock. He
- reckoned that he would catch Spencer before he went up to dress for
- dinner. "Poor devil," thought Bryant, "he won't have much appetite for
- dinner after he has read through that diary!"
- </p>
- <p>
- Spencer was in the library, and the detective, whom he had met before in
- connection with the mystery of Cathcart Square, was shown in. Spencer
- welcomed him with his usual cordiality.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Good-evening, Mr. Bryant. Any fresh light upon this terrible thing?"
- </p>
- <p>
- The footman had left the library door slightly open, after showing Bryant
- in, and had retired swiftly to his quarters.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was hardly out of the hall when Stella opened the front-door with her
- key, and glided noiselessly in. All her movements were noiseless,
- suggesting, as somebody had once remarked of her, the silent motions of a
- snake. She always carried a key, declaring that she could not be kept
- waiting for servants to answer the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- The library door was open, through the aperture she heard voices, and one
- of them she recognised. It was that of the Scotland Yard detective, who
- had cross-examined her very closely as to her various meetings with the
- dead man. She had been afraid of Bryant. He had looked at her so
- searchingly, and his manner always conveyed that he knew so much more than
- he was prepared to disclose.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bryant was speaking in a low, but very clear voice. Her hearing was
- singularly acute, and she could catch every word.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am come on a very painful errand, Mr. Spencer. There is a small volume
- here which throws a very clear light on what happened at Cathcart Square
- on that fatal evening of July the fourth."
- </p>
- <p>
- Guy's cheerful accents rang out. "You mean you have got a clue, Mr.
- Bryant. But why painful to me? If you are on the track of the murderer of
- my poor old friend, nobody will be more rejoiced than I."
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the low, grave tones of Bryant:
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Spencer, you will be a very stricken man when you have read through
- it. Your poor friend left behind him a very copious diary, made up to the
- morning of the day on which he was murdered. The original is at my office,
- you can inspect it at any time you like. This is a copy of the entries
- relating to Cathcart Square. It touches your domestic life very closely,
- in addition to proving why and by whom he was murdered."
- </p>
- <p>
- Stella waited to hear no more. Her face had gone livid, she felt shaking
- in every limb. That her old enemy, Murchison, had left a diary! They had
- never thought of that possibility. The game was up. She had staked
- something on her marriage as Norah Burton with Jack Pomfret, and had lost.
- This time she had staked everything and lost again, but now she had lost
- liberty and life in addition. There was but one end. She must seek at once
- the man who had, in a way, been a good and faithful friend, but also her
- evil genius.
- </p>
- <p>
- She stole as quietly out of the hall as she had entered it, and hailed a
- passing taxi. She knew she would never enter the house at Eaton Place
- again.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>rs. Spencer had
- plenty of money in her pocket. She was always accustomed to carry a large
- sum about her. Her adventurous life had taught her that it was always
- wiser to have a good amount of cash in her possession. The time might come
- at any moment when you were in a tight corner. She had promised a handsome
- reward to the taxi-cab driver if he could get to a certain destination
- within the speed limit.
- </p>
- <p>
- That destination was Kew Bridge, where it abuts on a little-known
- neighbourhood called Strand-on-the-Green.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the foot of Kew Bridge, the wretched and hunted woman halted, and paid
- the driver his extravagant fare. What did it matter what she paid
- to-night? To-morrow she might not be able to pay. She shuddered as she
- thought of that to-morrow.
- </p>
- <p>
- The taxi-driver drove slowly out of sight. She waited, from a sense of
- habitual caution, till he was well out of the way. And then, remembering
- everything, she smiled bitterly. Was there any need of caution now?
- </p>
- <p>
- She went down a narrow lane, halted at the door of a small cottage, and
- rang the front-door bell. As she did so, she was aware of a man a few
- yards away from her, who seemed to be strolling aimlessly about, a man
- dressed in ill-fitting clothes, and heavy boots.
- </p>
- <p>
- A detective certainly! This man had followed her from Eaton Place in a
- taxi almost as swift as her own. Bryant knew his business, he was not
- going to lose sight of her, or of her reputed cousin, George Dutton.
- </p>
- <p>
- The door was opened cautiously by George Dutton, alias George Burton.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a small furnished cottage that he had rented for some months past,
- at a rent commensurate with his means. He kept no servant; a feeble old
- woman came in the morning to clean him up and prepare his breakfast. When
- he came back at night from the not very prosperous bucket-shop, he looked
- after himself, and cooked over a gas-stove his evening meal.
- </p>
- <p>
- The evenings were drawing in, and it was rather a dark night. He peered
- for a moment at his visitor, before he recognised her.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Stella, by all that is wonderful." He called her by the new name, not the
- old one of Norah. "Come in, dear, but your arrival in this unexpected
- fashion does not suggest good news."
- </p>
- <p>
- She passed hastily through the open doorway. "Shut it quick," she said, in
- a low, hoarse voice. "There is a man watching outside, I am sure he is a
- detective."
- </p>
- <p>
- As a matter of fact, there were two detectives within a few feet of each
- other, but in her agitation she had not observed the second man, who was
- deputed to keep watch on the movements of Mr. George Dutton.
- </p>
- <p>
- George Dutton was an old hand, and not to be lightly disturbed by small
- incidents. But he recognised the significance of this visit. His ruddy
- colour died away.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You have bad news," he said quietly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The worst, George. Bryant, the detective, paid a visit to Guy this
- evening. I came in just in the nick of time. The library door was ajar, I
- heard what Bryant said. The Major has left a diary behind him, and, of
- course, he had put it all down, up to the arranged meeting in Cathcart
- Square. The game is up, you will recognise that."
- </p>
- <p>
- Dutton's mentality was a little bit slower than her own. "Did you hear any
- extracts read from the diary?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "What a fool you are!" she cried indignantly. "Why should I wait to hear?
- If the man kept a diary, is it not easy to guess that he would have
- related every incident connected with me, from our first meeting at the
- Southleigh dinner-party? Bryant is watching me, there is a detective
- waiting outside. No doubt he is watching you, too. He is just waiting to
- pounce."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Then why has he gone to your husband?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, you are too dense for worlds. Just to soften the blow. Can't you
- understand that he wants to warn him beforehand of the shame that is going
- to fall upon him, the discovery that his wife is a murderess?"
- </p>
- <p>
- And then Mr. Dutton understood. He stretched out appealing arms to her.
- "My poor little girl, my ever faithful pal! And I have brought you to
- this!"
- </p>
- <p>
- "You have brought me to this," she said bitterly. "Did I not implore you
- upon my knees to accept the Major's terms, and you were so obstinate, so
- set. You would insist upon the other way because it seemed better to you.
- And I, fool that I was, always yielding to your sinister influence, gave
- way as I always have done."
- </p>
- <p>
- Scoundrel and criminal as he was, hardened by years of evil-doing, the
- man's self-control gave way at that accusation. He drew her to him, and,
- strange to say, she did not shrink from his embrace..
- </p>
- <p>
- "My poor Stella, I have tried to do my best for you always, even
- sacrificed myself. But the end has come."
- </p>
- <p>
- He recognised that, as she did.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes," she said stoically, "as you say, the end has come. You have always
- been very adept in falling into holes, and then digging yourself out
- again. How are you going to dig yourself and me out of this hole, in the
- face of that incriminating diary?"
- </p>
- <p>
- Dutton walked up and down, his face working, his hands and his body
- trembling. He was up against the gravest problem of his adventurous
- career. The shadow of the prison had always hovered over him, but now
- there was a more ghastly menace, the shadow of the gallows. From the
- prison, he could return. There was no return from the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- He paused in his restless pacing, and came to a halt before the stricken
- woman. He had recovered himself to a certain extent. He had gambled and
- lost, he was prepared to accept the fate of the unsuccessful gambler.
- </p>
- <p>
- "You are brave, old girl?" he asked briefly.
- </p>
- <p>
- She looked up at him with a wan smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, I think I am brave. I can guess what you are about to suggest, with
- the detectives watching us outside." She burst into a little sob. "Oh, you
- always thought you were so clever, and yet, if I had had the management of
- affairs, things might have been so different."
- </p>
- <p>
- He spoke humbly. "I think you are right, Norah. I was always full of
- arrogance and self-conceit. You were weaker in character than I was, but
- you had always more brains. And I was a blind fool not to admit it. Many a
- time you gave me your advice, and I rejected it."
- </p>
- <p>
- "And what do you suggest now?" she asked, in a voice that had sunk to a
- whisper.
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked at her steadily. He had screwed up his courage to the sticking
- point. Could he count upon an equal fortitude in her?
- </p>
- <p>
- "It is the finish, old girl. You say the detectives are waiting outside.
- Bryant has got a good case, and the diary will hang us. There is no
- getting over that."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You propose&mdash;&mdash;" she said falteringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- He spoke quite steadily. The end had come, he had made up his mind, so far
- as regards himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- "We neither of us want to hang for the murder of Hugh Murchison?"
- </p>
- <p>
- She shuddered, and hid her face with her hands. "Oh, that awful evening!
- It has been like a nightmare ever since."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know," said Dutton soothingly. "It was one of my fatal mistakes. But it
- is no use crying over spilt milk. To-night we are face to face with facts.
- We have gambled, and we have lost, and we have got to pay the penalty."
- </p>
- <p>
- The wretched woman rose up, and wrung her hands. "And to think I might
- have been the Countess of Southleigh."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know; don't think I am not reckoning up all that," replied Dutton. "But
- we have got to deal with facts to-night, with the detectives waiting
- outside. The game is up, you know that as well as I do. We have only a few
- hours before us, perhaps a few minutes, in which to make the choice."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know," she answered. "You mean our only alternative is to cheat the
- law."
- </p>
- <p>
- He looked at her steadily. "That is the only way. If we suffer ourselves
- to be taken, we have not got a dog's chance."
- </p>
- <p>
- Weak woman as she was, she gathered something of his iron resolution. Yes,
- they must die and die together, to cheat the law. Such was to be the end
- of the brilliant adventuress who had inveigled two men into marriage, Jack
- Pomfret and Guy Spencer, with her subtle and elusive charm.
- </p>
- <p>
- "And what do you suggest, George? You have thought of these things more
- than I have."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have always thought of them," said Dutton gloomily. "Well, there are
- various ways I can suggest to you. I can shoot you first, and myself
- afterwards."
- </p>
- <p>
- She shuddered. "Some other way than that."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I can give you some tabloids."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Is there any pain?" she queried.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Hardly any."
- </p>
- <p>
- She shuddered again. "Hardly any. That does not sound very convincing."
- </p>
- <p>
- He proposed a third alternative. "You can come up to my room, and lie on
- the bed. I will paper up all the doors and cracks and turn up the gas. You
- will simply go to sleep and never wake."
- </p>
- <p>
- "That is the best," she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- "If we had plenty of time. But they may take us in a few minutes. Bryant
- has seen your husband, he will not wait long after that interview."
- </p>
- <p>
- "The tabloids, then," she said firmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yes, it had come to this, she must cheat the law. Twice, she had had her
- chance, once as the wife of Jack Pomfret, again as the wife of Guy
- Spencer. And twice had the cup of triumph been snatched from her lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- She must die, like a rat in a hole, in this obscure little cottage at
- Strand-on-the-Green, in the company of the man who had always been her
- evil genius.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dutton went across to a small cupboard built in the wall of the shabby
- parlour, and brought out a little bottle filled with capsules. He
- extracted one and handed it to the shrinking woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Take yours first, dear, I will take mine after." There was a look of
- infinite compassion in the scoundrel's face as he offered it to her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bravely she took it, and swallowed it with a great gulp, sitting in the
- shabby easy-chair. The effect was almost instantaneous, and when Dutton
- had made sure that she was beyond human aid, he took a similar tabloid
- himself, with the same result.
- </p>
- <p>
- An hour later there was a thundering knock at the door of the cottage. One
- of the detectives had gone to a telephone office and informed Bryant that
- the woman had come to Strand-on-the-Green, and was with Dutton. The order
- came back from Bryant, who had only stayed a few minutes at Eaton Place,
- that the pair were to be arrested at once.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course there was no response. After waiting for a few moments, the men
- broke in the frail door. But they were too late.
- </p>
- <p>
- Norah Burton, and the man who had been so long associated with her&mdash;brother,
- cousin, lover, whatever he might be&mdash;had gone to their judgment.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a nine-days' wonder, and while his friends and acquaintances were
- still discussing it at clubs and over tea-tables, Guy Spencer slipped
- quietly abroad. When he returned to England, at the end of twelve months,
- these tragic happenings had become little more than a memory to his world.
- </p>
- <p>
- He stayed a week with the Southleighs at their ancestral home in Sussex,
- and at the end of that week their friends read an important announcement
- in <i>The Morning Post</i>:
- </p>
- <p>
- "A marriage has been arranged and will shortly take place between Mr. Guy
- Spencer and his cousin, Lady Nina, only daughter and child of the Earl of
- Southleigh."
- </p>
- <h3>
- THE END
- </h3>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
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-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of This House To Let, by William Le Queux
-
-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
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: This House To Let
-
-Author: William Le Queux
-
-Release Date: February 24, 2016 [EBook #51307]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THIS HOUSE TO LET ***
-
-
-
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-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
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-
-
-THIS HOUSE TO LET
-
-By William Le Queux
-
-Hodder And Stoughton Limited
-
-London
-
-1921
-
-
-
-
-PROLOGUE
-
-
-|Very early on a July morning in 1919 Constable Brown was on his beat in
-Kensington, in the immediate neighbourhood of Cathcart Square.
-
-Cathcart Square was an old-fashioned backwater of this highly
-respectable suburb. It had not been built on any regular lines. Small,
-narrow houses nestled comfortably by the side of what might be called
-mansions. At the entrance to the Square itself, a narrow-fronted
-milk-shop stood next door to a palatial residence. The dairy was very
-old, and the Square, with its strange agglomeration of houses, had been
-built round it.
-
-Constable Brown, a tall, strapping young fellow, took his duties easily.
-He was quite contented with his lot, and not thirsting for promotion; he
-had no overweening sense of his own abilities. He was friendly with all
-the cooks on his beat, and from them he received very choice tit-bits.
-In his case, the policeman's lot was a fairly happy one.
-
-The morning was a very bright one, a somewhat powerful summer sun had
-just risen, and flooded the streets with light.
-
-He had no need of his lantern, early in the morning as it was. He
-strolled slowly round the Square, turning observant eyes on an the
-houses. In his patrol, he met nobody. The busy world of commerce was not
-yet astir. Only from afar he heard the distant rumbling of market-carts
-on their way to Covent Garden, market-carts laden with fruit and
-vegetables.
-
-The Square was sleeping. In a few more hours it would wake to vigorous
-life. The dairy shop would take down its shutters, and show signs of
-animation. And when the dairy shop took down its shutters, Constable
-Brown would be relieved, and go home to enjoy his well-earned rest.
-
-All was quiet in the Square. Brown had patrolled it several times in his
-nightly vigil, and had discovered no signs of marauders.
-
-He paused opposite No. 10, one of the few big houses. He looked
-contemplatively at the board announcing in large type--THIS HOUSE TO
-LET: FURNISHED-with the agent's name displayed prominently at the foot
-of the bill.
-
-"Only house to let in the Square," ruminated Brown, as he stood reading
-the bill for perhaps the hundredth time. "It's been empty now for over
-three months. It ought to have been snapped up long ago."
-
-He was right. Houses in Cathcart Square did not wait long for tenants.
-Mr. Brown ruminated further, and provided his own solution.
-
-"Old Miles, the caretaker, has got too comfortable quarters, he doesn't
-want to flit. When people come to view, he talks to them about damp, or
-ghosts or beetles, and chokes them off. Artful old devil, Miles, and a
-bit too fond of drink."
-
-Having finished his patrol of the Square itself, he passed along the
-backs, abutting on a somewhat mean street, for a rather undesirable
-neighbourhood had built itself around these somewhat stately houses.
-
-His perambulations brought him to the back of No. 10, the house to let.
-His trained eye, accustomed to take in the smallest details, noticed
-a broken pane of glass in the scullery window. He climbed over the low
-railing which shut off the back premises from the mean street on which
-they looked, and peered at the broken window-pane. From a general point
-of view there was not much in it. Window-panes are broken every day. But
-this was an empty house, looked after by a somewhat bibulous caretaker
-of the name of Miles. A hundred chances to one that Miles had stumbled
-against it, and broken it with his elbow.
-
-But although Constable Brown was not very brilliant, he was painstaking
-and methodical; his mind was slow but tenacious. He did not accept facts
-at their face value.
-
-After peering through the broken pane, he proceeded to further
-experiments. He lifted the window, and it went up easily. He drew his
-deductions swiftly. Somebody had entered the empty house. That somebody
-had smashed the pane in order to get at the latch, had entered the
-house, later emerged through the window and forgotten to fasten it.
-
-But why enter an empty house, where there was nothing to steal except
-the heavy furniture left by the late tenant, a Mr. Washington, who was
-abroad? Brown knew for a fact from the caretaker that all silver and
-plate had been lodged at Mr. Washington's bank. It was a puzzle.
-
-One thing was clear: his duty lay straight before him. He must go
-over that empty house. A careful examination might reveal something or
-nothing.
-
-But he was a very cautious man, and with no great belief in his own
-powers. He would not make the examination alone. He blew his whistle for
-further assistance.
-
-In a few seconds, a fellow constable, a smart young fellow, hurried up
-to him. Brown pointed to the broken pane, the uplifted window. The smart
-young man projected himself through the open space. Brown followed,
-explaining as he went.
-
-They searched the basement, the ground floor, and the floor above--with
-no result.
-
-"Now for the caretaker," said the younger and the more quick-witted of
-the two policemen.
-
-"He sleeps up at the top," answered Brown. "He generally comes home
-half-seas over. If a regiment was hammering at the door he would not
-wake till his sleep was done."
-
-They went up to the caretaker's room on the top floor. The bed was
-empty. Miles had evidently taken a holiday.
-
-The young constable grunted. "Seems a reliable sort of chap, doesn't he?
-I wonder how long he has been away? The house agents can tell us if
-they have sent any clients to view the house during the last twenty-four
-hours, and whether they have been able to get in or not. Anyway, for the
-present, he seems out of this job."
-
-Brown assented. He did not talk as much as his quicker-witted colleague,
-but his rather slow mind was working at its normal speed.
-
-"We've got to examine the other floors, you know. I've made up my mind
-to one thing--whoever came in here, robbery wasn't the object."
-
-"There I quite agree," remarked the younger man.
-
-They made their way down from the top floor, which consisted of three
-attics. On the floor beneath this, they searched every room and found
-nothing.
-
-But on the floor underneath their search was rewarded. In a small
-dressing-room, leading off the bedroom which fronted the square, they
-found a gruesome sight--the lifeless body of a man, comparatively young,
-somewhere about thirty-five or so, a deep gash in his throat, in his
-stiffened hand a razor.
-
-The two men gazed, horrified. It was an early summer morning, the sun
-was shining through the windows, the birds were twittering in the trees.
-Shortly the whole world would be astir. And here, in the small room, lay
-the senseless clay, oblivious of all these signs of awakening life and
-vigour.
-
-Brown was the first to speak. "Suicide!" he said hoarsely. "The poor
-devil wanted to make an end of it, and crept in here, knowing it was an
-empty house."
-
-The younger man spoke less convincingly. "It looks like it. Suicide,
-as you say." He paused a moment, and then spoke slowly: "I think
-it's suicide, but it might be--mind you, I only say might be--a very
-carefully planned murder. And now, let us overhaul his pockets, we may
-find something to establish identification."
-
-Together they bent down, and rummaged the dead man's pockets. They found
-plenty of material for identification.
-
-As they were engaged in their gruesome task, they heard the sound of a
-latch-key being put in the front-door. They heard the door banged to,
-and heavy footsteps ascended the staircase.
-
-"Miles come back after his spree," whispered Constable Brown to the
-younger man.
-
-Miles, all unsuspecting of what had taken place during his absence, came
-heavily up the stairs. It could not be said that he was by any means
-drunk, but he was not absolutely sober. He was slowly recovering from
-the previous night's debauch.
-
-Arrived on the floor where the two policemen were conducting their
-investigations, absolute sobriety came back to him. He saw the open
-door of the dressing-room, two men in uniform kneeling by the side of an
-inanimate object. His brain cleared as if by magic. He recognised in one
-of the kneeling constables his old friend Brown.
-
-He indulged in a little profanity, born of his emotion, which need not
-be set down here. Shorn of certain expletives, natural to a man of his
-class, he inquired of Brown what was the matter.
-
-Brown on his side was cool and explicit, and instead of answering the
-caretaker's questions, he preferred to put a few of his own.
-
-"Nice sort of caretaker you are," he said in a contemptuous voice.
-"You're paid to look after this house, aren't you? Where were you
-all last night I should like to know? You can see what has happened.
-Somebody has got in through the back, either to commit suicide, or with
-a companion who brought him here to murder him. That's got to be found
-out before the Coroner."
-
-Miles pulled himself together. He was by no means a fool when sober, and
-in sight of this ghastly object the fumes of last night's intoxication
-had absolutely cleared.
-
-"I can show an alibi right enough," he said doggedly.
-
-The younger and readier-witted of the two constables looked up and spoke
-sharply. "So far, my friend, we have not accused you, but you may as
-well tell us the details of your alibi."
-
-Miles's explanation, delivered in the somewhat halting way of his class,
-bore the ring of truth. An old acquaintance of his, whose name and
-address he gave, had looked him up the day before and asked him to spend
-a day with him at Shepperton, where the said acquaintance kept a small
-shop. Miles had succumbed to the temptation. .
-
-"It drives a man fair off his blooming chump to be tied by the leg in a
-hole like this," he interpolated in the midst of his narrative, "waiting
-for would-be tenants who never call. I daresay you chaps do your eight
-or ten hours a day, but you're out in the open air, not looking on four
-walls. You see a bit of life, I don't."
-
-Constable Brown cut across his narrative swiftly.
-
-"Never mind your grievances, Miles. If you could get a better job, I
-guess you would take it. Where did you spend the night?"
-
-"At the same old show, down at Shepperton," replied the unabashed Miles.
-"My old pal's a sport, I can tell you. When he shut up his shop, he plied
-me with some of the best. I wasn't backward, I admit. I missed the
-last train back, and slept on the sofa in the back room. When I woke, I
-remembered things a bit, and got an early train home. Here I am. My old
-pal Jack will tell you I'm speaking gospel truth."
-
-Neither of the two men listening to him had any doubt that his narrative
-was a true one. He was a poor, weak, bibulous creature, but by no
-stretch of the imagination could he be an accessory to the gruesome
-happenings at No. 10.
-
-Even had he been at his post, as he should have been on this particular
-night, he would have been sunk in a stertorous sleep, and have heard
-nothing.
-
-But to make everything sure, Constable Brown pulled him along and forced
-him to look at the dead man.
-
-"You have never seen him before, Miles? I mean he has not called to look
-over the house or anything?"
-
-"No." Miles, looking shudderingly at the ghastly sight, was ready to
-swear he had never seen him before.
-
-He turned his frightened gaze away. "It will be all over the town
-to-night," he said ruefully. "We shall never let the house after this."
-
-"It will still be a soft job for you, Miles," retorted Brown, a little
-spitefully. "You won't have to play up the damp and the beetles. You are
-here for life, old man."
-
-"I know," said Miles in a gloomy tone. "But I shall see him staring at
-me every minute of the day and night."
-
-The body was removed to the mortuary. The evening newspapers had
-flaring headlines: "Gruesome Discovery in No. 10 Cathcart Square." An
-enterprising journalist had got hold of Miles, and speedily discovering
-his weakness, had taken him to the nearest public-house, and plied him
-plentifully with liquor, with a view to a sensational article.
-
-The enterprising reporter made the best of his material, but it did not
-amount to much.
-
-The caretaker knew nothing about the dead man, he was armed at all
-points with his alibi. As regards the house itself, invested with
-so much tragedy, the present tenant was a Mr. Washington, a man of
-considerable means, now abroad. Mr. Washington was prepared to let it
-furnished. The furniture was very valuable.
-
-To a public greedily anxious for the smallest details, the astute
-journalist served up a nice little article, describing the expensive
-furniture, and adding a short life-history of Mr. Washington, as
-supplied by the reminiscent Miles. The public swallowed this article
-eagerly and awaited further developments.
-
-These came with the inquest, and there was a somewhat tame ending to
-what had promised to be a very sensational case.
-
-Some three months previously, a certain man named Reginald Davis had
-been suspected of committing a murder while driving a motor-car
-in Cornwall. The evidence, although circumstantial, had been very
-convincing. The police had been on his track, but not quickly enough.
-The man had eluded their vigilance, and run to earth somewhere.
-
-On the body of the dead man in Cathcart Square, the two constables had
-found three letters addressed to Reginald Davis. Also a letter,
-signed Reginald Davis, addressed to the Coroner in which he avowed his
-intention of committing suicide at the earliest opportunity.
-
-It was fairly evident from this that the wretched man, hunted by the
-police, and recognising that capture was imminent in the course of a few
-days, had resolved upon the fatal step, had effected his entrance into
-the lonely house in Cathcart Square, had found it even more deserted
-than he imagined, and in that little dressing-room cheated the law.
-
-But, in addition to this overpowering evidence, there was added the fact
-of identification.
-
-A tall, handsome young woman, giving the name of Caroline Masters, had
-been to the mortuary, and identified the body as that of her brother,
-Reginald Davis.
-
-She gave her evidence before the Coroner with commendable composure,
-broken now and again with a little natural grief. Her disclosures were
-briefly as follows.
-
-Reginald had always been the black sheep of the family, not naturally
-vicious, but impetuous, fiery-tempered and ungovernable. If he was
-guilty of the murder in Cornwall, it had been due to no natural criminal
-instinct, but to a fit of unbridled passion. Her theory was that remorse
-had weighed upon him for this unpremeditated crime, and that, through
-remorse and the fear of justice overtaking him, he had crept into this
-lonely house and passed sentence on himself.
-
-She made a very great impression on the Court by the calm and dignified
-way in which she gave her evidence. The Coroner put to her a few
-questions. She was quite certain that the body was that of her brother,
-Reginald Davis? Were there any other members of the family who could
-support her in her identification?
-
-No, there were no other members of the family alive. There was another
-brother dead, and a sister of whose whereabouts she knew nothing. Her
-father had been a strange man, he had quarrelled with all the members
-of his family, and she had never known one of them. Her mother had died
-some years ago. Her voice broke a little as she related these touching
-circumstances of her domestic life, more especially when she added she
-was a widow, her husband having been killed in the Great War.
-
-There seemed but one possible verdict. The dead man, it was clearly
-established, was Reginald Davis, first by the letters found upon him,
-secondly by his sister's identification.
-
-It was also clear that Reginald Davis, hunted by the police, and knowing
-that it was only a question of days or weeks before he would be run to
-earth, had considered the two alternatives of self-destruction or the
-extreme penalty of the law--and that he had chosen the former.
-
-The verdict was recorded. Mrs. Masters was complimented on the way
-in which she had given her evidence. The Coroner assured her that the
-sympathy of the Court was with her. The tears Welled into her eyes
-as she listened to the Coroner's well-chosen phrases. She bowed her
-grateful thanks.
-
-Constable Brown was waiting in the corridor as she came out. Beside
-him stood the younger policeman who had assisted him on that very
-well-remembered night in Cathcart Square.
-
-Brown touched his helmet. "A very trying time for you, ma'am," he said,
-"a very trying time. You went through it bravely."
-
-She smiled Wanly. "My poor brother! He had so many good points. But it
-is better as it is. I shudder to think of what might have been, if he
-had not done this dreadful thing."
-
-"Much the best way, ma'am, much the best way," corroborated Brown.
-
-She went out, a graceful figure, and Brown turned to his younger
-colleague.
-
-"A remarkable case, old chap. As we said all along, suicide."
-
-The younger man paused a little before he replied. It may be mentioned
-that a few months later he was promoted to the detective force in
-consequence of some rather clever work connected with a gang of coiners
-in an obscure corner of the West End.
-
-"It looks like it, but I'm not quite as sure as you are," he said
-laconically.
-
-Brown stared, but made no comment. A verdict was a verdict. His young
-colleague had the inexperience and the vanity of youth, and thought he
-was more clever than other people, perhaps!
-
-But on one thing the young constable had made up his mind, and that was
-that Miles, the bibulous caretaker, had not told the truth when in the
-witness-box. He came to this conclusion from his demeanour. Miles swore
-that he had no knowledge of the dead man, but the constable believed
-this to be a lie.
-
-And with the tame ending of the Coroner's inquest, the mystery of No.
-10 Cathcart Square ceased to hold the public interest. Plenty of other
-things came on to attract their attention.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-|In the year before the Great War, when to all appearance there was not
-a cloud upon the horizon, when only a few statesmen felt "profoundly
-uneasy," the secret of that uneasiness being carefully locked away in
-their own breasts, and hidden from the general public--in that year of
-1913, in the month of March, the Twenty-fifth Lancers were quartered at
-the town of Blankfield, in Yorkshire.
-
-The Twenty-fifth was a crack regiment. Most of the officers were
-members of the aristocracy, a few of the plutocracy, that portion of
-the plutocracy which on account of its wealth had been adopted into a
-superior world by marriage with its aristocratic daughters.
-
-They were a fine set of clean-minded, healthy living, sporting young
-fellows. They rode to hounds, they played polo when there was any going,
-they shot over the coverts of their friends, they made love to all the
-pretty girls they came across in a gallant and desultory fashion, loving
-and riding away.
-
-It cannot be said that they took their professional duties in too
-serious a fashion. But they were brave as lions, and when the time came
-to prove their mettle, none of their relatives had cause to blush for
-their record.
-
-The memories of most of them were enshrined deeply in the hearts of
-wailing mothers and weeping sweethearts, when the great holocaust came.
-
-Foremost amongst this band of gay spirits and resolute sportsmen was
-a certain Captain Murchison, "Hughie," as he was always called by his
-intimates.
-
-"Hughie" was not a pure aristocrat. His father, a man of fabulous
-wealth, was the head of the great brewing firm of Murchison, Delaroyd &
-Co., the fourth in succession, for the big brewery had been founded over
-a hundred years ago.
-
-It is supposed, in the case of self-made men, that it requires three
-generations to make a gentleman. Anyway, the present Sir Hugh had won
-his spurs by the fact of belonging to the fourth. And he had further
-firmly established his position by marrying Lady Gertrude Marchmont,
-a daughter of the Earl of Mounthaven. The Marchmonts had blue blood in
-profusion, they ere one of the oldest families in the Kingdom, only just
-being beaten by such superior people as the Howards, the Talbots, and
-the Nevilles.
-
-Captain Murchison was, therefore, plutocrat on the father's side,
-aristocrat of aristocrat on the mother's. But he did not owe his
-popularity to these adventitious circumstances. The fact that he was the
-most popular man in his regiment was due to his own sterling qualities.
-
-In the first place, he was a man of the most unbounded generosity and
-the most serene good-humour. He had captained the Eleven at Eton, and
-he was one of the best shots, also one of the best polo-players, in
-England. Needless to say that he was a man's man. The fact that he was
-also equally a woman's man can be easily explained. He boasted more than
-ordinary good looks, and he had a charming, deferential way with women
-that captivated them at once.
-
-The Twenty-fifth had a very good time at Blankfield, on the whole. The
-houses of the "county" were, of course, open to such a distinguished
-regiment, but perhaps they had a rather jollier time amongst the rather
-limited circle of rich townsfolk whom they condescended to visit:
-the people who, at the best, had only a nodding acquaintance with the
-"county."
-
-Murchison was a born sportsman. Hunting, polo, shooting, cricket,
-occupied nearly all his waking thoughts, except those few that were
-claimed by his professional duties. Popular as he was with women, not
-a single member of the weaker and more charming sex had made any real
-impression on him up to the present.
-
-He had had several flirtations with charming girls, of course: he might
-have indulged in a few sentimental passages with certain more or less
-detached, or semi-detached, married women. The latter very rarely, for
-although by no means a saint he was a very clean-minded young man, and
-held rather rigid notions as to what might be done, and what ought not
-to be done.
-
-Anyway at this particular moment he was quite heart-whole.
-
-And then, one day, in this rather sleepy town of Blankfield, an
-adventure befell him. It was not strictly a common or garden adventure,
-for more than one reason.
-
-The woman, or rather girl, who was concerned in it, for looking at her
-in a severe light she did not appeal to be more than twenty, bore upon
-her no marks of the shameless adventuress. It was easy to see that she
-was not a member of his own world, the world of plutocracy mingled
-into aristocracy by judicious intermarriage. The "county" would not,
-of course, open their doors to her. According to her own account, the
-respectable "villadom" of the sleepy old town had not called upon her,
-on account of the absence of convincing credentials.
-
-The meeting happened in this way. Hugh found himself with a blank
-afternoon, an afternoon that had not been filled up. He could call
-at lots of houses and get tea. But, at this period, he was becoming a
-little fed-up with the Blankfield teas, the simpering girls, the astute
-mothers who wanted to take the heir of the Murchison millions off his
-guard, and hook him for a son-in-law.
-
-Coming from a long line of successful tradesmen, Hugh had rather less
-brains than he ought to have acquired by heredity. Still, he was no
-fool. As long as a proposition was not too complex, he could size it
-up pretty accurately. And he sized up the Blankfield hospitality at its
-true worth.
-
-He walked down the High Street, and turned into the first tea-shop.
-It was a well-known establishment, and the dashing members of the
-Twenty-fifth were wont to invite hither for tea some of the Blankfield
-maidens who Were not too particular as to chaperonage.
-
-He expected to find here a good few of his brother officers. To his
-surprise, he did not see one. But the room was very full. To a casual
-observer, every table seemed occupied. He was about to turn away, when a
-waitress, who knew him well, touched him on the arm.
-
-"It's quite all right, Captain Murchison,"--Hugh had arrived at
-seniority very early: "there's a table up there at the far end. There's
-only a young lady there, and she has very nearly finished her tea."
-
-The young lady in question was quite young; Hugh decided from the first
-swift glance at her that she could not be more than twenty. She was
-exceedingly pretty, with wavy light hair and soft brown eyes. She wore
-an air of composure remarkable in one so youthful.
-
-The young man knew her well by sight, as did his brother officers. She
-was frequently to be seen in the High Street, flitting in and out
-shops, sometimes alone, sometimes accompanied by a rather common-looking
-person, some ten years her senior. It was said they were brother and
-sister and their name was Burton.
-
-They had arrived in Blankfield about a couple of months ago, and taken a
-moderate sized house on the London Road, a little in the outskirts of
-the town. But though they had been here for these two months, they knew
-nobody. Not a soul had called upon them: for the villadom of Blankfield
-was very select, and had to know something about newcomers before it
-stretched out a welcoming hand. About the Burtons nothing seemed to be
-known, and until some reliable information was forthcoming, they would
-be ostracised.
-
-The shop was very crowded, and most girls of her age might have felt
-embarrassed by her loneliness. But, although many admiring glances
-were levelled at her from the few masculine occupants, she seemed quite
-unperturbed and unconscious, looking neither to the right nor the
-left, but taking in everything that was going on, under lowered eyelids
-veiling those pretty brown eyes.
-
-She gave him one swift glance as he sat down, and then went on
-composedly with her tea. There was nothing in the glance that was either
-provocative or inviting. Of the two, Hugh felt much more embarrassed
-than she did. He wondered if she was as stand-offish as she looked. If
-he addressed a remark to her, would she snub him?
-
-Anyway he determined to put it to the proof. "I do hope I am not
-intruding, but it was Hobson's choice, you know; this is the only vacant
-table."
-
-No, she was not going to snub him. On the contrary, she gave him a very
-pleasant smile, and he noted with satisfaction that her voice was a
-refined and pleasant one.
-
-"There is hardly any question of intruding in a public place like this.
-I cannot expect them to turn customers away in order that I may sit by
-myself."
-
-It was not a bad beginning, thought Hugh. It was evident she was not
-disinclined to enter into a little desultory conversation with a man who
-she knew was a gentleman, and not likely to take undue advantage of her
-absence of conventionality.
-
-Hugh went on with growing boldness. He had often said to his great chum
-Jack Pomfret that it was a thousand pities this pretty girl was not in
-Blankfield Society, she seemed so much more attractive than the other
-girls who were in it.
-
-"We haven't been introduced, of course, but I know you very well by
-sight. There is hardly a day that I do not meet you about here. And I
-know your name, too. You are Miss Burton, are you not? And you live with
-your brother at that nice little house on the London Road."
-
-"Quite right." Miss Burton nodded her pretty head. She added with a
-little silvery laugh: "we can't be introduced, unless the waitress took
-the kind office upon herself, for I don't know a soul in the place.
-we have been here two months, and we have been let severely alone. I
-suppose if we stayed here for twenty years it would be the same. Of
-course, we didn't expect to get into 'county' Society, but we must be
-quite as good as heaps of people in the town and outskirts."
-
-Hugh was a little embarrassed by these very frank remarks. He observed
-lamely that it was a shame, and indulged in some rather inane remarks on
-the snobbishness of provincial towns.
-
-"You must find it awfully dull," he ventured after a brief pause. During
-the short silence, Miss Burton had ordered herself some more tea. It was
-evident that she was not desirous of abruptly terminating this pleasant
-_tete-a-tete_. The waitress drew her own conclusions from the further
-order, and smiled a little as she turned away.
-
-"I should be a hypocrite if I pretended the contrary. Of course,
-housekeeping takes up a good bit of my time, and I read a good deal, and
-do a lot of fancy-work. But all the same, it is a state of isolation,
-not an outside person to speak to from one week-end to the other. Of
-course I hear all that is going on from the tradespeople, and I know
-the names of the principal persons here whom I constantly meet and never
-speak to. I know, for instance, that you are Captain Murchison. I think
-I know the names of all your brother officers."
-
-"What made you come here, if it is not a rude question?" asked Hugh
-bluntly. "It was surely a risky experiment, landing yourself in a town
-like this, without any introductions."
-
-"I told my brother so when he first proposed it," replied Miss Burton
-calmly. "But, although he is one of the best fellows in the world, he
-is frightfully obstinate. He had stayed at an hotel here for a few days
-some years ago, and he had taken a violent fancy to the place. He was
-quite sure everybody would make a rush for us, the moment we arrived."
-
-Miss Burton proceeded to draw on her gloves. During this explanatory
-conversation, she had consumed her second cup of tea. She called the
-waitress and paid her bill.
-
-"I must be going now," she said. "I have quite enjoyed this little chat,
-although I am sure you will think very badly of me for having confided
-so much to a stranger. I really don't know what made me do it--I suppose
-I got tired of having kept silence for so long."
-
-Yes, he could understand that. Poor, pretty little girl, just at an age
-when all the pleasures of youth should be open to her, and to have to
-pass her life in the society of that rather common-looking brother, good
-fellow as she declared him to be.
-
-"I have enjoyed the meeting immensely, too," said Hugh heartily. "I only
-wish we could come across each other at some of these Blankfield houses,
-stupid and dull as they generally are."
-
-And then, the pretty Miss Burton fired her last shot as she rose to
-leave:
-
-"I have been unconventional enough from the beginning, and if I can do
-it without blushing, I am going to be more unconventional still. If you
-cared to come up to Rosemount one afternoon, I am sure my brother would
-be pleased to see you."
-
-Murchison was very embarrassed by the suggestion, although she did not
-proffer it in any bold fashion.
-
-"I shall be delighted," he stammered. "I will run up one afternoon."
-Of course when he said this he had very little intention of keeping his
-promise. To enjoy a mild sort of flirtation with an exceedingly pretty
-girl was one thing. To go to her house and make the acquaintance of her
-brother, who he was certain was not a gentleman, was quite a
-different proposition, and might land him in all sorts of unpleasant
-complications.
-
-He also had an uneasy conviction that Miss Burton was remarkably
-self-assured for such a young woman. She had spoken of blushing when
-she gave him the invitation, but she had not done so. Not the faintest
-colour showed on her cheek, and the glance that met his was perfectly
-steady and unwavering. She must either be very innocent, or, young as
-she was, she had acquired the experience and self-possession of a much
-older woman. He would like to think it all out.
-
-The girl nodded in a friendly fashion, and tripped away, leaving Hugh
-Murchison to finish his tea, and ponder over what had happened.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-|When Hugh got back to his quarters the first thing he did was to
-hunt up his great friend Jack Pomfret. He found that young gentleman
-stretched in front of a blazing fire--ft was a very chilly March--and
-smoking a cigar nearly as big as himself. Jack Pomfret, it may be
-said, was quite a small man, of about the size and weight that would be
-associated with the coxswain of a 'Varsity boat.
-
-Next to Murchison, perhaps Pomfret was the most popular man in the
-regiment. He was certainly the poorest, for although he came of an
-aristocratic family, the said family had very little to bless themselves
-with.
-
-If it had been left to his immediate relatives, Jack would have had to
-enter a line regiment, and subsist on his pay, supplemented by more or
-less regular small remittances from his hard-up father.
-
-But fortune had smiled on Jack when he was in his cradle. A rich
-great-aunt had been his godmother, and from the date of his christening
-had taken him under her wing. She had been crossed in love when quite
-a girl, would never marry. Jack Pomfret had a handsome, but not an
-extravagant, allowance now, and he would come into his great-aunt's
-fortune when she died.
-
-Jack always complained that his aunt was a bit thrifty, and did not
-fully understand the imperative necessities of a young subaltern in an
-expensive regiment like the Twenty-fifth.
-
-As a matter of fact, Miss Harding, his mother's youngest sister,
-suffered from acute indigestion, existed principally on soda-water and
-biscuits, lived in a comparatively small house with one manservant and
-two maids, and saved a great deal every year out of a large income. She
-loved Jack very much, but she had little or no sympathy with the follies
-and indiscretions of youth. She had a hazy sort of idea that an officer
-should live within his pay, as she lived well within her income.
-Needless to say that Jack had long disabused her of this silly idea.
-
-"Great tidings, old man," cried Murchison, breaking in upon the
-meditative little man, blowing great clouds of smoke. "I'll give you six
-guesses."
-
-"Not in a guessing mood," returned Jack shortly. "All my brain-power is
-used up. I am trying to concoct a letter to the dear old aunt--God bless
-her, she is one of the best!--insinuating gently that a cheque for a
-couple of hundred would be very convenient at the present moment."
-
-Murchison took a seat. "Silly old ass," he said in a kindly tone, "if
-you want a couple of hundred have it from me, and don't worry about
-the aunt. You can pay me when she stumps-up. From what you have told me
-about your respected relative, it might be a lengthy business. I suppose
-you will plead debts. She might offer to discharge them, and ask the
-names of the creditors. In that case, old chap, you wouldn't handle much
-personally, would you?"
-
-Pomfret laughed genially. He was always very hard-up, but he was never
-depressed for very long. There was always a silver lining to every
-cloud.
-
-"She's the sweetest, dearest soul on God's earth," he said in a tone of
-conviction. "But you know, Hughie old man, she doesn't understand--I say
-emphatically, she doesn't understand--you know what I mean. She is
-early Victorian. As to your suggestion, I appreciate it very much, but
-emphatically, no." He added, with a whimsical smile: "Yours is a loan,
-I should have to pay back; Heaven knows when I could do so. The dear old
-aunt, well, it is a gift, no question of paying back. I haven't thought
-it all out yet, but in the early cool of to-morrow morning, I shall
-write her a beautiful and touching letter. I know by experience it will
-bring a cheque."
-
-"You're an artful young devil, I know," said Murchison. Straight as
-a die himself, he was not too appreciative of his friend's diplomatic
-methods.
-
-On the other hand, was he justified in criticising? He had a magnificent
-allowance from his opulent father. Poor Jack, with a somewhat
-puritanical and niggardly aunt at his back, had just to worry along, and
-live in this expensive regiment from hand to mouth.
-
-There was no more to be said on this subject.
-
-"Well, Jack, are you in a mood to listen to my news?"
-
-Pomfret leaned forward, and flicked the ash oft his cigar. "Yes, I
-think I am. Begone dull care! I shall write that letter the first thing
-to-morrow morning."
-
-"Well, I have made the acquaintance of that pretty Burton girl, whom
-nobody in Blankfield visits."
-
-Mr. Pomfret emitted a little chuckling sound. "Lucky devil. How did you
-do it? I thought she was unapproachable. She walks down the High Street,
-'with a haughty stare, and her nose in the air,' and looks neither to
-left nor right. How did you manage it, old man?"
-
-Hugh laughed. "Oh, as easy as anything. Just dropped in to Winkley's,
-expecting to see a lot of you fellows with your best girls. Not a soul
-there I knew. Room full--every table full, save for one at which Miss
-Burton was sitting alone--sat at the one table, _vis-a-vis_ with Miss
-Burton. There it is in a nutshell."
-
-Mr. Pomfret grinned broadly. "Oh, Hughie, what I would have given for
-your chance. You know I am awfully gone on that girl, she is so sweet
-and dainty, far and away the prettiest girl in Blankfield. What did you
-make of your chance?"
-
-"As much as could be made in five or ten minutes. She told me a lot
-about things, her disappointment in finding that the Blankfield people
-would not call upon her, and that, excepting her brother, she had not a
-soul to speak to."
-
-"Poor little soul!" said Mr. Pomfret, in a voice of the deepest
-sympathy. "Poor little soul!" he repeated.
-
-"Well, we talked for some little time, some ten minutes perhaps, I don't
-think it could have been much longer. And then--then--you will never
-believe it, Jack--she asked me to call, and be introduced to her
-brother."
-
-Mr. Pomfret was quite young, in fact he was the baby of the regiment.
-But having been educated at a public school, he had learned a certain
-amount of worldly wisdom rather early. He gave expression to it now.
-
-"If she were living with her mother, or a maiden aunt, Hughie, the thing
-would be so easy. But the brother, we have seen him walking beside that
-lovely girl. It would be difficult to class him. It would be perhaps too
-much to say he was either a bounder or a cad--he's not boisterous enough
-for the one or common enough for the other. But clearly, he's not a
-gentleman or the imitation of one."
-
-"No," answered Hugh. "Your description of the brother quite fits. He is
-neither fish, flesh, fowl, nor good red-herring, as the old saw has
-it. Then the girl is so different. She is, to an extent, frank and
-unconventional."
-
-"She must be, or she wouldn't have asked you to call upon her,"
-interrupted the astute Mr. Pomfret.
-
-"Quite so, I perfectly agree. But upon my soul, Jack, she has the most
-perfect manners. She does these sort of things in such a way that you
-cease to wonder why she does them."
-
-"I understand." Mr. Pomfret looked very wise. "There's a wonderful
-fascination about the girl. She radiates it, even when you pass her in
-the street. By Gad, there's not a young woman in Blankfield who can
-hold a candle to her. Well, Hughie, what are you going to do about the
-invitation?"
-
-"I'm in two minds, old man, to go or stay away. There's the brother, you
-see."
-
-"There's the brother," repeated Mr. Pomfret, "and a dashed disappointing
-sort of a brother, too. If it had only been a mother, or a maiden aunt!
-what a priceless opportunity! And yet it seems a bit too good to be
-lost."
-
-"But the brother, what about him?" Hugh insisted.
-
-"The brother is, of course, a stumbling-block. You can't ask him to
-Mess. 'Old Fireworks' will stand more from you than anybody, but he
-would never stand Burton. He would be calling him 'Your Grace' or 'Your
-worship' or something."
-
-"Old Fireworks," it may be explained, was the nickname of the respected
-Colonel of the gallant Twenty-fifth Lancers. It had been conferred
-upon him, on account of his explosive temper. He was also a rigid
-disciplinarian.
-
-"I shall not go," said Hugh after a brief pause.
-
-Mr. Pomfret was thinking deeply. He pulled at his big cigar in a
-meditative fashion. Then at length, out of his wisdom, he spoke:
-
-"Let us reason this out, my well-beloved friend. A very pretty girl asks
-you to go and see her, she is unfortunately hampered by an undesirable
-brother. You accept their hospitality, but you know he is not a man
-you can ask to Mess. But you can take him to an hotel, and feed him up
-there. Tell him the Colonel's kicked up rough about guests, any lie you
-like, to save his _amour propre_."
-
-"A good idea, Jack. Have you anything more to say? Don't forget that
-if I go to Rosemount, the news will be all over Blankfield in five
-minutes."
-
-Mr. Pomfret snapped his fingers. "Who cares a fig for the Blankfield
-people? Everybody knows, or ought to know, that a soldier loves and
-rides away. And the Blankfield girls are dull enough, Heaven knows, I
-wouldn't give a thought to them."
-
-"Then you advise me to call, and be introduced to the brother, eh?"
-
-"Of course, we shall be off in another two months, and leave only tender
-memories behind us." Mr. Pomfret was a practical person, if ever
-there was one. "Let us seize the passing day. By the way, have you any
-objection to taking me up to call with you, when you go? Say no, if you
-have the slightest objection."
-
-Hugh Murchison looked at him squarely. "No, old chap, not the slightest.
-The girl interests me in a way, chiefly, I think, because I can't
-quite make her out, can't determine whether she is very cunning or very
-simple, but I am not attracted in the ordinary sense. I take it you
-are."
-
-Pomfret's look of indifference changed to one of gravity. "Yes, Hughie,
-I am. I would like to see that girl at close quarters."
-
-Hugh rose. "Right, we will call together, and in the meantime we will
-keep it from the other fellows?"
-
-"Good Heavens, I should think so, we should be chaffed to death," was
-Jack's fervent answer.
-
-A few days later, the two young men walked to Rosemount. It was a villa
-sort of house, set in a small garden, very carefully kept. The windows
-were ornamented with boxes of flowers. Small as the establishment was,
-there was an air of elegance about it, an elegance perhaps of restricted
-means but of refined taste.
-
-Pomfret nudged his senior officer. "I say, they've turned it into a very
-decent sort of little crib, haven't they? I should say that is due to
-the girl."
-
-Hugh laughed. "Perhaps it is the brother after all. He might be an
-artist, you know. Artists are often very rum-looking chaps."
-
-"Artist be hanged," said Pomfret emphatically. "I'll bet you a fiver he
-isn't an artist, whatever he is. A 'bookie' or a 'bookie's' tout, more
-likely."
-
-At the end of this short colloquy, they had reached the hall door.
-A very smart maidservant, in a becoming cap and apron, opened it. In
-answer to their inquiry, Miss Burton was in.
-
-They were shown into the drawing-room. The young mistress of the house
-was reclining in an easy-chair; an open book lay on her lap.
-
-She advanced towards them with that peculiar air of self-possession
-which had so impressed Hugh on his first meeting in the tea-shop. A
-hostess with years of social experience could not have been more at her
-ease than this young girl.
-
-"How nice of you to come, after that very vague invitation," she said,
-in her clear, silvery voice.
-
-She addressed Murchison first, and then turned swiftly to Pomfret, in
-whose eyes she doubtless recognised frank admiration of her peculiar
-attractiveness.
-
-"I know your friend is going to introduce you in proper form. But it is
-really quite unnecessary. I know you are Mr. Pomfret. I have learned the
-names of all the officers from the tradespeople, also, my only friends
-in Blankfield. Perhaps Captain Murchison has told you what I confided
-to him the other day, that we are as isolated here as if we were on a
-desert island."
-
-Mr. Pomfret sat down beside her on a small Chesterfield. From his
-vantage point he could gaze into the beautiful eyes, he could note the
-lustre of that fair, wavy hair.
-
-"A beastly shame," growled the young subaltern, at a loss for
-appropriate words to express the enormities of Blankfield Society.
-
-She turned away lightly, as if the subject interested her no further.
-
-"I think we will have tea. My brother is engaged in scientific pursuits.
-when he can tear himself away, he will join us. Captain Murchison, will
-you kindly ring the bell?"
-
-Truly, she had the manners of a woman of the world. She took the homage
-of the two men as an accomplished fact. The villadom of Blankfield
-could not produce such a hostess, so free from fussiness or exaggerated
-hospitality. You would have to go to the "county" to find her parallel.
-The two men exchanged appreciative glances. Whatever her origin, Miss
-Burton could shine in any circle in which she found herself permanently,
-or temporarily, located.
-
-The tea was served, and over the tea-cups they chatted in desultory
-fashion. Then the drawing-room door opened, and Mr. Burton appeared.
-From the moment of his appearance, the atmosphere seemed to be changed.
-He advanced towards them with outstretched hands. His manner was
-extremely cordial, but it went beyond the limits of good taste. His
-tones were breezy but blusterous. There was a rasping and a vulgar ring
-in his voice.
-
-"Welcome to our humble abode, gentlemen. It is very brave of you to come
-and visit the boycotted ones."
-
-Hugh and Jack Pomfret fidgeted in their chairs. This common-looking
-young man was a bit too communicative about his private affairs. They
-had a slight suspicion that he had been indulging in alcohol, his manner
-was so unrestrained.
-
-Mr. Burton sank down in his chair, and took a cup of tea from the hands
-of his attentive sister. The visitors did not see it, but she shot a
-warning glance at him, and in face of that warning glance, Mr. Burton,
-by a strong effort, pulled himself together.
-
-"You see, gentlemen, I feel very sore about this matter; my sister has a
-calmer temperament, and she takes things as they come. Here we came from
-the North of Ireland, from a little town where we were highly looked up
-to, where we knew every man, woman and child in the place. We came here,
-and, as I say, we are boycotted."
-
-Miss Burton looked at him severely. "George, I do not think it is very
-good taste of you to inflict your grievances upon these gentlemen, who
-have just come to make an afternoon call. Don't you think you could
-soothe your nerves better by getting back to your laboratory, or
-whatever you call it?"
-
-Mr. Burton accepted the hint, and rose. He waved a genial hand towards
-the visitors.
-
-"You will excuse me for a few moments. I have a most important
-experiment on. But I shall be back very shortly: I shall see you again
-before you leave."
-
-The two young men devoutly wished that they might not see him again.
-The man was a confirmed and innate vulgarian. Both he and his sister,
-no doubt, felt very sore about their social ostracism, but how different
-were the methods of expression indulged in by the two. She explained
-the situation with a proud dignity, hiding her chagrin with a show of
-indifference. He was exposing his gaping wounds to the public eye with
-an air of ostentation.
-
-"I must ask you to excuse my brother," said Miss Burton when
-her ebullient relative had left the room. "He has the true Irish
-temperament, it is impossible for him to conceal his feelings. He would
-like to go down the High Street, trailing his coat behind him, and
-inviting the residents to tread upon it, in real Irish fashion, so that
-he could indulge in a free fight with them."
-
-The young men laughed cordially. They felt that a somewhat awkward
-situation had been saved by her ready tact, her rather humorous
-explanation.
-
-But Murchison, the more level-headed of the two, looked at her very
-fixedly, as he said, "But you are Irish, too. How is it that you have
-learned to control your feelings so successfully?"
-
-At such a direct question, he would have expected her to flush a little;
-at any rate, show some slight symptoms of embarrassment. But this
-remarkably self-possessed girl of twenty or thereabouts was as cool as a
-cucumber. She laughed her little silvery laugh.
-
-"My brother and I are as wide apart as the North and South Poles," she
-said lightly. "Many people have commented on the fact. Would you like to
-know the reason?"
-
-She directed a rather challenging glance in the direction of Pomfret,
-whom she rightly judged to be more susceptible to feminine influence
-than his friend.
-
-"I should like to very much," was the subaltern's answer. That eloquent
-glance had completely subjugated the young man.
-
-"Well, listen. My father was a hard-riding, gambling, hard-drinking
-Irish squire, who squandered his money and left little but debts behind
-him. My brother takes after him in certain qualities, thank Heaven
-not his least desirables ones. My mother was an Englishwoman, rather
-a puritanical sort of woman, who fell in love, perhaps a little
-injudiciously, and I think wore her life out in the attempt to curb my
-father's unhappy propensities. I take after my mother. You understand?
-George is really my half-brother by my father's first wife."
-
-Pomfret nodded his head gravely. "I quite understand," he said, and his
-tone was one of conviction. Murchison preserved a benevolent attitude of
-neutrality. He was still thinking it all out.
-
-Miss Burton was very pretty, nay, more than pretty, very charming, very
-attractive, gifted with a marvellous self-possession, very clever,
-very adroit. But was she as genuine and frank as she seemed? Pomfret
-evidently thought so, but Murchison was not quite sure.
-
-Mr. George Burton, who took after his Irish father in several respects,
-according to his sister's account, made a re-appearance before the
-visitors left. There had been just a little suspicion at first that he
-had been indulging in the hard-drinking habits of his male parent. If
-so, that suspicion must be at once removed. He was bright, breezy and
-blusterous, but he was certainly master of himself. He advanced with the
-most cordial air.
-
-"Gentlemen, I feel I owe you an apology. I had no right to intrude my
-private grievances upon you, even although I am very possessed with
-them. Please put it down to my Irish temperament. You will forgive me, I
-am sure."
-
-He stretched out appealing hands, the hands of the plebeian as Murchison
-was quick to notice, nails bitten to the quick, coarse fingers and
-thumbs.
-
-Murchison quietly ignored the outstretched hand. So did Pomfret,
-subjugated as he was with the charm and attractiveness of Miss Burton.
-He did not quite feel that he wanted to shake hands with this very
-terrible brother, who took after his Irish father.
-
-"I apologise most sincerely, gentlemen," he repeated, "for my outburst
-just now. I had no right to inflict upon you a recital of my private
-grievances against the inhabitants of this wretched town. But I am a
-wild, excitable Irishman, whatever is in my mind has to come out. Please
-forgive me; I know my sister Norah never will."
-
-He looked appealingly at the girl who sat there, calm and self-possessed
-as always, with a slight expression of contempt upon her charming face.
-
-"I have already made excuses for you to Captain Murchison and Mr.
-Pomfret," she said coldly.
-
-The visitors were very much embarrassed. What could they say to this
-dreadful person who seemed so utterly lacking in all the qualities
-of good breeding? Hugh remained silent, Pomfret opened his lips and
-murmured something about the whole affair being very regrettable.
-
-But these somewhat incoherent remarks were quite enough to restore Mr.
-Burton to his normal state of easy buoyancy. He smiled affably.
-
-"So that is all over. Well, I am delighted to see you, and it will not
-be my fault if your first visit is your last. Now, I propose you come
-round and have a little bit of dinner with us soon, so that we may get
-to know each other better. Any night that you are at liberty will suit
-us. _We_ are not overwhelmed with invitations, as you can understand
-from what I have told you."
-
-If Murchison had been by himself, he would have politely shelved the
-invitation. Miss Burton, who took after her English mother, was quite
-decent and ladylike. The brother was insufferable. Vulgarity, so to
-speak, oozed from him. He was offensive even in his geniality. In short,
-he was impossible.
-
-But Pomfret took the wind out of his senior's sails.
-
-"Sorry we are quite full up this week, but hardly anything on next.
-Shall we say Monday?"
-
-Miss Burton took the matter out of her brother's hands by turning
-directly to Murchison.
-
-"Monday, of course, will suit us. Will it suit you?" she asked him
-pointedly.
-
-Taken by surprise, the unhappy young man could only mutter a reluctant
-affirmative. A few minutes later they left, pledged to partake of the
-Burtons' hospitality on the following Monday.
-
-When they were safely outside, Murchison spoke severely to his brother
-officer.
-
-"You've let us in for a nice thing. If you had left it to me, I would
-have got out of that dinner somehow."
-
-"But I didn't want to get out of it," replied the unabashed junior.
-"We knew the brother was pretty bad all along. I don't know that on the
-whole he is much worse than we imagined. But she's a ripping girl. I
-want to see more of her."
-
-"You silly young ass," growled Murchison; "I believe you've fallen head
-over ears in love with her."
-
-And Pomfret, one of the most mercurial and light-hearted of subalterns,
-answered quite gravely:
-
-"I rather fancy I have. I've never met a girl who appealed to me in
-quite the same sort of way."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-|As a result of his visit to Rosemount, Hugh Murchison was very
-perturbed in his mind. He blamed himself severely for having been
-tempted into that rather intimate conversation at the tea-shop. Miss
-Burton was attractive enough, and lady-like enough, to excuse any man
-for taking advantage of his obvious opportunities, but he had been a
-fool to go farther. He ought never to have set his foot in the house of
-people of whom he knew nothing.
-
-It was all Jack Pomfret's fault, he decided hastily. It was his
-influence, his keen desire to make the girl's acquaintance, that had
-weighed down his friend's prudence. For, if left to himself, Hugh was
-quite sure that he would have dallied and dallied till all inclination
-to call at Rosemount had died down.
-
-And Pomfret had owned to being greatly impressed with the fair young
-chatelaine. He had admitted that he had never met a girl who had
-appealed to him in quite the same sort of way. In fact, it was easy to
-see he had fallen desperately in love with her.
-
-And Jack was just one of those light-hearted, susceptible sort of chaps
-who have not an atom of common-sense in their composition, who will obey
-their impulses, regardless of consequences.
-
-And he was not his own master. His career was practically at the
-disposal of his somewhat puritanical aunt. It was just on the cards that
-Jack would be mad enough to propose to this girl who had so bewitched
-him. One could imagine how the aunt would receive such a communication.
-
-There was one little ray of hope, however. If Jack did commit such a
-crowning folly, he would be far too honourable not to acquaint Miss
-Burton with his circumstances. Hugh was fairly convinced that the young
-lady knew how to take care of herself. And, even if she did fall in love
-with Jack, as he had done with her, and be inclined to make a fool of
-herself, there was the objectionable brother to be reckoned with. He
-would certainly not allow his sister to engage herself to a man, except
-with the consent of that man's family.
-
-All the same, it was as well to avoid any embarrassing entanglements,
-if possible. It is easy to retrace your steps when you have only just
-started.
-
-With this object in view, Murchison sought his friend on the Sunday
-preceding the day on which they were to present themselves at Rosemount.
-
-"Jack, old man, I have been thinking----" he began.
-
-Mr. Pomfret lifted a warning finger. "My dear friend and mentor, don't
-indulge in such violent processes. It's very bad for you."
-
-"Don't be an ass, Jack. You are not really funny when you say that sort
-of thing. I've been thinking over this business to-morrow, and, frankly,
-I don't relish the prospect. We had better cut it out."
-
-Pomfret's face took on an obstinate expression. "You are speaking
-for yourself, of course. For my part, I don't intend to break my
-appointment. In my opinion, it would be an awfully low-down thing to do.
-If you didn't want to go, you shouldn't have accepted."
-
-It was evident the young man was not in a very reasonable frame of mind,
-equally evident he would require very careful handling.
-
-"Now, Jack, don't get off the handles. You know you are an awfully
-impetuous chap, and that I have much the cooler head of the two. I have
-been thinking it all out the last day or two, and I don't like the look
-of it."
-
-"You informed me just now that you had been thinking," replied Mr.
-Pomfret in the same sarcastic strain. "There is no need to dwell upon
-the fact. It is obvious."
-
-But the elder man was not to be ruffled. If anything unpleasant came of
-this sudden acquaintance he would lay the blame on himself for having
-mentioned that little incident of the tea-shop, and inspired the
-mercurial Jack's love of the daring and adventurous.
-
-"I don't know that I did accept, as a matter of fact, except by
-implication. I was about to return an evasive answer, leave it in the
-air, so to speak, when you cut in and jumped at the invitation for
-both."
-
-This was true, and Mr. Pomfret's air lost a little of its jaunty
-confidence. "Well, if you think I lugged you in, get out of it yourself.
-Of course you will have to tell some beastly lie that they will see
-through at once. Anyway I am going, and that's flat."
-
-"If you go, I shall go," said Hugh firmly. "But I would like you to
-listen to me for a few moments, and put things before you as they
-present themselves to me."
-
-"Fire away, then," was Pomfret's answer, but it was delivered in a very
-ungracious tone.
-
-"Of course we are both agreed about the brother," began Hugh mildly.
-
-The other interrupted impatiently: "The brother be hanged. We are not
-going to the house for the brother's sake, but because of the sister.
-what's the use of blinking the fact? If you had met him in the tea-shop
-instead of her, I don't suppose you would have wasted a word on him, no
-more should I. But I don't see why that pretty girl should be ostracised
-because of him."
-
-"I don't quite see, under the circumstances, how you can separate them,"
-pursued the obstinate Hugh. "I should like to turn off, just for a
-moment to the sister, and consider her."
-
-"Go ahead," said Mr. Pomfret in a somewhat sullen tone. He was keeping
-his impulsive and fiery nature under control, out of his great respect
-for his friend. But it was very doubtful if he would stand much
-criticism even from one so respected.
-
-"I have not a word to say against her appearance or her manners. I will
-go further, and say there is not a girl in Blankfield, or for the matter
-of that in the 'county' itself, who gives the impression of a thorough
-gentlewoman more convincingly than she does." Pomfret's face brightened
-at these words. "Oh, then you admit that, and you have knocked about the
-world a few years longer than I have. I am of the same opinion, but if
-you say it, it must be so."
-
-"I do say it unhesitatingly, but mind you, I am only judging from
-outside appearances. Now, how comes it that such a refined and ladylike
-girl as that should have such a bounder of a brother? There is a mystery
-there."
-
-Jack Pomfret prepared to argue. "I don't quite agree that he is a
-bounder, he is not quite boisterous enough for that. Let us agree on a
-common definition--namely, that he is bad form. That fits him, I think."
-
-"And the sister is very good form. You can't deny that there is a
-mystery."
-
-But the young subaltern developed a quite surprising ingenuity in
-argument.
-
-"She just simply calls him her brother," sharply, "but she has told you
-he is her halfbrother by a first marriage--father a gentleman, mother a
-common person, hence the bad form. A second time, the father married a
-woman of his own class, hence Norah Burton. Norah knows him for a good
-sort, if a bit rough, and sticks to him. That's a reasonable theory,
-anyway."
-
-"More ingenious than reasonable perhaps," commented Murchison with an
-amused smile.
-
-Pomfret went on, warming to his subject. "And, hang it all, if we speak
-of bounders--and mind you, I won't admit he is a bounder in the strict
-sense of the term--is there a family in England without them?"
-
-"Quite the same sort, do you think?" was Hugh's question.
-
-"Look here, I'm not going to be impertinent, and ask if you can point to
-any amongst your own connections, but I know something of my own family.
-I've got a cousin, good blood on both sides. He's been a bounder from
-the time he learned to talk, sets your teeth on edge; as some fellow
-said, every time he opens his mouth he puts his foot into it. By Gad,
-this fellow Burton is a polished gentleman to him. If George showed his
-nose in this regiment they would send him to Coventry in five minutes."
-
-"As they did that chap last year," remarked Hugh, alluding to an
-offensive young man who had been compelled to send in his papers, owing
-to the fact that his general demeanour had not come up to the somewhat
-exalted standard of the gallant Twenty-fifth.
-
-"Precisely," assented Pomfret. "But you were going to give me some views
-about the girl. Again I say, fire away."
-
-"Well, to go back to that meeting in the tea-shop. It was, to say the
-least, a little unconventional for a young girl to invite an utter
-stranger to call upon her."
-
-"You were not an utter stranger," retorted Jack doggedly. "She had
-heard who you were, perhaps from the tradespeople. She knew you were a
-gentleman, she knew your name, Captain Murchison. Hang it all, if you
-had met her in one of these dull Blankfield houses, and she had been
-introduced by a hostess about whom you both knew precious little, and
-asked you to call, being the mistress of her brother's house, you would
-have thought it quite the correct and proper thing. So would every man
-in the barracks. Don't people strike up acquaintances in hotels, and
-sometimes trains?"
-
-"They generally find out something about each other before they pursue
-the acquaintance," suggested Murchison. "Look here, old man, you know as
-well as I do, you are arguing all round the point. It would be precious
-easy for the Burtons to say who and what they were, and furnish some
-proper credentials. If they did that, I daresay all Blankfield would
-call upon them, and swallow the brother for the sake of the very
-charming sister."
-
-"Well, I'll pump her to-night, and get out all you want to know,"
-retorted Mr. Pomfret confidently. "I don't go so far as to say they will
-be able to refer us to Burke or Debrett. Decent middle-class people, I
-expect."
-
-It was useless to argue with such an optimist. "You've accounted for the
-brother, I remember, by your ingenious theory. Well, you've made up your
-mind to go then?"
-
-"Most certainly I have. You do as you like, but while we are on the
-subject of good form, it is not a pretty thing to accept an invitation,
-and then excuse yourself at the eleventh hour by an obvious lie."
-
-"Under ordinary circumstances, you would be quite right. It has not
-occurred to you that we were rather rushed into this dinner, then--that
-we were, so to speak, jumped at?"
-
-"It might look like it at first blush," admitted Mr. Pomfret
-reluctantly. "But here are two poor devils, marooned, as it were, in
-this snobbish town, and they naturally jump at the first people who show
-them the slightest civility. They must simply be aching to exchange a
-word with their fellow-creatures. Well, I am going to exchange several
-with them, I promise you."
-
-Hugh felt it was useless. When Pomfret got in these moods, it was waste
-of time to reason with him. He felt uneasy, however. He had promised his
-family to look after him, and he felt a certain responsibility. It was
-to be hoped the sudden infatuation for a pretty face would expire as
-quickly as it had been born.
-
-Perhaps a closer association with the bounder brother would produce a
-chastening influence. But then Jack seemed bounder-proof. Had he not
-alluded to a well-born cousin, beside whom Burton shone as a polished
-gentleman?
-
-Anyway, he must not desert his young and very impulsive friend. But it
-was with considerable reluctance that he accompanied him to Rosemount on
-the Monday night.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-|Eight o'clock was the hour appointed for dinner, this fact scoring
-in the Burtons' favour, as evincing a knowledge of the habits of good
-society. Even a few of the most select hostesses in Blankville, who
-ought to have known better, made a base compromise with half-past seven.
-
-The two men arrived about five minutes before the time. The young
-hostess was awaiting them in the drawing-room, attired in some filmy
-creation that made her look very charming and ethereal. Soft lights from
-shaded lamps played about her, and lent a touch of perfection to the
-picture.
-
-Mr. Burton was attired in the usual conventional evening dress of the
-English gentleman. One would have guessed him the sort of man who would
-wear a ready-made tie. Not at all. He had tied the bow himself, and with
-a masterly hand. Pomfret even, who was admitted to be the Beau Brummel of
-his regiment, could not have done it better.
-
-It is generally supposed that a common man looks more common still when
-he dons evening attire. "George" was an exception to the rule. His black
-clothes became him, and lent him a certain air of dignity, which was
-wanting when he assumed everyday garments. Even Murchison, prejudiced
-as he was against him, was forced to admit to himself that the "bounder"
-for once looked quite respectable. Pomfret, ever leaning to the
-charitable side, felt quite enthusiastic over him, and contrasted him
-favourably with his own cousin, who could boast blue blood on both
-sides.
-
-Norah Burton played the hostess as to the manner born, greeting the
-visitors with just the right degree of cordiality, quite free from the
-effusiveness of most of the Blankfield hostesses. And Burton, taking his
-cue from her, was hearty without boisterousness.
-
-The young subaltern's heart warmed to her, she was so gracious,
-so sweet, and about her there hovered such an air of calm dignity.
-Rosemount, no doubt, was honoured by the introduction of such
-distinguished visitors, viewed merely from the social point of view,
-but she did not permit a suspicion of this to escape her. Rather,
-judging by her demeanour, the visitors were honoured by being admitted
-to Rosemount.
-
-"Rather reminds me of a young queen entertaining her subjects," Pomfret
-remarked afterwards to his friend in a rather enthusiastic outburst.
-"I'm not speaking of the 'county' of course, but these Blankfield women
-make you feel they are overwhelmed with your condescension in coming
-to their houses, that they are hardly fit to sit at the same table with
-you."
-
-The dinner was plain, but well cooked. The appointments were perfect,
-snowy napery, elegant glass and cutlery. One neat-handed maidservant
-waited, and waited well. Mr. Burton carved the dishes that were
-carvable, there was no pretence at an _a la Russe_ banquet. Their small
-establishment could not cope with that, and they did not attempt it.
-There was a generous supply of wines: hock, burgundy and champagne.
-
-And Mr. Burton, strangely subdued, was quite a good host, hospitable but
-not pressing. Murchison thought he must have been having some lessons
-from his sister, who seemed intuitively to do the right thing Still
-suspicious, he was sure that she had been steadily coaching him how to
-comport himself on this important night.
-
-For, after all, it must be a feather in their caps, that after having
-been coldly cast aside by the _elite_ of Blankfield, they had captured
-for their dining acquaintance two of the most popular officers of the
-exclusive Twenty-fifth.
-
-And Murchison, ever on the watch for any little sign or symptom to
-confirm his suspicions, had to admit the pair were behaving perfectly.
-Not the slightest sign of elation at the small social triumph manifested
-itself in the demeanour of either. Dinner-parties like this might be a
-common occurrence for all they showed to the contrary.
-
-The substantial portion of the meal was over. Dessert was brought in,
-with port, claret and sherry, all of the most excellent vintage. The
-house was a small one, and not over-staffed, but there was no evidence
-of lack of means. Perhaps the Burtons were wise people in not keeping
-up a great show, but spending the greater part of their income on their
-personal enjoyments.
-
-While the men were still lingering over their dessert, Miss Burton rose.
-
-"There are no ladies to support me, so I shall feel quite lonely by
-myself," she said in her pretty, softly modulated voice. "Shall we have
-coffee in the drawing-room? You men can smoke. It is quite Liberty Hall
-here. My brother smokes in every room of the house."
-
-Murchison noted the subtle difference between the brother and sister.
-If Burton had given the invitation, he would certainly have said, "you
-gentlemen." The beautiful Norah would not make a mistake like that.
-
-Five minutes afterwards, the three men trooped into the pretty
-drawing-room with its subdued, shaded lights. Norah was sitting at a
-small table, on which were set the coffee equipage with an assortment
-of liqueurs. Decidedly, the Burtons knew how to do things when they
-received guests.
-
-The "bounder" brother, as Hugh always called him to himself, had drunk
-very heavily at dinner of every wine: hock, burgundy and champagne. But
-evidently he could carry a big quantity. It would take more than a
-small dinner-party like this to knock him over. When he entered the
-drawing-room his mien was as subdued as when he had first received his
-visitors.
-
-They drank their coffee round the fair-sized octagonal table, and then
-they broke up. Miss Burton retired to a Chesterfield, whither Pom-fret
-followed her, as he was bound to do.
-
-Burton bustled out of the room, and returned with a huge box of
-expensive cigars. He offered the box to Hugh, who took one with a
-deprecating look at the young hostess.
-
-"We dare not, Miss Burton. Think of your curtains in the morning."
-
-"Don't trouble, Captain Murchison," she said, with her charming smile.
-"The curtains have to take what comes in this house. George doesn't
-often sit in this room, but when he does he always smokes cigars. I told
-you this was Liberty Hall, you know."
-
-The box was offered to Pomfret, who took one. "Do you smoke, Miss
-Burton?" he asked.
-
-"Once in a blue moon. I think I will have one to-night, as a little
-treat. It is terribly tempting, when I see all you men smoking." The
-enamoured Pomfret fetched her a cigarette, hovered over her with a
-match, till it was properly lighted, and settled himself again on the
-Chesterfield. If that silly old Hugh didn't butt in, he was going to
-have a nice little chat with this charming girl, who had played the
-young hostess to such perfection.
-
-But Hugh was safely out of the way. Burton had piloted him to a
-comfortable easy-chair at the extreme end of the drawing-room, and
-these two antipathetic persons were apparently engaged in an interesting
-conversation. Anyway, Murchison's laugh rang out frequently.
-
-Pomfret, it must be confessed, was not very great at conversation. If
-the ball were opened, he could set it rolling, but he lacked initiative.
-He looked at Miss Burton with admiring eyes, but although he had got her
-comfortably to himself on that convenient Chesterfield, he could think
-of nothing to say to her.
-
-And then a brilliant inspiration came to him. "I say, how gracefully you
-smoke." The young woman burst into a pleasant peal of quite spontaneous
-laughter. She always had a ready smile at command, but her laughter was
-generally a little forced. This time it was perfectly genuine.
-
-"Oh, you are really comical," she cried. "How can any girl smoke a
-cigarette gracefully? In the first place, it is a most unfeminine thing
-to do. All people must smoke them in the same way, and there can never
-be anything graceful in the act."
-
-"Women don't smoke them the same way," replied the young subaltern, with
-the air of a man who has observed and learned. "Most of them chew them,
-and hold them at arm's length, as if they were afraid of being bitten."
-
-"It's because they don't like smoking, really, and only do it to be in
-the fashion. Now, when I am quite in the mood, I actually revel in a
-cigarette. I am in the mood to-night."
-
-Pomfret leaned forward, with a tender expression on his rather homely,
-but good-humoured, countenance.
-
-"That means that you feel happy to-night, eh?"
-
-She nodded brightly. "Oh, ever so happy! It is seeing new faces, you
-know, after weeks of isolation," she added with a touch of almost
-girlish gaiety. "It seems such ages since we gave a dinner-party. And
-you and Captain Murchison are so nice. It seems almost like a family
-gathering."
-
-"You like my friend Murchison, then? I am glad, because it is to him I
-owe the pleasure of your acquaintance."
-
-"I think he is a dear, he seems so honest, straightforward, and so
-reliable." She spoke with apparent conviction. "Were you not dreadfully
-shocked when he told you, for of course he must have told you, how we
-got to know each other?"
-
-"Not in the least," said Mr. Pomfret stoutly. "I explained to him that
-people can become acquainted, without being properly introduced in the
-conventional sort of way."
-
-"Ah, then, he had some doubts himself?" flashed Miss Burton. "I expect
-he was a little shocked, if you were not."
-
-"Not in the slightest, I assure you," replied Mr. Pomfret easily. He was
-not above telling a white lie upon occasions. He remembered too well
-the remarks that his friend had made upon the girl's unconventional
-behaviour, but he was not going to admit anything.
-
-Miss Burton spoke softly, after a brief pause. "You and Captain
-Murchison are very great friends, are you not?"
-
-"Awful pals," was the genuine response. "You see, he knows all my
-family. And when I joined the regiment, they deputed him to look after
-me. He has got a hard task," he added with a laugh.
-
-"Oh, not so very hard really, I am sure of that." Norah's voice was very
-sweet, very caressing. "But you and your friend are of very different
-temperaments."
-
-"In what way?"
-
-She smiled. "Oh, in half a hundred ways. Captain Murchison is as true as
-steel, but also as hard as steel. You, now, are not in the least hard.
-You are very kind and compassionate, you think the best of everybody."
-
-"Don't flatter me too much, please," interjected the bashful Pomfret.
-
-"Oh, pardon me, I know just the kind of man you are." The sweet face
-was very close to his own, the beautiful, rather sad eyes were looking
-steadily into his. "You are a rich man, or you would not be in this
-expensive regiment. But, if you were a poor man, and you had only ten
-pounds in your pocket, you would lend an impecunious friend five of
-them, and not trouble whether he repaid you or not."
-
-"I think you have fitted me, Miss Burton. My dear old chum Hugh is never
-tired of telling me I am an awful ass."
-
-"You are both right, really," answered Miss Burton.
-
-"You see, we look at life from two different standpoints."
-
-"I fancy you come from two different classes?" queried the charming
-young woman.
-
-Pomfret felt a little embarrassed. He did not want to give away his
-particular chum. But there were no doubt certain inherited commercial
-instincts in Hugh that sometimes offended the descendant of a more
-careless and aristocratic family.
-
-"You see, Hugh has come from the trading class, originally. His
-ancestors, no doubt, were close-fisted people. Hugh is not close-fisted
-himself: he is, in a certain way, the soul of generosity, but sometimes
-the old Adam peeps out in little things."
-
-He had a swift pang of remorse when he had said this. For he suddenly
-remembered Hugh's generous offer of the two hundred which Pomfret, by
-a very diplomatic letter, was going to cajole out of the octogenarian
-great-aunt.
-
-"Believe me," added he fervently, "Hugh is one of the best. He is a
-little peculiar sometimes in small things. I ought not to have spoken as
-I have done. I am more than sorry if I have conveyed a wrong impression
-of him."
-
-"But you have not," cried Norah Burton swiftly. "He would be hard in
-some things: I am sure--for instance--he would never forgive a really
-dishonourable action, even in the case of his best friend."
-
-"No, I am sure he would not," assented Pomfret. "But I don't fancy he
-has been much tried that way. We don't get many 'rotters' amongst our
-lot."
-
-"_Noblesse oblige_," quoted Miss Burton, lightly. Then she added more
-seriously: "And I am sure he is very kind-hearted and thoughtful. I
-was impressed with his reluctance to smoke because of the curtains. Of
-course, he did not remember that it did not matter in the least, as we
-never have callers."
-
-She was getting on the theme of their social isolation, but Pomfret was
-sure that, unlike her brother, strangely subdued to-night from his usual
-boisterousness, she would handle the subject with her customary tact and
-good taste.
-
-"Ah, of course, all that is very regrettable. It is not so much your
-loss, as the loss of Blankfield. I suppose you won't stay very long
-here."
-
-For a moment there came a blazing light in the soft, beautiful eyes.
-"A few days ago, I advised my brother to pack up and clear out. The
-snobbish plutocracy of Blankfield had beaten us, made up of retired
-shopkeepers and merchants. To-night, with you and Captain Murchison as
-our guests, I think we have beaten Blankfield with its fat mothers and
-plain daughters."
-
-She looked superb, as she drew her slender form up to its full height,
-the glow of indignant triumph blazing on her cheek. At the moment she
-was extremely beautiful. If Pomfret had been attracted before, he was
-infatuated now.
-
-"I will help you to beat the Blankfield people, for whom I don't care a
-row of pins. I will come, whenever you want me."
-
-"And your friend Captain Murchison, will he come, too?"
-
-Pomfret smiled whimsically. "Oh yes, he will come, if I make a point
-of it. Old Hugh thinks he leads me, but I really lead him." She leaned
-forward eagerly. "Can you bring some of your brother officers, Mr.
-Pomfret? Please don't think I am bold and forward and presumptuous. But
-I do long to be even with these Blankfield people. I would love to make
-a little sort of _salon_ of my own. I know it is useless to expect the
-women at present, but they might come in time. Mind you, I don't want
-them."
-
-"I will try," said Pomfret slowly. "I think I may say that Hugh and I
-are the two most popular men in the regiment; I say it without vanity.
-And I don't suppose we care a snap of the fingers about the Blankfield
-people. Still, I don't want to raise hopes that may never be fulfilled.
-I can only say, I will try." There was a pause. Then she spoke, and
-there was a far-away look in her eyes. "You hesitate, I see. Oh, I quite
-believe you when you say you will try. But there is some stumbling-block
-in the way, isn't there?" Pomfret had perforce to dissemble. "There is
-no stumbling-block that I know of, except running the risk of offending
-Blankfield. That is not a great one, as we shall be out of here in about
-two months."
-
-She leaned closer to him, and her voice sank to a whisper. "There is a
-stumbling-block, I know. You are too kind and generous to state what it
-is, you could not, as to-night he is your host. It is my brother."
-
-And then poor, infatuated Pomfret sought no further refuge in
-subterfuge. He blurted out the truth. "Some of our chaps wouldn't stand
-him, you know," he said simply.
-
-There was a little convulsive movement of the delicate hands. "And he
-is such a dear good fellow at heart, wanting I know in the little
-delicacies that mark a real gentleman. You see a great difference
-between us, don't you?"
-
-"A very distinct difference," assented Pomfret.
-
-"I will explain it to you in a few words. My father was a harum-scarum
-sort of person, as I told you last time you were here, hard-riding and
-hard-drinking. When he was a boy of twenty-five he married a woman out
-of his own class, a shop-girl or a barmaid, I am not quite sure which.
-George is many years older than myself, as I told you he is really my
-halfbrother. The first wife died, my father married again, this time
-a lady. I am the daughter of the second marriage. Now, I think you
-understand."
-
-Pomfret was delighted at this avowal, it proved his own prescience.
-
-"I am so glad you told me, but as it happens, it was just what I
-guessed."
-
-Miss Burton looked at him with admiring eyes. "You are really very
-clever, you know. Well, I will not exactly say this is a secret, but you
-will whisper it about discreetly. You need not be quite so frank as I
-have been about details, but you can hint at a _mesalliance_. I hate to
-have to tell you so much, for my brother has been so good to me."
-
-"Ah!" Mr. Pomfret's air plainly showed that he was eager for further
-information.
-
-And Miss Burton was quite willing to gratify him. The young man was a
-pleasant, comfortable sort of person to talk to. He was an admirable
-listener, and never broke in with unnecessary, or irritating
-interruptions.
-
-"When my father died he left little behind him but debts; my mother had
-preceded him some ten years. Poor George had gone into a stockbroker's
-office, through the good offices of a distant connection. His salary was
-very small, but he made a home for me. He would not hear of my earning
-my own living."
-
-"That could not have been very long ago," remarked Pomfret, "because you
-are not very old now."
-
-"No, it was not long," answered the girl, not committing herself to any
-definite dates. "Well, we had a very hard time, as you can imagine. Then
-suddenly our luck changed. An uncle of George's on his mother's side had
-gone out to Australia as a boy, and amassed, we won't say a fortune from
-your point of view, but what we should look upon as wealth. He had never
-married, and when he died, a will was found in which he left all he was
-possessed of to his sister's children. George was the only child, so he
-took it all."
-
-"So he threw up business and went in for a country life."
-
-"Well, he has thrown it up for a time. I am not quite certain he will
-not get tired of inactivity, and go back to it. Now that he has capital,
-it would be easy for him to embark in something that would keep him
-occupied, and pay him well."
-
-"Not a sportsman, I suppose, he doesn't care for hunting or shooting?
-The country is slow for a man if he doesn't do something in that line."
-
-The pretty girl smiled; there was a faint touch of humour in the smile.
-"Oh, he's not rich enough to indulge in luxuries of that sort. Besides,"
-she added hastily, "he has such wretched sight, he would be no good at
-sport."
-
-Pomfret thought it had been a very pleasant, enlightening conversation.
-Norah seemed to have been perfectly frank about their past and their
-present position. She did not pretend to be anything but what she was,
-the daughter of a spendthrift father, living on what was practically the
-charity of a good-hearted brother. And that brother was indebted for his
-good fortune to a relative who must have been a man of the people.
-
-While the two young people were having this confidential chat, Mr.
-Burton was making himself agreeable to the other guest, in his doubtless
-well-meant, but somewhat undiplomatic, fashion.
-
-"I do envy you young fellows when I see you walking about as if the
-world belonged to you."
-
-Hugh drew himself up stiffly. "I was not in the least aware that any one
-of us conveyed that impression."
-
-"No offence meant, I assure you." Hugh's tone showed him that he had
-been guilty of bad taste: a blessing Norah had not heard--she would have
-given him a bad quarter of an hour later on. "But all army men, I think,
-get a certain kind of swagger. Oh, nothing overbearing or unpleasant
-about it, of course. They are made so much of that there is no wonder
-if they do fancy themselves a bit. I'm sure I should if I were one of
-them."
-
-Murchison made no comment on this frank statement, and the other man
-rambled on in desultory fashion.
-
-"It's the life I wanted. As a boy I longed to grow up quickly and go
-into the army. There was a fair chance of it then, when the old man had
-still got a bit of money left. But by the time I was old enough the idea
-had to be knocked on the head. I had to go into a dingy stockbroking
-office instead."
-
-Hugh pricked up his ears at the announcement. He had not suspected that
-the man would be so communicative about his past. Of course he had gone
-as a clerk. If his father was not well-off enough to put him in the army
-neither could he have afforded to buy him a share in a business.
-
-"Yes," pursued Mr. Burton, "it was an awful come down after the dreams I
-had indulged in."
-
-"It must have been a very bitter disappointment," assented Hugh
-politely, in spite of his firm conviction that the army was the very
-last profession in the world suited to a man of his host's obvious
-peculiarities.
-
-"I should have been awfully keen on soldiering," pursued Mr. Burton,
-under the impression that he had discovered a sympathetic listener.
-"Don't you consider it a splendid life?"
-
-"There are many things in its favour, certainly," was the rather frigid
-reply.
-
-"But, after all, I don't think I should have cared to be in the line;
-there's not the same glamour about it, is there? You fellows in the
-cavalry, in a crack regiment like yours, must see the rosy side of
-life." He heaved a sigh. "And, of course, you've all got pots of money
-to grease the wheels."
-
-Hugh fidgeted perceptibly. How very vulgar the man was, with an innate
-vulgarity that nothing would ever eradicate. But his host, absorbed in
-his own reflections, did not observe the movement.
-
-"Of course, we know all about you, about the great house of Murchison,
-you are tiled-in all right." He lowered his voice to a confidential
-whisper: "What about that young chap yonder? I suppose he's rolling in
-money, too?"
-
-It was growing insufferable. For two pins Hugh would have got up and
-bidden him goodnight then and there, but he shrank from making a scene.
-what a fool he had been to come here, to allow his kindly feeling for
-that susceptible young donkey of a Pomfret to expose him to such an
-ordeal as this.
-
-"Really, Mr. Burton," he said in a cutting voice, "I do not discuss the
-private affairs of my friends on such a brief acquaintance. If you
-are really anxious to know, I believe Mr. Pomfret has considerable
-expectations from an old aunt who is fairly wealthy. Those expectations
-depend, I understand, upon his conforming generally to her wishes in all
-respects."
-
-"Ah, I understand," said the unabashed Burton. "Sorry if my question
-gave you offence. What really put it in my head was the difference
-between his position and mine when I was his age."
-
-There was silence for some little time, while the two men applied
-themselves steadily to their cigars. Then Burton jumped up suddenly.
-
-"This must be a bit slow for you and your friend, and the night is
-young. What do you say to a game at bridge?"
-
-Yes, Captain Murchison would welcome a game of bridge, anything as a
-relief to this vulgarian's conversation.
-
-They played for over two hours, Murchison keenly alert from certain
-suspicions that had been forming in his mind. At present there was no
-foundation for these vague suspicions. They played for small stakes,
-but the visitors rose up the winners, not by a great amount, but still
-winners.
-
-It was a fine night, the two men walked back to their quarters.
-
-"How did you get on with the charmer? I saw you seemed very confidential
-together," asked the older man.
-
-"Splendidly, old chap. She told me a lot about her history." Pomfret
-related all he had been told in full. "And how did you get on with the
-brother?"
-
-"Don't ask me," replied Hugh with a groan. "He's the most insufferable
-creature I ever came across. I don't really think I can go there again.
-At the beginning of the evening he started fairly well, but later he
-reverted to type."
-
-"Well, I may as well tell you straight, I shall. The next time we go
-I'll take a share of the brother."
-
-When Pomfret spoke in that tone he meant what he said, and Hugh knew he
-would have his own wilful way.
-
-There was one piece of information which the young subaltern had not
-imparted to his friend.
-
-It was this--that after much pressing, and more than one refusal, Miss
-Burton had agreed to meet him to-morrow afternoon at a very sequestered
-spot about a mile and a half from Blankfield, with the view of pursuing
-their acquaintance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-|From the night of that dinner-party Murchison noted a subtle difference
-in his young friend's demeanour. Pomfret had always been a harum-scarum
-sort of young fellow, accustomed to follow erratic and injudicious
-impulses, not absolutely devoid of brains of a certain order, but of
-imperfect and ill-balanced mentality.
-
-But in his wildest escapades he had always been frank and above-board.
-And he was ever the first, when he had overstepped the border-line,
-to admit that he was in the wrong. And on such occasions, far from
-justifying his exploits, he had been ready to deplore them.
-
-But his frankness seemed to have departed from that night. He seemed
-rather to avoid than seek the society of his old friend and mentor. When
-Hugh brought up the subject of the Burtons, Pomfret seemed anxious to
-avoid it, to say as little as possible. He seemed to shut himself up
-within his own soul.
-
-Hugh, of course, was profoundly uneasy. Such a transparent creature as
-Pomfret would not be likely to retire within his own shell unless there
-were cogent reasons for the withdrawal. And the reasons were inspired
-by the attractive personality of the fascinating siren at Rosemount,
-the charming young woman who explained the presence of an undesirable
-brother by the narrative of her father's first unfortunate marriage.
-
-Pomfret had invited the brother and sister to a dinner at the principal
-hotel in the place, and Hugh had been his friend's guest. Ladies, of
-course, could not be asked to the Mess. It had been a happy solution
-of a somewhat awkward position. Mr. Burton no doubt understood, but he
-accepted the situation with alacrity.
-
-From the dinner they had adjourned to Rosemount. Here they had played
-cards as before, but they left off fairly even. Hugh's suspicions about
-card-sharping were dissipated as before. At the same time, he was still
-resolved to keep a watchful eye upon the pair. It was firmly engrained
-upon his mind, and only, of course, from the purest instinct, that he
-did not trust either of them.
-
-Much to his surprise, they left without having been asked to a return
-dinner. It was the turn of the Burtons. And judging from the haste with
-which Burton had jumped at them on the first visit, the omission was a
-little noticeable. It could not be that these new isolated dwellers in
-Blankfield wanted to shelve an acquaintance which must have brightened
-their dull and unvisited existence.
-
-Another fact presented itself to Murchison's rather acute intelligence.
-There seemed already established between Pomfret and the attractive
-Norah a certain kind of freemasonry, a certain sort of easy relations.
-And once in the course of the evening he was sure that he heard the
-young man, in the course of a whispered conversation, address her by her
-Christian name. They had been sitting together on the Chesterfield, and
-their remarks to each other had been addressed in a very low tone. But
-Hugh's hearing was wonderfully acute, and he had surprised a sudden
-expression of rebuke in Miss Burton's eyes when Pomfret made the slip.
-
-And here, for a moment, this story must leave Hugh Murchison with his
-honest doubts and suspicions, while it follows the fortunes of his young
-friend and the attractive Norah Burton.
-
-For, truth to tell, at this particular juncture, young Pomfret, for
-all his apparent guilelessness, was pursuing a double game. Madly,
-overwhelmingly, in love with Norah, he was meeting her clandestinely,
-sometimes at her own house, sometimes in sequestered spots in the
-surrounding neighbourhood. And of these visits and meetings Hugh knew
-nothing.
-
-Pomfret was not free from a few pangs of self-reproach, from the fact
-that he was not running quite straight with good old Hugh, to whom he
-had always, hitherto, confessed all his difficulties and troubles.
-
-But then Hugh, although one of the best, was such a practical old stick.
-And if he told him the whole truth, there was no knowing what course
-Hugh might not think it was his duty to take. He might write to his
-family and bring them down in an avalanche on him, or even to the
-octogenarian aunt.
-
-Love taught him deep cunning, and what he lacked in this subtle quality
-was ably supplemented by Miss Burton, this young girl with the
-rather sad expression, and the candid eyes that always met your gaze
-unfalteringly.
-
-From the first clandestine meeting, arranged in whispers on the night of
-the dinner at Rose-mount, Pomfret had made the running very fast. He had
-given Norah to understand that he thought her the most desirable girl he
-had ever met, that no other woman had appealed, would or could appeal,
-to him as she did. There was a good drop of Irish blood in his own
-veins, and he certainly made a most fervent lover.
-
-Norah listened with a modest bashfulness that enchanted him. He was
-sure from her demeanour that she had never been made love to before. She
-seemed so overwhelmed that she could hardly say a word. If one were not
-so much in love, one might almost have thought she was stupid.
-
-She was not so stupid, however, as not to preserve her wits sufficiently
-to make another appointment, this time at Rosemount. Pomfret consented
-gladly, but he made a certain stipulation, which his companion was more
-than pleased to agree to.
-
-"We mustn't let old Hugh know about this, though, or he'll think he's
-left out in the cold. You see, it was really through him I knew you. You
-must tell your brother not to let it out."
-
-Miss Burton promised that, so far as she and her brother were concerned,
-Captain Murchison would be none the wiser. It only remained for Mr.
-Pomfret--although entreated to do so, she could not at this early stage
-address him as "Jack"--to surround his movements with a proper degree of
-mystery.
-
-When the two parted, and the meeting had been rather a brief one, for
-it was always a little dangerous lingering long about the environs
-of Blankfield, in case of unexpected intruders, Miss Burton made a
-significant remark.
-
-"I am quite sure your friend Captain Murchison does not like me. In
-fact, I think his real feeling is one of dislike."
-
-Mr. Pomfret was young enough to blush; he did so upon this occasion. He
-guessed the real truth, that Murchison did not dislike her at all, on
-the contrary, he rather admired her--but he had a certain distrust of
-her.
-
-"Fancy on your part, fancy, I'm quite sure," he answered glibly. "I
-expect he is a little bit sore, you know, about the whole thing, thinks
-I have cut him out with you."
-
-"Perhaps," assented Norah, easily. But in her own heart she knew it was
-nothing of the kind. She recognised at once the difference between the
-two men. Murchison was a thorough gentleman, kind and chivalrous, but
-he was a man of the world, with a certain hard strain in him, a man who
-would submit everything to the test of cold, practical reasoning, not to
-be hoodwinked or led astray.
-
-This poor babbling boy, with his unrestrained impulses, that Celtic
-leaven in his blood, would fall an easy prey to any woman who was clever
-enough to cast her spells over him. He would never reason, he would only
-feel.
-
-After that first meeting, the precursor of many others, the affair
-progressed briskly. Pomfret made love with great ardour, Norah received
-his advances with a shy sort of acquiescence that inflamed him the
-more. He was sure, oh very sure, he was the first who had touched that
-innocent heart.
-
-From these delightful confidences Murchison was shut out. It would not
-be wise to ignore him altogether, for such a course of action would have
-intensified his suspicions. But the invitations to Rosemount from either
-host or hostess were few and far between.
-
-He was not, however, so easily gulled as the three conspirators thought.
-Pomfret's preoccupied mood, the air of a man who had much on his mind,
-his frequent and unexplained absences, gave to his friend much food for
-thought. He felt certain that the easy-going, irresponsible young
-man was entangling himself. But in such a state of affairs he felt
-powerless. Short of invoking the influence of the Colonel, or writing to
-the elderly aunt, he could do nothing.
-
-It cannot be said that the course of true love was running very
-smoothly, even from the point of view of the ardent and enamoured suitor
-himself. In spite of his impulsive temperament, his disinclination to
-look hard facts squarely in the face, there was in him a slight leaven
-of common-sense.
-
-Save for the bounty and goodwill of this generous, if somewhat
-narrow-minded, aunt he was an absolute pauper. There was no hope of
-marrying without her consent. And he was quite sure that in a case like
-this her consent would never be given. A _fiancee_, to be received by
-her with approval, must present some sort of credentials.
-
-And there was the difficulty. Poor Jack had exhausted all his
-simple cunning to extract from them some convincing details of their
-antecedents. But even he, infatuated as he was, had to admit that
-they had parried inquiries with great adroitness. They maintained a
-persistent reticence as to names and places. Even he was forced to
-conclude that, for some reason or another, they did not choose to be
-frank about their past.
-
-These obvious facts, however, did not lessen his infatuation. To marry
-her was the one dominating object of his life, in spite of all that his
-few remaining remnants of common-sense could urge against such a step.
-
-More than once the rash idea occurred to him that he would marry her in
-secret, and when the marriage was an accomplished fact, throw himself
-upon his aunt's forgiveness.
-
-He mooted the idea to Norah, to whom, of course, he had already made a
-frank statement of his position, as befitted the honourable gentleman
-he was. But she did not receive the suggestion with enthusiasm, although
-she professed to fully reciprocate his ardent affection.
-
-"If I were a selfish girl, and only thought of my immediate happiness, I
-should say 'Yes,'" she said with a little tremulous smile, that made
-her look more desirable than ever in her lover's eyes. "But I could not
-allow _you_ to run such a terrible risk. Old people are very strange and
-very touchy when they think they have been slighted. Suppose she cast
-you off."
-
-"I suppose I could work, as thousands have to do," replied Jack, with a
-touch of his old doggedness.
-
-She shook her head. "My poor Jack! It is easy to talk of working, but
-you have got to find an employer. And you have been brought up to an
-idle life. What could you turn your hand to?" She paused a moment, and
-then added as an after-thought: "And besides, my brother would never
-sanction it."
-
-Even to Pomfret's slow revolving mind, the worldly taint in her just
-peeped forth in those sensible remarks.
-
-"If I am prepared to risk my aunt's displeasure, you can surely afford
-to risk your brother's?" he queried angrily.
-
-But Norah disarmed him with one of her sweetest smiles.
-
-"Be reasonable, dearest; we must not behave like a pair of silly
-children. And besides, there is a certain moral obligation on both
-sides. You owe everything to your aunt. I owe everything to my brother.
-It would be very base to ignore them."
-
-Jack was touched by the nobility of these last sentiments. "You are much
-better than I am, Norah, much less selfish."
-
-She caressed his curly head with her hand. "We must have patience, Jack.
-You have told me as plainly as your dear, kind heart would allow you to
-tell me that, for reasons which I don't want you to explain, your aunt
-would never give her consent to your marriage with me. Well, we must
-wait."
-
-In plain English her meaning was that they must possess their souls in
-patience till such time as this excellent old lady had departed this
-life. The suggestion was certainly a coldblooded one, but in his present
-infatuated mood Jack did not take any notice of that. Norah made a
-feeble attempt to gloss over the callousness of her remarks by adding
-that, although it was a very horrible thing to have to wait for the
-shoes of dead people, a person of Miss Harding's great age must expect
-to very shortly pay the debt of nature.
-
-Two days later, Jack received a telegram which seemed to give a certain
-air of prophecy to the young woman's forebodings. It was dispatched
-to him from his aunt's home in Cheshire by the local doctor, who had
-attended her for years. It informed him that she was seriously ill and
-requested his immediate attendance.
-
-He sought the Colonel at once and obtained leave. There was no time
-to call at Rose-mount, but he scribbled a hasty note to Miss Burton
-explaining matters. On his arrival, he found his aged relative very bad
-indeed.
-
-She had had a severe stroke, the second in two years, and Doctor
-Jephson was very doubtful as to whether her vitality would enable her to
-recover. He added that she had a marvellous constitution, and in such a
-case one could not absolutely say there was no hope. Of a feebler woman
-he would have said at once a few hours would see the end.
-
-Pomfret stayed there as long as the result was in doubt. At the end of
-three days the brave old lady rallied in the most wonderful way, and was
-able to hold a little conversation with her beloved nephew. He did not
-leave till the doctor assured him that she was out of danger.
-
-"It's a wonderful recovery," said Doctor Jephson as he shook hands at
-parting with the young man. "But it's the beginning of the end. I don't
-give her very long now, a few months at the most. Well, she has had a
-wonderful life, hardly an ache or a pain till the last few years, and
-then nothing very severe. But, of course, the machinery is worn out."
-
-All the way back to Blankfield those words kept repeating themselves in
-his ears: "I don't give her very long now, a few months at the most."
-
-And then an idea began to form in his mind. He was not so callous that
-he wanted his poor old aunt to die quickly, but it was obvious the time
-could not be long delayed when he would find himself possessed of her
-fortune, the master of his own destinies. Was there any reason why he
-should not forestall that period by the rather daring expedient of a
-secret marriage? They were both young. Even if the doctor was wrong,
-and they had to wait four or five years, it was not a great sacrifice
-of their youth. At least that was his way of looking at it. Of course he
-did not know how she would take the suggestion.
-
-She appeared to listen to him with deep interest and attention when he
-unfolded his plans.
-
-He explained that he had a very handsome allowance, which up to the
-present he had generally exceeded. Now that could all be altered. He
-would declare that he was sick of the army, and send in his papers.
-Through his family influence, he would get some Government appointment
-which necessitated his living in London. He would take inexpensive
-chambers for himself, rent a small house for her in some pleasant and
-not too remote suburb, and spend as much of his time as possible with
-her.
-
-"You don't think your aunt would reduce your allowance if you left
-the army?" was the one pertinent question she put to him when he had
-finished.
-
-"On the contrary, she would be more likely to increase it," was the
-confident rejoinder. "She would always have preferred that I should go
-in for something that meant real work. She thinks the army is an idle
-life."
-
-Miss Burton, no doubt, rapidly calculated the pros and cons of such a
-daring step. Jack had named a very handsome sum for her maintenance.
-If she could put up with the clandestine nature of the connection, till
-such time as a certain event happened, she would be better off than at
-Rosemount. She begged for time to think it over, and of course she would
-have to consult her brother before taking such an unusual step.
-
-That was only natural; it was impossible for Jack to insist that she
-should settle the matter herself without reference to the one person
-who, whatever his social defects, had behaved to her with unexampled
-kindness and generosity.
-
-Brother and sister no doubt talked it over very thoroughly, for it was
-three days before she told her lover that, although George would have
-preferred a longer period of waiting, he trusted him sufficiently to
-entrust Norah to his keeping, on the terms proposed.
-
-She did suggest that they should wait till Jack had left the army and
-settled himself in London. But he fought this idea stubbornly. He
-was mad to tie her to himself, for fear that somebody else with
-more immediate prospects might step in and carry her off. A little
-common-sense, of course, might have told him that if she was as fatally
-attractive to others as to himself, she would have been carried off
-before this.
-
-He was so terribly jealous of her, that he had never made the slightest
-effort to bring any of his brother officers round to Rose-mount. He even
-kept Hugh away as much as he could.
-
-The lovers worked out their little plot very nicely. Miss Burton would
-leave Blankfield for a couple of weeks, ostensibly to pay a visit to a
-relative. Her destination would be London. Jack would take a few days'
-leave of absence in due course, and procure a special licence. They
-would return on separate days and resume their normal life, until such
-time as they perfected their after arrangements.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-|Miss Burton arrived home on a Monday by a mid-day train; her attentive
-brother met her at the station. She was one of those girls who look
-smart and neat under the most trying circumstances. Although it was a
-long journey, she bore no signs or stains of travel.
-
-"When does Jack arrive, not too soon, I hope?" commented George, as he
-assisted her into a cab, and sat down beside her.
-
-"He wanted to come down to-night, but I vetoed that," responded the
-girl. "I told him people might put two and two together. He will get
-here mid-day to-morrow. I shall meet him casually in the High Street.
-He is going to bring Murchison along with him. And I shall give them an
-impromptu invitation to dinner."
-
-"I don't know that I am very keen on having Murchison to dinner,"
-remarked Mr. Burton in rather a growling tone.
-
-Miss Burton shrugged her shoulders. "And, perhaps, of the two, I am less
-keen than you are. But we have got to play it pretty quiet down here,
-till the whole lot of us clear out. Better to let Murchison come. He
-is pretty suspicious, as it is, but if we shut him out, he'll be more
-suspicious still."
-
-Mr. Burton chuckled in a grim fashion.
-
-"Well, our inquisitive friend, the whole lot of them as a matter of
-fact, can't do you much harm now. You've got him tight enough. And I'll
-say this for him, he's a bit soft and all that sort of thing, but he'll
-always play the game."
-
-The girl did not reply for a moment, then she spoke in a voice that was
-low and soft:
-
-"Yes, he's a dear little chap, he'll always play the game."
-
-"He can afford to," was the rather ungracious comment. Clearly Mr.
-Burton was not in one of his best moods to-day.
-
-Mr. Pomfret returned from his short leave on the following day, and at
-once sought his friend.
-
-"Glad to be back, old man, got fed-up with London," he cried cheerfully.
-His excuse for his visit was that he had to go up to see his aunt's
-solicitors, on some pressing affairs which the old lady had entrusted to
-him, after her temporary recovery from her dangerous illness.
-
-Now Murchison was pretty quick. He already had a shrewd suspicion that
-Jack had been making a great many surreptitious visits to Rosemount,
-that Hugh had been asked there now and again as a blind. And when he
-happened to be present, he had noticed that Jack and Norah had taken
-very little notice of each other. Jack had cultivated the brother, and
-left his friend to entertain the attractive young woman. In itself, this
-rather obvious attitude was suspicious. It confirmed his impression that
-there was a private understanding between the young people, and that
-they were throwing dust in his eyes.
-
-He had already put two and two together, with regard to the concurrent
-absences. Mr. Burton, meeting him in the High Street two days after
-Norah's departure, had told him his sister was paying a visit to a
-married relative who lived at Brighton. He would have not believed Mr.
-Burton on his oath.
-
-And Jack had taken his few days' leave, with the ostensible object of
-attending to his aunt's affairs.
-
-Hugh was pretty certain that the silly young ass, as he affectionately
-designated Jack in his own mind, had arranged to meet Miss Burton for
-a day or two in London, in order to enjoy her society, free from
-interruption or espionage. Of course, he was far from guessing the
-truth. He would not have thought Pomfret capable of any such daring
-action.
-
-Jack had just expressed himself fed-up with London, and yet his
-demeanour was jubilant and hilarious. Of course, Hugh could not dream
-his attitude was that of the exultant bridegroom, almost intoxicated
-with the knowledge of having gained his heart's desire. There had been a
-couple of lunches, perhaps a couple of dinners with a theatre thrown in.
-The buoyant Jack was living on these blissful memories.
-
-Later in the day, the two men walked down the High Street, of course in
-accordance with a pre-arranged plan decided upon by the artful lovers.
-The first person they met was Miss Burton, sauntering along slowly; Miss
-Burton, now Mrs. Pomfret, as fast as the ecclesiastical law of England
-could make her.
-
-She welcomed them with her ready and charming smile. "What strangers
-we are," she cried gaily. "And how nice to meet my only two friends in
-Blankfield."
-
-Pomfret did a little finessing on his own. 661 have been away for a few
-days, too,'' he explained glibly. "Had to go up to London to look
-after some business of my poor old aunt's; only got back by the mid-day
-train."
-
-"Did you enjoy your visit?" inquired Hugh of Norah, with that stiffness
-which he could never quite dissociate from his manner when addressing
-either brother or sister.
-
-"Yes and No," was the answer. "On the whole, I had quite a good time,
-but I am not sorry to get back to Rosemount, and my little household
-gods. Knowing you both has made such a difference to my life here."
-
-She was laying it on a little bit thick, Hugh thought, and he fancied
-she looked more at Pomfret than himself, as she said it. But he made a
-suitable and courteous reply.
-
-She was just about to turn away, when a sudden thought seemed to strike
-her.
-
-"As Mr. Pomfret and I have been such wanderers, would it not be nice to
-celebrate our return? will you both come to dinner to-night, and we can
-relate our experiences?"
-
-Pomfret jumped at the invitation, and Hugh had to follow suit. As a
-matter of fact, he was rather eager to go. They were both playing their
-parts very well, but he was quite convinced they _were_ playing a part.
-He was more certain about Jack than about her. Jack had been a bit too
-glib, had over-acted, as it were. They had met in London, if only for a
-few hours; he would have bet a thousand pounds on that.
-
-Jack declared that he would walk back to Rosemount with Miss Burton. He
-did not now care a farthing what members of Blank-field Society he met.
-Very shortly, the army would know him no more, and he would take up a
-new life with this fearless girl whom he had married on the sly.
-
-Hugh strolled on, and looked in at the various shops. The High Street
-happened to be rather empty on this particular afternoon, the _elite_ of
-Blankfield Society had not yet turned out for its usual promenade.
-
-Turning away from a jeweller's shop window, where he was inspecting some
-sleeve-links, he was confronted by a tall, sturdily built man of about
-fifty years of age, who raised his hat.
-
-"I believe I have the pleasure of addressing Captain Murchison?" he
-inquired politely.
-
-Hugh directed a swift glance at him. He was not exactly a common person,
-on the other hand he was certainly not a gentleman. There was something
-military in his bearing; he might have been a retired Sergeant-Major.
-
-"That is my name," answered Hugh a little curtly. "And who are you,
-please?"
-
-The tall man took a card from his waistcoat pocket and presented it.
-"Those are my credentials, sir."
-
-Hugh ran his eye over it swiftly. He saw the name, Davidson, a common
-one enough, and, in the corner, Scotland Yard. Why the deuce should this
-agent of the police want to accost him? And how did he know his name was
-Murchison?
-
-"I think you are acquainted with a family of the name of Burton, brother
-and sister they call themselves, who live at a house a little way out
-called Rosemount?"
-
-"Of course I know them, that is to say, in a casual sort of way."
-Needless to say that Murchison had never been more surprised in his
-life. "Why are you asking these questions?"
-
-Mr. Davidson darted a keen glance up and down the comparatively empty
-High Street. "This is rather an exposed place in which to talk, but I
-have something to tell you which I am sure you will be interested to
-listen to. I am staying at the 'Anchor,' in a side street from this. If
-you will do me the honour to follow me, I can take you into a private
-room there, where we shall not be observed nor overheard."
-
-Like a man in a dream, Hugh found himself following Mr. Davidson to the
-"Anchor," one of the second-class hotels in the town. He was quite
-sure that this tall, military looking person was going to clear up the
-mystery of the couple whom Blankfield, in its wisdom, had refused to
-visit, and whose acquaintance he owed to a random meeting at a tea-shop.
-
-There were only one or two idlers in the entrance-hall of the hotel,
-which was of what is known as the "Commercial" kind. Murchison was glad
-to find that he did not seem to attract their observation, as he rapidly
-crossed over to where his new acquaintance was standing in a rather dark
-corner.
-
-Davidson piloted him into a little sitting-room which opened out of a
-long narrow passage. He rang the bell, and ordered refreshments with the
-manner of a man who was acquainted with the usages of polite society.
-
-It would be quite safe to say that Hugh, the heir to a great fortune,
-brought up in the lap of luxury, an aristocrat by adoption, if not
-exactly by birth, had never found himself up till now in such an
-environment. He could not truthfully declare that it was an experience
-he wished to repeat.
-
-Still, he could blame nobody but himself, his foolish action in taking
-up with a couple of persons whom Blankfield, in its superior worldly
-wisdom, had decided to ignore. As he was in for it, and nothing could
-undo the past, it was better to go through with it. Let him accommodate
-himself to the situation, drink his whisky-and-soda in this dingy little
-parlour of a second-rate hotel, and treat the detective with genial
-courtesy.
-
-After the first mouthful of his drink, Davidson began to explain.
-
-"Of course, sir, I quite understand this is not the sort of thing or
-the sort of place to which you are accustomed," he said, waving
-a deprecatory hand round the shabby little parlour. "But in this
-particular case, I and my friend--that friend I may say at the moment
-is elsewhere taking his observations--wanted to lie low. It didn't
-enter into our scheme to put up at a swagger hotel, and run the risk of
-gossip. It might have reached the ears of those we are after, and scared
-them off." Hugh listened attentively. There was something very serious
-in the wind now, and the dwellers at Rosemount were as yet unaware of
-what was impending.
-
-His surprise expressed itself in the direct question which he shot at
-the detective: "I take it you are here to arrest them, then?"
-
-"One of them, the man," corrected Mr. Davidson, quietly; "we know a good
-deal about the girl, but we have no evidence that implicates her beyond
-the fact of her association with him, and from our point of view that
-means nothing in a Court of Law."
-
-"What is his offence?" asked the startled Hugh.
-
-"Forgery," was the laconic answer. "He belongs to a pretty well-known
-gang, and we have had our suspicions of him for a long time now, but he
-was devilish clever and cunning. Several of his pals were caught, but it
-was always difficult to rope him in. We shouldn't have got him now but
-for the fact of one of his pals peaching. And even now, although the
-evidence is strong enough for us, I doubt if it is strong enough to get
-him more than a comparatively light sentence. If he can lay hold of a
-clever counsel, and there will be some money at the back of him, if not
-a great deal, he won't come off so badly."
-
-So Mr. Burton was a criminal, and had been living in Blankfield on the
-proceeds of his nefarious calling. The rich uncle in Australia who had
-left him a comfortable fortune was a myth.
-
-"I suppose he has been on the 'crook' all his life?" queried Hugh.
-
-"Ever since he has come under our observation," was the reply of the
-detective. "Before he joined the present gang, a few of whom we have
-collared from time to time, card-sharping was his lay. Once he rented an
-expensive flat in Paris, and I believe made a tidy bit out of it. That
-is where the young lady first appeared upon the scene."
-
-"But how long ago is that? She doesn't look more than twenty."
-
-"I know," said Mr. Davidson. "She looks wonderfully young, that is one
-of her assets. As a matter of fact I should say she was twenty-four at
-the least. The Parisian episode occurred about five years ago, making
-her nineteen at the time. He was there about twelve months, at the end
-of which time he got an introduction to the forging gang, and chucked
-the cards in favour of a more remunerative game."
-
-"She acted, I suppose, as a decoy and confederate?"
-
-"So I am given to understand. She very seldom played herself, but used
-to signal the opponents' cards to him."
-
-"What a precious pair," groaned Hugh. He had long been doubtful of them,
-but he had never anticipated this.
-
-"Now, Captain Murchison, there is a little question I want to ask you,"
-said the detective briskly, after a brief pause. "My pal and I only
-arrived here yesterday, but we have not been idle, we have picked up
-a good deal. We have discovered that nobody in Blankfield visits them,
-except yourself and another officer, a Mr. Pomfret. That is true, is it
-not?"
-
-"Quite true," assented Murchison.
-
-"You frequently go to their house together. But perhaps I may be telling
-you something you don't know when I say that Mr. Pomfret more frequently
-has gone alone."
-
-"I have had my suspicions some time," was Hugh's answer.
-
-"Now tell me, please; I suppose in the evenings you played cards, or
-roulette, or some game of chance. I thought so. Did you lose much? Had
-you any suspicions they were rooking you?"
-
-"On my first visit, a suspicion that they might do so crossed my mind.
-But nothing of the sort was attempted. I should say that, up to the
-present, my friend and I stand a bit to the good. Evidently, that was
-not their object."
-
-"Clearly," assented the shrewd detective, "they had a deeper game than
-that on. They wanted to catch this young friend of yours for a husband,
-and failing that, to entrap him, so that they could blackmail him on the
-threat of a breach of promise case."
-
-"It looks as if that was their object."
-
-"Now, Captain Murchison, may I ask you if your friend is a man likely
-to fall into the trap? I saw him in the High Street this afternoon
-with you: and if I may say so without offence, he doesn't give me the
-impression of a very strong or self-reliant person."
-
-Hugh shook his head. "I fear he is very weak, very impulsive, very
-emotional, a ready prey for a designing woman."
-
-"Have you any idea how far the thing has gone?"
-
-To this question Hugh could only reply in the negative. His one hope was
-that the foolish boy had seen her so often that there was no necessity
-to write incriminating letters.
-
-"Well, Captain Murchison, my object in asking you to grant me an
-interview was two-fold. In the first place, I wanted to know if there
-had been any card-sharping. Then, as I am aware you go to the house, I
-wished to tell you that I and my friend are going to take him to-night.
-It might happen that you would be going there, and of course, you will
-not want to be on the stage when we play our little comedy."
-
-"We have promised to go to dinner tonight. She asked us both when we met
-her this afternoon."
-
-"And of course now, you will not go. I will take him before dinner-time,
-so you need not send round any excuses."
-
-Poor Hugh felt very miserable. What he especially shirked was having to
-tell this sordid narrative to Pomfret. He expressed to the detective his
-shrinking from the unwelcome task.
-
-"I quite understand, sir, but it's got to be done," replied the
-detective, firmly. For a few seconds after he had spoken, he seemed to
-be thinking deeply. Then he came out with a startling proposition.
-
-"Look here, Captain Murchison, something has just occurred to me. I am
-not sure whether you will think it a good plan. Just now I thought it
-would be better for you not to be there. But if this young gentleman
-is so gone on the girl, it might make a deeper impression on him, bring
-home to him more strongly the sense of her unworthiness, if he were
-actually present at the scene. And it would spare you any painful
-explanations, beforehand. Afterwards you can tell him or not, as you
-please, about our interview here."
-
-Hugh made a gesture of disgust. "You propose that we should carry out
-our original intention of dining there and of sitting at the table of a
-criminal? I don't think I could bring myself to it."
-
-If Mr. Davidson did not quite agree with the young man's scruples, he
-was open-minded enough to see the matter from Hugh's point of view.
-
-"I quite understand, sir. But I think I can manage it all right. You
-say they dine at eight. Get there with your friend a quarter of an hour
-before. I will be there with my friend at five minutes to, before the
-dinner is served. You then won't have to sit at his table, you see."
-
-Hugh was still hesitating. Mr. Davidson proceeded to clinch his
-argument.
-
-"You see, sir, it will be so much better for Mr. Pomfret to see with
-his own eyes and hear with his own ears. When he has seen us clap
-the darbies on Burton, and listened to what I can tell him about the
-girl--you can just give me a lead there, if you don't mind--I think he
-will be cured of his calf-love on the spot. As far as he is concerned,
-we want to make a swift and sudden cure, to kill his affection at once."
-
-Yes, on the whole, after a little further reflection Murchison was
-disposed to fall in with this new suggestion. Pomfret, however deep his
-infatuation, could not resist the evidence of his own senses. He would
-be much more strongly impressed than by a mere bald narration of the
-facts as conveyed to his friend by the detective.
-
-So it was settled. Hugh would bring Pomfret to Rosemount at twenty
-minutes or a quarter to eight. At five minutes to, Davidson and his
-colleague would present themselves to execute their painful errand.
-
-"Just a word before I go," said the young man as he turned towards the
-door. "Is the man's name really Burton, or only an alias?"
-
-"That is his real name. Of course he has had aliases. His family, I
-understand, are respectable people of the lower middle-class. He was the
-black sheep, born with crooked and criminal instincts."
-
-"And the girl, is she really his sister?"
-
-"On that point, I have no positive information," replied Davidson. "She
-has passed as such ever since the Paris days. But I should very much
-doubt it. I am informed that they are very unlike in manners and
-appearance, that he is a rough sort of fellow, while she would pass
-anywhere for a lady."
-
-Hugh went back to the barracks, more than rejoiced at the fact that the
-detective seemed to have appeared on the scene in the very nick of time.
-If marriage was contemplated as the result of this clandestine wooing,
-what a terrible tragedy would be averted from the unlucky Pomfret!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-|It was twenty minutes to eight as the two young men rang at the
-door-bell of Rosemount. Pomfret was always a slow dresser. It was only
-by extraordinary efforts that Hugh had got him off in time.
-
-Brother and sister were awaiting them in the pretty drawing-room, lit
-with softly shaded lamps. Miss Burton rose to meet them, she extended
-a hand to each, in her pretty graceful way, as if she looked upon them
-both as her dearest friends, and would make no difference between them
-in her greeting.
-
-But Hugh was very wide-awake, after his meeting with the detective, and
-he did notice that the left hand which she extended to Pomfret lingered
-a little longer in his responsive clasp than did the right which she had
-given to him.
-
-Yes, it was obvious that their acquaintance had gone far. There was
-even, he fancied, an intelligent sympathy in their mutual glances.
-Pomfret was the lover, Hugh Murchison was simply the friend.
-
-Mr. Burton welcomed them heartily. "Just like old times," he cried in
-his rough, breezy fashion. "I've been like a fish out of water during
-Norah's absence. It was just like her to organise a little party, simply
-us four, to celebrate her return."
-
-It struck Hugh that his conviviality was just a trifle forced, that he
-seemed "jumpy" and nervous. Had he by chance spotted those two strangers
-in the High Street, and wondered what manner of men they were?
-
-Pomfret settled himself on the chesterfield beside Norah, in spite
-of her rather obvious signals to preserve a more discreet attitude.
-Ignorant of what was going to happen a few minutes hence, her great
-object was to conceal the fact that Jack should take the position of an
-acknowledged lover.
-
-In her secret heart, she was very apprehensive of Murchison. She knew he
-was suspicious of her, and he had a sort of elder brother affection for
-Pomfret. She was not by any means sure as to the lengths to which this
-fraternal feeling might lead him. It might even inspire him to evoke the
-assistance of the Pomfret family, and then the security of her present
-position might be menaced.
-
-The secret marriage was, after all, in the nature of a gamble. If things
-turned out as she expected, if the old aunt died in reasonable time, the
-odds were in her favour. She could twist Jack round her little finger.
-But nobody knew better than this astute young woman of the world that
-there is many a slip betwixt the cup and the lip. Something that she had
-not calculated, not foreseen, might happen at any moment, and her house
-of cards might tumble to the ground. Her adventurous life had taught her
-never to be too sure of momentary prosperity.
-
-She was a little bit nervous and "jumpy," like her brother, to-night.
-Her smile was a little forced, her high spirits rather assumed. The
-wedding-ring, the marriage certificate hidden from sight, were great
-assets. And yet, was it all just a little too good to be quite true?
-
-Murchison talked with the brother, desultory sort of talk, hardly
-conscious of what he was saying. His ears were straining for the sound
-of that eletric-bell which would herald the arrival of Davidson and his
-colleague.
-
-And it came very quickly. There was a loud, imperative peal. Burton
-started from his seat, and forgot his assumed good manners.
-
-"Who the devil is that?" he cried fiercely. "Do they want to knock the
-house down?" It was the vulgar exclamation of a very vulgar man.
-
-Miss Burton was more mistress of herself, but Hugh observed that her
-cheek went a shade paler. Well, it was only natural. These two had been
-living in fear of the law for more years than they cared to remember.
-And they had thought they were safely in harbour. Poor fools!
-
-She turned to Pomfret, and forced a wan smile. "It is really quite
-alarming, Mr. Pomfret, visitors at this time of the evening. And you
-know so well that nobody in Blankfield, except yourselves, ever crosses
-our threshold."
-
-The happy Jack, the husband of a few short hours, was quite unperturbed.
-He smiled back at her confidently.
-
-"Somebody come to the wrong house, I should say. Why, you have gone
-quite pale! What a nervous little thing it is!" He whispered the last
-sentence in a lover-like tone.
-
-Murchison felt every nerve in his body tingling. Jack was in a state of
-ignorance. The brother and sister, he was sure, were filled with vague
-and undefined alarms. He, alone out of the four sitting in that charming
-little drawing-room awaiting the announcement of dinner, was sure of
-what was going to happen.
-
-He stole a look across at Pomfret with the happy, fatuous smile of the
-successful lover on his face. Poor devil! In another couple of minutes
-he would be terribly disillusioned.
-
-There was a heavy trampling of feet across the hall. The visitors,
-whoever they were, had pushed past the trim and ladylike parlourmaid.
-
-The drawing-room door was flung open, and the two big men, Davidson and
-his colleague, advanced towards Burton who was standing in the middle of
-the room.
-
-The detective spoke in a clear, ringing voice. "It's all up, Mr. Burton,
-I won't trouble to recount your various aliases. I've a warrant here to
-arrest you on a charge of forgery. You've gone free for some time, but
-one of your old pals has peached upon you. Hard luck for you, otherwise
-you might have been playing still, perhaps for ever, this nice little
-'stunt' at Blankfield. I suppose you will come quietly?"
-
-For a few seconds George Burton indulged in some horrible imprecations.
-In the same breath he protested his absolute innocence, and denounced
-the "pal" who had betrayed him. Mr. Davidson cut him short, as he
-fastened the handcuffs on his wrist.
-
-"Stow it, old man! Be a sport. It's a fair cop, isn't it? You knew the
-risk you ran when you went into this business."
-
-Mr. Burton subsided. "Yes, it's a fair cop," he growled. "I don't blame
-you, you are only doing your duty. I've no grudge against you. But by
-Heaven, when I come out, I'll do for that swine who has given me away,
-if I have to swing for it."
-
-Pomfret had risen from his seat on the chesterfield at the dramatic
-entrance of the two strangers. Norah had risen also. In the few seconds
-that elapsed between their entrance and the clapping of the handcuffs
-on Burton, she stretched out appealing arms to him, and cried out in a
-voice of despair:
-
-"Stand by me, Jack, stand by me. I knew nothing of this. It is as great
-a surprise to me as to you. Oh, my poor brother! He has done this for
-love of me."
-
-Murchison heard the impassioned tones, the despairing appeal. They
-would have melted a heart of stone. What effect would they have upon the
-unsuspicious Jack?
-
-Pomfret withdrew himself, almost coldly, from the proffered embrace. In
-a few seconds, as it seemed to Hugh, he had grown from a boy to a man.
-
-He turned to the detective, and Hugh was delighted at the sudden dignity
-that seemed to have come to him.
-
-"You seem to know a great deal about this man whom you have handcuffed,
-and who admits you are only doing your duty. Do you know anything about
-his sister, Miss Burton?"
-
-Mr. Davidson glanced significantly at Murchison. They had arranged
-a little conversation between themselves, but Jack's frankness had
-rendered this unnecessary.
-
-"What I know of the young lady, sir, I am sorry to tell you, is not to
-her credit. She has been associated with this man for some years. She
-started with him in Paris some time ago, when he was a card-sharper, and
-running a gambling-saloon. But to be fair, she is not in this business
-with him, and I have nothing against her."
-
-"Are they what they represent themselves to be, brother and sister?"
-Pomfret's voice was very quiet, but there was in it a suppressed note
-of agony. How he had loved this girl, and a few hours ago he had clasped
-her in his arms as his wife!
-
-The keen eyes of the detective softened as he looked at Jack, who was
-hiding the most intense agitation under an apparently stoical demeanour.
-
-"I have no accurate information on that point, sir, but I should very
-much doubt the fact of their relationship."
-
-While this brief conversation was taking place between Pomfret and
-Davidson, Norah was still standing with arms outstretched.
-
-Again there came forth the appealing, impassioned cry: "Jack, stand by
-me! Jack, stand by me!" She sank down on the sofa, and put her hands
-before her face. "Stay with me, wait till they have all gone, and I will
-explain everything. I have nothing to do with this."
-
-But Pomfret stood like a man turned to stone. Then suddenly, Norah gave
-a little gurgling cry, and fainted. Pomfret made a step towards her, and
-halted. His great love for her had been killed. Perhaps at this moment
-he hated her more than he had ever loved her.
-
-The parlour-maid, with a white face, was peeping in the room. Davidson
-beckoned to her.
-
-"My colleague will help you to take her up to her room. Look after her.
-She's as game as they make them, but to-night's t been too much for her.
-She has been playing for big stakes, and she has lost."
-
-The maid and Davidson's burly assistant lifted up the recumbent form.
-And when they had carried her out, Pomfret's self-control seemed to give
-way. He suddenly clutched at his throat and turned to Hugh.
-
-"Old man, I have had as much as I can stand. For Heaven's sake, take me
-from this accursed house."
-
-Hugh put his arm under his to steady him.
-
-The boy's nerve had gone, he was trembling like a man stricken with the
-ague. There was no cab or taxi to be got in this outlying district. They
-had to walk back to the barracks.
-
-Hugh planted him in an easy-chair in his own quarters, and mixed him a
-stiff peg. Even Dutch courage was better than nothing. Pom-fret drank it
-in two big gulps. Then he pulled himself together.
-
-"I have been an infernal fool, old man," he gasped, "an infernal fool."
-
-Hugh spoke soothingly. "Of course you have. But the folly is over. You
-now know Norah Burton and her rascally brother for what they are, a pair
-of criminals and adventurers."
-
-"But you don't know all," groaned the unfortunate Jack. "Norah Burton is
-my wife. I married her secretly the other day, by special licence, while
-I was up in London."
-
-Hugh leapt to his feet in astonishment. He had his own ideas of that
-visit to London, coupled with Norah's absence. But that Pom-fret, weak
-and impressionable as he was, should have made such a fool of himself,
-was beyond the limits of his comprehension.
-
-In a moment he pulled himself together. The poor lad was in a big mess
-enough, it was no time to rub it in. "Tell me all about it, old chap,"
-he said quietly.
-
-And Pomfret told him. He made it clear, perfect gentleman as he
-was, that Norah had been the least to blame in the matter, that
-the suggestion had come from himself, that Norah had insisted upon
-consulting her brother before yielding to his wishes.
-
-Yes, of course, Hugh could understand all that. They had known just the
-kind of man they were dealing with. They had hooked and landed their
-fish well. To a woman in her uncertain state, a husband with some
-prospects was better than her insecure position with a scoundrel like
-George Burton.
-
-Hugh filled a big pipe full up with a very strong and potent tobacco.
-He thought better when he was smoking, and this was a situation that
-demanded a good deal of thought.
-
-After a while he spoke. "Well, Jack, let us look facts in the face. What
-is done can't be undone. You have married this woman, and as long as she
-lives she is entitled to call herself Mrs. Pomfret, and you will have to
-keep her. There is no getting over that."
-
-The unhappy Jack groaned. There was no getting over that. This
-attractive, charming young woman, sister or confederate, or whatever
-relationship she stood in to this wretched criminal, was his legal wife,
-and, if she chose, she could make things very uncomfortable for him.
-
-"Well, old man, you have made a hash of your life at the very beginning
-of it. As I say, that can't be undone. You've got to make the best of
-it. I suppose you have entered into some financial arrangements with
-her."
-
-"Seven hundred a year till I come into my aunt's money. After that,
-of course, our marriage was to be acknowledged, and we would live
-together."
-
-"I see," said Hugh, assuming a cheerfulness he did not quite feel.
-"Well, I should not say she would try for more than her seven hundred a
-year at present. When your aunt dies she will of course fight for a bit
-more. I take it, after to-night's work, you will never want to live with
-her, cajoling and attractive as she is."
-
-Pomfret shuddered. "After what that fellow said, my love for her died.
-But, by Heaven, Hugh, I did love her while I believed in her."
-
-"Of course, of course. Have you signed any document about that seven
-hundred, by the way?"
-
-"Not yet. My solicitor is sending me the document to-day, it will reach
-me to-morrow morning."
-
-"It will make it a little easier to deal with her, then. Are you going
-to leave yourself in my hands? I don't think she will be very full of
-fight for the next few days."
-
-"Certainly I will, Hugh. Do your best for me. I never want to see her
-again, of that you may be sure."
-
-Murchison reflected deeply before he spoke again. "I doubt if she will
-trouble you very much. It won't be very difficult to compromise with
-her, she has too much to hide. And now for yourself."
-
-"Yes," groaned the unhappy Pomfret, in a hollow voice. "And now for
-myself. What do you suggest?"
-
-"There's only one thing to do, and that is to put the past behind
-you. As long as this woman lives, you can never marry. But many men go
-through life and remain bachelors, and are not altogether unhappy. You
-must make up your mind to be one of the bachelors, Jack."
-
-But Jack looked very despairing. The shock had been a terrible one. In
-spite of the stiff peg he had taken, his face was still livid, and his
-hands were shaking.
-
-Hugh looked at him anxiously. He was very weak; had the occurrences
-of this terrible night driven him over the border line that separates
-sanity from insanity?
-
-Presently he muttered, almost as if to himself, certain disjointed
-phrases. Hugh caught a few of them, repeated again and again.
-
-"Tied to her for life, she will outlive me, tied to her for life. She
-will never let me go. My poor family! I have always been a fool, but up
-to now have never brought disgrace to them. And God forgive me, I was
-reckoning on the death of my poor old generous aunt, it is idle to say
-I did not speculate on it. And for what, for what?--the pretended
-affection, the bought kisses of this adventuress, a card-sharper's
-decoy, who told me lying tales about the way in which her criminal
-associate had inherited his money."
-
-He rambled on like this for some quarter of an hour, and Murchison
-judged it was better to let him ease his mind in such a fashion.
-
-In a way, the poor foolish boy's brain had cleared up to a point; he was
-able to look the facts squarely in the face. His infatuation might have
-been so deep that he might, under these damning circumstances, have
-fallen a victim to her wiles a second time. She would no doubt have
-been prepared, if he had given her the opportunity, to have sworn her
-innocence, to have protested that she was the victim of circumstantial
-evidence, that she had believed what her brother had told her, that she
-had never been a partner in, or a confidant of, his criminal schemes.
-
-No, so far the rude shock had cleared his brain, made him see and think
-more clearly. But Murchison very much feared that the agonising remorse
-for his folly was obscuring it in another direction.
-
-He seemed to look upon himself as something unclean in having allowed
-himself to be contaminated by association with such a wretched
-adventuress. He was also acutely conscious that, at the best, he would
-have to take this horrible secret with him to the grave, unless it
-sprang suddenly to light, as such secrets have a knack of doing. Above
-all, he keenly felt the disgrace he had inflicted on his family.
-
-There was a great deal more desultory talk, and Hugh gave him the best
-advice he could under the unhappy circumstances--a reiteration of the
-"put it behind you and live it down" philosophy. This would have come
-easy to a man of the rocky and stolid type to which Murchison belonged
-by temperament. But Jack was highly-strung and impulsive. There was no
-ballast in him.
-
-Hugh almost had to push him out of the room. But, before doing so, he
-mixed the boy another stiff peg, with the hope that it would induce
-sleep and purchase him the oblivion of a few hours.
-
-"Now then, old man, toddle off. Get a good night's rest, and when you
-wake tomorrow, you will find things look pretty black, but not quite so
-black as now. If this young woman contemplates a deep game, and wants to
-insist overmuch on her rights as your wife, I will deal with her on your
-behalf. I'll warrant I bring her to reason."
-
-The poor distraught boy clasped his friend's hand convulsively. "Hugh,
-old chap, you are the best friend a man could ever have, true as steel."
-
-"Don't say that," replied Hugh with a little break in his voice. "I am
-bound to do the best for you. It was owing to my infernal folly that you
-ever set foot in that cursed house. I am older and stronger than you, I
-ought to have known better. Well, good old Jack, good-night! I tell you,
-things won't look quite as black to-morrow."
-
-But to Hugh's intense grief and remorse, there was no morrow for the
-unhappy boy, whose mind had been quite unhinged by the events of
-that terrible night. One could only surmise that he had found sleep
-impossible, and in a fit of frenzy had taken his life to escape from a
-future so black and discouraging.
-
-When his servant went to call him in the morning, he found his master
-lying on the floor, with a bullet-hole in the middle of his forehead.
-Everybody in the barracks had been fast asleep when the poor boy had
-fired the shot that was to take him out of his troubles, and nobody had
-heard the report.
-
-At the inquest, the whole miserable story came out. Of course it came
-through Hugh, the only person who was in possession of it. He narrated
-the details of his acquaintance with the Burtons, the introduction
-of Jack Pomfret to the house, the scene at Rosemount when the two
-detectives had taken the man, Jack's confession that he had made the
-girl his wife a few hours previously.
-
-Hugh never forgot that interview with the Colonel, in which "Old
-Fireworks" poured out his wrath in no measured terms. He roundly called
-him an infernal fool for mixing himself up with people of whom he knew
-nothing, and whom Blankfield in its ignorance of their antecedents had
-declined to visit--and very wisely.
-
-"If it had been poor Jack, a dear lad but a foolish, I could have found
-it in my heart to forgive him," he ended. "But you are a man of another
-sort, you have got your wits about you, if you choose to exercise them.
-I will never pardon you that day's work. You can play with fire and not
-be scorched, but he couldn't. That poor boy's death lies at your door,
-sir. I hope you realise it."
-
-Yes, Hugh did realise it. He stood with bowed head, and could not utter
-a word in self-defence.
-
-The news, of course, was all over the town the next morning, or rather
-the double news--that George Burton had been arrested by two detectives
-from Scotland Yard, and that in the early morning of the following
-day Jack Pomfret had blown out his brains. The evidence at the inquest
-explained the double event.
-
-The news of her young husband's suicide reached Norah early in the
-morning. She had gambled and lost. The old adventurous life was in front
-of her again.
-
-She took the buffets of fate with the stoicism of her kind and class.
-She had a comfortable little nest-egg put by which stood between her and
-present want. If only Jack had been less emotional, she would not have
-troubled him much, been content with quite a little. It is to be feared
-that, in her bitter disappointment, she felt a little sore against Jack
-for his moral cowardice in getting comfortably out of it himself, and
-leaving her in the lurch.
-
-Anyway, she faced the situation with a courage that one could not refuse
-to admire. By two o'clock that same day the servants had been paid their
-wages, the keys of the furnished house handed over to the agent, and
-Mrs. Pomfret had departed for London.
-
-Murchison could never forget that terrible time till something came
-that seemed to dwarf all other things. In August, nineteen hundred and
-fourteen, there burst the first storm of the war which shook the world
-to its centre. In the blood-soaked plains of France he forgot everything
-except his country.
-
-Jack Pomfret and Norah Burton seemed dim memories in those strenuous
-times of the world's upheaval. And yet, when he had a moment's leisure
-to think of the past, he felt a savage longing to be even with that
-fair-faced, smiling adventuress who had driven his poor young friend to
-a suicide's grave.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-|It's a good proposition, old man. You couldn't employ a couple of hours
-better. I have been in London Society of all sorts for the best part of
-my life, and I tell you that Stella Keane is the most charming girl I
-have ever met."
-
-The speaker was little Tommy Esmond, short, genial, and rotund of
-person. Tommy knew everybody who was anybody, and everybody knew the
-mercurial Tommy.
-
-Guy Spencer puffed leisurely at his cigar, and regarded his rotund
-little friend with an amused smile. Spencer was about thirty, Tommy was
-old enough to be his father. But he wore well.
-
-"Most excellent Tommy, how many times have I heard you say the same
-thing? Every girl you come across is the most charming you have ever
-met--until one sees you the next week. And then, the last girl has the
-super-charm--like the young lady you just mentioned, Miss Stella Keane."
-
-But Esmond was not to be rebuffed by a clumsy attempt at humour on the
-part of a young man so much his junior. Besides, Tommy was impervious
-to humour. It fell off him, like water from a duck's back. In his way he
-was a very strenuous little man, he had no time to frivol.
-
-"Don't try to be funny, old man: it doesn't suit you. Be sensible, and
-come round with me to Mrs. L'Estrange's flat and be introduced to Miss
-Keane."
-
-"It's an interesting suggestion, Tommy, but before I decide tell me
-first--who is Mrs. L'Estrange, and secondly, who and what is Miss
-Keane?"
-
-And Tommy Esmond launched forth on a full flow of narrative. Mrs.
-L'Estrange was the first cousin of a well-known Irish earl, and
-was--well, in somewhat reduced circumstances, and had a snug little flat
-in the Cadogan district.
-
-"Mrs. L'Estrange is quite satisfactorily explained," remarked Guy,
-interrupting his rather voluble friend. "Now what do you really know
-about Miss Keane?"
-
-Here, Esmond was a little less precise. Mrs. L'Estrange he knew quite
-well, had known her ever since he had been in London; her ancestry and
-connections were unimpeachable.
-
-Miss Keane, it would appear, had been suddenly projected into the
-L'Estrange household, as it were, from space. He understood that she
-was a distant connection, a far-off cousin, but he could give no
-particulars.
-
-Tommy, with the born instinct of the true diplomatist, was always ready
-to present everything in its best light, but he lacked the one essential
-quality of the born diplomatist--he was not very successful when he came
-to camouflaging facts.
-
-Spencer's smile was more amused than ever, as he regarded his genial
-friend. Spencer was only thirty, and Tommy was at least old enough to
-be his father. But there were times when the younger man thought he saw
-more clearly than the elder.
-
-"Let us put it at this, Tommy. Mrs. L'Estrange, being in somewhat
-straitened circumstances, supplements her meagre income by card-playing,
-at which I have no doubt she is an adept."
-
-And here, the usually placid Tommy interposed hotly: "You may say
-of Mrs. L'Estrange what you like. But, if you propose to offer any
-derogatory remarks about Miss Keane, I would rather not listen to them."
-
-And Spencer kept a curb on his tongue. Was this fat, comical-looking
-little man, a most unromantic figure, violently in love with Miss Stella
-Keane, and her sworn champion? Far be it from him to disturb his faith
-in this seductive siren, if it were so.
-
-"It's all right, old chap," he said quietly. "I am not going to make any
-remarks, derogatory or otherwise, about Miss Keane. I think I will adopt
-your suggestion. Let us adjourn to Mrs. L'Estrange's flat. If one loses
-fifty or a hundred one may have a good time."
-
-"You will see the most charming girl in London," cried Esmond in
-enthusiastic tones. It struck Spencer, as a peculiar phase of his t
-friend's detachment, that, being in love with the girl himself, he
-should be so anxious to introduce her to a younger man, who might,
-presumably, be his rival.
-
-For there could be no question of rivalry between the two men, apart
-from their ages. Spencer was tall, athletic, handsome: Tommy
-Esmond was--just Tommy Esmond--rotund, comical in appearance, and
-insignificant.
-
-Moreover, Spencer had other qualifications which are not without their
-influence on the fair sex. He had a considerable fortune, and he was the
-next in succession to an ancient earldom. If the Earl of Southleigh, a
-widower, did not marry again, he would succeed to the title and estates.
-He was, in every sense of the term, an eligible _parti_.
-
-The long, weary war was drawing to its close. The two men were dining
-at the fashionable "Excelsior" and were now about half-way through their
-dinner.
-
-Spencer had the bearing of a soldier, and he would have been at the
-Front long ago, but no doctor could be found who would pass him. To all
-appearance, he possessed the thews and sinews of an athlete, but the
-stalwart, manly frame covered an incurably weak heart, which played him
-strange tricks at times. He was serving his country in the best way open
-to him, and doing good, sound clerical work in a Government Office.
-
-"When do you suggest we should put in an appearance at Mrs.
-L'Estrange's?" he asked presently.
-
-"It will take us another half-hour to get through this abundant meal.
-You will then have your coffee, and you will want a good and long
-cigar. We began rather late, you will remember. By the time you have got
-through your smoke, we will make a move. We shall then find them in full
-swing."
-
-Guy nodded, and went on with his dinner. He was quite willing to go to
-the L'Estrange flat: he had no other engagement this evening, and
-it would be something to do. But he was not greatly interested about
-meeting the most beautiful girl in London. In spite of his friend's
-almost lyrical outbursts, he expected that Miss Stella Keane would prove
-a very ordinary young woman.
-
-Suddenly Tommy Esmond uttered an exclamation. "Look, there they are," he
-whispered excitedly across the table. "Mrs. L'Estrange and her cousin.
-The man with them is Colonel Desmond, the man who won the Victoria Cross
-in the Boer war."
-
-Tommy's round face was red with pleasurable emotion. Was there any
-doubt, thought Spencer, that the little man was tremendously smitten by
-the beautiful Miss Keane? would it result in a marriage, he wondered?
-Tommy was well-off, and a person of some importance in his little social
-world. And if Miss Keane was as lovely as his fond imagination painted
-her, it was quite evident that she was poor. Penniless young girls have
-before now accepted the shelter of a safe home, even when offered by
-comical-looking little elderly men.
-
-The three newcomers moved to a vacant table; Mrs. L'Estrange, a woman of
-middle age, dressed rather more youthfully than was quite in good taste,
-their escort, a tall figure in khaki, very upright and soldierly in his
-bearing, in spite of his sixty years, and last, but by no means least,
-the beautiful Miss Keane.
-
-Yes, at the first glance, the young man decided that she fully deserved
-his friend's somewhat extravagant praise. If everybody in London was not
-raving over her, it was simply due to the fact that her cousin's circle
-was not important, and that she had found nobody of sufficient social
-influence to launch her with the necessary _cachet_.
-
-If she had made her _debut_ at one of the great houses, stamped with
-the approval of any one of London's distinguished hostesses, Society
-journals would have gone into rhapsodies over her, and she would have
-been one of the reigning beauties of the hour, far, far beyond the
-aspirations of little Tommy Esmond.
-
-His own special taste rather inclined towards fair women, his cousin,
-Lady Nina, of whom he was very fond, being a charming specimen of that
-type. But he was no bigot in the matter of feminine beauty, and he was
-prepared to admit that there were some dark women who could compare
-favourably with their blonde sisters.
-
-But Stella Keane was not very dark. She had soft brown eyes, glossy
-dark hair, and a beautiful creamy complexion, a mouth like Cupid's bow,
-revealing when she smiled, teeth of a dazzling ivory. Her figure would
-have been pronounced perfect by the most critical and fastidious artist.
-
-"What do you think of her?" asked the delighted Tommy, after he had
-given his friend a decent time for his inspection.
-
-Tommy was a man whose friends had got into the habit of smiling at him,
-even when they agreed with him. Spencer smiled at him quite as often as
-any of his acquaintance, but at this moment he was perfectly grave.
-
-"You are quite right, old man, this time," he said quietly. "She is
-really beautiful, and her carriage is splendid. She looks like a young
-Empress--or, rather, she fulfils one's idea of what a young Empress
-should be."
-
-Tommy beamed. He drank in the words of unstinted praise like wine. The
-little blue eyes, usually devoid of expression, seemed suffused with
-a soft emotion. There was something pathetic in his devotion to this
-radiant young woman who looked like a youthful Empress.
-
-"And she is as good and sweet as she looks," he murmured in a voice that
-he could not keep steady. "When she talks to you seriously and lets
-you know what she really thinks and feels, by gad, Spencer, it makes a
-battered old worldling like myself feel unworthy to be in her presence.
-For she has a beautiful soul and mind as well as a beautiful body."
-
-Spencer could only look sympathetic. Poor little Tommy, he certainly
-seemed to talk like a lover. And what did Miss Keane think of it all?
-She must have more than a mere tolerance for him, or she would not have
-allowed him those peeps into her mind and soul to which he alluded with
-such unrestrained rapture.
-
-It was some time before Esmond's intense gaze attracted the attention
-of the party, and when it did, he was rewarded with a most affable smile
-from Mrs. L'Estrange, and one of quite pronounced friendliness from Miss
-Keane. The Colonel also bestowed a genial nod.
-
-After a pause, Tommy spoke somewhat ruefully. "I'm afraid this rather
-upsets our little plans. Mrs. L'Estrange is a most conscientious diner:
-she will be here, at the lowest calculation, for an hour and a half,
-counting the coffee and cigarettes. They won't be back at the flat under
-a couple. You wouldn't care to wait so long."
-
-He looked rather wistfully at his companion. He, for his own part, would
-have waited half the night.
-
-"Don't let us commit ourselves, old man, but await events. We haven't
-finished our dinner yet, and the service is deucedly slow. We can put
-in a lot more time. You can pay your respects at a fitting moment, and
-perhaps they will ask us to their table. I must confess I should like
-to see Miss Keane at closer quarters, and talk to her. Although I don't
-expect she will reveal as much to me as she does to you."
-
-Tommy looked pleased again; he was very bent upon introducing Spencer to
-his beautiful young friend. It would come about presently: if not here,
-in the lounge. Already, Mrs. L'Estrange had sent a few covert glances
-in the direction of their table. There was little doubt she knew who
-his companion was, and would be quite pleased to number him amongst her
-acquaintance.
-
-"Has Miss Keane many admirers? She should have," remarked Spencer
-presently. He noticed that Esmond's eyes were always turned in the
-direction of that particular table.
-
-"Not any serious ones, I fancy. A few young fellows send her flowers,
-but nothing more. It is quite an unsuitable _menage_ for a girl of her
-attractions. The majority of the _habitues_ are middle-aged men who
-go there simply to gamble. The few young ones come for a flutter, and
-disappear when they have had enough."
-
-"Does the young lady play?"
-
-"I have never seen her. She has told me scores of times that she loathes
-gambling. Her father ruined himself by it. I believe she is really very
-unhappy there. And I gather Mrs. L'Estrange has not the best of tempers,
-particularly when she has had bad luck."
-
-"Hobson's choice, I expect," suggested Spencer sympathetically. Miss
-Keane was facing him, giving him ample opportunity to examine the
-beautiful countenance, and it struck him that there was an underlying
-expression of sadness on the perfect features, especially when in
-repose.
-
-"I fear so," was Esmond's answer. "She is very reticent about her own
-affairs, as any gentlewoman would be. But from certain things she has
-let drop, I make out her own means are very slender, and her cousin's
-hospitality is a boon to her."
-
-Half an hour passed, and Spencer lit a big cigar. The two men chatted
-on various topics. Mrs. L'Estrange and the Colonel were still doing full
-justice to the excellent dishes offered them. Miss Keane was apparently
-satisfied, and sat quietly watching her companions, and throwing in an
-occasional remark.
-
-And suddenly came the loud sound of maroons. Everybody started. A few
-seconds later the clamour and roaring of our own guns burst forth. There
-was no doubt as to what was happening. The Germans were making one of
-their unwelcome visits.
-
-"By heavens, it's a raid, and we are in the thick of it," cried Tommy
-Esmond, rising excitedly. He was a nervous little man, and his face had
-grown a shade pale at the sound of the first boom.
-
-In a few moments there was a stampede from the dining-room. The guests
-hurried as fast as they could to the basement and cellars.
-
-Tommy, in his progress, was impeded by two burly men who were making
-their way leisurely. Spencer was a few feet in front of him, making for
-the crowd that surged round the doors. As he looked around the deserted
-tables, he saw Miss Keane standing alone, her eyes almost rigid with
-terror, her hands clutching convulsively the back of the chair on
-which she had been sitting. It was evident that the Colonel had quickly
-removed Mrs. L'Estrange from the scene of danger, and she had been too
-panic-stricken to follow them.
-
-He crossed over to her. "Excuse me," he said gently. "I am a friend of
-Mr. Esmond's. How is it you are alone? Did your companions desert you?"
-
-"Colonel Desmond took my cousin, and told me to keep close behind them.
-when I got up, my limbs seemed unable to move. I feel as if I were
-paralysed."
-
-He took her arm and put it through his. It was evident she had been
-rendered immobile by terror.
-
-"I will take care of you," he said soothingly. "Downstairs you will be
-quite safe. But we will let this crowd get through first."
-
-Tommy Esmond came bustling up, all anxiety. Truth to tell, he did
-not feel over brave, but his anxiety for himself was lost in the
-contemplation of her white face and stricken eyes.
-
-Slowly, cheered by the presence of the two men, a little colour flowed
-back into her cheeks, and she smiled wanly.
-
-"I am a fearful coward," she explained. "I go all to pieces in even the
-mildest thunderstorm."
-
-And it was in this wise, amid the crash of falling bombs, and the roar
-and clamour of our own guns, that Guy Spencer made the acquaintance of
-Stella Keane.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-|They found shelter in one of the big cellars of the Restaurant, and
-Miss Keane by degrees got back some of her courage. There were about
-twenty other persons in the same refuge, and she probably derived
-fortitude from their temporary companionship, and common danger. Tommy
-Esmond recovered himself very quickly, and hastened to observe the
-conventions.
-
-"It is a queer time and place in which to make introductions," he
-remarked genially. "But even in times of peril, one should preserve
-the usages of good society. I don't suppose you know the name of
-your gallant rescuer. Let me make you known, in a formal fashion. Mr.
-Spencer--Miss Keane."
-
-The beautiful Stella bowed her dark head, and the ghost of a smile
-flitted over her still pale face.
-
-"I know Mr. Spencer very well by sight. When I have recovered my wits, I
-will thank him properly and prettily. Perhaps he will come and see us at
-my cousin's flat."
-
-"I was bringing him on there to-night, as a matter of fact," explained
-Esmond. "But I presume all that is knocked on the head, even supposing
-we get out of this disgusting hole in reasonable time. Mrs. L'Estrange
-won't be in a mood to receive visitors, after this disquieting
-experience, I am sure."
-
-"I am afraid you don't know Mrs. L'Estrange," replied the girl, with a
-little mocking laugh. Her tones were not yet quite steady, but she
-was rapidly recovering herself. "The card tables were laid before we
-started, and we intended to be back early. If we get out safely from
-this disgusting hole, as you call it, my cousin will resume her ordinary
-pursuits, as if nothing had occurred to disturb them."
-
-Desultory conversation, the irresponsible chatter of the drawing-room
-kind, was almost impossible under the circumstances. And although Miss
-Keane did her best to assume a brave front, it was easy to see that
-she was inwardly quivering. At every roar of the guns, she shivered all
-over, and her cheek alternately flushed and then grew deadly pale with
-her inward terror.
-
-"Poor child," whispered Spencer to his companion; "she must be a bundle
-of nerves. Every second, she is experiencing the pangs of death in
-anticipation. By the way, the gallant Desmond doesn't seem to have
-troubled himself much about her. If I hadn't taken her forcibly away, I
-believe she would be rooted to that chair now."
-
-Esmond shrugged his shoulders. "Of course, a chap like Desmond doesn't
-know the meaning of fear, and he can't understand the sensation in
-others. The other woman took possession of him, and dragged him away.
-No doubt, he thought she was following. Mrs. L'Estrange, so far as I can
-judge, would never think of anything but number one."
-
-And as Spencer's glance stole to the fair face, he felt a strange
-feeling of pity for her. The poignant happenings of the last few moments
-had revealed to him her loneliness, the tragedy of her dependence upon
-others. In a supreme moment of peril, she, who ought to have lovers
-and friends by the score, was left by herself, and thrown upon the
-compassion of a stranger.
-
-An anxious half-hour passed, and then messengers came down with
-tidings of a reassuring nature. The raiders had been driven off, after
-inflicting considerable damage. Gay London was free to pursue its
-natural course of pleasure.
-
-At once the tension was relaxed. Drooping forms resumed an erect
-carriage, the roses bloomed again in the pale cheeks of the women. There
-was a flutter, a stir. They all moved away from the refuge which had
-been so welcome, and now had become unbearable.
-
-In the hall they encountered the Colonel, cool and collected, as if he
-were on parade, Mrs. L'Estrange fluttering and full of protestations.
-
-"Oh, my poor Stella! I have been distracted about you. Why did you not
-follow us? I thought you were close behind us all the time, till we got
-to one of these abominable cellars, and looked back to find you were
-missing."
-
-The Colonel pulled at his moustache a little nervously.
-
-"I shall never forgive myself, Miss Keane, not to have assured myself
-you were with us at the start. I would have come back to search for you,
-but Mrs. L'Estrange was in such a nervous state I could not leave her."
-
-Miss Keane answered him very coldly, and to her cousin she did not
-vouchsafe any reply.
-
-"Please do not apologise. It was a question of _sauve qui peut_.
-Fortunately, I found some kind friends who took compassion on a forlorn
-damsel, shaking and terror-stricken." She turned to Mrs. L'Estrange.
-"Mr. Esmond is, of course, an old friend. But you do not know Mr.
-Spencer who got to me first."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange was quite equal to the occasion; she extended her
-perfectly-gloved hand with an air of effusive cordiality.
-
-"A thousand thanks to you both. My darling Stella was fortunate in
-finding such protectors. We are both terrible cowards, I don't know
-which is the greater."
-
-"I, without question," flashed out Miss Keane. "Otherwise I should have
-had the sense to scurry away like yourself. We were both frightened
-rabbits, but you could run to a place of safety while I stood
-paralysed."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange turned away the awkward thrust with a charming smile.
-"I have made up my mind to one thing," she remarked with an air of
-conviction. "Never, so long as the War lasts, will I dine out of my own
-home. This night's experience has taught me a lesson. I don't want a
-second one."
-
-At this juncture, Tommy Esmond interposed. "I was going to bring my
-friend Spencer round to you to-night. But I suppose you feel a bit too
-shattered, eh? You would like to get home and rest."
-
-"Oh dear, no!" replied the lady vivaciously. "I never alter my habits
-for anything or anybody. Let us all go along at once. I will go with
-Colonel Desmond. You and Mr. Spencer can continue your charge of
-Stella."
-
-But Guy had a small duty to perform. "I think if you will excuse me,
-I will join you a little later. I want to go round to inquire after my
-uncle and cousin. He is a very old man, and I should like to know he is
-quite safe."
-
-So it was arranged. The others drove off to Mrs. L'Estrange's flat, and
-Spencer, finding he would have some time to wait for a taxi, walked to
-Carlton House Terrace, where Lord South-leigh had his town house.
-
-The footman who opened the door informed him that his lordship and Lady
-Nina were still in the dining-room with a small party. The earl had
-taken it all very calmly, and his daughter, who, unlike poor Stella
-Keane, was a young woman of remarkable courage, had not been disturbed
-at all.
-
-"Are they alone, Robert?"
-
-"No, sir, two old friends of his lordship's came to dinner to-night and
-are still with them. But, of course, they will be glad to see you."
-
-However, his duty being performed, and learning that all was
-satisfactory, Spencer thought he might as well get along to the flat.
-He had been strangely attracted by the beautiful girl, whom even her
-obvious terror and lack of self-control could not deprive of her charm.
-
-"No, I won't come in. Tell them I called round to make sure they were
-all safe. And say to her ladyship I will look in to-morrow afternoon
-about tea-time."
-
-He went into his club for a few moments to see if there were any
-letters, and half an hour later was at Mrs. L'Estrange's door.
-
-She occupied the first floor of an imposing block of flats, recently
-erected in one of the semi-fashionable quarters of London. She might not
-be in very affluent circumstances, as Esmond had hinted, but she would
-have to pay a very handsome rent for her abode.
-
-The door was opened by a decorous-looking butler, with the air of one
-who had served in good families. A man passed out as Spencer entered. He
-was a good-looking young fellow of about twenty-five, in khaki. Spencer
-knew him well by sight as the eldest son and heir of a rich brewer.
-
-His face did not wear a very happy expression. It did not require a
-Sherlock Holmes to surmise that his visit had been an expensive one, and
-that he was hurrying away to avoid further temptation.
-
-In the centre of a rather spacious hall, Stella Keane and Tommy Esmond
-stood chatting.
-
-She greeted the newcomer with a bright and friendly smile. She no longer
-looked pale, in fact he thought there was a slight suspicion of rouge
-on the fair cheeks. She was too goodlooking to need the aid of art, but
-perhaps she wanted to conceal the ravages inflicted on her beauty by
-that terrible time at the "Excelsior."
-
-"You are not very long after us. I conclude you found your friends were
-quite safe."
-
-She had gathered from the garrulous Tommy what she had not known before,
-that Spencer was next in succession to the earldom, also that Lord
-Southleigh had a very pretty daughter, who was an accomplished young
-sportswoman, a daring rider to hounds, an adept at golf, fishing, and
-other pastimes of a strenuous nature.
-
-She had pricked up her ears at mention of the cousin. Artfully she
-pumped Tommy as to whether there was any tender feeling between the
-relatives.
-
-But Tommy could give no information on this point. Spencer was a very
-reticent man about his private affairs, he explained. Personally, he
-should not consider him particularly susceptible to female influence.
-But he had heard that the old earl, who had a shockingly weak heart, and
-was likely to go off at any moment, would have viewed a marriage between
-the cousins with favour.
-
-She mused over his words. He did not think him particularly susceptible
-to female influence. And yet she was sure there was admiration,
-open, undisguised admiration, in the glances he had bestowed upon her
-to-night. He was evidently not deeply in love with his pretty sporting
-cousin, or she would have been Mrs. Guy Spencer before now, assuming, of
-course, that she was ready to obey her father's wishes.
-
-It was after a short silence that Miss Keane put a somewhat abrupt
-question to him: "Are you fond of play, Mr. Spencer? Everybody is who
-comes here."
-
-"Not really. I am a very lukewarm gambler. I don't mind a little flutter
-now and then, as a diversion. I always enjoy a small gamble at Monte
-Carlo, for example, but I never get carried away. When I have lost
-enough, I stop. Nothing could induce me to stake another _sou_."
-
-"Can you stop as easily when you are winning? That, I fancy, is where
-the selfcontrol comes in. But I think I am rather glad you are not one
-of the infatuated ones. I was brought up in an atmosphere of gambling."
-
-There was a pathetic shadow in the beautiful brown eyes as she spoke.
-Spencer's interest in her, a girl he had only known for a couple of
-hours, quickened. The glance he turned on her was full of sympathy,
-although he did not utter a word. It said as plainly as if he had
-spoken: "Tell me more about yourself, you will find an attentive
-listener."
-
-"My father and mother were both desperate gamblers. They staked and lost
-everything they had at cards, on the race-course, at Monte Carlo. My
-poor cousin, Mrs. L'Estrange, has the same fever in her veins."
-
-Now that he had invited her confidence, he was a little embarrassed
-by it. He did not know her well enough to condole with her. By way of
-relieving the tension, he uttered a few trite remarks on the subject of
-gambling generally.
-
-"Very sad when people are bitten by it to that extent. In my small
-experience, and I am only speaking of cards, I have found that, at the
-end of twelve months, you leave off pretty well where you started, good
-players or bad. You lose a hundred this week, you win a hundred the
-next, and so on, and so forth. If you are a good player, you get bad
-cards; if a duffer, you get good cards. And so the bad player has a
-pretty even chance with his more skilful opponent."
-
-Miss Keane threw aside her momentary sadness, and laughed at his
-scientific exposition.
-
-"You have evidently thought it all out," she said brightly. "But please
-don't inflict these cheerful theories on my cousin. She is a most tragic
-being when she loses. She thinks herself, and I believe is, one of the
-most scientific bridge-players in England, and she cannot be brought to
-understand why the duffers should have a look in."
-
-At this juncture Tommy Esmond interposed. It may have occurred to him
-that they were wasting precious time. They had come here for the special
-purpose of gambling.
-
-"What do you say to joining the others? We are in the very temple of
-gambling, and I know my young friend would like a little flutter."
-
-"Certainly. When I last peeped in, Amy looked the spirit of despair. I
-think she must have been losing heavily."
-
-She turned to lead the way, but at that instant the door-bell rang, and
-she halted, in readiness to greet the visitor, whoever it might be; and
-there entered a florid-looking, stout man, who advanced towards her with
-effusion, and both hands outstretched.
-
-"My dear Stella, I have been thinking of you ever since the raid began;
-I know how terribly you suffer when they are on. And I knew you were
-dining out to-night. I am rejoiced to see you safe and sound. I came
-round here the moment I could get away."
-
-Miss Keane flushed slightly as he took her hands and wrung them
-impressively to show his gratitude at her escape from peril. Tommy
-Esmond had given him a cool nod. But she felt Spencer's calm, critical
-gaze upon this ebullient expression of young English manhood.
-
-It was not so much what he said, as his manner of saying it. Bounder was
-written all over him, in his appearance, his manners, his gestures.
-
-She answered him very briefly, almost curtly, as if she were
-administering a cold douche. Then the flush deepened as she turned to
-Spencer.
-
-"May I introduce my cousin, Mr. Dutton?"
-
-The florid man bowed with an exaggerated air of cordiality. Spencer,
-who had taken a violent dislike to him from the first second he saw
-him, acknowledged the salutation with chilling gravity; and Stella Keane
-could almost read his thoughts, as his gaze travelled from one to the
-other.
-
-How could this imperial-looking girl have such an unmitigated bounder
-for a relative? What was the mystery about her that could make a
-creature like this claim kinship with her?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-|Mrs. L'Estrange was evidently a great believer in light: the electric
-bulbs glowed softly, but brilliantly, over the two rooms devoted to the
-service of the card-players.
-
-On the sideboards were arranged decanters of whisky, and soda-water in
-bottles and syphons. Whether he lost or won, the gambler, triumphant or
-despairing, could quaff to his success, or solace his despair.
-
-The elderly, youthfully-dressed woman advanced towards the new visitors,
-with a beaming expression of countenance.
-
-"Mr. Spencer, you will join us. What is your favourite game?"
-
-"Bridge," said Spencer, shortly. He was already a bit in love with
-Stella Keane, but he was by no means favourably inclined to her gushing,
-elderly cousin.
-
-He soon formed a party of four, and became absorbed, for the moment,
-in the game. Tommy Esmond was playing the same game, at a table
-some distance from him. Tommy was not supposed to be wealthy, but he
-evidently had money enough to indulge in a quiet gamble now and then.
-
-He remembered every incident of that night. His partner was a
-subordinate member of the Government, and a good sound player, lacking
-a little perhaps in the qualities of initiative and rapid decision.
-His opponents were a young man in the Foreign Office, and a slender,
-hawk-nosed young woman of about thirty.
-
-All through he held abominable cards, but, truth to tell, he was not
-very interested in the game. Whether he won or lost a hundred pounds did
-not interest him very greatly.
-
-But what did interest him, to every fibre of his being, was that Stella
-Keane hovered about his table. His eyes continually sought hers, and she
-did not seem to avoid his glance. At times he was sure he could detect
-a slight smile of intimacy. After all, had he not rescued her, half dead
-with fright, in the dining-room of the "Excelsior"?
-
-Once she bent over him and whispered, her cool, fragrant breath fanning
-his cheek: "You are having shocking bad luck. You haven't held a single
-decent card."
-
-He whispered back: "What did I tell you a little time ago? I flatter
-myself I am a fairly good bridge-player, but what could one do with
-those cards of mine?"
-
-She fluttered away, with still the shadow of that intimate smile upon
-her beautiful mouth, the smile that seemed to say they had only known
-each other for a few hours, under romantic and dramatic circumstances,
-but there was between them an affinity of spirit.
-
-He played on steadily for over an hour, and then a halt was cried. The
-young gentleman from the Foreign Office and the hawknosed young woman
-had scored. Guy Spencer rose from the table, the poorer by a hundred
-and fifty pounds. He wrote his cheque with a light heart. A hundred and
-fifty pounds was not a great price to pay for the introduction to Stella
-Keane.
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange came impressively towards him.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Spencer, I hope you have not lost. If so, I fear you will never
-come near me again." His glance roved in the direction of Stella,
-talking, as it appeared earnestly, to that bounder of a cousin. There
-came a steely look into his clear, resolute eyes.
-
-"If you will allow me, I shall be delighted to come here often to see
-you and Miss Keane. I suppose I had better pick up my old friend Tommy
-Esmond, if he is not too engrossed." But when he approached Esmond, that
-little rotund gentleman waved him away, in most genial fashion.
-
-"Run away, dear boy. It is Eclipse first, and the rest nowhere. I am
-winning hands down." Certainly he bore the mien of a conqueror. And
-there, behind his chair, stood Stella Keane.
-
-She welcomed Spencer with that faint, intimate smile which had already
-stirred his pulses.
-
-"I fear I brought you bad luck," she said, in her low, caressing voice.
-"But to Mr. Esmond I have been the harbinger of good fortune. Are you
-really going?"
-
-"I always go when I have won enough, or lost enough. You remember I gave
-you a little homily on gambling generally, not so long ago."
-
-She took her hand off Esmond's chair. "Well, I will leave my good
-influence behind, and look after the parting guest."
-
-She walked leisurely with him in the direction of the hall. It was
-deserted, but the light was brilliant, as it was in every other corner
-of the flat.
-
-She held out her hand impulsively. "Mr. Spencer, I have not thanked you
-properly for your kindness to me to-night. Terror-stricken, paralysed
-with fear, I should have been clinging to that chair now, if you had not
-rescued me in time. How can I thank you?"
-
-Spencer laughed lightly. "One would think from your excessive gratitude
-that you had not experienced a great deal of kindness in your life. And
-yet that would be impossible."
-
-She flushed a little; his gaze was perhaps more full of admiration, of
-frank and open compliment than could be justified by the briefness
-of their acquaintance. And yet it only expressed what he was inwardly
-thinking.
-
-Here was a girl who had only to look at her mirror to learn she was
-endowed with singular beauty. She must also know that she combined with
-her more than ordinary fairness an unusual charm of manner.
-
-How had it come about that one with such striking qualifications should
-exhibit a certain underlying sadness, as if the world had already proved
-a very disappointing place? Youth and good looks usually secure for
-their owner a good time. Girls with half her attractions could find
-plenty of admirers. What evil fate dogged her that she had to regard
-a perfectly common act of kindness as something to be exceptionally
-grateful for?
-
-"I have never been petted nor spoiled, even as a child," she answered
-gravely. "My father and mother were ignorant of the duties, as they were
-of the instincts, of parenthood. And since my poor pretence of a home
-was broken up, I have been a derelict and a wanderer, sometimes a
-tolerated guest, rarely, I fear, a very welcome one in the houses of
-other people."
-
-"But you are happy here, surely?" he suggested. After saying so much,
-she could hardly regard the question as an impertinent one. He longed to
-hear her history. Well, if he came and cultivated her, and let her see
-how sympathetic he could be, one day she would tell him.
-
-She shrugged her shoulders with an air of indifference.
-
-"My cousin is peculiar in many ways, and her devotion to play is an
-obsession. We have very little in common; still, it would not be fair to
-say she was difficult to get on with. I have been with her now for more
-than eighteen months, and although we have often held totally different
-opinions, I cannot remember that we have ever had a real quarrel. And,
-anyway, it is a home and a shelter, and that is something."
-
-Not much enthusiasm here, certainly. Mrs. L'Estrange had been dismissed
-with a very negative kind of faint praise. Her excellence seemed to lie
-rather in the absence of bad qualities than the possession of good ones.
-
-And yet, he could not bring himself to believe that Miss Keane was an
-ill-natured girl, or of an unresponsive temperament. He had to admit
-that his impressions of his hostess were not too favourable.
-
-She was outwardly genial, and at times gushing. Yet he fancied he could
-read behind this plausible exterior the signs of a hard, worldly nature.
-There was no softness in her glance, no tenderness in her rather hard,
-staccato tones.
-
-A girl with those glorious eyes, and mobile face, with the delicate
-complexion that flushed and paled by turns, must surely be sweet and
-sympathetic, and responsive to affection. How her voice had thrilled
-with emotion when she thanked him. If she was disappointed in her
-cousin, it must be the fault of the elder woman, who could not give what
-was demanded by the younger and more ardent temperament.
-
-He would have lingered longer, trying to pierce the riddle from these
-disjointed remarks, but they were interrupted by Tommy Esmond, who came
-bustling into the hall, flushed with victory.
-
-"Never had such luck in my life. Just wiped the floor with them," he
-explained excitedly. "You left your good influence behind, Miss Keane. A
-few minutes sufficed for victory."
-
-"I am very glad, but I think my powers for good must be very limited,
-for I brought bad luck to your friend," was her smiling rejoinder.
-
-He turned briskly to the young man. "It is a perfect night, Spencer.
-Shall we walk down to the Club to get a breath of fresh air, and turn in
-there for a quiet smoke?"
-
-Spencer nodded assent, and held out his hand to Miss Keane.
-
-"Well, good-bye for the present."
-
-"And I hope you will come and see us again soon. Don't wait for Mr.
-Esmond to bring you: after our thrilling experiences of tonight, we are
-more than ordinary acquaintances. We are at home nearly every night,
-if you want to gamble. And, if you would like a little rational chat
-instead, come in one afternoon to tea."
-
-"Thanks, I will. My card-playing fit has passed for a little time. Once
-again, goodbye."
-
-And, as soon as they were in the street, Esmond burst in with the
-question he was longing to ask.
-
-"Well, what do you think of her? Did I exaggerate?"
-
-"Not in the least," answered Spencer, speaking less seriously than he
-felt, he did not quite know for what reason, unless it was that with a
-man of his friend's calibre, he always had a tendency to discuss things
-lightly. "No, I don't think you have exaggerated a bit this time; so
-many of your swans have been geese, but this is a real swan, at last.
-She is very lovely; even in her terror she looked beautiful, and she has
-a peculiar, elusive charm. She makes you want to know more of her, and
-penetrate the mystery which seems to hover around her.59
-
-"I can't say I see any mystery, myself." Esmond spoke rather sharply,
-for such a good-natured little man.
-
-"Perhaps it is too strong a word. But I take it, you know something
-of the menage, and can enlighten me on one point. What is her position
-there: paid companion, a passing guest, or does she share the flat with
-her cousin on some sort of terms?"
-
-It was a little time before Esmond answered. "I have never rightly got
-at that myself. Sometimes I have thought one thing, sometimes another.
-But I am pretty sure she is poor: in fact, she has admitted as much."
-
-"Poverty is relative after all, and it depends on how she was brought
-up. She seems to dress well, and that cannot be done without money."
-
-Yes, Esmond admitted that she was turned out well. But he either could
-not, or would not express any positive opinion upon the delicate subject
-of Miss Keane's finances.
-
-"Does she ever play? She didn't touch a card while we were there, only
-flitted about from table to table."
-
-No, Esmond had never seen her play since he had frequented the house. It
-was clear, therefore, she did not make any pocket-money out of gambling.
-He had to admit that she seemed to act as deputy hostess, and, he
-believed, wrote most of her cousin's notes; in other words, made herself
-useful.
-
-All this information, such as it was, he imparted, as it seemed to
-Spencer, with some reluctance. Perhaps his keen admiration prompted him
-to hide anything that served to show her in a dependent position. And
-Spencer desisted from any further crossexamination on this head.
-
-On one point, however, he was determined to elicit a positive expression
-of opinion from the cautious little man.
-
-"What is the mystery of the bounder cousin? You must admit he has cad
-stamped all over him, his speech, his person, his gestures."
-
-Tommy could establish no defence for the gentleman in question. "No, he
-is past criticism, I allow. The result of some _mesalliance_, I suppose;
-his mother a very common person doubtless. But then, many highly
-respectable people have skeletons like that in their cupboards."
-
-"The mystery is that he finds his way, cousin as he may be, into any
-decent house. Mrs. L'Estrange we know to be a woman of good family. You
-would think she would lock and bolt the door against a creature like
-that. What is he supposed to be, if he has any profession beyond that of
-his intense bounderism?"
-
-"Something in the City, I am told," replied Esmond shortly. "Something
-connected with finance; stockbroker or something."
-
-"It must be a shady kind of finance, if he has anything to do with it,"
-growled the young man. "To think of his claiming relationship with that
-exquisite girl."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-|It would be idle to assume that a man of Guy Spencer's natural
-advantages had reached the age of thirty without experiencing a few
-affairs of the heart. But he had never been deeply touched, and
-his friend Tommy Esmond was right when he described him as not very
-susceptible to feminine influence.
-
-The one feeling which had lasted for some years, was a pronounced
-affection for his cousin Nina. He felt as much at home with her as he
-would have done with a favourite sister, had he possessed one. But the
-regard had a warmth in it that is lacking in fraternal relations.
-
-He knew that Lady Nina was not indifferent to him, that she allowed him
-to assume a certain air of proprietorship in the disposal of dances, in
-the claim to her society when he was disposed to enjoy it. He knew also
-that it was a match which would be warmly approved of by his invalid
-uncle.
-
-Without being guilty of undue vanity, he felt pretty certain that if he
-proposed he would be accepted. And once or twice he had been very near
-to taking the decisive step. He never could quite understand what it was
-that made him hesitate.
-
-The fact of his hesitation proved to himself, as well as to the young
-lady concerned, that much as he might like his cousin, he was certainly
-far from being deeply in love with her.
-
-She was a pretty, winsome girl, possessing an upright, straightforward
-nature, and quite attractive in a simple, frank fashion. There was
-nothing subtle or mysterious about her, you could read her like an open
-book. She was a good daughter, she was the type of girl who could not
-help making a good wife.
-
-Some day, no doubt, he would put the fateful question, and by her
-acceptance be made, in conventional parlance, the happiest of men. But
-although he would know he had chosen very wisely, and look forward to
-a placid kind of happiness, he was doubtful if Nina's smiles and kisses
-would ever thrill him, if with her he would ever learn the meaning of
-real love.
-
-He was not by any means sure that he was capable of very strong
-attachment. He had indulged in a few fancies, but they had only
-exercised a very small portion of his thoughts. Up to the present, he
-had certainly not experienced the wild ecstasies, the mingled joy and
-pain of the true lover.
-
-For the first time in his life, he had been seriously perturbed by the
-advent of Stella Keane. He had not fashioned in his imagination any
-particular ideal, any special type of woman who would make to him an
-irresistible appeal. But, if she had been Lady Nina, if he had met her
-in his own world, he would have owned at once this was the girl for whom
-he had been waiting.
-
-Her image pursued him persistently in his waking and his leisure hours.
-He could recall every word she had spoken during the short time they
-had spent together. He could see her a dozen times a day standing in the
-"Excelsior" dining-room, paralysed with terror.
-
-He remembered the break in her voice, the mist in her beautiful eyes,
-when she had thanked him. And ever and again, he longed to fathom the
-mystery of her loneliness, the cause of that sadness that was always
-lurking underneath.
-
-Was it wise to pursue the acquaintance, with the pretty certain result
-of intensifying the interest he already felt in her? He had no liking
-for Mrs. L'Estrange, a woman merely on the fringe of his world, or her
-gambling circle. If he wanted to lose or win money, there were plenty of
-other houses where he could indulge his fancy.
-
-And he knew nothing of Miss Keane's antecedents. The only thing he did
-know was that she had a cousin who was obviously a bounder of the first
-water. Tommy Esmond knew nothing about her either, or, if he did know,
-would not tell.
-
-For three days he wavered, one moment eager to rush off to the flat,
-the next determining that it would be better not to renew the brief
-acquaintance.
-
-On the fourth day, his impulse conquered his prudence. He told himself
-soothingly that his visit was due to curiosity, that he merely wanted to
-penetrate the mystery of her loneliness, her unprotected position.
-
-The bounder cousin was coming out as he entered. Mr. Dutton nodded
-affably to him with a greasy and familiar smile. Spencer acknowledged
-him in the coolest fashion compatible with bare civility. Why were
-there people, he wondered, whom you instinctively wanted to kick, for no
-apparently sufficient reason?
-
-Miss Keane was alone. Mrs. L'Estrange, she explained, was in bed with
-a racking headache. She had lost heavily the night before, and this was
-the usual penalty she paid for losing.
-
-"Hardly worth the candle, is it?" he said lightly, as he took his cup of
-tea from her. A slight frown crossed his brow as he observed the empty
-cup of "the bounder" on the table. Did he come here often? was his
-thought. Perhaps he was in love with her. But it was surely beyond the
-limits of possibility that she could ever return the affection of such a
-creature.
-
-He would see what he could get out of her. "I met your cousin as I came
-in. I suppose he is a frequent visitor?"
-
-She did not look in the least conscious or embarrassed by the question.
-"Oh yes, he comes very often. He is about the only one of my relatives
-I have any acquaintance with. My father's mode of life estranged all the
-others."
-
-Spencer thought it would have been a good thing if Mr. Dutton had been
-as sensitive to the disqualifications of the late Mr. Keane as the rest
-of her connections. But, of course, he could not say so.
-
-"He is not in the least like you." Then, after a pause, he added boldly,
-and perhaps a little rudely: "I should never have dreamed you were
-related."
-
-She quite understood what he meant, and there was a lurking humour in
-her smile, as she answered:
-
-"Poor old George, he is a good sort, but quite a rough diamond. His
-mother married a self-made man, of course, for his money. That may
-account for a great deal you have noticed."
-
-Spencer had the grace to look confused. It was evident he had conveyed
-his private impression of Mr. Dutton very distinctly to her clear young
-vision. But she did not seem offended, only slightly amused, at the poor
-figure cut by Cousin George in the estimation of a person in a superior
-world.
-
-Anyway, that little mystery was explained. There was nothing unusual
-in poor gentlewomen marrying self-made men, for the sake of money. The
-noble family of Southleigh had many such _mesalliances_ amongst its
-aristocratic records.
-
-But it was a relief to find Stella herself under no delusions concerning
-the young man in question. He did not think it possible she could, but
-as diplomatically as was possible, she admitted that Mr. Dutton was not
-what is, technically called, a gentleman.
-
-"He is the only relative with whom I am on speaking terms," she added,
-after a pause, "for reasons of which I have already given you a hint.
-And I think I have grown rather to look forward to his visits."
-
-Her observant eyes noticed a quick stiffening in his manner. She could
-guess his thoughts. How was it possible for a refined young woman to
-ever look forward to the visits of a person like Mr. Dutton, cousin
-though he might be?
-
-"You, of course, have heaps of relations; you can pick and choose," she
-went on, as if eager to explain to his fastidious taste her toleration
-of a man, so obviously the denizen of an inferior world. "You cannot, I
-daresay, imagine the loneliness of a girl of my age, debarred, through
-no fault of her own, from the society of her own kith and kin." Here
-was an opportunity to engage her in personal talk. He had not hoped she
-would take him into her confidence on his first visit.
-
-He leaned forward, and there was an eager note in his voice. "I formed
-an idea of you in the first few moments of our acquaintance, that you
-were not happy, that you were, in a sense, isolated, and that you had
-known more of sorrow than joy in your short life."
-
-She mused a moment, and then answered him in grave tones:
-
-"You were quite right. I feel it is the impression I must convey to
-either friend or stranger, an impression I shall always convey. For, if
-a great and overwhelming happiness were to come to me to-morrow, I could
-never forget the past years of sadness."
-
-"But, surely, you must have some happy memories? There were gleams of
-brightness in your childhood?"
-
-"No," she said, and there was a fierce vehemence in her voice. "They
-were the most miserable--an indifferent mother, a careless father, a
-roof and a shelter, food and clothing sufficient, if not in abundance,
-but no home, as it is understood by more fortunate children."
-
-"And when that home, or the wretched pretence of it, was broken up,
-you were thrown upon the mercy of the world," he questioned, "with no
-kindred, no friends to stretch out a helping hand?"
-
-"Our relatives had long before ceased to take any interest in the
-daughter of a ruined gambler. I was thrown, in a certain sense, on the
-mercy of the world. But for a small pittance, which my father could not
-deprive me of, I should have starved, for he left nothing behind him but
-debts."
-
-She was not, then, absolutely penniless. Something had been saved from
-the wreck. He wondered if Esmond knew this. And yet, if she told a
-comparative stranger this at their first real interview, she must have
-told him, who seemed to be on the footing of a friend of the house.
-
-"I had no real friends," she went on; "but in the course of a wandering
-life--when my father owed too much in one place he removed to another--I
-had picked up a few acquaintances. With these I made a home, on and off,
-for longer or shorter periods."
-
-"And you have come to anchor here with Mrs. L'Estrange, who is your
-cousin, one of the few relatives who did not visit the sins of the
-fathers on the children."
-
-Her voice was a little scornful. "The cousinship is a very distant one.
-And, as she is an inveterate gambler herself, but more lucky than my
-father, she could hardly look upon gambling in another as a deadly sin."
-He nodded his head in agreement. He did not want to talk himself,
-for fear he should interrupt the flow of her reminiscences; she was
-evidently in a confidential mood this afternoon.
-
-"I saw her a few times when quite a child, and then she vanished like
-the others. A couple of years ago, we met in Devonshire at the house of
-a mutual acquaintance. She seemed to take a fancy to me. In the end, she
-proposed that I should, for the present, make my home with her. She has
-only one interest in life, _play_. She is a very lazy woman. She hates
-writing the briefest note, and housekeeping is abhorrent to her. I
-attend to her correspondence, I order the dinner and look after the
-servants. I am not exactly eating the bread of charity," she concluded
-with a little mirthless laugh, "because I give some work in exchange for
-my food. My own little pittance provides me with clothes."
-
-He wondered what the little pittance represented in annual hard cash.
-She was dressed quietly but in good taste, and he was judge enough of
-woman's apparel to know that the material of her dress was expensive. On
-her slender fingers glittered a few valuable rings, heirlooms probably
-saved from the clutches of the gambling father. She did not convey the
-impression of poverty, but perhaps she was clever, and knew how to make
-the best of a small income.
-
-There was a long silence, and it almost seemed as if she had forgotten
-his presence. For she sat with a musing look in her beautiful eyes,
-her thoughts evidently in the past, conjuring up Heaven knows how many
-painful memories.
-
-Then she came back to herself, and turned to him with an apologetic
-smile. "I am afraid I have bored you to tears with my stupid personal
-history, but I will finish by telling you one little thing that may
-amuse you."
-
-He protested, of course, that he had not been in the least bored, only
-too painfully interested.
-
-"Well, I am not a person easily crushed, and although a physical coward
-and frightened of raids and thunderstorms, I am not a moral one. When
-I began to review my position, I tried to hit upon some way of making
-money."
-
-Was she fond of money, he wondered? Well, perhaps, like most women, she
-wanted money to buy herself pretty things. There was nothing unusual in
-that.
-
-"When I was a schoolgirl, I was supposed to show some artistic talent; I
-got several prizes. So I set to work and painted some half-a-dozen small
-things, in what I conceived to be a popular style, and took them
-round to as many dealers. In a week my hopes were shattered. One
-straightforward creature told me frankly that they just attained the
-school-girl level of excellence, but that I should never become an
-artist. It was not in me."
-
-"A crushing blow, indeed," said Spencer sympathetically.
-
-"I then turned to writing. Here, at any rate, was a profession that
-required no previous painful training, only powers of observation, some
-imagination, and a certain fluency of expression. I wrote some short
-stories which I thought good, which I still think good. History repeated
-itself. I sent them to a dozen editors, one after another. In every
-case, they were declined with thanks."
-
-"I daresay they were quite good, and they were not taken because you
-didn't happen to be in the ring," was Spencer's consoling comment.
-
-"Well," she exclaimed brightly, "there is an end of my reminiscences for
-to-day. Let us talk of anything and everything else. Have you seen Mr.
-Esmond lately? He has not been near us since the night he came with
-you."
-
-Shortly afterwards he took his leave, he had stayed unconsciously long
-as it was.
-
-"I shall come again soon, if I may, to listen to some more
-reminiscences," he said, as he shook hands. And she had given him
-permission, with the brightest of smiles.
-
-He had not learned half as much as he wanted, but he had gathered
-something. The bounder cousin was the son of a self-made man, a
-_parvenu_. And Stella Keane was not absolutely penniless, she had enough
-money to buy herself clothes. Did Tommy Esmond know as much as this? And
-if he did, why had he not said so?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-|Although unsuspicious by nature, Guy Spencer had mixed much in the
-world and seen a good deal of life. Attracted as he was by the charming
-Stella, there was a something about the atmosphere of that flat in
-Elsinore Gardens which created an unfavourable impression.
-
-Of Mrs. L'Estrange's antecedents there was no question. She was a woman
-of good family, she could produce chapter and verse for her ancestors.
-And yet, why was she not in a better environment?
-
-Clearly, she was on the downward slope. But was there anything
-remarkable in that? Heaps of members of aristocratic families were
-in the same sort of predicament, from various causes, through certain
-circumstances.
-
-Had he not received a letter a few days ago from the daughter of a
-well-known earl, imploring him for a loan of ten pounds, for the sake of
-old friendship?
-
-The writer was some twenty years his senior, and she had tipped him when
-he was at Eton. She now dated her letter from a suburb in the extreme
-west of Kensington. If she, with all her advantages of birth and
-connection, had fallen by the wayside, why not a comparatively obscure
-person like Mrs. L'Estrange?
-
-It was very easy to see it. Mrs. L'Estrange was of a Bohemian
-temperament, and probably a great spendthrift. She had made considerable
-inroads into whatever fortune she originally possessed, and had
-developed into an adept card-player, with a view to supplementing the
-little income that was left to her.
-
-And Stella Keane, that beautiful, sad girl, with the tragic history of
-worthless parents behind her, was the victim of fate. She was not happy
-in her cousin's home, amidst this gambling, card-playing set. She, at
-least, was pure, whoever else might be defiled. On that he would stake
-his existence.
-
-For a few days he thought a great deal about the subject, and during
-those few days he kept away from Elsinore Gardens and denied himself
-the pleasure of listening to a further instalment of Miss Keane's
-reminiscences of her unhappy history.
-
-If he were going to fall in love, he told himself sternly, he would
-fall in love with a woman of his own world, not with a girl, however
-beautiful and interesting she might be, who was only a hanger-on of a
-woman well-born, but evidently _declassee_, a woman no longer moving in
-the sphere to which she had been accustomed. In these reflections, he
-showed sound sense.
-
-But for a certain event that happened in the course of the next few
-days, he might have adhered to his good resolutions and have finally
-dismissed Miss Keane from his serious thoughts. And, in that case, this
-story would not have been written.
-
-And then the event happened. Returning home to his rooms one night,
-about twelve o'clock, his man told him that Mr. Esmond was waiting for
-him in the sitting-room.
-
-He found the little rotund man sitting in an easy-chair, white-faced,
-the marks of agitation written all over his countenance.
-
-Wondering at this unusual spectacle--Tommy was frequently fussy, but
-always self-contained--Spencer advanced, and held out his hand.
-
-"What's up, Tommy? You're a late visitor, but always welcome." He
-pointed to the decanters standing on the sideboard. "I hope you have
-helped yourself?"
-
-To Spencer's great surprise, the little man did not take the proffered
-hand. He spoke in a hoarse, choking voice, his lips twitching.
-
-"I've helped myself once too often, Spencer. And I can't take the hand
-of an honest man, for reasons. You've got it at once."
-
-Spencer had average brains, but he was not very quick to realise the
-meaning of unexpected situations. At first, he thought the little man
-had been drinking.
-
-"Sit down, Tommy, and get it off your chest. What in the name of wonder
-is the matter?" he said kindly. He was rather fond of Tommy in a casual
-sort of way.
-
-Esmond did not sit down at once, but went over to the sideboard, and
-mixed himself a stiff tumbler of whisky-and-soda. He gulped it down at a
-draught, and then took an armchair.
-
-"You won't begrudge me that, I know," he said, speaking in the same
-strained, hoarse voice. "It's the last drink I'll have in your rooms,
-the last drink in any house in England, I should say. I'm done for, old
-man, tomorrow I clear out, eat my heart away in some beastly foreign
-hole."
-
-No, Spencer's first surmise had been incorrect. The man was not drunk,
-not even elevated. His face was chalk-white, and he was trembling all
-over as if he had been stricken with palsy. But he was perfectly sober.
-
-Spencer took a chair himself, and spoke a little sternly. "Pull yourself
-together, old man, and speak out. At first I thought you had had a
-drop too much. But I see that's not the case. Out with it. You've been
-waiting some time, my man informs me. You want to tell me something.
-Tell it."
-
-Tommy Esmond moistened his dry lips with his tongue, and spoke.
-
-"I don't quite know what instinct prompted me to come to you. We haven't
-known each other so very intimately, after all, but I always felt you
-were a bit more of a Christian than the other chaps I have known, less
-of a Pharisee--that you would be more likely to find excuses for a poor
-devil who had yielded to temptation."
-
-"Do get on," said Spencer a little impatiently. He did not at all like
-the turn the conversation was taking.
-
-Tommy spoke brokenly, he could not put his words together very
-coherently, it appeared. But his halting utterance was simply due to
-emotion.
-
-"I was at Elsinore Gardens to-night, playing cards. You know Elsinore
-Gardens, Mrs. L'Estrange's flat?"
-
-He was quite sober, but his agitation made him wander a bit, or he would
-not have put the question.
-
-"Of course I know Mrs. L'Estrange's flat. It was you who took me there,"
-said Spencer.
-
-"Yes, we went there on the night of the raid, but I was not playing at
-your table. I remember you lost, and I won. Well, somebody has to lose,
-and somebody else has to win."
-
-Spencer made no comment on this obvious truism. Tommy Esmond again
-moistened his dry lips with his tongue. He was a long time in coming to
-the point, but he came to it at last.
-
-"Well, old man, I was playing with an old pal of mine, with whom I have
-been in business for years. We had a nice code of signals arranged. I
-was as cautious as I could be, but my partner had been dining out, and
-he was a bit indiscreet. There were three or four men watching us, they
-caught us both, although, as I tell you, I was cautious. But I made one
-slip, and they were down on me like a knife. You don't know my partner.
-It is the end of him. But it is the end of Tommy Esmond also."
-
-To say that Spencer was disgusted would be to convey a faint idea of his
-feelings. And yet, as he looked at the huddled, trembling form in the
-chair, his sentiment was rather one of compassion than loathing.
-what was there behind? what tragedy of circumstance had driven this
-apparently lighthearted, butterfly little creature to such crooked ways?
-
-"You're an old hand, then? It's not the first time you've cheated?"
-
-Tommy Esmond smiled wanly. He did not answer the question at once.
-
-"What age do you guess me, Spencer?"
-
-"At a casual glance, a little over fifty. You may be older. Looking at
-you closely, you do seem a bit made up, dye and all that sort of thing."
-
-"My dear sir, I am old enough to be your father. I shall never see sixty
-again."
-
-"And when did you take to this game?" Esmond thought a little before he
-replied, he was evidently counting the years.
-
-"When I was twenty-two I got an _entree_ into society. I was then
-enjoying an income of two pounds a week, I was a clerk in an insurance
-office. At twenty-four I left the insurance business and started
-cheating for a living."
-
-Spencer uttered a horrified ejaculation. He had never come across
-anything quite like this, at any rate, in actual experience.
-
-"Would you like to know something of my history, or would you like to
-kick me out at once, and have done with it?" asked Esmond quietly.
-
-But there were still some remnants of compassion in Spencer. And he was
-also a little curious. He was dealing, after all, with a human document.
-Tommy's revelations would add to his experience of life.
-
-"Tell me all you would like to say," he said.
-
-"It will be a relief to unbosom myself, after the years I have led this
-life," was Esmond's answer. "When I left Elsinore Gardens with my life
-in ruins, I felt I could have shrieked it all out to the policeman
-standing at the corner. I came on here, because I thought you would
-listen to me, because I felt sure you were not a Pharisee."
-
-Spencer motioned him to the sideboard. "Mix yourself another stiff peg,
-and steady your nerves. Then tell me as much as you like."
-
-Esmond went over and helped himself. After a few seconds the ague-like
-trembling ceased, and he was able to speak in a fairly steady voice.
-
-"My father was a solicitor in a small way of business in an obscure town
-in the west of England. There were three children--an elder brother,
-myself, and a sister. My elder brother succeeded to the practice and is
-still in the same place, making both ends meet on a microscopic income.
-My sister is dead.
-
-"My father was a God-fearing, deeply religious man, and did more
-than his duty by his family. He scraped and pinched to give us a good
-education, that being the only capital he could leave us. I was placed
-in an insurance office, the head of which was a distant connection of my
-mother's.
-
-"If I had chosen to be content with my lot I daresay in time I might
-have done fairly well, as I had more than average abilities, and gave
-complete satisfaction in the performance of my duties.
-
-"Unfortunately, I ran across, by the purest accident, a young man some
-couple of years my senior. His father, a man of very good family, had
-died a short time previously and left him a very decent income of about
-two thousand a year. He had been at a private school with me when we
-were boys.
-
-"This young man took a violent fancy to me, I was slim and not bad
-looking in those days. He had the _entree_ to some of the best houses
-in London through his aristocratic connections. He took me with him
-everywhere, as his bosom friend. I had certain social instincts, derived
-from Heaven knows where, and I soon found my feet. In twelve months I
-was able to run alone, sometimes I was able to get into houses where
-even he could not gain a footing. He laughingly declared that I had
-beaten him in the social race, but he was a good-natured fellow, without
-a particle of envy or meanness in his nature, and he was rather proud
-than otherwise that the pupil had outstripped the master."
-
-He paused for a moment. It was evident, that having kept silence for so
-many years, it was an enormous relief to unbosom himself.
-
-In spite of his disgust, Spencer could not but feel interested in this
-bit of life-history. He had often felt curious as to Tommy Esmond's
-past, and now that curiosity was going to be satisfied. He understood
-now why the little man had never made any but the most distant allusions
-to his home or his relatives.
-
-"The life suited me down to the ground, but there was always the
-terrible problem of ways and means, good clothes, travelling, expensive
-flowers, etc., etc. I had got to three pounds a week, but that doesn't
-go far in the circles to which I had been transplanted. It began to dawn
-upon me that, delightful as the life was, I was playing the fool, and
-neglecting the substance for the shadow. People asked me to their big
-parties, often to their dinners and to week-ends, but there was no
-money in it. In fact, I was getting out of my depth. I had already been
-obliged to borrow small sums from money-lenders to cover my expenses.
-
-"Bitterly I made up my mind that sooner or later I must cut it, and take
-life seriously, like the poor man I was. I belonged to a good club
-where I had all my letters addressed. I lodged in a little street in
-Bloomsbury, in cheap apartments. My friend alone knew this address.
-
-"He would have helped me to a considerable extent, but, strange to say,
-considering what I did afterwards, I shrank from accepting actual cash
-from him."
-
-Spencer interrupted him for a second. "You would not sponge upon your
-friend, instead you took to cheating your acquaintance. I take it that
-is what you are going to tell me."
-
-Esmond nodded. "Quite right. I had made up my mind to cut it, and
-disappear from a world in which I had no right to intrude. I had even
-made up my mind as to the exact date at the close of the season when
-I would disappear, and return to the humdrum life from which my friend
-roused me.
-
-"A few days before that date, something very strange happened; my life
-has always been full of surprises. A few weeks before the fixed date,
-I had made the acquaintance of a young nobleman, a member of one of the
-best-known families in England. He was then about thirty, very handsome,
-very popular with both men and women. He is dead now, but, of course, I
-shall not mention his name, which would startle you if you heard it.
-
-"As I have said, his family was a very distinguished one, but poor for
-its position. My friend, whom for the sake of convenience I will call
-Lord Frederick, lived in good style, never seemed short of cash, and
-paid his debts promptly. Those who knew were sure that he got little or
-no help from his family, yet he betted at race-meetings, played cards
-nearly every night, and lived generally the life of a man with a fair
-income.
-
-"His own explanation was, that he had some intimate friends on the Stock
-Exchange who put him on to any good thing going. In the course of the
-year, according to his own account, he made a considerable sum out of
-racing.
-
-"Lord Frederick, like my first friend, took considerable notice of me
-after we had become acquainted. Several times he invited me to his club.
-Afterwards he told me that he had a premonition I should be useful to
-him.
-
-"I shall never forget that night when the deadly temptation came to me,
-when I learned what manner of rascal he was. It was the close of the
-season. In a very few days more I should have looked my last on this gay
-and alluring existence, should have ceased to lead this double life of a
-poor clerk by day, a young man of fashion by night."
-
-Spencer suddenly interrupted. "But was there not a great risk of
-detection? were you never recognised in the City by some chance west End
-acquaintance."
-
-"Up to then, no. Of course, I must have been found out in time, if
-only from the suspicious circumstance that I could never accept any day
-invitations. This was one of the reasons that weighed most strongly with
-me in the resolve to give it up. I could not bear the thought that
-the Tommy Esmond who bore himself so bravely in his new world, who
-had managed to outlive all curiosity as to his antecedents, should
-be discovered in his true colours, a poor City drudge in an insurance
-office.
-
-"To return to my story. I had dined with Lord Frederick at the---- No, I
-will not give the name of the club, one of the most exclusive in London:
-it might put you on his track. He had ordered a choice dinner, and he
-plied me liberally with wine. My heart was very full at the prospect of
-having to say good-bye to this luxurious life, in a very few days' time.
-
-"After dinner we went into the smoking-room, which was nearly empty,
-as most of the members had left London. There were only two other
-occupants, and they were at the far end of the apartment. Practically,
-we had the place to ourselves.
-
-"He urged me strongly to take a trip over to Paris as his guest. I
-should have loved to go, but the wrench had to be made some time, it
-might as well be made now. Besides, I was heavily in debt, for a poor
-man, and I had not the cash to purchase the necessary outfit for such a
-trip.
-
-"He would not accept my first refusal, but tried to persuade me into
-reconsidering. When I still persisted, he bluntly asked me my reasons.
-
-"As I have said, I was very depressed that night at the prospect of all
-I was saying goodbye to. This mood was responsible for my blurting out a
-great portion of the absolute truth.
-
-"I explained to him that I had already accepted too much of his
-hospitality, which my circumstances did not enable me to return, that I
-could no longer take advantage of his generosity.
-
-"After this avowal, he did not speak for some little time, all the while
-regarding me with an intense gaze that embarrassed me very much.
-
-"'Thanks for telling me the truth,' he said at length. 'Your confidence
-is quite safe with me.' He added after a pause, 'So you are a poor man,
-in spite of the fact that your appearance does not suggest the fact.
-well, I may tell you that from the first moment I made your acquaintance
-I was pretty certain you were.'
-
-"I told him a little more. 'I am so poor,' I said frankly, 'that I
-cannot afford to keep up appearances any longer. In a few days I shall
-leave a world I ought never to have entered. Anyway, it is the last time
-I shall dine with you, and I don't suppose we shall ever meet again,
-unless we run across each other by chance in a very different sphere.'"
-
-"'You have absolutely made up your mind to do this, for the reasons you
-have given?' he asked presently.
-
-"'Absolutely,' I replied. 'I may say it is Hobson's choice. I am heavily
-in debt. If I cut my wants down to next to nothing, it will take me a
-year to pay off what I owe.' I laughed bitterly--'Unless I turned thief,
-I could not possibly go on.'
-
-"'I don't want to force your confidence,' was Lord Frederick's next
-remark. 'But having had a taste of this rather glittering world, I
-presume you will leave it with considerable regret.'
-
-"'I dare not say what I feel,' I said with conviction. 'It seems to me
-that in the old life to which I am returning I shall suffer the tortures
-of lost souls.'
-
-"Then he shot at me an extraordinary question. 'I wonder whether you
-would care to become a partner in my business?'
-
-"My heart suddenly grew light. Was there a chance that I could still
-keep on, that through his assistance I could find a decently paid
-occupation? After all, I only wanted a few hundreds a year more. A
-bachelor can live in the best society on comparatively little, but he
-must have that little, and the insurance office did not furnish it.
-
-"'If I were competent enough,' I faltered.
-
-"He smiled; I thought there was a little touch of a sneer in that smile.
-'Oh, I think you would be competent enough. But I am not at all sure
-that you would like the business sufficiently.'
-
-"'I can't say positively, of course, till I know the nature of it. But
-I don't think I should be very difficult to please, nor do I want any
-extravagant remuneration, just enough to keep up a decent appearance.'
-
-"'The share would be half, neither more nor less,' he said curtly; then
-he relapsed into a long silence, as if he were thinking very hard.
-
-"When he spoke it was in a low, strained voice. 'Look here, Esmond, I
-don't know very much of you. But I believe you to be a gentleman. The
-business I am engaged in is a very peculiar one, and it is more than
-probable it will not appeal to you. If you refuse, you are to give
-me your word of honour that this conversation between us shall be
-forgotten.'
-
-"I gave him more than my word, I added my solemn oath that I would never
-divulge a syllable.
-
-"I had for some little time felt that there was a mystery about him.
-I hazarded to myself that he was perhaps engaged in some spying work
-repugnant to any man of fine susceptibilities but quite remunerative.
-
-"I was startled, and to an extent horrified, by what he told me. He
-was a professional card-sharper, made his living by robbing his rich
-acquaintances. He had been at the game since he was twenty-five.
-
-"'I do pretty well, as you can guess, by the way in which I live,' he
-remarked at the conclusion of his strange confession. 'But with a smart
-confederate, and I am sure you would prove one, I could quadruple my
-gains. One is hampered by working alone. It's a scoundrel's business, of
-course. But I can always persuade myself I am not really doing very much
-harm, certainly not as much as the swindling sort of company-promoter.
-I win money from rich fools, rob them, if you like; it does at least as
-much good in my pockets as theirs.'
-
-"I suppose there was already some moral kink in me waiting to blossom
-forth under proper encouragement. For though I was very much startled, I
-cannot say that I was profoundly shocked, as I might have been by a less
-subtle form of robbery.
-
-"I did not accept or refuse that night, I wanted to think. I knew it
-was the turning of the ways. On the one hand well-paid roguery, with the
-accompanying delights of the fashionable world, on the other the deadly,
-drab life of the poor City drudge. In the morning my mind was made up. I
-went into partnership with my new friend."
-
-"And you made a fortune, I suppose?" asked Spencer, in a very cold
-voice.
-
-Esmond shook his head, and Spencer was not at all sure that the next
-words were truthful ones.
-
-"No, a comfortable living, nothing more. We made a good deal, but we had
-to lose a good deal, too, in order to avert suspicion."
-
-"Your friend is dead, you say. So you went on with it after his death?"
-
-"Yes, for a little time alone. Then I, too, got in a partner, the man
-who was with me to-night."
-
-There was a long silence between the two men. Spencer broke it first.
-
-"And what are your plans?" he asked.
-
-"I shall sneak out of the country to-morrow morning and make my way to
-France. I shall hide myself in some little out-of-the-way village under
-an assumed name, and rust out." The little man rose and looked at his
-former friend with an embarrassed air. "Well, thanks for having listened
-to me so patiently. It has been a tremendous relief to me to pour it all
-out."
-
-He did not offer his hand, for he felt certain it would not be taken.
-Spencer stopped him as he was at the door.
-
-"You have money, I suppose, something put by out of your--your
-winnings?"
-
-Esmond's voice was hesitating. Again it was very doubtful if he was
-speaking the truth. "Hardly a _sou_ out of them. It was lightly come,
-lightly go, all the time. But my father left me a little bit which will
-keep me going in a cheap place."
-
-Spencer did not believe him. The probability was he had put away safely
-a snug little nest-egg, in view of the detection which might come at any
-moment of such a hazardous occupation.
-
-"One word before you go," said the young man finally. "Is there much
-cheating going on at Elsinore Gardens?"
-
-Esmond turned and looked the speaker straight in the face. This time
-he certainly seemed to be speaking the truth, but he might be a most
-accomplished liar.
-
-"None at all, except when I and my partner were there. If there had
-been, I should have spotted it. I'm awfully sorry for Mrs. L'Estrange,
-for it having happened at her house, for I daresay people will hint
-nasty things."
-
-"She didn't suspect anything, then?"
-
-"Not a bit," replied Esmond. "We didn't play there more than about twice
-a week, and we never went in for high stakes. And, of course, we had to
-lose pretty often, to make things look square."
-
-"And Miss Keane suspected nothing either." As he remembered the girl's
-beautiful face, and sad history, Spencer felt almost ashamed of himself
-for putting the question.
-
-"Bless your soul, no, a thousand times no." The little rogue seemed to
-speak with unusual warmth. "Why, she loathes cards, she never can be got
-to join in. She has suffered too much from gambling."
-
-He went out of the room slowly and into the night. Spencer half pitied
-the poor devil who had made such a hash of his life through his desire
-to step out of his own class. He sat down and ruminated a long time over
-the strange history which had been unfolded to him.
-
-The next morning, the fugitive, Tommy Esmond, caught the morning train
-from Charing Cross. He looked very sad and woebegone, a pitiable figure,
-friendless and alone.
-
-But not quite friendless. A young woman closely-veiled and dressed very
-plainly rose up from one of the seats as he came on the platform, and
-touched him lightly on the arm. He recognised her, and glanced round
-anxiously.
-
-"It was very dear and sweet of you to come, Stella, but very imprudent.
-You might be seen by half a dozen people."
-
-"I know," answered Miss Keane, for the closely-veiled woman was she. "I
-got your letter this morning and could not bear you should go without a
-last good-bye. Well, I can see you are anxious. I will say it, and get
-back."
-
-She lifted the veil for a second, and held up her face. The little man
-kissed her hastily, and then made for his train.
-
-It was evident he had one friend left in the London he was flying from
-as a fugitive and outlaw, one woman who pitied him.
-
-And, at the same time that Stella was walking swiftly from the station,
-Guy Spencer was making up his mind that he would pay a visit to Elsinore
-Gardens in the afternoon, to see how the land lay there.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-|About five o'clock on the afternoon of the day following Esmond's
-confession, Guy Spencer rang the bell at Mrs. L'Estrange's flat in
-Elsinore Gardens.
-
-The decorous-looking butler opened the door. He seemed to wear a sad
-and chastened demeanour, as if overborne with the tragic events of the
-previous night. Of course, all servants know what is going on in the
-house of their employers. A scandal such as this must have quickly
-penetrated to them.
-
-"Is Mrs. L'Estrange at home?"
-
-The sad-faced butler answered at once; he could tell a lie with as much
-grace as anybody, but here there was no need to lie.
-
-"Mrs. L'Estrange is at home, sir, in a manner of speaking, but she
-is very ill, as a matter of fact in bed. Of course she cannot see any
-visitors."
-
-"Oh, I quite understand," said Spencer hastily. "Is Miss Keane in? If
-so, I would like to see her for a few moments."
-
-The melancholy man in black opened the door a few inches. "Miss Keane is
-in, sir, but I am afraid she is not very well, either. Will you kindly
-step in, sir, and I will find out if she can see you?"
-
-It was evident that Tommy Esmond and his equally nefarious partner had
-cast a gloom over the whole establishment. Spencer was ushered into the
-pretty drawing-room. In a few moments, Stella Keane came in. She was
-evidently under the stress of great emotion. There were dark shadows
-round the eyes, as if she had passed a sleepless night. Even her perfect
-mouth had a listless droop.
-
-But, in spite of her pallor, the dark shadows round her eyes, and that
-pathetic droop, she was still very beautiful. Pathos became her. Guy
-Spencer's heart gave a great leap as he saw her. There was about her an
-overpowering, an irresistible fascination.
-
-She advanced towards him with outstretched hands. She spoke in a broken
-voice, the perfectly moulded lips trembled:
-
-"It is so sweet of you to come. Of course you have heard? It is all over
-the town by now. Oh, this thrice-accursed gambling, the love of which
-induces decent men to cheat, and become outcasts from their world."
-
-She spoke with the deepest emotion, her bosom heaving, her voice broken
-by the catchings of the breath.
-
-"He was such a good little man, he was always so kind to me," she went
-on. "And last night those awful happenings. Branded a cheat, he and his
-friend, and they could not deny it. They had to slink out. I have
-hardly closed my eyes during the night, Mr. Spencer; my poor cousin is
-prostrated." She added with a shudder: "My girlhood was passed amidst a
-gambling set, but I never had an experience like this."
-
-She collected herself, and rang for tea. "You will sit down," she said.
-"You can understand I should have denied myself to anybody but you, I am
-so terribly upset. It is still like a nightmare."
-
-Spencer sat down as he was bidden. "I had a visit from Esmond last
-night," he said briefly. "He came straight on from Elsinore Gardens. He
-told me what had happened, he told me the whole history of the terrible
-thing, how he has been making his living by cheating at cards, since he
-was a young man." Miss Keane raised her hands in mute deprecation. "How
-awful! That, of course, I did not know. I had a letter from him this
-morning, apologising, if one can apologise for such a thing, telling me
-he was going to live abroad under an assumed name. It was a very short
-letter. His chief concern seemed to be that he had, incidentally, made
-it unpleasant for Mrs. L'Estrange."
-
-"How does Mrs. L'Estrange take it?"
-
-Miss Keane shrugged her shoulders. "She is a little bit hysterical, you
-know. One moment, she vows she will shut up the flat and go abroad, for
-fear of the nasty things that people will say. The next moment, she says
-that, confident in her perfect innocence, she will stay and face the
-music, and give her parties as usual."
-
-"Has she asked your advice?" queried Spencer.
-
-"She has, and my advice is to go on as usual. It is not her fault that
-blacklegs have crept into her circle. They creep into the best houses,
-the best clubs. So long as this cursed gambling goes on, there will be
-sharpers."
-
-"That's true," remarked Spencer, remembering a few episodes that had
-occurred in his time. "And, I suppose, you will still cast in your lot
-with her?"
-
-The look on the beautiful face grew more pathetic than ever.
-
-"What can I do, Mr. Spencer? I have told you my position. I wish
-my cousin were a different woman altogether, I wish she were not so
-infatuated with this horrible gambling. But I cannot influence her. She
-is too old and set to turn over a new leaf."
-
-Every moment the girl's fascination took a deeper hold of him. She
-was so very beautiful, so very seductive. But he still kept himself in
-check.
-
-"Tell me what actually happened last night. How were Esmond and his
-partner found out?"
-
-There was a little interruption by the solemn-faced butler who brought
-in tea. Miss Keane busied herself amongst the cups before she replied.
-
-"It is, as I told you, all a nightmare to me. I was wandering aimlessly
-about; as I have told you before, I never play, I loathe cards too much.
-Suddenly there was a scene at the table where Mr. Esmond and his partner
-were playing. Three men were standing watching the game, they had come
-here often, I knew their names."
-
-"They were friends of Mrs. L'Estrange?" queried Spencer.
-
-Just a faint shade of hesitation crept into the low voice.
-
-"Oh yes, friends of my cousin."
-
-"Straight sort of chaps, of course."
-
-"I have no doubt of that. They accused Mr. Esmond and his partner,
-Major Golightly, of cheating. Of course the charge was denied, but
-very half-heartedly. These three men were backed by others who had seen
-something suspicious. It seems Mr. Esmond and his partner had aroused
-suspicion before. Finally they confessed, and slunk out of the house."
-
-She paused a moment, and then laid her hand impulsively on his arm.
-
-"That first night you came to our house, you lost. Did you play at the
-same table with Tommy Esmond? I forget."
-
-The answer came straight. "No, I lost something, what was it?--something
-about a hundred and fifty. But Tommy Esmond did not rook me that time,
-he was playing at another table. I remember he was very cock-a-hoop,
-he was winning hand over fist. I say, I know I am putting a very
-impertinent question, but were Tommy Esmond and his partner, this
-Major Golightly, the only sharpers who came to this flat? Did I lose my
-hundred and fifty, or whatever it was, quite honestly?"
-
-Miss Keane covered her face with her hands for a few seconds, and when
-she took them away, he could see that tears were slowly trickling down
-her cheeks.
-
-"Heaven knows, Mr. Spencer, I don't. My cousin is a strange woman. She
-is fond of gaiety, of excitement. She asks people about whom she knows
-nothing to her flat, I think," she added with an hysterical laugh; "she
-fancies she is making herself a queen of Society. If she can get her
-rooms full that is all she wants. When she does that, she fancies
-herself the Duchess."
-
-"I think I understand," said Spencer gravely. "And I take it you would
-give heaven and earth to get out of this environment?"
-
-"If you only knew how I loathe it," she cried, in a fervent tone.
-"Sometimes I think I would rather run away and be a shopgirl or a
-waitress, to get rid of this horrible atmosphere."
-
-Guy Spencer was very perturbed. He rose and walked up and down the
-room--it was his habit to walk about, even in confined spaces, when he
-was in an emotional mood.
-
-At length he turned, and faced her squarely. "Look here, Miss Keane.
-It's rather nonsense talking about being a waitress or a shop-girl. You
-told me you had a small income saved from the wreck. How much is it?
-I am asking in no spirit of impertinent curiosity. I have a reason for
-asking."
-
-She hesitated for a moment before she replied: "Something like a
-hundred a year--paid to me quarterly by my cousin, Mr. Dutton, who is my
-trustee."
-
-"Then you are not exactly a pauper. Shopgirls and waitresses don't earn
-that."
-
-"But it would help," said Miss Keane, in a stifled voice. "A hundred a
-year does not go far; with clothes and everything."
-
-He longed to take her in his arms there and then and ask her to be his
-wife, so far was he subjugated by her subtle fascination. But certain
-things occurred to him. He thought of his old ancestry, his uncle whose
-heir he would be, even a faint idea of his cousin Nina flashed through
-his mind. What would his relatives say to a marriage like that, the
-marriage with a girl, however beautiful, picked up in a flat, owned by a
-woman of good family but doubtful reputation?
-
-But he could not afford to lose her. He was rich, he could indulge any
-passing whim. Out of his new-born ideas he spoke.
-
-"Miss Keane, I am very interested in you. Will you agree to look upon me
-as a friend?"
-
-She looked up at him from under downcast eyes.
-
-"Mr. Spencer, somehow I have always looked upon you as a friend, as
-something different from the ordinary man I meet in a place like this."
-
-"You want to get out of this atmosphere, away from your card-playing
-cousin, who cannot keep her parties free from disgraceful scandals."
-
-"I have told you how fervently I long to say good-bye to it all."
-
-Spencer had made up his mind as to what he was going to do. It was
-quixotic, but then he was a quixotic person. And, anyway, he was marking
-time. He would ask her to marry him in the end, but, at the moment, he
-did not clearly see his way to do so.
-
-"Suppose a woman friend offered to lend you five hundred pounds, to
-enable you to get clear of this stifling atmosphere, what would you say?
-You could go and live where you like and look around."
-
-"If a woman friend asked me that I think I should say, yes."
-
-"You have agreed that I am your friend, true, a man friend," said Guy.
-"Suppose I made you the same offer, what is your answer?"
-
-"From a man friend I fear my answer must be an unhesitating 'no,' even
-to you."
-
-He admired her answer. He could gather from it that she respected
-herself too much to snatch at any offer that came along.
-
-But he would play with her still. "Why?" he asked.
-
-The beautiful eyes, still a little clouded with her tears, met his
-unfalteringly.
-
-"You know as well as I do," was her answer. "I am poor, Mr. Spencer, but
-I am very proud."
-
-He sat down beside her, and took her hand in his.
-
-"I admire you for that answer, Stella. I may call you Stella, may I not?
-But I am not quite the ordinary type of man. I am going to speak quite
-plainly to you. If you accept that five hundred pounds, I am not going
-to ask you for any return. I want you to understand that."
-
-She shot at him a swift glance from under the downcast eyes.
-
-"You are a man out of a thousand, nay, out of ten thousand," she said,
-and in her voice there was a note of great appreciation. If Stella Keane
-ever felt a good impulse in her life, it was towards this man who was
-doing his best to befriend her.
-
-"Listen to me," said Spencer persuasively, her delicate hand still lying
-in his. "I don't know that I have done much good to other people in my
-life, but I do want to help you. I should like to get you out of
-this beastly hole. My proposal is, that I shall take for you a little
-furnished flat and supplement your income, or give you the five hundred
-pounds down, to do what you like with. It is for you to choose."
-
-"You would do this for me?" said Stella softly. "You must really like
-me, then! Men don't do this sort of thing for women unless they like
-them."
-
-"I like you very much, Stella, and I want to help you."
-
-He knew that he could take her in his arms and kiss her at his will. But
-he forebore. He was not going to spoil this somewhat idyllic wooing.
-
-"It cannot take place for a week or so," she said presently. "I cannot
-quite leave my cousin in the lurch. I must give her some sort of notice.
-Of course, I can make the excuse that the events of last night have
-completely shattered my nerve."
-
-"I don't wonder," was Spencer's comment. "Now, about this little matter
-we have been speaking of. I think it would be better if I paid this
-money into your bank, and left you to make your own arrangements. I
-suppose you have a bank?"
-
-Yes, Miss Keane had a banking-account, a very small one. She smilingly
-remarked that it would give the manager a shock when such a large sum
-was paid into it.
-
-"I will draw the money in cash to-morrow and bring it to you," said
-Spencer. "Then nobody will be able to guess from whom it comes."
-
-He rose, he could not trust himself to stay very much longer. At any
-moment his reserve might break down. He might be impelled to change the
-role of the benevolent friend into that of the ardent lover.
-
-And for a long time after he had left, Stella Keane sat absorbed in the
-most serious thoughts.
-
-There was no doubt he was ardently in love with her. But he was not yet
-quite prepared to screw up his courage to the sticking place.
-
-It was easy to understand. The obligations he owed his family were
-weighing on his mind.
-
-The woman he made his wife would one day be the Countess of Southleigh.
-He had to think of all this. And all he knew about her was learned from
-her own statement, and she had a cousin who was, from his point of view,
-certainly not a gentleman.
-
-Above all things, Stella Keane was a very business-like young woman, and
-never shrank from looking facts squarely in the face. She must play
-a waiting game. Guy Spencer was very deeply in love, but he was not a
-hotheaded, impetuous boy, the sort of amorous youth who runs off with a
-chorus girl, regardless of consequences. Lovers of this kind were very
-rarely met with.
-
-If Guy Spencer did marry her, and she could not at the moment be sure
-he would, he would be fully conscious of the disadvantages to himself
-entailed by such a marriage. Would her fascination be strong enough to
-conquer his better judgment?
-
-At any rate, for the present he was prepared to advance her five hundred
-pounds, and ask nothing but her friendship in return. It was an offer
-that she would have been a fool to refuse.
-
-Presently she rose and went up to Mrs. L'Estrange's bedroom. That sorely
-perturbed lady had risen, flung on a dressing-gown, and was reclining on
-a sofa.
-
-"I can't sleep, I only fidget and fidget about," was the explanation.
-"So I thought I might as well get up."
-
-"Very wise," said Stella calmly. "You're a little bit too hysterical,
-you know. You should keep your nerves in order as I do mine."
-
-"Not always," was the sarcastic rejoinder. "They go to pieces in
-thunderstorms and air raids, don't they?"
-
-"The exception proves the rule, my dear lady. Well, I haven't come up
-here to indulge in a sparring match. I have some very great news for
-you. Mr. Spencer called this afternoon; he hasn't left me very long."
-
-The elder woman became interested at once. "You don't mean to say he has
-asked you to marry him?"
-
-Stella laughed. "No, he hasn't, although it will not be my fault if he
-doesn't later on. It seems Tommy Esmond called on him last night, and
-made a clean breast of his whole history."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange frowned. "Then I think he was a great fool. Everybody,
-of course, will know what actually happened, that he was discovered
-cheating. But he need not go and tell him more than he would learn from
-general rumour.'"
-
-Stella's face hardened a little. "You must make some allowances for him.
-He must have been in a terrible state of tension when he felt that his
-career was ended. He was so very proud, you know, of the position in
-society that he had won for himself. He must have felt like a man on the
-eve of execution. He was hardly responsible for his thoughts or actions.
-He is very highly-strung."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange spoke more gently. "Yes, of course. I am sorry I said
-that, my dear. And after all, it doesn't make any difference how much
-he told or how little. The result to him is the same. And now for your
-great news, what are they? You say Spencer has not asked you to marry
-him."
-
-Stella told her of Guy's suggestion, and her acceptance of it. "It is
-too good a chance to refuse. So, my dear, I shall have to leave you at
-the earliest possible moment."
-
-It was some time before the elder woman seemed quite able to grasp it.
-when she did, her astonishment seemed unbounded.
-
-"Of all the strange things I have ever heard," she began, but Stella cut
-her short with a little mocking laugh.
-
-"Not quite so strange when you think it quietly out," she said. "If
-he really knew anything about me, if I could produce a few respectable
-relatives, if I had some of your blue blood in my veins, he would have
-proposed this afternoon."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange nodded her rather dishevelled head. "I think I see."
-
-"He is very much in love with me," went on Stella quietly. "Anyway, so
-much so that he doesn't want to lose sight of me, while he is making up
-his mind. Hence his offer."
-
-"But he could see you here."
-
-Stella shook her head. "He would loathe this house after what occurred
-last night, and he thinks I am in an unholy set. He really is an awful
-dear, you know, so high-minded and upright. His great aim is to get me
-away from the environment."
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange settled herself comfortably amongst her sofa cushions.
-She was an excitable and fussy person about trifles, but she took the
-great things of life with a calm and equal mind.
-
-"Well, my dear, go as soon as it suits yourself. You have been a good
-pal to me, and I shall be sorry to lose you. But if you have got a
-decent chance you would be a fool not to take it."
-
-Miss Keane was strongly of the same opinion. Anyway she was glad the
-interview was over, that Mrs. L'Estrange had taken everything in such
-good part. She might have turned nasty if the mood had seized her.
-
-Later on, Miss Keane wrote a long letter to Tommy Esmond to an address
-which he had communicated to her in his note of the morning.
-
-The same evening, she held a long conversation with her cousin and
-trustee, Mr. Dutton, who came to Elsinore Gardens in obedience to an
-urgent summons on the telephone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-|Lady Nina Spencer sat in the drawing-room of the big house in Carlton
-House Terrace, awaiting the few guests who had been invited to a small,
-informal dinner-party. Her father, very infirm for his years, sat
-opposite to her in a big easy-chair.
-
-The Earl spoke in his low, quavering voice: "I have nothing to say
-against the woman herself, judging from what little we have seen of her.
-She has very perfect manners, just a trifle too perfect. I can quite
-understand that for the average man she possesses considerable charm,
-and she has great good looks. Many people would call her beautiful.
-But I can only repeat what I said on the day I received Guy's letter
-announcing his clandestine marriage: 'The pity of it.'"
-
-Lady Nina was a quiet, robust and practical young person, fond of
-looking facts in the face, and looking at them very squarely.
-
-She had been as much shocked at her cousin's rash marriage as the Earl
-himself, but it was an accomplished fact. Only two courses were open:
-the first to have nothing more to do with Guy and his wife, the second
-to admit the wife to a guarded intimacy.
-
-Lord Southleigh had declared warmly, in his first disgust, that he would
-never look upon his young kinsman's face again. But Nina had prevailed
-with milder counsels. Guy was his heir, and in the course of Nature
-would succeed to the family honours. They would not cut themselves
-adrift from him, and they must make up their minds to tolerate this
-wife, of whose antecedents he could give no satisfactory account. The
-one fact he did mention, that she was a cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange, did
-not weigh much with them.
-
-Mrs. L'Estrange came of a fairly good family, so far as birth counted,
-but it was both impecunious and addicted to making unfortunate
-alliances. One of her sisters had run away with a good-looking young
-fellow who had been her father's valet. She was a woman who would have
-a good many undesirable relatives knocking about. Miss Stella Keane, the
-daughter of an impoverished Irishman, might well belong to this band of
-undesirables. More especially as Guy's statements about her antecedents
-were of the most bald and unsatisfactory nature.
-
-It was all very sad and regrettable from every point of view, but,
-as Nina calmly pointed out, several young heirs to peerages had been
-running amok lately, in the matrimonial sense, and taking their wives
-from very questionable quarters. Guy might have married some coarse and
-common creature from the music-halls. It was unfortunate, in a way, that
-he had a considerable fortune of his own, and could snap his fingers at
-the displeasure of his relatives, if they presumed to show it.
-
-But, somehow, knowing Guy as well as she did, Nina did not believe that
-the future Countess of Southleigh, who would, in due course, wear
-the family jewels, was likely to be coarse or common. Guy was too
-fastidious, too innately a gentleman, to be snared by a creature of that
-kind.
-
-And, on her first introduction, the young wife made a much more
-favourable impression than might have been anticipated, considering the
-prejudices arrayed against her.
-
-She was not in the least servile or obsequious in the presence of these
-two very aristocratic persons, but she bore herself with a certain kind
-of shrinking modesty, as if asking pardon for having intruded into the
-family. Her attitude to her husband appeared to be one of shy adoration,
-tempered with perfect good taste. Her deep affection for him, while
-not obtrusive or ostentatious, seemed to express itself in her tender
-glances, the soft cadences of her voice when she addressed him.
-
-Nina made up her mind to one thing, that, if she was not genuinely
-and devotedly in love with him, she must be one of the most perfect
-actresses to be met with off the stage.
-
-And Guy was still infatuated. When he had made her that strange offer,
-he knew that he was drifting, but he had still left some small remnant
-of self-control. But her fascination had proved too strong. Every day
-she wove the chains more strongly round him.
-
-And then there came a time when absence from her was unbearable, when he
-took to counting the hours that elapsed between their next meeting. The
-end was inevitable. The moment came when he definitely made up his
-mind that he could not break away; that existence without her would be
-intolerable.
-
-They were married quietly before the registrar, a strange wedding for
-the heir to the Southleigh earldom. No relatives of his were present,
-as he had foreborne to give them any notice of his intention. She
-was unattended also. Even her cousin, Mr. Dutton, did not put in an
-appearance. Knowing her future husband's dislike of the young man, she
-had not paid him the compliment of requesting his attendance.
-
-The day before the marriage, she spoke to him in a tremulous voice and
-with tears in her eyes.
-
-"Guy, darling, I have said very little about this before, but you must
-not think I am blind to the sacrifices you are making. From to-morrow
-I bid adieu to my past life, to all the few friends and acquaintances I
-have made; I know that you will be happier by my doing so. Henceforth
-I devote my whole life to you. Your people shall be my people, if they
-will forgive me and have me."
-
-He clasped her to his breast with a lover's rapture. How sweet and
-womanly she looked as she uttered those words in her low, broken tones.
-He understood what she meant. For his sake she was going to give up all
-that shady L'Estrange crew, to see as little of her objectionable cousin
-as possible. She explained, later on, that she could not ignore him
-altogether, as he had the management of her small affairs in his hands.
-But all this could be conducted by correspondence.
-
-Guy was delighted. He knew well enough that his own world would not
-accept his marriage kindly, that they would never take his wife to their
-offended bosom. But they would rub along somehow. There were plenty of
-men he could bring to their house, and perhaps a few decent women who
-were perfectly respectable, but not too strait-laced. And, anyway, the
-world was well lost for love like this.
-
-It cannot be said that, on the social side, their existence was a very
-brilliant one. It did not matter so much to Guy, he had never been
-over-fond of society. He liked his men friends, and having been a
-bachelor so long, he was fond of club life. He got quite as much
-amusement and distraction as he wanted.
-
-His wife had many lonely hours, but she was wise in this respect that
-she never sought to chain him to her side. Whenever he came home he
-found her there waiting for him, affectionate and welcoming. Perhaps,
-after her stormy and chequered past, what would have been dullness to
-others seemed to her the peace she had been longing for.
-
-She got on very well with her husband's male friends, most of whom
-openly expressed amongst themselves their admiration for her.
-
-If she had been a woman of a flirtatious temperament she could have had
-a good time without overstepping the bounds of decorum. But she never
-exceeded the limits of strict friendship. She never indulged in an
-intimacy that could have the least element of danger in it. The general
-vote was, that she was very beautiful, very charming, in a quiet,
-elusive way, but naturally of a cold and unimpassionable nature. Only
-for her husband did her glance take on a warmer expression, her voice a
-tenderer tone.
-
-The few women who came to the house found her unsatisfactory. The
-impression made upon them--and women are pretty shrewd when dissecting
-one of their own sex--was that she was a person who lived too much
-within herself, had a rooted disinclination "to let herself go" in
-those little confidential chats which are indulged in when no men
-are present. And for that studied reticence there must be some cogent
-reason. Above all, she never referred to her girlhood, never made any
-allusions to her family. The general impression was that Mrs. Spencer
-had something to hide.
-
-Anyway, after many months of married life, Guy was still as much in love
-with her as ever, and he was always profoundly touched by the pretty and
-impressive way in which she insisted that all the advantages were on her
-side, that she could never repay him sufficiently for the sacrifices he
-had so cheerfully made.
-
-Of course Guy knew nothing of what his friends were saying; the men
-who admired her beauty, and were disappointed at the negative qualities
-which accompanied it; the women who found her unsatisfactory and were
-determined that she had something to hide.
-
-All he knew, and was content in knowing, was this--that after many
-months of matrimony, for they had been married few weeks before the
-Armistice was proclaimed--that Armistice which was to be the precursor
-of a golden era--he was quite happy. She was a perfect wife, from his
-point of view, and he never looked back with the faintest misgiving.
-What he had done then, he would do again to-day, in spite of the fact
-that her reticence with regard to the past was as profound with him as
-with the various acquaintances who occasionally visited her.
-
-Not even the close intimacy of married life had elicited any of those
-allusions and confidences which enable one to piece together, in some
-measure, the life-history of the person who makes them. But Guy had
-a generous nature, and was one of the least suspicious of men. He
-attributed this strange reticence to the fact that the past contained
-nothing but painful memories, that even to the man she loved she could
-not reopen the old wounds.
-
-On this particular night, Lady Nina was awaiting her guests. It was a
-little dinnerparty to meet the young married couple, six in all, herself
-and father, Mr. and Mrs. Spencer, a young woman friend of the hostess,
-and an old friend of the Southleigh family, Hugh Murchison, already met
-with in the early chapters of this history.
-
-Murchison was the first arrival. He walked with a slight limp, the
-result of a bad wound in the leg. He had been laid-up for a very long
-time at his own home with the effects of shell-shock. He had only been
-in London for a few days, and it was ages since the Southleighs had seen
-him. They welcomed him warmly.
-
-After a little desultory conversation Nina spoke:
-
-"You know from my note that you are here to-night especially to meet
-Guy and his wife, the wife that he sprang upon us in such a sudden and
-dramatic manner."
-
-"Yes, I understood that. You know I have been out of the world so long,
-and more than half the time not in my right senses, that I had heard
-nothing of the details till, a day or two ago, I picked it up from club
-gossip. Then I was told that Guy had picked up a girl from nowhere,
-about whom nothing was known, and married her on the sly at a
-registry-office. I suppose it would be too unkind to assume that Guy had
-gone off his head?"
-
-Lord Southleigh growled out from his easy-chair. "Of course he was off
-his head when he did it. And the devil of it is he seems just as much
-off his head now. They are like turtle-doves, my dear boy, after several
-months of marriage."
-
-Lady Nina laughed. "My dear father gets more cynical every day. He
-insinuates as a general proposition, anyway it can be deduced from
-his remarks, that every man who marries a girl for love ought to be
-disillusioned shortly after the honeymoon. Well, certainly Guy is as
-much in love as ever, and, to be quite fair, she seems just as much in
-love with him."
-
-"She's putting it on, I suppose," suggested Hugh, who in a less
-obtrusive fashion was nearly as cynical as his host. "If she came from
-nowhere, and nobody knows anything about her, we may safely assume
-that she married him for his money, and that he was too infatuated to
-recognise the fact. Is she very bewitching?"
-
-"She is certainly very good-looking," was Nina's reply. "Many people say
-she is beautiful. From a man's point of view, she would be considered
-very charming in a subtle and elusive sort of way. Of course, my father
-hates her, it is a terrible shock to his pride to think she is going
-to inherit the family honours. Guy could have married anybody, although
-there would always have been still the danger that he would have been
-married for his money. When it comes to this point, there is not much
-difference between the well-born and low-born adventuress."
-
-From which remarks it will be gathered that the Lady Nina Spencer was
-a young woman of independent opinions, and not too strongly imbued with
-caste prejudices.
-
-Hugh reflected for a few moments. His thoughts had travelled back to
-those days at Blankfield, which now seemed so very far oft. What folly
-will not a certain type of man commit for the sake of a pretty woman?
-Jack Pomfret, in a moment of frenzy, had taken his life when he found he
-was tied up to a girl the accomplice and the decoy of a criminal.
-
-And Guy Spencer, a man of a very different type from the easy-going,
-pleasure-loving Pomfret, had made a hash of his opportunities, flouted
-his family obligations, to pursue the desire of the moment, to marry out
-of his own class.
-
-"What I hear is, that there is something very mysterious about her, that
-she preserves a strange reticence as to her past, makes no allusion to
-family or relatives. Does Guy know what other people do not know, and
-is he keeping his mouth shut? It is strange. Even if a man marries a
-ballet-girl, it comes out sooner or later that her father was a railway
-porter, or something of that sort." He pulled himself up suddenly,
-and added, awkwardly: "I say, you know, I am afraid I have been very
-indiscreet. I forgot for the moment that she is one of the family now."
-
-A deep growl came from the Earl's armchair: "She is not one of the
-family, she never will be. If the young fool had not been left that
-money by his godmother he would never have dared to do this disgraceful
-thing. By gad, Hugh, it is over a hundred years since there was such a
-_mesalliance_ in our family: please Heaven it will be a hundred years
-before there is another."
-
-Nina took up the conversation at the point where her angry father left
-it.
-
-"Of course, Hugh, you can say what you like. You are our old friend;
-you are Guy's for that matter, and we are prepared to discuss this thing
-with you quite frankly. Guy may know more than we imagine; personally, I
-think he knows very little, and only what she has told him."
-
-"But surely, she must have given some particulars of herself," cried
-Hugh, in amazement that a man like his friend Spencer, endowed with a
-fair share of common-sense, should take a wife upon trust, as it were.
-To be sure, Pomfret had done the same thing, but then poor old Jack,
-possessor of many excellent qualities, was singularly deficient in
-brain-power. He was one of those who never looked before they leaped.
-
-Nina shrugged her shoulders. "All we know is that she was a Miss Stella
-Keane, the daughter of a man who gambled away his fortune at cards
-and on the race-course. As for relatives, she has for cousin a Mrs.
-L'Estrange, a woman of good birth, but of somewhat shady reputation, who
-no longer mixes with her own class. There is another cousin, a man whose
-name I forget. I gather more from what has been omitted than what is
-actually said, that he is not a very desirable person, and has not
-visited Mrs. Spencer since her marriage. That is all I have learned
-during these many months."
-
-"Not much, certainly. And I suppose the lady dries up when you try to
-approach her on the subject."
-
-"Oh yes, her manner then is very marked," was Nina's answer. "At the
-slightest question she seems to become frozen, to shut herself up within
-her shell. You know, Hugh, I was prepared to make the best of it all
-for Guy's sake, although, of course, I quite sympathise with my father's
-resentment. I have nothing to say against her manners or her appearance.
-If not a lady, she is most ladylike, and she never offends. But all
-the same, I can't take to her. To me there seems something about her
-secretive and underhand. She appears to adore Guy, but, as you have
-suggested, that may be very accomplished acting."
-
-At this point, Miss Crichton, Lady Nina's friend, was announced. She
-was not in the inner counsels of the Southleigh family, so no further
-allusion was made to Guy's wife.
-
-A few moments later the Spencers arrived. Guy shook his old friend
-Murchison warmly by the hand, they had met of late years only once or
-twice during Hugh's brief leave from the Front. When they had exchanged
-a few mutual inquiries, the young husband turned to his wife, looking
-very slender and elegant in a filmy cream confection.
-
-"Stella, one of my oldest friends, Hugh Murchison. We were boys
-together. You must have heard me speak of him."
-
-The young woman held out her hand with a charming smile that lighted up
-the rather sad face, and made her look what so many of her admirers said
-she was, quite beautiful.
-
-"Yes, Major Murchison, I have heard of you from my husband, and how much
-you have suffered in this cruel war. You must come and see us, and renew
-your old friendship."
-
-For a moment Hugh could not speak. The room seemed suddenly peopled with
-ghosts of the past, summoned by the soft tones of that charming voice,
-so low and sweetly modulated. Then, collecting himself with a great
-effort, he dropped her hand, and made some formal answer. And at that
-moment the butler announced that dinner was served.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-|Small and informal dinner-parties can be either very lively or very
-dull, depending, no doubt, upon the careful selection of the guests,
-also on the personality of the host and hostess, who can sometimes
-exercise magnetic influence.
-
-Nina was, as a rule, a very vivacious hostess. Her father was uncertain.
-If he were in a congenial atmosphere, amongst his old friends and
-comrades, he would radiate geniality. But if there was one guest who
-did not quite hit it off with him, between whom and himself there was an
-undefined spirit of personal antagonism, he dried up at once, and became
-gloomy and morose.
-
-To-night, as his guest of honour, sitting at his right hand, he had the
-niece-in-law whose entrance into the family he had so bitterly resented.
-During the long courses he hardly spoke a word. He was rude almost to
-boorishness.
-
-But although Stella was fully conscious that she was there on
-sufferance, her admirable self-control enabled her to comport herself
-with unruffled demeanour. If this spiteful old man hoped that he was
-annoying her with his churlish behaviour, she would not give him the
-satisfaction of knowing that she was hurt. She ignored him, as he
-purposely ignored her.
-
-Miss Crichton, a cheerful, chatty young woman, whose flow of good
-spirits made her welcome at many houses, sat on the other side of the
-host. Finding Lord Southleigh disinclined to conversation, and guessing
-the reason of it, she divided her remarks between Stella Spencer and
-Murchison, who sat next her.
-
-A good-hearted girl, she felt just a little bit sorry for Stella.
-Lord Southleigh was not playing the game. His attitude was altogether
-illogical. It was open to him to refuse to receive his unwelcome niece
-at all, that would have been perfectly comprehensible. But having
-admitted her to his house, it was in the worst possible taste to so
-openly proclaim his dislike and detestation.
-
-Lady Nina talked brightly to her cousin Guy, in the random flashes of
-her conversation, taking in the others, with the solitary exception of
-her father, who sat there glum and silent, in one of his blackest
-and most unapproachable moods. And Miss Crichton did her best, really
-working very hard to counteract the sombre influence of the taciturn
-host.
-
-But in spite of the brave efforts of the two young women there was no
-exhilaration in the air, only a sort of well-defined depression, such as
-is felt in the atmosphere before the faint rumblings of a thunderstorm.
-Nobody really felt comfortable, not a single guest would feel anything
-but relief when the tedious evening drew to a close.
-
-Guy Spencer was relieved, in a way, that his uncle had ostensibly buried
-the hatchet, but still he never felt happy in that uncle's house. The
-strong disapproval was there, if suppressed for the sake of politeness.
-
-These little informal dinners, given at long intervals to impress upon
-him that he was still a recognised member of the family, bored him
-extremely. They were always strictly limited as to numbers, and the
-other guests were generally people of no importance, on the outer fringe
-of that society in which the Southleighs moved.
-
-It was difficult to know what Stella was feeling, for she had such
-admirable self-control. But if she was a sensitive woman she must have
-been cut to the heart by the behaviour of her elderly relative. And
-her suffering must have been more poignant from the fact that this
-contemptuous behaviour must be apparent to every other member of the
-party.
-
-While the two young women were chattering away, battling, as it were,
-against the general depression, Hugh Murchison was trying to collect his
-thoughts.
-
-Strange that his recollections had harked back to that tragedy at
-Blankfield while Nina was speaking of the young Mrs. Spencer. And, if
-his memory and his eyesight were not playing him false, he was sitting
-opposite to the unhappy Pomfret's widow.
-
-Six years make a considerable difference in the personal appearance of
-any man or woman, and they had made a difference in her. If he had met
-her in the street, he would not have known her. Perhaps he would not
-have known her to-night, but for that sudden accidental throwing back
-of the memory of old times. In other words, if his mind had not been
-accidentally diverted to Jack Pomfret, he would have failed to recognise
-the woman whom he once knew under the name of Norah Burton.
-
-And yet could he be sure? Let him think a little. Six years ago Norah
-Burton looked twenty, and Davidson the detective assured him she was at
-least four years older than she looked--the appearance of youth, he had
-added, was one of her assets.
-
-This young woman did not look a day older than twenty-six, and taking
-the computation of the years, she must be at least thirty. But if she
-were Norah Burton, and had retained that priceless asset of youth, she
-would still have that four years' advantage.
-
-Then Norah Burton's hair was fair and wavy, Stella Spencer's was dark.
-Still it is easy for a woman to alter the colour or the appearance
-of her hair. If Stella Keane had arisen, like the phoenix, from Norah
-Burton, she would alter herself in every detail, so far as Nature
-permitted her.
-
-Still, it is said that everybody in the world has a double. Often in
-his own experience he had claimed acquaintance with somebody whom he
-had mistaken for an old friend, and smilingly apologised for his error.
-Norah's good looks had been of a rather uncommon kind, but there must be
-dozens of women in the world more or less like her.
-
-Then, as Miss Crichton's harmless chatter flowed on, he thought of other
-things. Norah had an obscure past, on which such guarded confidences as
-she permitted herself to indulge in threw little or no light. It would
-appear that Stella Keane's history moved much on the same lines. There
-were only vague intimations, nothing definite, nothing satisfactory.
-
-There was another point of resemblance. Norah had one male relative who
-came out into the open for inspection, in her case a brother, afterwards
-discovered to be a criminal. Stella Keane had one male relative also,
-in her case a cousin, of whom nothing was known, except that he was an
-undesirable person who had not visited his relative's house since her
-marriage, no doubt for reasons well known to himself and Stella.
-
-_Ergo_ the undesirable cousin was lying low, as George Burton would have
-lain low, when Jack Pomfret had openly acknowledged Norah as his wife.
-
-And yet--and yet--was there anything in these suspicions? was he
-not allowing himself to be misled by a chance resemblance, by random
-coincidences?
-
-He stole a look at Guy Spencer chatting amiably with his cousin, the
-cousin whom rumour had persistently designed as the future Countess of
-Southleigh. He seemed the happy contented young married man; there was
-no hint of trouble or regret in his assured, placid demeanour. Evidently
-he was suffering from no self-reproach, no suspicion of the beautiful
-young woman he had made his wife. The calmness of his aspect gave the
-lie to any such disquieting suggestions.
-
-And the current of Murchison's thoughts ran swiftly along. They had been
-married some time now. If Stella Keane was the impostor Hugh suspected
-her to be, from that striking resemblance to Norah Burton the heroine of
-that tragic Blankville episode, surely in the close intimacy of wedded
-life something would have escaped her that would have aroused her
-husband's suspicions, have set him inquiring more closely into the past.
-
-Granting that she was a clever actress, still the most accomplished
-performer in the world could not wear the mask all day. There must
-come one moment, if not several moments, when that mask would be
-inadvertently dropped.
-
-No, he must be mistaken. The resemblance must be accidental. The brother
-in the one case, the cousin in the other, were equally accidental
-coincidences.
-
-He had got to this frame of mind when the men joined the ladies after
-dinner. In the spacious drawing-room, the atmosphere seemed to have
-cleared, the tension to be relaxed, with the change of scene.
-
-This was readily comprehensible. During dinner, Lord Southleigh,
-frowning and morose, in close juxtaposition with his guests, had in a
-very real sense dominated the scene, and communicated a sense of his
-hostility and displeasure to all round him, not least to the unhappy
-young woman who had inspired those wrathful feelings.
-
-Upstairs he was less in evidence. He retreated to the far end of the
-room, flung himself in a deep armchair, and, in a way, removed
-himself from the proceedings. There was nobody to whom he felt himself
-constrained to be civil. Murchison he had known from a boy; he could
-afford to be uncivil, to play the role of churlish host. Miss Crichton
-was more or less a social hanger-on, grateful for invitations to good
-houses; she did not count. Guy had forfeited all claim to consideration.
-His wife ought to be made to feel her position every moment of her life.
-
-Murchison gravitated to Miss Crichton. Well born, she was very poor, and
-by no means proud. She accepted in a meek spirit the social crumbs that
-were thrown at her by her wealthy superiors. She was always obliging and
-amiable. She never grumbled at being asked to join a dinner-party at
-the eleventh hour, when some other guest had failed. She never resented
-being put in a small bedroom at a country house-party, while a rich girl
-with no ancestry was given a luxurious apartment.
-
-On account of this excessive amiability, this indifference to studied
-and unstudied slights, she was immensely popular. All her friends
-declared her not only to be amiable, but "so sensible!"
-
-Hugh had known her for years, and in a way he pitied her, much more
-really than she pitied herself, for she had long since grown accustomed
-to her lot. But what he did know was, that she was as shrewd as she was
-amiable, that under that gay and smiling exterior she concealed a very
-acute intelligence.
-
-He wanted particularly to know her opinion of Mrs. Spencer, if she were
-frank enough to give it, for she had especially developed the bump of
-caution. She heard a great deal, but what she heard she generally kept
-to herself. It would have been fatal to her somewhat insecure position
-if it could have been said of her, with regard to any particular
-scandal, "Of course, you will never give me away, but Laura Crichton was
-my informant."
-
-He replied in a general way, "I was very interested, to-night, in my old
-friend Guy Spencer's wife. She is a little bit on the quiet side, but
-she is very beautiful, and there is certainly a wonderful charm about
-her. Of course, Lord Southleigh behaved abominably. I rather wonder she
-did not fling herself out of the room. One can understand his feelings,
-in a certain way. But why does he not take one attitude or the other?
-If he elects to receive her, for the sake of avoiding an open breach, he
-ought to put his hostility in his pocket."
-
-Miss Crichton smiled her worldly and diplomatic smile: "Dear Lord
-Southleigh is never very successful at hiding his real feelings."
-
-"Do you see much of her?" asked Hugh presently.
-
-"Oh, very little. I have met her a few times here, at these little
-informal gatherings. Lord Southleigh won't have her at their big
-parties, as I daresay you know. I have called on her a few times, and
-she has called back. That is all."
-
-"Well, you have seen enough to form some opinion of her. I should dearly
-like to know what that is."
-
-Miss Crichton looked at him quizzically. "Oh, the artfulness of you men!
-Do you think I don't see that you are trying to draw me? Well, I have
-formed the same conclusion that you have--she is very beautiful, and,
-from a man's point of view, has a subtle charm. Will that content you?"
-
-Hugh regarded her with a smile as quizzical as her own. "No, I'm
-afraid it won't. Now, look here, we are very old friends," he said
-persuasively, "and I am pretty near as discreet as you are, I never
-repeat what is told me in confidence. I should like to put a plain
-question to you."
-
-"Put it: I don't promise to answer it, you know."
-
-"Of course not. But I am very much interested in this strange marriage
-of Guy's. And, please don't think I am laying it on with a trowel, but
-I have very great faith in your judgment, I would trust it more than I
-would that of nine-tenths of the women I know."
-
-Of course she knew he was flattering her to obtain his purpose; but
-then--was the most sensible woman absolutely impervious to flattery?
-
-"Ask me your question," she answered briefly.
-
-Hugh sank his voice to a whisper. "We hear a great deal about her
-reticence as to the past. Do you think, in a few words, that Stella
-Spencer is a good and straight woman in the general sense in which we
-understand the expression?"
-
-For a moment Miss Crichton hesitated, then she looked him straight in
-the face. He had compelled her to a most unusual frankness.
-
-"You will, of course, never breathe a word of this to anybody. Suppose
-I say I refuse to reply to your question. Will you take that refusal as
-the answer you really want?"
-
-"I will--a thousand thanks. The subject is closed between us," was
-Hugh's grateful reply.
-
-A diversion was caused by the approach of Guy Spencer.
-
-"Hugh, old man, I am aching for a long crack with you. Come and dine
-quietly with us next week. I suggest Tuesday if that will suit you?"
-
-"Perfectly; I am free on Tuesday, Guy."
-
-"Right, then. But to make sure, if Miss Crichton will excuse us, we will
-go over to Stella and see if I have forgotten something, if we are free
-that night. I can't always carry these things in my head."
-
-They crossed over to the beautiful young woman, who was sustaining a
-somewhat listless conversation with her young hostess.
-
-"Stella," cried her husband, "I have asked Hugh to dine with us on
-Tuesday. My recollection is that we have nothing on for that night. But
-I thought you had better confirm it. You carry these things in your head
-so much better than I do."
-
-Young Mrs. Spencer smiled at Hugh her sweet smile, and as she did so
-her likeness to Norah Burton was overwhelming, the Norah Burton who had
-smiled at him in just the same way six years ago, in the tea-shop at
-Blankfield.
-
-"We are quite free, Major Murchison, and shall be delighted to see you."
-
-For a few moments he sat down beside her; and very shortly another
-coincidence happened.
-
-Mrs. Spencer made use of a certain word which is always pronounced in
-a certain way by educated people, and in another way by people who are
-only partially educated. Norah Burton had pronounced this particular
-word in the same way as Stella.
-
-Hugh had commented upon the fact to Pomfret, and that easy-going young
-man had remarked to him that he failed to see it much mattered, that she
-was at liberty to pronounce the word as she thought fit.
-
-When he got home, he passed a very restless night. When he had gone up
-into the drawingroom after dinner, he had been half prepared to dismiss
-the matter from his mind as a mere fantasy. And then had come his
-brief interview with Laura Crichton, in which she gave him plainly to
-understand that, in her opinion, Stella Spencer was not a good or a
-straight woman.
-
-And then had come that corroborative little piece of evidence of the
-mispronunciation of a certain word, establishing another link in the
-chain of evidence that Stella Keane and Norah Burton were one and the
-same person.
-
-And if it were so, what was his duty? If he could prove her to be Norah
-Burton, and her undesirable relative, George Burton, now freed from
-jail, could he permit such an adventuress to pass another day in the
-house of this honest gentleman whom she had so skilfully entrapped, as
-six years ago she had entrapped the guileless and trusting Jack Pomfret?
-
-The morning dawned and found him still in the throes of anxious thought.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-|As Murchison thought over matters in the cold, clear light of the
-morning, when the brain is at its freshest, he cursed the fate that ever
-seemed to mix him up in the private affairs of his friends. First had
-been that unhappy episode of poor Jack Pomfret, who had not strength
-of mind to survive the disgrace he had brought upon himself by his
-impetuous folly.
-
-Now there was this affair of Guy Spencer's, which he felt he must
-go through with and prove to the bottom. He must find out definitely
-whether the likeness to Norah Burton was accidental, or whether that
-scheming adventuress had, for the second time, ensnared a trusting and
-unsuspicious man.
-
-On Tuesday night when he dined in Eaton Place with the Spencers, he
-would seize an opportunity of putting to her a few leading questions.
-They would be of such a nature, that if his suspicions were correct,
-they would shake her self-possession.
-
-Certainly, she had betrayed no embarrassment at the sight of him, and
-that was a point in her favour. For, assuming that she was Norah Burton,
-the name of Murchison would be quite familiar to her, even if she had
-forgotten his appearance after the lapse of those six years.
-
-In the meantime he would get as much information about Stella Keane as
-he could before the date of the dinner. There was a man at his club,
-Gregory Fairfax, a middle-aged gossip, who was to be found in the
-smoking-room every day at a certain hour.
-
-Fairfax was a man of leisure and means, who had the reputation of
-knowing more people, and all about them, than anybody in town. He mixed
-in a dozen different sets: smart, fast, and Bohemian. He was equally
-at home in Belgravia, Mayfair, South Kensington, and several other
-quarters. He belonged to most of the best clubs, and many more that
-had no pretensions to social distinction. His knowledge of the various
-phases of London life was wide and extensive. He had also a marvellous
-memory. He never forgot a face or the minutest details of a scandal.
-
-To this gentleman, with whom he was on quite intimate terms, having
-known him from his first introduction to the London world, Hugh
-repaired, in the hope of getting to know all there was to know about
-this mysterious young woman who had so suddenly and clandestinely
-projected herself into the Southleigh family.
-
-After a few casual remarks, he opened the ball. It was an easy task,
-for there was nothing pleased Fairfax more than to place his extensive
-social knowledge at the service of any friend or acquaintance who was in
-search of details.
-
-"I say, Fairfax, I think you can help me in a little matter, because you
-have the reputation of knowing everything about everybody."
-
-Mr. Fairfax smiled genially. He was very proud of his profound social
-knowledge, and nothing pleased him more than to have his well-earned
-reputation alluded to in flattering terms.
-
-"Fire away, my young friend. I think I have picked up a bit in my
-twenty-five years of London life. Who is it you want to ask me about?"
-
-"I dined last night with my old friends the Southleighs; and there, for
-the first time, I met Mrs. Guy Spencer. I had heard of the marriage,
-of course, but no particulars of the young lady until I came to town
-a little while ago. All I have learned is that she was a Miss Stella
-Keane, and that she gives no very detailed account of her family
-history. I gather the general impression is that there is a mystery
-about her, which she refuses to allow anybody to penetrate. Do you know
-anything about her yourself?"
-
-Fairfax assumed an air of great gravity and importance. He was now in
-his element, about to pour out his stores of knowledge to an interested
-and grateful listener.
-
-"There may be one or two people who know as much as I know--always
-remembering that there is no first-hand knowledge, but the chances are
-a hundred to one you would not come across them. It happens that I was
-a good deal in that rather queer set which frequented Mrs. L'Estrange's
-flat."
-
-"She was supposed to|be a well-bred woman, was she not?"
-
-"Oh, certainly, so far as family went. But, judging in the light of
-subsequent events, there is no doubt she was a wrong'un. The place, from
-the start, was simply a gambling saloon. Sometimes, the play was very
-moderate. I am fond of a bit of a flutter myself, but I must own that I
-never lost very much, and for a long time I never had any suspicions of
-foul play."
-
-"Ah, but you had later on?" interrupted Hugh.
-
-"I'll come to that before we get on to Miss Stella Keane. Then one night
-something happened. Do you remember a little chap named Esmond, who used
-to go about everywhere?"
-
-Yes, Hugh remembered Tommy Esmond, although his acquaintance with him
-had been of the slightest.
-
-"He was a funny little man, very genial and popular with everybody. Like
-myself, he didn't stick to any one particular set, but went into a dozen
-different ones. One night he would be dining at a swagger club with a
-peer, the next he would be hobnobbing at a pot-house sort of a place
-with a fifth-rate actor. Very eclectic was Tommy, and nobody ever knew
-where the deuce he came from. He had been so long about that people
-forgot to inquire, and looked upon him as a sort of institution, and
-took him for granted, as it were.
-
-"Well, one night, one dreadful night, Tommy was discovered cheating by
-a couple of chaps who were too sharp for him. They were common sort of
-fellows, might have been crooks themselves for all I know, and kicked up
-a deuce of a row. They went so far as to insinuate that Mrs. L'Estrange
-was not altogether innocent, and had a hand in the plunder. Result,
-Tommy had to make a bolt of it."
-
-"What was your own opinion about it? Was it an accident?"
-
-"I might not have believed it, but a similar thing took place about a
-couple of months later. Another man was found cheating, and this
-time Mrs. L'Estrange refused to face the music. She closed down, and
-disappeared from London. I have never met anybody who has seen or heard
-anything of her since. I expect she's to be found on the Continent like
-her friend Tommy."
-
-"And Miss Keane was an inmate of this suspicious household?"
-
-"Yes, ever since I went to the house, up to a few days after Tommy
-bolted. She left suddenly, and Mrs. L'Estrange was very reticent as to
-where she had gone to. The next I heard was that she had been married
-quietly to Guy Spencer."
-
-"Did any suspicions attach to her?"
-
-"No, it would not be fair to say that they did. She never played
-herself, but she had a great knack of hovering about the tables. And
-after the Esmond episode one or two men whispered that she had been
-hovering about them too much, and that Mrs. L'Estrange thought she had
-better get rid of her, might be so or not."
-
-"Did you ever come across a cousin of hers there, a man named Dutton?"
-
-"Oh yes, a dozen or more times, for I went to the flat pretty
-frequently. A common, under-bred fellow, not in the least like her, for
-in addition to being remarkably good-looking, her manners and appearance
-were those of a lady."
-
-"Do you know what has become of him?"
-
-"Yes, he's an outside stockbroker, with a small office in the City. I
-ran against him only last week. I don't know whether he recognised me
-or not, but I looked the other way. With one or two exceptions, the
-L'Estrange _clientele_ was not one that you cared to recognise when
-outside the flat."
-
-Fairfax had finished his narrative. Hugh thanked him warmly. Still, he
-had not learned anything really of importance. There was no evidence
-that Miss Keane had cheated, or helped others to cheat. The hovering
-round the card-table was not a particularly suspicious action if taken
-by itself. She might be signalling to her confederates, of course, but
-there was no evidence on which to convict her.
-
-A sudden thought struck Murchison which prompted him to put a question
-to Fairfax.
-
-"She might have been a decoy, to lure rich men to this gambling place,
-in order that they might be rooked by her accomplices." The middle-aged
-man shook his head. "I don't think so. She had no scope for that sort of
-game. Mrs. L'Estrange hardly knew anybody in her own world, for reasons
-which I daresay could be very satisfactorily explained, I should guess a
-not too clean or reputable past. She could not get the girl into houses
-where she would pick up rich men."
-
-"But you say some men came there who played heavily."
-
-"A few," answered Fairfax. "But I always had a notion that Dutton picked
-those up, in the course of his shady business, a mug here, a mug there,
-who had a few thousands to throw away either on the Stock Exchange or
-in gambling. If the flat was run on the crook, and it is even betting
-it was, I should say the proprietors--or the syndicate, call it what
-you like--were contented with quite small profits. I daresay a couple of
-thousand a year would keep Mrs. L'Estrange in luxury, and I suppose she
-must have had a bit of money of her own."
-
-"And, assuming that they were all in league, Tommy Esmond and others
-would want their bit," suggested Hugh.
-
-"Certainly," assented Fairfax; "but always granting that the show was
-run on the crook, it wouldn't be difficult to romp in thirty or forty
-pounds a night, with even the small players and the occasional mugs
-who were well-lined. Quite a decent amount to divide at the end of the
-week."
-
-"Well, I am awfully obliged for all you have told me, Fairfax."
-
-"But it doesn't help you much, eh?" queried the elder man, who detected
-a certain note of disappointment in his companion's tone.
-
-"Well, candidly, it doesn't, but of course, that is no fault of yours.
-We may dismiss the L'Estrange business, there is no evidence there. She
-might have signalled to her confederates or not. It might have been a
-perfectly innocent action. She didn't play herself, she just hovered
-round the tables to kill the time."
-
-"Of course, either theory will fit," remarked the shrewd man of the
-world, who had picked up so much knowledge of life in his forty-five
-strenuous years.
-
-He paused for a few moments before he spoke again.
-
-"Now look here, Murchison, I can read you like a book. I haven't
-told you very much more than you know yourself, or could have pieced
-together. You are disappointed because I couldn't tell you anything of
-her history prior to her appearance in the L'Estrange household. Well,
-there, I am at fault. And you have a particular reason for wanting to
-know. In other words, you have some suspicions of your own."
-
-Hugh felt he must be cautious. In connecting Mrs. Spencer with Norah
-Burton he might be on the wrong track altogether, have been deceived
-by a striking, but purely accidental, resemblance. He could not be too
-frank with a man of Fairfax's temperament. Rumour had it that he would
-always respect a confidence, but his general reputation was that of a
-chatterbox. He spoke guardedly.
-
-"Yes, certain undefined ones, quite undefined, please understand that."
-Then, speaking a little more frankly, "What I dearly want to know is,
-was she a straight woman before she charmed my friend Guy Spencer into
-marrying her."
-
-Fairfax smiled his slow, wise smile: "I am glad you have put your cards
-on the table. Of course I guessed from the beginning that it was what
-you were after. Well, I shan't breathe a word of this to anybody; I
-can hold my tongue when I have a mind. You have a deep interest in the
-matter for the sake of the Southleigh family, eh?"
-
-Hugh had to admit that it was so.
-
-"Well, I am going to tell you something that, up to the present, I have
-not told to anybody else, and, to tell you the truth, I was not in the
-least interested in Guy Spencer's marriage. If he chose to marry a girl
-without a past, that was his affair. But I see you are keen."
-
-"Yes, I am very keen."
-
-"Good! well, I will give you a little information, from which you can
-draw your own inferences. They are as open to you as to me, and I
-shall just state the bare facts. As you know, Esmond had to bolt to the
-Continent. On a certain morning I came up from the country by an early
-train, landing at Charing Cross. I went to the bookstall to buy a few
-papers. I must tell you that I am one of those persons who have eyes at
-the back of their head, and see everything going on around them."
-
-Yes, Hugh knew that Fairfax had a wonderful gift of observation, in
-addition to his many other gifts.
-
-"As I turned away, I saw Esmond slink into the station, glancing
-furtively from right to left, as fearful of being seen. Of course, I
-had not heard the news, and I was not present at the _debacle_, but I
-guessed something was up from his furtive appearance. As he slunk along,
-a young woman heavily-veiled walked swiftly forward, and laid her hand
-upon his arm. They were only together for a few seconds, Esmond was
-evidently urging her to leave him for fear of recognition. When they
-parted, she kissed him affectionately. In spite of the heavy veiling, I
-recognised her."
-
-"Stella Keane, of course," cried Hugh.
-
-"Stella Keane. Fortunately, neither of them saw me, I expect they were
-both too agitated. Well, there is the fact; as I said just now, you can
-draw your own inferences, and perhaps answer the question whether she
-was a good woman before she married your friend."
-
-"It is answered," said Hugh sternly. "A good woman would not trouble to
-go to the station to say good-bye to a derelict card-sharper, and kiss
-him affectionately, unless there had been some close and dishonourable
-relationship between them."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-|Murchison arrived at Eaton Place about twenty minutes before the dinner
-hour. His expectation was that he would find Mrs. Spencer alone in the
-drawing-room, and in this hope he was not disappointed.
-
-Stella, beautifully gowned, was seated in a luxurious easy-chair,
-reading. As he was announced, she rose and threw her novel down. She
-advanced to him with outstretched hand and that ever-charming smile.
-
-"Oh, how sweet of you to come in good time, not rush in just a moment
-before dinner is served. We can have a comfortable chat before Guy
-comes. He takes an awful time to dress, you know. His ties bother him
-really; he discards about half a dozen before he gets the proper bow.
-Isn't it silly?"
-
-She was very girlish to-night, quite different from what she had been at
-the Southleigh party, staid, demure, a little resentful, and averse from
-conversation.
-
-Murchison's thoughts flew back to that day at Blankfield when he had met
-a certain girl by chance at the tea-shop. Norah Burton had been just
-as girlish then as Mrs. Spencer was now, allowing for the six years'
-interval.
-
-She crossed over to a Chesterfield, and motioned him to a seat beside
-her. Hugh obeyed her invitation, but he felt sure that she had done this
-with a motive. She was about to exercise her subtle fascination on her
-husband's friend.
-
-"Now, please tell me all about yourself," she said. "You are Guy's
-friend, and I have a right to know. His friends are mine. I know what
-you have done in the war: you have suffered very terribly. But before
-that; please enlighten me."
-
-It was a challenge. Did she desire to know as much of his past as he
-desired to know of hers? He looked at her very steadily.
-
-"You know, Mrs. Spencer, it is a little difficult to go back to anything
-before those awful years of war. But I remember, as in a sort of dream,
-that, quite as a young man, I was gazetted to the Twenty-fifth Lancers."
-
-"A crack regiment, was it not?" queried Mrs. Spencer. "My dear father
-was in the Twenty-fourth."
-
-She was keeping it up bravely, he thought. He remembered Fairfax's
-story. The woman who had said good-bye to a fugitive card-sharper at
-Charing Cross Station, and kissed him affectionately, was hardly likely
-to be the daughter of an officer in the Twenty-fourth Lancers. He
-was not sure of very much, but of this one incident he was absolutely
-positive: Fairfax was a man who was always certain of his facts.
-
-"I can't remember much about the early years; I expect I went through
-the usual trials and troubles of a young subaltern, was subjected to
-a good deal of ragging. Well, somehow, promotion came: I was Captain
-at quite a youthful age. The one thing that sticks in my mind, in those
-pre-war days, is the fact that we were quartered at Blankfield."
-
-Mrs. Spencer lifted calm, inquiring eyes. "At Blankfield! And where is
-that?"
-
-"You don't mean to say you haven't heard of Blankfield?"
-
-Mrs. Spencer shook her dark head. "No; I dare say it shows great
-ignorance, but I was never good at geography. I was brought up so
-quietly; I have never travelled. I know next to nothing of my own
-country, and nothing of any other."
-
-She uttered these remarks with a disarming and appealing smile, as if
-asking pardon from a man of the world for having led such an uneventful
-and sequestered life--she, as he thought sardonically, the mysterious
-cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange, the affectionate friend of the card-sharper
-Tommie Esmond.
-
-"Blankfield is rather a well-known town in Yorkshire; it is also a
-garrison town. As I said, it was my lot to be quartered there."
-
-"Was it a nice place?" queried Mrs. Spencer with an air of polite
-interest.
-
-"In a way, yes; we had a good time. But my recollections of it
-are distinctly unpleasant. For I had the misfortune to assist at a
-tragedy--nay, more, to play a part in it--which has left an ineffaceable
-record upon my memory." Stella Spencer leaned forward. There was no
-momentary change of expression upon the clear-cut, charming face; her
-eyes met his own with a calm, steady gaze. But he thought--and after all
-that might be fancy--he detected a restless movement of her hands.
-
-"I shall like to hear about that tragedy, if it is not too painful for
-you to recall it," she said softly. If she were really what he
-believed her to be, she was playing the role of sympathetic listener to
-perfection.
-
-"I had a young chum of the name of Pomfret, a mere boy, impulsive,
-high-spirited, generous, unsuspicious, little versed in the ways of
-the world, absolutely unversed in the ways of women. I had promised
-his family to look after him. Looking back at this distance of years,
-I realise how badly I fulfilled my trust; how, in a sense, I was
-unwittingly the cause of the tragedy that befell him. I wonder if you
-ever came across my friend, Jack Pomfret."
-
-"Never; but, of course, I have met so few people. And you know the
-truth, as well as everybody else, I was not brought up in my husband's
-world, in your world and that of the Southleighs. I could never claim
-to be more than respectable middle-class. I take it, your friend was a
-member of some old family."
-
-The voice was steady, but he thought he noticed an increased
-restlessness in the movements of the hands. And the admission that she
-was a member of the respectable middle-class struck him as conveying a
-false note intentionally. If what she alleged was true, that her father
-had been an officer in the Twenty-fourth Lancers, she was a grade higher
-than the respectable middle-class. Clever as she was, she had made a
-false step there.
-
-"You want to hear the history of that tragedy, of the terrible
-circumstances which cut short the life of my poor young friend. Well, it
-is hardly necessary to say that a woman was the cause. Women, I suppose,
-have been at the bottom of most of the tragedies that have happened to
-men ever since the days of Eve."
-
-"I know that is the general opinion, but I have always been very
-doubtful as to whether it is a true one."
-
-She spoke lightly, but it seemed to him her tone was not quite so
-assured as it had been a moment ago. Anyway, she was evidently intensely
-interested in the forthcoming narrative.
-
-"At Blankfield I happened to make the acquaintance of a very charming
-young woman, who was not received in the Society of the place, for the
-reason that nothing was known about her. The acquaintance was made in
-the most unconventional fashion. She asked me to call upon her and her
-brother. I told all this to Pomfret, who knew the girl by sight, and
-he asked me to take him along with me. He had met her very often in the
-High Street, and was immensely attracted by her appearance."
-
-"And were you attracted, too, by this formidable young lady, Major
-Murchison?" interrupted Stella.
-
-"In a way. But, honestly, more curious than attracted. Well, to cut my
-story as short as I can, Pomfret soon arrived at an understanding with
-the young woman, to a great extent without my knowledge. They were
-married secretly; there were family reasons why he could not marry her
-openly."
-
-"But this--but this"--was she speaking a little nervously, or was it
-only his fancy?--"was quite romantic and charming. No doubt they were
-deeply in love with each other. Surely there was no tragedy to follow
-such a delightful wooing?"
-
-"But there was. This innocent-faced, charming girl was an adventuress
-of the first water. She was the accomplice of her criminal brother, if
-brother he was. A day or two after the wedding, Pomfret and I went
-to dine with this wretched pair. Before we sat down to dinner, two
-detectives entered the room and arrested the so-called brother on a
-charge of forgery."
-
-Mrs. Spencer shuddered. "How horrible, how appalling! And what happened
-to the girl? was she arrested, too?"
-
-"No; she fainted, and I dragged my friend away. At the time I did not
-know he had married her. When I got him back to the barracks, he told me
-his miserable story. That same night, or some time in the next morning,
-he shot himself. It was perhaps a cowardly way in which to avoid the
-consequences of his folly, but then he was always rash and impulsive."
-
-Mrs. Spencer spoke, and there was a far-away look in her eyes. "Your
-poor friend! No wonder that memory haunts you. And yet, he was not very
-wise. This poor adventuress might have been easy to deal with; she
-might not have troubled him any further if he had made her some small
-allowance; would, so to speak, have slunk out of his life. And she might
-have been innocent herself, unable to break away from this wretched
-criminal of a brother."
-
-"You are very charitable, Mrs. Spencer," said Hugh coldly. "But I fear
-I cannot agree with you. If the girl had been naturally and innately
-honest, she would rather have swept a crossing than have lived upon the
-gains of that creature--brother, or lover, or whatever he was."
-
-Stella spoke with dignity. "You are, I see, very much moved, Major
-Murchison, and you can judge better than I. I cannot pretend
-to understand the mentality of adventuresses and their criminal
-associates," she added with a light laugh, "but I should say that
-sweeping a crossing is a most uncongenial occupation, especially in the
-cold weather."
-
-"In other words, if you had been in her place, you would have preferred
-to live on the earnings of a rogue?" queried Hugh, perhaps a little too
-warmly. As soon as he spoke, he regretted his words. He had given her an
-advantage, of which she was not slow to avail herself.
-
-She drew herself up proudly. "Major Murchison, are you not saying a
-little too much in presuming to place me on the level of the adventuress
-you have spoken of? I think it will be more consistent with my
-self-respect to leave your question unanswered."
-
-And then suddenly her proud mood vanished, and a softer one took its
-place. Her voice trembled as she spoke; there was a suspicious moisture
-in her eyes.
-
-"I see that I was very wrong when I suffered Guy to persuade me to marry
-him. I have alienated him from his friends and family, and, alas! I have
-none of my own to bring him in exchange. His uncle loathes me; Lady Nina
-is polite and tolerates me. And you--you, his old friend, who have known
-him from boyhood--you dislike me also. But--" and here her voice swelled
-into a proud note--"my husband loves and trusts me. While he does that,
-Major Murchison, I can snap my fingers at the rest of the world."
-
-Murchison bowed respectfully; he felt he had got to recover a good deal
-of lost ground. So far the woman had the advantage, but he did not fail
-to notice the vulgarity of the last phrase, "snap my fingers."
-
-"I am very sorry if I have offended you, Mrs. Spencer, by my indiscreet
-remarks. If you are secure in Guy's love, as I am sure you are, you have
-a very happy possession."
-
-She sank back on the sofa, and in a second recovered the composure which
-had been momentarily disturbed.
-
-"Forgive me if I have spoken a little warmly," she said, "but I could
-not overlook what you said just now."
-
-And then Hugh shot at her his last bolt. "I have not yet told you the
-name of the girl who drove my poor young friend Pomfret to his death."
-
-"Tell it me, if you please, but I shall be no more likely to know it
-than the name of your friend, Mr. Pomfret. As I told you, I am a member
-of the respectable middle-class; I cannot boast that I am acquainted
-with the aristocracy, except through my husband."
-
-"And yet your father, you told me just now, was an officer in the
-Twenty-fourth Lancers. Those officers were all recruited from the
-aristocracy, or at worst the upper middle-class."
-
-"Oh, you are trying to cross-examine me and trap me," she cried
-bitterly.
-
-But Hugh was inexorable. "The name of that woman was Norah Burton; her
-accomplice, her brother as she called him, was George Burton; he had
-other aliases," he thundered.
-
-He had shot his last bolt, but Stella was not shaken. She rose up,
-quivering a little. He noticed that, but it might be due to the
-agitation of wronged innocence.
-
-"The name conveys nothing to me. Your attitude during these few minutes
-has been very strange. You have insinuated that I am an adventuress on
-the same level with your Miss Norah something. Well, so far, poor dear
-Guy has not shot himself, and I will take good care he doesn't."
-
-"You have much to gain by his living, if you love him--the title and
-everything. I have no doubt he has made his will. You would gain a good
-deal by his death. I cannot say, at the moment, which alternative would
-suit you better."
-
-"You are intolerable, you are insulting. If I tell my husband this when
-he comes down, he will kick you out of the house."
-
-"But I don't think you will tell your husband," retorted Hugh coolly.
-
-"And why not? My word will outweigh yours. I have only to tell him that
-you brand me as an adventuress, of the same class as this Miss Nora
-Burton, and you will see what he will say."
-
-"But you will not tell him," repeated Hugh. "Mrs. Spencer, I did not
-think we should go so far as we have done. But I will put my cards
-on the table at once, and I do so from certain indications in your
-demeanour to-night. I will not say all I have in my mind; I am going to
-collect further evidence first. But I will say this: you are not what
-you seem." He had touched her now. Her calm had gone, her breast was
-heaving, her hands were moving more restlessly.
-
-"Put your cards on the table and have done. I was Stella Keane when I
-married my husband. I defy you to disprove that."
-
-"At present, no. You are the same Stella Keane who saw Tommie Esmond,
-a discovered card-sharper, off at the Charing Cross Station, and kissed
-him an affectionate farewell. If you were on such intimate terms with
-that man, you are no fit wife for my friend Guy Spencer."
-
-He had touched her at last. "How did you find that out?" she gasped, and
-her face for a second went livid. She was surprised beyond the point of
-denial.
-
-And at that moment the door opened and Guy Spencer entered. She
-recovered herself immediately; went up to her husband and laid a
-caressing hand on his shoulder.
-
-"A perfect tie, dearest; it was worth the time. Your friend, Major
-Murchison, has been distressing me with a terrible story of some tragedy
-that happened when he was quartered at Blankfield."
-
-Guy Spencer smiled cheerfully. "Dear old Hugh is good at stories. He
-must tell it me after dinner."
-
-As she looked up into her husband's face, Hugh noticed the tender light
-in her eyes. Lady Nina had said that if she was not devotedly in love
-with Guy, she must be the most consummate actress off the stage. Loving
-wife or consummate actress, which was she?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-|When Hugh reflected over that interview in the drawing-room before
-dinner, he came to the conclusion that he had not played his cards very
-well, that he had been a little too precipitate. Whether she was Norah
-Burton or not, she was a very clever young woman, and he had just put
-her on her guard by that rather indiscreet allusion to Tommy Esmond. If
-he had no further evidence to go on than that incident, she would give
-her husband a plausible explanation of it. And Hugh believed his old
-friend Guy was still deeply in love enough with his wife to believe
-anything she told him.
-
-He could imagine her telling that convincing story to Guy, probably with
-her arms round his neck, and her pretty eyes looking up to his with the
-love-light in them. Esmond had been a kind friend to her, had done her
-many a good turn. Much as she deplored his baseness, she could not bear
-the thought of his slinking out of the country, a branded fugitive,
-without a forgiving hand stretched out to him.
-
-Backwards and forwards he revolved the matter in his mind, till he came
-to the conclusion that the problem was one he could not solve himself.
-And then he suddenly thought of his old acquaintance, Davidson of
-Scotland Yard, the tall man of military aspect who had arrested George
-Burton on that memorable night at Rosemount.
-
-He went round to Scotland Yard, presented his card, and inquired for Mr.
-Davidson. His old acquaintance was dead; a man named Bryant had taken
-his place. Would Major Murchison care to see him?
-
-In a few seconds Hugh was ushered into Bryant's room. To his surprise
-and relief Bryant was the man who had accompanied Davidson to
-Blankfield. It was pretty certain he would recall to the minutest detail
-the circumstances of that visit.
-
-"Good-day, Mr. Bryant. You know my name by my card, of course, but I am
-not so sure you remember anything of the time and place where we last
-met."
-
-But the detective was able to reassure him on this point.
-
-"In our profession, sir, we remember everything and everybody, and we
-never forget a face. It is some years ago, it is true, but I recall
-the incidents of our meeting as if they had happened yesterday. Poor
-Davidson and I came down to collar that slim rascal George Burton,
-who, by the way, got off with a light sentence. Davidson saw you in the
-afternoon and gave you the option of staying away. You talked it over,
-and came to the conclusion that, for certain reasons, you would rather
-be in at the finish. Those reasons were connected with your young friend
-Mr. Pomfret, who was infatuated with the young woman."
-
-"You remember everything as well as I do, Mr. Bryant. I must
-congratulate you on your marvellous memory, for I suppose this is only
-one out of hundreds of cases."
-
-Mr. Bryant smiled, well pleased at this tribute to his capacity.
-
-"We cultivate our small gifts, sir, in this direction. Well, we took the
-slim George. The girl fainted. You dragged Mr. Pomfret out of the house,
-and he shot himself in the small hours of the morning. It came out that
-he had married the young woman a day or two before, and could not face
-the exposure." Hugh paid a second tribute to the detective's marvellous
-memory. "And now, Mr. Bryant, have you any knowledge of what has
-become of them? People like that are never quite submerged: some day or
-another, like the scum they are, they will be found floating on the top
-again."
-
-Bryant shook his head. "No, sir, I cannot say I have. They have not
-come under our observation again. Probably they are abroad under assumed
-names, engaged in rascally business, of course, but doing it very much
-_sub rosa_."
-
-"Mind you, at present I have very little to go on," said Hugh. "I
-may have been deceived by a chance resemblance. But I have a strong
-intuition I am on their track."
-
-Bryant's attitude became alert at once. "You say you have no evidence.
-well, tell me your suspicions, and I will tell you what weight I attach
-to them."
-
-"First of all, before I do that, let me know if you would recognise
-Norah Burton and George Burton again, in spite of the passage of years.
-Norah had fair hair; the one I am on the track of has dark hair. The man
-I have not seen; this time he is a cousin, not a brother."
-
-"Ah!" Mr. Bryant drew a deep breath. "If they are the people you think,
-sir, and I once saw them, no disguises would take me in. Now tell me all
-you know."
-
-Thus exhorted, Murchison launched into a copious narrative. He explained
-that on the night of the dinner with the Southleighs at Carlton House
-Terrace, he had met for the first time the wife of his old friend Guy
-Spencer, that he had detected in her an extraordinary likeness to Norah
-Burton. The marriage had been hastily contracted; next to nothing was
-known about the young woman's antecedents, apart from the very vague
-details with which she furnished them.
-
-In the background was a cousin, by all accounts a very common fellow,
-who had never visited the house since the marriage. Then there was the
-episode of Tommy Esmond being found cheating at cards at the L'Estrange
-flat, and Stella Keane's farewell meeting with him at Charing Cross
-Station.
-
-Mr. Bryant made copious notes. When the narrative was finished he made
-his comments.
-
-"There are, of course, coincidences that may mean nothing or a great
-deal, Major Murchison. However, assuming that the lady in question is
-not our old friend Norah Burton, she is evidently not a very estimable
-member of society. She was in a shady set at Mrs. L'Estrange's, and
-Tommy Esmond must have been a pretty close pal."
-
-"Well, I want you to take this case on for me, and find out what you
-can."
-
-But Bryant shook his head. "Sorry, sir, but in my position I can't take
-on private business. It is not a public matter, you see, unless you can
-accuse them of anything." Hugh's face fell. "I forgot that. What am I to
-do? Can you recommend me to a private detective?"
-
-"Half a dozen, sir, all keen fellows. But you can't stir very much
-without me, in the first instance. You want me to identify them. Well,
-I will go so far as that, in memory of the time when we were together
-in the original job. Mrs. Spencer, you say, lives in Eaton Place. I will
-keep a watch on that house till I see her coming out or going in. If I
-agree that she was Norah Burton, we have got the first step. Now, what
-do you know about this cousin, Dutton?"
-
-"Only that he is an outside stockbroker, with an office, or offices, in
-the City."
-
-"Good." Mr. Bryant opened a telephone book and rapidly turned over
-the pages. "Here he is, right enough--George Dutton--George, mark
-you--share- and stock-broker, Bartholomew Court. Well, sir, to oblige
-you, I will run down to the City and get a peep at Mr. George Dutton.
-If my recollection agrees with yours, I will put you on to one of my
-friends, and you can have the precious pair watched. If they are the
-persons you think they are, you may depend upon it they won't keep long
-apart; they will make opportunities of meeting each other. Anyway,
-they must be pretty thick together, or he would not put up with being
-excluded from the house."
-
-Hugh left with a great sense of relief. He felt that the matter was
-in very capable hands. If Bryant told him that he was following a
-will-o'-the-wisp, then the whole matter could drop. The fact of Mrs.
-Spencer's relations with Tommy Esmond were hardly important enough to
-justify him in disturbing his friend's domestic felicity.
-
-At the end of three days the detective rang him up. The message was
-brief: "Come and see me."
-
-Bryant received him in his room. "Well, Major Murchison, your suspicions
-are quite correct. I have been very close to the interesting pair. Mrs.
-Spencer has camouflaged herself very well, but beyond doubt she is Norah
-Burton. Our gaol-bird, George Burton, has been less particular. He
-has not disguised himself at all; the few years have made little or no
-impression on him. He has hid himself in the City, trusting that nobody
-he ever knew would come across him."
-
-"Then I was right, after all, Mr. Bryant. And now what would you advise
-me to do? This woman is the worst type of adventuress card-sharper all
-through--at least a confederate, in Paris with Burton, in London with
-Tommy Esmond. To be fair, we cannot say how much or how little she knew
-of his forgery business."
-
-"Your idea is to turn her out of her husband's house, with or without
-scandal?" queried the detective.
-
-"Without scandal, if possible. I would prefer that. I suppose you would
-back me up by saying that you have recognised her and this scoundrel who
-was yesterday her brother and is to-day her cousin?"
-
-"If you push me to it, I will, Major Murchison, for the sake of our old
-acquaintance. But, for reasons which I stated last time we met, I don't
-want to mix myself up in a purely private affair. The woman caught hold
-of a fool in your friend Pomfret; she has caught hold of another equally
-silly fool in your friend Mr. Spencer. Please forgive my blunt language,
-but it is so, is it not?"
-
-"You are quite right, Bryant," groaned poor Hugh. "I seem fated to be
-mixed up in these matters. At the present moment I have a little stunt
-on, in which I don't require any help. A younger brother of mine has got
-mixed up with a young harpy in the chorus of a third-rate theatre. The
-young fool has written compromising letters to her. I am trying to buy
-these letters. I need hardly tell you she is asking a high price. I
-can't see her at my own place, for fear of my brother popping in. I have
-taken rooms in a suburb where I see her to carry on the bargaining."
-
-Mr. Bryant raised his hands. "Well, sir, when a woman once begins to
-twist a man round her little finger there is no knowing to what length
-he will go."
-
-"Profoundly true, Mr. Bryant. Well, what do you advise me to do?"
-
-"For the moment, nothing. Get a little more evidence. When I watched
-this couple, I took my old friend Parkinson with me. He knows them now.
-Get him to watch them. He will tell you where they meet, and how often.
-Here is his card. He will wait on you at your convenience."
-
-"I quite see," said Hugh, as he took the proffered card. "If I can prove
-that they are meeting on the sly it will strengthen my hands, eh?"
-
-"That is the idea. Of course, at the moment, I don't know which you are
-going to tackle first, the husband or the wife."
-
-"I can't say myself, my mind is in such a whirl. But I feel I must
-avenge poor Jack Pomfret's death."
-
-Mr. Bryant rose. "You will excuse me, Major Murchison, but I have a very
-busy day. Make use of Parkinson; he is as keen as mustard. And if it
-comes to this, that you want me for purposes of identification, I am at
-your disposal, in Eaton Place or elsewhere."
-
-Murchison left, but not before he had pressed a substantial cheque into
-Bryant's somewhat reluctant hand.
-
-The next day he interviewed Parkinson, a lean, ascetic-looking man of
-the true sleuth-hound breed. He took his instructions.
-
-"Give me a fortnight, if you please, sir; a week is hardly long enough.
-I'll warrant, from what our friend Bryant has hinted to me, I will have
-something to report."
-
-And he had. At the end of the fortnight he appeared. He produced a small
-pocket-book.
-
-"I'm glad you didn't stipulate for only a week, sir; it was rather
-a blank one--only one meeting. I expect the lady couldn't get away
-comfortably. But the week after I was rewarded. Three meetings in that
-second week."
-
-"Ah! where do they meet?"
-
-"At quite humble little restaurants and queer places in the City. I
-fancy the bucket-shop business is not very flourishing just now. For on
-the last two occasions when I followed them in, and sat at a table
-where I could observe them, I saw Mrs. Spencer slip an envelope into his
-hand."
-
-"Good Heavens!" cried Murchison in a tone of disgust. "She is keeping
-this criminal with her husband's money."
-
-Mr. Parkinson shrugged his shoulders. "A common enough case, sir, if you
-had seen as much of life as I have."
-
-Hugh shuddered. The woman was depraved to the core. She could leave her
-house in Eaton Place, where she had been installed by her devoted and
-trustful husband, and journey down to some obscure eating-house in the
-City to meet this criminal who lived upon her bounty.
-
-Well, the chain of evidence was complete. Bryant would swear to the
-identification, and Parkinson would swear that Mrs. Guy Spencer, once
-Norah Burton, had met George Burton clandestinely four times in a
-fortnight, and had supplied him with money.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-|It was in his blackest and most grim mood that Hugh Murchison walked
-to Eaton Place, for the purpose of paying an afternoon call upon Mrs.
-Spencer. He had not been near her since the night of the dinner, had
-only left cards. And, very fortunately, he had not come across Guy in
-the interval.
-
-On that particular night he had reproached himself with indiscretion.
-He had availed himself of Fairfax's information to tax her with meeting
-Tommie Esmond at Charing Cross Station on the morning of his flight to
-the Continent.
-
-And at the moment that he had made that dramatic announcement, the
-drawing-room door had opened to admit the unsuspecting husband. Hugh had
-left shortly after dinner, on the plea of another engagement. Had Mrs.
-Spencer tried to take the wind out of his sails by volunteering some
-plausible explanation about her meeting with Esmond? She was a clever
-young woman; she might try to forestall him. On the other hand, she
-might sit tight till he forced her hand. Anyway, he was going to force
-it to-day, armed with the new evidence that had been furnished to him.
-
-Mrs. Spencer was not looking well. Her eyes had lost their brightness,
-her once charming smile was forced and mechanical.
-
-She rose as he was announced, and advanced to him with outstretched
-hands, with an exaggerated air of cordiality.
-
-"I thought you had forgotten us." She seated herself on the Chesterfield
-and motioned him to sit beside her. "Major Murchison, I fear I was a
-little rude to you the other night, you remember, just before Guy came
-in." She clasped her hands nervously together. "I do trust we are going
-to be friends."
-
-Hugh looked at her grimly. He had no compassion for this shameless
-adventuress who had driven the poor foolish Pomfret to his grave, who
-had ensnared Guy Spencer, a man of stronger fibre, but equally powerless
-in the hands of an unscrupulous woman.
-
-"Mrs. Spencer--to call you by one of the many names by which you are
-known--we were not friends the last time I was at this house. To-day we
-are bitter enemies."
-
-"What do you mean?" she faltered. "You are speaking in riddles. Why
-should you, the old friend of my husband, be the bitter enemy of his
-innocent wife?"
-
-"His innocent wife!" repeated Hugh sternly. "Dare you look me in the
-face and say that my name, even if you fail to recognise me after these
-years, does not recall to you certain tragic episodes at Blankfield?"
-
-"I know nothing of Blankfield." The voice was low but very unsteady.
-"You put that question to me the other night in a roundabout sort of
-way. My answer is the same--I know nothing of Blankfield."
-
-There was a long pause. Hugh continued to look at her with his steady
-and disconcerting gaze. Suddenly she rose, and paced restlessly up and
-down the long drawing-room.
-
-"Major Murchison, put your cards on the table. You have come into this
-house, an old friend of my husband's; I have done my best to make you
-welcome. But you have some spite against me. Of what do you accuse me?"
-
-"I will put my cards on the table," answered Hugh in his inflexible
-voice. "On the night I met you at Carlton House Terrace I had my
-suspicions; no two women could be so exactly alike. Since that night
-I have been picking up information here and there. I have now got a
-complete chain of evidence."
-
-"Evidence of what?" she gasped, still pursuing her restless walk up and
-down the room. "Of my having met Tommie Esmond at Charing Cross Station?
-would you like to hear the true history of that?"
-
-"I shall be pleased to hear any explanation you like to offer, with the
-reservation that I must please myself as to whether I accept it or not."
-
-"You are very hard, Major Murchison. As you are not prepared to believe
-me, perhaps it would be better if I did not embark on this history. But
-Tommie Esmond is really my uncle, my mother's brother. When I was in
-low water he was very kind to me. I could not turn my back on him in
-his distress." She spoke with sudden passion. "Of course, you, with your
-pharisaical way of looking at things, would say I should have forgotten
-all his previous kindness."
-
-"The Tommie Esmond affair is, comparatively, a trivial one, Mrs.
-Spencer. I am coming in a moment to graver issues. You still say that
-the name of Murchison conveys nothing to you. Oh, think well before you
-answer! Remember, I have told you I have overwhelming evidence. And,
-believe me, the task I have set out upon is far from a welcome one."
-
-"I still say that the name of Murchison conveys nothing to me." She
-spoke with a certain air of assurance, but he could see that she was
-quivering all over.
-
-"Carry your memory back to that night at Blankfield when your so-called
-brother, George Burton, was arrested on a charge of forgery. You had
-been his decoy and accomplice in a gambling saloon in Paris. You had
-inveigled my poor friend, Jack Pomfret, into a clandestine marriage a
-few days before. Jack, unable to survive his folly and disgrace, blew
-his brains out. If not in the eyes of the law, you were, morally, a
-murderess."
-
-"You are mad, raving mad!" she cried, but her voice seemed strangled as
-she made the bold denial.
-
-"Not mad, Mrs. Spencer, but very sane, as I will show you in a few
-seconds. As I told you, I recognised you that night at the South-leigh
-dinner-party, in spite of the pains you had taken to camouflage
-yourself. But I waited for corroborative evidence. The detective who
-arrested your so-called brother, George Burton, has seen you and is
-prepared to swear to your identity as Norah Burton."
-
-Then suddenly she gave way, fell on her knees before him, and stretched
-out appealing hands.
-
-"Oh, you are very clever; I see you have found it all out. But you will
-be merciful, you will not drive an unhappy woman to despair, just when
-she has got into safe harbour. Will you be kind enough to listen to my
-miserable history?"
-
-"I will listen to anything you have got to say."
-
-"My childhood and girlhood were most wretched and unhappy. At a time
-when most girls are tasting the sweets and joys of life, I had to live
-by my wits. I fell under the influence of a good-natured, but very
-wicked man."
-
-"In other words, George Burton?" queried Hugh.
-
-"In other words, George Burton," she repeated in the low, strangled
-voice that did not move Hugh very much. "I was starving when he met me
-and took me up. He was genuinely sorry for me. Mind you, I knew nothing
-of his nefarious schemes. He hid those very carefully away from me."
-
-"But you were his decoy, if not his confederate, in the gambling saloon
-in Paris?"
-
-"His decoy, perhaps, unconsciously, but never his confederate."
-
-"And when did Tommie Esmond appear on the scene?" queried Hugh.
-
-"Oh, much later. George got into low water and had not enough for
-himself. I then hunted up my uncle, who received me with open arms."
-
-Hugh was developing the instincts of a crossexaminer. "And Tommie
-Esmond, I suppose, introduced you to the card-sharping crew at the
-Elsinore flat, and you were launched as the cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange,
-who presided over this delectable establishment?"
-
-"I was a distant cousin of Mrs. L'Estrange on my dear mother's side,"
-was the answer.
-
-She was lying terribly, he felt assured. But he had a card or two up his
-sleeve yet. Still, it was wise to see how far she would go.
-
-"And when did you part with the so-called brother, George Burton?"
-
-"Oh, very shortly after he came out of prison. I had one interview with
-him; I could not do less after his kindness to me. And in the meantime I
-had hunted up poor old Tommie Esmond."
-
-"And what did you do after that night at Blankfield? I think you cleared
-out the next day. I heard you had paid everything up."
-
-"Thank Heaven, yes. There was just a little money left. My life after
-that was a nightmare. Amongst other humiliations, I was a waitress in
-a tea-shop." A smile of vanity broke over the charming face. "The wages
-were very small, but I got a lot of tips." Perhaps in this particular
-instance she was not lying, if it was true that she had been in a
-tea-shop at all.
-
-There was a little pause, and then Murchison spoke in his stern,
-inflexible voice:
-
-"And how long is it since you saw George Burton?"
-
-She had answered the question before, but he was hoping to entrap her
-into some unguarded admission. He could see that she was considerably
-thrown oft her balance, clever and ready as she was, by the extent of
-his knowledge.
-
-"I told you just now, soon after he came out of prison."
-
-And then Hugh rose in his wrath. And then she, seeing in his face that
-he had another and a stronger card to play, got up from her kneeling
-position and watched him with an agonised countenance.
-
-"I am sorry to use such harsh words to a woman, even such a woman as you
-are, Mrs. Spencer. But when you say that you are lying miserably, and
-you know it as well as I do." Her face went livid. She assumed a tone of
-indignation, but her voice died away in a sob. "How dare you say that?"
-
-"I am not the sort of man to make a statement unless I can prove it up
-to the hilt. Your so-called cousin, George Dutton, keeps a bucket-shop
-in the City; from certain evidence in my possession, I should say it was
-not a very paying business."
-
-Stella did not attempt to reply to this last shot, but she recognised
-that he had gone about the business very thoroughly.
-
-"George Dutton, the bucket-shop keeper, is George Burton, the forger,
-come to life again, still, I take it, on the same criminal tack, perhaps
-in a lesser degree. Do you admit," he cried vehemently, "that George
-Burton and George Dutton are one and the same?"
-
-"Yes, since you seem to have proof, I admit it," was the somewhat sullen
-answer.
-
-"That is as well; it clears the ground, up to a certain point. You say
-you parted from Burton soon after his release from prison, and have not
-seen him since. When was that--how long ago? You met him frequently as
-George Dutton at Elsinore Gardens."
-
-The courage of despair seemed to come to her, and she ceased to tremble.
-"I will answer no more questions. Tell me what you allege and I will
-admit or deny. Of course, you have employed a detective; you have had me
-watched."
-
-"Of course. I should not presume to cope single-handed with a clever
-woman like yourself. You have met George Dutton, alias George Burton,
-four times within the last fortnight at obscure restaurants in the City,
-and there is a strong presumption that you were handing to him envelopes
-containing money."
-
-She seemed now to recognise that the game was up. Her self-possession
-returned to her. She sat down, and motioned to him to seat himself.
-
-"You are much too clever for me, Major Murchison. You have handled the
-matter very well, so well that you have turned your vague suspicions
-into absolute certainty. Well, what action are you going to take? As a
-matter of course, you intend to turn me out of my husband's house?"
-
-"If not at the moment, very speedily. You will admit, I think, with
-your clever brain, that you should not remain under the roof of such an
-honourable English, gentleman as he is a day longer than necessary."
-
-"I will admit it, from your point of view, if you like. Oh, believe me,
-I can see your side," replied this remarkable young woman. "But you will
-forgive me, Major Murchison, if I say that, from my point of view, I
-would have preferred that you had never been born. Guy is very happy; he
-believes in me and trusts me. It will be a great blow to him as to me."
-
-"I know. I wish it were in my power to spare him this misery. But, in
-common honesty, I cannot."
-
-"And have you thought of what is to become of me when I am turned out of
-my husband's house?" she inquired in a composed voice. Her adroit mind
-had evidently adapted itself to the altered circumstances, and was now
-busied in turning them, as far as possible, to her own advantage.
-
-"You have George Dutton to fall back upon, also Tommie Esmond," was
-Murchison's retort.
-
-She snapped her fingers in a fashion that was almost vulgar, and she was
-so free from vulgar actions.
-
-"George is thankful that I can, from time to time, fling him a ten-pound
-note; his luck has deserted him. Tommie Esmond, I believe, saved a bit
-out of the wreck, but he has not more than enough to keep body and soul
-together."
-
-"Guy is not a man to behave ungenerously, however deeply he has been
-wronged," said Hugh, after he had reflected a few moments. He added more
-hesitatingly, "And if Guy should take an obdurate attitude, it is
-possible I might come to your assistance. I have hunted you down, but I
-do not want to drive you into the gutter."
-
-"But a man must support his wife, even if her past has not been quite so
-respectable as it might have been," she cried defiantly.
-
-Hugh directed upon her a searching look. "Mrs. Spencer, it is in my mind
-that you may not be Guy's wife after all. If I probed a little deeper,
-I might get at your real relations with this George Dutton, or rather
-Burton."
-
-"Oh, this time you are really pursuing a will-o'-the-wisp, I assure
-you. George has never been anything to me but brother or cousin, as the
-occasion demanded."
-
-She paused a second, and there was a terrified look in her eyes as she
-added, "But even if your suspicions were correct, which they are not,
-you would not go back from your own promise. If Guy proved obdurate, you
-would not drive me to the gutter. You promised me that."
-
-"I shall keep my promise, Mrs. Spencer, and I will give it you in
-writing, if you wish."
-
-"It would be as well. And you will want something from me in writing
-also, I expect," she concluded shrewdly.
-
-"Certainly I shall," said Hugh steadily. "I shall draw up a full
-confession for you to sign, to prevent you from ever troubling your
-husband again--if, as I suggested just now, he is your husband."
-
-Mrs. Spencer rose. It seemed that there was a sense of relief in the
-fact that the interview was ending so amicably.
-
-"I would have preferred to remain as I am, but, on the whole, the life
-doesn't suit me, luxurious as it is. I am very fond of Guy really, he
-has been so good to me, but I have alienated him from his friends. And
-I have to sit here hour after hour by myself, with only my thoughts for
-company."
-
-"Let us say one week from now I will have that confession ready to
-sign."
-
-"And you will bring it here?" suggested Stella.
-
-"I think not. It will take some time to read through, and we might be
-interrupted," was Hugh's answer.
-
-"At your hotel, then, I suppose?" was the young woman's next suggestion.
-
-"The same objection applies."
-
-He scribbled down an address on a piece of paper. "Meet me there this
-day week at the hour I have appointed. Nobody will interrupt us, I will
-take care of that."
-
-And Mrs. Spencer lay awake half the night, working out a problem that
-had suggested itself to her in a flash.
-
-The next day she lunched with George Dutton in the City. The detective
-might be watching her, but did it matter? whatever happened at the end
-of the week, she had burned her boats.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-|Two months had elapsed since the meeting between Major Murchison and
-Stella Spencer, recorded in the last chapter.
-
-A handsome, well-set-up man of about thirty was travelling up from
-Manchester to London. The reason of his journey was his desire to
-visit his sister, Caroline Masters, who occupied a small flat in the
-neighbourhood of King's Cross.
-
-Up to a short time ago this handsome, well-set-up man had been leading a
-very quiet life in the busy city of Manchester. He was an electrician
-by trade, and a very clever one. He was civil, well-spoken, intelligent
-beyond his station, but he had not forgathered much with his
-fellow-workers, had kept himself very much to himself. And yet, strange
-to say, this self-isolation had not provoked suspicion or resentment on
-the part of his daily associates.
-
-Reginald Davis, for such was his name, had been unjustly suspected of
-murder, and the police had been hot on his track. Then had come the
-suicide in No. 10 Cathcart Square, and his sister, Caroline Masters, had
-identified the dead body as that of her brother.
-
-Caroline Masters had always been a plucky, resourceful girl, and devoted
-to him. The dead man, no doubt, bore some resemblance to himself,
-and she had taken advantage of the opportunity to swear to a false
-identification, and remove from him the sleepless vigilance of the
-police. This much she had conveyed to him in a guarded letter.
-
-Reginald Davis, the man falsely accused of murder, was dead in the eyes
-of the law: in a sense, he had nothing further to fear. But at the same
-time, caution must be observed. The few friends he had were in London;
-at any time he might run across one or more of them. So, taking another
-name, he had hidden himself in Manchester, and corresponded secretly
-with the one of the two sisters he could trust, Caroline Masters.
-
-And then, suddenly, the burden had been lifted from his soul. There was
-a small paragraph in the evening newspapers, afterwards reproduced in
-the morning ones, which told him that he need not skulk through the
-world any longer.
-
-A man lying under sentence of death for a brutal murder and without hope
-of reprieve, had confessed to the crime of which Davis had been falsely
-accused. In the paragraph, which was, of course, essentially the same
-in all the papers, were a few words of sympathy for the unfortunate
-Reginald Davis who had stolen into No. 10 Cathcart Square and committed
-suicide, under a sense of abject terror. The police had carefully
-investigated the statements of the condemned man, with the result that
-they found the late Reginald Davis absolutely innocent.
-
-The late Reginald Davis, very alive and well, knocked at the door of
-his sister's flat. She had been apprised of his coming, and greeted him
-affectionately. She sat him down before a well-cooked supper. He was
-hungry and ate heartily. She did not disturb him with much conversation
-till he had finished. Then she spoke.
-
-"Well, Reggie, that was a bit of luck indeed." She was, of course,
-alluding to the confession of the real murderer. "Now you are as free as
-air. You were always a bit of a bad egg, old boy, but never a criminal
-to that extent."
-
-"No, hang it all, I am not particular in a general way, but murder
-was not in my line," he answered briefly. "It was hard lines to get
-scot-free of the other things, and then to be suspected of that at the
-end."
-
-He looked at her admiringly. "By Jove! Carrie, you were always the
-cleverest of the lot of us. That was a brain-wave of yours, walking in
-and identifying me as the suicide." Mrs. Masters smiled appreciatively.
-"Yes, it came to me in a flash. I read the account in the papers. It
-struck me I might do something useful. I went up to the court with the
-tale of a missing brother. I saw the body; the poor creature might have
-been your twin. Of course, I swore it was you, and gave you a new lease
-of life." She added severely, "I hope you have taken advantage of what
-I did, and become a reformed character." Davis spoke very gravely. "Yes,
-Carrie, I swear to you I have. That shock was the making of me. I have
-lain very low, worked hard, and put by money."
-
-He pulled out an envelope from his breastpocket, and thrust it into her
-hand; it was full of one-pound notes.
-
-"Fifty of the best, old girl, for a little nest-egg. I have not
-forgotten my best pal, you see."
-
-The tears came into Mrs. Masters' eyes. He had been a bad egg, but he
-had a good heart at bottom.
-
-"That is very sweet of you, Reggie; it will come in very useful. And now
-to go back for a moment to Cathart Square. Who was the poor devil
-who killed himself there? He was as like you as two peas are like each
-other."
-
-"I think we have got to find that out," said Reginald Davis gravely.
-"Nor, reading the account in the papers, am I quite sure that it was a
-suicide."
-
-"But that was the verdict," interrupted the sister.
-
-"I know, but there are peculiar things about the case. Letters addressed
-to Reginald Davis were found on him; there was a letter signed Reginald
-Davis, addressed to the Coroner, announcing his intention to commit
-suicide. Those letters had been placed there by the person who murdered
-him, and that person who murdered him was somebody who knew me, unless
-it was the accidental taking of a common name."
-
-"But the razor was clutched in his hand, Reggie!"
-
-"Quite easy," replied Davis, who, if not a murderer himself, could
-easily project himself, apparently, into the mind of one. "We will
-assume, for the moment, it was a man. He cut the poor devil's throat,
-and then thrust the razor into his stiffening hand, to convey the idea
-of suicide."
-
-"It might be," agreed Mrs. Masters.
-
-"Well, Carrie, one thing I have fixed on, and it is one of the things
-for which I have come up. I go to Scotland Yard to-morrow, tell them
-straight I am Reginald Davis, without a stain upon my character, explain
-to them that you were misled by a close resemblance. We will have that
-body exhumed. I am firmly convinced it was a murder."
-
-"Let sleeping dogs lie, Reggie," advised Mrs. Masters, who had a horror
-of the law and its subtle ways. "Never mind who was the poor devil who
-was found there, whether he was murdered or committed suicide. It is no
-affair of yours."
-
-"It is an affair of mine in this way," replied Davis in a dogged tone.
-"The person who murdered the poor devil, as you call him, knew something
-about me, and took a liberty with my name."
-
-"It served you a good turn, Reggie, anyway."
-
-"I know; I admit that. But the murderer did not know he was doing me,
-thanks to you, a good turn when he killed the other fellow."
-
-Mrs. Masters thought deeply for a few moments. "Reggie, you have been a
-very bad egg, I am sure. I shall never guess a quarter of what you have
-been guilty of."
-
-He laid his hand affectionately on her arm. "Well for you, old girl, you
-can't. That is all past and done with. By the way, that letter found on
-the poor chap, announcing his intention to commit suicide, did they ask
-you to identify my handwriting? Of course, the others addressed to him
-didn't matter much. Anybody could have written them. But my letter was a
-forgery. Did they ask you to identify that particular letter?"
-
-"They did, Reggie, and my brain was in such a whirl that I could hardly
-read it. I said that I believed it was in your handwriting. It was
-certainly very like, although, as you can imagine, I looked at it
-through a sort of mist. Anyway, it was as like your handwriting as the
-dead man was like you." Davis ruminated for a few moments. "That letter
-was forged by somebody who knew me and could imitate my hand to a
-nicety. I am thinking of all the wrong'uns I knew in the old days. I
-think I can fix him."
-
-"Yes," said Mrs. Masters breathlessly. She was capable of great daring
-in the cause and the service of those she loved, but she was not
-habituated to the ways of hardened criminals.
-
-"A man I was a bit associated with in the old days; luckily he didn't
-drag me in far enough. He was an expert forger. We used to call him
-'George the Penman.'"
-
-Mrs. Masters shuddered. "Oh, you poor weak soul, you were so near it as
-that?"
-
-"Very near, Carrie. The shock of the false accusation of murder pulled
-me up straight. I saw where I was drifting, and made up my mind that
-the straight path was the surest." At the moment that Mr. Davis gave
-utterance to this honourable sentiment there was a ring at the bell.
-
-Mrs. Masters rose at once. "It is Iris. I dropped her a note to say you
-were coming. She will be so pleased to see you."
-
-There floated into the small sitting-room a very dainty and ethereal
-figure, Miss Iris Deane, a charming member of the chorus at the
-Frivolity Theatre.
-
-She flung her arms round the neck of her handsome brother. "Oh Reggie,
-dear, what a treat to see you! And all this dreadful thing is lifted
-from you."
-
-Iris was not his favourite sister. She was clever in a worldly way, and
-had made good. But she had not the sterling loyalty of Caroline.
-
-Davis gently checked her enthusiasm. "And how have you been getting on,
-Iris? Always floating on the top as usual?"
-
-Miss Iris showed her dimples. "Always floating on the top, as you
-say, dear old boy. A silly, soft chap fell in love with me; wrote most
-impassioned love-letters. Well, he was too soppy for me to care much
-about him, and when his rich brother came along, offering me a price for
-his love-letters, I can tell you I just jumped at the chance."
-
-"Did you get a good price?" queried her brother.
-
-"I stuck out for ten thousand," explained the capable Iris; "but this
-chap was a good bargainer, and I let them go at seven. It was better on
-the whole. If I had married Roddie, I should have been so fed-up in a
-month that I should have run away from him, and then Heaven knows where
-I might have ended."
-
-Davis looked at his sister approvingly. There was enough of the old Adam
-left in him to entertain a slight envy of his sister's chances. Seven
-thousand pounds, a little fortune in itself, was a good bit of work, a
-handsome reward for the display of her dimples.
-
-"Roddie who, dear? You might tell us his other name," queried Mrs.
-Masters, who perhaps was also smitten with a sense of envy.
-
-"That's telling," answered the sprightly Iris, who was not given to be
-too frank about her own affairs. "But if either of you two dear things
-want a little ready, apply to me. Of course, you will remember I have
-got to take care of myself, to make provision for my old age."
-
-Davis and Carrie exchanged glances. They knew the volatile Iris of old.
-As a child she had always been mean and grasping. Not much of the seven
-thousand would come their way, if they were on the verge of starvation.
-
-Carrie spoke in cold accents. "You are really too generous, Iris. But
-we shall not have to trespass upon your generosity. I have enough for my
-humble wants. And Reggie has been able to put by, so much so that he has
-been kind enough to make me a very handsome money present to-night."
-
-"Dear old Reggie," said the sweetly smiling Iris. "I am so glad you have
-made good."
-
-And then Davis spoke: "Thanks, in great part, to Carrie, who told that
-splendid lie about the suicide, or murder, at 10 Cathcart Square. You
-remember that, of course?"
-
-"Suicide, wasn't it?" said Iris, but her cheek had grown a little pale.
-
-"I don't think so. There was a forged letter purporting to be written by
-me. I am going to Scotland Yard to-morrow, stating frankly who I am,
-and urging them to exhume the body. We will find out who the man, buried
-under the name of Reginald Davis, really was."
-
-And then the agitation of his younger sister became extreme. She
-clutched convulsively at his arm.
-
-"Reggie, you will not do this. What does it matter to you who the man
-was? Go under some other name, and let sleeping dogs lie." Unconsciously
-she had used the same expression as Mrs. Masters, but from different
-motives.
-
-"I have been under a different name for a longer time than I care to
-remember," answered Davis doggedly. "I have a fancy to resume my own,
-and make a clean breast of it to the police. They have nothing else to
-charge me with."
-
-Iris fell on her knees, and the tears rained down her cheeks.
-
-"For my sake, Reggie, if not for your own."
-
-"And why for your sake? Tell us what you mean," demanded her brother
-sternly.
-
-And Iris spoke as clearly as she could speak amidst her strangled sobs.
-
-"If you try and unearth that mystery at Cathcart Square, I might be
-dragged in, and it might be very awkward for me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-|Davis directed a keen glance at his elder sister over the bowed head of
-Iris. The younger woman was by no means of an emotional nature. Light,
-frivolous and volatile, she had danced through life, and, on the whole,
-had had a good time. One could not picture her in a tragic mood.
-
-And yet, she was the personification of deep emotion now. She could
-hardly speak for those convulsive sobs, and in her frightened eyes
-there was a deep and haunting terror. At what point, and through what
-circumstances, had tragedy touched this little selfish, self-centred
-butterfly, gifted with a certain amount of cunning and sharpness, but
-utterly brainless.
-
-"What do you know of No. 10 Cathcart Square, except what you gleaned
-from the newspapers?" demanded her brother sternly. "How can you be
-implicated in the murder of the unknown man whom Carrie mistook for me?"
-
-"But Carrie did not mistake him for you," wailed Iris. "She told me
-afterwards that the idea suggested itself in a flash, and when she
-read the newspaper she was not sure whether it was you who had crept in
-there, according to the evidence, and made away with yourself, through
-fear of the police."
-
-"Leave Carrie out of it for the moment," said Davis. "Whatever she did
-was well thought out. Of course, we both know her object was to identify
-me, if possible, and put Scotland Yard off the scent. What we want to
-know is, how did you come to be acquainted with the house? what do you
-mean by saying that, if further investigations are made, you might be
-dragged in?"
-
-"I was there on four occasions: on the last a few days before the
-murder, or suicide, whatever it was."
-
-Davis gasped, and Carrie lifted her hands in horror. What did this
-confession mean? It was impossible that this slim, weak girl had herself
-been the murderess, could have killed a big, powerful man of the same
-build as the supposed Davis, with those slim, weak hands.
-
-She saw the horror in their faces, and hastened to reassure them. "Oh
-no, not that, I swear to you. I am no more a murderess than you were a
-murderer, Reggie. But if the whole thing is raked up, and the man whom
-I believe it to be, accurately identified this time, things might look
-very black for me."
-
-Davis lifted her from her kneeling position, and placed her in an
-easy-chair. "Calm yourself, and tell us the whole story of why and how
-you came to be in Cathcart Square at all."
-
-Iris waited a few moments till the convulsive sobbing ceased. She spoke
-with little occasional gasps, but it was very evident it was a relief to
-unbosom herself.
-
-"It is a very long story," she began tremulously.
-
-"If the telling of it lasts till midnight, we must have it," said her
-brother in an inflexible voice.
-
-And compelled by his resolute manner, the girl, whom they had always
-regarded as a frivolous butterfly, embarked upon her strange and
-thrilling narrative.
-
-"It all arose out of the sale of those letters I spoke to you about.
-Carrie just now asked me the name of the man who wrote them. Well, I
-didn't get further than Roddie, which doesn't carry you very far. If it
-had not been for your threat of going to Scotland Yard, I should have
-stopped at that. A still tongue makes a wise head, you know."
-
-They could quite believe that. In spite of her ceaseless chatter, Iris
-had always been very reticent about her own affairs. She had seen next
-to nothing of her brother for a few years, not very much of Carrie
-Masters. And, on these occasions, she had always avoided, in a marked
-manner, any allusion to her private affairs.
-
-"I told you of a soppy young chap who started to make love to me last
-year. I didn't care a snap for him, but he was very persistent, and at
-last wrote me most urgent letters imploring me to be his wife. His full
-name was Roderick Murchison, a member of the great brewing family; his
-father has been dead for some time, he died during the war, and Roddie
-came in for tons of money, although he was not the eldest son. I don't
-know if you have ever heard of him?"
-
-No, neither Davis nor Carrie had known of the existence of such a young
-man. They had a hazy idea that there was a big brewing firm of that
-name, that was all.
-
-"Well, as I say, I didn't care a snap for him, although he was awfully
-good and generous, overwhelmed me with, all kinds of lovely presents:
-rings, bracelets, fur coats, etc. In our life, you know, one accepts
-these things from the mugs who are gone on us without attaching very
-much importance to the fact."
-
-It was evident that Miss Iris had struck out her own line of life, and
-made a very good thing out of it.
-
-"Well, then, Roddie began to grow desperate, and declared he couldn't
-live without me. It was all so genuine that at last I began to think
-seriously of it. There were tons of money, and although I didn't cotton
-much to the sort of life I should have to lead as his wife, still there
-were worse things than being Mrs. Roderick Murchison, with the future
-well assured, and a handsome settlement."
-
-Davis and his elder sister exchanged wondering glances. So this
-butterfly little girl, whom they had always regarded as rather shallow
-and feather-brained, had had this wonderful chance of marrying a
-gentleman and a rich man.
-
-"It was difficult to bring myself up to the scratch, in spite of the
-advantages, for he was so soft and soppy that he irritated me in a
-thousand-and-one ways, and I knew in a very short time I should grow to
-hate and despise him. Then one night, after a very excellent champagne
-supper at the 'Excelsior,' he got me in a yielding mood, and I promised
-to marry him."
-
-Brother and sister could only marvel at the girl's extraordinary good
-fortune, reluctant as she seemed to avail herself of it.
-
-"He told me that before he went to bed that night he wrote to his family
-acquainting them with the news, anticipating fully their objections,
-but expressing his strong determination to brook no interference or
-remonstrance. You see he was his own master, nobody could take his money
-away from him, and he didn't care whether his relatives were offended or
-not."
-
-"And how did the family take it?" queried Davis.
-
-"I am coming to that," replied Iris. She was growing much calmer now. It
-was a relief to unburden her secret to an audience whom she could trust.
-For she was sure that neither her brother nor sister would ever allow
-her to put herself into real danger.
-
-"I am coming to that," she repeated. "A few days after he had written
-those letters, one to his widowed mother, one to his elder brother, who
-had inherited the bulk of the big fortune, the elder brother called upon
-me in my flat. He was a very handsome, well-set-up man, although he had
-been through a good deal in the war. He was very like you, Reggie."
-
-"Ah," ejaculated Mr. Davis. He looked at Carrie, keenly watching her
-sister, with a glance that suggested they would soon be coming to the
-real pith of this rambling confession.
-
-"He begged the favour of a short conversation. He was perfectly open and
-above-board. He told me straight he was Roddie's elder brother, and that
-his name was Hugh Murchison. He pointed out to me very kindly that
-his brother was an impetuous young ass--a judgment which I privately
-endorsed--that Roddie had been infatuated, in his short day, with quite
-a number of other girls, although, perhaps, not to the same extent
-as with me." Iris, getting back rapidly into her light mind, let her
-volatile and easily impressed nature peep out in her next words.
-
-"Oh, Hugh Murchison was a darling, so quiet, so sensible, and so strong.
-If he had been fool enough to ask me to marry him, I would not have
-given him up for seven thousand pounds."
-
-"But you were prepared to chuck Roddie for that?" suggested her brother
-quietly.
-
-"I think I let him go a bit too cheap," answered the fair Iris in
-a reflective voice. "Many girls have got more than I asked for
-compromising a breach of promise. But to tell the absolute truth, Hugh
-Murchison hypnotised me a bit. He was so quiet and yet so strong that I
-felt he could twist me round his little finger."
-
-"We want to get to Cathcart Square," interjected Davis a little
-impatiently. "We don't seem to be near it yet."
-
-"I must tell my story my own way, it is no use driving me," replied
-Iris, pouting a little. "Well, as I tell you, he called that day at my
-flat--that was the beginning of negotiations. Where were we to meet
-to discuss details? I couldn't have him at my flat, because Roddie was
-always popping in and out. He couldn't have me at his hotel, because
-nobody knew whom we might come across, and Roddie was always coming
-there. He said he would think out a plan and telephone or wire me."
-
-"Ah," said Carrie, with a sigh of relief: she was a very practical
-person. "Now, I suppose we are coming to it."
-
-Iris, heedless of the interruption, went on with her story.
-
-"Next day he 'phoned me up, and after ascertaining that I was quite
-alone, told me to meet him at 10 Cathcart Square to resume our
-conversation."
-
-"Why, in the name of all that is wonderful----" began Reginald Davis,
-but his sister motioned him to silence.
-
-"Don't interrupt, please, you will know everything in a few minutes. I
-went to No. 10 Cathcart Square at the time appointed. He opened the
-door himself. It was a big house in an old-fashioned square, ages old, I
-should say, and in the front court was an agent's board, intimating that
-this particular house was to let, furnished."
-
-"I know Cathcart Square well, it's in an old-world quarter of
-Kensington," interrupted Davis. He added grimly, "I know it well,
-although I did not have the misfortune to commit suicide there."
-
-"He told me a very funny story. The afternoon of the day before, he had
-been up to Kensington to visit an old nurse of the family who lived
-near by. He had strolled round to Cathcart Square to fill up an idle
-half-hour. He had been struck by the appearance of the house, and
-loitered before it, when suddenly the door opened, and a somewhat
-bibulous-looking caretaker came out."
-
-Davis indulged in a sigh of relief. "We are really coming to it now,
-then?"
-
-"Yes, you are coming to it. He told me a sudden idea had occurred to
-him. Here would be a quiet little spot for our meetings, a place where
-Roddie would never dream of following us. He accosted the caretaker,
-evidently a drunken and corrupt creature. He explained that he wanted to
-rent a couple of rooms where he could receive a certain visitor he was
-expecting in the course of the next week or fortnight. It was no
-use going to the house agents for that, they would turn down such a
-proposition. The caretaker, with a couple of five-pound notes in his
-hand, took an intelligent view of the situation. He gave Hugh a key,
-and intimated that, if he had sufficient notice, he would make himself
-scarce on the occasions when the visitor was expected."
-
-"Of all the mad things----" began Davis, but his sister for the second
-time motioned her brother to silence.
-
-"Not quite so mad as you think. I fancy I can see into his mind. We
-could have met at a dozen different restaurants in London, but Roddie
-was here, there and everywhere: at any moment he might have come across
-us. He would never get as far as Kensington." David nodded his sagacious
-head. "I think I see. Go on."
-
-"I met him there, in all four times, the last meeting was a few days
-before the tragedy."
-
-"And what took place at that meeting?"
-
-"He paid me the seven thousand pounds in notes. I signed a paper
-agreeing to give Roddie up. I carried out my bargain. I wrote Roddie
-that same night, giving him his dismissal, and assuring him that nothing
-he could urge would induce me to reconsider my determination. He sent me
-frantic telegrams the next day, but I replied to the same effect. After
-taking his seven thousand pounds, I could not break faith with Hugh,
-could I?"
-
-Davis was not quite sure that Iris would not break faith with anybody if
-it suited her purpose. But clearly Hugh Murchison had subjugated her to
-the extent of respecting an honourable bargain. No doubt she had fallen
-in love with him, so far as a person of her shallow temperament could
-fall in love.
-
-"And what has become of Roddie?"
-
-"I don't know, and I don't care. He has bored me to extinction for over
-nine months. I am glad to be shut of him."
-
-Davis put a question. "You say Hugh Murchison paid you in notes. What
-have you done with them? His bank will have the numbers."
-
-"Will they?" cried Iris, the frightened look again coming into her eyes;
-she knew nothing of business methods. "I paid them into my own account.
-Now, you see, if you rake this up I might be implicated."
-
-"Your opinion is, then, that the man found in No. 10 Cathcart Square was
-Hugh Murchison?"
-
-"I am as nearly sure as I can be, after reading the caretaker's
-evidence. He had some other stunt on beside my own. I was not the only
-visitor he received."
-
-Davis thought deeply before he spoke. "If I have him dug up, and he is
-identified by those who know him, a lot will come to light. Your notes
-will be traced, for one thing."
-
-"I am afraid of everything, Reggie. For the love of Heaven, let him rest
-where he is." Caroline Masters breathed softly to herself. "You were
-half in love with him, or perhaps three-quarters, and you don't want to
-know the real truth. Oh, you miserable little, paltry soul!"
-
-And then a sudden thought came to Davis. "Now, Iris, you could never
-think very clearly about things when they got a little bit complicated.
-You are quite sure the last occasion on which you saw him was a few days
-before the discovery of the body?"
-
-"I will swear to it," cried Iris firmly.
-
-"The date of his cheque, which the Bank has, will show that. He probably
-cashed it himself on the day he paid you, any way the day before. Now,
-on the day preceding and the day following that tragedy, can you prove
-where you were?"
-
-Iris began to see light. "Of course I can. The day after I had the
-notes, I got up a sprained ankle, an obliging doctor, an old (or rather
-young) friend of mine, sent a certificate to the theatre. I motored down
-to Brighton with Johnny Lascelles--who, by the way, used to make Roddie
-fearfully jealous. We joined a jolly little party at 'The Old Ship.' I
-came back the day after the discovery in Cathcart Square."
-
-Davis rose and gave a great shout: "You have witnesses who can swear to
-that?"
-
-"Of course," answered Iris, not even yet comprehending the full drift of
-the question. "Johnny Lascelles motored me there and drove me back. Then
-there was Cissy Monteith, Katie Havard, Jack Legard and others who were
-with me all the time."
-
-"You silly little idiot," cried Reginald Davis. "And what the deuce do
-you mean by saying that you might be implicated?"
-
-"The notes," she faltered. "My meeting him alone in that empty house.
-They might suggest I murdered him, if you say he was murdered."
-
-Davis smote his forehead in impotent anger at her denseness. "How could
-you have murdered him when you were at Brighton all the time?"
-
-He smote the palms of his hands together.
-
-"I will find out who the dead man was, and also the man who forged my
-name to that letter to the Coroner."
-
-He turned to his sister: "As for you, young woman, it may be you will
-have a bad quarter of an hour, if it all comes out about Roddie. But
-never mind, you will have a splendid advertisement. The next bunch of
-letters you get hold of, the price will be twice seven thousand pounds."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-|The following morning Reginald Davis, resolved to unearth the mystery
-of 10 Cath-cart Square, stood in the private room of Mr. Bryant of
-Scotland Yard.
-
-He had easily overcome his younger sister's scruples, her terror at
-having to give evidence in a court of justice, and being forced to
-disclose certain transactions not too creditable to herself. She had
-come to see from the point of view artfully suggested by Davis, that, on
-the whole, it would be a very good advertisement. It might even take
-her from her place in the chorus to a small acting part, and then her
-fortune would be made. She might be able to come across another rich man
-whom she would like well enough to marry, a man quite different from the
-somewhat invertebrate Roddie.
-
-Bryant looked up from his papers, and regarded the young man with his
-keen and steady gaze. Davis's good looks, and frank air impressed him
-favourably.
-
-"Well, my man, what do you want with me? I don't usually see strangers
-who approach me in such a mysterious fashion. You would neither state
-your name nor business, only said vaguely that you wanted to interview
-me on a matter of great urgency."
-
-"I wished to keep my business for your private ear, sir. Can you throw
-your mind back to a certain gruesome affair that happened at 10 Cathcart
-Square?"
-
-"Certainly, although I was not in charge of the matter. The man was
-identified as Reginald Davis, who was wanted on a charge of murder,
-the circumstantial evidence against him being very strong; the verdict
-returned was one of suicide. If I recollect rightly, he had broken a
-pane of glass in one of the back windows of the house, unhasped the
-latch of the window, and cut his throat upstairs after he got inside.
-The facts were accepted at the time as conclusive evidence of his
-guilt."
-
-"And you recollect, sir, what happened a short time ago with regard to
-the crime of which Reginald Davis was accused?"
-
-"Perfectly. The real criminal has confessed. And this poor devil,
-overwhelmed no doubt by the circumstantial evidence which told so
-strongly against him, acted too hastily."
-
-"If the police had caught him, he would probably have been hanged by
-now," said Davis a little bitterly.
-
-Mr. Bryant looked a little uneasy. "I should say it is more than
-probable from what I remember of the case; well, you know, the law makes
-mistakes at times, I will admit."
-
-"And juries at inquests make mistakes at times, also," remarked Davis
-quietly. "This particular jury made a mistake. The dead man was no more
-Reginald Davis than you are."
-
-It was not easy to startle Mr. Bryant, he had been through too many
-strange experiences for that, but he exhibited a mild surprise as he put
-the question: "And what authority have you for saying that?"
-
-"I think you will admit the best. I who stand before you am the Reginald
-Davis who was wanted on that false charge of murder, and branded by that
-intelligent jury as a suicide."
-
-"You can prove this, of course. I mean that you are the real Reginald
-Davis."
-
-"Of course I can, sir; I can bring a dozen witnesses, if necessary, half
-of whom have known me since a boy."
-
-Needless to say that a man of Bryant's experience did not, as a rule,
-believe one quarter of what he was told. But this man's face--this man's
-tones--convinced him that he was listening to the truth.
-
-He rose from his chair. "Wait here a moment, please, while I hunt up the
-particulars of this case. As I told you just now, I was not in charge of
-it, and I should like to refresh my memory as to certain details."
-
-He came back after a few moments. "I know it all now, from A to Z.
-You were identified by a married sister, a Mrs. Masters, who gave some
-details of your career, which did not seem to have been a very healthy
-one. She was also shown a letter which you were supposed to have written
-to the Coroner, and she believed it to be in your handwriting. This
-wants some explanation, I think, Mr. Davis, to call you by the name
-which you say is your right one."
-
-"Quite so, sir," answered Reginald composedly. "It certainly requires
-a good deal of explanation, but if you will listen to me with a little
-patience, I think I can convince you that the thing is more natural than
-it appears." The Inspector threw himself back in his chair: "I have no
-doubt it was your sister who identified you, but how did she come to
-mistake the actual suicide for you?"
-
-And Mr. Davis gave the explanation which Bryant might believe or not, or
-believe in part, as he chose.
-
-"My sister Caroline was deeply attached to me. She was in despair when
-she heard that I was suspected of murder, and was being hunted by the
-police. As day after day, week after week, went by, and there was no
-news of my capture, she got it firmly fixed in her mind that I had
-committed suicide. She hunted the newspapers every morning to find some
-paragraph that would confirm her fears. And then one day she read about
-what had happened at Cathcart Square."
-
-Mr. Bryant was now deeply interested. He leaned forward in his chair,
-and his attitude betokened his eagerness.
-
-"It is possible that her mind had become a little unhinged by her
-anxiety. She expected to find me, and she found a man who might have
-passed for my twin brother. So she tells me now that I have revealed
-myself, for, of course, I lay very low until this belated confession of
-the real murderer."
-
-Bryant only made a brief comment on this particular portion of the
-narrative which Davis was twisting about with some skill. Of course,
-Mrs. Masters had not been deceived by the accidental resemblance, but in
-pretending to be she had given that brother a new lease of life.
-
-"You say that the man was so like you that the sister, who had known you
-from childhood, was ready to swear he was her brother?"
-
-"There is no doubt, sir, that at the time her mind was clouded. She went
-there expecting to find me, and as a not altogether unnatural result,
-she found what she expected."
-
-"We will let that pass," said the Inspector drily. "No doubt, under
-extraordinary circumstances, strange hallucinations are apt to occur. It
-was very fortunate for you that your sister made that mistake, and that
-it was accepted. As you admitted just now, if you had been caught and
-tried it would have gone very hardly with you."
-
-Whatever Bryant thought in his own mind, it was evident that he was
-prepared to admit that Mrs. Masters had acted in good faith when she
-swore that the dead man was her brother. Davis could see there would be
-no trouble on that score.
-
-"Now we come to the letter," pursued Davis. "I questioned my sister very
-closely about that last night. She says she was so overwhelmed with the
-discovery that she read that letter through a mist, as it were, but she
-is positive that it closely resembled my handwriting."
-
-"Another hallucination, I suppose, or an accidental resemblance. Well,
-if you will leave a specimen of your own caligraphy with us, we can
-compare them," said Bryant.
-
-"And I suppose, sir, you will have the body exhumed, for the purpose of
-discovering who the man really was?"
-
-"I suppose so," replied the Inspector a little unwillingly. "Although
-I don't expect we shall ever find out. Nobody came forward at the time
-when your sister made that mistake. Is it likely anybody will come
-forward now? Some poor derelict, weary of life I suppose, without kith
-or kin to claim him at the end. There are scores of suicides in the
-year, Mr. Davis, who are buried unidentified."
-
-He added, after a moment's pause: "Of course, before taking any such
-steps, we must formally prove, from unimpeachable testimony, that not
-only are you Reginald Davis, but the particular Reginald Davis who was
-falsely accused of murder."
-
-"I quite understand," answered Davis a little stiffly. "Before I
-leave this room, I will indicate the quarters where you can obtain the
-information you want."
-
-"Then, when I have verified that, I will ask you to come and see me
-again." Bryant's manner as he said these words, indicated that the
-interview was at an end.
-
-But Davis kept his seat, he had not finished yet.
-
-"May I take the liberty of detaining you for a few moments longer, sir,
-to impress upon you the importance of having that body exhumed? You may
-be correct in your theory it is that of some poor derelict, but I have a
-different theory altogether."
-
-The Inspector looked sharply at him, and drew a deep breath. "Ah, then,
-you have some knowledge of something: your visit to me has been leading
-up to this, eh?"
-
-"No actual knowledge, sir, but a surmise that has, I venture to think,
-some foundation. I have two sisters. The elder one I have already spoken
-of to you."
-
-There was a slight note of sarcasm in the Inspector's voice as he
-replied, "Yes, Mrs. Masters, whose fortunate mistake was of such
-excellent service to you, during the time you were waiting for the real
-criminal's confession." Davis did not suffer himself to resent this.
-Of course, a man of the world like Bryant did not believe in this
-camouflaged story. Mrs. Masters was a clever young woman, and had
-taken advantage of an accidental resemblance to get her brother out of
-jeopardy.
-
-"My other sister, Iris Deane, is in the chorus of the Frivolity Theatre.
-I don't suppose you have ever heard of her?"
-
-Mr. Bryant shook his head. He knew a great deal about all classes of
-criminals, but young ladies in the chorus of the Frivolity, or any other
-theatre, were not in his line.
-
-"She was at Mrs. Masters's house last night. She came over especially
-to welcome me, on my reintroduction to the world which I was supposed
-to have quitted. She made to us a very startling confession, and that
-confession is intimately associated with the events at Cathcart Square."
-
-And this time, Bryant was genuinely surprised, and was at no pains to
-conceal it. Reginald Davis--he was beginning to believe in the man's
-identity now--was evidently a member of a very remarkable family.
-
-"You astound me, Mr. Davis. Yourself and both your sisters mixed up with
-what happened there! It sounds like a romance. Pray proceed!"
-
-Davis told the story as Iris had told him, carefully concealing the
-names of the two men concerned in it for the moment. He was careful
-to point out that on the night of the suicide she could establish a
-complete and unquestioned alibi.
-
-Bryant turned on him sharply. "It occurs to me that you don't think it
-was a suicide, Mr. Davis."
-
-"I don't, sir, and at present I can't quite tell you why."
-
-"But you must have some reason for thinking that," said Bryant in the
-same sharp tone.
-
-"My only reason is this--if the man who was buried under the name of
-Reginald Davis is the man I believe him to be, there was no earthly
-reason why he should commit suicide. To the best of my belief, he was
-murdered for some motive that I cannot guess, and the murderer, after
-cutting his throat, put the razor in his stiffening hand."
-
-"It is a theory worth thinking about," said Bryant, who was beginning to
-appreciate his visitor very much. "And now, Mr. Davis, the name of the
-man whom your sister met in the empty house?"
-
-"I have kept that to the last, to surprise you. You will know the name,
-but I don't suppose you ever came across the man. It was Major Hugh
-Murchison."
-
-At this startling announcement, the Inspector literally jumped from his
-chair.
-
-"But I do know Major Hugh Murchison," he cried. "He was in my office not
-so very long ago. Let me see, when was it?"
-
-He turned to his diary and verified the date, and gave it to Reginald
-Davis. It was longer back than he thought.
-
-"And you have not seen him since that day?"
-
-"No," answered the Inspector. "Wait a moment till I ring up my friend
-Parkinson. I couldn't undertake the job he called on, as it was quite a
-private matter. I handed it over to Parkinson."
-
-He rang up his old friend and former colleague. Davis could gather
-enough from the conversation on Bryant's side to be sure that a
-considerable interval had elapsed since Parkinson had seen his client.
-
-Bryant sat down in his chair. "Mr. Davis, I cannot say how much obliged
-I am to you for your visit, and the information you have given me. Now,
-I know a great deal more than you do about the proceedings and movements
-of Major Murchison, I know on what business he was engaged, in addition
-to that little matter of your sister's. I will go into the inquiries
-concerning yourself, and please hold yourself at my disposal, give me an
-address where I can communicate with you readily."
-
-Davis did so, and said good-bye to the Inspector.
-
-After he had left, Bryant gave instructions he was not to be disturbed
-for an hour. And during that hour he did the hardest bit of thinking he
-had ever done in his life.
-
-And now that Davis had mentioned it, the man did bear a superficial
-resemblance to Hugh Murchison.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-|It was a very hard nut he had to crack. Thanks to his peculiar
-position, he was in possession of reliable and exclusive information
-from more than one quarter. He held several threads in his capable
-hands, but would he be able to weave them into a net wide enough for his
-purpose?
-
-His recent interview with Davis had established the fact that four
-persons were connected with the mystery of Cathcart Square--Davis
-himself, Caroline Masters (the elder sister), Iris Deane (the younger
-sister), and, most important of all, Hugh Murchison.
-
-He dismissed, for the moment, the first three from his mind. But Hugh
-Murchison, with his resemblance to Reginald Davis, was the connecting
-link between them and another set of actors.
-
-Murchison had consulted him with the view of identifying Mrs. Spencer
-and George Dutton with the Norah and George Burton of those far-off days
-at Blankfield, and he had identified them as the same persons. He had
-then handed over the Major to the astute Parkinson, who would find out
-as much as he could with regard to the present relations between the
-precious pair.
-
-Bryant had been very busy of late, and he had almost dismissed the
-Murchison episode from his mind. But when the Major had completed his
-investigations he would undoubtedly take steps to turn such a scheming
-and unscrupulous adventuress out of her husband's house. As to the way
-in which he would proceed to accomplish that purpose, Bryant, of course,
-had no knowledge. Neither did he know which Murchison would approach
-first, the husband or the wife. Perhaps both together.
-
-One thing stood out pretty clearly, from the evidence of Iris Deane,
-that she had met Murchison alone at the house in Cathcart Square a few
-days before the discovery of the dead body.
-
-Another thing also stood out equally clearly, that the dead man bore a
-remarkable likeness to Reginald Davis. If not, Caroline Masters would
-not have dared to perjure herself as she had done. And he himself had
-recognised the superficial resemblance between the two men.
-
-Assuming that it was a murder, and not a suicide, and Bryant was
-beginning to incline, like Davis, to the former theory, why had the
-murderer fixed upon the name of Reginald Davis, and forged a letter
-to the Coroner? He must have been somebody who had known Davis at some
-time, and was acquainted with his handwriting. Like Caroline Masters, he
-must have been inclined to do the hunted fugitive a good turn, and have
-trusted to his gratitude to keep a silent tongue.
-
-An hour's steady thinking had cleared his brain. The conclusions
-he arrived at were as follows: Hugh Murchison had been murdered by
-somebody, and buried as a suicide under the name of Reginald Davis.
-The next question was who was the murderer, and what was the motive
-for committing the murder? Here he could make a pretty shrewd guess. If
-Murchison had gone about his mission in a straightforward, but rather
-blundering, fashion the motive was clear enough.
-
-With Bryant to think was to act. Davis was having a week's holiday in
-London, staying with his sister, Mrs. Masters. That same afternoon the
-young man was again in the Inspector's room, in response to an urgent
-summons on the telephone.
-
-"Now, Mr. Davis, I have been thinking deeply over this rather
-complicated affair of Cathcart Square, and I am beginning to see a
-streak or two of daylight. I told you this morning I know a bit more
-about Major Murchison than you do, and there is just a chance you might
-help me. I take it you have had a somewhat adventurous career, your
-sister admitted as much at the inquest. She said in fact that you had
-been the black sheep of the family."
-
-Davis hung his head in a shame-faced fashion. "I have to admit it, sir.
-It's no use attempting to deny it, when Carrie gave me away like that."
-
-"I have no desire to pry into your past, except so far as it helps me in
-my present quest. But I expect, in your time, you have associated with
-a few undesirable characters." Reginald Davis admitted the fact quite
-frankly.
-
-"Now, of course, it is only just a chance. But did you ever come across
-a man named George Burton, and a young woman who passed as his sister?
-My first knowledge of them is that they ran a gambling saloon in
-Paris, she a good-looking girl, acting as decoy. Then he quitted the
-card-sharping game and went in for more criminal pursuits."
-
-"I did know them, sir. If I tell you what I do know, am I letting myself
-in for anything?" queried Mr. Davis cautiously. "You see, since that
-awful thing happened, I have turned over a new leaf. Nobody could tempt
-me to go the least bit on the crook."
-
-"Make your mind quite easy, Davis. We have nothing against you. You know
-that, or you would have hardly dared to come to life again."
-
-"Well, sir, I did know George Burton pretty intimately at one time,
-after he left Paris. He was in the forgery business and he tried to drag
-me in, but I was clever enough to keep out of it. They used, in his own
-set, to call him 'George the Penman.'"
-
-"Good," said Bryant; "and what did you know about the girl?"
-
-"Not very much, sir. She passed as his sister, but one or two of his
-pals believed her to be his wife, although there was no evidence of it."
-
-"Did you ever learn anything of her origin?"
-
-"Well, one chap who seemed to know more about them than their other
-pals, told me that she was by way of being a lady, the illegitimate
-daughter of a man well-known in London Society."
-
-"Do you know the name of the man?"
-
-Davis tapped his forehead in the effort of recollection.
-
-"It's on the tip of my tongue, sir: it will come to me in a moment--a
-man who was mixed up in a gambling scandal, and had to leave the
-country. Ah, I have got it now, he was known familiarly as Tommie
-Esmond."
-
-Mr. Bryant rose. He had got all he could out of his new acquaintance.
-The threads in his hand were drawing closer into a web.
-
-"Well, Mr. Davis, good-day. Many thanks for the information you have
-given me, it has been very helpful. I will keep in touch with you."
-
-"And you think, with me, it was a murder, and not a suicide?" questioned
-Davis as he left.
-
-But Bryant was not the man to express a decided opinion until he was
-fully justified by the facts. He kept his thoughts to himself till the
-last moment.
-
-He smiled pleasantly. "Time will show. I shall have that body exhumed,
-as soon as I have made a few further inquiries."
-
-Davis had to be content with this oracular utterance, and bowed himself
-out. He solaced himself by narrating all that had occurred to the
-wondering Carrie.
-
-The matter had now become one for the activities of Scotland Yard.
-The first thing to be done was to ascertain the whereabouts of Hugh
-Murchison, that is to say, if he was still in the land of the living.
-Some time had elapsed since he had communicated with Parkinson. Of
-course, in itself, there would be nothing strange in that. Parkinson had
-got the information that was required, been paid for it, and with that
-payment, their relations had ended.
-
-Bryant went to the hotel where the Major had stayed, at any rate up
-to the time that the detective had last seen him, and interviewed the
-manager, whom he had known for some years in his professional capacity.
-This person, a genial and cosmopolitan Italian, readily answered his
-questions.
-
-Yes, the Major had stayed there for some little time. When he came,
-he explained that he was only paying a flying visit to London. Had he
-brought a servant with him? No, he had not. A somewhat strange omission
-for a man in his position, was it not? The circumstance was easily
-explained. The Major had had to dismiss his late valet for theft, and
-was not in a hurry, for the present, to suit himself with a fresh one.
-This he had told the manager and he was valeted at the hotel.
-
-He had left some time. How long? The manager would find out the exact
-date. This he did. On the afternoon of the fourth of July.
-
-The Major had taken his things down to Victoria Station in a cab with
-the view of depositing them there, as he was going to take an evening
-train to Brighton.
-
-Bryant brightened up at this information. The discovery of the dead body
-at Cathcart Square had taken place early on the morning of the fifth.
-
-Now arose the question, had the Major got through his business with the
-Spencers before the fourth of July? In that case Mrs. Spencer was hardly
-likely to be still living at Eaton Place with her husband.
-
-Inquiries at Eaton Place soon established the fact that Mrs. Spencer was
-still there. What had happened? Had the Major communicated the result of
-his research to the husband, with the result that, infatuated with his
-wife, that husband had refused to credit the story and accepted Stella's
-denials?
-
-It was a fairly plausible theory. When men are deeply in love, women
-can twist them round their little finger. In that case, it was easy to
-understand that, disgusted with the failure of his intervention, the
-Major had made up his mind to leave London at once.
-
-One other thing was to be done, to ascertain if the Major had intimated
-to any of his friends his intention of leaving London so abruptly. For
-this purpose, Bryant sought out the brother Roderick, who had rooms in
-Jermyn Street.
-
-Yes, Roderick had met the Major in Bond Street in the morning, and
-learned of the proposed journey to Brighton. The young man added that
-his brother was very erratic in his movements, and sometimes would
-disappear for weeks at a stretch without communicating with any of his
-friends or relatives.
-
-There was now one of two theories that stood out: the first one that Guy
-Spencer had been told, and refused to believe the true facts about his
-wife. The second was, that the Major had shirked the unpleasantness of
-a personal interview of such a delicate character, and had gone down to
-Brighton intending to write privately to Spencer from there.
-
-Further inquiries elicited the fact that the Major had never made that
-projected journey to Brighton. His belongings had never been claimed,
-they were still lying in the cloak room at Victoria Station.
-
-There was now no further doubt as to what steps had to be taken.
-The Major had disappeared at a date practically coinciding with the
-discovery of the dead body at Cathcart Square, the dead body which had
-been wrongly identified as that of Reginald Davis, whose likeness to the
-Major was so pronounced. Of that fact, Bryant himself was aware.
-
-The authorities were applied to, and gave permission for the body to be
-exhumed. As the living Reginald Davis had established his identity to
-the satisfaction of Scotland Yard, it was necessary to find out, if
-possible, that of the man who had been mistaken for him.
-
-The body was exhumed and pronounced by half-a-dozen people, including
-Guy Spencer, to be that of the Major.
-
-It had now become clearly a case of murder, and although those in charge
-of the case had little or no doubt as to the guilty persons, it might
-have been very difficult to prove, but for one convincing fact, supplied
-by the murdered man himself.
-
-But this evidence, which was overwhelming, the police kept to themselves
-for some little time, for their own good reasons.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-|The luggage which had been left at Victoria Station on the fatal day
-was, of course, seized by the police. They searched it thoroughly in
-the hope that they would find something useful to them in the shape of
-letters or memoranda.
-
-Of letters there were only two, brief ones from Iris Deane, in which she
-expressed her determination of sticking out for her ten thousand pounds.
-As we know, in the end she gave way and accepted seven.
-
-But they did find one priceless thing, and that was a diary, bound in
-red leather, a small volume as to the size of the page, but very bulky.
-It had evidently been the dead man's habit to keep a fairly close record
-of his doings, for it was numbered, and contained entries from some
-date in May 1919 up to July 3rd, the day before he left the hotel,
-and announced to the manager that he intended to take a late train to
-Brighton.
-
-For the twentieth time since he had discovered this important piece
-of evidence, Mr. Bryant sat in his room at Scotland Yard, reading and
-re-reading the entries which he knew almost by heart.
-
-With the entries, before the visit to London, Bryant had no concern.
-They recorded trifling events which had no reference to the tragedy
-at Cathcart Square. There was, of course, allusion to the letter from
-Roderick which had so startled his family, the letter announcing his
-engagement to the chorus girl, Iris Deane, and his fixed resolve to make
-her his wife. There was a note of a family council, in which the elder
-brother was deputed to approach the young woman herself, with the object
-of buying her off.
-
-There were a few records of his first days in London, after a long
-absence, his visits to his clubs, his meeting with old pre-war
-acquaintances, his first interview with Iris Deane, the difficulty of
-arranging further interviews either at his hotel or her flat, owing to
-the fear of Roddie popping in unexpectedly.
-
-Then came the whimsical record of his strolling round Kensington,
-halting opposite the house with the board announcing that it was to be
-let furnished, his interview with the accommodating caretaker who, in
-return for a very handsome _douceur_, gave him a duplicate key to enter
-the house at any time he liked. He had casually mentioned to Miles that
-his name was Sanderson.
-
-The Major seemed childishly pleased over what he considered a very
-astute move, especially the giving of another name. Here in this quiet
-backwater of the world, for so it would seem to a man of his wealth and
-position, he could continue his negotiations with the somewhat obstinate
-Iris. In the portion of the diary concerned with the grasping and
-frivolous young chorus-girl, Bryant was not greatly interested. He had
-learned this already from Iris Deane, whom he had interviewed a few
-times, and Reginald Davis.
-
-He turned from the bulky little volume, the pages of which were covered
-with the Major's small, rather methodical handwriting, to a slenderer
-book lying beside him. Into this had been copied all the extracts
-bearing on the relations between the dead man and Mrs. Spencer,
-otherwise Stella Keane, otherwise Norah Burton.
-
-The first entry recorded the dinner-party at Carlton House Terrace, when
-he had been struck by the remarkable likeness of his friend's wife to
-the pretty adventuress at Blankfield, who had driven his old friend,
-Jack Pomfret, to his death; his endeavours to startle her by allusions
-to that garrison town.
-
-An important entry was that of his interview with his old acquaintance
-at the club, Gilbert Fairfax, from whom he had learned something of the
-atmosphere of the L'Estrange flat in Elsinore Gardens, the branding of
-Tommie Esmond as a card-sharper, the flight of the fat little man to the
-Continent, the visit of Stella Keane to Charing Cross Station to bid the
-detected cheat farewell. There was a comment upon this fact: "Whether
-she is Norah Burton or not, her intimacy with the L'Estrange set, her
-solicitude for Tommie Esmond, are sufficient to make her unfit to be the
-wife of a straight, honest fellow like my old friend Guy Spencer."
-
-There followed further entries, relating his interview with Bryant, the
-confirmation by the detective that Stella Keane was Norah Burton, that
-George Dutton, the keeper of the obscure little bucket-shop in the City,
-was the same George Burton who had been arrested at Blank-field on a
-charge of forgery, and who, thanks to one of the cleverest advocates at
-the criminal bar, had got off with a very light sentence.
-
-There was a full record of the long interview with Mrs. Spencer, in
-which she had been finally confounded, and forced to confession, of her
-acceptance of his terms, of the words she had uttered when, while rather
-regretting that things could not go on as they were, lamenting the fact
-that her accuser had ever been born, she was not at all satisfied with
-her present environment, and would experience a certain measure of
-relief in quitting it for a more congenial sphere.
-
-On the day he had parted from her, the day on which she had yielded to
-his inflexible determination that she must remain under her husband's
-roof as short a time as possible, he recorded the fact that, up to the
-present moment, he had not made up his mind as to the precise way in
-which he was going to bring about the separation. He wanted to choose
-the way which would least hurt Guy.
-
-There had flashed through his mind that, in addition to the confession
-she was about to make to him of her whole career, she should confess to
-her husband that she was not legally his wife, being in reality the wife
-of George Burton, alias George Dutton. There followed here a note. "I am
-convinced she and this rascal were married, the sister and cousin dodges
-were always a fake. I must see Parkinson to find out if he can ferret
-out anything on that point. But the time is short. In a week I must be
-ready for action."
-
-A further entry showed that he had called on Parkinson with this object,
-only to learn that the detective had gone on an important mission
-abroad, and could undertake no further work till his return, which would
-be some ten days hence. That idea therefore had to be dismissed. He must
-think out some other plan.
-
-Then came the last and most important entry of all, dated on the fourth
-of July, written no doubt a few hours before he took his luggage to
-Victoria Station.
-
-"I meet Norah Burton, I always think of her by that old name, at
-Cathcart Square at six o'clock to-night. I have given the caretaker a
-holiday to keep him out of the way. I have drawn up two copies of
-the confession, one of which she is to sign. I have also drawn up an
-undertaking on my part to keep her from want in case Guy should prove
-obdurate. But this I am sure he will not do. Besides, if she is his
-wife, and thinking it over, I have my doubts as to whether she was ever
-really married to Burton, he would have to support her, in spite of her
-unsavoury associations."
-
-Bryant paused for a moment as he finished this paragraph to reflect a
-little. Personally, he did not believe that she was the wife of George
-Burton; in his opinion, their association had been the result of mutual
-interests. With this knowledge hanging over her head, she would hardly
-have been daring enough to go through the ceremony of marriage with two
-other men. Anyway, it was a debatable point.
-
-Moreover, Burton, like most criminals, would be very wide awake and
-calculating. To marry her would be to handicap himself. He could get
-more out of her by marrying her to a rich man.
-
-Then came the last paragraph of all.
-
-"Now, for my action after the final interview of to-night, when she has
-signed the confession. I may do one of two things, forbid her to return
-to her husband's house, and go myself straight to Eaton Place, and break
-the news to Spencer without any preamble. In that case, I shall take
-with me some ready money to hand to her, as she will probably have very
-little upon her.
-
-"And yet I rather shrink from this course; it would be painful for me to
-watch his agony while I struck such a terrible blow. I will run down
-to Brighton, drop him a note telling him that an important letter will
-reach him at his club by registered post to-morrow, that he is on no
-account to let his wife know he has heard from me till he has read the
-contents of that registered packet.
-
-"I shall post him the copy of the confession, telling him he can inspect
-the original at any time he likes, meeting me either in Brighton or
-London, leaving him to deal with her as he chooses. After all, his is
-the right to dispose of his private affairs, my duty really ends when I
-have put him in possession of the facts. My first method must have the
-effect of creating open scandal at once, by my insisting upon her not
-returning to Eaton Place.
-
-"He may wish to devise some plan that will create a scandal less open,
-to save, as far as he can, the disgrace to himself and his family. If I
-know the man, and here, perhaps, I am arguing from the knowledge only of
-my own temperament, I should say his love would turn to hatred after he
-reads that confession. Jack Pomfret was a weaker man than Guy, but he
-acted as I should have done under the circumstances, and refused all
-further communication with her, refused to give her the opportunity of
-denial or explanation.
-
-"Still, there is no knowing to what lengths a deep-rooted infatuation
-for a fascinating woman will lead a man. In this respect, Guy may be
-less adamant than Pomfret, although I am sure he will never imitate poor
-Jack's final weakness. He is too sturdily built for that.
-
-"When confronted with that confession she may plead artfully, and,
-perhaps to him, convincingly, that while she admits everything contained
-in it, she was more sinned against than sinning, that she tried to
-escape from her odious bondage by marrying Jack, and that with his
-suicide and the frustration of her hopes, she was compelled to return
-to an environment which she loathed. He might consent to believe and
-forgive, although to me such a thing seems incredible, impossible."
-
-Bryant closed the book on the last entry. That little red-leather volume
-threw a lurid light on the mystery of Cathcart Square. The exhumed body
-was found to be that of Major Murchison, wrongly identified in the first
-instance as that of Reginald Davis. It was all very clear.
-
-That meeting had taken place, and the unfortunate man had been done
-to death by the precious pair, Norah Burton and the scoundrel brother,
-cousin or life-long lover, whichever he was. Reginald Davis was an old
-acquaintance of theirs, had been possibly a more intimate one than
-the cautious Davis was prepared to admit. They took with them letters
-addressed to their old friend, they forged a letter from him intimating
-his intention to commit suicide.
-
-If Davis read of all this in the papers, he was too concerned with his
-own danger to emerge from his hiding-place and publish the truth to the
-world. He would be thankful that, through the villainy of others, he
-could take a new lease of life, unmenaced by detection. Of course, they
-had never thought of the possibility that Davis would be cleared by the
-confession of the real criminal. Like Scotland Yard, they were sure he
-was guilty, and his silence was a matter of certainty.
-
-And slowly Bryant, drawing from the stores of his vast experience, began
-to construct in his own mind the details of the murder, executed by
-two desperate criminals, almost driven to the verge of madness by the
-knowledge that their carefully-laid plans were about to be frustrated by
-the action of one man.
-
-The woman, the weaker of the two, was probably more disposed to yield to
-the force and strength of circumstances. Once before, in her marriage to
-Jack Pomfret, she had had the cup snatched from her lips, and bowed
-to the inevitable. From the few words recorded in the Major's accusing
-diary, it would seem that, secured of a modest competence, she was ready
-a second time to accept her fate.
-
-And then, in that week's interval, it was easy to guess what had
-happened. She had consulted her old partner in crime, George Burton. He
-had reasoned, as it turned out, a little shallowly, remove Murchison,
-and the danger will be past. The resemblance of Murchison to Reginald
-Davis had occurred to the pair, hence the cunningly prepared letters.
-
-And how was the actual murder accomplished? Had they gone to Cathcart
-Square together, or had Burton followed her, getting in by means of that
-broken window-pane at the back? And did they know the Major was alone?
-In that last interview with Mrs. Spencer, had he let out the fact
-that he had given the caretaker a holiday, so that they should not be
-disturbed?
-
-These were side problems that could not be solved at the moment. Only
-two persons could solve them, and those two, in all probability, would
-never speak.
-
-But how had they killed him? The Major was a strong, muscular fellow who
-would fight tenaciously for his life. Norah Burton was a slender woman,
-almost verging on frailness, George Dutton, to call him by his latest
-name, was certainly of a muscular build, although of only average
-height.
-
-Well, of course, they had foreseen and prepared for all that.
-while talking to him, she had sprayed over him the essence of some
-overpowering and stupefying drug, and while he was staggering about,
-dazed and blinded, the man had stepped in and done the rest.
-
-Owing to the absence of the caretaker, they had plenty of time. They had
-rifled his pockets, taking out of them the money which, according to
-his diary, he had brought along with him, his personal belongings, the
-ticket which he had received at the luggage room of Victoria Station,
-and, of course, the confession which Norah Burton had or had not signed.
-No doubt, they had also examined his linen and underclothing to make
-sure that his name was not on them. If it had been, they would have
-dealt with it by stripping the body.
-
-They had carried it out pretty well, on the whole. There were two things
-they had not reckoned on. One was the resuscitation of Reginald Davis.
-The other was the fact that Murchison kept a diary, one of the last
-things that a man of his sort was likely to do.
-
-Bryant, although not a very emotional man, felt very depressed as he
-came to the result of his meditations. He felt sure that, if Norah
-Burton could have had her own way, she would have accepted her fate,
-gone forth on the world again with the slender pittance that either of
-the two men, her husband or his friend, would have allowed her.
-
-She had suffered herself to be dominated by a more reckless and criminal
-spirit, with the result that the life of an honourable man had been
-taken, and she was already standing at the foot of the gallows.
-
-The pair, only knowing that the body had been exhumed and proved to
-be that of Hugh Murchison--a terribly disturbing thought to them--but
-ignorant of the discovery of that incriminating diary, were being
-closely watched. But they felt sure that nothing could be traced to
-them, they had hidden their tracks so cleverly, as they thought.
-
-It was now only a question of a few hours as to when they should be
-taken. And Bryant felt that Guy Spencer should know the truth before
-anybody else. Poor fellow! He would soften the blow to him as much as he
-could.
-
-That same evening he went round to Eaton Place, about seven o'clock.
-He reckoned that he would catch Spencer before he went up to dress for
-dinner. "Poor devil," thought Bryant, "he won't have much appetite for
-dinner after he has read through that diary!"
-
-Spencer was in the library, and the detective, whom he had met before
-in connection with the mystery of Cathcart Square, was shown in. Spencer
-welcomed him with his usual cordiality.
-
-"Good-evening, Mr. Bryant. Any fresh light upon this terrible thing?"
-
-The footman had left the library door slightly open, after showing
-Bryant in, and had retired swiftly to his quarters.
-
-He was hardly out of the hall when Stella opened the front-door with
-her key, and glided noiselessly in. All her movements were noiseless,
-suggesting, as somebody had once remarked of her, the silent motions of
-a snake. She always carried a key, declaring that she could not be kept
-waiting for servants to answer the door.
-
-The library door was open, through the aperture she heard voices, and
-one of them she recognised. It was that of the Scotland Yard detective,
-who had cross-examined her very closely as to her various meetings with
-the dead man. She had been afraid of Bryant. He had looked at her so
-searchingly, and his manner always conveyed that he knew so much more
-than he was prepared to disclose.
-
-Bryant was speaking in a low, but very clear voice. Her hearing was
-singularly acute, and she could catch every word.
-
-"I am come on a very painful errand, Mr. Spencer. There is a small
-volume here which throws a very clear light on what happened at Cathcart
-Square on that fatal evening of July the fourth."
-
-Guy's cheerful accents rang out. "You mean you have got a clue, Mr.
-Bryant. But why painful to me? If you are on the track of the murderer
-of my poor old friend, nobody will be more rejoiced than I."
-
-Again the low, grave tones of Bryant:
-
-"Mr. Spencer, you will be a very stricken man when you have read through
-it. Your poor friend left behind him a very copious diary, made up to
-the morning of the day on which he was murdered. The original is at my
-office, you can inspect it at any time you like. This is a copy of the
-entries relating to Cathcart Square. It touches your domestic life very
-closely, in addition to proving why and by whom he was murdered."
-
-Stella waited to hear no more. Her face had gone livid, she felt shaking
-in every limb. That her old enemy, Murchison, had left a diary! They
-had never thought of that possibility. The game was up. She had staked
-something on her marriage as Norah Burton with Jack Pomfret, and had
-lost. This time she had staked everything and lost again, but now she
-had lost liberty and life in addition. There was but one end. She must
-seek at once the man who had, in a way, been a good and faithful friend,
-but also her evil genius.
-
-She stole as quietly out of the hall as she had entered it, and hailed
-a passing taxi. She knew she would never enter the house at Eaton Place
-again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-|Mrs. Spencer had plenty of money in her pocket. She was always
-accustomed to carry a large sum about her. Her adventurous life had
-taught her that it was always wiser to have a good amount of cash in her
-possession. The time might come at any moment when you were in a tight
-corner. She had promised a handsome reward to the taxi-cab driver if he
-could get to a certain destination within the speed limit.
-
-That destination was Kew Bridge, where it abuts on a little-known
-neighbourhood called Strand-on-the-Green.
-
-At the foot of Kew Bridge, the wretched and hunted woman halted, and
-paid the driver his extravagant fare. What did it matter what she paid
-to-night? To-morrow she might not be able to pay. She shuddered as she
-thought of that to-morrow.
-
-The taxi-driver drove slowly out of sight. She waited, from a sense of
-habitual caution, till he was well out of the way. And then, remembering
-everything, she smiled bitterly. Was there any need of caution now?
-
-She went down a narrow lane, halted at the door of a small cottage, and
-rang the front-door bell. As she did so, she was aware of a man a few
-yards away from her, who seemed to be strolling aimlessly about, a man
-dressed in ill-fitting clothes, and heavy boots.
-
-A detective certainly! This man had followed her from Eaton Place in a
-taxi almost as swift as her own. Bryant knew his business, he was not
-going to lose sight of her, or of her reputed cousin, George Dutton.
-
-The door was opened cautiously by George Dutton, alias George Burton.
-
-It was a small furnished cottage that he had rented for some months
-past, at a rent commensurate with his means. He kept no servant; a
-feeble old woman came in the morning to clean him up and prepare his
-breakfast. When he came back at night from the not very prosperous
-bucket-shop, he looked after himself, and cooked over a gas-stove his
-evening meal.
-
-The evenings were drawing in, and it was rather a dark night. He peered
-for a moment at his visitor, before he recognised her.
-
-"Stella, by all that is wonderful." He called her by the new name,
-not the old one of Norah. "Come in, dear, but your arrival in this
-unexpected fashion does not suggest good news."
-
-She passed hastily through the open doorway. "Shut it quick," she said,
-in a low, hoarse voice. "There is a man watching outside, I am sure he
-is a detective."
-
-As a matter of fact, there were two detectives within a few feet of each
-other, but in her agitation she had not observed the second man, who was
-deputed to keep watch on the movements of Mr. George Dutton.
-
-George Dutton was an old hand, and not to be lightly disturbed by small
-incidents. But he recognised the significance of this visit. His ruddy
-colour died away.
-
-"You have bad news," he said quietly.
-
-"The worst, George. Bryant, the detective, paid a visit to Guy this
-evening. I came in just in the nick of time. The library door was ajar,
-I heard what Bryant said. The Major has left a diary behind him, and, of
-course, he had put it all down, up to the arranged meeting in Cathcart
-Square. The game is up, you will recognise that."
-
-Dutton's mentality was a little bit slower than her own. "Did you hear
-any extracts read from the diary?"
-
-"What a fool you are!" she cried indignantly. "Why should I wait to
-hear? If the man kept a diary, is it not easy to guess that he would
-have related every incident connected with me, from our first meeting at
-the Southleigh dinner-party? Bryant is watching me, there is a detective
-waiting outside. No doubt he is watching you, too. He is just waiting to
-pounce."
-
-"Then why has he gone to your husband?"
-
-"Oh, you are too dense for worlds. Just to soften the blow. Can't you
-understand that he wants to warn him beforehand of the shame that is
-going to fall upon him, the discovery that his wife is a murderess?"
-
-And then Mr. Dutton understood. He stretched out appealing arms to her.
-"My poor little girl, my ever faithful pal! And I have brought you to
-this!"
-
-"You have brought me to this," she said bitterly. "Did I not implore you
-upon my knees to accept the Major's terms, and you were so obstinate,
-so set. You would insist upon the other way because it seemed better to
-you. And I, fool that I was, always yielding to your sinister influence,
-gave way as I always have done."
-
-Scoundrel and criminal as he was, hardened by years of evil-doing, the
-man's self-control gave way at that accusation. He drew her to him, and,
-strange to say, she did not shrink from his embrace..
-
-"My poor Stella, I have tried to do my best for you always, even
-sacrificed myself. But the end has come."
-
-He recognised that, as she did.
-
-"Yes," she said stoically, "as you say, the end has come. You have
-always been very adept in falling into holes, and then digging yourself
-out again. How are you going to dig yourself and me out of this hole, in
-the face of that incriminating diary?"
-
-Dutton walked up and down, his face working, his hands and his body
-trembling. He was up against the gravest problem of his adventurous
-career. The shadow of the prison had always hovered over him, but now
-there was a more ghastly menace, the shadow of the gallows. From the
-prison, he could return. There was no return from the other.
-
-He paused in his restless pacing, and came to a halt before the stricken
-woman. He had recovered himself to a certain extent. He had gambled and
-lost, he was prepared to accept the fate of the unsuccessful gambler.
-
-"You are brave, old girl?" he asked briefly.
-
-She looked up at him with a wan smile.
-
-"Yes, I think I am brave. I can guess what you are about to suggest,
-with the detectives watching us outside." She burst into a little sob.
-"Oh, you always thought you were so clever, and yet, if I had had the
-management of affairs, things might have been so different."
-
-He spoke humbly. "I think you are right, Norah. I was always full of
-arrogance and self-conceit. You were weaker in character than I was, but
-you had always more brains. And I was a blind fool not to admit it. Many
-a time you gave me your advice, and I rejected it."
-
-"And what do you suggest now?" she asked, in a voice that had sunk to a
-whisper.
-
-He looked at her steadily. He had screwed up his courage to the sticking
-point. Could he count upon an equal fortitude in her?
-
-"It is the finish, old girl. You say the detectives are waiting outside.
-Bryant has got a good case, and the diary will hang us. There is no
-getting over that."
-
-"You propose----" she said falteringly.
-
-He spoke quite steadily. The end had come, he had made up his mind, so
-far as regards himself.
-
-"We neither of us want to hang for the murder of Hugh Murchison?"
-
-She shuddered, and hid her face with her hands. "Oh, that awful evening!
-It has been like a nightmare ever since."
-
-"I know," said Dutton soothingly. "It was one of my fatal mistakes. But
-it is no use crying over spilt milk. To-night we are face to face with
-facts. We have gambled, and we have lost, and we have got to pay the
-penalty."
-
-The wretched woman rose up, and wrung her hands. "And to think I might
-have been the Countess of Southleigh."
-
-"I know; don't think I am not reckoning up all that," replied Dutton.
-"But we have got to deal with facts to-night, with the detectives
-waiting outside. The game is up, you know that as well as I do. We have
-only a few hours before us, perhaps a few minutes, in which to make the
-choice."
-
-"I know," she answered. "You mean our only alternative is to cheat the
-law."
-
-He looked at her steadily. "That is the only way. If we suffer ourselves
-to be taken, we have not got a dog's chance."
-
-Weak woman as she was, she gathered something of his iron resolution.
-Yes, they must die and die together, to cheat the law. Such was to be
-the end of the brilliant adventuress who had inveigled two men into
-marriage, Jack Pomfret and Guy Spencer, with her subtle and elusive
-charm.
-
-"And what do you suggest, George? You have thought of these things more
-than I have."
-
-"I have always thought of them," said Dutton gloomily. "Well, there are
-various ways I can suggest to you. I can shoot you first, and myself
-afterwards."
-
-She shuddered. "Some other way than that."
-
-"I can give you some tabloids."
-
-"Is there any pain?" she queried.
-
-"Hardly any."
-
-She shuddered again. "Hardly any. That does not sound very convincing."
-
-He proposed a third alternative. "You can come up to my room, and lie on
-the bed. I will paper up all the doors and cracks and turn up the gas.
-You will simply go to sleep and never wake."
-
-"That is the best," she said.
-
-"If we had plenty of time. But they may take us in a few minutes. Bryant
-has seen your husband, he will not wait long after that interview."
-
-"The tabloids, then," she said firmly.
-
-Yes, it had come to this, she must cheat the law. Twice, she had had
-her chance, once as the wife of Jack Pomfret, again as the wife of Guy
-Spencer. And twice had the cup of triumph been snatched from her lips.
-
-She must die, like a rat in a hole, in this obscure little cottage at
-Strand-on-the-Green, in the company of the man who had always been her
-evil genius.
-
-Dutton went across to a small cupboard built in the wall of the shabby
-parlour, and brought out a little bottle filled with capsules. He
-extracted one and handed it to the shrinking woman.
-
-"Take yours first, dear, I will take mine after." There was a look of
-infinite compassion in the scoundrel's face as he offered it to her.
-
-Bravely she took it, and swallowed it with a great gulp, sitting in the
-shabby easy-chair. The effect was almost instantaneous, and when Dutton
-had made sure that she was beyond human aid, he took a similar tabloid
-himself, with the same result.
-
-An hour later there was a thundering knock at the door of the cottage.
-One of the detectives had gone to a telephone office and informed Bryant
-that the woman had come to Strand-on-the-Green, and was with Dutton. The
-order came back from Bryant, who had only stayed a few minutes at Eaton
-Place, that the pair were to be arrested at once.
-
-Of course there was no response. After waiting for a few moments, the
-men broke in the frail door. But they were too late.
-
-Norah Burton, and the man who had been so long associated with
-her--brother, cousin, lover, whatever he might be--had gone to their
-judgment.
-
-It was a nine-days' wonder, and while his friends and acquaintances were
-still discussing it at clubs and over tea-tables, Guy Spencer slipped
-quietly abroad. When he returned to England, at the end of twelve
-months, these tragic happenings had become little more than a memory to
-his world.
-
-He stayed a week with the Southleighs at their ancestral home in Sussex,
-and at the end of that week their friends read an important announcement
-in _The Morning Post_:
-
-"A marriage has been arranged and will shortly take place between Mr.
-Guy Spencer and his cousin, Lady Nina, only daughter and child of the
-Earl of Southleigh."
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of This House To Let, by William Le Queux
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