Arnold arrived at the office the next
morning punctually at five minutes to nine, and was
already at work when Mr. Jarvis appeared ten minutes
later.
“Gayety’s not upset you,
then, eh?” the latter remarked, divesting himself
of his hat and overcoat.
“Not at all, thanks,” Arnold answered.
“Nice house, the governor’s, isn’t
it?”
“Very nice indeed.”
“Good dinners he gives, too,”
continued Mr. Jarvis. “Slap-up wines, and
the right sort of company. Must have been an eye-opener
for you.”
Arnold nodded. He was not in
the least anxious to discuss the events of the previous
evening with Mr. Jarvis. The latter, however,
came a little nearer to him. He took off his
gold-rimmed spectacles and wiped them carefully.
“Now I should like to know,”
he said, “exactly how Mrs. Weatherley struck
you?”
“She appeared to me to be a
singularly charming and very beautiful lady,”
Arnold replied, writing quickly.
Mr. Jarvis was disappointed.
“She’s good-looking enough,”
he admitted. “I can’t say that I’ve
seen much of her, mind you, but she gave me the impression
of a woman who wasn’t above using the powder-puff.
She drove down here with the governor one day, and
to look at her you’d have thought she was a
princess come among the slums.”
“She was born abroad,”
Arnold remarked. “I dare say this atmosphere
would seem a little strange to her.”
“Sort of half a foreigner, I’ve
understood,” Mr. Jarvis continued. “Speaks
English all right, though. I can’t help
thinking,” he went on, “that the governor
would have done better to have married into one of
our old city families. Nothing like them, you
know, Chetwode. Some fine women, too. There’s
Godson, the former Lord Mayor. He had four daughters,
and the governor might have had his pick.”
“Here he comes,” Arnold remarked, quietly.
Mr. Jarvis took the hint and went
off to his work. A moment or two later, Mr. Weatherley
arrived. He passed through the office and bestowed
upon every one his customary salutation. At Arnold’s
desk he paused for a moment.
“Feeling all right this morning,
young man?” he inquired, striving after a note
of patronage which somehow or other eluded him.
“Quite well, thank you, sir.”
“You found the evening pleasant,
I hope? Didn’t lose any money at bridge,
eh?”
“Mrs. Weatherley was good enough
to take on the stakes, sir,” Arnold replied.
“As a matter of fact, I believe that we won.
I enjoyed the evening very much, thank you.”
Mr. Weatherley passed on to his office.
Jarvis waited until his door was closed.
“So you played bridge with Mrs.
Weatherley, eh?” he remarked.
“I did,” Arnold admitted.
“Have you noticed the shrinkage of weight in
these last invoices?”
Mr. Jarvis accepted the papers which
his junior passed him, and departed into the warehouse.
Arnold was left untroubled with any more questions.
At half-past twelve, however, he was sent for into
Mr. Weatherley’s private office. Mr. Weatherley
was leaning back in his chair and he had the air of
a man who has come to a resolution.
“Shut the door, Chetwode,” he ordered.
Arnold did as he was bidden.
“Come up to the desk here,”
he was further instructed. “Now, listen
to me,” Mr. Weatherley continued, after a moment’s
pause. “You are a young man of discretion,
I am sure. My wife, I may say, Chetwode, thought
quite highly of you last night.”
Arnold looked his employer in the
face and felt a sudden pang of sympathy. Mr.
Weatherley was certainly not looking as hale and prosperous
as a few months ago. His cheeks were flabby, and
there was a worried look about him which the head
of the firm of Weatherley & Co. should certainly not
have worn.
“Mrs. Weatherley is very kind,
sir,” he remarked. “As to my discretion,
I may say that I believe I am to be trusted. I
should try, of course, to justify any confidence you
might place in me.”
“I believe so, too, Chetwode,”
Mr. Weatherley declared. “I am going to
trust you now with a somewhat peculiar commission.
You may have noticed that I have been asked to speak
privately upon the telephone several times this morning.”
“Certainly, sir,” Arnold
replied. “It was I who put you through.”
“I am not even sure,”
Mr. Weatherley continued, “who it was speaking,
but I received some communications which I think I
ought to take notice of. I want you accordingly
to go to a certain restaurant in the west-end, the
name and address of which I will give you, order your
lunch there you can have whatever you like and
wait until you see Mr. Rosario. I dare say you
remember meeting Mr. Rosario last night, eh?”
“Certainly, sir. I remember him quite well.”
“He will not be expecting you,
so you will have to sit near the door and watch for
him. Directly you see him, you must go to him
and say that this message is from a friend. Tell
him that whatever engagement he may have formed for
luncheon, he is to go at once to the Prince’s
Grill Room and remain there until two o’clock.
He is not to lunch at the Milan that is
the name of the place where you will be. Do you
understand?”
“I understand perfectly,”
Arnold assented. “But supposing he only
laughs at me?”
“You will have done your duty,”
Mr. Weatherley said. “There need be no
mystery about the affair. You can say at once
that you are there as the result of certain telephone
messages addressed to me this morning, and that I
should have come myself if it had been possible.
If he chooses to disregard them, it is his affair entirely not
mine. At the same time, I think that he will go.”
“It seems an odd sort of a thing
to tell a perfect stranger, sir,” Arnold remarked.
Mr. Weatherley produced a five-pound note.
“You can’t go into those
sort of places without money in your pocket,”
he continued. “You can account to me for
the change later, but don’t spare yourself.
Have as good a lunch as you can eat. The restaurant
is the Milan Grill Room on the Strand the
cafe, mind, not the main restaurant. You know
where it is?”
“Quite well, sir, thank you.”
Mr. Weatherley looked at his employee curiously.
“Have you ever been there, then?” he inquired.
“Once or twice, sir,” Arnold admitted.
“Not on the twenty-eight shillings a week you
get from me!”
“Quite true, sir,” Arnold
assented. “My circumstances were slightly
different at the time.”
Mr. Weatherley hesitated. This
young man’s manner did not invite confidences.
On the other hand, he was genuinely curious about him.
“What made you come into the
city, Chetwode?” he inquired. “You
don’t seem altogether cut out for it not
that you don’t do your work and all that sort
of thing,” he went on, hastily. “I
haven’t a word of complaint to make, mind.
All the same, you certainly seem as though you might
have done a little better for yourself.”
“It is the fault of circumstances,
sir,” Arnold replied. “I am hoping
that before long you will find that I do my work well
enough to give me a better position.”
“You are ambitious, then?”
The face of the young man was suddenly grim.
“I mean to get on,” he
declared. “There were several years of my
life when I used to imagine things. I have quite
finished with that. I realize that there is only
one way by means of which a man can count.”
Mr. Weatherley nodded ponderously.
“Well,” he said, “let
me see that your work is well done, and you may find
promotion is almost as quick in the city as anywhere
else. You had better be off now.”
“I trust,” Arnold ventured,
as he turned toward the door, “that Mrs. Weatherley
is quite well this morning?”
“So far as I know, she is,”
Mr. Weatherley replied. “My wife isn’t
usually visible before luncheon time. Continental
habits, you know. I shall expect you back by
three o’clock. You must come and report
to me then.”
Arnold brushed his hat and coat with
extra care as he took them down from the peg.
“Going to lunch early, aren’t
you?” Mr. Jarvis remarked, looking at the clock.
“Not sure that we can spare you yet. Smithers
isn’t back.”
“I am going out for the governor,” Arnold
replied.
“What, to the bank?” Mr. Jarvis asked.
Arnold affected not to hear.
He walked out into the street, lit a cigarette, and
had his boots carefully polished at London Bridge
Station. Then, as he had plenty of time, he took
the train to Charing Cross and walked blithely down
the Strand. Freed from the routine of his office
work, he found his mind once more full of the events
of last night. There was so much that he could
not understand, yet there was so much that seemed
to be leading him on towards the land of adventures.
He found himself watching the faces in the Strand
with a new interest, and he laughed to himself as he
realized what it was. He was looking all the time
for the man whose face he had seen pressed to the
window-pane!