For the next two or three days, Archie
felt decidedly, worried over his projected marriage
with Lucy. Certainly he had to put
it bluntly purchased Braddock’s consent,
and that gentleman could scarcely draw back from his
plighted word, which had cost the lover so much.
Nevertheless, Hope did not entirely, trust the Professor,
as, from the few words which he had let drop at the
dinner party, it was plain that he hankered after
money with which to fit out the expedition in search
of the mysterious tomb to which he had alluded.
Archie knew, as did the Professor, that he could not
supply the necessary five thousand pounds without
practically ruining himself, and already he had crippled
his resources in paying over the price of the green
mummy. He had fondly believed that Braddock would
have been satisfied with the relic of Peruvian humanity;
but it seemed that the Professor, having got what he
wanted, now clamored for what was at present beyond
his reach. The mummy was his property, but he
desired the contents of Queen Tahoser’s tomb
also. This particular moon, which he cried for,
was a very expensive article, and Hope did not see
how he could gain it.
Unless and here came in
the cause of Archie’s worry unless
the five thousand pounds was borrowed from Sir Frank
Random, the Professor would have to content himself
with the Maltese mummy. But from what the young
man had seen of Braddock’s longing for the especial
sepulchre, which he desired to loot, he believed that
the scientist would not readily surrender his whim.
Random could easily lend or give the money, since he
was extremely rich, and extremely generous, but it
was improbable that he would aid Braddock without
a quid pro quo. As the sole desire of the baronet’s
heart was to make Lucy his wife, it could easily be
guessed that he would only assist the Professor to
realize his ambition on condition that the savant
used his influence with his step-daughter. That
meant the breaking of the engagement with Hope and
the marriage of the girl to the soldier. Of course
such a state of things would make Lucy unhappy; but
Braddock cared very little for that. To gratify
his craze for Egyptian research, he would be willing
to sacrifice a dozen girls like Lucy.
Undoubtedly Lucy would refuse to be
passed along from one man to another like a bale of
goods, and Archie knew that, so far as in her lay,
she would keep to her engagement, especially as she
denied Braddock’s right to dispose of her hand.
All the same, the Professor, in spite of his cherubical
looks, could make himself extremely disagreeable, and
undoubtedly would do so if thwarted. The sole
course that remained, should Braddock begin operations
to break the present engagement, would be to marry
Lucy at once. Archie would willingly have done
so, but pecuniary difficulties stood in the way.
He had never told any one of these, not even the girl
he loved, but they existed all the same. For
many years he had been assisting needy relatives, and
thus had hampered himself, in spite of his income.
By sheer force of will, so as to force Braddock into
giving him Lucy, he had contrived to secure the necessary
thousand pounds, without confusing the arrangements
he had made to pay off certain debts connected with
his domestic philanthropy; but this brought him to
the end of his resources. In six months he hoped
to be free to have his income entirely to himself,
and then small as it was he
could support a wife. But until the half year
elapsed he could see no chance of marrying Lucy with
any degree of comfort, and meanwhile she would be
exposed to the persécutions of the Professor.
Perhaps persécutions is too harsh a word, as
Braddock was kind enough to the girl. Nevertheless,
he was pertinacious in gaining his aims where his
pet hobby was concerned, and undoubtedly, could he
see any chance of obtaining the money from Random
by selling his step-daughter, he would do so.
Assuredly it was dishonorable to act in this way, but
the Professor was a scientific Jesuit, and deemed
that the end justified the means, when any glory to
himself and gain to the British Museum was in question.
“But I may be doing him an injustice,”
said Archie, when he was explaining his fears to Miss
Kendal on the third day after the dinner party.
“After all, the Professor is a gentleman, and
will probably hold to the bargain which he has made.”
“I don’t care whether
he does or not,” cried Lucy, who had a fine color
and a certain amount of fire in her eyes. “I
am not going to be bought and sold to forward these
nasty scientific schemes. My father can say what
he likes and do what he likes, but I marry you to-morrow
if you like.”
“That’s just it,”
said Archie, flushing, “we can’t marry.”
“Why?” she asked, much astonished.
Hope looked at the ground and drew
patterns with his cane-point in the sand. They
were seated in the hot sunshine for the
Indian summer still continued under a moldering
brick wall, which ran around the most delightful of
kitchen gardens. This was situated at the back
of the Pyramids, and contained a multiplicity of pot
herbs and fruit trees and vegetables. It resembled
the Fairy Garden in Madame D’Alnoy’s story
of The White Cat, and in the autumn yielded a plentiful
crop of fine-flavored fruit. But now the trees
were bare and the garden looked somewhat forlorn for
lack of greenery. But in spite of the lateness
of the season, Lucy often brought a book to read under
the glowing wall, and there ripened like a peach in
the warm sunshine. On this occasion she brought
Archie into the old-world garden, as he had hinted
at confidences. And the time had come to speak
plainly, as Hope began to think that he had not treated
Lucy quite fairly in hiding from her his momentarily
embarrassed position.
“Why can’t we marry at
once?” asked Lucy, seeing that her lover held
his peace and looked confused.
Hope did not reply directly.
“I had better release you from your engagement,”
he said haltingly.
“Oh!” Lucy’s nostrils
dilated and she threw back her head scornfully.
“And the other woman’s name?”
“There is no other woman.
I love you and you only. But money.”
“What about money? You have your income!”
“Oh yes that is sure,
small as it is. But I have incurred debts on
behalf of an uncle and his family. These have
embarrassed me for the moment, and so I cannot see
my way to marrying you for at least six months, Lucy.”
He caught her hand. “I feel ashamed of myself
that I did not tell you of this before. But I
feared to lose you. Yet, on reflection, I see
that it is dishonorable to keep you in the dark, and
if you think that I have behaved badly ”
“Well, I do in a way,”
she interrupted quickly, “as your silence was
quite unnecessary. Don’t treat me as a doll,
my dear. I wish to share your troubles as well
as your joys. Come, tell me all about it.”
“You are not angry?”
“Yes, I am at your
thinking I loved you so little as to be biased against
our marriage because of money troubles. Pooh!”
she flicked away a speck of dust from his coat, “I
don’t care that for such things.”
“You are an angel,” he cried ardently.
“I am a very practical girl just now,”
she retorted. “Go on, confess!”
Archie, thus encouraged, did so, and
it was a very mild confession that she heard, involving
a great deal of unnecessary sacrifice in helping a
pauper uncle. Hope strove to belittle his good
deeds as much as possible, but Lucy saw plainly the
good heart that had dictated the giving up of his
small income for some years. When in possession
of all the facts, she threw her arms around his neck
and kissed him.
“You are a silly old boy,”
she whispered. “As if what you tell me could
make any difference to me!”
“But we can’t be married for six months,
dearest.”
“Of course not. Do you
believe that I as a woman can gather together my trousseau
under six months? No, my dear. We must not
marry in haste to repent at leisure. In another
half year you will enjoy your own income, and then
we can marry.”
“But meanwhile,” said
Archie, after kissing her, “the Professor will
bother you to marry Random.”
“Oh no. He has sold me
to you for one thousand pounds. There! There,
do not say a single word. I am only teasing you.
Let us say that my father has consented to my marriage
with you, and cannot withdraw his word. Not that
I care if he does. I am my own mistress.”
“Lucy!” he
took her hands again and looked into her eyes “Braddock
is a scientific lunatic, and would do anything to forward
his aims with regard to this very expensive tomb,
which he has set his heart on discovering. As
I can’t lend or give the money, he is sure to
apply to Random, and Random ”
“Will want to marry me,”
cried Lucy, rising. “No, my dear, not at
all. Sir Frank is a gentleman, and when he learns
that I am engaged to you, he will simply become a
dear friend. There, don’t worry any more
about the matter. You ought to have told me of
your troubles before, but as I have forgiven you,
there is no more to be said. In six months I
shall become Mrs. Hope, and meanwhile I can hold my
own against any inconvenience that my father may cause
me.”
“But ” He rose
and began to remonstrate, anxious to abase himself
still further before this angel of a maiden.
She placed her hand over his mouth.
“Not another word, or I shall box your ears,
sir that is, I shall exercise the privilege
of a wife before I become one. And now,”
she slipped her arm within his, “let us go in
and see the arrival of the precious mummy.”
“Oh, it has arrived then.”
“Not here exactly. My father expects it
at three o’clock.”
“It is now a quarter to,”
said Archie, consulting his watch. “As I
have been to London all yesterday I did not know that
The Diver had arrived at Pierside, How is Bolton?”
Lucy wrinkled her brows. “I
am rather worried over Sidney,” she said in
an anxious voice, “and so is my father.
He had not appeared.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“Well,” she looked at
the ground in a pondering manner, “my father
got a letter from Sidney yesterday afternoon, saying
that the ship with the mummy and himself on board
had arrived about four o’clock. The letter
was sent on by special messenger and came at six.”
“Then it arrived in the evening
and not in the afternoon?”
“How particular you are!”
said Miss Kendal, with a shrug. “Well, then,
Sidney said that he could not bring the mummy to this
place last night as it was so late. He intended so
he told my father in the letter to remove
the case containing the mummy ashore to an inn near
the wharf at Pierside, and there would remain the
night so as to take care of it.”
“That’s all right,”
said Hope, puzzled. “Where’s your
difficulty?”
“A note came from the landlord
of the inn this morning, saying that by direction
of Mr. Bolton that is Sidney, you know he
was sending the mummy in its case to Gartley on a
lorry, and that it would arrive at three o’clock
this afternoon.”
“Well?” asked Hope, still puzzled.
“Well?” she rejoined impatiently.
“Can’t you see show strange it is that
Sidney should let the mummy out of his sight, after
guarding it so carefully not only from Malta to England,
but all the night in Pierside at that hotel?
Why doesn’t he bring the mummy here himself,
and come on with the lorry?”
“There is no explanation no letter
from Sidney Bolton?”
“None. He wrote yesterday,
as I stated, saying that he would keep the case in
the hotel, and send it on this morning.”
“Did he use the word `send,’ or the word
`bring’?”
“He said ‘send.’”
“Then that shows he did not intend to bring
it himself.”
“But why should he not do so?”
“I daresay he will explain when he appears.”
“I am very sorry for him when
he does appear,” said Lucy seriously, “for
my father is furious. Why, this precious mummy,
for which so much has been paid, might have been lost.”
“Pooh! Who would steal a thing like that?”
“A thing like that is worth
nearly one thousand pounds,” said Lucy in a
dry tone, “and if anyone got wind of it, stealing
would be easy, since Sidney, as appears likely, has
sent on the case unguarded.”
“Well, let us go in and see if Sidney arrives
with the case.”
They passed out of the garden and
sauntered round to the front of the house. There,
standing in the roadway, they beheld a ponderous lorry
with a rough-looking driver standing at the horses’
heads. The front door of the house was open,
so the mummy case had apparently arrived before its
time, and had been taken to Braddock’s museum
while they were chatting in the kitchen garden.
“Did Mr. Bolton come with the
case?” asked Lucy, leaning over the railings
and addressing the driver.
“No one came, miss, except myself
and my two mates, who have taken the case indoor.”
The driver jerked a coarse thumb over his shoulder.
“Was Mr. Bolton at the hotel,
where the case remained for the night?”
“No, miss that is,
I dunno who Mr. Bolton is. The landlord of the
Sailor’s Rest told me and my mates to take the
case to this here house, and we done it. That’s
all I know, miss.”
“Strange,” murmured Lucy,
walking to the front door. “What do you
think, Archie? Isn’t it strange?”
Hope nodded. “But I daresay
Bolton will explain his absence,” said he, following
her. “He will arrive in time to open the
mummy case along with the Professor.”
“I hope so,” said Miss
Kendal, who looked much perplexed. “I can’t
understand Sidney abandoning the case, when it might
so easily have been stolen. Come in and see my
father, Archie,” and she passed into the house,
followed by the young man, whose curiosity was now
aroused. As they entered the door, the two men
who had taken in the case blundered out and shortly
drove away on the lorry towards Jessum railway station.
In the museum they found Braddock
purple with rage and swearing vigorously. He
was staring at a large packing case, which had been
set up on end against the wall, while beside him crouched
Cockatoo, holding chisels and hammers and wedges necessary
to open the treasure trove.
“So the precious mummy has arrived,
father,” said Lucy, who saw that the Professor
was furious. “Are you not pleased?”
“Pleased! pleased!” shouted
the angry man of science. “How can I be
pleased when I see how badly the case has been treated?
See how it has been bruised and battered and shaken!
I’ll have an action against Captain Hervey of
The Diver if my mummy has been injured. Sidney
should have taken better care of so precious an object.”
“What does he say?” asked
Archie, glancing round the museum to see if the delinquent
had arrived.
“Say!” shouted Braddock
again, and snatching a chisel from Cockatoo.
“Oh, what can he say when he is not here?”
“Not here?” said Lucy,
more and more surprised at the unaccountable absence
of Braddock’s assistant. “Where is
he, then?”
“I don’t know. I
wish I did; I’d have him arrested for neglecting
to watch over this case. As it is, when he comes
back I’ll dismiss him from my employment.
He can go back to his infernal laundry work along with
his old witch of a mother.”
“But why hasn’t Bolton
come back, sir?” asked Hope sharply.
Braddock struck a furious blow at
the head of the chisel which he had inserted into
the case.
“I want to know that. He
brought the case to the Sailor’s Rest, and should
have come on with it this morning. Instead of
doing so, he tells the landlord a most
unreliable man to send it on. And my
precious mummy the mummy that has cost
nine hundred pounds,” cried Braddock, working
furiously, and battering the chisel as though it were
Bolton’s head, “is left to be stolen by
any scientific thief that comes along.”
While the Professor, assisted by Cockatoo, loosened
the lid of the packing case, a mild voice was heard
at the door. Lucy turned, as did Archie, to see
Widow Anne curtseying on the threshold of the door.
Braddock himself took no notice of
her entrance, being occupied with his task, and even
while doing it swore scientifically under his breath.
He was furious against Bolton for neglect of duty,
and Hope rather sympathized with him. It was
a serious matter to have left a valuable object like
the green mummy to the rough care of laborers.
“I beg your pardon, my lady,”
whimpered Widow Anne, who looked more lean and rusty
and dismal than ever; “but has my Sid come?
I saw the cart and the coffin. Where’s
my boy?”
“Coffin! coffin!” bellowed
Braddock angrily between thunder blows. “What
do you mean by calling this case a coffin?”
“Well, it do hold one of them
camphorated corps, sir,” said Mrs. Bolton with
another curtsey. “My boy Sid told me as
much, afore he went to them furren parts.”
“Have you seen him since he
returned?” questioned Lucy, while Braddock and
Cockatoo strained at the lid, now nearly off.
“Why, I ain’t set eyes
on him,” moaned the widow dismally, “and
summat tells me as I never will.”
“Don’t talk rubbish, woman,”
said Archie tartly, for he did not wish Lucy to be
upset again by this ancient ghoul.
“Woman indeed, sir. I’d
have you know, oh!” the widow jumped
and quavered as the lid of the packing case fell on
the floor with a bang. “Oh lor, sir, the
start you did give me!”
But Braddock had no eyes for her,
and no ears for anyone. He pulled lustily at
the straw packing, and soon the floor was littered
with rubbish. But no green case appeared, and
no mummy. Suddenly Widow Anne shrieked again.
“There’s my Sid dead oh,
my son, dead! dead!”
She spoke truly. The body of Sidney Bolton was
before them.