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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #56087 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/56087)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of In Queer Street, by Fergus Hume
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: In Queer Street
-
-Author: Fergus Hume
-
-Release Date: November 30, 2017 [EBook #56087]
-First Updated: February 12, 2018
-Last Updated: March 4, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN QUEER STREET ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charles Bowen from page scans provided by the
-Haithi Trust Org. --images digitized by Google (original
-from University of Wisconsin)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
- 1. Page scan source: Haithi Trust Org. images digitized by Google
- (original from University of Wisconsin)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-IN QUEER STREET
-
-
-BY
-FERGUS HUME
-AUTHOR OF
-"THE MYSTERY OF A HANSOM CAB," "THE PINK SHOP,"
-"ACROSS THE FOOTLIGHTS," "SEEN IN THE SHADOW,"
-ETC., ETC.
-
-
-
-LONDON
-F. V. WHITE & CO., LTD.
-17, BUCKINGHAM STREET, STRAND, W.C.
-1913
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-CHAP.
-I. THE BOARDING-HOUSE
-II. OLD SCHOOL-FELLOWS
-III. MAN PROPOSES
-IV. THE ADVERTISEMENT
-V. THE NEXT STEP
-VI. SEEKING TROUBLE
-VII. AN AMAZING DISCOVERY
-VIII. FAMILY HISTORY
-IX. GWEN
-X. VANE'S AUNT
-XI. MACBETH'S BANQUET
-XII. CUPID'S GARDEN
-XIII. DANGER
-XIV. AT BAY
-XV. A FRIEND IN NEED
-XVI. EXPLANATIONS
-XVII. BLACKMAIL
-XVIII. HENCH'S DIPLOMACY
-XIX. A DENIAL
-XX. REAPING THE WHIRLWIND
-XXI. THE SUNSHINE OR LIFE
-
-
-
-
-
-
-IN QUEER STREET
-
-
-
-
-
-
-IN QUEER STREET
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-THE BOARDING-HOUSE
-
-
-"Here," explained the landlady, "we are not wildly gay, as the serious
-aspect of life prevents our indulging in unrestrained mirth. Each one
-of us is devoted to an ideal, Mr. Spruce."
-
-"And what is the ideal, Mrs. Tesk?" asked the twinkling little man who
-was proposing himself as a boarder.
-
-"The intention of gaining wealth in virtuous ways, by exercising the
-various talents with which we have been endowed by an All-seeing
-Providence."
-
-"If you eliminate the word 'virtuous,' most people have some such
-ideal," was the dry reply of Mr. Spruce. "I want money myself, or I
-shouldn't come to live here. A Bethnal Green lodging-house isn't my
-idea of luxury."
-
-"Boarding-house, if you please," said Mrs. Tesk, drawing up her thin
-figure. "I would point out that my establishment is most superior.
-Brought up in scholastic circles, I assisted my father and my husband
-for many years in teaching the young idea how to shoot, and----"
-
-"In plain English, you kept a school."
-
-"Crudely put, it is as you say, Mr. Spruce," assented the landlady;
-"but habit has accustomed me to express myself in a more elegant way.
-My husband and my father having been long numbered with the angelic
-host, I was unable to continue successfully as a teacher of youth. A
-learned friend suggested to me that an excellent income might be
-derived from a high-class boarding-house. Therefore I rented this
-mansion for the purpose of entertaining a select number of paying
-guests."
-
-"Paying guests! How admirably you express yourself, Mrs. Tesk."
-
-"It has always been my custom to do full justice to our beautiful
-language, Mr. Spruce. Even my establishment has a name redolent of
-classic times. It is called--and not unfittingly I think--The Home of
-the Muses."
-
-"So I observed in your advertisement. Why not call this place
-Parnassus? Then one word would serve for five."
-
-"The suggestion is not without merit," said the former
-school-mistress. "I perceive, Mr. Spruce, that you have some knowledge
-of the classics."
-
-"I was educated at Winchester and Cambridge, Mrs. Tesk. The Home of
-the Muses--what a delightful name and how very appropriate."
-
-Poor Mrs. Tesk having no sense of humour, did not understand that this
-last remark was ironical, and smiled gravely in full approval. Spruce
-screwed in his eye-glass, and glanced with a shrug at his
-surroundings. These were scarcely calculated to satisfy a sybarite,
-being extremely ugly, inartistic, well-worn and dingy. The room, of no
-great size, was over-crowded with clumsy furniture made in the early
-years of the nineteenth century, when solidity was much more valued
-than beauty. What with six ordinary chairs, two armchairs, a
-horse-hair sofa to match, a sideboard, a bookcase, and a fender-stool
-all of mahogany, to say nothing of an Indian screen and a rosewood
-piano, there was scarcely room to move. And everywhere appeared
-patterns;--on the carpet, on the wall-paper, on the curtains and on
-the table-cloth: the eye ached to find some plain spot, which was not
-striped, or spotted, or scrolled, or dotted. The sole redeeming
-feature of the dreadful apartment was that many years and constant use
-had mellowed everything into a sober congruity, so that the whole
-looked comfortable and homely. As the Home of the Muses, it was an
-entire failure; as the sanctum of the sedate middle-aged woman in the
-worn black silk gown, it was quite successful. And as there were many
-out-of-date educational volumes in the bookcase, and as the walls were
-decorated with samplers, water-coloured drawings, geographical maps,
-and even with framed specimens of hand-writing, it could be easily
-guessed that the apartment belonged to a retired school-mistress.
-There was something quite pathetic in Mrs. Tesk's flotsam and jetsam,
-which she had saved from the dire wreck of her superior fortunes.
-
-And the landlady was as suited to the room as her visitor was
-unsuited, for there could not be a greater contrast than the two
-presented to one another. Mrs. Tesk belonged to a bygone age,
-while Spruce had to do with the very immediate present. In her
-shabby-genteel gown, which clothed a thin bony figure, and with a
-severe parchment-coloured face, the former teacher of the young looked
-very respectable indeed. Her mittens, her be-ribboned cap, her long
-gold chain, her large brooch containing locks of hair, and her cloth
-boots suggested the stories of Emma Jane Worboise and Mrs. Henry Wood.
-She was prim, pedantic and eminently genteel, the survival of an epoch
-when women wore full skirts and believed that their duty was to keep
-house, rather than to smash windows. Spruce stared at her through his
-eye-glass as he would have done at a prehistoric animal.
-
-The would-be boarder was the last expression of man, as representing
-the lily of the fields which toils not. He resembled a cherub and was
-dressed like a Nut, that last variety of the masher, the swell, the
-dandy and the buck. With his clean-shaven pink and white face, his
-mild blue eyes, his smooth fair hair, little hands, little feet, and
-general well-groomed aspect, he looked like a good boy thoroughly
-acquainted with the Church Catechism. But his extravagant attire
-suggested Piccadilly, music-halls, the Park and afternoon teas. He
-wore a pale-green suit, the coat of which was made to show his waist,
-and turned-up trousers, which revealed purple socks and brogues of
-russia leather. His waistcoat was cut low, revealing a lavender-hued
-shirt and a purple scarf painted with a portrait of a famous dancer;
-and he held a green Trilby hat in his gloved hands, together with a
-gold-headed cane and an unlighted cigarette, which he did not dare to
-smoke in the severe presence of Mrs. Tesk. On the whole, Mr. Cuthbert
-Spruce was a thing of beauty, and wore as many colours as Joseph did
-when he put on his famous coat. He was the kind of male doll that
-virile men long to kick but dare not lest they should smash the thing.
-
-When he had completed his survey of the room and of Mrs. Tesk, the Nut
-explained himself glibly. "I have come down here for a few months in
-order to study character for a book. Until I write that book I am
-rather hard up, so I should like to know if your terms are----"
-
-"Twenty-five shillings a week," interrupted Mrs. Tesk solemnly. "No
-one, not even the most captious, can call such terms expensive or
-prohibitive."
-
-"I certainly don't. In fact you ask so little that I am not sure if
-you can make me comfortable at the price."
-
-"Good food, a good bed and genteel society, Mr. Spruce. What more does
-mortal man require, save a fire, which is not necessary, seeing that
-summer is with us in all its annual glory?"
-
-"I don't think much of its annual glory comes to Bethnal Green, Mrs.
-Tesk. However, your terms will suit me, and I'll bring my boxes this
-afternoon. I can have a bath, I suppose?"
-
-"Sixpence extra if cold and one shilling if warm."
-
-"A cold bath will suit me as it is summer. Have you a valet in the
-house?"
-
-"No, Mr. Spruce. Such a menial is only to be found in the houses of
-the rich, as I understand from the perusal of novels read for
-recreation. Here you will find plain living and high thinking. My cook
-is an old servant, who is able to roast and boil healthy viands.
-Amelia, who is sixteen, attends to the house-work, and there is the
-boy, Simon Jedd--commonly called Bottles, which is a facetious
-appellation given to him by a paying guest inclined to merriment. Such
-is my staff."
-
-"And the paying guests?" asked Spruce, who began to think that five
-and twenty shillings was quite the top price to ask for such board and
-lodging.
-
-Mrs. Tesk coughed. "Our circle is limited at present to a chosen few,
-as London is rather empty just now, on account of the summer season,
-which attracts people to the green woods and the sounding sea. There
-is Madame Alpenny, who is of Hungarian extraction, but who married an
-Englishman; together with her daughter, Zara, a dancer of repute at
-the Bijou Music-hall. I hesitated to accept the daughter as a paying
-guest," added Mrs. Tesk loftily, "as my education scarcely permits me
-to approve of the profession of Terpsichore."
-
-"She was one of the Muses, you know," Spruce reminded her; "and as
-this is the Home of those ladies----"
-
-"Quite so," interrupted Mrs. Tesk in her most stately fashion. "That
-fact may have biassed me in my permitting her to reside under my roof.
-Also, not having many paying guests at present, the money was a
-consideration, and humanity interdicted me from parting mother and
-child; although I am bound to say that Madame Alpenny refused to come
-if I did not take her daughter also. Finally I consented, and since
-seeing Zara dance I have not regretted my yielding. She exhibits the
-poetry of motion in a high degree and is quite respectable."
-
-"Any other paying guests?"
-
-"Mr. Edward Bracken--ordinarily termed Ned,--who plays the violin in
-the Bijou orchestra with great delicacy, and Mr. Owain Hench, who is
-at present absent, and will not return for a week."
-
-Spruce rose and looked surprised. "Owain Hench. Will you spell his
-first name, Mrs. Tesk? I fancy I know him."
-
-Mrs. Tesk spelt the name slowly. "It is a Welsh title!" she said as
-if Hench was a member of the House of Lords, "and the spelling is
-peculiar. In history we are told of Owen Tudor, and Owen Glendower,
-who signed their Christian appellations somewhat differently."
-
-"It is the proper Welsh spelling," said Spruce, smiling. "He must be
-the same fellow I used to know at Winchester. We used to rag him about
-the queer way in which he spelt his name. Fancy Hench in this
-galley"--and he looked disdainfully round the shabby room--"I thought
-he was rich."
-
-"I am not acquainted with the financial affairs of Mr. Hench," said
-the landlady stiffly; "but I am quite certain that he is by no means
-endowed largely with specie. Nevertheless he is a kind-hearted and
-estimable young man, who will yet achieve fame and fortune, although
-in what particular direction it is at present hard to say. He has
-resided here for six months, so I can speak of his qualities with some
-knowledge."
-
-Spruce walked to the door. "I shall be glad to see Hench again," he
-remarked lightly. "Well, Mrs. Tesk, you may expect me and my luggage
-by four o'clock."
-
-"I understand." Mrs. Tesk folded her hands and bowed graciously. "You
-will be in time for afternoon tea, when I shall have the pleasure of
-introducing you to Madame Alpenny, Mademoiselle Zara, and to Mr.
-Edward Bracken. You will find us a happy family, Mr. Spruce, and I
-trust you will never regret coming to stay in The Home of the Muses."
-
-Spruce stifled a laugh and went out, lighting his cigarette and
-putting his hat on in the hall. He was immensely amused with the
-stately old-fashioned airs of the ex-school-mistress, and promised
-himself some fun in drawing her out. He did not anticipate a rosy time
-in the boarding-house, which was much too shabby and poor and
-sordid for one of his pleasure-loving nature; but he felt that the
-companionship of his old schoolfellow would enable him to pass the
-time fairly pleasantly. In his explanation to Mrs. Tesk as to his
-reason for coming to Bethnal Green, Mr. Spruce had not been entirely
-truthful, but the excuse of gathering material for a book would serve
-his purpose. The truth was that the Nut had been mixed up in a
-gambling affair with which cheating had been connected, so he had
-wisely determined to obliterate himself for a few months. Not being
-able to go abroad or into the country by reason of a lean purse, he
-had made up his mind to rusticate in Bethnal Green, and hoped that when
-the scandal was ended he could return to the West End. In the meantime,
-he was safe from observation, as no one would ever suspect that he was
-in London, so near and yet so far from civilization. He intended to give
-to Hench the same excuse as he had already given to Mrs. Tesk, and had
-no doubt but what it would be accepted. Hench, as he considered, was
-smart in many ways and the reverse in a few. While at Winchester he
-had been considered clever, but always over-confident that others were
-as honourable as himself, a belief which led to his being taken
-advantage of on many occasions. Spruce had never been intimate with
-Hench, as he belonged to a different set, but he was quite ready to be
-intimate with him now in such a dull locality as Bethnal Green. The
-cherubic little man by no means cared for the plain living and high
-thinking to which Mrs. Tesk had alluded, as he preferred high living
-and plain thinking, the latter having to do with thoughts of how to
-kill time by amusing himself. It was not likely that Hench would be of
-the same opinion, as from what Spruce remembered he had always been a
-solid sort of chap. Of course, it was eight years since the Nut had
-seen the young man, but if living in The Home of the Muses denoted his
-status, it was probable that he would be more solid than ever. And
-solid in the opinion of Mr. Spruce meant woeful dullness and
-pronounced common-sense. Therefore he scarcely anticipated that Hench
-would prove to be an ideal companion.
-
-However, owing to the trouble in the West End, Spruce had to make the
-best of things, and duly arrived at the appointed time with his five
-boxes. People did not usually come to Mrs. Tesk's establishment with
-so much luggage, but Spruce being a Nut, and eminently fashionable,
-required many clothes to set off his rather mean little person.
-Amelia, the maid-of-all-work, and Jedd, who was facetiously called
-"Bottles," helped the cabman to carry up the many trunks to the
-new-comer's bedroom, and looked upon him with awe as the owner of such
-costly paraphernalia. Mrs. Tesk was also pleased in her stately
-fashion, as the arrival of such a quantity of luggage imparted dignity
-in some mysterious way to her establishment. By four o'clock the new
-paying guest had taken possession of his new abode, and was on his way
-to the drawing-room to meet those already assembled under Mrs. Tesk's
-hospitable roof. To do honour to the occasion, and to produce a good
-impression, Spruce had changed into a brand-new suit, and looked like
-Solomon-in-all-his-glory when he entered the stuffy apartment
-grandiloquently termed the drawing-room. It was tolerably large and
-less crowded with furniture than the sanctum of the landlady, but the
-windows being closed and the day being warm, Spruce gasped when he
-ventured in. It was like entering the coolest room of a Turkish bath.
-
-"Allow me," said Mrs. Tesk in her deepest and most genteel voice. "Mr.
-Spruce, permit me to introduce you to Madame Alpenny, to Mademoiselle
-Zara Alpenny and to Mr. Edward Bracken. Madame Alpenny, Mademoiselle
-Alpenny and Mr. Edward Bracken, permit me to introduce you to Mr.
-Spruce, our new companion."
-
-During the landlady's long-winded introduction the Nut bowed to the
-several people mentioned and swiftly noted their outward looks. The
-Hungarian lady, who had married an Englishman, was a very stout woman,
-slightly taller than Spruce himself, which was not saying much, and
-the remains of former beauty were apparent in her face if not in her
-figure. It is true that her complexion was sallow and her hair an
-unpleasant red, but she had finely-cut features and splendid eyes,
-dark, eloquent and alluring. She wore a dark dress spotted with orange
-circles, a loose black velvet mantle trimmed with beads, and a large
-floppy picture-hat, together with many costly bracelets, rings,
-chains, brooches and lockets. Evidently she carried her fortune on her
-person for security, and looked like a walking jeweller's shop. Spruce
-saw at a glance that she was a lady, although why she should wear such
-shabby clothes and live in such a shabby place when she possessed such
-valuable ornaments he could not say. Privately he decided that she
-looked interesting, and determined to find out all about her during
-his stay in the boarding-house.
-
-"You will find us very quiet here," observed Madame Alpenny in
-excellent English, and smiling with very white teeth at the
-new-comer's resplendent appearance; "it will be dull in these parts
-for a young gentleman."
-
-"Oh, I can make myself at home anywhere, Madame," replied Spruce,
-accepting a cup of very weak tea from Mrs. Tesk. "My visit here is
-only to collect material for a novel."
-
-"I read the stories of my countryman, Maurus Jokai," said Madame with
-a nod. "You write like him. Is it not so?"
-
-"By no means. I know nothing of Maurus Jokai."
-
-"Gaszynski! Morzycka! Zmorski! Mukulitch! Riedl! Vehse?" the foreign
-lady ran off these difficult names of Polish, Russian and Hungarian
-authors still smiling; "you know them. Eh? What?"
-
-"Never heard of them Madame. They sound like names out of the Book of
-Numbers to me. I am a very ignorant person, as you will find."
-
-"Ah, say not so, Mr. Spruce. You like amusement perhaps. The dance,
-the cricket, the five o'clock tea? Tell me."
-
-"All those things are more in my line. I hear from Mrs. Tesk that your
-daughter dances?"
-
-"Ah, yes. Zara?"
-
-"I am at the Bijou Music-hall just now in a Fire-dance," said the girl
-in an indifferent manner, for Spruce had not made the same impression
-on her as he had on her mother; "and Mr. Bracken here is in the
-orchestra."
-
-"Second-violin," growled Bracken, who was paying great attention to
-the thin bread and butter. "Hard work and bad pay"--he stole a glance
-at the dancer--"but I have my compensations."
-
-The look was sufficient to make Spruce understand that the young man
-was in love with Zara, just as the frown of Madame Alpenny, who had
-intercepted the look, showed him the mother's disapproval. The dancer
-was a tall and rather gaunt girl, handsome in a bold gipsy flamboyant
-way, with flashing dark eyes and a somewhat defiant manner, while the
-violinist was roughly good-looking, and seemed to pay very little
-attention to his dress. Evidently a romance was in progress here, and
-Spruce promised himself some amusement in watching the efforts--which
-he was sure were being made--of the mother to keep the lovers apart.
-
-"You see," said Mrs. Tesk complacently, "we have many talents
-assembled here, Mr. Spruce. Mademoiselle Zara indulges in the light
-fantastic toe; Mr. Bracken is devoted to the noble art of music, and
-Madame Alpenny is conversant with the literature of foreign nations,
-which is natural considering her nationality. In my own person, I
-represent the English element of letters, and if you enjoy heart to
-heart talks, I am prepared to discuss poetry with you from Dan Chaucer
-down to Robert Browning."
-
-"Thanks very much," said the new guest hastily and scarcely relishing
-the prospect; "but my doctor won't let me read much, as my health is
-not very good. But I daresay," he added, glancing round at the queer
-set he found himself amongst, "we can get up a game of bridge
-occasionally."
-
-"Ah, but certainly," cried Madame with vivacity and her splendid eyes
-flashed; "for my part I delight in cards!"
-
-"My preference is for Patience," said Mrs. Tesk solemnly. "I find it
-relieves the strain on my mind. So long as the stakes are not very
-high, Mr. Spruce, I shall be delighted to join you and Madame and
-Mademoiselle Zara in a friendly game. Oh, you will not find us dull, I
-think. And when Mr. Owain Hench returns he will be able to inform you
-about many parts of the world not usually accessible to the ordinary
-person."
-
-Spruce rather resented Mrs. Tesk calling him an ordinary person, as he
-considered that he was head and shoulders above the assembled company.
-However, he did not allow any sign of annoyance at her density to
-escape him, but uttered a little chuckling laugh of acquiescence.
-"I'll be glad to see Hench again. He was always a good chap."
-
-"Ah!" Madame glanced at her defiant daughter and then at Spruce; "it
-appears, then, that you know Mr. Hench?"
-
-"We were at school together."
-
-"So! He is a charming young man."
-
-Zara laughed meaningly. "With money mamma thinks that he would be
-still more charming," she said significantly, and the sallow face of
-Madame grew red.
-
-"It is true," she admitted frankly. "When one has a daughter, one must
-be careful of charming young men who are not rich. What do you say,
-Mr. Spruce?"
-
-"Well, I never had a daughter, so I can't say anything," replied the
-little man, who was rapidly understanding many things. "And your
-opinion, Mr. Bracken, if I may ask it?" He put the question advisedly,
-as the mention of Hench's name had brought a scowl to the face of the
-violinist.
-
-"Money isn't everything," growled Bracken, passing his hand through
-his rough hair, which he wore a trifle long, after the fashion of
-musicians. "Hench is a good fellow, and being clever will be rich some
-day."
-
-"Ah! no"--Madame Alpenny shook her head vehemently--"he is too--what
-you call--careless of money. He is idle; he is a mystery."
-
-Spruce opened his pale blue eyes at the last word, and put in his
-monocle to stare at the Hungarian lady. "There never was any mystery
-about Hench at school," he observed rather puzzled. "He was always
-rather a commonplace sort of chap."
-
-"There is a mystery," insisted Madame more vehemently than ever. "I
-have seen him before, but where--no, it is impossible to say."
-
-"You don't mean to say that he is wanted by the police?" asked
-Bracken.
-
-"Don't speak like that!" cried Zara with a frown. "Mr. Hench is the
-most honourable man in the world. There is nothing mean about him."
-
-"He is all that is agreeable and polite," said her mother gravely;
-"and but for one thing I have no fault to find with him. Still, I have
-seen him somewhere, that young gentleman; he has a history!"
-
-"History! mystery! You jump to conclusions, mamma."
-
-"Zara, my father was a diplomatist, and I am observant."
-
-"Suspicious, I should say," remarked Bracken under his breath.
-
-But low as he spoke the woman heard him. "Of some people I am,"
-she said with a dark glance, which revealed that she was not so
-good-humoured as she looked.
-
-Zara rose with a swing of her skirts and looked as graceful and as
-dangerous as a pantheress. "I am going to lie down," she observed
-rather irrelevantly. "I always lie down, Mr. Spruce, so as to prepare
-for the fatigues of the night. If you ask Mr. Bracken he will take you
-to the smoking-room."
-
-"Oh, thanks," gasped Spruce, who did not wish to remain in the company
-of the violinist, whom he privately termed a bounder; "but I am going
-to my room to write letters."
-
-"Fancy staying in to write letters on this beautiful day. Mr. Bracken
-will be wiser, I am sure, and take a walk."
-
-"You've hit it," said Mr. Bracken, taking out a well-worn briar pipe.
-"I'm off for a breather." And he escorted Zara out of the room without
-noticing Spruce, to whom he had taken a dislike.
-
-Madame Alpenny half arose when she saw the two departing in company,
-but sat down again with a frown. In a few minutes she walked to the
-window and drew a sigh of relief on seeing Bracken standing on the
-pavement lighting his pipe. Spruce guessed by this by-play that she
-did not approve of the violinist being with her daughter, and became
-more certain than ever that the romance he had conjectured existed.
-Zara had got rid of Bracken, it was evident, so as not to leave him in
-the company of her mother. Hence her mention that the violinist would
-show Spruce the smoking-room, and her suggestion of a walk for Bracken
-when the new guest refused the offer of tobacco. However, Madame now
-seeing that the two were parted, returned to her seat satisfied, and
-resumed her talk about Mr. Hench.
-
-"You must tell me of your old schoolfellow," she said graciously; "he
-is a young man I greatly admire. I study his character."
-
-"An admirable character," said Mrs. Tesk loftily.
-
-"I cannot help you, Madame, as I haven't seen Hench for years," said
-Spruce.
-
-"Ah indeed! You will find him very mysterious!" And she nodded
-significantly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-OLD SCHOOL-FELLOWS
-
-
-Mr. Spruce found The Home of the Muses less dull than he expected it
-to be, in spite of its ridiculous name. For six days he amused himself
-very tolerably in contemplating the novelty of his surroundings, and
-in getting what amusement he could out of the same. Desiring
-"something new," after the fashion of the Athenians, he explored
-Bethnal Green more or less thoroughly, and learned that the seamy side
-of life here exhibited had attractions for a keen-witted observer, as
-he truly was. People in the West End were always on the look-out for
-money with which to indulge their fancies; people in this
-neighbourhood hunted likewise for the nimble shilling, but used it
-when obtained to keep a roof over their heads and bread in their
-mouths. But the excitement of the money-chase was always the same, and
-Spruce watched the same with great interest. In fact he took part in
-the hunt for dollars himself, as he also had to live in such comfort
-as his depleted purse could command.
-
-That Destiny had not dealt lavishly with Spruce was due to his own
-crooked way of propitiating the whimsical goddess, since he disliked
-honest toil. On leaving college and entering the great world, he had
-enjoyed a fair fortune nursed for years by jealous guardians, which
-ought to have kept him in luxury for the whole of his useless life.
-But the Nut, thinking he possessed the purse of Fortunatus, dipped
-into it too freely, and like the earthen pot at once smashed when the
-brass pots dashed against him. He entered a fast set, fascinating and
-expensive, whose members gambled heavily, who flirted freely with
-free-lance ladies and who ran up bills on every occasion. A few years
-of this life reduced Spruce to living on his wits, and as these were
-sharp enough, he managed to scramble along somehow and keep his head
-above water.
-
-But not making money fast enough honestly, he attempted to cheat at
-cards, and therefore was expelled from his profligate paradise. For
-this reason he had come to rusticate in Bethnal Green, and intended to
-return as soon as he could make sure of being tolerated in his former
-haunts and by his former associates. But as he had committed the one
-crime which society, however rapid, will never condone, the prospect
-of his being whitewashed was not very promising. However, the little
-man knew that money covers a multitude of sins, and would go far to
-excuse the particular sin of cheating, which had ruined him. He
-therefore looked here, there and everywhere during his retirement in
-the hope of making money, so that he could return with full pockets to
-the West End. But it must be admitted that Bethnal Green was not
-exactly Tom Tiddler's ground, and little gold and silver did Spruce
-pick up.
-
-The Nut certainly won a certain amount of money from Madame Alpenny,
-who was a born gambler, and staked her jewellery when coin was
-wanting. She was always hard up, as she frankly informed Spruce when
-she came to know him better, and had long since turned what money she
-possessed into the costly ornaments she wore. Zara earned enough to
-keep her mother and herself at the boarding-house, but otherwise spent
-her earnings on herself, knowing, as she did, that Madame Alpenny
-would only gamble away what was given her. Therefore the old woman
-sometimes had to sell a brooch or a bracelet in order to get funds for
-her gambling. She was clever at cards, but scarcely so clever, and it
-may be added unscrupulous, as Spruce, so by the end of the week her
-person was not quite so lavishly decorated with jewellery as it had
-been when the Nut first set eyes on her. But in spite of her bad luck,
-the Hungarian lady always behaved amiably towards Spruce, as she took
-him at his own valuation and believed him to be a rich young man
-indulging in the fantastic whim of living in Mrs. Tesk's house. It did
-not take much time for the Nut to see that Madame Alpenny's agreeable
-demeanour was due to the hope she entertained that he would make love
-to Zara, and perhaps become her son-in-law. Spruce had about as much
-idea of courting the dancer as of flying, but he allowed the lady to
-think that he admired her daughter so that she might continue to
-gamble. Being quite deceived as to his real status and his real
-intentions, she did; so Spruce found himself much better off in pocket
-by the end of the week, and about the time when Owain Hench was
-expected back.
-
-The little man was waiting for Hench, as he greatly desired to see if
-any money could be made out of him. People who travelled about the
-world, as Hench apparently did, often found gold-mines, or knew of
-some hidden treasure, or had an idea of how to make money in large
-quantities. Spruce was very vague as to how he could exploit Hench to
-his own advantage, as he had not seen him for eight years and did not
-know his possibilities. However, he was assured that while residing
-under the same roof as Hench he would soon be able to learn if he was
-worth making a friend of, and so waited anxiously for the young man's
-return. Meanwhile he gambled with Madame Alpenny; made himself
-agreeable to the ex-school-mistress, whom he found a frightful bore;
-and went several times to the Bijou Music-hall to see Mademoiselle
-Zara dance. To his surprise he found that she was really a very
-brilliant artist, who was entirely thrown away on a Bethnal Green
-audience, and asked himself quite seriously if it would not be worth
-while to marry her and secure for her an engagement at the West End.
-If she made a success there--as he was sure she would do--then she
-could support him in luxury and the old woman could be got rid of
-somehow. Oh, Spruce found many ideas in The Home of the Muses which
-might result in the gain of money, although he saw plainly that to
-bring the same to fruition time was necessary. At all events, he was
-making a living out of Madame Alpenny; foresaw possibilities in Zara's
-dancing with the chance of profit to himself, and always kept in his
-scheming little mind that Hench might prove to be a valuable
-acquaintance. Therefore, the six days prior to the young man's return
-proved to be amusing and profitable and promising. As Spruce had
-become an adventurer and a picker-up of unconsidered trifles, after
-the fashion of Autolycus, he was quite content with the progress he
-had made so far in his new camping-ground. For that it was, since
-Spruce had no idea of having a home, and disliked domesticity.
-
-It was on Sunday afternoon that Hench returned. Madame Alpenny was
-lying down for a rest, as she always did on the seventh day; Zara had
-slipped out for a walk with Bracken; and Mrs. Tesk was laboriously
-reading a religious book, which she found extremely dull, but
-considered the correct thing to peruse on the Sabbath. Spruce being
-left very much to his own devices, had amused himself by sorting his
-wardrobe, and towards five o'clock was beginning to find time hang
-heavy on his hands. With a yawn he descended to the smoking-room to
-idle away an hour with a cigarette and the Sunday papers. In the bleak
-little apartment devoted to the goddess Nicotine--a goddess unknown to
-the Olympians, it may be remarked--he came suddenly upon a tall young
-man who was puffing his pipe and listlessly staring out of the window.
-Rather from intuition than from positive knowledge, the Nut guessed
-that this was the returned wanderer.
-
-"Hullo, Hench, and how are you?" was his greeting, and he advanced
-with a gracious smile and an outstretched hand.
-
-The young man rose slowly, looking very much astonished, but
-mechanically accepted the proferred grasp. Apparently he did not
-recognize that this resplendent being was his old schoolfellow, and
-hinted as much in a rough and ready fashion. "Who the deuce are you?"
-he demanded with a puzzled expression.
-
-"Cuthbert Spruce!" replied the Nut, nettled as a vain man would be by
-the want of recognition.
-
-"Cuthbert Spruce! Well?" Hench still appeared to be ignorant and
-waited for some light to be cast upon the subject of this hearty
-greeting.
-
-"Oh, come now, you are an ass, Hench. Don't you remember Winchester,
-and the day you picked me up when I got lost during the hare and
-hounds run?"
-
-Hench stared at the pink and white cherubic face and a smile broke
-over his face, as he shook the little man's hand heartily. "Of course.
-Little Spruce, isn't it?"
-
-"I have already said as much," retorted the mortified Nut dryly.
-
-"Well, I didn't see much of you at Winchester, you know," confessed
-the stalwart young man, sitting down for a chat; "you were in a
-different set, anyhow. And I don't fancy I cared much for your set,
-such as it was. H'm!" Hench stared hard at the other and pulled hard
-at his pipe. "Yes. Little Spruce, of course, commonly called The
-Cherub. And by gad, Spruce, you're a cherub still."
-
-"No one could call you so, Hench," said Spruce affably, sitting down
-and producing a dainty cigarette-case; "you are more like Hercules,
-big and stolid and dull and honest."
-
-"What a mixture of depreciation and compliment," said Hench coolly.
-"Well, I am glad to see you, in spite of your somewhat free speech.
-After all, one's heart warms to a chap from the old school."
-
-"Rather!" agreed the Nut, whose heart never warmed towards any one or
-anything. "It's queer meeting you here. Let's have a look at you."
-
-Hench laughed and shifted his position, so that the light from the
-window fell full upon him. A woman would have thought, as women did
-think, that he was well worth looking at, since he was tall and
-stalwart, undeniably handsome and possessed of great strength. With
-his well-built figure and upright carriage he looked more like a
-soldier than anything else. His hair, closely cropped, was brown, as
-were his eyes, and he had a full spade-shaped beard which added to his
-virile looks. The two men formed a marked contrast, and the small,
-dainty, over-dressed Nut looked like a doll beside the big, handsome,
-carelessly attired man. And it was on this attire that Spruce's eyes
-were fixed, as it hinted at many things. A well-worn blue-serge suit,
-a woollen shirt and mended brown boots did not suggest money, any more
-than the presence of Hench in this cheap boarding house intimated a
-good income. The Nut began to think that his dreams of making use of
-Hench were purely visionary. There was no wealth to be extracted from
-such an obvious pauper. Nevertheless, Spruce, who never threw away a
-chance, behaved very cordially and paid compliments.
-
-"But for that beard you are just the same as you were at Winchester,"
-he remarked. "You were always big and heroic-looking. What are you
-doing here?"
-
-"Marking time!" said Hench laconically.
-
-"In the hopes of what?"
-
-"Of making my fortune."
-
-"Hum!" Spruce looked dissatisfied, as he did not care about meeting
-old schoolfellows who required help; "you do look down on your luck."
-
-"Not more than usual. I always make sufficient to keep my head
-above water by writing articles and stories for cheap newspapers
-and journals. But that is a poor state of things for a man of
-twenty-five."
-
-"There isn't much pie-crust about it, I admit, Hench. Why, I thought
-you were rich. I know at school the fellows always talked about your
-father being a Duke of sorts constantly on the move."
-
-"My father travelled a great deal on the Continent, certainly, and
-when I left school I joined him. But he died five or six years ago and
-left me with very little money. Since then I have been voyaging round
-the terrestrial globe to find money, and so far have not achieved
-success. But I say"--Hench broke off to re-fill his pipe--"why make me
-egotistical? My affairs don't interest you."
-
-"Oh yes, they do," Spruce protested, then baited his hook with a
-minnow to catch a possible whale. "And if you will allow me to be your
-banker----"
-
-"No! No! It's awfully good of you. But I have enough for my needs."
-
-"Well, when you haven't, come to me. Old schoolfellows, you know,
-should help one another at a pinch."
-
-"You're a good chap, Spruce," said the big man, gratefully.
-
-Spruce smiled graciously in response to the compliment, and privately
-considered that Hench was as trusting as he always had been, taking
-men at their own valuation, instead of putting a price on them
-himself. However, he had gained the good-will of the man by his
-delicate offer--which he by no means intended should be accepted--and
-therefore hoped, should Hench prove to be worth powder and shot, to
-benefit by his artful diplomacy. "Oh, that's all right, old fellow,"
-he said airily and blowing rings of smoke; "since we're in the same
-galley we may as well renew our old friendship."
-
-"Begin a friendship, you mean," said Hench very directly. "We weren't
-pals at school, so far as I can recollect."
-
-"No! that's true enough. But you picked me up out of that ditch and
-played the part of a Good Samaritan, so I have reason to be friendly."
-
-"Thanks! I'm with you, Spruce. While we camp here I daresay we'll see
-a lot of one another, and I shan't forget your kind offer to help. I'm
-not quick to make friends, you know, as I find most people jolly well
-look after themselves to the exclusion of every one else."
-
-"I do, myself," said the Nut coolly. "Don't think that I go about
-playing the part of the Good Samaritan haphazard. But an old
-schoolfellow, you know----"
-
-"Yes! I understand. There's something in having been at the same desk,
-isn't there. But I say, Spruce, what are you doing here? Now that I
-cast my memory back, you were supposed to be very well off."
-
-"Oh, I am still," lied the Nut in a most brazen way; "that is I have
-enough money on which to live comfortably, although not a millionaire.
-But the fact is, I have literary ambitions, and wish to write a book.
-Some fellow said that Bethnal Green had never been written up since
-the time of the celebrated beggar, so I thought I'd come down and
-gather material. I spotted Mrs. Tesk's advertisement in the papers and
-the name of the house attracted me."
-
-Hench laughed. "The Home of the Muses! It's rather a queer title to
-give a house in this poverty-stricken neighbourhood; but then Mrs.
-Tesk, bless her, is queer herself. She's a good sort though, all the
-same. Well, you've come to the right place to get material for a sort
-of Charles Dickens book. We all live in Queer Street here, Spruce."
-
-"Queer Street, which, like Bohemia, is nowhere and yet is everywhere,
-Hench."
-
-"You are epigrammatic. That won't do for a book of the Dickens type."
-
-The Nut shrugged his shoulders. "I don't know what sort of book I'll
-write, and that's a fact. In Queer Street, which I take it comprises
-the whole of Bethnal Green, there are many interesting people, for I
-have been walking about and have kept my eyes open. But those I find
-most interesting are under this roof."
-
-"Madame Alpenny?"
-
-"Yes! She's quite a character with her jewellery and her gambling. By
-the way, you won't find her so decked out Hindoo fashion as hitherto.
-During the week of my stay here, I have won two bracelets, several
-rings and a pair of ear-rings."
-
-Hench looked displeased. "You shouldn't encourage her love of
-gambling," he said strongly. "I'm not a saint, but it doesn't seem
-right for a well-to-do man such as you are to win Madame Alpenny's
-jewellery."
-
-"Why not? She has the same chance of winning my money. We play quite
-fairly, you know, Hench, and one must pass the time somehow. But I
-quite understand why you don't wish me to loot the lady."
-
-"Oh, do you." Hench grew red and smoothed his beard. "Well?"
-
-"I have listened and looked and questioned and considered while I have
-been here," explained the Nut coolly, "and by doing so I have found
-out your romance."
-
-"My romance!"--the big man bit his nether lip and thought that it was
-like the cheek of this finicky little devil to meddle with what did
-not in any way concern him--"what the deuce are you talking about?"
-
-"About your romance; about Bracken's romance; and about Mademoiselle
-Zara, who is the subject of both romances."
-
-"You are talking through your hat, Spruce."
-
-"By no means. I can give you chapter and verse for my surmises. Zara
-Alpenny is a handsome gipsy, although to my fancy she is a trifle
-gaunt and fierce, as any one can see. Her mother being poor, intends
-that her daughter shall be the wife of a wealthy man. You have fallen
-in love with this divinity of the Bijou Music-hall, and so has that
-bounder of a violinist. Madame Alpenny, knowing your circumstances,
-will have nothing to do with either of you as sons-in-law, preferring
-yours truly."
-
-"You!" Hench sat up and stared indignantly at the smooth speaker. "Now
-what the dickens do you mean by that rubbish?"
-
-"What I say. You understand King's English, I take it. But you need
-have no fear so far as I am concerned. Mademoiselle Zara is not my
-sort, and I have no intention of forwarding Madame Alpenny's
-matrimonial aims. But you----"
-
-Hench rose, looking considerably irritated. "I wish you would mind
-your own business," he said sharply. "You have found a mare's nest."
-
-"Oh, well," observed Spruce lazily, "if that is the case I may as well
-change my mind and become a suitor for Zara's hand."
-
-"You shall do nothing of the sort."
-
-"Why not? You don't love her, if I am to credit your mare's nest
-parable."
-
-Hench found that the Nut was too sharp for him and sat down with a
-defeated air. "I admire the girl, rather than love her," he admitted
-reluctantly. "She's a good sort and would make a good wife--something
-of a comrade, you know."
-
-"I don't think that fierce-eyed girl would care for a marriage of the
-comrade sort, Hench. She wants love of the most pronounced and
-romantic kind, and that kind she is getting from Bracken. He worships
-her, and will carry off the prize if all you can give is cautious
-admiration."
-
-"It's none of your business, anyway," fumed the big man.
-
-"No. I admit that! But suppose I make it my business by asking Madame
-Alpenny for her daughter's hand. She believes me to be rich and----"
-
-"And you are not. Come, be honest."
-
-Spruce saw that he had overshot the mark and retreated dexterously. "I
-have already been honest, as I told you that I was not a millionaire
-but only well off. Anyhow, I am a better husband for Zara so far as
-money is concerned than you or that bounder."
-
-"But hang it, man, you can't love her. You've only known her a week."
-
-"I never said that I did love her, or could possibly come to love her.
-Still, Zara is handsome and clever, so why shouldn't I make her my
-comrade-wife, since you suggested the same kind of half-baked alliance
-with yourself."
-
-"Look here, Spruce," stated the other very seriously, and irritated by
-the nimble wit of his schoolfellow, "you have proved yourself to be a
-decent sort by offering to help me. For that offer I thank you, and
-because of it I am willing that we should be friends. But if you make
-love to Zara we are sure to quarrel."
-
-"Aren't you rather a dog-in-the-manger, Hench?"
-
-"No. I admire the girl."
-
-"She wants love, which you evidently can't give her," retorted Spruce
-in an emphatic manner. "Now, if I can love her----"
-
-"You said that she wasn't your sort."
-
-"She isn't. Still, she is handsome, and one might pick up a worse
-wife."
-
-"But not a worse mother-in-law. So far as I am concerned it doesn't
-matter, as I have neither kith nor kin to my knowledge, and, moreover,
-I am a vagabond upon the face of the earth. But with your family
-connections and position and money, the marriage would not be a
-success, seeing that it entails your taking Madame Alpenny to the West
-End. There she would scarcely do you credit."
-
-Spruce rocked with laughter, and wondered what Hench would say if he
-knew the true position of affairs which had been so carefully withheld
-from him. "I give in, old fellow," he said, wiping his eyes with a
-mauve silk handkerchief and wafting a perfume about the room. "I was
-only codding you. I don't want to marry the girl. But Bracken does."
-
-"And so do I," rejoined Hench tartly.
-
-"H'm! I'm not so sure of that. Yours is a cold-blooded wooing. The
-girl asks you for the bread of love and you give her the stone of
-admiration."
-
-"She doesn't ask me for love," said the tall young man with a sigh. "I
-am not so blind but what I can see that she loves Bracken."
-
-"Then why don't you sheer off?"
-
-"I don't like any man to get the better of me."
-
-"There speaks the buccaneer, the cave-man, the prehistoric grabber.
-Lord! what a weird state of things, and how simple you are, Hench, to
-place all your cards on the table. I can teach you a thing or two."
-
-"I am quite sure you can," said Hench dryly, and disliking the wit of
-this effeminate little creature, which was so extremely keen; "but I
-go my own way, thank you, and dree my own weird. It is probable
-that I will ask Madame Alpenny if I can marry Zara, and if Zara is
-agreeable----"
-
-"Which by your own showing she won't be," put in Spruce
-parenthetically.
-
-"----I'll marry her. If not, I'll go away and let Bracken make her his
-wife."
-
-Spruce rose with a yawn. "I fancy Madame Alpenny will have a word or
-two to say to that, my dear fellow. Why don't you skip now?"
-
-"Because I admire Zara and mean to give her the chance of accepting or
-rejecting me," said Hench doggedly. "Also, I can't leave London for a
-few weeks, as I have to interview my father's lawyers."
-
-"What about?"
-
-"I can't tell you. My father left certain papers with his lawyers
-which were to be given to me when I attained the age of twenty-five.
-My birthday arrives shortly, and then I'll see what is to be done."
-
-"It sounds like a mystery," yawned Spruce, apparently in a listless
-manner, but secretly all agog to learn what the lawyers of his friend
-knew; "Madame Alpenny says you are a mystery."
-
-"Me!" Hench laughed scornfully; "why, there's nothing mysterious about
-me. As you said just now, I am a simple person who places all his
-cards on the table."
-
-"Yes"--Spruce nodded--"more fool you. Now, if you will only allow that
-old woman to think that there really is a mystery connected with
-you--and there seems to be so far as this legal interview is
-concerned--she may give you a chance of becoming her daughter's
-husband."
-
-"Perhaps! But why does she think me a mystery?"
-
-"I can't tell you. She was very vague about the matter. She declares
-that she has seen you somewhere and that you have a history."
-
-"History be hanged. My father had sufficient money to travel about and
-put me to school at Winchester. When I left I joined him, and we went
-through Europe to this place and that until he died and was buried in
-Paris. What mystery is there about that?"
-
-"None. But your family----?"
-
-"I haven't got any save my father, who is dead. And he told me very
-little about himself or his belongings. We are a Welsh family, I
-believe."
-
-"Hench isn't a Welsh name."
-
-"Owain is, anyhow, and the spelling is old Welsh," retorted the other.
-
-"True. We used to rag you about the spelling at school. Well, with
-such a name as that, you might find out the truth about your family."
-
-"I'm not curious."
-
-"You should be then, as I would be if I were in your shoes. For all
-you know there may be a title and money waiting for you."
-
-"Oh, rubbish! Well, you can tell Madame Alpenny what I have told you.
-No. On second thoughts, I'll tell her myself. She and her mystery,
-indeed!" and with a scornful nod Hench left the bleak smoking-room.
-
-Spruce reflected that Hench was a simpleton to be so frank about his
-private affairs, and had not changed, so far as trusting people went,
-since his school-days. "Also there is a mystery," he mused. "I'll
-search it out."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-MAN PROPOSES
-
-
-Everyone, without exception, was glad that Hench had returned, for he
-appeared to be a favourite with all. And not the least pleased to see
-him was the boy Simon Jedd, commonly called "Bottles." He was a
-freckled, red-haired, laughing youngster of fifteen, with a wide mouth
-and a snub nose, not by any manner of means handsome, but genial and
-cheerful and extremely honest. He helped Amelia with the house-work,
-ran errands, waited at table, cleaned the boots of the paying guests,
-and earned his scanty wages by making himself uncommonly useful on all
-and every occasion. But being a restless youth, and much given at odd
-moments to reading books of highly-coloured adventure in the form of
-penny stories, he had a soul above his drudgery, and longed with all
-his heart to face dangers of the most pronounced kind. Such a lad was
-bound to have some sort of actual hero to worship and adore.
-
-In Hench, Bottles saw exactly the pioneering type, which was his ideal
-of perfect manhood, and he looked upon the young man as the model of
-all the virtues which most appealed to him. This being the case, he
-never could do enough to prove his devotion. No bed was so well made
-as that of Hench; no room was kept so spotlessly clean, and no boots
-were so highly polished. Half amused and half touched by this genuine
-hero-worship, Hench lent the boy books of travel, told him about his
-adventures in far lands, gave him odd shillings to patronize the local
-picture palace and music-hall, and generally treated him in a way
-which made the heart of the boy swell with pride. It was no wonder
-that Bottles adored him and could never do enough for him.
-
-On the morning after his return, Hench found his clothes well brushed,
-his bath ready, and a cup of tea at his elbow, while Bottles hovered
-round the room wondering what else he could do to show his rejoicing
-spirit. In his shabby patched clothes, and wearing an apron of green
-baize, Bottles grinned respectfully when Hench sat up in bed to drink
-his tea. He also supplied him with small-beer chronicles concerning
-events which had taken place in The Home of the Muses during his
-hero's absence. Hench cared very little for such gossip, but allowed
-Bottles to prattle on because it pleased the lad. And certainly Master
-Jedd might have been a detective, so full and clever was his report.
-In the course of his narrative he arrived at Spruce. Then Hench really
-did listen, for, simple as he was, he began to wonder if the Nut had
-given his true reason for this visit to Bethnal Green.
-
-"Such a swell as he is, ain't he?" babbled Bottles, who was now
-slipping links and studs into Hench's shirt. "I never did see a cove
-come with so many boxes, sir. Must be rich, I think, though he ain't
-free with his money. Says he knew you at school, sir, he does. True,
-ain't it?"
-
-"Quite true, Bottles!" replied Hench, nodding. "I haven't seen him for
-eight or more years."
-
-"And you don't like him now you do see him, do you, sir?"
-
-"Why should you say that?"
-
-"Well, sir"--Bottles scratched his scarlet poll--"he don't seem to me
-to be quite your style. There ain't no Buffalo Bill, Pathfinder
-business about him. If you don't mind my saying so, sir, I don't think
-it's cricket his winning all that foreign lady's jewellery at cards,
-nohow."
-
-"That's none of your business, Bottles."
-
-"Sorry, sir. But I can't help seeing and thinking when I do see. And
-what's a swell like him doing down here, I'd like to know?"
-
-"You'd better ask him."
-
-"And get a clip on the ears for my pains, sir. Not me. Though I dessay
-he ain't the cove to hit out."
-
-"Too kind-hearted?" asked Hench, amused.
-
-"Well," said Bottles slowly, "I shouldn't use them words myself. Mr.
-Spruce is the kind of feller who'd trip you up when you wasn't
-looking; but I don't think he'd meet any one's eye straight. Seems to
-me as he might have done a glide, if you take me, sir."
-
-"I don't take you, Bottles?"
-
-"Bolted, mizzled, cut away," explained the boy earnestly. "Swells
-don't come to this place for fun."
-
-"Don't be a fool, boy. Mr. Spruce has only come here to gather
-material for a book he is writing."
-
-"Oh, he says that, do he, sir? Well, I don't think! Ho! I'll keep my
-eye on all the illustrated papers and see if his picture's in 'em."
-
-"Why should his picture be in them?"
-
-Bottles shook his head mysteriously and skipped lightly towards the
-door. He saw that Hench did not approve of his groundless suspicions,
-so made up his mind to say no more. All the same, having got the idea
-that Spruce had "done something" into his head, which came from
-reading too many penny-dreadful romances, he made up his mind to watch
-the Nut. This he did not tell his hero lest he should be forbidden to
-"follow the trail," as he put it. Therefore he held his tongue and
-removed himself swiftly.
-
-While Hench took his bath and dressed slowly, he wondered if by
-chance the boy had hit the mark. It did appear to be strange that a
-well-to-do and fashionable young man should come and live amidst such
-sordid surroundings. Spruce's story of gathering material for a novel
-was plausible enough, yet somehow it did not ring true. Hench, as the
-Nut thought with some degree of truth, was a very simple and
-unsuspicious person, but he was not quite such a fool as Mr. Spruce
-imagined him to be. Affable as the young man had been, and pleased as
-he was with his old schoolfellow's offer of pecuniary aid, he could
-not bring himself to like the Cherub. His dandified dress, his
-mincing ways, his gorgeous array and use of perfume, irritated the
-rough-and-ready manhood of Hench. He sensed something poisonous about
-the little man, and resolved very rightly to be wary in his dealings
-with him. Moreover, Spruce was altogether too curious about matters
-which did not concern him, though why he should be so Hench was unable
-to say. The Nut had made himself acquainted with the affairs of every
-one in the house since his arrival, and knew much which could not
-possibly interest him. However, if he had come to Bethnal Green to
-plot and contrive, it would be a case of diamond cut diamond, for
-Hench guessed that Bottles would keep his eye on the little man's
-doings. And the eye of Bottles was sharp, while the brain of Bottles
-was keen; so the schemes of Mr. Spruce would be baffled in the end,
-always presuming that he really had any.
-
-"But it's all bosh," said Hench aloud to himself, as he made ready to
-go down to breakfast. "Spruce has come here to write a book, and it's
-silly of me to make a mountain out of a molehill. I daresay he'll
-grow tired of this dull life here and cut away back to the West End.
-Upon my word I shan't be sorry when he goes. Strange that Bottles
-should dislike him so thoroughly. He's a sharp lad, is Bottles, and
-doesn't usually make mistakes."
-
-Having unloaded his mind in this soliloquy, Hench descended to
-breakfast and enjoyed that meal all alone, as he was late and every
-one was out. Spruce, indeed, was having breakfast in his room, and of
-this Hench was glad, as he always liked to read the newspaper while
-drinking his coffee. This would have been impossible had such a
-chattering magpie as the Nut been present. But he did not escape the
-attentions of his old schoolfellow entirely, for Spruce made his
-appearance just as he finished eating. The Nut wore a suit of
-cream-coloured serge with a black necktie, black boots, black gloves,
-and a black hat of soft felt. Hench stared.
-
-"I say, you look like a negative," he remonstrated. "Don't go out in
-that get-up or you'll be mobbed."
-
-"Oh, no," said Spruce smoothly; "only pointed at. I'm accustomed to
-that, as I have put on a different suit every day since coming here.
-It must be a pleasure for these Bethnal Green rotters to see a
-well-dressed man."
-
-"I don't mind a fellow being well dressed," retorted Hench with
-emphasis, "but I do object to over-dressing."
-
-Spruce shrugged his shoulders. "You never did care to look decent."
-
-"I'm decent enough; confound your impudence!"
-
-"What with that shaggy beard and shabby clothes, and----"
-
-"There! There! Keep off the grass, Spruce. My clothes are well enough,
-although I do admit my beard is a trifle out of place. But when I
-returned from South America six months ago I never bothered to shave.
-Too much trouble."
-
-"Well, if I were a good-looking chap such as you are, I would pay more
-attention to my appearance. Coming out for a walk?"
-
-"No. Not with you in that get-up!"
-
-Spruce laughed. "Rum sort of chap you are to object to a fellow
-dressing decently. However, have it your own way. I'll see you this
-afternoon."
-
-Hench nodded absently and filled his pipe, while Spruce departed to
-delight the jeering inhabitants of Bethnal Green. And they did jeer,
-in what Spruce considered their coarse, common, vulgar way, but did
-not manage to upset him in the least. He was much too conceited to
-think that he could possibly be wrong in his selection of clothes. And
-it must be confessed that, as the day was hot even for July, he looked
-wonderfully cool and comfortable in his white garb. The men jeered,
-but for the most part the women admired him, and so long as he gained
-admiration from the fair sex Spruce was wholly content. So he screwed
-in his eye-glass and strutted and smiled, and made a progress through
-the main streets of Bethnal Green with a heroism worthy of a better
-cause. And it was heroism in a way to venture amongst the great
-unwashed in such fantastic clothes, although in Spruce it took the
-form of absolute vanity, and a certainty that he was "a thing of
-beauty and a joy for ever."
-
-As the day was warm and sunny the Nut did not return to luncheon, but
-enjoyed that meal in a City restaurant. He did not risk travelling
-beyond Fleet Street, lest he should stumble against some former friend
-who certainly would not be amiably disposed. Like the Peri, Spruce
-stood at the Gates of Paradise, but did not dare to venture in, so
-after a long look up the Strand, which was closed to him, he returned
-gloomily to Bethnal Green. But by the time he reached The Home of the
-Muses, he felt much better, as his nature was too shallow for him to
-be impressed strongly by any emotion--sorrowful or joyful. It was late
-in the afternoon when he entered the dingy drawing-room, and here he
-found Hench and Madame Alpenny enjoying the regulation tea. Zara,
-it appeared, was lying down to refresh herself for the evening's
-performance, and Bracken was attending a rehearsal. As for Mrs. Tesk,
-her mind was engaged with the approaching dinner, and she was
-consulting the cook in the kitchen.
-
-As soon as Bottles, who was attending to the meal, saw Spruce stepping
-in he became at once upon the alert, and devoured him with his light
-blue eyes. Hench, noticing this espionage, sent the lad away to get
-fresh tea, as he did not approve of Bottles watching and listening to
-what did not concern him. Madame Alpenny smiled blandly when Spruce
-entered and complimented him on his cool looks. She was hot herself,
-and this was little to be wondered at, as she wore her constant black
-dress with the orange spots, her picture hat and her heavy bead
-mantle. The Nut wondered if she had any other clothes, as she never
-seemed to wear another garb.
-
-"You are just in time, Mr. Spruce," said Madame Alpenny in her lively
-way, and after she had paid her compliment. "Tell me what you know of
-Mr. Hench here."
-
-Spruce stared. "Why do you ask me that?"
-
-"Indeed you may well ask," said Hench with a frown, "as you cannot
-answer the question. But Madame here will not permit me to pay
-attention to Mademoiselle Zara until she knows more about me."
-
-"I am a good mother, you see, and must consider my daughter's
-happiness," was the reply of the Hungarian lady, as she took the
-freshly filled teapot from Bottles and sent him out of the room again.
-
-"If that is the case," said Spruce politely, "then you must allow her
-to become Mrs. Bracken."
-
-"Certainly I shall not. Ah, but you are smiling."
-
-"Indeed, I think your daughter will only be happy with Bracken,"
-insisted the Nut lightly. "He loves her, and I think that she loves
-him."
-
-"In that case," commented Madame with a shrug and glancing at Hench,
-"there is no chance for you."
-
-"I admire Mademoiselle Zara and wish to make her my wife," said Hench
-steadily. "I am young and strong, and will soon make a fortune."
-
-"So far you have been unsuccessful," she replied dryly; "and for my
-daughter I prefer a ready-made fortune." Her eyes rested on Spruce as
-she spoke. The little man did not take the hint, but chuckled softly
-in his hateful fashion, so she was obliged to go on. "Tell me, Mr.
-Spruce, what do you know of Mr. Hench?"
-
-"Only that he is the best fellow in the world."
-
-Hench frowned. "I don't see how you can swear to that, seeing we have
-not met for eight years."
-
-"Oh, you were always a good sort of chap," said Spruce gaily. "If you
-don't mind my saying so, you haven't enough brains to be wicked. It
-takes a clever person to sin properly."
-
-"Ah, but you will amuse yourself with this talk," broke in Madame,
-smiling. "I want a good man for my daughter."
-
-"Take Bracken, then. He's a bit of a bounder, but decent enough."
-
-The old woman pursed up her lips and shook her head. After a few
-moments of reflection she spoke freely. "My daughter must marry money,
-and neither you, Mr. Hench, nor Mr. Bracken have any money. I will not
-allow you to pay your addresses to her. Nor will Zara receive them.
-She is a good girl and loves her old mother."
-
-"Well, Hench," said Spruce, when this speech was ended, "now you know.
-Are you not heart-broken?"
-
-"No!" retorted Hench sharply. "Nor am I defeated. Zara will decide."
-
-"She will decide what I order her to decide!" cried Madame Alpenny
-furiously. "And my daughter is not for you, Mr. Hench!"
-
-"I should prefer to discuss that question privately," said the young
-man in a stiff, haughty way; "there is no need for Mr. Spruce to be
-present."
-
-"Oh, don't say that," chimed in the Nut reproachfully; "I may be able
-to help you, old fellow. You don't go the right way to work."
-
-"It's my own way," snapped Hench restlessly, and objecting to
-interference.
-
-"Then it's the wrong way," snapped Spruce in his turn. "Remember that
-Madame Alpenny thinks you are a mystery. Use that to help you."
-
-"In what way?" Hench opened his brown eyes.
-
-"Mysterious persons are always interesting, and if Madame here finds
-that you may turn out to be some one great, who knows but what she may
-change her mind?"
-
-"Are you something great?" asked the lady, addressing Hench quickly.
-
-"No. I am nobody, and will remain nobody. Why should you think that I
-am, what you call, a mystery?"
-
-"It is hard to say," she answered dreamily and staring hard at him.
-"I have seen eyes like yours somewhere. They are connected with a
-story--a kind of family mystery. But I can't remember to whom those
-eyes belonged."
-
-"Perhaps you have met our friend here before," suggested the Nut
-eagerly.
-
-"No!" said Madame positively, and Hench also shook his head. "I met
-him here for the first time. The person who had eyes like him I
-met--or I fancy I met--some twenty years ago. But it is all vague and
-uncertain. Yet I feel that the story I allude to is here"--she touched
-her forehead--"a mere word will bring it back to my memory."
-
-"Then let us try and find the magic word," cried the irrepressible
-Spruce. "I am desperately curious myself to fathom a mystery which the
-person concerned in it does not guess."
-
-"Meaning me," said Hench tartly. "You are talking rubbish."
-
-"Sense, sense, common-sense. When the mystery is discovered you may be
-able to marry Mademoiselle Zara."
-
-"There is no mystery about me, I tell you."
-
-"Well, I am not so sure of that," remarked the little man, in spite
-of his friend's frown. "You don't know anything about your family, as
-you admitted to me. Yet I dare swear that those papers you are to
-inspect at your lawyers' in a few weeks, when you arrive at the age of
-twenty-five, may contain a history which will astonish you."
-
-"Papers at your lawyers'," echoed Madame Alpenny, looking excited; "is
-that so?" Hench reluctantly admitted that such was the case. "But I
-don't suppose that anything I don't know will come to my knowledge."
-
-"Who knows," observed the old lady thoughtfully. "Mr. Spruce is right.
-This hint of mystery interests me in you and makes me more ready to
-entertain your proposal to marry Zara. If you turned out to be
-wealthy----"
-
-"I never will, I tell you," insisted Hench crossly.
-
-"Then why are these mysterious papers in existence? No! believe me,
-they have a story to tell. I am better disposed towards you because of
-those papers, as who knows to what they may lead. Mr. Spruce is right
-about a mystery interesting me, and I congratulate Mr. Spruce. He
-ought to be in the diplomatic service. His knowledge of human nature
-does him credit."
-
-Evidently both Madame and the Cherub were bent upon building a castle
-in the air, as Hench could not think that the papers in question were
-likely to make him a rich man. His father had never been rich, and
-knowing the sybaritism of his deceased parent, the young man was
-pretty certain that if there had been any money about, the elder Hench
-would have obtained it to waste. "You are both wrong," he said
-gloomily. "There is not likely to be a fortune waiting for me when I
-read those papers. My name is a commonplace one, and I have every
-reason to believe that my family is commonplace also. My father never
-gave me any information about his parents. All I know is that his name
-was Owain Hench, as mine is, and that he once or twice remarked that
-his youth had been passed in some Welsh place, called Rhaiadr!"
-
-The effect of this last word on Madame was astonishing. She turned
-quite pale with sudden emotion, her large dark eyes blazed into vivid
-life and she clapped her hands loudly. "Rhaiadr! Owain of Rhaiadr! The
-word means water tumbling over a rock--a waterfall. Ah, yes, and so
-they call a torrent in the barbarous country of Wales."
-
-Hench stared at her, not understanding this outburst, but Spruce, much
-more alive to what was meant, laughed and nodded. "We have hit upon
-the magic word, it seems," he observed, all on the alert for
-knowledge. "Tell us who was the owner of the eyes which were like
-those of Hench's, Madame?"
-
-"Your father had such eyes," said Madame, turning to the astonished
-man.
-
-"My father!"--Hench started to his feet--"you have never met my
-father. Why, he died about five years ago."
-
-Madame nodded complacently and signed that he should seat himself
-again. "Ah, is that so? He is dead, then. Oh, but I did meet him, Mr.
-Hench. Some twenty years back--it was in Buda Pesth. I remember it
-all"--she pressed her jewelled fingers to her forehead--"it all comes
-back to me."
-
-"Tell us about it, then," suggested Spruce eagerly. "Bah!" said Hench
-rather rudely, "it's all imagination."
-
-"Indeed it is not," protested Madame, gesticulating. "If it were so,
-how would I know that Rhaiadr meant a waterfall and was in Wales, a
-country I know nothing about? Owain of Rhaiadr!--that is what your
-father called himself."
-
-"Owain is my Christian name, and was my father's before me. But we
-don't live in the Middle Ages, when a man was known by his first name
-being connected with a town, or village, or county, or country. Owain
-Hench of Rhaiadr, if you like, Madame."
-
-The woman shook her head and her eyes sparkled like diamonds. "Ah, but
-it is not so. Owain of Rhaiadr was what your father said. I remember
-we were sitting on the terrace of the hotel, and feeling ill, he
-sought my sympathy. Ah, my friend, and more than my sympathy. He
-wished to marry me."
-
-"Marry you!" Hench stared at the withered old woman in amazement.
-
-"Why not? I was a handsome young widow in those days and had some
-money. Afterwards I lost it, being unlucky at cards."
-
-"Well, let us hope that to make up for your loss you were lucky in
-love," said Spruce affably.
-
-"No! I did not wish to marry again, as I was devoted to the memory of
-my English husband. But I liked your father, Mr. Hench, even though I
-refused to become his wife. He was not rich, you understand, so it was
-useless for me to marry a poor man. But I liked him because he was
-well-bred and sympathetic in many ways. How it all comes back to me. I
-told him of my daughter, who was with her nurse in the gardens below
-the terrace, and he informed me that he had a son of four or five, who
-was in England being looked after by strangers."
-
-"By strangers," echoed Hench bitterly; "that is true. All my life I
-have had to do with strangers."
-
-"Ah, but, my friend, it was not the fault of your good father," said
-Madame in a hurried tone. "His young wife--your mother--died early,
-and it was impossible for your father to travel about the Continent
-with a baby--as you were."
-
-"A baby of over four years old could have travelled well enough," said
-Hench in a sombre tone; "but my father never cared about me over-much.
-He----" here the young man checked himself, as he did not wish to
-discuss his father in the presence of Spruce, although he might have
-done so with Madame Alpenny, since he desired to marry her daughter.
-After a pause he continued: "Well, did my father tell you his family
-history?"
-
-It was quite one minute before the old lady answered this question.
-She reflected deeply, with her eyes searching his handsome face, then
-shook her head sadly. "No! We were not so confidential as that. We met
-several times again, but as I refused to marry him, your father went
-away to Paris. I never saw him again, but the memory of his eyes
-remained, and those same eyes you now use to look at me suggested my
-old romance."
-
-"They would not have done so but for the magic word Rhaiadr," said
-Spruce in brisk tones. "Well, Hench, you see that there is a mystery."
-
-"There is not," declared the young man sharply and much vexed. "Your
-mystery resolves itself into what Madame here calls her romance. My
-father asked her to marry him and she refused. Very wisely, I think,"
-he added, as if to himself--"she would never have been happy."
-
-Madame overheard him, shrugged her shoulders, and rose, looking more
-shapeless in figure and more untidy in dress than ever. "In any case,
-I have never been happy," she said sadly, "so it does not matter. But
-I am now inclined to consider your proposal to pay attentions to
-Zara."
-
-"He is not yet rich, remember," put in Spruce, grinning.
-
-"Mind your own business," said Hench vehemently.
-
-"No"--Madame's tone was peculiar--"and perhaps he never may be rich.
-But if Zara likes you, I am not sure but what I will not allow you to
-marry her. No, I have not yet quite made up my mind. Give me time to
-think"--she moved ponderously towards the door. "Owain of Rhaiadr! Ah,
-if you were only able to call yourself that. Well, who knows," and
-with a mysterious nod she disappeared.
-
-"Queer thing, coming across an old flame of your father's in Queer
-Street," said the Nut affably. "What do you think?"
-
-"I think," said Hench in anything but an amiable tone, "that you had
-better mind your own damned business."
-
-Spruce was by no means offended. "As you will, although you should be
-sensible enough to use my brains to help you with your family
-mystery."
-
-"There is no mystery. How often am I to repeat that?" And Hench walked
-away fuming with rage at the little man's persistence.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-THE ADVERTISEMENT
-
-
-Hench felt annoyed with himself for talking so freely about his
-private affairs in the presence of Spruce, yet he could not see how he
-could have done otherwise. Madame Alpenny, disregarding the obvious
-fact that his proposal for her daughter's hand was not for public
-discussion, had appealed to the little man for information concerning
-the suitor, and in this way the Nut had been drawn into the
-conversation. If was not that Hench affected reticence, as he was a
-singularly frank man; or that there was anything to conceal in his
-past life, since that was free from punishable misdeeds. But it
-irritated him that Spruce should meddle, as the man appeared to have a
-finger in everybody's pie, and Hench saw no reason why he should have
-anything to do with this particular pastry. For this reason he gave
-his old schoolfellow the cold shoulder.
-
-Spruce objected to this, as it was his aim to ingratiate himself, with
-a view to possible happenings which would place him in possession of
-money. At the outset Hench's friendship had not appeared to be worth
-cultivating, as he was poor, aggressively honest, and not at all a man
-to be exploited by the unscrupulous. But after Hench's confidence
-regarding the papers at the lawyers', Spruce scented a mystery which
-might be profitable. His suspicions, which at the outset were of the
-very faintest description, received colour and were rendered more
-substantial by the knowledge that Madame Alpenny had been acquainted
-with the young man's father. Spruce had noted her hesitation in
-replying to the question concerning the telling of the family history,
-and was satisfied in his own mind that she knew more than she would
-admit. The fact that after the conversation in the drawing-room she
-was willing to consider the proposal of marriage to Zara, implied that
-there was something in the wind. Having regard to Madame Alpenny's
-poverty and to her desire that Zara should marry a wealthy man, that
-something undoubtedly had to do with money. As yet Spruce was very
-vague about the whole matter, as his information was not accurate
-enough to enable him to act. But the key to the mystery, whatever it
-might be, was in the possession of Madame Alpenny, therefore the Nut
-watched her carefully. If she was agreeable that Zara should become
-the wife of Hench, there was certainly money to be gained by her as
-the result of the marriage; and if Hench was likely to possess riches,
-Spruce made up his mind to share in the same.
-
-For this reason he ignored the young man's bearish manner and scant
-civility, which otherwise he would not have tolerated. Spruce was
-amiability itself, and went out of his way to amuse the paying guests,
-so that Mrs. Tesk looked upon him as quite an acquisition. He played
-the piano, he sang songs, he performed conjuring tricks, and made
-himself generally agreeable. Also he escorted Zara to the Bijou
-Music-hall and there became acquainted with the management, with the
-stage hands, and with the hangers-on of the profession. In a week he
-was quite at home behind the scenes, and even became friendly with
-Mrs. Jedd, who was the mother of Bottles, and the wardrobe mistress.
-In fact, he ingratiated himself with every one and was highly popular;
-meantime watching Madame Alpenny with the ardour of a cat at a
-mouse-hole, and giving his best attentions to Hench. These were so
-coldly received that finally he remonstrated in a most plaintive
-manner.
-
-"I don't see why you should be so confoundedly disagreeable," he
-said after seven days of hard work to be polite; "we are two gentlemen
-who are stranded here, and may as well chum up for the sake of
-company."
-
-"I don't wish to chum up, as you call it, with any one," retorted
-Hench coldly.
-
-"Not with Zara?" Spruce could not help giving his friend the dig.
-
-"That is my business."
-
-"I never suggested otherwise. But I would point out that Madame
-Alpenny's resolve to consider your marriage proposition favourably is
-due to me. Had I not guided the conversation as I did, she would never
-have remembered her meeting with your father. It is the romance of
-that which has inclined her to permit your wooing."
-
-"Madame Alpenny would have remembered without your help."
-
-"I think not. You have been here along with her for six months and
-have had endless conversations. But until I made a third----"
-
-"An inconvenient third."
-
-"Oh, as you will. But until I made a third, she did not recollect the
-adventure of her youth which has softened her towards you. This being
-the case, I don't see why you should hold me at arm's length."
-
-"I am not taking the trouble to consider you in any way," said Hench
-in his most freezing manner. "We were never chums at school, and I see
-nothing in you to make me more friendly now. It is true that you
-offered to help me with money, but as I don't require your help in
-that way, I lie under no obligation to you. Why the dickens can't you
-go back to the West End?"
-
-"I shall go back," lied Spruce, "when I gather sufficient material
-for my proposed book. Meanwhile, my friend----"
-
-"Meanwhile," repeated Hench, cutting him short, "suppose you mind your
-own business and leave mine alone."
-
-"Had I left your business alone, Madame Alpenny would not now be so
-agreeable to you, old fellow," said Spruce, persistently polite.
-"However, since you object, I shall meddle no more. All the same, if I
-can do you a good turn I am perfectly willing to do so."
-
-"Don't be worthy and pose as a bed-rock Christian!"
-
-"I'm sure I don't know what you mean," sighed the little man, who knew
-perfectly well what was implied; "but as you are bent upon making
-yourself disagreeable, you will be pleased to hear that I am returning
-to the West End to-morrow for a few days."
-
-"I hope you'll stay there," growled Hench wrathfully, and quite unable
-to get rid of this gadfly. "I prefer to be alone."
-
-"You will be more alone than you think," retorted Spruce tartly.
-"Madame Alpenny is going away also for a few days. She told Mrs. Tesk,
-who told me."
-
-"Just like you, to go interfering with other people's business,
-Spruce. Madame Alpenny can go away without the world coming to an
-end." He paused, then asked a question which he immediately regretted
-having put. "Where's she going?"
-
-"Ah!" Spruce chuckled cynically, "you are curious in spite of your
-pretended dislike to meddle with what doesn't concern you. Well, she
-is going to see if any West End manager will come to see Zara dancing
-at the Bijou Music-hall, with a view to getting her daughter a better
-engagement."
-
-"I hope she will succeed," said Hench heartily. "Zara is a rare dancer
-and well deserves better luck."
-
-"If she goes, you will be parted."
-
-"Oh, hang your interference!" cried Hench, and walked out of the
-smoking-room.
-
-"Better make hay while the sun shines," Spruce called out after him,
-and, after his usual manner, chuckled when the door banged by way of
-reply.
-
-There appeared to be a perfect exodus from The Home of the Muses, for
-Bracken also became conspicuous by his absence. He went to see his
-mother at Folkestone, who was a widow, as news came that her health
-was not what it might be. But the greatest surprise was when Bottles
-came to Hench on the morning of the exodus, dressed in his best
-clothes and smiling all over his freckled face. He was blushing also,
-which was a rare thing for the imp to do, and made a request which
-accounted for the same.
-
-"Would you mind, sir--I mean, am I asking too much--that is, if you
-won't think it sauce on my part," he stumbled amongst his words and
-blushed deeper.
-
-"Out with it, Bottles! What is it? Speak straight and to the point."
-
-Jedd did so and very bluntly. "I want you to lend me five shillings,
-sir. Oh, I'll pay it back out of my wages at sixpence a week, see if I
-don't"--the boy went through a pantomine--"that wet; that dry; cut my
-throat if I tell a lie."
-
-Hench, who had every reason to trust Bottles, and who considered him
-to be a lad with a future if clever wits went for anything, produced a
-couple of half-crowns from his slender resources. "There you are! You
-needn't pay me back."
-
-"Oh, but I will, sir, thanking you all the same," said Bottles,
-pocketing the cash. "Mother's brought me up proper, she has, and
-always told me never to borrer. But I can't help borrering this time;
-it's business."
-
-"What business?"
-
-"Private," said the lad stiffly; "but the five bob shall be paid back,
-honest, Mr. Hench."
-
-"Well, Bottles, I admire your principles and will accept the sixpence
-a week repayment. But why are you so excited and why this splendour of
-dress?"
-
-"I'm going down the country to see my brother, sir."
-
-"Your brother. I never knew you had a brother."
-
-"Oh, yes sir, please. We're twins, we are, and I'm the elder by half
-an hour, as mother always says. Peter's a page in a lady's house in
-the country, and Mrs. Tesk allows me to go and see him sometimes. I
-asked her if I could go to-day, and she said that as Mr. Spruce and
-Mr. Bracken and Madame Alpenny were away for a few days, and there
-wouldn't be much work, that she would let me go."
-
-"Well," said Hench with a good-natured laugh, "I hope you'll enjoy
-yourself, my lad. So you are Simon and your brother is Peter. Eh?"
-
-"Yes, sir. Called after the Chief Apostle, sir. Mother reads her
-Bible even though she's only looking after the clothes at the Bijour
-Music-hall. I'm going to stay away for two days, Mr. Hench, and p'raps
-three. But I won't waste my time; oh no, not much, you bet, sir."
-
-"What do you mean?" asked his patron, considerably mystified.
-
-"I'll tell you some day, sir, as you've a right to know."
-
-"Know what?"
-
-"What I've got up my sleeve. It may be rot, and it may be something
-else. All I can tell you, sir, is, that when the time comes, you'll
-know. S'elp me Bob, I'll tell you everything," and Bottles panted with
-excitement.
-
-"Bottles, you've muddled your brain with your adventure and detective
-penny-dreadful yarns. Well, go on your Sexton Blake errand, and mind
-you have a good time. I shall miss your attentions, though," ended
-Hench kindly.
-
-"I hope you won't miss 'em very much, sir. I've told Amelia to see as
-you get everything you want. She's only a gal, but she'll do her best
-for my sake, sir," ended Bottles grandly. "She and me's going to marry
-when we're rich."
-
-"Go away, you precocious imp, and don't talk nonsense."
-
-"There's many a true word spoke in nonsense, as mother says, sir.
-She's great on proverbs, is mother!" and with this parting shot
-Bottles rapidly disappeared, grinning amiably and very much excited.
-Hench wondered at the boy's mysterious hints and could not for the
-life of him see how they could have anything to do with his own
-affairs. However, thinking that Bottles was merely drawing on his
-imagination, he dismissed the matter from his mind.
-
-And, indeed, for the next few days, and until the return of the
-absent, the young man found his hands full enough. Zara being alone,
-with neither her mother nor Bracken at her elbow, Hench thought that
-he might as well take advantage of the opportunity to carry on an
-uninterrupted wooing. He escorted Zara to the music-hall and escorted
-her home again. He took her sundry walks, gave her sundry meals in
-restaurants, and provided her with cheap amusements in the form of
-cinematograph entertainments. Zara, who really liked Hench, was very
-grateful for his attentions, but she resolutely refused to allow him
-to make love to her. With the dexterity of a woman she managed to keep
-him at arm's length; but one evening while he conducted her to
-business the young man managed to get nearer to his divinity.
-Certainly the crowded streets, flaring with gas-lights, were unfit
-surroundings for love-making. But Hench had to carry on his romance as
-best he could, since Zara was so clever in throwing obstacles in his
-way. On this occasion, however, he broke through them.
-
-"You are very cruel to me," he remarked, after many minutes of
-desultory conversation, and seizing the opportunity when the pair
-turned down into a quiet side street, "very cruel indeed."
-
-The handsome girl was silent for a moment or so. "It's no use my
-pretending to misunderstand you, Mr. Hench," she said at length.
-"What's the time?"
-
-Rather surprised by the irrelevance of the question, Hench looked at
-his very cheap watch. "Eight o'clock."
-
-"Well, I'm not on until a quarter to nine, and although I do take a
-long time to dress, I can give you ten minutes."
-
-"Oh, thank you, Zara. You are----"
-
-"Don't make any mistake, Mr. Hench. I won't have those ten minutes
-spent in love-making, which would bore me and waste your time."
-
-"No time spent upon you is wasted, Zara."
-
-"There you are wrong. It is time we had an explanation. So long as
-mother objected to you as she does to Ned----"
-
-"To Ned?"
-
-"I mean to Mr. Bracken," said Zara, colouring and wincing. "Well then,
-so long as she was in that frame of mind, I let things slide. But now
-mother seems inclined to consider you as a possible son-in--law, and I
-must appeal to you."
-
-"Command me in any way."
-
-"Then don't worry me with attentions. Oh, I don't mind your behaving
-like a gentleman, as you have been doing, to pass the time while
-mother is away. I am very grateful to you for the amusement you have
-given me. But"--added the girl, leaning against the railings of a
-convenient dwelling-house--"I am not in love with you, no more than
-you are with me."
-
-"I do love you," said Hench, frowning; "what's the use of saying
-otherwise?"
-
-"You don't love me, I tell you," insisted Zara petulantly. "Trust a
-woman to understand the exact state of a man's heart. You like me, you
-admire me, you think me a good sort, but love"--she shook her
-head--"you don't understand love as Ned--I mean, Mr. Bracken--does."
-
-"Oh, call him Ned by all means," said Hench quietly. "I see you are
-friendly enough with him to do so."
-
-"I am engaged to him."
-
-"With your mother's consent?"
-
-"No. You know very well that mother wants me to marry a rich man, and
-Ned is poor, although he does hope to get a few hundred pounds now
-that his mother is dying. I love him and I intend somehow to marry
-him."
-
-"That is unpleasant hearing for me, Zara."
-
-"Indeed, it isn't, Mr. Hench. I know quite well what has led you to
-propose marriage to me----"
-
-"I never have proposed as yet," interpolated Hench quickly.
-
-"No. But you intended to. If I had not prevented you from going too
-far these last few days you would have proposed. Come now, isn't that
-the truth?"
-
-"Yes! And to make you understand me fully I ask you now to be my
-wife."
-
-"Then I refuse. I love Ned, and Ned only, even though he's but a poor
-violinist in the orchestra and earns little money. He loves me also,
-and in a way which you cannot comprehend."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Because your heart has never been touched either by me or by any
-other woman. It's no use your saying that it has been. I know you
-better than you do yourself, Mr. Hench."
-
-The young man felt slightly mortified. "You appear to have a bad
-opinion of me, Mademoiselle."
-
-"Indeed, I have a most excellent opinion of you. Make no mistake about
-that, Mr. Hench. You are an honourable gentleman; you are extremely
-kind-hearted and you will be an admirable husband--to the woman you
-love."
-
-"You are the woman, believe me!" cried Hench impetuously.
-
-Zara shook her proud head, smiling, and looked less fierce than usual.
-"Oh, what children men are. They want a toy and cry when they don't
-get it, yet break it when it is in their possession. I am the toy, Mr.
-Hench, and you are the child who wants it."
-
-"And if I got the toy I would break it. Eh?"
-
-"Yes," said the dancer frankly, and began to walk on slowly, as the
-ten minutes were nearly up, "and I'll tell you why. You are a lonely
-man, who has no home, no relations, no centre in life, if I may put it
-so. Having an intensely domestic nature--that nature which makes an
-admirable husband, a devoted father, and which is domestic in its
-essence--you want a wife to create a centre round which you can
-revolve. I happen to be passably good-looking, to have some good
-qualities, and to be an agreeable companion. Therefore, liking me, you
-mistake that liking for love, and offer me a respectable but dull
-future. Any other woman, decently kind and presentable, would suit you
-just as well as I would, and with her you would believe yourself to be
-in love as you think you are with me. But a happy marriage is not
-built up upon such a foundation, Mr. Hench, believe me. A woman wants
-love, she wants a heart. You can give me neither."
-
-"And Mr. Bracken can?"
-
-"Yes! Otherwise I wouldn't marry him. If mother is successful and can
-get me a West End engagement, I daresay I'll have plenty of men
-fluttering about me, and can pick and choose amongst lovers of higher
-rank and with more money than poor Ned has. But I won't find one who
-loves me as he does."
-
-"I don't quite understand the kind of love you mean," murmured Hench,
-perplexed.
-
-"Of course you don't, for the very simple reason that you require an
-explanation. True love comes from within and not from without. When
-you really feel the passion you require no explanation. Come and tell
-me when you really fall in love, Mr. Hench, if I am not right."
-
-"Where did you learn how to talk in this way?" asked Hench, who was
-beginning to see that she was right.
-
-"Experience has taught me, and experience is a great teacher. I am
-older than you think, Mr. Hench."
-
-"You are only three and twenty. Your mother told me so."
-
-"I am older in experience, for you know that a woman is always twice
-as old as a man in the ways of the world. However, here is the Bijou,
-and I must go in to get ready for my work. You understand what I mean,
-don't you?"
-
-"Yes. I daresay my love is of a very feeble quality."
-
-"Don't be bitter and don't pity yourself, Mr. Hench. Your liking for
-me is perfectly honourable, and I am sure you would make a kind
-husband. But love--you know nothing of love. I said that before, I
-fancy, and I say it again." She offered her gloved hand. "Come! Let us
-be friends, nothing nearer, nothing dearer. Otherwise you will make me
-unhappy."
-
-Round the corner of the music-hall, where no one was about, Hench bent
-over Zara's hand and kissed it. "Let it be as you say," he said
-firmly; "all the same, I envy Bracken his future wife."
-
-"You will meet a woman who will suit you better than I will," Zara
-assured him, and her great black eyes shone. "When you do, come and
-tell me how wholly correct I have been. And another thing, Mr. Hench,
-don't let mother bully me about you."
-
-"There's no chance. I am too poor to be your husband so far as Madame
-Alpenny is concerned, even though she likes me better than she did."
-
-Zara looked at him curiously. "Are you sure that you are poor?" she
-asked in an enigmatic tone, and then ran into the music-hall, through
-the dark stage door, before he could reply.
-
-Hench strolled home leisurely, wondering what she meant by her last
-speech. Of course he was poor. She knew it; so did Madame Alpenny; so
-did every one in the boarding-house. Yet she implied a doubt.
-Resolving to ask for an explanation when occasion served, the young
-man dismissed this particular matter from his mind, and thought of his
-misfortune in losing Zara. He had always admired her, and now that she
-had spoken to him so eloquently he admired her more than ever.
-Hitherto more or less silent, she had never displayed the common-sense
-qualities of her mind before. Therefore Hench saw that she was not
-only a handsome woman and an accomplished girl, but had considerable
-mental powers. Otherwise she could scarcely have placed the truth so
-plainly before him as she had done. And with a sigh the pseudo-lover
-confessed that it was the truth. What he felt was not love, for,
-although he regretted his dismissal from the wooing of a noble woman,
-he by no means felt broken-hearted, as Bracken would have done. Hench
-recognized that his desire for Zara was only a strong wish for a home
-and a wife and a family, and--as she put it--for a centre round which
-his life could revolve. Having arrived at this conclusion he decided
-to leave the girl alone, and wait until fortune brought him to the
-feet of his true mate. "And I must have some sort of mate in the
-world, anyhow," added Hench to himself, by way of comfort.
-
-Henceforth the relations of the two were much more unembarrassed, for
-it was a brother and sister connection--frank and markedly
-comfortable. During the remainder of Madame Alpenny's absence, Hench
-took Zara about as usual, and she confided in him her love for
-Bracken, her plans for the accomplishment of that love, and her many
-difficulties with her mother. Madame Alpenny, it seemed, was by no
-means an angel, as she possessed a furious temper, and wasted all her
-money in gambling. She was an ill woman to cross, since her nature was
-vindictive and eminently determined to have its own way. Zara gave
-Hench to understand that if she could marry Bracken and pension her
-mother she would be truly happy. At present she was very miserable,
-and only the hope of escaping from her mother's clutches in the manner
-described enabled her to endure trouble. Hench, in his new character
-of her brother, consoled her, and promised to do what he could to
-forward her aims. But he did not see at the present moment how he
-could do anything.
-
-Madame Alpenny returned on the third day, but the other absentees
-still remained away. The old woman looked very satisfied with herself,
-and hinted that she had done good business which would improve Zara's
-position. She was markedly civil to Hench, and encouraged him greatly
-to pay attentions to her daughter. As the two now understood one
-another, to do this was easy--both for Hench to pay them and for Zara
-to receive them--but Madame Alpenny remained in the dark as to the
-true meaning of their comedy. Then, on the second day after her
-return, a surprising thing happened, with which she had to do. What it
-was Hench learned while sitting at a lonely breakfast. Madame Alpenny,
-who always took that meal in her own room, came down unexpectedly
-arrayed in a greasy dressing-gown and flourishing a newspaper in her
-hand. "Rhaiadr! Rhaiadr!" she called out excitedly. "What does it
-mean?" Hench looked at her in surprise. "Tumbling water, you told me,"
-he said, after an astonished pause. "Don't you remember----?"
-
-"No! No! I don't mean that." She clapped _The Express_ on the table
-before him, and pointed with one chubby finger at an advertisement. "I
-mean, what do you make of that? Rhaiadr! No one can have anything to
-do with that word but your father--and you."
-
-Hench, more puzzled than ever by her excitement, read the
-advertisement upon which her finger rested. "If Rhaiadr," he read
-aloud, "will come to the Gipsy Stile at Cookley, Essex, at eight
-o'clock on the 1st of July, he will hear of something greatly to his
-advantage."
-
-"There!" said Madame Alpenny triumphantly, and looking more shapeless
-than ever in her dressing-gown; "what do you think of that?"
-
-"It has nothing to do with me," said Hench, with a shrug.
-
-"Nothing to do with you!" she screamed. "Why, the name Rhaiadr shows
-that it has everything to do with you. Go there and see what it means.
-Ah, I always said that you were a mystery; now I am sure of it." And
-she rubbed her hands.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-THE NEXT STEP
-
-
-Hench could not help admitting that the mention of the peculiar Welsh
-word "Rhaiadr" in the newspaper had something to do with him.
-Undoubtedly he was the person whom the unknown advertiser wished to
-meet; but the whole matter was so strange and unexpected that he
-determined to think it over carefully before taking any steps. For
-this reason he said little to the excited Hungarian lady, who was
-rather annoyed by his reticence. But he did not take any notice of her
-hints, and retired as speedily as possible to his own room. There he
-lighted his pipe, sat by the window and read the advertisement twice
-and thrice again, after which he laid down the newspaper so that he
-might think more freely. And his thoughts had to do with his past life
-when travelling with his father.
-
-The record of earlier days was bare enough, as Hench decided when he
-recalled the same. His father had paid strangers to look after him
-immediately after the death of Mrs. Hench, and when Owain was only
-five years of age. For years the lad saw very little of his parent,
-who was always moving from one place to another after the fashion of
-the Wandering Jew. Then came his education at a private school, and
-afterwards the wider training at Winchester. Later, Owain had expected
-to go to Oxford, but his father, finding the need of some one to lean
-upon in his old age, had summoned the boy to Berlin unexpectedly.
-Owain's mysterious parent proved to be an aristocratic-looking
-gentleman, perfectly dressed, perfectly acquainted with the motley
-Continental world, and perfectly heartless. Hench senior frankly
-acknowledged that he cared for no one but himself, and turned his son
-into a kind of superior servant. The two travelled all over Europe in
-moderately good style, as Mr. Hench always seemed to have enough to
-keep him in comfort if not in luxury. But this last he also obtained
-by gambling, as he frequently won large sums of money, which were
-always squandered in extravagant whims and fancies. If Owain had not
-possessed a sterling thoughtful nature he would have been ruined by
-this hand-to-mouth existence, which was distinguished by continual ups
-and downs. But the young man had his own views of leading a decent
-life, and when unhampered by his spendthrift father determined to
-carry them out. The opportunity did not come to him until he was
-twenty years of age, when Mr. Hench died in Paris and was buried
-without parade in Pere La Chaise. Cold-hearted and selfish to the end,
-he passed away without suggesting how his son, to whom he had given no
-profession, was to exist. He simply told him to go to Gilberry &
-Gilberry, solicitors, of Lincoln's Inn Fields, on his twenty-fifth
-birthday, when certain papers would be handed to him. Thus it can be
-seen that the young man had little reason to regret the demise of so
-egotistic a parent, who had been a curse rather than a blessing.
-
-What the papers in charge of Gilberry & Gilberry might contain, Owain
-could not guess, nor had his dying father enlightened him, but he
-fancied that they might have something to do with proving the identity
-of the dead man. Owain had always suspected, from the strict silence
-preserved by his father about his past, that Hench was an assumed
-name, and hoped that the mysterious documents might afford some clue
-to the family history. The sole clue which the young man had to guide
-him to knowledge of any sort or description was the mention of his
-father of Rhaiadr as the place where he had passed his youthful days.
-Yet the word had proved to be of some value, for its mention had
-evoked a memory of Madame Alpenny's early romance, although that story
-had proved to be more interesting than useful. Now it appeared that
-the talismanic word was being used to lure him to meet a stranger,
-who--as the advertisement put it--would tell him of something greatly
-to his advantage.
-
-Owain, having reached this point of his meditations, rose to pace the
-room and consider the position. He was of two minds about answering
-the summons, since an open-air meeting seemed scarcely business-like
-or even reasonable. Also it was now the last week in June, and the
-appointment was arranged for the first day of July. But on the tenth
-day of that month came Owain's birthday, when he would be placed in
-possession of the papers for which he had waited so long. The young
-man considered, prudently enough, that it would be just as well to
-curb his curiosity for nine days, as the documents might throw some
-light on the admittedly odd advertisement. If he obeyed the summons to
-the Gipsy Stile, Cookley, Essex, on the first of July, he would be at
-the disadvantage of being in the dark, since he would know nothing,
-while the person who met him would know much. The rough-and-tumble
-life which he had led since the death of his father inclined Owain to
-prudence, as he knew from dire experience what tricky people there
-were in the world. Therefore he determined to take no notice of the
-advertisement--at all events for the present, since he had a week to
-think over the matter--and calmly wait until he became possessed of
-the papers on his twenty-fifth birthday. Finally, he resolved to say
-nothing to Spruce, who, luckily, had not yet returned, and to ask
-Madame Alpenny to keep the Nut in ignorance of the advertisement. He
-certainly would have to be more or less frank with the Hungarian lady,
-since she had drawn his attention to the notice in _The Express_.
-
-Madame Alpenny was full of curiosity when she met Hench at afternoon
-tea, and, as they had the room to themselves, she immediately
-proceeded to ask questions. Hench baffled her as well as he could, but
-found it difficult to do so. She appeared to be certain that he was
-more of a mystery than ever, and insisted upon scenting a fortune in
-the same. Naturally, as Zara's mother, she was anxious to know if her
-belief was correct, as then Hench could make the girl his wife and
-supply a meritorious mother-in-law with ample funds. As usual, she
-wore her eternal orange-spotted dress, her shabby bead mantle and her
-flamboyant picture hat, looking quite a merry old blackguard of an
-adventuress. Hench had long since decided that she was such a one.
-
-"Of course you'll keep this appointment," said Madame Alpenny eagerly,
-when she handed Hench his tea.
-
-"I'm not sure. You see, I may not be the person wanted."
-
-"Pfui!" said the woman contemptuously, and her large, dark eyes
-sparkled. "Why, the word Rhaiadr proves conclusively that you are the
-person. It is strange, Mr. Hench," she continued with great vivacity,
-"that I should have heard the word from you only a few days before
-this advertisement appeared."
-
-"It's very strange," assented the young man, with his eyes searching
-her face. "You know nothing about the advertisement, I suppose?"
-
-"Eh, but why should I?" she asked in amazement. "Only by chance did I
-see the name Rhaiadr, and immediately brought the paper to you,
-remembering our conversation of some days back. I presume, sir," she
-went on, with a shrug, "that you do not think I put in the
-advertisement?"
-
-"Oh, no; by no means," said Owain hastily; "but you might have
-mentioned the Welsh name to some one else."
-
-"No," said Madame Alpenny decidedly. "That is, I mentioned it only to
-Zara, and she took little notice of what I mentioned. Of course, there
-was Mr. Spruce, who was in this room when we talked about my meeting
-with your father. But he is not likely to have asked you to meet him
-in Essex, when he can see you here any day; also he probably has not
-seen the advertisement."
-
-"Oh, I don't suspect Spruce, Madame; and that reminds me, it will be
-as well to say nothing to Spruce about the matter."
-
-"Am I a chatter-box, or a fool?" asked Madame fiercely, and with a
-lowering look on her face. "Certainly I will say nothing to Mr.
-Spruce. But you must tell me all that takes place when you meet
-whosoever you are to meet."
-
-"I am going to meet no one," retorted Hench resolutely; "there is no
-need for me to do so."
-
-"But, my friend, you will hear of something greatly to your advantage,
-as it said in the newspaper," expostulated the woman, frowning.
-
-"I mean to wait until I get the papers from my lawyers on the tenth of
-July, Madame. They may tell me of the something greatly to my
-advantage without my going on a wild-goose chase into Essex."
-
-"But I don't understand your objection."
-
-"It is this. If I go now, I am quite in ignorance of my family history
-with which this appointment has to do, as I shrewdly suspect. If I go
-after the tenth of July I will be in a better position to deal with
-the matter, as I think the papers at my lawyers' will tell me much
-about my father."
-
-Madame Alpenny nodded. "There is something in that. All the same, this
-advertisement concerns you and not your father, who is dead and
-buried."
-
-"It and the papers also concern my father's past life, and therefore
-concern my present," argued Hench seriously. "And I have waited so
-long for light to be thrown on the past that I can easily wait a few
-days longer."
-
-"You have made no attempt to get at the past up till now?"
-
-"Oh, yes. After my father's death I went to my lawyers"--Hench did not
-intend to tell Madame Alpenny the name of the firm--"and asked about
-the papers. They admitted that they had them, and promised to deliver
-them on my twenty-fifth birthday. Otherwise they would say nothing."
-
-"And you--what did you do?"
-
-"What could I do save go away and do my best to keep myself alive for
-five years. I went as a sailor on a tramp vessel and met with many
-adventures. I found that I had a talent for writing, and in San
-Francisco I managed to get a short story of mine accepted, printed and
-paid for. Then I went to Peru, and afterwards to the South Seas,
-coming back to England through Australia, China, India and Persia.
-Rather a roundabout way of progression, I admit. But I was like a leaf
-blown by the winds of fortune--and bitter winds they were. In one way
-and another, chiefly by writing short adventure tales, I managed to
-keep myself afloat. This year I came here, six months ago, to wait for
-the tenth of July. Here I met you----"
-
-"And Zara," said Madame quickly.
-
-Hench looked at her with a peculiar expression, and raked his brown
-beard with outspread fingers. It was on the tip of his tongue to
-relate how he had been refused by the girl, but on second thoughts he
-refrained. According to Zara her mother had a quick temper, and if all
-was told the girl might suffer from that temper. Also Madame Alpenny,
-being given a clue, might learn that Zara and Bracken were engaged,
-which knowledge would assuredly lead to trouble. On the whole,
-therefore, Hench decided to be silent, and replied evasively. "Ah,
-yes, I met your charming daughter, of course."
-
-"And admired her?" persisted Madame, not finding his speech
-sufficiently ardent in tone.
-
-"And admired her to the extent of asking your permission to propose to
-her. But, of course, when you refused me that, because I am poor, I
-have changed my mind. As a gentleman I can do no less."
-
-"As a lover you can do much more," retorted the old woman, with a look
-of annoyance. "And remember that I was favourable to your proposal
-when I learned that you were the son of the man who wished to marry me
-so long ago."
-
-"Yet I am still poor," said Hench ironically.
-
-"That has yet to be proved," rejoined Madame bluntly. "Oh, don't look
-so astonished, my friend. I am old and I am shrewd, and I have learned
-by experience that two and two make four. Those papers you mention,
-together with this advertisement which plainly refers to you, appear
-to me proof that you will inherit money."
-
-"I don't see that, Madame, unless, of course, my father gave you some
-hint that there was money in the family."
-
-"Mr. Hench gave me no hint," said the lady sharply and hastily. "He
-explained that he had a small income, and frequently won large sums at
-cards. On the whole, he gave me to understand that if I married him
-there would be no lack of money. But he never said a word about a
-fortune coming to him."
-
-"Then why should you think that a fortune is likely to come to me?"
-asked Hench very naturally.
-
-"I have intuition, my friend, and intuition tells me that those papers
-and that advertisement mean money." Madame Alpenny paused, and then
-continued after some thought: "You say that you had great difficulty
-in getting money after your father's death?"
-
-"That is so. I had to earn every penny."
-
-"Strange, when he had a sufficient income to keep him comfortable."
-
-"That was an annuity. He told me so shortly before he died."
-
-"And told you that the papers with your lawyers would place you in
-possession of money?"
-
-"No." Hench shook his head. "He never even hinted at such a thing."
-
-Madame Alpenny nursed her pointed chin and frowned at the carpet. "I
-am sure there is money," she mused, loud enough for the young man to
-overhear. "Your father gave you no profession or trade with which to
-earn money, and it is not likely that he would have behaved so unless
-he knew that the future held a fortune in store for you."
-
-Hench's lip curled. "I am sorry to destroy any illusion about my
-father," he said with a shrug; "but I don't think he cared two straws
-about my future."
-
-"Then why should he tell you about the papers?" asked Madame, as sharp
-as a needle. "Believe me, those papers refer to a fortune."
-
-"Well"--Hench rose and stretched himself--"I shall know all about that
-when I see the lawyers on the tenth of July."
-
-"Or when you meet this unknown person in Essex on the first of July."
-
-"I am not going to meet the person," said Hench coldly; "and I have
-given my reasons for not meeting him."
-
-"Him!" Madame Alpenny laughed. "It may be a woman, for all you know."
-
-Hench wheeled round to face her searchingly. "Why do you think it is a
-woman?"
-
-"Oh," she answered smoothly, "I only surmise. I don't say that the
-person is a woman, for I know no more about the matter than you do.
-All I do say is, that if you wish to marry my daughter you will have
-to learn about this fortune as quickly as possible. I hope that I have
-managed to get an engagement for Zara in the West End, and there she
-may meet with some one wealthy who will make her his wife."
-
-"You don't appear to take Mademoiselle Zara's feelings into
-consideration."
-
-"Feelings!" echoed Madame Alpenny vehemently. "What are feelings of
-any sort compared with poverty? I have little money myself, and what I
-have is all in these things." She touched her rings, bracelets and
-brooches. "Zara does not earn what her talents demand. We want money,
-and the sole way in which we can get it is for her to marry money.
-Failing you there are others."
-
-"Quite so," said Hench, thinking of Bracken, and smiling slightly.
-"But a man who has no wealth may wish to marry her."
-
-"Referring to yourself, I suppose," said Madame Alpenny dryly, and
-quite mistaking his meaning. "Well, you won't marry her unless you
-prove through those papers and that advertisement to be possessed of a
-fortune. Until then, I hope you will be circumspect with regard to
-Zara. Don't be too attentive to her, and turn the poor child's head."
-
-"There is no fear of my doing that," said Hench equally dryly, "but to
-make things safe I propose to remove myself from temptation. To-morrow
-I shall leave this place."
-
-"For how long?"
-
-"For ever."
-
-"Oh,"--Madame Alpenny looked as black as thunder, as this proposal by
-no means suited her scheme of getting a rich son-in-law,--"don't do
-that."
-
-"Why not? After all, there is nothing to keep me here."
-
-"Zara!"
-
-"But you will not let me pay attention to Zara with a view to
-matrimony." Madame Alpenny looked uneasy and puzzled. "You place me on
-the horns of a dilemma, Mr. Hench. I can't let you become engaged to
-my daughter until I am sure you have money. But of course"--she
-brightened up--"if what I suspect is true, and money comes, you can
-return and marry her."
-
-This frank suggestion placed Hench on the horns of a dilemma, but he
-managed to evade binding himself in a most dexterous way. "If
-Mademoiselle Zara is really able to return my love, and thinks that
-she will be happy as my wife, I shall certainly return and renew my
-suit. But remember, Madame, she must become my wife of her own free
-will, and not because you insist."
-
-"Oh, that's all right," said the old lady easily. "Zara is a good girl
-and will obey her mother to whom she owes so much."
-
-"That is the very thing I don't wish her to do," insisted Hench,
-sharply; "it is no question of filial obedience. If she accepts me of
-her own free will, and without coercion from you, I marry her;
-otherwise I will not."
-
-"I am not in the habit of coercing my daughter," said Madame Alpenny
-loftily, and, as usual, evading the main point; "and I shall expect
-you to return with all information about your family. Then we can
-talk. I look upon you as a man of honour, Mr. Hench, so much so that I
-do not even ask you to give me any address. If you get money you will
-marry Zara."
-
-"And if I do not?"
-
-Madame Alpenny shrugged her fat shoulders. "In that case she will
-marry another person who has money."
-
-"You are very business-like," said Hench, highly disapproving of this
-mercantile way of looking at things.
-
-"I always am," she assured him coolly; "it saves trouble!"
-
-Owain said no more at the moment, nor did he have any conversation on
-the subject again with the Hungarian lady prior to his departure.
-Madame Alpenny evidently had full confidence in his love for her
-daughter, and believed that Zara's beauty would lure him back again
-with gold in his pockets. Had she had any idea of the interview
-between the two young people, and the new relationship of brother and
-sister which that interview had suggested, she might have been less
-easy in her scheming mind. But Hench held his tongue and so did Zara,
-therefore Madame Alpenny was kept in a kind of fool's paradise. The
-young man reported the conversation hurriedly to the girl, and being
-clever, she knew exactly how to act so as to keep her mother in
-ignorance, until such time as she could declare her own mind and
-choose her own mate.
-
-Meanwhile; Hench got to work expeditiously and packed his
-scanty luggage, after paying Mrs. Tesk what he owed her. The
-ex-school-mistress was very sorry to lose him, not only from a
-financial point of view but because she really had a regard for him.
-Still, as she intimated, they were both leaves floating on the river
-of life, and the currents of circumstances were parting them. She
-hoped that he would enjoy himself and prosper wherever he was going,
-but if Fortune proved unkind, he was to remember that a refined abode
-always waited for him as a haven in adversity. All this and much more
-said Mrs. Tesk, who had a warm heart and hospitable nature. Hench was
-quite sorry to leave her, as he liked the quaint old lady and her odd
-ways. And just when Owain finished his business in her sanctum he
-emerged to run against Spruce, who looked more like a fashion-plate
-and less like a man than ever.
-
-"Just got back," said the Nut airily; "had a topping time. Wish you
-had been with me, instead of wasting your sweetness on the desert air
-hereabouts."
-
-"I was not going to waste it any longer," said Hench dryly. "I am
-leaving this house this afternoon."
-
-"Oh, I say,"--Spruce looked disappointed and uneasy,--"for how long?"
-
-"For ever! There is nothing to keep me here that I know of, and as I
-told you long ago, I am more or less of a bird of passage."
-
-"What about Mademoiselle Zara?"
-
-"Oh, that's all right; and may I remind you it's none of your
-business?"
-
-"Well, don't get in a wax," protested Spruce amiably. "I never saw
-such a chap for jumping on a fellow."
-
-"If you think so, you must be glad that I am going away."
-
-"No, I'm not," confessed the Nut frankly. "You're a gentleman and so
-am I, and in this hole you're the only chap I can chum up with."
-
-"We have not chummed up, as you put it," said Hench frigidly. "Well,
-that isn't my fault. I am always willing to be friendly, and if you
-won't be it's your loss, not mine. Where are you going?"
-
-"That, again, is my business. I may be going abroad, or I may stay in
-London, or I may be going to the moon."
-
-"You're crazy enough for that last, anyhow, if lunatics live there as
-some one said," fumed Spruce, who was growing angry. "And you're silly
-to make an enemy of me, you know."
-
-"I don't want you as a friend, and I don't care if you are my enemy
-five times over," said Hench very straightly. "What the deuce do you
-mean by that threat? What harm can you do me?"
-
-"I never said that I could or would do you any harm," protested
-Spruce, feeling uncomfortable; "but some day I may be able to do you a
-good turn."
-
-Hench looked at the spic and span little man, and felt rather sorry
-for him, as he seemed to mean well, in spite of his irritating
-curiosity. "Let us part friends," he said, holding out his hand.
-"After all, you are an old schoolfellow and have got your good points.
-But oil and water don't mix. See?"
-
-Spruce gave the extended hand a feeble shake and dropped it. "I can't
-help seeing, when you put things so straightly. It's a difference of
-temperament, I suppose--you're clay and I'm china. But I tell you
-what," cried Spruce, with his pale blue eyes flashing maliciously,
-"you'll be glad enough some day for me to come and help you!"
-
-"I always make a point of seeking no one's assistance," said Hench
-coldly, and walked up to his room, wondering what Spruce meant, since
-there was a significance in his tone which intimated that he quite
-expected to meet his enemy again.
-
-Spruce looked after the tall, straight form of the young man, and bit
-his nether lip with anything but an amiable look. He greatly regretted
-that Hench should go away thus suddenly, as the unexpected departure
-upset his plans for making money out of him. He still clung to the
-idea that the mysterious papers at the lawyers' had something to do
-with a fortune, and determined not to lose sight of Hench, come what
-may. Therefore he also retired to his own room to plot and plan and
-devise schemes whereby he could entangle his prey in invisible nets.
-But this he could not do without the aid of Madame Alpenny, since she
-was the mother of Zara, whom Hench loved. So to Madame Alpenny the Nut
-went and had quite a long conversation with her, which conversation
-resulted in his quitting the house at the hour of Hench's departure.
-Owain was relieved when the time came for him to go to find that
-Spruce was not at his elbow with his disagreeable civilities. He never
-could bring himself to like Spruce.
-
-It was Bottles who helped the taxi-cab driver to carry down the trunk
-and portmanteau which formed his hero's luggage. The boy had returned
-on the morning of the day when Hench departed and was desperately
-sorry to hear of the exit. Hench gave him a sovereign and comforted
-him with a promise that on some future occasion they would meet again.
-Then Bottles proffered a request that Hench would give him some
-address to write to, and strange to say, the young man supplied him
-with the information he asked for. He felt that he could wholly trust
-Bottles.
-
-"But you won't have anything to write to me about," he said, when the
-written address was handed over.
-
-Bottles looked up with a shrewd smile on his freckled face. "The mouse
-helped the lion, sir, as mother told me, and I may help you."
-
-"What do you mean by that? How can you help me?"
-
-"Least said is soonest mended, as mother says," retorted Bottles
-wisely. "And it ain't for nothing as I've read detective stories. I
-won't give any one the address, sir. I'm yours till death!" and he
-folded his arms with a noble air.
-
-Hench drove away rather bewildered. "The boy is mad," he said. But the
-boy was not.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-SEEKING TROUBLE
-
-
-It was for two reasons that Hench left The Home of the Muses and
-vanished--so far as the paying guests were concerned--into the
-unknown. In the first place, he wished to render Zara's position more
-easy; in the second he desired to have nothing more to do with Madame
-Alpenny; and also there was a third and less important reason, which
-had to do with Cuthbert Spruce. While Owain drove westward in the
-taxi, he amused himself by surveying his position.
-
-With regard to the girl, Hench was beginning to grasp the fact that he
-really did not love her, or he would have been more moved by her frank
-confession of love for Bracken. What she had said was quite true, as
-he now acknowledged. He admired her, and being lonely, wished for a
-companion, so as to make a centre in life round which he could
-revolve. It was an odd comparison but a very true one. Any other
-woman, handsome, kind-hearted and affectionate, would have done as
-well as Zara to bring about the desired end, and Owain confessed to
-himself that to propose such a business-like scheme to a girl was
-rather a cold-blooded way of looking at love. She was--he confessed
-this also--quite right to refuse him, and to accept the offer of a man
-who adored her. This being the case, Hench decided that it only
-remained for him to go away, since his presence would more or less
-embarrass her, in spite of the brother-and-sister compact. Finally,
-being very human, Owain felt that it was impossible to stay, and
-witnessing Bracken triumphing where he had failed. On the whole,
-therefore, he was well pleased to escape from Bethnal Green, and his
-feelings suffered very little from the exile.
-
-The second reason, which had Madame Alpenny for its excuse, was also
-connected more or less indirectly with Zara's refusal. Since the idea
-of money coming to him had occurred to the Hungarian lady, she had
-been more amiably disposed towards Hench with regard to his
-half-hearted wooing of her daughter. Yet, as she was still uncertain
-that Owain would be rich, she had not--according to the slang
-phrase--forced the pace. But if fancy became fact and the mysterious
-papers really did place him in possession of a fortune, Hench felt
-tolerably convinced that Madame Alpenny would worry him and worry Zara
-until she brought about the marriage. Under the circumstances this was
-not to be thought of, as apart from the fact of his readjusted
-relations with the girl, Madame Alpenny was by no means desirable as a
-mother-in-law. She was poor, inquisitive, scheming and decidedly
-dangerous; always on the alert to make what she could out of others,
-and--as Hench believed--unscrupulous in her methods of gaining what
-she desired. Already he had told her more about his private affairs
-than was altogether wise, more or less against his will, as it would
-seem, since she had wormed her way into his confidence with remarkable
-dexterity. It struck him forcibly that he was wise to avoid her by
-leaving the boarding-house, and he congratulated himself on his
-promptitude in dealing with the situation. And as he had done so
-judiciously, it was unlikely that Madame Alpenny would ever trouble
-him again.
-
-It was when the taxi was sweeping down a quiet street near the British
-Museum that Owain came to the third and minor reason, which concerned
-Spruce. The Nut, also, was much too curious about affairs which
-nothing to do with him in any way, and seemed to take a pleasure in
-meddling. He was just the kind of person to read other people's
-letters, give unasked advice and take a thousand liberties out of
-pretended good-nature. All the same, Hench firmly believed that all
-this interference was intended, in the end, to benefit Spruce himself.
-But Owain could not see how his old school-friend could in any way
-make capital out of him. Nevertheless, instinct warned him to avoid
-the man as something dangerous. By leaving Mrs. Tesk's establishment
-he had avoided him, and he was as unlikely to meet him again as he was
-to meet with Madame Alpenny. Taking everything into consideration,
-Hench alighted at his new abode with the conviction that he had
-escaped from some danger--he could not put a name to it--just in time.
-
-Owing to some unexpected good fortune in connection with gold-mining
-shares, Hench possessed quite one hundred pounds, which was sufficient
-to keep him in comfort and even in luxury until he could call on
-Gilberry & Gilberry. That visit he expected would result in throwing
-light on his somewhat dark path, and perhaps would bring him wealth.
-Yet, being cautious, he husbanded his resources lest his expectations
-should be disappointed. Therefore the hotel he came to was a quiet and
-cheap hostel in Burney Street, Bloomsbury, chiefly patronized by
-country people. It was a much better class establishment than that of
-Mrs. Tesk, and Hench found it very comfortable. He had been there on a
-former occasion when in England, and found very little change. The
-manageress was the same, the staff had not been altered, and on the
-whole Owain felt that the place was more home-like than any he had
-been in. Also, having risen out of the submerged tenth, the young man
-brushed up his apparel, had his hair cut and his beard trimmed, and
-got out his scarcely-worn suit of dress clothes. For the next week he
-amused himself in a quiet way, generally sauntering in the Park,
-exploring the Museum, enjoying the theatres and music-halls, and
-taking what quiet inexpensive pleasures came in his way. All he wished
-to do was to pass the time pleasantly until his twenty-fifth birthday,
-when he intended to call on Gilberry & Gilberry. Then he would learn
-his fate, and his future career would be ordained by the contents of
-the papers.
-
-But all the time Hench was haunted by an uneasy feeling regarding the
-advertisement brought to his notice by Madame Alpenny. Had he stayed
-at the boarding-house, he assuredly would not have obeyed the request
-for a meeting, as the woman would have become aware that he had done
-so. This he did not wish her to do, since he regarded her as
-dangerous, and did not know what the result of his errand to Cookley
-would be. But now that Madame Alpenny belonged to the past, Owain was
-inclined out of sheer curiosity to keep the appointment for the 1st of
-July, and learn why the word "Rhaiadr" had been used. Of course, as he
-had already recognized, the papers at Gilberry & Gilberry's might
-place him in possession of details which would enable him to deal more
-openly with the person who wished to meet him at the Gipsy Stile. But
-it wanted ten days to his birthday, and by brooding over the
-advertisement Hench became so curious that he finally decided to take
-the journey into Essex. There was a spice of adventure about the
-matter, which appealed to his pioneering spirit, and, moreover, as he
-had nothing to do, he thought that he might as well employ his mind
-and time in satisfying his curiosity. According to Dr. Watts, "Satan
-finds some mischief still, for idle hands to do," and never was the
-line so exemplified as by Hench's action. Although he did not know it,
-he was going out to seek trouble, when he left the hotel for Liverpool
-Street Station.
-
-Besides being haunted by the advertisement, Hench during his week in
-Bloomsbury had been also haunted by a feeling that Madame Alpenny was
-somewhere in his vicinity. Twice or thrice he had fancied she was at
-his elbow, and had as many times made sure that he had caught a
-glimpse in the distance of her orange-spotted frock, her bead mantle
-and picture hat. As he walked to the railway station this feeling was
-insistently strong, and Hench found himself searching the crowds here,
-there and everywhere for the sinister face and red hair of the old
-woman. But he saw no one who resembled her, until he was descending
-the stairs after taking his ticket to Cookley. Then he was positive
-that in the throng moving below he recognized her shabby garb. Of
-course, he did not find her when he mingled with the mob, and laughed
-at the trick which his eyesight had played him. Why he should be so
-haunted by the woman--in his thoughts that is, as he did not believe
-that there was any ground for his suspicions--he could not say. But it
-was not until he was seated in a third-class smoking compartment that
-he shook off the feeling of her near presence. It was all a case of
-nerves, he assured himself, and by the time he was well on his journey
-he thoroughly convinced himself of this fact. At all events, as the
-train gradually left London behind, Owain quite got rid of his
-nightmare.
-
-Cookley is slightly over thirty miles from the metropolis, so Hench,
-having left the latter at five o'clock, arrived at his destination
-somewhere about half-past six o'clock. The appointment at the Gipsy
-Stile was precisely at eight, So he had an hour and a half to wait.
-This time he employed in learning the whereabouts of the rendezvous,
-as he had not the least idea of the direction in which it lay. As
-there was no hurry, he took things easy and sauntered leisurely out of
-the local station and down the long road which led to the village.
-After a lengthy period spent in a smoky city, the pure air and rural
-sights of the country were exceedingly pleasant.
-
-The village was not large, but decidedly picturesque, being one of
-those somnolent old-world hamlets beloved of artists and wondered at
-by tourists. Formerly no strangers came near it, but since the advent
-of the ubiquitous motor-car it had become quite a centre of interest.
-This was mainly owing to its squared-towered Norman church, a
-venerable and stately structure, which was much too large for so small
-a place. Also there was a Saxon cross on the village green and sundry
-Roman remains in an adjacent field. Archæologists and antiquarians,
-together with tourists, chiefly American, frequently came to inspect
-these objects of interest, and artists often took up their quarters in
-the Bull Inn to paint the church, the ancient cottages and the
-surrounding country. It was quite the nook which a student would have
-loved, but much too quiet for a restless young man such as Owain Hench
-assuredly was. The quicksilver in his veins never allowed him to
-remain long in one place, yet even he confessed to feeling the charm
-of Cookley.
-
-No one took much notice of him, for which slight he was thankful. In
-his shabby suit of blue serge, his woollen shirt and ragged Panama
-hat, he looked like an ordinary tramp, and those gentry of the road
-were much too common in Cookley to be even glanced at. Also the night
-was closing in, and in the soft warm twilight the young man passed
-almost unheeded, a fact upon which he afterwards had reason to
-congratulate himself. After wandering through several crooked streets,
-he emerged into the gracious spaces of the village green and made for
-the Bull Inn--easily recognized by its gigantic sign--where he treated
-himself to a tankard of beer in the tap-room. Owain really did not
-require the drink, but ordered it so as to give some excuse for his
-questions. The ancients of the village were already gathered for their
-evening symposium, and the room was filled with the blue haze of
-tobacco-smoke. It was none too well lighted by a solitary oil lamp,
-and Hench sat down in a secluded corner to enjoy his briar and sip his
-ale. Also, when occasion served, he asked the buxom wench who attended
-to thirsty customers where the Gipsy Stile was to be found. She looked
-at him in surprise.
-
-"Why, every one hereabouts knows where that be."
-
-"I am a stranger here."
-
-"One of them tramps, ain't you?" said the girl, tossing her head.
-"Well, you can't miss the Gipsy Stile. There's a path leading out of
-the churchyard, across the meadows, and that takes you into the heart
-of the wood, where you'll find it right in your way."
-
-"Oh, it's in a wood, is it?" questioned Owain, secretly wondering
-again, as he had wondered before, why such a rendezvous had been
-chosen.
-
-"Why, yes. Parley Wood, it is called, and lies long-side Squire Evans'
-old house. There's only a red brick wall divides the wood from the
-park."
-
-"Thank you," said Hench politely, and attended to his beer and pipe,
-while the villagers talked politics and crops and local gossip, and he
-amused himself by listening to their crude views.
-
-In the old days and before Cookley had been brought into near contact
-with the outer world, the stranger would have been more closely
-observed and the conversation would have been listened to. But so many
-tourists now came to the village that the inhabitants paid little
-attention to them. In his dark corner Owain sat for close upon an
-hour, wondering at the narrow limits of the Cookley intellect. Still,
-he was interested in the old-fashioned views of the labourers, and
-time passed quicker than he noticed. A glance at his watch showed him
-to his surprise that it was a few minutes to eight, so he rose hastily
-to seek his destination. As he had already paid for his beer, there
-was nothing to detain him, and he was speedily passing through the
-green on his way to the square tower of the church, which stood up
-blackly in the luminous twilight. So far as Owain could guess there
-was no danger of his losing his way.
-
-A narrow lane, sloping slightly upward to the lychgate, conducted him
-to the churchyard, and he soon found himself surrounded by tombstones
-old and new, dotted irregularly amongst the long grass of the
-enclosure. Keeping to the gravelled path, he made a circuit of the
-vast church, and finally came to a stile set in the stone wall
-girdling the place. On climbing over this, he found his feet treading
-a well-defined path, which meandered across a wide meadow to enter
-into Parley Wood, which was visible some distance away. Owain, with
-the aid of a match, found that it was eight o'clock, and the chimes of
-the church again assured him of the fact. Fearing lest he should be
-late, he hurried quickly, and his long legs soon took him under the
-shade of ancient trees. Here it was somewhat dark, but Hench had eyes
-like a cat, and could very easily follow the path, which wound
-deviously through the woodland. Around him, in the fragrant dark, life
-was stirring, and he heard the piercing song of the nightingale, the
-occasional hoot of an owl, and became aware that sundry creatures were
-moving more or less noiselessly amongst the undergrowth. At times he
-moved across a dell where the light was stronger, and then again he
-would plunge into the gloom of the trees. The young man enjoyed the
-adventure apart from the reason which had led him to undertake it, as
-he had a great love of Nature, and enjoyed her beauty.
-
-At length he emerged into a wide clearing across which ran a ragged
-fence of time-stained wood overgrown with woodbine and more or less
-buried in nettles, darnels, shrubs and young trees. In the centre of
-this there was an old-fashioned stile, which Owain took to be the
-place of meeting. Beyond the open ground stretched for some distance,
-and faintly in the warm twilight he could see a tall wall and beyond
-it the thick foliage of oaks, beeches and elms. This was undoubtedly
-the place, as he remembered how the girl at the Bull Inn had assured
-him that the wood lay long-side the park of the squire, and no great
-distance from a red brick wall. Therefore Owain walked briskly up to
-the stile, taking off his straw hat for the sake of coolness, and
-looked all round the place to see if the person who had advertised was
-waiting. He saw no one.
-
-A glance at his watch after lighting a match showed him that he had
-been fifteen minutes walking from the church to the stile, so he
-wondered if the person had grown tired of waiting. But that was
-unlikely, since he was not so very much behind his time. The man--he
-presumed that it was a man--who had advertised would certainly wait
-longer when he had taken so much trouble to bring about the meeting.
-Hench therefore believed that something had detained the person in
-question, and sat down on the stile to wait. Already the moon was well
-up in the cloudless sky and her silver radiance flooded the whole
-solemn woodland. Owain admired the mingled beauty of light and shade,
-listened to the distant nightingale singing triumphantly, and stared
-every now and then round about to make sure that he would not miss his
-man, since he did not know from which quarter he would appear. Then
-came a surprise, and a highly unpleasant one.
-
-In the course of his glancing here, there and everywhere, he became
-aware that in the long grass some distance beyond the stile, and some
-distance away from the meandering path, lay a dark object. At first
-Hench thought it was merely the trunk of a tree, but as the moonlight
-grew stronger and the outlines of the object more distinct, he began
-to believe that it was a man. Doubtless, as he concluded hastily, some
-tramp had thrown himself down to sleep in the safe cover of the wood,
-where no policeman would rouse him from his slumbers. But Hench knew
-that it was scarcely wise to sleep in the moonbeams, so clambered over
-the stile and walked towards the man with the intention of awakening
-him. Shortly he was bending over the presumably sleeping tramp, and
-then became aware with a shock of surprise that the man was clothed in
-evening-dress, over which a dark, loose cloak had been thrown. With a
-vivid feeling of fear Hench turned the man over--he was lying on his
-face--and started back with an ejaculation of horror. The stiff white
-shirt-front was red with blood, and in the man's heart was buried a
-knife with a horn handle. Owain struck a match to assure himself of
-the truth, although the moonlight was so strong that he scarcely
-needed to take such trouble. But while he held the match with shaking
-hand over the dead face, its wavering light showed him very plainly
-that he was right. The man was dead--the man had been murdered--and
-there he lay mysteriously done to death in the heart of a lonely wood.
-
-Of course, Hench's first impulse, which was the impulse of an ordinary
-human being when brought face to face with crime, was to run back to
-Cookley village and give the alarm. But even as he turned to fly, he
-halted, struck with a sudden thought which made the blood freeze in
-his young veins. He had been lured to this place by means of the
-advertisement, and here he found the dead body of a man not long
-stabbed to the heart. Was it a trap? Had he been brought to this
-solitary spot to be entangled in a crime? It seemed very like it, and
-swiftly thinking over the matter, Hench did not see how he could
-exonerate himself should he give the alarm. With a feeling of absolute
-terror, he bent over the dead so as to make himself acquainted with
-the appearance of the poor creature. There was no doubt that the man
-was a gentleman, since he was in evening-dress and was wearing studs
-and sleeve-links of gold, together with a silk-lined overcoat, or
-rather cloak. His face was clean-shaven, with an aquiline nose and
-thin compressed lips, decidedly that of a handsome man. From his
-lined countenance and white hair, Owain took him to be about sixty
-years of age, although being dead there was an astonishing look of
-youth about him. Even as Hench stared, the lines on the old face
-seemed to fade away and leave it young and smooth. Yes, he was a
-gentleman, as was apparent from the well-bred, disdainful face. It did
-not need the evening-dress, the silk-lined cloak, the silk socks or
-the patent-leather shoes to show the man's station in the world. Here,
-as it occurred to Owain, was a gentleman, who had strolled into the
-wood after dinner, there to meet with a terrible death at the hands of
-some unknown person.
-
-Starting to his feet, the young man remembered how the girl at the inn
-had talked of Squire Evans' estate lying long-side the wood and
-divided therefrom by a brick wall. Here was the wood, yonder the wall
-in question; so it came strongly into Hench's mind that the dead man
-was Squire Evans. But who had killed him and why had he been killed?
-Hench looked round searchingly into the shadow of the trees, but could
-see no lurking form. Whosoever had struck the blow had done so shortly
-before Hench arrived, as the body was still warm and still supple.
-After all, the man was dead, sure enough, and it would be useless to
-run to the village for succour. In fact it would be dangerous, as
-Owain thought with fear knocking at his heart, for how could he prove
-his innocence of the crime. There was no motive for him to kill this
-unknown man, certainly; not even the motive of robbery, as the studs
-and sleeve-links had not been taken by the assassin. Hench wavered
-between a desire to consult his own safety by flight and a wish to
-rouse the village and hunt hot-footed for the murderer. For two long,
-long minutes he pondered over the horrible situation, then, without a
-backward glance, raced at top speed along the unknown path leading
-into the further recesses of the wood. And while he ran his heart beat
-tumultuously, the perspiration beaded his forehead, and his body
-shivered with cold, in spite of the warm night. Safety was what he
-made for, and he tore onward as if the officers of justice were
-already on his track. An innocent man--yes, he was an innocent
-man--yet the circumstantial evidence might hang him in spite of that
-same innocence.
-
-Instinct led Hench to avoid returning to London by passing through the
-village and boarding the train at Cookley Station. Already--and he
-thought of the possibility with terror--his face and figure might be
-remembered by some keen-sighted yokel. There was the conversation with
-the girl in the tap-room. He had talked long enough with her to be
-remembered, even though the atmosphere, hazy with smoke, had only been
-illuminated by one dingy lamp. Then, again, he had spoken about the
-Gipsy Stile; he had asked where it was, and at the Gipsy Stile the
-murder had taken place. Then there was the advertisement; the police
-would be sure to find that out, and if there was any reward offered,
-Madame Alpenny might speak to the authorities about the same. Then he
-would be linked with the crime, and run the risk of arrest. When
-confronted with the girl at the inn, she would probably recognize him.
-Then what possible defence could he make to an accusation of murder?
-
-These and many other thoughts buzzed like distracting bees through
-Owain's brain as he fled from that awful place. All his idea was to
-get away, to reach some other railway station, to hide in London,
-and remain quiet until he saw what the police would do. But on the
-face of it, he would be safe nowhere; yet with the instinct of
-self-preservation he plunged onward through the wood in the hope of
-escape. Hench was a brave man, and had faced many dangers, but to be
-hanged for a crime which he had not committed, to be entangled in
-circumstances over which he had no control, made him choose the least
-of two evils. Once or twice he halted in his headlong flight wondering
-if it would not be best to return and give himself up to the village
-policeman, as, after all, he had no motive to kill the man and
-moreover could produce the advertisement. But the resolution was
-momentary. He simply could not face the trouble, even though he did
-his best to screw up his courage to the sticking point. Wiping his
-forehead, he drew a long breath and strode onward. It was too late now
-to think of returning, as the body might already have been found. All
-he could do was to walk on and on and on, in the hope of leaving
-terror behind.
-
-After leaving the wood, Hench found himself traversing other meadows
-similar to that near Cookley church, These bordered a narrow lane,
-into which a stile afforded him access. From this lane he gained the
-high-road, and from a sign-post learned that it would conduct him to
-London. At first Owain intended to walk on until he arrived at the
-nearest railway station, for there was yet time to catch a late train
-to town. But on reflection he decided to use his legs, as there would
-be less danger in solitary pedestrianism than in venturing to ask for
-a ticket at a local station, where his appearance might be observed.
-Also the night was warm, the moon gave her full light, and the journey
-to London would be more pleasurable on foot than it would be were he
-cooped up in a train. Besides, he was much too agitated by what he had
-gone through to sit quiet under the gaze of fellow-travellers.
-Innocent though he was, conscience made a coward of him, and he knew
-that every careless eye cast upon him would make him wince. He was
-safer to walk, so walk he did.
-
-Owain never forgot that thirty odd miles tramp through the lovely
-summer night, when--as the saying goes--he saw a bird in every bush.
-Certainly he was guiltless of any crime, yet fate had connected him
-with one, and he felt like Cain, so strong was the power of his
-imagination. Again and again he asked himself if it would not have
-been wiser to dare the worst, trusting in God's justice and his own
-innocence. But again and again came the reply that innocent men have
-been hanged ere now on purely circumstantial evidence, and that he had
-done right to fly the danger of a judicial death. Hench cursed himself
-for not having waited until his twenty-fifth birthday. Had he taken no
-notice of the advertisement, as he originally intended to do, he would
-not now be in this plight. But it was too late to blame himself now.
-He had come to the rendezvous, he had found a dead body, he had fled
-like a true criminal from the spot, so it was no use crying over spilt
-milk. Whatever was in store for him he would have to face it. As he
-had sown, so would he have to reap.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-AN AMAZING DISCOVERY
-
-
-Owain reached his hotel in the early hours of the morning, and finding
-no one about but the sleepy night-porter, who was just leaving, had no
-difficulty in getting to his bedroom almost unobserved. Once in that
-haven he drew a long breath of relief, and wearied by his long tramp,
-threw himself on his bed without undressing. Notwithstanding his
-anxiety, which had increased instead of lessening, he speedily fell
-fast asleep into a heavy dreamless slumber, which resembled lethargy
-rather than natural repose. It was high noon when he woke, feeling
-much refreshed and as hungry as the proverbial hunter. Considering the
-trouble in which he was involved, it was fortunate that travel had
-steadied his nerves to face the worst, if needs be. The result of his
-experience of danger led him to prepare for possibilities. He
-therefore took a cold bath to brace himself, dressed more carefully
-than usual with great deliberation, and went down to make an excellent
-breakfast. As yet the hue and cry was not out against him, so he had
-ample time to consider his position.
-
-Over a pipe in the smoking-room, he glanced at several of the daily
-papers, but naturally found therein nothing about the murder in Parley
-Wood at Cookley. It was more than probable that the evening news would
-contain an account of the finding of the body, and--for all Hench
-knew--a description of himself as the criminal. Of this, however, he
-was uncertain, since he had not been noticed closely in the twilight,
-and his conversation with the girl of the Bull Inn had taken place in
-a darkish and smoky room, dimly lighted by a solitary lamp. Of course
-the girl would say that a man had asked her where the Gipsy Stile was
-to be found, and the person she had conversed with would be suspected.
-But the questioner assuredly could not be described, unless the
-serving-wench was sharper than Owain gave her credit for being. Only a
-very inquisitive and observant person would have examined him closely
-enough to give a fair word-picture of him to the authorities. And
-Owain's experience led him to believe that few people ever did observe
-with much degree of accuracy. So far as the girl at the inn and the
-inhabitants of Cookley were concerned he felt tolerably safe. But
-there was another person to consider in connection with his adventure,
-and that was Madame Alpenny. The Hungarian lady certainly knew that he
-was the man required to meet the advertiser at Cookley, as the use of
-the word "Rhaiadr" had enlightened her on that point. Therefore it was
-probable that, when the details of the murder were made public, she
-would inform the police about the matter. But the woman did not know
-that he had kept the appointment, as he had given her to understand
-very plainly that he did not intend to do so. Assuredly the feeling
-that she was at his elbow had haunted him when he had set forth on his
-errand, and he had fancied that she had been lurking about Liverpool
-Street Station. But even then he had set down the faint belief to
-imagination, so there was no reason why he should conclude that she
-actually had been spying on him. In fact he did not see how she
-possibly could have done so, since he had not given her his address.
-Only Bottles knew that, and Bottles--as Hench felt sure--was to be
-thoroughly trusted.
-
-So far the young man could see no cause for alarm, but an hour's
-reflection made him resolve to make things doubly sure against
-discovery. Thanks to the twilight and the dimly-lighted tap-room,
-Hench made sure that any description given of his appearance would be
-more or less vague, and was not likely to be recognized by any one in
-the hotel when it appeared in the newspapers. Nevertheless, so as to
-place the matter beyond all doubt, he paid his bill, packed his
-luggage and took his departure late in the afternoon for Victoria
-Station. Here he left his box and portmanteau in the cloak-room, and
-went down to South Kensington in search of quiet lodgings. But before
-venturing to inquire for the same, Owain sought out a barber's shop in
-Brampton Road and had his heavy brown beard removed. He would rather
-have shaved himself, so as to do away with the possibility of the
-barber noticing any description in the newspapers, even though the
-same was vague and inaccurate. But to do this was impossible. He could
-not change his appearance before leaving the Bloomsbury Hotel without
-exciting remark, and he did not wish to present himself at his new
-lodgings in any degree like his old self, as it was known to the
-paying guests of Mrs. Tesk's establishment. Therefore he was obliged
-to risk a barber's razor and a barber's curiosity.
-
-One thing was certain, that when he emerged from the shop, no one
-would have recognized him for the man who had entered. The removal of
-his beard altered him wonderfully, making him look years younger, and
-improving his good looks in a marked degree. Owain sat in the barber's
-chair a bearded colonist of the type dear to penny fiction, he rose
-from it looking like the Hermes of the Vatican. Even the hairdresser
-exclaimed at the extraordinary transformation and complimented him on
-his improved appearance. Hench was rather annoyed that the man should
-take so much notice, and paying him hurriedly, departed as swiftly as
-he could without exciting suspicion. Then he walked down the Brompton
-Road and sought out a quiet side street in South Kensington, where he
-knew there were rooms to be let. The place was already known to him,
-during the last six months, as under the same roof lived an old
-school-friend, with whom Hench had kept up a correspondence. On
-returning to England he had looked up this friend, and they had
-renewed their acquaintanceship with uncommon fervour. Therefore Owain
-deemed it best to live near him, so that he might make use of him
-should any trouble ensue from his adventure. It may be remarked that
-the friend was a barrister, and as such--so Hench considered--would be
-able to attend to legal details if necessary.
-
-The rooms in question were still to be had, as a voluble landlady
-assured Mr. Hench, so he engaged them for a month, paying the rent
-in advance. Then he left a message for his friend, and returned to
-get his luggage from the cloak-room in Victoria Station. By seven
-o'clock, Owain was installed in a tolerably comfortable bedroom and
-sitting-room, and was dawdling over a hurriedly provided meal. His
-friend, he was informed, was not expected back until nine o'clock, so
-Hench passed the time in reading the evening papers. These he had
-bought at the railway station when getting his luggage, and in two of
-them he found what he sought.
-
-The account of the Parley Wood crime was necessarily meagre, as so
-short a time had elapsed since the discovery of the body that the
-police were not in possession of much information. It appeared, from
-the scanty details, that the dead man was--as Hench suspected--Squire
-Madoc Evans, the Lord of the Manor and the owner of Cookley Grange. He
-had gone for a stroll in the woods shortly after dinner, and not
-having returned, search had been made, with the result that the poor
-old gentleman was found stabbed to the heart near the Gipsy Stile. The
-weapon used to execute the murder was a common carving-knife with a
-horn handle, and the medical examination showed that Evans had met
-with his violent death about half-past seven. The account ended with
-the information that the police were making all inquiries in the hope
-of tracing the criminal, but as yet had been unsuccessful.
-
-Owain breathed more freely, as there was no word of the girl at the
-Bull Inn or of her conversation with himself. Still, it was early days
-yet, and the young man felt very sure that shortly she would speak
-out. An account of the man who had inquired where the Gipsy Stile was
-to be found would assuredly appear in print; then it would depend
-entirely upon the memory and acuteness of the girl whether he would be
-traced. And, of course, if Madame Alpenny became suspicious--and Owain
-was positive that she would become so--her story to the police would
-certainly result in his arrest. Then, when confronted with the girl of
-the inn, there would be small chance of denying his identity with the
-tramp who had made those fatal inquiries. Hench felt extremely
-uncomfortable in spite of his innocence, and longed to have some one
-to whom he could talk freely. Later on in the evening, and while
-gloomily smoking in an armchair, the young man thought that he could
-trust his old school-friend. James Vane was quite a different man to
-Spruce, who also had been at the same school, and was as true as the
-Nut was false. After much reflection and some hesitation, Hench
-decided to unbosom himself to the barrister, since the dangers which
-environed him were so great that he could not deal with them unaided.
-
-At nine o'clock precisely, a sharp knock came to the door of the
-sitting-room, and Hench sprang up to greet his visitor. Vane was a
-tall, slim man, with a lean, hatchet face, keen dark eyes, and thin
-dark hair, touched already with grey although he was only thirty years
-of age. He was perfectly dressed and perfectly well-groomed, quick in
-his movements and a trifle saturnine in his manner. Some people were
-rather afraid of him, as he was always cold and cautious. But Owain
-knew that this frigid exterior concealed a truly warm heart, and
-that--as the saying goes--Vane's bark was worse than his bite. To his
-old school-chum he showed himself as he really was, and few would have
-recognized the chilly barrister in the smiling friend. It was as
-though ice had melted on a mountain-top to reveal a green sward.
-
-"Well, I am glad to see you again, Owain," said Vane, after shaking
-hands warmly; "it is quite six months since I set eyes on you. Where
-have you been all this time? What have you been doing with yourself?
-And where is that patriarchal beard which made you look like Abraham?
-H'm! You're in love."
-
-Hench stared and made his friend comfortable in an armchair. "What on
-earth makes you say that?" he inquired with a puzzled look.
-
-"No girl could possibly love a man with a beard which made him look
-one hundred and ten years old. You have met with a girl--with _the_
-girl--and are in love. Therefore have you shaved your chin, reduced
-your age, and made yourself look like a young Greek god."
-
-"I don't feel like a Greek god, Jim," said Hench, taking a seat and
-glancing round to see that windows and doors were closed. "I'm
-worried."
-
-"Poor old chap," said Vane with quick sympathy; "rely on me to help.
-We always were pals at school, you know. Is it money?"
-
-"No. I have enough to keep me going. By the way, your mention of our
-being pals at school reminds me that I met another chap who was with
-us at Winchester ages ago."
-
-"Don't make us out to be as old as the hills, Owain. We're young yet,
-and the wine of life still sparkles in the bowl. Who is this chap?"
-
-"Spruce. He is----"
-
-"Oh Lord!" Vane removed his cigarette from his thin lips with an air
-of disgust. "I know what he is; you needn't tell me anything about
-him. You don't mean to say that you look upon him as a pal?"
-
-"No! He wanted me to but I couldn't stomach him and his dandified
-airs. If you want my opinion of him," continued Hench frankly, "he's a
-sickening little beast, as arrogant as they make them."
-
-"He's all that and more--one of the Gadarene swine. Where did you meet
-him?"
-
-"At a boarding-house in Bethnal Green."
-
-"Oh! That's the fox's hole, is it. I thought he would go further
-afield."
-
-"Has he any reason to go afield at all?" asked Hench, staring. "You
-bet he has, old fellow. Mr. Cuthbert Spruce has been a man on the
-market for quite a long time."
-
-"What is a man on the market?"
-
-"A chap who gets his living by his wits," explained the barrister
-leisurely, "and Spruce has been at that sort of game for ever so long.
-He started with a decent income but got rid of it at cards. Cards
-queered his pitch ultimately, as he was caught cheating and had to
-clear out. H'm! He's ruralizing at Bethnal Green, is he? I expect he
-will stay there until his little bad wind blows away. Then he'll try
-and return. But it's all of no use, Owain, as no one will have the
-little beast at any price."
-
-"He told me quite a different story."
-
-"Oh, he would, naturally. Spruce is very good at telling stories. He
-ought to be a novelist by rights."
-
-"That's exactly what he claims to be," retorted Owain, opening his
-eyes widely. "He said that he had come to Bethnal Green to gather
-material for a yarn."
-
-"Pretty thin," commented Vane, with a shrug, "considering he can't
-write a single paragraph of King's English without a dozen mistakes. I
-credited him with sufficient imagination to manufacture a better lie.
-However, it's useless for us to waste time over Spruce and his shady
-doings. Cheating at cards has finished him, and now he'll go under
-altogether. R.I.P. and be hanged to him. But what were you doing at
-Bethnal Green, old son?"
-
-"I thought that a cheap boarding-house down there would suit my
-pocket."
-
-"H'm! You explained that much before, even though I offered to share
-my pennies with you."
-
-"Very good of you, Jim," said Hench hastily and colouring, "but I
-don't care about shoving my burden on to another man's shoulders.
-However, a gold mine I had a few shares in turned up trumps, and I
-have a hundred pounds more or less at my back."
-
-"And for that reason you have come West?"
-
-"Well, not exactly. If you don't mind being bored with my----"
-
-"Nothing you tell me will ever bore me, Owain," interrupted Vane
-quickly. "It's a girl, I swear. Come, be honest."
-
-"Well, there was a girl, but there isn't now," confessed Owain, and
-while Vane chuckled at his own perspicuity he related what had taken
-place at The Home of the Muses in connection with Zara, Bracken,
-Madame Alpenny and Spruce. Vane listened intently, and when Hench
-ended made his first remark in connection with the Nut, for whom he
-seemed to have no great love.
-
-"The sordid little animal wished to make money out of you, Owain," he
-said in his shrewd way, "and for that reason made up to you and kept
-his eye on you."
-
-"But he knew that I had no money," protested Hench, puzzled.
-
-"These papers at the lawyers' may mean money," retorted the barrister.
-"I am inclined to agree with that old lady you mention so far. Well,
-it's only about nine days until your birthday, so you haven't long to
-wait. And now that you've cut the place--very wisely, I think--Spruce
-won't be able to line his pockets at your expense. As to the girl--you
-never did love her."
-
-"Well, perhaps you are right. But I admired her."
-
-"That's nothing. I admire scores of girls, but that doesn't mean
-matrimony, my son. You are at that age, Owain, when any woman could
-collar you. I'm glad that this Zara girl had enough sense to cotton to
-the other man. Madame Alpenny----"
-
-Hench rose restlessly. "I'm afraid of her," he interrupted bluntly.
-
-"Pooh! Why should you be? She can't force you to marry her daughter."
-
-"No." Owain spoke slowly. "It's not that. But the advertisement----"
-
-"Well, it had to do with you, certainly, going by the mention of the
-place where your father passed his youth. But you told her that you
-did not intend to keep the appointment."
-
-"Yes. All the same, I did keep the appointment."
-
-"The deuce!" Vane looked surprised. "Well?"
-
-"I'm coming to my trouble now," said Hench, picking up one of the
-newspapers nervously; "read that paragraph."
-
-Vane looked at his friend in surprise, and then swiftly made himself
-acquainted with the information about the Parley Wood murder. He
-started when he first grasped what the paragraph was about, but
-afterwards read on slowly to the end. When he knew all about the
-matter he threw aside the newspaper and looked inquiringly at Hench.
-"Well?"
-
-"Well," repeated Owain, sitting down with his hands in his pockets,
-"can't you see, Jim? I went to the Gipsy Stile and----"
-
-"And murdered this man," finished Vane derisively. "Do you expect me
-to believe that, you fool?"
-
-"No. I'm not given to behaving in that way. But I kept the appointment
-and I found the corpse."
-
-"Oh, the devil!" Vane sat up.
-
-"So I said at the time," remarked Hench dryly.
-
-"And when Madame Alpenny reads about the crime, she will put two and
-two together."
-
-"They won't make four in her calculations," said Vane swiftly. "After
-all, you are innocent. She can't prove you to be guilty."
-
-"Well, I don't know. The circumstantial evidence is rather strong."
-
-"The circumstantial evidence!" Vane stared and reflected. "You had a
-beard when I saw you last, now----"
-
-"I shaved to-day, so that there might be no chance of my being
-discovered by any description that girl at the Bull Inn might give."
-
-"Girl at the Bull Inn? What do you mean?"
-
-Hench lost no time but promptly gave a full account of his adventures
-from the time he left Liverpool Street Station to the moment that he
-sat down to dinner in the very room in which the two were speaking.
-Vane interrupted him frequently, and his face grew grave as he
-recognized that Hench was in a woeful plight. "Of course, I've acted
-like an ass," confessed Owain in a rueful manner; "but how would you
-have acted, Jim?"
-
-"Sitting in this chair and being wise after the event, I should have
-faced the thing out," said Vane slowly. "But had I been in your shoes
-in that wood I should probably have run away as you did." He paused,
-shook his head, stared at the carpet. "Damn!" he muttered
-emphatically.
-
-"I thought it best to speak to you," murmured Owain anxiously.
-
-Vane nodded. "Quite right. What's the use of a pal if he doesn't rise
-to the occasion. After all, if Madame Alpenny does speak to the police
-she can't prove you to be guilty. You had no motive to murder this
-Evans. He was quite a stranger to you."
-
-"Quite. All the same----"
-
-"All the same, hold your confounded tongue!" insisted the barrister.
-"My advice to you is to sit tight and wait events."
-
-"Madame Alpenny?"
-
-"Exactly. If she is the old adventuress you think she is, and which
-from your description she certainly appears to be, I don't think you
-need have any fear for the moment."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Because she will wait until you are in possession of those papers on
-your twenty-fifth birthday. If they place you in possession of money
-she will be silent on condition that you marry her daughter."
-
-"I won't. Nothing would induce me to marry a girl who loves another
-man."
-
-"Oh, I don't say that you would marry her, but that Madame Alpenny
-would try and make you marry her. Until all hope fails in that
-direction she'll say nothing about the advertisement. Of course, if
-there is no money the old hag will split, especially if there is a
-reward. As this Squire Evans seems to be a landowner and a rich man, I
-expect there will be a reward."
-
-"I see. Then the best thing for me to do is to wait."
-
-"Exactly. I'll support you, and you can talk your heart out to me."
-
-"You're a good fellow, Jim. Why, I half believed you would think
-me----"
-
-"Don't talk bosh!" Vane jumped up irritably. "Why, you're the whitest
-man I know, and my old school-pal. I'd as soon believe myself guilty
-as you. Now I'm off to bed; go thou and do likewise and don't worry."
-After which speech he shook hands with Hench and the two parted for
-the night.
-
-For the next nine days they had many such talks, and kept themselves
-well informed of the progress which the case was making so far as they
-could learn in print. Of course, the girl at the Bull Inn _did_ tell
-the police about the interview in the tap-room, and of course great
-capital was made out of this. But as Owain had suspected, the girl
-being inobservant, and not having seen him very clearly in the smoky
-dimly-lighted atmosphere, gave a most incoherent account of his
-appearance. All she could say was that the questioner was a
-rough-looking tramp with a bushy black beard, who spoke civilly
-enough, but who was not a gentleman. Vane chuckled when he read this
-unflattering description, which was sufficiently wrong and vague to
-preserve Hench from suspicions. And, indeed, if the girl had been
-confronted with Hench she would never have recognized in this handsome
-clean-shaven young gentleman, fashionably dressed, the rough tramp who
-had drank his beer in the tap-room. It was Vane who made Owain dress
-fashionably, so as to make him look as unlike his old bearded self as
-possible. He took him to his tailor, to his haberdasher, to his
-bootmaker, and to various other tradesmen, with the result that
-Owain's new wardrobe did full justice to his handsome looks. Hench,
-being of the pioneering legion, rather kicked against being thus
-civilized, but he recognized that Vane was right to insist upon the
-transformation.
-
-Whatever Madame Alpenny might have thought she did not put her
-thoughts into action, for nothing appeared in the papers likely to
-show that Hench was suspected by the police. The inquest on Squire
-Madoc Evans' body was duly held, and the verdict was brought in of
-"Wilful murder against some person or persons unknown," although every
-one was pretty certain that the shabby tramp who had inquired the way
-to the Gipsy Stile was the culprit. But he had vanished, and--thanks
-to Madame Alpenny's silence--no word came to the police suggesting his
-identity with Owain Hench. The funeral took place in due time, and it
-gave Owain a thrill when he read that the body had been taken to
-Rhaiadr in Wales for burial. It was said that Evans came from that
-place, and that all his ancestors were buried there. Incidentally, it
-was mentioned that the dead man had left a daughter who inherited
-Cookley Grange, and by her father's death became the Lady of the
-Manor.
-
-"I think it's all right now," said Vane when matters reached this
-pitch. "After the nine days' wonder the excitement will gradually die
-away. And, by Jupiter!" cried the barrister, "it is exactly nine days.
-Owain, old son, this is your birthday. Off with you and call on
-Gilberry & Gilberry."
-
-"Won't you come also, Jim?"
-
-"No, I won't. You can't get into trouble in a respectable legal
-office, and you are so changed that no one is likely to spot you as
-the man who is wanted for Squire Madoc Evans' death."
-
-Owain was content to go alone, although he felt slightly nervous. His
-strongest card, should anything come out, was that he had not known
-Evans, and therefore had no reason to kill him. And by this time he
-was growing used to the situation, since Madame Alpenny was holding
-her tongue. Why she acted in this kind way he could not understand,
-but accepted the explanation provided by Vane. However, if he came
-into money she probably would find him out and move in the matter.
-Therefore it was with some reluctance that Hench went to Gilberry &
-Gilberry's office in Lincoln's Inn Fields. He wanted to let sleeping
-dogs lie, and was unwilling to become rich, as by doing so he would
-certainly bring Madame Alpenny down on his head. All the same, Hench
-felt very curious when he faced the white-headed old gentleman who was
-the head of the firm, and was rather astonished by the warmth of the
-greeting he received.
-
-"I am glad to see you," said Mr. Gilberry heartily. "You come in the
-nick of time, my dear young friend."
-
-"To do what, sir?"
-
-"To inherit ten thousand a year."
-
-"What?" Owain became pale with amazement.
-
-Gilberry chuckled. "Oh yes. It is as I say, Mr. Evans."
-
-"What?" cried Owain again, and this time louder, with a quavering
-voice.
-
-"Of course; of course," the old man chuckled once more. "You think
-that your name is Hench. Not so; not so. You are Owain Evans of
-Rhaiadr, the heir of Squire Madoc Evans, of Cookley Grange, in Essex."
-
-"And--and--what relation am I to--to--to----"
-
-"Oh, yes. You don't know. Why, my dear sir, Madoc Evans was your
-uncle."
-
-Owain gasped, and turned as white as the corpse he had seen in Parley
-Wood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-FAMILY HISTORY
-
-
-Like M. Jourdain in Moliere's comedy, Vane was only surprised when he
-found virtue in unexpected places, but he certainly was astonished in
-another direction when Hench stumbled into his chambers white-faced,
-wild-eyed and trembling. The barrister hastily arose and supported his
-friend to a chair, and as hastily produced a glass of brandy to hold
-to his lips.
-
-"Drink this, Owain," he commanded, wondering what had happened to put
-his visitor in such a state. "Don't say a word until you feel better."
-
-Hench drank the whole glassful of fiery liquor, and the colour began
-to return to his wan cheeks. He did not speak, as requested, but sat
-in the chair with a broken-down look, which startled Vane more than he
-showed. Looking anxiously at his friend he came to the sole conclusion
-he could come to, seeing what he knew in connection with Hench's
-adventure. "Madame Alpenny has found you out?"
-
-Hench shook his head. "It's worse than that," he muttered faintly.
-
-"Then the worse it is the better you should brace yourself up to face
-it," was Vane's irritable retort. "Have another glass of brandy,
-although I don't approve of Dutch courage myself."
-
-"No. No more brandy. Wait a bit. I'll soon pull round."
-
-Vane nodded approvingly, and turned his back so as to give the man
-time to recover himself. He went to the window and looked at the busy
-traffic of Chancery Lane, in which thoroughfare his chambers were
-situated. The same were directly opposite that gateway which leads
-into Lincoln's Inn Fields, through the highways and byeways of
-pleasant grounds sacred to the goddess Themis. Hench had evidently
-come straight in this way from the offices of Gilberry & Gilberry.
-Vane wondered how he had managed to arrive without attracting
-observation and being stopped, so wild had been his looks when he
-entered the chambers. The journey was very short, truly, but the
-appearance of the man was sufficient to warrant interference.
-Evidently the unexpected had happened to throw Hench into this
-abnormal state, and with a shrug of his shoulders Vane turned to see
-how he was getting on. Hench smiled faintly as he met the inquiring
-gaze of the barrister and wiped his forehead, which was wet with
-perspiration. Then he essayed to speak and apologize, succeeding after
-one or two desperate attempts.
-
-"Sorry, Jim, but I couldn't help myself."
-
-"Seems like it," snapped Vane, trying to bully him into calmness. He
-had never before seen Hench so upset, as the man was usually very
-quiet and self-controlled. Something very bad must have happened to
-unnerve him in this way. "I should like to know what is the meaning of
-all this," went on Vane crossly. "Upon my Sam, Owain, if I didn't know
-you were a sober chap I should have believed that you were drunk when
-you came in. I wonder some policeman didn't run you in between here
-and Lincoln's Inn Fields."
-
-"I did see people staring at me," replied Hench in a stronger voice,
-as the brandy had done its work and he was rapidly recovering his
-balance. "Perhaps if I had come by a longer way I might have got into
-trouble. But you see, Jim, the distance----"
-
-"Yes! Yes!" Vane dropped into his own favourite chair. "I know all
-about that, old son. Come to the point. What's up?"
-
-"I've had a shock."
-
-"Oh Lord! as if the most stupid person--which I am not--couldn't see
-as much. I can only conclude that Madame Alpenny has told the police
-and you are in danger of arrest. Yet you deny that such is the case."
-
-"I do. Madame Alpenny has nothing to do with this particular matter.
-Yes, I have had a shock, but I'm all right now." Hench shook himself
-like a dog coming out of a pond and drew a long breath, then continued
-to talk calmly. His first remark was a question. "If I did get
-arrested, Jim, I suppose my best line of defence would be to say that,
-not knowing the dead man, I had no motive to kill him."
-
-"That is my opinion," admitted the barrister. "Well?"
-
-"Well, there is no chance of my taking up that line of defence."
-
-"Why not? You told me that you did not know Squire Evans."
-
-"I did. I don't contradict my admission."
-
-"Then why can't you defend yourself, if necessary, on that score?"
-
-"I'll answer that question by asking you another? Who am I?"
-
-Vane stared and looked wholly bewildered. "Owain Hench!"
-
-"So I thought. Now I learn from Gilberry & Gilberry that I am Owain
-Evans."
-
-"What?" Vane uttered the ejaculation in as astonished a tone as Hench
-had done in the solicitor's office. "Are you a relative of the dead
-man?"
-
-"Yes. I am his nephew."
-
-"Well, the unexpected is always happening," commented Vane, after a
-pause of sheer surprise. "But even so, as you did not know your uncle
-and never met him, you can still say, if necessary, that you had no
-motive to murder him."
-
-"I can't." Owain rose and began to pace the room. "I can't; and that's
-the worst of it, Jim. As you say, I did not know him and I never met
-him, but evil tongues might give me the lie, seeing what I stood to
-gain."
-
-"What did you stand to gain?"
-
-"Ten thousand a year."
-
-"Ten thousand a year!" Vane echoed the words with a gasp of
-astonishment. "I say, Owain, those mysterious papers left by your
-father did mean a fortune after all, as Madame Alpenny suspected?"
-
-Hench nodded, and sat down again with a disconsolate air. "It is a
-dangerous position that I am in. Owain Evans of Rhaiadr with ten
-thousand a year, which comes to me now that Uncle Madoc is
-dead----that is who I am."
-
-"But you knew nothing about such an inheritance?"
-
-"Who will believe that?" asked Owain derisively. "Already, as the
-tramp who asked the way to the Gipsy Stile, I am accused of the crime.
-Should the truth of my keeping that appointment become known, the
-motive of gaining ten thousand a year will be imputed to me as an
-excuse for committing the deed."
-
-"Don't go too fast, Owain," said Vane sharply; "remember only Gilberry
-& Gilberry had this information. They can prove that you knew nothing
-about the same on the first of July when the man was murdered."
-
-"True enough. All the same I kept the appointment," persisted Hench
-stubbornly. "Who is to prove that I did not have a long interview with
-my uncle in Parley Wood; who is to declare that he did not admit I was
-his heir and that his death would place me in possession of so large
-an income? And, remember, Jim, that I am poor. A man would do much to
-gain ten thousand a year."
-
-"A man like you, Owain, would do nothing mean or dishonourable or
-cruel to gain double the sum," said Vane sharply. "Don't be a fool."
-
-"Am I a fool? You know me, Jim, but other people don't. Supposing
-Madame Alpenny tells what she knows to the police and sets them on my
-track----"
-
-"She doesn't know your address. You told me so."
-
-"I told you truly. She doesn't. But seeing that I have given my usual
-name both at the hotel I stayed at and to the landlady of my lodgings
-in South Kensington, there won't be much difficulty in the police
-finding me. People will talk, you know. I have shaved off my beard
-too, and that might be quoted against me as a sign of my guilt."
-
-"It might," assented Vane restlessly, for he recognized that the
-position was a dangerous one. "But it all depends upon Madame Alpenny.
-So far she has made no move, and now that you really are rich she will
-hold her tongue."
-
-"Provided I marry her daughter, I suppose?" inquired Owain dryly.
-
-"Of course. The woman is an adventuress, as you say, and means to make
-money out of you. Marry her daughter and supply her with funds, and
-you will place yourself in the power of a possible blackmailer."
-
-Hench's face became dour and obstinate in its looks. "Even if Madame
-Alpenny placed me in the dock at the New Bailey, I won't marry Zara,
-or give the old woman a single penny."
-
-"I'm with you, old son." Vane leaned forward and shook his friend's
-hand. "You can depend upon me to do all I can to pull you through."
-
-"You're a good sort, Jim, to stand by me," said Hench, much moved.
-
-"Pooh! Pooh! Pooh! I take a right view of friendship, that's all,"
-said Vane cheerfully. "Come, old man, let us discuss the situation. We
-have ample time, as Madame Alpenny will hold her tongue until you
-openly refuse the demands she is sure to make. Who gains time, gains
-everything, and lots of things may happen before she can place your
-neck in a noose."
-
-"I am in a dangerous position."
-
-"You are. I don't wish to minimize the risk, or undervalue Madame
-Alpenny as an enemy. But remember, Owain, that she is not your enemy
-until you give her cause to be so by declining to marry the girl and
-pension Madame. Thus the police will learn nothing for many a long
-day, and meantime we can act."
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"Why, in trying to learn who really did murder your uncle." Vane drew
-a long breath. "By Jupiter, old son, I don't wonder you were knocked
-all of a heap by the information that you had a new relative and ten
-thousand a year."
-
-"Oh, it wasn't that which upset me," explained Hench with a shrug,
-"but the knowledge that my uncle was the dead man I found in Parley
-Wood."
-
-"Gilberry & Gilberry don't know that, I suppose?"
-
-"Of course not. I kept that information to myself. They didn't even,
-so far as I could gather, know anything about the advertisement, or
-they would have spoken about it. I said nothing."
-
-"Very wise of you. I wonder," mused the barrister, "why your uncle put
-in that advertisement?"
-
-"To make you understand, Jim, it will be necessary to repeat my family
-history as Mr. Gilberry told it to me."
-
-"That is what I have been wishing you to do for the last fifteen
-minutes, old boy. Here, take a cigarette and make yourself
-comfortable. When I am in possession of facts I shall be in a better
-position to advise you."
-
-"I need advice," sighed Hench, lighting up.
-
-"Well, don't shed tears over it, sonny. Fire away."
-
-Vane's banter and anxious desire to cheer him up did Hench good, and
-he produced a large blue envelope out of his pocket which contained
-several papers. The young man glanced at these doubtfully, then laid
-them on the table. "You can examine them at your leisure," he said,
-leaning back comfortably in his chair. "I'll tell you the story
-instead of reading it."
-
-"That will be best," assented Vane brightly. "Begin, Scheherazade."
-
-"My grandfather," said Hench conversationally, "lived at Rhaiadr in
-South Wales, where his family had resided for centuries. They were
-minor princes, I believe, before the first Edward conquered the
-country, but dwindled in importance as the centuries went by. When the
-family estates came to my grandfather, all he had was considerable
-property in Rhaiadr and a tumbledown family seat. He was called Mynydd
-Evans----"
-
-"Curious Christian name," commented Vane, lighting a fresh cigarette.
-
-"Yes! Gilberry, who seems to know something of the Welsh language,
-told me that it means 'Great.' So my grandfather was really Great
-Evans, so called because he was the chief person in Rhaiadr, and
-because he was a stout, bulky man, over six feet three in height. He
-was discontented with his lot, as he wanted money and power and
-position, and the deuce knows what."
-
-"Rather a grabber, Owain, considering that he was the Lord of
-Rhaiadr--and that's another queer name."
-
-"It means water tumbling over a rock--a waterfall, in fact," said
-Hench, with a nod. "My father mentioned the word to Madame Alpenny and
-gave her the translation. Well, to continue. Mynydd Evans collected
-what money he could and came to London. There he set up as a merchant,
-and being clever, in a wonderfully short space of time he made a large
-fortune."
-
-"He must have done so considering he could leave your uncle ten
-thousand a year," said Vane emphatically. "But why didn't he return to
-Rhaiadr?"
-
-"Mr. Gilberry couldn't explain that. I expect the old man found the
-Welsh parish of his ancestors too narrow for his ambition, and perhaps
-too far from London and his place of business. He bought the Lordship
-of the Manor of Cookley, in Essex, and took up his abode in the old
-Grange. There he died."
-
-"And your Uncle Madoc, as the eldest son, became the heir?"
-
-"Now, that is exactly what did not happen. Mynydd Evans had two
-sons--my father, Owain, and Madoc--and my father was the elder of the
-two. He was"--Hench wriggled uneasily--"he was a rotter, and I'm
-breaking the fifth commandment in saying so, Jim."
-
-"Well," said the barrister coolly, "from what you told me of your
-father when we met six months ago, I rather think he was a bad lot."
-
-"Unfortunately, yes," said Hench hastily. "But he is dead, so let us
-say as little about him as possible. Anyhow, he contrived so mortally
-to offend my grandfather with his doings that he was cut out of the
-will."
-
-"What did he do particularly shady?"
-
-"I can't tell you," said Hench, with a shrug. "From what Gilberry said
-I gathered that it wasn't one shady deed, but the culmination of many
-that induced Mynydd Evans to give the estate to my Uncle Madoc. He was
-the good boy of the family, and Mynydd Evans knew that his hard-earned
-fortune would not be dissipated in his hands. My father was allowed
-five or six hundred a year, and told to keep away from England. He did
-so and afterwards married abroad--an English governess, my mother. She
-died in due time and I was sent to England to board with strangers.
-Then I went to a private school, afterwards to Winchester, where we
-met, Jim."
-
-"Yes, I know all that. Afterwards your father sent for you and
-ultimately died in Paris. You told me about your life since, when you
-came back six months ago. But why didn't your father relate your
-family history to you? Why did he keep you in the dark?"
-
-"Really, Jim, I can't say, unless it was that he felt ashamed of his
-doings. He would have had to tell me that he was not straight, to
-account for his being cut out of the will, you know. Anyhow, he saw
-Gilberry & Gilberry and left with them those papers, which include my
-birth certificate and my baptismal one--things which are necessary to
-prove my identity, you know. Gilberry & Gilberry were my father's
-lawyers and the lawyers of my uncle and grandfather. They saw that my
-school fees were paid and kept an eye on me while my father was in
-exile. So I had no difficulty in proving who I was. In fact old
-Gilberry knew me from my likeness to my father the moment I entered
-the office. It's all right so far."
-
-"But if the money was left to your uncle, how do you inherit?"
-
-"Well, it seems that Mynydd Evans always had some qualms about cutting
-off the direct line, and, I suppose, hoped that the third generation
-would be better than the second, as represented by my father. Anyhow,
-he made a will excluding my father, save for the five or six hundred a
-year allowance, and left the whole eleven thousand pounds per annum he
-was worth to Uncle Madoc."
-
-"You said it was ten thousand."
-
-"Yes. But of the extra thousand, five hundred went to my father during
-his life and the remaining five hundred--or it might be four with six
-to my father, as I'm not quite clear about the exact amounts--to Gwen
-Evans, my first cousin, Uncle Madoc's daughter."
-
-"Oh! There's a girl, then?"
-
-"Yes, and if old Gilberry is to be believed, she is a very pretty
-girl. I understand that she is about twenty years of age. We can talk
-of her later, Jim. Anyhow, you must understand that Uncle Madoc only
-had the income and the Grange for life. Afterwards it was to go to the
-offspring of my father, who was the true heir. I am the sole
-offspring, so I inherit."
-
-"I see," pondered Vane. "Well, all that seems clear and reasonable
-enough. Only I should like to know why your uncle didn't find you out
-and treat you as his heir. He could have done so through Gilberry &
-Gilberry, who--as you say--kept their eye on you all the time."
-
-"According to Mr. Gilberry, my uncle hated my father fervently, and
-did not at all approve of Mynydd Evans' will, which left the property
-to the son of the brother he detested. He made no inquiries, I
-understand, and was quite content to enjoy the property and let the
-deluge in the shape of myself come after him. Of course he would
-rather, as Mr. Gilberry said, have had Gwen get the property, but he
-could not, as the will of my grandfather was too clear."
-
-"Well, I can understand that the brothers did not love one another,"
-said Vane, after a pause; "family feuds are unfortunately too common.
-But what made the old man put in that advertisement?"
-
-"As I didn't mention the advertisement to Mr. Gilberry for obvious
-reasons, I could obtain no information on that point," explained
-Owain, looking somewhat perplexed. "And why he sought me out in that
-peculiar way at the eleventh hour, I can't say. He might as well have
-done the thing straight through the family lawyers. Anyhow, I suppose
-he thought that the mention of the name Rhaiadr would show me that I
-was wanted, although I can't understand why he worded the
-advertisement so obscurely. But that my father mentioned the place of
-his family to me, I wouldn't have bothered about the matter. Let alone
-the fact," concluded Hench after a pause, "that I wouldn't have seen
-the advertisement at all but for Madame Alpenny. It was queer, wasn't
-it, Jim, that the advertisement should have appeared with the name
-Rhaiadr just after she remembered meeting my father over twenty years
-ago?"
-
-"So queer," said Vane dryly, "that I wonder if Madame Alpenny had
-anything to do with the insertion of the advertisement."
-
-"Oh, that's rubbish, Jim. She never met my uncle, and couldn't have
-put in the advertisement on her own, as she didn't know the ropes. My
-uncle put it in sure enough, or he would not have been in the wood to
-meet me. But why the deuce he should choose out-of-doors as a meeting
-place instead of asking me into his own house, I can't understand."
-
-"He was evidently an original," said the barrister, with a shrug. "By
-the way, if you died, or if you had never been born, who would inherit
-the estate?"
-
-"Gwen, my cousin, of course. The will left the property to the
-offspring of the eldest son, and failing such offspring, to the
-children of the second son. Why do you ask that, Jim?"
-
-"Well, it occurs to me that the cautiously worded advertisement and
-the appointment of so lonely a place to meet in, suggests foul play on
-the part of your beloved uncle."
-
-"Foul play?" Hench stared. "What the deuce do you mean?"
-
-"Madoc might have intended to murder you so that his daughter might
-inherit."
-
-"Oh, rot!"
-
-"Not at all. We must look at all possibilities. Madoc hated your
-father and doubtless hated you also as the son of your father. If he
-could have done you out of the inheritance by murdering you, I don't
-see why he should have held his hand."
-
-"But you don't know the man's character," protested Hench. "He may
-have been a very harmless person."
-
-"A very cunning and plotting person, anyhow," said Vane quickly.
-"Else, why the carefully worded advertisement and the strange place
-chosen for the meeting. No, Owain, my conjecture may be wild, but
-there is some truth in it, I am sure. Madoc intended to get rid of
-you, and your lucky stars led some one to get rid of him, before you
-appeared on the scene."
-
-"My lucky stars," said Hench, rising. "How can you say that, when I am
-in danger of being arrested for his death?"
-
-"There is no danger just now, until Madame Alpenny moves. And when she
-does move we may be able to counterplot her."
-
-"She will move as soon as I enter into my inheritance."
-
-"I know that. Therefore, if I were you, I should not take up my
-inheritance just yet."
-
-"How can I prevent that? Gilberry & Gilberry will take immediate steps
-to place me in possession, and the business is sure to get into the
-newspapers. Then Madame Alpenny will see that I am rich and come to
-bother me."
-
-"Of course. But you can tell Gilberry & Gilberry to hold over action
-until you learn who murdered your uncle. Once you find the true
-assassin you will be safe from the malice of Madame Alpenny and all
-other people."
-
-"Oh, there is no one can spot me but Madame Alpenny," said Owain
-confidentially.
-
-"Not even Spruce?" asked Vane significantly.
-
-"Certainly not. He knows nothing about my affairs."
-
-"You told me that he knew about the papers you were to see on your
-twenty-fifth birthday?"
-
-"Oh, yes. But those papers won't connect me with Uncle Madoc's death.
-Only the advertisement can do that, and I don't suppose Spruce has set
-eyes on it."
-
-"Let us hope not," said Vane uneasily. "But since he heard the name
-Rhaiadr when the meeting with your father was explained by Madame
-Alpenny, he certainly might put two and two together if he did see the
-advertisement. And if the old woman saw it, why shouldn't Spruce see
-it?"
-
-"My dear Jim, why manufacture trouble, when we have enough to deal
-with as things stand? If Spruce does get on the trail, I shall deal
-with him very promptly, I assure you. I'm not afraid of that little
-rat."
-
-"Rats can be dangerous, Owain, and Spruce is a meddlesome animal
-always on the make. You with your ten thousand a year would be a
-god-send to him. Now, if you will take my advice----"
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"This. Tell Gilberry & Gilberry to let things remain as they are,
-until you tell them to place you legally in possession of your
-property. They can look after the ten thousand odd pounds coming to
-you and allow your cousin the four or five hundred a year to which she
-is entitled. Then go down to Cookley as Owain Hench and look about for
-any possible person who might have knifed your uncle."
-
-"But Gilberry & Gilberry will think it queer."
-
-"What the devil does it matter what they think? So long as they get
-their fees all they have to do is to execute your orders. And if you
-like, you can make a romance out of the business and tell them that
-you are going down to Cookley to see your cousin under your false
-name, so as to find out what she is like. Of course, you can hint that
-you may fall in love----"
-
-"Oh, rats!" interrupted Hench inelegantly. "I'm not likely to fall in
-love. I don't believe that I understand what love is, seeing what a
-hash I made of my attentions to Zara."
-
-"You made a hash because you didn't love her, old son. But you may
-fall in love with your cousin."
-
-"Don't anticipate the worst," said Owain dryly. "Anyhow, your advice
-is good, Jim. I shall tell Gilberry & Gilberry to hold over and will
-give them to understand that I wish to see the beautiful heiress I
-have dispossessed. As Hench, I shall go to Cookley and look round for
-the criminal. With my changed appearance I don't suppose I'll be
-spotted."
-
-"No, I think you are safe so far," said Vane, looking at his friend in
-a critical manner, "but don't risk seeing that girl at the Bull Inn.
-She may recognize your voice. And I'll tell you what, Owain, I'll give
-you an introduction to an old aunt of mine, Mrs. Perage, who is a
-great swell in those parts. Her respectability may help you to hold
-your own amongst the very suspicious, narrow-minded people one finds
-in the country."
-
-"Jim, you're a brick."
-
-"Oh, fudge! I'll loot you when you enter into your kingdom," and Vane
-laughed uproariously at his small joke. "See if I don't make you pay
-up!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-GWEN
-
-
-Naturally, Gilberry & Gilberry were extremely astonished when the heir
-to Cookley Grange refused to enter into his kingdom immediately. Such
-a wonderful reluctance to enjoy a large income and a splendid position
-had never before come under their notice. Fortunately, however, Mr.
-Samuel Gilberry, the senior partner, who attended particularly to the
-business of the estate, was of a romantic turn of mind, unusual in a
-lawyer, and Owain's suggestion of acting the part of a disguised
-prince rather appealed to him. Adopting Vane's suggestion, Hench--as
-he persisted in calling himself for the time being--artfully pointed
-out that it would be just as well to make the acquaintance of his
-cousin as a stranger before revealing himself. He did not wish her, as
-he put it, to be biassed by the fact that he was the son of his
-father. "For you see, sir," he said to the old gentleman, who was a
-white-bearded benevolent person, somewhat like the traditional Father
-Christmas, "so far as I can gather from the papers which my father
-left behind him, these brothers, who are the parents of Gwen and
-myself, were not friends."
-
-"They hated one another fervently, if you don't mind my saying so,"
-was the emphatic response of the old lawyer, as he took a pinch of
-snuff.
-
-"I don't mind your stating the truth, Mr. Gilberry, which is what I
-want to get at," replied Hench readily. "Well then, admitting that the
-two hated one another, it is more than likely that Uncle Madoc had no
-great love for me."
-
-"He had not, my young friend. I pointed out to him frequently that as
-he had never set eyes on you, he could scarcely form any judgment,
-good, bad or indifferent. But he declared that you were the son of
-your father and that no good could come out of Nazareth."
-
-"Quite so. And doubtless he passed on his opinion to his daughter."
-
-"I think it is extremely likely, although I cannot speak positively,
-Mr. Owain," said the solicitor. "By the way, I may as well call you by
-that name, since you refuse to take your proper appellation, and I
-don't like to call you Mr. Hench."
-
-"I don't mind what you call me," Owain assured him, "so long as you
-don't let the cat out of the bag. My cousin is sure to have a bad
-opinion of me, since her father was so bitter. This being the case, I
-shall have no chance of becoming friendly with her if I present myself
-as her cousin. I do not wish to carry on the feud, so it is necessary
-for me to gain Gwen's good opinion. Therefore, under the name my
-father adopted, I shall make her acquaintance as a stranger, and win
-her friendship entirely on my own merits."
-
-"It is rather a fantastical way of acting, and is scarcely
-business-like," was Gilberry's reply. "All the same the idea is not
-without merit. I am quite ready to help you, and can do so, by saying
-that you are abroad."
-
-"I don't think it is even necessary to say as much. Let Gwen know that
-I have communicated with you, and have decided to wait for a time
-before taking over the estate. She can put it down to eccentricity, or
-to my late father's influence, if she likes. Anyhow, I don't suppose
-she will trouble to search very deeply into the matter, and will
-probably be pleased that I don't take possession of Cookley Grange
-immediately. She can continue to live there until I give her notice to
-quit."
-
-Gilberry laughed and shook his head. "Miss Evans is a very decided
-young lady, Mr. Owain," he remarked in a judicial manner, "and having
-her own income of five hundred a year, she has already quitted the
-Grange."
-
-"Because she expected me to take possession?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"There!" cried Hench triumphantly. "Didn't I tell you that she was
-biassed by her father. Has she left Cookley?"
-
-"No. She has gone to stay with a very charming old lady in the
-neighbourhood, called Mrs. Perage."
-
-"Better and better. That will enable me to make her acquaintance
-without unduly forcing myself upon her. My friend, Mr. Vane, who is a
-barrister----"
-
-"Yes! Yes! I know the name. I have heard that he is clever. Well?"
-
-"Well, he has given me a letter of introduction to Mrs. Perage, who is
-his aunt."
-
-Mr. Samuel Gilberry rubbed his hands and chuckled. "Very good--very
-good indeed, my young friend. It is quite a romance. Now, to carry the
-same to a proper conclusion, may I suggest that you should fall in
-love with Miss Evans?"
-
-Hench shook his head doubtfully. "Private feelings can't be ordered
-about like private soldiers," he remarked dryly. "I am not the kind of
-man to fall in love, Mr. Gilberry."
-
-"Pooh! Pooh! A handsome young fellow like you is sure to experience
-the grand passion. And let me tell you that Miss Evans is a beautiful
-girl, both clever and sensible. If you could manage to marry her,"
-went on the lawyer coaxingly, "think how delightfully you would end
-the family feud. And after all, poor girl, it is rather hard for her
-to be reduced to five hundred a year after enjoying, through her
-father, ten thousand per annum."
-
-"Oh, as to that," said Owain promptly, "you can allow her two or three
-thousand out of my income."
-
-"She wouldn't take it, seeing that your consent is necessary."
-
-"Yet you talk about my marrying her," was Hench's retort. "I have
-about as much chance of doing that as the man in the moon. However, I
-shall make her acquaintance as Hench, and see what comes of it. By the
-way, doesn't she know the name my father took in place of Evans?"
-
-"No. Your late uncle never mentioned it. As Owain Hench you are quite
-safe in making her acquaintance. She will never think that you are her
-cousin, unless you let her see how you spell your Christian name. The
-Welsh spelling may give her a hint, and she is very sharp, remember."
-
-"If I have occasion to write it, I shall spell the name in the English
-way. I don't suppose that will be necessary, anyhow. Well, that's all
-right. Act as we have decided and I shall go down to Cookley to carry
-out my romance, as you call it, Mr. Gilberry. One question I should
-like to ask you, however, before leaving."
-
-"And that is, Mr. Owain---?"
-
-"Who murdered my uncle?" Mr. Gilberry took a pinch of snuff and shook
-his venerable head. "Really, it is hard to say, unless it was that
-tramp who asked the way to the Gipsy Stile, Mr. Owain. I suppose you
-saw all about that in the papers?"
-
-Hench winced, but recovered himself immediately. "Yes, I did, Mr.
-Gilberry. But what reason could that tramp have had to murder my
-uncle. Not robbery, if the report of the inquest is to be believed,
-for then it was said that neither the money, nor the watch, nor the
-jewellery had been taken."
-
-"Exactly. So far as I can see, there was no reason why this man should
-have murdered Mr. Evans." Mr. Gilberry knitted his brows and looked
-perplexed. "Maybe it was revenge," he concluded doubtfully.
-
-"Revenge. Then my uncle had enemies?"
-
-"Dozens, I should think," said the lawyer coolly. "Mr. Madoc Evans was
-a very cantankerous person. I may say that much ill of the dead. He
-quarrelled with many people, and, moreover, was very severe on
-poaching both as a magistrate and as a landowner. This tramp, for all
-I know, may have been a poacher who had a grudge against him."
-
-"Do the police think so?"
-
-"The police say nothing, because they have no evidence to go upon,"
-said the lawyer sharply. "The sole person they suspect is the tramp
-who came to the Bull Inn. But he has disappeared, and they can't find
-him. However, in the village it is said that the tramp was a poacher,
-who murdered the Squire out of revenge. You can take or leave that
-opinion, as you like. The whole thing is a mystery to me, Mr. Owain."
-
-"And to me," said Hench, in all good faith. "I shall never be
-satisfied until I learn who murdered my uncle."
-
-"That wish does you credit, Mr. Owain," said Mr. Gilberry approvingly,
-and again the young man winced. "Considering how unfriendly the late
-Squire was towards your father."
-
-"Well, my father was just as unfriendly towards him," returned Hench
-with a shrug. "And, as I say, I don't wish to carry on the feud.
-Good-bye, Mr. Gilberry. When I am settled in Cookley I shall let you
-know my address and will write you if necessary. You are sure that no
-one knows my name of Hench as having anything to do with the family at
-the Grange?"
-
-"I am quite sure, although I don't call one solitary girl a family,"
-chuckled the old man, walking with his client towards the door.
-"Good-bye, good-bye. I hope--I sincerely hope--that the feud will be
-ended by your marriage to my late friend's daughter."
-
-"You might as well expect water to run up hill," retorted Hench
-sceptically, and went on his way, certain that he was not likely to
-lose his heart.
-
-Consequent on the necessity of preserving the secret of his identity
-carefully, Hench requested Vane to introduce him by letter to Mrs.
-Perage as Mr. Hench, suppressing the Christian name, which might have
-given Gwen a clue, if only from the oddness of the spelling. Vane, on
-learning that the girl had gone to stay with his aunt, quite approved
-of this, and both in his letter of introduction and his private
-epistle to the old lady made all things safe. As Mr. Hench, the young
-man went down to Cookley, and if he was forced to state what his
-Christian name was, he resolved to spell it in the English way. That
-would provoke no remark from Gwen, as "Owen" was not a particularly
-unusual designation. All the same, Hench felt that he was treading on
-thin ice. He determined to stay at Cookley as short a time as
-possible, and to see no more of his cousin than he could help. After
-all he was going down not to meet her, as Mr. Gilberry believed, but
-to learn if possible who had murdered the unfortunate Squire.
-
-While reading a newspaper entitled _The Setting Sun_ in the train,
-Hench received a distinct shock, although by this time he was growing
-accustomed to being startled. Some amateur detective had written a
-letter to the editor of this halfpenny evening journal, drawing
-attention to the advertisement in _The Express_ with reference to the
-meeting at the Gipsy Stile. Of the name "Rhaiadr" nothing was said, as
-such was Greek to the writer of the letter. But the fact that some one
-was invited to meet Squire Evans at the very place and on the very
-evening when he was murdered was largely commented upon. The very
-officious person who wrote suggested that the police should try
-and learn to whom the advertisement was addressed, "when without
-doubt"--the letter went on to say--"the assassin will be captured."
-
-Although it was rather like asking the authorities to look for a
-needle in a bottle of hay, seeing that there were eight million people
-in London to any one of whom the advertisement might have been
-addressed, Owain felt cold water running down his spine. Not on
-account of the Hungarian lady, because he agreed with Vane that she
-would not give information to the police until she learned if he was
-prepared to marry her daughter. It was Spruce he feared--the little
-rat who was meddlesome and secretive, and unscrupulous, and who could
-do much mischief once he got on the trail. From what Vane had said, it
-was plain that the Nut had rendered his position in the West End
-untenable owing to his cheating, and the sole chance he had of
-becoming even tolerable to his former associates--and perhaps not even
-then--was to return with his pockets full of money. Then, for the sake
-of winning the same, they might overlook his fault. Probably they
-would not, but Hench was quite sure that Spruce believed that money
-would do anything. Naturally, he would do much to get money, being
-anything but an honourable man as had been ample proved. In Bethnal
-Green there were few opportunities of making a fortune, and Spruce was
-not sufficiently clever to take advantage even of what chances there
-were. Consequently, he would be quite prepared--Hench was certain of
-this--to get what he could by blackmail. Already he believed that
-there was some mystery about Hench, and if he saw the advertisement,
-or the letter which had drawn attention to the same, he would be
-certain to get at the truth. Having been present at the conversation
-between Hench and Madame Alpenny when the woman's meeting with his
-father--Hench's father that is--had been discussed, the word "Rhaiadr"
-would certainly come again into his mind. Connecting the same with
-Hench, the young man was convinced that Spruce would venture to accuse
-him of keeping the appointment and murdering the advertiser. Then if
-it came out that the dead man was Hench's uncle, so strong a motive
-was provided that arrest would certainly follow.
-
-It was a very uncomfortable journey for Owain, and he alighted at
-Cookley Station with the firm idea that he was about to have a trying
-time. Madame Alpenny was dangerous and so was Spruce, as both wanted
-cash and both were wholly unscrupulous. However, if either went to the
-police they were not likely to get what they wanted, so Hench
-comforted himself with the idea that before taking any action they
-would find him out and offer to treat. On what he discovered at
-Cookley would depend his attitude, as if he could only get at the
-truth he could place the matter in the hands of the police without
-danger to himself. On the other hand, if he made no discovery likely
-to prove who was the assassin, it would be necessary to come to some
-arrangement or risk the consequence. And Hench could not disguise from
-himself that on the face of it his defence was weak, since the
-strongest point--that of being a stranger to the dead man--was
-removed. Certainly, as he had never met Squire Evans, the deceased
-_was_ a stranger to him, but the fact that the dead man was his uncle,
-whose demise would give him ten thousand five hundred a year,
-assuredly provided a strong motive for the commission of the crime. It
-was all puzzling and difficult, and dangerous and highly unpleasant.
-All that Hench could do was to wait and see what Madame Alpenny, and
-possibly Spruce, would do. Any one who has experienced suspense will
-understand what agonies this unfortunate young man underwent. It
-required all his courage and all his nerve to endure the anxiety of
-the next few days. And to make matters worse, Vane was not at hand to
-relieve the tension by listening to Owain's fears.
-
-It was with an odd feeling, and not one of safety, that Hench again
-set foot in Cookley. As he walked down the crooked street he noted how
-many eyes of both men and women followed his movements, and for the
-moment believed that he was recognized. But that was impossible,
-considering the contrast between the rough-bearded tramp who had
-visited the Bull Inn and the smart, fashionable, clean-shaven young
-gentleman now strolling complacently through the little town. What the
-people looked at, especially the women, were his handsome face and
-distinguished appearance. From a muttered remark or so which his ear
-caught, Owain understood that they took him for a tourist, who had
-come to see the lions of the place. Therefore, in this character the
-young man asked one or two where he could find lodgings. Of course he
-was at once directed to the inn, but here, for obvious reasons, he did
-not wish to go. With the idea of finding quiet rooms he had left his
-portmanteau at the railway station, so as to seek the same unhampered
-by luggage. For some time he was unsuccessful in his search, until on
-the outskirts of the village and no great distance from the church he
-saw a notice in a cottage window of "Apartments to Let." At once he
-knocked at the door, since the place seemed clean and quiet. A
-delicate, slender little woman answered his inquiries by stating that
-she was called Mrs. Bell and had rooms to let. An inspection of these
-satisfied the young man, although they were rather poorly furnished
-and decidedly small. At once he took them at the very moderate sum
-demanded, and Mrs. Bell at his request sent her nephew to the station
-to get her new lodger's portmanteau. The little woman, who was meek
-and fragile, at once took a great interest in Hench, as he had kind
-eyes and a gentle manner. In a short time the two were good friends,
-and Mrs. Bell congratulated herself that for one month she had such a
-pleasant-spoken gentleman under her homely roof. She said as much to
-her big burly nephew when he returned with the portmanteau on his
-shoulder, and her nephew thoroughly agreed with her, which was
-natural, seeing that the new lodger had given him half a crown for his
-trouble. So Hench was made very comfortable by the two, who approved
-of him more and more every day. Mrs. Bell was a busy bee in the way of
-looking after household affairs, and Giles her nephew, who was a
-labourer, brushed Owain's boots and clothes for him. Also--and this
-was a great point--Mrs. Bell was no gossip and kept very much to
-herself, so the neighbours heard little about Hench from her. On the
-whole, the young man decided that he was very well placed.
-
-Hench did not present his letter of introduction to Mrs. Perage
-straight away, but busied himself in learning what he could of
-the geography of Cookley. He examined the church, explored the
-village,--never going into the Bull Inn, by the way,--and even
-ventured to look at the Gipsy Stile. It gave him a qualm when he
-found himself on the well-remembered spot, and saw beyond the old
-brick wall the picturesque Grange, which was now his property. Mrs.
-Bell, who knew everything about the place and talked freely enough
-when asked, although she was no scandal-monger, told him how Miss
-Evans had gone to stay with Mrs. Perage since the death of her
-father.
-
-"And they do say," said Mrs. Bell, who always prefaced her remarks
-with this phrase, "that she ain't going to rest until she finds out
-who killed him."
-
-"Is there any clue?" asked Owain, keeping his face turned away.
-
-"No, there ain't, sir, unless you can call that tramp a clue. He did
-ask Betsy Jane at the Bull where the Gipsy Stile was, and the old
-Squire was found there some hours later as dead as mutton. But since
-then no one's clapped eyes on him, and I don't suppose, sir, as any
-one ever will."
-
-"Do you think the tramp murdered the Squire?"
-
-"Lord, sir, how do I know!" cried Mrs. Bell in a panic. "I hev enough
-to do in the house without thinking of murders. But they do say as
-Squire Evans was a hard man on poachers, as Giles knows, he having got
-into trouble over a pheasant. It might be, sir, as that tramp was one
-of them poachers, and done for the Squire. Though to be sure," added
-the woman, rubbing her nose in a perplexed way, "if he was a poacher
-hereabouts some one would hev knowed him, and he wouldn't hev had to
-ask Betsy Jane of the Bull where the stile was. It's my opinion, that
-for all Miss Gwen's trying she'll never find out who killed her
-father. And they do say as if the murderer ain't found it won't be any
-great grief to them as knowed old Mr. Evans."
-
-"What kind of a girl is Miss Evans?" asked Hench irrelevantly.
-
-"Ah!" cried Mrs. Bell, nursing her hands under her apron. "Now they do
-say, sir, as I knows myself, as she's as nice a young lady as you ever
-set eyes on. Lovely I call her, and small like me, though quite a
-lady, which I ain't. She's as loved as her father was hated, and they
-do say as that's saying a great deal. I do assure you, sir, as we'd
-rather hev Miss Gwen for the head of the place than this new young
-Squire, as comes from no one knows where!"
-
-Hench had many conversations about these matters with Mrs. Bell, and
-gradually came to know a great deal during the next few days. His
-uncle, it appeared, had been very unpopular, while Gwen was the
-reverse. Generally, it was quite believed amongst the ancients of the
-village that the Squire had been murdered by the unknown tramp, who
-was a poacher, and the verdict was that it served the dead man right,
-because he was always so hard on the poor. Owain was tolerably sure
-that the Cookley people would have been quite sorry had the presumed
-criminal been arrested. But as he was the person in question, he was
-glad that they had not been troubled to mourn in this way. All the
-same, in spite of all his questioning, he was unable to learn anything
-likely to show who had met Squire Evans in Parley Wood. So far his
-mission to Cookley had proved a complete failure.
-
-Then Destiny intervened to conduct him a step further on the dark
-path, which was leading him he knew not where. Towards the end of
-the week, and when he was beginning to feel safer and more at home
-in the village, he had an adventure, the consequences of which were
-far-reaching. Owain had gone for a long walk into the surrounding
-country, and was returning leisurely under the many-coloured glories
-of the sunset. The weather was warm, the road was dusty, and he paused
-by a stile to remove his straw hat and allow the breeze to cool his
-heated brow. Before him was the church, round the square ivy-clothed
-tower of which the jackdaws were flying; to the right was the road,
-melting almost imperceptibly into the narrow village street, while to
-the left ran the same road curving abruptly round a corner into the
-agricultural lands. So dangerous was this bend in the highway that it
-was marked with one of those red triangles elevated on a post to warn
-motorists and cyclists not to move at too great a pace. The injunction
-was very much needed, and never more so than in the present instance.
-
-Hench leaned idling against the stile enjoying the beauty of the
-evening and the picturesque character of the landscape. He could not
-see very far, as the place was muffled with hawthorn hedges and tall
-trees, but there was a quiet domestic loveliness about the prospect
-which soothed his tormented soul. Suddenly his eye was caught by a
-moving figure in the porch of the church, which was under the west
-window. It was that of a slender girl, not very tall, but singularly
-graceful. As she came down the path towards the lychgate, he saw that
-she had a beautiful face, aristocratic in its looks and rather pensive
-in its expression. Arrayed in white, and with a white sunshade, she
-stepped daintily through the gate and out on to the dusty road,
-turning her face towards the village, whither she was evidently going.
-But scarcely had she taken three steps when a motor-car, without
-warning, swept swiftly round the dangerous corner. The girl was
-directly in his path, and although Hench shouted at once, she did not
-step aside. In fact she seemed to be puzzled by his cry, until the
-noise of the approaching machine struck her ear. Then she wheeled
-suddenly and stood where she was, paralysed with fright. Hench saw
-that in a second she would be cut down and be crushed under those
-cruel wheels, so plunged suddenly forward and dashed across the
-roadway to thrust her out of the way. So impetuous was his onset that
-she was tumbled back into the hedge girdling the churchyard, and Hench
-himself fell sprawling in the dust. With a whirr, the motor passed and
-he felt a sharp pain in his ankle. The next moment the car was buzzing
-at top-speed through the village, its driver evidently afraid of
-prosecution for neglecting to sound his horn. Meanwhile the girl
-gathered herself up out of the hedge, and Owain lay still on the
-highway. The whole event lasted less than a minute--the girl being
-saved, the man being hurt in the twinkling of an eye. And in the same
-twinkling of an eye the car had vanished into the unknown.
-
-"Oh!" The young lady hurried towards her preserver. "Are you hurt?"
-
-"My ankle," gasped Hench, sitting up with an effort; "it's giving me a
-warm time--a wheel went over it, I think--probably it is broken!" and
-he winced with the pain.
-
-"You have saved my life!"
-
-"Oh, that's all right," replied the young man, speaking with
-difficulty, for the suffering was great. "You can repay me by helping
-me home, or by getting assistance. I can't walk by myself."
-
-"Give me your hand," said the girl quickly, quite cool and mistress of
-herself. "There! Can you get on to your feet?"
-
-"On to one foot, anyhow," gasped Hench, smiling to reassure her, and
-managed to stand upright. "But my ankle is not so very bad. I don't
-think it is broken--only crushed."
-
-"That's bad enough. Lean on me. Where do you live?"
-
-"At Mrs. Bell's."
-
-"That's not far away. Come. What a hero you are to save me. My name is
-Evans."
-
-"Evans!" repeated Owain, and then knew that he had at last met his
-cousin.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-VANE'S AUNT
-
-
-"I should have been killed to a certainty but for the way in which he
-got me out of the way," said Gwen to Mrs. Perage, when recounting her
-adventure, and speaking rather incoherently, for the same had shaken
-her nerves.
-
-Mrs. Perage growled. She was a gaunt, dark-brewed old lady, with a
-formidable frown and a very determined character. "All's well that
-ends well," she said in a deep contralto voice, which suggested that
-of a man. "It might have been worse but for this hero of yours. Did
-you take the number of the car?"
-
-"My goodness!" cried the girl pettishly. "How could I, when I was
-lying on my back in the ditch under the churchyard hedge? The car
-passed like a flash."
-
-"Daresay," sniffed Mrs. Perage aggressively. "Having done wrong, the
-chauffeur got out of the way. We'll make inquiries and prosecute. I'd
-hang every one of those road-hogs if I had my way."
-
-"Oh, I don't think it is worth making a fuss about," said Gwen
-quickly. "I am all right, and his ankle will soon be quite well. I
-fetched the doctor as soon as I got him to Mrs. Bell's, and there are
-no bones broken. He will be out and about in a few days."
-
-"His--him--he," said Mrs. Perage sharply. "How indefinite you are.
-What's the name of your Achilles?"
-
-"Hench. Mr. Hench. So Mrs. Bell told me, and he's been with her for
-nearly a whole week."
-
-"Hench!" Mrs. Perage rubbed her beaky nose and reflected. "Why, that's
-the name of Jim's friend he wrote me about. There was a letter of
-introduction given. Hum! And he's been a week in Cookley without
-calling. That doesn't look as if he wished to make my acquaintance,
-Gwen."
-
-"Perhaps he's down here on business," suggested the girl, "and did not
-wish to call on any one until he was free."
-
-"Well, if he doesn't call on me, I'll call on him," said the old dame
-grimly; "if only to thank him for saving your life. Hum! Quite
-romantic the way in which the man's come into your little world, my
-dear. Quite romantic, I call it." Then, being very much the woman, in
-spite of her masculine appearance, Mrs. Perage asked a leading
-question. "Good-looking?"
-
-"Oh!" Gwen clasped her hands. "He's a Greek god."
-
-"So was Vulcan. Anything like that heavenly blacksmith?"
-
-"No. He's tall and splendidly built, with brown hair and brown eyes;
-clean-shaven with clearly-cut features."
-
-"Hum!" Mrs. Perage brought out the ejaculation with a boom. "You
-examined him pretty closely, young lady."
-
-"Well, I had plenty of time to do so," retorted Miss Evans pertly. "I
-helped him to hobble to Mrs. Bell's house, and saw him again to thank
-him after the doctor had examined his poor ankle. I'm sure you will
-like him."
-
-"That has yet to be seen. I don't like many people. However, Jim says
-that Mr. Hench is a thoroughly good fellow, and----"
-
-"I'm sure he is. He saved my life."
-
-"Consequently you intend to tumble head over heels in love with him?"
-
-Gwen grew red. "I certainly don't. All the same he's very nice, and
-I'm sorry he's suffering pain."
-
-"Pity is akin to love," quoted Mrs. Perage, apparently to the ceiling.
-The girl laughed and shook her head. "In spite of your matter-of-fact
-ways and the common-sense you pride yourself upon, you have an
-imaginative vein, Mrs. Perage. I am sure you see in this accident the
-beginning of a romance."
-
-"If the young man is handsome, as you say, and a good sort as Jim Vane
-says, why not?" asked the old lady, smiling. "Besides, I don't believe
-in chance, as everything is ordained by Providence. I shouldn't be at
-all surprised if, in the long run, it was proved that Mr. Hench
-tumbled out of the clouds to be your husband. However, it's early days
-yet to talk. Wait and see!"
-
-As the result of long experience, dating from the time when she was a
-small child in short frocks, Gwen knew that it was useless to argue
-with Mrs. Perage, so she left the room and went upstairs to change her
-dress. And as a matter of fact, she had been extremely struck with
-Hench's good looks, as a woman naturally would be. Also, he seemed to
-be excessively agreeable, and likewise she owed him her life, not
-forgetting that she was just at that age when girls begin to dream of
-marriage. Poor Gwen had not passed a very happy time with her
-cantankerous father, and was not averse to having a pleasant home and
-an aggressively devoted lover. So she looked at herself in the glass,
-pondering over Mrs. Perage's remarks, and blushed crimson to find that
-Hench was taking up much more of her thoughts than she considered
-altogether proper. That it was a case of love at first sight she would
-not admit, but on the whole her feelings had a great deal to do with
-the oft-quoted proverb.
-
-On his side, Owain had no doubts whatever on the subject, strange as
-it may seem, considering that hitherto he had never been in love. His
-cousin's lovely face, her sympathetic kindness, together with the
-undeniable fact that he had saved her life, created in him a number of
-tumultuous feelings, which he spent the night in analysing. To be
-sure, he told himself that he did so because the pain of his ankle
-kept him wide awake, and because thoughts in this direction took his
-mind off his aching bones. But when the dawn came, he was tolerably
-certain that he was in love. The feeling he now experienced was wholly
-different to that with which he had regarded Zara. He had admired the
-dancer in a cool, reflective, judicious way, seeing that she had
-faults as well as virtues. But in Gwen he could see no faults, and
-never paused to consider that he could scarcely know her character
-from the little he had seen of her.
-
-Sensible as Hench usually was, some power--he presumed it was the
-power of love---swept him off his feet, and he credited the girl with
-all the virtues of the angels, and with their beauty also. He was glad
-that he had saved her, as she would be grateful; he was glad that he
-had hurt himself, as she would pity him; and he was decidedly glad
-that he had concealed the relationship. Now, at least, there was every
-chance that he would be able to make a friend of her. Not that he
-wanted to halt at friendship. He was now firmly bent upon making her
-his wife, and thus would be able to fulfil Mr. Gilberry's prophecy and
-end the family feud in quite an agreeable and romantic way. All the
-night Owain was building castles in the air, and when the dawn came
-they were still firm. Only on the arrival of the doctor to examine his
-ankle did the young man descend from these Olympian heights. Then,
-with a sudden and very natural reaction, he began to think that he had
-been too premature in his building.
-
-The result of this was disastrous to Gwen. She called at mid-day to
-see how he was getting on, and he received her coldly, while lying on
-the slippery horse-hair sofa in Mrs. Bell's tiny sitting-room. The
-girl, flushed with the romance of the whole adventure and struck anew
-with the splendid looks of her preserver, felt chilled by his calm
-politeness. The two talked in a more or less formal way and parted
-very soon. Gwen went back to tell Mrs. Perage that her hero was
-horrid, and her hero remained on his sofa trying to assure himself
-that he had rescued only an ordinary girl. But it was all of no use,
-for Nature would have her way. During the next few days the two met
-under the chaperonage of the widow Bell, and gradually became aware
-that the feelings they entertained towards one another were more than
-those of mere friendship. Of course this knowledge made them more
-stiff and formal than ever in their intercourse, as their conversation
-was confined to commonplace subjects, not likely to awaken emotion.
-Hench was anxious to ask his cousin about her father, but as she said
-nothing, he did not venture to broach the matter. Still, remembering
-that she had been clothed in white on the day of the accident, and
-seeing that her frocks since, beyond black ribbons, did not suggest
-mourning in any great degree, he came to the conclusion that she had
-not been particularly attached to her father, although he could not be
-quite sure. But all doubts on this question were set aside by Mrs.
-Perage, who placed matters very plainly before him, according to her
-somewhat grim custom.
-
-The old lady did not call for a few days, although she sent creams and
-jellies, books and flowers, by the hands of Gwen. Owain was very
-grateful for these kind attentions, and asked Miss Evans to take back
-his letter of introduction, which she did. Etiquette thus having been
-complied with, one day, instead of the fairy vision of Gwen, the
-patient beheld a tall and lean old dame stalk into his room. By this
-time he was able to get about with a crutch, and rose to greet her,
-upon which she thrust him back into his armchair with a pair of very
-capable hands.
-
-"Not so," said Mrs. Perage, when he was again seated and taking a
-chair opposite, where she kilted her black stuff dress to show a pair
-of large boots. "Stay where you are, young man. Hum! You look better
-than I expected."
-
-"I'm quite well now, thank you, Mrs. Perage. And I must apologise for
-not having presented Jim's letter before."
-
-"Jim sent another letter, and I know all about you," said the old lady
-sharply.
-
-"Oh, I don't think you do," said Hench, rather alarmed, as he feared
-that Vane might have been indiscreet.
-
-"Why not?" Mrs. Perage bent her sharp old eyes on his perturbed face,
-the good looks of which she secretly approved of. "There's nothing
-wrong about you, I hope and trust?"
-
-"Not what you would call wrong," said Hench evasively.
-
-"Pooh, young man. How do you know anything about my standard of
-morality. I don't suppose it's what you'd call a high one," added Mrs.
-Perage, rubbing her nose. "I always make allowance for fools, and most
-of those who dwell in this world, which is much too good for them, are
-fools."
-
-Hench laughed. He liked Mrs. Perage, who was quite a character. In her
-young days she had been a great beauty, although she was now old and
-weather-beaten, careless of her attire, and quite manly in her manner.
-Since the death of her husband, some thirty years ago, she had managed
-her estates herself, for being childless she had little else to do,
-and had long since outgrown the toys which amuse Society. For a woman
-she was uncommonly tall, and with her aquiline nose, her swart
-complexion and dark eyes, she resembled a gipsy. In spite of her
-coarse dress so carelessly worn, there was an air of good-breeding
-about her, and also a shrewd look on her fierce face. Owain stared
-hard at her Amazonian looks, considering that here was a woman who
-should have been the mother of heroes to gird armour on them and send
-them forth to the fray. She was quite out of place in a peaceful
-community.
-
-"Well, young man," said Mrs. Perage roughly, "you'll know me again, I
-daresay, if staring goes for anything. What are your thoughts?"
-
-Hench told them and suggested how unfit she was for a peaceful world
-where a policeman stands at every corner. "I can't see you anywhere,
-Mrs. Perage, but in some Norse hall, worshipping Odin and urging men
-to battle."
-
-"Perhaps going to battle myself," said the old dame grimly, yet very
-pleased with the strange compliment. "Hum! You are right, the world is
-tame now-a-day, and a long life has bored me with the petty concerns
-of baby folk. You seem to have ideas in your head, Master Owain."
-Hench stared and fear clutched at his heart. If she knew this much,
-she might know more. "Who told you my Christian name?" he faltered.
-
-"My own common sense, man alive! I have lived here all my life and
-knew your grandfather, Mynydd Evans, aye and your father, and Madoc
-also. Hench was the name Owain took when he was outlawed. See, my boy,
-how naturally I use the Norse word, after your suggestions of my being
-a modern Valkyrie."
-
-"Does my cousin know who I am?" asked the young man anxiously. "No. I
-wanted to see you first before I told her."
-
-"Don't tell her, Mrs. Perage."
-
-"Why not. Hum!"--her eyes were as piercing as spears--"there is some
-reason for you masquerading as Hench."
-
-"Hench was the name adopted by my father, and until a few days ago I
-quite believed that it was my true name. But certain papers which he
-left with our family lawyers explained matters."
-
-"Did they explain that you inherit Cookley Grange and ten thousand a
-year?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Hum!"--Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose again and looked puzzled. "Then,
-knowing that you were the heir, why did you not come and see your
-uncle after the death of your father? I know he died in Paris five
-years ago, as Madoc told me."
-
-"I did not know that I was the heir until my twenty-fifth birthday on
-the tenth day of this month. My father left instructions with Gilberry
-& Gilberry that they were not to give the papers to me until then. I
-have already told you, Mrs. Perage, that only lately did I learn my
-true name."
-
-The old dame nodded absently, thinking deeply for a few minutes. "I
-think your father was wise to keep you thus in ignorance until you
-were older and had some experience of the world. A man of twenty-five
-could have managed Madoc better than a boy of twenty. Yes, Owain was
-wise, knowing Madoc's character."
-
-"The late Squire does not appear to have had a very good one,"
-remarked Hench dryly. "He was unpopular, I am told by Mrs. Bell."
-
-"He was a wicked, selfish, greedy, miserly old scoundrel," retorted
-Mrs. Perage, aggressively blunt. "And if that's speaking evil of the
-dead, I don't care. I am quite sure that Madoc fed your grandfather's
-anger when it was directed towards Owain, who, after all, was not so
-very evil, although selfish enough. Still, your father would never
-have been cut out of the will but for Madoc. And if Madoc had met you,
-young man, he would have tried to settle your hash in some way, you
-may be certain."
-
-"Oh!" Hench started, and was on the point of revealing the story of
-the advertisement and his adventure, when he checked himself prudently
-and made quite a different remark. "But if Uncle Madoc was such a
-rotter, why is Gwen such a nice girl, and I am sure a good girl?"
-
-"She is all that," endorsed Mrs. Perage heartily. "And if your father
-was such a selfish profligate--I don't wish to hurt your filial
-feelings, but he was--why are you such a nice young man?"
-
-Hench coloured at the compliment. "I may be a profligate also."
-
-"Pooh!" said Mrs. Perage with supreme contempt, "don't you think that
-I am able to read faces? Yours is a good one and so is Gwen's. The
-decency of you both comes in each case from the mother's side, I
-expect, for both your fathers were--what they were. Children of Old
-Nick, I call them. You had a bad time with that father of yours, I'll
-be bound?"
-
-"Well"--Hench winced--"he was not a very amiable parent, I must admit,
-although I wouldn't say that to any one save you."
-
-Mrs. Perage bent her keen old eyes on him, read between the lines, and
-laughed in a short rasping manner after the style of a fox barking.
-"Just as I thought, young man. Owain was a selfish, cruel animal, and
-so was Madoc. He gave you as bad a time as Madoc did Gwen."
-
-"I rather gathered from Gwen's absence of mourning that she had no
-great love for her father," remarked Hench musingly. "Your powers of
-observation are great, Owain. Gwen and her father got on about as well
-together as a ferret and a rabbit; she being the last and he the
-first. But for me I don't know what the poor girl would have done. She
-would have run away from home, I expect. However, she always came to
-me when her father was particularly trying, and now she has come to me
-altogether. With me she will stay, until you take her away."
-
-Hench raised himself on his elbow and blushed in a delightfully
-youthful manner. "What makes you say that?" he asked confusedly.
-
-"Am I a fool?" queried Mrs. Perage grimly. "Doesn't a cat love cream,
-and is not a young man likely to fall in love with one whose life he
-has saved, provided that one is charming and good. Go to, my boy." She
-spoke quite in the style of her nephew Jim. "I can see through a brick
-wall, I suppose. But all this doesn't explain why you are masquerading
-here under your father's false name. Come now, tell me all about it."
-
-Hench did not do as she asked him, even though she was such a sensible
-old lady, for he thought that the time was not yet ripe for him to
-speak freely about his Gipsy Stile adventure. Therefore he told her
-the same story that he had told to Mr. Gilberry. "And you see I was
-right to meet my cousin under a feigned name," he concluded, "for had
-I come as Owain Evans she would have been prejudiced against me."
-
-"Well, I don't know." Mrs. Perage again rubbed her nose thoughtfully.
-"As you may guess, Madoc always spoke ill of you, saying you were the
-true son of your wicked father, which was a case of the pot calling
-the kettle black, I rather think. But, you see, Madoc hated the idea
-of your getting the property."
-
-"He wanted Gwen to get it?"
-
-"Not a bit. So long as you didn't succeed he would have been content
-to let an hospital have it. He cared nothing for his daughter, and
-being such a bad father she naturally disbelieved anything he said.
-Far from thinking you the rascal Madoc said you were, Gwen fancied
-that you were quite a nice agreeable young man, which you are. I think
-she would have welcomed Owain Evans just as kindly as she has welcomed
-Owain Hench. All the same, if you win her heart as a disguised prince
-the romance of it will appeal to her when she learns the delightful
-truth."
-
-Hench laughed, feeling greatly relieved. "Mrs. Perage, I don't believe
-you are a Norse goddess. You are much too romantic."
-
-"Perhaps, young man. I am an old fool."
-
-"You are one of the most charming people I have ever met," said Hench
-warmly.
-
-"Pooh!" retorted Mrs. Perage, pleased with the compliment. "Don't make
-love to me, or you'll break Gwen's heart."
-
-"Has she a heart to break--on my account, that is?"
-
-"Young man,"--Mrs. Perage rose until her head nearly touched the low
-ceiling, and she assumed her grand manner,--"you don't expect one
-woman to tell the secrets of another woman. All the same, a nod is as
-good as a wink to a blind horse. And you are blind, being in love."
-
-"Am I in love?"
-
-"Something tells me that you are--and with Gwen. But if you are
-already engaged, or if there is any other girl in the question, I tell
-you, young man, that I won't have it. Gwen is much too good a girl to
-be trifled with."
-
-"Oh, I assure you, I am not going to trifle with her."
-
-"Good. If you do, you'll have me to reckon with," said the old woman
-grimly. "I am quite Norse enough to twist your neck if you repeat in
-your own person the very objectionable character of your father. Tell
-me plump and plain, if you please: do you love Gwen?"
-
-"I think so."
-
-"Think so! Then you don't love her. No man worth a woman's affection
-can be in doubt on that point."
-
-"Well, you see, I'm a bit of an ass as regards women," confessed
-Hench, flustered by her imperious insistence. "I have never been in
-love before."
-
-"All the better!" cried Mrs. Perage sharply. "But I thought I was."
-
-"Hum! Well, and why not; one must gain experience. How many times?"
-
-"Once only. I admired this girl but she loved another man, so I went
-away."
-
-"Hum!" said Mrs. Perage once more. "Is your heart broken?"
-
-"Oh Lord, no. I soon got over it."
-
-"Then you haven't been in love. But with regard to Gwen"--Mrs. Perage
-suddenly sat down and laughed heartily--"aren't we rather silly to
-talk in this way? We are only weaving ropes of sand, for I know
-nothing certain about the state of your affections or those of Gwen. I
-think I had better let you two manage things in your own way, and as
-Mother Nature--who has a large experience--dictates. All I say is, act
-honestly towards the girl, or you'll have me to deal with.
-Understand?"
-
-"I understand." Hench laughed. "You can trust me."
-
-Mrs. Perage went away very well satisfied with the state of affairs.
-At heart she was romantic like every woman, and like every woman she
-was quite a matchmaker. There was no young man in Cookley worthy of
-Gwen, so far as she knew, and this swain--so her thoughts ran--had
-been brought by Providence in the nick of time to save the girl from
-being an old maid. She longed to speak as freely to Miss Evans as she
-had spoken to her cousin, but did not dare to do so, lest she should
-frighten her into banishing the dawning feeling of love. Mrs. Perage
-had seen much harm come from meddling, so decided to refrain from
-throwing the young people too violently at one another's heads. But
-she certainly threw them gently, for when Hench was nearly all right a
-few days later, she sent him an invitation to dinner. This he accepted
-with great delight, and the more eagerly as Gwen had ceased her visits
-since he became convalescent. At the dinner he would have a chance of
-seeing her again, and perhaps an opportunity of hinting at his
-feelings. For by this time he had proved the truth of the saying that
-"Absence makes the heart grow fonder," and was very sure that he
-really and truly loved her with all the power that was in him. And
-this was the genuine passion of man for woman--not the counterfeit one
-which had led him to seek Zara Alpenny.
-
-By this time, since the Hungarian lady was not making trouble, Hench
-began to think that she would leave him alone altogether. Surely, he
-thought, if she intended to scheme for her daughter's marriage with
-him, she would have made some advance before now. Her silence lifted a
-weight off his mind, and he arrayed himself in purple and fine linen
-for the dinner, feeling that the sun of prosperity was beaming on him.
-He went to Mrs. Perage's house, believing that the fine weather would
-continue, and quite forgot the adage about the treacherous calm before
-the storm. But when he got to the door, and the door was opened by a
-small smart page with a freckled face and red hair, he was reminded
-that it did not do to trust wholly to appearance. The sight of the boy
-gave him quite a shock, and an uncomfortable one, reminding him as he
-did of Bethnal Green.
-
-"Bottles!" he said, stepping into the hall and staring at the lad.
-
-"No, sir; no, Mr. Hench. I'm Peter!" grinned the boy, and began to
-help Hench off with his overcoat.
-
-Then Owain remembered how Simon Jedd had told him he had a brother in
-service in the country--the same he had gone to see. But he never
-expected to find that brother in Cookley and in the service of Mrs.
-Perage. "You know my name?" he said hesitatingly, and wondering if the
-imp was to be trusted.
-
-"Oh yes, sir. Simon has spoken heaps heaps of times to me about you,
-saying how kind you were to him. Knew your name, sir, the minute Miss
-Gwen said as you'd saved her life."
-
-"Simon came down to see you some weeks ago?"
-
-"Yes, sir!" Peter spoke eagerly, and was evidently about to say much,
-when he suddenly shut his wide mouth and said no more than the two
-words.
-
-Hench settled his coat and his tie, pondering over the situation. The
-sight of the boy, who was connected with Bottles, revived his anxiety,
-and he feared lest the lad should write to London and say where he
-was. In that case Madame Alpenny might find him out, and then there
-would be trouble. But then Simon, if he did write, would do so to his
-brother, and Bottles was entirely to be trusted. Still, Hench would
-have liked to give this page a hint, yet could not do so, as it would
-be undignified. Peter noted his lingering and hesitation.
-
-"Simon wants to see you, sir. It's all right."
-
-"What's all right?" asked Hench sharply.
-
-The page wriggled uneasily. "Simon will tell you, sir. I don't know
-nothing, I don't, Mr. Hench."
-
-Owain felt uneasy at the implied mystery, but judged it wise to affect
-careless confidence. "Simon can come and see me when he likes," he
-said, and entered the drawing-room, considerably annoyed by the
-encounter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-MACBETH'S BANQUET
-
-
-The house of Mrs. Perage was quaint and old-fashioned, being so
-delightfully reminiscent of gracious antiquity that Hench was charmed
-with his surroundings. As a very modern young man, who had wandered
-largely in new lands where civilization was still raw, he was
-pleasantly impressed by the panelled room with the low ceiling. The
-furniture was Chippendale and Sheraton of the powder and puff epoch,
-while carpet and curtains were mellowed by age into restful colours,
-comfortable to the eye. An odour of dried rose leaves scented the air,
-mingling with the more living perfume of countless blossoms. Mrs.
-Perage had the happy taste to be extremely fond of flowers, it would
-seem, for the room was filled with colour and fragrance, even to the
-fireplace, which bloomed like a garden with white buds and green
-leaves. Even though the curtains were not yet drawn, and the luminous
-summer twilight stole in through the wide windows, the many lamps were
-lighted. And the radiance of these, diffused through rose-tinted
-shades, bathed the whole room in the delicate hues of dawn. This was a
-haven of rest, a bower of joy, a paradise of delight, and Hench drew a
-long breath of sheer pleasure on its threshold.
-
-"What a charming room," he said, advancing to greet his hostess.
-"Charming!"
-
-"Blunderer!" retorted that lady in her contralto voice, which boomed
-like the buzz of a bee in a fox glove bell. "You should say, what
-charming ladies."
-
-"You would think me too bold if I put my thoughts into words."
-
-"Very cleverly turned, young man. But women never think men are too
-bold when they pay compliments."
-
-Hench laughed and smiled in a friendly way at Gwen, who was smiling in
-a friendly way at him. She looked wonderfully fresh, attractively
-delightful, as delicate as Titania and wholly as fascinating. Her
-dress of plain white silk adorned with black ribbons, hinting at
-mourning, became her well in its dainty simplicity, and Owain felt
-again that queer heart-throb which informed him very distinctly that
-this was the one girl in the world for him. No woman could be lovely
-unless she had golden hair and blue eyes and a complexion of cream and
-roses. He wondered how he ever could have admired Zara, who did not
-possess these necessary charms. But when he was attracted by the
-dancer he was a fool, now he intended to be a wise man and lay his
-heart at Gwen's feet. Whether she would pick it up had yet to be seen,
-for she gave no intimation of her feelings.
-
-"When you two finish grinning at one another like a couple of Chinese
-dolls, perhaps you will remember that I am present. Sit down, young
-man. Are you very hungry? I have a very good dinner for you."
-
-"Splendid! I'm not hungry, Mrs. Perage, but I am greedy."
-
-"Pooh! That joke is as old as the hills. Be more original."
-
-"That's difficult. How can I be original, Miss Evans?" Hench asked the
-question with ceremonious courtesy, which made Mrs. Perage smile,
-knowing what she did know.
-
-"I think you are original," said Gwen brightly. "You saved my life!"
-
-"Hum!" came the boom of Mrs. Perage, "and that's originality, is it?"
-
-"Well, I don't make a practice of saving lives," laughed Hench
-lightly. "And I don't think I ever saved any one before. So I _am_
-original, you see."
-
-The old dame smiled grimly, as she relished the young man's flippant
-conversation. "One grows so tired of common-sense," she murmured,
-following her own thoughts.
-
-"Why, you are always commending common-sense," exclaimed Gwen, lifting
-her eyebrows and laughing.
-
-"In its place, child, in its place. To-night you and Mr. Hench can
-talk nonsense, as it will make me feel young."
-
-"You _are_ young, Mrs. Perage," said Owain seriously. "Your heart is
-in its spring-time. You are one whom the gods love."
-
-"Ta! Ta! Ta! young Chesterfield. Don't make me blush, as I have long
-since forgotten how to do so. You and your compliments, indeed! Not
-but what I wear tolerably well, although a trifle time-worn," which
-final sentence showed that Mrs. Perage had her little vanities.
-
-And she was right in having them, for having stepped out of her rough
-day-clothes into sumptuous evening dress, she looked wonderfully
-stately. Amber satin, black lace and diamonds, oddly enough, seemed as
-natural to her as the more or less masculine dress which she affected
-during her business hours. Mrs. Perage always called looking after her
-farms and attending to her accounts business, which it assuredly was,
-and business moreover which required a clear head. In the day-time she
-was like one of her labourers in appearance, and her clothes might
-have graced a scarecrow, but when evening came she always appeared as
-a fine lady. This change, which reminded Hench somewhat of Miss
-Hardcastle in Goldsmith's comedy, amused the young man. He liked Mrs.
-Perage.
-
-"I wrote and asked Jim Vane to come down to dinner," went on Mrs.
-Perage, after a pause. "As I thought that I could amuse myself with
-his wit while you attended to Gwen here. But he wrote saying that he
-could not come, as he was exploring Bethnal Green."
-
-"Bethnal Green," echoed Hench with a start. "What the deuce--I beg
-your pardon, Mrs. Perage---but what is Jim doing there?"
-
-"He did not explain. Why do you ask?"
-
-"Oh, nothing, nothing!"
-
-"What an irrelevant reply."
-
-"Well, I was only thinking that Jim usually prefers the West End to
-the quarters of the poor," said Hench guardedly. He was not quite
-certain if he had mentioned his sojourn at Bethnal Green to Mrs.
-Perage, and resolved to do so now, as--so far as he was able--he
-wished to be quite straight and above-board with the keen old lady. "I
-stayed there for six months."
-
-"In Bethnal Green?" said Gwen, amazed. "And what were you doing in
-such a horrible place, Mr. Hench?"
-
-"Well, as Jim would put it, I was doing a perish. I am a poor man,
-Miss Evans, and have lived for many years in Queer Street."
-
-"Queer Street?" Gwen looked puzzled.
-
-"It is the name given to the locality where those unsuccessful people
-who are trying for what they can't get live in penury."
-
-Gwen looked at Hench's well-cut suit of evening clothes, at his
-well-bred face, and considered his general debonair appearance. "You
-don't look poor."
-
-"There is poverty and poverty," said Mrs. Perage gruffly. "Mr. Hench
-is not yet in the workhouse, Gwen. For my part I think 'a perish,' as
-you say Jim calls it, is not a bad thing for a young man. It gives him
-experience of life----"
-
-"Of the seamy side of life, Mrs. Perage," interpolated the young man.
-
-"And what is more picturesque than that. Here we are all respectable
-and eminently dull. There's the gong." She rose with a well-managed
-sweep of her skirts. "Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die."
-
-"Or diet," said Hench, holding the door open for the ladies. "Pooh!
-nonsense!" said the Amazon vigorously. "Young men shouldn't know the
-meaning of such a word. I'm sure I don't. I have a strong digestion
-and a hard heart."
-
-"Not that last," said Gwen quickly; "as I know."
-
-"What imagination you have, child," retorted Mrs. Perage, and took her
-position at the head of a small table, while Gwen and Hench sat on
-either side. "And I hope you don't mind our straggling into the
-dining-room in this free and easy way," she added to the young man;
-"but I couldn't take your arm as Gwen would have felt out of it, and I
-wasn't going to let you give Gwen your arm lest you should lack
-reverence for my age." And she laughed in her deep, hearty fashion,
-evidently desirous of making her guest feel quite at home.
-
-The dining-room was a small apartment decorated and furnished in the
-Jacobean style. But Hench could not see much of it, as there were only
-candles in sconces here and there. The most powerful illumination was
-that thrown by a large lamp with a green shade, which hung low over
-the table. In its light the white napery, the old silver, the crystal
-glasses and the many flowers, looked peculiarly attractive. And the
-table not being over large, the three seated at it could converse with
-one another very much at their ease. A deft maid and Peter waited
-dexterously, and everything ran smoothly during the meal.
-
-"This is my hour of relaxation," explained Mrs. Perage briskly. "I am
-ominously fond of my creature comforts and this is my favourite soup."
-
-"Why ominously?"
-
-"Silly questioner. Doesn't devotion to eating show that one is growing
-old?"
-
-"Then I must have been born old," said Hench gaily, "for I have always
-had a good appetite since I was a boy, and have always liked nice
-things." His eyes rested, perhaps inadvertently, on Gwen as he spoke.
-
-"Ah!" Mrs. Perage had noticed the look, and spoke significantly. "You
-are one of those lucky people who will always get the nice things."
-
-"I haven't had much luck so far, Mrs. Perage."
-
-"Ungrateful! What do you call this?"
-
-"Paradise!" said Hench briefly.
-
-"With you as Adam, Gwen as Eve, and myself as the Serpent."
-
-"Aren't you talking dreadful nonsense?" observed the girl seriously.
-
-"Not at all," retorted the old lady coolly. "It is common-sense to
-chatter amusingly. Enjoy yourself, child, and when trouble comes you
-will be able to remember at least one happy hour."
-
-"Trouble has come, and severe trouble, too," replied Gwen softly, and
-with a gloomy air.
-
-"Now, not another word!" Mrs. Perage spoke sharply. "We can talk of
-that afterwards in the drawing-room."
-
-"Talk of what?" asked Hench innocently, for he was surprised by Gwen's
-gloom and Mrs. Perage's sharpness.
-
-The old dame rubbed her nose in a vexed way. "Gwen has something to
-ask you this evening," she observed. "I think it is nonsense myself.
-No! I won't tell you what it is just now, neither will Gwen. Let us
-enjoy our meal without the discussion of horrors."
-
-This was all very well, but how was Hench to enjoy his meal when Care
-stood like a waiter behind his chair? The presence of Peter reminded
-him of Bottles, and that memory brought to his recollection The Home
-of the Muses in Bethnal Green, where, for all he knew, Madame Alpenny
-might be plotting. Then he wondered what had taken Jim to the house,
-for there he must have gone, as it was unlikely he would journey to
-such a district for any other purpose. Perhaps the Hungarian lady was
-already weaving her nets to snare him--the thinker-either as a husband
-for Zara, or as a criminal. It was very uncomfortable thinking.
-
-And being so alarmed, Hench did his best to talk brightly and
-amusingly. For the time being he was "fey," as the Scotch say, and
-roused his cousin out of her gloom by his sallies. Mrs. Perage
-seconded him admirably, as she quite enjoyed a contest of wits, which
-was rare to come by in Cookley. The food was good, the wine was
-excellent, the company interesting. All the same Hench felt that this
-meal was like Macbeth's banquet, and behind the revelry lurked the
-grim figure of Tragedy with her bowl and dagger. At any moment Banquo
-in the person of Madame Alpenny might appear. Of course such a
-supposition was nonsense, as the Hungarian lady did not know where he
-was. But the feeling became so real to Hench that he cast several
-uneasy looks behind his chair. Gwen noticed this and remarked on the
-same nervously.
-
-"Why do you look over your shoulder?" she asked petulantly.
-
-"For the Kill-joy," said Hench in a blunt way. "You know, Miss Evans,
-man is never permitted to be entirely happy. There is always the
-Kill-joy."
-
-"Gwen will provide you with all the Kill-joy you are needing," said
-Mrs. Perage significantly. "Wait until we go to the drawing-room.
-Meantime go on scintillating, young man. Talk your heart out."
-
-"To whom?" asked Hench audaciously.
-
-"To me, sir. You can flirt with Gwen to-morrow; to-night old age must
-have its turn. Here are some very excellent cigarettes. Light up and
-talk."
-
-"You remind me of the lady who asked Sydney Smith when he was going to
-be funny," said Hench dryly. "It is not easy to talk when so ordered.
-As to Miss Evans, she never flirts."
-
-"Ah, you don't know my capabilities," retorted Gwen, with a
-mischievous gleam in her blue eyes. "I have many sides to my
-character."
-
-"And all charming, I am sure," answered the young man courteously.
-
-And so the conversation went on, all frothy, all about nothings--mere
-spume and spindrift of the mind. And the lighter it became the more
-certain did Hench become sure that Banquo's ghost was haunting the
-room. He felt quite relieved when Mrs. Perage conducted himself and
-Gwen into the drawing-room, for there the psychic atmosphere was less
-oppressive. The girl, however, appeared to feel it otherwise, for
-after playing on the piano for a few minutes she began to wander
-restlessly round the room. Mrs. Perage attempted to frown her into
-sitting down, but as this proved to be an impossible task she accepted
-the situation with grim resignation.
-
-"You may as well enlist Mr. Hench as your champion, child. You will
-never be quiet until you do."
-
-"Enlist me as your champion!" echoed Hench, glancing at Gwen.
-
-The girl grew flushed. "That is Mrs. Perage's pretty way of putting
-things," was her reply, as she sat down near the hostess. "But I do
-wish you to help me, Mr. Hench. I'm not quite sure if I am right in
-doing so, and perhaps you will think it is presumption on my part.
-But, somehow, your having saved my life has made you more than a
-friend."
-
-"More than a friend?"
-
-"I mean"--Gwen became even more crimson than she already was, as she
-became aware that she had spoken more freely than was necessary--"more
-familiar than most of my friends."
-
-"Who are usually mere acquaintances," observed Mrs. Perage quietly.
-"Why beat about the bush, Gwen? You know that Mr. Hench is clever and
-kind-hearted, and you are anxious that he should do you a favour. That
-is the situation."
-
-"Any favour I can do you, Miss Evans----" began the young man eagerly,
-when the girl stopped him.
-
-"Don't say another word until you know what the favour is," she said
-in an abrupt manner; "to do what I want may be unpleasant. In a word I
-want you to try and find out who murdered my father."
-
-"That's about a dozen words, more or less," sighed Mrs. Perage, but
-Hench took no notice of her flippant remark. He was too much taken
-aback to do so, and remained silent.
-
-Gwen misunderstood his silence, and looked mortified "You won't help
-me?"
-
-"I was thinking," said the young man gravely. "Of course I have read
-all about the death of your father in the newspapers, Miss Evans, and
-I can quite understand your desire to avenge him. Anything I can do
-shall be done with the very greatest pleasure. How do matters stand?"
-
-"As they stood after the inquest," explained Gwen with a shrug. "The
-jury brought in an open verdict, but the general opinion is that my
-father was murdered by the man who spoke to the girl in the tap-room
-of the Bull Inn." Hench winced. Every one appeared to be agreed that
-the tramp was the culprit, and he guessed that if discovered the tramp
-would have little chance of escaping a most uncomfortable trial. Even
-if he proved his innocence the experience would be unpleasant.
-Wondering what Mrs. Perage and the girl would say if he were to
-acknowledge that he was the man referred to, he began to ask questions
-in a grave voice.
-
-"Do you think that this tramp is the guilty person?"
-
-"It looks like it," rejoined Gwen promptly. "The man asked the way to
-the Gipsy Stile and evidently went there. Afterwards my father was
-found dead near the stile."
-
-"Had this tramp any motive to murder your father?"
-
-"How can I tell that?" said the girl irritably. "I am only taking what
-evidence suggests his guilt. Why should he come to Cookley and ask the
-way to the very place where my father was afterwards found dead?"
-
-"But the fact that the man asked the way to the stile shows that he
-was a stranger in Cookley. Would a stranger come here to murder your
-father?"
-
-"Hum!" said Mrs. Perage suddenly. "Madoc Evans had many enemies!"
-
-"Can you name any of them?"
-
-"Every one in the neighbourhood, I should say," snapped the old lady
-cynically.
-
-"Exactly. Every one in the neighbourhood. But this tramp was a
-stranger."
-
-"He might have been hired by some one to murder the Squire," said Mrs.
-Perage vaguely.
-
-"In that case the some one would have explained how this bravo was to
-get to the stile," said Hench coolly. And then he wondered if Gwen
-knew anything about the advertisement. "Also," he continued, "the some
-one must have known that Squire Evans would be at the stile at that
-particular time. Now, Miss Evans, can you tell me if your father made
-any appointment?"
-
-Gwen shook her head. "I can't say. My father did many things about
-which he told me nothing. Often in summer he walked out after dinner,
-as he did on the night he was murdered, but where he went I can't say.
-We searched the park when we missed him, and afterwards the woods on
-chance."
-
-"Was your father agitated on that night?"
-
-"He was agitated from the time the woman came to see him," said Gwen
-quickly. Hench sat up, and a thrill passed through him.
-
-"A woman?"
-
-"Yes! Some time in June a woman called one afternoon and had an
-interview with my father in the library. She was with him for two
-hours, and when she went away he was very much upset. I asked him who
-she was and why the visit annoyed him--as it plainly did."
-
-"And he told you to mind your own business, I'll be bound," said Mrs.
-Perage with a grim smile, for she knew Evans thoroughly.
-
-"Yes, he did. But from the time this woman called my father was silent
-and morose and irritable. I hope you won't think that I am undutiful,
-Mr. Hench, when I say that my father was not a pleasant-tempered man.
-But after the interview he became unbearable."
-
-"I never knew him when he was otherwise," cried the old lady,
-determined that Hench should know everything. "Madoc Evans was without
-doubt the most disagreeable person I have ever met. A bear would have
-had a more amiable temper."
-
-"Well, my father is dead," said Gwen coldly, "so it's no use calling
-him names."
-
-"Oh, I'll be a very tombstone for lying about the dead, if you like,
-my dear Gwen. But if Mr. Hench is to help he must know that your
-father was one of those uncomfortable men who never had a friend, and
-who never wanted one, so far as I know."
-
-"My father was eccentric," said Gwen, her colour coming and going as
-she explained herself to the young man. "And certainly he did not get
-on well with people. He quarrelled with my grandfather and with his
-brother Owain."
-
-"And with every one else," said Mrs. Perage. "After all Mynydd Evans
-would have done better to leave the money to Owain"--she stole a
-glance at Hench as she spoke. "He was a better man than Madoc."
-
-"Madoc was my father," said Gwen impatiently, "so please say as little
-bad of him as possible. And, after all, the estate has gone to my
-cousin, Owain's son, though I don't know why he doesn't come and take
-possession. What do you think is the reason, Mr. Hench?"
-
-"How can I tell the reason?" asked Hench awkwardly, and aware that
-Mrs. Perage was looking at him significantly. "Let us leave that fact
-alone for the present and talk of this woman who evidently upset your
-father. Who was she, Miss Evans?"
-
-"I have told you that my father refused to say."
-
-"Did you see her?"
-
-"I caught a glimpse of her when she went away from the Grange, as I
-happened to be looking out of the drawing-room window."
-
-"What was she like to look at?"
-
-"I didn't see her face. Her back was turned towards me, as she was
-going down the avenue."
-
-"Oh," said Hench disappointed, "that's a pity."
-
-"But I remember how she was dressed."
-
-"That's better. Well?"
-
-"She looked an untidy old thing," said Gwen, after a pause to
-recollect the appearance of this important stranger. "Very fat and
-unshapely. She wore a black dress spotted with orange dots, a black
-velvet mantle trimmed with jet beads, and a hat much too large for
-her, and----" She broke off. "What's the matter, Mr. Hench?"
-
-Owain's sudden change of colour and sudden start at this vivid
-description of Madame Alpenny betrayed him immediately, and he looked
-confused, not very well knowing how to excuse himself. For obvious
-reasons he did not wish to admit that he recognized the costume
-described. Therefore he took refuge in a white lie, and told the first
-one that occurred to him. "An idea struck me, Miss Evans, that your
-father might have been murdered by gipsies."
-
-"Hum!" cried Mrs. Perage, quite taken in by this plausible untruth.
-"That isn't at all unlikely. Madoc was hard on gipsies, especially
-when they poached."
-
-"But why do you suggest gipsies?" Gwen asked Owain, without attending
-to her hostess.
-
-"Well," he said, with an affected shrug, "that queer dress of the
-untidy old woman hints at a gipsy. Perhaps it's only a fancy on my
-part."
-
-"It's a very good fancy," said Mrs. Perage emphatically. "If this
-tramp is innocent, which he may be for all I know, the gipsies may
-have something to do with the crime. Why, Gwen, don't you remember how
-your father turned a whole gang of them off Parley Common a year ago
-because they were robbing the hen-roosts? And an orange spotted dress
-is just what a gipsy would wear."
-
-"But you don't think, Mrs. Perage, that this woman murdered my
-father?"
-
-"My dear, I don't suggest anything because I don't know anything. All
-I say is, that Mr. Hench's chance shot may have hit the bull's-eye."
-
-Gwen looked down thoughtfully at the carpet. "My father certainly was
-very much worried after his interview with this woman, and his worry
-lasted up to the time of his death. Gipsies--if this woman was a
-gipsy--might have something to do with the matter."
-
-"It's only my idea, of course," said Owain hastily, for he did not
-wish Madame Alpenny to be run to earth immediately. "Don't let us jump
-to conclusions. We must think. I shall be here for a few weeks, and
-during that time, Miss Evans, I am wholly at your disposal."
-
-"You will help me to learn who murdered my father?"
-
-"Yes. I'll do my best to find out," said Hench earnestly.
-
-"Hum!" boomed Mrs. Perage. "Easier said than done. How do you intend
-to begin?"
-
-"Well," remarked Hench, after a pause. "I think it will be a good
-start if Miss Evans takes me over Cookley Grange and into Parley Wood
-where the corpse was found. Then we can talk over the matter."
-
-Gwen looked doubtful. "Do you think my cousin would mind if I went
-over the Grange and took Mr. Hench?" she asked her hostess.
-
-Mrs. Perage stole a sly glance at Owain. "No, I don't think he would.
-Why should he, if you come to that?"
-
-"Well, his father and my father didn't get on well together."
-
-"That is no reason why their son and daughter shouldn't," retorted
-Mrs. Perage. "You can take Mr. Hench to the Grange to-morrow at
-noon. Now, young man,"--she rose to the full height of her lofty
-stature,----"you can depart. I keep early hours here, as it is
-necessary that I should have my beauty sleep."
-
-"As if you needed it!" said Owain jestingly, and this agreeable visit
-ended as it had begun--with badinage and frivolity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-CUPID'S GARDEN
-
-
-That night Hench awoke during the small hours of the morning with the
-conviction that he knew all about the mystery in which he was
-involved. He had fallen asleep much exercised in his mind so far as
-the visit of Madame Alpenny to Cookley Grange was concerned. He
-remembered that about the time mentioned by Gwen the Hungarian lady
-had gone away from Bethnal Green, presumably to procure an engagement
-for Zara in a West End music-hall. Certainly that might have been one
-very good reason why she had remained absent for a few days, but now
-it appeared that there was another, which had to do with Madoc Evans.
-When unconsciousness came Owain was still wrestling with the problem,
-and somehow it seemed that the same was solved during slumber. But
-with the working of his physical brain the scheme broke up, and he was
-only able to retain fragments. These he proceeded to piece together
-while staring at the ceiling through the faint twilight of the already
-dawning day. It was rather a difficult task to put two and two
-together.
-
-The young man recollected that Madame Alpenny had denied all knowledge
-of the elder Hench's family history, but recollected also that she had
-done so with a certain amount of hesitation. It now was borne in
-forcibly upon him that his father had told the woman much more about
-his past than she would admit. Probably he had informed her of the
-quarrel with the grandfather, and of his dislike for the brother,
-explaining also that Madoc enjoyed Cookley Grange and the large income
-for life. The word "Rhaiadr" had brought back the interview clearly to
-Madame Alpenny's mind, and it was more than probable that she knew
-Owain would inherit the estate. For that reason she had been agreeable
-to his paying attentions to her daughter, and for that reason she had
-paid her visit to Cookley Grange. Hench now quite understood how she
-had come to see the advertisement and to draw his attention to it.
-Without the least hesitation he concluded that she had learned from
-his father where Cookley Grange was situated, and thither she had gone
-to tell Madoc of her meeting with his pauper nephew. Why his uncle
-should have put in the queer advertisement and have appointed so
-strange a meeting-place Owain could not conceive, but he was certain
-that Madoc had done so, and had used the very word to attract
-attention which had awakened the Hungarian lady's memory of the
-twenty-year-old meeting. She was without doubt on the look-out for the
-advertisement, knowing in which paper it would appear. Thus she had
-easily been able to show it to him, and having--so to speak--assisted
-Madoc to lay the trap she had waited results.
-
-Now what puzzled Hench was why Squire Evans should have acted in this
-very roundabout way to bring about a meeting. An honest man would
-have either ignored the son of the brother he hated or would have
-openly invited him as his heir to visit him. Instead of doing this
-Madoc had behaved mysteriously in making the appointment, and had
-chosen for the rendezvous a solitary place out-of-doors. It seemed
-tolerably clear to Owain that his uncle had intended to do him harm;
-perhaps his idea was to murder him so that he should not inherit.
-Squire Evans, if the hints of Gwen and the very plain speaking of Mrs.
-Perage were to be believed, was by no means honest, so it was just
-possible that he wanted to get his hated heir out of the way. Hench
-shrunk from this conclusion, but after much thought could come to no
-other. The unexpected murder of the Squire had prevented his own death
-taking place.
-
-When the young man rose in the morning he turned the matter over in
-his mind, both while he was having his bath and while he was getting
-into his clothes. It then occurred to him that, as Madame Alpenny
-wished him to inherit so that he might marry Zara, the scheme of Evans
-would scarcely have suited her. She would have been no party to such a
-transaction, as such would have rendered void all her plans to get
-money through the marriage. But Madoc, being crafty, had probably not
-explained what he intended to do, and Madame Alpenny had returned to
-The Home of the Muses simply to bring about a meeting which would
-result in Owain entering into his kingdom on the death of his uncle.
-As things had turned out that death had taken place very unexpectedly,
-and Hench wondered if Madame Alpenny believed that he was the
-criminal. It seemed impossible that she should so believe, as in the
-first place she was ignorant that he had kept the appointment, and in
-the second if she was aware she would assuredly have moved in the
-matter before now. Owain could not understand her silence. The only
-reason he could conceive why she should remain in the background
-when things had come to such a pass was that her intention was to
-come forward when he took possession of the estate. Then--as he
-thought--she would appear at Cookley Grange with Zara, and if he
-refused to marry the girl would then accuse him of the murder.
-
-And again Hench remembered how he had been haunted by the feeling of
-this scheming woman's presence both at his hotel and when he started
-for Cookley. He had even believed that he had seen her amongst the
-crowd at Liverpool Street Station. Certainly the feeling was vague and
-he had been unable to prove that she was actually present on the
-platform. All the same he was now pretty certain that Madame Alpenny
-had been watching him, and that she knew he was staying at Cookley.
-When she thought it was time she would very likely appear to continue
-her plots. It was all very uncomfortable and unpleasant to a young man
-who was honest and straight in all his dealings. Against his will he
-was involved in these sordid schemes, and he did not see any way of
-extricating himself from their mire. All he could do was to wait until
-the Hungarian lady took action. Meanwhile he would do his best to try
-and learn who had actually murdered his uncle. It was for this reason
-he had so readily agreed to assist Gwen in her search.
-
-The day was very hot, as there was not a cloud in the sky and the sun
-was blazing like a great jewel in the softly-hued azure. Hench,
-scorning convention, assumed a tropical kit which he had brought from
-the warm lands of the equator. In a white linen suit, white shoes and
-a solar topee, he looked sufficiently noticeable as he made his way to
-Mrs. Perage's house. The Cookley villagers, accustomed as they were to
-the eccentricities of tourists, were very much surprised to behold him
-clothed so strangely. Naturally, being excessively prejudiced, they
-did not consider the cool comfort of such a garb, and jeered at the
-young man's common-sense while they sweated in their hot dark apparel.
-Matrons even came to the doors to remark audibly that his washing-bill
-must be something enormous. But Hench took no notice of the attention
-he attracted. He was even glad, as it proved conclusively to him that
-no one recognized in his spotless dress the rough tramp who was being
-hunted for far and wide.
-
-At the gate of Mrs. Perage's grounds he met Gwen, likewise clothed
-in fair white linen with a large straw hat girdled by artificial
-corn-flowers, as blue as her own eyes. She met Hench with a smile and
-he smiled also, for each of them considered that the other looked
-wonderfully handsome. Gwen even said as much with delightfully
-childish candour, blushing as she spoke.
-
-"How nice you look, Mr. Hench, and what a sensible dress for a hot
-day."
-
-"I return the compliment," said Owain, standing very straight and slim
-and saluting her in a strictly military fashion by way of a joke. "But
-people hereabouts have been making very rude remarks regarding my
-laundry-bill."
-
-"Of course they would. It is eccentric in England to be comfortable in
-white clothes. You wouldn't dare to go to London in that suit."
-
-"Try me," said Hench laughing. "I might do it out of dare-devilment,
-although I am not anxious to attract undue attention."
-
-"Why?" asked the girl, looking at him in what his guilty conscience
-told him was a searching way.
-
-Conscious that he had said an awkward thing, which he had, having
-regard to his position, Owain strove to turn it off with a laugh. "I
-am not vain enough to wish for admiration. I leave that to the Nuts
-and the Nibs."
-
-"Horrid, conceited young men," said Gwen, as she fell into step beside
-him. "I do detest that class of person."
-
-"Then I hope you don't think that I belong to the class in question."
-
-"No. You're a man!"
-
-"A very faulty man."
-
-"I hope so. A perfect man would be horrid."
-
-"And a perfect woman?" asked Owain, peeping under her large hat.
-
-"There isn't such a thing."
-
-"There is," he insisted. "I know one, at all events."
-
-"Mrs. Perage would be very flattered if she heard you say that," said
-Gwen in a demure tone and smiling.
-
-"I don't mean Mrs. Perage, delightful as she is. I mean----"
-
-"Now, don't spoil things with explanations," interrupted Miss Evans
-quickly.
-
-"Are you to pay all the compliments?"
-
-"I don't pay compliments. I say that you are a man, because you saved
-my life and don't talk about yourself as those horrid Nuts do. If you
-were like them I shouldn't ask you to assist me."
-
-Owain nodded comprehendingly. "I hope we will be successful," he said
-soberly, "but the task is a difficult one!"
-
-"To me more than to you it is difficult," said Gwen, colouring. "For
-to make you understand I have to say things about my father which I
-would rather leave unspoken."
-
-"Leave them unspoken," advised Hench coolly. "I have learned quite
-enough from Mrs. Perage to know that your father was a man who made
-many enemies. One of them murdered him; which one we have to find
-out."
-
-"How are we to begin?"
-
-"I hardly know. Perhaps Fate will begin for us," said Hench. He was
-thinking of Madame Alpenny as Fate. His cousin said nothing more, as
-her mind was busy considering his remarks, so the two walked on very
-quietly along the dusty road until they came to the scene of the
-motor-car adventure. Gwen was about to recall Owain's bravery, but
-checked herself, lest she should say too much, for her gratitude
-towards Hench was very strong. Also she saw that he was as attracted
-by her as she was by him, and thought if she spoke too ardently that
-he might say things which she did not wish to be said at the present
-moment. By this time the girl was tolerably certain that the young man
-loved her, and would probably propose if she gave him the least
-chance. As she knew little about his worldly position, she did not
-desire to move too swiftly in matters of love. Much as she loved him
-and admired him and was grateful to him, yet, like all women, even the
-most romantic, she had a vein of practical wisdom, which made her look
-before she leaped. Soon she would know more of Hench with regard to
-his income, his position, his habits and tastes. Then she would be
-able to say "Yes" or "No" in accordance with her feelings. They were
-strong just now, but she did not intend to let them run away with her.
-
-Owain went with Gwen along the path leading out of the churchyard
-through emerald-hued meadows towards Parley Wood. It was the very same
-path which he had trodden on that eventful night, and he shivered
-slightly at the recollection. Fortunately Gwen was too much taken up
-with her own thoughts to notice this sign of discomfort, which was
-lucky, since it would have necessitated an untrue explanation. And
-after that one uncontrollable tremor, Hench braced himself to outward
-calmness, and trod with apparent carelessness the bye-way which had
-previously conducted him towards such dire trouble. He was quite glad
-when the girl branched off along another path skirting the wood. This
-took them round the corner of the trees and brought them into a narrow
-lane, where the trees met overhead to shut out the sky. The pair moved
-through a quiet green twilight with a tall hedge on one side and a
-mouldering red brick wall on the other.
-
-"This runs round the park," said Gwen, tapping the mellow bricks, "and
-by following it we come to the gates."
-
-"Is it a large park?" asked Hench, curious to ascertain the extent of
-his domain.
-
-"Not very large, but very beautiful. So is the house." Gwen heaved a
-sigh. "I was very, very sorry to leave the Grange, as you may guess."
-
-"Perhaps you will go back to it," suggested Owain, feeling desperately
-anxious to then and there lay the same at her feet.
-
-"No!" Gwen flushed angrily. "My cousin is sure to take possession
-soon, and then I can never visit my old home."
-
-"Why not?" Owain averted his face. "Your cousin may be a good sort of
-chap."
-
-"I don't see how he can be with such a father as he had," retorted
-Gwen tartly.
-
-Hench was nettled, as he thought that this was unfair. "After all,
-your father was no angel," he said, also tartly. "Yet look at--you."
-
-"If you are going to pay silly compliments, I shall go back," said the
-girl sharply. "We are here on business, remember."
-
-"I didn't pay a compliment--at any rate to your father."
-
-"My father was--my father, so there's no use saying anything more. As
-to my cousin, I'll never set eyes on him, so why talk about him."
-
-"If you stay with Mrs. Perage you are certain to see him."
-
-"I shan't stay with Mrs. Perage. As soon as my cousin arrives I shall
-go to live in London and enjoy myself. I have five hundred a year of
-my own, so I can do as I like."
-
-"Why have you remained here so far?"
-
-"Because I wish to learn who murdered my father."
-
-"But I thought you didn't get on with your father?"
-
-"That is no reason why I should allow the beast who murdered him to
-escape, Mr. Hench," said Gwen quickly. "I wish you wouldn't talk
-of--but there"--she walked on abruptly--"you don't understand, and I
-cannot give you plain enough explanations to make you understand.
-There is our family history to be considered and it is not a pleasant
-one."
-
-Of course, Owain knew the family history just as thoroughly as the
-girl by his side, but for obvious reasons he could not tell her so. He
-could recall nothing in the same creditable to the late Squire, and it
-was impossible to guess why Gwen should so greatly desire to avenge
-his death. Even though the dead man was her father, he had proved a
-particularly unkind one, if Mrs. Perage was to be believed. But before
-they returned to the village, Gwen was compelled, against her will as
-it were, to tell him the true reason for the search. Then Owain was no
-longer astonished that she should prosecute the same, and ask for his
-assistance.
-
-The two passed through ornate iron gates swung between two mighty
-pillars of stone, and walked leisurely up a long avenue, which swept
-round in a curve to lead into a vast open space girdled by the trees
-of the park. Here, the young man for the first time came face to face
-with the mansion he had inherited, and silently expressed his
-admiration. It was a rambling structure of mellow red brick, the
-patchwork of many generations, and comprising many styles of
-architecture. And the very incongruity of the same constituted its
-chief beauty, as the eye was always finding something new and
-unexpected. Two storeys in height, it possessed a lofty slanting roof
-of red tiles, weather-worn and picturesque, with many stacks of
-twisted chimneys and many mullion windows. The whole was draped in
-dark green ivy, and seemed to be so ancient that it only appeared to
-be held together by the same. Windows and door were closed, but Gwen
-informed her companion that Mrs. Capes, her father's old housekeeper,
-was in charge. To summon her, she rang the bell as they stood in the
-porch.
-
-"It's a lovely place, isn't it?" she said, watching Owain's eyes
-roving round. "Very lovely," he assented warmly. "We could be very
-happy here."
-
-"We!"--Gwen flushed hotly--"what do you mean?" Then it was Hench's
-turn to flush. "I beg your pardon. I spoke without thinking, you see.
-What a lucky person your cousin is," he ended artfully.
-
-"I don't envy him his luck," she replied coldly, "and I'm sorry for
-the place, let alone the people. He is sure to be disagreeable."
-
-"But not knowing him, how can you judge?" protested Owain, much vexed
-at this persistent hostility.
-
-"I knew my father and I heard all about my Uncle Owain. No good can
-come out of Nazareth, and no decent man from the Evans family."
-
-Hench inwardly groaned and considered that she would have small mercy
-on him when she came to realize that he was the wicked heir in
-question. Madoc Evans must indeed have been a cruel parent to
-prejudice her so greatly against the race whence she sprung. However,
-he had little time to consider this question, as the door opened and a
-stiff, stately old dame in a black silk dress and wearing a lace cap
-made her appearance. She was a comely woman in spite of her age, and
-smiled all over her wrinkled face when she beheld the girl.
-
-"La, Miss, I am glad to see you. I thought you were never coming
-again."
-
-"I wish to show this gentleman the house and grounds," said Gwen,
-stepping into a large hall, with busts of the Caesars on pedestals
-ranged on either side. "I suppose my cousin has not yet come?"
-
-"No, Miss," said Mrs. Capes respectfully, and looking at Owain in a
-puzzled way as though she recognized his face. "The lawyers wrote to
-tell me that he was coming some time before the end of the year, but
-they couldn't be sure when."
-
-"Curious," murmured Gwen to herself. "I wonder why he is so slow in
-coming?"
-
-"Perhaps he thinks you are here and does not wish to turn you out,"
-said Hench, overhearing. "Then I shall write to Mr. Gilberry and tell
-him that I have left. In fact, I think he knows, as Mrs. Perage said
-something about having written. Anyhow, I don't want my cousin to show
-any consideration for me."
-
-"Oh, fie, Miss," said Mrs. Capes reprovingly. "Mr. Evans may be a very
-nice gentleman, for all we know."
-
-"Ah," said Gwen bitterly, "you worship the rising sun, I see."
-
-Mrs. Capes looked offended. "I worship no one, Miss, but if Mr. Evans
-turns out to be a nice gentleman, why shouldn't I like him?" She stole
-a glance at Owain as she spoke, and again he saw something like
-recognition in her eyes.
-
-Gwen shrugged her shoulders. "Wait here, Mr. Hench, and I shall return
-soon. I can show you over the house, and we will not need to trouble
-Mrs. Capes."
-
-She went away in a hurry, while Hench and the housekeeper remained in
-the hall looking at one another. By this time Owain felt rather
-uncomfortable, as it seemed that Mrs. Capes recognized him, and he
-wondered if she was about to denounce him as the much-wanted tramp. Of
-course the idea was ridiculous, as she had never seen him when he
-first came to Cookley to keep the appointment of the advertisement.
-Nevertheless, Hench felt uneasy and pointedly questioned the old
-woman, so as to set his own mind at rest. "Why do you look at me so
-intently, Mrs. Capes?" he asked quickly.
-
-"I was thinking how greatly you resemble your father," she answered.
-
-Owain was taken aback. "My father!" he muttered nervously.
-
-"My dear young gentleman, I have been with the family all my life, and
-knew Mr. Owain Evans as boy and man. I was certain that you were his
-son the moment I saw you. And when Miss Gwen called you 'Mr. Hench,'
-of course I was positive. That was the name Mr. Owain took when he
-went away from his father."
-
-"I am Owain Evans," admitted the young man, seeing that he was
-discovered; "but I don't wish my cousin to know. She seems to have a
-prejudice against me."
-
-Mrs. Capes nodded shrewdly. "Mr. Madoc was always speaking against you
-and your father, sir. No, I won't say a word. Are you----?" She looked
-searchingly at him.
-
-Hench guessed what she meant. "Yes, I am," he admitted boldly, "very
-much in love, but if she learns who I am she won't marry me."
-
-"The temper of the family is obstinate," she sighed. "All the same,
-sir, as you are young and good-looking, I wouldn't give up hope."
-
-"As that means giving up Gwen, you may be certain that I won't. Hush,
-here she is, Mrs. Capes. Not a word."
-
-"You can trust me, sir," replied the housekeeper, and looked quite
-pleased at being in the secret of the young Squire's identity. "I'll
-go now," she added, raising her voice for the benefit of Gwen. "You
-know your way about, Miss."
-
-"Yes. Don't let us trouble you," replied Miss Evans more graciously,
-and then the two young people were left alone.
-
-Gwen conducted Hench all over the vast house, showing him into one
-room after another filled with treasures. The place was very old and
-the rooms were spacious, while the furniture and the draperies and the
-carpets, the pictures, statues, carvings, and bric-a-brac were
-delightfully attractive. After wandering in raw lands, Owain deeply
-appreciated this real home, with which Destiny had provided him. He
-thought that if the goddess would only add to her gift by giving him
-Gwen for his wife, that he would have nothing else to wish for in the
-wide world. His appreciation and delighted observations pleased Gwen,
-although she sighed when they emerged again into the sunshine,
-intending to show him the garden.
-
-"It's horrid to leave it," she said, casting a backward glance at the
-ancient house. "I envy my cousin."
-
-"I thought you didn't," remarked Owain calmly.
-
-"After seeing my old home again, I do," answered Gwen, passing quickly
-across the lawn. "Come down here and see the flowers."
-
-The gardens were a paradise of flowers and beautifully laid out. There
-were all kinds of nooks and arbours in odd corners, and many winding
-paths which led to pleasant glades. The trees were magnificent, and
-everywhere the place bloomed with blossoms. Hench was not quite sure
-if he did not like the gardens even better than the charming house.
-And what with the colour and scent of flowers, the heat of the day,
-the silence of the place, and the fact that he was walking long-side
-the girl he loved, the young man rather lost his head. In a rash
-moment he quoted Omar Khayyam's verse relative to the wilderness, the
-wine-cup, the loaf of bread, and of course "Thou!" Gwen blushed and
-flushed, and threw up her hand to stop him. They were standing near a
-marble bench under an oak tree, and on this she sat down.
-
-"I wish you would not speak to me like that," she said in vexed tones.
-
-"Why not, when I love you?"
-
-"You can't love in five minutes."
-
-"Romeo and Juliet did."
-
-"Ah, that is in a play. I am talking of real life. We have only known
-each other a very short time."
-
-"Undoubtedly. But then our introduction made for intimacy at once."
-
-"How unfair," murmured Gwen, looking down. "You are taking advantage
-of the fact that you saved my life."
-
-"If that is any bar to my loving you, I wish I hadn't."
-
-"Then you would have had no one to love," retorted the girl, who could
-not help smiling at the speech. Hench saw that smile.
-
-"Gwen, you don't dislike me?" he asked entreatingly.
-
-"No, I certainly do not. I like you, and so does Mrs. Perage."
-
-"Please leave Mrs. Perage out of the conversation. Does your saying
-that you like me mean that you love me?"
-
-"Liking doesn't mean love."
-
-"It's a step in the right direction, anyhow," said Hench cheerfully.
-"See here, Gwen, I have little to offer you, but with that little I
-give my heart. Now if----"
-
-"Don't say anything more just now," interrupted the girl, much
-distressed. "I cannot answer you."
-
-"You can say yes, or no."
-
-"I don't wish to say no."
-
-"Then that means yes!" cried Hench triumphantly, and his heart beat
-rapidly.
-
-"No"--Gwen pulled away the hand he had taken--"there is something you
-must know about me. I did not intend to tell you, but since you have
-spoken, I must be frank." She drew a long breath, while Owain fixed
-his brown eyes keenly on her disturbed face. "Have you heard anything
-against me in the village?"
-
-"No, I have not. But then I don't go into the village much, nor do I
-attend to gossip. All I know of you comes from Mrs. Bell, and she
-adores you."
-
-Gwen crossed her feet and folded her hands. "My father and I never got
-on well together," she said rapidly and in a low voice, looking down
-as she spoke. "He treated me very harshly, and we very often
-quarrelled."
-
-"That was not your fault, I swear," cried the lover impetuously.
-
-"No. I can honestly say that it wasn't. But every one knew that we did
-not get on well together, and when my father was murdered, some people
-said"--she drew another long breath--"that I--I--murdered him."
-
-She looked up with a frightened glance, as if she expected Hench to
-turn and fly after hearing such a confession. Instead of doing so, the
-young man laughed aloud and lifted her from the bench into his arms.
-"What a silly thing to say," he murmured, pressing her to his breast.
-
-"You--you--don't---believe it?" gasped Gwen, making no attempt to get
-away.
-
-"Darling, it is not worth my while to answer such a question. I love
-you and I have done so from the first moment I set eyes on you. Can I
-believe that the most perfect girl in the world is guilty of anything,
-much less of such a dreadful crime?"
-
-"But people say----"
-
-"I won't hear another word. Thus I stop your mouth"--and before Gwen
-was aware, Owain had kissed her full on the lips.
-
-"Oh," she said, half frightened, half delighted, "how can you!" Then
-suddenly she slipped from his arms. "No! No! Only when you learn the
-truth about my father's death and end this scandal, will I--will
-I----"
-
-"Good!" said Owain, quite understanding. "I'll find out the truth and
-then we will go hand in hand to the church." And a final kiss sealed
-the compact.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-DANGER
-
-
-Considering that he had gained his heart's desire, Hench should have
-returned to his lodgings in the highest spirits. Instead of doing so,
-he arrived in a rather disturbed frame of mind. It seemed to him,
-after due reflection, that he was not treating Gwen straightforwardly,
-since as yet she was quite unaware of the relationship between them.
-Nevertheless, as he argued, he would never have been able to win her
-had she known at the outset that he was the heir to the estate and her
-cousin. So far he had acted honestly enough in masquerading as a
-disguised prince, but he should not have compelled her to acknowledge
-her love before making himself known. Aware of the truth, she could
-make her choice of marrying the man she loved, or of dismissing the
-cousin whom her father had taught her to detest. Hench felt decidedly
-uncomfortable.
-
-This being the case, he was unable to stay in the poky little rooms,
-as he felt too restless to sit down, and too excited to read. His foot
-was now so much better that he could walk with considerable ease,
-although he had some sort of twinge every now and then. But it was
-certainly not well enough to permit his taking a long walk. Yet Owain,
-feeling hipped, did so, and strolled a long way into the country. The
-result was that he felt the old pain coming on again, and his ankle
-being yet somewhat weak, there was danger that he might twist it.
-Luckily, a carrier's cart came along the road when he was some miles
-from Cookley, and the offer of a shilling procured Hench a drive back
-to the village. When he alighted at Mrs. Bell's door he felt that his
-foot was again swollen and painful, and cursed his folly, as he
-hobbled into his sitting-room. He would have to rest that evening, as
-he fully recognized, and as the lover's desire was to see Gwen, such
-enforced absence from her presence did not please him. With a groan he
-wondered how he would get through the dull hours until bed-time.
-
-But Fate had already provided him with an interesting companion. While
-Hench sat down and removed his boots and stroked his ankle, a tall
-figure appeared at the door of the bedroom, which opened into the
-sitting-room. After an astonished pause, Hench fell back on the sofa
-and gasped.
-
-"Jim!" he cried. "Who would have thought of seeing you here?"
-
-"I thought I would surprise you," said Vane complacently, and
-advancing into the parlour. "I arrived three hours ago and found that
-you had gone out for a walk. Therefore, I looked up my aunt, as I
-intend to put up with her for the night, and then came back to lie on
-your bed and pass the time in sleep until you turned up. Humph! You
-don't look like a joyful lover."
-
-"What do you know about that?" asked Hench tartly. "Has Gwen----"
-
-"No, she hasn't," interrupted Vane promptly. "But Aunt Emma hinted
-that she wished to bring about a marriage between you and your cousin,
-so that the family quarrels should end. From your words rather than
-your looks, it seems that you have settled the matter and accomplished
-Aunt Emma's desire."
-
-Hench groaned. "We can talk of that later. Meantime, I apologize for
-lying on the sofa; but I foolishly went for a long walk and my ankle
-is aching again."
-
-"Oh, that's all right," replied the barrister, lighting a cigarette.
-"Aunt Emma told me of your rescuing Miss Evans and that your ankle was
-better. Why the deuce have you made it worse?"
-
-"I couldn't sit down here after meeting Gwen this morning, and went
-for a walk. This is the result," and Hench pointed to his ankle. As he
-had removed his sock, Vane saw that it was much inflamed.
-
-"Silly ass," said Jim, fumbling near the fireplace for the bell-rope.
-"Better bathe it in cold water and lie up for the evening."
-
-"I intend to, and I daresay it will be all right in the morning.
-Mrs. Bell"--the delicate-looking landlady entered as he spoke her
-name--"just bring me a basin of cold water and my sponge."
-
-Mrs. Bell threw up her hands at the sight which met her eyes. "Won't I
-send for the doctor, Mr. Hench?"
-
-"No. Bathing will reduce the swelling and rest will put everything
-else right, Mrs. Bell. Don't worry. Sorry I'm an invalid, Vane, and
-can't entertain you."
-
-"Oh, I shan't let you off inviting me to dinner, Owain," said the
-barrister, as Mrs. Bell disappeared to fetch the basin of water. "I've
-come down to see you especially. Later I go on to sleep at my aunt's
-place."
-
-"What do you wish to see me about?" asked Hench uneasily.
-
-"That can wait until I have some food. Don't be inhospitable."
-
-Owain laughed and began to bathe his ankle in the cold water which
-Mrs. Bell had just brought in. He thought that Vane's news could not
-be anything very unpleasant since he so calmly postponed telling it.
-So the two men chatted on various frivolous subjects while the
-landlady laid the cloth and made the dinner ready. By the time Hench
-finished doctoring his foot and was feeling less pain, the meal was
-before them. Vane pushed the table near to the sofa so that Owain
-could eat without sitting in a chair. He partook of the viands in the
-dining attitude of an ancient Roman, leaning on one elbow, and being
-hungry, managed to make an excellent meal. Then Mrs. Bell brought in
-the coffee, and after clearing the table, left the two men to their
-own devices. Vane sat near the window smoking, while Owain remained
-comfortably on his sofa. The casement was open, and the scent of the
-homely cottage flowers came into the room, which was filled with the
-coming shadows of the night. Hench felt so tired that he did not begin
-the conversation, and would have much preferred slumber. But Vane gave
-him no chance. He began to chat immediately, and on a subject which
-was already worrying his friend considerably.
-
-"So you are in love with your cousin and she with you," he remarked,
-after a puff or two. "I am going by what Aunt Emma said, remember. It
-seems quick work to me--a kind of five minutes' wooing."
-
-"Jim, I fell head over heels in love with Gwen the moment I saw her."
-
-"The deuce! Yet the last time we met, you told me that you didn't know
-what love meant."
-
-"That was quite true. I didn't. My liking for Zara Alpenny was one of
-simple admiration. But Gwen! Oh, Jim, you don't know how I adore her."
-
-"I'll take it for granted that you do," said Vane dryly. "But I can't
-say that your newly-born passion makes you very happy. You have
-groaned two or three or four times since you arrived."
-
-"It's my ankle giving me pain."
-
-"Oh, shucks!" cried the barrister, after a purely American fashion,
-"it's your heart, man. You aren't the chap to yowl over a twisted
-sinew, as I know jolly well. Come along and unburden your mind to your
-father-confessor."
-
-"It will be a relief," admitted Hench, with a fifth groan. "The fact
-is I am not quite sure if I have acted rightly in stealing a march on
-Gwen."
-
-"What do you mean by your stealing a march?"
-
-"Well, you see she knows me as Hench, and hasn't the least idea that I
-am her cousin who inherits the property."
-
-"What of that? You came here with the idea of masquerading."
-
-"So I did. But I didn't intend to go too far."
-
-"And you have?"
-
-"Yes!"--another groan. "We went to the Grange this morning, and when I
-found myself alone in the garden with her I proposed to her."
-
-"So she said to Aunt Emma."
-
-"But, Jim, you told me that she had said nothing?"
-
-"I did. It was a fib, I admit. But I wanted to hear your version of
-the proposal, Owain," said Vane shamelessly. "You didn't intend to go
-too far, nor did your cousin. But as you were swept off your feet by
-passion, so was she, as she admitted to Aunt Emma, with tears. Miss
-Evans intended to keep you at arm's length until she knew more about
-you. But this passion took you both off your feet, so there's no doubt
-of its being genuine on both sides."
-
-"On my side, certainly. But on hers----?"
-
-"The same. I hope you don't mind Aunt Emma telling me of what took
-place; she has your interest very much at heart."
-
-"I am glad that Mrs. Perage broke the ice," said Hench dolefully.
-"It makes it easier for me to talk. You see, Gwen loves me as a
-stranger----"
-
-"Can a girl love a stranger?"
-
-"I mean she thinks that I am only Owain Hench. When she learns that I
-am Owain Evans she will throw me over."
-
-"Why should she, seeing that she loves you?"
-
-"Love may turn to hate, and her dislike for my father's son has been
-carefully fostered by her father."
-
-"Well," said Vane with an air of finality, "it seems to me that she
-should be jolly glad to get back her old home by marriage with a
-decent chap such as her cousin is."
-
-"She doesn't believe that I am a decent chap," cried Hench irritably.
-
-"Then you must prove that you are by explaining matters," insisted Jim
-coolly. "Bless you, Miss Evans will look upon your masquerading as a
-romance."
-
-"I've got my doubts about that. She may resent being deceived."
-
-Vane remained silent for a few moments and lighted a fresh cigarette.
-"As a bachelor I don't pretend to understand women," he said at
-length, "and it is just on the cards that she may cut up rough. Still,
-if she loves you really and truly, as Aunt Emma assured me she does,
-she will forgive your innocent deception. After all, by concealing the
-truth you only gave yourself a fair chance of being judged on your
-merits."
-
-Hench nodded wearily. "That of course was my idea of masquerading, and
-it was a right idea, seeing how strongly her father has prejudiced her
-against me. I am a kind of monster in her eyes in my capacity of
-heir"--Hench turned restlessly--"I must tell her, I suppose."
-
-"You must, and as soon as possible," advised his mentor firmly. "If
-you don't, the information may come from a less pleasant quarter."
-
-"Now, what do you mean by that?" asked Hench, startled.
-
-"Madame Alpenny----?"
-
-"You don't know her."
-
-"Oh yes, I do. I am not aware if Aunt Emma told you, but I went down
-to Bethnal Green for a day or so."
-
-"She told me last night, when I dined at her house. I was wondering
-why you went there?"
-
-"Where are your wits?" asked Vane in a surprised tone. "Of course, I
-went in your interest to that boarding-house and stopped for a couple
-of nights."
-
-"In my interest?" Hench raised himself on his elbow and stared at Vane
-with an uneasy look in his eyes.
-
-"Of course. You don't suppose that any business of my own took me down
-there, do you? So far as regards this murder of your uncle, you are
-not out of the wood yet, so I wanted to learn what I could to help
-you."
-
-"You're a real good fellow, Jim," said Owain gratefully.
-
-"Pfui! In the absence of briefs which don't come my way, it gives me
-something to do. Besides, if there is a row over the business you can
-engage me as your counsel, and then I'll make a big name straight
-away."
-
-"Oh, hang it"--Hench moved uneasily--"don't speak of that even in
-jest."
-
-"I'm not in jest, but in dead earnest," insisted Vane seriously. "I
-tell you Madame Alpenny is on the warpath."
-
-"What?"
-
-"There! there! Don't get excited, you silly ass. Let me begin at the
-beginning and end at the end." Vane blew a ring or so of smoke and
-went on talking. "I stayed at The Home of the Muses to see if Spruce
-knew anything about that advertisement, as I dreaded him rather than
-the old woman. Of course, he knew me as a pal of yours at the old
-school, and was very curious to know where you had got to."
-
-"You didn't tell him, I hope?"
-
-Vane shook his head. "Is thy servant an ass that he should do so? Of
-course I lay low like Brer Rabbit, and let Spruce babble on. He
-doesn't know anything about your real name, or the advertisement, or
-your accession to fortune, or anything else. He'd have let the
-information slip had he known. So far as Spruce is concerned you can
-set your mind at rest. I'm glad such is the case, Owain, for he's a
-dangerous monkey."
-
-"Humph!" said Hench meditatively. "If he is ignorant why does he wish
-to know where I am?"
-
-"Because, having made London too hot for him over that card affair,
-with which I charged him, by the way, he wants to seek fresh fields
-and pastures new. He had an idea--I think you told him--that you were
-going away into the lands at the back-of-beyond, so thought he'd like
-to come with you."
-
-"I wouldn't have him as a gift as a companion," said Hench with
-disgust.
-
-"So I told him, and he wasn't exactly pleased. At all events, since I
-ostensibly didn't know where you were he shut up, and gave me the cold
-shoulder on account of my nasty manner towards him with regard to the
-cheating. I do think," finished Vane calmly, "that he's the most
-abject Gadarene swine I have ever met."
-
-Owain drew a long breath of relief when Vane finished, for he also
-mistrusted the meddlesome little man. Had Spruce understood the
-situation it was very certain that he would have attempted to make an
-income out of the same by blackmail, particularly now that Hench had
-money in large quantities. But as he was quite ignorant of everything
-there was nothing to be feared. "Then it's not from that quarter the
-information about my real name is to come to Gwen?"
-
-"No! Set your mind at rest so far. Madame Alpenny is the lady likely
-to queer your pitch."
-
-"But she doesn't know where I am."
-
-"Oh yes, she does. Mrs. Bell's cottage in Cookley, Essex, was the
-address she gave me as one likely to find you."
-
-Hench swore under his breath. "How did she find out?"
-
-"Hurry no man's cattle, my son," said Vane sagely. "You must be
-introduced to the subject gradually, so that you may admire my
-diplomatic skill. I came to Mrs. Tesk's establishment to ask for you,
-as that--according to my story--was the address you gave me. Mrs. Tesk
-didn't know where you had gone to, so I paid civil attentions to
-Madame Alpenny and confessed that I was your very good friend. Then
-she told me--when we became better acquainted, mind you--that you were
-her very good friend, and would shortly be her very good son-in-law."
-
-"Nothing of the sort," cried Hench violently. "I proposed to Zara, and
-she refused me as she loves Bracken."
-
-"Zara said nothing about that proposal or her Bracken engagement to
-Madame Alpenny, as she's a deuced sight too much afraid of the old
-hag. Madame Alpenny told me that she had given you permission to marry
-Zara whenever you got the cash. She mentioned that, as you were the
-nephew of Squire Evans who had been murdered, you were now rich."
-
-"How did she know that?" asked Hench, remembering the visit paid by
-the Hungarian lady to his deceased uncle.
-
-"Oh, she told me that your father, some twenty years ago, wished to
-marry her, and gave a sketch of his family history."
-
-"I know. It was the word 'Rhaiadr' he mentioned which revived her
-recollection and led to the advertisement being inserted."
-
-"The deuce!" said Vane curiously. "She told me nothing of that."
-
-"No, she wouldn't," growled Hench impatiently. "Go on. I can speak
-later."
-
-"Well, then," proceeded the barrister, "Madame Alpenny knew that you
-inherited the estate; also your real name and all the rest of it."
-
-"My father told her."
-
-"Exactly, and she frankly confessed that she had refused him because
-the estate was going to you and not to your father. She never bothered
-any more about the matter until she met you at The Home of the Muses.
-Then the name 'Rhaiadr' revived her memory, and she wished you to
-marry Zara when you became rich. After seeing the death of your uncle
-in the newspapers she was certain that you had entered into your
-kingdom, and is coming down to see if you will keep your promise and
-marry Zara."
-
-"Did she say that she could make it hot for me if I didn't?"
-
-"No. She's a wary old bird. She was all smiles and amiability," said
-Vane significantly. "There was no word of the murder or of the
-advertisement, or anything which led me to understand that she had a
-card up her sleeve. All she knows--according to her own showing--is
-that you are Squire Evans' heir and are engaged to her daughter."
-
-"It's a lie. I'm not. How did she learn where I was?"
-
-"Oh, she confessed that as she had no reason--so she said--to conceal
-it. A page called Bottles told her."
-
-Hench slipped off the sofa and swore again. "I guessed as much. I saw
-Bottles' brother, who is a page at your aunt's. He recognized me, as
-his brother had written telling him all about me. I had half a mind to
-tell him to hold his tongue as to my whereabouts but didn't like to."
-
-"It would have been too late," said Vane quickly. "The page must
-have written whenever he heard your name as that of a gentleman
-staying in the village. At all events, Madame Alpenny knew all about
-you being here the day before yesterday. Peter--I know the brat at my
-aunt's--wrote to Simon, surnamed Bottles, and Bottles gave you away to
-Madame Alpenny."
-
-"Hang him! I did think that I could trust Bottles."
-
-"You can't trust any one in this wicked world," commented the
-barrister philosophically. "Madame Alpenny knew that the boy was a
-hero-worshipper and adored you, so she made inquiries. I daresay a few
-shillings made him talk."
-
-"I don't believe it," said Hench doubtfully. "Peter hinted that
-everything was right, so I believe Bottles has some card up his sleeve
-which has to do with all this mystery."
-
-"But I don't see----"
-
-"No more do I," said Hench, cutting Vane short. "We're in the dark,
-and until some light is thrown on the subject we will remain in the
-dark. As to Madame Alpenny, she is at the bottom of the business, I am
-sure." And then Owain went on to tell his friend about the visit paid
-by the woman to the Squire. "She has engineered the whole plot, I'm
-certain."
-
-"Queer," admitted Vane, staring absently out into the shadowy garden.
-"Do you think she murdered the Squire?"
-
-"How do I know. She might have done so in order to place me in
-possession of the money at once. There is certainly a motive.
-Perhaps,"--Hench's face grew less gloomy,--"perhaps that is why she
-hasn't moved in the matter so far."
-
-"How did you expect her to move?"
-
-"Well, she must have guessed that I would keep the appointment, and
-when she saw that my uncle was murdered she naturally would accuse me.
-Instead of doing this she has held her tongue."
-
-"Only for a time, old son. Believe me, she may turn up here any day.
-Naturally she wouldn't queer her pitch by telling the police of what
-she knows. My impression is that she will try and make you marry Zara
-by threatening to give you away unless you come up to the scratch."
-
-"I shan't come up to the scratch, then," muttered Hench sullenly.
-
-"In that case Madame Alpenny will have the game in her own hands."
-
-"She won't, Jim, if I can prove her guilty."
-
-"That won't be an easy job," said Vane doubtfully. "The woman is as
-cunning as a fox, and as dangerous as a tigress. Besides, we can't be
-sure that she _did_ get rid of your uncle. Anyhow,"--the barrister
-rose to stretch himself,--"I advise you to make friends with Mammon by
-telling Gwen who you are, and getting over the trouble before Madame
-Alpenny turns up to put her fingers in the pie. She intends to do
-that, you know."
-
-"She'll burn her fingers, then."
-
-"I said a pie, not a fire," retorted Jim dryly. "She intends to eat
-your pudding, not to burn herself."
-
-"Well, what is best to be done under the circumstances?" asked Hench
-crossly.
-
-"Tell Gwen who you are, and explain how you saw the body of her father
-in Parley Wood," rejoined the barrister promptly.
-
-"No! No! No! She would believe me to be guilty. You know how the
-supposed tramp who went to the Bull Inn is suspected. If I confessed
-that I was the man----"
-
-"I see, I see," interrupted Vane, wrinkling his lean face. "It's a bit
-difficult, isn't it, old man? But if Miss Evans loves you she'll never
-believe a word against you. That's a woman all over."
-
-"I tell you she is prejudiced against her cousin Owain," said Hench
-sullenly. "And when she learns that I am that cousin she will merge
-her love in hate."
-
-Vane shook his head. "I doubt it. But if she does by any ill chance,
-you have a friend in my aunt. She likes you no end, and will stand by
-you. As you may guess, she has a strong influence over Miss Evans."
-
-"Mrs. Perage is a very clever and sensible woman," mused Owain
-thoughtfully. "And I really think it would be wise for me to tell her
-everything."
-
-"I agree!" cried Vane emphatically. "Bachelor as I am, I always
-believe in asking a woman's advice. The sex has more intuition than
-ours has. Let her be the person to deal with Madame Alpenny--one woman
-against another. Then," added the barrister cynically, "you'll see the
-fur fly."
-
-"I won't tax Mrs. Perage's friendship so far, Jim. My ankle will be
-all right to-morrow, so if you will ask Gwen to meet me near the old
-Saxon Cross in the churchyard I can reveal who I am. When I settle
-matters with her I shall see Mrs. Perage and relate the whole story."
-
-"Relate it to Miss Evans also," advised Vane strongly.
-
-"No. I shall only tell her who I am, and give her time to get over
-that before I tell more. It's dangerous to give her too big a dose at
-once. Also, when I tell your aunt about my adventure I wish to be
-guided by her advice. She may suggest my keeping the same a secret
-from Gwen until the truth becomes known."
-
-"Well, do as you think best, Owain. But how is the truth to become
-known?"
-
-"I shall wait until I see Madame Alpenny before forming an opinion."
-
-Vane wheeled round. "Do you mean to accuse her of the murder?"
-
-"Not unless she accuses me. It's a case of pull devil, pull baker. Now
-you'd better out along to your aunt's and make my excuses for not
-turning up. Meanwhile I shall think over things, and a pleasant night
-I shall have."
-
-"The way of the transgressor is hard," laughed Vane cheerfully.
-
-"Transgressor be hanged! I'm more sinned against than sinning."
-
-Vane laid a friendly hand on his friend's shoulder. "All right, old
-man, don't get your hair riz. I'll tell Aunt Emma that your ankle kept
-you from paying your respects to her, and will request Miss Evans to
-meet you to-morrow near the Cross. At what time, by the way?"
-
-"Three o'clock in the afternoon. And don't come along in the morning,
-Jim. I wish to think out matters alone. I shall see you in the
-afternoon."
-
-Vane put on his hat and prepared a cigarette. "Don't overdo it," he
-advised at the door. "And remember that two heads are better than
-one."
-
-"Quite so. That is why I intend to see Gwen. All the same, I'm
-afraid."
-
-"Nonsense! Use that very eloquent tongue of yours and show her that
-the devil is not so black as he is painted. Miss Evans, being very
-much a woman, may cut up rough at the outset, but when----"
-
-"When what?"
-
-"When she knows that you are in danger of arrest she will stand by you
-through thick and thin."
-
-"I have my doubts," said Hench dolefully.
-
-"I haven't. Women are contrary animals. As her prosperous cousin she
-may hate you. As an innocent man, in danger of being hanged, she will
-love you."
-
-"May you be a true prophet," said Hench fervently, and Vane went away
-laughing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-AT BAY
-
-
-Vane faithfully delivered both messages, and Gwen was as pleased with
-the churchyard appointment as Mrs. Perage was annoyed by Hench's
-folly. That he should walk for miles on a weak ankle proved what a
-fool he was, and she said as much to her nephew next morning at
-breakfast.
-
-"You men are all babies, Jim, silly, obstinate and weak."
-
-"Not me," retorted the barrister. "I haven't been fooling with my
-ankle."
-
-"You know quite well what I mean," fumed Mrs. Perage, who was in her
-work-a-day attire, and who looked particularly fierce. "It's not only
-his ankle, it's his masquerading." She rubbed her nose irritably. "I
-tell you there will be the deuce to pay. Gwen is Welsh."
-
-"Well, what does her nationality matter?"
-
-"It matters everything. The Welsh are a particularly fiery nation,
-and have the pride of Old Nick. As a poor man Gwen loves her
-cousin--he is the fairy prince who has come into her life. But when
-she learns the truth----"
-
-"She'll forgive him if she loves him."
-
-Mrs. Perage shook her head and scowled. "You don't know woman, Jim.
-Her very love may make her resent his not having treated her quite
-honestly."
-
-"Aren't you taking the matter too seriously, Aunt Emma?" expostulated
-Vane with a shrug. "After all, Miss Evans must see that Owain could
-only give himself a fair chance by masquerading as he has done. If he
-had turned up _in propria persona_, she would have disliked him on the
-spot."
-
-"Hum!" boomed Mrs. Perage doubtfully. "Perhaps. But not if he had
-saved her life. That act would have excused everything had it been
-done as Owain Evans."
-
-"What do you mean by excusing everything?"
-
-"I mean as regards the reputation of Owain Evans. Of course Madoc was
-always a liar, as I know, and Gwen didn't get on over-well with him.
-As a _deus ex machina_, Gwen would have disbelieved her father's
-stories of her cousin's wickedness."
-
-"But the poor chap isn't wicked at all. He's the whitest man I know."
-
-"Madoc's lies would have smirched the whiteness of an angel," retorted
-the old lady sharply. "But Gwen would have either forgiven or would
-have disbelieved had Hench come as her cousin. As it is she may throw
-him over if he tells her who he really is."
-
-"Oh, he intends to tell her right enough, and this very day, somewhere
-about three o'clock," said Vane coolly. "She may cut up rough for the
-minute, but when Owain gets into trouble she'll find out that she
-loves him all right."
-
-"Trouble!" Mrs. Perage looked up suddenly. "What trouble?"
-
-"I'm not at liberty to say, Aunt Emma. Owain intends to tell you
-himself. But there's a big trouble coming along."
-
-"Hum! Can't it be averted?"
-
-"So far as I can see, it can't."
-
-"Well, Jim,"--the old dame rose from the breakfast table and brushed
-the crumbs from her apron,--"I'll wait to hear the young man's
-explanation. But I am quite sure that he is honest and kind and a
-well-bred gentleman. Nothing will ever make me change my opinion of
-him."
-
-"Wait till you hear what the trouble is."
-
-"Do you know all about it?" demanded Mrs. Perage imperatively.
-
-"Yes, I do."
-
-"And you still can call Hench your friend?"
-
-"I can. He's a rattling good chap."
-
-"Then why the dickens should I change my opinion when I learn the
-truth?" said Mrs. Perage vigorously. "It can't be anything
-dishonourable or you would not champion Hench. Do you think you are
-talking to a fool, Jim Vane?"
-
-"Oh Lord, Aunt Emma, don't get on to me. My nerves are weak."
-
-"Your head is," retorted Aunt Emma smartly. "I wish you hadn't hinted
-at this trouble, Jim. I'm horribly inquisitive, and will be on
-tenterhooks until I know what it's all about."
-
-"I don't expect you'll have to wait long," said Vane gloomily. "There
-will be the devil to pay if----"
-
-Mrs. Perage closed her ears and hurried to the door. "Not another
-word. You are only making me more and more curious. But I tell you
-what, Jim, I am going to stand Hench's friend in any case."
-
-"You're a brick, Aunt Emma."
-
-"I'm an old fool," snapped Mrs. Perage, who was more upset by the
-implied mystery than she chose to admit. "My wisest plan would be to
-wash my hands of the whole business, known and unknown. But instead of
-doing so I am just going to strengthen Gwen's love for Owain, so that
-it may not fail her when he makes his revelation."
-
-Mrs. Perage held to this determination, and twice or thrice during the
-morning she exchanged words with Miss Evans on the subject of Hench.
-The girl for the time being had lost sight of her mission of clearing
-her name by discovering the name of the assassin, and was wholly taken
-up with love dreams. She was passionately devoted to the young man, as
-his attitude tended to increase her belief in the nobility of his
-nature. He had saved her life as it was, and now, in the face of the
-rumours which credited her with the death of her father, he was
-willing to marry her. No man but the noblest who ever breathed would
-act in so gloriously honourable a fashion. She said this and much more
-to Mrs. Perage in the seclusion of her bedroom, when she was putting
-on her prettiest frock and hat to keep the appointment. And all the
-time Mrs. Perage was rubbing her beaky nose irritably.
-
-"Don't build the pedestal too high, Gwen," she advised dryly. "Your
-idol may have feet of clay and come toppling over."
-
-"No," said the girl firmly. "Nothing will ever make me believe that
-Mr. Hench is not the best of men. What is his Christian name, Mrs.
-Perage? It is strange that he did not tell me yesterday."
-
-Mrs. Perage was much too wary to give the name, lest it should lead to
-uncomfortable questions and forestall Owain's explanations. "How the
-deuce should I know the man's name?" she asked crossly and evasively.
-"I never met him until you introduced him to me as your hero."
-
-"And he is a hero, isn't he?"
-
-"Hum! I suppose so! The rescue was rather flamboyant--a kind of
-playing to the gallery."
-
-"How unjust," cried Gwen, flaming up, which was exactly what Mrs.
-Perage wanted her to do. "As if he could help the way in which my
-rescue took place. I am quite sure that he is the most modest of men."
-
-"Pooh! No man is modest; they are all as conceited as pigs."
-
-"I never knew that pigs were considered vain, Mrs. Perage," said Gwen
-coldly. "And I don't see why you should compare Mr. Hench to one."
-
-"I spoke generally. Don't be silly."
-
-"Ah, you call me silly because I'm in love."
-
-"Are you really and truly in love?" asked the old lady doubtfully.
-"Mind you, I don't mean that easy romantic passion which seems
-everything and means nothing. But real love, true love, staunch love,
-the sort which will hold to its object in the face of all detraction."
-
-"I wouldn't believe a word against Mr. Hench, if that is what you
-mean. But I don't know why you should use the word detraction."
-
-"I don't know myself," said Mrs. Perage grimly. "Unless it is that I
-find most men are broken cisterns. There, there, child, go away and
-meet your Prince. I don't wish to be your Jeremiah and prophesy woe."
-
-"I wouldn't believe you if you did," said the girl very decidedly.
-"All my woe was undergone with the death of my father and the loss of
-my old home. I am sure that there is nothing but sunshine ahead."
-
-Mrs. Perage sniffed and thought anxiously about Vane's hints. But it
-was not her business to give chapter and verse for her forebodings.
-And, at all events, she had somewhat strengthened Gwen's love for the
-young man by depreciating him in a hinting kind of way. When the girl,
-flushed with love, and looking as pretty as a picture, set forth to
-keep the appointment, Mrs. Perage stood at the window and breathed a
-prayer that all would be well. It was a bright warm day, but clouds
-were drifting across the sky. Even as the old dame prayed a cloud
-concealed the brightness of the sun and Mrs. Perage shuddered. It was
-an omen of ill, she thought; but when a few moments later the cloud
-passed and the glow of the sunshine reasserted itself, she cheered up.
-It seemed to her that trouble was coming, but would pass without being
-of any great duration. She fervently hoped so, and went about her
-daily business calling herself hard names for being so superstitious.
-
-Meantime, Gwen, with a smiling face and a light heart, was walking
-swiftly towards the place of meeting. Every moment spent away from
-Hench, now that he had declared himself, seemed to be wasted, and she
-promised herself three or four golden hours with her lover. They would
-talk in the churchyard for a time, and then would take a long walk, in
-any direction, for whatever path they chose would lead to the Elysian
-Fields. Then he would tell her how much he loved her, and she would
-respond coyly to his caresses, until earth and sea and sky would be
-transfigured, and they would be blessed above all lovers who ever were
-or who ever would be. Afterwards would come marriage, and they would
-enter into the kingdom of heaven to remain there for ever and ever.
-Gwen rather blushed at the extravagance of her thoughts when she
-entered the churchyard, and blushed still more when she came suddenly
-upon the ancient Saxon Cross, against which the man of men was
-leaning. She thought for a single nervous moment that he looked rather
-pinched and worried, but had no cause to complain of the warmth of his
-greeting. Once she was in his arms with only the jackdaws for
-spectators, it seemed as though he would never let her go. All the
-poetry of Romeo and Juliet was in his embrace. And those lovers met in
-a vault at the last which was even more weird than meeting in a
-churchyard.
-
-"Though I'm not sure if I like it," murmured Gwen following the course
-of her thoughts, as they sat down on a flat tombstone.
-
-"Like what?" inquired Hench fatuously; "me?"
-
-"I wasn't thinking of you at the moment."
-
-"Oh, Gwen!" This was breathed with an air of reproach.
-
-"I deserve that, I deserve that," she cried penitently. "But really I
-was thinking that a churchyard is rather a dismal place to meet in."
-
-"Any place is Paradise where you are," Hench assured her. "But we can
-go away for a walk in a few minutes."
-
-"Into Parley Wood?"
-
-Hench shivered. "No. I don't like Parley Wood--on your account," he
-added in a hasty manner. "For there----"
-
-"Yes, I know." Gwen stopped him and shivered also. "I didn't think of
-what I was saying. But we can't stay here amongst the tombs."
-
-"Why not? Have you any sad recollections about these tombs? Your
-father is not buried here, I know."
-
-"He is buried at Rhaiadr, in Wales, where his ancestors lie," said the
-girl in an altered tone. "But I wish you would not speak of my father.
-He was so cruel to me that I wish to forget all about him for the time
-being. We will have to talk of him later, when it is necessary to
-learn who killed him. Meantime, let us have our golden hour. But
-no"--she made a gesture of despair--"we have lost that as it is."
-
-"Why so?"
-
-"Because you have called up the spectre of my father," said Gwen
-sadly. "You have reminded me that I am looked at askance by the
-villagers."
-
-"Dear, you are quite wrong about that. Mrs. Bell speaks of you in the
-highest terms of respect. I think you are making a mistake."
-
-"No, I am not," said Gwen decisively. "I don't say that any one has
-openly declared that I have anything to do with the--the crime"--her
-breath came and went quickly--"but people look and people talk
-secretly."
-
-"What does it matter so long as they don't talk openly?" said Hench,
-soothing her gently.
-
-"I wish they would," she cried vehemently. "For then I could meet the
-rumours better. As it is I am fighting in the dark--and all alone,
-too."
-
-"No! No!" Hench gathered her into his strong arms. "You have me to
-fight for you now. Be calm, dearest; everything will be put right
-now."
-
-"Eh, my faith, but that is most true," said a voice immediately behind
-them, and the lovers jumped up in dismay to find that they were
-observed.
-
-The speaker had suddenly emerged from behind a tall tombstone near at
-hand, and stood staring hard at them--a dumpy little woman with a
-swarthy face and big black eyes now filled with anger. It did not
-require the orange-spotted dress, the shabby bead-trimmed mantle and
-the picture hat to inform either of the young people who the spy was.
-Hench recognized Madame Alpenny at once, and Gwen beheld the unknown
-visitor who had called at the Grange. To a woman the dress was
-sufficient to fix the identity.
-
-"You are the woman who came to see my father," said Gwen, turning
-white, for the sight of this visitor revived her recollections of the
-painful days before Squire Evans was murdered.
-
-"Yes, I am the woman. Very clever of you, Mademoiselle, to remember
-me."
-
-"I remember your dress. Who are you?"
-
-Madame Alpenny nodded suavely towards the silent Hench. "Ask him."
-
-Gwen turned round and looked hard at her lover's colourless face. "Who
-is this woman?" she asked almost inaudibly. "Do you know her?"
-
-"None better," snapped the Hungarian lady. "Come, Mr. Hench, say who I
-am, and then I shall tell Mademoiselle who you are."
-
-"Tell him who he is; tell me who he is," stuttered Gwen incoherently.
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Ask him," said Madame Alpenny once more. "Mr. Hench----"
-
-"Ah"--the Hungarian lady broke into a hard laugh--"then he has not
-told you his Christian name."
-
-"I will tell her now," said Hench, taking Gwen's cold hand, and
-speaking with an effort. "This lady is Madame Alpenny, who lived in
-the same boarding-house as I did in Bethnal Green."
-
-"But what had she to do with my father, and what has she to do with
-you?"
-
-"I think your Christian name will explain all in one word," remarked
-Madame Alpenny, looking up at the blue sky.
-
-"I intended to tell you myself, Gwen, this very morning," cried Hench,
-striving to preserve his calmness, which was sorely shaken.
-
-"Tell me what?" said Gwen, who was very white and unstrung.
-
-"That my Christian name is--Owain."
-
-"Owain----?"
-
-"Owain Evans," said Madame Alpenny sharply. "Let there be an end to
-his deceit, Mademoiselle. He is your cousin, the same who has robbed
-you of your heritage, the same who has----"
-
-"Hold your tongue!" interrupted Hench fiercely. "It is for Miss Evans
-to speak and not you."
-
-"_Miss_ Evans," sneered the woman, with sparkling eyes. "Why so, when
-you called her by her Christian name lately, as she can now call you
-by yours? Oh, it is very well, very well indeed, this bal masque of
-lies and wickedness."
-
-By this time, Gwen, who had been staring silently at Hench, spoke in a
-low tone, but in so absolutely unemotional a manner that he could not
-tell what her feelings were. "Are you really my cousin?"
-
-"Yes! I knew that you were prejudiced against me owing to the false
-stories told to you by your father, therefore I wished to make your
-acquaintance under the name my father took when he was sent away from
-home. Until a few weeks ago I believed it was my true name. Don't
-blame me over-much, Gwen," he implored. "After all, I wouldn't have
-had a fair chance had I come as your cousin."
-
-"Perhaps not," she said softly, and a touch of colour came into her
-face. "And after all, you saved my life."
-
-"No! No! Let us put all obligation out of the question!" cried Hench
-resolutely. "I wish to be judged on my merits."
-
-"That will be difficult, seeing what a hero you are," said Madame
-Alpenny in a hatefully smooth voice.
-
-"Hold your tongue!" cried Gwen, turning on her just as Hench had done.
-"You came down here to make mischief this time, as you came before to
-make mischief. How you succeeded before you best know yourself,
-although I truly believe that your last visit had something to do with
-my father's death."
-
-"It is a lie!" said Madame Alpenny fiercely, and stepped forward.
-
-Gwen did the same, and the two were face to face, very close indeed to
-one another. "I believe that it is the truth. But of that we can talk
-later. As to making mischief this time, you shan't succeed. I quite
-understand why my cousin wished to give himself a chance of being
-judged fairly. And, after all, he came under the name his father used
-for many years."
-
-"Oh, Gwen"--Hench caught her hand--"do you forgive me?"
-
-"You silly fellow, there is nothing to forgive," she replied gently.
-"You were right, as I was greatly prejudiced against you by my father.
-But now----"
-
-"Now?" he asked, looking at her anxiously.
-
-"I believe you to be honourable and honest, and----"
-
-"Ah"--Madame Alpenny broke in with a snarl, since things were not
-going as she desired--"honourable, honest. Oh, it is very fine; most
-excellent, I call it. Do not be sure, Mademoiselle, that he is what
-you call him."
-
-"I _am_ sure"--Gwen stamped--"and to prove the truth of my belief, I
-am ready to marry him, as my cousin, Owain Evans. There!"
-
-"Oh, Gwen! Oh, Gwen!" said Hench, scarcely believing his ears.
-
-"Ah, it is so," taunted the marplot. "Do you marry him for the
-heritage you have lost by his coming?"
-
-"I marry him because I love him, as he loves me," said Gwen quietly,
-and placing her hand in that of her lover, she faced Madame Alpenny
-steadily.
-
-"What a comparison"--the woman threw up her hands--"when he loves you
-not in the least little bit."
-
-"I love her with all my heart and soul!" cried the young man
-furiously.
-
-"Ah, and so did you speak to my daughter, Zara."
-
-Gwen pulled her hand away from that of Owain, and looked from him to
-the scoffing woman. "My daughter, Zara," she repeated. "And who is
-she?"
-
-"Do I not speak English?" questioned Madame Alpenny mockingly. "Ah,
-then I do pray your forgiveness, as I am what you call--yes--an
-alien."
-
-"It is nonsense you are talking," said Hench angrily. "Your
-daughter----"
-
-Then she turned on him furiously, letting her temper flame out for the
-first time during the interview. "Yes, my daughter. You dare to stand
-there and declare that you do not love her. She is heart-broken, poor
-girl, because you have deserted her. I came here bearing a message,
-and when I visited where you are staying, your landlady told me you
-had gone to this place. I followed quietly and hid myself there"--she
-flung out an arm towards the tall tombstone--"to hear what?--you
-making love with another girl. But it shall not be so, I tell you.
-Zara, my daughter, you shall marry, and not this--this----"
-
-"Stop!" cried Hench, finally managing to stay this torrent of words.
-"If you begin to call names you will be sorry for it. I do not love
-your daughter--I never loved your daughter. It is true that I admired
-her, but she told me how she desired to marry Bracken."
-
-"You false one!" raged Madame Alpenny. "Zara told me you did ask her
-hand in marriage."
-
-"That is true," acknowledged Hench boldly. "But I----" he paused, for
-a low cry of pain broke on his ear. He turned impetuously to reassure
-Gwen of his devotion, only to see her gliding up the path towards the
-gate with surprising swiftness. Evidently his foolish admission had
-given her to understand that Madame Alpenny's accusation was true, and
-without waiting to hear any explanation, she had slipped away in
-despair. "Gwen! Gwen!" cried the young man in hoarse tones, and
-hastening after the girl. "Wait; wait; it is not what you think, my
-dear; it is----" his voice broke, as Gwen, without turning her head,
-reached the gate and ran along the road.
-
-"Ah, but no. You shall not go after," hissed a bitter voice at his
-elbow, and Madame Alpenny grasped his arm firmly. "Here you stay to
-speak with me."
-
-"You old fiend!" cried Hench, turning on her furiously, for he saw
-that it was useless to follow Gwen and explain at the present moment.
-
-"As you please," retorted the Hungarian lady, releasing him. "Names do
-not do harm, my friend. I can afford to laugh, and I do."
-
-While she was laughing, Hench suddenly became quite cool. He saw that
-he was in both a dangerous and uncomfortable position, as the woman
-had chosen her time excellently to complicate matters. Gwen had
-pardoned his masquerade, but she was far too feminine, as he believed,
-to pardon his proposing to another woman. In a moment Hench determined
-to settle Madame Alpenny and then go at once to enlist Mrs. Perage on
-his side. "Well," he said calmly to the marplot, "you have found me
-and you have done your worst. What now?"
-
-"Don't say that much, Monsieur," said Madame Alpenny shrilly. "Done my
-worst, do you declare? Ah, but no. Not yet have I said what I came to
-say."
-
-"I know what you have come to say," retorted Hench, taking the bull by
-the horns, which was the best thing to do. "You mean to accuse me of
-murdering my uncle."
-
-Madame Alpenny looked rather taken aback by this cool defiance, but
-accepted the situation with a vicious pluck. "And is it not so?"
-
-"It isn't worth my while to reply to so ridiculous a question," said
-Hench, shrugging his square shoulders. "You accuse me. On what
-grounds, pray?"
-
-"Plenty of grounds, Monsieur; plenty of grounds. You obeyed that
-advertisement and met your uncle to murder him and get the property."
-
-"When I didn't know that he was my uncle, or that I would inherit any
-property in the event of his death?"
-
-"You did know that he was your uncle," said the woman furiously.
-"Those papers at your lawyers'----"
-
-"I did not see them until nine days later," interrupted the young man.
-
-"_You_ say so," she sneered, "How can you prove that?"
-
-"My lawyers can prove it."
-
-"Ah, what folly!" Madame Alpenny brushed away this defence with a
-gesture. "It was Mr. Evans who told you in that wood how he was your
-uncle----"
-
-"He did not. I never met him while he was alive."
-
-"_You_ say so----" began Madame, again, only to be cut short.
-
-"Hold your tongue and listen," said Hench in a peremptory tone. "You
-are very clever and cunning, Madame, and have trapped me by means of
-that advertisement in the hopes that you can force me to marry your
-daughter. I absolutely decline to do so."
-
-"Then I tell the policemen that you are a murderer," she retorted
-quickly. Hench laughed. "Oh no, you won't. You would have done that
-long ago, but that you wished to blackmail me. But I refuse to be
-blackmailed also. And you, Madame, will have to explain why you came
-down here to request my uncle to insert that advertisement, instead of
-writing to me openly. Stop"--Hench waved his hand, as she was about to
-speak--"I have no time to enter into details now. On another occasion
-we can speak."
-
-Madame Alpenny looked at him sullenly, as she was unprepared for this
-defiance and saw the need of gaining time. "I will wait for one week
-and then come to you again," she said savagely. "But you marry Zara,
-or you hang!"
-
-"I shall do neither," said Hench calmly, and turned on his heel with
-contempt.
-
-"One week," called out the woman furiously; "in one week I come
-again!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-A FRIEND IN NEED
-
-
-Now that the long-expected blow had fallen, Hench was surprised to
-find how lightly he had been struck. Madame Alpenny having come at an
-inopportune moment for him, had made mischief, and for the time being
-it looked as though she was triumphing. But Owain felt certain that
-she was afraid; he had seen fear in her eyes when he met her so
-defiantly. If she had been quite sure of her position, she would not
-have given him a week to consider matters. It was not difficult to
-understand why she had done so. For the murder of Evans the woman
-cared very little, save as a means to force the man she accused to do
-what she wanted. Her aim was to secure a wealthy son-in-law, and she
-could only do that by threatening to tell the police about his fatal
-visit to Cookley. But if he refused to do her bidding and she did tell
-the police, then, so far as she was concerned, everything was at an
-end. She would certainly get him into trouble, but she would not have
-him as her daughter's husband, nor would she get any money. Unwilling
-to push things too far, Madame Alpenny had therefore compromised by
-giving Hench seven days of grace.
-
-Of course, at the end of that time, the young man knew that his answer
-to her would be the same, and then she might revenge herself by
-acquainting the authorities with her plausible story. But it was
-questionable if she would do so even then, as the fear in her eyes
-hinted that she knew more about the crime than she dared to admit. If
-anything was made public, Hench had an idea that Madame Alpenny might
-be placed in the dock instead of himself. He could not be sure of
-this, as even though she had called on Evans to set the advertisement
-trap, there was nothing to show that she had come to Cookley on the
-evening of the murder. In that case it would be difficult for her to
-prove that he had really kept the appointment in Parley Wood. But, as
-Hench recognized, the fact of the advertisement being addressed to
-him, together with the undoubted fact that he benefited to the extent
-of ten thousand a year by the death of his uncle, would undoubtedly
-throw suspicion on him. The girl at the Bull Inn might remember his
-voice as that of the tramp; and then the fact of his shaving off his
-beard would suggest that he had some reason to escape the accusation.
-On the whole, it was tolerably certain that if Madame Alpenny _did_ go
-to the police, there would be trouble out of which it would not be
-easy to emerge scathless. But, owing to his belief that Madame Alpenny
-knew more about the matter than she would admit, Hench felt sure she
-would not seek the assistance of the authorities. And in any case he
-was absolutely safe for one whole week. Much could be done in that
-time.
-
-It was best, meanwhile, to explain things to Gwen, so that she might
-be sure of his love. When she learned exactly how he had come to
-propose to Zara, then she would understand that his desire to marry
-the dancer had only been the longing of a lonely man for home and
-companionship. With comprehension of this fact, as Hench devoutly
-hoped, the love of Gwen would return, and she would stand by him in
-the coming trouble. He needed all the friends he could gather round
-him to face things, and particularly felt that having his cousin to
-defend him would brace him up to defend himself. Without her love the
-young man felt that it would not be worth while to fight. Ten thousand
-a year and a clearance of his name from suspicion would not make up
-for the loss of the girl, who was now all in all to him. Therefore the
-first thing to do was to win back Gwen's heart; after that the deluge
-could come, so far as Hench was concerned.
-
-He returned to his lodgings, and glancing through the window, saw
-Madame Alpenny waddling along the street on her way to the station.
-She cast one vengeful look on the cottage of Mrs. Bell, but did not
-attempt to enter, which was another sign that she did not feel herself
-strong enough to go into details. And, as a matter of fact, such was
-the case. Madame Alpenny had hoped to dominate Hench immediately, and
-his defiance had taken her entirely by surprise. Therefore, she had
-wisely retreated in order to collect herself, and intended to descend
-on him at the end of seven days with overwhelming proofs of his guilty
-deed. Hench was relieved when he saw her pass by the cottage, as he
-did not wish her to enter and make trouble. Also he was relieved
-because he saw in her passing a confession of weakness. Therefore did
-he feel much more cheerful and hopeful than he had done for many a
-long day.
-
-Mrs. Bell explained that a lady had called to see her lodger and that
-she had sent her on to the churchyard, whither Hench had intimated he
-was going. She hoped that she had not done wrong. Owain told her that
-the visitor had only come down to see him on business; that the
-business had been easily dispatched; that the lady had returned to
-London, and that Mrs. Bell had acted quite judiciously.
-
-The little pale woman accepted the explanation in all good faith, and
-then went to open the door for the entrance of another lady. Hench,
-busy with his afternoon tea, was not surprised when Mrs. Perage
-entered, full of wrath. He had rather expected she would come, as it
-occurred to him that Gwen's unexpected return from the churchyard
-would lead to questions and explanations. From the very first remark
-of Mrs. Perage, it was certain that she knew all about the matter.
-
-"Well," said the fierce old lady, who looked something like Meg
-Merrilees in her half-masculine, half-feminine garb, "this is a nice
-state of affairs, young man. Gwen goes to meet you with her heart full
-of love, and returns with that same heart broken into little pieces.
-Your work."
-
-"Sit down, Mrs. Perage, and let us talk quietly," said Hench
-entreatingly.
-
-"Talk quietly!" echoed Mrs. Perage, sitting down nevertheless. "Why,
-I'm seething with rage, and want to break things--you amongst them."
-
-"Then you doubt me?"
-
-Mrs. Perage looked at him with a softer eye, and remembered how she
-had been prepared to stand by him whatever was said. She had declared
-as much to Jim Vane, and could do nothing else but fulfil her
-declaration. "Perhaps you have some excuse, young man?" she said
-truculently.
-
-"I have no excuse, but I have an explanation," said Hench dryly.
-
-"Then you _did_ propose to that other girl!" shrieked Mrs. Perage
-furiously.
-
-"Yes. I told you that I----"
-
-"You didn't; you didn't." Mrs. Perage would not give him time to
-finish his remark. "You told me that you admired another girl, but
-that she loved some one else, so you went away. Pfui! Do you think
-that my memory has gone with age?"
-
-"What you say is quite true----"
-
-"That my memory has gone with age?" demanded the old lady acidly.
-
-"No! No! No! But your recollection of what I said about my former----"
-
-"Love-affairs!" interpolated Mrs. Perage, who declined to be
-suppressed.
-
-"No! No! No!" cried Hench again and earnestly. "I never was in love
-until I met Gwen. I told you so. But I did say that I admired another
-girl."
-
-"You didn't say that you had proposed to her," said Mrs. Perage
-grimly.
-
-"No, I didn't, because----"
-
-"Because you loved her."
-
-"I didn't!" cried Owain, thoroughly exasperated by these constant
-interruptions. "As I have already stated, I didn't know the meaning of
-the word love until I met with Gwen."
-
-"Then why did you propose to this Zara creature? One doesn't propose
-unless love has something to do with the matter."
-
-"Has your experience of life only taught you that much, Mrs. Perage? A
-man proposes for the sake of money."
-
-"Was this Zara creature rich?"
-
-"No. She was very poor."
-
-"Then you didn't propose to her on that account. Come"--Mrs. Perage
-spoke in her roughest manner--"don't waste my time. _Why_ did you
-propose?"
-
-"Because I was a lonely man and wanted a home and a comrade. I had
-been wandering all over the world by myself, and found life dismal in
-the extreme. I didn't love Zara Alpenny one little bit. But I admired
-her as a thoroughly good woman----"
-
-"Oh"--Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose--"she was a good woman, was she?"
-
-"A thoroughly good woman," repeated Hench, again emphasizing his
-remark. "And when I asked her to be my wife, she told me that I didn't
-love her, but only wanted a home, adding that she loved some one else.
-I recognized the truth of her statement with regard to my own
-feelings, and therefore I went away from Bethnal Green. I still
-respect her, Mrs. Perage, and if I can forward her marriage with the
-man of her choice in any way, I will do so. After all, Madame Alpenny
-wants a rich son-in-law, and I am wealthy enough to smooth matters
-over in that way for Ned Bracken."
-
-"Who is he?"
-
-"The man Zara loves. And that you may know the worst, let me tell you
-that she is a dancer at a Bethnal Green music-hall."
-
-"Hum!" said Mrs. Perage, smiling grimly. "And by mentioning her
-profession and position you think that I will have a bad opinion of
-her. Fudge! I have met with dancers much better as regards morals than
-many a woman received at Court. Don't be a fool and think you are
-talking to an inexperienced girl."
-
-"Well, I did talk to an inexperienced girl," said Hench rather
-bitterly, "and she has turned on me."
-
-"Why not? You gave her no explanation."
-
-"How could I, when she ran away while I was speaking? I couldn't
-follow quickly enough, as my foot is yet weak."
-
-"Your ankle, you mean--be careful in your speech." Mrs. Perage rubbed
-her nose again and her eyes grew calmer. "I'll have a cup of tea if
-you will have the decency to give me one."
-
-Owain rang for a fresh cup and saucer. "I thought you wouldn't
-condescend to eat and drink with a pariah."
-
-"Fudge!" said Mrs. Perage again, and very sharply. "Who said you were
-a pariah, you silly fellow? That's merely hurt vanity on your part."
-
-"How can I help being hurt, when I am so misjudged?"
-
-"Look here." Mrs. Perage bent forward and shook his shoulder. "Are you
-a man or a twopenny-halfpenny school-girl?"
-
-"I'm an ass," confessed Owain, ashamed of his petty outbreak. "But I
-have an attack of nerves, I think, owing to my dreadful position."
-
-"Hum!" Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose, received a cup and saucer from
-Mrs. Bell, who had just entered the room, and sent that fragile person
-out again. "Jim hinted at trouble. It seems he was right."
-
-"Jim knows all about it."
-
-"Well, then, I don't. Wait till I fill my cup and then you can tell
-me."
-
-"Tell you what?"
-
-"Drat the man, you know. It's more than this trouble with Gwen you
-have to tell me about."
-
-"I think that I had better tell you about the trouble with Gwen
-first."
-
-"What's the use of beginning at the wrong end? Relate the story from
-start to finish and then I'll understand more about this interview in
-the churchyard with this ridiculous old woman."
-
-"Madame Alpenny."
-
-"Hum! The name fits her. Go on."
-
-"I have already told you most of my life---"
-
-"And have left out the most interesting part, apparently. See here,
-Hench, or rather, I should say, Owain." Mrs. Perage drank some of her
-tea and continued slowly. "I am an old woman with a romantic heart. I
-love Gwen and I have taken a fancy to you. Both you and Gwen come of a
-bad stock, as old Mynydd Evans was a miser, Owain Evans was a
-profligate, and Madoc Evans was a scoundrel, fit for any deed of
-wickedness. You two children are the best of the bunch, and I expect
-get your decent morals from your mothers. I want to see you happy and
-married. Now, don't disappoint me."
-
-"I certainly won't, if Gwen won't," said Owain promptly.
-
-"Hum! Gwen is a more difficult person to manage. However, if you leave
-it to me, I think in some way things will be put right."
-
-"Oh, I shall leave everything to you, with pleasure," said Hench
-eagerly. "And I thank you for the trouble you are taking. Your
-advice----"
-
-"Cannot be given further until I am in possession of facts,"
-interrupted Mrs. Perage, and finishing his sentence in a different
-way. "I know that you are Owain's son and inherit the property. I know
-that you love Gwen, and that it is possible, in spite of existing
-circumstances, that you will marry her. Also I am aware that Madoc was
-murdered--by that tramp, I presume."
-
-"No!" said Hench sharply, and ready to make a clean breast. "I am the
-tramp."
-
-"Ha!" exclaimed the old lady in a tone of surprise. "You are the
-tramp? Well, I withdraw my accusation, as I am sure you are innocent
-enough. But what I was coming to when you interrupted me was that I
-wish to know more. Jim says you are in trouble."
-
-"In very great trouble. And if you will help me---"
-
-"Bless the man, what I came here for was to help. But I can't do that
-on half-confidences. You must speak plainly. Now, no more talk.
-Begin." Hench did as he was ordered, and in a very short time Mrs.
-Perage was in possession of all facts connected with the
-advertisement; with the keeping of the appointment and the discovery
-of the body; and with the schemes of Madame Alpenny. Her strong old
-face did not betray much emotion, although she was inwardly astonished
-at the revelations, but she kept her eyes on Owain until he ceased
-speaking, and then rubbed her nose, as was her custom when perplexed
-or annoyed. As she made no remark, Hench did so. "What do you think?"
-
-"Hum!" said Mrs. Perage, starting from the brown study in which she
-was involved. "You've brought your pigs to a pretty market, young man.
-Well, well, we must see what is best to be done."
-
-"You don't believe me to be guilty?"
-
-"Would I be still sitting here if I did? Don't be a fool. Not that I
-blame the person who got Madoc out of the way very much. He was such a
-disagreeable person, that I often thought I'd be hanged for killing
-him myself."
-
-"Mrs. Perage!"
-
-"It sounds dreadful, doesn't it?" she said good-humouredly. "But then
-you see I am a dreadful person in the eyes of many milk-and-water
-people, because I have my own decided opinions and go my own way. I
-suppose it's wrong to say a word against the dead, although I don't
-see why we should talk of nothing but virtues they never possessed
-while alive. Well, let the man rest; he did a lot of harm when he was
-alive, and wherever he has gone to, he's making mischief. You didn't
-murder him, anyhow?"
-
-"I certainly did not," answered Hench, smiling. "But the question is,
-who did?"
-
-"Ah"--Mrs. Perage kilted up her dress and folded her hands on her
-knees--"a very difficult question to answer. But Madame Alpenny
-didn't, although you seem to have some idea that she is the guilty
-person."
-
-"She knew my uncle and all about the disposal of the property through
-the confidence made to her by my father twenty years ago."
-
-"That doesn't prove that she murdered Madoc. She wanted you to marry
-her daughter undoubtedly after she laid hold of the clue which led her
-to learn that you were likely to inherit ten thousand a year. But why
-should she put her neck in a noose?"
-
-"She might have wished me to get possession of the property at once,
-and have murdered my uncle in the hope that I would go to the spot and
-then run the risk of being arrested. I believe myself that it was all
-a plot to get me under her thumb. I _did_ go to the rendezvous and I
-_am_ implicated. Well?"
-
-Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose again. "The devil's in it for trouble,"
-she muttered. "Perhaps I am premature in assuming that this woman is
-innocent, but it seems incredible that she should run such a risk. I
-shall have to see her first before I make up my mind. She's clever."
-
-"In a foxy sort of way."
-
-"Hum! The fox doesn't do things on a big scale in the way of killing."
-
-Hench answered flippantly, as the conversation was getting on his
-nerves. "What about hen-roost massacres?"
-
-Mrs. Perage rose, and was about to rebuke him when she saw, as
-Gwen had seen earlier, the white pinched look on his face. "You're
-over-wrought, my friend. I want you to promise me two things."
-
-"Yes. What are they?" asked the young man wearily.
-
-"In the first place do not make any move in these matters until I give
-you leave. I have a plan in my head."
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"I shan't tell it until it is carried out. In the second place do not
-come to my house until to-morrow afternoon."
-
-"But Gwen will believe more than ever that I am----"
-
-"What she thinks you are in a moment of rage on her part," finished
-Mrs. Perage. "That's just it. If you see her now you will spoil all.
-Wait until I tell you that it is safe to come."
-
-"Very well. But I can't let you take my burden on your shoulders and
-stay here doing nothing. It's not cricket."
-
-"You'll get all the cricket you require, I promise you," said Mrs.
-Perage as she took her departure. "I don't mind telling you," she
-added, glancing back, "that it interests me to have something exciting
-of this sort to do. Life is rather dull hereabouts."
-
-"I only hope it will not prove too exciting."
-
-The old lady laughed and stepped briskly out of the cottage, while
-Owain remained where he was kicking against the pricks. He wished to
-see Gwen, but as he had promised to wait for instructions he could not
-do so. Like the lady who had just left, he found life in Cookley
-intolerably dull at the moment. But then, as Gwen was not beside him,
-he would have found it equally dull had he been alone in Paris or
-London. It was Gwen who made up his existence, and nothing else
-mattered particularly. To such lengths does the passion of love lead
-ordinarily sensible human beings.
-
-Meanwhile, Mrs. Perage walked home briskly, turning over certain plans
-in her very capable mind. She did not seek out Gwen, who was weeping
-in the retirement of her bedroom, since all explanations at the
-present moment were futile. But Mrs. Perage decided that when the girl
-grew calmer a very positive explanation, which could not be mistaken,
-should be made to her by the right person. To bring about this
-necessary event she looked up her nephew, whom she found dawdling in
-the garden with a cigarette and a French novel. Vane lay on the grass
-under a shady tree clothed in white flannels, and looked rather
-alarmed when his aunt appeared. The day was hot, and Mrs. Perage was
-so uncommonly active that she was scarcely a desirable companion for a
-lazy man. His anxiety was therefore natural.
-
-"Sit up and listen," said Mrs. Perage, getting to work at once. "I've
-seen our young friend, and I now know as much as you do."
-
-Jim sat up cross-legged, resigned to the worst, and Mrs. Perage seated
-herself on the rustic bench under the tree with the air of a judge
-trying a particularly vicious criminal. "Need we discuss matters
-just now?" he asked in a bored tone. "I'm so comfortable. Peter is
-bringing me some tea, I have a book and a case of cigarettes, so on
-the whole----"
-
-"Don't be an ass, Jim. You can be busy enough if you like."
-
-"That's just it, Aunt Emma," remonstrated the barrister, clutching his
-ankles. "I don't like. There's nothing to be done at present. I'll see
-Owain this evening and hear how he settled with that old woman."
-
-"He has settled nothing. But he managed to get her to leave him alone
-for seven days. In that time much can be done."
-
-"Very probably. I'm sure I wish to do all I can. And Gwen?"
-
-"She's crying in her bedroom. She will continue to cry until she is
-assured that Owain really loves her and not this other girl. You know
-what I mean?"
-
-"Well, as you related what took place in the churchyard and as Gwen
-repeated the story to me, I must admit that I do know. I say, Aunt
-Emma, you don't think Miss Evans minds me calling her Gwen, as I----"
-
-"Oh, don't talk rubbish," interrupted Mrs. Perage quickly. "We have
-more important things to speak about. This evening you must go to town
-by the seven train,"--she glanced at her watch. "That will give you
-time to have dinner comfortably, as you needn't dress."
-
-"But, I say,"--Vane looked rather disgusted,--"I don't want to go to
-town."
-
-"You must," said his aunt impressively. "Go to Bethnal Green, and
-bring down with you to-morrow Mademoiselle Zara."
-
-"What for?"
-
-"Bless the man, can't you understand? Only this Zara creature can set
-Gwen's mind at rest. She can explain that Hench never really loved her
-and only offered himself to her to gain a home and a companion."
-
-"Can't Owain tell Gwen that?"
-
-"He might tell it to her fifty times and she would not believe him,"
-said Mrs. Perage shrewdly. "But when this girl speaks everything will
-be put right straight away. Then we can consider what is best to be
-done about the other and more serious business. But you must see, Jim,
-that it is first necessary to adjust matters between Gwen and Hench."
-
-"Well, Aunt Emma, you understand your own sex better than I do, so I
-suppose it is best for me to bring Zara Alpenny down."
-
-"I am quite positive it is."
-
-"Good! I'll enjoy my dinner and then go to town by the train you
-mention. I can bring Mademoiselle Zara to your house about two o'clock
-to-morrow. Now that's all right." Vane yawned and rose. "Ah, here
-comes Peter with the tea."
-
-Mrs. Perage looked rather grimly on the freckled page who carried on a
-tray the beverage which Mr. Vane desired. Hench had told her how
-Madame Alpenny had learned his whereabouts through Simon, _alias_
-Bottles, and the same could have only acquired the knowledge through
-Peter.
-
-"Here!" she said sharply. "Do you write to your brother in town and
-tell him all the gossip of the village?"
-
-"Me, mum? No, mum," said Peter, rather alarmed by her peremptory tone.
-
-"Don't tell lies, boy," said his mistress sternly. "You told your
-brother that Mr. Hench was staying at Mrs. Bell's cottage."
-
-"I know I did, mum." Peter began to whimper. "But I hope I didn't do
-no harm, mum. Simon, he thinks no end of Mr. Hench, so I thought as
-I'd tell him. But it's all right, mum. Simon knows what he's about."
-
-"What do you mean by that?" questioned Vane quickly, for the page
-spoke in a very significant tone. Peter shuffled and wriggled
-uncomfortably. "Simon will tell you, sir, when the time comes," he
-replied evasively.
-
-"Tell what?"
-
-"What Simon knows, sir."
-
-"And what does Simon know?"
-
-"I can't tell you, sir. Simon's clever. He knows a thing or two."
-
-"And so do I," said Mrs. Perage sternly. "And one is that you are not
-to write gossiping letters from my house."
-
-"No, mum, I won't!" And Peter went away as quickly as he could lest he
-should be questioned further. "Now what does that mean?" asked Mrs.
-Perage shrewdly. "Is this brat and his brother mixed up in this
-dangerous business?"
-
-"It seems like it," replied Jim, stirring his tea meditatively. "But
-Peter may have written in all innocence, knowing how Bottles adores
-Owain."
-
-"Bottles, as you call him, didn't tell Madame Alpenny in all
-innocence," she snapped.
-
-"Hum!" said Vane, quite in his aunt's style, "we'll look into the
-matter." And he did so on the morrow when he went to Bethnal Green.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-EXPLANATIONS
-
-
-Gwen was thoroughly miserable. On returning from the churchyard she
-had shut herself up in her bedroom, after a sobbing description to
-Mrs. Perage and Vane of what had taken place. In this seclusion she
-remained, speaking little, eating less, and only sleeping occasionally
-when exhausted Nature insisted upon having her own sensible way. The
-trouble Gwen was now undergoing seemed ever so much worse than that
-which she had already undergone. The death of her father had been
-dreadful, but he had been such a tyrant that--to speak plainly--his
-loss had not broken her heart. But now she felt certain that her heart
-was really and truly broken, as the idea of losing Owain was like a
-nightmare. The girl by this time fully recognized that she loved her
-cousin dearly, even though that love had grown as rapidly and
-unexpectedly as Jonah's gourd. Perhaps, like the same, it would perish
-as quickly. Gwen attempted to assure herself of this, but could not
-self-hypnotise herself into such a belief. Her passion was too
-genuine, too strong, too overwhelming, to be got rid of so easily.
-
-Yet--she asked herself this question frequently--how could she believe
-that Owain loved her, when she had heard from his own lips that he had
-proposed to another girl? Gwen considered that she had been very
-generous in forgiving his masquerading, although she admitted that
-under the circumstances the assumption of a false name had been
-pardonable. But that he should have loved some one else, and should
-have proposed to that some one, seemed to her to be monstrous. It was
-impossible for her to forget or forgive such a thing. She assured
-herself that self-respect demanded the adoption of this merciless
-attitude, but the cause of it--which she would not admit--was really
-jealousy. But whatever it was the feeling made her wretched, and for
-long hours the poor child tossed and turned and shivered and wept, as
-she wondered what her future was likely to be. She had youth, she had
-beauty, she had money, but all these desirable things were as dust and
-ashes, lacking the companionship of the man she loved. And as he had
-condemned himself out of his own month she could not see how the
-position of things was to be altered.
-
-In her bluff way, Mrs. Perage was very sorry for the girl, as she saw
-how truly genuine was her suffering. The old lady strongly sympathized
-with that despairing feeling of youth which believes that the world
-has come to an end because things do not turn out as expected. Not
-that she believed Gwen's world had ended, but understood easily enough
-how the girl thought so. To put matters right, Mrs. Perage set herself
-to work in the hope of proving that the sun was merely obscured for
-the moment. For a day and a night she left the sufferer alone, so that
-she might get over the first stage of misery and anger. Then the old
-dame entered the bedroom and proceeded to develop her scheme, which
-she hoped would put the crooked straight.
-
-"Well, my dear," she said in a brisk and heartless manner, as she
-seated herself on the bed, "have you overcome your fit of self-pity?"
-
-"Oh, how unkind you are," wailed Gwen, who did not expect such a
-speech. "My heart is broken."
-
-"No, my dear, your vanity is hurt."
-
-"Vanity? I have no vanity."
-
-"Well, well, we will call it pride, self-respect, dignity, or any
-other pretty name which appeals to you," said Mrs. Perage
-complacently. "Anyhow, you can't lie here amongst the ruins of your
-life. Have some breakfast and get up."
-
-"I can't eat and I can't drink. How can you expect me to?" cried Gwen,
-who was intensely exasperated by this matter-of-fact speech. "You will
-make me angry, Mrs. Perage."
-
-"I want to, since anger will make you see things in a more sensible
-light. You can't live on air, you know, my dear, or on love either,
-especially as this last is nonexistent."
-
-The spirit of contradiction, begotten by anger, made the invalid
-resent this last remark. "Love isn't nonexistent," she declared
-crossly. "I love Owain still, although he doesn't deserve my affection
-in the least. I call it a shame for him to come here and save my life
-and make me love him, when all the time he is engaged to another
-girl."
-
-"Who told you that he was?" inquired Mrs. Perage dryly, and very well
-satisfied with the result her conversation was producing.
-
-"He told me so himself, and I told you how he was," said Gwen
-incoherently. "He admitted that he had proposed to the nasty daughter
-of that horrid woman."
-
-"Well," said Mrs. Perage coolly, "a young man must gain experience
-somehow."
-
-"Owain shan't gain any at my expense," retorted Gwen viciously. "After
-all, I don't think that he is worth troubling about."
-
-"Of course he isn't," said Mrs. Perage, wishing to emphasize this
-opinion. "So lie down and go to sleep and forget all about him. You
-can't eat, you know."
-
-"Yes, I can." Gwen rose in the bed angrily. "I shall have my breakfast
-and get up and go about things just as if nothing had happened."
-
-Mrs. Perage shook her old head wisely. "You have not the strength."
-
-"I have--I have. Ring the bell and order some tea and toast."
-
-"Peter is bringing up some sort of a meal, my dear. Ah, there is his
-knock. I will take the tray," and Mrs. Perage went to the door to do
-so, chuckling at the way in which she was dealing with the situation.
-"Give it to me, Peter; now you can go. By the way, Gwen, shall I send
-him for the doctor?"
-
-"No. I'm quite well," said the girl indignantly. So Peter was
-dismissed and the tray was placed on the bed. "Leave me to eat, Mrs.
-Perage, and you can come back after I have dressed."
-
-"Foolish! Foolish!" said the old dame, leaving the room. "You are
-attempting too much." And she departed, still chuckling to think how
-easily this somewhat difficult young lady had fallen into the trap.
-
-Gwen, quite ignorant that she was acting exactly as Mrs. Perage
-desired, sipped the tea and nibbled at the toast. Pride speedily
-came to her aid, and when the meal was finished she felt much better.
-Self-pity was now merged in a sense of anger that Owain had dared to
-treat her so shamefully, therefore she dressed herself in her
-prettiest frock with the intention of proving to him that she felt
-his treachery less than he might have expected. When she walked
-into the drawing-room, Mrs. Perage looked up to see a smartly dressed
-young lady with sparkling eyes and a fine colour, in place of the
-white-faced invalid she had left. So far the result of the experiment
-was distinctly good.
-
-"And of course," suggested the old lady artfully, "you have quite
-decided to throw Owain overboard."
-
-"What else would you have me do?" demanded Gwen revengefully.
-
-"Hum!" said Mrs. Perage in a meditative manner. "I think I should ask
-for an explanation."
-
-"There can be no explanation likely to satisfy me."
-
-"That entirely depends upon my common-sense way of looking at things,"
-said Mrs. Perage dryly. "Or on your common-sense, if you come to that.
-By the way, that girl is coming down here this afternoon--she will
-arrive in an hour."
-
-"What girl?"
-
-"Hum!" Mrs. Perage skirted round the subject and did not give an
-entirely direct reply. "Your breakfast has been your luncheon, for it
-is now two o'clock, so such a queer exchange of meals must have upset
-you. Perhaps you had better not be present."
-
-"What girl are you talking about?" asked Gwen, her colour coming and
-going, although she knew perfectly well what was meant. "And I am in
-quite enough good health to see any girl. How dare she come here?"
-
-"Ah!"--Mrs. Perage chuckled,--"you guess what I mean, I see. Well, my
-dear Jim was rather put out about your quarrel with Hench, so he
-suggested at my desire that it would be as well for him to go to town
-and bring Mademoiselle Zara with him down here to explain matters."
-
-"I don't require any explanation," said Gwen, holding her head very
-high.
-
-"Bless the girl, did I say so? This Zara woman is coming to explain to
-me. I may as well be plain, Gwen. It was I who told Jim to go to town
-and fetch her, since it is necessary that I should learn what a rascal
-Hench is."
-
-"He's not a rascal; I'm sure he's not a rascal." Gwen stamped her foot
-and grew very red.
-
-"Oh yes, he is, my dear. To propose to one girl and to make love to
-another is not right. I must inquire into his character, you know, so
-as to see if he is a decent man to know. Now Mademoiselle Zara can
-tell us the truth. But I don't want you to be present."
-
-"But I shall!" cried Miss Evans, with another stamp. "It is my right
-to be present. The explanation concerns me more than any one else."
-
-"Oh, well, if you insist upon being present, I have no more to say."
-Mrs. Perage shrugged her shoulders, and making a wilful mistake. "Did
-you say 'present' or 'pleasant'?"
-
-"Pleasant. You must be pleasant to Mademoiselle Zara, as, after all,
-you do not care anything for your cousin."
-
-"I do. All the same I am angry with him. I shall be present and be
-pleasant just as I please. And now I shall take a walk in the park so
-as to calm my nerves. I'm sure Owain has upset them enough." And Gwen
-hastily departed, while Mrs. Perage chuckled more than ever.
-
-"Fiery little Welsh temper she has," murmured the old lady. "I don't
-envy Hench when he makes her his wife. Hum! So that's settled. Let us
-hope good will come of the interview." She rubbed her nose. "Gwen's a
-handful to manage, but by contradiction I fancy that I have secured my
-own way."
-
-Of course this was quite true, although Miss Evans, walking in the
-park, was perfectly sure that she was acting contrary to Mrs. Perage's
-wishes. By this time the girl was in a fine temper, ready to quarrel
-with any one about anything. In fact she felt very much inclined to
-fight for what she considered were her rights, so far as concerned her
-cousin. In some queer way, Gwen arrived at the conclusion that by
-saving her life Hench had given her some sort of claim over him. Of
-course, she would never marry him; nothing would ever induce her to
-marry such a faithless person. But she intended to hint at her
-fantastic claim by ordering him to make Zara his wife. Then, on
-further reflection, she did not like him to marry the dancer, as she
-loved him herself. Still, as he was unworthy of her love, perhaps it
-would be as well to allow him to carry out his proposal to Madame
-Alpenny's daughter. He would certainly be miserable, which would serve
-him right, as Zara was bound to be a minx and a cat and several other
-disagreeable things. In this incoherent way Miss Evans thought, while
-working off her anger as best she could by walking at top speed up one
-path and down another. She did not know whether to laugh or to cry, to
-rage or to fret; all she did know was that everything seemed to be
-wrong, and that the bottom had fallen out of creation.
-
-When Gwen again ventured into the house, she found the drawing-room
-tenanted by Mrs. Perage, her nephew, and two visitors. One of these
-was a handsome, untidily dressed young fellow, who wore his hair
-rather long after the manner of musicians; the other was a tall girl,
-gaunt, striking-looking, with something of the gipsy in her
-appearance. She wore a red velvet hat and a long red velvet mantle,
-the violent hues of which harmonized well with her somewhat sallow
-complexion and bold dark eyes. When Gwen entered, this girl was
-laughing and showed a row of very white teeth, which added to her
-handsome looks.
-
-"Mademoiselle Zara, this is Miss Evans," said Mrs. Perage, rising to
-make a rapid introduction. "Gwen, this is Madame Alpenny's daughter,
-and Mr. Bracken, to whom she is engaged."
-
-"Engaged?" Gwen started back and gasped. "But I don't understand."
-
-"Mademoiselle Zara will explain," said Mrs. Perage swiftly, and
-collecting the two men with her eyes. "Mr. Bracken, I must show you my
-garden, as I am sure you take an interest in flowers. Come with me.
-You also, Jim, as you must go to Mrs. Bell's and bring Hench here."
-
-"I don't wish to see him," called out Gwen hurriedly, but Mrs. Perage
-took no notice of the speech, as she had already conducted the two men
-out of the room, leaving the two girls alone.
-
-Gwen eyed Zara and Zara eyed Gwen with great curiosity, and used their
-intuitions with so much skill that in two minutes each girl knew all
-about the nature of the other girl. Miss Evans could not deny but what
-the dancer was handsome enough to attract any one, even the most
-fastidious, while Zara thought that Gwen was one of the most charming
-young ladies she had ever seen.
-
-"I'm sure he will be very happy with you," she said abruptly.
-
-"Who?" asked Gwen, sitting down and getting ready to fence.
-
-Zara laughed meaningly. "My dear, there is only one 'he' in the world
-for you."
-
-"So I thought, until I found him out," retorted Miss Evans sharply.
-
-"Oh, I understand all about your finding him out. Mr. Vane gave me a
-full description of my mother's meddling. But if you had waited to
-hear what took place after your departure from the churchyard there
-would have been no need for me to come down."
-
-"I did not ask you to come down," said Gwen pointedly.
-
-"You did not. Mrs. Perage did, however, as she was anxious for your
-mistake to be corrected. I am anxious, also, else I would not have
-troubled to take this long journey."
-
-"Why did you undertake it, then?"
-
-"Because I have the greatest respect for Mr. Hench."
-
-"The greatest love, you mean."
-
-"Indeed, I mean nothing of the sort," said Zara candidly. "I have no
-more love for Mr. Hench than I have for that table. Didn't you hear
-Mrs. Perage say that I was engaged to Mr. Bracken?"
-
-"Yes! I suppose you are," admitted Gwen reluctantly. "But there is
-always one who loves and one who is loved, you know."
-
-"Heine, the German poet, said that, Miss Evans. I congratulate you on
-the wide range of your reading. It shows that you are not narrow, and
-not being narrow, I trust that you will do Mr. Hench justice."
-
-"He proposed to you. I heard him say so myself."
-
-"My dear," said the dancer, after the lenient fashion of an elder
-sister, "Mr. Hench at that time would have proposed to any woman of
-decent character and decent looks. Your Heine quotation implied that
-although I did not love him, he loved me. There you are entirely
-wrong. He admired me, certainly, but----"
-
-"But he proposed to you," interrupted Miss Evans doggedly.
-
-Zara's cheeks grew crimson and her voice became sharper. "We are two
-women talking together," she said decisively. "Therefore, it is
-useless for us to skirt about the bush as we would do with men. Mr.
-Hench never loved me; he had no conception of love when he proposed,
-and I told him so. Can't you understand how a lonely man must wish for
-a home and a comrade, so that he may have some centre in life? I used
-those very words to him. Mr. Bracken gives me that true love which is
-more than admiration, which was all Mr. Hench had to offer. He could
-not give me his heart because he did not know that he possessed one.
-Since coming here he has made the discovery that he has a heart and he
-has given it to you."
-
-"Have you seen him; did he tell you so?"
-
-It took Zara a moment or so to quell her rising anger, and she felt
-inclined to shake this silly little girl who was not to be convinced
-by common-sense explanations. "I have not seen Mr. Hench, nor if you
-wish it will I see him."
-
-"Oh, it's nothing to me," said Gwen with an air of finality.
-
-"Then it ought to be. Mr. Vane told me what Mr. Hench told him."
-
-"What is that?"
-
-"You know quite well," retorted Zara tartly. "It is that Mr. Hench
-loves you better than you deserve."
-
-"How can you tell what I deserve?"
-
-"I am only going by what I see of you now," said the dancer patiently.
-"You really love Mr. Hench, and you are fighting against your
-feelings, because you believe that he loves me, which is not the case.
-As you can see that I am speaking the truth, it is unworthy of you to
-speak as you do. Therefore, I say that Mr. Hench loves you better than
-you deserve. I don't know," cried Zara, becoming exasperated, "why you
-force me to make so unnecessary an explanation, as you are quite aware
-of what I mean."
-
-Gwen was so impressed by the dancer's earnest speech that she became
-much more reasonable. "I am a pig, I know," she murmured rather
-inelegantly. "But it isn't pleasant to love a man and then to hear
-from his own lips that he proposed to another woman."
-
-"Pooh! You are making a mountain out of a molehill," said Zara
-contemptuously. "If Mr. Hench had proposed to me after he met you,
-then there might be some sense in your attitude. But I tell you he did
-not know the meaning of love when he proposed to me, and would have
-proposed to any other woman just as readily. His first acquaintance
-with love was when he saved your life. He is heart and soul devoted to
-you. My dear"--Zara rose, and bending over Gwen, took her hand--"don't
-be foolish and throw away a love which will make you the happiest
-woman in the world."
-
-"Can you swear that Owain loves me?" asked Gwen, more and more
-impressed.
-
-"Personally, I cannot. But from what Mr. Vane has told me I certainly
-can declare that Mr. Hench adores you."
-
-"Yes." Miss Evans stared hard at nothing. "I believe he does."
-
-"Then why are you making all this trouble?"
-
-"You are a woman and ask me that?"
-
-Zara laughed. "It is absurd, I know. But I am anxious to put things
-right. My mother made trouble and I came down to make peace. Don't
-send me away with my errand unaccomplished."
-
-Gwen jumped up and kissed the dancer. "No, I won't. I am quite
-satisfied with your explanation. I have been very silly and have made
-myself quite ill in worrying over things. And if Owain comes----"
-
-"Owain is coming," interrupted Zara quickly, as she glanced out of
-the open French window of the room. "Yonder he is with Mr. Vane, who
-was sent to bring him by Mrs. Perage. My dear"--she kissed Gwen's
-cheek--"I will slip out to join Mrs. Perage and Ned in the garden. You
-stay here and make it up with Mr. Hench. No half-measures, mind. Be
-generous and loyal." And with a smiling nod the dancer flitted through
-the window just as the footsteps of Owain were heard in the hall.
-
-"Oh!" said Gwen, drawing a long breath, "how nearly I have lost him."
-
-Vane had sense enough not to enter along with his friend, as he
-thoroughly understood the saying about two being company and three
-none. In a most loyal fashion he obliterated himself, and Owain walked
-into the room by himself. The young man looked worn and ill, so that
-Gwen's heart was touched, and she felt ashamed of her conduct, which
-was responsible for his wilted appearance. Almost without thought she
-flew into his arms.
-
-"I'm a horrid creature," she murmured. "Do forgive me and I'll be
-good."
-
-"Oh!"--Owain's pale face flushed suddenly and his brown eyes
-sparkled--"then you don't believe----"
-
-"I believe that you love me. Mademoiselle Zara has explained
-everything."
-
-"Thank God for that. Where is she?"
-
-"Do you wish to see her?" asked Miss Evans jealously.
-
-"Only to thank her. But that can come later. Meantime"--he bent and
-kissed her three or four times--"oh, Gwen, how could you think that I
-loved any one in the world but you--you--you?"
-
-"I was silly and wicked and--and----"
-
-"No! No! There was some cause for your anger, as Madame Alpenny told
-so skilful a lie. It wasn't all a lie, of course, as I did propose to
-Zara."
-
-"I know you did, and I know why you did. But you will be much happier
-with me than with her," said the girl naïvely.
-
-"Than with any one, Gwen," cried the young man fervently. "Oh, my
-dear, to think how nearly I have lost you."
-
-"I said that to myself about you, just before you entered," whispered
-Gwen in a penitent tone. "Do forgive me."
-
-"On condition that you forgive me," pleaded Owain fondly.
-
-"Dear, there is nothing to forgive," said the girl, abasing herself.
-"It is all my fault--all my fault. I'm a nasty little jealous animal."
-
-"Just the kind of animal I like." Owain pressed her hard in his arms.
-"I'll never, never let you go again, and now that we are together and
-you are on my side, I am prepared to face the worst."
-
-"Face what?"
-
-"Ah, I forgot; you don't understand. I have a long explanation to
-give." Hench paused and looked nervous, as he drew Gwen to a chair and
-sat down to take her on his knee. "You won't hate me, or doubt me?"
-
-"Never! Never!" Gwen positively. "I'll never doubt you again.
-What is the matter?"
-
-"Murder is the matter!"
-
-"What?" She started back and stared at his perturbed face. "The murder
-of----"
-
-"Yes! The murder of your father. You know that tramp you suspect?"
-
-"The one who asked the way to the Gipsy Stile? Yes."
-
-"I am that tramp."
-
-"It's impossible."
-
-"It is quite true. I have explained matters to Vane and to Mrs.
-Perage. Now I must explain them to you. Having admitted that I am the
-tramp you suspect----"
-
-Gwen stopped him by laying her hand over his mouth.
-"I don't suspect the tramp, now that you are he," she said vehemently.
-"You are innocent, I am sure."
-
-"How can you be sure?" asked Hench sharply. "Because you saved my
-life," replied Gwen in a truly feminine fashion. "No one who saved a
-person's life would commit a murder."
-
-"Well, I can scarcely admit the logic of that reasoning," said Hench,
-unable to refrain from a smile, in spite of the desperate situation.
-"But I am glad that you so far trust me."
-
-"I trust you to the death."
-
-"Darling!"--he kissed her--"that gives me the courage to tell you
-all!" And he did tell her all then and there, from the time of the
-conversation with Madame Alpenny down to the moment when she accused
-him in the churchyard. "So you see, Gwen," he concluded in a
-melancholy tone, "that although perfectly innocent, this woman has the
-power to have me arrested."
-
-"You shall not be arrested," said Gwen, with sparkling eyes and red
-cheeks.
-
-"Then you don't believe me to be guilty?"
-
-"What a silly question to ask." This time it was Gwen who kissed. "Is
-it likely that I would still be sitting on your knee if I thought you
-killed my father? Of course, the whole thing is difficult and
-mysterious, but I am on your side, Owain, and we will fight it out
-together."
-
-"Yes! Yes!" Hench rose and swung her off her feet right into his arms.
-"I am not afraid now. Your love will give me strength to conquer my
-enemies. But it will be an ordeal for you."
-
-"An ordeal which will prove the depth of my love, dear. And I deserve
-such an ordeal. I doubted you once; but I'll never, never, never,
-never doubt you again. Owain, darling, everything will come right.
-There is Mr. Vane and Mrs. Perage and myself and you. Against us is
-only that horrid old woman."
-
-"She holds a strong hand in the game, though," murmured the young man
-doubtfully. "We hold a stronger. Right will always prevail against
-might."
-
-"Gwen! Gwen! You are a tower of strength. You put new life into me.
-Yes, we will fight; we will fight, fight to the end."
-
-"And win!" cried Gwen. "Oh, never doubt, Owain. We must win!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-BLACKMAIL
-
-
-After the reconciliation between the lovers nothing remained but to go
-into the garden and announce that Mademoiselle Zara's errand had been
-wholly successful. Gwen was now quite amiably disposed towards her
-rival, and was indeed very thankful to her for the peacemaking
-explanation. Along with Hench she went into the hot sunshine, and as
-they walked across the lawns towards the glade where they were likely
-to find the others, Owain warned Gwen that Zara was wholly ignorant of
-her mother's schemes. "Only you and I, Mrs. Perage and Jim Vane, know
-about her accusation," said the young man seriously. "So don't hint a
-word of the business to Zara."
-
-"Of course I won't," agreed Gwen readily. "But what steps are you
-going to take, Owain, in order to counterplot her?"
-
-"Madame Alpenny? Well, I haven't any idea in my head just now, and, at
-all events, she has given me a week to think over things. Let us leave
-matters as they are until to-morrow, and then we can call a council of
-war and see what is best to be done. There's no doubt that Madame
-Alpenny has me in a tight place."
-
-"She has," said Gwen cheerfully. "But we may be able to turn the
-tables on her."
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"I don't know," mused the girl. "It seems to me that this woman knows
-more about the death of my father than she will admit. She may be
-guilty herself."
-
-Hench shook his head. "I have some such idea myself, and yet it seems
-impossible. What had she to gain?"
-
-"A fortune through you," said Gwen promptly. "By means of that
-advertisement which brought you to the Gipsy Stile, she implicated you
-in the murder, which she may have executed before you arrived. Once
-under her thumb, she hoped to compel you to marry Zara, and so would
-have gained control of the money."
-
-"I am not under her thumb yet," said Hench grimly. "And what is more,
-I don't intend to be, strong as is her position. Whether she is guilty
-or innocent I can't say, as I am ignorant of her doings on the night
-of the first of July. But I should like to know, Gwen, why your father
-put that advertisement into the papers, and why he appointed the Gipsy
-Stile as the place of meeting?"
-
-"I can't explain," she answered doubtfully. "My father never said a
-word to me about the advertisement, or, indeed, about Madame Alpenny's
-visit. I asked him who she was and he told me to mind my own
-business."
-
-"Well, Madame Alpenny can explain, as I believe she suggested the
-advertisement dodge herself." Owain reflected for a moment. "There's
-something queer behind all this, Gwen, and when we learn what that
-something is, I daresay we will find out who murdered your father. And
-then----"
-
-"Hush," said Gwen suddenly, as they turned round the corner of a green
-alley which ran between high box hedges. "Here they are."
-
-As a matter of fact the lovers stumbled right into the centre of a
-group consisting of Mrs. Perage and her guests. They all appeared to
-be smiling, and the smiles grew very broad when the reconciled couple
-came towards them. Mrs. Perage caught Gwen by the shoulders and looked
-into her tell-tale blue eyes.
-
-"Is it all right, you nuisance?" she demanded gruffly.
-
-"All right!" assented Gwen, giving her a kiss. "Thanks to----"
-
-"To me," cried the dancer gaily. "I am the goddess of Peace."
-
-Hench took her hand and kissed it. "I can never thank you
-sufficiently."
-
-"I don't require thanks, Mr. Hench. But did I not tell you that when
-you really fell in love you would understand how wholly different it
-was to your feeling for me?"
-
-"You did, and I have learned the difference. Admiration is moonlight,
-and love is the most glowing of sunshine."
-
-"How poetical," said Vane with a shrug.
-
-"And how true. Jim, I have to thank you for bringing Mademoiselle Zara
-with the olive branch. Bless you, as a friend in need."
-
-"Bless Aunt Emma, rather, old son. She suggested the idea."
-
-"It seemed the only way of convincing a stupid man," said Mrs. Perage
-lightly. "However, all's well that ends well, so let us go in and have
-some tea. Our visitors have to leave in an hour."
-
-All this time Bracken, silent according to custom, was smiling amiably
-at the man he had at one time considered his rival. Now he advanced
-and shook him by the hand, much to the approval of Zara, for Bracken
-had given her considerable trouble over Hench's attentions. Mrs.
-Perage, still holding on tightly to Gwen, was walking in front,
-together with Vane, so Owain had the pleasant task of escorting Zara
-and her lover to the house. He was glad of this, as he wished to say
-something and repay the dancer for her kindness.
-
-"When are you two going to be married?" he asked abruptly.
-
-Zara sighed. "I don't know," she confessed sadly. "Ned expected to get
-some money from his mother, but she died without leaving any. Neither
-I nor Ned make enough money to keep ourselves and my mother, so we
-can't think of marrying for a long time."
-
-"Madame Alpenny seems to be the stumbling block," mused Hench
-thoughtfully.
-
-"She is," declared Bracken in a gruff, rough way. "Zara and I could
-manage by ourselves on what we earn, if it wasn't for that cattish old
-woman."
-
-"Ned! Ned! Don't call names. After all, my mother is my mother."
-
-"She is very selfish, and makes you miserable to please herself," said
-Bracken crossly. "I shall never make much money as I am not a genius
-as you are, Zara. If you could only get the engagement you deserve you
-would make sufficient to settle your mother, and then we could get
-married."
-
-"Allow me to see to that," said Owain quickly. "See here, Bracken, and
-you, Zara, you may not know it but I am a rich man."
-
-"I am very glad," said the dancer honestly. "You have made money,
-then?"
-
-"I have inherited money--a large income. I owe you much, as but for
-you things would not have been squared."
-
-"It was the least I could do, Mr. Hench."
-
-"It was a very great deal to do, as the task was a delicate one.
-However, what I mean is this, that as you have been my friend you
-must allow me to be yours. Therefore"--Owain spoke slowly and
-deliberately--"I wish you, with Bracken's approval, of course, to
-accept one thousand pounds."
-
-"Oh!" gasped Zara, flushing as red as her cloak. "I couldn't think of
-it."
-
-"Nor can I," said Bracken resentfully. "I can keep my own wife."
-
-"My dear people,"--Owain being between them took an arm of each,--"if
-you like you can pay me back on some future occasion. Zara, your
-mother will bother me to marry you until some barrier is raised which
-will prevent your being my possible wife. At present, as you have
-stated, you are not able to marry for want of money. Now if I give you
-this thousand pounds, which I can very easily spare, I want you to get
-married quietly. When your mother learns that you are Mrs. Bracken she
-will leave me alone. Then you can give her a sum of money to live on
-in the meantime and will be able to rest on your oars and look about
-for a better engagement. You see?"
-
-"Yes," said Zara gratefully. "I see, and I am very much obliged. If I
-can give my mother half the money she will go to her people in Buda
-Pesth and amuse herself with gambling. Then with five hundred pounds
-Ned and and I can manage to get to the West End. Money always brings
-money, and I am sure that I could get an engagement."
-
-"Didn't your mother go in search of one for you?" asked Hench,
-nodding.
-
-Zara's lip curled and she looked more disdainful than ever. "My mother
-said that she went, but she never did."
-
-Hench started. "She was absent for a few days, I remember."
-
-"Yes. On business, she told me. But what her business was I never
-knew. It had nothing to do with an engagement, however, or I should
-have known."
-
-Of course Owain knew very well on what business Madame Alpenny had
-been engaged, but he was wise enough to make no remark. Also at the
-moment his attention was distracted by Bracken, who had been thinking
-in his heavy way.
-
-"If you will allow Zara and me to pay you back the money with interest
-at five per cent," he observed, reflectively, "we don't mind--eh,
-Zara?"
-
-"No," she rejoined promptly. "I shall take the money with pleasure
-then, as it will certainly help us to get married in spite of my
-mother's opposition. I am very grateful for your kind help, Mr.
-Hench."
-
-"I am only doing what I ought to do," said Owain frankly. "You have
-done me a good turn, so it is only right that I should do you and
-Bracken one. I shall see my lawyers next week and arrange for the
-money to be paid to you by cheque, or in notes, or gold, whichever you
-prefer."
-
-"Say a cheque, Hench," remarked Bracken, with a sigh of relief. "I
-have a banking account. It's a very small one--still, it is a banking
-account."
-
-"Good. I will call at The Home of the Muses some day next week with
-the cheque, and meantime you can see about getting married."
-
-"Oh, Ned!" cried Zara.
-
-"Oh, Zara!" cried Ned, and they embraced, even though they were in
-sight of the drawing-room windows.
-
-"Well," said Hench philosophically, "I have made two people happy,
-anyhow."
-
-"We will be happier if you are happy yourself, you generous man," said
-Zara.
-
-"Oh, that's all right," replied Hench hurriedly, for he did not wish
-to be thanked or praised. "Come and have some tea. We'll keep this
-little arrangement to ourselves."
-
-The visitors were very pleased at the result of their visit, which
-they had been far from expecting, and the tea was unusually gay. Gwen
-could not show enough attention to Zara, and Mrs. Perage, who had
-taken a fancy to the honest dullness of Ned, looked after him in her
-brusque way. Owain and his beloved were silent from sheer happiness,
-in spite of the thunder-clouds which still obscured the sun, so it was
-left to Jim Vane to brighten the party with chatter and gaiety. He was
-entirely successful, and the visitors left with a sense of great
-enjoyment. Zara looked younger, less fatigued and unapproachable than
-usual, while Bracken's stolid good-looking face was wreathed in
-smiles. And Hench saw them off at the station with a sense of
-thankfulness that he had been able to help them. He was so happy
-himself in having gained Gwen's love that he wished every one else to
-be happy, and moreover was delighted that he had been able to repay
-Zara for her good work. He returned to his lodgings to dress, and then
-went to dine at Mrs. Perage's hospitable board.
-
-Gwen wished to hold the council of war after dinner, but Hench
-refused. He considered that the day had been quite sufficiently filled
-with events, and did not wish to start a discussion which was likely
-to be prolonged into the small hours. Gwen looked tired after all the
-excitement she had undergone, and Hench himself felt rather weary. The
-true fact was that a sense of anxiety lay beneath their surface
-gaiety, and they were feeling the suspense more than they thought.
-Mrs. Perage and her nephew were also rather silent; so in spite of the
-reconciliation of the lovers the evening was rather a failure. With
-her usual prompt way of dealing with things, Mrs. Perage sent Hench
-away at half-past nine o'clock.
-
-"We are all worn out with bother," she said briskly. "So it is best
-for all of us to have a good night's rest and then we can deal with
-other and more serious matters to-morrow."
-
-"One serious matter has been put right, thanks to you," said Hench,
-looking fondly at Gwen. "It was just as well to take the bull by the
-horns," said Mrs. Perage candidly. "And I am glad that Zara proved to
-be so sensible a creature. And when you tell Gwen what--what----" she
-hesitated, not knowing if it was wise to speak.
-
-"What peril I am in," finished Hench. "Oh, I've done that this
-afternoon."
-
-"The deuce you have!" cried Vane, turning from his friend to Gwen.
-"And what do you think of the matter, Miss Evans?"
-
-"I don't know what to think," said Gwen promptly. "Save that I believe
-Owain to be innocent, and I will stand by him to the end, whatever it
-may be."
-
-"Good. And the accusation of Madame----"
-
-"Jim," commanded his aunt sharply, "do hold your tongue. This is not
-the time to begin a discussion. To-morrow, when our wits are clearer,
-we can talk. Owain, go home to bed. Jim and I will turn our backs
-while you take leave of Gwen."
-
-This was not necessary, as Gwen accompanied her lover to the door and
-kisses were exchanged in the twilight of the summer night. But the two
-were so long in parting that Mrs. Perage had to come on the scene and
-fairly shut the door in the face of this lingering lover. Hench went
-away, feeling that the sun had vanished from the sky, which was
-exactly what the sun should do considering the time. He sauntered home
-leisurely, thinking of Gwen and picturing his future life with her. By
-the time he reached Mrs. Bell's cottage it was striking ten from the
-church tower, and he entered the house yawning with the intention of
-going at once to bed. There he could dream of Gwen.
-
-But Owain did not get to his repose so speedily as he expected, for he
-found a visitor sitting in his parlour--and not a visitor he was
-exactly pleased to see. From an armchair rose the smartly dressed
-figure of Mr. Cuthbert Spruce, who smiled amiably when he saw the
-astonished look on the face of his host. Hench frowned, very
-ill-pleased.
-
-"What the deuce are you doing here, Spruce?" he demanded sharply.
-
-"I have come to have a serious talk with you," said the Nut coolly,
-and resumed his seat with the air of a man determined to stay where he
-was.
-
-"Then you can clear out and come to-morrow, my friend. I am much too
-tired to talk just now." Hench glanced at his watch. "There is a train
-at a quarter to eleven which you can catch."
-
-"I am not going back to town this evening, Hench."
-
-"Well, that's your business, not mine. Anyhow, I want you to go now."
-
-"I am staying at the Bull Inn," went on Spruce significantly. "It is
-necessary that we should speak now. Better be sensible, Hench, and
-listen."
-
-Owain looked at this meddlesome marplot searchingly. He was staying at
-the Bull Inn, and that was a place which Hench had carefully avoided
-lest he should come into contact with the girl who had seen him as a
-tramp. It occurred to him from the significance of Spruce's tone that
-the Nut had been making inquiries, and had come to make himself
-unpleasant. However, Hench was not the man to be frightened into doing
-what he did not wish to do, and he threw off his coat and hat, still
-frowning.
-
-"I don't know why you have come here," he said coldly, "or how you
-found out where I was living. But----"
-
-"Madame Alpenny told me," said Spruce quickly, and brought out a
-cigarette.
-
-"Hang her impudence! Don't smoke. I don't want you to stay."
-
-"Very good." The Nut rose and carefully lighted the little roll of
-tobacco. "As you please. But don't say that I did not give you your
-chance."
-
-"What the devil do you mean?"
-
-"If you send me away how can I explain?" asked Spruce, with a
-supercilious smile. "I have been waiting for quite an hour, and it was
-only after a great deal of persuasion that your landlady allowed me to
-enter. I believe"--added the Nut, stretching his arms and yawning--
-"that she is waiting up, so as to be sure that I have not come after
-the spoons."
-
-Hench looked at him hard, then abruptly left the room to assure Mrs.
-Bell that everything was all right. After he had sent her to bed, at
-rest in her mind about the stranger, he returned to the parlour and
-closed the door in an ostentatious manner.
-
-Spruce laughed.
-
-"You are going to let me stay, then," he remarked coolly and sitting
-down again.
-
-Hench sat opposite to him with a resolute air. "You don't leave this
-room until you fully explain what the devil you mean by dogging my
-footsteps in this way," he said sternly.
-
-"Dogged is a good word, or was it dogging? Both are good words. You
-will have to be dogged so far as your courage is concerned. And as to
-dogging, it is better that I should do that than the police."
-
-"Oh, hang your fantastical chatter!" snapped Hench with a lowering
-brow. "Come to the point."
-
-"Can't you see my point now that I have mentioned the police?"
-
-"No," said Hench briefly and obstinately.
-
-"Curious! You are not usually so dense." Spruce puffed lightly at his
-cigarette and smiled blandly. "The fact is I am here on behalf of
-Madame Alpenny."
-
-"What has Madame Alpenny to do with me, may I ask?"
-
-"Oh, you may ask, and I shall reply with great pleasure. Madame
-Alpenny has done me the honour to make me her confidential friend, and
-I am now in possession of all facts connected with your gaining of a
-large fortune. Most people would be glad to get so much money, but few
-people would be ready to gain it at so heavy a price."
-
-Hench winced inwardly but not outwardly, as he did not intend to show
-fear in the presence of this little reptile. He saw from the very
-audacity with which the Nut spoke that he knew all about the matter
-connected with the death of Madoc Evans, and knew also that the
-creature had come at this untimely hour to profit by his knowledge.
-"You speak in riddles," he said coldly.
-
-"Oh, I think you can guess them," retorted the other man.
-
-"Perhaps I can and perhaps I cannot. But as you hint at mysteries it
-is for you to explain them. Be as brief as you can. I can't wait up
-all night listening to your twaddle."
-
-"Very bravely carried off, Hench," taunted Spruce, his eyes looking
-angry. "But such bluff doesn't deceive me. I know too much for you to
-pretend ignorance."
-
-"What you know I am waiting to learn," said Hench, setting his teeth.
-
-"Why give me the trouble to explain?"
-
-"Stop your fencing and come to the point. You want money?"
-
-"A great deal of money. The price of my story is costly."
-
-"Really!" said Hench sarcastically. "Well, you were writing a story at
-Bethnal Green. At least that was the lie you told me to account for
-your presence in the boarding-house."
-
-Spruce laughed, in no wise offended, as his moral perceptions were
-very much blunted. "I am writing a much better story than I
-anticipated. I told you that I came to Bethnal Green to find material.
-Well, I have found material of the best. I shall sell this story for a
-good price," he concluded, looking meaningly at his listener.
-
-"And the price?"
-
-"Well, I think about two thousand a year."
-
-"Moderate," said Owain shortly and not quailing.
-
-"I think so myself, seeing that I shall have to pay Madame Alpenny at
-least two hundred a year out of it."
-
-"And keep one thousand eight hundred a year to yourself?"
-
-"That is my intention," rejoined the Nut coolly. "Spruce, you
-are--what you are, as it is impossible to find a name low enough to
-suit you. And how am I to pay this two thousand a year?"
-
-"Out of the ten thousand per annum your uncle left you."
-
-"Humph! You seem to be well informed."
-
-"Madame Alpenny informed me, so naturally I am in possession of many
-facts which you would prefer to keep secret. Come, Hench, it is no use
-our beating about the bush, as we understand one another, so----"
-
-"Pardon me, we don't understand one another. What am I to get for this
-two thousand a year blackmail?"
-
-"Don't use nasty words. It won't help you to be nasty. I'm top-dog,
-Hench, so you had better give in."
-
-"Two words go to a bargain," said Hench calmly. "What am I to gain in
-return for this two thousand a year?"
-
-"My silence."
-
-"About what?" Spruce started up, looking peevishly angry. "Don't try
-me too far, Hench. You know quite well what I mean. A word from me to
-the police and you will be arrested straight away for the murder of
-your uncle."
-
-"Oh, indeed. You seem to be very certain of my guilt."
-
-"Whether I am certain or not doesn't matter," retorted the other. "I
-hold you in the hollow of my hand."
-
-"Explain how you do that."
-
-"Oh, very well," said Spruce, sitting down again. "If you will have
-chapter and verse I am willing to oblige you, although I think you are
-wasting my time."
-
-The Nut drew a long breath and then proceeded to inform his host of
-his discoveries. These had to do with the insertion of the
-advertisement, with the visit of Hench on the fatal night to Cookley,
-and with the inheritance which the untoward death of Madoc Evans had
-brought the young man. "So you see," concluded the Nut, "that I have
-only to go to the police with this tale to ensure your arrest."
-
-"I quite admit that, Spruce. In fact, I admit the truth of all your
-story. I should like to know how you found out all about the business.
-You could scarcely go to Madame Alpenny and force it out of her
-without some previous knowledge."
-
-"Well, it was my clever brain that gave me the tip," said Spruce
-coolly. "That conversation in which the word 'Rhaiadr' was used gave
-me the idea that the old woman knew something about you. I watched her
-and followed her when she went away. She came down here and saw Evans
-at the Grange. I waited until she got home later, and then told her
-that I had followed her. She was so alarmed lest you should know of
-the visit--as your doing so would have upset the apple-cart--that she
-told me about the advertisement. When it appeared I saw it and made
-sure that you would obey it. I followed you to that hotel near the
-British Museum, but you left there and I lost sight of you. Therefore
-I lay low until I got evidence of your visit to Cookley on the night
-of the first of July. I saw all about the murder in the newspapers and
-believed that you were guilty. But I was not sure until I went to-day
-to the Bull Inn and questioned that girl about the supposed tramp.
-From what she said, vague as her description was, I knew that you were
-the tramp in question, so came on here to let you know. I believe that
-you asked the way to the Gipsy Stile and went straight there to murder
-your uncle."
-
-"Oh!" said Owain, unmoved. "Am I the sort of person to murder an old
-man?"
-
-"I don't say that you killed him in cold blood," replied Spruce
-hastily. "You doubtless had a quarrel and stabbed him before you knew
-what you were about."
-
-"One moment, Spruce. I am not in the habit of carrying about
-carving-knives to kill people. And I had no reason to kill my uncle,
-as at the time I did not know that he was any relation."
-
-"Oh, he told you that at the time you met him."
-
-"I never met him. I found him dead." Spruce started up in a fury and
-snatched at his hat. "What's the use of your dodging in this way. I
-say that you murdered him, and if you don't promise to pay me two
-thousand a year and secure the same to me by deed, I shall go to the
-police and procure your arrest. You know I can do it."
-
-"You can. I fully admit that just now you are top-dog," said Hench in
-quite a bland way. "And you are willing to condone my felony for the
-money?"
-
-"Yes! You can kill the whole population of Cookley for all I care."
-
-"Oh, I quite understand that. Well, to-night I shall say nothing. You
-must give me one week to consider matters."
-
-"I don't mind,"--Spruce made for the door with a shrug,--"but don't
-you try and bolt or I shall put the police on to you."
-
-"Naturally! You have made everything perfectly clear to me.
-Good-night."
-
-Spruce walked into the passage and opened the outside door.
-"Remember," he said.
-
-"Good-night," repeated Hench, and shut the door in the face of the
-blackmailer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-HENCH'S DIPLOMACY
-
-
-Contrary to his expectations, Owain passed a very good night. By this
-time he was so accustomed to trouble that it did not seem sensible to
-worry over anything until he could meet the same fairly and squarely.
-Dangerous as Madame Alpenny and Spruce were, he had no reason to fear
-them for a week, since they gave him that period in which to assent to
-their terms. The woman wished him to marry her daughter; the man
-desired to obtain an income of two thousand a year, secured by deed;
-and if he satisfied both, they would hold their peace and trouble him
-no longer. But Hench by no means intended to purchase immunity at this
-price, as to do so would imply that he was guilty. As he was perfectly
-innocent such a course was not to be thought of, and it was necessary
-to think of some other means of settling the difficulty. And since
-Owain could not decide his course of action on the spur of the moment,
-he put the matter out of his head for the time being and retired to
-bed immediately. After a good night's rest, he rose greatly refreshed,
-and sent Giles to bring Vane to breakfast.
-
-Guessing from the unexpectedness of the invitation that something was
-in the wind, Vane speedily arrived, and was waiting in the little
-parlour when his friend made his appearance. Hench refused to give any
-information until the meal was ended, saying that to mix up business
-with pleasure was to spoil both, so the barrister had to possess his
-soul in patience until they were enjoying their morning smoke. Then,
-as Hench still held his peace, Vane asked him a down-right question
-with considerable impatience.
-
-"Why did you ask me to come to breakfast, Owain?"
-
-"To talk over a further complication of this trouble."
-
-"The murder of your uncle?"
-
-"Yes! When I came here last night, Spruce was waiting for me."
-
-"Spruce!" echoed the other curiously. "That crawling little cheat. How
-did he find you out, Owain?"
-
-"Madame Alpenny told him where I was, and Bottles told her, and Peter
-told his brother. That is how the screed runs."
-
-"Why the deuce couldn't Peter keep his knowledge of your whereabouts
-to himself," growled the barrister. "We don't want Spruce here."
-
-"Oh, Peter didn't think he was doing wrong in telling Bottles, as he
-knew how his brother was devoted to me. It is Bottles I blame in
-giving me away. I don't think he is so devoted to me as I thought. And
-I certainly don't want Spruce here, especially as he has come to
-blackmail me."
-
-"What's that?" Vane sat up very straight.
-
-"Listen!" and Hench related what had taken place in that very room on
-the previous night, so that the barrister was soon placed in
-possession of all facts connected with the accusation. Vane sat silent
-when his friend ended, digesting the uncomfortable knowledge.
-
-"Little beast!" he said at length. "I knew that he was after no good
-in going to Bethnal Green."
-
-"Oh, that was mere chance, Jim. But his cleverness led him to suspect
-what Madame Alpenny knew, and he watched her day and night until he
-wormed her secret out of her. Well, you have heard; what is your
-advice?"
-
-"I should give Spruce rope enough to hang himself," said Vane quickly.
-
-"In what way?"
-
-"By promising him the money. If he accepts he will be condoning a
-felony and in that way will get himself into trouble."
-
-"I will get into trouble also."
-
-"I'm not so sure of that," said Vane, looking out of the window in a
-musing manner. "Spruce says that you are guilty, to suit his own ends.
-But I should not be surprised if he knew the name of the true
-assassin."
-
-"Madame Alpenny?"
-
-"I think so. No one but you and that woman knew of the appointment at
-the Gipsy Stile. You are innocent, so she must be guilty. And we have
-agreed that she had a strong motive to place you in possession of the
-property straight away. Yes, I truly think that she struck the blow,
-thus giving you the money at once and getting you under her thumb. She
-killed two birds with one stone."
-
-"Don't be in such a hurry," said Owain dryly. "The appointment was
-advertised in the newspaper shown to me by Madame Alpenny. Other
-people may have gone there on the chance of getting something."
-
-"Other people had nothing to gain by keeping the appointment, Owain,
-much less by murdering the old man. No. Some one who knew what his
-death meant to you is the assassin, and Madame Alpenny alone possessed
-that information."
-
-"True enough. Well, and what do you propose?"
-
-"Send that man you sent to me for Spruce, and ask him to come here at
-once."
-
-"For what purpose?"
-
-"We can make a bargain with him. Instead of giving him the money to
-hold his tongue, offer it to him on condition that he reveals the
-truth."
-
-"He won't. He's a born liar."
-
-"Oh yes, he will. The chance of getting two thousand a year will
-unlock his tongue. He'd sell Madame Alpenny or a dozen like her to
-line his own nest."
-
-"It's not a bad idea," said Owain, as he left the room to speak to
-Giles. While he was absent Vane began to think of Peter, the page, who
-was the brother of Simon, surnamed Bottles. It seemed to him that
-these two boys knew of something in connection with the matter, as
-they appeared to take a great interest in the doings of Hench. The
-barrister resolved to speak to Owain on his return, and did so
-immediately he came back with the information that Giles was now on
-his way to the Bull Inn. "You say that Bottles was devoted to you,
-Owain," said Vane reflectively.
-
-"I thought so, but since he has given me away to Madame Alpenny I have
-my doubts of his honesty."
-
-"Hm! I don't know. A hero-worshipper doesn't throw off his allegiance
-so lightly. Bottles promised to hold his tongue?"
-
-"Yes! Really, though, Jim, there was nothing for him to tell."
-
-"Not when you left Bethnal Green, I admit. But there has been
-something to tell since, and he has told it, to wit your whereabouts,
-which you did not wish to be known to that old hag. Bottles must have
-some reason for acting as he has done. If I were you I would go up to
-town and see him."
-
-Hench nodded. "I intend to, and to see Madame Alpenny at the same
-time. Our conversation ended rather abruptly in the churchyard, and I
-want to make it quite clear to her that I suspect her of being the
-guilty person."
-
-"Quite so. And if we succeed in frightening or bribing that little
-animal Spruce, you will have more grounds to present to her as to the
-truth of your accusation. We're travelling along a dark path, Owain,
-and the deuce knows what we will find at the end of it."
-
-"A gaol for Madame Alpenny and a church for me and Gwen to be married
-in, Jim," said Hench promptly. "But it is a dark path as you say, and
-I have got on to it in the most unexpected manner. I wish I had called
-to see you before coming down here on that night. Had you been with me
-all this trouble would have been avoided."
-
-Vane quite agreed. "In dealing with people like Madame Alpenny and
-Spruce it is always best to have a witness. That is why I think that
-the wisdom of seeing Spruce in company is apparent. Hullo! here he is.
-Doesn't he look like Solomon in all his glory, the slimy little
-reptile?"
-
-It was indeed Spruce who had just clicked the gate and was sauntering
-up the short garden path. As the day was very warm, he was
-appropriately clothed in a suit of cream-coloured serge, with brown
-shoes and a straw hat. His whole appearance was spic and span, and he
-looked more like a cherub than ever with his pink and white face. No
-one would have thought that this innocent blue-eyed youth was such a
-despicable little scoundrel. His purple necktie, his purple scarf, his
-purple socks, and the purple band round his hat, were all in keeping
-with his quality of a Nut. He even wiped his heated face with a purple
-bordered pocket-handkerchief, and when he came into the room the same
-wafted a delicate perfume abroad which made Vane growl with disgust.
-
-"What the dickens do you use scent for?" he asked irritably.
-
-"Vane!" said the Nut, not very well pleased to come across one who
-knew all about his card-table delinquencies. "You here?"
-
-"A pleasant surprise, isn't it, Spruce?" sneered the barrister, who
-ardently desired to kick the creature into a dusty heap on the road.
-
-"Oh, I don't mind meeting old friends," said Spruce, recovering his
-impudence. "I'm not your friend, neither is Hench."
-
-"Well,"---Spruce shrugged his elegant shoulders, "let us say old
-schoolfellows."
-
-"You are a disgrace to Winchester!" raged Vane, scowling. "A cheat and
-a sneak, a liar and a thief. That's what you are."
-
-"Thanks. Any more names?"
-
-"I may as well add blackmailer," observed Hench coldly.
-
-"In that case I can call you a murderer, which is a worse name!"
-snarled the Nut, looking very ugly.
-
-"I am not. You are lying as usual."
-
-"Don't insult me too much, Hench. You seem to forget that I am
-top-dog."
-
-"So far you certainly are. Top-puppy, I should say. Sit down and let
-us get to business."
-
-Spruce still stood by the door in what he considered was a haughty
-attitude, and frowned impressively. "I don't see what Vane has to do
-with any business between you and myself," he said sharply.
-
-"Vane is my friend, and I have asked him here to deal with the matter
-about which you spoke last night."
-
-"You seem ready to take the whole world into your confidence," said
-Spruce insolently, dusting a chair with his handkerchief before taking
-a seat. "If you act in that way I can't protect you."
-
-"Wait till you're asked," said Vane tartly. "Good Lord, the idea of
-your protecting any one; unless," he added significantly, "it is
-Madame Alpenny."
-
-"What do you mean by that?" asked the Nut, visibly discomposed.
-
-"Oh, I think you know quite well what I mean, Spruce. You accuse Hench
-here of murdering his uncle?"
-
-"Yes, I do. And I'll tell the police as much if he doesn't pay my
-price. The police would give a good deal to find the tramp who asked
-the way to the Gipsy Stile on the night of the first of July."
-
-"How can you prove that Hench is the tramp?"
-
-"By his own admission."
-
-"And if he does not make that admission in open court?"
-
-"Then I'll leave it to the barmaid at the Bull Inn. She cannot
-describe our friend's appearance very well, as she is stupid and the
-tap-room was badly lighted when she saw him. But she declares that she
-would know his voice. Mr. Owain Hench would then have to prove what he
-was doing on the night in question, and I don't think that would be
-easy."
-
-"It certainly would not be easy," said Hench coolly. "I have admitted
-that you can make out a very good case for the prosecution. All the
-same you are perfectly aware that I am innocent."
-
-"What makes you say that?" asked Spruce quickly and--as Vane
-thought--in a somewhat anxious manner.
-
-"Because I think you know who is the guilty person."
-
-"Do I? That remains to be seen."
-
-"Spruce," said Vane in a menacing manner, "you are playing a very
-dangerous game, and let alone the fact that you are trying to
-blackmail Hench, you run the risk of condoning a felony."
-
-"Ah!" said the Nut quickly. "Then you suggest that our friend is
-guilty?"
-
-"Nothing of the sort. I suggest that you pretend to believe him guilty
-to get this money. But you know perfectly well that he is not."
-
-"Do you mean to insinuate that I know who murdered the Squire?" asked
-Spruce, with a fine show of indignation.
-
-"Certainly I do," retorted Vane smartly. "Don't put on frills. In my
-opinion Madame Alpenny, who knew all about the advertisement and the
-property, is the guilty person. But, as she isn't worth powder and
-shot, you are trying to fasten the crime on to Hench's shoulders."
-
-"And I can, Mr. James Vane, as you and he shall find."
-
-"Oh!" said Hench cynically. "And you really expect me to pay you two
-thousand a year to refrain from doing so? I won't."
-
-"You won't?" Spruce was plainly taken aback.
-
-"No. Rather than do so I shall go to the police and tell my story.
-Better be in the hands of the authorities than in yours."
-
-"You won't dare to do what you say."
-
-"Oh yes, I dare. My conscience is clear, so I am willing to stand the
-brunt."
-
-Spruce was plainly embarrassed by this defiance and did not very well
-know what to say or do. If Hench acted as he threatened to do, there
-would be no money for the Nut, and perhaps an action against him as a
-blackmailer. He was shrewd enough to see this, and therefore shuffled
-his cards so that he might not drive his proposed victim to
-extremities. "What do you wish me to do, then?" he asked sullenly.
-
-Before Hench could reply Vane, who was looking out of the window,
-turned round sharply. "There is Peter," he said, glancing at his
-friend. "What the deuce is he hanging round your cottage for?"
-
-The answer came from an unexpected quarter. "Peter is waiting to see
-me," said Spruce with dignity. "He was at the Bull Inn when your
-messenger came and I told him to wait until I returned. I expect he
-has followed me here and expects me to come out soon."
-
-"What are you seeing Peter about?" questioned Hench sharply.
-
-"That is my business," snapped the Nut sulkily.
-
-"Mine also. Peter is the brother of Bottles, who is employed by Mrs.
-Tesk, and both the boys are meddling in matters which do not concern
-them. What does it all mean?"
-
-"You had better ask the boy in and question him," sneered Spruce
-coolly.
-
-"I shall do so after we have dispatched this affair," said Hench
-sharply. "You ask me what I wish you to do. I reply, clear my
-character."
-
-"How can I do that?"
-
-"In a way best known to yourself. But you are well aware that Madame
-Alpenny is the guilty person."
-
-"I am not."
-
-"Don't tell lies. It is better worth my while to pay you two thousand
-a year to prove her guilty and me innocent, than for me to give the
-income to you merely for the sake of your holding your tongue. That's
-a thing you never did and never will do."
-
-Spruce considered. "If I prove Madame Alpenny to be guilty," he said,
-with a greedy gleam in his eyes, "will you pay me the two thousand a
-year?"
-
-"I'll think about it."
-
-"Then I do nothing. To be quite plain, I _can_ clear your character in
-the way you say----"
-
-"Ah, I knew you were lying."
-
-"----But I shan't do so unless you agree, in the presence of Vane, to
-give me my price."
-
-"It is too large a price," grumbled the barrister. "Large or small, it
-is what I want."
-
-"I'll give you one thousand a year if you----"
-
-"Two thousand."
-
-Hench looked at Vane and Vane at Hench, as both were uncertain how to
-act. A very difficult question had to be threshed out. Owain was
-unwilling to pay blackmail, yet if he did not there was bound to be
-trouble. If he did he was quite certain that Spruce could clear his
-character. For an honourable man the position was very trying, but
-there seemed to be only one way out of it.
-
-"Very good," said Hench with an effort. "You must have your price,
-Shylock, as my life and liberty are more to me than money, and there
-is no denying but what you have me in a cleft stick. I promise to give
-you two thousand a year if you remove all danger from me of being
-accused."
-
-"I can do that."
-
-"Then you know who murdered my uncle?"
-
-"I do. Madame Alpenny is guilty, as you thought. But I alone can prove
-her guilt. I have your promise in Vane's presence to give me the
-income?"
-
-"Yes," said Hench with another effort, for he hated giving way thus
-ignobly to this scoundrel. "You have my promise."
-
-"You hear, Vane? I shall call you as a witness in case of
-non-payment."
-
-"I hear," said the barrister, smoking phlegmatically. "I am surety for
-Hench's good faith. You shall be paid, you rat. Now prove to us that
-you can have the woman arrested."
-
-Spruce drew a long breath of relief, as things were now going exactly
-as he wished. Like the traitor he was, he gaily went to work and sold
-Madame Alpenny's secret to gain the money. "She came down to see Evans
-after she knew that Hench was his nephew."
-
-"I know that," said Owain quickly. "Tell us something new."
-
-"All in good time," said Spruce smoothly. "I made her confess how she
-arranged with Evans about the advertisement and how to draw your
-attention to it."
-
-"Why was the appointment made in Parley Wood instead of in the house?"
-asked Vane, whom the problem had frequently perplexed.
-
-"I can't tell you. Madame Alpenny never explained that to me. All I
-know is that she laid the trap for Hench to fall into, and he did."
-
-"Only to find that my uncle was dead."
-
-"Of course," said Spruce, turning towards Hench with raised eyebrows;
-"that was the trap. She intended to accuse you, and thus force you to
-marry Zara so that she could handle the money."
-
-"That I also know, and she did accuse me. Well?"
-
-"Well, she came down here by the same train as you did, and while you
-were at the Bull Inn she went on to Parley Wood and murdered the
-Squire."
-
-"How can you prove that?"
-
-"Very easily." Spruce rose from his chair, and going to the window
-beckoned in the page. "Come here, I want you!" he cried.
-
-Peter started and seemed very much inclined to run away. But after a
-pause he braced up his courage and entered the house. Shortly he was
-standing before the three men, twisting his cap and looking very
-nervous. His likeness to his town brother was more apparent than ever,
-and Hench winced to think how Bottles had betrayed him. He had always
-believed that he could trust the boy to the uttermost.
-
-"Peter," said Spruce, sitting down again and enjoying his position of
-dictator, "you must tell this gentleman what you told me."
-
-"If Simon wishes me to," blurted out Peter.
-
-"He does wish you. I brought you that letter from Simon telling you to
-do whatever I asked you. Isn't that so?"
-
-"Yes, sir." Peter flushed and quivered, and wriggled in a most uneasy
-way. "Well, then, tell them what you told me about Madame Alpenny
-coming to Cookley on the night when Squire Evans was murdered."
-
-"Simon sent me a telegram telling me to watch for her," said Peter,
-speaking to the three generally. "And as I knew how she was dressed I
-easily did so, even though she wore a veil."
-
-"How did you know her dress?" asked Hench sharply.
-
-"Well, sir, when Simon came down here for his holiday he told me as
-he'd follered Madame Alpenny, who was up to some game. I met him then
-at the station, when he told me, and he follered her to the Grange. I
-follered him and hid in Parley Wood outside because Simon told me to.
-He watched at the gate. She saw the Squire and then came out, and
-after passing Simon she went into the wood follering the path to the
-Gipsy Stile."
-
-"What did she go there for?" questioned Vane.
-
-"To see the Squire."
-
-"But she had seen him in the house."
-
-"So she had, but he came to her at the Gipsy Stile afterwards. Both
-Simon and I follered and hid to listen. The Squire said as he would
-put in an advertisement asking 'Rhaiadr' to meet him at the Gipsy
-Stile, and said as he brought her there to see the meeting-place. When
-Madame Alpenny examined it and the Squire showed her how to get to it
-from the church she went away, and the Squire he returned to his
-house. Simon and me saw Madame Alpenny go to the station and catch the
-train to town. That was all that happened at that time. So you see,
-sir, how I knew how she was dressed."
-
-"I understand, though it is difficult to know why your brother
-suspected her."
-
-"Oh, Simon is sharp, sir, and he saw she was up to some games. He'll
-tell you all about it."
-
-"I'll see to that," said Hench grimly. "I'll have no more of this
-underhanded work. Well, go on. What about the second occasion when you
-saw her?"
-
-"Simon sent me a telegram saying as she was coming by a perticler
-train and to watch her at the station. I went there and saw her in the
-same dress, so I knew her in spite of the veil. Simon was there too,
-but he couldn't wait to speak to me, but just follered her, waving me
-back. I follered them as far as the church and waited there. Madame
-Alpenny, with Simon after her, went into the wood, and after staying
-there for a long time she came out and ran for the station."
-
-"Was Simon following her then?" asked Vane, alertly.
-
-"No, sir. He was still hiding in the wood, I think. I hid in the
-churchyard behind a tomb, and Madame she ran past me. I waited in the
-churchyard for Simon, and later I saw you, sir."
-
-"Me!" said Hench, starting up. "Yes, sir. You went through the
-churchyard and along the path. When you got into the wood Simon came
-running out as white as death, and told me as Madame Alpenny had
-murdered the Squire. He made me swear to hold my tongue, lest I and
-him should get into trouble. Then he went off to catch the train to
-London and I went home."
-
-"Why didn't you tell the police all this?" asked Hench, frowning.
-
-"Oh, I couldn't, sir," replied Peter in a most ingenuous way. "Simon
-made me promise not to in case we'd both get into trouble. But as he
-wrote saying I could tell Mr. Spruce I have done so, and as Mr. Spruce
-says I can tell you I have----"
-
-"There! There!" Spruce waved the boy into silence. "That is enough.
-You can go, and hold your tongue. Simon's orders, remember. Well,"--he
-turned to the two men,--"do you see how I can prove your innocence and
-Madame Alpenny's guilt?"
-
-"Yes," said Hench thoughtfully. "As Peter here saw me when I entered
-the wood, and Simon told him that the Squire was already dead, I see
-how my character can be cleared. Well, Spruce, I shall go to town and
-see the woman and the boy. When I settle with them I shall see you
-about your reward."
-
-"Don't you try and sell me," threatened Spruce, putting on his hat.
-"If you do it will be the worse for you."
-
-"Pah! Get out, you little swine," said Vane contemptuously, and the
-Nut departed considerably pleased with himself in spite of the
-scornful epithet.
-
-Peter lingered behind. "See Simon, sir. He'll explain," he said in a
-whisper.
-
-"Oh, I'll see him. But he's a little Judas," said Hench angrily.
-
-"No, sir. He ain't a Judas," said Peter, speaking grandiloquently.
-"Simon's as true to you as a needle is to the North Pole." And then he
-ran away hastily, evidently afraid of being questioned further. Hench
-let him go.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-A DENIAL
-
-
-On the day after the interview with Spruce it was necessary for Owain
-to travel to London for the purpose of having an interview with Madame
-Alpenny. Vane at first wished to go with him, but on second thoughts
-decided that it would be best for him to remain in Cookley and keep a
-close watch on the Nut. That traitor, having behaved treacherously,
-was as pleased with himself as if he had acted in a most honourable
-manner. He was now certain of an excellent income, and determined to
-go abroad for a year or so to enjoy himself until such time as his
-West End friends forgot his little mistake at cards. Meanwhile he
-remained at the Bull Inn waiting for the arrest of the Hungarian lady,
-when everything would be put ship-shape. Spruce was very pleased with
-every one and everything since matters had turned out so well. That
-they had turned out badly for Madame Alpenny did not worry him in the
-least. He was much too busy building castles in the air to trouble
-about her.
-
-Owain had given Mrs. Perage and Gwen a full account of the discovery
-of the old woman's guilt. They were naturally shocked, but scarcely
-surprised, as for a long time circumstances had tended to make them
-think that Madame Alpenny had murdered the Squire. At the same time
-Gwen pleaded with her lover to deal gently with the wretched creature
-as she was Zara's mother, and they both owed a great deal to Zara.
-Hench admitted as much and promised to be as lenient as he could.
-Nevertheless, he pointed out that to save himself he would have to
-inform the police about the woman's guilt. Unwilling as he was to act
-so drastically, there was no other course to be taken. All the way to
-London the young man argued out the matter in his own vexed mind, but
-was unable to see how he could shield Madame Alpenny. It was a pity
-that Zara, who was innocent, should suffer for the wickedness of her
-mother. All the same, it was impossible to spare her the shock. Owain
-hated the idea of saving himself at the expense of a woman, but in
-strict justice to himself, and considering that his liberty and life
-were at stake, he could not see what else he could do. When he was on
-his way to Bethnal Green he fully made up his mind to act as justice
-dictated.
-
-The Home of the Muses was much in the same state as Hench had left it,
-although there were several new boarders. Mrs. Tesk received him
-joyfully, and conducted him to her sanctum saying that she wished for
-a private conversation with him. Madame Alpenny, it appeared, was in
-the drawing-room along with Bracken and Zara.
-
-"For a surprising thing has occurred," said Mrs. Tesk, who looked more
-like a retired school-mistress than ever. "They are now man and wife."
-
-"Oh!" Hench expected something of this sort, but was astonished to
-learn that the young couple had got married so promptly. "Man and
-wife, are they?"
-
-"Yes! They have entered into the bonds of matrimony, and are now
-breaking the news to Madame Alpenny."
-
-"She won't be pleased," observed Hench, with a shrug. "Oh, I am sure
-she will be very annoyed indeed!" cried Mrs. Tesk, clasping her hands
-with a look of distress. "She intended you to be her son-in-law. She
-told me so several times."
-
-"Ah! There is such a thing as counting your chickens before they are
-hatched, Mrs. Tesk," was the young man's dry reply.
-
-"But you loved Mademoiselle Zara--or rather I should now say Mrs.
-Bracken."
-
-"I admired her," corrected Owain. "I never loved her. She quite
-understood my feeling. I wish her and Bracken all manner of luck."
-
-"So do I, Mr. Hench. After all, if two people are tenderly attached,
-why should they not wed?"
-
-"Why, indeed? When were they married?"
-
-"Yesterday, at a Registrar's office. I scarcely look upon such a civil
-contract as a marriage myself, Mr. Hench, as such a ceremony should
-surely be sanctified by the blessing of the Church. But married they
-are according to the law of the land, and I expect they will leave me
-now."
-
-"Why should they?"
-
-"Because Madame Alpenny will never allow them to live under the same
-roof as herself. She is a very determined woman, Mr. Hench. I shall be
-sorry to lose the company of the bridal pair," said poor Mrs. Tesk,
-wiping away a tear, "as I highly approve of their young affection.
-It's so romantic. Ah!" she rose suddenly and opened the door. "They
-have broken the news. Hark!"
-
-Madame Alpenny certainly was not pleased. She stood at the head of the
-stairs anathematizing the bridal pair as they descended arm in arm.
-Zara was weeping and Bracken's stolid face wore an angry expression.
-Moved to the depths of her being, Mrs. Tesk was about to rush out and
-console them when her skirts were plucked by Hench.
-
-"Don't say that I am here," he whispered, and the landlady nodded
-comprehendingly as she disappeared.
-
-While Mrs. Tesk was accompanying Bracken and his wife to the door
-Madame Alpenny still stood at the top of the stairs raging wildly. She
-was fat and homely in her appearance, and still wore her eternal
-orange-spotted dress, bead mantle and picture hat. But furious anger
-made her look quite picturesque as she poured out a torrent of words,
-shaking her fists and with flashing eyes. "Never come near me again,
-you miserable girl!" she shouted after her daughter. "Ah, but what a
-wicked child you are to throw yourself away on a fool. As to that man
-Hench, who has bribed you into deceiving me, he shall suffer for his
-evil doings. Take my curse with you, Zara, and may you-----" Sheer
-wrath choked her further utterance, and perhaps the fact that the
-happy pair had stepped out of the front door. Even Atê cannot waste
-her fury on nothing, and Madame Alpenny looked very like Atê indeed.
-
-Luckily the boarders were all away and the servants were downstairs,
-so there were no spectators of the scene but Hench and Mrs. Tesk. The
-landlady parted with Zara and Bracken quite tenderly, for their
-romance appealed to her ever-young heart. While she was dismissing
-them on the doorstep, with a blessing which she hoped would neutralize
-the maternal curse, Hench ran up the stairs and into the drawing-room
-as quickly as he could. Madame Alpenny had staggered into the same a
-few moments earlier, and was sobbing violently on the sofa when Owain
-entered and closed the door. At the sound of the closing she looked
-up, and her face became purple with rage when she saw who had
-disturbed her.
-
-"You dare to come here, you--you--you?" she stormed, rising promptly
-and shaking her fist. "You who have ruined my hopes for Zara."
-
-"As those hopes were connected with a possible marriage between myself
-and your daughter," said Owain suavely, "I told you long ago that they
-could never be realized."
-
-"You told me. What do I care what you told me?" Madame Alpenny was in
-such a rage that she could scarcely get the words out. "And you smile,
-do you? Ah, yes, you can smile at my shame."
-
-"Don't be a fool," said Hench brusquely. "Your daughter has married an
-honourable man, whom you ought to be proud of as your son-in-law."
-
-"But I wanted you," sobbed Madame piteously, and suddenly passing from
-anger to pleading sorrow.
-
-"I know, and I pointed out to you that the thing was not possible.
-Zara loves Bracken, and I have arranged for money to be given to them
-so that they can make a fresh start in life."
-
-"Money; my money," moaned the old woman. "Your money! What do you mean
-by saying that?" Madame Alpenny dropped her handkerchief from her eyes
-and stood up with as great a dignity as her stout ungainly figure
-permitted. "Your money is mine, Monsieur. You owe it to me that you
-inherited the money."
-
-"Indeed!" Hench trapped her at once. "So you admit your guilt."
-
-"My guilt?"
-
-"Yes. It was you who murdered my uncle."
-
-"I?" Madame Alpenny stood stock still and stared hard. "It is a lie."
-
-"It is the truth. You learned from my father how matters stood twenty
-years ago, and our conversation in this very room revived your memory
-when I mentioned the place where my father had passed his youth. You
-went down to see my Uncle Madoc and arranged with him that I should be
-brought to meet him in Parley Wood by means of that advertisement
-which you showed me. And----"
-
-Madame Alpenny interrupted his flow of words by waving her fat hand
-for silence. "I admit all this, although I don't know how you found it
-out."
-
-"Never mind how I found it out. You are guilty."
-
-"What? You tell me a long story of what I have done and which I admit
-to be true. But you have said nothing which can prove that I murdered
-the man."
-
-"I was coming to that when you interrupted me," said Hench calmly.
-"You knew that I would go to the meeting, although I was then ignorant
-of my relationship to Squire Evans. Therefore you travelled down to
-Cookley on the first of July and----"
-
-"I never did; I never did," interrupted Madame Alpenny violently, but
-looking very anxious in spite of her denial.
-
-"You did, and when you arrived at Cookley you went to the Gipsy Stile
-before I did to stab my uncle."
-
-"Oh!" Madame Alpenny waved her arms grotesquely. "La! la! la! la! I
-murdered him, did I? And why should I murder him?"
-
-"So as to place me in possession of the money," said Hench solemnly.
-"So as to implicate me in the death, as you knew that I would arrive
-to find the dead body of the man you had killed. In this way you hoped
-to force me to marry your daughter and handle my fortune."
-
-Madame Alpenny sat down with a cool ironical air. "A very clever tale
-indeed, Monsieur. And who can prove its truth?"
-
-"Two people at least. You were followed when you first went to Cookley
-to join my uncle in laying the trap by means of the advertisement; you
-were followed on the occasion of your second visit, when you killed
-him."
-
-"Who followed me? Who saw me?"
-
-"Simon Jedd, who is a page here, and his brother Peter, who is in the
-service of Mrs. Perage at Cookley."
-
-"And how much have you paid them to tell this lie?"
-
-"I have paid them nothing. They are voluntary witnesses. Come, Madame,
-it is useless for you to deny the truth."
-
-"But I do deny it, see you!" she cried excitedly. "I deny it wholly
-and altogether. My first visit---ah, yes, I say that I did call on
-your uncle, and he did tell me about the advertisement, but----"
-
-"Why did he put in that advertisement?" interrupted Owain sharply.
-
-"He wished to see you before revealing himself as your uncle."
-
-"He could have appointed the meeting to take place in his house. Why
-was it arranged to come off in Parley Wood?"
-
-"There," said Madame Alpenny with candour, "I cannot help you. But
-that Monsieur Evans was strange--ah yes, he was dangerous. He told me
-that he would meet you at the Gipsy Stile, and took me there to show
-me the place. I went into the wood after I had left the big house."
-
-"I am aware of that," said Hench, remembering what Peter had said. "Go
-on."
-
-"You seem to know much," she sneered.
-
-"Enough to get you arrested and tried, condemned and hanged," said
-Hench in a significant tone. "Go on, I tell you."
-
-Madame Alpenny snarled, and her eyes glittered viciously. "Don't try
-to ride the tall horse over me, beast that you are. I am not afraid;
-no, I am not at all afraid. I do not know why your uncle arranged the
-meeting for the wood. All I had to do was to draw your attention to
-the advertisement, which I did. He wrote it out and put it in the
-journal. For all I know," went on the woman, more or less to herself,
-"this man wished to kill you, and chose a lonely place to do so."
-
-"Why should he wish to kill me?"
-
-"Because he hated your father and he hated you, Monsieur. He did not
-wish you to get the money. I did, because then you could marry Zara
-and I would be rich for the rest of my life."
-
-"That means I would have been under your thumb."
-
-"Ah, but no. Why should you be under my thumb? It was gratitude I
-looked for because I knew what would give you a large fortune. Your
-uncle would have given you enough to live on--perhaps two thousand a
-year."
-
-"Why so, when he hated me?"
-
-"Because I would have persuaded him. I told him about my daughter and
-how you loved her."
-
-"I did not," said Hench quickly and with a frown. "You did; you did.
-And Monsieur Evans, he said that if he found you a good young man and
-better than your wicked father, whom your uncle hated, that he would
-allow you a good income as his heir. For that reason did I agree to
-him putting in the advertisement and bringing you to meet him in that
-solitary spot. But it was in my mind to tell you all when I came
-back."
-
-"Why didn't you? It would have saved much trouble."
-
-"Because if I had not consented your uncle would never have
-acknowledged you as his heir or allowed you anything. Then you could
-not have married Zara and have given me money as I desired. Monsieur
-Evans was a healthy man, and I saw he would live for many years."
-
-"Therefore to get the money into your clutches at once you killed
-him."
-
-"I did not. Who dares to say that I did?"
-
-"Simon Jedd will dare for one, when I examine him, and Mr. Spruce has
-already accused you, for another."
-
-Madame Alpenny jumped up in a fury. "Mistare Spruce!" she shouted,
-with a violent gesture. "That wicked beast! That evil one! He accuse
-me?"
-
-"Of murdering my uncle? Yes. It is due to his information that I am
-here, as he can help me to prove your guilt."
-
-"My guilt!" Madame Alpenny snapped her fingers, with a crimson face.
-"Oh, that for my guilt! I am innocent."
-
-"Naturally you say so. But can you prove your innocence?"
-
-"I can." She said this with so much assurance that Hench was
-staggered, and began to wonder if he had made a mistake. "See you,
-that Mistare Spruce make me confess to him and then betrays me to you.
-Beast!"
-
-"You should not have trusted him," said Owain coldly. "Any one can see
-that he is a bad lot. I wonder that a woman of your penetration,
-Madame, behaved in so rash a manner."
-
-"Rash! Ah, but I did not behave rash. He forced me to speak. He knew
-so much that I had to tell him all."
-
-"About the murder?"
-
-"I am innocent of the murder," cried the woman, throwing back her head
-in a fierce way. "Hear what I speak, and then you shall see. Mistare
-Spruce was in this room when I told how I met your father. Is it not
-so?"
-
-"Yes," agreed Hench. "He heard the whole conversation."
-
-"I said," went on Madame Alpenny, "that there was a mystery about
-you, and now you know what the mystery was. Mistare Spruce, wanting
-to make money out of you and thinking that I knew something--which I
-did--watched me as a cat a mouse. I went to Cookley saying that I had
-to go away to find an engagement for my daughter. Is it not so?" she
-asked again.
-
-"Yes. You were away for a few days and so was Spruce."
-
-"He followed me down to Cookley."
-
-"Are you sure?" asked Hench, wondering why the two sharp Jedd boys had
-not also seen the Nut.
-
-"He confessed to me. He saw me enter the Grange; he saw me come out
-and go into the wood to meet Monsieur Evans at the Gipsy Stile. He
-stole after me and listened. You understand? He listened and learned
-about the property coming to you; about the advertisement; about my
-desire that you should marry my daughter Zara."
-
-"Well?" asked Owain, when she stopped for want of breath.
-
-"Well,"--she made a dramatic gesture,--"and what follows. He
-said nothing, but he knew the paper in which the advertisement
-appeared--Monsieur Evans mentioned it at the stile--and learned about
-the meeting. He still said nothing, but after the tale of the murder
-appears in the paper he comes to me."
-
-"Yes? To accuse you; to blackmail you?"
-
-"Ah, but no. He said nothing of me being guilty. He declared that you
-went down to Cookley to meet your uncle."
-
-"How did he know?"
-
-"I cannot say. It was, perhaps, what you call a pot-shot. But he says
-you are the guilty person and that he will denounce you unless I
-confess all. I tell him all, as I did not wish you to be arrested, and
-Mistare Spruce said that he would wait until you married Zara before
-speaking. Then he expected me to get you to give him two thousand a
-year for ever."
-
-Hench nodded. "Quite so. That is the price he asked for betraying you.
-And why did he alter his arrangements?"
-
-"He grew weary, and then that Bracken--the pig who stole my
-daughter--told him that he loved Zara and would marry her, as she
-loved him. And, mark you, Mistare Spruce still says nothing to me. Oh,
-no. He goes down to you and declares that I am guilty, as only in that
-way could he get the money. Do you think, Monsieur, that I am blind?
-Ah, but no. I see it all. You wish your name to be cleared, and you
-are helped by Mistare Spruce to accuse me. But it is a lie--a lie--a
-lie!" She rose to stamp furiously. "I am as innocent as you are
-guilty. You murdered Monsieur Evans to get the money."
-
-"Well," said Hench, with a shrug, "it's not much use my denying that I
-did, as you can only save yourself by believing that I struck the
-blow. You _had_ a strong case against me," ended Hench, with emphasis.
-"But now that Spruce has told his story, these Jedd boys who watched
-you on the night of the murder can prove you to be the assassin."
-
-"Ah," sneered Madame Alpenny contemptuously, "it is that silly,
-insolent, ugly page who accuses me?"
-
-"He has not done so yet, but he will when I see him, if what Spruce
-says is true; and true, Madame, I believe it to be."
-
-"Pfui!" She snapped her fingers again. "I did not go to Cookley on
-that night."
-
-"Can you prove that?"
-
-Madame Alpenny looked somewhat disconcerted; then a thought seemed to
-strike her and she burst into a violent rage. "Ah, but you dare to ask
-me that when you arranged, to save yourself, that I should go to
-Hampstead on the night."
-
-"Go to Hampstead? What are you talking about?"
-
-"Your wickedness!" vociferated the woman, beside herself with fury. "I
-received a letter on the morning of the first of July, asking me to
-meet the writer at the Ponds in Hampstead, as I would then be told how
-to get the money of your uncle at once. It was six o'clock I was to
-meet this person, and----"
-
-"Who was the person?"
-
-"There was no name signed to the letter, as you well know who wrote
-it," cried Madame Alpenny indignantly. "And it said also that if the
-person who wrote was not there I was to wait if it was two or three
-hours. I go"--she spoke dramatically, in the present tense--"I find no
-one. I wait and wait and wait; hour and hour and hour I wait. After
-ten o'clock--yes, and nearer eleven, if I remember--I come back
-disappointed to this place. I hear no more of the letter or of the
-person. But you see that I am innocent. Could I be in two places at
-once, I ask you, Monsieur?"
-
-"No. But have you any witness to prove that you were at Hampstead?"
-
-"No," said Madame Alpenny, in her turn, and disconcerted again as she
-was quite sharp enough to see the flaw in her story. "I cannot bring
-any one to prove I was at Hampstead. But I was----I was----I was."
-
-"Show me the letter."
-
-"I have not got it. I tore it up and so made a mistake."
-
-"You did," said Hench coolly, and not believing a word of her tale.
-"All the worse for you, Madame. Well"--he rose and took up his
-hat--"it only remains for me to go to the police and tell them
-everything."
-
-If Hench thought that this statement would frighten the woman, he was
-never more mistaken in his life. She snapped her fingers right under
-his nose. "Go! Go! Go!" she cried. "You have robbed me of my daughter
-by giving money to that fool to marry her; now you would rob me of my
-liberty. I defy you. I care not for the police, nor for you, nor for
-anything."
-
-"Very good." Hench walked towards the door. "If you had behaved in a
-different spirit I would have tried to arrange matters differently for
-your daughter's sake. As it is you must take the consequence. To clear
-my own character, you can understand----"
-
-"Oh, yes, I well understand, Monsieur. You murdered your uncle; you
-wrote that letter asking me to leave this house, so that I could be
-unable to explain where I was, and now you accuse me at the bidding of
-Mistare Spruce. I see it all, and I defy you; I spit upon you; I----"
-Here Hench, unable to stand any more of her savage anger, left the
-room, while she still raged.
-
-The young man descended the stairs with the determination to go as
-soon as possible to the police-office and tell his tale. If he did
-not, the chances were that Madame Alpenny would run away, although he
-admitted to himself that her speech was not that of a frightened
-person. But when he reached the bottom of the stairs and saw Mrs. Tesk
-at the door of her sanctum, he remembered that Simon Jedd had still to
-be examined, and walked up to the landlady.
-
-"Where is Bottles?" he asked abruptly.
-
-"Dismissed from my employment!" was the unexpected reply.
-
-"Dismissed! His brother, who is a page at Mrs. Perage's, did not tell
-me so."
-
-"Simon did not wish his brother to know," said Mrs. Tesk quietly, "as
-he was ashamed, very naturally."
-
-"Ashamed of what?"
-
-"Of being dismissed for theft."
-
-"Come, come, Mrs. Tesk, I can't believe that Bottles is a thief."
-
-"He is!" insisted the ex-school-mistress, colouring. "Sorry as I am to
-say so, Mr. Hench. Several small articles have been missing lately,
-and amongst them a valuable carving-knife with a horn handle, which I
-inherited from my grandmother. So you see----"
-
-"A horn-handled carving-knife!" echoed Hench with a start, and
-remembered clearly that such a weapon had been used to stab Madoc
-Evans. "Can you swear that the boy took it?"
-
-"I accused him of stealing the knife and several other small articles.
-He turned red, but he did not deny his guilt. Out of consideration for
-his hard-working mother, I did not prosecute him, but sent him away,
-lest he should contaminate Amelia and the other servants."
-
-"Where is he now?"
-
-"Staying with Mrs. Jedd, his mother. As you know, she is the wardrobe
-mistress at the Bijou Music-hall."
-
-"Thank you. I'll go and see Bottles. I can't believe that such an
-honest lad is guilty." And Hench turned on his heel.
-
-"Wait, sir. You do not blame me?"
-
-"Oh, no. If he did not deny your accusation, you acted rightly. But
-there must be some explanation of this. What it is I go to find out."
-
-Mrs. Tesk would have detained him to ask questions concerning Madame
-Alpenny's frame of mind, but Hench refused to stay. He was now
-beginning to wonder if the Hungarian lady really was guilty. It seemed
-as if Bottles was the culprit, that is if he had really stolen the
-carving-knife. With such a weapon the crime had certainly been
-committed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-REAPING THE WHIRLWIND
-
-
-The weather was uncommonly hot. For weeks the sun had been blazing in
-a cloudless sky, as it did in the tropics, and the earth was parched
-for want of rain. Everywhere it was seamed and cracked; everywhere
-the grass was brown and the trees were wilted, while the air was like
-the thrice-heated breath of a furnace. Animals and human beings went
-languidly about their business and longed all day for the cool night
-hours. Not that it was particularly cool even when the twilight came,
-but it was something to escape the pitiless blue sky and the burning
-sun. And on this particular evening a hot wind rose with unexpected
-suddenness to make matters worse. It raised clouds of dust, it rattled
-the dry foliage in Parley Wood, and brought no sense of relief to the
-worn and weary. As people are never really prepared for an unusually
-hot season in England, the Cookley villagers found this equatorial
-summer excessively trying and disagreeable.
-
-Spruce enjoyed the sultry weather personally, as he loved warmth with
-all the affection of a cat, and the worst heat never caused him any
-discomfort. After dining excellently at seven o'clock, he now sat by
-the open window of his sitting-room at the Bull Inn, enjoying a cup of
-fragrant coffee and as many cigarettes as he could get through. Of
-course, he was in accurate evening dress, as he always loved to be
-clothed appropriately according to the hour of the day. No one was
-more of a slave to social observances than the Nut, for he had the
-petty soul of a Beau Brummel. A small table stood before him, and he
-passed the time in trying new card-tricks, which might be useful some
-day, should he again become hard up. Not that Spruce always played
-false to make money, since he was a cheat by instinct. To get the
-better of any one by trickery was pleasant, as it involved danger,
-which was exciting, and gave him an agreeable feeling of superiority
-because of his wonderful dexterity. So he shuffled and cut and dealt;
-slipped cards up his sleeve and out again; diddled an imaginary
-opponent by sleight of hand, and in every way trained himself to
-cheating as though it were a fine art. Most card-lovers when alone
-play Patience. Spruce preferred to prepare himself for future
-campaigns.
-
-Every now and then he cast a disdainful look round the shabby old
-room, which was by no means to his taste. Undoubtedly the apartment
-was ancient and time-worn, containing too much furniture, and giving
-little gratification to the eye. But Time had mellowed the whole into
-pleasing, sober colours, and less fastidious people would have been
-delighted with the reposeful look of things. The atmosphere was quite
-monastic. But Spruce admired spacious chambers filled with gilded
-furniture and blazing with lights. He had the tastes of Louis XIV.,
-and Versailles was his idea of a dwelling house. When he was in
-possession of the two thousand a year, he intended to live in great
-luxury, but meanwhile contented himself with this dingy habitation.
-The window at which he was seated looked out on to a small garden
-surrounded by a low wall beyond which stretched fields right up to the
-grey churchyard. The sill of the window was so low that the Nut could
-easily have vaulted over it into the pleasant garden. But not having
-any love for Nature, he preferred to stay where he was playing cards,
-and dreaming of luxurious years, which were as he thought--truly
-coming to him.
-
-While Spruce was thus occupied, the landlady of the inn knocked at the
-door to announce that Mr. Hench and Mr. Vane wished to see him. The
-Nut at once ordered them to be admitted, never doubting but what they
-were coming to conclude the matter of his blackmail. He rose to greet
-them pleasantly, as if he was the most honest person in the world, and
-when the door was closed signed that they should be seated. He resumed
-his post near the window, and in that way obtained a good view of
-their faces, while his own was in the shadow. As it was only half-past
-eight o'clock, the twilight was yet luminous enough to see very
-plainly, and although Spruce offered to ring for lights, Hench
-signified that it was not necessary. Then the host offered cigarettes
-and drinks, both of which were curtly refused.
-
-"You are uncommonly rude," said the Nut, much nettled. "When you look
-up a man you might be civil."
-
-"That depends very much on the man," said Vane coolly. "Neither Hench
-nor myself were ever friends of yours, Spruce."
-
-"Oh, I don't want your friendship. After all, you are a dull couple."
-
-"But honest," said Hench with emphasis.
-
-"Honesty implies dullness. It takes a clever man to sin."
-
-"What a brilliant person you must be, then."
-
-"That's sarcastic, I suppose." Spruce was not at all offended, but
-accepted the observation as a tribute to his powers. "But I don't
-mind. On the whole, I am clever enough to get two thousand a year."
-
-"You haven't earned it yet," snapped Vane with a look of dislike.
-
-Spruce started. "Ah, play fair, whatever you do," he protested. "Hench
-promised me two thousand a year if I told him about that old woman.
-You heard him, Vane."
-
-"I heard Hench promise to give you that income if the crime was
-brought home to Madame Alpenny, and his character cleared," said Vane
-dryly. "There is a difference between telling a thing and proving a
-thing."
-
-"I suppose that means Madame Alpenny denies her guilt?" said the Nut,
-turning to the other man. "It is useless for her to do so, as Simon
-can prove it."
-
-"Oh, I have seen Simon and have brought him down with me," said Hench
-quietly. "In fact, he is waiting outside to come in when called."
-
-"Then call him at once," said Spruce briskly. "I want to get this
-business completed and see the last of you. I hate bores."
-
-"Oh, you'll see the last of us sooner than you expect," said Vane
-grimly.
-
-"Good! You will confer a favour on me when you do cut." Spruce looked
-round again at Owain. "So you saw Madame Alpenny?"
-
-"Yesterday, at The Home of the Muses. I went up to town especially to
-see her, as you know."
-
-"And she----"
-
-"She denies that she was in Cookley on the night when my uncle was
-killed. I was given to understand by her that an anonymous letter
-summoned her to the Hampstead Ponds to meet some one."
-
-"For what purpose?"
-
-"The letter said that the person who wrote it--there was no name,
-remember--declared that information would be given to enable her to
-get the money at once from my uncle."
-
-"What money?"
-
-"My property, I presume, for which she was scheming."
-
-"Well, and did Madame Alpenny see this person?"
-
-"No. She went to Hampstead about six and returned home after ten."
-
-"Quite time enough for her to travel to Cookley and back in order to
-commit the murder," said Spruce coolly. "Did you see the letter?"
-
-"No. She had torn it up."
-
-"Fudge!" cried the Nut inelegantly. "There never was such a letter.
-She invented that yarn so as to account for her presence elsewhere on
-the night of the crime. She did murder Squire Evans. You heard what
-Peter said?"
-
-"Oh, yes. And I have heard what Simon said. I am bound to say," said
-Hench with emphasis, "that his story is much the same."
-
-"Well then, with two witnesses, what more proof do you want of the
-woman's guilt?" demanded Spruce indignantly. "I fancy I have earned my
-money. What do you say, Vane?"
-
-"I say we had better have Simon in and hear his story," retorted the
-barrister dryly. "It is just as well to get everything made quite
-plain."
-
-"So I think," declared the Nut briskly. "Call him in, Hench."
-
-With great calmness the young man did so, not at all disturbed by the
-imperious tone in which the order was given. This was Spruce's little
-hour of triumph, so both the visitors allowed him to control the
-situation while he was able. Bottles made his appearance quickly, and
-cap in hand stood before the closed door, waiting to be interrogated.
-With his freckled face and red hair he looked anything but
-prepossessing. At least he did not in the Nut's eyes, who failed to
-observe the good-humoured expression and intelligent gaze of the lad,
-which were worth much more than mere animal comeliness.
-
-Spruce, in the attitude of an examining judge, surveyed the boy
-superciliously and immediately began to question him. "You are to tell
-these gentlemen what you told me," he commanded. "Now, on the first of
-July you followed Madame Alpenny to the Liverpool Street Station?"
-
-"Yes, sir. She caught the five o'clock train to this place."
-
-"And you followed?"
-
-"I did, sir. I wished to see what her game was."
-
-"One moment," interpolated Hench at this remark. "I may mention that I
-also came to Cookley on that night by that train. I had an idea that
-Madame Alpenny was at my elbow. In fact, I fancied that I caught a
-glimpse of her in the crowd at Liverpool Street Station. But I thought
-that I was mistaken."
-
-"You wasn't mistaken, sir," said Bottles calmly.
-
-"She was in the crowd, sure enough, and went down by that train. So
-did you, sir, for I saw you, and dodged."
-
-"Good!" said Spruce, rubbing his hands. "This unsolicited testimony of
-yours, Hench, emphasizes the fact of the woman's guilt. Go on, Simon."
-
-"The train got here at half-past six. I had already sent a telegram to
-my brother saying that Madame was coming, and telling him to meet the
-train and watch. He was on the Cookley platform, sure enough, but I
-hadn't any time to speak to him, having to keep my eye on Madame
-Alpenny. She didn't go through the village street, but across the
-fields to the churchyard and then by the path to Parley Wood. I
-followed, hiding as often as I could."
-
-"She didn't see you, then?" inquired Vane idly.
-
-"No, sir. I was much too fly. Peter, he came also at a distance, and
-hid in the churchyard, while I follered Madame Alpenny into the wood.
-She made for the Gipsy Stile."
-
-"How did you know where that was?" inquired Hench.
-
-"Why, sir," said the boy, greatly surprised, "of course I was there
-before when she and the old cove talked together about the
-advertisement."
-
-"Yes! Yes! I understand."
-
-"And, of course," said Spruce smoothly, "he was following Madame, who
-also knew the appointed meeting place. Well, Simon?"
-
-"She didn't stay at the stile, but hid in the wood. I hid near her and
-kept my eyes on her, as there was plenty of light."
-
-"Of course. It was not late and the Gipsy Stile is in a clearing,"
-explained the Nut, waving his hand. "Go on, boy."
-
-"After a long time--I couldn't say how long, as I hadn't a watch--the
-old cove came to the stile. Madame Alpenny came to meet him and talked
-to him for a time, and----"
-
-"Did she raise her veil?" asked Hench quickly.
-
-"No, sir. She spoke for a few minutes, and I could see as she'd
-something in her right hand. What it was I don't know. Then she
-suddenly lifted her arm and stabbed the old gentleman, who fell
-without a cry. As soon as she made sure he was dead, she cut. My
-brother saw her go through the churchyard."
-
-Vane nodded. "On her way to the station. I remember. Then you came out
-of the wood, to meet your brother near the church, and made him swear
-not to say a single word."
-
-"What else could I do, sir?" protested Bottles, distressed. "I might
-have got into a row with the police. That is why I said nothing."
-
-"Very wise of you," said Spruce approvingly, then turned to the
-others. "Well, gentlemen, I think the case is clear. Madame Alpenny
-murdered Squire Evans, and her guilt is proved by Simon here, who saw
-the crime committed, and by Peter, who saw her in the vicinity, even
-though she swears that she was at Hampstead. What more proof do you
-want?"
-
-"None," said Hench calmly. "Undoubtedly my uncle was murdered by--some
-one dressed as Madame Alpenny!"
-
-Spruce gave a gasp and rose as if moved by springs.
-
-"What do you mean by saying that, may I ask?" he demanded in a choked
-voice.
-
-"I mean that you murdered Madoc Evans and that Bottles here can prove
-it."
-
-"A lie! A wicked, false lie!" gasped the Nut, who became deadly pale.
-
-Vane chuckled; tense as the situation was, he chuckled. "You have been
-weaving a rope for your own neck all this time, Spruce," he remarked
-grimly.
-
-"Such an accusation is ridiculous!" said the other, with an attempt at
-dignity. "Is it likely that I would dress up as a woman to----"
-
-"You were always good in amateur theatricals," said Vane
-remorselessly. "And you would do anything to get the two thousand a
-year, which, by the way, you are not likely to enjoy."
-
-"My enemy speaks," said Spruce dramatically. "It's one thing to say a
-thing and another thing to prove a thing."
-
-"You are quite epigrammatic!" sneered the barrister.
-
-"Hush, Jim, and let the boy speak. He can prove that Spruce is
-guilty."
-
-"I just can," said Bottles promptly, and greatly enjoying his _rôle_ of
-detective. "For I've watched you, Mr. Spruce, for ever so long. I
-watched Madame Alpenny first, thinking she meant harm to Mr. Hench."
-
-"Why should she have meant harm?" asked Vane quickly, for he was not
-so well acquainted with the story as his friend.
-
-"Oh, she knew something about him, and said that he was a mystery. I
-heard her talking to Miss Zara, and then I heard something of the talk
-in the drawingroom, when she said as she knowed Mr. Hench's father.
-She asked me for an A.B.C., too, she did, and left it open on the
-table. I looked and saw on the page the timetable for Cookley. I
-didn't know she was going there, as other time-tables were on the
-page, but I thought it was queer seeing Cookley, considering that my
-brother was down here with Mrs. Perage."
-
-"It's all rubbish, of course," said Spruce, with a kind of hysterical
-cackle. "But what did you do then?"
-
-"I watched. When she went away I got my holiday and follered. She did
-go to Cookley, and so did you, Mr. Spruce."
-
-"It's a lie, you imp. I didn't!"
-
-"You did!" insisted the lad. "And it was your follering Madame Alpenny
-as made me watch you. I knowed as you wasn't up to any good. Me and
-Simon follered you both, and when Madame Alpenny went into the Grange
-you hung about in the midst of the trees waiting for her. Then you
-follered her when she went into the wood to see the old cove at that
-stile, and heard everything."
-
-"Admitting all this," said Spruce, appealing to the two men, "how does
-it connect me with the murder and this masquerade, which is so
-ridiculous?"
-
-"Oh, I'll connect you, right enough," said Bottles tartly. "Don't you
-make any mistake, sir. I ain't read detective stories for nothing.
-When you came back I watched you and I watched Madame. Then you made
-friends with the manager of the Bijou Music-hall,"
-
-"I was friends with him long before!" declared Spruce angrily, and
-hoping against hope that the boy would fail to substantiate his
-accusation. "Ah, but you became better friends," said Bottles
-persistently, "and got behind the scenes. Then you were agreeable to
-mother and asked to look over the theatrical properties. I didn't know
-what you was after until mother said as you'd asked her for a red wig
-to play in some theatricals. Then I guessed as you wanted to imitate
-Madame, who has hair as red as mine. I was sure when you brought
-mother some orange-spotted black cloth to make a dress and borrowed a
-bead mantle and a flopping hat off her."
-
-"I did not. You are a brazen liar!"
-
-"Liar yourself, sir! Mother can prove the truth of everything I say.
-You paid her well for the things, I don't deny. But mother wouldn't
-have taken a penny if she knowed what you was after. She never did
-know, as there was no mention of Madame Alpenny's dress, or of Madame,
-in the papers reporting the murder. Only when Mr. Hench come yesterday
-did I take him to mother and tell her all. She was horrified, for
-mother is a good sort, and told him what I am telling you. I knowed it
-all before."
-
-"The woman is a liar, as the boy is," said Spruce, licking his lips,
-which were very white and dry.
-
-"Shut up, Bottles!" said Hench, as the boy was about to make an angry
-response. "Let me say the rest. Bottles watched you leave the house
-dressed as Madame Alpenny, Spruce----"
-
-"It was Madame Alpenny!" insisted the Nut, fighting desperately.
-
-"It wasn't!" cried Simon, who could not be suppressed. "She'd gone to
-Hampstead later, after you went, and I let her out. No, I'm talking
-wrong. I saw her leave the house after four, and she said as she'd an
-appointment at Hampstead, and wouldn't be back till late. She come
-back very late, and so did I, because I was follering you."
-
-"The boy equivocates, you see," mumbled Spruce.
-
-"First one thing, then another."
-
-"I think his evidence is very clear, on the whole," declared Vane
-calmly.
-
-"So do I," said Hench. "And after Madame Alpenny went, you came out,
-Spruce, dressed in the same way. Bottles, knowing how you got the
-clothes from his mother, the wardrobe mistress at the Bijou, and
-knowing that Madame Alpenny had already left the house, guessed it was
-you in disguise. He snatched up his cap and followed, catching the
-five o'clock train, as you did. The rest you know. You are the guilty
-man."
-
-"He is!" said Bottles with relish. "And he gave back the things to
-mother saying as the amateur theatricals had been quite a success."
-
-"As he hoped to make two thousand a year, I presume they were!" said
-Vane in a cruel voice. "Well, Spruce, what have you to say before
-being arrested?"
-
-"Arrested!" Spruce gave a scream like a woman, and he dropped limply
-into his chair, white-faced and aghast. "What for?"
-
-"For the murder of Squire Evans."
-
-"No! No!" He thrust out his hands as if warding off a blow. "I did not
-kill him. You cannot bring the crime home to me."
-
-"The evidence you have heard brings the crime home to you only too
-positively," said Hench, with a certain pity in his voice, for the
-sudden collapse of the man was dreadful. "Peter can prove that you
-were mixed up in the matter, and Mrs. Jedd can prove that you borrowed
-the clothes, having the orange-spotted dress made after the style of
-that worn by Madame Alpenny. And Simon can prove the murder. He saw
-you kill the man."
-
-"No! No! No!"
-
-"May I die if I didn't!" swore Bottles, who was looking nervous, for
-the scene shook him considerably, since he was only a boy.
-
-"It was a mean, sordid murder, committed for the sake of gain," said
-Vane.
-
-"Don't kick the man when he is down, Jim," said Hench, pityingly.
-
-"Why not? He was insolent enough while he was up. And to kill an old
-man of whom he knew nothing! Owain, it was beastly. I hope I'm as
-decent a chap as any, but my gorge rises at the sight of this
-creature."
-
-What little pride remained in Spruce rose at these words. He sprang to
-his feet and shook his fist wildly in the air. "I shall get off!" he
-screamed. "I can prove my innocence!"
-
-"Do so to the detective," said Hench, wishing to end the scene.
-
-"A detective! a detective!" Spruce clutched his throat as if to tear
-away the rope he was doomed to. "You won't--you won't----" His voice
-failed.
-
-"I saw the authorities and procured a warrant before leaving London.
-Every moment I expect the detective in to execute it."
-
-"No! No! No!" Spruce flung himself on his knees. "Dear Hench, good
-Hench, you won't allow me to be hanged? I don't want the money; I'll
-give it up. Let me get away; let me hide."
-
-"Did you murder my uncle?"
-
-"Yes! Yes!" Spruce's cheeks were streaming with tears and his teeth
-were chattering. "It's all true. I acknowledge that I killed him to
-get the money. But I am sorry--really and truly I am sorry. Don't give
-me up--don't----"
-
-"Get up," cried Vane in disgust, "and take your gruel like a man."
-
-"Bottles, see if the policeman is there," ordered Hench, and Bottles,
-glad to escape from the scene, fled willingly.
-
-"No!" Spruce rose from grovelling on the ground, and from a tearful
-martyr was suddenly changed into a wild beast. His lips curled,
-showing his teeth. He drew back towards the window, and his eyes
-flashed fire. If he had had a weapon in his hand there is no doubt he
-would have killed both the men. "You shan't catch me, hounds that you
-are. I shall escape; I shall----"
-
-"Look out, Owain, he's trying for the window!"
-
-But Vane's warning came too late. With a surprising spring, the
-miserable little creature flung himself through the window into the
-garden. Before the two men could recover from their surprise he was
-over the low garden wall and racing for the churchyard. Terror winged
-his feet, and he flew onward like an arrow from the bow. Hench leaped
-after him immediately, and followed close behind him, while Vane
-rushed out to see if the police had arrived with the warrant. Two men
-were there in plain clothes, with a village constable, and in a few
-hurried words the barrister related how the man wanted had escaped.
-With the rapidity of lightning the news spread, and in a wonderfully
-short space of time half the village, headed by the police, Vane and
-Bottles, were making for the churchyard. Far ahead they could see
-Hench running swiftly through the twilight, but of the fugitive they
-could see no trace.
-
-It was no wonder that the pursuers could not gain a glimpse of their
-wretched quarry, for Spruce flew on with amazing speed. Behind him
-were the dogs of justice, and he knew that once they pulled him down
-all that remained for him to do was to face the death he had earned by
-his cowardly crime. But he was not a man, only a creeping crawling
-thing saturated with evil, a bird of prey, a snarling tiger--and he
-did not wish to receive the reward of his wickedness. Instinctively he
-made for the wood wherein his crime had been committed. Once in its
-dark recesses he hoped to remain hidden until he could escape over
-seas. Behind him he caught sight of Hench, and longed to have a knife
-or revolver to shoot or stab the man he hated. Gasping, and streaming
-with perspiration, he plunged into the wood, broke from the path which
-led to the Gipsy Stile, and struggled through the dry, rustling
-undergrowth. They would never catch him, he swore, and even as he did
-the miserable creature heard the beat of Owain's feet in pursuit.
-
-A thought struck him. The wood was dry, and would burn like tinder.
-Hench, being in the wood and unprepared, would be probably burnt to
-death. Without thinking of the danger to himself in his mad fury--only
-resolved to make an end to Owain and to place a blazing screen between
-himself and his pursuers---Spruce took out a silver box and struck a
-match. Then another, and another, until all round him, in the grass
-and the moss and the undergrowth, were stars of fire. The stars grew
-into blazing suns, as the flames caught the tall, dry trees and roared
-upward. With inconceivable rapidity the fire spread, and now it was
-time for Spruce to fly from the death he had created. As he plunged
-onward he came suddenly into the open, and fell, catching his foot in
-a fallen tree-trunk. He tried to rise and could not, as his ankle was
-twisted. So he lay shrieking on the verge of a fiery furnace, unable
-to move, and condemned by his own evil act to a far more terrible
-death than that which he would have suffered at the hands of the law.
-Shouting for help, and only anxious now to escape the immediate doom,
-Spruce heard the cries of the villagers, when they saw the tall
-columns of flame rising from the wood. Hench was lunging here and
-there amidst the undergrowth seeking for Spruce, and continued to do
-so until a barrier of flame cut him off from further search. Before
-that terrible heat he was forced to retreat, and made for the pathway
-so as to get back into the open. Vane's voice, high, clamorous and
-clear, could be heard shouting for him, and in the roar of the flames
-Hench heard the shrieking of the wretched creature who had lighted the
-funeral pyre of himself. He made for the direction whence the cries
-came, as they appeared to be near at hand. Fighting the flames, he
-stumbled into the open space round the Gipsy Stile and saw Spruce
-writhing on the edge of the clearing under a canopy of fire. It blazed
-overhead; it ran along the moss and grass, licking up everything with
-greedy avidity; and all round the wood was like a seven-times heated
-furnace.
-
-"Save me; save me!" yelled Spruce, seeing his enemy.
-
-Wicked as the creature was, Owain did his best. He ran towards the
-spot where Spruce lay in agony, and tried to reach him. But the flames
-came out with a gust of the hot dry wind, which now was blowing
-furiously, and the young man fell back, shielding his face with his
-arms. When he removed them he heard a wild cry of agony, and saw a
-tall bulky tree falling slowly down. Spruce was beneath it, and saw
-its gradual descent. He cried to Hench for help; he cried to God for
-pardon; but the tree dropped inch by inch in the midst of that hell
-until it suddenly crashed down on the doomed man. Then there was
-silence, save for the roar of the flames rejoicing over their prey.
-
-Hench turned and fled, skirting the flaming trees and getting round to
-where the police and villagers were by slipping along the park wall.
-Blackened and burnt, dizzy and faint, he staggered into the open
-space, where all watched the great bonfire. Vane rushed forward and
-caught him in his arms.
-
-"Are you hurt--are you hurt?"
-
-"No. I'm all right. But Spruce----!" He gasped at the memory of the
-horror.
-
-"My man," said the police officer. "What of him?"
-
-"Dead!" breathed Hench faintly, and then fell unconscious to the
-ground, while Parley Wood, with a noise like the roaring of many
-waters, vanished for ever in flames and smoke.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-THE SUNSHINE OF LIFE
-
-
-The discovery that Spruce was the murderer of Squire Evans, the
-burning of Parley Wood, and the consequent death of the criminal, were
-wholly unexpected events. They descended on the Cookley villagers like
-so many bolts from the blue, and naturally caused a very great
-commotion. So far as the woodland was concerned, nothing remained but
-a vast area of grey ashes, wherein multitudinous smouldering stumps
-pricked up here and there. Luckily the trees of the Grange park were
-untouched, as the fire had not reached across the considerable space
-which, like a wide roadway, divided Hench's property from the
-miniature forest. Also, the violent wind blowing from the south had
-swept the flames northward, long-side the brick wall girdling the
-demesne. But considerable damage had been wrought, as Parley Wood was
-dear to many artists, and they, as well as the villagers, lamented the
-blotting out of this beauty-spot. But, as some people said, perhaps it
-was just as well, since the murder of Madoc Evans had given the wood
-an evil reputation. These philosophical individuals, however, were in
-the minority.
-
-Under the huge tree-trunk which had crushed him to death the body of
-Cuthbert Spruce was found, burnt and disfigured almost beyond
-recognition. But there was not the least difficulty in identifying the
-remains of the wretched man, and he was duly buried in Cookley
-churchyard. A large number of morbid sight-seers were attracted to the
-ceremony, and there was much talk about the extraordinary events which
-had led to his guilt being proved. Hench, naturally enough, was
-anxious that the whole miserable story should be kept from the public,
-but this was not possible. The Inspector who had been charged with the
-arrest of Spruce advised the young man--for the clearing of his own
-character--to allow all facts to become known. Therefore the
-newspapers were filled with true accounts of all that had happened in
-connection with the affair, from the time of his early conversation
-with Madame Alpenny down to the moment when he staggered out of Parley
-Wood to fall unconscious at Vane's feet. Owain was considerably shaken
-by what he had undergone, both physically and mentally, so it was
-natural that he should take some days to recover. He was burnt and
-bruised; very much horrified by the appalling death of his old
-schoolfellow; and greatly disturbed by the enforced publicity of the
-whole dreadful business. It was fortunate that Mrs. Perage was at hand
-to look after him, as she proved to be a very dragon to guard the
-broken man from the curiosity of the public. Vane brought Hench to the
-old lady's house, and there he remained in bed for quite a week to be
-nursed back to health and strength by Gwen. Save the Inspector, who
-advised him to make the facts of the case known to the world, he saw
-no one but the old lady and the young one. Not even Jim Vane was
-permitted to interview him.
-
-The result of this judicious treatment on the part of Mrs. Perage was
-obvious, for while the excitement was going on Hench remained secluded
-in his sick-room, and was not worried with questions. By the time he
-was able to get up, healed of his hurts and much calmer in mind, the
-worst was over. Spruce lay in the churchyard, the newspapers had said
-all they could say about the matter, and the nine days' wonder of the
-whole awful business had come to an end. It only remained for Owain to
-fulfil his promise to the Brackens; to reward the Jedd boys for the
-clever way in which they had saved him; to take formal possession of
-his property, and to marry his cousin. Then he could begin a new life,
-and all the old troubles would be forgotten. Of course it required
-decision and strength to deal with such matters, but, thanks to Gwen's
-careful nursing, Owain was quite able to attend to the business. With
-his descent into the drawing-room, wholly cured at the end of nine
-days, the 'nine days' wonder came to a termination.
-
-"Now we must sweep up the fragments," said Hench, who was rapidly
-recovering his strength, although he still looked somewhat pale.
-
-"Quite so," agreed Mrs. Perage, who looked more grim and masculine
-than ever. "I have asked the fragments to come here to-day for the
-sweeping."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"My meaning is plain enough, young man!" she replied vigorously. "I
-want all this disagreeable business concluded, so that it will not be
-necessary to re-open it again. Then, as soon as possible, you must
-arrange about getting the property, marry Gwen, and go for a year's
-tour in Europe, or in the States, if you like. I don't care where you
-go, so long as you get away."
-
-"I don't know if Owain is strong enough to travel yet," said Gwen, who
-was sitting beside the sofa holding her lover's hand.
-
-"Fudge!" retorted Mrs. Perage, standing on the hearthrug in quite a
-manly attitude, with her hands behind her back. "Don't make a
-mollycoddle of the fellow, you silly girl. While he remains here,
-everything will remind him of the horrors which have taken place. Let
-him travel to forget, and then he can return to take up his work as
-the Squire of Cookley. You must go with him, as he is sure to be
-miserable without you."
-
-"That is very certain!" said Hench, smiling.
-
-"Well, then," cried Mrs. Perage argumentatively, "so young a girl
-can't go with you as a chaperon, can she? Marry her in a couple of
-weeks and then no one can say a word, even if you take her to the
-North Pole."
-
-"But my father has not been dead very long," murmured Gwen nervously.
-
-"My dear, don't be a fool. God forbid that I should say a word against
-your father, who has paid for his foolishness. But you owe him nothing
-and you never got on with him. Then why sacrifice yourself to a
-feeling which does not exist? Pfui!" Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose.
-"Can't you understand that I am anxious to see the backs of you two
-nuisances? I've had quite enough bother with you as it is."
-
-Hench laughed outright, knowing that Mrs. Perage looked upon himself
-and Gwen as her own children. "You wouldn't be happy without us," he
-said gaily. "You would have no one to scold."
-
-"Oh, there's always Jim Vane, at a pinch," said Mrs. Perage
-good-humouredly. "But I daresay I shall miss you two brats. Babies,
-that's what you are. As to scolding, there will be plenty of that when
-you return. You are the Lord of the Manor, but I have much property in
-Cookley also, so there will be ample for us to fight about. I want my
-own way and so do you. Hum!" Mrs. Perage rubbed her hands. "There are
-lively times ahead."
-
-Both the young people looked at the tall, grim old Amazon with great
-affection, as they recognized how much they owed her. Gwen
-particularly loved her, as she had brought common-sense to bear on the
-estrangement after the fatal interview in the churchyard with Madame
-Alpenny. But that Mrs. Perage had acted so vigorously, Gwen saw
-plainly enough that she and Owain might never have entirely understood
-one another. Now they did, especially since the nine days' nursing had
-drawn them together more rapidly. Never did a couple arrange to enter
-into the bonds of matrimony with such an excellent knowledge of each
-other's character. Mrs. Perage guessed what was passing in the girl's
-mind and nodded approvingly.
-
-"Trouble brings people together very quickly," she said briskly. "Time
-is nothing and opportunity is everything. Owain has saved your life;
-carefully nursed him back to health, so you comprehend one another a
-thousand times better than if you had dawdled through a ten years'
-courtship. You are both decent, also, my dears; quite different to
-your fathers. It's the mothers' blood that tells, I expect. What do
-you say, Hench?"
-
-"Oh, don't call him Hench," said Gwen, with a shudder. "Let us leave
-that false name behind with all the other trouble."
-
-"Very good. What do you say, Evans?"
-
-"I agree with you, Mrs. Perage. Gwen and I will get on capitally."
-
-"You had better!" she threatened. "If I catch you beating her it's me
-you'll have to reckon with. Ha!" She glanced out of the window.
-"Here's Jim, the first of the fragments come to be swept into the
-dustbin of oblivion."
-
-"I hope not," said Owain, laughing. "I wish Jim to remain my very good
-friend and be my best man."
-
-"Of course he will be. And I will be the bridesmaid if Gwen is
-sensible enough to ask me."
-
-"You shall do whatever you like at the wedding," said Gwen, also
-laughing, for she felt uncommonly happy.
-
-"And afterwards also, my dear. I am fond of my own way; it's a great
-fault of mine. Jim,"--Vane entered as she spoke,--"here you are at
-last. There! I'm not fond of kisses. Go and talk to Evans yonder, and
-ask him if you can kiss Gwen."
-
-"Oh!" said Gwen in alarm, whereat every one laughed.
-
-"Don't be frightened, Miss Evans," said Vane, with a smile on his lean
-face. "I am quite sure that Owain yonder is now strong enough to punch
-my head if I take Aunt Emma's advice. Well, old chap, how goes it? You
-look much better and are quite a different man."
-
-"I am, Jim. Hench has vanished for ever. Only Owain Evans remains."
-
-"Well, I hope he'll be as good a chap as Hench was."
-
-"Much better!" said Gwen resentfully. "I've improved him. He is no
-longer to be a wanderer, but intends to settle down with me as the
-Squire of the parish."
-
-"After a year's travelling!" said Mrs. Perage sharply, and detailed
-her scheme to her nephew, who quite approved.
-
-"Better be off with the old life, Owain, before you take on with the
-new," he said judicially. "Travel will heal all the old soreness, and
-will place a barrier between the disagreeable past and the pleasant
-future. Aunt Emma is a sensible woman."
-
-"I always am!" said Aunt Emma. "Now, Jim, say what you have to say
-about this trouble, and let us bury the same for ever."
-
-"There isn't much to say," said Vane carelessly. "The newspapers have
-dropped the matter, and everybody is forgetting the sensation. You
-won't be bothered with reporters or photographers when you come
-abroad, Owain. All the same, it is just as well that you are going
-away."
-
-"What does the Inspector say about Bottles' share in the business?"
-
-"He wasn't very pleased, and gave both Bottles and his brother a good
-talking to for having held their tongues for so long."
-
-"I wonder why they did," murmured Mrs. Perage, rubbing her nose.
-
-"My dear aunt, it was a game to both of them. Bottles having read
-detective tales was burning to be a Sexton Blake or a Sherlock Holmes.
-Only when he saw that miserable creature brought to book did the boy
-realize that his comedy had turned into real tragedy. I've brought him
-with me as you desired." Vane went to the door and beckoned to the
-lad, who entered bashfully, to look with adoring eyes on his hero.
-Hench called to him to come forward and shook him heartily by the
-hand, thanking him for his great services.
-
-"Oh, it ain't nothing, sir," said Bottles, with a glowing face as
-crimson as his hair. "I'd do anything for you, as you've always been
-kind to me. And it's been a rattling good game, anyhow."
-
-"A sadly serious game, Bottles, I fear."
-
-"Yes, sir." The lad turned pale, shivered, and swallowed something
-with an effort, as he recalled the scene at the Bull Inn. "I didn't
-think it was so bad till I saw that little cove's face. It wasn't me
-who got him burnt, was it, sir?" he asked entreatingly.
-
-"No! No! my boy. How he came to set the wood on fire, I don't know.
-Perhaps he struck a match to see his way in the darkness. But we will
-never know exactly what happened. You are not in any way to blame.
-What made you suspect him?"
-
-"I didn't suspect him at first, sir. It was Madame I thought was the
-wrong 'un, as I told you. But when I saw that little cove sneaking
-after her down to Cookley I watched him as well as her. Then I found
-out he was talking a lot to mother and learned about the dress and the
-wig. After that, it wasn't hard to twig his game. But I never thought
-as he'd murder the old cove," said Bottles, shivering. "I turned sick
-in the wood when I saw that knife go in."
-
-"Oh, by the way, Bottles, Mrs. Tesk told me that she dismissed you for
-stealing the knife."
-
-"Yes, she did, sir. She said as I'd taken other things. But it was
-Amelia, I was engaged to, as stole the things, and I couldn't give her
-away. But I ain't going to make her my wife, sir," said Bottles
-seriously. "She ain't what she should be in the way of honesty."
-
-"Did she steal the knife also?"
-
-"No, I think Mr. Spruce stole that; took it off the table one day, and
-slipped it up his sleeve. He killed the old cove with it, as you know,
-and left it in the body. I knowed it was Mrs. Tesk's carving-knife all
-along."
-
-"Does Mrs. Tesk know all this now?" asked Owain quickly. "Yes, sir.
-Mother went and told her, though I didn't wish to split on Amelia,
-who's only a gel after all. Mrs. Tesk said as she was sorry and asked
-me to go back, which I have done, sir."
-
-"Well, then, Bottles, I am going to take you away from there and send
-you to school. Also I intend to settle a small income on your mother
-so that she need not work any more at the Bijou Music-hall. Finally, I
-will arrange with my lawyers to invest a sum of money for you so that
-you may be able to start life with something in hand. What do you wish
-to be?"
-
-"I think if Bottles is wise he will be a detective," suggested Vane.
-
-Bottles turned a shining face towards the speaker. "That's just what I
-want to be, sir. I can do it, I'm sure."
-
-"I think so also," remarked Mrs. Perage gruffly. "But I hope Peter
-doesn't want to be one also. I can't have a juvenile Vidocq in my
-house."
-
-"Oh, Peter ain't got no ambitions, mum," said Bottles contemptuously.
-"He's just as pleased as Punch to stay on with you and rise to be a
-butler and a footman."
-
-"I'll look after Peter," said Mrs. Perage, nodding briskly. "He has
-also had a share in this business which has cleared up the mystery,
-and he deserves to be rewarded. But see here," she added sharply, "why
-didn't you tell the police immediately about the murder?"
-
-"Because I wanted to see what that little cove would do, mum. I
-guessed from his disguise that he intended to make out that Madame
-Alpenny had murdered the old cove. But I didn't think he'd accuse Mr.
-Hench there."
-
-"Mr. Evans, Simon," corrected Gwen quickly. "That is his real name."
-
-"I think I shall always be Hench to Bottles," said Owain, laughing.
-"He can call me what he likes as he has done so much for me. But you
-would have saved a lot of trouble, Bottles, if you had told the police
-at once."
-
-"So the Inspector said, sir," grinned the boy. "He gave me what-for,
-he did. But I wanted to see the game out, sir."
-
-Owain saw that Bottles would persist in regarding the whole dreadful
-business as a game, in spite of its terrible termination, so he left
-the subject alone. "But you might have guessed, my detective friend,
-that Spruce would accuse me, as he wanted to get my money. He
-committed the murder to trap me."
-
-"I thought he'd do that through Madame Alpenny when you married Miss
-Zara," was the boy's reply, promptly given. "As you'd never have liked
-your mother-in-law to be hanged. You didn't mind my giving the address
-I got from Peter to Madame Alpenny and the little cove, did you, sir?"
-
-"I did when I was in the dark. But now I see that you did so
-deliberately."
-
-"It was part of the game," persisted Bottles coolly. "And as the
-little cove had gone so far, I knew he'd go further. If I hadn't told
-him and Madame of your address they might have asked the police where
-you were."
-
-"That suggestion doesn't do credit to your detective acumen, Bottles.
-Had either of the two brought the police into the matter, they would
-not have been able to get the expected money. Spruce was playing the
-blackmail game."
-
-"I see, sir." Bottles rubbed his red head. "Well, I've got something
-to learn yet, I expect, as a 'tec, and I ain't above learning. But
-thank you for helping me, sir, and for helping mother. She's a good
-one, is mother, and gave me such a talking for not having spoke out
-before."
-
-"Between the Inspector and your mother, I daresay you have had a bad
-time, Bottles," said Vane idly.
-
-"You bet I have, sir. But it don't matter. I've enjoyed myself, I
-have, in pulling the strings."
-
-"It's more than I have done," said Owain languidly. "Good-bye,
-Bottles. Go home and tell your mother of my intentions. Next week I'll
-fulfill my promise, as soon as I can see my solicitors and settle
-matters."
-
-"And, Simon," said Mrs. Perage graciously, "you can go to the kitchen
-and have your dinner. Here's a pound. Take Peter with you to town and
-to see your mother."
-
-"Thank you, mum; thank you, sir; thank everybody." And Bottles
-disappeared with a happy grin, which made every one smile.
-
-"Here comes Madame Alpenny and the Brackens," announced Vane, who
-acted as a master of the ceremonies.
-
-"I don't like that old woman to come under my roof," said Mrs. Perage,
-with a frown. "She's a plotter and a schemer. But----"
-
-"Oh, she's only one of the fragments which have to be swept up," said
-Gwen in a lively tone. "I don't like her either; but I am so much
-obliged to Zara that I am quite willing Owain should help the old
-lady."
-
-"Old lady, indeed," grumbled Mrs. Perage. "Old scamp, I call her. You
-can deal with her yourselves. I'm going." And as the newcomers entered
-the room, she went out swiftly through the conservatory.
-
-Zara looked pale, her husband confused, and both advanced with rather
-a shame-stricken air. Madame Alpenny, on the contrary, rushed forward
-and took Owain's hand with effusion, beaming all over her harsh swart
-face. Considering how she had behaved when they last met, the young
-man was astonished by this friendly greeting. He scarcely knew what to
-say; but it appeared there was no need for him to say anything. Madame
-Alpenny did all the talking, so it was just as well that Mrs. Perage
-had left the room. Had that Amazonian dame remained, there assuredly
-would have been trouble.
-
-"Ah, but I am delighted to see you looking so magnificent after your
-illness, dear Monsieur!" cried Madame, clasping Owain's hand fondly
-within her own. "You terrified me greatly, as I thought you would
-perish. Ah, but it is good of the Heavens to preserve you to us."
-
-The young man withdrew his hand as soon as he recovered from his
-astonishment, and spoke very coldly. "You have changed your mind since
-our last meeting!"
-
-Madame Alpenny threw up her fat hands. "Ah, but what would you, my
-dear sir? I was angered at losing so beautiful a son-in-law. I said
-much that I have wept for saying. And to you also, in the churchyard,
-Mademoiselle," she added, turning to Gwen, who was frigid, "I spoke
-most wickedly. Ach! my dear young lady, you must forgive me for my
-open nature. We are all now friends here, I hope."
-
-She beamed all round the room, but there were no answering smiles.
-Zara laid her hand on her mother's arm and drew her back. "I must ask
-your pardon, Mr. Hench, for all the trouble which has been brought to
-you," she said seriously.
-
-"It was not your fault, Mrs. Bracken, nor that of your husband," said
-Owain very quickly. "I have nothing but friendship and admiration for
-you both, seeing the way in which you made the crooked straight
-between us," and he glanced at Gwen fondly.
-
-"Ah, what a good heart!" murmured the Hungarian lady, with her
-handkerchief to her eyes. "A heart of gold!"
-
-"Shut up!" growled Bracken to his mother-in-law, and twitched the old
-head mantle which she still wore over the famous orange-spotted dress.
-
-"I will not shut up, you rude man!" cried Madame Alpenny volubly. "Ah,
-to think of what I have suffered at the hands of Mistare Spruce, now
-happily deceased. He would have had me hanged!"
-
-"Did he accuse you of committing the murder?" asked Vane sharply.
-
-"But no. He was all sweetness and smiles. Yet, if Monsieur Hench had
-married Zara, then this Mistare Spruce would have accused me. He laid
-his plans to make me guilty. It was he, I find, who wrote the letter
-asking me to go to Hampstead. He wished me to be unable to prove where
-I was. If he had lived I should have put him in gaol," ended Madame,
-with a frown.
-
-"You nearly put Mr. Evans in gaol!" said Gwen icily.
-
-"Mistare Evans. Ah, yes--the real name of Monsieur Hench. No, I would
-not have put him in gaol, Mademoiselle. My talk was what you call--eh,
-yes--bluff. I might have been his beloved mother had I accepted his
-father's hand. Never would I have harmed him."
-
-"Oh, I think you would when you had me in your power, Madame," said
-Owain dryly. "Remember what you talked about in the churchyard."
-
-"Bluff--all bluff, Monsieur."
-
-"It would have been better had you acted fairly with me and told the
-truth at our first conversation. Then I should have known that I was
-Madoc Evans' heir and all this trouble would have been avoided. You
-also would have been the richer for such honesty, Madame."
-
-"Ah, but you will not turn from me now," said Madame in a wheedling
-tone. "See, Monsieur Hench, it is through me you have money and marry
-this sweet angel. I am poor; I am deserving. So give me----"
-
-"Mr. Hench will give you nothing, mother," said Zara in a cold tone of
-displeasure. "I came down here to say good-bye to him and to take you
-out of his life. Mr. Hench,"--she faced round to Owain,--"my husband
-and I are going to America, where I have obtained a good engagement.
-My mother goes back to Hungary, and I will send her money to support
-her. Therefore it will not be necessary for you to give me that
-thousand pounds."
-
-"I wish to give it to you as a mark of my esteem," insisted Hench, and
-Gwen endorsed this speech.
-
-"I do not wish my wife to take it," said Bracken, advancing to hold
-out his hand. "Good-bye, Mr. Evans, we have been here long enough. We
-shall always remember your kindness with gratitude."
-
-Owain shook the extended hand. "But I wish you would take the money,
-Bracken."
-
-"Ah, but do!" cried Madame Alpenny, feverishly greedy. "I can double
-it at cards. I am so lucky, I want to----"
-
-"Come away, mother," interrupted Zara, dragging her towards the door.
-"Mr. Hench will not give you a single penny!"
-
-"Ingrate!" shouted Madame, turning at the door, out of which she was
-going, held firmly by Zara and Bracken. "After all I have done. Ach!
-the wickedness of the evil one. I gave him thousands, and he--he, the
-beast--the-----" Here she was dragged into the hall by her scandalized
-daughter, and those in the drawing-room heard her voice loudly
-lamenting all the way down the avenue. In this manner was the
-Hungarian lady rewarded for her scheming. She did not benefit in the
-least.
-
-"I'm glad she's gone," said Gwen, drawing a deep breath. "I don't like
-her."
-
-"Nor do I," said Owain, pulling the girl down beside him. "She nearly
-got me into the dock. But I am bound to say that she ran an equal risk
-from poor Spruce."
-
-"Poor Spruce, indeed!" cried Vane, turning from the window where he
-was watching the protesting Madame Alpenny being dragged down the
-avenue. "Why say good of a man who did nothing but evil?"
-
-"Don't be hard on him, Jim. After all, he has paid the penalty of his
-crime by suffering a terrible death."
-
-"You're a good chap, Owain, so I won't say another word. But never
-mention his name to me again if you I can help."
-
-"We'll never mention anything about the past if we can help," said
-Gwen, as Owain slipped his arm round her. "Now all these people have
-gone let us try and forget them."
-
-"Oh, you'll forget right enough," said Vane, smiling. "When you marry
-Owain you will think of nothing but him."
-
-"He saved my life!" cried the future Mrs. Evans defiantly.
-
-"In return you have saved mine," murmured Owain. "Had you not nursed
-me back to life and love, where should I have been now? But the clouds
-have disappeared, my dear, and now the sunshine of life is ours. In
-three weeks we will get married quietly and go abroad for a year.
-Afterwards we can return to take up our position here."
-
-"And you will go back to your old home, Miss Evans," said Vane,
-laughing. "Not much change about that."
-
-"A great deal of change!" cried Gwen hotly. "While I lived there with
-my poor father, the Grange was a house of hate; now it will be a
-mansion of love."
-
-"Quite so; you will be so happy that you won't want to see any one."
-
-"Always you, Jim," said Owain, holding out his hand, which the
-barrister took.
-
-"And me also, I hope," said Mrs. Perage, entering unexpectedly from
-the conservatory. "Hum! A touching tableau. The sweetheart, the angel
-of the sweetheart, and the true-hearted friend. Fudge!"
-
-"You don't mean that word!" cried Gwen.
-
-"Perhaps I don't." Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose. "For to tell you the
-truth, I don't know what the word means. I got it out of 'The Vicar of
-Wakefield,' and it seemed useful. I should like to have used it to
-that old woman who is screaming viciously all the way down the avenue.
-Really, young man, you have some very queer friends."
-
-"Well, I lived in Queer Street for a long time, you know!" said Owain,
-smiling.
-
-"You'll never live there again," whispered Gwen.
-
-"Lucky Owain!" mocked Vane. "No more hunger and thirst, hard beds and
-unpaid bills. You will henceforth lie in the lap of luxury."
-
-"Hum!" said Mrs. Perage gruffly. "There is a good luncheon: a much
-better one than you ever tasted in Queer Street, I'll be bound.
-There's the gong."
-
-Owain rose quickly and took Gwen's arm. "And here begins the new
-life!" he said.
-
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
---------------------------------
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- <title>
- In Queer Street
- </title>
- <meta name="Author" content="Fergus Hume" />
- <meta name="Publisher" content="F. V. White &amp; Co., Ltd." />
- <meta name="Date" content="1913" />
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-<pre xml:space="preserve">
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of In Queer Street, by Fergus Hume
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: In Queer Street
-
-Author: Fergus Hume
-
-Release Date: November 30, 2017 [EBook #56087]
-First Updated: February 12, 2018
-Last Updated: March 4, 2018
-
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN QUEER STREET ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charles Bowen from page scans provided by the
-Haithi Trust Org. --images digitized by Google (original
-from University of Wisconsin)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <p class="hang1">
- Transcriber's Notes:<br /> 1. Page scan source: Haithi Trust Org. images
- digitized by Google<br /> (original from University of Wisconsin)
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h3>
- IN QUEER STREET
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h5>
- BY
- </h5>
- <h4>
- FERGUS HUME
- </h4>
- <h5>
- AUTHOR OF<br /> &quot;THE MYSTERY OF A HANSOM CAB,&quot; &quot;THE PINK
- SHOP,&quot;<br /> &quot;ACROSS THE FOOTLIGHTS,&quot; &quot;SEEN IN THE
- SHADOW,&quot;<br /> ETC., ETC.
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h3>
- <span style="font-size:smaller">LONDON</span><br /> F. V. WHITE &amp; CO.,
- LTD.<br /> <span style="font-size:smaller">17, BUCKINGHAM STREET, STRAND,
- W.C.<br /> 1913</span>
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <table cellpadding="10" style="width:90%; margin-left:5%; font-weight:bold">
- <colgroup>
- <col style="width:20%; vertical-align:top; text-align:right" />
- <col style="width:80%; vertical-align:top; text-align:left" />
- </colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2">
- <h3>
- CONTENTS
- </h3>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- CHAPTER
- </td>
- <td>
- &nbsp;
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_01" href="#div1_01" id="div1Ref_01">I.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">THE BOARDING-HOUSE</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_02" href="#div1_02" id="div1Ref_02">II.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">OLD SCHOOL-FELLOWS</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_03" href="#div1_03" id="div1Ref_03">III.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">MAN PROPOSES</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_04" href="#div1_04" id="div1Ref_04">IV.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">THE ADVERTISEMENT</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_05" href="#div1_05" id="div1Ref_05">V.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">THE NEXT STEP</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_06" href="#div1_06" id="div1Ref_06">VI.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">SEEKING TROUBLE</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_07" href="#div1_07" id="div1Ref_07">VII.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">AN AMAZING DISCOVERY</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_08" href="#div1_08" id="div1Ref_08">VIII.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">FAMILY HISTORY</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_09" href="#div1_09" id="div1Ref_09">IX.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">GWEN</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_10" href="#div1_10" id="div1Ref_10">X.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">VANE'S AUNT</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_11" href="#div1_11" id="div1Ref_11">XI.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">MACBETH'S BANQUET</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_12" href="#div1_12" id="div1Ref_12">XII.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">CUPID'S GARDEN</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_13" href="#div1_13" id="div1Ref_13">XIII.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">DANGER</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_14" href="#div1_14" id="div1Ref_14">XIV.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">AT BAY</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_15" href="#div1_15" id="div1Ref_15">XV.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">A FRIEND IN NEED</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_16" href="#div1_16" id="div1Ref_16">XVI.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">EXPLANATIONS</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_17" href="#div1_17" id="div1Ref_17">XVII.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">BLACKMAIL</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_18" href="#div1_18" id="div1Ref_18">XVIII.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">HENCH'S DIPLOMACY</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_19" href="#div1_19" id="div1Ref_19">XIX.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">A DENIAL</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_20" href="#div1_20" id="div1Ref_20">XX.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">REAPING THE WHIRLWIND</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>
- <a name="div1Ref_21" href="#div1_21" id="div1Ref_21">XXI.</a>
- </td>
- <td>
- <span class="sc">THE SUNSHINE OR LIFE</span>
- </td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h3>
- IN QUEER STREET
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h3>
- IN QUEER STREET
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_01" href="#div1Ref_01" id="div1_01">CHAPTER I</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- THE BOARDING-HOUSE
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Here,&quot; explained the landlady, &quot;we are not wildly gay, as
- the serious aspect of life prevents our indulging in unrestrained mirth.
- Each one of us is devoted to an ideal, Mr. Spruce.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And what is the ideal, Mrs. Tesk?&quot; asked the twinkling little
- man who was proposing himself as a boarder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The intention of gaining wealth in virtuous ways, by exercising the
- various talents with which we have been endowed by an All-seeing
- Providence.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If you eliminate the word 'virtuous,' most people have some such
- ideal,&quot; was the dry reply of Mr. Spruce. &quot;I want money myself,
- or I shouldn't come to live here. A Bethnal Green lodging-house isn't my
- idea of luxury.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Boarding-house, if you please,&quot; said Mrs. Tesk, drawing up her
- thin figure. &quot;I would point out that my establishment is most
- superior. Brought up in scholastic circles, I assisted my father and my
- husband for many years in teaching the young idea how to shoot, and----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In plain English, you kept a school.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Crudely put, it is as you say, Mr. Spruce,&quot; assented the
- landlady; &quot;but habit has accustomed me to express myself in a more
- elegant way. My husband and my father having been long numbered with the
- angelic host, I was unable to continue successfully as a teacher of youth.
- A learned friend suggested to me that an excellent income might be derived
- from a high-class boarding-house. Therefore I rented this mansion for the
- purpose of entertaining a select number of paying guests.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Paying guests! How admirably you express yourself, Mrs. Tesk.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It has always been my custom to do full justice to our beautiful
- language, Mr. Spruce. Even my establishment has a name redolent of classic
- times. It is called--and not unfittingly I think--The Home of the Muses.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So I observed in your advertisement. Why not call this place
- Parnassus? Then one word would serve for five.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The suggestion is not without merit,&quot; said the former
- school-mistress. &quot;I perceive, Mr. Spruce, that you have some
- knowledge of the classics.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I was educated at Winchester and Cambridge, Mrs. Tesk. The Home of
- the Muses--what a delightful name and how very appropriate.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Poor Mrs. Tesk having no sense of humour, did not understand that this
- last remark was ironical, and smiled gravely in full approval. Spruce
- screwed in his eye-glass, and glanced with a shrug at his surroundings.
- These were scarcely calculated to satisfy a sybarite, being extremely
- ugly, inartistic, well-worn and dingy. The room, of no great size, was
- over-crowded with clumsy furniture made in the early years of the
- nineteenth century, when solidity was much more valued than beauty. What
- with six ordinary chairs, two armchairs, a horse-hair sofa to match, a
- sideboard, a bookcase, and a fender-stool all of mahogany, to say nothing
- of an Indian screen and a rosewood piano, there was scarcely room to move.
- And everywhere appeared patterns;--on the carpet, on the wall-paper, on
- the curtains and on the table-cloth: the eye ached to find some plain
- spot, which was not striped, or spotted, or scrolled, or dotted. The sole
- redeeming feature of the dreadful apartment was that many years and
- constant use had mellowed everything into a sober congruity, so that the
- whole looked comfortable and homely. As the Home of the Muses, it was an
- entire failure; as the sanctum of the sedate middle-aged woman in the worn
- black silk gown, it was quite successful. And as there were many
- out-of-date educational volumes in the bookcase, and as the walls were
- decorated with samplers, water-coloured drawings, geographical maps, and
- even with framed specimens of hand-writing, it could be easily guessed
- that the apartment belonged to a retired school-mistress. There was
- something quite pathetic in Mrs. Tesk's flotsam and jetsam, which she had
- saved from the dire wreck of her superior fortunes.
- </p>
- <p>
- And the landlady was as suited to the room as her visitor was unsuited,
- for there could not be a greater contrast than the two presented to one
- another. Mrs. Tesk belonged to a bygone age, while Spruce had to do with
- the very immediate present. In her shabby-genteel gown, which clothed a
- thin bony figure, and with a severe parchment-coloured face, the former
- teacher of the young looked very respectable indeed. Her mittens, her
- be-ribboned cap, her long gold chain, her large brooch containing locks of
- hair, and her cloth boots suggested the stories of Emma Jane Worboise and
- Mrs. Henry Wood. She was prim, pedantic and eminently genteel, the
- survival of an epoch when women wore full skirts and believed that their
- duty was to keep house, rather than to smash windows. Spruce stared at her
- through his eye-glass as he would have done at a prehistoric animal.
- </p>
- <p>
- The would-be boarder was the last expression of man, as representing the
- lily of the fields which toils not. He resembled a cherub and was dressed
- like a Nut, that last variety of the masher, the swell, the dandy and the
- buck. With his clean-shaven pink and white face, his mild blue eyes, his
- smooth fair hair, little hands, little feet, and general well-groomed
- aspect, he looked like a good boy thoroughly acquainted with the Church
- Catechism. But his extravagant attire suggested Piccadilly, music-halls,
- the Park and afternoon teas. He wore a pale-green suit, the coat of which
- was made to show his waist, and turned-up trousers, which revealed purple
- socks and brogues of russia leather. His waistcoat was cut low, revealing
- a lavender-hued shirt and a purple scarf painted with a portrait of a
- famous dancer; and he held a green Trilby hat in his gloved hands,
- together with a gold-headed cane and an unlighted cigarette, which he did
- not dare to smoke in the severe presence of Mrs. Tesk. On the whole, Mr.
- Cuthbert Spruce was a thing of beauty, and wore as many colours as Joseph
- did when he put on his famous coat. He was the kind of male doll that
- virile men long to kick but dare not lest they should smash the thing.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he had completed his survey of the room and of Mrs. Tesk, the Nut
- explained himself glibly. &quot;I have come down here for a few months in
- order to study character for a book. Until I write that book I am rather
- hard up, so I should like to know if your terms are----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Twenty-five shillings a week,&quot; interrupted Mrs. Tesk solemnly.
- &quot;No one, not even the most captious, can call such terms expensive or
- prohibitive.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I certainly don't. In fact you ask so little that I am not sure if
- you can make me comfortable at the price.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Good food, a good bed and genteel society, Mr. Spruce. What more
- does mortal man require, save a fire, which is not necessary, seeing that
- summer is with us in all its annual glory?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't think much of its annual glory comes to Bethnal Green, Mrs.
- Tesk. However, your terms will suit me, and I'll bring my boxes this
- afternoon. I can have a bath, I suppose?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Sixpence extra if cold and one shilling if warm.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A cold bath will suit me as it is summer. Have you a valet in the
- house?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, Mr. Spruce. Such a menial is only to be found in the houses of
- the rich, as I understand from the perusal of novels read for recreation.
- Here you will find plain living and high thinking. My cook is an old
- servant, who is able to roast and boil healthy viands. Amelia, who is
- sixteen, attends to the house-work, and there is the boy, Simon
- Jedd--commonly called Bottles, which is a facetious appellation given to
- him by a paying guest inclined to merriment. Such is my staff.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And the paying guests?&quot; asked Spruce, who began to think that
- five and twenty shillings was quite the top price to ask for such board
- and lodging.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Tesk coughed. &quot;Our circle is limited at present to a chosen few,
- as London is rather empty just now, on account of the summer season, which
- attracts people to the green woods and the sounding sea. There is Madame
- Alpenny, who is of Hungarian extraction, but who married an Englishman;
- together with her daughter, Zara, a dancer of repute at the Bijou
- Music-hall. I hesitated to accept the daughter as a paying guest,&quot;
- added Mrs. Tesk loftily, &quot;as my education scarcely permits me to
- approve of the profession of Terpsichore.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She was one of the Muses, you know,&quot; Spruce reminded her;
- &quot;and as this is the Home of those ladies----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Quite so,&quot; interrupted Mrs. Tesk in her most stately fashion.
- &quot;That fact may have biassed me in my permitting her to reside under
- my roof. Also, not having many paying guests at present, the money was a
- consideration, and humanity interdicted me from parting mother and child;
- although I am bound to say that Madame Alpenny refused to come if I did
- not take her daughter also. Finally I consented, and since seeing Zara
- dance I have not regretted my yielding. She exhibits the poetry of motion
- in a high degree and is quite respectable.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Any other paying guests?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mr. Edward Bracken--ordinarily termed Ned,--who plays the violin in
- the Bijou orchestra with great delicacy, and Mr. Owain Hench, who is at
- present absent, and will not return for a week.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce rose and looked surprised. &quot;Owain Hench. Will you spell his
- first name, Mrs. Tesk? I fancy I know him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Tesk spelt the name slowly. &quot;It is a Welsh title!&quot; she said
- as if Hench was a member of the House of Lords, &quot;and the spelling is
- peculiar. In history we are told of Owen Tudor, and Owen Glendower, who
- signed their Christian appellations somewhat differently.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It is the proper Welsh spelling,&quot; said Spruce, smiling. &quot;He
- must be the same fellow I used to know at Winchester. We used to rag him
- about the queer way in which he spelt his name. Fancy Hench in this galley&quot;--and
- he looked disdainfully round the shabby room--&quot;I thought he was rich.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am not acquainted with the financial affairs of Mr. Hench,&quot;
- said the landlady stiffly; &quot;but I am quite certain that he is by no
- means endowed largely with specie. Nevertheless he is a kind-hearted and
- estimable young man, who will yet achieve fame and fortune, although in
- what particular direction it is at present hard to say. He has resided
- here for six months, so I can speak of his qualities with some knowledge.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce walked to the door. &quot;I shall be glad to see Hench again,&quot;
- he remarked lightly. &quot;Well, Mrs. Tesk, you may expect me and my
- luggage by four o'clock.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I understand.&quot; Mrs. Tesk folded her hands and bowed graciously.
- &quot;You will be in time for afternoon tea, when I shall have the
- pleasure of introducing you to Madame Alpenny, Mademoiselle Zara, and to
- Mr. Edward Bracken. You will find us a happy family, Mr. Spruce, and I
- trust you will never regret coming to stay in The Home of the Muses.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce stifled a laugh and went out, lighting his cigarette and putting
- his hat on in the hall. He was immensely amused with the stately
- old-fashioned airs of the ex-school-mistress, and promised himself some
- fun in drawing her out. He did not anticipate a rosy time in the
- boarding-house, which was much too shabby and poor and sordid for one of
- his pleasure-loving nature; but he felt that the companionship of his old
- schoolfellow would enable him to pass the time fairly pleasantly. In his
- explanation to Mrs. Tesk as to his reason for coming to Bethnal Green, Mr.
- Spruce had not been entirely truthful, but the excuse of gathering
- material for a book would serve his purpose. The truth was that the Nut
- had been mixed up in a gambling affair with which cheating had been
- connected, so he had wisely determined to obliterate himself for a few
- months. Not being able to go abroad or into the country by reason of a
- lean purse, he had made up his mind to rusticate in Bethnal Green, and
- hoped that when the scandal was ended he could return to the West End. In
- the meantime, he was safe from observation, as no one would ever suspect
- that he was in London, so near and yet so far from civilization. He
- intended to give to Hench the same excuse as he had already given to Mrs.
- Tesk, and had no doubt but what it would be accepted. Hench, as he
- considered, was smart in many ways and the reverse in a few. While at
- Winchester he had been considered clever, but always over-confident that
- others were as honourable as himself, a belief which led to his being
- taken advantage of on many occasions. Spruce had never been intimate with
- Hench, as he belonged to a different set, but he was quite ready to be
- intimate with him now in such a dull locality as Bethnal Green. The
- cherubic little man by no means cared for the plain living and high
- thinking to which Mrs. Tesk had alluded, as he preferred high living and
- plain thinking, the latter having to do with thoughts of how to kill time
- by amusing himself. It was not likely that Hench would be of the same
- opinion, as from what Spruce remembered he had always been a solid sort of
- chap. Of course, it was eight years since the Nut had seen the young man,
- but if living in The Home of the Muses denoted his status, it was probable
- that he would be more solid than ever. And solid in the opinion of Mr.
- Spruce meant woeful dullness and pronounced common-sense. Therefore he
- scarcely anticipated that Hench would prove to be an ideal companion.
- </p>
- <p>
- However, owing to the trouble in the West End, Spruce had to make the best
- of things, and duly arrived at the appointed time with his five boxes.
- People did not usually come to Mrs. Tesk's establishment with so much
- luggage, but Spruce being a Nut, and eminently fashionable, required many
- clothes to set off his rather mean little person. Amelia, the
- maid-of-all-work, and Jedd, who was facetiously called &quot;Bottles,&quot;
- helped the cabman to carry up the many trunks to the new-comer's bedroom,
- and looked upon him with awe as the owner of such costly paraphernalia.
- Mrs. Tesk was also pleased in her stately fashion, as the arrival of such
- a quantity of luggage imparted dignity in some mysterious way to her
- establishment. By four o'clock the new paying guest had taken possession
- of his new abode, and was on his way to the drawing-room to meet those
- already assembled under Mrs. Tesk's hospitable roof. To do honour to the
- occasion, and to produce a good impression, Spruce had changed into a
- brand-new suit, and looked like Solomon-in-all-his-glory when he entered
- the stuffy apartment grandiloquently termed the drawing-room. It was
- tolerably large and less crowded with furniture than the sanctum of the
- landlady, but the windows being closed and the day being warm, Spruce
- gasped when he ventured in. It was like entering the coolest room of a
- Turkish bath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Allow me,&quot; said Mrs. Tesk in her deepest and most genteel
- voice. &quot;Mr. Spruce, permit me to introduce you to Madame Alpenny, to
- Mademoiselle Zara Alpenny and to Mr. Edward Bracken. Madame Alpenny,
- Mademoiselle Alpenny and Mr. Edward Bracken, permit me to introduce you to
- Mr. Spruce, our new companion.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- During the landlady's long-winded introduction the Nut bowed to the
- several people mentioned and swiftly noted their outward looks. The
- Hungarian lady, who had married an Englishman, was a very stout woman,
- slightly taller than Spruce himself, which was not saying much, and the
- remains of former beauty were apparent in her face if not in her figure.
- It is true that her complexion was sallow and her hair an unpleasant red,
- but she had finely-cut features and splendid eyes, dark, eloquent and
- alluring. She wore a dark dress spotted with orange circles, a loose black
- velvet mantle trimmed with beads, and a large floppy picture-hat, together
- with many costly bracelets, rings, chains, brooches and lockets. Evidently
- she carried her fortune on her person for security, and looked like a
- walking jeweller's shop. Spruce saw at a glance that she was a lady,
- although why she should wear such shabby clothes and live in such a shabby
- place when she possessed such valuable ornaments he could not say.
- Privately he decided that she looked interesting, and determined to find
- out all about her during his stay in the boarding-house.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You will find us very quiet here,&quot; observed Madame Alpenny in
- excellent English, and smiling with very white teeth at the new-comer's
- resplendent appearance; &quot;it will be dull in these parts for a young
- gentleman.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I can make myself at home anywhere, Madame,&quot; replied
- Spruce, accepting a cup of very weak tea from Mrs. Tesk. &quot;My visit
- here is only to collect material for a novel.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I read the stories of my countryman, Maurus Jokai,&quot; said Madame
- with a nod. &quot;You write like him. Is it not so?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;By no means. I know nothing of Maurus Jokai.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Gaszynski! Morzycka! Zmorski! Mukulitch! Riedl! Vehse?&quot; the
- foreign lady ran off these difficult names of Polish, Russian and
- Hungarian authors still smiling; &quot;you know them. Eh? What?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Never heard of them Madame. They sound like names out of the Book of
- Numbers to me. I am a very ignorant person, as you will find.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, say not so, Mr. Spruce. You like amusement perhaps. The dance,
- the cricket, the five o'clock tea? Tell me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;All those things are more in my line. I hear from Mrs. Tesk that
- your daughter dances?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, yes. Zara?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am at the Bijou Music-hall just now in a Fire-dance,&quot; said
- the girl in an indifferent manner, for Spruce had not made the same
- impression on her as he had on her mother; &quot;and Mr. Bracken here is
- in the orchestra.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Second-violin,&quot; growled Bracken, who was paying great attention
- to the thin bread and butter. &quot;Hard work and bad pay&quot;--he stole
- a glance at the dancer--&quot;but I have my compensations.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The look was sufficient to make Spruce understand that the young man was
- in love with Zara, just as the frown of Madame Alpenny, who had
- intercepted the look, showed him the mother's disapproval. The dancer was
- a tall and rather gaunt girl, handsome in a bold gipsy flamboyant way,
- with flashing dark eyes and a somewhat defiant manner, while the violinist
- was roughly good-looking, and seemed to pay very little attention to his
- dress. Evidently a romance was in progress here, and Spruce promised
- himself some amusement in watching the efforts--which he was sure were
- being made--of the mother to keep the lovers apart.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You see,&quot; said Mrs. Tesk complacently, &quot;we have many
- talents assembled here, Mr. Spruce. Mademoiselle Zara indulges in the
- light fantastic toe; Mr. Bracken is devoted to the noble art of music, and
- Madame Alpenny is conversant with the literature of foreign nations, which
- is natural considering her nationality. In my own person, I represent the
- English element of letters, and if you enjoy heart to heart talks, I am
- prepared to discuss poetry with you from Dan Chaucer down to Robert
- Browning.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Thanks very much,&quot; said the new guest hastily and scarcely
- relishing the prospect; &quot;but my doctor won't let me read much, as my
- health is not very good. But I daresay,&quot; he added, glancing round at
- the queer set he found himself amongst, &quot;we can get up a game of
- bridge occasionally.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, but certainly,&quot; cried Madame with vivacity and her splendid
- eyes flashed; &quot;for my part I delight in cards!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My preference is for Patience,&quot; said Mrs. Tesk solemnly. &quot;I
- find it relieves the strain on my mind. So long as the stakes are not very
- high, Mr. Spruce, I shall be delighted to join you and Madame and
- Mademoiselle Zara in a friendly game. Oh, you will not find us dull, I
- think. And when Mr. Owain Hench returns he will be able to inform you
- about many parts of the world not usually accessible to the ordinary
- person.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce rather resented Mrs. Tesk calling him an ordinary person, as he
- considered that he was head and shoulders above the assembled company.
- However, he did not allow any sign of annoyance at her density to escape
- him, but uttered a little chuckling laugh of acquiescence. &quot;I'll be
- glad to see Hench again. He was always a good chap.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah!&quot; Madame glanced at her defiant daughter and then at Spruce;
- &quot;it appears, then, that you know Mr. Hench?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;We were at school together.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So! He is a charming young man.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Zara laughed meaningly. &quot;With money mamma thinks that he would be
- still more charming,&quot; she said significantly, and the sallow face of
- Madame grew red.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It is true,&quot; she admitted frankly. &quot;When one has a
- daughter, one must be careful of charming young men who are not rich. What
- do you say, Mr. Spruce?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I never had a daughter, so I can't say anything,&quot; replied
- the little man, who was rapidly understanding many things. &quot;And your
- opinion, Mr. Bracken, if I may ask it?&quot; He put the question
- advisedly, as the mention of Hench's name had brought a scowl to the face
- of the violinist.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Money isn't everything,&quot; growled Bracken, passing his hand
- through his rough hair, which he wore a trifle long, after the fashion of
- musicians. &quot;Hench is a good fellow, and being clever will be rich
- some day.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah! no&quot;--Madame Alpenny shook her head vehemently--&quot;he is
- too--what you call--careless of money. He is idle; he is a mystery.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce opened his pale blue eyes at the last word, and put in his monocle
- to stare at the Hungarian lady. &quot;There never was any mystery about
- Hench at school,&quot; he observed rather puzzled. &quot;He was always
- rather a commonplace sort of chap.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There is a mystery,&quot; insisted Madame more vehemently than ever.
- &quot;I have seen him before, but where--no, it is impossible to say.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You don't mean to say that he is wanted by the police?&quot; asked
- Bracken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't speak like that!&quot; cried Zara with a frown. &quot;Mr.
- Hench is the most honourable man in the world. There is nothing mean about
- him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He is all that is agreeable and polite,&quot; said her mother
- gravely; &quot;and but for one thing I have no fault to find with him.
- Still, I have seen him somewhere, that young gentleman; he has a history!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;History! mystery! You jump to conclusions, mamma.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Zara, my father was a diplomatist, and I am observant.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Suspicious, I should say,&quot; remarked Bracken under his breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- But low as he spoke the woman heard him. &quot;Of some people I am,&quot;
- she said with a dark glance, which revealed that she was not so
- good-humoured as she looked.
- </p>
- <p>
- Zara rose with a swing of her skirts and looked as graceful and as
- dangerous as a pantheress. &quot;I am going to lie down,&quot; she
- observed rather irrelevantly. &quot;I always lie down, Mr. Spruce, so as
- to prepare for the fatigues of the night. If you ask Mr. Bracken he will
- take you to the smoking-room.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, thanks,&quot; gasped Spruce, who did not wish to remain in the
- company of the violinist, whom he privately termed a bounder; &quot;but I
- am going to my room to write letters.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Fancy staying in to write letters on this beautiful day. Mr. Bracken
- will be wiser, I am sure, and take a walk.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You've hit it,&quot; said Mr. Bracken, taking out a well-worn briar
- pipe. &quot;I'm off for a breather.&quot; And he escorted Zara out of the
- room without noticing Spruce, to whom he had taken a dislike.
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny half arose when she saw the two departing in company, but
- sat down again with a frown. In a few minutes she walked to the window and
- drew a sigh of relief on seeing Bracken standing on the pavement lighting
- his pipe. Spruce guessed by this by-play that she did not approve of the
- violinist being with her daughter, and became more certain than ever that
- the romance he had conjectured existed. Zara had got rid of Bracken, it
- was evident, so as not to leave him in the company of her mother. Hence
- her mention that the violinist would show Spruce the smoking-room, and her
- suggestion of a walk for Bracken when the new guest refused the offer of
- tobacco. However, Madame now seeing that the two were parted, returned to
- her seat satisfied, and resumed her talk about Mr. Hench.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You must tell me of your old schoolfellow,&quot; she said
- graciously; &quot;he is a young man I greatly admire. I study his
- character.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;An admirable character,&quot; said Mrs. Tesk loftily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I cannot help you, Madame, as I haven't seen Hench for years,&quot;
- said Spruce.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah indeed! You will find him very mysterious!&quot; And she nodded
- significantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_02" href="#div1Ref_02" id="div1_02">CHAPTER II</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- OLD SCHOOL-FELLOWS
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Spruce found The Home of the Muses less dull than he expected it to
- be, in spite of its ridiculous name. For six days he amused himself very
- tolerably in contemplating the novelty of his surroundings, and in getting
- what amusement he could out of the same. Desiring &quot;something new,&quot;
- after the fashion of the Athenians, he explored Bethnal Green more or less
- thoroughly, and learned that the seamy side of life here exhibited had
- attractions for a keen-witted observer, as he truly was. People in the
- West End were always on the look-out for money with which to indulge their
- fancies; people in this neighbourhood hunted likewise for the nimble
- shilling, but used it when obtained to keep a roof over their heads and
- bread in their mouths. But the excitement of the money-chase was always
- the same, and Spruce watched the same with great interest. In fact he took
- part in the hunt for dollars himself, as he also had to live in such
- comfort as his depleted purse could command.
- </p>
- <p>
- That Destiny had not dealt lavishly with Spruce was due to his own crooked
- way of propitiating the whimsical goddess, since he disliked honest toil.
- On leaving college and entering the great world, he had enjoyed a fair
- fortune nursed for years by jealous guardians, which ought to have kept
- him in luxury for the whole of his useless life. But the Nut, thinking he
- possessed the purse of Fortunatus, dipped into it too freely, and like the
- earthen pot at once smashed when the brass pots dashed against him. He
- entered a fast set, fascinating and expensive, whose members gambled
- heavily, who flirted freely with free-lance ladies and who ran up bills on
- every occasion. A few years of this life reduced Spruce to living on his
- wits, and as these were sharp enough, he managed to scramble along somehow
- and keep his head above water.
- </p>
- <p>
- But not making money fast enough honestly, he attempted to cheat at cards,
- and therefore was expelled from his profligate paradise. For this reason
- he had come to rusticate in Bethnal Green, and intended to return as soon
- as he could make sure of being tolerated in his former haunts and by his
- former associates. But as he had committed the one crime which society,
- however rapid, will never condone, the prospect of his being whitewashed
- was not very promising. However, the little man knew that money covers a
- multitude of sins, and would go far to excuse the particular sin of
- cheating, which had ruined him. He therefore looked here, there and
- everywhere during his retirement in the hope of making money, so that he
- could return with full pockets to the West End. But it must be admitted
- that Bethnal Green was not exactly Tom Tiddler's ground, and little gold
- and silver did Spruce pick up.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Nut certainly won a certain amount of money from Madame Alpenny, who
- was a born gambler, and staked her jewellery when coin was wanting. She
- was always hard up, as she frankly informed Spruce when she came to know
- him better, and had long since turned what money she possessed into the
- costly ornaments she wore. Zara earned enough to keep her mother and
- herself at the boarding-house, but otherwise spent her earnings on
- herself, knowing, as she did, that Madame Alpenny would only gamble away
- what was given her. Therefore the old woman sometimes had to sell a brooch
- or a bracelet in order to get funds for her gambling. She was clever at
- cards, but scarcely so clever, and it may be added unscrupulous, as
- Spruce, so by the end of the week her person was not quite so lavishly
- decorated with jewellery as it had been when the Nut first set eyes on
- her. But in spite of her bad luck, the Hungarian lady always behaved
- amiably towards Spruce, as she took him at his own valuation and believed
- him to be a rich young man indulging in the fantastic whim of living in
- Mrs. Tesk's house. It did not take much time for the Nut to see that
- Madame Alpenny's agreeable demeanour was due to the hope she entertained
- that he would make love to Zara, and perhaps become her son-in-law. Spruce
- had about as much idea of courting the dancer as of flying, but he allowed
- the lady to think that he admired her daughter so that she might continue
- to gamble. Being quite deceived as to his real status and his real
- intentions, she did; so Spruce found himself much better off in pocket by
- the end of the week, and about the time when Owain Hench was expected
- back.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little man was waiting for Hench, as he greatly desired to see if any
- money could be made out of him. People who travelled about the world, as
- Hench apparently did, often found gold-mines, or knew of some hidden
- treasure, or had an idea of how to make money in large quantities. Spruce
- was very vague as to how he could exploit Hench to his own advantage, as
- he had not seen him for eight years and did not know his possibilities.
- However, he was assured that while residing under the same roof as Hench
- he would soon be able to learn if he was worth making a friend of, and so
- waited anxiously for the young man's return. Meanwhile he gambled with
- Madame Alpenny; made himself agreeable to the ex-school-mistress, whom he
- found a frightful bore; and went several times to the Bijou Music-hall to
- see Mademoiselle Zara dance. To his surprise he found that she was really
- a very brilliant artist, who was entirely thrown away on a Bethnal Green
- audience, and asked himself quite seriously if it would not be worth while
- to marry her and secure for her an engagement at the West End. If she made
- a success there--as he was sure she would do--then she could support him
- in luxury and the old woman could be got rid of somehow. Oh, Spruce found
- many ideas in The Home of the Muses which might result in the gain of
- money, although he saw plainly that to bring the same to fruition time was
- necessary. At all events, he was making a living out of Madame Alpenny;
- foresaw possibilities in Zara's dancing with the chance of profit to
- himself, and always kept in his scheming little mind that Hench might
- prove to be a valuable acquaintance. Therefore, the six days prior to the
- young man's return proved to be amusing and profitable and promising. As
- Spruce had become an adventurer and a picker-up of unconsidered trifles,
- after the fashion of Autolycus, he was quite content with the progress he
- had made so far in his new camping-ground. For that it was, since Spruce
- had no idea of having a home, and disliked domesticity.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was on Sunday afternoon that Hench returned. Madame Alpenny was lying
- down for a rest, as she always did on the seventh day; Zara had slipped
- out for a walk with Bracken; and Mrs. Tesk was laboriously reading a
- religious book, which she found extremely dull, but considered the correct
- thing to peruse on the Sabbath. Spruce being left very much to his own
- devices, had amused himself by sorting his wardrobe, and towards five
- o'clock was beginning to find time hang heavy on his hands. With a yawn he
- descended to the smoking-room to idle away an hour with a cigarette and
- the Sunday papers. In the bleak little apartment devoted to the goddess
- Nicotine--a goddess unknown to the Olympians, it may be remarked--he came
- suddenly upon a tall young man who was puffing his pipe and listlessly
- staring out of the window. Rather from intuition than from positive
- knowledge, the Nut guessed that this was the returned wanderer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hullo, Hench, and how are you?&quot; was his greeting, and he
- advanced with a gracious smile and an outstretched hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- The young man rose slowly, looking very much astonished, but mechanically
- accepted the proferred grasp. Apparently he did not recognize that this
- resplendent being was his old schoolfellow, and hinted as much in a rough
- and ready fashion. &quot;Who the deuce are you?&quot; he demanded with a
- puzzled expression.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Cuthbert Spruce!&quot; replied the Nut, nettled as a vain man would
- be by the want of recognition.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Cuthbert Spruce! Well?&quot; Hench still appeared to be ignorant and
- waited for some light to be cast upon the subject of this hearty greeting.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, come now, you are an ass, Hench. Don't you remember Winchester,
- and the day you picked me up when I got lost during the hare and hounds
- run?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench stared at the pink and white cherubic face and a smile broke over
- his face, as he shook the little man's hand heartily. &quot;Of course.
- Little Spruce, isn't it?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have already said as much,&quot; retorted the mortified Nut dryly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I didn't see much of you at Winchester, you know,&quot;
- confessed the stalwart young man, sitting down for a chat; &quot;you were
- in a different set, anyhow. And I don't fancy I cared much for your set,
- such as it was. H'm!&quot; Hench stared hard at the other and pulled hard
- at his pipe. &quot;Yes. Little Spruce, of course, commonly called The
- Cherub. And by gad, Spruce, you're a cherub still.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No one could call you so, Hench,&quot; said Spruce affably, sitting
- down and producing a dainty cigarette-case; &quot;you are more like
- Hercules, big and stolid and dull and honest.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What a mixture of depreciation and compliment,&quot; said Hench
- coolly. &quot;Well, I am glad to see you, in spite of your somewhat free
- speech. After all, one's heart warms to a chap from the old school.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Rather!&quot; agreed the Nut, whose heart never warmed towards any
- one or anything. &quot;It's queer meeting you here. Let's have a look at
- you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench laughed and shifted his position, so that the light from the window
- fell full upon him. A woman would have thought, as women did think, that
- he was well worth looking at, since he was tall and stalwart, undeniably
- handsome and possessed of great strength. With his well-built figure and
- upright carriage he looked more like a soldier than anything else. His
- hair, closely cropped, was brown, as were his eyes, and he had a full
- spade-shaped beard which added to his virile looks. The two men formed a
- marked contrast, and the small, dainty, over-dressed Nut looked like a
- doll beside the big, handsome, carelessly attired man. And it was on this
- attire that Spruce's eyes were fixed, as it hinted at many things. A
- well-worn blue-serge suit, a woollen shirt and mended brown boots did not
- suggest money, any more than the presence of Hench in this cheap boarding
- house intimated a good income. The Nut began to think that his dreams of
- making use of Hench were purely visionary. There was no wealth to be
- extracted from such an obvious pauper. Nevertheless, Spruce, who never
- threw away a chance, behaved very cordially and paid compliments.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But for that beard you are just the same as you were at Winchester,&quot;
- he remarked. &quot;You were always big and heroic-looking. What are you
- doing here?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Marking time!&quot; said Hench laconically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In the hopes of what?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of making my fortune.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; Spruce looked dissatisfied, as he did not care about
- meeting old schoolfellows who required help; &quot;you do look down on
- your luck.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not more than usual. I always make sufficient to keep my head above
- water by writing articles and stories for cheap newspapers and journals.
- But that is a poor state of things for a man of twenty-five.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There isn't much pie-crust about it, I admit, Hench. Why, I thought
- you were rich. I know at school the fellows always talked about your
- father being a Duke of sorts constantly on the move.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My father travelled a great deal on the Continent, certainly, and
- when I left school I joined him. But he died five or six years ago and
- left me with very little money. Since then I have been voyaging round the
- terrestrial globe to find money, and so far have not achieved success. But
- I say&quot;--Hench broke off to re-fill his pipe--&quot;why make me
- egotistical? My affairs don't interest you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh yes, they do,&quot; Spruce protested, then baited his hook with a
- minnow to catch a possible whale. &quot;And if you will allow me to be
- your banker----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No! It's awfully good of you. But I have enough for my needs.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, when you haven't, come to me. Old schoolfellows, you know,
- should help one another at a pinch.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You're a good chap, Spruce,&quot; said the big man, gratefully.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce smiled graciously in response to the compliment, and privately
- considered that Hench was as trusting as he always had been, taking men at
- their own valuation, instead of putting a price on them himself. However,
- he had gained the good-will of the man by his delicate offer--which he by
- no means intended should be accepted--and therefore hoped, should Hench
- prove to be worth powder and shot, to benefit by his artful diplomacy.
- &quot;Oh, that's all right, old fellow,&quot; he said airily and blowing
- rings of smoke; &quot;since we're in the same galley we may as well renew
- our old friendship.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Begin a friendship, you mean,&quot; said Hench very directly. &quot;We
- weren't pals at school, so far as I can recollect.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! that's true enough. But you picked me up out of that ditch and
- played the part of a Good Samaritan, so I have reason to be friendly.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Thanks! I'm with you, Spruce. While we camp here I daresay we'll see
- a lot of one another, and I shan't forget your kind offer to help. I'm not
- quick to make friends, you know, as I find most people jolly well look
- after themselves to the exclusion of every one else.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I do, myself,&quot; said the Nut coolly. &quot;Don't think that I go
- about playing the part of the Good Samaritan haphazard. But an old
- schoolfellow, you know----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! I understand. There's something in having been at the same
- desk, isn't there. But I say, Spruce, what are you doing here? Now that I
- cast my memory back, you were supposed to be very well off.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I am still,&quot; lied the Nut in a most brazen way; &quot;that
- is I have enough money on which to live comfortably, although not a
- millionaire. But the fact is, I have literary ambitions, and wish to write
- a book. Some fellow said that Bethnal Green had never been written up
- since the time of the celebrated beggar, so I thought I'd come down and
- gather material. I spotted Mrs. Tesk's advertisement in the papers and the
- name of the house attracted me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench laughed. &quot;The Home of the Muses! It's rather a queer title to
- give a house in this poverty-stricken neighbourhood; but then Mrs. Tesk,
- bless her, is queer herself. She's a good sort though, all the same. Well,
- you've come to the right place to get material for a sort of Charles
- Dickens book. We all live in Queer Street here, Spruce.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Queer Street, which, like Bohemia, is nowhere and yet is everywhere,
- Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are epigrammatic. That won't do for a book of the Dickens type.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Nut shrugged his shoulders. &quot;I don't know what sort of book I'll
- write, and that's a fact. In Queer Street, which I take it comprises the
- whole of Bethnal Green, there are many interesting people, for I have been
- walking about and have kept my eyes open. But those I find most
- interesting are under this roof.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madame Alpenny?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! She's quite a character with her jewellery and her gambling. By
- the way, you won't find her so decked out Hindoo fashion as hitherto.
- During the week of my stay here, I have won two bracelets, several rings
- and a pair of ear-rings.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench looked displeased. &quot;You shouldn't encourage her love of
- gambling,&quot; he said strongly. &quot;I'm not a saint, but it doesn't
- seem right for a well-to-do man such as you are to win Madame Alpenny's
- jewellery.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not? She has the same chance of winning my money. We play quite
- fairly, you know, Hench, and one must pass the time somehow. But I quite
- understand why you don't wish me to loot the lady.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, do you.&quot; Hench grew red and smoothed his beard. &quot;Well?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have listened and looked and questioned and considered while I
- have been here,&quot; explained the Nut coolly, &quot;and by doing so I
- have found out your romance.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My romance!&quot;--the big man bit his nether lip and thought that
- it was like the cheek of this finicky little devil to meddle with what did
- not in any way concern him--&quot;what the deuce are you talking about?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;About your romance; about Bracken's romance; and about Mademoiselle
- Zara, who is the subject of both romances.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are talking through your hat, Spruce.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;By no means. I can give you chapter and verse for my surmises. Zara
- Alpenny is a handsome gipsy, although to my fancy she is a trifle gaunt
- and fierce, as any one can see. Her mother being poor, intends that her
- daughter shall be the wife of a wealthy man. You have fallen in love with
- this divinity of the Bijou Music-hall, and so has that bounder of a
- violinist. Madame Alpenny, knowing your circumstances, will have nothing
- to do with either of you as sons-in-law, preferring yours truly.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You!&quot; Hench sat up and stared indignantly at the smooth
- speaker. &quot;Now what the dickens do you mean by that rubbish?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What I say. You understand King's English, I take it. But you need
- have no fear so far as I am concerned. Mademoiselle Zara is not my sort,
- and I have no intention of forwarding Madame Alpenny's matrimonial aims.
- But you----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench rose, looking considerably irritated. &quot;I wish you would mind
- your own business,&quot; he said sharply. &quot;You have found a mare's
- nest.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, well,&quot; observed Spruce lazily, &quot;if that is the case I
- may as well change my mind and become a suitor for Zara's hand.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You shall do nothing of the sort.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not? You don't love her, if I am to credit your mare's nest
- parable.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench found that the Nut was too sharp for him and sat down with a
- defeated air. &quot;I admire the girl, rather than love her,&quot; he
- admitted reluctantly. &quot;She's a good sort and would make a good
- wife--something of a comrade, you know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't think that fierce-eyed girl would care for a marriage of the
- comrade sort, Hench. She wants love of the most pronounced and romantic
- kind, and that kind she is getting from Bracken. He worships her, and will
- carry off the prize if all you can give is cautious admiration.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's none of your business, anyway,&quot; fumed the big man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. I admit that! But suppose I make it my business by asking Madame
- Alpenny for her daughter's hand. She believes me to be rich and----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And you are not. Come, be honest.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce saw that he had overshot the mark and retreated dexterously. &quot;I
- have already been honest, as I told you that I was not a millionaire but
- only well off. Anyhow, I am a better husband for Zara so far as money is
- concerned than you or that bounder.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But hang it, man, you can't love her. You've only known her a week.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I never said that I did love her, or could possibly come to love
- her. Still, Zara is handsome and clever, so why shouldn't I make her my
- comrade-wife, since you suggested the same kind of half-baked alliance
- with yourself.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Look here, Spruce,&quot; stated the other very seriously, and
- irritated by the nimble wit of his schoolfellow, &quot;you have proved
- yourself to be a decent sort by offering to help me. For that offer I
- thank you, and because of it I am willing that we should be friends. But
- if you make love to Zara we are sure to quarrel.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Aren't you rather a dog-in-the-manger, Hench?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. I admire the girl.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She wants love, which you evidently can't give her,&quot; retorted
- Spruce in an emphatic manner. &quot;Now, if I can love her----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You said that she wasn't your sort.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She isn't. Still, she is handsome, and one might pick up a worse
- wife.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But not a worse mother-in-law. So far as I am concerned it doesn't
- matter, as I have neither kith nor kin to my knowledge, and, moreover, I
- am a vagabond upon the face of the earth. But with your family connections
- and position and money, the marriage would not be a success, seeing that
- it entails your taking Madame Alpenny to the West End. There she would
- scarcely do you credit.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce rocked with laughter, and wondered what Hench would say if he knew
- the true position of affairs which had been so carefully withheld from
- him. &quot;I give in, old fellow,&quot; he said, wiping his eyes with a
- mauve silk handkerchief and wafting a perfume about the room. &quot;I was
- only codding you. I don't want to marry the girl. But Bracken does.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And so do I,&quot; rejoined Hench tartly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;H'm! I'm not so sure of that. Yours is a cold-blooded wooing. The
- girl asks you for the bread of love and you give her the stone of
- admiration.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She doesn't ask me for love,&quot; said the tall young man with a
- sigh. &quot;I am not so blind but what I can see that she loves Bracken.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then why don't you sheer off?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't like any man to get the better of me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There speaks the buccaneer, the cave-man, the prehistoric grabber.
- Lord! what a weird state of things, and how simple you are, Hench, to
- place all your cards on the table. I can teach you a thing or two.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am quite sure you can,&quot; said Hench dryly, and disliking the
- wit of this effeminate little creature, which was so extremely keen;
- &quot;but I go my own way, thank you, and dree my own weird. It is
- probable that I will ask Madame Alpenny if I can marry Zara, and if Zara
- is agreeable----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Which by your own showing she won't be,&quot; put in Spruce
- parenthetically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;----I'll marry her. If not, I'll go away and let Bracken make her
- his wife.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce rose with a yawn. &quot;I fancy Madame Alpenny will have a word or
- two to say to that, my dear fellow. Why don't you skip now?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because I admire Zara and mean to give her the chance of accepting
- or rejecting me,&quot; said Hench doggedly. &quot;Also, I can't leave
- London for a few weeks, as I have to interview my father's lawyers.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What about?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I can't tell you. My father left certain papers with his lawyers
- which were to be given to me when I attained the age of twenty-five. My
- birthday arrives shortly, and then I'll see what is to be done.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It sounds like a mystery,&quot; yawned Spruce, apparently in a
- listless manner, but secretly all agog to learn what the lawyers of his
- friend knew; &quot;Madame Alpenny says you are a mystery.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Me!&quot; Hench laughed scornfully; &quot;why, there's nothing
- mysterious about me. As you said just now, I am a simple person who places
- all his cards on the table.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes&quot;--Spruce nodded--&quot;more fool you. Now, if you will only
- allow that old woman to think that there really is a mystery connected
- with you--and there seems to be so far as this legal interview is
- concerned--she may give you a chance of becoming her daughter's husband.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Perhaps! But why does she think me a mystery?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I can't tell you. She was very vague about the matter. She declares
- that she has seen you somewhere and that you have a history.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;History be hanged. My father had sufficient money to travel about
- and put me to school at Winchester. When I left I joined him, and we went
- through Europe to this place and that until he died and was buried in
- Paris. What mystery is there about that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;None. But your family----?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I haven't got any save my father, who is dead. And he told me very
- little about himself or his belongings. We are a Welsh family, I believe.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hench isn't a Welsh name.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Owain is, anyhow, and the spelling is old Welsh,&quot; retorted the
- other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;True. We used to rag you about the spelling at school. Well, with
- such a name as that, you might find out the truth about your family.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm not curious.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You should be then, as I would be if I were in your shoes. For all
- you know there may be a title and money waiting for you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, rubbish! Well, you can tell Madame Alpenny what I have told you.
- No. On second thoughts, I'll tell her myself. She and her mystery, indeed!&quot;
- and with a scornful nod Hench left the bleak smoking-room.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce reflected that Hench was a simpleton to be so frank about his
- private affairs, and had not changed, so far as trusting people went,
- since his school-days. &quot;Also there is a mystery,&quot; he mused.
- &quot;I'll search it out.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_03" href="#div1Ref_03" id="div1_03">CHAPTER III</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- MAN PROPOSES
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Everyone, without exception, was glad that Hench had returned, for he
- appeared to be a favourite with all. And not the least pleased to see him
- was the boy Simon Jedd, commonly called &quot;Bottles.&quot; He was a
- freckled, red-haired, laughing youngster of fifteen, with a wide mouth and
- a snub nose, not by any manner of means handsome, but genial and cheerful
- and extremely honest. He helped Amelia with the house-work, ran errands,
- waited at table, cleaned the boots of the paying guests, and earned his
- scanty wages by making himself uncommonly useful on all and every
- occasion. But being a restless youth, and much given at odd moments to
- reading books of highly-coloured adventure in the form of penny stories,
- he had a soul above his drudgery, and longed with all his heart to face
- dangers of the most pronounced kind. Such a lad was bound to have some
- sort of actual hero to worship and adore.
- </p>
- <p>
- In Hench, Bottles saw exactly the pioneering type, which was his ideal of
- perfect manhood, and he looked upon the young man as the model of all the
- virtues which most appealed to him. This being the case, he never could do
- enough to prove his devotion. No bed was so well made as that of Hench; no
- room was kept so spotlessly clean, and no boots were so highly polished.
- Half amused and half touched by this genuine hero-worship, Hench lent the
- boy books of travel, told him about his adventures in far lands, gave him
- odd shillings to patronize the local picture palace and music-hall, and
- generally treated him in a way which made the heart of the boy swell with
- pride. It was no wonder that Bottles adored him and could never do enough
- for him.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the morning after his return, Hench found his clothes well brushed, his
- bath ready, and a cup of tea at his elbow, while Bottles hovered round the
- room wondering what else he could do to show his rejoicing spirit. In his
- shabby patched clothes, and wearing an apron of green baize, Bottles
- grinned respectfully when Hench sat up in bed to drink his tea. He also
- supplied him with small-beer chronicles concerning events which had taken
- place in The Home of the Muses during his hero's absence. Hench cared very
- little for such gossip, but allowed Bottles to prattle on because it
- pleased the lad. And certainly Master Jedd might have been a detective, so
- full and clever was his report. In the course of his narrative he arrived
- at Spruce. Then Hench really did listen, for, simple as he was, he began
- to wonder if the Nut had given his true reason for this visit to Bethnal
- Green.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Such a swell as he is, ain't he?&quot; babbled Bottles, who was now
- slipping links and studs into Hench's shirt. &quot;I never did see a cove
- come with so many boxes, sir. Must be rich, I think, though he ain't free
- with his money. Says he knew you at school, sir, he does. True, ain't it?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Quite true, Bottles!&quot; replied Hench, nodding. &quot;I haven't
- seen him for eight or more years.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And you don't like him now you do see him, do you, sir?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why should you say that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, sir&quot;--Bottles scratched his scarlet poll--&quot;he don't
- seem to me to be quite your style. There ain't no Buffalo Bill, Pathfinder
- business about him. If you don't mind my saying so, sir, I don't think
- it's cricket his winning all that foreign lady's jewellery at cards,
- nohow.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That's none of your business, Bottles.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Sorry, sir. But I can't help seeing and thinking when I do see. And
- what's a swell like him doing down here, I'd like to know?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You'd better ask him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And get a clip on the ears for my pains, sir. Not me. Though I
- dessay he ain't the cove to hit out.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Too kind-hearted?&quot; asked Hench, amused.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot; said Bottles slowly, &quot;I shouldn't use them words
- myself. Mr. Spruce is the kind of feller who'd trip you up when you wasn't
- looking; but I don't think he'd meet any one's eye straight. Seems to me
- as he might have done a glide, if you take me, sir.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't take you, Bottles?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Bolted, mizzled, cut away,&quot; explained the boy earnestly. &quot;Swells
- don't come to this place for fun.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't be a fool, boy. Mr. Spruce has only come here to gather
- material for a book he is writing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, he says that, do he, sir? Well, I don't think! Ho! I'll keep my
- eye on all the illustrated papers and see if his picture's in 'em.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why should his picture be in them?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bottles shook his head mysteriously and skipped lightly towards the door.
- He saw that Hench did not approve of his groundless suspicions, so made up
- his mind to say no more. All the same, having got the idea that Spruce had
- &quot;done something&quot; into his head, which came from reading too many
- penny-dreadful romances, he made up his mind to watch the Nut. This he did
- not tell his hero lest he should be forbidden to &quot;follow the trail,&quot;
- as he put it. Therefore he held his tongue and removed himself swiftly.
- </p>
- <p>
- While Hench took his bath and dressed slowly, he wondered if by chance the
- boy had hit the mark. It did appear to be strange that a well-to-do and
- fashionable young man should come and live amidst such sordid
- surroundings. Spruce's story of gathering material for a novel was
- plausible enough, yet somehow it did not ring true. Hench, as the Nut
- thought with some degree of truth, was a very simple and unsuspicious
- person, but he was not quite such a fool as Mr. Spruce imagined him to be.
- Affable as the young man had been, and pleased as he was with his old
- schoolfellow's offer of pecuniary aid, he could not bring himself to like
- the Cherub. His dandified dress, his mincing ways, his gorgeous array and
- use of perfume, irritated the rough-and-ready manhood of Hench. He sensed
- something poisonous about the little man, and resolved very rightly to be
- wary in his dealings with him. Moreover, Spruce was altogether too curious
- about matters which did not concern him, though why he should be so Hench
- was unable to say. The Nut had made himself acquainted with the affairs of
- every one in the house since his arrival, and knew much which could not
- possibly interest him. However, if he had come to Bethnal Green to plot
- and contrive, it would be a case of diamond cut diamond, for Hench guessed
- that Bottles would keep his eye on the little man's doings. And the eye of
- Bottles was sharp, while the brain of Bottles was keen; so the schemes of
- Mr. Spruce would be baffled in the end, always presuming that he really
- had any.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But it's all bosh,&quot; said Hench aloud to himself, as he made
- ready to go down to breakfast. &quot;Spruce has come here to write a book,
- and it's silly of me to make a mountain out of a molehill. I daresay he'll
- grow tired of this dull life here and cut away back to the West End. Upon
- my word I shan't be sorry when he goes. Strange that Bottles should
- dislike him so thoroughly. He's a sharp lad, is Bottles, and doesn't
- usually make mistakes.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Having unloaded his mind in this soliloquy, Hench descended to breakfast
- and enjoyed that meal all alone, as he was late and every one was out.
- Spruce, indeed, was having breakfast in his room, and of this Hench was
- glad, as he always liked to read the newspaper while drinking his coffee.
- This would have been impossible had such a chattering magpie as the Nut
- been present. But he did not escape the attentions of his old schoolfellow
- entirely, for Spruce made his appearance just as he finished eating. The
- Nut wore a suit of cream-coloured serge with a black necktie, black boots,
- black gloves, and a black hat of soft felt. Hench stared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I say, you look like a negative,&quot; he remonstrated. &quot;Don't
- go out in that get-up or you'll be mobbed.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, no,&quot; said Spruce smoothly; &quot;only pointed at. I'm
- accustomed to that, as I have put on a different suit every day since
- coming here. It must be a pleasure for these Bethnal Green rotters to see
- a well-dressed man.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't mind a fellow being well dressed,&quot; retorted Hench with
- emphasis, &quot;but I do object to over-dressing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce shrugged his shoulders. &quot;You never did care to look decent.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm decent enough; confound your impudence!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What with that shaggy beard and shabby clothes, and----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There! There! Keep off the grass, Spruce. My clothes are well
- enough, although I do admit my beard is a trifle out of place. But when I
- returned from South America six months ago I never bothered to shave. Too
- much trouble.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, if I were a good-looking chap such as you are, I would pay
- more attention to my appearance. Coming out for a walk?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. Not with you in that get-up!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce laughed. &quot;Rum sort of chap you are to object to a fellow
- dressing decently. However, have it your own way. I'll see you this
- afternoon.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench nodded absently and filled his pipe, while Spruce departed to
- delight the jeering inhabitants of Bethnal Green. And they did jeer, in
- what Spruce considered their coarse, common, vulgar way, but did not
- manage to upset him in the least. He was much too conceited to think that
- he could possibly be wrong in his selection of clothes. And it must be
- confessed that, as the day was hot even for July, he looked wonderfully
- cool and comfortable in his white garb. The men jeered, but for the most
- part the women admired him, and so long as he gained admiration from the
- fair sex Spruce was wholly content. So he screwed in his eye-glass and
- strutted and smiled, and made a progress through the main streets of
- Bethnal Green with a heroism worthy of a better cause. And it was heroism
- in a way to venture amongst the great unwashed in such fantastic clothes,
- although in Spruce it took the form of absolute vanity, and a certainty
- that he was &quot;a thing of beauty and a joy for ever.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- As the day was warm and sunny the Nut did not return to luncheon, but
- enjoyed that meal in a City restaurant. He did not risk travelling beyond
- Fleet Street, lest he should stumble against some former friend who
- certainly would not be amiably disposed. Like the Peri, Spruce stood at
- the Gates of Paradise, but did not dare to venture in, so after a long
- look up the Strand, which was closed to him, he returned gloomily to
- Bethnal Green. But by the time he reached The Home of the Muses, he felt
- much better, as his nature was too shallow for him to be impressed
- strongly by any emotion--sorrowful or joyful. It was late in the afternoon
- when he entered the dingy drawing-room, and here he found Hench and Madame
- Alpenny enjoying the regulation tea. Zara, it appeared, was lying down to
- refresh herself for the evening's performance, and Bracken was attending a
- rehearsal. As for Mrs. Tesk, her mind was engaged with the approaching
- dinner, and she was consulting the cook in the kitchen.
- </p>
- <p>
- As soon as Bottles, who was attending to the meal, saw Spruce stepping in
- he became at once upon the alert, and devoured him with his light blue
- eyes. Hench, noticing this espionage, sent the lad away to get fresh tea,
- as he did not approve of Bottles watching and listening to what did not
- concern him. Madame Alpenny smiled blandly when Spruce entered and
- complimented him on his cool looks. She was hot herself, and this was
- little to be wondered at, as she wore her constant black dress with the
- orange spots, her picture hat and her heavy bead mantle. The Nut wondered
- if she had any other clothes, as she never seemed to wear another garb.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are just in time, Mr. Spruce,&quot; said Madame Alpenny in her
- lively way, and after she had paid her compliment. &quot;Tell me what you
- know of Mr. Hench here.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce stared. &quot;Why do you ask me that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Indeed you may well ask,&quot; said Hench with a frown, &quot;as you
- cannot answer the question. But Madame here will not permit me to pay
- attention to Mademoiselle Zara until she knows more about me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am a good mother, you see, and must consider my daughter's
- happiness,&quot; was the reply of the Hungarian lady, as she took the
- freshly filled teapot from Bottles and sent him out of the room again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If that is the case,&quot; said Spruce politely, &quot;then you must
- allow her to become Mrs. Bracken.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Certainly I shall not. Ah, but you are smiling.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Indeed, I think your daughter will only be happy with Bracken,&quot;
- insisted the Nut lightly. &quot;He loves her, and I think that she loves
- him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In that case,&quot; commented Madame with a shrug and glancing at
- Hench, &quot;there is no chance for you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I admire Mademoiselle Zara and wish to make her my wife,&quot; said
- Hench steadily. &quot;I am young and strong, and will soon make a fortune.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So far you have been unsuccessful,&quot; she replied dryly; &quot;and
- for my daughter I prefer a ready-made fortune.&quot; Her eyes rested on
- Spruce as she spoke. The little man did not take the hint, but chuckled
- softly in his hateful fashion, so she was obliged to go on. &quot;Tell me,
- Mr. Spruce, what do you know of Mr. Hench?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Only that he is the best fellow in the world.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench frowned. &quot;I don't see how you can swear to that, seeing we have
- not met for eight years.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, you were always a good sort of chap,&quot; said Spruce gaily.
- &quot;If you don't mind my saying so, you haven't enough brains to be
- wicked. It takes a clever person to sin properly.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, but you will amuse yourself with this talk,&quot; broke in
- Madame, smiling. &quot;I want a good man for my daughter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Take Bracken, then. He's a bit of a bounder, but decent enough.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old woman pursed up her lips and shook her head. After a few moments
- of reflection she spoke freely. &quot;My daughter must marry money, and
- neither you, Mr. Hench, nor Mr. Bracken have any money. I will not allow
- you to pay your addresses to her. Nor will Zara receive them. She is a
- good girl and loves her old mother.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, Hench,&quot; said Spruce, when this speech was ended, &quot;now
- you know. Are you not heart-broken?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No!&quot; retorted Hench sharply. &quot;Nor am I defeated. Zara will
- decide.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She will decide what I order her to decide!&quot; cried Madame
- Alpenny furiously. &quot;And my daughter is not for you, Mr. Hench!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I should prefer to discuss that question privately,&quot; said the
- young man in a stiff, haughty way; &quot;there is no need for Mr. Spruce
- to be present.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, don't say that,&quot; chimed in the Nut reproachfully; &quot;I
- may be able to help you, old fellow. You don't go the right way to work.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's my own way,&quot; snapped Hench restlessly, and objecting to
- interference.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then it's the wrong way,&quot; snapped Spruce in his turn. &quot;Remember
- that Madame Alpenny thinks you are a mystery. Use that to help you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In what way?&quot; Hench opened his brown eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mysterious persons are always interesting, and if Madame here finds
- that you may turn out to be some one great, who knows but what she may
- change her mind?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Are you something great?&quot; asked the lady, addressing Hench
- quickly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. I am nobody, and will remain nobody. Why should you think that I
- am, what you call, a mystery?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It is hard to say,&quot; she answered dreamily and staring hard at
- him. &quot;I have seen eyes like yours somewhere. They are connected with
- a story--a kind of family mystery. But I can't remember to whom those eyes
- belonged.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Perhaps you have met our friend here before,&quot; suggested the Nut
- eagerly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No!&quot; said Madame positively, and Hench also shook his head.
- &quot;I met him here for the first time. The person who had eyes like him
- I met--or I fancy I met--some twenty years ago. But it is all vague and
- uncertain. Yet I feel that the story I allude to is here&quot;--she
- touched her forehead--&quot;a mere word will bring it back to my memory.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then let us try and find the magic word,&quot; cried the
- irrepressible Spruce. &quot;I am desperately curious myself to fathom a
- mystery which the person concerned in it does not guess.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Meaning me,&quot; said Hench tartly. &quot;You are talking rubbish.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Sense, sense, common-sense. When the mystery is discovered you may
- be able to marry Mademoiselle Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There is no mystery about me, I tell you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I am not so sure of that,&quot; remarked the little man, in
- spite of his friend's frown. &quot;You don't know anything about your
- family, as you admitted to me. Yet I dare swear that those papers you are
- to inspect at your lawyers' in a few weeks, when you arrive at the age of
- twenty-five, may contain a history which will astonish you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Papers at your lawyers',&quot; echoed Madame Alpenny, looking
- excited; &quot;is that so?&quot; Hench reluctantly admitted that such was
- the case. &quot;But I don't suppose that anything I don't know will come
- to my knowledge.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Who knows,&quot; observed the old lady thoughtfully. &quot;Mr.
- Spruce is right. This hint of mystery interests me in you and makes me
- more ready to entertain your proposal to marry Zara. If you turned out to
- be wealthy----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I never will, I tell you,&quot; insisted Hench crossly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then why are these mysterious papers in existence? No! believe me,
- they have a story to tell. I am better disposed towards you because of
- those papers, as who knows to what they may lead. Mr. Spruce is right
- about a mystery interesting me, and I congratulate Mr. Spruce. He ought to
- be in the diplomatic service. His knowledge of human nature does him
- credit.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Evidently both Madame and the Cherub were bent upon building a castle in
- the air, as Hench could not think that the papers in question were likely
- to make him a rich man. His father had never been rich, and knowing the
- sybaritism of his deceased parent, the young man was pretty certain that
- if there had been any money about, the elder Hench would have obtained it
- to waste. &quot;You are both wrong,&quot; he said gloomily. &quot;There is
- not likely to be a fortune waiting for me when I read those papers. My
- name is a commonplace one, and I have every reason to believe that my
- family is commonplace also. My father never gave me any information about
- his parents. All I know is that his name was Owain Hench, as mine is, and
- that he once or twice remarked that his youth had been passed in some
- Welsh place, called Rhaiadr!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The effect of this last word on Madame was astonishing. She turned quite
- pale with sudden emotion, her large dark eyes blazed into vivid life and
- she clapped her hands loudly. &quot;Rhaiadr! Owain of Rhaiadr! The word
- means water tumbling over a rock--a waterfall. Ah, yes, and so they call a
- torrent in the barbarous country of Wales.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench stared at her, not understanding this outburst, but Spruce, much
- more alive to what was meant, laughed and nodded. &quot;We have hit upon
- the magic word, it seems,&quot; he observed, all on the alert for
- knowledge. &quot;Tell us who was the owner of the eyes which were like
- those of Hench's, Madame?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Your father had such eyes,&quot; said Madame, turning to the
- astonished man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My father!&quot;--Hench started to his feet--&quot;you have never
- met my father. Why, he died about five years ago.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame nodded complacently and signed that he should seat himself again.
- &quot;Ah, is that so? He is dead, then. Oh, but I did meet him, Mr. Hench.
- Some twenty years back--it was in Buda Pesth. I remember it all&quot;--she
- pressed her jewelled fingers to her forehead--&quot;it all comes back to
- me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Tell us about it, then,&quot; suggested Spruce eagerly. &quot;Bah!&quot;
- said Hench rather rudely, &quot;it's all imagination.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Indeed it is not,&quot; protested Madame, gesticulating. &quot;If it
- were so, how would I know that Rhaiadr meant a waterfall and was in Wales,
- a country I know nothing about? Owain of Rhaiadr!--that is what your
- father called himself.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Owain is my Christian name, and was my father's before me. But we
- don't live in the Middle Ages, when a man was known by his first name
- being connected with a town, or village, or county, or country. Owain
- Hench of Rhaiadr, if you like, Madame.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The woman shook her head and her eyes sparkled like diamonds. &quot;Ah,
- but it is not so. Owain of Rhaiadr was what your father said. I remember
- we were sitting on the terrace of the hotel, and feeling ill, he sought my
- sympathy. Ah, my friend, and more than my sympathy. He wished to marry me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Marry you!&quot; Hench stared at the withered old woman in
- amazement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not? I was a handsome young widow in those days and had some
- money. Afterwards I lost it, being unlucky at cards.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, let us hope that to make up for your loss you were lucky in
- love,&quot; said Spruce affably.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! I did not wish to marry again, as I was devoted to the memory of
- my English husband. But I liked your father, Mr. Hench, even though I
- refused to become his wife. He was not rich, you understand, so it was
- useless for me to marry a poor man. But I liked him because he was
- well-bred and sympathetic in many ways. How it all comes back to me. I
- told him of my daughter, who was with her nurse in the gardens below the
- terrace, and he informed me that he had a son of four or five, who was in
- England being looked after by strangers.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;By strangers,&quot; echoed Hench bitterly; &quot;that is true. All
- my life I have had to do with strangers.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, but, my friend, it was not the fault of your good father,&quot;
- said Madame in a hurried tone. &quot;His young wife--your mother--died
- early, and it was impossible for your father to travel about the Continent
- with a baby--as you were.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A baby of over four years old could have travelled well enough,&quot;
- said Hench in a sombre tone; &quot;but my father never cared about me
- over-much. He----&quot; here the young man checked himself, as he did not
- wish to discuss his father in the presence of Spruce, although he might
- have done so with Madame Alpenny, since he desired to marry her daughter.
- After a pause he continued: &quot;Well, did my father tell you his family
- history?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was quite one minute before the old lady answered this question. She
- reflected deeply, with her eyes searching his handsome face, then shook
- her head sadly. &quot;No! We were not so confidential as that. We met
- several times again, but as I refused to marry him, your father went away
- to Paris. I never saw him again, but the memory of his eyes remained, and
- those same eyes you now use to look at me suggested my old romance.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;They would not have done so but for the magic word Rhaiadr,&quot;
- said Spruce in brisk tones. &quot;Well, Hench, you see that there is a
- mystery.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There is not,&quot; declared the young man sharply and much vexed.
- &quot;Your mystery resolves itself into what Madame here calls her
- romance. My father asked her to marry him and she refused. Very wisely, I
- think,&quot; he added, as if to himself--&quot;she would never have been
- happy.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame overheard him, shrugged her shoulders, and rose, looking more
- shapeless in figure and more untidy in dress than ever. &quot;In any case,
- I have never been happy,&quot; she said sadly, &quot;so it does not
- matter. But I am now inclined to consider your proposal to pay attentions
- to Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He is not yet rich, remember,&quot; put in Spruce, grinning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mind your own business,&quot; said Hench vehemently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No&quot;--Madame's tone was peculiar--&quot;and perhaps he never may
- be rich. But if Zara likes you, I am not sure but what I will not allow
- you to marry her. No, I have not yet quite made up my mind. Give me time
- to think&quot;--she moved ponderously towards the door. &quot;Owain of
- Rhaiadr! Ah, if you were only able to call yourself that. Well, who knows,&quot;
- and with a mysterious nod she disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Queer thing, coming across an old flame of your father's in Queer
- Street,&quot; said the Nut affably. &quot;What do you think?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think,&quot; said Hench in anything but an amiable tone, &quot;that
- you had better mind your own damned business.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce was by no means offended. &quot;As you will, although you should be
- sensible enough to use my brains to help you with your family mystery.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There is no mystery. How often am I to repeat that?&quot; And Hench
- walked away fuming with rage at the little man's persistence.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_04" href="#div1Ref_04" id="div1_04">CHAPTER IV</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- THE ADVERTISEMENT
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench felt annoyed with himself for talking so freely about his private
- affairs in the presence of Spruce, yet he could not see how he could have
- done otherwise. Madame Alpenny, disregarding the obvious fact that his
- proposal for her daughter's hand was not for public discussion, had
- appealed to the little man for information concerning the suitor, and in
- this way the Nut had been drawn into the conversation. If was not that
- Hench affected reticence, as he was a singularly frank man; or that there
- was anything to conceal in his past life, since that was free from
- punishable misdeeds. But it irritated him that Spruce should meddle, as
- the man appeared to have a finger in everybody's pie, and Hench saw no
- reason why he should have anything to do with this particular pastry. For
- this reason he gave his old schoolfellow the cold shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce objected to this, as it was his aim to ingratiate himself, with a
- view to possible happenings which would place him in possession of money.
- At the outset Hench's friendship had not appeared to be worth cultivating,
- as he was poor, aggressively honest, and not at all a man to be exploited
- by the unscrupulous. But after Hench's confidence regarding the papers at
- the lawyers', Spruce scented a mystery which might be profitable. His
- suspicions, which at the outset were of the very faintest description,
- received colour and were rendered more substantial by the knowledge that
- Madame Alpenny had been acquainted with the young man's father. Spruce had
- noted her hesitation in replying to the question concerning the telling of
- the family history, and was satisfied in his own mind that she knew more
- than she would admit. The fact that after the conversation in the
- drawing-room she was willing to consider the proposal of marriage to Zara,
- implied that there was something in the wind. Having regard to Madame
- Alpenny's poverty and to her desire that Zara should marry a wealthy man,
- that something undoubtedly had to do with money. As yet Spruce was very
- vague about the whole matter, as his information was not accurate enough
- to enable him to act. But the key to the mystery, whatever it might be,
- was in the possession of Madame Alpenny, therefore the Nut watched her
- carefully. If she was agreeable that Zara should become the wife of Hench,
- there was certainly money to be gained by her as the result of the
- marriage; and if Hench was likely to possess riches, Spruce made up his
- mind to share in the same.
- </p>
- <p>
- For this reason he ignored the young man's bearish manner and scant
- civility, which otherwise he would not have tolerated. Spruce was
- amiability itself, and went out of his way to amuse the paying guests, so
- that Mrs. Tesk looked upon him as quite an acquisition. He played the
- piano, he sang songs, he performed conjuring tricks, and made himself
- generally agreeable. Also he escorted Zara to the Bijou Music-hall and
- there became acquainted with the management, with the stage hands, and
- with the hangers-on of the profession. In a week he was quite at home
- behind the scenes, and even became friendly with Mrs. Jedd, who was the
- mother of Bottles, and the wardrobe mistress. In fact, he ingratiated
- himself with every one and was highly popular; meantime watching Madame
- Alpenny with the ardour of a cat at a mouse-hole, and giving his best
- attentions to Hench. These were so coldly received that finally he
- remonstrated in a most plaintive manner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't see why you should be so confoundedly disagreeable,&quot; he
- said after seven days of hard work to be polite; &quot;we are two
- gentlemen who are stranded here, and may as well chum up for the sake of
- company.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't wish to chum up, as you call it, with any one,&quot;
- retorted Hench coldly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not with Zara?&quot; Spruce could not help giving his friend the
- dig.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is my business.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I never suggested otherwise. But I would point out that Madame
- Alpenny's resolve to consider your marriage proposition favourably is due
- to me. Had I not guided the conversation as I did, she would never have
- remembered her meeting with your father. It is the romance of that which
- has inclined her to permit your wooing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madame Alpenny would have remembered without your help.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think not. You have been here along with her for six months and
- have had endless conversations. But until I made a third----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;An inconvenient third.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, as you will. But until I made a third, she did not recollect the
- adventure of her youth which has softened her towards you. This being the
- case, I don't see why you should hold me at arm's length.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am not taking the trouble to consider you in any way,&quot; said
- Hench in his most freezing manner. &quot;We were never chums at school,
- and I see nothing in you to make me more friendly now. It is true that you
- offered to help me with money, but as I don't require your help in that
- way, I lie under no obligation to you. Why the dickens can't you go back
- to the West End?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I shall go back,&quot; lied Spruce, &quot;when I gather sufficient
- material for my proposed book. Meanwhile, my friend----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Meanwhile,&quot; repeated Hench, cutting him short, &quot;suppose
- you mind your own business and leave mine alone.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Had I left your business alone, Madame Alpenny would not now be so
- agreeable to you, old fellow,&quot; said Spruce, persistently polite.
- &quot;However, since you object, I shall meddle no more. All the same, if
- I can do you a good turn I am perfectly willing to do so.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't be worthy and pose as a bed-rock Christian!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm sure I don't know what you mean,&quot; sighed the little man,
- who knew perfectly well what was implied; &quot;but as you are bent upon
- making yourself disagreeable, you will be pleased to hear that I am
- returning to the West End to-morrow for a few days.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I hope you'll stay there,&quot; growled Hench wrathfully, and quite
- unable to get rid of this gadfly. &quot;I prefer to be alone.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You will be more alone than you think,&quot; retorted Spruce tartly.
- &quot;Madame Alpenny is going away also for a few days. She told Mrs.
- Tesk, who told me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Just like you, to go interfering with other people's business,
- Spruce. Madame Alpenny can go away without the world coming to an end.&quot;
- He paused, then asked a question which he immediately regretted having
- put. &quot;Where's she going?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah!&quot; Spruce chuckled cynically, &quot;you are curious in spite
- of your pretended dislike to meddle with what doesn't concern you. Well,
- she is going to see if any West End manager will come to see Zara dancing
- at the Bijou Music-hall, with a view to getting her daughter a better
- engagement.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I hope she will succeed,&quot; said Hench heartily. &quot;Zara is a
- rare dancer and well deserves better luck.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If she goes, you will be parted.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, hang your interference!&quot; cried Hench, and walked out of the
- smoking-room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Better make hay while the sun shines,&quot; Spruce called out after
- him, and, after his usual manner, chuckled when the door banged by way of
- reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- There appeared to be a perfect exodus from The Home of the Muses, for
- Bracken also became conspicuous by his absence. He went to see his mother
- at Folkestone, who was a widow, as news came that her health was not what
- it might be. But the greatest surprise was when Bottles came to Hench on
- the morning of the exodus, dressed in his best clothes and smiling all
- over his freckled face. He was blushing also, which was a rare thing for
- the imp to do, and made a request which accounted for the same.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Would you mind, sir--I mean, am I asking too much--that is, if you
- won't think it sauce on my part,&quot; he stumbled amongst his words and
- blushed deeper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Out with it, Bottles! What is it? Speak straight and to the point.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jedd did so and very bluntly. &quot;I want you to lend me five shillings,
- sir. Oh, I'll pay it back out of my wages at sixpence a week, see if I
- don't&quot;--the boy went through a pantomine--&quot;that wet; that dry;
- cut my throat if I tell a lie.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench, who had every reason to trust Bottles, and who considered him to be
- a lad with a future if clever wits went for anything, produced a couple of
- half-crowns from his slender resources. &quot;There you are! You needn't
- pay me back.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, but I will, sir, thanking you all the same,&quot; said Bottles,
- pocketing the cash. &quot;Mother's brought me up proper, she has, and
- always told me never to borrer. But I can't help borrering this time; it's
- business.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What business?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Private,&quot; said the lad stiffly; &quot;but the five bob shall be
- paid back, honest, Mr. Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, Bottles, I admire your principles and will accept the sixpence
- a week repayment. But why are you so excited and why this splendour of
- dress?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm going down the country to see my brother, sir.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Your brother. I never knew you had a brother.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, yes sir, please. We're twins, we are, and I'm the elder by half
- an hour, as mother always says. Peter's a page in a lady's house in the
- country, and Mrs. Tesk allows me to go and see him sometimes. I asked her
- if I could go to-day, and she said that as Mr. Spruce and Mr. Bracken and
- Madame Alpenny were away for a few days, and there wouldn't be much work,
- that she would let me go.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot; said Hench with a good-natured laugh, &quot;I hope
- you'll enjoy yourself, my lad. So you are Simon and your brother is Peter.
- Eh?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, sir. Called after the Chief Apostle, sir. Mother reads her
- Bible even though she's only looking after the clothes at the Bijour
- Music-hall. I'm going to stay away for two days, Mr. Hench, and p'raps
- three. But I won't waste my time; oh no, not much, you bet, sir.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What do you mean?&quot; asked his patron, considerably mystified.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'll tell you some day, sir, as you've a right to know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Know what?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What I've got up my sleeve. It may be rot, and it may be something
- else. All I can tell you, sir, is, that when the time comes, you'll know.
- S'elp me Bob, I'll tell you everything,&quot; and Bottles panted with
- excitement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Bottles, you've muddled your brain with your adventure and detective
- penny-dreadful yarns. Well, go on your Sexton Blake errand, and mind you
- have a good time. I shall miss your attentions, though,&quot; ended Hench
- kindly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I hope you won't miss 'em very much, sir. I've told Amelia to see as
- you get everything you want. She's only a gal, but she'll do her best for
- my sake, sir,&quot; ended Bottles grandly. &quot;She and me's going to
- marry when we're rich.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Go away, you precocious imp, and don't talk nonsense.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There's many a true word spoke in nonsense, as mother says, sir.
- She's great on proverbs, is mother!&quot; and with this parting shot
- Bottles rapidly disappeared, grinning amiably and very much excited. Hench
- wondered at the boy's mysterious hints and could not for the life of him
- see how they could have anything to do with his own affairs. However,
- thinking that Bottles was merely drawing on his imagination, he dismissed
- the matter from his mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- And, indeed, for the next few days, and until the return of the absent,
- the young man found his hands full enough. Zara being alone, with neither
- her mother nor Bracken at her elbow, Hench thought that he might as well
- take advantage of the opportunity to carry on an uninterrupted wooing. He
- escorted Zara to the music-hall and escorted her home again. He took her
- sundry walks, gave her sundry meals in restaurants, and provided her with
- cheap amusements in the form of cinematograph entertainments. Zara, who
- really liked Hench, was very grateful for his attentions, but she
- resolutely refused to allow him to make love to her. With the dexterity of
- a woman she managed to keep him at arm's length; but one evening while he
- conducted her to business the young man managed to get nearer to his
- divinity. Certainly the crowded streets, flaring with gas-lights, were
- unfit surroundings for love-making. But Hench had to carry on his romance
- as best he could, since Zara was so clever in throwing obstacles in his
- way. On this occasion, however, he broke through them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are very cruel to me,&quot; he remarked, after many minutes of
- desultory conversation, and seizing the opportunity when the pair turned
- down into a quiet side street, &quot;very cruel indeed.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The handsome girl was silent for a moment or so. &quot;It's no use my
- pretending to misunderstand you, Mr. Hench,&quot; she said at length.
- &quot;What's the time?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Rather surprised by the irrelevance of the question, Hench looked at his
- very cheap watch. &quot;Eight o'clock.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I'm not on until a quarter to nine, and although I do take a
- long time to dress, I can give you ten minutes.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, thank you, Zara. You are----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't make any mistake, Mr. Hench. I won't have those ten minutes
- spent in love-making, which would bore me and waste your time.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No time spent upon you is wasted, Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There you are wrong. It is time we had an explanation. So long as
- mother objected to you as she does to Ned----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;To Ned?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I mean to Mr. Bracken,&quot; said Zara, colouring and wincing.
- &quot;Well then, so long as she was in that frame of mind, I let things
- slide. But now mother seems inclined to consider you as a possible
- son-in--law, and I must appeal to you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Command me in any way.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then don't worry me with attentions. Oh, I don't mind your behaving
- like a gentleman, as you have been doing, to pass the time while mother is
- away. I am very grateful to you for the amusement you have given me. But&quot;--added
- the girl, leaning against the railings of a convenient dwelling-house--&quot;I
- am not in love with you, no more than you are with me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I do love you,&quot; said Hench, frowning; &quot;what's the use of
- saying otherwise?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You don't love me, I tell you,&quot; insisted Zara petulantly.
- &quot;Trust a woman to understand the exact state of a man's heart. You
- like me, you admire me, you think me a good sort, but love&quot;--she
- shook her head--&quot;you don't understand love as Ned--I mean, Mr.
- Bracken--does.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, call him Ned by all means,&quot; said Hench quietly. &quot;I see
- you are friendly enough with him to do so.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am engaged to him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;With your mother's consent?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. You know very well that mother wants me to marry a rich man, and
- Ned is poor, although he does hope to get a few hundred pounds now that
- his mother is dying. I love him and I intend somehow to marry him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is unpleasant hearing for me, Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Indeed, it isn't, Mr. Hench. I know quite well what has led you to
- propose marriage to me----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I never have proposed as yet,&quot; interpolated Hench quickly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. But you intended to. If I had not prevented you from going too
- far these last few days you would have proposed. Come now, isn't that the
- truth?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! And to make you understand me fully I ask you now to be my
- wife.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then I refuse. I love Ned, and Ned only, even though he's but a poor
- violinist in the orchestra and earns little money. He loves me also, and
- in a way which you cannot comprehend.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because your heart has never been touched either by me or by any
- other woman. It's no use your saying that it has been. I know you better
- than you do yourself, Mr. Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The young man felt slightly mortified. &quot;You appear to have a bad
- opinion of me, Mademoiselle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Indeed, I have a most excellent opinion of you. Make no mistake
- about that, Mr. Hench. You are an honourable gentleman; you are extremely
- kind-hearted and you will be an admirable husband--to the woman you love.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are the woman, believe me!&quot; cried Hench impetuously.
- </p>
- <p>
- Zara shook her proud head, smiling, and looked less fierce than usual.
- &quot;Oh, what children men are. They want a toy and cry when they don't
- get it, yet break it when it is in their possession. I am the toy, Mr.
- Hench, and you are the child who wants it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And if I got the toy I would break it. Eh?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes,&quot; said the dancer frankly, and began to walk on slowly, as
- the ten minutes were nearly up, &quot;and I'll tell you why. You are a
- lonely man, who has no home, no relations, no centre in life, if I may put
- it so. Having an intensely domestic nature--that nature which makes an
- admirable husband, a devoted father, and which is domestic in its
- essence--you want a wife to create a centre round which you can revolve. I
- happen to be passably good-looking, to have some good qualities, and to be
- an agreeable companion. Therefore, liking me, you mistake that liking for
- love, and offer me a respectable but dull future. Any other woman,
- decently kind and presentable, would suit you just as well as I would, and
- with her you would believe yourself to be in love as you think you are
- with me. But a happy marriage is not built up upon such a foundation, Mr.
- Hench, believe me. A woman wants love, she wants a heart. You can give me
- neither.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And Mr. Bracken can?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! Otherwise I wouldn't marry him. If mother is successful and can
- get me a West End engagement, I daresay I'll have plenty of men fluttering
- about me, and can pick and choose amongst lovers of higher rank and with
- more money than poor Ned has. But I won't find one who loves me as he
- does.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't quite understand the kind of love you mean,&quot; murmured
- Hench, perplexed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course you don't, for the very simple reason that you require an
- explanation. True love comes from within and not from without. When you
- really feel the passion you require no explanation. Come and tell me when
- you really fall in love, Mr. Hench, if I am not right.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Where did you learn how to talk in this way?&quot; asked Hench, who
- was beginning to see that she was right.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Experience has taught me, and experience is a great teacher. I am
- older than you think, Mr. Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are only three and twenty. Your mother told me so.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am older in experience, for you know that a woman is always twice
- as old as a man in the ways of the world. However, here is the Bijou, and
- I must go in to get ready for my work. You understand what I mean, don't
- you?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes. I daresay my love is of a very feeble quality.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't be bitter and don't pity yourself, Mr. Hench. Your liking for
- me is perfectly honourable, and I am sure you would make a kind husband.
- But love--you know nothing of love. I said that before, I fancy, and I say
- it again.&quot; She offered her gloved hand. &quot;Come! Let us be
- friends, nothing nearer, nothing dearer. Otherwise you will make me
- unhappy.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Round the corner of the music-hall, where no one was about, Hench bent
- over Zara's hand and kissed it. &quot;Let it be as you say,&quot; he said
- firmly; &quot;all the same, I envy Bracken his future wife.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You will meet a woman who will suit you better than I will,&quot;
- Zara assured him, and her great black eyes shone. &quot;When you do, come
- and tell me how wholly correct I have been. And another thing, Mr. Hench,
- don't let mother bully me about you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There's no chance. I am too poor to be your husband so far as Madame
- Alpenny is concerned, even though she likes me better than she did.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Zara looked at him curiously. &quot;Are you sure that you are poor?&quot;
- she asked in an enigmatic tone, and then ran into the music-hall, through
- the dark stage door, before he could reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench strolled home leisurely, wondering what she meant by her last
- speech. Of course he was poor. She knew it; so did Madame Alpenny; so did
- every one in the boarding-house. Yet she implied a doubt. Resolving to ask
- for an explanation when occasion served, the young man dismissed this
- particular matter from his mind, and thought of his misfortune in losing
- Zara. He had always admired her, and now that she had spoken to him so
- eloquently he admired her more than ever. Hitherto more or less silent,
- she had never displayed the common-sense qualities of her mind before.
- Therefore Hench saw that she was not only a handsome woman and an
- accomplished girl, but had considerable mental powers. Otherwise she could
- scarcely have placed the truth so plainly before him as she had done. And
- with a sigh the pseudo-lover confessed that it was the truth. What he felt
- was not love, for, although he regretted his dismissal from the wooing of
- a noble woman, he by no means felt broken-hearted, as Bracken would have
- done. Hench recognized that his desire for Zara was only a strong wish for
- a home and a wife and a family, and--as she put it--for a centre round
- which his life could revolve. Having arrived at this conclusion he decided
- to leave the girl alone, and wait until fortune brought him to the feet of
- his true mate. &quot;And I must have some sort of mate in the world,
- anyhow,&quot; added Hench to himself, by way of comfort.
- </p>
- <p>
- Henceforth the relations of the two were much more unembarrassed, for it
- was a brother and sister connection--frank and markedly comfortable.
- During the remainder of Madame Alpenny's absence, Hench took Zara about as
- usual, and she confided in him her love for Bracken, her plans for the
- accomplishment of that love, and her many difficulties with her mother.
- Madame Alpenny, it seemed, was by no means an angel, as she possessed a
- furious temper, and wasted all her money in gambling. She was an ill woman
- to cross, since her nature was vindictive and eminently determined to have
- its own way. Zara gave Hench to understand that if she could marry Bracken
- and pension her mother she would be truly happy. At present she was very
- miserable, and only the hope of escaping from her mother's clutches in the
- manner described enabled her to endure trouble. Hench, in his new
- character of her brother, consoled her, and promised to do what he could
- to forward her aims. But he did not see at the present moment how he could
- do anything.
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny returned on the third day, but the other absentees still
- remained away. The old woman looked very satisfied with herself, and
- hinted that she had done good business which would improve Zara's
- position. She was markedly civil to Hench, and encouraged him greatly to
- pay attentions to her daughter. As the two now understood one another, to
- do this was easy--both for Hench to pay them and for Zara to receive
- them--but Madame Alpenny remained in the dark as to the true meaning of
- their comedy. Then, on the second day after her return, a surprising thing
- happened, with which she had to do. What it was Hench learned while
- sitting at a lonely breakfast. Madame Alpenny, who always took that meal
- in her own room, came down unexpectedly arrayed in a greasy dressing-gown
- and flourishing a newspaper in her hand. &quot;Rhaiadr! Rhaiadr!&quot; she
- called out excitedly. &quot;What does it mean?&quot; Hench looked at her
- in surprise. &quot;Tumbling water, you told me,&quot; he said, after an
- astonished pause. &quot;Don't you remember----?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No! I don't mean that.&quot; She clapped <i> The Express</i> on
- the table before him, and pointed with one chubby finger at an
- advertisement. &quot;I mean, what do you make of that? Rhaiadr! No one can
- have anything to do with that word but your father--and you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench, more puzzled than ever by her excitement, read the advertisement
- upon which her finger rested. &quot;If Rhaiadr,&quot; he read aloud,
- &quot;will come to the Gipsy Stile at Cookley, Essex, at eight o'clock on
- the 1st of July, he will hear of something greatly to his advantage.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There!&quot; said Madame Alpenny triumphantly, and looking more
- shapeless than ever in her dressing-gown; &quot;what do you think of that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It has nothing to do with me,&quot; said Hench, with a shrug.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Nothing to do with you!&quot; she screamed. &quot;Why, the name
- Rhaiadr shows that it has everything to do with you. Go there and see what
- it means. Ah, I always said that you were a mystery; now I am sure of it.&quot;
- And she rubbed her hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_05" href="#div1Ref_05" id="div1_05">CHAPTER V</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- THE NEXT STEP
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench could not help admitting that the mention of the peculiar Welsh word
- &quot;Rhaiadr&quot; in the newspaper had something to do with him.
- Undoubtedly he was the person whom the unknown advertiser wished to meet;
- but the whole matter was so strange and unexpected that he determined to
- think it over carefully before taking any steps. For this reason he said
- little to the excited Hungarian lady, who was rather annoyed by his
- reticence. But he did not take any notice of her hints, and retired as
- speedily as possible to his own room. There he lighted his pipe, sat by
- the window and read the advertisement twice and thrice again, after which
- he laid down the newspaper so that he might think more freely. And his
- thoughts had to do with his past life when travelling with his father.
- </p>
- <p>
- The record of earlier days was bare enough, as Hench decided when he
- recalled the same. His father had paid strangers to look after him
- immediately after the death of Mrs. Hench, and when Owain was only five
- years of age. For years the lad saw very little of his parent, who was
- always moving from one place to another after the fashion of the Wandering
- Jew. Then came his education at a private school, and afterwards the wider
- training at Winchester. Later, Owain had expected to go to Oxford, but his
- father, finding the need of some one to lean upon in his old age, had
- summoned the boy to Berlin unexpectedly. Owain's mysterious parent proved
- to be an aristocratic-looking gentleman, perfectly dressed, perfectly
- acquainted with the motley Continental world, and perfectly heartless.
- Hench senior frankly acknowledged that he cared for no one but himself,
- and turned his son into a kind of superior servant. The two travelled all
- over Europe in moderately good style, as Mr. Hench always seemed to have
- enough to keep him in comfort if not in luxury. But this last he also
- obtained by gambling, as he frequently won large sums of money, which were
- always squandered in extravagant whims and fancies. If Owain had not
- possessed a sterling thoughtful nature he would have been ruined by this
- hand-to-mouth existence, which was distinguished by continual ups and
- downs. But the young man had his own views of leading a decent life, and
- when unhampered by his spendthrift father determined to carry them out.
- The opportunity did not come to him until he was twenty years of age, when
- Mr. Hench died in Paris and was buried without parade in Pere La Chaise.
- Cold-hearted and selfish to the end, he passed away without suggesting how
- his son, to whom he had given no profession, was to exist. He simply told
- him to go to Gilberry &amp; Gilberry, solicitors, of Lincoln's Inn Fields,
- on his twenty-fifth birthday, when certain papers would be handed to him.
- Thus it can be seen that the young man had little reason to regret the
- demise of so egotistic a parent, who had been a curse rather than a
- blessing.
- </p>
- <p>
- What the papers in charge of Gilberry &amp; Gilberry might contain, Owain
- could not guess, nor had his dying father enlightened him, but he fancied
- that they might have something to do with proving the identity of the dead
- man. Owain had always suspected, from the strict silence preserved by his
- father about his past, that Hench was an assumed name, and hoped that the
- mysterious documents might afford some clue to the family history. The
- sole clue which the young man had to guide him to knowledge of any sort or
- description was the mention of his father of Rhaiadr as the place where he
- had passed his youthful days. Yet the word had proved to be of some value,
- for its mention had evoked a memory of Madame Alpenny's early romance,
- although that story had proved to be more interesting than useful. Now it
- appeared that the talismanic word was being used to lure him to meet a
- stranger, who--as the advertisement put it--would tell him of something
- greatly to his advantage.
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain, having reached this point of his meditations, rose to pace the room
- and consider the position. He was of two minds about answering the
- summons, since an open-air meeting seemed scarcely business-like or even
- reasonable. Also it was now the last week in June, and the appointment was
- arranged for the first day of July. But on the tenth day of that month
- came Owain's birthday, when he would be placed in possession of the papers
- for which he had waited so long. The young man considered, prudently
- enough, that it would be just as well to curb his curiosity for nine days,
- as the documents might throw some light on the admittedly odd
- advertisement. If he obeyed the summons to the Gipsy Stile, Cookley,
- Essex, on the first of July, he would be at the disadvantage of being in
- the dark, since he would know nothing, while the person who met him would
- know much. The rough-and-tumble life which he had led since the death of
- his father inclined Owain to prudence, as he knew from dire experience
- what tricky people there were in the world. Therefore he determined to
- take no notice of the advertisement--at all events for the present, since
- he had a week to think over the matter--and calmly wait until he became
- possessed of the papers on his twenty-fifth birthday. Finally, he resolved
- to say nothing to Spruce, who, luckily, had not yet returned, and to ask
- Madame Alpenny to keep the Nut in ignorance of the advertisement. He
- certainly would have to be more or less frank with the Hungarian lady,
- since she had drawn his attention to the notice in <i>The Express</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny was full of curiosity when she met Hench at afternoon tea,
- and, as they had the room to themselves, she immediately proceeded to ask
- questions. Hench baffled her as well as he could, but found it difficult
- to do so. She appeared to be certain that he was more of a mystery than
- ever, and insisted upon scenting a fortune in the same. Naturally, as
- Zara's mother, she was anxious to know if her belief was correct, as then
- Hench could make the girl his wife and supply a meritorious mother-in-law
- with ample funds. As usual, she wore her eternal orange-spotted dress, her
- shabby bead mantle and her flamboyant picture hat, looking quite a merry
- old blackguard of an adventuress. Hench had long since decided that she
- was such a one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course you'll keep this appointment,&quot; said Madame Alpenny
- eagerly, when she handed Hench his tea.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm not sure. You see, I may not be the person wanted.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pfui!&quot; said the woman contemptuously, and her large, dark eyes
- sparkled. &quot;Why, the word Rhaiadr proves conclusively that you are the
- person. It is strange, Mr. Hench,&quot; she continued with great vivacity,
- &quot;that I should have heard the word from you only a few days before
- this advertisement appeared.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's very strange,&quot; assented the young man, with his eyes
- searching her face. &quot;You know nothing about the advertisement, I
- suppose?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Eh, but why should I?&quot; she asked in amazement. &quot;Only by
- chance did I see the name Rhaiadr, and immediately brought the paper to
- you, remembering our conversation of some days back. I presume, sir,&quot;
- she went on, with a shrug, &quot;that you do not think I put in the
- advertisement?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, no; by no means,&quot; said Owain hastily; &quot;but you might
- have mentioned the Welsh name to some one else.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No,&quot; said Madame Alpenny decidedly. &quot;That is, I mentioned
- it only to Zara, and she took little notice of what I mentioned. Of
- course, there was Mr. Spruce, who was in this room when we talked about my
- meeting with your father. But he is not likely to have asked you to meet
- him in Essex, when he can see you here any day; also he probably has not
- seen the advertisement.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I don't suspect Spruce, Madame; and that reminds me, it will be
- as well to say nothing to Spruce about the matter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Am I a chatter-box, or a fool?&quot; asked Madame fiercely, and with
- a lowering look on her face. &quot;Certainly I will say nothing to Mr.
- Spruce. But you must tell me all that takes place when you meet whosoever
- you are to meet.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am going to meet no one,&quot; retorted Hench resolutely; &quot;there
- is no need for me to do so.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But, my friend, you will hear of something greatly to your
- advantage, as it said in the newspaper,&quot; expostulated the woman,
- frowning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I mean to wait until I get the papers from my lawyers on the tenth
- of July, Madame. They may tell me of the something greatly to my advantage
- without my going on a wild-goose chase into Essex.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But I don't understand your objection.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It is this. If I go now, I am quite in ignorance of my family
- history with which this appointment has to do, as I shrewdly suspect. If I
- go after the tenth of July I will be in a better position to deal with the
- matter, as I think the papers at my lawyers' will tell me much about my
- father.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny nodded. &quot;There is something in that. All the same,
- this advertisement concerns you and not your father, who is dead and
- buried.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It and the papers also concern my father's past life, and therefore
- concern my present,&quot; argued Hench seriously. &quot;And I have waited
- so long for light to be thrown on the past that I can easily wait a few
- days longer.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You have made no attempt to get at the past up till now?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, yes. After my father's death I went to my lawyers&quot;--Hench
- did not intend to tell Madame Alpenny the name of the firm--&quot;and
- asked about the papers. They admitted that they had them, and promised to
- deliver them on my twenty-fifth birthday. Otherwise they would say
- nothing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And you--what did you do?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What could I do save go away and do my best to keep myself alive for
- five years. I went as a sailor on a tramp vessel and met with many
- adventures. I found that I had a talent for writing, and in San Francisco
- I managed to get a short story of mine accepted, printed and paid for.
- Then I went to Peru, and afterwards to the South Seas, coming back to
- England through Australia, China, India and Persia. Rather a roundabout
- way of progression, I admit. But I was like a leaf blown by the winds of
- fortune--and bitter winds they were. In one way and another, chiefly by
- writing short adventure tales, I managed to keep myself afloat. This year
- I came here, six months ago, to wait for the tenth of July. Here I met
- you----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And Zara,&quot; said Madame quickly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench looked at her with a peculiar expression, and raked his brown beard
- with outspread fingers. It was on the tip of his tongue to relate how he
- had been refused by the girl, but on second thoughts he refrained.
- According to Zara her mother had a quick temper, and if all was told the
- girl might suffer from that temper. Also Madame Alpenny, being given a
- clue, might learn that Zara and Bracken were engaged, which knowledge
- would assuredly lead to trouble. On the whole, therefore, Hench decided to
- be silent, and replied evasively. &quot;Ah, yes, I met your charming
- daughter, of course.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And admired her?&quot; persisted Madame, not finding his speech
- sufficiently ardent in tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And admired her to the extent of asking your permission to propose
- to her. But, of course, when you refused me that, because I am poor, I
- have changed my mind. As a gentleman I can do no less.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;As a lover you can do much more,&quot; retorted the old woman, with
- a look of annoyance. &quot;And remember that I was favourable to your
- proposal when I learned that you were the son of the man who wished to
- marry me so long ago.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yet I am still poor,&quot; said Hench ironically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That has yet to be proved,&quot; rejoined Madame bluntly. &quot;Oh,
- don't look so astonished, my friend. I am old and I am shrewd, and I have
- learned by experience that two and two make four. Those papers you
- mention, together with this advertisement which plainly refers to you,
- appear to me proof that you will inherit money.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't see that, Madame, unless, of course, my father gave you some
- hint that there was money in the family.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mr. Hench gave me no hint,&quot; said the lady sharply and hastily.
- &quot;He explained that he had a small income, and frequently won large
- sums at cards. On the whole, he gave me to understand that if I married
- him there would be no lack of money. But he never said a word about a
- fortune coming to him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then why should you think that a fortune is likely to come to me?&quot;
- asked Hench very naturally.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have intuition, my friend, and intuition tells me that those
- papers and that advertisement mean money.&quot; Madame Alpenny paused, and
- then continued after some thought: &quot;You say that you had great
- difficulty in getting money after your father's death?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is so. I had to earn every penny.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Strange, when he had a sufficient income to keep him comfortable.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That was an annuity. He told me so shortly before he died.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And told you that the papers with your lawyers would place you in
- possession of money?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No.&quot; Hench shook his head. &quot;He never even hinted at such a
- thing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny nursed her pointed chin and frowned at the carpet. &quot;I
- am sure there is money,&quot; she mused, loud enough for the young man to
- overhear. &quot;Your father gave you no profession or trade with which to
- earn money, and it is not likely that he would have behaved so unless he
- knew that the future held a fortune in store for you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench's lip curled. &quot;I am sorry to destroy any illusion about my
- father,&quot; he said with a shrug; &quot;but I don't think he cared two
- straws about my future.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then why should he tell you about the papers?&quot; asked Madame, as
- sharp as a needle. &quot;Believe me, those papers refer to a fortune.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well&quot;--Hench rose and stretched himself--&quot;I shall know all
- about that when I see the lawyers on the tenth of July.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Or when you meet this unknown person in Essex on the first of July.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am not going to meet the person,&quot; said Hench coldly; &quot;and
- I have given my reasons for not meeting him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Him!&quot; Madame Alpenny laughed. &quot;It may be a woman, for all
- you know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench wheeled round to face her searchingly. &quot;Why do you think it is
- a woman?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh,&quot; she answered smoothly, &quot;I only surmise. I don't say
- that the person is a woman, for I know no more about the matter than you
- do. All I do say is, that if you wish to marry my daughter you will have
- to learn about this fortune as quickly as possible. I hope that I have
- managed to get an engagement for Zara in the West End, and there she may
- meet with some one wealthy who will make her his wife.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You don't appear to take Mademoiselle Zara's feelings into
- consideration.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Feelings!&quot; echoed Madame Alpenny vehemently. &quot;What are
- feelings of any sort compared with poverty? I have little money myself,
- and what I have is all in these things.&quot; She touched her rings,
- bracelets and brooches. &quot;Zara does not earn what her talents demand.
- We want money, and the sole way in which we can get it is for her to marry
- money. Failing you there are others.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Quite so,&quot; said Hench, thinking of Bracken, and smiling
- slightly. &quot;But a man who has no wealth may wish to marry her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Referring to yourself, I suppose,&quot; said Madame Alpenny dryly,
- and quite mistaking his meaning. &quot;Well, you won't marry her unless
- you prove through those papers and that advertisement to be possessed of a
- fortune. Until then, I hope you will be circumspect with regard to Zara.
- Don't be too attentive to her, and turn the poor child's head.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There is no fear of my doing that,&quot; said Hench equally dryly,
- &quot;but to make things safe I propose to remove myself from temptation.
- To-morrow I shall leave this place.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;For how long?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;For ever.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh,&quot;--Madame Alpenny looked as black as thunder, as this
- proposal by no means suited her scheme of getting a rich son-in-law,--&quot;don't
- do that.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not? After all, there is nothing to keep me here.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Zara!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But you will not let me pay attention to Zara with a view to
- matrimony.&quot; Madame Alpenny looked uneasy and puzzled. &quot;You place
- me on the horns of a dilemma, Mr. Hench. I can't let you become engaged to
- my daughter until I am sure you have money. But of course&quot;--she
- brightened up--&quot;if what I suspect is true, and money comes, you can
- return and marry her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- This frank suggestion placed Hench on the horns of a dilemma, but he
- managed to evade binding himself in a most dexterous way. &quot;If
- Mademoiselle Zara is really able to return my love, and thinks that she
- will be happy as my wife, I shall certainly return and renew my suit. But
- remember, Madame, she must become my wife of her own free will, and not
- because you insist.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, that's all right,&quot; said the old lady easily. &quot;Zara is
- a good girl and will obey her mother to whom she owes so much.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is the very thing I don't wish her to do,&quot; insisted Hench,
- sharply; &quot;it is no question of filial obedience. If she accepts me of
- her own free will, and without coercion from you, I marry her; otherwise I
- will not.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am not in the habit of coercing my daughter,&quot; said Madame
- Alpenny loftily, and, as usual, evading the main point; &quot;and I shall
- expect you to return with all information about your family. Then we can
- talk. I look upon you as a man of honour, Mr. Hench, so much so that I do
- not even ask you to give me any address. If you get money you will marry
- Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And if I do not?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny shrugged her fat shoulders. &quot;In that case she will
- marry another person who has money.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are very business-like,&quot; said Hench, highly disapproving of
- this mercantile way of looking at things.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I always am,&quot; she assured him coolly; &quot;it saves trouble!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain said no more at the moment, nor did he have any conversation on the
- subject again with the Hungarian lady prior to his departure. Madame
- Alpenny evidently had full confidence in his love for her daughter, and
- believed that Zara's beauty would lure him back again with gold in his
- pockets. Had she had any idea of the interview between the two young
- people, and the new relationship of brother and sister which that
- interview had suggested, she might have been less easy in her scheming
- mind. But Hench held his tongue and so did Zara, therefore Madame Alpenny
- was kept in a kind of fool's paradise. The young man reported the
- conversation hurriedly to the girl, and being clever, she knew exactly how
- to act so as to keep her mother in ignorance, until such time as she could
- declare her own mind and choose her own mate.
- </p>
- <p>
- Meanwhile; Hench got to work expeditiously and packed his scanty luggage,
- after paying Mrs. Tesk what he owed her. The ex-school-mistress was very
- sorry to lose him, not only from a financial point of view but because she
- really had a regard for him. Still, as she intimated, they were both
- leaves floating on the river of life, and the currents of circumstances
- were parting them. She hoped that he would enjoy himself and prosper
- wherever he was going, but if Fortune proved unkind, he was to remember
- that a refined abode always waited for him as a haven in adversity. All
- this and much more said Mrs. Tesk, who had a warm heart and hospitable
- nature. Hench was quite sorry to leave her, as he liked the quaint old
- lady and her odd ways. And just when Owain finished his business in her
- sanctum he emerged to run against Spruce, who looked more like a
- fashion-plate and less like a man than ever.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Just got back,&quot; said the Nut airily; &quot;had a topping time.
- Wish you had been with me, instead of wasting your sweetness on the desert
- air hereabouts.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I was not going to waste it any longer,&quot; said Hench dryly.
- &quot;I am leaving this house this afternoon.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I say,&quot;--Spruce looked disappointed and uneasy,--&quot;for
- how long?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;For ever! There is nothing to keep me here that I know of, and as I
- told you long ago, I am more or less of a bird of passage.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What about Mademoiselle Zara?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, that's all right; and may I remind you it's none of your
- business?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, don't get in a wax,&quot; protested Spruce amiably. &quot;I
- never saw such a chap for jumping on a fellow.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If you think so, you must be glad that I am going away.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, I'm not,&quot; confessed the Nut frankly. &quot;You're a
- gentleman and so am I, and in this hole you're the only chap I can chum up
- with.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;We have not chummed up, as you put it,&quot; said Hench frigidly.
- &quot;Well, that isn't my fault. I am always willing to be friendly, and
- if you won't be it's your loss, not mine. Where are you going?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That, again, is my business. I may be going abroad, or I may stay in
- London, or I may be going to the moon.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You're crazy enough for that last, anyhow, if lunatics live there as
- some one said,&quot; fumed Spruce, who was growing angry. &quot;And you're
- silly to make an enemy of me, you know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't want you as a friend, and I don't care if you are my enemy
- five times over,&quot; said Hench very straightly. &quot;What the deuce do
- you mean by that threat? What harm can you do me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I never said that I could or would do you any harm,&quot; protested
- Spruce, feeling uncomfortable; &quot;but some day I may be able to do you
- a good turn.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench looked at the spic and span little man, and felt rather sorry for
- him, as he seemed to mean well, in spite of his irritating curiosity.
- &quot;Let us part friends,&quot; he said, holding out his hand. &quot;After
- all, you are an old schoolfellow and have got your good points. But oil
- and water don't mix. See?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce gave the extended hand a feeble shake and dropped it. &quot;I can't
- help seeing, when you put things so straightly. It's a difference of
- temperament, I suppose--you're clay and I'm china. But I tell you what,&quot;
- cried Spruce, with his pale blue eyes flashing maliciously, &quot;you'll
- be glad enough some day for me to come and help you!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I always make a point of seeking no one's assistance,&quot; said
- Hench coldly, and walked up to his room, wondering what Spruce meant,
- since there was a significance in his tone which intimated that he quite
- expected to meet his enemy again.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce looked after the tall, straight form of the young man, and bit his
- nether lip with anything but an amiable look. He greatly regretted that
- Hench should go away thus suddenly, as the unexpected departure upset his
- plans for making money out of him. He still clung to the idea that the
- mysterious papers at the lawyers' had something to do with a fortune, and
- determined not to lose sight of Hench, come what may. Therefore he also
- retired to his own room to plot and plan and devise schemes whereby he
- could entangle his prey in invisible nets. But this he could not do
- without the aid of Madame Alpenny, since she was the mother of Zara, whom
- Hench loved. So to Madame Alpenny the Nut went and had quite a long
- conversation with her, which conversation resulted in his quitting the
- house at the hour of Hench's departure. Owain was relieved when the time
- came for him to go to find that Spruce was not at his elbow with his
- disagreeable civilities. He never could bring himself to like Spruce.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Bottles who helped the taxi-cab driver to carry down the trunk and
- portmanteau which formed his hero's luggage. The boy had returned on the
- morning of the day when Hench departed and was desperately sorry to hear
- of the exit. Hench gave him a sovereign and comforted him with a promise
- that on some future occasion they would meet again. Then Bottles proffered
- a request that Hench would give him some address to write to, and strange
- to say, the young man supplied him with the information he asked for. He
- felt that he could wholly trust Bottles.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But you won't have anything to write to me about,&quot; he said,
- when the written address was handed over.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bottles looked up with a shrewd smile on his freckled face. &quot;The
- mouse helped the lion, sir, as mother told me, and I may help you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What do you mean by that? How can you help me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Least said is soonest mended, as mother says,&quot; retorted Bottles
- wisely. &quot;And it ain't for nothing as I've read detective stories. I
- won't give any one the address, sir. I'm yours till death!&quot; and he
- folded his arms with a noble air.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench drove away rather bewildered. &quot;The boy is mad,&quot; he said.
- But the boy was not.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_06" href="#div1Ref_06" id="div1_06">CHAPTER VI</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- SEEKING TROUBLE
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- It was for two reasons that Hench left The Home of the Muses and
- vanished--so far as the paying guests were concerned--into the unknown. In
- the first place, he wished to render Zara's position more easy; in the
- second he desired to have nothing more to do with Madame Alpenny; and also
- there was a third and less important reason, which had to do with Cuthbert
- Spruce. While Owain drove westward in the taxi, he amused himself by
- surveying his position.
- </p>
- <p>
- With regard to the girl, Hench was beginning to grasp the fact that he
- really did not love her, or he would have been more moved by her frank
- confession of love for Bracken. What she had said was quite true, as he
- now acknowledged. He admired her, and being lonely, wished for a
- companion, so as to make a centre in life round which he could revolve. It
- was an odd comparison but a very true one. Any other woman, handsome,
- kind-hearted and affectionate, would have done as well as Zara to bring
- about the desired end, and Owain confessed to himself that to propose such
- a business-like scheme to a girl was rather a cold-blooded way of looking
- at love. She was--he confessed this also--quite right to refuse him, and
- to accept the offer of a man who adored her. This being the case, Hench
- decided that it only remained for him to go away, since his presence would
- more or less embarrass her, in spite of the brother-and-sister compact.
- Finally, being very human, Owain felt that it was impossible to stay, and
- witnessing Bracken triumphing where he had failed. On the whole,
- therefore, he was well pleased to escape from Bethnal Green, and his
- feelings suffered very little from the exile.
- </p>
- <p>
- The second reason, which had Madame Alpenny for its excuse, was also
- connected more or less indirectly with Zara's refusal. Since the idea of
- money coming to him had occurred to the Hungarian lady, she had been more
- amiably disposed towards Hench with regard to his half-hearted wooing of
- her daughter. Yet, as she was still uncertain that Owain would be rich,
- she had not--according to the slang phrase--forced the pace. But if fancy
- became fact and the mysterious papers really did place him in possession
- of a fortune, Hench felt tolerably convinced that Madame Alpenny would
- worry him and worry Zara until she brought about the marriage. Under the
- circumstances this was not to be thought of, as apart from the fact of his
- readjusted relations with the girl, Madame Alpenny was by no means
- desirable as a mother-in-law. She was poor, inquisitive, scheming and
- decidedly dangerous; always on the alert to make what she could out of
- others, and--as Hench believed--unscrupulous in her methods of gaining
- what she desired. Already he had told her more about his private affairs
- than was altogether wise, more or less against his will, as it would seem,
- since she had wormed her way into his confidence with remarkable
- dexterity. It struck him forcibly that he was wise to avoid her by leaving
- the boarding-house, and he congratulated himself on his promptitude in
- dealing with the situation. And as he had done so judiciously, it was
- unlikely that Madame Alpenny would ever trouble him again.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was when the taxi was sweeping down a quiet street near the British
- Museum that Owain came to the third and minor reason, which concerned
- Spruce. The Nut, also, was much too curious about affairs which nothing to
- do with him in any way, and seemed to take a pleasure in meddling. He was
- just the kind of person to read other people's letters, give unasked
- advice and take a thousand liberties out of pretended good-nature. All the
- same, Hench firmly believed that all this interference was intended, in
- the end, to benefit Spruce himself. But Owain could not see how his old
- school-friend could in any way make capital out of him. Nevertheless,
- instinct warned him to avoid the man as something dangerous. By leaving
- Mrs. Tesk's establishment he had avoided him, and he was as unlikely to
- meet him again as he was to meet with Madame Alpenny. Taking everything
- into consideration, Hench alighted at his new abode with the conviction
- that he had escaped from some danger--he could not put a name to it--just
- in time.
- </p>
- <p>
- Owing to some unexpected good fortune in connection with gold-mining
- shares, Hench possessed quite one hundred pounds, which was sufficient to
- keep him in comfort and even in luxury until he could call on Gilberry
- &amp; Gilberry. That visit he expected would result in throwing light on
- his somewhat dark path, and perhaps would bring him wealth. Yet, being
- cautious, he husbanded his resources lest his expectations should be
- disappointed. Therefore the hotel he came to was a quiet and cheap hostel
- in Burney Street, Bloomsbury, chiefly patronized by country people. It was
- a much better class establishment than that of Mrs. Tesk, and Hench found
- it very comfortable. He had been there on a former occasion when in
- England, and found very little change. The manageress was the same, the
- staff had not been altered, and on the whole Owain felt that the place was
- more home-like than any he had been in. Also, having risen out of the
- submerged tenth, the young man brushed up his apparel, had his hair cut
- and his beard trimmed, and got out his scarcely-worn suit of dress
- clothes. For the next week he amused himself in a quiet way, generally
- sauntering in the Park, exploring the Museum, enjoying the theatres and
- music-halls, and taking what quiet inexpensive pleasures came in his way.
- All he wished to do was to pass the time pleasantly until his twenty-fifth
- birthday, when he intended to call on Gilberry &amp; Gilberry. Then he
- would learn his fate, and his future career would be ordained by the
- contents of the papers.
- </p>
- <p>
- But all the time Hench was haunted by an uneasy feeling regarding the
- advertisement brought to his notice by Madame Alpenny. Had he stayed at
- the boarding-house, he assuredly would not have obeyed the request for a
- meeting, as the woman would have become aware that he had done so. This he
- did not wish her to do, since he regarded her as dangerous, and did not
- know what the result of his errand to Cookley would be. But now that
- Madame Alpenny belonged to the past, Owain was inclined out of sheer
- curiosity to keep the appointment for the 1st of July, and learn why the
- word &quot;Rhaiadr&quot; had been used. Of course, as he had already
- recognized, the papers at Gilberry &amp; Gilberry's might place him in
- possession of details which would enable him to deal more openly with the
- person who wished to meet him at the Gipsy Stile. But it wanted ten days
- to his birthday, and by brooding over the advertisement Hench became so
- curious that he finally decided to take the journey into Essex. There was
- a spice of adventure about the matter, which appealed to his pioneering
- spirit, and, moreover, as he had nothing to do, he thought that he might
- as well employ his mind and time in satisfying his curiosity. According to
- Dr. Watts, &quot;Satan finds some mischief still, for idle hands to do,&quot;
- and never was the line so exemplified as by Hench's action. Although he
- did not know it, he was going out to seek trouble, when he left the hotel
- for Liverpool Street Station.
- </p>
- <p>
- Besides being haunted by the advertisement, Hench during his week in
- Bloomsbury had been also haunted by a feeling that Madame Alpenny was
- somewhere in his vicinity. Twice or thrice he had fancied she was at his
- elbow, and had as many times made sure that he had caught a glimpse in the
- distance of her orange-spotted frock, her bead mantle and picture hat. As
- he walked to the railway station this feeling was insistently strong, and
- Hench found himself searching the crowds here, there and everywhere for
- the sinister face and red hair of the old woman. But he saw no one who
- resembled her, until he was descending the stairs after taking his ticket
- to Cookley. Then he was positive that in the throng moving below he
- recognized her shabby garb. Of course, he did not find her when he mingled
- with the mob, and laughed at the trick which his eyesight had played him.
- Why he should be so haunted by the woman--in his thoughts that is, as he
- did not believe that there was any ground for his suspicions--he could not
- say. But it was not until he was seated in a third-class smoking
- compartment that he shook off the feeling of her near presence. It was all
- a case of nerves, he assured himself, and by the time he was well on his
- journey he thoroughly convinced himself of this fact. At all events, as
- the train gradually left London behind, Owain quite got rid of his
- nightmare.
- </p>
- <p>
- Cookley is slightly over thirty miles from the metropolis, so Hench,
- having left the latter at five o'clock, arrived at his destination
- somewhere about half-past six o'clock. The appointment at the Gipsy Stile
- was precisely at eight, So he had an hour and a half to wait. This time he
- employed in learning the whereabouts of the rendezvous, as he had not the
- least idea of the direction in which it lay. As there was no hurry, he
- took things easy and sauntered leisurely out of the local station and down
- the long road which led to the village. After a lengthy period spent in a
- smoky city, the pure air and rural sights of the country were exceedingly
- pleasant.
- </p>
- <p>
- The village was not large, but decidedly picturesque, being one of those
- somnolent old-world hamlets beloved of artists and wondered at by
- tourists. Formerly no strangers came near it, but since the advent of the
- ubiquitous motor-car it had become quite a centre of interest. This was
- mainly owing to its squared-towered Norman church, a venerable and stately
- structure, which was much too large for so small a place. Also there was a
- Saxon cross on the village green and sundry Roman remains in an adjacent
- field. Archæologists and antiquarians, together with tourists, chiefly
- American, frequently came to inspect these objects of interest, and
- artists often took up their quarters in the Bull Inn to paint the church,
- the ancient cottages and the surrounding country. It was quite the nook
- which a student would have loved, but much too quiet for a restless young
- man such as Owain Hench assuredly was. The quicksilver in his veins never
- allowed him to remain long in one place, yet even he confessed to feeling
- the charm of Cookley.
- </p>
- <p>
- No one took much notice of him, for which slight he was thankful. In his
- shabby suit of blue serge, his woollen shirt and ragged Panama hat, he
- looked like an ordinary tramp, and those gentry of the road were much too
- common in Cookley to be even glanced at. Also the night was closing in,
- and in the soft warm twilight the young man passed almost unheeded, a fact
- upon which he afterwards had reason to congratulate himself. After
- wandering through several crooked streets, he emerged into the gracious
- spaces of the village green and made for the Bull Inn--easily recognized
- by its gigantic sign--where he treated himself to a tankard of beer in the
- tap-room. Owain really did not require the drink, but ordered it so as to
- give some excuse for his questions. The ancients of the village were
- already gathered for their evening symposium, and the room was filled with
- the blue haze of tobacco-smoke. It was none too well lighted by a solitary
- oil lamp, and Hench sat down in a secluded corner to enjoy his briar and
- sip his ale. Also, when occasion served, he asked the buxom wench who
- attended to thirsty customers where the Gipsy Stile was to be found. She
- looked at him in surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why, every one hereabouts knows where that be.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am a stranger here.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;One of them tramps, ain't you?&quot; said the girl, tossing her
- head. &quot;Well, you can't miss the Gipsy Stile. There's a path leading
- out of the churchyard, across the meadows, and that takes you into the
- heart of the wood, where you'll find it right in your way.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, it's in a wood, is it?&quot; questioned Owain, secretly
- wondering again, as he had wondered before, why such a rendezvous had been
- chosen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why, yes. Parley Wood, it is called, and lies long-side Squire
- Evans' old house. There's only a red brick wall divides the wood from the
- park.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Thank you,&quot; said Hench politely, and attended to his beer and
- pipe, while the villagers talked politics and crops and local gossip, and
- he amused himself by listening to their crude views.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the old days and before Cookley had been brought into near contact with
- the outer world, the stranger would have been more closely observed and
- the conversation would have been listened to. But so many tourists now
- came to the village that the inhabitants paid little attention to them. In
- his dark corner Owain sat for close upon an hour, wondering at the narrow
- limits of the Cookley intellect. Still, he was interested in the
- old-fashioned views of the labourers, and time passed quicker than he
- noticed. A glance at his watch showed him to his surprise that it was a
- few minutes to eight, so he rose hastily to seek his destination. As he
- had already paid for his beer, there was nothing to detain him, and he was
- speedily passing through the green on his way to the square tower of the
- church, which stood up blackly in the luminous twilight. So far as Owain
- could guess there was no danger of his losing his way.
- </p>
- <p>
- A narrow lane, sloping slightly upward to the lychgate, conducted him to
- the churchyard, and he soon found himself surrounded by tombstones old and
- new, dotted irregularly amongst the long grass of the enclosure. Keeping
- to the gravelled path, he made a circuit of the vast church, and finally
- came to a stile set in the stone wall girdling the place. On climbing over
- this, he found his feet treading a well-defined path, which meandered
- across a wide meadow to enter into Parley Wood, which was visible some
- distance away. Owain, with the aid of a match, found that it was eight
- o'clock, and the chimes of the church again assured him of the fact.
- Fearing lest he should be late, he hurried quickly, and his long legs soon
- took him under the shade of ancient trees. Here it was somewhat dark, but
- Hench had eyes like a cat, and could very easily follow the path, which
- wound deviously through the woodland. Around him, in the fragrant dark,
- life was stirring, and he heard the piercing song of the nightingale, the
- occasional hoot of an owl, and became aware that sundry creatures were
- moving more or less noiselessly amongst the undergrowth. At times he moved
- across a dell where the light was stronger, and then again he would plunge
- into the gloom of the trees. The young man enjoyed the adventure apart
- from the reason which had led him to undertake it, as he had a great love
- of Nature, and enjoyed her beauty.
- </p>
- <p>
- At length he emerged into a wide clearing across which ran a ragged fence
- of time-stained wood overgrown with woodbine and more or less buried in
- nettles, darnels, shrubs and young trees. In the centre of this there was
- an old-fashioned stile, which Owain took to be the place of meeting.
- Beyond the open ground stretched for some distance, and faintly in the
- warm twilight he could see a tall wall and beyond it the thick foliage of
- oaks, beeches and elms. This was undoubtedly the place, as he remembered
- how the girl at the Bull Inn had assured him that the wood lay long-side
- the park of the squire, and no great distance from a red brick wall.
- Therefore Owain walked briskly up to the stile, taking off his straw hat
- for the sake of coolness, and looked all round the place to see if the
- person who had advertised was waiting. He saw no one.
- </p>
- <p>
- A glance at his watch after lighting a match showed him that he had been
- fifteen minutes walking from the church to the stile, so he wondered if
- the person had grown tired of waiting. But that was unlikely, since he was
- not so very much behind his time. The man--he presumed that it was a
- man--who had advertised would certainly wait longer when he had taken so
- much trouble to bring about the meeting. Hench therefore believed that
- something had detained the person in question, and sat down on the stile
- to wait. Already the moon was well up in the cloudless sky and her silver
- radiance flooded the whole solemn woodland. Owain admired the mingled
- beauty of light and shade, listened to the distant nightingale singing
- triumphantly, and stared every now and then round about to make sure that
- he would not miss his man, since he did not know from which quarter he
- would appear. Then came a surprise, and a highly unpleasant one.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the course of his glancing here, there and everywhere, he became aware
- that in the long grass some distance beyond the stile, and some distance
- away from the meandering path, lay a dark object. At first Hench thought
- it was merely the trunk of a tree, but as the moonlight grew stronger and
- the outlines of the object more distinct, he began to believe that it was
- a man. Doubtless, as he concluded hastily, some tramp had thrown himself
- down to sleep in the safe cover of the wood, where no policeman would
- rouse him from his slumbers. But Hench knew that it was scarcely wise to
- sleep in the moonbeams, so clambered over the stile and walked towards the
- man with the intention of awakening him. Shortly he was bending over the
- presumably sleeping tramp, and then became aware with a shock of surprise
- that the man was clothed in evening-dress, over which a dark, loose cloak
- had been thrown. With a vivid feeling of fear Hench turned the man
- over--he was lying on his face--and started back with an ejaculation of
- horror. The stiff white shirt-front was red with blood, and in the man's
- heart was buried a knife with a horn handle. Owain struck a match to
- assure himself of the truth, although the moonlight was so strong that he
- scarcely needed to take such trouble. But while he held the match with
- shaking hand over the dead face, its wavering light showed him very
- plainly that he was right. The man was dead--the man had been
- murdered--and there he lay mysteriously done to death in the heart of a
- lonely wood.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course, Hench's first impulse, which was the impulse of an ordinary
- human being when brought face to face with crime, was to run back to
- Cookley village and give the alarm. But even as he turned to fly, he
- halted, struck with a sudden thought which made the blood freeze in his
- young veins. He had been lured to this place by means of the
- advertisement, and here he found the dead body of a man not long stabbed
- to the heart. Was it a trap? Had he been brought to this solitary spot to
- be entangled in a crime? It seemed very like it, and swiftly thinking over
- the matter, Hench did not see how he could exonerate himself should he
- give the alarm. With a feeling of absolute terror, he bent over the dead
- so as to make himself acquainted with the appearance of the poor creature.
- There was no doubt that the man was a gentleman, since he was in
- evening-dress and was wearing studs and sleeve-links of gold, together
- with a silk-lined overcoat, or rather cloak. His face was clean-shaven,
- with an aquiline nose and thin compressed lips, decidedly that of a
- handsome man. From his lined countenance and white hair, Owain took him to
- be about sixty years of age, although being dead there was an astonishing
- look of youth about him. Even as Hench stared, the lines on the old face
- seemed to fade away and leave it young and smooth. Yes, he was a
- gentleman, as was apparent from the well-bred, disdainful face. It did not
- need the evening-dress, the silk-lined cloak, the silk socks or the
- patent-leather shoes to show the man's station in the world. Here, as it
- occurred to Owain, was a gentleman, who had strolled into the wood after
- dinner, there to meet with a terrible death at the hands of some unknown
- person.
- </p>
- <p>
- Starting to his feet, the young man remembered how the girl at the inn had
- talked of Squire Evans' estate lying long-side the wood and divided
- therefrom by a brick wall. Here was the wood, yonder the wall in question;
- so it came strongly into Hench's mind that the dead man was Squire Evans.
- But who had killed him and why had he been killed? Hench looked round
- searchingly into the shadow of the trees, but could see no lurking form.
- Whosoever had struck the blow had done so shortly before Hench arrived, as
- the body was still warm and still supple. After all, the man was dead,
- sure enough, and it would be useless to run to the village for succour. In
- fact it would be dangerous, as Owain thought with fear knocking at his
- heart, for how could he prove his innocence of the crime. There was no
- motive for him to kill this unknown man, certainly; not even the motive of
- robbery, as the studs and sleeve-links had not been taken by the assassin.
- Hench wavered between a desire to consult his own safety by flight and a
- wish to rouse the village and hunt hot-footed for the murderer. For two
- long, long minutes he pondered over the horrible situation, then, without
- a backward glance, raced at top speed along the unknown path leading into
- the further recesses of the wood. And while he ran his heart beat
- tumultuously, the perspiration beaded his forehead, and his body shivered
- with cold, in spite of the warm night. Safety was what he made for, and he
- tore onward as if the officers of justice were already on his track. An
- innocent man--yes, he was an innocent man--yet the circumstantial evidence
- might hang him in spite of that same innocence.
- </p>
- <p>
- Instinct led Hench to avoid returning to London by passing through the
- village and boarding the train at Cookley Station. Already--and he thought
- of the possibility with terror--his face and figure might be remembered by
- some keen-sighted yokel. There was the conversation with the girl in the
- tap-room. He had talked long enough with her to be remembered, even though
- the atmosphere, hazy with smoke, had only been illuminated by one dingy
- lamp. Then, again, he had spoken about the Gipsy Stile; he had asked where
- it was, and at the Gipsy Stile the murder had taken place. Then there was
- the advertisement; the police would be sure to find that out, and if there
- was any reward offered, Madame Alpenny might speak to the authorities
- about the same. Then he would be linked with the crime, and run the risk
- of arrest. When confronted with the girl at the inn, she would probably
- recognize him. Then what possible defence could he make to an accusation
- of murder?
- </p>
- <p>
- These and many other thoughts buzzed like distracting bees through Owain's
- brain as he fled from that awful place. All his idea was to get away, to
- reach some other railway station, to hide in London, and remain quiet
- until he saw what the police would do. But on the face of it, he would be
- safe nowhere; yet with the instinct of self-preservation he plunged onward
- through the wood in the hope of escape. Hench was a brave man, and had
- faced many dangers, but to be hanged for a crime which he had not
- committed, to be entangled in circumstances over which he had no control,
- made him choose the least of two evils. Once or twice he halted in his
- headlong flight wondering if it would not be best to return and give
- himself up to the village policeman, as, after all, he had no motive to
- kill the man and moreover could produce the advertisement. But the
- resolution was momentary. He simply could not face the trouble, even
- though he did his best to screw up his courage to the sticking point.
- Wiping his forehead, he drew a long breath and strode onward. It was too
- late now to think of returning, as the body might already have been found.
- All he could do was to walk on and on and on, in the hope of leaving
- terror behind.
- </p>
- <p>
- After leaving the wood, Hench found himself traversing other meadows
- similar to that near Cookley church, These bordered a narrow lane, into
- which a stile afforded him access. From this lane he gained the high-road,
- and from a sign-post learned that it would conduct him to London. At first
- Owain intended to walk on until he arrived at the nearest railway station,
- for there was yet time to catch a late train to town. But on reflection he
- decided to use his legs, as there would be less danger in solitary
- pedestrianism than in venturing to ask for a ticket at a local station,
- where his appearance might be observed. Also the night was warm, the moon
- gave her full light, and the journey to London would be more pleasurable
- on foot than it would be were he cooped up in a train. Besides, he was
- much too agitated by what he had gone through to sit quiet under the gaze
- of fellow-travellers. Innocent though he was, conscience made a coward of
- him, and he knew that every careless eye cast upon him would make him
- wince. He was safer to walk, so walk he did.
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain never forgot that thirty odd miles tramp through the lovely summer
- night, when--as the saying goes--he saw a bird in every bush. Certainly he
- was guiltless of any crime, yet fate had connected him with one, and he
- felt like Cain, so strong was the power of his imagination. Again and
- again he asked himself if it would not have been wiser to dare the worst,
- trusting in God's justice and his own innocence. But again and again came
- the reply that innocent men have been hanged ere now on purely
- circumstantial evidence, and that he had done right to fly the danger of a
- judicial death. Hench cursed himself for not having waited until his
- twenty-fifth birthday. Had he taken no notice of the advertisement, as he
- originally intended to do, he would not now be in this plight. But it was
- too late to blame himself now. He had come to the rendezvous, he had found
- a dead body, he had fled like a true criminal from the spot, so it was no
- use crying over spilt milk. Whatever was in store for him he would have to
- face it. As he had sown, so would he have to reap.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_07" href="#div1Ref_07" id="div1_07">CHAPTER VII</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- AN AMAZING DISCOVERY
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain reached his hotel in the early hours of the morning, and finding no
- one about but the sleepy night-porter, who was just leaving, had no
- difficulty in getting to his bedroom almost unobserved. Once in that haven
- he drew a long breath of relief, and wearied by his long tramp, threw
- himself on his bed without undressing. Notwithstanding his anxiety, which
- had increased instead of lessening, he speedily fell fast asleep into a
- heavy dreamless slumber, which resembled lethargy rather than natural
- repose. It was high noon when he woke, feeling much refreshed and as
- hungry as the proverbial hunter. Considering the trouble in which he was
- involved, it was fortunate that travel had steadied his nerves to face the
- worst, if needs be. The result of his experience of danger led him to
- prepare for possibilities. He therefore took a cold bath to brace himself,
- dressed more carefully than usual with great deliberation, and went down
- to make an excellent breakfast. As yet the hue and cry was not out against
- him, so he had ample time to consider his position.
- </p>
- <p>
- Over a pipe in the smoking-room, he glanced at several of the daily
- papers, but naturally found therein nothing about the murder in Parley
- Wood at Cookley. It was more than probable that the evening news would
- contain an account of the finding of the body, and--for all Hench knew--a
- description of himself as the criminal. Of this, however, he was
- uncertain, since he had not been noticed closely in the twilight, and his
- conversation with the girl of the Bull Inn had taken place in a darkish
- and smoky room, dimly lighted by a solitary lamp. Of course the girl would
- say that a man had asked her where the Gipsy Stile was to be found, and
- the person she had conversed with would be suspected. But the questioner
- assuredly could not be described, unless the serving-wench was sharper
- than Owain gave her credit for being. Only a very inquisitive and
- observant person would have examined him closely enough to give a fair
- word-picture of him to the authorities. And Owain's experience led him to
- believe that few people ever did observe with much degree of accuracy. So
- far as the girl at the inn and the inhabitants of Cookley were concerned
- he felt tolerably safe. But there was another person to consider in
- connection with his adventure, and that was Madame Alpenny. The Hungarian
- lady certainly knew that he was the man required to meet the advertiser at
- Cookley, as the use of the word &quot;Rhaiadr&quot; had enlightened her on
- that point. Therefore it was probable that, when the details of the murder
- were made public, she would inform the police about the matter. But the
- woman did not know that he had kept the appointment, as he had given her
- to understand very plainly that he did not intend to do so. Assuredly the
- feeling that she was at his elbow had haunted him when he had set forth on
- his errand, and he had fancied that she had been lurking about Liverpool
- Street Station. But even then he had set down the faint belief to
- imagination, so there was no reason why he should conclude that she
- actually had been spying on him. In fact he did not see how she possibly
- could have done so, since he had not given her his address. Only Bottles
- knew that, and Bottles--as Hench felt sure--was to be thoroughly trusted.
- </p>
- <p>
- So far the young man could see no cause for alarm, but an hour's
- reflection made him resolve to make things doubly sure against discovery.
- Thanks to the twilight and the dimly-lighted tap-room, Hench made sure
- that any description given of his appearance would be more or less vague,
- and was not likely to be recognized by any one in the hotel when it
- appeared in the newspapers. Nevertheless, so as to place the matter beyond
- all doubt, he paid his bill, packed his luggage and took his departure
- late in the afternoon for Victoria Station. Here he left his box and
- portmanteau in the cloak-room, and went down to South Kensington in search
- of quiet lodgings. But before venturing to inquire for the same, Owain
- sought out a barber's shop in Brampton Road and had his heavy brown beard
- removed. He would rather have shaved himself, so as to do away with the
- possibility of the barber noticing any description in the newspapers, even
- though the same was vague and inaccurate. But to do this was impossible.
- He could not change his appearance before leaving the Bloomsbury Hotel
- without exciting remark, and he did not wish to present himself at his new
- lodgings in any degree like his old self, as it was known to the paying
- guests of Mrs. Tesk's establishment. Therefore he was obliged to risk a
- barber's razor and a barber's curiosity.
- </p>
- <p>
- One thing was certain, that when he emerged from the shop, no one would
- have recognized him for the man who had entered. The removal of his beard
- altered him wonderfully, making him look years younger, and improving his
- good looks in a marked degree. Owain sat in the barber's chair a bearded
- colonist of the type dear to penny fiction, he rose from it looking like
- the Hermes of the Vatican. Even the hairdresser exclaimed at the
- extraordinary transformation and complimented him on his improved
- appearance. Hench was rather annoyed that the man should take so much
- notice, and paying him hurriedly, departed as swiftly as he could without
- exciting suspicion. Then he walked down the Brompton Road and sought out a
- quiet side street in South Kensington, where he knew there were rooms to
- be let. The place was already known to him, during the last six months, as
- under the same roof lived an old school-friend, with whom Hench had kept
- up a correspondence. On returning to England he had looked up this friend,
- and they had renewed their acquaintanceship with uncommon fervour.
- Therefore Owain deemed it best to live near him, so that he might make use
- of him should any trouble ensue from his adventure. It may be remarked
- that the friend was a barrister, and as such--so Hench considered--would
- be able to attend to legal details if necessary.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rooms in question were still to be had, as a voluble landlady assured
- Mr. Hench, so he engaged them for a month, paying the rent in advance.
- Then he left a message for his friend, and returned to get his luggage
- from the cloak-room in Victoria Station. By seven o'clock, Owain was
- installed in a tolerably comfortable bedroom and sitting-room, and was
- dawdling over a hurriedly provided meal. His friend, he was informed, was
- not expected back until nine o'clock, so Hench passed the time in reading
- the evening papers. These he had bought at the railway station when
- getting his luggage, and in two of them he found what he sought.
- </p>
- <p>
- The account of the Parley Wood crime was necessarily meagre, as so short a
- time had elapsed since the discovery of the body that the police were not
- in possession of much information. It appeared, from the scanty details,
- that the dead man was--as Hench suspected--Squire Madoc Evans, the Lord of
- the Manor and the owner of Cookley Grange. He had gone for a stroll in the
- woods shortly after dinner, and not having returned, search had been made,
- with the result that the poor old gentleman was found stabbed to the heart
- near the Gipsy Stile. The weapon used to execute the murder was a common
- carving-knife with a horn handle, and the medical examination showed that
- Evans had met with his violent death about half-past seven. The account
- ended with the information that the police were making all inquiries in
- the hope of tracing the criminal, but as yet had been unsuccessful.
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain breathed more freely, as there was no word of the girl at the Bull
- Inn or of her conversation with himself. Still, it was early days yet, and
- the young man felt very sure that shortly she would speak out. An account
- of the man who had inquired where the Gipsy Stile was to be found would
- assuredly appear in print; then it would depend entirely upon the memory
- and acuteness of the girl whether he would be traced. And, of course, if
- Madame Alpenny became suspicious--and Owain was positive that she would
- become so--her story to the police would certainly result in his arrest.
- Then, when confronted with the girl of the inn, there would be small
- chance of denying his identity with the tramp who had made those fatal
- inquiries. Hench felt extremely uncomfortable in spite of his innocence,
- and longed to have some one to whom he could talk freely. Later on in the
- evening, and while gloomily smoking in an armchair, the young man thought
- that he could trust his old school-friend. James Vane was quite a
- different man to Spruce, who also had been at the same school, and was as
- true as the Nut was false. After much reflection and some hesitation,
- Hench decided to unbosom himself to the barrister, since the dangers which
- environed him were so great that he could not deal with them unaided.
- </p>
- <p>
- At nine o'clock precisely, a sharp knock came to the door of the
- sitting-room, and Hench sprang up to greet his visitor. Vane was a tall,
- slim man, with a lean, hatchet face, keen dark eyes, and thin dark hair,
- touched already with grey although he was only thirty years of age. He was
- perfectly dressed and perfectly well-groomed, quick in his movements and a
- trifle saturnine in his manner. Some people were rather afraid of him, as
- he was always cold and cautious. But Owain knew that this frigid exterior
- concealed a truly warm heart, and that--as the saying goes--Vane's bark
- was worse than his bite. To his old school-chum he showed himself as he
- really was, and few would have recognized the chilly barrister in the
- smiling friend. It was as though ice had melted on a mountain-top to
- reveal a green sward.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I am glad to see you again, Owain,&quot; said Vane, after
- shaking hands warmly; &quot;it is quite six months since I set eyes on
- you. Where have you been all this time? What have you been doing with
- yourself? And where is that patriarchal beard which made you look like
- Abraham? H'm! You're in love.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench stared and made his friend comfortable in an armchair. &quot;What on
- earth makes you say that?&quot; he inquired with a puzzled look.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No girl could possibly love a man with a beard which made him look
- one hundred and ten years old. You have met with a girl--with <i>the</i>
- girl--and are in love. Therefore have you shaved your chin, reduced your
- age, and made yourself look like a young Greek god.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't feel like a Greek god, Jim,&quot; said Hench, taking a seat
- and glancing round to see that windows and doors were closed. &quot;I'm
- worried.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Poor old chap,&quot; said Vane with quick sympathy; &quot;rely on me
- to help. We always were pals at school, you know. Is it money?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. I have enough to keep me going. By the way, your mention of our
- being pals at school reminds me that I met another chap who was with us at
- Winchester ages ago.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't make us out to be as old as the hills, Owain. We're young yet,
- and the wine of life still sparkles in the bowl. Who is this chap?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Spruce. He is----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh Lord!&quot; Vane removed his cigarette from his thin lips with an
- air of disgust. &quot;I know what he is; you needn't tell me anything
- about him. You don't mean to say that you look upon him as a pal?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! He wanted me to but I couldn't stomach him and his dandified
- airs. If you want my opinion of him,&quot; continued Hench frankly, &quot;he's
- a sickening little beast, as arrogant as they make them.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He's all that and more--one of the Gadarene swine. Where did you
- meet him?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;At a boarding-house in Bethnal Green.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh! That's the fox's hole, is it. I thought he would go further
- afield.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Has he any reason to go afield at all?&quot; asked Hench, staring.
- &quot;You bet he has, old fellow. Mr. Cuthbert Spruce has been a man on
- the market for quite a long time.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What is a man on the market?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A chap who gets his living by his wits,&quot; explained the
- barrister leisurely, &quot;and Spruce has been at that sort of game for
- ever so long. He started with a decent income but got rid of it at cards.
- Cards queered his pitch ultimately, as he was caught cheating and had to
- clear out. H'm! He's ruralizing at Bethnal Green, is he? I expect he will
- stay there until his little bad wind blows away. Then he'll try and
- return. But it's all of no use, Owain, as no one will have the little
- beast at any price.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He told me quite a different story.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, he would, naturally. Spruce is very good at telling stories. He
- ought to be a novelist by rights.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That's exactly what he claims to be,&quot; retorted Owain, opening
- his eyes widely. &quot;He said that he had come to Bethnal Green to gather
- material for a yarn.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pretty thin,&quot; commented Vane, with a shrug, &quot;considering
- he can't write a single paragraph of King's English without a dozen
- mistakes. I credited him with sufficient imagination to manufacture a
- better lie. However, it's useless for us to waste time over Spruce and his
- shady doings. Cheating at cards has finished him, and now he'll go under
- altogether. R.I.P. and be hanged to him. But what were you doing at
- Bethnal Green, old son?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I thought that a cheap boarding-house down there would suit my
- pocket.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;H'm! You explained that much before, even though I offered to share
- my pennies with you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very good of you, Jim,&quot; said Hench hastily and colouring,
- &quot;but I don't care about shoving my burden on to another man's
- shoulders. However, a gold mine I had a few shares in turned up trumps,
- and I have a hundred pounds more or less at my back.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And for that reason you have come West?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, not exactly. If you don't mind being bored with my----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Nothing you tell me will ever bore me, Owain,&quot; interrupted Vane
- quickly. &quot;It's a girl, I swear. Come, be honest.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, there was a girl, but there isn't now,&quot; confessed Owain,
- and while Vane chuckled at his own perspicuity he related what had taken
- place at The Home of the Muses in connection with Zara, Bracken, Madame
- Alpenny and Spruce. Vane listened intently, and when Hench ended made his
- first remark in connection with the Nut, for whom he seemed to have no
- great love.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The sordid little animal wished to make money out of you, Owain,&quot;
- he said in his shrewd way, &quot;and for that reason made up to you and
- kept his eye on you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But he knew that I had no money,&quot; protested Hench, puzzled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;These papers at the lawyers' may mean money,&quot; retorted the
- barrister. &quot;I am inclined to agree with that old lady you mention so
- far. Well, it's only about nine days until your birthday, so you haven't
- long to wait. And now that you've cut the place--very wisely, I
- think--Spruce won't be able to line his pockets at your expense. As to the
- girl--you never did love her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, perhaps you are right. But I admired her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That's nothing. I admire scores of girls, but that doesn't mean
- matrimony, my son. You are at that age, Owain, when any woman could collar
- you. I'm glad that this Zara girl had enough sense to cotton to the other
- man. Madame Alpenny----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench rose restlessly. &quot;I'm afraid of her,&quot; he interrupted
- bluntly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pooh! Why should you be? She can't force you to marry her daughter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No.&quot; Owain spoke slowly. &quot;It's not that. But the
- advertisement----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, it had to do with you, certainly, going by the mention of the
- place where your father passed his youth. But you told her that you did
- not intend to keep the appointment.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes. All the same, I did keep the appointment.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The deuce!&quot; Vane looked surprised. &quot;Well?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm coming to my trouble now,&quot; said Hench, picking up one of
- the newspapers nervously; &quot;read that paragraph.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane looked at his friend in surprise, and then swiftly made himself
- acquainted with the information about the Parley Wood murder. He started
- when he first grasped what the paragraph was about, but afterwards read on
- slowly to the end. When he knew all about the matter he threw aside the
- newspaper and looked inquiringly at Hench. &quot;Well?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot; repeated Owain, sitting down with his hands in his
- pockets, &quot;can't you see, Jim? I went to the Gipsy Stile and----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And murdered this man,&quot; finished Vane derisively. &quot;Do you
- expect me to believe that, you fool?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. I'm not given to behaving in that way. But I kept the
- appointment and I found the corpse.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, the devil!&quot; Vane sat up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So I said at the time,&quot; remarked Hench dryly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And when Madame Alpenny reads about the crime, she will put two and
- two together.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;They won't make four in her calculations,&quot; said Vane swiftly.
- &quot;After all, you are innocent. She can't prove you to be guilty.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I don't know. The circumstantial evidence is rather strong.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The circumstantial evidence!&quot; Vane stared and reflected. &quot;You
- had a beard when I saw you last, now----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I shaved to-day, so that there might be no chance of my being
- discovered by any description that girl at the Bull Inn might give.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Girl at the Bull Inn? What do you mean?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench lost no time but promptly gave a full account of his adventures from
- the time he left Liverpool Street Station to the moment that he sat down
- to dinner in the very room in which the two were speaking. Vane
- interrupted him frequently, and his face grew grave as he recognized that
- Hench was in a woeful plight. &quot;Of course, I've acted like an ass,&quot;
- confessed Owain in a rueful manner; &quot;but how would you have acted,
- Jim?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Sitting in this chair and being wise after the event, I should have
- faced the thing out,&quot; said Vane slowly. &quot;But had I been in your
- shoes in that wood I should probably have run away as you did.&quot; He
- paused, shook his head, stared at the carpet. &quot;Damn!&quot; he
- muttered emphatically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I thought it best to speak to you,&quot; murmured Owain anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane nodded. &quot;Quite right. What's the use of a pal if he doesn't rise
- to the occasion. After all, if Madame Alpenny does speak to the police she
- can't prove you to be guilty. You had no motive to murder this Evans. He
- was quite a stranger to you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Quite. All the same----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;All the same, hold your confounded tongue!&quot; insisted the
- barrister. &quot;My advice to you is to sit tight and wait events.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madame Alpenny?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Exactly. If she is the old adventuress you think she is, and which
- from your description she certainly appears to be, I don't think you need
- have any fear for the moment.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because she will wait until you are in possession of those papers on
- your twenty-fifth birthday. If they place you in possession of money she
- will be silent on condition that you marry her daughter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I won't. Nothing would induce me to marry a girl who loves another
- man.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I don't say that you would marry her, but that Madame Alpenny
- would try and make you marry her. Until all hope fails in that direction
- she'll say nothing about the advertisement. Of course, if there is no
- money the old hag will split, especially if there is a reward. As this
- Squire Evans seems to be a landowner and a rich man, I expect there will
- be a reward.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I see. Then the best thing for me to do is to wait.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Exactly. I'll support you, and you can talk your heart out to me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You're a good fellow, Jim. Why, I half believed you would think
- me----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't talk bosh!&quot; Vane jumped up irritably. &quot;Why, you're
- the whitest man I know, and my old school-pal. I'd as soon believe myself
- guilty as you. Now I'm off to bed; go thou and do likewise and don't
- worry.&quot; After which speech he shook hands with Hench and the two
- parted for the night.
- </p>
- <p>
- For the next nine days they had many such talks, and kept themselves well
- informed of the progress which the case was making so far as they could
- learn in print. Of course, the girl at the Bull Inn <i>did</i> tell the
- police about the interview in the tap-room, and of course great capital
- was made out of this. But as Owain had suspected, the girl being
- inobservant, and not having seen him very clearly in the smoky
- dimly-lighted atmosphere, gave a most incoherent account of his
- appearance. All she could say was that the questioner was a rough-looking
- tramp with a bushy black beard, who spoke civilly enough, but who was not
- a gentleman. Vane chuckled when he read this unflattering description,
- which was sufficiently wrong and vague to preserve Hench from suspicions.
- And, indeed, if the girl had been confronted with Hench she would never
- have recognized in this handsome clean-shaven young gentleman, fashionably
- dressed, the rough tramp who had drank his beer in the tap-room. It was
- Vane who made Owain dress fashionably, so as to make him look as unlike
- his old bearded self as possible. He took him to his tailor, to his
- haberdasher, to his bootmaker, and to various other tradesmen, with the
- result that Owain's new wardrobe did full justice to his handsome looks.
- Hench, being of the pioneering legion, rather kicked against being thus
- civilized, but he recognized that Vane was right to insist upon the
- transformation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Whatever Madame Alpenny might have thought she did not put her thoughts
- into action, for nothing appeared in the papers likely to show that Hench
- was suspected by the police. The inquest on Squire Madoc Evans' body was
- duly held, and the verdict was brought in of &quot;Wilful murder against
- some person or persons unknown,&quot; although every one was pretty
- certain that the shabby tramp who had inquired the way to the Gipsy Stile
- was the culprit. But he had vanished, and--thanks to Madame Alpenny's
- silence--no word came to the police suggesting his identity with Owain
- Hench. The funeral took place in due time, and it gave Owain a thrill when
- he read that the body had been taken to Rhaiadr in Wales for burial. It
- was said that Evans came from that place, and that all his ancestors were
- buried there. Incidentally, it was mentioned that the dead man had left a
- daughter who inherited Cookley Grange, and by her father's death became
- the Lady of the Manor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think it's all right now,&quot; said Vane when matters reached
- this pitch. &quot;After the nine days' wonder the excitement will
- gradually die away. And, by Jupiter!&quot; cried the barrister, &quot;it
- is exactly nine days. Owain, old son, this is your birthday. Off with you
- and call on Gilberry &amp; Gilberry.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Won't you come also, Jim?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, I won't. You can't get into trouble in a respectable legal
- office, and you are so changed that no one is likely to spot you as the
- man who is wanted for Squire Madoc Evans' death.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain was content to go alone, although he felt slightly nervous. His
- strongest card, should anything come out, was that he had not known Evans,
- and therefore had no reason to kill him. And by this time he was growing
- used to the situation, since Madame Alpenny was holding her tongue. Why
- she acted in this kind way he could not understand, but accepted the
- explanation provided by Vane. However, if he came into money she probably
- would find him out and move in the matter. Therefore it was with some
- reluctance that Hench went to Gilberry &amp; Gilberry's office in
- Lincoln's Inn Fields. He wanted to let sleeping dogs lie, and was
- unwilling to become rich, as by doing so he would certainly bring Madame
- Alpenny down on his head. All the same, Hench felt very curious when he
- faced the white-headed old gentleman who was the head of the firm, and was
- rather astonished by the warmth of the greeting he received.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am glad to see you,&quot; said Mr. Gilberry heartily. &quot;You
- come in the nick of time, my dear young friend.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;To do what, sir?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;To inherit ten thousand a year.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What?&quot; Owain became pale with amazement.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gilberry chuckled. &quot;Oh yes. It is as I say, Mr. Evans.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What?&quot; cried Owain again, and this time louder, with a
- quavering voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course; of course,&quot; the old man chuckled once more. &quot;You
- think that your name is Hench. Not so; not so. You are Owain Evans of
- Rhaiadr, the heir of Squire Madoc Evans, of Cookley Grange, in Essex.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And--and--what relation am I to--to--to----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, yes. You don't know. Why, my dear sir, Madoc Evans was your
- uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain gasped, and turned as white as the corpse he had seen in Parley
- Wood.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_08" href="#div1Ref_08" id="div1_08">CHAPTER VIII</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- FAMILY HISTORY
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Like M. Jourdain in Moliere's comedy, Vane was only surprised when he
- found virtue in unexpected places, but he certainly was astonished in
- another direction when Hench stumbled into his chambers white-faced,
- wild-eyed and trembling. The barrister hastily arose and supported his
- friend to a chair, and as hastily produced a glass of brandy to hold to
- his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Drink this, Owain,&quot; he commanded, wondering what had happened
- to put his visitor in such a state. &quot;Don't say a word until you feel
- better.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench drank the whole glassful of fiery liquor, and the colour began to
- return to his wan cheeks. He did not speak, as requested, but sat in the
- chair with a broken-down look, which startled Vane more than he showed.
- Looking anxiously at his friend he came to the sole conclusion he could
- come to, seeing what he knew in connection with Hench's adventure. &quot;Madame
- Alpenny has found you out?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench shook his head. &quot;It's worse than that,&quot; he muttered
- faintly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then the worse it is the better you should brace yourself up to face
- it,&quot; was Vane's irritable retort. &quot;Have another glass of brandy,
- although I don't approve of Dutch courage myself.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. No more brandy. Wait a bit. I'll soon pull round.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane nodded approvingly, and turned his back so as to give the man time to
- recover himself. He went to the window and looked at the busy traffic of
- Chancery Lane, in which thoroughfare his chambers were situated. The same
- were directly opposite that gateway which leads into Lincoln's Inn Fields,
- through the highways and byeways of pleasant grounds sacred to the goddess
- Themis. Hench had evidently come straight in this way from the offices of
- Gilberry &amp; Gilberry. Vane wondered how he had managed to arrive
- without attracting observation and being stopped, so wild had been his
- looks when he entered the chambers. The journey was very short, truly, but
- the appearance of the man was sufficient to warrant interference.
- Evidently the unexpected had happened to throw Hench into this abnormal
- state, and with a shrug of his shoulders Vane turned to see how he was
- getting on. Hench smiled faintly as he met the inquiring gaze of the
- barrister and wiped his forehead, which was wet with perspiration. Then he
- essayed to speak and apologize, succeeding after one or two desperate
- attempts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Sorry, Jim, but I couldn't help myself.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Seems like it,&quot; snapped Vane, trying to bully him into
- calmness. He had never before seen Hench so upset, as the man was usually
- very quiet and self-controlled. Something very bad must have happened to
- unnerve him in this way. &quot;I should like to know what is the meaning
- of all this,&quot; went on Vane crossly. &quot;Upon my Sam, Owain, if I
- didn't know you were a sober chap I should have believed that you were
- drunk when you came in. I wonder some policeman didn't run you in between
- here and Lincoln's Inn Fields.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I did see people staring at me,&quot; replied Hench in a stronger
- voice, as the brandy had done its work and he was rapidly recovering his
- balance. &quot;Perhaps if I had come by a longer way I might have got into
- trouble. But you see, Jim, the distance----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! Yes!&quot; Vane dropped into his own favourite chair. &quot;I
- know all about that, old son. Come to the point. What's up?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I've had a shock.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh Lord! as if the most stupid person--which I am not--couldn't see
- as much. I can only conclude that Madame Alpenny has told the police and
- you are in danger of arrest. Yet you deny that such is the case.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I do. Madame Alpenny has nothing to do with this particular matter.
- Yes, I have had a shock, but I'm all right now.&quot; Hench shook himself
- like a dog coming out of a pond and drew a long breath, then continued to
- talk calmly. His first remark was a question. &quot;If I did get arrested,
- Jim, I suppose my best line of defence would be to say that, not knowing
- the dead man, I had no motive to kill him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is my opinion,&quot; admitted the barrister. &quot;Well?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, there is no chance of my taking up that line of defence.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not? You told me that you did not know Squire Evans.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I did. I don't contradict my admission.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then why can't you defend yourself, if necessary, on that score?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'll answer that question by asking you another? Who am I?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane stared and looked wholly bewildered. &quot;Owain Hench!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So I thought. Now I learn from Gilberry &amp; Gilberry that I am
- Owain Evans.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What?&quot; Vane uttered the ejaculation in as astonished a tone as
- Hench had done in the solicitor's office. &quot;Are you a relative of the
- dead man?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes. I am his nephew.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, the unexpected is always happening,&quot; commented Vane,
- after a pause of sheer surprise. &quot;But even so, as you did not know
- your uncle and never met him, you can still say, if necessary, that you
- had no motive to murder him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I can't.&quot; Owain rose and began to pace the room. &quot;I can't;
- and that's the worst of it, Jim. As you say, I did not know him and I
- never met him, but evil tongues might give me the lie, seeing what I stood
- to gain.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What did you stand to gain?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ten thousand a year.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ten thousand a year!&quot; Vane echoed the words with a gasp of
- astonishment. &quot;I say, Owain, those mysterious papers left by your
- father did mean a fortune after all, as Madame Alpenny suspected?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench nodded, and sat down again with a disconsolate air. &quot;It is a
- dangerous position that I am in. Owain Evans of Rhaiadr with ten thousand
- a year, which comes to me now that Uncle Madoc is dead----that is who I
- am.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But you knew nothing about such an inheritance?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Who will believe that?&quot; asked Owain derisively. &quot;Already,
- as the tramp who asked the way to the Gipsy Stile, I am accused of the
- crime. Should the truth of my keeping that appointment become known, the
- motive of gaining ten thousand a year will be imputed to me as an excuse
- for committing the deed.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't go too fast, Owain,&quot; said Vane sharply; &quot;remember
- only Gilberry &amp; Gilberry had this information. They can prove that you
- knew nothing about the same on the first of July when the man was
- murdered.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;True enough. All the same I kept the appointment,&quot; persisted
- Hench stubbornly. &quot;Who is to prove that I did not have a long
- interview with my uncle in Parley Wood; who is to declare that he did not
- admit I was his heir and that his death would place me in possession of so
- large an income? And, remember, Jim, that I am poor. A man would do much
- to gain ten thousand a year.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A man like you, Owain, would do nothing mean or dishonourable or
- cruel to gain double the sum,&quot; said Vane sharply. &quot;Don't be a
- fool.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Am I a fool? You know me, Jim, but other people don't. Supposing
- Madame Alpenny tells what she knows to the police and sets them on my
- track----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She doesn't know your address. You told me so.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I told you truly. She doesn't. But seeing that I have given my usual
- name both at the hotel I stayed at and to the landlady of my lodgings in
- South Kensington, there won't be much difficulty in the police finding me.
- People will talk, you know. I have shaved off my beard too, and that might
- be quoted against me as a sign of my guilt.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It might,&quot; assented Vane restlessly, for he recognized that the
- position was a dangerous one. &quot;But it all depends upon Madame
- Alpenny. So far she has made no move, and now that you really are rich she
- will hold her tongue.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Provided I marry her daughter, I suppose?&quot; inquired Owain
- dryly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course. The woman is an adventuress, as you say, and means to
- make money out of you. Marry her daughter and supply her with funds, and
- you will place yourself in the power of a possible blackmailer.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench's face became dour and obstinate in its looks. &quot;Even if Madame
- Alpenny placed me in the dock at the New Bailey, I won't marry Zara, or
- give the old woman a single penny.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm with you, old son.&quot; Vane leaned forward and shook his
- friend's hand. &quot;You can depend upon me to do all I can to pull you
- through.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You're a good sort, Jim, to stand by me,&quot; said Hench, much
- moved.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pooh! Pooh! Pooh! I take a right view of friendship, that's all,&quot;
- said Vane cheerfully. &quot;Come, old man, let us discuss the situation.
- We have ample time, as Madame Alpenny will hold her tongue until you
- openly refuse the demands she is sure to make. Who gains time, gains
- everything, and lots of things may happen before she can place your neck
- in a noose.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am in a dangerous position.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are. I don't wish to minimize the risk, or undervalue Madame
- Alpenny as an enemy. But remember, Owain, that she is not your enemy until
- you give her cause to be so by declining to marry the girl and pension
- Madame. Thus the police will learn nothing for many a long day, and
- meantime we can act.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In what way?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why, in trying to learn who really did murder your uncle.&quot; Vane
- drew a long breath. &quot;By Jupiter, old son, I don't wonder you were
- knocked all of a heap by the information that you had a new relative and
- ten thousand a year.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, it wasn't that which upset me,&quot; explained Hench with a
- shrug, &quot;but the knowledge that my uncle was the dead man I found in
- Parley Wood.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Gilberry &amp; Gilberry don't know that, I suppose?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course not. I kept that information to myself. They didn't even,
- so far as I could gather, know anything about the advertisement, or they
- would have spoken about it. I said nothing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very wise of you. I wonder,&quot; mused the barrister, &quot;why
- your uncle put in that advertisement?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;To make you understand, Jim, it will be necessary to repeat my
- family history as Mr. Gilberry told it to me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is what I have been wishing you to do for the last fifteen
- minutes, old boy. Here, take a cigarette and make yourself comfortable.
- When I am in possession of facts I shall be in a better position to advise
- you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I need advice,&quot; sighed Hench, lighting up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, don't shed tears over it, sonny. Fire away.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane's banter and anxious desire to cheer him up did Hench good, and he
- produced a large blue envelope out of his pocket which contained several
- papers. The young man glanced at these doubtfully, then laid them on the
- table. &quot;You can examine them at your leisure,&quot; he said, leaning
- back comfortably in his chair. &quot;I'll tell you the story instead of
- reading it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That will be best,&quot; assented Vane brightly. &quot;Begin,
- Scheherazade.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My grandfather,&quot; said Hench conversationally, &quot;lived at
- Rhaiadr in South Wales, where his family had resided for centuries. They
- were minor princes, I believe, before the first Edward conquered the
- country, but dwindled in importance as the centuries went by. When the
- family estates came to my grandfather, all he had was considerable
- property in Rhaiadr and a tumbledown family seat. He was called Mynydd
- Evans----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Curious Christian name,&quot; commented Vane, lighting a fresh
- cigarette.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! Gilberry, who seems to know something of the Welsh language,
- told me that it means 'Great.' So my grandfather was really Great Evans,
- so called because he was the chief person in Rhaiadr, and because he was a
- stout, bulky man, over six feet three in height. He was discontented with
- his lot, as he wanted money and power and position, and the deuce knows
- what.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Rather a grabber, Owain, considering that he was the Lord of
- Rhaiadr--and that's another queer name.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It means water tumbling over a rock--a waterfall, in fact,&quot;
- said Hench, with a nod. &quot;My father mentioned the word to Madame
- Alpenny and gave her the translation. Well, to continue. Mynydd Evans
- collected what money he could and came to London. There he set up as a
- merchant, and being clever, in a wonderfully short space of time he made a
- large fortune.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He must have done so considering he could leave your uncle ten
- thousand a year,&quot; said Vane emphatically. &quot;But why didn't he
- return to Rhaiadr?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mr. Gilberry couldn't explain that. I expect the old man found the
- Welsh parish of his ancestors too narrow for his ambition, and perhaps too
- far from London and his place of business. He bought the Lordship of the
- Manor of Cookley, in Essex, and took up his abode in the old Grange. There
- he died.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And your Uncle Madoc, as the eldest son, became the heir?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Now, that is exactly what did not happen. Mynydd Evans had two
- sons--my father, Owain, and Madoc--and my father was the elder of the two.
- He was&quot;--Hench wriggled uneasily--&quot;he was a rotter, and I'm
- breaking the fifth commandment in saying so, Jim.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot; said the barrister coolly, &quot;from what you told me
- of your father when we met six months ago, I rather think he was a bad
- lot.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Unfortunately, yes,&quot; said Hench hastily. &quot;But he is dead,
- so let us say as little about him as possible. Anyhow, he contrived so
- mortally to offend my grandfather with his doings that he was cut out of
- the will.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What did he do particularly shady?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I can't tell you,&quot; said Hench, with a shrug. &quot;From what
- Gilberry said I gathered that it wasn't one shady deed, but the
- culmination of many that induced Mynydd Evans to give the estate to my
- Uncle Madoc. He was the good boy of the family, and Mynydd Evans knew that
- his hard-earned fortune would not be dissipated in his hands. My father
- was allowed five or six hundred a year, and told to keep away from
- England. He did so and afterwards married abroad--an English governess, my
- mother. She died in due time and I was sent to England to board with
- strangers. Then I went to a private school, afterwards to Winchester,
- where we met, Jim.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, I know all that. Afterwards your father sent for you and
- ultimately died in Paris. You told me about your life since, when you came
- back six months ago. But why didn't your father relate your family history
- to you? Why did he keep you in the dark?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Really, Jim, I can't say, unless it was that he felt ashamed of his
- doings. He would have had to tell me that he was not straight, to account
- for his being cut out of the will, you know. Anyhow, he saw Gilberry &amp;
- Gilberry and left with them those papers, which include my birth
- certificate and my baptismal one--things which are necessary to prove my
- identity, you know. Gilberry &amp; Gilberry were my father's lawyers and
- the lawyers of my uncle and grandfather. They saw that my school fees were
- paid and kept an eye on me while my father was in exile. So I had no
- difficulty in proving who I was. In fact old Gilberry knew me from my
- likeness to my father the moment I entered the office. It's all right so
- far.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But if the money was left to your uncle, how do you inherit?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, it seems that Mynydd Evans always had some qualms about
- cutting off the direct line, and, I suppose, hoped that the third
- generation would be better than the second, as represented by my father.
- Anyhow, he made a will excluding my father, save for the five or six
- hundred a year allowance, and left the whole eleven thousand pounds per
- annum he was worth to Uncle Madoc.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You said it was ten thousand.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes. But of the extra thousand, five hundred went to my father
- during his life and the remaining five hundred--or it might be four with
- six to my father, as I'm not quite clear about the exact amounts--to Gwen
- Evans, my first cousin, Uncle Madoc's daughter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh! There's a girl, then?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, and if old Gilberry is to be believed, she is a very pretty
- girl. I understand that she is about twenty years of age. We can talk of
- her later, Jim. Anyhow, you must understand that Uncle Madoc only had the
- income and the Grange for life. Afterwards it was to go to the offspring
- of my father, who was the true heir. I am the sole offspring, so I
- inherit.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I see,&quot; pondered Vane. &quot;Well, all that seems clear and
- reasonable enough. Only I should like to know why your uncle didn't find
- you out and treat you as his heir. He could have done so through Gilberry
- &amp; Gilberry, who--as you say--kept their eye on you all the time.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;According to Mr. Gilberry, my uncle hated my father fervently, and
- did not at all approve of Mynydd Evans' will, which left the property to
- the son of the brother he detested. He made no inquiries, I understand,
- and was quite content to enjoy the property and let the deluge in the
- shape of myself come after him. Of course he would rather, as Mr. Gilberry
- said, have had Gwen get the property, but he could not, as the will of my
- grandfather was too clear.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I can understand that the brothers did not love one another,&quot;
- said Vane, after a pause; &quot;family feuds are unfortunately too common.
- But what made the old man put in that advertisement?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;As I didn't mention the advertisement to Mr. Gilberry for obvious
- reasons, I could obtain no information on that point,&quot; explained
- Owain, looking somewhat perplexed. &quot;And why he sought me out in that
- peculiar way at the eleventh hour, I can't say. He might as well have done
- the thing straight through the family lawyers. Anyhow, I suppose he
- thought that the mention of the name Rhaiadr would show me that I was
- wanted, although I can't understand why he worded the advertisement so
- obscurely. But that my father mentioned the place of his family to me, I
- wouldn't have bothered about the matter. Let alone the fact,&quot;
- concluded Hench after a pause, &quot;that I wouldn't have seen the
- advertisement at all but for Madame Alpenny. It was queer, wasn't it, Jim,
- that the advertisement should have appeared with the name Rhaiadr just
- after she remembered meeting my father over twenty years ago?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So queer,&quot; said Vane dryly, &quot;that I wonder if Madame
- Alpenny had anything to do with the insertion of the advertisement.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, that's rubbish, Jim. She never met my uncle, and couldn't have
- put in the advertisement on her own, as she didn't know the ropes. My
- uncle put it in sure enough, or he would not have been in the wood to meet
- me. But why the deuce he should choose out-of-doors as a meeting place
- instead of asking me into his own house, I can't understand.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He was evidently an original,&quot; said the barrister, with a
- shrug. &quot;By the way, if you died, or if you had never been born, who
- would inherit the estate?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Gwen, my cousin, of course. The will left the property to the
- offspring of the eldest son, and failing such offspring, to the children
- of the second son. Why do you ask that, Jim?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, it occurs to me that the cautiously worded advertisement and
- the appointment of so lonely a place to meet in, suggests foul play on the
- part of your beloved uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Foul play?&quot; Hench stared. &quot;What the deuce do you mean?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madoc might have intended to murder you so that his daughter might
- inherit.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, rot!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not at all. We must look at all possibilities. Madoc hated your
- father and doubtless hated you also as the son of your father. If he could
- have done you out of the inheritance by murdering you, I don't see why he
- should have held his hand.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But you don't know the man's character,&quot; protested Hench.
- &quot;He may have been a very harmless person.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A very cunning and plotting person, anyhow,&quot; said Vane quickly.
- &quot;Else, why the carefully worded advertisement and the strange place
- chosen for the meeting. No, Owain, my conjecture may be wild, but there is
- some truth in it, I am sure. Madoc intended to get rid of you, and your
- lucky stars led some one to get rid of him, before you appeared on the
- scene.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My lucky stars,&quot; said Hench, rising. &quot;How can you say
- that, when I am in danger of being arrested for his death?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There is no danger just now, until Madame Alpenny moves. And when
- she does move we may be able to counterplot her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She will move as soon as I enter into my inheritance.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I know that. Therefore, if I were you, I should not take up my
- inheritance just yet.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How can I prevent that? Gilberry &amp; Gilberry will take immediate
- steps to place me in possession, and the business is sure to get into the
- newspapers. Then Madame Alpenny will see that I am rich and come to bother
- me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course. But you can tell Gilberry &amp; Gilberry to hold over
- action until you learn who murdered your uncle. Once you find the true
- assassin you will be safe from the malice of Madame Alpenny and all other
- people.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, there is no one can spot me but Madame Alpenny,&quot; said Owain
- confidentially.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not even Spruce?&quot; asked Vane significantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Certainly not. He knows nothing about my affairs.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You told me that he knew about the papers you were to see on your
- twenty-fifth birthday?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, yes. But those papers won't connect me with Uncle Madoc's death.
- Only the advertisement can do that, and I don't suppose Spruce has set
- eyes on it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Let us hope not,&quot; said Vane uneasily. &quot;But since he heard
- the name Rhaiadr when the meeting with your father was explained by Madame
- Alpenny, he certainly might put two and two together if he did see the
- advertisement. And if the old woman saw it, why shouldn't Spruce see it?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My dear Jim, why manufacture trouble, when we have enough to deal
- with as things stand? If Spruce does get on the trail, I shall deal with
- him very promptly, I assure you. I'm not afraid of that little rat.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Rats can be dangerous, Owain, and Spruce is a meddlesome animal
- always on the make. You with your ten thousand a year would be a god-send
- to him. Now, if you will take my advice----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What is it?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;This. Tell Gilberry &amp; Gilberry to let things remain as they are,
- until you tell them to place you legally in possession of your property.
- They can look after the ten thousand odd pounds coming to you and allow
- your cousin the four or five hundred a year to which she is entitled. Then
- go down to Cookley as Owain Hench and look about for any possible person
- who might have knifed your uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But Gilberry &amp; Gilberry will think it queer.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What the devil does it matter what they think? So long as they get
- their fees all they have to do is to execute your orders. And if you like,
- you can make a romance out of the business and tell them that you are
- going down to Cookley to see your cousin under your false name, so as to
- find out what she is like. Of course, you can hint that you may fall in
- love----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, rats!&quot; interrupted Hench inelegantly. &quot;I'm not likely
- to fall in love. I don't believe that I understand what love is, seeing
- what a hash I made of my attentions to Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You made a hash because you didn't love her, old son. But you may
- fall in love with your cousin.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't anticipate the worst,&quot; said Owain dryly. &quot;Anyhow,
- your advice is good, Jim. I shall tell Gilberry &amp; Gilberry to hold
- over and will give them to understand that I wish to see the beautiful
- heiress I have dispossessed. As Hench, I shall go to Cookley and look
- round for the criminal. With my changed appearance I don't suppose I'll be
- spotted.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, I think you are safe so far,&quot; said Vane, looking at his
- friend in a critical manner, &quot;but don't risk seeing that girl at the
- Bull Inn. She may recognize your voice. And I'll tell you what, Owain,
- I'll give you an introduction to an old aunt of mine, Mrs. Perage, who is
- a great swell in those parts. Her respectability may help you to hold your
- own amongst the very suspicious, narrow-minded people one finds in the
- country.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Jim, you're a brick.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, fudge! I'll loot you when you enter into your kingdom,&quot; and
- Vane laughed uproariously at his small joke. &quot;See if I don't make you
- pay up!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_09" href="#div1Ref_09" id="div1_09">CHAPTER IX</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- GWEN
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Naturally, Gilberry &amp; Gilberry were extremely astonished when the heir
- to Cookley Grange refused to enter into his kingdom immediately. Such a
- wonderful reluctance to enjoy a large income and a splendid position had
- never before come under their notice. Fortunately, however, Mr. Samuel
- Gilberry, the senior partner, who attended particularly to the business of
- the estate, was of a romantic turn of mind, unusual in a lawyer, and
- Owain's suggestion of acting the part of a disguised prince rather
- appealed to him. Adopting Vane's suggestion, Hench--as he persisted in
- calling himself for the time being--artfully pointed out that it would be
- just as well to make the acquaintance of his cousin as a stranger before
- revealing himself. He did not wish her, as he put it, to be biassed by the
- fact that he was the son of his father. &quot;For you see, sir,&quot; he
- said to the old gentleman, who was a white-bearded benevolent person,
- somewhat like the traditional Father Christmas, &quot;so far as I can
- gather from the papers which my father left behind him, these brothers,
- who are the parents of Gwen and myself, were not friends.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;They hated one another fervently, if you don't mind my saying so,&quot;
- was the emphatic response of the old lawyer, as he took a pinch of snuff.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't mind your stating the truth, Mr. Gilberry, which is what I
- want to get at,&quot; replied Hench readily. &quot;Well then, admitting
- that the two hated one another, it is more than likely that Uncle Madoc
- had no great love for me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He had not, my young friend. I pointed out to him frequently that as
- he had never set eyes on you, he could scarcely form any judgment, good,
- bad or indifferent. But he declared that you were the son of your father
- and that no good could come out of Nazareth.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Quite so. And doubtless he passed on his opinion to his daughter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think it is extremely likely, although I cannot speak positively,
- Mr. Owain,&quot; said the solicitor. &quot;By the way, I may as well call
- you by that name, since you refuse to take your proper appellation, and I
- don't like to call you Mr. Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't mind what you call me,&quot; Owain assured him, &quot;so
- long as you don't let the cat out of the bag. My cousin is sure to have a
- bad opinion of me, since her father was so bitter. This being the case, I
- shall have no chance of becoming friendly with her if I present myself as
- her cousin. I do not wish to carry on the feud, so it is necessary for me
- to gain Gwen's good opinion. Therefore, under the name my father adopted,
- I shall make her acquaintance as a stranger, and win her friendship
- entirely on my own merits.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It is rather a fantastical way of acting, and is scarcely
- business-like,&quot; was Gilberry's reply. &quot;All the same the idea is
- not without merit. I am quite ready to help you, and can do so, by saying
- that you are abroad.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't think it is even necessary to say as much. Let Gwen know
- that I have communicated with you, and have decided to wait for a time
- before taking over the estate. She can put it down to eccentricity, or to
- my late father's influence, if she likes. Anyhow, I don't suppose she will
- trouble to search very deeply into the matter, and will probably be
- pleased that I don't take possession of Cookley Grange immediately. She
- can continue to live there until I give her notice to quit.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gilberry laughed and shook his head. &quot;Miss Evans is a very decided
- young lady, Mr. Owain,&quot; he remarked in a judicial manner, &quot;and
- having her own income of five hundred a year, she has already quitted the
- Grange.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because she expected me to take possession?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There!&quot; cried Hench triumphantly. &quot;Didn't I tell you that
- she was biassed by her father. Has she left Cookley?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. She has gone to stay with a very charming old lady in the
- neighbourhood, called Mrs. Perage.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Better and better. That will enable me to make her acquaintance
- without unduly forcing myself upon her. My friend, Mr. Vane, who is a
- barrister----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! Yes! I know the name. I have heard that he is clever. Well?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, he has given me a letter of introduction to Mrs. Perage, who
- is his aunt.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Samuel Gilberry rubbed his hands and chuckled. &quot;Very good--very
- good indeed, my young friend. It is quite a romance. Now, to carry the
- same to a proper conclusion, may I suggest that you should fall in love
- with Miss Evans?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench shook his head doubtfully. &quot;Private feelings can't be ordered
- about like private soldiers,&quot; he remarked dryly. &quot;I am not the
- kind of man to fall in love, Mr. Gilberry.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pooh! Pooh! A handsome young fellow like you is sure to experience
- the grand passion. And let me tell you that Miss Evans is a beautiful
- girl, both clever and sensible. If you could manage to marry her,&quot;
- went on the lawyer coaxingly, &quot;think how delightfully you would end
- the family feud. And after all, poor girl, it is rather hard for her to be
- reduced to five hundred a year after enjoying, through her father, ten
- thousand per annum.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, as to that,&quot; said Owain promptly, &quot;you can allow her
- two or three thousand out of my income.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She wouldn't take it, seeing that your consent is necessary.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yet you talk about my marrying her,&quot; was Hench's retort. &quot;I
- have about as much chance of doing that as the man in the moon. However, I
- shall make her acquaintance as Hench, and see what comes of it. By the
- way, doesn't she know the name my father took in place of Evans?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. Your late uncle never mentioned it. As Owain Hench you are quite
- safe in making her acquaintance. She will never think that you are her
- cousin, unless you let her see how you spell your Christian name. The
- Welsh spelling may give her a hint, and she is very sharp, remember.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If I have occasion to write it, I shall spell the name in the
- English way. I don't suppose that will be necessary, anyhow. Well, that's
- all right. Act as we have decided and I shall go down to Cookley to carry
- out my romance, as you call it, Mr. Gilberry. One question I should like
- to ask you, however, before leaving.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And that is, Mr. Owain---?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Who murdered my uncle?&quot; Mr. Gilberry took a pinch of snuff and
- shook his venerable head. &quot;Really, it is hard to say, unless it was
- that tramp who asked the way to the Gipsy Stile, Mr. Owain. I suppose you
- saw all about that in the papers?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench winced, but recovered himself immediately. &quot;Yes, I did, Mr.
- Gilberry. But what reason could that tramp have had to murder my uncle.
- Not robbery, if the report of the inquest is to be believed, for then it
- was said that neither the money, nor the watch, nor the jewellery had been
- taken.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Exactly. So far as I can see, there was no reason why this man
- should have murdered Mr. Evans.&quot; Mr. Gilberry knitted his brows and
- looked perplexed. &quot;Maybe it was revenge,&quot; he concluded
- doubtfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Revenge. Then my uncle had enemies?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Dozens, I should think,&quot; said the lawyer coolly. &quot;Mr.
- Madoc Evans was a very cantankerous person. I may say that much ill of the
- dead. He quarrelled with many people, and, moreover, was very severe on
- poaching both as a magistrate and as a landowner. This tramp, for all I
- know, may have been a poacher who had a grudge against him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Do the police think so?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The police say nothing, because they have no evidence to go upon,&quot;
- said the lawyer sharply. &quot;The sole person they suspect is the tramp
- who came to the Bull Inn. But he has disappeared, and they can't find him.
- However, in the village it is said that the tramp was a poacher, who
- murdered the Squire out of revenge. You can take or leave that opinion, as
- you like. The whole thing is a mystery to me, Mr. Owain.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And to me,&quot; said Hench, in all good faith. &quot;I shall never
- be satisfied until I learn who murdered my uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That wish does you credit, Mr. Owain,&quot; said Mr. Gilberry
- approvingly, and again the young man winced. &quot;Considering how
- unfriendly the late Squire was towards your father.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, my father was just as unfriendly towards him,&quot; returned
- Hench with a shrug. &quot;And, as I say, I don't wish to carry on the
- feud. Good-bye, Mr. Gilberry. When I am settled in Cookley I shall let you
- know my address and will write you if necessary. You are sure that no one
- knows my name of Hench as having anything to do with the family at the
- Grange?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am quite sure, although I don't call one solitary girl a family,&quot;
- chuckled the old man, walking with his client towards the door. &quot;Good-bye,
- good-bye. I hope--I sincerely hope--that the feud will be ended by your
- marriage to my late friend's daughter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You might as well expect water to run up hill,&quot; retorted Hench
- sceptically, and went on his way, certain that he was not likely to lose
- his heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- Consequent on the necessity of preserving the secret of his identity
- carefully, Hench requested Vane to introduce him by letter to Mrs. Perage
- as Mr. Hench, suppressing the Christian name, which might have given Gwen
- a clue, if only from the oddness of the spelling. Vane, on learning that
- the girl had gone to stay with his aunt, quite approved of this, and both
- in his letter of introduction and his private epistle to the old lady made
- all things safe. As Mr. Hench, the young man went down to Cookley, and if
- he was forced to state what his Christian name was, he resolved to spell
- it in the English way. That would provoke no remark from Gwen, as &quot;Owen&quot;
- was not a particularly unusual designation. All the same, Hench felt that
- he was treading on thin ice. He determined to stay at Cookley as short a
- time as possible, and to see no more of his cousin than he could help.
- After all he was going down not to meet her, as Mr. Gilberry believed, but
- to learn if possible who had murdered the unfortunate Squire.
- </p>
- <p>
- While reading a newspaper entitled <i>The Setting Sun</i> in the train,
- Hench received a distinct shock, although by this time he was growing
- accustomed to being startled. Some amateur detective had written a letter
- to the editor of this halfpenny evening journal, drawing attention to the
- advertisement in <i>The Express</i> with reference to the meeting at the
- Gipsy Stile. Of the name &quot;Rhaiadr&quot; nothing was said, as such was
- Greek to the writer of the letter. But the fact that some one was invited
- to meet Squire Evans at the very place and on the very evening when he was
- murdered was largely commented upon. The very officious person who wrote
- suggested that the police should try and learn to whom the advertisement
- was addressed, &quot;when without doubt&quot;--the letter went on to say--&quot;the
- assassin will be captured.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Although it was rather like asking the authorities to look for a needle in
- a bottle of hay, seeing that there were eight million people in London to
- any one of whom the advertisement might have been addressed, Owain felt
- cold water running down his spine. Not on account of the Hungarian lady,
- because he agreed with Vane that she would not give information to the
- police until she learned if he was prepared to marry her daughter. It was
- Spruce he feared--the little rat who was meddlesome and secretive, and
- unscrupulous, and who could do much mischief once he got on the trail.
- From what Vane had said, it was plain that the Nut had rendered his
- position in the West End untenable owing to his cheating, and the sole
- chance he had of becoming even tolerable to his former associates--and
- perhaps not even then--was to return with his pockets full of money. Then,
- for the sake of winning the same, they might overlook his fault. Probably
- they would not, but Hench was quite sure that Spruce believed that money
- would do anything. Naturally, he would do much to get money, being
- anything but an honourable man as had been ample proved. In Bethnal Green
- there were few opportunities of making a fortune, and Spruce was not
- sufficiently clever to take advantage even of what chances there were.
- Consequently, he would be quite prepared--Hench was certain of this--to
- get what he could by blackmail. Already he believed that there was some
- mystery about Hench, and if he saw the advertisement, or the letter which
- had drawn attention to the same, he would be certain to get at the truth.
- Having been present at the conversation between Hench and Madame Alpenny
- when the woman's meeting with his father--Hench's father that is--had been
- discussed, the word &quot;Rhaiadr&quot; would certainly come again into
- his mind. Connecting the same with Hench, the young man was convinced that
- Spruce would venture to accuse him of keeping the appointment and
- murdering the advertiser. Then if it came out that the dead man was
- Hench's uncle, so strong a motive was provided that arrest would certainly
- follow.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a very uncomfortable journey for Owain, and he alighted at Cookley
- Station with the firm idea that he was about to have a trying time. Madame
- Alpenny was dangerous and so was Spruce, as both wanted cash and both were
- wholly unscrupulous. However, if either went to the police they were not
- likely to get what they wanted, so Hench comforted himself with the idea
- that before taking any action they would find him out and offer to treat.
- On what he discovered at Cookley would depend his attitude, as if he could
- only get at the truth he could place the matter in the hands of the police
- without danger to himself. On the other hand, if he made no discovery
- likely to prove who was the assassin, it would be necessary to come to
- some arrangement or risk the consequence. And Hench could not disguise
- from himself that on the face of it his defence was weak, since the
- strongest point--that of being a stranger to the dead man--was removed.
- Certainly, as he had never met Squire Evans, the deceased _was a stranger
- to him, but the fact that the dead man was his uncle, whose demise would
- give him ten thousand five hundred a year, assuredly provided a strong
- motive for the commission of the crime. It was all puzzling and difficult,
- and dangerous and highly unpleasant. All that Hench could do was to wait
- and see what Madame Alpenny, and possibly Spruce, would do. Any one who
- has experienced suspense will understand what agonies this unfortunate
- young man underwent. It required all his courage and all his nerve to
- endure the anxiety of the next few days. And to make matters worse, Vane
- was not at hand to relieve the tension by listening to Owain's fears.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was with an odd feeling, and not one of safety, that Hench again set
- foot in Cookley. As he walked down the crooked street he noted how many
- eyes of both men and women followed his movements, and for the moment
- believed that he was recognized. But that was impossible, considering the
- contrast between the rough-bearded tramp who had visited the Bull Inn and
- the smart, fashionable, clean-shaven young gentleman now strolling
- complacently through the little town. What the people looked at,
- especially the women, were his handsome face and distinguished appearance.
- From a muttered remark or so which his ear caught, Owain understood that
- they took him for a tourist, who had come to see the lions of the place.
- Therefore, in this character the young man asked one or two where he could
- find lodgings. Of course he was at once directed to the inn, but here, for
- obvious reasons, he did not wish to go. With the idea of finding quiet
- rooms he had left his portmanteau at the railway station, so as to seek
- the same unhampered by luggage. For some time he was unsuccessful in his
- search, until on the outskirts of the village and no great distance from
- the church he saw a notice in a cottage window of &quot;Apartments to Let.&quot;
- At once he knocked at the door, since the place seemed clean and quiet. A
- delicate, slender little woman answered his inquiries by stating that she
- was called Mrs. Bell and had rooms to let. An inspection of these
- satisfied the young man, although they were rather poorly furnished and
- decidedly small. At once he took them at the very moderate sum demanded,
- and Mrs. Bell at his request sent her nephew to the station to get her new
- lodger's portmanteau. The little woman, who was meek and fragile, at once
- took a great interest in Hench, as he had kind eyes and a gentle manner.
- In a short time the two were good friends, and Mrs. Bell congratulated
- herself that for one month she had such a pleasant-spoken gentleman under
- her homely roof. She said as much to her big burly nephew when he returned
- with the portmanteau on his shoulder, and her nephew thoroughly agreed
- with her, which was natural, seeing that the new lodger had given him half
- a crown for his trouble. So Hench was made very comfortable by the two,
- who approved of him more and more every day. Mrs. Bell was a busy bee in
- the way of looking after household affairs, and Giles her nephew, who was
- a labourer, brushed Owain's boots and clothes for him. Also--and this was
- a great point--Mrs. Bell was no gossip and kept very much to herself, so
- the neighbours heard little about Hench from her. On the whole, the young
- man decided that he was very well placed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench did not present his letter of introduction to Mrs. Perage straight
- away, but busied himself in learning what he could of the geography of
- Cookley. He examined the church, explored the village,--never going into
- the Bull Inn, by the way,--and even ventured to look at the Gipsy Stile.
- It gave him a qualm when he found himself on the well-remembered spot, and
- saw beyond the old brick wall the picturesque Grange, which was now his
- property. Mrs. Bell, who knew everything about the place and talked freely
- enough when asked, although she was no scandal-monger, told him how Miss
- Evans had gone to stay with Mrs. Perage since the death of her father.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And they do say,&quot; said Mrs. Bell, who always prefaced her
- remarks with this phrase, &quot;that she ain't going to rest until she
- finds out who killed him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Is there any clue?&quot; asked Owain, keeping his face turned away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, there ain't, sir, unless you can call that tramp a clue. He did
- ask Betsy Jane at the Bull where the Gipsy Stile was, and the old Squire
- was found there some hours later as dead as mutton. But since then no
- one's clapped eyes on him, and I don't suppose, sir, as any one ever will.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Do you think the tramp murdered the Squire?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Lord, sir, how do I know!&quot; cried Mrs. Bell in a panic. &quot;I
- hev enough to do in the house without thinking of murders. But they do say
- as Squire Evans was a hard man on poachers, as Giles knows, he having got
- into trouble over a pheasant. It might be, sir, as that tramp was one of
- them poachers, and done for the Squire. Though to be sure,&quot; added the
- woman, rubbing her nose in a perplexed way, &quot;if he was a poacher
- hereabouts some one would hev knowed him, and he wouldn't hev had to ask
- Betsy Jane of the Bull where the stile was. It's my opinion, that for all
- Miss Gwen's trying she'll never find out who killed her father. And they
- do say as if the murderer ain't found it won't be any great grief to them
- as knowed old Mr. Evans.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What kind of a girl is Miss Evans?&quot; asked Hench irrelevantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah!&quot; cried Mrs. Bell, nursing her hands under her apron. &quot;Now
- they do say, sir, as I knows myself, as she's as nice a young lady as you
- ever set eyes on. Lovely I call her, and small like me, though quite a
- lady, which I ain't. She's as loved as her father was hated, and they do
- say as that's saying a great deal. I do assure you, sir, as we'd rather
- hev Miss Gwen for the head of the place than this new young Squire, as
- comes from no one knows where!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench had many conversations about these matters with Mrs. Bell, and
- gradually came to know a great deal during the next few days. His uncle,
- it appeared, had been very unpopular, while Gwen was the reverse.
- Generally, it was quite believed amongst the ancients of the village that
- the Squire had been murdered by the unknown tramp, who was a poacher, and
- the verdict was that it served the dead man right, because he was always
- so hard on the poor. Owain was tolerably sure that the Cookley people
- would have been quite sorry had the presumed criminal been arrested. But
- as he was the person in question, he was glad that they had not been
- troubled to mourn in this way. All the same, in spite of all his
- questioning, he was unable to learn anything likely to show who had met
- Squire Evans in Parley Wood. So far his mission to Cookley had proved a
- complete failure.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then Destiny intervened to conduct him a step further on the dark path,
- which was leading him he knew not where. Towards the end of the week, and
- when he was beginning to feel safer and more at home in the village, he
- had an adventure, the consequences of which were far-reaching. Owain had
- gone for a long walk into the surrounding country, and was returning
- leisurely under the many-coloured glories of the sunset. The weather was
- warm, the road was dusty, and he paused by a stile to remove his straw hat
- and allow the breeze to cool his heated brow. Before him was the church,
- round the square ivy-clothed tower of which the jackdaws were flying; to
- the right was the road, melting almost imperceptibly into the narrow
- village street, while to the left ran the same road curving abruptly round
- a corner into the agricultural lands. So dangerous was this bend in the
- highway that it was marked with one of those red triangles elevated on a
- post to warn motorists and cyclists not to move at too great a pace. The
- injunction was very much needed, and never more so than in the present
- instance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench leaned idling against the stile enjoying the beauty of the evening
- and the picturesque character of the landscape. He could not see very far,
- as the place was muffled with hawthorn hedges and tall trees, but there
- was a quiet domestic loveliness about the prospect which soothed his
- tormented soul. Suddenly his eye was caught by a moving figure in the
- porch of the church, which was under the west window. It was that of a
- slender girl, not very tall, but singularly graceful. As she came down the
- path towards the lychgate, he saw that she had a beautiful face,
- aristocratic in its looks and rather pensive in its expression. Arrayed in
- white, and with a white sunshade, she stepped daintily through the gate
- and out on to the dusty road, turning her face towards the village,
- whither she was evidently going. But scarcely had she taken three steps
- when a motor-car, without warning, swept swiftly round the dangerous
- corner. The girl was directly in his path, and although Hench shouted at
- once, she did not step aside. In fact she seemed to be puzzled by his cry,
- until the noise of the approaching machine struck her ear. Then she
- wheeled suddenly and stood where she was, paralysed with fright. Hench saw
- that in a second she would be cut down and be crushed under those cruel
- wheels, so plunged suddenly forward and dashed across the roadway to
- thrust her out of the way. So impetuous was his onset that she was tumbled
- back into the hedge girdling the churchyard, and Hench himself fell
- sprawling in the dust. With a whirr, the motor passed and he felt a sharp
- pain in his ankle. The next moment the car was buzzing at top-speed
- through the village, its driver evidently afraid of prosecution for
- neglecting to sound his horn. Meanwhile the girl gathered herself up out
- of the hedge, and Owain lay still on the highway. The whole event lasted
- less than a minute--the girl being saved, the man being hurt in the
- twinkling of an eye. And in the same twinkling of an eye the car had
- vanished into the unknown.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh!&quot; The young lady hurried towards her preserver. &quot;Are
- you hurt?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My ankle,&quot; gasped Hench, sitting up with an effort; &quot;it's
- giving me a warm time--a wheel went over it, I think--probably it is
- broken!&quot; and he winced with the pain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You have saved my life!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, that's all right,&quot; replied the young man, speaking with
- difficulty, for the suffering was great. &quot;You can repay me by helping
- me home, or by getting assistance. I can't walk by myself.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Give me your hand,&quot; said the girl quickly, quite cool and
- mistress of herself. &quot;There! Can you get on to your feet?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;On to one foot, anyhow,&quot; gasped Hench, smiling to reassure her,
- and managed to stand upright. &quot;But my ankle is not so very bad. I
- don't think it is broken--only crushed.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That's bad enough. Lean on me. Where do you live?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;At Mrs. Bell's.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That's not far away. Come. What a hero you are to save me. My name
- is Evans.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Evans!&quot; repeated Owain, and then knew that he had at last met
- his cousin.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_10" href="#div1Ref_10" id="div1_10">CHAPTER X</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- VANE'S AUNT
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I should have been killed to a certainty but for the way in which he
- got me out of the way,&quot; said Gwen to Mrs. Perage, when recounting her
- adventure, and speaking rather incoherently, for the same had shaken her
- nerves.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage growled. She was a gaunt, dark-brewed old lady, with a
- formidable frown and a very determined character. &quot;All's well that
- ends well,&quot; she said in a deep contralto voice, which suggested that
- of a man. &quot;It might have been worse but for this hero of yours. Did
- you take the number of the car?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My goodness!&quot; cried the girl pettishly. &quot;How could I, when
- I was lying on my back in the ditch under the churchyard hedge? The car
- passed like a flash.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Daresay,&quot; sniffed Mrs. Perage aggressively. &quot;Having done
- wrong, the chauffeur got out of the way. We'll make inquiries and
- prosecute. I'd hang every one of those road-hogs if I had my way.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I don't think it is worth making a fuss about,&quot; said Gwen
- quickly. &quot;I am all right, and his ankle will soon be quite well. I
- fetched the doctor as soon as I got him to Mrs. Bell's, and there are no
- bones broken. He will be out and about in a few days.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;His--him--he,&quot; said Mrs. Perage sharply. &quot;How indefinite
- you are. What's the name of your Achilles?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hench. Mr. Hench. So Mrs. Bell told me, and he's been with her for
- nearly a whole week.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hench!&quot; Mrs. Perage rubbed her beaky nose and reflected. &quot;Why,
- that's the name of Jim's friend he wrote me about. There was a letter of
- introduction given. Hum! And he's been a week in Cookley without calling.
- That doesn't look as if he wished to make my acquaintance, Gwen.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Perhaps he's down here on business,&quot; suggested the girl, &quot;and
- did not wish to call on any one until he was free.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, if he doesn't call on me, I'll call on him,&quot; said the old
- dame grimly; &quot;if only to thank him for saving your life. Hum! Quite
- romantic the way in which the man's come into your little world, my dear.
- Quite romantic, I call it.&quot; Then, being very much the woman, in spite
- of her masculine appearance, Mrs. Perage asked a leading question. &quot;Good-looking?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh!&quot; Gwen clasped her hands. &quot;He's a Greek god.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So was Vulcan. Anything like that heavenly blacksmith?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. He's tall and splendidly built, with brown hair and brown eyes;
- clean-shaven with clearly-cut features.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; Mrs. Perage brought out the ejaculation with a boom.
- &quot;You examined him pretty closely, young lady.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I had plenty of time to do so,&quot; retorted Miss Evans
- pertly. &quot;I helped him to hobble to Mrs. Bell's house, and saw him
- again to thank him after the doctor had examined his poor ankle. I'm sure
- you will like him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That has yet to be seen. I don't like many people. However, Jim says
- that Mr. Hench is a thoroughly good fellow, and----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm sure he is. He saved my life.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Consequently you intend to tumble head over heels in love with him?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen grew red. &quot;I certainly don't. All the same he's very nice, and
- I'm sorry he's suffering pain.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pity is akin to love,&quot; quoted Mrs. Perage, apparently to the
- ceiling. The girl laughed and shook her head. &quot;In spite of your
- matter-of-fact ways and the common-sense you pride yourself upon, you have
- an imaginative vein, Mrs. Perage. I am sure you see in this accident the
- beginning of a romance.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If the young man is handsome, as you say, and a good sort as Jim
- Vane says, why not?&quot; asked the old lady, smiling. &quot;Besides, I
- don't believe in chance, as everything is ordained by Providence. I
- shouldn't be at all surprised if, in the long run, it was proved that Mr.
- Hench tumbled out of the clouds to be your husband. However, it's early
- days yet to talk. Wait and see!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- As the result of long experience, dating from the time when she was a
- small child in short frocks, Gwen knew that it was useless to argue with
- Mrs. Perage, so she left the room and went upstairs to change her dress.
- And as a matter of fact, she had been extremely struck with Hench's good
- looks, as a woman naturally would be. Also, he seemed to be excessively
- agreeable, and likewise she owed him her life, not forgetting that she was
- just at that age when girls begin to dream of marriage. Poor Gwen had not
- passed a very happy time with her cantankerous father, and was not averse
- to having a pleasant home and an aggressively devoted lover. So she looked
- at herself in the glass, pondering over Mrs. Perage's remarks, and blushed
- crimson to find that Hench was taking up much more of her thoughts than
- she considered altogether proper. That it was a case of love at first
- sight she would not admit, but on the whole her feelings had a great deal
- to do with the oft-quoted proverb.
- </p>
- <p>
- On his side, Owain had no doubts whatever on the subject, strange as it
- may seem, considering that hitherto he had never been in love. His
- cousin's lovely face, her sympathetic kindness, together with the
- undeniable fact that he had saved her life, created in him a number of
- tumultuous feelings, which he spent the night in analysing. To be sure, he
- told himself that he did so because the pain of his ankle kept him wide
- awake, and because thoughts in this direction took his mind off his aching
- bones. But when the dawn came, he was tolerably certain that he was in
- love. The feeling he now experienced was wholly different to that with
- which he had regarded Zara. He had admired the dancer in a cool,
- reflective, judicious way, seeing that she had faults as well as virtues.
- But in Gwen he could see no faults, and never paused to consider that he
- could scarcely know her character from the little he had seen of her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sensible as Hench usually was, some power--he presumed it was the power of
- love---swept him off his feet, and he credited the girl with all the
- virtues of the angels, and with their beauty also. He was glad that he had
- saved her, as she would be grateful; he was glad that he had hurt himself,
- as she would pity him; and he was decidedly glad that he had concealed the
- relationship. Now, at least, there was every chance that he would be able
- to make a friend of her. Not that he wanted to halt at friendship. He was
- now firmly bent upon making her his wife, and thus would be able to fulfil
- Mr. Gilberry's prophecy and end the family feud in quite an agreeable and
- romantic way. All the night Owain was building castles in the air, and
- when the dawn came they were still firm. Only on the arrival of the doctor
- to examine his ankle did the young man descend from these Olympian
- heights. Then, with a sudden and very natural reaction, he began to think
- that he had been too premature in his building.
- </p>
- <p>
- The result of this was disastrous to Gwen. She called at mid-day to see
- how he was getting on, and he received her coldly, while lying on the
- slippery horse-hair sofa in Mrs. Bell's tiny sitting-room. The girl,
- flushed with the romance of the whole adventure and struck anew with the
- splendid looks of her preserver, felt chilled by his calm politeness. The
- two talked in a more or less formal way and parted very soon. Gwen went
- back to tell Mrs. Perage that her hero was horrid, and her hero remained
- on his sofa trying to assure himself that he had rescued only an ordinary
- girl. But it was all of no use, for Nature would have her way. During the
- next few days the two met under the chaperonage of the widow Bell, and
- gradually became aware that the feelings they entertained towards one
- another were more than those of mere friendship. Of course this knowledge
- made them more stiff and formal than ever in their intercourse, as their
- conversation was confined to commonplace subjects, not likely to awaken
- emotion. Hench was anxious to ask his cousin about her father, but as she
- said nothing, he did not venture to broach the matter. Still, remembering
- that she had been clothed in white on the day of the accident, and seeing
- that her frocks since, beyond black ribbons, did not suggest mourning in
- any great degree, he came to the conclusion that she had not been
- particularly attached to her father, although he could not be quite sure.
- But all doubts on this question were set aside by Mrs. Perage, who placed
- matters very plainly before him, according to her somewhat grim custom.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old lady did not call for a few days, although she sent creams and
- jellies, books and flowers, by the hands of Gwen. Owain was very grateful
- for these kind attentions, and asked Miss Evans to take back his letter of
- introduction, which she did. Etiquette thus having been complied with, one
- day, instead of the fairy vision of Gwen, the patient beheld a tall and
- lean old dame stalk into his room. By this time he was able to get about
- with a crutch, and rose to greet her, upon which she thrust him back into
- his armchair with a pair of very capable hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not so,&quot; said Mrs. Perage, when he was again seated and taking
- a chair opposite, where she kilted her black stuff dress to show a pair of
- large boots. &quot;Stay where you are, young man. Hum! You look better
- than I expected.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm quite well now, thank you, Mrs. Perage. And I must apologise for
- not having presented Jim's letter before.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Jim sent another letter, and I know all about you,&quot; said the
- old lady sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I don't think you do,&quot; said Hench, rather alarmed, as he
- feared that Vane might have been indiscreet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not?&quot; Mrs. Perage bent her sharp old eyes on his perturbed
- face, the good looks of which she secretly approved of. &quot;There's
- nothing wrong about you, I hope and trust?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not what you would call wrong,&quot; said Hench evasively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pooh, young man. How do you know anything about my standard of
- morality. I don't suppose it's what you'd call a high one,&quot; added
- Mrs. Perage, rubbing her nose. &quot;I always make allowance for fools,
- and most of those who dwell in this world, which is much too good for
- them, are fools.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench laughed. He liked Mrs. Perage, who was quite a character. In her
- young days she had been a great beauty, although she was now old and
- weather-beaten, careless of her attire, and quite manly in her manner.
- Since the death of her husband, some thirty years ago, she had managed her
- estates herself, for being childless she had little else to do, and had
- long since outgrown the toys which amuse Society. For a woman she was
- uncommonly tall, and with her aquiline nose, her swart complexion and dark
- eyes, she resembled a gipsy. In spite of her coarse dress so carelessly
- worn, there was an air of good-breeding about her, and also a shrewd look
- on her fierce face. Owain stared hard at her Amazonian looks, considering
- that here was a woman who should have been the mother of heroes to gird
- armour on them and send them forth to the fray. She was quite out of place
- in a peaceful community.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, young man,&quot; said Mrs. Perage roughly, &quot;you'll know
- me again, I daresay, if staring goes for anything. What are your thoughts?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench told them and suggested how unfit she was for a peaceful world where
- a policeman stands at every corner. &quot;I can't see you anywhere, Mrs.
- Perage, but in some Norse hall, worshipping Odin and urging men to battle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Perhaps going to battle myself,&quot; said the old dame grimly, yet
- very pleased with the strange compliment. &quot;Hum! You are right, the
- world is tame now-a-day, and a long life has bored me with the petty
- concerns of baby folk. You seem to have ideas in your head, Master Owain.&quot;
- Hench stared and fear clutched at his heart. If she knew this much, she
- might know more. &quot;Who told you my Christian name?&quot; he faltered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My own common sense, man alive! I have lived here all my life and
- knew your grandfather, Mynydd Evans, aye and your father, and Madoc also.
- Hench was the name Owain took when he was outlawed. See, my boy, how
- naturally I use the Norse word, after your suggestions of my being a
- modern Valkyrie.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Does my cousin know who I am?&quot; asked the young man anxiously.
- &quot;No. I wanted to see you first before I told her."
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't tell her, Mrs. Perage.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not. Hum!&quot;--her eyes were as piercing as spears--&quot;there
- is some reason for you masquerading as Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hench was the name adopted by my father, and until a few days ago I
- quite believed that it was my true name. But certain papers which he left
- with our family lawyers explained matters.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Did they explain that you inherit Cookley Grange and ten thousand a
- year?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot;--Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose again and looked puzzled.
- &quot;Then, knowing that you were the heir, why did you not come and see
- your uncle after the death of your father? I know he died in Paris five
- years ago, as Madoc told me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I did not know that I was the heir until my twenty-fifth birthday on
- the tenth day of this month. My father left instructions with Gilberry
- &amp; Gilberry that they were not to give the papers to me until then. I
- have already told you, Mrs. Perage, that only lately did I learn my true
- name.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old dame nodded absently, thinking deeply for a few minutes. &quot;I
- think your father was wise to keep you thus in ignorance until you were
- older and had some experience of the world. A man of twenty-five could
- have managed Madoc better than a boy of twenty. Yes, Owain was wise,
- knowing Madoc's character.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The late Squire does not appear to have had a very good one,&quot;
- remarked Hench dryly. &quot;He was unpopular, I am told by Mrs. Bell.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He was a wicked, selfish, greedy, miserly old scoundrel,&quot;
- retorted Mrs. Perage, aggressively blunt. &quot;And if that's speaking
- evil of the dead, I don't care. I am quite sure that Madoc fed your
- grandfather's anger when it was directed towards Owain, who, after all,
- was not so very evil, although selfish enough. Still, your father would
- never have been cut out of the will but for Madoc. And if Madoc had met
- you, young man, he would have tried to settle your hash in some way, you
- may be certain.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh!&quot; Hench started, and was on the point of revealing the story
- of the advertisement and his adventure, when he checked himself prudently
- and made quite a different remark. &quot;But if Uncle Madoc was such a
- rotter, why is Gwen such a nice girl, and I am sure a good girl?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She is all that,&quot; endorsed Mrs. Perage heartily. &quot;And if
- your father was such a selfish profligate--I don't wish to hurt your
- filial feelings, but he was--why are you such a nice young man?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench coloured at the compliment. &quot;I may be a profligate also.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pooh!&quot; said Mrs. Perage with supreme contempt, &quot;don't you
- think that I am able to read faces? Yours is a good one and so is Gwen's.
- The decency of you both comes in each case from the mother's side, I
- expect, for both your fathers were--what they were. Children of Old Nick,
- I call them. You had a bad time with that father of yours, I'll be bound?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well&quot;--Hench winced--&quot;he was not a very amiable parent, I
- must admit, although I wouldn't say that to any one save you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage bent her keen old eyes on him, read between the lines, and
- laughed in a short rasping manner after the style of a fox barking. &quot;Just
- as I thought, young man. Owain was a selfish, cruel animal, and so was
- Madoc. He gave you as bad a time as Madoc did Gwen.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I rather gathered from Gwen's absence of mourning that she had no
- great love for her father,&quot; remarked Hench musingly. &quot;Your
- powers of observation are great, Owain. Gwen and her father got on about
- as well together as a ferret and a rabbit; she being the last and he the
- first. But for me I don't know what the poor girl would have done. She
- would have run away from home, I expect. However, she always came to me
- when her father was particularly trying, and now she has come to me
- altogether. With me she will stay, until you take her away.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench raised himself on his elbow and blushed in a delightfully youthful
- manner. &quot;What makes you say that?&quot; he asked confusedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Am I a fool?&quot; queried Mrs. Perage grimly. &quot;Doesn't a cat
- love cream, and is not a young man likely to fall in love with one whose
- life he has saved, provided that one is charming and good. Go to, my boy.&quot;
- She spoke quite in the style of her nephew Jim. &quot;I can see through a
- brick wall, I suppose. But all this doesn't explain why you are
- masquerading here under your father's false name. Come now, tell me all
- about it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench did not do as she asked him, even though she was such a sensible old
- lady, for he thought that the time was not yet ripe for him to speak
- freely about his Gipsy Stile adventure. Therefore he told her the same
- story that he had told to Mr. Gilberry. &quot;And you see I was right to
- meet my cousin under a feigned name,&quot; he concluded, &quot;for had I
- come as Owain Evans she would have been prejudiced against me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I don't know.&quot; Mrs. Perage again rubbed her nose
- thoughtfully. &quot;As you may guess, Madoc always spoke ill of you,
- saying you were the true son of your wicked father, which was a case of
- the pot calling the kettle black, I rather think. But, you see, Madoc
- hated the idea of your getting the property.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He wanted Gwen to get it?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not a bit. So long as you didn't succeed he would have been content
- to let an hospital have it. He cared nothing for his daughter, and being
- such a bad father she naturally disbelieved anything he said. Far from
- thinking you the rascal Madoc said you were, Gwen fancied that you were
- quite a nice agreeable young man, which you are. I think she would have
- welcomed Owain Evans just as kindly as she has welcomed Owain Hench. All
- the same, if you win her heart as a disguised prince the romance of it
- will appeal to her when she learns the delightful truth.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench laughed, feeling greatly relieved. &quot;Mrs. Perage, I don't
- believe you are a Norse goddess. You are much too romantic.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Perhaps, young man. I am an old fool.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are one of the most charming people I have ever met,&quot; said
- Hench warmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pooh!&quot; retorted Mrs. Perage, pleased with the compliment.
- &quot;Don't make love to me, or you'll break Gwen's heart.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Has she a heart to break--on my account, that is?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Young man,&quot;--Mrs. Perage rose until her head nearly touched the
- low ceiling, and she assumed her grand manner,--&quot;you don't expect one
- woman to tell the secrets of another woman. All the same, a nod is as good
- as a wink to a blind horse. And you are blind, being in love.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Am I in love?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Something tells me that you are--and with Gwen. But if you are
- already engaged, or if there is any other girl in the question, I tell
- you, young man, that I won't have it. Gwen is much too good a girl to be
- trifled with.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I assure you, I am not going to trifle with her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Good. If you do, you'll have me to reckon with,&quot; said the old
- woman grimly. &quot;I am quite Norse enough to twist your neck if you
- repeat in your own person the very objectionable character of your father.
- Tell me plump and plain, if you please: do you love Gwen?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think so.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Think so! Then you don't love her. No man worth a woman's affection
- can be in doubt on that point.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, you see, I'm a bit of an ass as regards women,&quot; confessed
- Hench, flustered by her imperious insistence. &quot;I have never been in
- love before.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;All the better!&quot; cried Mrs. Perage sharply. &quot;But I thought
- I was.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum! Well, and why not; one must gain experience. How many times?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Once only. I admired this girl but she loved another man, so I went
- away.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; said Mrs. Perage once more. &quot;Is your heart broken?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh Lord, no. I soon got over it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then you haven't been in love. But with regard to Gwen&quot;--Mrs.
- Perage suddenly sat down and laughed heartily--&quot;aren't we rather
- silly to talk in this way? We are only weaving ropes of sand, for I know
- nothing certain about the state of your affections or those of Gwen. I
- think I had better let you two manage things in your own way, and as
- Mother Nature--who has a large experience--dictates. All I say is, act
- honestly towards the girl, or you'll have me to deal with. Understand?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I understand.&quot; Hench laughed. &quot;You can trust me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage went away very well satisfied with the state of affairs. At
- heart she was romantic like every woman, and like every woman she was
- quite a matchmaker. There was no young man in Cookley worthy of Gwen, so
- far as she knew, and this swain--so her thoughts ran--had been brought by
- Providence in the nick of time to save the girl from being an old maid.
- She longed to speak as freely to Miss Evans as she had spoken to her
- cousin, but did not dare to do so, lest she should frighten her into
- banishing the dawning feeling of love. Mrs. Perage had seen much harm come
- from meddling, so decided to refrain from throwing the young people too
- violently at one another's heads. But she certainly threw them gently, for
- when Hench was nearly all right a few days later, she sent him an
- invitation to dinner. This he accepted with great delight, and the more
- eagerly as Gwen had ceased her visits since he became convalescent. At the
- dinner he would have a chance of seeing her again, and perhaps an
- opportunity of hinting at his feelings. For by this time he had proved the
- truth of the saying that &quot;Absence makes the heart grow fonder,&quot;
- and was very sure that he really and truly loved her with all the power
- that was in him. And this was the genuine passion of man for woman--not
- the counterfeit one which had led him to seek Zara Alpenny.
- </p>
- <p>
- By this time, since the Hungarian lady was not making trouble, Hench began
- to think that she would leave him alone altogether. Surely, he thought, if
- she intended to scheme for her daughter's marriage with him, she would
- have made some advance before now. Her silence lifted a weight off his
- mind, and he arrayed himself in purple and fine linen for the dinner,
- feeling that the sun of prosperity was beaming on him. He went to Mrs.
- Perage's house, believing that the fine weather would continue, and quite
- forgot the adage about the treacherous calm before the storm. But when he
- got to the door, and the door was opened by a small smart page with a
- freckled face and red hair, he was reminded that it did not do to trust
- wholly to appearance. The sight of the boy gave him quite a shock, and an
- uncomfortable one, reminding him as he did of Bethnal Green.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Bottles!&quot; he said, stepping into the hall and staring at the
- lad.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, sir; no, Mr. Hench. I'm Peter!&quot; grinned the boy, and began
- to help Hench off with his overcoat.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then Owain remembered how Simon Jedd had told him he had a brother in
- service in the country--the same he had gone to see. But he never expected
- to find that brother in Cookley and in the service of Mrs. Perage. &quot;You
- know my name?&quot; he said hesitatingly, and wondering if the imp was to
- be trusted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh yes, sir. Simon has spoken heaps heaps of times to me about you,
- saying how kind you were to him. Knew your name, sir, the minute Miss Gwen
- said as you'd saved her life.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Simon came down to see you some weeks ago?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, sir!&quot; Peter spoke eagerly, and was evidently about to say
- much, when he suddenly shut his wide mouth and said no more than the two
- words.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench settled his coat and his tie, pondering over the situation. The
- sight of the boy, who was connected with Bottles, revived his anxiety, and
- he feared lest the lad should write to London and say where he was. In
- that case Madame Alpenny might find him out, and then there would be
- trouble. But then Simon, if he did write, would do so to his brother, and
- Bottles was entirely to be trusted. Still, Hench would have liked to give
- this page a hint, yet could not do so, as it would be undignified. Peter
- noted his lingering and hesitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Simon wants to see you, sir. It's all right.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What's all right?&quot; asked Hench sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- The page wriggled uneasily. &quot;Simon will tell you, sir. I don't know
- nothing, I don't, Mr. Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain felt uneasy at the implied mystery, but judged it wise to affect
- careless confidence. &quot;Simon can come and see me when he likes,&quot;
- he said, and entered the drawing-room, considerably annoyed by the
- encounter.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_11" href="#div1Ref_11" id="div1_11">XI</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- MACBETH'S BANQUET
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- The house of Mrs. Perage was quaint and old-fashioned, being so
- delightfully reminiscent of gracious antiquity that Hench was charmed with
- his surroundings. As a very modern young man, who had wandered largely in
- new lands where civilization was still raw, he was pleasantly impressed by
- the panelled room with the low ceiling. The furniture was Chippendale and
- Sheraton of the powder and puff epoch, while carpet and curtains were
- mellowed by age into restful colours, comfortable to the eye. An odour of
- dried rose leaves scented the air, mingling with the more living perfume
- of countless blossoms. Mrs. Perage had the happy taste to be extremely
- fond of flowers, it would seem, for the room was filled with colour and
- fragrance, even to the fireplace, which bloomed like a garden with white
- buds and green leaves. Even though the curtains were not yet drawn, and
- the luminous summer twilight stole in through the wide windows, the many
- lamps were lighted. And the radiance of these, diffused through
- rose-tinted shades, bathed the whole room in the delicate hues of dawn.
- This was a haven of rest, a bower of joy, a paradise of delight, and Hench
- drew a long breath of sheer pleasure on its threshold.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What a charming room,&quot; he said, advancing to greet his hostess.
- &quot;Charming!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Blunderer!&quot; retorted that lady in her contralto voice, which
- boomed like the buzz of a bee in a fox glove bell. &quot;You should say,
- what charming ladies.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You would think me too bold if I put my thoughts into words.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very cleverly turned, young man. But women never think men are too
- bold when they pay compliments.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench laughed and smiled in a friendly way at Gwen, who was smiling in a
- friendly way at him. She looked wonderfully fresh, attractively
- delightful, as delicate as Titania and wholly as fascinating. Her dress of
- plain white silk adorned with black ribbons, hinting at mourning, became
- her well in its dainty simplicity, and Owain felt again that queer
- heart-throb which informed him very distinctly that this was the one girl
- in the world for him. No woman could be lovely unless she had golden hair
- and blue eyes and a complexion of cream and roses. He wondered how he ever
- could have admired Zara, who did not possess these necessary charms. But
- when he was attracted by the dancer he was a fool, now he intended to be a
- wise man and lay his heart at Gwen's feet. Whether she would pick it up
- had yet to be seen, for she gave no intimation of her feelings.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;When you two finish grinning at one another like a couple of Chinese
- dolls, perhaps you will remember that I am present. Sit down, young man.
- Are you very hungry? I have a very good dinner for you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Splendid! I'm not hungry, Mrs. Perage, but I am greedy.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pooh! That joke is as old as the hills. Be more original.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That's difficult. How can I be original, Miss Evans?&quot; Hench
- asked the question with ceremonious courtesy, which made Mrs. Perage
- smile, knowing what she did know.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think you are original,&quot; said Gwen brightly. &quot;You saved
- my life!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; came the boom of Mrs. Perage, &quot;and that's
- originality, is it?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I don't make a practice of saving lives,&quot; laughed Hench
- lightly. &quot;And I don't think I ever saved any one before. So I <i>am_
- original, you see.&quot;</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- The old dame smiled grimly, as she relished the young man's flippant
- conversation. &quot;One grows so tired of common-sense,&quot; she
- murmured, following her own thoughts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why, you are always commending common-sense,&quot; exclaimed Gwen,
- lifting her eyebrows and laughing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In its place, child, in its place. To-night you and Mr. Hench can
- talk nonsense, as it will make me feel young.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You <i>are</i> young, Mrs. Perage,&quot; said Owain seriously.
- &quot;Your heart is in its spring-time. You are one whom the gods love.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ta! Ta! Ta! young Chesterfield. Don't make me blush, as I have long
- since forgotten how to do so. You and your compliments, indeed! Not but
- what I wear tolerably well, although a trifle time-worn,&quot; which final
- sentence showed that Mrs. Perage had her little vanities.
- </p>
- <p>
- And she was right in having them, for having stepped out of her rough
- day-clothes into sumptuous evening dress, she looked wonderfully stately.
- Amber satin, black lace and diamonds, oddly enough, seemed as natural to
- her as the more or less masculine dress which she affected during her
- business hours. Mrs. Perage always called looking after her farms and
- attending to her accounts business, which it assuredly was, and business
- moreover which required a clear head. In the day-time she was like one of
- her labourers in appearance, and her clothes might have graced a
- scarecrow, but when evening came she always appeared as a fine lady. This
- change, which reminded Hench somewhat of Miss Hardcastle in Goldsmith's
- comedy, amused the young man. He liked Mrs. Perage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I wrote and asked Jim Vane to come down to dinner,&quot; went on
- Mrs. Perage, after a pause. &quot;As I thought that I could amuse myself
- with his wit while you attended to Gwen here. But he wrote saying that he
- could not come, as he was exploring Bethnal Green.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Bethnal Green,&quot; echoed Hench with a start. &quot;What the
- deuce--I beg your pardon, Mrs. Perage---but what is Jim doing there?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He did not explain. Why do you ask?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, nothing, nothing!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What an irrelevant reply.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I was only thinking that Jim usually prefers the West End to
- the quarters of the poor,&quot; said Hench guardedly. He was not quite
- certain if he had mentioned his sojourn at Bethnal Green to Mrs. Perage,
- and resolved to do so now, as--so far as he was able--he wished to be
- quite straight and above-board with the keen old lady. &quot;I stayed
- there for six months.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In Bethnal Green?&quot; said Gwen, amazed. &quot;And what were you
- doing in such a horrible place, Mr. Hench?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, as Jim would put it, I was doing a perish. I am a poor man,
- Miss Evans, and have lived for many years in Queer Street.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Queer Street?&quot; Gwen looked puzzled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It is the name given to the locality where those unsuccessful people
- who are trying for what they can't get live in penury.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen looked at Hench's well-cut suit of evening clothes, at his well-bred
- face, and considered his general debonair appearance. &quot;You don't look
- poor.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There is poverty and poverty,&quot; said Mrs. Perage gruffly. &quot;Mr.
- Hench is not yet in the workhouse, Gwen. For my part I think 'a perish,'
- as you say Jim calls it, is not a bad thing for a young man. It gives him
- experience of life----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of the seamy side of life, Mrs. Perage,&quot; interpolated the young
- man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And what is more picturesque than that. Here we are all respectable
- and eminently dull. There's the gong.&quot; She rose with a well-managed
- sweep of her skirts. &quot;Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Or diet,&quot; said Hench, holding the door open for the ladies.
- &quot;Pooh! nonsense!&quot; said the Amazon vigorously. &quot;Young men
- shouldn't know the meaning of such a word. I'm sure I don't. I have a
- strong digestion and a hard heart.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not that last,&quot; said Gwen quickly; &quot;as I know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What imagination you have, child,&quot; retorted Mrs. Perage, and
- took her position at the head of a small table, while Gwen and Hench sat
- on either side. &quot;And I hope you don't mind our straggling into the
- dining-room in this free and easy way,&quot; she added to the young man;
- &quot;but I couldn't take your arm as Gwen would have felt out of it, and
- I wasn't going to let you give Gwen your arm lest you should lack
- reverence for my age.&quot; And she laughed in her deep, hearty fashion,
- evidently desirous of making her guest feel quite at home.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dining-room was a small apartment decorated and furnished in the
- Jacobean style. But Hench could not see much of it, as there were only
- candles in sconces here and there. The most powerful illumination was that
- thrown by a large lamp with a green shade, which hung low over the table.
- In its light the white napery, the old silver, the crystal glasses and the
- many flowers, looked peculiarly attractive. And the table not being over
- large, the three seated at it could converse with one another very much at
- their ease. A deft maid and Peter waited dexterously, and everything ran
- smoothly during the meal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;This is my hour of relaxation,&quot; explained Mrs. Perage briskly.
- &quot;I am ominously fond of my creature comforts and this is my favourite
- soup.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why ominously?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Silly questioner. Doesn't devotion to eating show that one is
- growing old?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then I must have been born old,&quot; said Hench gaily, &quot;for I
- have always had a good appetite since I was a boy, and have always liked
- nice things.&quot; His eyes rested, perhaps inadvertently, on Gwen as he
- spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah!&quot; Mrs. Perage had noticed the look, and spoke significantly.
- &quot;You are one of those lucky people who will always get the nice
- things.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I haven't had much luck so far, Mrs. Perage.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ungrateful! What do you call this?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Paradise!&quot; said Hench briefly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;With you as Adam, Gwen as Eve, and myself as the Serpent.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Aren't you talking dreadful nonsense?&quot; observed the girl
- seriously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not at all,&quot; retorted the old lady coolly. &quot;It is
- common-sense to chatter amusingly. Enjoy yourself, child, and when trouble
- comes you will be able to remember at least one happy hour.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Trouble has come, and severe trouble, too,&quot; replied Gwen
- softly, and with a gloomy air.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Now, not another word!&quot; Mrs. Perage spoke sharply. &quot;We can
- talk of that afterwards in the drawing-room.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Talk of what?&quot; asked Hench innocently, for he was surprised by
- Gwen's gloom and Mrs. Perage's sharpness.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old dame rubbed her nose in a vexed way. &quot;Gwen has something to
- ask you this evening,&quot; she observed. &quot;I think it is nonsense
- myself. No! I won't tell you what it is just now, neither will Gwen. Let
- us enjoy our meal without the discussion of horrors.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- This was all very well, but how was Hench to enjoy his meal when Care
- stood like a waiter behind his chair? The presence of Peter reminded him
- of Bottles, and that memory brought to his recollection The Home of the
- Muses in Bethnal Green, where, for all he knew, Madame Alpenny might be
- plotting. Then he wondered what had taken Jim to the house, for there he
- must have gone, as it was unlikely he would journey to such a district for
- any other purpose. Perhaps the Hungarian lady was already weaving her nets
- to snare him--the thinker-either as a husband for Zara, or as a criminal.
- It was very uncomfortable thinking.
- </p>
- <p>
- And being so alarmed, Hench did his best to talk brightly and amusingly.
- For the time being he was &quot;fey,&quot; as the Scotch say, and roused
- his cousin out of her gloom by his sallies. Mrs. Perage seconded him
- admirably, as she quite enjoyed a contest of wits, which was rare to come
- by in Cookley. The food was good, the wine was excellent, the company
- interesting. All the same Hench felt that this meal was like Macbeth's
- banquet, and behind the revelry lurked the grim figure of Tragedy with her
- bowl and dagger. At any moment Banquo in the person of Madame Alpenny
- might appear. Of course such a supposition was nonsense, as the Hungarian
- lady did not know where he was. But the feeling became so real to Hench
- that he cast several uneasy looks behind his chair. Gwen noticed this and
- remarked on the same nervously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why do you look over your shoulder?&quot; she asked petulantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;For the Kill-joy,&quot; said Hench in a blunt way. &quot;You know,
- Miss Evans, man is never permitted to be entirely happy. There is always
- the Kill-joy.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Gwen will provide you with all the Kill-joy you are needing,&quot;
- said Mrs. Perage significantly. &quot;Wait until we go to the
- drawing-room. Meantime go on scintillating, young man. Talk your heart
- out.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;To whom?&quot; asked Hench audaciously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;To me, sir. You can flirt with Gwen to-morrow; to-night old age must
- have its turn. Here are some very excellent cigarettes. Light up and talk.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You remind me of the lady who asked Sydney Smith when he was going
- to be funny,&quot; said Hench dryly. &quot;It is not easy to talk when so
- ordered. As to Miss Evans, she never flirts.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, you don't know my capabilities,&quot; retorted Gwen, with a
- mischievous gleam in her blue eyes. &quot;I have many sides to my
- character.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And all charming, I am sure,&quot; answered the young man
- courteously.
- </p>
- <p>
- And so the conversation went on, all frothy, all about nothings--mere
- spume and spindrift of the mind. And the lighter it became the more
- certain did Hench become sure that Banquo's ghost was haunting the room.
- He felt quite relieved when Mrs. Perage conducted himself and Gwen into
- the drawing-room, for there the psychic atmosphere was less oppressive.
- The girl, however, appeared to feel it otherwise, for after playing on the
- piano for a few minutes she began to wander restlessly round the room.
- Mrs. Perage attempted to frown her into sitting down, but as this proved
- to be an impossible task she accepted the situation with grim resignation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You may as well enlist Mr. Hench as your champion, child. You will
- never be quiet until you do.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Enlist me as your champion!&quot; echoed Hench, glancing at Gwen.
- </p>
- <p>
- The girl grew flushed. &quot;That is Mrs. Perage's pretty way of putting
- things,&quot; was her reply, as she sat down near the hostess. &quot;But I
- do wish you to help me, Mr. Hench. I'm not quite sure if I am right in
- doing so, and perhaps you will think it is presumption on my part. But,
- somehow, your having saved my life has made you more than a friend.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;More than a friend?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I mean&quot;--Gwen became even more crimson than she already was, as
- she became aware that she had spoken more freely than was necessary--&quot;more
- familiar than most of my friends.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Who are usually mere acquaintances,&quot; observed Mrs. Perage
- quietly. &quot;Why beat about the bush, Gwen? You know that Mr. Hench is
- clever and kind-hearted, and you are anxious that he should do you a
- favour. That is the situation.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Any favour I can do you, Miss Evans----&quot; began the young man
- eagerly, when the girl stopped him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't say another word until you know what the favour is,&quot; she
- said in an abrupt manner; &quot;to do what I want may be unpleasant. In a
- word I want you to try and find out who murdered my father.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That's about a dozen words, more or less,&quot; sighed Mrs. Perage,
- but Hench took no notice of her flippant remark. He was too much taken
- aback to do so, and remained silent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen misunderstood his silence, and looked mortified &quot;You won't help
- me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I was thinking,&quot; said the young man gravely. &quot;Of course I
- have read all about the death of your father in the newspapers, Miss
- Evans, and I can quite understand your desire to avenge him. Anything I
- can do shall be done with the very greatest pleasure. How do matters
- stand?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;As they stood after the inquest,&quot; explained Gwen with a shrug.
- &quot;The jury brought in an open verdict, but the general opinion is that
- my father was murdered by the man who spoke to the girl in the tap-room of
- the Bull Inn.&quot; Hench winced. Every one appeared to be agreed that the
- tramp was the culprit, and he guessed that if discovered the tramp would
- have little chance of escaping a most uncomfortable trial. Even if he
- proved his innocence the experience would be unpleasant. Wondering what
- Mrs. Perage and the girl would say if he were to acknowledge that he was
- the man referred to, he began to ask questions in a grave voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Do you think that this tramp is the guilty person?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It looks like it,&quot; rejoined Gwen promptly. &quot;The man asked
- the way to the Gipsy Stile and evidently went there. Afterwards my father
- was found dead near the stile.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Had this tramp any motive to murder your father?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How can I tell that?&quot; said the girl irritably. &quot;I am only
- taking what evidence suggests his guilt. Why should he come to Cookley and
- ask the way to the very place where my father was afterwards found dead?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But the fact that the man asked the way to the stile shows that he
- was a stranger in Cookley. Would a stranger come here to murder your
- father?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; said Mrs. Perage suddenly. &quot;Madoc Evans had many
- enemies!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Can you name any of them?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Every one in the neighbourhood, I should say,&quot; snapped the old
- lady cynically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Exactly. Every one in the neighbourhood. But this tramp was a
- stranger.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He might have been hired by some one to murder the Squire,&quot;
- said Mrs. Perage vaguely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In that case the some one would have explained how this bravo was to
- get to the stile,&quot; said Hench coolly. And then he wondered if Gwen
- knew anything about the advertisement. &quot;Also,&quot; he continued,
- &quot;the some one must have known that Squire Evans would be at the stile
- at that particular time. Now, Miss Evans, can you tell me if your father
- made any appointment?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen shook her head. &quot;I can't say. My father did many things about
- which he told me nothing. Often in summer he walked out after dinner, as
- he did on the night he was murdered, but where he went I can't say. We
- searched the park when we missed him, and afterwards the woods on chance.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Was your father agitated on that night?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He was agitated from the time the woman came to see him,&quot; said
- Gwen quickly. Hench sat up, and a thrill passed through him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A woman?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! Some time in June a woman called one afternoon and had an
- interview with my father in the library. She was with him for two hours,
- and when she went away he was very much upset. I asked him who she was and
- why the visit annoyed him--as it plainly did.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And he told you to mind your own business, I'll be bound,&quot; said
- Mrs. Perage with a grim smile, for she knew Evans thoroughly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, he did. But from the time this woman called my father was
- silent and morose and irritable. I hope you won't think that I am
- undutiful, Mr. Hench, when I say that my father was not a
- pleasant-tempered man. But after the interview he became unbearable.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I never knew him when he was otherwise,&quot; cried the old lady,
- determined that Hench should know everything. &quot;Madoc Evans was
- without doubt the most disagreeable person I have ever met. A bear would
- have had a more amiable temper.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, my father is dead,&quot; said Gwen coldly, &quot;so it's no
- use calling him names.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I'll be a very tombstone for lying about the dead, if you like,
- my dear Gwen. But if Mr. Hench is to help he must know that your father
- was one of those uncomfortable men who never had a friend, and who never
- wanted one, so far as I know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My father was eccentric,&quot; said Gwen, her colour coming and
- going as she explained herself to the young man. &quot;And certainly he
- did not get on well with people. He quarrelled with my grandfather and
- with his brother Owain.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And with every one else,&quot; said Mrs. Perage. &quot;After all
- Mynydd Evans would have done better to leave the money to Owain&quot;--she
- stole a glance at Hench as she spoke. &quot;He was a better man than
- Madoc.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madoc was my father,&quot; said Gwen impatiently, &quot;so please
- say as little bad of him as possible. And, after all, the estate has gone
- to my cousin, Owain's son, though I don't know why he doesn't come and
- take possession. What do you think is the reason, Mr. Hench?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How can I tell the reason?&quot; asked Hench awkwardly, and aware
- that Mrs. Perage was looking at him significantly. &quot;Let us leave that
- fact alone for the present and talk of this woman who evidently upset your
- father. Who was she, Miss Evans?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have told you that my father refused to say.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Did you see her?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I caught a glimpse of her when she went away from the Grange, as I
- happened to be looking out of the drawing-room window.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What was she like to look at?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I didn't see her face. Her back was turned towards me, as she was
- going down the avenue.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh,&quot; said Hench disappointed, &quot;that's a pity.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But I remember how she was dressed.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That's better. Well?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She looked an untidy old thing,&quot; said Gwen, after a pause to
- recollect the appearance of this important stranger. &quot;Very fat and
- unshapely. She wore a black dress spotted with orange dots, a black velvet
- mantle trimmed with jet beads, and a hat much too large for her, and----&quot;
- She broke off. &quot;What's the matter, Mr. Hench?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain's sudden change of colour and sudden start at this vivid description
- of Madame Alpenny betrayed him immediately, and he looked confused, not
- very well knowing how to excuse himself. For obvious reasons he did not
- wish to admit that he recognized the costume described. Therefore he took
- refuge in a white lie, and told the first one that occurred to him. &quot;An
- idea struck me, Miss Evans, that your father might have been murdered by
- gipsies.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; cried Mrs. Perage, quite taken in by this plausible
- untruth. &quot;That isn't at all unlikely. Madoc was hard on gipsies,
- especially when they poached.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But why do you suggest gipsies?&quot; Gwen asked Owain, without
- attending to her hostess.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot; he said, with an affected shrug, &quot;that queer dress
- of the untidy old woman hints at a gipsy. Perhaps it's only a fancy on my
- part.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's a very good fancy,&quot; said Mrs. Perage emphatically. &quot;If
- this tramp is innocent, which he may be for all I know, the gipsies may
- have something to do with the crime. Why, Gwen, don't you remember how
- your father turned a whole gang of them off Parley Common a year ago
- because they were robbing the hen-roosts? And an orange spotted dress is
- just what a gipsy would wear.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But you don't think, Mrs. Perage, that this woman murdered my
- father?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My dear, I don't suggest anything because I don't know anything. All
- I say is, that Mr. Hench's chance shot may have hit the bull's-eye.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen looked down thoughtfully at the carpet. &quot;My father certainly was
- very much worried after his interview with this woman, and his worry
- lasted up to the time of his death. Gipsies--if this woman was a
- gipsy--might have something to do with the matter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's only my idea, of course,&quot; said Owain hastily, for he did
- not wish Madame Alpenny to be run to earth immediately. &quot;Don't let us
- jump to conclusions. We must think. I shall be here for a few weeks, and
- during that time, Miss Evans, I am wholly at your disposal.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You will help me to learn who murdered my father?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes. I'll do my best to find out,&quot; said Hench earnestly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; boomed Mrs. Perage. &quot;Easier said than done. How do
- you intend to begin?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot; remarked Hench, after a pause. &quot;I think it will be
- a good start if Miss Evans takes me over Cookley Grange and into Parley
- Wood where the corpse was found. Then we can talk over the matter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen looked doubtful. &quot;Do you think my cousin would mind if I went
- over the Grange and took Mr. Hench?&quot; she asked her hostess.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage stole a sly glance at Owain. &quot;No, I don't think he would.
- Why should he, if you come to that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, his father and my father didn't get on well together.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is no reason why their son and daughter shouldn't,&quot;
- retorted Mrs. Perage. &quot;You can take Mr. Hench to the Grange to-morrow
- at noon. Now, young man,&quot;--she rose to the full height of her lofty
- stature,----&quot;you can depart. I keep early hours here, as it is
- necessary that I should have my beauty sleep.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;As if you needed it!&quot; said Owain jestingly, and this agreeable
- visit ended as it had begun--with badinage and frivolity.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_12" href="#div1Ref_12" id="div1_12">CHAPTER XII</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- CUPID'S GARDEN
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- That night Hench awoke during the small hours of the morning with the
- conviction that he knew all about the mystery in which he was involved. He
- had fallen asleep much exercised in his mind so far as the visit of Madame
- Alpenny to Cookley Grange was concerned. He remembered that about the time
- mentioned by Gwen the Hungarian lady had gone away from Bethnal Green,
- presumably to procure an engagement for Zara in a West End music-hall.
- Certainly that might have been one very good reason why she had remained
- absent for a few days, but now it appeared that there was another, which
- had to do with Madoc Evans. When unconsciousness came Owain was still
- wrestling with the problem, and somehow it seemed that the same was solved
- during slumber. But with the working of his physical brain the scheme
- broke up, and he was only able to retain fragments. These he proceeded to
- piece together while staring at the ceiling through the faint twilight of
- the already dawning day. It was rather a difficult task to put two and two
- together.
- </p>
- <p>
- The young man recollected that Madame Alpenny had denied all knowledge of
- the elder Hench's family history, but recollected also that she had done
- so with a certain amount of hesitation. It now was borne in forcibly upon
- him that his father had told the woman much more about his past than she
- would admit. Probably he had informed her of the quarrel with the
- grandfather, and of his dislike for the brother, explaining also that
- Madoc enjoyed Cookley Grange and the large income for life. The word
- &quot;Rhaiadr&quot; had brought back the interview clearly to Madame
- Alpenny's mind, and it was more than probable that she knew Owain would
- inherit the estate. For that reason she had been agreeable to his paying
- attentions to her daughter, and for that reason she had paid her visit to
- Cookley Grange. Hench now quite understood how she had come to see the
- advertisement and to draw his attention to it. Without the least
- hesitation he concluded that she had learned from his father where Cookley
- Grange was situated, and thither she had gone to tell Madoc of her meeting
- with his pauper nephew. Why his uncle should have put in the queer
- advertisement and have appointed so strange a meeting-place Owain could
- not conceive, but he was certain that Madoc had done so, and had used the
- very word to attract attention which had awakened the Hungarian lady's
- memory of the twenty-year-old meeting. She was without doubt on the
- look-out for the advertisement, knowing in which paper it would appear.
- Thus she had easily been able to show it to him, and having--so to
- speak--assisted Madoc to lay the trap she had waited results.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now what puzzled Hench was why Squire Evans should have acted in this very
- roundabout way to bring about a meeting. An honest man would have either
- ignored the son of the brother he hated or would have openly invited him
- as his heir to visit him. Instead of doing this Madoc had behaved
- mysteriously in making the appointment, and had chosen for the rendezvous
- a solitary place out-of-doors. It seemed tolerably clear to Owain that his
- uncle had intended to do him harm; perhaps his idea was to murder him so
- that he should not inherit. Squire Evans, if the hints of Gwen and the
- very plain speaking of Mrs. Perage were to be believed, was by no means
- honest, so it was just possible that he wanted to get his hated heir out
- of the way. Hench shrunk from this conclusion, but after much thought
- could come to no other. The unexpected murder of the Squire had prevented
- his own death taking place.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the young man rose in the morning he turned the matter over in his
- mind, both while he was having his bath and while he was getting into his
- clothes. It then occurred to him that, as Madame Alpenny wished him to
- inherit so that he might marry Zara, the scheme of Evans would scarcely
- have suited her. She would have been no party to such a transaction, as
- such would have rendered void all her plans to get money through the
- marriage. But Madoc, being crafty, had probably not explained what he
- intended to do, and Madame Alpenny had returned to The Home of the Muses
- simply to bring about a meeting which would result in Owain entering into
- his kingdom on the death of his uncle. As things had turned out that death
- had taken place very unexpectedly, and Hench wondered if Madame Alpenny
- believed that he was the criminal. It seemed impossible that she should so
- believe, as in the first place she was ignorant that he had kept the
- appointment, and in the second if she was aware she would assuredly have
- moved in the matter before now. Owain could not understand her silence.
- The only reason he could conceive why she should remain in the background
- when things had come to such a pass was that her intention was to come
- forward when he took possession of the estate. Then--as he thought--she
- would appear at Cookley Grange with Zara, and if he refused to marry the
- girl would then accuse him of the murder.
- </p>
- <p>
- And again Hench remembered how he had been haunted by the feeling of this
- scheming woman's presence both at his hotel and when he started for
- Cookley. He had even believed that he had seen her amongst the crowd at
- Liverpool Street Station. Certainly the feeling was vague and he had been
- unable to prove that she was actually present on the platform. All the
- same he was now pretty certain that Madame Alpenny had been watching him,
- and that she knew he was staying at Cookley. When she thought it was time
- she would very likely appear to continue her plots. It was all very
- uncomfortable and unpleasant to a young man who was honest and straight in
- all his dealings. Against his will he was involved in these sordid
- schemes, and he did not see any way of extricating himself from their
- mire. All he could do was to wait until the Hungarian lady took action.
- Meanwhile he would do his best to try and learn who had actually murdered
- his uncle. It was for this reason he had so readily agreed to assist Gwen
- in her search.
- </p>
- <p>
- The day was very hot, as there was not a cloud in the sky and the sun was
- blazing like a great jewel in the softly-hued azure. Hench, scorning
- convention, assumed a tropical kit which he had brought from the warm
- lands of the equator. In a white linen suit, white shoes and a solar
- topee, he looked sufficiently noticeable as he made his way to Mrs.
- Perage's house. The Cookley villagers, accustomed as they were to the
- eccentricities of tourists, were very much surprised to behold him clothed
- so strangely. Naturally, being excessively prejudiced, they did not
- consider the cool comfort of such a garb, and jeered at the young man's
- common-sense while they sweated in their hot dark apparel. Matrons even
- came to the doors to remark audibly that his washing-bill must be
- something enormous. But Hench took no notice of the attention he
- attracted. He was even glad, as it proved conclusively to him that no one
- recognized in his spotless dress the rough tramp who was being hunted for
- far and wide.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the gate of Mrs. Perage's grounds he met Gwen, likewise clothed in fair
- white linen with a large straw hat girdled by artificial corn-flowers, as
- blue as her own eyes. She met Hench with a smile and he smiled also, for
- each of them considered that the other looked wonderfully handsome. Gwen
- even said as much with delightfully childish candour, blushing as she
- spoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How nice you look, Mr. Hench, and what a sensible dress for a hot
- day.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I return the compliment,&quot; said Owain, standing very straight
- and slim and saluting her in a strictly military fashion by way of a joke.
- &quot;But people hereabouts have been making very rude remarks regarding
- my laundry-bill.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course they would. It is eccentric in England to be comfortable
- in white clothes. You wouldn't dare to go to London in that suit.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Try me,&quot; said Hench laughing. &quot;I might do it out of
- dare-devilment, although I am not anxious to attract undue attention.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why?&quot; asked the girl, looking at him in what his guilty
- conscience told him was a searching way.
- </p>
- <p>
- Conscious that he had said an awkward thing, which he had, having regard
- to his position, Owain strove to turn it off with a laugh. &quot;I am not
- vain enough to wish for admiration. I leave that to the Nuts and the Nibs.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Horrid, conceited young men,&quot; said Gwen, as she fell into step
- beside him. &quot;I do detest that class of person.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then I hope you don't think that I belong to the class in question.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. You're a man!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A very faulty man.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I hope so. A perfect man would be horrid.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And a perfect woman?&quot; asked Owain, peeping under her large hat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There isn't such a thing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There is,&quot; he insisted. &quot;I know one, at all events.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mrs. Perage would be very flattered if she heard you say that,&quot;
- said Gwen in a demure tone and smiling.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't mean Mrs. Perage, delightful as she is. I mean----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Now, don't spoil things with explanations,&quot; interrupted Miss
- Evans quickly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Are you to pay all the compliments?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't pay compliments. I say that you are a man, because you saved
- my life and don't talk about yourself as those horrid Nuts do. If you were
- like them I shouldn't ask you to assist me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain nodded comprehendingly. &quot;I hope we will be successful,&quot; he
- said soberly, &quot;but the task is a difficult one!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;To me more than to you it is difficult,&quot; said Gwen, colouring.
- &quot;For to make you understand I have to say things about my father
- which I would rather leave unspoken.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Leave them unspoken,&quot; advised Hench coolly. &quot;I have
- learned quite enough from Mrs. Perage to know that your father was a man
- who made many enemies. One of them murdered him; which one we have to find
- out.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How are we to begin?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I hardly know. Perhaps Fate will begin for us,&quot; said Hench. He
- was thinking of Madame Alpenny as Fate. His cousin said nothing more, as
- her mind was busy considering his remarks, so the two walked on very
- quietly along the dusty road until they came to the scene of the motor-car
- adventure. Gwen was about to recall Owain's bravery, but checked herself,
- lest she should say too much, for her gratitude towards Hench was very
- strong. Also she saw that he was as attracted by her as she was by him,
- and thought if she spoke too ardently that he might say things which she
- did not wish to be said at the present moment. By this time the girl was
- tolerably certain that the young man loved her, and would probably propose
- if she gave him the least chance. As she knew little about his worldly
- position, she did not desire to move too swiftly in matters of love. Much
- as she loved him and admired him and was grateful to him, yet, like all
- women, even the most romantic, she had a vein of practical wisdom, which
- made her look before she leaped. Soon she would know more of Hench with
- regard to his income, his position, his habits and tastes. Then she would
- be able to say &quot;Yes&quot; or &quot;No&quot; in accordance with her
- feelings. They were strong just now, but she did not intend to let them
- run away with her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain went with Gwen along the path leading out of the churchyard through
- emerald-hued meadows towards Parley Wood. It was the very same path which
- he had trodden on that eventful night, and he shivered slightly at the
- recollection. Fortunately Gwen was too much taken up with her own thoughts
- to notice this sign of discomfort, which was lucky, since it would have
- necessitated an untrue explanation. And after that one uncontrollable
- tremor, Hench braced himself to outward calmness, and trod with apparent
- carelessness the bye-way which had previously conducted him towards such
- dire trouble. He was quite glad when the girl branched off along another
- path skirting the wood. This took them round the corner of the trees and
- brought them into a narrow lane, where the trees met overhead to shut out
- the sky. The pair moved through a quiet green twilight with a tall hedge
- on one side and a mouldering red brick wall on the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;This runs round the park,&quot; said Gwen, tapping the mellow
- bricks, &quot;and by following it we come to the gates.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Is it a large park?&quot; asked Hench, curious to ascertain the
- extent of his domain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not very large, but very beautiful. So is the house.&quot; Gwen
- heaved a sigh. &quot;I was very, very sorry to leave the Grange, as you
- may guess.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Perhaps you will go back to it,&quot; suggested Owain, feeling
- desperately anxious to then and there lay the same at her feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No!&quot; Gwen flushed angrily. &quot;My cousin is sure to take
- possession soon, and then I can never visit my old home.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not?&quot; Owain averted his face. &quot;Your cousin may be a
- good sort of chap.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't see how he can be with such a father as he had,&quot;
- retorted Gwen tartly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench was nettled, as he thought that this was unfair. &quot;After all,
- your father was no angel,&quot; he said, also tartly. &quot;Yet look
- at--you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If you are going to pay silly compliments, I shall go back,&quot;
- said the girl sharply. &quot;We are here on business, remember.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I didn't pay a compliment--at any rate to your father.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My father was--my father, so there's no use saying anything more. As
- to my cousin, I'll never set eyes on him, so why talk about him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If you stay with Mrs. Perage you are certain to see him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I shan't stay with Mrs. Perage. As soon as my cousin arrives I shall
- go to live in London and enjoy myself. I have five hundred a year of my
- own, so I can do as I like.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why have you remained here so far?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because I wish to learn who murdered my father.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But I thought you didn't get on with your father?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is no reason why I should allow the beast who murdered him to
- escape, Mr. Hench,&quot; said Gwen quickly. &quot;I wish you wouldn't talk
- of--but there&quot;--she walked on abruptly--&quot;you don't understand,
- and I cannot give you plain enough explanations to make you understand.
- There is our family history to be considered and it is not a pleasant one.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course, Owain knew the family history just as thoroughly as the girl by
- his side, but for obvious reasons he could not tell her so. He could
- recall nothing in the same creditable to the late Squire, and it was
- impossible to guess why Gwen should so greatly desire to avenge his death.
- Even though the dead man was her father, he had proved a particularly
- unkind one, if Mrs. Perage was to be believed. But before they returned to
- the village, Gwen was compelled, against her will as it were, to tell him
- the true reason for the search. Then Owain was no longer astonished that
- she should prosecute the same, and ask for his assistance.
- </p>
- <p>
- The two passed through ornate iron gates swung between two mighty pillars
- of stone, and walked leisurely up a long avenue, which swept round in a
- curve to lead into a vast open space girdled by the trees of the park.
- Here, the young man for the first time came face to face with the mansion
- he had inherited, and silently expressed his admiration. It was a rambling
- structure of mellow red brick, the patchwork of many generations, and
- comprising many styles of architecture. And the very incongruity of the
- same constituted its chief beauty, as the eye was always finding something
- new and unexpected. Two storeys in height, it possessed a lofty slanting
- roof of red tiles, weather-worn and picturesque, with many stacks of
- twisted chimneys and many mullion windows. The whole was draped in dark
- green ivy, and seemed to be so ancient that it only appeared to be held
- together by the same. Windows and door were closed, but Gwen informed her
- companion that Mrs. Capes, her father's old housekeeper, was in charge. To
- summon her, she rang the bell as they stood in the porch.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's a lovely place, isn't it?&quot; she said, watching Owain's eyes
- roving round. &quot;Very lovely,&quot; he assented warmly. &quot;We could
- be very happy here.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;We!&quot;--Gwen flushed hotly--&quot;what do you mean?&quot; Then it
- was Hench's turn to flush. &quot;I beg your pardon. I spoke without
- thinking, you see. What a lucky person your cousin is,&quot; he ended
- artfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't envy him his luck,&quot; she replied coldly, &quot;and I'm
- sorry for the place, let alone the people. He is sure to be disagreeable.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But not knowing him, how can you judge?&quot; protested Owain, much
- vexed at this persistent hostility.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I knew my father and I heard all about my Uncle Owain. No good can
- come out of Nazareth, and no decent man from the Evans family.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench inwardly groaned and considered that she would have small mercy on
- him when she came to realize that he was the wicked heir in question.
- Madoc Evans must indeed have been a cruel parent to prejudice her so
- greatly against the race whence she sprung. However, he had little time to
- consider this question, as the door opened and a stiff, stately old dame
- in a black silk dress and wearing a lace cap made her appearance. She was
- a comely woman in spite of her age, and smiled all over her wrinkled face
- when she beheld the girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;La, Miss, I am glad to see you. I thought you were never coming
- again.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I wish to show this gentleman the house and grounds,&quot; said
- Gwen, stepping into a large hall, with busts of the Caesars on pedestals
- ranged on either side. &quot;I suppose my cousin has not yet come?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, Miss,&quot; said Mrs. Capes respectfully, and looking at Owain
- in a puzzled way as though she recognized his face. &quot;The lawyers
- wrote to tell me that he was coming some time before the end of the year,
- but they couldn't be sure when.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Curious,&quot; murmured Gwen to herself. &quot;I wonder why he is so
- slow in coming?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Perhaps he thinks you are here and does not wish to turn you out,&quot;
- said Hench, overhearing. &quot;Then I shall write to Mr. Gilberry and tell
- him that I have left. In fact, I think he knows, as Mrs. Perage said
- something about having written. Anyhow, I don't want my cousin to show any
- consideration for me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, fie, Miss,&quot; said Mrs. Capes reprovingly. &quot;Mr. Evans
- may be a very nice gentleman, for all we know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah,&quot; said Gwen bitterly, &quot;you worship the rising sun, I
- see.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Capes looked offended. &quot;I worship no one, Miss, but if Mr. Evans
- turns out to be a nice gentleman, why shouldn't I like him?&quot; She
- stole a glance at Owain as she spoke, and again he saw something like
- recognition in her eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen shrugged her shoulders. &quot;Wait here, Mr. Hench, and I shall
- return soon. I can show you over the house, and we will not need to
- trouble Mrs. Capes.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- She went away in a hurry, while Hench and the housekeeper remained in the
- hall looking at one another. By this time Owain felt rather uncomfortable,
- as it seemed that Mrs. Capes recognized him, and he wondered if she was
- about to denounce him as the much-wanted tramp. Of course the idea was
- ridiculous, as she had never seen him when he first came to Cookley to
- keep the appointment of the advertisement. Nevertheless, Hench felt uneasy
- and pointedly questioned the old woman, so as to set his own mind at rest.
- &quot;Why do you look at me so intently, Mrs. Capes?&quot; he asked
- quickly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I was thinking how greatly you resemble your father,&quot; she
- answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain was taken aback. &quot;My father!&quot; he muttered nervously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My dear young gentleman, I have been with the family all my life,
- and knew Mr. Owain Evans as boy and man. I was certain that you were his
- son the moment I saw you. And when Miss Gwen called you 'Mr. Hench,' of
- course I was positive. That was the name Mr. Owain took when he went away
- from his father.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am Owain Evans,&quot; admitted the young man, seeing that he was
- discovered; &quot;but I don't wish my cousin to know. She seems to have a
- prejudice against me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Capes nodded shrewdly. &quot;Mr. Madoc was always speaking against
- you and your father, sir. No, I won't say a word. Are you----?&quot; She
- looked searchingly at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench guessed what she meant. &quot;Yes, I am,&quot; he admitted boldly,
- &quot;very much in love, but if she learns who I am she won't marry me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The temper of the family is obstinate,&quot; she sighed. &quot;All
- the same, sir, as you are young and good-looking, I wouldn't give up hope.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;As that means giving up Gwen, you may be certain that I won't. Hush,
- here she is, Mrs. Capes. Not a word.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You can trust me, sir,&quot; replied the housekeeper, and looked
- quite pleased at being in the secret of the young Squire's identity.
- &quot;I'll go now,&quot; she added, raising her voice for the benefit of
- Gwen. &quot;You know your way about, Miss.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes. Don't let us trouble you,&quot; replied Miss Evans more
- graciously, and then the two young people were left alone.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen conducted Hench all over the vast house, showing him into one room
- after another filled with treasures. The place was very old and the rooms
- were spacious, while the furniture and the draperies and the carpets, the
- pictures, statues, carvings, and bric-a-brac were delightfully attractive.
- After wandering in raw lands, Owain deeply appreciated this real home,
- with which Destiny had provided him. He thought that if the goddess would
- only add to her gift by giving him Gwen for his wife, that he would have
- nothing else to wish for in the wide world. His appreciation and delighted
- observations pleased Gwen, although she sighed when they emerged again
- into the sunshine, intending to show him the garden.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's horrid to leave it,&quot; she said, casting a backward glance
- at the ancient house. &quot;I envy my cousin.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I thought you didn't,&quot; remarked Owain calmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;After seeing my old home again, I do,&quot; answered Gwen, passing
- quickly across the lawn. &quot;Come down here and see the flowers.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The gardens were a paradise of flowers and beautifully laid out. There
- were all kinds of nooks and arbours in odd corners, and many winding paths
- which led to pleasant glades. The trees were magnificent, and everywhere
- the place bloomed with blossoms. Hench was not quite sure if he did not
- like the gardens even better than the charming house. And what with the
- colour and scent of flowers, the heat of the day, the silence of the
- place, and the fact that he was walking long-side the girl he loved, the
- young man rather lost his head. In a rash moment he quoted Omar Khayyam's
- verse relative to the wilderness, the wine-cup, the loaf of bread, and of
- course &quot;Thou!&quot; Gwen blushed and flushed, and threw up her hand
- to stop him. They were standing near a marble bench under an oak tree, and
- on this she sat down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I wish you would not speak to me like that,&quot; she said in vexed
- tones.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not, when I love you?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You can't love in five minutes.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Romeo and Juliet did.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, that is in a play. I am talking of real life. We have only known
- each other a very short time.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Undoubtedly. But then our introduction made for intimacy at once.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How unfair,&quot; murmured Gwen, looking down. &quot;You are taking
- advantage of the fact that you saved my life.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If that is any bar to my loving you, I wish I hadn't.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then you would have had no one to love,&quot; retorted the girl, who
- could not help smiling at the speech. Hench saw that smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Gwen, you don't dislike me?&quot; he asked entreatingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, I certainly do not. I like you, and so does Mrs. Perage.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Please leave Mrs. Perage out of the conversation. Does your saying
- that you like me mean that you love me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Liking doesn't mean love.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's a step in the right direction, anyhow,&quot; said Hench
- cheerfully. &quot;See here, Gwen, I have little to offer you, but with
- that little I give my heart. Now if----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't say anything more just now,&quot; interrupted the girl, much
- distressed. &quot;I cannot answer you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You can say yes, or no.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't wish to say no.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then that means yes!&quot; cried Hench triumphantly, and his heart
- beat rapidly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No&quot;--Gwen pulled away the hand he had taken--&quot;there is
- something you must know about me. I did not intend to tell you, but since
- you have spoken, I must be frank.&quot; She drew a long breath, while
- Owain fixed his brown eyes keenly on her disturbed face. &quot;Have you
- heard anything against me in the village?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, I have not. But then I don't go into the village much, nor do I
- attend to gossip. All I know of you comes from Mrs. Bell, and she adores
- you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen crossed her feet and folded her hands. &quot;My father and I never
- got on well together,&quot; she said rapidly and in a low voice, looking
- down as she spoke. &quot;He treated me very harshly, and we very often
- quarrelled.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That was not your fault, I swear,&quot; cried the lover impetuously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. I can honestly say that it wasn't. But every one knew that we
- did not get on well together, and when my father was murdered, some people
- said&quot;--she drew another long breath--&quot;that I--I--murdered him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- She looked up with a frightened glance, as if she expected Hench to turn
- and fly after hearing such a confession. Instead of doing so, the young
- man laughed aloud and lifted her from the bench into his arms. &quot;What
- a silly thing to say,&quot; he murmured, pressing her to his breast.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You--you--don't---believe it?&quot; gasped Gwen, making no attempt
- to get away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Darling, it is not worth my while to answer such a question. I love
- you and I have done so from the first moment I set eyes on you. Can I
- believe that the most perfect girl in the world is guilty of anything,
- much less of such a dreadful crime?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But people say----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I won't hear another word. Thus I stop your mouth&quot;--and before
- Gwen was aware, Owain had kissed her full on the lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh,&quot; she said, half frightened, half delighted, &quot;how can
- you!&quot; Then suddenly she slipped from his arms. &quot;No! No! Only
- when you learn the truth about my father's death and end this scandal,
- will I--will I----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Good!&quot; said Owain, quite understanding. &quot;I'll find out the
- truth and then we will go hand in hand to the church.&quot; And a final
- kiss sealed the compact.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_13" href="#div1Ref_13" id="div1_13">CHAPTER XIII</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- DANGER
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Considering that he had gained his heart's desire, Hench should have
- returned to his lodgings in the highest spirits. Instead of doing so, he
- arrived in a rather disturbed frame of mind. It seemed to him, after due
- reflection, that he was not treating Gwen straightforwardly, since as yet
- she was quite unaware of the relationship between them. Nevertheless, as
- he argued, he would never have been able to win her had she known at the
- outset that he was the heir to the estate and her cousin. So far he had
- acted honestly enough in masquerading as a disguised prince, but he should
- not have compelled her to acknowledge her love before making himself
- known. Aware of the truth, she could make her choice of marrying the man
- she loved, or of dismissing the cousin whom her father had taught her to
- detest. Hench felt decidedly uncomfortable.
- </p>
- <p>
- This being the case, he was unable to stay in the poky little rooms, as he
- felt too restless to sit down, and too excited to read. His foot was now
- so much better that he could walk with considerable ease, although he had
- some sort of twinge every now and then. But it was certainly not well
- enough to permit his taking a long walk. Yet Owain, feeling hipped, did
- so, and strolled a long way into the country. The result was that he felt
- the old pain coming on again, and his ankle being yet somewhat weak, there
- was danger that he might twist it. Luckily, a carrier's cart came along
- the road when he was some miles from Cookley, and the offer of a shilling
- procured Hench a drive back to the village. When he alighted at Mrs.
- Bell's door he felt that his foot was again swollen and painful, and
- cursed his folly, as he hobbled into his sitting-room. He would have to
- rest that evening, as he fully recognized, and as the lover's desire was
- to see Gwen, such enforced absence from her presence did not please him.
- With a groan he wondered how he would get through the dull hours until
- bed-time.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Fate had already provided him with an interesting companion. While
- Hench sat down and removed his boots and stroked his ankle, a tall figure
- appeared at the door of the bedroom, which opened into the sitting-room.
- After an astonished pause, Hench fell back on the sofa and gasped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Jim!&quot; he cried. &quot;Who would have thought of seeing you
- here?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I thought I would surprise you,&quot; said Vane complacently, and
- advancing into the parlour. &quot;I arrived three hours ago and found that
- you had gone out for a walk. Therefore, I looked up my aunt, as I intend
- to put up with her for the night, and then came back to lie on your bed
- and pass the time in sleep until you turned up. Humph! You don't look like
- a joyful lover.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What do you know about that?&quot; asked Hench tartly. &quot;Has
- Gwen----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, she hasn't,&quot; interrupted Vane promptly. &quot;But Aunt Emma
- hinted that she wished to bring about a marriage between you and your
- cousin, so that the family quarrels should end. From your words rather
- than your looks, it seems that you have settled the matter and
- accomplished Aunt Emma's desire.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench groaned. &quot;We can talk of that later. Meantime, I apologize for
- lying on the sofa; but I foolishly went for a long walk and my ankle is
- aching again.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, that's all right,&quot; replied the barrister, lighting a
- cigarette. &quot;Aunt Emma told me of your rescuing Miss Evans and that
- your ankle was better. Why the deuce have you made it worse?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I couldn't sit down here after meeting Gwen this morning, and went
- for a walk. This is the result,&quot; and Hench pointed to his ankle. As
- he had removed his sock, Vane saw that it was much inflamed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Silly ass,&quot; said Jim, fumbling near the fireplace for the
- bell-rope. &quot;Better bathe it in cold water and lie up for the evening.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I intend to, and I daresay it will be all right in the morning. Mrs.
- Bell&quot;--the delicate-looking landlady entered as he spoke her name--&quot;just
- bring me a basin of cold water and my sponge.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Bell threw up her hands at the sight which met her eyes. &quot;Won't
- I send for the doctor, Mr. Hench?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. Bathing will reduce the swelling and rest will put everything
- else right, Mrs. Bell. Don't worry. Sorry I'm an invalid, Vane, and can't
- entertain you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I shan't let you off inviting me to dinner, Owain,&quot; said
- the barrister, as Mrs. Bell disappeared to fetch the basin of water.
- &quot;I've come down to see you especially. Later I go on to sleep at my
- aunt's place.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What do you wish to see me about?&quot; asked Hench uneasily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That can wait until I have some food. Don't be inhospitable.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain laughed and began to bathe his ankle in the cold water which Mrs.
- Bell had just brought in. He thought that Vane's news could not be
- anything very unpleasant since he so calmly postponed telling it. So the
- two men chatted on various frivolous subjects while the landlady laid the
- cloth and made the dinner ready. By the time Hench finished doctoring his
- foot and was feeling less pain, the meal was before them. Vane pushed the
- table near to the sofa so that Owain could eat without sitting in a chair.
- He partook of the viands in the dining attitude of an ancient Roman,
- leaning on one elbow, and being hungry, managed to make an excellent meal.
- Then Mrs. Bell brought in the coffee, and after clearing the table, left
- the two men to their own devices. Vane sat near the window smoking, while
- Owain remained comfortably on his sofa. The casement was open, and the
- scent of the homely cottage flowers came into the room, which was filled
- with the coming shadows of the night. Hench felt so tired that he did not
- begin the conversation, and would have much preferred slumber. But Vane
- gave him no chance. He began to chat immediately, and on a subject which
- was already worrying his friend considerably.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So you are in love with your cousin and she with you,&quot; he
- remarked, after a puff or two. &quot;I am going by what Aunt Emma said,
- remember. It seems quick work to me--a kind of five minutes' wooing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Jim, I fell head over heels in love with Gwen the moment I saw her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The deuce! Yet the last time we met, you told me that you didn't
- know what love meant.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That was quite true. I didn't. My liking for Zara Alpenny was one of
- simple admiration. But Gwen! Oh, Jim, you don't know how I adore her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'll take it for granted that you do,&quot; said Vane dryly. &quot;But
- I can't say that your newly-born passion makes you very happy. You have
- groaned two or three or four times since you arrived.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's my ankle giving me pain.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, shucks!&quot; cried the barrister, after a purely American
- fashion, &quot;it's your heart, man. You aren't the chap to yowl over a
- twisted sinew, as I know jolly well. Come along and unburden your mind to
- your father-confessor.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It will be a relief,&quot; admitted Hench, with a fifth groan.
- &quot;The fact is I am not quite sure if I have acted rightly in stealing
- a march on Gwen.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What do you mean by your stealing a march?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, you see she knows me as Hench, and hasn't the least idea that
- I am her cousin who inherits the property.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What of that? You came here with the idea of masquerading.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So I did. But I didn't intend to go too far.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And you have?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes!&quot;--another groan. &quot;We went to the Grange this morning,
- and when I found myself alone in the garden with her I proposed to her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So she said to Aunt Emma.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But, Jim, you told me that she had said nothing?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I did. It was a fib, I admit. But I wanted to hear your version of
- the proposal, Owain,&quot; said Vane shamelessly. &quot;You didn't intend
- to go too far, nor did your cousin. But as you were swept off your feet by
- passion, so was she, as she admitted to Aunt Emma, with tears. Miss Evans
- intended to keep you at arm's length until she knew more about you. But
- this passion took you both off your feet, so there's no doubt of its being
- genuine on both sides.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;On my side, certainly. But on hers----?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The same. I hope you don't mind Aunt Emma telling me of what took
- place; she has your interest very much at heart.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am glad that Mrs. Perage broke the ice,&quot; said Hench
- dolefully. &quot;It makes it easier for me to talk. You see, Gwen loves me
- as a stranger----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Can a girl love a stranger?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I mean she thinks that I am only Owain Hench. When she learns that I
- am Owain Evans she will throw me over.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why should she, seeing that she loves you?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Love may turn to hate, and her dislike for my father's son has been
- carefully fostered by her father.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot; said Vane with an air of finality, &quot;it seems to me
- that she should be jolly glad to get back her old home by marriage with a
- decent chap such as her cousin is.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She doesn't believe that I am a decent chap,&quot; cried Hench
- irritably.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then you must prove that you are by explaining matters,&quot;
- insisted Jim coolly. &quot;Bless you, Miss Evans will look upon your
- masquerading as a romance.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I've got my doubts about that. She may resent being deceived.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane remained silent for a few moments and lighted a fresh cigarette.
- &quot;As a bachelor I don't pretend to understand women,&quot; he said at
- length, &quot;and it is just on the cards that she may cut up rough.
- Still, if she loves you really and truly, as Aunt Emma assured me she
- does, she will forgive your innocent deception. After all, by concealing
- the truth you only gave yourself a fair chance of being judged on your
- merits.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench nodded wearily. &quot;That of course was my idea of masquerading,
- and it was a right idea, seeing how strongly her father has prejudiced her
- against me. I am a kind of monster in her eyes in my capacity of heir&quot;--Hench
- turned restlessly--&quot;I must tell her, I suppose.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You must, and as soon as possible,&quot; advised his mentor firmly.
- &quot;If you don't, the information may come from a less pleasant quarter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Now, what do you mean by that?&quot; asked Hench, startled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madame Alpenny----?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You don't know her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh yes, I do. I am not aware if Aunt Emma told you, but I went down
- to Bethnal Green for a day or so.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She told me last night, when I dined at her house. I was wondering
- why you went there?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Where are your wits?&quot; asked Vane in a surprised tone. &quot;Of
- course, I went in your interest to that boarding-house and stopped for a
- couple of nights.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In my interest?&quot; Hench raised himself on his elbow and stared
- at Vane with an uneasy look in his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course. You don't suppose that any business of my own took me
- down there, do you? So far as regards this murder of your uncle, you are
- not out of the wood yet, so I wanted to learn what I could to help you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You're a real good fellow, Jim,&quot; said Owain gratefully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pfui! In the absence of briefs which don't come my way, it gives me
- something to do. Besides, if there is a row over the business you can
- engage me as your counsel, and then I'll make a big name straight away.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, hang it&quot;--Hench moved uneasily--&quot;don't speak of that
- even in jest.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm not in jest, but in dead earnest,&quot; insisted Vane seriously.
- &quot;I tell you Madame Alpenny is on the warpath.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There! there! Don't get excited, you silly ass. Let me begin at the
- beginning and end at the end.&quot; Vane blew a ring or so of smoke and
- went on talking. &quot;I stayed at The Home of the Muses to see if Spruce
- knew anything about that advertisement, as I dreaded him rather than the
- old woman. Of course, he knew me as a pal of yours at the old school, and
- was very curious to know where you had got to.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You didn't tell him, I hope?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane shook his head. &quot;Is thy servant an ass that he should do so? Of
- course I lay low like Brer Rabbit, and let Spruce babble on. He doesn't
- know anything about your real name, or the advertisement, or your
- accession to fortune, or anything else. He'd have let the information slip
- had he known. So far as Spruce is concerned you can set your mind at rest.
- I'm glad such is the case, Owain, for he's a dangerous monkey.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Humph!&quot; said Hench meditatively. &quot;If he is ignorant why
- does he wish to know where I am?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because, having made London too hot for him over that card affair,
- with which I charged him, by the way, he wants to seek fresh fields and
- pastures new. He had an idea--I think you told him--that you were going
- away into the lands at the back-of-beyond, so thought he'd like to come
- with you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I wouldn't have him as a gift as a companion,&quot; said Hench with
- disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So I told him, and he wasn't exactly pleased. At all events, since I
- ostensibly didn't know where you were he shut up, and gave me the cold
- shoulder on account of my nasty manner towards him with regard to the
- cheating. I do think,&quot; finished Vane calmly, &quot;that he's the most
- abject Gadarene swine I have ever met.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain drew a long breath of relief when Vane finished, for he also
- mistrusted the meddlesome little man. Had Spruce understood the situation
- it was very certain that he would have attempted to make an income out of
- the same by blackmail, particularly now that Hench had money in large
- quantities. But as he was quite ignorant of everything there was nothing
- to be feared. &quot;Then it's not from that quarter the information about
- my real name is to come to Gwen?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! Set your mind at rest so far. Madame Alpenny is the lady likely
- to queer your pitch.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But she doesn't know where I am.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh yes, she does. Mrs. Bell's cottage in Cookley, Essex, was the
- address she gave me as one likely to find you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench swore under his breath. &quot;How did she find out?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hurry no man's cattle, my son,&quot; said Vane sagely. &quot;You
- must be introduced to the subject gradually, so that you may admire my
- diplomatic skill. I came to Mrs. Tesk's establishment to ask for you, as
- that--according to my story--was the address you gave me. Mrs. Tesk didn't
- know where you had gone to, so I paid civil attentions to Madame Alpenny
- and confessed that I was your very good friend. Then she told me--when we
- became better acquainted, mind you--that you were her very good friend,
- and would shortly be her very good son-in-law.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Nothing of the sort,&quot; cried Hench violently. &quot;I proposed
- to Zara, and she refused me as she loves Bracken.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Zara said nothing about that proposal or her Bracken engagement to
- Madame Alpenny, as she's a deuced sight too much afraid of the old hag.
- Madame Alpenny told me that she had given you permission to marry Zara
- whenever you got the cash. She mentioned that, as you were the nephew of
- Squire Evans who had been murdered, you were now rich.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How did she know that?&quot; asked Hench, remembering the visit paid
- by the Hungarian lady to his deceased uncle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, she told me that your father, some twenty years ago, wished to
- marry her, and gave a sketch of his family history.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I know. It was the word 'Rhaiadr' he mentioned which revived her
- recollection and led to the advertisement being inserted.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The deuce!&quot; said Vane curiously. &quot;She told me nothing of
- that.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, she wouldn't,&quot; growled Hench impatiently. &quot;Go on. I
- can speak later.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, then,&quot; proceeded the barrister, &quot;Madame Alpenny knew
- that you inherited the estate; also your real name and all the rest of it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My father told her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Exactly, and she frankly confessed that she had refused him because
- the estate was going to you and not to your father. She never bothered any
- more about the matter until she met you at The Home of the Muses. Then the
- name 'Rhaiadr' revived her memory, and she wished you to marry Zara when
- you became rich. After seeing the death of your uncle in the newspapers
- she was certain that you had entered into your kingdom, and is coming down
- to see if you will keep your promise and marry Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Did she say that she could make it hot for me if I didn't?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. She's a wary old bird. She was all smiles and amiability,&quot;
- said Vane significantly. &quot;There was no word of the murder or of the
- advertisement, or anything which led me to understand that she had a card
- up her sleeve. All she knows--according to her own showing--is that you
- are Squire Evans' heir and are engaged to her daughter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's a lie. I'm not. How did she learn where I was?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, she confessed that as she had no reason--so she said--to conceal
- it. A page called Bottles told her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench slipped off the sofa and swore again. &quot;I guessed as much. I saw
- Bottles' brother, who is a page at your aunt's. He recognized me, as his
- brother had written telling him all about me. I had half a mind to tell
- him to hold his tongue as to my whereabouts but didn't like to.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It would have been too late,&quot; said Vane quickly. &quot;The page
- must have written whenever he heard your name as that of a gentleman
- staying in the village. At all events, Madame Alpenny knew all about you
- being here the day before yesterday. Peter--I know the brat at my
- aunt's--wrote to Simon, surnamed Bottles, and Bottles gave you away to
- Madame Alpenny.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hang him! I did think that I could trust Bottles.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You can't trust any one in this wicked world,&quot; commented the
- barrister philosophically. &quot;Madame Alpenny knew that the boy was a
- hero-worshipper and adored you, so she made inquiries. I daresay a few
- shillings made him talk.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't believe it,&quot; said Hench doubtfully. &quot;Peter hinted
- that everything was right, so I believe Bottles has some card up his
- sleeve which has to do with all this mystery.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But I don't see----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No more do I,&quot; said Hench, cutting Vane short. &quot;We're in
- the dark, and until some light is thrown on the subject we will remain in
- the dark. As to Madame Alpenny, she is at the bottom of the business, I am
- sure.&quot; And then Owain went on to tell his friend about the visit paid
- by the woman to the Squire. &quot;She has engineered the whole plot, I'm
- certain.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Queer,&quot; admitted Vane, staring absently out into the shadowy
- garden. &quot;Do you think she murdered the Squire?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How do I know. She might have done so in order to place me in
- possession of the money at once. There is certainly a motive. Perhaps,&quot;--Hench's
- face grew less gloomy,--&quot;perhaps that is why she hasn't moved in the
- matter so far.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How did you expect her to move?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, she must have guessed that I would keep the appointment, and
- when she saw that my uncle was murdered she naturally would accuse me.
- Instead of doing this she has held her tongue.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Only for a time, old son. Believe me, she may turn up here any day.
- Naturally she wouldn't queer her pitch by telling the police of what she
- knows. My impression is that she will try and make you marry Zara by
- threatening to give you away unless you come up to the scratch.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I shan't come up to the scratch, then,&quot; muttered Hench
- sullenly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In that case Madame Alpenny will have the game in her own hands.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She won't, Jim, if I can prove her guilty.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That won't be an easy job,&quot; said Vane doubtfully. &quot;The
- woman is as cunning as a fox, and as dangerous as a tigress. Besides, we
- can't be sure that she <i>did</i> get rid of your uncle. Anyhow,&quot;--the
- barrister rose to stretch himself,--&quot;I advise you to make friends
- with Mammon by telling Gwen who you are, and getting over the trouble
- before Madame Alpenny turns up to put her fingers in the pie. She intends
- to do that, you know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She'll burn her fingers, then.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I said a pie, not a fire,&quot; retorted Jim dryly. &quot;She
- intends to eat your pudding, not to burn herself.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, what is best to be done under the circumstances?&quot; asked
- Hench crossly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Tell Gwen who you are, and explain how you saw the body of her
- father in Parley Wood,&quot; rejoined the barrister promptly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No! No! She would believe me to be guilty. You know how the
- supposed tramp who went to the Bull Inn is suspected. If I confessed that
- I was the man----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I see, I see,&quot; interrupted Vane, wrinkling his lean face.
- &quot;It's a bit difficult, isn't it, old man? But if Miss Evans loves you
- she'll never believe a word against you. That's a woman all over.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I tell you she is prejudiced against her cousin Owain,&quot; said
- Hench sullenly. &quot;And when she learns that I am that cousin she will
- merge her love in hate.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane shook his head. &quot;I doubt it. But if she does by any ill chance,
- you have a friend in my aunt. She likes you no end, and will stand by you.
- As you may guess, she has a strong influence over Miss Evans.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mrs. Perage is a very clever and sensible woman,&quot; mused Owain
- thoughtfully. &quot;And I really think it would be wise for me to tell her
- everything.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I agree!&quot; cried Vane emphatically. &quot;Bachelor as I am, I
- always believe in asking a woman's advice. The sex has more intuition than
- ours has. Let her be the person to deal with Madame Alpenny--one woman
- against another. Then,&quot; added the barrister cynically, &quot;you'll
- see the fur fly.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I won't tax Mrs. Perage's friendship so far, Jim. My ankle will be
- all right to-morrow, so if you will ask Gwen to meet me near the old Saxon
- Cross in the churchyard I can reveal who I am. When I settle matters with
- her I shall see Mrs. Perage and relate the whole story.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Relate it to Miss Evans also,&quot; advised Vane strongly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. I shall only tell her who I am, and give her time to get over
- that before I tell more. It's dangerous to give her too big a dose at
- once. Also, when I tell your aunt about my adventure I wish to be guided
- by her advice. She may suggest my keeping the same a secret from Gwen
- until the truth becomes known.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, do as you think best, Owain. But how is the truth to become
- known?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I shall wait until I see Madame Alpenny before forming an opinion.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane wheeled round. &quot;Do you mean to accuse her of the murder?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not unless she accuses me. It's a case of pull devil, pull baker.
- Now you'd better out along to your aunt's and make my excuses for not
- turning up. Meanwhile I shall think over things, and a pleasant night I
- shall have.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The way of the transgressor is hard,&quot; laughed Vane cheerfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Transgressor be hanged! I'm more sinned against than sinning.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane laid a friendly hand on his friend's shoulder. &quot;All right, old
- man, don't get your hair riz. I'll tell Aunt Emma that your ankle kept you
- from paying your respects to her, and will request Miss Evans to meet you
- to-morrow near the Cross. At what time, by the way?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Three o'clock in the afternoon. And don't come along in the morning,
- Jim. I wish to think out matters alone. I shall see you in the afternoon.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane put on his hat and prepared a cigarette. &quot;Don't overdo it,&quot;
- he advised at the door. &quot;And remember that two heads are better than
- one.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Quite so. That is why I intend to see Gwen. All the same, I'm
- afraid.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Nonsense! Use that very eloquent tongue of yours and show her that
- the devil is not so black as he is painted. Miss Evans, being very much a
- woman, may cut up rough at the outset, but when----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;When what?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;When she knows that you are in danger of arrest she will stand by
- you through thick and thin.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have my doubts,&quot; said Hench dolefully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I haven't. Women are contrary animals. As her prosperous cousin she
- may hate you. As an innocent man, in danger of being hanged, she will love
- you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;May you be a true prophet,&quot; said Hench fervently, and Vane went
- away laughing.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_14" href="#div1Ref_14" id="div1_14">CHAPTER XIV</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- AT BAY
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane faithfully delivered both messages, and Gwen was as pleased with the
- churchyard appointment as Mrs. Perage was annoyed by Hench's folly. That
- he should walk for miles on a weak ankle proved what a fool he was, and
- she said as much to her nephew next morning at breakfast.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You men are all babies, Jim, silly, obstinate and weak.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not me,&quot; retorted the barrister. &quot;I haven't been fooling
- with my ankle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You know quite well what I mean,&quot; fumed Mrs. Perage, who was in
- her work-a-day attire, and who looked particularly fierce. &quot;It's not
- only his ankle, it's his masquerading.&quot; She rubbed her nose
- irritably. &quot;I tell you there will be the deuce to pay. Gwen is Welsh.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, what does her nationality matter?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It matters everything. The Welsh are a particularly fiery nation,
- and have the pride of Old Nick. As a poor man Gwen loves her cousin--he is
- the fairy prince who has come into her life. But when she learns the
- truth----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She'll forgive him if she loves him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage shook her head and scowled. &quot;You don't know woman, Jim.
- Her very love may make her resent his not having treated her quite
- honestly.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Aren't you taking the matter too seriously, Aunt Emma?&quot;
- expostulated Vane with a shrug. &quot;After all, Miss Evans must see that
- Owain could only give himself a fair chance by masquerading as he has
- done. If he had turned up <i>in propria persona_, she would have disliked
- him on the spot.&quot;</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; boomed Mrs. Perage doubtfully. &quot;Perhaps. But not if
- he had saved her life. That act would have excused everything had it been
- done as Owain Evans.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What do you mean by excusing everything?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I mean as regards the reputation of Owain Evans. Of course Madoc was
- always a liar, as I know, and Gwen didn't get on over-well with him. As a
- <i>deus ex machina_, Gwen would have disbelieved her father's stories of
- her cousin's wickedness.&quot;</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But the poor chap isn't wicked at all. He's the whitest man I know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madoc's lies would have smirched the whiteness of an angel,&quot;
- retorted the old lady sharply. &quot;But Gwen would have either forgiven
- or would have disbelieved had Hench come as her cousin. As it is she may
- throw him over if he tells her who he really is.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, he intends to tell her right enough, and this very day,
- somewhere about three o'clock,&quot; said Vane coolly. &quot;She may cut
- up rough for the minute, but when Owain gets into trouble she'll find out
- that she loves him all right.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Trouble!&quot; Mrs. Perage looked up suddenly. &quot;What trouble?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm not at liberty to say, Aunt Emma. Owain intends to tell you
- himself. But there's a big trouble coming along.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum! Can't it be averted?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So far as I can see, it can't.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, Jim,&quot;--the old dame rose from the breakfast table and
- brushed the crumbs from her apron,--&quot;I'll wait to hear the young
- man's explanation. But I am quite sure that he is honest and kind and a
- well-bred gentleman. Nothing will ever make me change my opinion of him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Wait till you hear what the trouble is.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Do you know all about it?&quot; demanded Mrs. Perage imperatively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, I do.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And you still can call Hench your friend?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I can. He's a rattling good chap.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then why the dickens should I change my opinion when I learn the
- truth?&quot; said Mrs. Perage vigorously. &quot;It can't be anything
- dishonourable or you would not champion Hench. Do you think you are
- talking to a fool, Jim Vane?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh Lord, Aunt Emma, don't get on to me. My nerves are weak.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Your head is,&quot; retorted Aunt Emma smartly. &quot;I wish you
- hadn't hinted at this trouble, Jim. I'm horribly inquisitive, and will be
- on tenterhooks until I know what it's all about.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't expect you'll have to wait long,&quot; said Vane gloomily.
- &quot;There will be the devil to pay if----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage closed her ears and hurried to the door. &quot;Not another
- word. You are only making me more and more curious. But I tell you what,
- Jim, I am going to stand Hench's friend in any case.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You're a brick, Aunt Emma.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm an old fool,&quot; snapped Mrs. Perage, who was more upset by
- the implied mystery than she chose to admit. &quot;My wisest plan would be
- to wash my hands of the whole business, known and unknown. But instead of
- doing so I am just going to strengthen Gwen's love for Owain, so that it
- may not fail her when he makes his revelation.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage held to this determination, and twice or thrice during the
- morning she exchanged words with Miss Evans on the subject of Hench. The
- girl for the time being had lost sight of her mission of clearing her name
- by discovering the name of the assassin, and was wholly taken up with love
- dreams. She was passionately devoted to the young man, as his attitude
- tended to increase her belief in the nobility of his nature. He had saved
- her life as it was, and now, in the face of the rumours which credited her
- with the death of her father, he was willing to marry her. No man but the
- noblest who ever breathed would act in so gloriously honourable a fashion.
- She said this and much more to Mrs. Perage in the seclusion of her
- bedroom, when she was putting on her prettiest frock and hat to keep the
- appointment. And all the time Mrs. Perage was rubbing her beaky nose
- irritably.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't build the pedestal too high, Gwen,&quot; she advised dryly.
- &quot;Your idol may have feet of clay and come toppling over.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No,&quot; said the girl firmly. &quot;Nothing will ever make me
- believe that Mr. Hench is not the best of men. What is his Christian name,
- Mrs. Perage? It is strange that he did not tell me yesterday.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage was much too wary to give the name, lest it should lead to
- uncomfortable questions and forestall Owain's explanations. &quot;How the
- deuce should I know the man's name?&quot; she asked crossly and evasively.
- &quot;I never met him until you introduced him to me as your hero.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And he is a hero, isn't he?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum! I suppose so! The rescue was rather flamboyant--a kind of
- playing to the gallery.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How unjust,&quot; cried Gwen, flaming up, which was exactly what
- Mrs. Perage wanted her to do. &quot;As if he could help the way in which
- my rescue took place. I am quite sure that he is the most modest of men.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pooh! No man is modest; they are all as conceited as pigs.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I never knew that pigs were considered vain, Mrs. Perage,&quot; said
- Gwen coldly. &quot;And I don't see why you should compare Mr. Hench to
- one.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I spoke generally. Don't be silly.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, you call me silly because I'm in love.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Are you really and truly in love?&quot; asked the old lady
- doubtfully. &quot;Mind you, I don't mean that easy romantic passion which
- seems everything and means nothing. But real love, true love, staunch
- love, the sort which will hold to its object in the face of all
- detraction.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I wouldn't believe a word against Mr. Hench, if that is what you
- mean. But I don't know why you should use the word detraction.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't know myself,&quot; said Mrs. Perage grimly. &quot;Unless it
- is that I find most men are broken cisterns. There, there, child, go away
- and meet your Prince. I don't wish to be your Jeremiah and prophesy woe.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I wouldn't believe you if you did,&quot; said the girl very
- decidedly. &quot;All my woe was undergone with the death of my father and
- the loss of my old home. I am sure that there is nothing but sunshine
- ahead.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage sniffed and thought anxiously about Vane's hints. But it was
- not her business to give chapter and verse for her forebodings. And, at
- all events, she had somewhat strengthened Gwen's love for the young man by
- depreciating him in a hinting kind of way. When the girl, flushed with
- love, and looking as pretty as a picture, set forth to keep the
- appointment, Mrs. Perage stood at the window and breathed a prayer that
- all would be well. It was a bright warm day, but clouds were drifting
- across the sky. Even as the old dame prayed a cloud concealed the
- brightness of the sun and Mrs. Perage shuddered. It was an omen of ill,
- she thought; but when a few moments later the cloud passed and the glow of
- the sunshine reasserted itself, she cheered up. It seemed to her that
- trouble was coming, but would pass without being of any great duration.
- She fervently hoped so, and went about her daily business calling herself
- hard names for being so superstitious.
- </p>
- <p>
- Meantime, Gwen, with a smiling face and a light heart, was walking swiftly
- towards the place of meeting. Every moment spent away from Hench, now that
- he had declared himself, seemed to be wasted, and she promised herself
- three or four golden hours with her lover. They would talk in the
- churchyard for a time, and then would take a long walk, in any direction,
- for whatever path they chose would lead to the Elysian Fields. Then he
- would tell her how much he loved her, and she would respond coyly to his
- caresses, until earth and sea and sky would be transfigured, and they
- would be blessed above all lovers who ever were or who ever would be.
- Afterwards would come marriage, and they would enter into the kingdom of
- heaven to remain there for ever and ever. Gwen rather blushed at the
- extravagance of her thoughts when she entered the churchyard, and blushed
- still more when she came suddenly upon the ancient Saxon Cross, against
- which the man of men was leaning. She thought for a single nervous moment
- that he looked rather pinched and worried, but had no cause to complain of
- the warmth of his greeting. Once she was in his arms with only the
- jackdaws for spectators, it seemed as though he would never let her go.
- All the poetry of Romeo and Juliet was in his embrace. And those lovers
- met in a vault at the last which was even more weird than meeting in a
- churchyard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Though I'm not sure if I like it,&quot; murmured Gwen following the
- course of her thoughts, as they sat down on a flat tombstone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Like what?&quot; inquired Hench fatuously; &quot;me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I wasn't thinking of you at the moment.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, Gwen!&quot; This was breathed with an air of reproach.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I deserve that, I deserve that,&quot; she cried penitently. &quot;But
- really I was thinking that a churchyard is rather a dismal place to meet
- in.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Any place is Paradise where you are,&quot; Hench assured her. &quot;But
- we can go away for a walk in a few minutes.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Into Parley Wood?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench shivered. &quot;No. I don't like Parley Wood--on your account,&quot;
- he added in a hasty manner. &quot;For there----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, I know.&quot; Gwen stopped him and shivered also. &quot;I
- didn't think of what I was saying. But we can't stay here amongst the
- tombs.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not? Have you any sad recollections about these tombs? Your
- father is not buried here, I know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He is buried at Rhaiadr, in Wales, where his ancestors lie,&quot;
- said the girl in an altered tone. &quot;But I wish you would not speak of
- my father. He was so cruel to me that I wish to forget all about him for
- the time being. We will have to talk of him later, when it is necessary to
- learn who killed him. Meantime, let us have our golden hour. But no&quot;--she
- made a gesture of despair--&quot;we have lost that as it is.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why so?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because you have called up the spectre of my father,&quot; said Gwen
- sadly. &quot;You have reminded me that I am looked at askance by the
- villagers.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Dear, you are quite wrong about that. Mrs. Bell speaks of you in the
- highest terms of respect. I think you are making a mistake.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, I am not,&quot; said Gwen decisively. &quot;I don't say that any
- one has openly declared that I have anything to do with the--the crime&quot;--her
- breath came and went quickly--&quot;but people look and people talk
- secretly.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What does it matter so long as they don't talk openly?&quot; said
- Hench, soothing her gently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I wish they would,&quot; she cried vehemently. &quot;For then I
- could meet the rumours better. As it is I am fighting in the dark--and all
- alone, too.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No!&quot; Hench gathered her into his strong arms. &quot;You
- have me to fight for you now. Be calm, dearest; everything will be put
- right now.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Eh, my faith, but that is most true,&quot; said a voice immediately
- behind them, and the lovers jumped up in dismay to find that they were
- observed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The speaker had suddenly emerged from behind a tall tombstone near at
- hand, and stood staring hard at them--a dumpy little woman with a swarthy
- face and big black eyes now filled with anger. It did not require the
- orange-spotted dress, the shabby bead-trimmed mantle and the picture hat
- to inform either of the young people who the spy was. Hench recognized
- Madame Alpenny at once, and Gwen beheld the unknown visitor who had called
- at the Grange. To a woman the dress was sufficient to fix the identity.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are the woman who came to see my father,&quot; said Gwen,
- turning white, for the sight of this visitor revived her recollections of
- the painful days before Squire Evans was murdered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, I am the woman. Very clever of you, Mademoiselle, to remember
- me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I remember your dress. Who are you?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny nodded suavely towards the silent Hench. &quot;Ask him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen turned round and looked hard at her lover's colourless face. &quot;Who
- is this woman?&quot; she asked almost inaudibly. &quot;Do you know her?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;None better,&quot; snapped the Hungarian lady. &quot;Come, Mr.
- Hench, say who I am, and then I shall tell Mademoiselle who you are.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Tell him who he is; tell me who he is,&quot; stuttered Gwen
- incoherently. &quot;What do you mean?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ask him,&quot; said Madame Alpenny once more. &quot;Mr. Hench----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah&quot;--the Hungarian lady broke into a hard laugh--&quot;then he
- has not told you his Christian name.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I will tell her now,&quot; said Hench, taking Gwen's cold hand, and
- speaking with an effort. &quot;This lady is Madame Alpenny, who lived in
- the same boarding-house as I did in Bethnal Green.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But what had she to do with my father, and what has she to do with
- you?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think your Christian name will explain all in one word,&quot;
- remarked Madame Alpenny, looking up at the blue sky.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I intended to tell you myself, Gwen, this very morning,&quot; cried
- Hench, striving to preserve his calmness, which was sorely shaken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Tell me what?&quot; said Gwen, who was very white and unstrung.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That my Christian name is--Owain.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Owain----?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Owain Evans,&quot; said Madame Alpenny sharply. &quot;Let there be
- an end to his deceit, Mademoiselle. He is your cousin, the same who has
- robbed you of your heritage, the same who has----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hold your tongue!&quot; interrupted Hench fiercely. &quot;It is for
- Miss Evans to speak and not you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;_Miss Evans,&quot; sneered the woman, with sparkling eyes. &quot;Why
- so, when you called her by her Christian name lately, as she can now call
- you by yours? Oh, it is very well, very well indeed, this bal masque of
- lies and wickedness.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- By this time, Gwen, who had been staring silently at Hench, spoke in a low
- tone, but in so absolutely unemotional a manner that he could not tell
- what her feelings were. &quot;Are you really my cousin?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! I knew that you were prejudiced against me owing to the false
- stories told to you by your father, therefore I wished to make your
- acquaintance under the name my father took when he was sent away from
- home. Until a few weeks ago I believed it was my true name. Don't blame me
- over-much, Gwen,&quot; he implored. &quot;After all, I wouldn't have had a
- fair chance had I come as your cousin.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Perhaps not,&quot; she said softly, and a touch of colour came into
- her face. &quot;And after all, you saved my life.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No! Let us put all obligation out of the question!&quot; cried
- Hench resolutely. &quot;I wish to be judged on my merits.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That will be difficult, seeing what a hero you are,&quot; said
- Madame Alpenny in a hatefully smooth voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hold your tongue!&quot; cried Gwen, turning on her just as Hench had
- done. &quot;You came down here to make mischief this time, as you came
- before to make mischief. How you succeeded before you best know yourself,
- although I truly believe that your last visit had something to do with my
- father's death.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It is a lie!&quot; said Madame Alpenny fiercely, and stepped
- forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen did the same, and the two were face to face, very close indeed to one
- another. &quot;I believe that it is the truth. But of that we can talk
- later. As to making mischief this time, you shan't succeed. I quite
- understand why my cousin wished to give himself a chance of being judged
- fairly. And, after all, he came under the name his father used for many
- years.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, Gwen&quot;--Hench caught her hand--&quot;do you forgive me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You silly fellow, there is nothing to forgive,&quot; she replied
- gently. &quot;You were right, as I was greatly prejudiced against you by
- my father. But now----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Now?&quot; he asked, looking at her anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I believe you to be honourable and honest, and----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah&quot;--Madame Alpenny broke in with a snarl, since things were
- not going as she desired--&quot;honourable, honest. Oh, it is very fine;
- most excellent, I call it. Do not be sure, Mademoiselle, that he is what
- you call him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I <i>am</i> sure&quot;--Gwen stamped--&quot;and to prove the truth
- of my belief, I am ready to marry him, as my cousin, Owain Evans. There!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, Gwen! Oh, Gwen!&quot; said Hench, scarcely believing his ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, it is so,&quot; taunted the marplot. &quot;Do you marry him for
- the heritage you have lost by his coming?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I marry him because I love him, as he loves me,&quot; said Gwen
- quietly, and placing her hand in that of her lover, she faced Madame
- Alpenny steadily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What a comparison&quot;--the woman threw up her hands--&quot;when he
- loves you not in the least little bit.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I love her with all my heart and soul!&quot; cried the young man
- furiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, and so did you speak to my daughter, Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen pulled her hand away from that of Owain, and looked from him to the
- scoffing woman. &quot;My daughter, Zara,&quot; she repeated. &quot;And who
- is she?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Do I not speak English?&quot; questioned Madame Alpenny mockingly.
- &quot;Ah, then I do pray your forgiveness, as I am what you call--yes--an
- alien.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It is nonsense you are talking,&quot; said Hench angrily. &quot;Your
- daughter----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then she turned on him furiously, letting her temper flame out for the
- first time during the interview. &quot;Yes, my daughter. You dare to stand
- there and declare that you do not love her. She is heart-broken, poor
- girl, because you have deserted her. I came here bearing a message, and
- when I visited where you are staying, your landlady told me you had gone
- to this place. I followed quietly and hid myself there&quot;--she flung
- out an arm towards the tall tombstone--&quot;to hear what?--you making
- love with another girl. But it shall not be so, I tell you. Zara, my
- daughter, you shall marry, and not this--this----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Stop!&quot; cried Hench, finally managing to stay this torrent of
- words. &quot;If you begin to call names you will be sorry for it. I do not
- love your daughter--I never loved your daughter. It is true that I admired
- her, but she told me how she desired to marry Bracken.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You false one!&quot; raged Madame Alpenny. &quot;Zara told me you
- did ask her hand in marriage.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is true,&quot; acknowledged Hench boldly. &quot;But I----&quot;
- he paused, for a low cry of pain broke on his ear. He turned impetuously
- to reassure Gwen of his devotion, only to see her gliding up the path
- towards the gate with surprising swiftness. Evidently his foolish
- admission had given her to understand that Madame Alpenny's accusation was
- true, and without waiting to hear any explanation, she had slipped away in
- despair. &quot;Gwen! Gwen!&quot; cried the young man in hoarse tones, and
- hastening after the girl. &quot;Wait; wait; it is not what you think, my
- dear; it is----&quot; his voice broke, as Gwen, without turning her head,
- reached the gate and ran along the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, but no. You shall not go after,&quot; hissed a bitter voice at
- his elbow, and Madame Alpenny grasped his arm firmly. &quot;Here you stay
- to speak with me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You old fiend!&quot; cried Hench, turning on her furiously, for he
- saw that it was useless to follow Gwen and explain at the present moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;As you please,&quot; retorted the Hungarian lady, releasing him.
- &quot;Names do not do harm, my friend. I can afford to laugh, and I do.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- While she was laughing, Hench suddenly became quite cool. He saw that he
- was in both a dangerous and uncomfortable position, as the woman had
- chosen her time excellently to complicate matters. Gwen had pardoned his
- masquerade, but she was far too feminine, as he believed, to pardon his
- proposing to another woman. In a moment Hench determined to settle Madame
- Alpenny and then go at once to enlist Mrs. Perage on his side. &quot;Well,&quot;
- he said calmly to the marplot, &quot;you have found me and you have done
- your worst. What now?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't say that much, Monsieur,&quot; said Madame Alpenny shrilly.
- &quot;Done my worst, do you declare? Ah, but no. Not yet have I said what
- I came to say.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I know what you have come to say,&quot; retorted Hench, taking the
- bull by the horns, which was the best thing to do. &quot;You mean to
- accuse me of murdering my uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny looked rather taken aback by this cool defiance, but
- accepted the situation with a vicious pluck. &quot;And is it not so?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It isn't worth my while to reply to so ridiculous a question,&quot;
- said Hench, shrugging his square shoulders. &quot;You accuse me. On what
- grounds, pray?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Plenty of grounds, Monsieur; plenty of grounds. You obeyed that
- advertisement and met your uncle to murder him and get the property.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;When I didn't know that he was my uncle, or that I would inherit any
- property in the event of his death?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You did know that he was your uncle,&quot; said the woman furiously.
- &quot;Those papers at your lawyers'----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I did not see them until nine days later,&quot; interrupted the
- young man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;_You say so,&quot; she sneered, &quot;How can you prove that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My lawyers can prove it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, what folly!&quot; Madame Alpenny brushed away this defence with
- a gesture. &quot;It was Mr. Evans who told you in that wood how he was
- your uncle----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He did not. I never met him while he was alive.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;_You say so----&quot; began Madame, again, only to be cut short.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hold your tongue and listen,&quot; said Hench in a peremptory tone.
- &quot;You are very clever and cunning, Madame, and have trapped me by
- means of that advertisement in the hopes that you can force me to marry
- your daughter. I absolutely decline to do so.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then I tell the policemen that you are a murderer,&quot; she
- retorted quickly. Hench laughed. &quot;Oh no, you won't. You would have
- done that long ago, but that you wished to blackmail me. But I refuse to
- be blackmailed also. And you, Madame, will have to explain why you came
- down here to request my uncle to insert that advertisement, instead of
- writing to me openly. Stop&quot;--Hench waved his hand, as she was about
- to speak--&quot;I have no time to enter into details now. On another
- occasion we can speak.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny looked at him sullenly, as she was unprepared for this
- defiance and saw the need of gaining time. &quot;I will wait for one week
- and then come to you again,&quot; she said savagely. &quot;But you marry
- Zara, or you hang!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I shall do neither,&quot; said Hench calmly, and turned on his heel
- with contempt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;One week,&quot; called out the woman furiously; &quot;in one week I
- come again!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_15" href="#div1Ref_15" id="div1_15">CHAPTER XV</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- A FRIEND IN NEED
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Now that the long-expected blow had fallen, Hench was surprised to find
- how lightly he had been struck. Madame Alpenny having come at an
- inopportune moment for him, had made mischief, and for the time being it
- looked as though she was triumphing. But Owain felt certain that she was
- afraid; he had seen fear in her eyes when he met her so defiantly. If she
- had been quite sure of her position, she would not have given him a week
- to consider matters. It was not difficult to understand why she had done
- so. For the murder of Evans the woman cared very little, save as a means
- to force the man she accused to do what she wanted. Her aim was to secure
- a wealthy son-in-law, and she could only do that by threatening to tell
- the police about his fatal visit to Cookley. But if he refused to do her
- bidding and she did tell the police, then, so far as she was concerned,
- everything was at an end. She would certainly get him into trouble, but
- she would not have him as her daughter's husband, nor would she get any
- money. Unwilling to push things too far, Madame Alpenny had therefore
- compromised by giving Hench seven days of grace.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course, at the end of that time, the young man knew that his answer to
- her would be the same, and then she might revenge herself by acquainting
- the authorities with her plausible story. But it was questionable if she
- would do so even then, as the fear in her eyes hinted that she knew more
- about the crime than she dared to admit. If anything was made public,
- Hench had an idea that Madame Alpenny might be placed in the dock instead
- of himself. He could not be sure of this, as even though she had called on
- Evans to set the advertisement trap, there was nothing to show that she
- had come to Cookley on the evening of the murder. In that case it would be
- difficult for her to prove that he had really kept the appointment in
- Parley Wood. But, as Hench recognized, the fact of the advertisement being
- addressed to him, together with the undoubted fact that he benefited to
- the extent of ten thousand a year by the death of his uncle, would
- undoubtedly throw suspicion on him. The girl at the Bull Inn might
- remember his voice as that of the tramp; and then the fact of his shaving
- off his beard would suggest that he had some reason to escape the
- accusation. On the whole, it was tolerably certain that if Madame Alpenny
- <i>did</i> go to the police, there would be trouble out of which it would
- not be easy to emerge scathless. But, owing to his belief that Madame
- Alpenny knew more about the matter than she would admit, Hench felt sure
- she would not seek the assistance of the authorities. And in any case he
- was absolutely safe for one whole week. Much could be done in that time.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was best, meanwhile, to explain things to Gwen, so that she might be
- sure of his love. When she learned exactly how he had come to propose to
- Zara, then she would understand that his desire to marry the dancer had
- only been the longing of a lonely man for home and companionship. With
- comprehension of this fact, as Hench devoutly hoped, the love of Gwen
- would return, and she would stand by him in the coming trouble. He needed
- all the friends he could gather round him to face things, and particularly
- felt that having his cousin to defend him would brace him up to defend
- himself. Without her love the young man felt that it would not be worth
- while to fight. Ten thousand a year and a clearance of his name from
- suspicion would not make up for the loss of the girl, who was now all in
- all to him. Therefore the first thing to do was to win back Gwen's heart;
- after that the deluge could come, so far as Hench was concerned.
- </p>
- <p>
- He returned to his lodgings, and glancing through the window, saw Madame
- Alpenny waddling along the street on her way to the station. She cast one
- vengeful look on the cottage of Mrs. Bell, but did not attempt to enter,
- which was another sign that she did not feel herself strong enough to go
- into details. And, as a matter of fact, such was the case. Madame Alpenny
- had hoped to dominate Hench immediately, and his defiance had taken her
- entirely by surprise. Therefore, she had wisely retreated in order to
- collect herself, and intended to descend on him at the end of seven days
- with overwhelming proofs of his guilty deed. Hench was relieved when he
- saw her pass by the cottage, as he did not wish her to enter and make
- trouble. Also he was relieved because he saw in her passing a confession
- of weakness. Therefore did he feel much more cheerful and hopeful than he
- had done for many a long day.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Bell explained that a lady had called to see her lodger and that she
- had sent her on to the churchyard, whither Hench had intimated he was
- going. She hoped that she had not done wrong. Owain told her that the
- visitor had only come down to see him on business; that the business had
- been easily dispatched; that the lady had returned to London, and that
- Mrs. Bell had acted quite judiciously.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little pale woman accepted the explanation in all good faith, and then
- went to open the door for the entrance of another lady. Hench, busy with
- his afternoon tea, was not surprised when Mrs. Perage entered, full of
- wrath. He had rather expected she would come, as it occurred to him that
- Gwen's unexpected return from the churchyard would lead to questions and
- explanations. From the very first remark of Mrs. Perage, it was certain
- that she knew all about the matter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot; said the fierce old lady, who looked something like Meg
- Merrilees in her half-masculine, half-feminine garb, &quot;this is a nice
- state of affairs, young man. Gwen goes to meet you with her heart full of
- love, and returns with that same heart broken into little pieces. Your
- work.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Sit down, Mrs. Perage, and let us talk quietly,&quot; said Hench
- entreatingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Talk quietly!&quot; echoed Mrs. Perage, sitting down nevertheless.
- &quot;Why, I'm seething with rage, and want to break things--you amongst
- them.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then you doubt me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage looked at him with a softer eye, and remembered how she had
- been prepared to stand by him whatever was said. She had declared as much
- to Jim Vane, and could do nothing else but fulfil her declaration. &quot;Perhaps
- you have some excuse, young man?&quot; she said truculently.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have no excuse, but I have an explanation,&quot; said Hench dryly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then you <i>did</i> propose to that other girl!&quot; shrieked Mrs.
- Perage furiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes. I told you that I----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You didn't; you didn't.&quot; Mrs. Perage would not give him time to
- finish his remark. &quot;You told me that you admired another girl, but
- that she loved some one else, so you went away. Pfui! Do you think that my
- memory has gone with age?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What you say is quite true----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That my memory has gone with age?&quot; demanded the old lady
- acidly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No! No! But your recollection of what I said about my former----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Love-affairs!&quot; interpolated Mrs. Perage, who declined to be
- suppressed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No! No!&quot; cried Hench again and earnestly. &quot;I never was
- in love until I met Gwen. I told you so. But I did say that I admired
- another girl.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You didn't say that you had proposed to her,&quot; said Mrs. Perage
- grimly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, I didn't, because----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because you loved her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I didn't!&quot; cried Owain, thoroughly exasperated by these
- constant interruptions. &quot;As I have already stated, I didn't know the
- meaning of the word love until I met with Gwen.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then why did you propose to this Zara creature? One doesn't propose
- unless love has something to do with the matter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Has your experience of life only taught you that much, Mrs. Perage?
- A man proposes for the sake of money.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Was this Zara creature rich?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. She was very poor.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then you didn't propose to her on that account. Come&quot;--Mrs.
- Perage spoke in her roughest manner--&quot;don't waste my time. <i>Why</i>
- did you propose?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because I was a lonely man and wanted a home and a comrade. I had
- been wandering all over the world by myself, and found life dismal in the
- extreme. I didn't love Zara Alpenny one little bit. But I admired her as a
- thoroughly good woman----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh&quot;--Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose--&quot;she was a good woman,
- was she?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A thoroughly good woman,&quot; repeated Hench, again emphasizing his
- remark. &quot;And when I asked her to be my wife, she told me that I
- didn't love her, but only wanted a home, adding that she loved some one
- else. I recognized the truth of her statement with regard to my own
- feelings, and therefore I went away from Bethnal Green. I still respect
- her, Mrs. Perage, and if I can forward her marriage with the man of her
- choice in any way, I will do so. After all, Madame Alpenny wants a rich
- son-in-law, and I am wealthy enough to smooth matters over in that way for
- Ned Bracken.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Who is he?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The man Zara loves. And that you may know the worst, let me tell you
- that she is a dancer at a Bethnal Green music-hall.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; said Mrs. Perage, smiling grimly. &quot;And by mentioning
- her profession and position you think that I will have a bad opinion of
- her. Fudge! I have met with dancers much better as regards morals than
- many a woman received at Court. Don't be a fool and think you are talking
- to an inexperienced girl.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I did talk to an inexperienced girl,&quot; said Hench rather
- bitterly, &quot;and she has turned on me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not? You gave her no explanation.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How could I, when she ran away while I was speaking? I couldn't
- follow quickly enough, as my foot is yet weak.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Your ankle, you mean--be careful in your speech.&quot; Mrs. Perage
- rubbed her nose again and her eyes grew calmer. &quot;I'll have a cup of
- tea if you will have the decency to give me one.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain rang for a fresh cup and saucer. &quot;I thought you wouldn't
- condescend to eat and drink with a pariah.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Fudge!&quot; said Mrs. Perage again, and very sharply. &quot;Who
- said you were a pariah, you silly fellow? That's merely hurt vanity on
- your part.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How can I help being hurt, when I am so misjudged?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Look here.&quot; Mrs. Perage bent forward and shook his shoulder.
- &quot;Are you a man or a twopenny-halfpenny school-girl?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm an ass,&quot; confessed Owain, ashamed of his petty outbreak.
- &quot;But I have an attack of nerves, I think, owing to my dreadful
- position.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose, received a cup and saucer
- from Mrs. Bell, who had just entered the room, and sent that fragile
- person out again. &quot;Jim hinted at trouble. It seems he was right.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Jim knows all about it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, then, I don't. Wait till I fill my cup and then you can tell
- me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Tell you what?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Drat the man, you know. It's more than this trouble with Gwen you
- have to tell me about.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think that I had better tell you about the trouble with Gwen
- first.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What's the use of beginning at the wrong end? Relate the story from
- start to finish and then I'll understand more about this interview in the
- churchyard with this ridiculous old woman.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madame Alpenny.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum! The name fits her. Go on.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have already told you most of my life---&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And have left out the most interesting part, apparently. See here,
- Hench, or rather, I should say, Owain.&quot; Mrs. Perage drank some of her
- tea and continued slowly. &quot;I am an old woman with a romantic heart. I
- love Gwen and I have taken a fancy to you. Both you and Gwen come of a bad
- stock, as old Mynydd Evans was a miser, Owain Evans was a profligate, and
- Madoc Evans was a scoundrel, fit for any deed of wickedness. You two
- children are the best of the bunch, and I expect get your decent morals
- from your mothers. I want to see you happy and married. Now, don't
- disappoint me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I certainly won't, if Gwen won't,&quot; said Owain promptly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum! Gwen is a more difficult person to manage. However, if you
- leave it to me, I think in some way things will be put right.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I shall leave everything to you, with pleasure,&quot; said Hench
- eagerly. &quot;And I thank you for the trouble you are taking. Your
- advice----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Cannot be given further until I am in possession of facts,&quot;
- interrupted Mrs. Perage, and finishing his sentence in a different way.
- &quot;I know that you are Owain's son and inherit the property. I know
- that you love Gwen, and that it is possible, in spite of existing
- circumstances, that you will marry her. Also I am aware that Madoc was
- murdered--by that tramp, I presume.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No!&quot; said Hench sharply, and ready to make a clean breast.
- &quot;I am the tramp.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ha!&quot; exclaimed the old lady in a tone of surprise. &quot;You
- are the tramp? Well, I withdraw my accusation, as I am sure you are
- innocent enough. But what I was coming to when you interrupted me was that
- I wish to know more. Jim says you are in trouble.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In very great trouble. And if you will help me---&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Bless the man, what I came here for was to help. But I can't do that
- on half-confidences. You must speak plainly. Now, no more talk. Begin.&quot;
- Hench did as he was ordered, and in a very short time Mrs. Perage was in
- possession of all facts connected with the advertisement; with the keeping
- of the appointment and the discovery of the body; and with the schemes of
- Madame Alpenny. Her strong old face did not betray much emotion, although
- she was inwardly astonished at the revelations, but she kept her eyes on
- Owain until he ceased speaking, and then rubbed her nose, as was her
- custom when perplexed or annoyed. As she made no remark, Hench did so.
- &quot;What do you think?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; said Mrs. Perage, starting from the brown study in which
- she was involved. &quot;You've brought your pigs to a pretty market, young
- man. Well, well, we must see what is best to be done.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You don't believe me to be guilty?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Would I be still sitting here if I did? Don't be a fool. Not that I
- blame the person who got Madoc out of the way very much. He was such a
- disagreeable person, that I often thought I'd be hanged for killing him
- myself.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mrs. Perage!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It sounds dreadful, doesn't it?&quot; she said good-humouredly.
- &quot;But then you see I am a dreadful person in the eyes of many
- milk-and-water people, because I have my own decided opinions and go my
- own way. I suppose it's wrong to say a word against the dead, although I
- don't see why we should talk of nothing but virtues they never possessed
- while alive. Well, let the man rest; he did a lot of harm when he was
- alive, and wherever he has gone to, he's making mischief. You didn't
- murder him, anyhow?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I certainly did not,&quot; answered Hench, smiling. &quot;But the
- question is, who did?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah&quot;--Mrs. Perage kilted up her dress and folded her hands on
- her knees--&quot;a very difficult question to answer. But Madame Alpenny
- didn't, although you seem to have some idea that she is the guilty person.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She knew my uncle and all about the disposal of the property through
- the confidence made to her by my father twenty years ago.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That doesn't prove that she murdered Madoc. She wanted you to marry
- her daughter undoubtedly after she laid hold of the clue which led her to
- learn that you were likely to inherit ten thousand a year. But why should
- she put her neck in a noose?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She might have wished me to get possession of the property at once,
- and have murdered my uncle in the hope that I would go to the spot and
- then run the risk of being arrested. I believe myself that it was all a
- plot to get me under her thumb. I <i>did</i> go to the rendezvous and I
- _am implicated. Well?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose again. &quot;The devil's in it for trouble,&quot;
- she muttered. &quot;Perhaps I am premature in assuming that this woman is
- innocent, but it seems incredible that she should run such a risk. I shall
- have to see her first before I make up my mind. She's clever.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In a foxy sort of way.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum! The fox doesn't do things on a big scale in the way of killing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench answered flippantly, as the conversation was getting on his nerves.
- &quot;What about hen-roost massacres?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage rose, and was about to rebuke him when she saw, as Gwen had
- seen earlier, the white pinched look on his face. &quot;You're
- over-wrought, my friend. I want you to promise me two things.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes. What are they?&quot; asked the young man wearily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In the first place do not make any move in these matters until I
- give you leave. I have a plan in my head.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What is it?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I shan't tell it until it is carried out. In the second place do not
- come to my house until to-morrow afternoon.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But Gwen will believe more than ever that I am----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What she thinks you are in a moment of rage on her part,&quot;
- finished Mrs. Perage. &quot;That's just it. If you see her now you will
- spoil all. Wait until I tell you that it is safe to come.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very well. But I can't let you take my burden on your shoulders and
- stay here doing nothing. It's not cricket.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You'll get all the cricket you require, I promise you,&quot; said
- Mrs. Perage as she took her departure. &quot;I don't mind telling you,&quot;
- she added, glancing back, &quot;that it interests me to have something
- exciting of this sort to do. Life is rather dull hereabouts.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I only hope it will not prove too exciting.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old lady laughed and stepped briskly out of the cottage, while Owain
- remained where he was kicking against the pricks. He wished to see Gwen,
- but as he had promised to wait for instructions he could not do so. Like
- the lady who had just left, he found life in Cookley intolerably dull at
- the moment. But then, as Gwen was not beside him, he would have found it
- equally dull had he been alone in Paris or London. It was Gwen who made up
- his existence, and nothing else mattered particularly. To such lengths
- does the passion of love lead ordinarily sensible human beings.
- </p>
- <p>
- Meanwhile, Mrs. Perage walked home briskly, turning over certain plans in
- her very capable mind. She did not seek out Gwen, who was weeping in the
- retirement of her bedroom, since all explanations at the present moment
- were futile. But Mrs. Perage decided that when the girl grew calmer a very
- positive explanation, which could not be mistaken, should be made to her
- by the right person. To bring about this necessary event she looked up her
- nephew, whom she found dawdling in the garden with a cigarette and a
- French novel. Vane lay on the grass under a shady tree clothed in white
- flannels, and looked rather alarmed when his aunt appeared. The day was
- hot, and Mrs. Perage was so uncommonly active that she was scarcely a
- desirable companion for a lazy man. His anxiety was therefore natural.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Sit up and listen,&quot; said Mrs. Perage, getting to work at once.
- &quot;I've seen our young friend, and I now know as much as you do.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim sat up cross-legged, resigned to the worst, and Mrs. Perage seated
- herself on the rustic bench under the tree with the air of a judge trying
- a particularly vicious criminal. &quot;Need we discuss matters just now?&quot;
- he asked in a bored tone. &quot;I'm so comfortable. Peter is bringing me
- some tea, I have a book and a case of cigarettes, so on the whole----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't be an ass, Jim. You can be busy enough if you like.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That's just it, Aunt Emma,&quot; remonstrated the barrister,
- clutching his ankles. &quot;I don't like. There's nothing to be done at
- present. I'll see Owain this evening and hear how he settled with that old
- woman.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He has settled nothing. But he managed to get her to leave him alone
- for seven days. In that time much can be done.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very probably. I'm sure I wish to do all I can. And Gwen?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She's crying in her bedroom. She will continue to cry until she is
- assured that Owain really loves her and not this other girl. You know what
- I mean?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, as you related what took place in the churchyard and as Gwen
- repeated the story to me, I must admit that I do know. I say, Aunt Emma,
- you don't think Miss Evans minds me calling her Gwen, as I----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, don't talk rubbish,&quot; interrupted Mrs. Perage quickly.
- &quot;We have more important things to speak about. This evening you must
- go to town by the seven train,&quot;--she glanced at her watch. &quot;That
- will give you time to have dinner comfortably, as you needn't dress.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But, I say,&quot;--Vane looked rather disgusted,--&quot;I don't want
- to go to town.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You must,&quot; said his aunt impressively. &quot;Go to Bethnal
- Green, and bring down with you to-morrow Mademoiselle Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What for?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Bless the man, can't you understand? Only this Zara creature can set
- Gwen's mind at rest. She can explain that Hench never really loved her and
- only offered himself to her to gain a home and a companion.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Can't Owain tell Gwen that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He might tell it to her fifty times and she would not believe him,&quot;
- said Mrs. Perage shrewdly. &quot;But when this girl speaks everything will
- be put right straight away. Then we can consider what is best to be done
- about the other and more serious business. But you must see, Jim, that it
- is first necessary to adjust matters between Gwen and Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, Aunt Emma, you understand your own sex better than I do, so I
- suppose it is best for me to bring Zara Alpenny down.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am quite positive it is.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Good! I'll enjoy my dinner and then go to town by the train you
- mention. I can bring Mademoiselle Zara to your house about two o'clock
- to-morrow. Now that's all right.&quot; Vane yawned and rose. &quot;Ah,
- here comes Peter with the tea.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage looked rather grimly on the freckled page who carried on a
- tray the beverage which Mr. Vane desired. Hench had told her how Madame
- Alpenny had learned his whereabouts through Simon, <i>alias_ Bottles, and
- the same could have only acquired the knowledge through Peter.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Here!&quot; she said sharply. &quot;Do you write to your brother in
- town and tell him all the gossip of the village?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Me, mum? No, mum,&quot; said Peter, rather alarmed by her peremptory
- tone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't tell lies, boy,&quot; said his mistress sternly. &quot;You
- told your brother that Mr. Hench was staying at Mrs. Bell's cottage.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I know I did, mum.&quot; Peter began to whimper. &quot;But I hope I
- didn't do no harm, mum. Simon, he thinks no end of Mr. Hench, so I thought
- as I'd tell him. But it's all right, mum. Simon knows what he's about.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What do you mean by that?&quot; questioned Vane quickly, for the
- page spoke in a very significant tone. Peter shuffled and wriggled
- uncomfortably. &quot;Simon will tell you, sir, when the time comes,&quot;
- he replied evasively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Tell what?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What Simon knows, sir.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And what does Simon know?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I can't tell you, sir. Simon's clever. He knows a thing or two.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And so do I,&quot; said Mrs. Perage sternly. &quot;And one is that
- you are not to write gossiping letters from my house.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, mum, I won't!&quot; And Peter went away as quickly as he could
- lest he should be questioned further. &quot;Now what does that mean?&quot;
- asked Mrs. Perage shrewdly. &quot;Is this brat and his brother mixed up in
- this dangerous business?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It seems like it,&quot; replied Jim, stirring his tea meditatively.
- &quot;But Peter may have written in all innocence, knowing how Bottles
- adores Owain.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Bottles, as you call him, didn't tell Madame Alpenny in all
- innocence,&quot; she snapped.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; said Vane, quite in his aunt's style, &quot;we'll look
- into the matter.&quot; And he did so on the morrow when he went to Bethnal
- Green.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_16" href="#div1Ref_16" id="div1_16">CHAPTER XVI</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- EXPLANATIONS
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen was thoroughly miserable. On returning from the churchyard she had
- shut herself up in her bedroom, after a sobbing description to Mrs. Perage
- and Vane of what had taken place. In this seclusion she remained, speaking
- little, eating less, and only sleeping occasionally when exhausted Nature
- insisted upon having her own sensible way. The trouble Gwen was now
- undergoing seemed ever so much worse than that which she had already
- undergone. The death of her father had been dreadful, but he had been such
- a tyrant that--to speak plainly--his loss had not broken her heart. But
- now she felt certain that her heart was really and truly broken, as the
- idea of losing Owain was like a nightmare. The girl by this time fully
- recognized that she loved her cousin dearly, even though that love had
- grown as rapidly and unexpectedly as Jonah's gourd. Perhaps, like the
- same, it would perish as quickly. Gwen attempted to assure herself of
- this, but could not self-hypnotise herself into such a belief. Her passion
- was too genuine, too strong, too overwhelming, to be got rid of so easily.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yet--she asked herself this question frequently--how could she believe
- that Owain loved her, when she had heard from his own lips that he had
- proposed to another girl? Gwen considered that she had been very generous
- in forgiving his masquerading, although she admitted that under the
- circumstances the assumption of a false name had been pardonable. But that
- he should have loved some one else, and should have proposed to that some
- one, seemed to her to be monstrous. It was impossible for her to forget or
- forgive such a thing. She assured herself that self-respect demanded the
- adoption of this merciless attitude, but the cause of it--which she would
- not admit--was really jealousy. But whatever it was the feeling made her
- wretched, and for long hours the poor child tossed and turned and shivered
- and wept, as she wondered what her future was likely to be. She had youth,
- she had beauty, she had money, but all these desirable things were as dust
- and ashes, lacking the companionship of the man she loved. And as he had
- condemned himself out of his own mouth she could not see how the position
- of things was to be altered.
- </p>
- <p>
- In her bluff way, Mrs. Perage was very sorry for the girl, as she saw how
- truly genuine was her suffering. The old lady strongly sympathized with
- that despairing feeling of youth which believes that the world has come to
- an end because things do not turn out as expected. Not that she believed
- Gwen's world had ended, but understood easily enough how the girl thought
- so. To put matters right, Mrs. Perage set herself to work in the hope of
- proving that the sun was merely obscured for the moment. For a day and a
- night she left the sufferer alone, so that she might get over the first
- stage of misery and anger. Then the old dame entered the bedroom and
- proceeded to develop her scheme, which she hoped would put the crooked
- straight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, my dear,&quot; she said in a brisk and heartless manner, as
- she seated herself on the bed, &quot;have you overcome your fit of
- self-pity?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, how unkind you are,&quot; wailed Gwen, who did not expect such a
- speech. &quot;My heart is broken.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, my dear, your vanity is hurt.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Vanity? I have no vanity.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, well, we will call it pride, self-respect, dignity, or any
- other pretty name which appeals to you,&quot; said Mrs. Perage
- complacently. &quot;Anyhow, you can't lie here amongst the ruins of your
- life. Have some breakfast and get up.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I can't eat and I can't drink. How can you expect me to?&quot; cried
- Gwen, who was intensely exasperated by this matter-of-fact speech. &quot;You
- will make me angry, Mrs. Perage.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I want to, since anger will make you see things in a more sensible
- light. You can't live on air, you know, my dear, or on love either,
- especially as this last is nonexistent.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The spirit of contradiction, begotten by anger, made the invalid resent
- this last remark. &quot;Love isn't nonexistent,&quot; she declared
- crossly. &quot;I love Owain still, although he doesn't deserve my
- affection in the least. I call it a shame for him to come here and save my
- life and make me love him, when all the time he is engaged to another
- girl.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Who told you that he was?&quot; inquired Mrs. Perage dryly, and very
- well satisfied with the result her conversation was producing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He told me so himself, and I told you how he was,&quot; said Gwen
- incoherently. &quot;He admitted that he had proposed to the nasty daughter
- of that horrid woman.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot; said Mrs. Perage coolly, &quot;a young man must gain
- experience somehow.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Owain shan't gain any at my expense,&quot; retorted Gwen viciously.
- &quot;After all, I don't think that he is worth troubling about.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course he isn't,&quot; said Mrs. Perage, wishing to emphasize
- this opinion. &quot;So lie down and go to sleep and forget all about him.
- You can't eat, you know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, I can.&quot; Gwen rose in the bed angrily. &quot;I shall have
- my breakfast and get up and go about things just as if nothing had
- happened.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Perage shook her old head wisely. &quot;You have not the strength.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have--I have. Ring the bell and order some tea and toast.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Peter is bringing up some sort of a meal, my dear. Ah, there is his
- knock. I will take the tray,&quot; and Mrs. Perage went to the door to do
- so, chuckling at the way in which she was dealing with the situation.
- &quot;Give it to me, Peter; now you can go. By the way, Gwen, shall I send
- him for the doctor?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. I'm quite well,&quot; said the girl indignantly. So Peter was
- dismissed and the tray was placed on the bed. &quot;Leave me to eat, Mrs.
- Perage, and you can come back after I have dressed.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Foolish! Foolish!&quot; said the old dame, leaving the room. &quot;You
- are attempting too much.&quot; And she departed, still chuckling to think
- how easily this somewhat difficult young lady had fallen into the trap.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen, quite ignorant that she was acting exactly as Mrs. Perage desired,
- sipped the tea and nibbled at the toast. Pride speedily came to her aid,
- and when the meal was finished she felt much better. Self-pity was now
- merged in a sense of anger that Owain had dared to treat her so
- shamefully, therefore she dressed herself in her prettiest frock with the
- intention of proving to him that she felt his treachery less than he might
- have expected. When she walked into the drawing-room, Mrs. Perage looked
- up to see a smartly dressed young lady with sparkling eyes and a fine
- colour, in place of the white-faced invalid she had left. So far the
- result of the experiment was distinctly good.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And of course,&quot; suggested the old lady artfully, &quot;you have
- quite decided to throw Owain overboard.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What else would you have me do?&quot; demanded Gwen revengefully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; said Mrs. Perage in a meditative manner. &quot;I think I
- should ask for an explanation.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There can be no explanation likely to satisfy me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That entirely depends upon my common-sense way of looking at things,&quot;
- said Mrs. Perage dryly. &quot;Or on your common-sense, if you come to
- that. By the way, that girl is coming down here this afternoon--she will
- arrive in an hour.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What girl?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; Mrs. Perage skirted round the subject and did not give an
- entirely direct reply. &quot;Your breakfast has been your luncheon, for it
- is now two o'clock, so such a queer exchange of meals must have upset you.
- Perhaps you had better not be present.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What girl are you talking about?&quot; asked Gwen, her colour coming
- and going, although she knew perfectly well what was meant. &quot;And I am
- in quite enough good health to see any girl. How dare she come here?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah!&quot;--Mrs. Perage chuckled,--&quot;you guess what I mean, I
- see. Well, my dear Jim was rather put out about your quarrel with Hench,
- so he suggested at my desire that it would be as well for him to go to
- town and bring Mademoiselle Zara with him down here to explain matters.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't require any explanation,&quot; said Gwen, holding her head
- very high.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Bless the girl, did I say so? This Zara woman is coming to explain
- to me. I may as well be plain, Gwen. It was I who told Jim to go to town
- and fetch her, since it is necessary that I should learn what a rascal
- Hench is.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He's not a rascal; I'm sure he's not a rascal.&quot; Gwen stamped
- her foot and grew very red.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh yes, he is, my dear. To propose to one girl and to make love to
- another is not right. I must inquire into his character, you know, so as
- to see if he is a decent man to know. Now Mademoiselle Zara can tell us
- the truth. But I don't want you to be present.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But I shall!&quot; cried Miss Evans, with another stamp. &quot;It is
- my right to be present. The explanation concerns me more than any one
- else.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, well, if you insist upon being present, I have no more to say.&quot;
- Mrs. Perage shrugged her shoulders, and making a wilful mistake. &quot;Did
- you say 'present' or 'pleasant'?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pleasant. You must be pleasant to Mademoiselle Zara, as, after all,
- you do not care anything for your cousin.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I do. All the same I am angry with him. I shall be present and be
- pleasant just as I please. And now I shall take a walk in the park so as
- to calm my nerves. I'm sure Owain has upset them enough.&quot; And Gwen
- hastily departed, while Mrs. Perage chuckled more than ever.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Fiery little Welsh temper she has,&quot; murmured the old lady.
- &quot;I don't envy Hench when he makes her his wife. Hum! So that's
- settled. Let us hope good will come of the interview.&quot; She rubbed her
- nose. &quot;Gwen's a handful to manage, but by contradiction I fancy that
- I have secured my own way.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course this was quite true, although Miss Evans, walking in the park,
- was perfectly sure that she was acting contrary to Mrs. Perage's wishes.
- By this time the girl was in a fine temper, ready to quarrel with any one
- about anything. In fact she felt very much inclined to fight for what she
- considered were her rights, so far as concerned her cousin. In some queer
- way, Gwen arrived at the conclusion that by saving her life Hench had
- given her some sort of claim over him. Of course, she would never marry
- him; nothing would ever induce her to marry such a faithless person. But
- she intended to hint at her fantastic claim by ordering him to make Zara
- his wife. Then, on further reflection, she did not like him to marry the
- dancer, as she loved him herself. Still, as he was unworthy of her love,
- perhaps it would be as well to allow him to carry out his proposal to
- Madame Alpenny's daughter. He would certainly be miserable, which would
- serve him right, as Zara was bound to be a minx and a cat and several
- other disagreeable things. In this incoherent way Miss Evans thought,
- while working off her anger as best she could by walking at top speed up
- one path and down another. She did not know whether to laugh or to cry, to
- rage or to fret; all she did know was that everything seemed to be wrong,
- and that the bottom had fallen out of creation.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Gwen again ventured into the house, she found the drawing-room
- tenanted by Mrs. Perage, her nephew, and two visitors. One of these was a
- handsome, untidily dressed young fellow, who wore his hair rather long
- after the manner of musicians; the other was a tall girl, gaunt,
- striking-looking, with something of the gipsy in her appearance. She wore
- a red velvet hat and a long red velvet mantle, the violent hues of which
- harmonized well with her somewhat sallow complexion and bold dark eyes.
- When Gwen entered, this girl was laughing and showed a row of very white
- teeth, which added to her handsome looks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mademoiselle Zara, this is Miss Evans,&quot; said Mrs. Perage,
- rising to make a rapid introduction. &quot;Gwen, this is Madame Alpenny's
- daughter, and Mr. Bracken, to whom she is engaged.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Engaged?&quot; Gwen started back and gasped. &quot;But I don't
- understand.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mademoiselle Zara will explain,&quot; said Mrs. Perage swiftly, and
- collecting the two men with her eyes. &quot;Mr. Bracken, I must show you
- my garden, as I am sure you take an interest in flowers. Come with me. You
- also, Jim, as you must go to Mrs. Bell's and bring Hench here.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't wish to see him,&quot; called out Gwen hurriedly, but Mrs.
- Perage took no notice of the speech, as she had already conducted the two
- men out of the room, leaving the two girls alone.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen eyed Zara and Zara eyed Gwen with great curiosity, and used their
- intuitions with so much skill that in two minutes each girl knew all about
- the nature of the other girl. Miss Evans could not deny but what the
- dancer was handsome enough to attract any one, even the most fastidious,
- while Zara thought that Gwen was one of the most charming young ladies she
- had ever seen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm sure he will be very happy with you,&quot; she said abruptly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Who?&quot; asked Gwen, sitting down and getting ready to fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- Zara laughed meaningly. &quot;My dear, there is only one 'he' in the world
- for you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So I thought, until I found him out,&quot; retorted Miss Evans
- sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I understand all about your finding him out. Mr. Vane gave me a
- full description of my mother's meddling. But if you had waited to hear
- what took place after your departure from the churchyard there would have
- been no need for me to come down.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I did not ask you to come down,&quot; said Gwen pointedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You did not. Mrs. Perage did, however, as she was anxious for your
- mistake to be corrected. I am anxious, also, else I would not have
- troubled to take this long journey.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why did you undertake it, then?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because I have the greatest respect for Mr. Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The greatest love, you mean.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Indeed, I mean nothing of the sort,&quot; said Zara candidly. &quot;I
- have no more love for Mr. Hench than I have for that table. Didn't you
- hear Mrs. Perage say that I was engaged to Mr. Bracken?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! I suppose you are,&quot; admitted Gwen reluctantly. &quot;But
- there is always one who loves and one who is loved, you know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Heine, the German poet, said that, Miss Evans. I congratulate you on
- the wide range of your reading. It shows that you are not narrow, and not
- being narrow, I trust that you will do Mr. Hench justice.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He proposed to you. I heard him say so myself.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My dear,&quot; said the dancer, after the lenient fashion of an
- elder sister, &quot;Mr. Hench at that time would have proposed to any
- woman of decent character and decent looks. Your Heine quotation implied
- that although I did not love him, he loved me. There you are entirely
- wrong. He admired me, certainly, but----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But he proposed to you,&quot; interrupted Miss Evans doggedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Zara's cheeks grew crimson and her voice became sharper. &quot;We are two
- women talking together,&quot; she said decisively. &quot;Therefore, it is
- useless for us to skirt about the bush as we would do with men. Mr. Hench
- never loved me; he had no conception of love when he proposed, and I told
- him so. Can't you understand how a lonely man must wish for a home and a
- comrade, so that he may have some centre in life? I used those very words
- to him. Mr. Bracken gives me that true love which is more than admiration,
- which was all Mr. Hench had to offer. He could not give me his heart
- because he did not know that he possessed one. Since coming here he has
- made the discovery that he has a heart and he has given it to you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Have you seen him; did he tell you so?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- It took Zara a moment or so to quell her rising anger, and she felt
- inclined to shake this silly little girl who was not to be convinced by
- common-sense explanations. &quot;I have not seen Mr. Hench, nor if you
- wish it will I see him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, it's nothing to me,&quot; said Gwen with an air of finality.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then it ought to be. Mr. Vane told me what Mr. Hench told him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What is that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You know quite well,&quot; retorted Zara tartly. &quot;It is that
- Mr. Hench loves you better than you deserve.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How can you tell what I deserve?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am only going by what I see of you now,&quot; said the dancer
- patiently. &quot;You really love Mr. Hench, and you are fighting against
- your feelings, because you believe that he loves me, which is not the
- case. As you can see that I am speaking the truth, it is unworthy of you
- to speak as you do. Therefore, I say that Mr. Hench loves you better than
- you deserve. I don't know,&quot; cried Zara, becoming exasperated, &quot;why
- you force me to make so unnecessary an explanation, as you are quite aware
- of what I mean.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen was so impressed by the dancer's earnest speech that she became much
- more reasonable. &quot;I am a pig, I know,&quot; she murmured rather
- inelegantly. &quot;But it isn't pleasant to love a man and then to hear
- from his own lips that he proposed to another woman.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pooh! You are making a mountain out of a molehill,&quot; said Zara
- contemptuously. &quot;If Mr. Hench had proposed to me after he met you,
- then there might be some sense in your attitude. But I tell you he did not
- know the meaning of love when he proposed to me, and would have proposed
- to any other woman just as readily. His first acquaintance with love was
- when he saved your life. He is heart and soul devoted to you. My dear&quot;--Zara
- rose, and bending over Gwen, took her hand--&quot;don't be foolish and
- throw away a love which will make you the happiest woman in the world.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Can you swear that Owain loves me?&quot; asked Gwen, more and more
- impressed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Personally, I cannot. But from what Mr. Vane has told me I certainly
- can declare that Mr. Hench adores you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes.&quot; Miss Evans stared hard at nothing. &quot;I believe he
- does.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then why are you making all this trouble?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are a woman and ask me that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Zara laughed. &quot;It is absurd, I know. But I am anxious to put things
- right. My mother made trouble and I came down to make peace. Don't send me
- away with my errand unaccomplished.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen jumped up and kissed the dancer. &quot;No, I won't. I am quite
- satisfied with your explanation. I have been very silly and have made
- myself quite ill in worrying over things. And if Owain comes----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Owain is coming,&quot; interrupted Zara quickly, as she glanced out
- of the open French window of the room. &quot;Yonder he is with Mr. Vane,
- who was sent to bring him by Mrs. Perage. My dear&quot;--she kissed Gwen's
- cheek--&quot;I will slip out to join Mrs. Perage and Ned in the garden.
- You stay here and make it up with Mr. Hench. No half-measures, mind. Be
- generous and loyal.&quot; And with a smiling nod the dancer flitted
- through the window just as the footsteps of Owain were heard in the hall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh!&quot; said Gwen, drawing a long breath, &quot;how nearly I have
- lost him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane had sense enough not to enter along with his friend, as he thoroughly
- understood the saying about two being company and three none. In a most
- loyal fashion he obliterated himself, and Owain walked into the room by
- himself. The young man looked worn and ill, so that Gwen's heart was
- touched, and she felt ashamed of her conduct, which was responsible for
- his wilted appearance. Almost without thought she flew into his arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm a horrid creature,&quot; she murmured. &quot;Do forgive me and
- I'll be good.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh!&quot;--Owain's pale face flushed suddenly and his brown eyes
- sparkled--&quot;then you don't believe----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I believe that you love me. Mademoiselle Zara has explained
- everything.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Thank God for that. Where is she?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Do you wish to see her?&quot; asked Miss Evans jealously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Only to thank her. But that can come later. Meantime&quot;--he bent
- and kissed her three or four times--&quot;oh, Gwen, how could you think
- that I loved any one in the world but you--you--you?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I was silly and wicked and--and----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No! There was some cause for your anger, as Madame Alpenny told
- so skilful a lie. It wasn't all a lie, of course, as I did propose to
- Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I know you did, and I know why you did. But you will be much happier
- with me than with her,&quot; said the girl naïvely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Than with any one, Gwen,&quot; cried the young man fervently. &quot;Oh,
- my dear, to think how nearly I have lost you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I said that to myself about you, just before you entered,&quot;
- whispered Gwen in a penitent tone. &quot;Do forgive me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;On condition that you forgive me,&quot; pleaded Owain fondly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Dear, there is nothing to forgive,&quot; said the girl, abasing
- herself. &quot;It is all my fault--all my fault. I'm a nasty little
- jealous animal.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Just the kind of animal I like.&quot; Owain pressed her hard in his
- arms. &quot;I'll never, never let you go again, and now that we are
- together and you are on my side, I am prepared to face the worst.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Face what?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, I forgot; you don't understand. I have a long explanation to
- give.&quot; Hench paused and looked nervous, as he drew Gwen to a chair
- and sat down to take her on his knee. &quot;You won't hate me, or doubt
- me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Never! Never!&quot; Gwen positively. &quot;I'll never doubt you
- again. What is the matter?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Murder is the matter!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What?&quot; She started back and stared at his perturbed face.
- &quot;The murder of----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! The murder of your father. You know that tramp you suspect?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The one who asked the way to the Gipsy Stile? Yes.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am that tramp.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's impossible.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It is quite true. I have explained matters to Vane and to Mrs.
- Perage. Now I must explain them to you. Having admitted that I am the
- tramp you suspect----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen stopped him by laying her hand over his mouth. &quot;I don't suspect
- the tramp, now that you are he,&quot; she said vehemently. &quot;You are
- innocent, I am sure.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How can you be sure?&quot; asked Hench sharply. &quot;Because you
- saved my life,&quot; replied Gwen in a truly feminine fashion. &quot;No
- one who saved a person's life would commit a murder.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I can scarcely admit the logic of that reasoning,&quot; said
- Hench, unable to refrain from a smile, in spite of the desperate
- situation. &quot;But I am glad that you so far trust me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I trust you to the death.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Darling!&quot;--he kissed her--&quot;that gives me the courage to
- tell you all!&quot; And he did tell her all then and there, from the time
- of the conversation with Madame Alpenny down to the moment when she
- accused him in the churchyard. &quot;So you see, Gwen,&quot; he concluded
- in a melancholy tone, &quot;that although perfectly innocent, this woman
- has the power to have me arrested.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You shall not be arrested,&quot; said Gwen, with sparkling eyes and
- red cheeks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then you don't believe me to be guilty?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What a silly question to ask.&quot; This time it was Gwen who
- kissed. &quot;Is it likely that I would still be sitting on your knee if I
- thought you killed my father? Of course, the whole thing is difficult and
- mysterious, but I am on your side, Owain, and we will fight it out
- together.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! Yes!&quot; Hench rose and swung her off her feet right into his
- arms. &quot;I am not afraid now. Your love will give me strength to
- conquer my enemies. But it will be an ordeal for you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;An ordeal which will prove the depth of my love, dear. And I deserve
- such an ordeal. I doubted you once; but I'll never, never, never, never
- doubt you again. Owain, darling, everything will come right. There is Mr.
- Vane and Mrs. Perage and myself and you. Against us is only that horrid
- old woman.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She holds a strong hand in the game, though,&quot; murmured the
- young man doubtfully. &quot;We hold a stronger. Right will always prevail
- against might.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Gwen! Gwen! You are a tower of strength. You put new life into me.
- Yes, we will fight; we will fight, fight to the end.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And win!&quot; cried Gwen. &quot;Oh, never doubt, Owain. We must
- win!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_17" href="#div1Ref_17" id="div1_17">CHAPTER XVII</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- BLACKMAIL
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- After the reconciliation between the lovers nothing remained but to go
- into the garden and announce that Mademoiselle Zara's errand had been
- wholly successful. Gwen was now quite amiably disposed towards her rival,
- and was indeed very thankful to her for the peacemaking explanation. Along
- with Hench she went into the hot sunshine, and as they walked across the
- lawns towards the glade where they were likely to find the others, Owain
- warned Gwen that Zara was wholly ignorant of her mother's schemes. &quot;Only
- you and I, Mrs. Perage and Jim Vane, know about her accusation,&quot; said
- the young man seriously. &quot;So don't hint a word of the business to
- Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course I won't,&quot; agreed Gwen readily. &quot;But what steps
- are you going to take, Owain, in order to counterplot her?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madame Alpenny? Well, I haven't any idea in my head just now, and,
- at all events, she has given me a week to think over things. Let us leave
- matters as they are until to-morrow, and then we can call a council of war
- and see what is best to be done. There's no doubt that Madame Alpenny has
- me in a tight place.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She has,&quot; said Gwen cheerfully. &quot;But we may be able to
- turn the tables on her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In what way?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't know,&quot; mused the girl. &quot;It seems to me that this
- woman knows more about the death of my father than she will admit. She may
- be guilty herself.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench shook his head. &quot;I have some such idea myself, and yet it seems
- impossible. What had she to gain?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A fortune through you,&quot; said Gwen promptly. &quot;By means of
- that advertisement which brought you to the Gipsy Stile, she implicated
- you in the murder, which she may have executed before you arrived. Once
- under her thumb, she hoped to compel you to marry Zara, and so would have
- gained control of the money.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am not under her thumb yet,&quot; said Hench grimly. &quot;And
- what is more, I don't intend to be, strong as is her position. Whether she
- is guilty or innocent I can't say, as I am ignorant of her doings on the
- night of the first of July. But I should like to know, Gwen, why your
- father put that advertisement into the papers, and why he appointed the
- Gipsy Stile as the place of meeting?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I can't explain,&quot; she answered doubtfully. &quot;My father
- never said a word to me about the advertisement, or, indeed, about Madame
- Alpenny's visit. I asked him who she was and he told me to mind my own
- business.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, Madame Alpenny can explain, as I believe she suggested the
- advertisement dodge herself.&quot; Owain reflected for a moment. &quot;There's
- something queer behind all this, Gwen, and when we learn what that
- something is, I daresay we will find out who murdered your father. And
- then----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hush,&quot; said Gwen suddenly, as they turned round the corner of a
- green alley which ran between high box hedges. &quot;Here they are.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- As a matter of fact the lovers stumbled right into the centre of a group
- consisting of Mrs. Perage and her guests. They all appeared to be smiling,
- and the smiles grew very broad when the reconciled couple came towards
- them. Mrs. Perage caught Gwen by the shoulders and looked into her
- tell-tale blue eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Is it all right, you nuisance?&quot; she demanded gruffly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;All right!&quot; assented Gwen, giving her a kiss. &quot;Thanks
- to----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;To me,&quot; cried the dancer gaily. &quot;I am the goddess of
- Peace.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench took her hand and kissed it. &quot;I can never thank you
- sufficiently.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't require thanks, Mr. Hench. But did I not tell you that when
- you really fell in love you would understand how wholly different it was
- to your feeling for me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You did, and I have learned the difference. Admiration is moonlight,
- and love is the most glowing of sunshine.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How poetical,&quot; said Vane with a shrug.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And how true. Jim, I have to thank you for bringing Mademoiselle
- Zara with the olive branch. Bless you, as a friend in need.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Bless Aunt Emma, rather, old son. She suggested the idea.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It seemed the only way of convincing a stupid man,&quot; said Mrs.
- Perage lightly. &quot;However, all's well that ends well, so let us go in
- and have some tea. Our visitors have to leave in an hour.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- All this time Bracken, silent according to custom, was smiling amiably at
- the man he had at one time considered his rival. Now he advanced and shook
- him by the hand, much to the approval of Zara, for Bracken had given her
- considerable trouble over Hench's attentions. Mrs. Perage, still holding
- on tightly to Gwen, was walking in front, together with Vane, so Owain had
- the pleasant task of escorting Zara and her lover to the house. He was
- glad of this, as he wished to say something and repay the dancer for her
- kindness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;When are you two going to be married?&quot; he asked abruptly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Zara sighed. &quot;I don't know,&quot; she confessed sadly. &quot;Ned
- expected to get some money from his mother, but she died without leaving
- any. Neither I nor Ned make enough money to keep ourselves and my mother,
- so we can't think of marrying for a long time.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madame Alpenny seems to be the stumbling block,&quot; mused Hench
- thoughtfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She is,&quot; declared Bracken in a gruff, rough way. &quot;Zara and
- I could manage by ourselves on what we earn, if it wasn't for that cattish
- old woman.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ned! Ned! Don't call names. After all, my mother is my mother.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She is very selfish, and makes you miserable to please herself,&quot;
- said Bracken crossly. &quot;I shall never make much money as I am not a
- genius as you are, Zara. If you could only get the engagement you deserve
- you would make sufficient to settle your mother, and then we could get
- married.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Allow me to see to that,&quot; said Owain quickly. &quot;See here,
- Bracken, and you, Zara, you may not know it but I am a rich man.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am very glad,&quot; said the dancer honestly. &quot;You have made
- money, then?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have inherited money--a large income. I owe you much, as but for
- you things would not have been squared.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It was the least I could do, Mr. Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It was a very great deal to do, as the task was a delicate one.
- However, what I mean is this, that as you have been my friend you must
- allow me to be yours. Therefore&quot;--Owain spoke slowly and
- deliberately--&quot;I wish you, with Bracken's approval, of course, to
- accept one thousand pounds.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh!&quot; gasped Zara, flushing as red as her cloak. &quot;I
- couldn't think of it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Nor can I,&quot; said Bracken resentfully. &quot;I can keep my own
- wife.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My dear people,&quot;--Owain being between them took an arm of
- each,--&quot;if you like you can pay me back on some future occasion.
- Zara, your mother will bother me to marry you until some barrier is raised
- which will prevent your being my possible wife. At present, as you have
- stated, you are not able to marry for want of money. Now if I give you
- this thousand pounds, which I can very easily spare, I want you to get
- married quietly. When your mother learns that you are Mrs. Bracken she
- will leave me alone. Then you can give her a sum of money to live on in
- the meantime and will be able to rest on your oars and look about for a
- better engagement. You see?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes,&quot; said Zara gratefully. &quot;I see, and I am very much
- obliged. If I can give my mother half the money she will go to her people
- in Buda Pesth and amuse herself with gambling. Then with five hundred
- pounds Ned and and I can manage to get to the West End. Money always
- brings money, and I am sure that I could get an engagement.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Didn't your mother go in search of one for you?&quot; asked Hench,
- nodding.
- </p>
- <p>
- Zara's lip curled and she looked more disdainful than ever. &quot;My
- mother said that she went, but she never did.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench started. &quot;She was absent for a few days, I remember.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes. On business, she told me. But what her business was I never
- knew. It had nothing to do with an engagement, however, or I should have
- known.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course Owain knew very well on what business Madame Alpenny had been
- engaged, but he was wise enough to make no remark. Also at the moment his
- attention was distracted by Bracken, who had been thinking in his heavy
- way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If you will allow Zara and me to pay you back the money with
- interest at five per cent,&quot; he observed, reflectively, &quot;we don't
- mind--eh, Zara?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No,&quot; she rejoined promptly. &quot;I shall take the money with
- pleasure then, as it will certainly help us to get married in spite of my
- mother's opposition. I am very grateful for your kind help, Mr. Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am only doing what I ought to do,&quot; said Owain frankly. &quot;You
- have done me a good turn, so it is only right that I should do you and
- Bracken one. I shall see my lawyers next week and arrange for the money to
- be paid to you by cheque, or in notes, or gold, whichever you prefer.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Say a cheque, Hench,&quot; remarked Bracken, with a sigh of relief.
- &quot;I have a banking account. It's a very small one--still, it is a
- banking account.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Good. I will call at The Home of the Muses some day next week with
- the cheque, and meantime you can see about getting married.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, Ned!&quot; cried Zara.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, Zara!&quot; cried Ned, and they embraced, even though they were
- in sight of the drawing-room windows.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot; said Hench philosophically, &quot;I have made two people
- happy, anyhow.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;We will be happier if you are happy yourself, you generous man,&quot;
- said Zara.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, that's all right,&quot; replied Hench hurriedly, for he did not
- wish to be thanked or praised. &quot;Come and have some tea. We'll keep
- this little arrangement to ourselves.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The visitors were very pleased at the result of their visit, which they
- had been far from expecting, and the tea was unusually gay. Gwen could not
- show enough attention to Zara, and Mrs. Perage, who had taken a fancy to
- the honest dullness of Ned, looked after him in her brusque way. Owain and
- his beloved were silent from sheer happiness, in spite of the
- thunder-clouds which still obscured the sun, so it was left to Jim Vane to
- brighten the party with chatter and gaiety. He was entirely successful,
- and the visitors left with a sense of great enjoyment. Zara looked
- younger, less fatigued and unapproachable than usual, while Bracken's
- stolid good-looking face was wreathed in smiles. And Hench saw them off at
- the station with a sense of thankfulness that he had been able to help
- them. He was so happy himself in having gained Gwen's love that he wished
- every one else to be happy, and moreover was delighted that he had been
- able to repay Zara for her good work. He returned to his lodgings to
- dress, and then went to dine at Mrs. Perage's hospitable board.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwen wished to hold the council of war after dinner, but Hench refused. He
- considered that the day had been quite sufficiently filled with events,
- and did not wish to start a discussion which was likely to be prolonged
- into the small hours. Gwen looked tired after all the excitement she had
- undergone, and Hench himself felt rather weary. The true fact was that a
- sense of anxiety lay beneath their surface gaiety, and they were feeling
- the suspense more than they thought. Mrs. Perage and her nephew were also
- rather silent; so in spite of the reconciliation of the lovers the evening
- was rather a failure. With her usual prompt way of dealing with things,
- Mrs. Perage sent Hench away at half-past nine o'clock.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;We are all worn out with bother,&quot; she said briskly. &quot;So it
- is best for all of us to have a good night's rest and then we can deal
- with other and more serious matters to-morrow.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;One serious matter has been put right, thanks to you,&quot; said
- Hench, looking fondly at Gwen. &quot;It was just as well to take the bull
- by the horns,&quot; said Mrs. Perage candidly. &quot;And I am glad that
- Zara proved to be so sensible a creature. And when you tell Gwen
- what--what----&quot; she hesitated, not knowing if it was wise to speak.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What peril I am in,&quot; finished Hench. &quot;Oh, I've done that
- this afternoon.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The deuce you have!&quot; cried Vane, turning from his friend to
- Gwen. &quot;And what do you think of the matter, Miss Evans?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't know what to think,&quot; said Gwen promptly. &quot;Save
- that I believe Owain to be innocent, and I will stand by him to the end,
- whatever it may be.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Good. And the accusation of Madame----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Jim,&quot; commanded his aunt sharply, &quot;do hold your tongue.
- This is not the time to begin a discussion. To-morrow, when our wits are
- clearer, we can talk. Owain, go home to bed. Jim and I will turn our backs
- while you take leave of Gwen.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- This was not necessary, as Gwen accompanied her lover to the door and
- kisses were exchanged in the twilight of the summer night. But the two
- were so long in parting that Mrs. Perage had to come on the scene and
- fairly shut the door in the face of this lingering lover. Hench went away,
- feeling that the sun had vanished from the sky, which was exactly what the
- sun should do considering the time. He sauntered home leisurely, thinking
- of Gwen and picturing his future life with her. By the time he reached
- Mrs. Bell's cottage it was striking ten from the church tower, and he
- entered the house yawning with the intention of going at once to bed.
- There he could dream of Gwen.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Owain did not get to his repose so speedily as he expected, for he
- found a visitor sitting in his parlour--and not a visitor he was exactly
- pleased to see. From an armchair rose the smartly dressed figure of Mr.
- Cuthbert Spruce, who smiled amiably when he saw the astonished look on the
- face of his host. Hench frowned, very ill-pleased.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What the deuce are you doing here, Spruce?&quot; he demanded
- sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have come to have a serious talk with you,&quot; said the Nut
- coolly, and resumed his seat with the air of a man determined to stay
- where he was.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then you can clear out and come to-morrow, my friend. I am much too
- tired to talk just now.&quot; Hench glanced at his watch. &quot;There is a
- train at a quarter to eleven which you can catch.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am not going back to town this evening, Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, that's your business, not mine. Anyhow, I want you to go now.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am staying at the Bull Inn,&quot; went on Spruce significantly.
- &quot;It is necessary that we should speak now. Better be sensible, Hench,
- and listen.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain looked at this meddlesome marplot searchingly. He was staying at the
- Bull Inn, and that was a place which Hench had carefully avoided lest he
- should come into contact with the girl who had seen him as a tramp. It
- occurred to him from the significance of Spruce's tone that the Nut had
- been making inquiries, and had come to make himself unpleasant. However,
- Hench was not the man to be frightened into doing what he did not wish to
- do, and he threw off his coat and hat, still frowning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't know why you have come here,&quot; he said coldly, &quot;or
- how you found out where I was living. But----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madame Alpenny told me,&quot; said Spruce quickly, and brought out a
- cigarette.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hang her impudence! Don't smoke. I don't want you to stay.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very good.&quot; The Nut rose and carefully lighted the little roll
- of tobacco. &quot;As you please. But don't say that I did not give you
- your chance.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What the devil do you mean?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If you send me away how can I explain?&quot; asked Spruce, with a
- supercilious smile. &quot;I have been waiting for quite an hour, and it
- was only after a great deal of persuasion that your landlady allowed me to
- enter. I believe&quot;--added the Nut, stretching his arms and yawning--
- &quot;that she is waiting up, so as to be sure that I have not come after
- the spoons.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench looked at him hard, then abruptly left the room to assure Mrs. Bell
- that everything was all right. After he had sent her to bed, at rest in
- her mind about the stranger, he returned to the parlour and closed the
- door in an ostentatious manner.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce laughed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are going to let me stay, then,&quot; he remarked coolly and
- sitting down again.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench sat opposite to him with a resolute air. &quot;You don't leave this
- room until you fully explain what the devil you mean by dogging my
- footsteps in this way,&quot; he said sternly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Dogged is a good word, or was it dogging? Both are good words. You
- will have to be dogged so far as your courage is concerned. And as to
- dogging, it is better that I should do that than the police.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, hang your fantastical chatter!&quot; snapped Hench with a
- lowering brow. &quot;Come to the point.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Can't you see my point now that I have mentioned the police?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No,&quot; said Hench briefly and obstinately.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Curious! You are not usually so dense.&quot; Spruce puffed lightly
- at his cigarette and smiled blandly. &quot;The fact is I am here on behalf
- of Madame Alpenny.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What has Madame Alpenny to do with me, may I ask?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, you may ask, and I shall reply with great pleasure. Madame
- Alpenny has done me the honour to make me her confidential friend, and I
- am now in possession of all facts connected with your gaining of a large
- fortune. Most people would be glad to get so much money, but few people
- would be ready to gain it at so heavy a price.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench winced inwardly but not outwardly, as he did not intend to show fear
- in the presence of this little reptile. He saw from the very audacity with
- which the Nut spoke that he knew all about the matter connected with the
- death of Madoc Evans, and knew also that the creature had come at this
- untimely hour to profit by his knowledge. &quot;You speak in riddles,&quot;
- he said coldly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I think you can guess them,&quot; retorted the other man.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Perhaps I can and perhaps I cannot. But as you hint at mysteries it
- is for you to explain them. Be as brief as you can. I can't wait up all
- night listening to your twaddle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very bravely carried off, Hench,&quot; taunted Spruce, his eyes
- looking angry. &quot;But such bluff doesn't deceive me. I know too much
- for you to pretend ignorance.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What you know I am waiting to learn,&quot; said Hench, setting his
- teeth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why give me the trouble to explain?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Stop your fencing and come to the point. You want money?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A great deal of money. The price of my story is costly.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Really!&quot; said Hench sarcastically. &quot;Well, you were writing
- a story at Bethnal Green. At least that was the lie you told me to account
- for your presence in the boarding-house.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce laughed, in no wise offended, as his moral perceptions were very
- much blunted. &quot;I am writing a much better story than I anticipated. I
- told you that I came to Bethnal Green to find material. Well, I have found
- material of the best. I shall sell this story for a good price,&quot; he
- concluded, looking meaningly at his listener.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And the price?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I think about two thousand a year.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Moderate,&quot; said Owain shortly and not quailing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think so myself, seeing that I shall have to pay Madame Alpenny at
- least two hundred a year out of it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And keep one thousand eight hundred a year to yourself?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is my intention,&quot; rejoined the Nut coolly. &quot;Spruce,
- you are--what you are, as it is impossible to find a name low enough to
- suit you. And how am I to pay this two thousand a year?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Out of the ten thousand per annum your uncle left you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Humph! You seem to be well informed.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madame Alpenny informed me, so naturally I am in possession of many
- facts which you would prefer to keep secret. Come, Hench, it is no use our
- beating about the bush, as we understand one another, so----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pardon me, we don't understand one another. What am I to get for
- this two thousand a year blackmail?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't use nasty words. It won't help you to be nasty. I'm top-dog,
- Hench, so you had better give in.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Two words go to a bargain,&quot; said Hench calmly. &quot;What am I
- to gain in return for this two thousand a year?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My silence.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;About what?&quot; Spruce started up, looking peevishly angry. &quot;Don't
- try me too far, Hench. You know quite well what I mean. A word from me to
- the police and you will be arrested straight away for the murder of your
- uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, indeed. You seem to be very certain of my guilt.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Whether I am certain or not doesn't matter,&quot; retorted the
- other. &quot;I hold you in the hollow of my hand.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Explain how you do that.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, very well,&quot; said Spruce, sitting down again. &quot;If you
- will have chapter and verse I am willing to oblige you, although I think
- you are wasting my time.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Nut drew a long breath and then proceeded to inform his host of his
- discoveries. These had to do with the insertion of the advertisement, with
- the visit of Hench on the fatal night to Cookley, and with the inheritance
- which the untoward death of Madoc Evans had brought the young man. &quot;So
- you see,&quot; concluded the Nut, &quot;that I have only to go to the
- police with this tale to ensure your arrest.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I quite admit that, Spruce. In fact, I admit the truth of all your
- story. I should like to know how you found out all about the business. You
- could scarcely go to Madame Alpenny and force it out of her without some
- previous knowledge.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, it was my clever brain that gave me the tip,&quot; said Spruce
- coolly. &quot;That conversation in which the word 'Rhaiadr' was used gave
- me the idea that the old woman knew something about you. I watched her and
- followed her when she went away. She came down here and saw Evans at the
- Grange. I waited until she got home later, and then told her that I had
- followed her. She was so alarmed lest you should know of the visit--as
- your doing so would have upset the apple-cart--that she told me about the
- advertisement. When it appeared I saw it and made sure that you would obey
- it. I followed you to that hotel near the British Museum, but you left
- there and I lost sight of you. Therefore I lay low until I got evidence of
- your visit to Cookley on the night of the first of July. I saw all about
- the murder in the newspapers and believed that you were guilty. But I was
- not sure until I went to-day to the Bull Inn and questioned that girl
- about the supposed tramp. From what she said, vague as her description
- was, I knew that you were the tramp in question, so came on here to let
- you know. I believe that you asked the way to the Gipsy Stile and went
- straight there to murder your uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh!&quot; said Owain, unmoved. &quot;Am I the sort of person to
- murder an old man?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't say that you killed him in cold blood,&quot; replied Spruce
- hastily. &quot;You doubtless had a quarrel and stabbed him before you knew
- what you were about.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;One moment, Spruce. I am not in the habit of carrying about
- carving-knives to kill people. And I had no reason to kill my uncle, as at
- the time I did not know that he was any relation.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, he told you that at the time you met him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I never met him. I found him dead.&quot; Spruce started up in a fury
- and snatched at his hat. &quot;What's the use of your dodging in this way.
- I say that you murdered him, and if you don't promise to pay me two
- thousand a year and secure the same to me by deed, I shall go to the
- police and procure your arrest. You know I can do it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You can. I fully admit that just now you are top-dog,&quot; said
- Hench in quite a bland way. &quot;And you are willing to condone my felony
- for the money?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! You can kill the whole population of Cookley for all I care.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I quite understand that. Well, to-night I shall say nothing. You
- must give me one week to consider matters.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't mind,&quot;--Spruce made for the door with a shrug,--&quot;but
- don't you try and bolt or I shall put the police on to you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Naturally! You have made everything perfectly clear to me.
- Good-night.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce walked into the passage and opened the outside door. &quot;Remember,&quot;
- he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Good-night,&quot; repeated Hench, and shut the door in the face of
- the blackmailer.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_18" href="#div1Ref_18" id="div1_18">CHAPTER XVIII</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- HENCH'S DIPLOMACY
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Contrary to his expectations, Owain passed a very good night. By this time
- he was so accustomed to trouble that it did not seem sensible to worry
- over anything until he could meet the same fairly and squarely. Dangerous
- as Madame Alpenny and Spruce were, he had no reason to fear them for a
- week, since they gave him that period in which to assent to their terms.
- The woman wished him to marry her daughter; the man desired to obtain an
- income of two thousand a year, secured by deed; and if he satisfied both,
- they would hold their peace and trouble him no longer. But Hench by no
- means intended to purchase immunity at this price, as to do so would imply
- that he was guilty. As he was perfectly innocent such a course was not to
- be thought of, and it was necessary to think of some other means of
- settling the difficulty. And since Owain could not decide his course of
- action on the spur of the moment, he put the matter out of his head for
- the time being and retired to bed immediately. After a good night's rest,
- he rose greatly refreshed, and sent Giles to bring Vane to breakfast.
- </p>
- <p>
- Guessing from the unexpectedness of the invitation that something was in
- the wind, Vane speedily arrived, and was waiting in the little parlour
- when his friend made his appearance. Hench refused to give any information
- until the meal was ended, saying that to mix up business with pleasure was
- to spoil both, so the barrister had to possess his soul in patience until
- they were enjoying their morning smoke. Then, as Hench still held his
- peace, Vane asked him a down-right question with considerable impatience.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why did you ask me to come to breakfast, Owain?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;To talk over a further complication of this trouble.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The murder of your uncle?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! When I came here last night, Spruce was waiting for me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Spruce!&quot; echoed the other curiously. &quot;That crawling little
- cheat. How did he find you out, Owain?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madame Alpenny told him where I was, and Bottles told her, and Peter
- told his brother. That is how the screed runs.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why the deuce couldn't Peter keep his knowledge of your whereabouts
- to himself,&quot; growled the barrister. &quot;We don't want Spruce here.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, Peter didn't think he was doing wrong in telling Bottles, as he
- knew how his brother was devoted to me. It is Bottles I blame in giving me
- away. I don't think he is so devoted to me as I thought. And I certainly
- don't want Spruce here, especially as he has come to blackmail me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What's that?&quot; Vane sat up very straight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Listen!&quot; and Hench related what had taken place in that very
- room on the previous night, so that the barrister was soon placed in
- possession of all facts connected with the accusation. Vane sat silent
- when his friend ended, digesting the uncomfortable knowledge.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Little beast!&quot; he said at length. &quot;I knew that he was
- after no good in going to Bethnal Green.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, that was mere chance, Jim. But his cleverness led him to suspect
- what Madame Alpenny knew, and he watched her day and night until he wormed
- her secret out of her. Well, you have heard; what is your advice?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I should give Spruce rope enough to hang himself,&quot; said Vane
- quickly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In what way?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;By promising him the money. If he accepts he will be condoning a
- felony and in that way will get himself into trouble.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I will get into trouble also.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm not so sure of that,&quot; said Vane, looking out of the window
- in a musing manner. &quot;Spruce says that you are guilty, to suit his own
- ends. But I should not be surprised if he knew the name of the true
- assassin.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Madame Alpenny?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think so. No one but you and that woman knew of the appointment at
- the Gipsy Stile. You are innocent, so she must be guilty. And we have
- agreed that she had a strong motive to place you in possession of the
- property straight away. Yes, I truly think that she struck the blow, thus
- giving you the money at once and getting you under her thumb. She killed
- two birds with one stone.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't be in such a hurry,&quot; said Owain dryly. &quot;The
- appointment was advertised in the newspaper shown to me by Madame Alpenny.
- Other people may have gone there on the chance of getting something.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Other people had nothing to gain by keeping the appointment, Owain,
- much less by murdering the old man. No. Some one who knew what his death
- meant to you is the assassin, and Madame Alpenny alone possessed that
- information.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;True enough. Well, and what do you propose?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Send that man you sent to me for Spruce, and ask him to come here at
- once.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;For what purpose?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;We can make a bargain with him. Instead of giving him the money to
- hold his tongue, offer it to him on condition that he reveals the truth.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He won't. He's a born liar.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh yes, he will. The chance of getting two thousand a year will
- unlock his tongue. He'd sell Madame Alpenny or a dozen like her to line
- his own nest.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's not a bad idea,&quot; said Owain, as he left the room to speak
- to Giles. While he was absent Vane began to think of Peter, the page, who
- was the brother of Simon, surnamed Bottles. It seemed to him that these
- two boys knew of something in connection with the matter, as they appeared
- to take a great interest in the doings of Hench. The barrister resolved to
- speak to Owain on his return, and did so immediately he came back with the
- information that Giles was now on his way to the Bull Inn. &quot;You say
- that Bottles was devoted to you, Owain,&quot; said Vane reflectively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I thought so, but since he has given me away to Madame Alpenny I
- have my doubts of his honesty.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hm! I don't know. A hero-worshipper doesn't throw off his allegiance
- so lightly. Bottles promised to hold his tongue?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! Really, though, Jim, there was nothing for him to tell.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Not when you left Bethnal Green, I admit. But there has been
- something to tell since, and he has told it, to wit your whereabouts,
- which you did not wish to be known to that old hag. Bottles must have some
- reason for acting as he has done. If I were you I would go up to town and
- see him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench nodded. &quot;I intend to, and to see Madame Alpenny at the same
- time. Our conversation ended rather abruptly in the churchyard, and I want
- to make it quite clear to her that I suspect her of being the guilty
- person.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Quite so. And if we succeed in frightening or bribing that little
- animal Spruce, you will have more grounds to present to her as to the
- truth of your accusation. We're travelling along a dark path, Owain, and
- the deuce knows what we will find at the end of it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A gaol for Madame Alpenny and a church for me and Gwen to be married
- in, Jim,&quot; said Hench promptly. &quot;But it is a dark path as you
- say, and I have got on to it in the most unexpected manner. I wish I had
- called to see you before coming down here on that night. Had you been with
- me all this trouble would have been avoided.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane quite agreed. &quot;In dealing with people like Madame Alpenny and
- Spruce it is always best to have a witness. That is why I think that the
- wisdom of seeing Spruce in company is apparent. Hullo! here he is. Doesn't
- he look like Solomon in all his glory, the slimy little reptile?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was indeed Spruce who had just clicked the gate and was sauntering up
- the short garden path. As the day was very warm, he was appropriately
- clothed in a suit of cream-coloured serge, with brown shoes and a straw
- hat. His whole appearance was spic and span, and he looked more like a
- cherub than ever with his pink and white face. No one would have thought
- that this innocent blue-eyed youth was such a despicable little scoundrel.
- His purple necktie, his purple scarf, his purple socks, and the purple
- band round his hat, were all in keeping with his quality of a Nut. He even
- wiped his heated face with a purple bordered pocket-handkerchief, and when
- he came into the room the same wafted a delicate perfume abroad which made
- Vane growl with disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What the dickens do you use scent for?&quot; he asked irritably.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Vane!&quot; said the Nut, not very well pleased to come across one
- who knew all about his card-table delinquencies. &quot;You here?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A pleasant surprise, isn't it, Spruce?&quot; sneered the barrister,
- who ardently desired to kick the creature into a dusty heap on the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I don't mind meeting old friends,&quot; said Spruce, recovering
- his impudence. &quot;I'm not your friend, neither is Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot;---Spruce shrugged his elegant shoulders, &quot;let us
- say old schoolfellows.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are a disgrace to Winchester!&quot; raged Vane, scowling. &quot;A
- cheat and a sneak, a liar and a thief. That's what you are.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Thanks. Any more names?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I may as well add blackmailer,&quot; observed Hench coldly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In that case I can call you a murderer, which is a worse name!&quot;
- snarled the Nut, looking very ugly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am not. You are lying as usual.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't insult me too much, Hench. You seem to forget that I am
- top-dog.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So far you certainly are. Top-puppy, I should say. Sit down and let
- us get to business.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce still stood by the door in what he considered was a haughty
- attitude, and frowned impressively. &quot;I don't see what Vane has to do
- with any business between you and myself,&quot; he said sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Vane is my friend, and I have asked him here to deal with the matter
- about which you spoke last night.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You seem ready to take the whole world into your confidence,&quot;
- said Spruce insolently, dusting a chair with his handkerchief before
- taking a seat. &quot;If you act in that way I can't protect you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Wait till you're asked,&quot; said Vane tartly. &quot;Good Lord, the
- idea of your protecting any one; unless,&quot; he added significantly,
- &quot;it is Madame Alpenny.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What do you mean by that?&quot; asked the Nut, visibly discomposed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I think you know quite well what I mean, Spruce. You accuse
- Hench here of murdering his uncle?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, I do. And I'll tell the police as much if he doesn't pay my
- price. The police would give a good deal to find the tramp who asked the
- way to the Gipsy Stile on the night of the first of July.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How can you prove that Hench is the tramp?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;By his own admission.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And if he does not make that admission in open court?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then I'll leave it to the barmaid at the Bull Inn. She cannot
- describe our friend's appearance very well, as she is stupid and the
- tap-room was badly lighted when she saw him. But she declares that she
- would know his voice. Mr. Owain Hench would then have to prove what he was
- doing on the night in question, and I don't think that would be easy.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It certainly would not be easy,&quot; said Hench coolly. &quot;I
- have admitted that you can make out a very good case for the prosecution.
- All the same you are perfectly aware that I am innocent.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What makes you say that?&quot; asked Spruce quickly and--as Vane
- thought--in a somewhat anxious manner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because I think you know who is the guilty person.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Do I? That remains to be seen.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Spruce,&quot; said Vane in a menacing manner, &quot;you are playing
- a very dangerous game, and let alone the fact that you are trying to
- blackmail Hench, you run the risk of condoning a felony.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah!&quot; said the Nut quickly. &quot;Then you suggest that our
- friend is guilty?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Nothing of the sort. I suggest that you pretend to believe him
- guilty to get this money. But you know perfectly well that he is not.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Do you mean to insinuate that I know who murdered the Squire?&quot;
- asked Spruce, with a fine show of indignation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Certainly I do,&quot; retorted Vane smartly. &quot;Don't put on
- frills. In my opinion Madame Alpenny, who knew all about the advertisement
- and the property, is the guilty person. But, as she isn't worth powder and
- shot, you are trying to fasten the crime on to Hench's shoulders.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And I can, Mr. James Vane, as you and he shall find.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh!&quot; said Hench cynically. &quot;And you really expect me to
- pay you two thousand a year to refrain from doing so? I won't.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You won't?&quot; Spruce was plainly taken aback.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. Rather than do so I shall go to the police and tell my story.
- Better be in the hands of the authorities than in yours.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You won't dare to do what you say.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh yes, I dare. My conscience is clear, so I am willing to stand the
- brunt.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce was plainly embarrassed by this defiance and did not very well know
- what to say or do. If Hench acted as he threatened to do, there would be
- no money for the Nut, and perhaps an action against him as a blackmailer.
- He was shrewd enough to see this, and therefore shuffled his cards so that
- he might not drive his proposed victim to extremities. &quot;What do you
- wish me to do, then?&quot; he asked sullenly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before Hench could reply Vane, who was looking out of the window, turned
- round sharply. &quot;There is Peter,&quot; he said, glancing at his
- friend. &quot;What the deuce is he hanging round your cottage for?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The answer came from an unexpected quarter. &quot;Peter is waiting to see
- me,&quot; said Spruce with dignity. &quot;He was at the Bull Inn when your
- messenger came and I told him to wait until I returned. I expect he has
- followed me here and expects me to come out soon.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What are you seeing Peter about?&quot; questioned Hench sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is my business,&quot; snapped the Nut sulkily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mine also. Peter is the brother of Bottles, who is employed by Mrs.
- Tesk, and both the boys are meddling in matters which do not concern them.
- What does it all mean?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You had better ask the boy in and question him,&quot; sneered Spruce
- coolly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I shall do so after we have dispatched this affair,&quot; said Hench
- sharply. &quot;You ask me what I wish you to do. I reply, clear my
- character.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How can I do that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In a way best known to yourself. But you are well aware that Madame
- Alpenny is the guilty person.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am not.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't tell lies. It is better worth my while to pay you two thousand
- a year to prove her guilty and me innocent, than for me to give the income
- to you merely for the sake of your holding your tongue. That's a thing you
- never did and never will do.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce considered. &quot;If I prove Madame Alpenny to be guilty,&quot; he
- said, with a greedy gleam in his eyes, &quot;will you pay me the two
- thousand a year?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'll think about it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then I do nothing. To be quite plain, I <i>can</i> clear your
- character in the way you say----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, I knew you were lying.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;----But I shan't do so unless you agree, in the presence of Vane, to
- give me my price.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It is too large a price,&quot; grumbled the barrister. &quot;Large
- or small, it is what I want.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'll give you one thousand a year if you----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Two thousand.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench looked at Vane and Vane at Hench, as both were uncertain how to act.
- A very difficult question had to be threshed out. Owain was unwilling to
- pay blackmail, yet if he did not there was bound to be trouble. If he did
- he was quite certain that Spruce could clear his character. For an
- honourable man the position was very trying, but there seemed to be only
- one way out of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very good,&quot; said Hench with an effort. &quot;You must have your
- price, Shylock, as my life and liberty are more to me than money, and
- there is no denying but what you have me in a cleft stick. I promise to
- give you two thousand a year if you remove all danger from me of being
- accused.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I can do that.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then you know who murdered my uncle?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I do. Madame Alpenny is guilty, as you thought. But I alone can
- prove her guilt. I have your promise in Vane's presence to give me the
- income?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes,&quot; said Hench with another effort, for he hated giving way
- thus ignobly to this scoundrel. &quot;You have my promise.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You hear, Vane? I shall call you as a witness in case of
- non-payment.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I hear,&quot; said the barrister, smoking phlegmatically. &quot;I am
- surety for Hench's good faith. You shall be paid, you rat. Now prove to us
- that you can have the woman arrested.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce drew a long breath of relief, as things were now going exactly as
- he wished. Like the traitor he was, he gaily went to work and sold Madame
- Alpenny's secret to gain the money. &quot;She came down to see Evans after
- she knew that Hench was his nephew.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I know that,&quot; said Owain quickly. &quot;Tell us something new.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;All in good time,&quot; said Spruce smoothly. &quot;I made her
- confess how she arranged with Evans about the advertisement and how to
- draw your attention to it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why was the appointment made in Parley Wood instead of in the house?&quot;
- asked Vane, whom the problem had frequently perplexed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I can't tell you. Madame Alpenny never explained that to me. All I
- know is that she laid the trap for Hench to fall into, and he did.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Only to find that my uncle was dead.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course,&quot; said Spruce, turning towards Hench with raised
- eyebrows; &quot;that was the trap. She intended to accuse you, and thus
- force you to marry Zara so that she could handle the money.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That I also know, and she did accuse me. Well?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, she came down here by the same train as you did, and while you
- were at the Bull Inn she went on to Parley Wood and murdered the Squire.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How can you prove that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very easily.&quot; Spruce rose from his chair, and going to the
- window beckoned in the page. &quot;Come here, I want you!&quot; he cried.
- </p>
- <p>
- Peter started and seemed very much inclined to run away. But after a pause
- he braced up his courage and entered the house. Shortly he was standing
- before the three men, twisting his cap and looking very nervous. His
- likeness to his town brother was more apparent than ever, and Hench winced
- to think how Bottles had betrayed him. He had always believed that he
- could trust the boy to the uttermost.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Peter,&quot; said Spruce, sitting down again and enjoying his
- position of dictator, &quot;you must tell this gentleman what you told me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;If Simon wishes me to,&quot; blurted out Peter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He does wish you. I brought you that letter from Simon telling you
- to do whatever I asked you. Isn't that so?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, sir.&quot; Peter flushed and quivered, and wriggled in a most
- uneasy way. &quot;Well, then, tell them what you told me about Madame
- Alpenny coming to Cookley on the night when Squire Evans was murdered.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Simon sent me a telegram telling me to watch for her,&quot; said
- Peter, speaking to the three generally. &quot;And as I knew how she was
- dressed I easily did so, even though she wore a veil.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How did you know her dress?&quot; asked Hench sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, sir, when Simon came down here for his holiday he told me as
- he'd follered Madame Alpenny, who was up to some game. I met him then at
- the station, when he told me, and he follered her to the Grange. I
- follered him and hid in Parley Wood outside because Simon told me to. He
- watched at the gate. She saw the Squire and then came out, and after
- passing Simon she went into the wood follering the path to the Gipsy
- Stile.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What did she go there for?&quot; questioned Vane.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;To see the Squire.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But she had seen him in the house.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So she had, but he came to her at the Gipsy Stile afterwards. Both
- Simon and I follered and hid to listen. The Squire said as he would put in
- an advertisement asking 'Rhaiadr' to meet him at the Gipsy Stile, and said
- as he brought her there to see the meeting-place. When Madame Alpenny
- examined it and the Squire showed her how to get to it from the church she
- went away, and the Squire he returned to his house. Simon and me saw
- Madame Alpenny go to the station and catch the train to town. That was all
- that happened at that time. So you see, sir, how I knew how she was
- dressed.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I understand, though it is difficult to know why your brother
- suspected her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, Simon is sharp, sir, and he saw she was up to some games. He'll
- tell you all about it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'll see to that,&quot; said Hench grimly. &quot;I'll have no more
- of this underhanded work. Well, go on. What about the second occasion when
- you saw her?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Simon sent me a telegram saying as she was coming by a perticler
- train and to watch her at the station. I went there and saw her in the
- same dress, so I knew her in spite of the veil. Simon was there too, but
- he couldn't wait to speak to me, but just follered her, waving me back. I
- follered them as far as the church and waited there. Madame Alpenny, with
- Simon after her, went into the wood, and after staying there for a long
- time she came out and ran for the station.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Was Simon following her then?&quot; asked Vane, alertly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, sir. He was still hiding in the wood, I think. I hid in the
- churchyard behind a tomb, and Madame she ran past me. I waited in the
- churchyard for Simon, and later I saw you, sir.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Me!&quot; said Hench, starting up. &quot;Yes, sir. You went through
- the churchyard and along the path. When you got into the wood Simon came
- running out as white as death, and told me as Madame Alpenny had murdered
- the Squire. He made me swear to hold my tongue, lest I and him should get
- into trouble. Then he went off to catch the train to London and I went
- home.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why didn't you tell the police all this?&quot; asked Hench,
- frowning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I couldn't, sir,&quot; replied Peter in a most ingenuous way.
- &quot;Simon made me promise not to in case we'd both get into trouble. But
- as he wrote saying I could tell Mr. Spruce I have done so, and as Mr.
- Spruce says I can tell you I have----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There! There!&quot; Spruce waved the boy into silence. &quot;That is
- enough. You can go, and hold your tongue. Simon's orders, remember. Well,&quot;--he
- turned to the two men,--&quot;do you see how I can prove your innocence
- and Madame Alpenny's guilt?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes,&quot; said Hench thoughtfully. &quot;As Peter here saw me when
- I entered the wood, and Simon told him that the Squire was already dead, I
- see how my character can be cleared. Well, Spruce, I shall go to town and
- see the woman and the boy. When I settle with them I shall see you about
- your reward.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't you try and sell me,&quot; threatened Spruce, putting on his
- hat. &quot;If you do it will be the worse for you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pah! Get out, you little swine,&quot; said Vane contemptuously, and
- the Nut departed considerably pleased with himself in spite of the
- scornful epithet.
- </p>
- <p>
- Peter lingered behind. &quot;See Simon, sir. He'll explain,&quot; he said
- in a whisper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I'll see him. But he's a little Judas,&quot; said Hench angrily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, sir. He ain't a Judas,&quot; said Peter, speaking
- grandiloquently. &quot;Simon's as true to you as a needle is to the North
- Pole.&quot; And then he ran away hastily, evidently afraid of being
- questioned further. Hench let him go.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_19" href="#div1Ref_19" id="div1_19">CHAPTER XIX</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- A DENIAL
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- On the day after the interview with Spruce it was necessary for Owain to
- travel to London for the purpose of having an interview with Madame
- Alpenny. Vane at first wished to go with him, but on second thoughts
- decided that it would be best for him to remain in Cookley and keep a
- close watch on the Nut. That traitor, having behaved treacherously, was as
- pleased with himself as if he had acted in a most honourable manner. He
- was now certain of an excellent income, and determined to go abroad for a
- year or so to enjoy himself until such time as his West End friends forgot
- his little mistake at cards. Meanwhile he remained at the Bull Inn waiting
- for the arrest of the Hungarian lady, when everything would be put
- ship-shape. Spruce was very pleased with every one and everything since
- matters had turned out so well. That they had turned out badly for Madame
- Alpenny did not worry him in the least. He was much too busy building
- castles in the air to trouble about her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain had given Mrs. Perage and Gwen a full account of the discovery of
- the old woman's guilt. They were naturally shocked, but scarcely
- surprised, as for a long time circumstances had tended to make them think
- that Madame Alpenny had murdered the Squire. At the same time Gwen pleaded
- with her lover to deal gently with the wretched creature as she was Zara's
- mother, and they both owed a great deal to Zara. Hench admitted as much
- and promised to be as lenient as he could. Nevertheless, he pointed out
- that to save himself he would have to inform the police about the woman's
- guilt. Unwilling as he was to act so drastically, there was no other
- course to be taken. All the way to London the young man argued out the
- matter in his own vexed mind, but was unable to see how he could shield
- Madame Alpenny. It was a pity that Zara, who was innocent, should suffer
- for the wickedness of her mother. All the same, it was impossible to spare
- her the shock. Owain hated the idea of saving himself at the expense of a
- woman, but in strict justice to himself, and considering that his liberty
- and life were at stake, he could not see what else he could do. When he
- was on his way to Bethnal Green he fully made up his mind to act as
- justice dictated.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Home of the Muses was much in the same state as Hench had left it,
- although there were several new boarders. Mrs. Tesk received him joyfully,
- and conducted him to her sanctum saying that she wished for a private
- conversation with him. Madame Alpenny, it appeared, was in the
- drawing-room along with Bracken and Zara.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;For a surprising thing has occurred,&quot; said Mrs. Tesk, who
- looked more like a retired school-mistress than ever. &quot;They are now
- man and wife.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh!&quot; Hench expected something of this sort, but was astonished
- to learn that the young couple had got married so promptly. &quot;Man and
- wife, are they?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! They have entered into the bonds of matrimony, and are now
- breaking the news to Madame Alpenny.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She won't be pleased,&quot; observed Hench, with a shrug. &quot;Oh,
- I am sure she will be very annoyed indeed!&quot; cried Mrs. Tesk, clasping
- her hands with a look of distress. &quot;She intended you to be her
- son-in-law. She told me so several times.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah! There is such a thing as counting your chickens before they are
- hatched, Mrs. Tesk,&quot; was the young man's dry reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But you loved Mademoiselle Zara--or rather I should now say Mrs.
- Bracken.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I admired her,&quot; corrected Owain. &quot;I never loved her. She
- quite understood my feeling. I wish her and Bracken all manner of luck.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So do I, Mr. Hench. After all, if two people are tenderly attached,
- why should they not wed?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why, indeed? When were they married?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yesterday, at a Registrar's office. I scarcely look upon such a
- civil contract as a marriage myself, Mr. Hench, as such a ceremony should
- surely be sanctified by the blessing of the Church. But married they are
- according to the law of the land, and I expect they will leave me now.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why should they?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because Madame Alpenny will never allow them to live under the same
- roof as herself. She is a very determined woman, Mr. Hench. I shall be
- sorry to lose the company of the bridal pair,&quot; said poor Mrs. Tesk,
- wiping away a tear, &quot;as I highly approve of their young affection.
- It's so romantic. Ah!&quot; she rose suddenly and opened the door. &quot;They
- have broken the news. Hark!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny certainly was not pleased. She stood at the head of the
- stairs anathematizing the bridal pair as they descended arm in arm. Zara
- was weeping and Bracken's stolid face wore an angry expression. Moved to
- the depths of her being, Mrs. Tesk was about to rush out and console them
- when her skirts were plucked by Hench.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't say that I am here,&quot; he whispered, and the landlady
- nodded comprehendingly as she disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- While Mrs. Tesk was accompanying Bracken and his wife to the door Madame
- Alpenny still stood at the top of the stairs raging wildly. She was fat
- and homely in her appearance, and still wore her eternal orange-spotted
- dress, bead mantle and picture hat. But furious anger made her look quite
- picturesque as she poured out a torrent of words, shaking her fists and
- with flashing eyes. &quot;Never come near me again, you miserable girl!&quot;
- she shouted after her daughter. &quot;Ah, but what a wicked child you are
- to throw yourself away on a fool. As to that man Hench, who has bribed you
- into deceiving me, he shall suffer for his evil doings. Take my curse with
- you, Zara, and may you-----&quot; Sheer wrath choked her further
- utterance, and perhaps the fact that the happy pair had stepped out of the
- front door. Even Atê cannot waste her fury on nothing, and Madame Alpenny
- looked very like Atê indeed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Luckily the boarders were all away and the servants were downstairs, so
- there were no spectators of the scene but Hench and Mrs. Tesk. The
- landlady parted with Zara and Bracken quite tenderly, for their romance
- appealed to her ever-young heart. While she was dismissing them on the
- doorstep, with a blessing which she hoped would neutralize the maternal
- curse, Hench ran up the stairs and into the drawing-room as quickly as he
- could. Madame Alpenny had staggered into the same a few moments earlier,
- and was sobbing violently on the sofa when Owain entered and closed the
- door. At the sound of the closing she looked up, and her face became
- purple with rage when she saw who had disturbed her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You dare to come here, you--you--you?&quot; she stormed, rising
- promptly and shaking her fist. &quot;You who have ruined my hopes for
- Zara.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;As those hopes were connected with a possible marriage between
- myself and your daughter,&quot; said Owain suavely, &quot;I told you long
- ago that they could never be realized.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You told me. What do I care what you told me?&quot; Madame Alpenny
- was in such a rage that she could scarcely get the words out. &quot;And
- you smile, do you? Ah, yes, you can smile at my shame.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't be a fool,&quot; said Hench brusquely. &quot;Your daughter has
- married an honourable man, whom you ought to be proud of as your
- son-in-law.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But I wanted you,&quot; sobbed Madame piteously, and suddenly
- passing from anger to pleading sorrow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I know, and I pointed out to you that the thing was not possible.
- Zara loves Bracken, and I have arranged for money to be given to them so
- that they can make a fresh start in life.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Money; my money,&quot; moaned the old woman. &quot;Your money! What
- do you mean by saying that?&quot; Madame Alpenny dropped her handkerchief
- from her eyes and stood up with as great a dignity as her stout ungainly
- figure permitted. &quot;Your money is mine, Monsieur. You owe it to me
- that you inherited the money.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Indeed!&quot; Hench trapped her at once. &quot;So you admit your
- guilt.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My guilt?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes. It was you who murdered my uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I?&quot; Madame Alpenny stood stock still and stared hard. &quot;It
- is a lie.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It is the truth. You learned from my father how matters stood twenty
- years ago, and our conversation in this very room revived your memory when
- I mentioned the place where my father had passed his youth. You went down
- to see my Uncle Madoc and arranged with him that I should be brought to
- meet him in Parley Wood by means of that advertisement which you showed
- me. And----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny interrupted his flow of words by waving her fat hand for
- silence. &quot;I admit all this, although I don't know how you found it
- out.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Never mind how I found it out. You are guilty.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What? You tell me a long story of what I have done and which I admit
- to be true. But you have said nothing which can prove that I murdered the
- man.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I was coming to that when you interrupted me,&quot; said Hench
- calmly. &quot;You knew that I would go to the meeting, although I was then
- ignorant of my relationship to Squire Evans. Therefore you travelled down
- to Cookley on the first of July and----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I never did; I never did,&quot; interrupted Madame Alpenny
- violently, but looking very anxious in spite of her denial.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You did, and when you arrived at Cookley you went to the Gipsy Stile
- before I did to stab my uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh!&quot; Madame Alpenny waved her arms grotesquely. &quot;La! la!
- la! la! I murdered him, did I? And why should I murder him?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So as to place me in possession of the money,&quot; said Hench
- solemnly. &quot;So as to implicate me in the death, as you knew that I
- would arrive to find the dead body of the man you had killed. In this way
- you hoped to force me to marry your daughter and handle my fortune.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny sat down with a cool ironical air. &quot;A very clever tale
- indeed, Monsieur. And who can prove its truth?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Two people at least. You were followed when you first went to
- Cookley to join my uncle in laying the trap by means of the advertisement;
- you were followed on the occasion of your second visit, when you killed
- him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Who followed me? Who saw me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Simon Jedd, who is a page here, and his brother Peter, who is in the
- service of Mrs. Perage at Cookley.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And how much have you paid them to tell this lie?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have paid them nothing. They are voluntary witnesses. Come,
- Madame, it is useless for you to deny the truth.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But I do deny it, see you!&quot; she cried excitedly. &quot;I deny
- it wholly and altogether. My first visit---ah, yes, I say that I did call
- on your uncle, and he did tell me about the advertisement, but----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why did he put in that advertisement?&quot; interrupted Owain
- sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He wished to see you before revealing himself as your uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He could have appointed the meeting to take place in his house. Why
- was it arranged to come off in Parley Wood?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There,&quot; said Madame Alpenny with candour, &quot;I cannot help
- you. But that Monsieur Evans was strange--ah yes, he was dangerous. He
- told me that he would meet you at the Gipsy Stile, and took me there to
- show me the place. I went into the wood after I had left the big house.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am aware of that,&quot; said Hench, remembering what Peter had
- said. &quot;Go on.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You seem to know much,&quot; she sneered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Enough to get you arrested and tried, condemned and hanged,&quot;
- said Hench in a significant tone. &quot;Go on, I tell you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny snarled, and her eyes glittered viciously. &quot;Don't try
- to ride the tall horse over me, beast that you are. I am not afraid; no, I
- am not at all afraid. I do not know why your uncle arranged the meeting
- for the wood. All I had to do was to draw your attention to the
- advertisement, which I did. He wrote it out and put it in the journal. For
- all I know,&quot; went on the woman, more or less to herself, &quot;this
- man wished to kill you, and chose a lonely place to do so.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why should he wish to kill me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because he hated your father and he hated you, Monsieur. He did not
- wish you to get the money. I did, because then you could marry Zara and I
- would be rich for the rest of my life.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That means I would have been under your thumb.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, but no. Why should you be under my thumb? It was gratitude I
- looked for because I knew what would give you a large fortune. Your uncle
- would have given you enough to live on--perhaps two thousand a year.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why so, when he hated me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because I would have persuaded him. I told him about my daughter and
- how you loved her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I did not,&quot; said Hench quickly and with a frown. &quot;You did;
- you did. And Monsieur Evans, he said that if he found you a good young man
- and better than your wicked father, whom your uncle hated, that he would
- allow you a good income as his heir. For that reason did I agree to him
- putting in the advertisement and bringing you to meet him in that solitary
- spot. But it was in my mind to tell you all when I came back.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why didn't you? It would have saved much trouble.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because if I had not consented your uncle would never have
- acknowledged you as his heir or allowed you anything. Then you could not
- have married Zara and have given me money as I desired. Monsieur Evans was
- a healthy man, and I saw he would live for many years.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Therefore to get the money into your clutches at once you killed
- him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I did not. Who dares to say that I did?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Simon Jedd will dare for one, when I examine him, and Mr. Spruce has
- already accused you, for another.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny jumped up in a fury. &quot;Mistare Spruce!&quot; she
- shouted, with a violent gesture. &quot;That wicked beast! That evil one!
- He accuse me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of murdering my uncle? Yes. It is due to his information that I am
- here, as he can help me to prove your guilt.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My guilt!&quot; Madame Alpenny snapped her fingers, with a crimson
- face. &quot;Oh, that for my guilt! I am innocent.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Naturally you say so. But can you prove your innocence?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I can.&quot; She said this with so much assurance that Hench was
- staggered, and began to wonder if he had made a mistake. &quot;See you,
- that Mistare Spruce make me confess to him and then betrays me to you.
- Beast!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You should not have trusted him,&quot; said Owain coldly. &quot;Any
- one can see that he is a bad lot. I wonder that a woman of your
- penetration, Madame, behaved in so rash a manner.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Rash! Ah, but I did not behave rash. He forced me to speak. He knew
- so much that I had to tell him all.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;About the murder?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am innocent of the murder,&quot; cried the woman, throwing back
- her head in a fierce way. &quot;Hear what I speak, and then you shall see.
- Mistare Spruce was in this room when I told how I met your father. Is it
- not so?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes,&quot; agreed Hench. &quot;He heard the whole conversation.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I said,&quot; went on Madame Alpenny, &quot;that there was a mystery
- about you, and now you know what the mystery was. Mistare Spruce, wanting
- to make money out of you and thinking that I knew something--which I
- did--watched me as a cat a mouse. I went to Cookley saying that I had to
- go away to find an engagement for my daughter. Is it not so?&quot; she
- asked again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes. You were away for a few days and so was Spruce.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He followed me down to Cookley.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Are you sure?&quot; asked Hench, wondering why the two sharp Jedd
- boys had not also seen the Nut.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He confessed to me. He saw me enter the Grange; he saw me come out
- and go into the wood to meet Monsieur Evans at the Gipsy Stile. He stole
- after me and listened. You understand? He listened and learned about the
- property coming to you; about the advertisement; about my desire that you
- should marry my daughter Zara."
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well?&quot; asked Owain, when she stopped for want of breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot;--she made a dramatic gesture,--&quot;and what follows.
- He said nothing, but he knew the paper in which the advertisement
- appeared--Monsieur Evans mentioned it at the stile--and learned about the
- meeting. He still said nothing, but after the tale of the murder appears
- in the paper he comes to me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes? To accuse you; to blackmail you?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, but no. He said nothing of me being guilty. He declared that you
- went down to Cookley to meet your uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How did he know?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I cannot say. It was, perhaps, what you call a pot-shot. But he says
- you are the guilty person and that he will denounce you unless I confess
- all. I tell him all, as I did not wish you to be arrested, and Mistare
- Spruce said that he would wait until you married Zara before speaking.
- Then he expected me to get you to give him two thousand a year for ever.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench nodded. &quot;Quite so. That is the price he asked for betraying
- you. And why did he alter his arrangements?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He grew weary, and then that Bracken--the pig who stole my
- daughter--told him that he loved Zara and would marry her, as she loved
- him. And, mark you, Mistare Spruce still says nothing to me. Oh, no. He
- goes down to you and declares that I am guilty, as only in that way could
- he get the money. Do you think, Monsieur, that I am blind? Ah, but no. I
- see it all. You wish your name to be cleared, and you are helped by
- Mistare Spruce to accuse me. But it is a lie--a lie--a lie!&quot; She rose
- to stamp furiously. &quot;I am as innocent as you are guilty. You murdered
- Monsieur Evans to get the money.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well,&quot; said Hench, with a shrug, &quot;it's not much use my
- denying that I did, as you can only save yourself by believing that I
- struck the blow. You <i>had</i> a strong case against me,&quot; ended
- Hench, with emphasis. &quot;But now that Spruce has told his story, these
- Jedd boys who watched you on the night of the murder can prove you to be
- the assassin.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah,&quot; sneered Madame Alpenny contemptuously, &quot;it is that
- silly, insolent, ugly page who accuses me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He has not done so yet, but he will when I see him, if what Spruce
- says is true; and true, Madame, I believe it to be.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Pfui!&quot; She snapped her fingers again. &quot;I did not go to
- Cookley on that night.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Can you prove that?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny looked somewhat disconcerted; then a thought seemed to
- strike her and she burst into a violent rage. &quot;Ah, but you dare to
- ask me that when you arranged, to save yourself, that I should go to
- Hampstead on the night.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Go to Hampstead? What are you talking about?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Your wickedness!&quot; vociferated the woman, beside herself with
- fury. &quot;I received a letter on the morning of the first of July,
- asking me to meet the writer at the Ponds in Hampstead, as I would then be
- told how to get the money of your uncle at once. It was six o'clock I was
- to meet this person, and----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Who was the person?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There was no name signed to the letter, as you well know who wrote
- it,&quot; cried Madame Alpenny indignantly. &quot;And it said also that if
- the person who wrote was not there I was to wait if it was two or three
- hours. I go&quot;--she spoke dramatically, in the present tense--&quot;I
- find no one. I wait and wait and wait; hour and hour and hour I wait.
- After ten o'clock--yes, and nearer eleven, if I remember--I come back
- disappointed to this place. I hear no more of the letter or of the person.
- But you see that I am innocent. Could I be in two places at once, I ask
- you, Monsieur?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. But have you any witness to prove that you were at Hampstead?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No,&quot; said Madame Alpenny, in her turn, and disconcerted again
- as she was quite sharp enough to see the flaw in her story. &quot;I cannot
- bring any one to prove I was at Hampstead. But I was----I was----I was.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Show me the letter.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I have not got it. I tore it up and so made a mistake.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You did,&quot; said Hench coolly, and not believing a word of her
- tale. &quot;All the worse for you, Madame. Well&quot;--he rose and took up
- his hat--&quot;it only remains for me to go to the police and tell them
- everything.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- If Hench thought that this statement would frighten the woman, he was
- never more mistaken in his life. She snapped her fingers right under his
- nose. &quot;Go! Go! Go!&quot; she cried. &quot;You have robbed me of my
- daughter by giving money to that fool to marry her; now you would rob me
- of my liberty. I defy you. I care not for the police, nor for you, nor for
- anything.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very good.&quot; Hench walked towards the door. &quot;If you had
- behaved in a different spirit I would have tried to arrange matters
- differently for your daughter's sake. As it is you must take the
- consequence. To clear my own character, you can understand----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, yes, I well understand, Monsieur. You murdered your uncle; you
- wrote that letter asking me to leave this house, so that I could be unable
- to explain where I was, and now you accuse me at the bidding of Mistare
- Spruce. I see it all, and I defy you; I spit upon you; I----&quot; Here
- Hench, unable to stand any more of her savage anger, left the room, while
- she still raged.
- </p>
- <p>
- The young man descended the stairs with the determination to go as soon as
- possible to the police-office and tell his tale. If he did not, the
- chances were that Madame Alpenny would run away, although he admitted to
- himself that her speech was not that of a frightened person. But when he
- reached the bottom of the stairs and saw Mrs. Tesk at the door of her
- sanctum, he remembered that Simon Jedd had still to be examined, and
- walked up to the landlady.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Where is Bottles?&quot; he asked abruptly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Dismissed from my employment!&quot; was the unexpected reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Dismissed! His brother, who is a page at Mrs. Perage's, did not tell
- me so.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Simon did not wish his brother to know,&quot; said Mrs. Tesk
- quietly, &quot;as he was ashamed, very naturally.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ashamed of what?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of being dismissed for theft.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Come, come, Mrs. Tesk, I can't believe that Bottles is a thief.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He is!&quot; insisted the ex-school-mistress, colouring. &quot;Sorry
- as I am to say so, Mr. Hench. Several small articles have been missing
- lately, and amongst them a valuable carving-knife with a horn handle,
- which I inherited from my grandmother. So you see----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A horn-handled carving-knife!&quot; echoed Hench with a start, and
- remembered clearly that such a weapon had been used to stab Madoc Evans.
- &quot;Can you swear that the boy took it?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I accused him of stealing the knife and several other small
- articles. He turned red, but he did not deny his guilt. Out of
- consideration for his hard-working mother, I did not prosecute him, but
- sent him away, lest he should contaminate Amelia and the other servants.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Where is he now?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Staying with Mrs. Jedd, his mother. As you know, she is the wardrobe
- mistress at the Bijou Music-hall.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Thank you. I'll go and see Bottles. I can't believe that such an
- honest lad is guilty.&quot; And Hench turned on his heel.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Wait, sir. You do not blame me?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, no. If he did not deny your accusation, you acted rightly. But
- there must be some explanation of this. What it is I go to find out.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Tesk would have detained him to ask questions concerning Madame
- Alpenny's frame of mind, but Hench refused to stay. He was now beginning
- to wonder if the Hungarian lady really was guilty. It seemed as if Bottles
- was the culprit, that is if he had really stolen the carving-knife. With
- such a weapon the crime had certainly been committed.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_20" href="#div1Ref_20" id="div1_20">CHAPTER XX</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- REAPING THE WHIRLWIND
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- The weather was uncommonly hot. For weeks the sun had been blazing in a
- cloudless sky, as it did in the tropics, and the earth was parched for
- want of rain. Everywhere it was seamed and cracked; everywhere the grass
- was brown and the trees were wilted, while the air was like the
- thrice-heated breath of a furnace. Animals and human beings went languidly
- about their business and longed all day for the cool night hours. Not that
- it was particularly cool even when the twilight came, but it was something
- to escape the pitiless blue sky and the burning sun. And on this
- particular evening a hot wind rose with unexpected suddenness to make
- matters worse. It raised clouds of dust, it rattled the dry foliage in
- Parley Wood, and brought no sense of relief to the worn and weary. As
- people are never really prepared for an unusually hot season in England,
- the Cookley villagers found this equatorial summer excessively trying and
- disagreeable.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce enjoyed the sultry weather personally, as he loved warmth with all
- the affection of a cat, and the worst heat never caused him any
- discomfort. After dining excellently at seven o'clock, he now sat by the
- open window of his sitting-room at the Bull Inn, enjoying a cup of
- fragrant coffee and as many cigarettes as he could get through. Of course,
- he was in accurate evening dress, as he always loved to be clothed
- appropriately according to the hour of the day. No one was more of a slave
- to social observances than the Nut, for he had the petty soul of a Beau
- Brummel. A small table stood before him, and he passed the time in trying
- new card-tricks, which might be useful some day, should he again become
- hard up. Not that Spruce always played false to make money, since he was a
- cheat by instinct. To get the better of any one by trickery was pleasant,
- as it involved danger, which was exciting, and gave him an agreeable
- feeling of superiority because of his wonderful dexterity. So he shuffled
- and cut and dealt; slipped cards up his sleeve and out again; diddled an
- imaginary opponent by sleight of hand, and in every way trained himself to
- cheating as though it were a fine art. Most card-lovers when alone play
- Patience. Spruce preferred to prepare himself for future campaigns.
- </p>
- <p>
- Every now and then he cast a disdainful look round the shabby old room,
- which was by no means to his taste. Undoubtedly the apartment was ancient
- and time-worn, containing too much furniture, and giving little
- gratification to the eye. But Time had mellowed the whole into pleasing,
- sober colours, and less fastidious people would have been delighted with
- the reposeful look of things. The atmosphere was quite monastic. But
- Spruce admired spacious chambers filled with gilded furniture and blazing
- with lights. He had the tastes of Louis XIV., and Versailles was his idea
- of a dwelling house. When he was in possession of the two thousand a year,
- he intended to live in great luxury, but meanwhile contented himself with
- this dingy habitation. The window at which he was seated looked out on to
- a small garden surrounded by a low wall beyond which stretched fields
- right up to the grey churchyard. The sill of the window was so low that
- the Nut could easily have vaulted over it into the pleasant garden. But
- not having any love for Nature, he preferred to stay where he was playing
- cards, and dreaming of luxurious years, which were as he thought--truly
- coming to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- While Spruce was thus occupied, the landlady of the inn knocked at the
- door to announce that Mr. Hench and Mr. Vane wished to see him. The Nut at
- once ordered them to be admitted, never doubting but what they were coming
- to conclude the matter of his blackmail. He rose to greet them pleasantly,
- as if he was the most honest person in the world, and when the door was
- closed signed that they should be seated. He resumed his post near the
- window, and in that way obtained a good view of their faces, while his own
- was in the shadow. As it was only half-past eight o'clock, the twilight
- was yet luminous enough to see very plainly, and although Spruce offered
- to ring for lights, Hench signified that it was not necessary. Then the
- host offered cigarettes and drinks, both of which were curtly refused.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are uncommonly rude,&quot; said the Nut, much nettled. &quot;When
- you look up a man you might be civil.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That depends very much on the man,&quot; said Vane coolly. &quot;Neither
- Hench nor myself were ever friends of yours, Spruce.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I don't want your friendship. After all, you are a dull couple.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But honest,&quot; said Hench with emphasis.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Honesty implies dullness. It takes a clever man to sin.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What a brilliant person you must be, then.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That's sarcastic, I suppose.&quot; Spruce was not at all offended,
- but accepted the observation as a tribute to his powers. &quot;But I don't
- mind. On the whole, I am clever enough to get two thousand a year.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You haven't earned it yet,&quot; snapped Vane with a look of
- dislike.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce started. &quot;Ah, play fair, whatever you do,&quot; he protested.
- &quot;Hench promised me two thousand a year if I told him about that old
- woman. You heard him, Vane.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I heard Hench promise to give you that income if the crime was
- brought home to Madame Alpenny, and his character cleared,&quot; said Vane
- dryly. &quot;There is a difference between telling a thing and proving a
- thing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I suppose that means Madame Alpenny denies her guilt?&quot; said the
- Nut, turning to the other man. &quot;It is useless for her to do so, as
- Simon can prove it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I have seen Simon and have brought him down with me,&quot; said
- Hench quietly. &quot;In fact, he is waiting outside to come in when
- called.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Then call him at once,&quot; said Spruce briskly. &quot;I want to
- get this business completed and see the last of you. I hate bores.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, you'll see the last of us sooner than you expect,&quot; said
- Vane grimly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Good! You will confer a favour on me when you do cut.&quot; Spruce
- looked round again at Owain. &quot;So you saw Madame Alpenny?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yesterday, at The Home of the Muses. I went up to town especially to
- see her, as you know.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And she----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She denies that she was in Cookley on the night when my uncle was
- killed. I was given to understand by her that an anonymous letter summoned
- her to the Hampstead Ponds to meet some one.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;For what purpose?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The letter said that the person who wrote it--there was no name,
- remember--declared that information would be given to enable her to get
- the money at once from my uncle.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What money?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My property, I presume, for which she was scheming.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, and did Madame Alpenny see this person?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. She went to Hampstead about six and returned home after ten.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Quite time enough for her to travel to Cookley and back in order to
- commit the murder,&quot; said Spruce coolly. &quot;Did you see the letter?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. She had torn it up.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Fudge!&quot; cried the Nut inelegantly. &quot;There never was such a
- letter. She invented that yarn so as to account for her presence elsewhere
- on the night of the crime. She did murder Squire Evans. You heard what
- Peter said?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, yes. And I have heard what Simon said. I am bound to say,&quot;
- said Hench with emphasis, &quot;that his story is much the same.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well then, with two witnesses, what more proof do you want of the
- woman's guilt?&quot; demanded Spruce indignantly. &quot;I fancy I have
- earned my money. What do you say, Vane?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I say we had better have Simon in and hear his story,&quot; retorted
- the barrister dryly. &quot;It is just as well to get everything made quite
- plain.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So I think,&quot; declared the Nut briskly. &quot;Call him in,
- Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- With great calmness the young man did so, not at all disturbed by the
- imperious tone in which the order was given. This was Spruce's little hour
- of triumph, so both the visitors allowed him to control the situation
- while he was able. Bottles made his appearance quickly, and cap in hand
- stood before the closed door, waiting to be interrogated. With his
- freckled face and red hair he looked anything but prepossessing. At least
- he did not in the Nut's eyes, who failed to observe the good-humoured
- expression and intelligent gaze of the lad, which were worth much more
- than mere animal comeliness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce, in the attitude of an examining judge, surveyed the boy
- superciliously and immediately began to question him. &quot;You are to
- tell these gentlemen what you told me,&quot; he commanded. &quot;Now, on
- the first of July you followed Madame Alpenny to the Liverpool Street
- Station?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, sir. She caught the five o'clock train to this place.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And you followed?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I did, sir. I wished to see what her game was.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;One moment,&quot; interpolated Hench at this remark. &quot;I may
- mention that I also came to Cookley on that night by that train. I had an
- idea that Madame Alpenny was at my elbow. In fact, I fancied that I caught
- a glimpse of her in the crowd at Liverpool Street Station. But I thought
- that I was mistaken.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You wasn't mistaken, sir,&quot; said Bottles calmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She was in the crowd, sure enough, and went down by that train. So
- did you, sir, for I saw you, and dodged.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Good!&quot; said Spruce, rubbing his hands. &quot;This unsolicited
- testimony of yours, Hench, emphasizes the fact of the woman's guilt. Go
- on, Simon.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The train got here at half-past six. I had already sent a telegram
- to my brother saying that Madame was coming, and telling him to meet the
- train and watch. He was on the Cookley platform, sure enough, but I hadn't
- any time to speak to him, having to keep my eye on Madame Alpenny. She
- didn't go through the village street, but across the fields to the
- churchyard and then by the path to Parley Wood. I followed, hiding as
- often as I could.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She didn't see you, then?&quot; inquired Vane idly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, sir. I was much too fly. Peter, he came also at a distance, and
- hid in the churchyard, while I follered Madame Alpenny into the wood. She
- made for the Gipsy Stile.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;How did you know where that was?&quot; inquired Hench.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why, sir,&quot; said the boy, greatly surprised, &quot;of course I
- was there before when she and the old cove talked together about the
- advertisement.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! Yes! I understand.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And, of course,&quot; said Spruce smoothly, &quot;he was following
- Madame, who also knew the appointed meeting place. Well, Simon?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;She didn't stay at the stile, but hid in the wood. I hid near her
- and kept my eyes on her, as there was plenty of light.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course. It was not late and the Gipsy Stile is in a clearing,&quot;
- explained the Nut, waving his hand. &quot;Go on, boy.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;After a long time--I couldn't say how long, as I hadn't a watch--the
- old cove came to the stile. Madame Alpenny came to meet him and talked to
- him for a time, and----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Did she raise her veil?&quot; asked Hench quickly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, sir. She spoke for a few minutes, and I could see as she'd
- something in her right hand. What it was I don't know. Then she suddenly
- lifted her arm and stabbed the old gentleman, who fell without a cry. As
- soon as she made sure he was dead, she cut. My brother saw her go through
- the churchyard.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane nodded. &quot;On her way to the station. I remember. Then you came
- out of the wood, to meet your brother near the church, and made him swear
- not to say a single word.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What else could I do, sir?&quot; protested Bottles, distressed.
- &quot;I might have got into a row with the police. That is why I said
- nothing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very wise of you,&quot; said Spruce approvingly, then turned to the
- others. &quot;Well, gentlemen, I think the case is clear. Madame Alpenny
- murdered Squire Evans, and her guilt is proved by Simon here, who saw the
- crime committed, and by Peter, who saw her in the vicinity, even though
- she swears that she was at Hampstead. What more proof do you want?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;None,&quot; said Hench calmly. &quot;Undoubtedly my uncle was
- murdered by--some one dressed as Madame Alpenny!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spruce gave a gasp and rose as if moved by springs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What do you mean by saying that, may I ask?&quot; he demanded in a
- choked voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I mean that you murdered Madoc Evans and that Bottles here can prove
- it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A lie! A wicked, false lie!&quot; gasped the Nut, who became deadly
- pale.
- </p>
- <p>
- Vane chuckled; tense as the situation was, he chuckled. &quot;You have
- been weaving a rope for your own neck all this time, Spruce,&quot; he
- remarked grimly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Such an accusation is ridiculous!&quot; said the other, with an
- attempt at dignity. &quot;Is it likely that I would dress up as a woman
- to----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You were always good in amateur theatricals,&quot; said Vane
- remorselessly. &quot;And you would do anything to get the two thousand a
- year, which, by the way, you are not likely to enjoy.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My enemy speaks,&quot; said Spruce dramatically. &quot;It's one
- thing to say a thing and another thing to prove a thing.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You are quite epigrammatic!&quot; sneered the barrister.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hush, Jim, and let the boy speak. He can prove that Spruce is
- guilty.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I just can,&quot; said Bottles promptly, and greatly enjoying his <i>rôle</i>
- of detective. &quot;For I've watched you, Mr. Spruce, for ever so long. I
- watched Madame Alpenny first, thinking she meant harm to Mr. Hench.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why should she have meant harm?&quot; asked Vane quickly, for he was
- not so well acquainted with the story as his friend.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, she knew something about him, and said that he was a mystery. I
- heard her talking to Miss Zara, and then I heard something of the talk in
- the drawingroom, when she said as she knowed Mr. Hench's father. She asked
- me for an A.B.C., too, she did, and left it open on the table. I looked
- and saw on the page the timetable for Cookley. I didn't know she was going
- there, as other time-tables were on the page, but I thought it was queer
- seeing Cookley, considering that my brother was down here with Mrs.
- Perage.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's all rubbish, of course,&quot; said Spruce, with a kind of
- hysterical cackle. &quot;But what did you do then?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I watched. When she went away I got my holiday and follered. She did
- go to Cookley, and so did you, Mr. Spruce.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's a lie, you imp. I didn't!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You did!&quot; insisted the lad. &quot;And it was your follering
- Madame Alpenny as made me watch you. I knowed as you wasn't up to any
- good. Me and Simon follered you both, and when Madame Alpenny went into
- the Grange you hung about in the midst of the trees waiting for her. Then
- you follered her when she went into the wood to see the old cove at that
- stile, and heard everything.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Admitting all this,&quot; said Spruce, appealing to the two men,
- &quot;how does it connect me with the murder and this masquerade, which is
- so ridiculous?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I'll connect you, right enough,&quot; said Bottles tartly.
- &quot;Don't you make any mistake, sir. I ain't read detective stories for
- nothing. When you came back I watched you and I watched Madame. Then you
- made friends with the manager of the Bijou Music-hall,&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I was friends with him long before!&quot; declared Spruce angrily,
- and hoping against hope that the boy would fail to substantiate his
- accusation. &quot;Ah, but you became better friends,&quot; said Bottles
- persistently, &quot;and got behind the scenes. Then you were agreeable to
- mother and asked to look over the theatrical properties. I didn't know
- what you was after until mother said as you'd asked her for a red wig to
- play in some theatricals. Then I guessed as you wanted to imitate Madame,
- who has hair as red as mine. I was sure when you brought mother some
- orange-spotted black cloth to make a dress and borrowed a bead mantle and
- a flopping hat off her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I did not. You are a brazen liar!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Liar yourself, sir! Mother can prove the truth of everything I say.
- You paid her well for the things, I don't deny. But mother wouldn't have
- taken a penny if she knowed what you was after. She never did know, as
- there was no mention of Madame Alpenny's dress, or of Madame, in the
- papers reporting the murder. Only when Mr. Hench come yesterday did I take
- him to mother and tell her all. She was horrified, for mother is a good
- sort, and told him what I am telling you. I knowed it all before.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The woman is a liar, as the boy is,&quot; said Spruce, licking his
- lips, which were very white and dry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Shut up, Bottles!&quot; said Hench, as the boy was about to make an
- angry response. &quot;Let me say the rest. Bottles watched you leave the
- house dressed as Madame Alpenny, Spruce----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It was Madame Alpenny!&quot; insisted the Nut, fighting desperately.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It wasn't!&quot; cried Simon, who could not be suppressed. &quot;She'd
- gone to Hampstead later, after you went, and I let her out. No, I'm
- talking wrong. I saw her leave the house after four, and she said as she'd
- an appointment at Hampstead, and wouldn't be back till late. She come back
- very late, and so did I, because I was follering you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The boy equivocates, you see,&quot; mumbled Spruce.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;First one thing, then another.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think his evidence is very clear, on the whole,&quot; declared
- Vane calmly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So do I,&quot; said Hench. &quot;And after Madame Alpenny went, you
- came out, Spruce, dressed in the same way. Bottles, knowing how you got
- the clothes from his mother, the wardrobe mistress at the Bijou, and
- knowing that Madame Alpenny had already left the house, guessed it was you
- in disguise. He snatched up his cap and followed, catching the five
- o'clock train, as you did. The rest you know. You are the guilty man.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He is!&quot; said Bottles with relish. &quot;And he gave back the
- things to mother saying as the amateur theatricals had been quite a
- success.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;As he hoped to make two thousand a year, I presume they were!&quot;
- said Vane in a cruel voice. &quot;Well, Spruce, what have you to say
- before being arrested?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Arrested!&quot; Spruce gave a scream like a woman, and he dropped
- limply into his chair, white-faced and aghast. &quot;What for?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;For the murder of Squire Evans.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No!&quot; He thrust out his hands as if warding off a blow.
- &quot;I did not kill him. You cannot bring the crime home to me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;The evidence you have heard brings the crime home to you only too
- positively,&quot; said Hench, with a certain pity in his voice, for the
- sudden collapse of the man was dreadful. &quot;Peter can prove that you
- were mixed up in the matter, and Mrs. Jedd can prove that you borrowed the
- clothes, having the orange-spotted dress made after the style of that worn
- by Madame Alpenny. And Simon can prove the murder. He saw you kill the
- man.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No! No!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;May I die if I didn't!&quot; swore Bottles, who was looking nervous,
- for the scene shook him considerably, since he was only a boy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It was a mean, sordid murder, committed for the sake of gain,&quot;
- said Vane.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't kick the man when he is down, Jim,&quot; said Hench,
- pityingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Why not? He was insolent enough while he was up. And to kill an old
- man of whom he knew nothing! Owain, it was beastly. I hope I'm as decent a
- chap as any, but my gorge rises at the sight of this creature.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- What little pride remained in Spruce rose at these words. He sprang to his
- feet and shook his fist wildly in the air. &quot;I shall get off!&quot; he
- screamed. &quot;I can prove my innocence!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Do so to the detective,&quot; said Hench, wishing to end the scene.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A detective! a detective!&quot; Spruce clutched his throat as if to
- tear away the rope he was doomed to. &quot;You won't--you won't----&quot;
- His voice failed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I saw the authorities and procured a warrant before leaving London.
- Every moment I expect the detective in to execute it.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No! No!&quot; Spruce flung himself on his knees. &quot;Dear
- Hench, good Hench, you won't allow me to be hanged? I don't want the
- money; I'll give it up. Let me get away; let me hide.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Did you murder my uncle?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes! Yes!&quot; Spruce's cheeks were streaming with tears and his
- teeth were chattering. &quot;It's all true. I acknowledge that I killed
- him to get the money. But I am sorry--really and truly I am sorry. Don't
- give me up--don't----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Get up,&quot; cried Vane in disgust, &quot;and take your gruel like
- a man.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Bottles, see if the policeman is there,&quot; ordered Hench, and
- Bottles, glad to escape from the scene, fled willingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No!&quot; Spruce rose from grovelling on the ground, and from a
- tearful martyr was suddenly changed into a wild beast. His lips curled,
- showing his teeth. He drew back towards the window, and his eyes flashed
- fire. If he had had a weapon in his hand there is no doubt he would have
- killed both the men. &quot;You shan't catch me, hounds that you are. I
- shall escape; I shall----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Look out, Owain, he's trying for the window!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- But Vane's warning came too late. With a surprising spring, the miserable
- little creature flung himself through the window into the garden. Before
- the two men could recover from their surprise he was over the low garden
- wall and racing for the churchyard. Terror winged his feet, and he flew
- onward like an arrow from the bow. Hench leaped after him immediately, and
- followed close behind him, while Vane rushed out to see if the police had
- arrived with the warrant. Two men were there in plain clothes, with a
- village constable, and in a few hurried words the barrister related how
- the man wanted had escaped. With the rapidity of lightning the news
- spread, and in a wonderfully short space of time half the village, headed
- by the police, Vane and Bottles, were making for the churchyard. Far ahead
- they could see Hench running swiftly through the twilight, but of the
- fugitive they could see no trace.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was no wonder that the pursuers could not gain a glimpse of their
- wretched quarry, for Spruce flew on with amazing speed. Behind him were
- the dogs of justice, and he knew that once they pulled him down all that
- remained for him to do was to face the death he had earned by his cowardly
- crime. But he was not a man, only a creeping crawling thing saturated with
- evil, a bird of prey, a snarling tiger--and he did not wish to receive the
- reward of his wickedness. Instinctively he made for the wood wherein his
- crime had been committed. Once in its dark recesses he hoped to remain
- hidden until he could escape over seas. Behind him he caught sight of
- Hench, and longed to have a knife or revolver to shoot or stab the man he
- hated. Gasping, and streaming with perspiration, he plunged into the wood,
- broke from the path which led to the Gipsy Stile, and struggled through
- the dry, rustling undergrowth. They would never catch him, he swore, and
- even as he did the miserable creature heard the beat of Owain's feet in
- pursuit.
- </p>
- <p>
- A thought struck him. The wood was dry, and would burn like tinder. Hench,
- being in the wood and unprepared, would be probably burnt to death.
- Without thinking of the danger to himself in his mad fury--only resolved
- to make an end to Owain and to place a blazing screen between himself and
- his pursuers---Spruce took out a silver box and struck a match. Then
- another, and another, until all round him, in the grass and the moss and
- the undergrowth, were stars of fire. The stars grew into blazing suns, as
- the flames caught the tall, dry trees and roared upward. With
- inconceivable rapidity the fire spread, and now it was time for Spruce to
- fly from the death he had created. As he plunged onward he came suddenly
- into the open, and fell, catching his foot in a fallen tree-trunk. He
- tried to rise and could not, as his ankle was twisted. So he lay shrieking
- on the verge of a fiery furnace, unable to move, and condemned by his own
- evil act to a far more terrible death than that which he would have
- suffered at the hands of the law. Shouting for help, and only anxious now
- to escape the immediate doom, Spruce heard the cries of the villagers,
- when they saw the tall columns of flame rising from the wood. Hench was
- lunging here and there amidst the undergrowth seeking for Spruce, and
- continued to do so until a barrier of flame cut him off from further
- search. Before that terrible heat he was forced to retreat, and made for
- the pathway so as to get back into the open. Vane's voice, high, clamorous
- and clear, could be heard shouting for him, and in the roar of the flames
- Hench heard the shrieking of the wretched creature who had lighted the
- funeral pyre of himself. He made for the direction whence the cries came,
- as they appeared to be near at hand. Fighting the flames, he stumbled into
- the open space round the Gipsy Stile and saw Spruce writhing on the edge
- of the clearing under a canopy of fire. It blazed overhead; it ran along
- the moss and grass, licking up everything with greedy avidity; and all
- round the wood was like a seven-times heated furnace.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Save me; save me!&quot; yelled Spruce, seeing his enemy.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wicked as the creature was, Owain did his best. He ran towards the spot
- where Spruce lay in agony, and tried to reach him. But the flames came out
- with a gust of the hot dry wind, which now was blowing furiously, and the
- young man fell back, shielding his face with his arms. When he removed
- them he heard a wild cry of agony, and saw a tall bulky tree falling
- slowly down. Spruce was beneath it, and saw its gradual descent. He cried
- to Hench for help; he cried to God for pardon; but the tree dropped inch
- by inch in the midst of that hell until it suddenly crashed down on the
- doomed man. Then there was silence, save for the roar of the flames
- rejoicing over their prey.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench turned and fled, skirting the flaming trees and getting round to
- where the police and villagers were by slipping along the park wall.
- Blackened and burnt, dizzy and faint, he staggered into the open space,
- where all watched the great bonfire. Vane rushed forward and caught him in
- his arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Are you hurt--are you hurt?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No. I'm all right. But Spruce----!&quot; He gasped at the memory of
- the horror.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My man,&quot; said the police officer. &quot;What of him?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Dead!&quot; breathed Hench faintly, and then fell unconscious to the
- ground, while Parley Wood, with a noise like the roaring of many waters,
- vanished for ever in flames and smoke.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- <a name="div1_21" href="#div1Ref_21" id="div1_21">CHAPTER XXI</a>
- </h4>
- <h5>
- THE SUNSHINE OF LIFE
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- The discovery that Spruce was the murderer of Squire Evans, the burning of
- Parley Wood, and the consequent death of the criminal, were wholly
- unexpected events. They descended on the Cookley villagers like so many
- bolts from the blue, and naturally caused a very great commotion. So far
- as the woodland was concerned, nothing remained but a vast area of grey
- ashes, wherein multitudinous smouldering stumps pricked up here and there.
- Luckily the trees of the Grange park were untouched, as the fire had not
- reached across the considerable space which, like a wide roadway, divided
- Hench's property from the miniature forest. Also, the violent wind blowing
- from the south had swept the flames northward, long-side the brick wall
- girdling the demesne. But considerable damage had been wrought, as Parley
- Wood was dear to many artists, and they, as well as the villagers,
- lamented the blotting out of this beauty-spot. But, as some people said,
- perhaps it was just as well, since the murder of Madoc Evans had given the
- wood an evil reputation. These philosophical individuals, however, were in
- the minority.
- </p>
- <p>
- Under the huge tree-trunk which had crushed him to death the body of
- Cuthbert Spruce was found, burnt and disfigured almost beyond recognition.
- But there was not the least difficulty in identifying the remains of the
- wretched man, and he was duly buried in Cookley churchyard. A large number
- of morbid sight-seers were attracted to the ceremony, and there was much
- talk about the extraordinary events which had led to his guilt being
- proved. Hench, naturally enough, was anxious that the whole miserable
- story should be kept from the public, but this was not possible. The
- Inspector who had been charged with the arrest of Spruce advised the young
- man--for the clearing of his own character--to allow all facts to become
- known. Therefore the newspapers were filled with true accounts of all that
- had happened in connection with the affair, from the time of his early
- conversation with Madame Alpenny down to the moment when he staggered out
- of Parley Wood to fall unconscious at Vane's feet. Owain was considerably
- shaken by what he had undergone, both physically and mentally, so it was
- natural that he should take some days to recover. He was burnt and
- bruised; very much horrified by the appalling death of his old
- schoolfellow; and greatly disturbed by the enforced publicity of the whole
- dreadful business. It was fortunate that Mrs. Perage was at hand to look
- after him, as she proved to be a very dragon to guard the broken man from
- the curiosity of the public. Vane brought Hench to the old lady's house,
- and there he remained in bed for quite a week to be nursed back to health
- and strength by Gwen. Save the Inspector, who advised him to make the
- facts of the case known to the world, he saw no one but the old lady and
- the young one. Not even Jim Vane was permitted to interview him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The result of this judicious treatment on the part of Mrs. Perage was
- obvious, for while the excitement was going on Hench remained secluded in
- his sick-room, and was not worried with questions. By the time he was able
- to get up, healed of his hurts and much calmer in mind, the worst was
- over. Spruce lay in the churchyard, the newspapers had said all they could
- say about the matter, and the nine days' wonder of the whole awful
- business had come to an end. It only remained for Owain to fulfil his
- promise to the Brackens; to reward the Jedd boys for the clever way in
- which they had saved him; to take formal possession of his property, and
- to marry his cousin. Then he could begin a new life, and all the old
- troubles would be forgotten. Of course it required decision and strength
- to deal with such matters, but, thanks to Gwen's careful nursing, Owain
- was quite able to attend to the business. With his descent into the
- drawing-room, wholly cured at the end of nine days, the 'nine days' wonder
- came to a termination.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Now we must sweep up the fragments,&quot; said Hench, who was
- rapidly recovering his strength, although he still looked somewhat pale.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Quite so,&quot; agreed Mrs. Perage, who looked more grim and
- masculine than ever. &quot;I have asked the fragments to come here to-day
- for the sweeping.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What do you mean?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My meaning is plain enough, young man!&quot; she replied vigorously.
- &quot;I want all this disagreeable business concluded, so that it will not
- be necessary to re-open it again. Then, as soon as possible, you must
- arrange about getting the property, marry Gwen, and go for a year's tour
- in Europe, or in the States, if you like. I don't care where you go, so
- long as you get away.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't know if Owain is strong enough to travel yet,&quot; said
- Gwen, who was sitting beside the sofa holding her lover's hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Fudge!&quot; retorted Mrs. Perage, standing on the hearthrug in
- quite a manly attitude, with her hands behind her back. &quot;Don't make a
- mollycoddle of the fellow, you silly girl. While he remains here,
- everything will remind him of the horrors which have taken place. Let him
- travel to forget, and then he can return to take up his work as the Squire
- of Cookley. You must go with him, as he is sure to be miserable without
- you.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That is very certain!&quot; said Hench, smiling.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, then,&quot; cried Mrs. Perage argumentatively, &quot;so young
- a girl can't go with you as a chaperon, can she? Marry her in a couple of
- weeks and then no one can say a word, even if you take her to the North
- Pole.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But my father has not been dead very long,&quot; murmured Gwen
- nervously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My dear, don't be a fool. God forbid that I should say a word
- against your father, who has paid for his foolishness. But you owe him
- nothing and you never got on with him. Then why sacrifice yourself to a
- feeling which does not exist? Pfui!&quot; Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose.
- &quot;Can't you understand that I am anxious to see the backs of you two
- nuisances? I've had quite enough bother with you as it is.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hench laughed outright, knowing that Mrs. Perage looked upon himself and
- Gwen as her own children. &quot;You wouldn't be happy without us,&quot; he
- said gaily. &quot;You would have no one to scold.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, there's always Jim Vane, at a pinch,&quot; said Mrs. Perage
- good-humouredly. &quot;But I daresay I shall miss you two brats. Babies,
- that's what you are. As to scolding, there will be plenty of that when you
- return. You are the Lord of the Manor, but I have much property in Cookley
- also, so there will be ample for us to fight about. I want my own way and
- so do you. Hum!&quot; Mrs. Perage rubbed her hands. &quot;There are lively
- times ahead.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Both the young people looked at the tall, grim old Amazon with great
- affection, as they recognized how much they owed her. Gwen particularly
- loved her, as she had brought common-sense to bear on the estrangement
- after the fatal interview in the churchyard with Madame Alpenny. But that
- Mrs. Perage had acted so vigorously, Gwen saw plainly enough that she and
- Owain might never have entirely understood one another. Now they did,
- especially since the nine days' nursing had drawn them together more
- rapidly. Never did a couple arrange to enter into the bonds of matrimony
- with such an excellent knowledge of each other's character. Mrs. Perage
- guessed what was passing in the girl's mind and nodded approvingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Trouble brings people together very quickly,&quot; she said briskly.
- &quot;Time is nothing and opportunity is everything. Owain has saved your
- life; carefully nursed him back to health, so you comprehend one another a
- thousand times better than if you had dawdled through a ten years'
- courtship. You are both decent, also, my dears; quite different to your
- fathers. It's the mothers' blood that tells, I expect. What do you say,
- Hench?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, don't call him Hench,&quot; said Gwen, with a shudder. &quot;Let
- us leave that false name behind with all the other trouble.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Very good. What do you say, Evans?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I agree with you, Mrs. Perage. Gwen and I will get on capitally.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You had better!&quot; she threatened. &quot;If I catch you beating
- her it's me you'll have to reckon with. Ha!&quot; She glanced out of the
- window. &quot;Here's Jim, the first of the fragments come to be swept into
- the dustbin of oblivion.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I hope not,&quot; said Owain, laughing. &quot;I wish Jim to remain
- my very good friend and be my best man.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Of course he will be. And I will be the bridesmaid if Gwen is
- sensible enough to ask me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You shall do whatever you like at the wedding,&quot; said Gwen, also
- laughing, for she felt uncommonly happy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And afterwards also, my dear. I am fond of my own way; it's a great
- fault of mine. Jim,&quot;--Vane entered as she spoke,--&quot;here you are
- at last. There! I'm not fond of kisses. Go and talk to Evans yonder, and
- ask him if you can kiss Gwen.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh!&quot; said Gwen in alarm, whereat every one laughed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't be frightened, Miss Evans,&quot; said Vane, with a smile on
- his lean face. &quot;I am quite sure that Owain yonder is now strong
- enough to punch my head if I take Aunt Emma's advice. Well, old chap, how
- goes it? You look much better and are quite a different man.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I am, Jim. Hench has vanished for ever. Only Owain Evans remains.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I hope he'll be as good a chap as Hench was.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Much better!&quot; said Gwen resentfully. &quot;I've improved him.
- He is no longer to be a wanderer, but intends to settle down with me as
- the Squire of the parish.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;After a year's travelling!&quot; said Mrs. Perage sharply, and
- detailed her scheme to her nephew, who quite approved.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Better be off with the old life, Owain, before you take on with the
- new,&quot; he said judicially. &quot;Travel will heal all the old
- soreness, and will place a barrier between the disagreeable past and the
- pleasant future. Aunt Emma is a sensible woman.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I always am!&quot; said Aunt Emma. &quot;Now, Jim, say what you have
- to say about this trouble, and let us bury the same for ever.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;There isn't much to say,&quot; said Vane carelessly. &quot;The
- newspapers have dropped the matter, and everybody is forgetting the
- sensation. You won't be bothered with reporters or photographers when you
- come abroad, Owain. All the same, it is just as well that you are going
- away.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;What does the Inspector say about Bottles' share in the business?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He wasn't very pleased, and gave both Bottles and his brother a good
- talking to for having held their tongues for so long.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I wonder why they did,&quot; murmured Mrs. Perage, rubbing her nose.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;My dear aunt, it was a game to both of them. Bottles having read
- detective tales was burning to be a Sexton Blake or a Sherlock Holmes.
- Only when he saw that miserable creature brought to book did the boy
- realize that his comedy had turned into real tragedy. I've brought him
- with me as you desired.&quot; Vane went to the door and beckoned to the
- lad, who entered bashfully, to look with adoring eyes on his hero. Hench
- called to him to come forward and shook him heartily by the hand, thanking
- him for his great services.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, it ain't nothing, sir,&quot; said Bottles, with a glowing face
- as crimson as his hair. &quot;I'd do anything for you, as you've always
- been kind to me. And it's been a rattling good game, anyhow.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A sadly serious game, Bottles, I fear.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, sir.&quot; The lad turned pale, shivered, and swallowed
- something with an effort, as he recalled the scene at the Bull Inn. &quot;I
- didn't think it was so bad till I saw that little cove's face. It wasn't
- me who got him burnt, was it, sir?&quot; he asked entreatingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No! No! my boy. How he came to set the wood on fire, I don't know.
- Perhaps he struck a match to see his way in the darkness. But we will
- never know exactly what happened. You are not in any way to blame. What
- made you suspect him?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I didn't suspect him at first, sir. It was Madame I thought was the
- wrong 'un, as I told you. But when I saw that little cove sneaking after
- her down to Cookley I watched him as well as her. Then I found out he was
- talking a lot to mother and learned about the dress and the wig. After
- that, it wasn't hard to twig his game. But I never thought as he'd murder
- the old cove,&quot; said Bottles, shivering. &quot;I turned sick in the
- wood when I saw that knife go in.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, by the way, Bottles, Mrs. Tesk told me that she dismissed you
- for stealing the knife.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Yes, she did, sir. She said as I'd taken other things. But it was
- Amelia, I was engaged to, as stole the things, and I couldn't give her
- away. But I ain't going to make her my wife, sir,&quot; said Bottles
- seriously. &quot;She ain't what she should be in the way of honesty.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Did she steal the knife also?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;No, I think Mr. Spruce stole that; took it off the table one day,
- and slipped it up his sleeve. He killed the old cove with it, as you know,
- and left it in the body. I knowed it was Mrs. Tesk's carving-knife all
- along.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Does Mrs. Tesk know all this now?&quot; asked Owain quickly. &quot;Yes,
- sir. Mother went and told her, though I didn't wish to split on Amelia,
- who's only a gel after all. Mrs. Tesk said as she was sorry and asked me
- to go back, which I have done, sir.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, then, Bottles, I am going to take you away from there and send
- you to school. Also I intend to settle a small income on your mother so
- that she need not work any more at the Bijou Music-hall. Finally, I will
- arrange with my lawyers to invest a sum of money for you so that you may
- be able to start life with something in hand. What do you wish to be?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think if Bottles is wise he will be a detective,&quot; suggested
- Vane.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bottles turned a shining face towards the speaker. &quot;That's just what
- I want to be, sir. I can do it, I'm sure.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think so also,&quot; remarked Mrs. Perage gruffly. &quot;But I
- hope Peter doesn't want to be one also. I can't have a juvenile Vidocq in
- my house.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, Peter ain't got no ambitions, mum,&quot; said Bottles
- contemptuously. &quot;He's just as pleased as Punch to stay on with you
- and rise to be a butler and a footman.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'll look after Peter,&quot; said Mrs. Perage, nodding briskly.
- &quot;He has also had a share in this business which has cleared up the
- mystery, and he deserves to be rewarded. But see here,&quot; she added
- sharply, &quot;why didn't you tell the police immediately about the
- murder?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Because I wanted to see what that little cove would do, mum. I
- guessed from his disguise that he intended to make out that Madame Alpenny
- had murdered the old cove. But I didn't think he'd accuse Mr. Hench there.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mr. Evans, Simon,&quot; corrected Gwen quickly. &quot;That is his
- real name.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I think I shall always be Hench to Bottles,&quot; said Owain,
- laughing. &quot;He can call me what he likes as he has done so much for
- me. But you would have saved a lot of trouble, Bottles, if you had told
- the police at once.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;So the Inspector said, sir,&quot; grinned the boy. &quot;He gave me
- what-for, he did. But I wanted to see the game out, sir.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain saw that Bottles would persist in regarding the whole dreadful
- business as a game, in spite of its terrible termination, so he left the
- subject alone. &quot;But you might have guessed, my detective friend, that
- Spruce would accuse me, as he wanted to get my money. He committed the
- murder to trap me.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I thought he'd do that through Madame Alpenny when you married Miss
- Zara,&quot; was the boy's reply, promptly given. &quot;As you'd never have
- liked your mother-in-law to be hanged. You didn't mind my giving the
- address I got from Peter to Madame Alpenny and the little cove, did you,
- sir?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I did when I was in the dark. But now I see that you did so
- deliberately.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It was part of the game,&quot; persisted Bottles coolly. &quot;And
- as the little cove had gone so far, I knew he'd go further. If I hadn't
- told him and Madame of your address they might have asked the police where
- you were.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;That suggestion doesn't do credit to your detective acumen, Bottles.
- Had either of the two brought the police into the matter, they would not
- have been able to get the expected money. Spruce was playing the blackmail
- game.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I see, sir.&quot; Bottles rubbed his red head. &quot;Well, I've got
- something to learn yet, I expect, as a 'tec, and I ain't above learning.
- But thank you for helping me, sir, and for helping mother. She's a good
- one, is mother, and gave me such a talking for not having spoke out
- before.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Between the Inspector and your mother, I daresay you have had a bad
- time, Bottles,&quot; said Vane idly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You bet I have, sir. But it don't matter. I've enjoyed myself, I
- have, in pulling the strings.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It's more than I have done,&quot; said Owain languidly. &quot;Good-bye,
- Bottles. Go home and tell your mother of my intentions. Next week I'll
- fulfill my promise, as soon as I can see my solicitors and settle matters.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And, Simon,&quot; said Mrs. Perage graciously, &quot;you can go to
- the kitchen and have your dinner. Here's a pound. Take Peter with you to
- town and to see your mother.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Thank you, mum; thank you, sir; thank everybody.&quot; And Bottles
- disappeared with a happy grin, which made every one smile.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Here comes Madame Alpenny and the Brackens,&quot; announced Vane,
- who acted as a master of the ceremonies.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I don't like that old woman to come under my roof,&quot; said Mrs.
- Perage, with a frown. &quot;She's a plotter and a schemer. But----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, she's only one of the fragments which have to be swept up,&quot;
- said Gwen in a lively tone. &quot;I don't like her either; but I am so
- much obliged to Zara that I am quite willing Owain should help the old
- lady.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Old lady, indeed,&quot; grumbled Mrs. Perage. &quot;Old scamp, I
- call her. You can deal with her yourselves. I'm going.&quot; And as the
- newcomers entered the room, she went out swiftly through the conservatory.
- </p>
- <p>
- Zara looked pale, her husband confused, and both advanced with rather a
- shame-stricken air. Madame Alpenny, on the contrary, rushed forward and
- took Owain's hand with effusion, beaming all over her harsh swart face.
- Considering how she had behaved when they last met, the young man was
- astonished by this friendly greeting. He scarcely knew what to say; but it
- appeared there was no need for him to say anything. Madame Alpenny did all
- the talking, so it was just as well that Mrs. Perage had left the room.
- Had that Amazonian dame remained, there assuredly would have been trouble.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, but I am delighted to see you looking so magnificent after your
- illness, dear Monsieur!&quot; cried Madame, clasping Owain's hand fondly
- within her own. &quot;You terrified me greatly, as I thought you would
- perish. Ah, but it is good of the Heavens to preserve you to us.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- The young man withdrew his hand as soon as he recovered from his
- astonishment, and spoke very coldly. &quot;You have changed your mind
- since our last meeting!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Alpenny threw up her fat hands. &quot;Ah, but what would you, my
- dear sir? I was angered at losing so beautiful a son-in-law. I said much
- that I have wept for saying. And to you also, in the churchyard,
- Mademoiselle,&quot; she added, turning to Gwen, who was frigid, &quot;I
- spoke most wickedly. Ach! my dear young lady, you must forgive me for my
- open nature. We are all now friends here, I hope.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- She beamed all round the room, but there were no answering smiles. Zara
- laid her hand on her mother's arm and drew her back. &quot;I must ask your
- pardon, Mr. Hench, for all the trouble which has been brought to you,&quot;
- she said seriously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It was not your fault, Mrs. Bracken, nor that of your husband,&quot;
- said Owain very quickly. &quot;I have nothing but friendship and
- admiration for you both, seeing the way in which you made the crooked
- straight between us,&quot; and he glanced at Gwen fondly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, what a good heart!&quot; murmured the Hungarian lady, with her
- handkerchief to her eyes. &quot;A heart of gold!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Shut up!&quot; growled Bracken to his mother-in-law, and twitched
- the old head mantle which she still wore over the famous orange-spotted
- dress.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I will not shut up, you rude man!&quot; cried Madame Alpenny
- volubly. &quot;Ah, to think of what I have suffered at the hands of
- Mistare Spruce, now happily deceased. He would have had me hanged!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Did he accuse you of committing the murder?&quot; asked Vane
- sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;But no. He was all sweetness and smiles. Yet, if Monsieur Hench had
- married Zara, then this Mistare Spruce would have accused me. He laid his
- plans to make me guilty. It was he, I find, who wrote the letter asking me
- to go to Hampstead. He wished me to be unable to prove where I was. If he
- had lived I should have put him in gaol,&quot; ended Madame, with a frown.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You nearly put Mr. Evans in gaol!&quot; said Gwen icily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mistare Evans. Ah, yes--the real name of Monsieur Hench. No, I would
- not have put him in gaol, Mademoiselle. My talk was what you call--eh,
- yes--bluff. I might have been his beloved mother had I accepted his
- father's hand. Never would I have harmed him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, I think you would when you had me in your power, Madame,&quot;
- said Owain dryly. &quot;Remember what you talked about in the churchyard.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Bluff--all bluff, Monsieur.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;It would have been better had you acted fairly with me and told the
- truth at our first conversation. Then I should have known that I was Madoc
- Evans' heir and all this trouble would have been avoided. You also would
- have been the richer for such honesty, Madame.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, but you will not turn from me now,&quot; said Madame in a
- wheedling tone. &quot;See, Monsieur Hench, it is through me you have money
- and marry this sweet angel. I am poor; I am deserving. So give me----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Mr. Hench will give you nothing, mother,&quot; said Zara in a cold
- tone of displeasure. &quot;I came down here to say good-bye to him and to
- take you out of his life. Mr. Hench,&quot;--she faced round to Owain,--&quot;my
- husband and I are going to America, where I have obtained a good
- engagement. My mother goes back to Hungary, and I will send her money to
- support her. Therefore it will not be necessary for you to give me that
- thousand pounds.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I wish to give it to you as a mark of my esteem,&quot; insisted
- Hench, and Gwen endorsed this speech.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I do not wish my wife to take it,&quot; said Bracken, advancing to
- hold out his hand. &quot;Good-bye, Mr. Evans, we have been here long
- enough. We shall always remember your kindness with gratitude.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain shook the extended hand. &quot;But I wish you would take the money,
- Bracken.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ah, but do!&quot; cried Madame Alpenny, feverishly greedy. &quot;I
- can double it at cards. I am so lucky, I want to----&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Come away, mother,&quot; interrupted Zara, dragging her towards the
- door. &quot;Mr. Hench will not give you a single penny!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Ingrate!&quot; shouted Madame, turning at the door, out of which she
- was going, held firmly by Zara and Bracken. &quot;After all I have done.
- Ach! the wickedness of the evil one. I gave him thousands, and he--he, the
- beast--the-----&quot; Here she was dragged into the hall by her
- scandalized daughter, and those in the drawing-room heard her voice loudly
- lamenting all the way down the avenue. In this manner was the Hungarian
- lady rewarded for her scheming. She did not benefit in the least.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;I'm glad she's gone,&quot; said Gwen, drawing a deep breath. &quot;I
- don't like her.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Nor do I,&quot; said Owain, pulling the girl down beside him. &quot;She
- nearly got me into the dock. But I am bound to say that she ran an equal
- risk from poor Spruce.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Poor Spruce, indeed!&quot; cried Vane, turning from the window where
- he was watching the protesting Madame Alpenny being dragged down the
- avenue. &quot;Why say good of a man who did nothing but evil?&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Don't be hard on him, Jim. After all, he has paid the penalty of his
- crime by suffering a terrible death.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You're a good chap, Owain, so I won't say another word. But never
- mention his name to me again if you I can help.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;We'll never mention anything about the past if we can help,&quot;
- said Gwen, as Owain slipped his arm round her. &quot;Now all these people
- have gone let us try and forget them.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Oh, you'll forget right enough,&quot; said Vane, smiling. &quot;When
- you marry Owain you will think of nothing but him.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;He saved my life!&quot; cried the future Mrs. Evans defiantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;In return you have saved mine,&quot; murmured Owain. &quot;Had you
- not nursed me back to life and love, where should I have been now? But the
- clouds have disappeared, my dear, and now the sunshine of life is ours. In
- three weeks we will get married quietly and go abroad for a year.
- Afterwards we can return to take up our position here.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And you will go back to your old home, Miss Evans,&quot; said Vane,
- laughing. &quot;Not much change about that.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;A great deal of change!&quot; cried Gwen hotly. &quot;While I lived
- there with my poor father, the Grange was a house of hate; now it will be
- a mansion of love.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Quite so; you will be so happy that you won't want to see any one.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Always you, Jim,&quot; said Owain, holding out his hand, which the
- barrister took.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;And me also, I hope,&quot; said Mrs. Perage, entering unexpectedly
- from the conservatory. &quot;Hum! A touching tableau. The sweetheart, the
- angel of the sweetheart, and the true-hearted friend. Fudge!&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You don't mean that word!&quot; cried Gwen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Perhaps I don't.&quot; Mrs. Perage rubbed her nose. &quot;For to
- tell you the truth, I don't know what the word means. I got it out of 'The
- Vicar of Wakefield,' and it seemed useful. I should like to have used it
- to that old woman who is screaming viciously all the way down the avenue.
- Really, young man, you have some very queer friends.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Well, I lived in Queer Street for a long time, you know!&quot; said
- Owain, smiling.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;You'll never live there again,&quot; whispered Gwen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Lucky Owain!&quot; mocked Vane. &quot;No more hunger and thirst,
- hard beds and unpaid bills. You will henceforth lie in the lap of luxury.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- &quot;Hum!&quot; said Mrs. Perage gruffly. &quot;There is a good luncheon:
- a much better one than you ever tasted in Queer Street, I'll be bound.
- There's the gong.&quot;
- </p>
- <p>
- Owain rose quickly and took Gwen's arm. &quot;And here begins the new
- life!&quot; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <h4>
- THE END
- </h4>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <hr class="W90" />
- <h5>
- Printed by W. Mate &amp; Sons, Ltd., &quot;Directory&quot; Office,
- Bournemouth
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
- </p>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
-
-
-
-
-
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