“And this is all you mean to tell me?”
“I think you will find it quite enough, Miss
Strange.”
“Just the address ”
“And this advice: that
your call be speedy. Distracted nerves cannot
wait.”
Violet, across whose wonted piquancy
there lay an indefinable shadow, eyed her employer
with a doubtful air before turning away toward the
door. She had asked him for a case to investigate
(something she had never done before), and she had
even gone so far as to particularize the sort of case
she desired: “It must be an interesting
one,” she had stipulated, “but different,
quite different from the last one. It must not
involve death or any kind of horror. If you have
a case of subtlety without crime, one to engage my
powers without depressing my spirits, I beg you to
let me have it. I I have not felt quite
like myself since I came from Massachusetts.”
Whereupon, without further comment, but with a smile
she did not understand, he had handed her a small slip
of paper on which he had scribbled an address.
She should have felt satisfied, but for some reason
she did not. She regarded him as capable of plunging
her into an affair quite the reverse of what she felt
herself in a condition to undertake.
“I should like to know a little
more,” she pursued, making a move to unfold
the slip he had given her.
But he stopped her with a gesture.
“Read it in your limousine,”
said he. “If you are disappointed then,
let me know. But I think you will find yourself
quite ready for your task.”
“And my father?”
“Would approve if he could be
got to approve the business at all. You do not
even need to take your brother with you.”
“Oh, then, it’s with women only I have
to deal?”
“Read the address after you are headed up Fifth
Avenue.”
But when, with her doubts not yet
entirely removed, she opened the small slip he had
given her, the number inside suggested nothing but
the fact that her destination lay somewhere near Eightieth
Street. It was therefore with the keenest surprise
she beheld her motor stop before the conspicuous house
of the great financier whose late death had so affected
the money-market. She had not had any acquaintance
with this man herself, but she knew his house.
Everyone knew that. It was one of the most princely
in the whole city. C. Dudley Brooks had known
how to spend his millions. Indeed, he had known
how to do this so well that it was of him her father,
also a financier of some note, had once said he was
the only successful American he envied.
She was expected; that she saw the
instant the door was opened. This made her entrance
easy an entrance further brightened by the
delightful glimpse of a child’s cherubic face
looking at her from a distant doorway. It was
an instantaneous vision, gone as soon as seen; but
its effect was to rob the pillared spaces of the wonderful
hallway of some of their chill, and to modify in some
slight degree the formality of a service which demanded
three men to usher her into a small reception-room
not twenty feet from the door of entrance.
Left in this secluded spot, she had
time to ask herself what member of the household she
would be called upon to meet, and was surprised to
find that she did not even know of whom the household
consisted. She was sure of the fact that Mr.
Brooks had been a widower for many years before his
death, but beyond that she knew nothing of his domestic
life. His son but was there a son?
She had never heard any mention made of a younger
Mr. Brooks, yet there was certainly some one of his
connection who enjoyed the rights of an heir.
Him she must be prepared to meet with a due composure,
whatever astonishment he might show at the sight of
a slip of a girl instead of the experienced detective
he had every right to expect.
But when the door opened to admit
the person she was awaiting, the surprise was hers.
It was a woman who stood before her, a woman and an
oddity. Yet, in just what her oddity lay, Violet
found it difficult to decide. Was it in the smoothness
of her white locks drawn carefully down over her ears,
or in the contrast afforded by her eager eyes and her
weak and tremulous mouth? She was dressed in the
heaviest of mourning and very expensively, but there
was that in her bearing and expression which made
it impossible to believe that she took any interest
in her garments or even knew in which of her dresses
she had been attired.
“I am the person you have come
here to see,” she said. “Your name
is not unfamiliar to me, but you may not know mine.
It is Quintard; Mrs. Quintard. I am in difficulty.
I need assistance secret assistance.
I did not know where to go for it except to a detective
agency; so I telephoned to the first one I saw advertised;
and and I was told to expect Miss Strange.
But I didn’t think it would be you though I suppose
it’s all right. You have come here for this
purpose, haven’t you, though it does seem a
little queer?”
“Certainly, Mrs. Quintard; and if you will tell
me ”
“My dear, it’s just this yes,
I will sit down. Last week my brother died.
You have heard of him no doubt, C. Dudley Brooks?”
“Oh, yes; my father knew him we
all knew him by reputation. Do not hurry, Mrs.
Quintard. I have sent my car away. You can
take all the time you wish.”
“No, no, I cannot. I’m
in desperate haste. He but let me go
on with my story. My brother was a widower, with
no children to inherit. That everybody knows.
But his wife left behind her a son by a former husband,
and this son of hers my brother had in a measure adopted,
and even made his sole heir in a will he drew up during
the lifetime of his wife. But when he found,
as he very soon did, that this young man was not developing
in a way to meet such great responsibilities, he made
a new will though unhappily without the
knowledge of the family, or even of his most intimate
friends in which he gave the bulk of his
great estate to his nephew Clement, who has bettered
the promise of his youth and who besides has children
of great beauty whom my brother had learned to love.
And this will this hoarded scrap of paper
which means so much to us all, is lost! lost! and
I ” here her voice which had risen
almost to a scream, sank to a horrified whisper, “am
the one who lost it.”
“But there’s a copy of
it somewhere there is always a copy ”
“Oh, but you haven’t heard
all. My nephew is an invalid; has been an invalid
for years that’s why so little is
known about him. He’s dying of consumption.
The doctors hold out no hope for him, and now, with
the fear preying upon him of leaving his wife and
children penniless, he is wearing away so fast that
any hour may see his end. And I have to meet
his eyes such pitiful eyes and
the look in them is killing me. Yet, I was not
to blame. I could not help Oh, Miss
Strange,” she suddenly broke in with the inconsequence
of extreme feeling, “the will is in the house!
I never carried it off the floor where I sleep.
Find it; find it, I pray, or ”
The moment had come for Violet’s
soft touch, for Violet’s encouraging word.
“I will try,” she answered her.
Mrs. Quintard grew calmer.
“But, first,” the young
girl continued, “I must know more about the
conditions. Where is this nephew of yours the
man who is ill?”
“In this house, where he has been for the last
eight months.”
“Was the child his of whom I caught a glimpse
in the hall as I came in?”
“Yes, and ”
“I will fight for that child!”
Violet cried out impulsively. “I am sure
his father’s cause is good. Where is the
other claimant the one you designate as
Carlos?”
“Oh, there’s where the
trouble is! Carlos is on the Mauretania, and she
is due here in a couple of days. He comes from
the East where he has been touring with his wife.
Miss Strange, the lost will must be found before then,
or the other will be opened and read and Carlos made
master of this house, which would mean our quick departure
and Clement’s certain death.”
“Move a sick man? a
relative as low as you say he is? Oh no, Mrs.
Quintard; no one would do that, were the house a cabin
and its owners paupers.”
“You do not know Carlos; you
do not know his wife. We should not be given
a week in which to pack. They have no children
and they envy Clement who has. Our only hope
lies in discovering the paper which gives us the right
to remain here in face of all opposition. That
or penury. Now you know my trouble.”
“And it is trouble; one from
which I shall make every effort to relieve you.
But first let me ask if you are not worrying unnecessarily
about this missing document? If it was drawn
up by Mr. Brooks’s lawyer ”
“But it was not,” that
lady impetuously interrupted. “His lawyer
is Carlos’s near relative, and has never been
told of the change in my brother’s intentions.
Clement (I am speaking now of my brother and not of
my nephew) was a great money-getter, but when it came
to standing up for his rights in domestic matters,
he was more timid than a child. He was subject
to his wife while she lived, and when she was gone,
to her relatives, who are all of a dominating character.
When he finally made up his mind to do us justice
and eliminate Carlos, he went out of town I
wish I could remember where and had this
will drawn up by a stranger, whose name I cannot recall.”
Her shaking tones, her nervous manner
betrayed a weakness equalling, if not surpassing,
that of the brother who dared in secret what he had
not strength to acknowledge openly, and it was with
some hesitation Violet prepared to ask those definite
questions which would elucidate the cause and manner
of a loss seemingly so important. She dreaded
to hear some commonplace tale of inexcusable carelessness.
Something subtler than this the presence
of some unsuspected agency opposed to young Clement’s
interest; some partisan of Carlos; some secret undermining
force in a house full of servants and dependants,
seemed necessary for the development of so ordinary
a situation into a drama justifying the exercise of
her special powers.
“I think I understand now your
exact position in the house, as well as the value
of the paper which you say you have lost. The
next thing for me to hear is how you came to have
charge of this paper, and under what circumstances
you were led to mislay it. Do you not feel quite
ready to tell me?”
“Is is that necessary?” Mrs.
Quintard faltered.
“Very,” replied Violet, watching her curiously.
“I didn’t expect that
is, I hoped you would be able to point out, by some
power we cannot of course explain, just the spot where
the paper lies, without having to tell all that.
Some people can, you know.”
“Ah, I understand. You
regarded me as unfit for practical work, and so credited
me with occult powers. But that is where you made
a mistake, Mrs. Quintard; I’m nothing if not
practical. And let me add, that I’m as
secret as the grave concerning what my clients tell
me. If I am to be of any help to you, I must
be made acquainted with every fact involved in the
loss of this valuable paper. Relate the whole
circumstance or dismiss me from the case. You
can have done nothing more foolish or wrong than many ”
“Oh, don’t say things
like that!” broke in the poor woman in a tone
of great indignation. “I have done nothing
anyone could call either foolish or wicked. I
am simply very unfortunate, and being sensitive But
this isn’t telling the story. I’ll
try to make it all clear; but if I do not, and show
any confusion, stop me and help me out with questions.
I I oh, where shall I begin?”
“With your first knowledge of this second will.”
“Thank you, thank you; now I
can go on. One night, shortly after my brother
had been given up by the physicians, I was called to
his bedside for a confidential talk. As he had
received that day a very large amount of money from
the bank, I thought he was going to hand it over to
me for Clement, but it was for something much more
serious than this he had summoned me. When he
was quite sure that we were alone and nobody anywhere
within hearing, he told me that he had changed his
mind as to the disposal of his property and that it
was to Clement and his children, and not to Carlos,
he was going to leave this house and the bulk of his
money. That he had had a new will drawn up which
he showed me ”
“Showed you?”
“Yes; he made me bring it to
him from the safe where he kept it; and, feeble as
he was, he was so interested in pointing out certain
portions of it that he lifted himself in bed and was
so strong and animated that I thought he was getting
better. But it was a false strength due to the
excitement of the moment, as I saw next day when he
suddenly died.”
“You were saying that you brought
the will to him from his safe. Where was the
safe?”
“In the wall over his head.
He gave me the key to open it. This key he took
from under his pillow. I had no trouble in fitting
it or in turning the lock.”
“And what happened after you looked at the will?”
“I put it back. He told
me to. But the key I kept. He said I was
not to part with it again till the time came for me
to produce the will.”
“And when was that to be?”
“Immediately after the funeral,
if it so happened that Carlos had arrived in time
to attend it. But if for any reason he failed
to be here, I was to let it lie till within three
days of his return, when I was to take it out in the
presence of a Mr. Delahunt who was to have full charge
of it from that time. Oh, I remember all that
well enough! and I meant most earnestly to carry out
his wishes, but ”
“Go on, Mrs. Quintard, pray
go on. What happened? Why couldn’t
you do what he asked?”
“Because the will was gone when
I went to take it out. There was nothing to show
Mr. Delahunt but the empty shelf.”
“Oh, a theft! just a common
theft! Someone overheard the talk you had with
your brother. But how about the key? You
had that?”
“Yes, I had that.”
“Then it was taken from you
and returned? You must have been careless as
to where you kept it ”
“No, I wore it on a chain about
my neck. Though I had no reason to mistrust any
one in the house, I felt that I could not guard this
key too carefully. I even kept it on at night.
In fact it never left me. It was still on my
person when I went into the room with Mr. Delahunt.
But the safe had been opened for all that.”
“There were two keys to it, then?”
“No; in giving me the key, my
brother had strictly warned me not to lose it, as
it had no duplicate.”
“Mrs. Quintard, have you a special confidant
or maid?”
“Yes, my Hetty.”
“How much did she know about this key?”
“Nothing, but that it didn’t
help the fit of my dress. Hetty has cared for
me for years. There’s no more devoted woman
in all New York, nor one who can be more relied upon
to tell the truth. She is so honest with her
tongue that I am bound to believe her even when she
says ”
“What?”
“That it was I and nobody else
who took the will out of the safe last night.
That she saw me come from my brother’s room with
a folded paper in my hand, pass with it into the library,
and come out again without it. If this is so,
then that will is somewhere in that great room.
But we’ve looked in every conceivable place
except the shelves, where it is useless to search.
It would take days to go through them all, and meanwhile
Carlos ”
“We will not wait for Carlos.
We will begin work at once. But just one other
question. How came Hetty to see you in your walk
through the rooms? Did she follow you?”
“Yes. It’s it’s
not the first time I have walked in my sleep.
Last night but she will tell you.
It’s a painful subject to me. I will send
for her to meet us in the library.”
“Where you believe this document to lie hidden?”
“Yes.”
“I am anxious to see the room. It is upstairs,
I believe.”
“Yes.”
She had risen and was moving rapidly
toward the door. Violet eagerly followed her.
Let us accompany her in her passage
up the palatial stairway, and realize the effect upon
her of a splendour whose future ownership possibly
depended entirely upon herself.
It was a cold splendour. The
merry voices of children were lacking in these great
halls. Death past and to come infused the air
with solemnity and mocked the pomp which yet appeared
so much a part of the life here that one could hardly
imagine the huge pillared spaces without it.
To Violet, more or less accustomed
to fine interiors, the chief interest of this one
lay in its connection with the mystery then occupying
her. Stopping for a moment on the stair, she
inquired of Mrs. Quintard if the loss she so deplored
had been made known to the servants, and was much
relieved to find that, with the exception of Mr. Delahunt,
she had not spoken of it to any one but Clement.
“And he will never mention it,” she declared,
“not even to his wife. She has troubles
enough to bear without knowing how near she stood
to a fortune.”
“Oh, she will have her fortune!”
Violet confidently replied. “In time, the
lawyer who drew up the will will appear. But what
you want is an immediate triumph over the cold Carlos,
and I hope you may have it. Ah!”
This expletive was a sigh of sheer surprise.
Mrs. Quintard had unlocked the library
door and Violet had been given her first glimpse of
this, the finest room in New York.
She remembered now that she had often
heard it so characterized, and, indeed, had it been
taken bodily from some historic abbey of the old world,
it could not have expressed more fully, in structure
and ornamentation, the Gothic idea at its best.
All that it lacked were the associations of vanished
centuries, and these, in a measure, were supplied
to the imagination by the studied mellowness of its
tints and the suggestion of age in its carvings.
So much for the room itself, which
was but a shell for holding the great treasure of
valuable books ranged along every shelf. As Violet’s
eyes sped over their ranks and thence to the five
windows of deeply stained glass which faced her from
the southern end, Mrs. Quintard indignantly exclaimed:
“And Carlos would turn this into a billiard
room!”
“I do not like Carlos,”
Violet returned hotly; then remembering herself, hastened
to ask whether Mrs. Quintard was quite positive as
to this room being the one in which she had hidden
the precious document.
“You had better talk to Hetty,”
said that lady, as a stout woman of most prepossessing
appearance entered their presence and paused respectfully
just inside the doorway. “Hetty, you will
answer any questions this young lady may put.
If anyone can help us, she can. But first, what
news from the sick-room?”
“Nothing good. The doctor
has just come for the third time today. Mrs.
Brooks is crying and even the children are dumb with
fear.”
“I will go. I must see
the doctor. I must tell him to keep Clement alive
by any means till ”
She did not wait to say what; but
Violet understood and felt her heart grow heavy.
Could it be that her employer considered this the gay
and easy task she had asked for?
The next minute she was putting her first question:
“Hetty, what did you see in
Mrs. Quintard’s action last night, to make you
infer that she left the missing document in this room?”
The woman’s eyes, which had
been respectfully studying her face, brightened with
a relief which made her communicative. With the
self-possession of a perfectly candid nature, she inquiringly
remarked:
“My mistress has spoken of her infirmity?”
“Yes, and very frankly.”
“She walks in her sleep.”
“So she said.”
“And sometimes when others are asleep, and she
is not.”
“She did not tell me that.”
“She is a very nervous woman
and cannot always keep still when she rouses up at
night. When I hear her rise, I get up too; but,
never being quite sure whether she is sleeping or
not, I am careful to follow her at a certain distance.
Last night I was so far behind her that she had been
to her brother’s room and left it before I saw
her face.”
“Where is his room and where is hers?”
“Hers is in front on this same
floor. Mr. Brooks’s is in the rear, and
can be reached either by the hall or by passing through
this room into a small one beyond, which we called
his den..”
“Describe your encounter.
Where were you standing when you saw her first?”
“In the den I have just mentioned.
There was a bright light in the hall behind me and
I could see her figure quite plainly. She was
holding a folded paper clenched against her breast,
and her movement was so mechanical that I was sure
she was asleep. She was coming this way, and
in another moment she entered this room. The door,
which had been open, remained so, and in my anxiety
I crept to it and looked in after her. There
was no light burning here at that hour, but the moon
was shining in in long rays of variously coloured
light. If I had followed her but I
did not. I just stood and watched her long enough
to see her pass through a blue ray, then through a
green one, and then into, if not through, a red one.
Expecting her to walk straight on, and having some
fears of the staircase once she got into the hall,
I hurried around to the door behind you there to head
her off. But she had not yet left this room.
I waited and waited and still she did not come.
Fearing some accident, I finally ventured to approach
the door and try it. It was locked. This
alarmed me. She had never locked herself in anywhere
before and I did not know what to make of it.
Some persons would have shouted her name, but I had
been warned against doing that, so I simply stood
where I was, and eventually I heard the key turn in
the lock and saw her come out. She was still
walking stiffly, but her hands were empty and hanging
at her side.”
“And then?”
“She went straight to her room
and I after her. I was sure she was dead asleep
by this time.”
“And she was?”
“Yes, Miss; but still full of
what was on her mind. I know this because she
stopped when she reached the bedside and began fumbling
with the waist of her wrapper. It was for the
key she was searching, and when her fingers encountered
it hanging on the outside, she opened her wrapper
and thrust it in on her bare skin.”
“You saw her do all that?”
“As plainly as I see you now.
The light in her room was burning brightly.”
“And after that?”
“She got into bed. It was I who turned
off the light.”
“Has that wrapper of hers a pocket?”
“No, Miss.”
“Nor her gown?”
“No, Miss.”
“So she could not have brought
the paper into her room concealed about her person?”
“No, Miss; she left it here. It never passed
beyond this doorway.”
“But might she not have carried
it back to some place of concealment in the rooms
she had left?”
The woman’s face changed and
a slight flush showed through the natural brown of
her cheeks.
“No,” she disclaimed;
“she could not have done that. I was careful
to lock the library door behind her before I ran out
into the hall.”
“Then,” concluded Violet,
with all the emphasis of conviction, “it is
here, and nowhere else we must look for that document
till we find it.”
Thus assured of the first step in
the task she had before her, Miss Strange settled
down to business.
The room, which towered to the height
of two stories, was in the shape of a huge oval.
This oval, separated into narrow divisions for the
purpose of accommodating the shelves with which it
was lined, narrowed as it rose above the great Gothic
chimney-piece and the five gorgeous windows looking
towards the south, till it met and was lost in the
tracery of the ceiling, which was of that exquisite
and soul-satisfying order which we see in the Henry
VII chapel in Westminster Abbey. What break otherwise
occurred in the circling round of books reaching thus
thirty feet or more above the head was made by the
two doors already spoken of and a narrow strip of
wall at either end of the space occupied by the windows.
No furniture was to be seen there except a couple of
stalls taken from some old cathedral, which stood in
the two bare places just mentioned.
But within, on the extensive floor-space,
several articles were grouped, and Violet, recognizing
the possibilities which any one of them afforded for
the concealment of so small an object as a folded document,
decided to use method in her search, and to that end,
mentally divided the space before her into four segments.
The first took in the door, communicating
with the suite ending in Mr. Brooks’s bedroom.
A diagram of this segment will show that the only
article of furniture in it was a cabinet.
It was at this cabinet Miss Strange made her first
stop.
“You have looked this well through?”
she asked as she bent over the glass case on top to
examine the row of mediaeval missals displayed within
in a manner to show their wonderful illuminations.
“Not the case,” explained
Hetty. “It is locked you see and no one
has as yet succeeded in finding the key. But
we searched the drawers underneath with the greatest
care. Had we sifted the whole contents through
our fingers, I could not be more certain that the
paper is not there.”
Violet stepped into the next segment.
This was the one dominated by the
huge fire-place. A rug lay before the hearth.
To this Violet pointed.
Quickly the woman answered: “We
not only lifted it, but turned it over.”
“And that box at the right?”
“Is full of wood and wood only.”
“Did you take out this wood?”
“Every stick.”
“And those ashes in the fire-place? Something
has been burned there.”
“Yes; but not lately. Besides,
those ashes are all wood ashes. If the least
bit of charred paper had been mixed with them, we should
have considered the matter settled. But you can
see for yourself that no such particle can be found.”
While saying this, she had put the poker into Violet’s
hand. “Rake them about, Miss, and make sure.”
Violet did so, with the result that
the poker was soon put back into place, and she herself
down on her knees looking up the chimney.
“Had she thrust it up there,”
Hetty made haste to remark, “there would have
been some signs of soot on her sleeves. They are
white and very long and are always getting in her
way when she tries to do anything.”
Violet left the fire-place after a
glance at the mantel-shelf on which nothing stood
but a casket of open fretwork, and two coloured photographs
mounted on small easels. The casket was too open
to conceal anything and the photographs lifted too
high above the shelf for even the smallest paper,
let alone a document of any size, to hide behind them.
The chairs, of which there were several
in this part of the room, she passed with just an
inquiring look. They were all of solid oak, without
any attempt at upholstery, and although carved to match
the stalls on the other side of the room, offered
no place for search.
Her delay in the third segment was
brief. Here there was absolutely nothing but
the door by which she had entered, and the books.
As she flitted on, following the oval of the wall,
a small frown appeared on her usually smooth forehead.
She felt the oppression of the books the
countless books. If indeed, she should find herself
obliged to go through them. What a hopeless outlook!
But she had still a segment to consider,
and after that the immense table occupying the centre
of the room, a table which in its double capacity
(for it was as much desk as table) gave more promise
of holding the solution of the mystery than anything
to which she had hitherto given her attention.
The quarter in which she now stood
was the most beautiful, and, possibly, the most precious
of them all. In it blazed the five great windows
which were the glory of the room; but there are no
hiding-places in windows, and much as she revelled
in colour, she dared not waste a moment on them.
There was more hope for her in the towering stalls,
with their possible drawers for books.
But Hetty was before her in the attempt
she made to lift the lids of the two great seats.
“Nothing in either,” said
she; and Violet, with a sigh, turned towards the table.
This was an immense affair, made to
accommodate itself to the shape of the room, but with
a hollowed-out space on the window-side large enough
to hold a chair for the sitter who would use its top
as a desk. On it were various articles suitable
to its double use. Without being crowded, it
displayed a pile of magazines and pamphlets, boxes
for stationery, a writing pad with its accompaniments,
a lamp, and some few ornaments, among which was a
large box, richly inlaid with pearl and ivory, the
lid of which stood wide open.
“Don’t touch,” admonished
Violet, as Hetty stretched out her hand to move some
little object aside. “You have already worked
here busily in the search you made this morning.”
“We handled everything.”
“Did you go through these pamphlets?”
“We shook open each one.
We were especially particular here, since it was at
this table I saw Mrs. Quintard stop.”
“With head level or drooped?”
“Drooped.”
“Like one looking down, rather than up, or around?”
“Yes. A ray of red light
shone on her sleeve. It seemed to me the sleeve
moved as though she were reaching out.”
“Will you try to stand as she
did and as nearly in the same place as possible?”
Hetty glanced down at the table edge,
marked where the gules dominated the blue and green,
and moved to that spot, and paused with her head sinking
slowly towards her breast.
“Very good,” exclaimed
Violet. “But the moon was probably in a
very different position from what the sun is now.”
“You are right; it was higher
up; I chanced to notice it.”
“Let me come,” said Violet.
Hetty moved, and Violet took her place
but in a spot a step or two farther front. This
brought her very near to the centre of the table.
Hanging her head, just as Hetty had done, she reached
out her right hand.
“Have you looked under this
blotter?” she asked, pointing towards the pad
she touched. “I mean, between the blotter
and the frame which holds it?”
“I certainly did,” answered Hetty, with
some pride.
Violet remained staring down.
“Then you took off everything that was lying
on it?”
“Oh, yes.”
Violet continued to stare down at the blotter.
Then impetuously:
“Put them back in their accustomed places.”
Hetty obeyed.
Violet continued to look at them,
then slowly stretched out her hand, but soon let it
fall again with an air of discouragement. Certainly
the missing document was not in the ink-pot or the
mucilage bottle. Yet something made her stoop
again over the pad and subject it to the closest scrutiny.
“If only nothing had been touched!”
she inwardly sighed. But she let no sign of her
discontent escape her lips, simply exclaiming as she
glanced up at the towering spaces overhead: “The
books! the books! Nothing remains but for you
to call up all the servants, or get men from the outside
and, beginning at one end I should say the
upper one take down every book standing
within reach of a woman of Mrs. Quintard’s height.”
“Hear first what Mrs. Quintard
has to say about that,” interrupted the woman
as that lady entered in a flutter of emotion springing
from more than one cause.
“The young lady thinks that
we should remove the books,” Hetty observed,
as her mistress’s eye wandered to hers from Violet’s
abstracted countenance.
“Useless. If we were to
undertake to do that, Carlos would be here before
half the job was finished. Besides, Hetty must
have told you my extreme aversion to nicely bound
books. I will not say that when awake I never
place my hand on one, but once in a state of somnambulism,
when every natural whim has full control, I am sure
that I never would. There is a reason for my
prejudice. I was not always rich. I once
was very poor. It was when I was first married
and long before Clement had begun to make his fortune.
I was so poor then that frequently I went hungry,
and what was worse saw my little daughter cry for food.
And why? Because my husband was a bibliomaniac.
He would spend on fine editions what would have kept
the family comfortable. It is hard to believe,
isn’t it? I have seen him bring home a
Grolier when the larder was as empty as that box;
and it made me hate books so, especially those of extra
fine binding, that I have to tear the covers off before
I can find courage to read them.”
O life! life! how fast Violet was learning it!
“I can understand your idea,
Mrs. Quintard, but as everything else has failed,
I should make a mistake not to examine these shelves.
It is just possible that we may be able to shorten
the task very materially; that we may not have to
call in help, even. To what extent have they been
approached, or the books handled, since you discovered
the loss of the paper we are looking for?”
“Not at all. Neither of
us went near them.” This from Hetty.
“Nor any one else?”
“No one else has been admitted
to the room. We locked both doors the moment
we felt satisfied that the will had been left here.”
“That’s a relief.
Now I may be able to do something. Hetty, you
look like a very strong woman, and I, as you see,
am very little. Would you mind lifting me up
to these shelves? I want to look at them.
Not at the books, but at the shelves themselves.”
The wondering woman stooped and raised
her to the level of the shelf she had pointed out.
Violet peered closely at it and then at the ones just
beneath.
“Am I heavy?” she asked;
“if not, let me see those on the other side of
the door.”
Hetty carried her over.
Violet inspected each shelf as high
as a woman of Mrs. Quintard’s stature could
reach, and when on her feet again, knelt to inspect
the ones below.
“No one has touched or drawn
anything from these shelves in twenty-four hours,”
she declared. “The small accumulation of
dust along their edges has not been disturbed at any
point. It was very different with the table-top.
That shows very plainly where you had moved things
and where you had not.”
“Was that what you were looking for? Well,
I never!”
Violet paid no heed; she was thinking and thinking
very deeply.
Hetty turned towards her mistress,
then quickly back to Violet, whom she seized by the
arm.
“What’s the matter with
Mrs. Quintard?” she hurriedly asked. “If
it were night, I should think that she was in one
of her spells.”
Violet started and glanced where Hetty
pointed. Mrs. Quintard was within a few feet
of them, but as oblivious of their presence as though
she stood alone in the room. Possibly, she thought
she did. With fixed eyes and mechanical step
she began to move straight towards the table, her
whole appearance of a nature to make Hetty’s
blood run cold, but to cause that of Violet’s
to bound through her veins with renewed hope.
“The one thing I could have
wished!” she murmured under her breath.
“She has fallen into a trance. She is again
under the dominion of her idea. If we watch and
do not disturb her she may repeat her action of last
night, and herself show where she has put this precious
document.”
Meanwhile Mrs. Quintard continued
to advance. A moment more, and her smooth white
locks caught the ruddy glow centred upon the chair
standing in the hollow of the table. Words were
leaving her lips, and her hand, reaching out over
the blotter, groped among the articles scattered there
till it settled on a large pair of shears.
“Listen,” muttered Violet
to the woman pressing close to her side. “You
are acquainted with her voice; catch what she says
if you can.”
Hetty could not; an undistinguishable
murmur was all that came to her ears.
Violet took a step nearer. Mrs.
Quintard’s hand had left the shears and was
hovering uncertainly in the air. Her distress
was evident. Her head, no longer steady on her
shoulders, was turning this way and that, and her
tones becoming inarticulate.
“Paper! I want paper”
burst from her lips in a shrill unnatural cry.
But when they listened for more and
watched to see the uncertain hand settle somewhere,
she suddenly came to herself and turned upon them
a startled glance, which speedily changed into one
of the utmost perplexity.
“What am I doing here?”
she asked. “I have a feeling as if I had
almost seen almost touched oh,
it’s gone! and all is blank again. Why
couldn’t I keep it till I knew ”
Then she came wholly to herself and, forgetting even
the doubts of a moment since, remarked to Violet in
her old tremulous fashion:
“You asked us to pull down the
books? But you’ve evidently thought better
of it.”
“Yes, I have thought better
of it.” Then, with a last desperate hope
of re-arousing the visions lying somewhere back in
Mrs. Quintard’s troubled brain, Violet ventured
to observe: “This is likely to resolve itself
into a psychological problem, Mrs. Quintard. Do
you suppose that if you fell again into the condition
of last night, you would repeat your action and so
lead us yourself to where the will lies hidden?”
“Possibly; but it may be weeks
before I walk again in my sleep, and meanwhile Carlos
will have arrived, and Clement, possibly, died.
My nephew is so low that the doctor is coming back
at midnight. Miss Strange, Clement is a man in
a thousand. He says he wants to see you.
Would you be willing to accompany me to his room for
a moment? He will not make many more requests
and I will take care that the interview is not prolonged.”
“I will go willingly. But
would it not be better to wait ”
“Then you may never see him at all.”
“Very well; but I wish I had some better news
to give.”
“That will come later.
This house was never meant for Carlos. Hetty,
you will stay here. Miss Strange, let us go now.”
“You need not speak; just let him see you.”
Violet nodded and followed Mrs. Quintard into the
sick-room.
The sight which met her eyes tried
her young emotions deeply. Staring at her from
the bed, she saw two piercing eyes over whose brilliance
death as yet had gained no control. Clements’s
soul was in that gaze; Clement halting at the brink
of dissolution to sound the depths behind him for
the hope which would make departure easy. Would
he see in her, a mere slip of a girl dressed in fashionable
clothes and bearing about her all the marks of social
distinction, the sort of person needed for the task
upon the success of which depended his darlings’
future? She could hardly expect it. Yet
as she continued to meet his gaze with all the seriousness
the moment demanded, she beheld those burning orbs
lose some of their demand and the fingers, which had
lain inert upon the bedspread, flutter gently and
move as if to draw attention to his wife and the three
beautiful children clustered at the foot-board.
He had not spoken nor could she speak,
but the solemnity with which she raised her right
hand as to a listening Heaven called forth upon his
lips what was possibly his last smile, and with the
memory of this faint expression of confidence on his
part, she left the room, to make her final attempt
to solve the mystery of the missing document.
Facing the elderly lady in the hall,
she addressed her with the force and soberness of
one leading a forlorn hope:
“I want you to concentrate your
mind upon what I have to say to you. Do you think
you can do this?”
“I will try,” replied
the poor woman with a backward glance at the door
which had just been closed upon her.
“What we want,” said she,
“is, as I stated before, an insight into the
workings of your brain at the time you took the will
from the safe. Try and follow what I have to
say, Mrs. Quintard. Dreams are no longer regarded
by scientists as prophecies of the future or even as
spontaneous and irrelevant conditions of thought, but
as reflections of a near past, which can almost without
exception be traced back to the occurrences which
caused them. Your action with the will had its
birth in some previous line of thought afterwards
forgotten. Let us try and find that thought.
Recall, if you can, just what you did or read yesterday.”
Mrs. Quintard looked frightened.
“But, I have no memory,”
she objected. “I forget quickly, so quickly
that in order to fulfill my engagements I have to keep
a memorandum of every day’s events. Yesterday?
yesterday? What did I do yesterday? I went
downtown for one thing, but I hardly know where.”
“Perhaps your memorandum of
yesterday’s doings will help you.”
“I will get it. But it
won’t give you the least help. I keep it
only for my own eye, and ”
“Never mind; let me see it.”
And she waited impatiently for it to be put in her
hands.
But when she came to read the record
of the last two days, this was all she found:
Saturday: Mauretania nearly due.
I must let Mr. Delahunt know today that he’s
wanted here to-morrow. Hetty will try on my dresses.
Says she has to alter them. Mrs. Peabody came
to lunch, and we in such trouble! Had to go down
street. Errand for Clement. The will, the
will! I think of nothing else. Is it safe
where it is? No peace of mind till to-morrow.
Clement better this afternoon. Says he must live
till Carlos gets back; not to triumph over him, but
to do what he can to lessen his disappointment.
My good Clement!
So nervous, I went to pasting photographs,
and was forgetting all my troubles when Hetty brought
in another dress to try on.
Quiet in the great house, during which
the clock on the staircase sent forth seven musical
peals. To Violet waiting alone in the library,
they acted as a summons. She was just leaving
the room, when the sound of hubbub in the hall below
held her motionless in the doorway. An automobile
had stopped in front, and several persons were entering
the house, in a gay and unseemly fashion. As
she stood listening, uncertain of her duty, she perceived
the frenzied figure of Mrs. Quintard approaching.
As she passed by, she dropped one word: “Carlos!”
Then she went staggering on, to disappear a moment
later down the stairway.
This vision lost, another came.
This time it was that of Clements’s wife leaning
from the marble balustrade above, the shadow of approaching
grief battling with the present terror in her perfect
features. Then she too withdrew from view and
Violet, left for the moment alone in the great hall,
stepped back into the library and began to put on her
hat.
The lights had been turned up in the
grand salon and it was in this scene of gorgeous colour
that Mrs. Quintard came face to face with Carlos Pelacios.
Those who were witness to her entrance say that she
presented a noble appearance, as with the resolution
of extreme desperation she stood waiting for his first
angry attack.
He, a short, thick-set, dark man,
showing both in features and expression the Spanish
blood of his paternal ancestors, started to address
her in tones of violence, but changed his note, as
he met her eye, to one simply sardonic.
“You here!” he began.
“I assure you, madame, that it is a pleasure
which is not without its inconveniences. Did
you not receive my cablegram requesting this house
to be made ready for my occupancy?”
“I did.”
“Then why do I find guests here?
They do not usually precede the arrival of their host.”
“Clement is very ill ”
“So much the greater reason that he should have
been removed ”
“You were not expected for two
days yet. You cabled that you were coming on
the Mauretania.”
“Yes, I cabled that. Elisabetta,” this
to his wife standing silently in the background “we
will go to the Plaza for tonight. At three o’clock
tomorrow we shall expect to find this house in readiness
for our return. Later, if Mrs. Quintard desires
to visit us we shall be pleased to receive her.
But” this to Mrs. Quintard herself “you
must come without Clement and the kids.”
Mrs. Quintard’s rigid hand stole up to her throat.
“Clement is dying. He is
failing hourly,” she murmured. “He
may not live till morning.”
Even Carlos was taken aback by this.
“Oh, well!” said he, “we will give
you two days.”
Mrs. Quintard gasped, then she walked
straight up to him. “You will give us all
the time his condition requires and more, much more.
He is the real owner of this house, not you.
My brother left a will bequeathing it to him.
You are my nephew’s guests, and not he yours.
As his representative I entreat you and your wife
to remain here until you can find a home to your mind.”
The silence seethed. Carlos had
a temper of fire and so had his wife. But neither
spoke, till he had gained sufficient control over himself
to remark without undue rancour:
“I did not think you had the
wit to influence your brother to this extent; otherwise,
I should have cut my travels short.” Then
harshly: “Where is this will?”
“It will be produced.” But the words
faltered.
Carlos glanced at the man standing
behind his wife; then back at Mrs. Quintard.
“Wills are not scribbled off
on deathbeds; or if they are, it needs something more
than a signature to legalize them. I don’t
believe in this trick of a later will. Mr. Cavanagh” here
he indicated the gentleman accompanying them “has
done my father’s business for years, and he
assured me that the paper he holds in his pocket is
the first, last, and only expression of your brother’s
wishes. If you are in a position to deny this,
show us the document you mention; show us it at once,
or inform us where and in whose hands it can be found.”
“That, for for reasons
I cannot give, I must refuse to do at present.
But I am ready to swear ”
A mocking laugh cut her short.
Did it issue from his lips or from those of his highstrung
and unfeeling wife? It might have come from either;
there was cause enough.
“Oh!” she faltered, “may
God have mercy!” and was sinking before their
eyes, when she heard her name, called from the threshold,
and, looking that way, saw Hetty beaming upon her,
backed by a little figure with a face so radiant that
instinctively her hand went out to grasp the folded
sheet of paper Hetty was seeking to thrust upon her.
“Ah!” she cried, in a
great voice, “you will not have to wait, nor
Clement either. Here is the will! The children
have come into their own.” And she fell
at their feet in a dead faint.
“Where did you find it?
Oh! where did you find it? I have waited a week
to know. When, after Carlos’s sudden departure,
I stood beside Clement’s death-bed and saw from
the look he gave me that he could still feel and understand,
I told him that you had succeeded in your task and
that all was well with us. But I was not able
to tell him how you had succeeded or in what place
the will had been found; and he died, unknowing.
But we may know, may we not, now that he is laid away
and there is no more talk of our leaving this house?”
Violet smiled, but very tenderly,
and in a way not to offend the mourner. They
were sitting in the library the great library
which was to remain in Clement’s family after
all and it amused her to follow the dreaming
lady’s glances as they ran in irrepressible curiosity
over the walls. Had Violet wished, she could
have kept her secret forever. These eyes would
never have discovered it.
But she was of a sympathetic temperament,
our Violet, so after a moment’s delay, during
which she satisfied herself that little, if anything,
had been touched in the room since her departure from
it a week before, she quietly observed:
“You were right in persisting
that you hid it in this room. It was here I found
it. Do you notice that photograph on the mantel
which does not stand exactly straight on its easel?”
“Yes.”
“Supposing you take it down. You can reach
it, can you not?”
“Oh, yes. But what ”
“Lift it down, dear Mrs. Quintard;
and then turn it round and look at its back.”
Agitated and questioning, the lady
did as she was bid, and at the first glance gave a
cry of surprise, if not of understanding. The
square of brown paper, acting as a backing to the
picture, was slit across, disclosing a similar one
behind it which was still intact.
“Oh! was it hidden in here?” she asked.
“Very completely,” assented
Violet. “Pasted in out of sight by a lady
who amuses herself with mounting and framing photographs.
Usually, she is conscious of her work, but this time
she performed her task in a dream.”
Mrs. Quintard was all amazement.
“I don’t remember touching
these pictures,” she declared. “I
never should have remembered. You are a wonderful
person, Miss Strange. How came you to think these
photographs might have two backings? There was
nothing to show that this was so.”
“I will tell you, Mrs. Quintard. You helped
me.”
“I helped you?”
“Yes. You remember the
memorandum you gave me? In it you mentioned pasting
photographs. But this was not enough in itself
to lead me to examine those on the mantel, if you
had not given me another suggestion a little while
before. We did not tell you this, Mrs. Quintard,
at the time, but during the search we were making
here that day, you had a lapse into that peculiar
state which induces you to walk in your sleep.
It was a short one, lasting but a moment, but in a
moment one can speak, and, this you did ”
“Spoke? I spoke?”
“Yes, you uttered the word ‘paper!’
not the paper, but ‘paper!’ and reached
out towards the shears. Though I had not much
time to think of it then, afterwards upon reading
your memorandum I recalled your words, and asked myself
if it was not paper to cut, rather than to hide, you
wanted. If it was to cut, and you were but repeating
the experience of the night before, then the room
should contain some remnants of cut paper. Had
we seen any? Yes, in the basket, under the desk
we had taken out and thrown back again a strip or
so of wrapping paper, which, if my memory did not
fail me, showed a clean-cut edge. To pull this
strip out again and spread it flat upon the desk was
the work of a minute, and what I saw led me to look
all over the room, not now for the folded document,
but for a square of brown paper, such as had been taken
out of this larger sheet. Was I successful?
Not for a long while, but when I came to the photographs
on the mantel and saw how nearly they corresponded
in shape and size to what I was looking for, I recalled
again your fancy for mounting photographs and felt
that the mystery was solved.
“A glance at the back of one
of them brought disappointment, but when I turned
about its mate You know what I found underneath
the outer paper. You had laid the will against
the original backing and simply pasted another one
over it.
“That the discovery came in
time to cut short a very painful interview has made
me joyful for a week.
“And now may I see the children?”