Mr. Weatherley laid down his newspaper
with a grunt. He was alone in his private office
with his newly appointed secretary.
“Two whole days gone already
and they’ve never caught that fellow!”
he exclaimed. “They don’t seem to
have a clue, even.”
Arnold looked up from some papers
upon which he was engaged.
“We can’t be absolutely
sure of that, sir,” he reminded his employer.
“They wouldn’t give everything away to
the Press.”
Mr. Weatherley threw the newspaper
which he had been reading onto the floor, and struck
the table with his fist.
“The whole affair,” he
declared, “is scandalous perfectly
scandalous. The police system of this country
is ridiculously inadequate. Scotland Yard ought
to be thoroughly overhauled. Some one should
take the matter up one of the ha’penny
papers on the lookout for a sensation might manage
it. Just see here what happens,” he went
on earnestly. “A man is murdered in cold
blood in a fashionable restaurant. The murderer
simply walks out of the place into the street and
no one hears of him again. He can’t have
been swallowed up, can he? You were there, Chetwode.
What do you think of it?”
Arnold, who had been thinking of little
else for the last few days, shook his head.
“I don’t know what to
think, sir,” he admitted, “except that
the murderer up till now has been extraordinarily
lucky.”
“Either that or he was fiendishly
clever,” Mr. Weatherley agreed, pulling nervously
at his little patch of gray sidewhiskers. “I
wonder, now you’ve read the case,
Chetwode?”
“Every word of it,” Arnold admitted.
“Have you formed any idea yourself
as to the motive?” Mr. Weatherley asked nervously.
Arnold shook his head.
“At present there seems nothing
to go on, sir,” he remarked. “I did
hear it said that some one was trying to blackmail
him and Mr. Rosario wasn’t having any.”
Mr. Weatherley pushed his scant hair
back with his hand. He appeared to feel the heat
of the office.
“You’ve heard that, too,
eh?” he muttered. “It occurred to
me from the first, Chetwode. It certainly did
occur to me. You will remember that I mentioned
it.”
“What did your brother-in-law
think of it, sir?” Arnold asked. “He
and Mr. Rosario seemed to be very great friends.
They were talking together for a long time that night
at your house.”
Mr. Weatherley jumped to his feet
and threw open the window. The air which entered
the office from the murky street was none of the best,
but he seemed to find it welcome. Arnold was shocked
to see his face when he turned around.
“The Count Sabatini is a very
extraordinary man,” Mr. Weatherley confessed.
“He and his friends come to my house, but to
tell you the truth I don’t know much about them.
Mrs. Weatherley wishes to have them there and that
is quite enough for me. All the same, I don’t
feel that they’re exactly the sort of people
I’ve been used to, Chetwode, and that’s
a fact.”
Mr. Weatherley had resumed his seat.
He was leaning back in his chair now, his hands drooping
to his side, looking precisely what he was an
ungraceful, commonplace little person, without taste
or culture, upon whom even a good tailor seemed to
have wasted his efforts. A certain pomposity
which in a way became the man proclaimed
his prosperity and redeemed him from complete insignificance had
for a moment departed. He was like a pricked
bladder. Arnold could scarcely help feeling sorry
for him.
“I shouldn’t allow these
things to worry me, if I were you, sir,” Arnold
suggested respectfully. “If there is anything
which you don’t understand, I should ask for
an explanation. Mrs. Weatherley is much too kind
and generous to wish you to be worried, I am sure.”
Then the side of the man with which
Arnold wholly sympathized showed itself suddenly.
At the mention of his wife’s name an expression
partly fatuous, partly beatific, transformed his homely
features. He was looking at her picture which
stood always opposite him. He had the air of
an adoring devotee before some sacred shrine.
“You are quite right, Chetwode,”
he declared, “quite right, but I am always very
careful not to let my wife know how I feel. You
see, the Count Sabatini is her only relative, and
before our marriage they were inseparable. He
was an exile from Portugal and it seems to me these
foreigners hang on together more than we do. I
am only too glad for her to be with him as much as
she chooses. It is just a little unfortunate
that his friends should sometimes be well,
a trifle distasteful, but one must put
up with it. One must put up with it, eh?
After all, Rosario was a man very well spoken of.
There was no reason why he shouldn’t have come
to my house. Plenty of other men in my position
would have been glad to have entertained him.”
“Certainly, sir,” agreed
Arnold. “I believe he went a great deal
into society.”
“And, no doubt,” Mr. Weatherley
continued, eagerly, “he had many enemies.
In the course of his commercial career, which I believe
was an eventful one, he would naturally make enemies....
By the bye, Chetwode, speaking of blackmail that
blackmail rumor, eh? You don’t happen to
have heard any particulars?”
“None at all, sir,” replied
Arnold. “I don’t suppose anything
is really known. It seems a probable solution
of the affair, though.”
Mr. Weatherley nodded thoughtfully.
“It does,” he admitted.
“I can quite imagine any one trying it on and
Rosario defying him. Just the course which would
commend itself to such a man.”
“The proper course, no doubt,”
Arnold remarked, “although it scarcely turned
out the best for poor Mr. Rosario.”
Mr. Weatherley distinctly shivered.
“Well, well,” he declared,
“you had better take out those invoices, and
ask Jarvis to see me at once about Budden & Williams’
account.... God bless my soul alive, why, here’s
Mrs. Weatherley!”
A car had stopped outside and both
men had caught a vision of a fur-clad feminine figure
crossing the pavement. Mr. Weatherley’s
fingers, busy already with his tie, were trembling
with excitement. His whole appearance was transformed.
“Hurry out and meet her, Chetwode!”
he exclaimed. “Show her the way in!
This is the first time in her life she has been here
of her own accord. Just as we were speaking about
her, too!”
Fenella entered the office as a princess
shod in satin might enter a pigsty. Her ermine-trimmed
gown was raised with both her hands, her delightful
nose had a distinct tilt and her lips a curl.
But when she saw Arnold, a wonderful smile transformed
her face. She was in the middle of the clerk’s
office, the cynosure of twenty-four staring eyes,
but she dropped her gown and held out both her delicately
gloved hands. The fall of her skirts seemed to
shake out strange perfumes into the stuffy room.
“Ah! you are really here, then,
in this odious gloom? You will show me where
I can find my husband?”
Arnold stepped back and threw open
the door of the inner office. She laughed into
his face.
“Do not go away,” she
ordered. “Come in with me. I want to
thank you for looking after me the other day.”
Arnold murmured a few words of excuse
and turned away. Mr. Tidey Junior carefully arranged
his necktie and slipped down from his stool.
“Jarvis,” he exclaimed,
“a free lunch and my lifetime’s gratitude
if you’ll send me into the governor’s
office on any pretext whatever!”
Mr. Jarvis, who was answering the
telephone, took off his gold-rimmed spectacles and
wiped them.
“Some one must go in and say
that Mr. Burland, of Harris & Burland, wishes to know
at what time he can see the governor. I think
you had better let Chetwode go, though.”
The young man turned away, humming a tune.
“Not I!” he replied.
“Don’t be surprised, you fellows, if I
am not out just yet. The governor’s certain
to introduce me.”
He knocked at the door confidently
and disappeared. In a very few seconds he was
out again. His appearance was not altogether
indicative of conquest.
“Governor says Burland can go
to the devil, or words to that effect,” he announced,
ill-naturedly. “Chetwode, you’re to
take in the private cheque book.... I tell you
what, Jarvis,” he added, slowly resuming his
stool, “the governor’s not himself these
days. The least he could have done would have
been to introduce me, especially as he’s been
up at our place so often. Rotten form, I call
it. Anyway, she’s not nearly so good-looking
close to.”
Mr. Jarvis proceeded to inform the
inquirer through the telephone that Mr. Weatherley
was unfortunately not to be found at the moment.
Arnold, with Mr. Weatherley’s cheque book in
his hand, knocked at the door of the private office
and closed the door carefully behind him. As
he stood upon the threshold, his heart gave a sudden
leap. Mr. Weatherley was sitting in his accustomed
chair, but his attitude and expression were alike
unusual. He was like a man shrinking under the
whip. And Fenella he was quick enough
to catch the look in her face, the curl of her lips,
the almost wicked flash of her eyes. Yet in a
moment she was laughing.
“Your cheque book, Mr. Weatherley,”
he remarked, laying it down upon the desk.
Mr. Weatherley barely thanked him barely,
indeed, seemed to realize Arnold’s presence.
The latter turned to go. Fenella, however, intervened.
“Don’t go away, if you
please, Mr. Chetwode,” she begged. “My
husband is angry with me and I am a little frightened.
And all because I have asked him to help a very good
friend of mine who is in need of money to help forward
a splendid cause.”
Arnold was embarrassed. He glanced
doubtfully at Mr. Weatherley, who was fingering his
cheque book.
“It is scarcely a matter for
discussion ” his employer began, but
Fenella threw out her hands.
“Oh! la, la!” she interrupted.
“Don’t bore me so, my dear Samuel, or
I will come to this miserable place no more. Mr.
Starling must have this five hundred pounds because
I have promised him, and because I have promised my
brother that he shall have it. It is most important,
and if all goes well it will come back to you some
day or other. If not, you must make up your mind
to lose it. Please write out the cheque, and
afterwards Mr. Chetwode is to take me out to lunch.
Andrea asked me especially to bring him, and if we
do not go soon,” she added, consulting a little
jeweled watch upon her wrist, “we shall be late.
Andrea does not like to be kept waiting.”
“I was hoping,” Mr. Weatherley
remarked, with an unwieldy attempt at jocularity,
“that I might be asked out to luncheon myself.”
“Another day, my dear husband,”
she promised carelessly. “You know that
you and Andrea do not agree very well. You bore
him so much and then he is irritable. I do not
like Andrea when he is irritable. Give me my
cheque, dear, and let me go.”
Mr. Weatherley dipped his pen in the
ink, solemnly wrote out a cheque and tore it from
the book. Fenella, who had risen to her feet
and was standing over him with her hand upon his shoulder,
stuffed it carelessly into the gold purse which she
was carrying. Then she patted him on the cheek
with her gloved hand.
“Don’t overwork,”
she said, “and come home punctually. Are
you quite ready, Mr. Chetwode?”
Arnold, who was finding the position
more than ever embarrassing, turned to his employer.
“Can you spare me, sir?” he asked.
Mr. Weatherley nodded.
“If my wife desires you to go,
certainly,” he replied. “But Fenella,”
he added, “I am not very busy myself. Is
it absolutely necessary that you lunch with your brother?
Perhaps, even if it is, he can put up with my society
for once.”
She threw a kiss to him from the door.
“Unreasonable person!”
she exclaimed. “To-day it is absolutely
necessary that I lunch with Andrea. You must go
to your club if you are not busy, and play billiards
or something. Come, Mr. Chetwode,” she
added, turning towards the door, “we have barely
a quarter of an hour to get to the Carlton. I
dare not be late. The only person,” she
went on, as they passed through the outer office and
Arnold paused for a moment to take down his hat and
coat, “whom I really fear in this world is Andrea.”
Mr. Weatherley remained for a moment
in the chair where she had left him, gazing idly at
the counterfoil of the cheque. Then he rose and
from a safe point of vantage watched the car drive
off. With slow, leaden footsteps he returned
to his seat. It was past his own regular luncheon
hour, but he made no movement to leave the place.