Jack Glover listened gravely to the
story which the girl told. He had called at her
lodgings on the following morning to secure her signature
to some documents, and breathlessly and a little shamefacedly,
she told him what had happened.
“Of course it was an accident,”
she insisted, “in fact, Mr. and Miss Briggerland
were almost knocked down by the car. But you don’t
know how thankful I am your Mr. Jaggs was on the spot.”
“Where is he now?” asked Jack.
“I don’t know,”
replied the girl. “He just limped away without
another word and I did not see him again, though I
thought I caught a glimpse of him as I came into this
house last night. How did he come to be on the
spot?” she asked curiously.
“That is easily explained,”
replied Jack. “I told the old boy not to
let you out of his sight from sundown to sun up.”
“Then you think I’m safe
during the day?” she rallied him.
He nodded.
“I don’t know whether
to laugh at you or to be very angry,” she said,
shaking her head reprovingly. “Of course
it was an accident!”
“I disagree with you,”
said Jack. “Did you catch a glimpse of the
chauffeur?”
“No,” she said in surprise.
“I didn’t think of looking at him.”
He nodded.
“If you had, you would probably
have seen an old friend, namely, the gentleman who
carried you off from the Erving Theatre,” he
said quietly.
It was difficult for Lydia to analyse
her own feelings. She knew that Jack Glover was
wrong, monstrously wrong. She was perfectly confident
that his fantastic theory had no foundation, and yet
she could not get away from his sincerity. Remembering
Jean’s description of him as “a little
queer” she tried to fit that description into
her knowledge of him, only to admit to herself that
he had been exceptionally normal as far as she was
concerned. The suggestion that his object was
mercenary, and that he looked upon her as a profitable
match for himself, she dismissed without consideration.
“Anyway, I like your Mr. Jaggs,” she said.
“Better than you like me, I
gather from your tone,” smiled Jack. “He’s
not a bad old boy.”
“He is a very strong old boy,”
she said. “He lifted me as though I were
a feather I don’t know now how I escaped.
The steering gear went wrong,” she explained
unnecessarily.
“Dear me,” said Jack politely,
“and it went right again in time to enable the
chauffeur to keep clear of Briggerland and his angel
daughter!”
She gave a gesture of despair.
“You’re hopeless,”
she said. “These things happened in the
dark ages; men and women do not assassinate one another
in the twentieth century.”
“Who told you that?” he
demanded. “Human nature hasn’t changed
for two thousand years. The instinct to kill
is as strong as ever, or wars would be impossible.
If any man or woman could commit one cold-blooded murder,
there is no reason why he or she should not commit
a hundred. In England, America, and France fifty
cold-blooded murders are detected every year.
Twice that number are undetected. It does not
make the crime more impossible because the criminal
is good looking.”
“You’re hopeless,”
she said again, and Jack made no further attempt to
convince her.
On the Thursday of that week she exchanged
her lodgings for a handsome flat in Cavendish Place,
and Mrs. Morgan had promised to join her a week later,
when she had settled up her own business affairs.
Lydia was fortunate enough to get
two maids from one of the agencies, one of whom was
to sleep on the premises. The flat was not illimitable,
and she regretted that she had promised to place a
room at the disposal of the aged Mr. Jaggs. If
he was awake all night as she presumed he would be,
and slept in the day, he might have been accommodated
in the kitchen, and she hinted as much to Jack.
To her surprise the lawyer had turned down that idea.
“You don’t want your servants
to know that you have a watchman.”
“What do you imagine they will
think he is?” she asked scornfully. “How
can I have an old gentleman in the flat without explaining
why he is there?”
“Your explanation could be that he did the boots.”
“It wouldn’t take him
all night to do the boots. Of course, I’m
too grateful to him to want him to do anything.”
Mr. Jaggs reported again for duty
that night. He came at half-past nine, a shabby-looking
old man, and Lydia, who had not yet got used to her
new magnificence, came out into the hall to meet him.
He was certainly not a prepossessing
object, and Lydia discovered that, in addition to
his other misfortunes, he had a slight squint.
“I hadn’t an opportunity
of thanking you the other day, Mr. Jaggs,” she
said. “I think you saved my life.”
“That’s all right, miss,”
he said, in his hoarse voice. “Dooty is
dooty!”
She thought he was looking past her,
till she realised that his curious slanting line of
vision was part of his infirmity.
“I’ll show you to your room,” she
said hastily.
She led the way down the corridor,
opened the door of a small room which had been prepared
for him, and switched on the light.
“Too much light for me, miss,”
said the old man, shaking his head. “I
like to sit in the dark and listen, that’s what
I like, to sit in the dark and listen.”
“But you can’t sit in
the dark, you’ll want to read, won’t you?”
“Can’t read, miss,”
said Jaggs cheerfully. “Can’t write,
either. I don’t know that I’m any
worse off.”
Reluctantly she switched out the light.
“But you won’t be able to see your food.”
“I can feel for that, miss,”
he said with a hoarse chuckle. “Don’t
you worry about me. I’ll just sit here
and have a big think.”
If she was uncomfortable before, she
was really embarrassed now. The very sight of
the door behind which old Jaggs sat having his “big
think” was an irritation to her. She could
not sleep for a long time that night for thinking
of him sitting in the darkness, and “listening”
as he put it, and had firmly resolved on ending a
condition of affairs which was particularly distasteful
to her, when she fell asleep.
She woke when the maid brought her
tea, to learn that Jaggs had gone.
The maid, too, had her views on the
“old gentleman.” She hadn’t
slept all night for the thought of him, she said,
though probably this was an exaggeration.
The arrangement must end, thought
Lydia, and she called at Jack Glover’s office
that afternoon to tell him so. Jack listened without
comment until she had finished.
“I’m sorry he is worrying
you, but you’ll get used to him in time, and
I should be obliged if you kept him for a month.
You would relieve me of a lot of anxiety.”
At first she was determined to have
her way, but he was so persistent, so pleading, that
eventually she surrendered.
Lucy, the new maid, however, was not so easily convinced.
“I don’t like it, miss,”
she said, “he’s just like an old tramp,
and I’m sure we shall be murdered in our beds.”
“How cheerful you are, Lucy,”
laughed Lydia. “Of course, there is no
danger from Mr. Jaggs, and he really was very useful
to me.”
The girl grumbled and assented a little
sulkily, and Lydia had a feeling that she was going
to lose a good servant. In this she was not mistaken.
Old Jaggs called at half-past nine
that night, and was admitted by the maid, who stalked
in front of him and opened his door.
“There’s your room,”
she snapped, “and I’d rather have your
room than your company.”
“Would you, miss?” wheezed
Jaggs, and Lydia, attracted by the sound of voices,
came to the door and listened with some amusement.
“Lord, bless me life, it ain’t
a bad room, either. Put the light out, my dear,
I don’t like light. I like ’em dark,
like them little cells in Holloway prison, where you
were took two years ago for robbing your missus.”
Lydia’s smile left her face. She heard
the girl gasp.
“You old liar!” she hissed.
“Lucy Jones you call yourself you
used to be Mary Welch in them days,” chuckled
old Jaggs.
“I’m not going to be insulted,”
almost screamed Lucy, though there was a note of fear
in her strident voice. “I’m going
to leave to-night.”
“No you ain’t, my dear,”
said old Jaggs complacently. “You’re
going to sleep here to-night, and you’re going
to leave in the morning. If you try to get out
of that door before I let you, you’ll be pinched.”
“They’ve got nothing against
me,” the girl was betrayed into saying.
“False characters, my dear.
Pretending to come from the agency, when you didn’t.
That’s another crime. Lord bless your heart,
I’ve got enough against you to put you in jail
for a year.”
Lydia came forward.
“What is this you’re saying about my maid?”
“Good evening, ma’am.”
The old man knuckled his forehead.
“I’m just having an argument with your
young lady.”
“Do you say she is a thief?”
“Of course she is, miss,” said Jaggs scornfully.
“You ask her!”
But Lucy had gone into her room, slammed the door
and locked it.
The next morning when Lydia woke,
the flat was empty, save for herself. But she
had hardly finished dressing when there came a knock
at the door, and a trim, fresh-looking country girl,
with an expansive smile and a look of good cheer that
warmed Lydia’s heart, appeared.
“You’re the lady that wants a maid, ma’am,
aren’t you?”
“Yes,” said Lydia in surprise. “But
who sent you?”
“I was telegraphed for yesterday, ma’am,
from the country.”
“Come in,” said Lydia helplessly.
“Isn’t it right?”
asked the girl a little disappointedly. “They
sent me my fare. I came up by the first train.”
“It is quite all right,”
said Lydia, “only I’m wondering who is
running this flat, me or Mr. Jaggs?”