It was eight o’clock at night
and raining, scarcely a time when a business so limited
in its clientele as that of a coin dealer could hope
to attract any customer, but a light was still showing
in the small shop that bore over its window the name
of Baxter, and in the even smaller office at the back
the proprietor himself sat reading the latest Pall
Mall. His enterprise seemed to be justified,
for presently the door bell gave its announcement,
and throwing down his paper Mr Baxter went forward.
As a matter of fact the dealer had
been expecting someone and his manner as he passed
into the shop was unmistakably suggestive of a caller
of importance. But at the first glance towards
his visitor the excess of deference melted out of
his bearing, leaving the urbane, self-possessed shopman
in the presence of the casual customer.
“Mr Baxter, I think?”
said the latter. He had laid aside his dripping
umbrella and was unbuttoning overcoat and coat to reach
an inner pocket. “You hardly remember me,
I suppose? Mr Carlyle two years ago
I took up a case for you
“To be sure. Mr Carlyle, the private detective
“Inquiry agent,” corrected Mr Carlyle
precisely.
“Well,” smiled Mr Baxter,
“for that matter I am a coin dealer and not an
antiquarian or a numismatist. Is there anything
in that way that I can do for you?”
“Yes,” replied his visitor;
“it is my turn to consult you.” He
had taken a small wash-leather bag from the inner
pocket and now turned something carefully out upon
the counter. “What can you tell me about
that?”
The dealer gave the coin a moment’s scrutiny.
“There is no question about
this,” he replied. “It is a Sicilian
tetradrachm of Dionysius.”
“Yes, I know that I
have it on the label out of the cabinet. I can
tell you further that it’s supposed to be one
that Lord Seastoke gave two hundred and fifty pounds
for at the Brice sale in ’94.”
“It seems to me that you can
tell me more about it than I can tell you,”
remarked Mr Baxter. “What is it that you
really want to know?”
“I want to know,” replied
Mr Carlyle, “whether it is genuine or not.”
“Has any doubt been cast upon it?”
“Certain circumstances raised a suspicion that
is all.”
The dealer took another look at the
tetradrachm through his magnifying glass, holding
it by the edge with the careful touch of an expert.
Then he shook his head slowly in a confession of ignorance.
“Of course I could make a guess
“No, don’t,” interrupted
Mr Carlyle hastily. “An arrest hangs on
it and nothing short of certainty is any good to me.”
“Is that so, Mr Carlyle?”
said Mr Baxter, with increased interest. “Well,
to be quite candid, the thing is out of my line.
Now if it was a rare Saxon penny or a doubtful noble
I’d stake my reputation on my opinion, but I
do very little in the classical series.”
Mr Carlyle did not attempt to conceal
his disappointment as he returned the coin to the
bag and replaced the bag in the inner pocket.
“I had been relying on you,”
he grumbled reproachfully. “Where on earth
am I to go now?”
“There is always the British Museum.”
“Ah, to be sure, thanks. But will anyone
who can tell me be there now?”
“Now? No fear!” replied Mr Baxter.
“Go round in the morning
“But I must know to-night,”
explained the visitor, reduced to despair again.
“To-morrow will be too late for the purpose.”
Mr Baxter did not hold out much encouragement in the
circumstances.
“You can scarcely expect to
find anyone at business now,” he remarked.
“I should have been gone these two hours myself
only I happened to have an appointment with an American
millionaire who fixed his own time.” Something
indistinguishable from a wink slid off Mr Baxter’s
right eye. “Offmunson he’s called,
and a bright young pedigree-hunter has traced his
descent from Offa, King of Mercia. So he quite
naturally wants a set of Offas as a sort
of collateral proof.”
“Very interesting,” murmured
Mr Carlyle, fidgeting with his watch. “I
should love an hour’s chat with you about your
millionaire customers some other time.
Just now look here, Baxter, can’t
you give me a line of introduction to some dealer
in this sort of thing who happens to live in town?
You must know dozens of experts.”
“Why, bless my soul, Mr Carlyle,
I don’t know a man of them away from his business,”
said Mr Baxter, staring. “They may live
in Park Lane or they may live in Petticoat Lane for
all I know. Besides, there aren’t so many
experts as you seem to imagine. And the two best
will very likely quarrel over it. You’ve
had to do with ‘expert witnesses,’ I suppose?”
“I don’t want a witness;
there will be no need to give evidence. All I
want is an absolutely authoritative pronouncement that
I can act on. Is there no one who can really
say whether the thing is genuine or not?”
Mr Baxter’s meaning silence
became cynical in its implication as he continued
to look at his visitor across the counter. Then
he relaxed.
“Stay a bit; there is a man an
amateur I remember hearing wonderful things
about some time ago. They say he really does know.”
“There you are,” exclaimed
Mr Carlyle, much relieved. “There always
is someone. Who is he?”
“Funny name,” replied
Baxter. “Something Wynn or Wynn something.”
He craned his neck to catch sight of an important
motor car that was drawing to the kerb before his
window. “Wynn Carrados! You’ll
excuse me now, Mr Carlyle, won’t you? This
looks like Mr Offmunson.”
Mr Carlyle hastily scribbled the name down on his
cuff.
“Wynn Carrados, right. Where does he live?”
“Haven’t the remotest
idea,” replied Baxter, referring the arrangement
of his tie to the judgment of the wall mirror.
“I have never seen the man myself. Now,
Mr Carlyle, I’m sorry I can’t do any more
for you. You won’t mind, will you?”
Mr Carlyle could not pretend to misunderstand.
He enjoyed the distinction of holding open the door
for the transatlantic representative of the line of
Offa as he went out, and then made his way through
the muddy streets back to his office. There was
only one way of tracing a private individual at such
short notice through the pages of the directories,
and the gentleman did not flatter himself by a very
high estimate of his chances.
Fortune favoured him, however.
He very soon discovered a Wynn Carrados living at
Richmond, and, better still, further search failed
to unearth another. There was, apparently, only
one householder at all events of that name in the
neighbourhood of London. He jotted down the address
and set out for Richmond.
The house was some distance from the
station, Mr Carlyle learned. He took a taxicab
and drove, dismissing the vehicle at the gate.
He prided himself on his power of observation and
the accuracy of the deductions which resulted from
it a detail of his business. “It’s
nothing more than using one’s eyes and putting
two and two together,” he would modestly declare,
when he wished to be deprecatory rather than impressive,
and by the time he had reached the front door of “The
Turrets” he had formed some opinion of the position
and tastes of the man who lived there.
A man-servant admitted Mr Carlyle
and took in his card his private card with
the bare request for an interview that would not detain
Mr Carrados for ten minutes. Luck still favoured
him; Mr Carrados was at home and would see him at
once. The servant, the hall through which they
passed, and the room into which he was shown, all
contributed something to the deductions which the
quietly observant gentleman was half unconsciously
recording.
“Mr Carlyle,” announced the servant.
The room was a library or study.
The only occupant, a man of about Carlyle’s
own age, had been using a typewriter up to the moment
of his visitor’s entrance. He now turned
and stood up with an expression of formal courtesy.
“It’s very good of you
to see me at this hour,” apologized the caller.
The conventional expression of Mr
Carrados’s face changed a little.
“Surely my man has got your
name wrong?” he exclaimed. “Isn’t
it Louis Calling?”
The visitor stopped short and his
agreeable smile gave place to a sudden flash of anger
or annoyance.
“No, sir,” he replied
stiffly. “My name is on the card which you
have before you.”
“I beg your pardon,” said
Mr Carrados, with perfect good-humour. “I
hadn’t seen it. But I used to know a Calling
some years ago at St Michael’s.”
“St Michael’s!”
Mr Carlyle’s features underwent another change,
no less instant and sweeping than before. “St
Michael’s! Wynn Carrados? Good heavens!
it isn’t Max Wynn old ‘Winning’
Wynn?”
“A little older and a little
fatter yes,” replied Carrados.
“I have changed my name, you see.”
“Extraordinary thing meeting
like this,” said his visitor, dropping into
a chair and staring hard at Mr Carrados. “I
have changed more than my name. How did you recognize
me?”
“The voice,” replied Carrados.
“It took me back to that little smoke-dried
attic den of yours where we
“My God!” exclaimed Carlyle
bitterly, “don’t remind me of what we were
going to do in those days.” He looked round
the well-furnished, handsome room and recalled the
other signs of wealth that he had noticed. “At
all events, you seem fairly comfortable, Wynn.”
“I am alternately envied and
pitied,” replied Carrados, with a placid tolerance
of circumstance that seemed characteristic of him.
“Still, as you say, I am fairly comfortable.”
“Envied, I can understand. But why are
you pitied?”
“Because I am blind,” was the tranquil
reply.
“Blind!” exclaimed Mr
Carlyle, using his own eyes superlatively. “Do
you mean literally blind?”
“Literally.... I was riding
along a bridle-path through a wood about a dozen years
ago with a friend. He was in front. At one
point a twig sprang back you know how easily
a thing like that happens. It just flicked my
eye nothing to think twice about.”
“And that blinded you?”
“Yes, ultimately. It’s called amaurosis.”
“I can scarcely believe it.
You seem so sure and self-reliant. Your eyes
are full of expression only a little quieter
than they used to be. I believe you were typing
when I came.... Aren’t you having me?”
“You miss the dog and the stick?” smiled
Carrados. “No; it’s a fact.”
“What an awful infliction for
you, Max. You were always such an impulsive,
reckless sort of fellow never quiet.
You must miss such a fearful lot.”
“Has anyone else recognized you?” asked
Carrados quietly.
“Ah, that was the voice, you said,” replied
Carlyle.
“Yes; but other people heard
the voice as well. Only I had no blundering,
self-confident eyes to be hoodwinked.”
“That’s a rum way of putting
it,” said Carlyle. “Are your ears
never hoodwinked, may I ask?”
“Not now. Nor my fingers.
Nor any of my other senses that have to look out for
themselves.”
“Well, well,” murmured
Mr Carlyle, cut short in his sympathetic emotions.
“I’m glad you take it so well. Of
course, if you find it an advantage to be blind, old
man ” He stopped and reddened.
“I beg your pardon,” he concluded stiffly.
“Not an advantage perhaps,”
replied the other thoughtfully. “Still it
has compensations that one might not think of.
A new world to explore, new experiences, new powers
awakening; strange new perceptions; life in the fourth
dimension. But why do you beg my pardon, Louis?”
“I am an ex-solicitor, struck
off in connexion with the falsifying of a trust account,
Mr Carrados,” replied Carlyle, rising.
“Sit down, Louis,” said
Carrados suavely. His face, even his incredibly
living eyes, beamed placid good-nature. “The
chair on which you will sit, the roof above you, all
the comfortable surroundings to which you have so
amiably alluded, are the direct result of falsifying
a trust account. But do I call you ‘Mr
Carlyle’ in consequence? Certainly not,
Louis.”
“I did not falsify the account,”
cried Carlyle hotly. He sat down, however, and
added more quietly: “But why do I tell you
all this? I have never spoken of it before.”
“Blindness invites confidence,”
replied Carrados. “We are out of the running human
rivalry ceases to exist. Besides, why shouldn’t
you? In my case the account was falsified.”
“Of course that’s all
bunkum, Max,” commented Carlyle. “Still,
I appreciate your motive.”
“Practically everything I possess
was left to me by an American cousin, on the condition
that I took the name of Carrados. He made his
fortune by an ingenious conspiracy of doctoring the
crop reports and unloading favourably in consequence.
And I need hardly remind you that the receiver is
equally guilty with the thief.”
“But twice as safe. I know
something of that, Max.... Have you any idea
what my business is?”
“You shall tell me,” replied Carrados.
“I run a private inquiry agency.
When I lost my profession I had to do something for
a living. This occurred. I dropped my name,
changed my appearance and opened an office. I
knew the legal side down to the ground and I got a
retired Scotland Yard man to organize the outside
work.”
“Excellent!” cried Carrados.
“Do you unearth many murders?”
“No,” admitted Mr Carlyle;
“our business lies mostly on the conventional
lines among divorce and defalcation.”
“That’s a pity,”
remarked Carrados. “Do you know, Louis,
I always had a secret ambition to be a detective myself.
I have even thought lately that I might still be able
to do something at it if the chance came my way.
That makes you smile?”
“Well, certainly, the idea
“Yes, the idea of a blind detective the
blind tracking the alert
“Of course, as you say, certain
faculties are no doubt quickened,” Mr Carlyle
hastened to add considerately, “but, seriously,
with the exception of an artist, I don’t suppose
there is any man who is more utterly dependent on
his eyes.”
Whatever opinion Carrados might have
held privately, his genial exterior did not betray
a shadow of dissent. For a full minute he continued
to smoke as though he derived an actual visual enjoyment
from the blue sprays that travelled and dispersed
across the room. He had already placed before
his visitor a box containing cigars of a brand which
that gentleman keenly appreciated but generally regarded
as unattainable, and the matter-of-fact ease and certainty
with which the blind man had brought the box and put
it before him had sent a questioning flicker through
Carlyle’s mind.
“You used to be rather fond
of art yourself, Louis,” he remarked presently.
“Give me your opinion of my latest purchase the
bronze lion on the cabinet there.” Then,
as Carlyle’s gaze went about the room, he added
quickly: “No, not that cabinet the
one on your left.”
Carlyle shot a sharp glance at his
host as he got up, but Carrados’s expression
was merely benignly complacent. Then he strolled
across to the figure.
“Very nice,” he admitted. “Late
Flemish, isn’t it?”
“No. It is a copy of Vidal’s ‘Roaring
lion.’”
“Vidal?”
“A French artist.”
The voice became indescribably flat. “He,
also, had the misfortune to be blind, by the way.”
“You old humbug, Max!”
shrieked Carlyle, “you’ve been thinking
that out for the last five minutes.” Then
the unfortunate man bit his lip and turned his back
towards his host.
“Do you remember how we used
to pile it up on that obtuse ass Sanders and then
roast him?” asked Carrados, ignoring the half-smothered
exclamation with which the other man had recalled himself.
“Yes,” replied Carlyle
quietly. “This is very good,” he continued,
addressing himself to the bronze again. “How
ever did he do it?”
“With his hands.”
“Naturally. But, I mean, how did he study
his model?”
“Also with his hands. He called it ‘seeing
near.’”
“Even with a lion handled it?”
“In such cases he required the
services of a keeper, who brought the animal to bay
while Vidal exercised his own particular gifts....
You don’t feel inclined to put me on the track
of a mystery, Louis?”
Unable to regard this request as anything
but one of old Max’s unquenchable pleasantries,
Mr Carlyle was on the point of making a suitable reply
when a sudden thought caused him to smile knowingly.
Up to that point he had, indeed, completely forgotten
the object of his visit. Now that he remembered
the doubtful Dionysius and Mr Baxter’s recommendation
he immediately assumed that some mistake had been made.
Either Max was not the Wynn Carrados he had been seeking
or else the dealer had been misinformed; for although
his host was wonderfully expert in the face of his
misfortune, it was inconceivable that he could decide
the genuineness of a coin without seeing it. The
opportunity seemed a good one of getting even with
Carrados by taking him at his word.
“Yes,” he accordingly
replied, with crisp deliberation, as he recrossed
the room; “yes, I will, Max. Here is the
clue to what seems to be a rather remarkable fraud.”
He put the tetradrachm into his host’s hand.
“What do you make of it?”
For a few seconds Carrados handled
the piece with the delicate manipulation of his finger-tips
while Carlyle looked on with a self-appreciative grin.
Then with equal gravity the blind man weighed the
coin in the balance of his hand. Finally he touched
it with his tongue.
“Well?” demanded the other.
“Of course I have not much to
go on, and if I was more fully in your confidence
I might come to another conclusion
“Yes, yes,” interposed
Carlyle, with amused encouragement.
“Then I should advise you to
arrest the parlourmaid, Nina Brun, communicate with
the police authorities of Padua for particulars of
the career of Helene Brunesi, and suggest to Lord
Seastoke that he should return to London to see what
further depredations have been made in his cabinet.”
Mr Carlyle’s groping hand sought
and found a chair, on to which he dropped blankly.
His eyes were unable to detach themselves for a single
moment from the very ordinary spectacle of Mr Carrados’s
mildly benevolent face, while the sterilized ghost
of his now forgotten amusement still lingered about
his features.
“Good heavens!” he managed
to articulate, “how do you know?”
“Isn’t that what you wanted
of me?” asked Carrados suavely.
“Don’t humbug, Max,”
said Carlyle severely. “This is no joke.”
An undefined mistrust of his own powers suddenly possessed
him in the presence of this mystery. “How
do you come to know of Nina Brun and Lord Seastoke?”
“You are a detective, Louis,”
replied Carrados. “How does one know these
things? By using one’s eyes and putting
two and two together.”
Carlyle groaned and flung out an arm petulantly.
“Is it all bunkum, Max?
Do you really see all the time though that
doesn’t go very far towards explaining it.”
“Like Vidal, I see very well at
close quarters,” replied Carrados, lightly running
a forefinger along the inscription on the tetradrachm.
“For longer range I keep another pair of eyes.
Would you like to test them?”
Mr Carlyle’s assent was not
very gracious; it was, in fact, faintly sulky.
He was suffering the annoyance of feeling distinctly
unimpressive in his own department; but he was also
curious.
“The bell is just behind you,
if you don’t mind,” said his host.
“Parkinson will appear. You might take note
of him while he is in.”
The man who had admitted Mr Carlyle
proved to be Parkinson.
“This gentleman is Mr Carlyle,
Parkinson,” explained Carrados the moment the
man entered. “You will remember him for
the future?”
Parkinson’s apologetic eye swept
the visitor from head to foot, but so lightly and
swiftly that it conveyed to that gentleman the comparison
of being very deftly dusted.
“I will endeavour to do so,
sir,” replied Parkinson, turning again to his
master.
“I shall be at home to Mr Carlyle
whenever he calls. That is all.”
“Very well, sir.”
“Now, Louis,” remarked
Mr Carrados briskly, when the door had closed again,
“you have had a good opportunity of studying
Parkinson. What is he like?”
“In what way?”
“I mean as a matter of description.
I am a blind man I haven’t seen my
servant for twelve years what idea can you
give me of him? I asked you to notice.”
“I know you did, but your Parkinson
is the sort of man who has very little about him to
describe. He is the embodiment of the ordinary.
His height is about average
“Five feet nine,” murmured
Carrados. “Slightly above the mean.”
“Scarcely noticeably so.
Clean-shaven. Medium brown hair. No particularly
marked features. Dark eyes. Good teeth.”
“False,” interposed Carrados.
“The teeth not the statement.”
“Possibly,” admitted Mr
Carlyle. “I am not a dental expert and I
had no opportunity of examining Mr Parkinson’s
mouth in detail. But what is the drift of all
this?”
“His clothes?”
“Oh, just the ordinary evening
dress of a valet. There is not much room for
variety in that.”
“You noticed, in fact, nothing
special by which Parkinson could be identified?”
“Well, he wore an unusually
broad gold ring on the little finger of the left hand.”
“But that is removable.
And yet Parkinson has an ineradicable mole a
small one, I admit on his chin. And
you a human sleuth-hound. Oh, Louis!”
“At all events,” retorted
Carlyle, writhing a little under this good-humoured
satire, although it was easy enough to see in it Carrados’s
affectionate intention “at all events,
I dare say I can give as good a description of Parkinson
as he can give of me.”
“That is what we are going to test. Ring
the bell again.”
“Seriously?”
“Quite. I am trying my
eyes against yours. If I can’t give you
fifty out of a hundred I’ll renounce my private
detectorial ambition for ever.”
“It isn’t quite the same,” objected
Carlyle, but he rang the bell.
“Come in and close the door,
Parkinson,” said Carrados when the man appeared.
“Don’t look at Mr Carlyle again in
fact, you had better stand with your back towards
him, he won’t mind. Now describe to me his
appearance as you observed it.”
Parkinson tendered his respectful
apologies to Mr Carlyle for the liberty he was compelled
to take, by the deferential quality of his voice.
“Mr Carlyle, sir, wears patent
leather boots of about size seven and very little
used. There are five buttons, but on the left
boot one button the third up is
missing, leaving loose threads and not the more usual
metal fastener. Mr Carlyle’s trousers, sir,
are of a dark material, a dark grey line of about
a quarter of an inch width on a darker ground.
The bottoms are turned permanently up and are, just
now, a little muddy, if I may say so.”
“Very muddy,” interposed
Mr Carlyle generously. “It is a wet night,
Parkinson.”
“Yes, sir; very unpleasant weather.
If you will allow me, sir, I will brush you in the
hall. The mud is dry now, I notice. Then,
sir,” continued Parkinson, reverting to the
business in hand, “there are dark green cashmere
hose. A curb-pattern key-chain passes into the
left-hand trouser pocket.”
From the visitor’s nether garments
the photographic-eyed Parkinson proceeded to higher
ground, and with increasing wonder Mr Carlyle listened
to the faithful catalogue of his possessions.
His fetter-and-link albert of gold and platinum was
minutely described. His spotted blue ascot, with
its gentlemanly pearl scarfpin, was set forth, and
the fact that the buttonhole in the left lapel of his
morning coat showed signs of use was duly noted.
What Parkinson saw he recorded but he made no deductions.
A handkerchief carried in the cuff of the right sleeve
was simply that to him and not an indication that Mr
Carlyle was, indeed, left-handed.
But a more delicate part of Parkinson’s
undertaking remained. He approached it with a
double cough.
“As regards Mr Carlyle’s personal appearance;
sir
“No, enough!” cried the
gentleman concerned hastily. “I am more
than satisfied. You are a keen observer, Parkinson.”
“I have trained myself to suit
my master’s requirements, sir,” replied
the man. He looked towards Mr Carrados, received
a nod and withdrew.
Mr Carlyle was the first to speak.
“That man of yours would be
worth five pounds a week to me, Max,” he remarked
thoughtfully. “But, of course
“I don’t think that he
would take it,” replied Carrados, in a voice
of equally detached speculation. “He suits
me very well. But you have the chance of using
his services indirectly.”
“You still mean that seriously?”
“I notice in you a chronic disinclination
to take me seriously, Louis. It is really to
an Englishman almost painful. Is there
something inherently comic about me or the atmosphere
of The Turrets?”
“No, my friend,” replied
Mr Carlyle, “but there is something essentially
prosperous. That is what points to the improbable.
Now what is it?”
“It might be merely a whim,
but it is more than that,” replied Carrados.
“It is, well, partly vanity, partly ennui,
partly” certainly there was something
more nearly tragic in his voice than comic now “partly
hope.”
Mr Carlyle was too tactful to pursue the subject.
“Those are three tolerable motives,”
he acquiesced. “I’ll do anything
you want, Max, on one condition.”
“Agreed. And it is?”
“That you tell me how you knew
so much of this affair.” He tapped the
silver coin which lay on the table near them.
“I am not easily flabbergasted,” he added.
“You won’t believe that
there is nothing to explain that it was
purely second-sight?”
“No,” replied Carlyle tersely; “I
won’t.”
“You are quite right. And yet the thing
is very simple.”
“They always are when
you know,” soliloquized the other. “That’s
what makes them so confoundedly difficult when you
don’t.”
“Here is this one then.
In Padua, which seems to be regaining its old reputation
as the birthplace of spurious antiques, by the way,
there lives an ingenious craftsman named Pietro Stelli.
This simple soul, who possesses a talent not inferior
to that of Cavino at his best, has for many years
turned his hand to the not unprofitable occupation
of forging rare Greek and Roman coins. As a collector
and student of certain Greek colonials and a specialist
in forgeries I have been familiar with Stelli’s
workmanship for years. Latterly he seems to have
come under the influence of an international crook
called at the moment Dompierre,
who soon saw a way of utilizing Stelli’s genius
on a royal scale. Helene Brunesi, who in private
life is and really is, I believe Madame
Dompierre, readily lent her services to the enterprise.”
“Quite so,” nodded Mr Carlyle, as his
host paused.
“You see the whole sequence, of course?”
“Not exactly not in detail,”
confessed Mr Carlyle.
“Dompierre’s idea was
to gain access to some of the most celebrated cabinets
of Europe and substitute Stelli’s fabrications
for the genuine coins. The princely collection
of rarities that he would thus amass might be difficult
to dispose of safely but I have no doubt that he had
matured his plans. Helene, in the person of Nina
Bran, an Anglicised French parlourmaid a
part which she fills to perfection was to
obtain wax impressions of the most valuable pieces
and to make the exchange when the counterfeits reached
her. In this way it was obviously hoped that
the fraud would not come to light until long after
the real coins had been sold, and I gather that she
has already done her work successfully in several
houses. Then, impressed by her excellent references
and capable manner, my housekeeper engaged her, and
for a few weeks she went about her duties here.
It was fatal to this detail of the scheme, however,
that I have the misfortune to be blind. I am told
that Helene has so innocently angelic a face as to
disarm suspicion, but I was incapable of being impressed
and that good material was thrown away. But one
morning my material fingers which, of course,
knew nothing of Helene’s angelic face discovered
an unfamiliar touch about the surface of my favourite
Euclideas, and, although there was doubtless nothing
to be seen, my critical sense of smell reported that
wax had been recently pressed against it. I began
to make discreet inquiries and in the meantime my
cabinets went to the local bank for safety. Helene
countered by receiving a telegram from Angiers, calling
her to the death-bed of her aged mother. The
aged mother succumbed; duty compelled Helene to remain
at the side of her stricken patriarchal father, and
doubtless The Turrets was written off the syndicate’s
operations as a bad debt.”
“Very interesting,” admitted
Mr Carlyle; “but at the risk of seeming obtuse” his
manner had become delicately chastened “I
must say that I fail to trace the inevitable connexion
between Nina Brun and this particular forgery assuming
that it is a forgery.”
“Set your mind at rest about
that, Louis,” replied Carrados. “It
is a forgery, and it is a forgery that none but Pietro
Stelli could have achieved. That is the essential
connexion. Of course, there are accessories.
A private detective coming urgently to see me with
a notable tetradrachm in his pocket, which he announces
to be the clue to a remarkable fraud well,
really, Louis, one scarcely needs to be blind to see
through that.”
“And Lord Seastoke? I suppose
you happened to discover that Nina Brun had gone there?”
“No, I cannot claim to have
discovered that, or I should certainly have warned
him at once when I found out only recently about
the gang. As a matter of fact, the last information
I had of Lord Seastoke was a line in yesterday’s
Morning Post to the effect that he was still
at Cairo. But many of these pieces ”
He brushed his finger almost lovingly across the vivid
chariot race that embellished the reverse of the coin,
and broke off to remark: “You really ought
to take up the subject, Louis. You have no idea
how useful it might prove to you some day.”
“I really think I must,”
replied Carlyle grimly. “Two hundred and
fifty pounds the original of this cost, I believe.”
“Cheap, too; it would make five
hundred pounds in New York to-day. As I was saying,
many are literally unique. This gem by Kimon is here
is his signature, you see; Peter is particularly good
at lettering and as I handled the genuine
tetradrachm about two years ago, when Lord Seastoke
exhibited it at a meeting of our society in Albemarle
Street, there is nothing at all wonderful in my being
able to fix the locale of your mystery. Indeed,
I feel that I ought to apologize for it all being so
simple.”
“I think,” remarked Mr
Carlyle, critically examining the loose threads on
his left boot, “that the apology on that head
would be more appropriate from me.”