The circumstance was something of
a shock to him. Up to this moment he had looked
upon young Raynor as being merely a selfish, irresponsible
wastrel, not as something vicious, something that had
the courage or even the power to bite or to sting.
Now, however He turned the bracelet
over in his hand and examined it closely, to be certain
before he finally decided that it really was Margot’s.
The act served merely to deepen suspicion
into certainty. By a dozen things he knew it
for what he hoped it might not be. It was Margot’s
bracelet, beyond all possible question it was!
So, then, he had been a fool for his pains, had he a
fool taken in and gulled by appearances, eh?
And the creature he had fancied a mere worm was, after
all, a serpent and dangerous!
Margot’s bracelet in the pocket
of Harry Raynor’s evening coat was something
rather more significant than Margot’s picture
and Margot’s letters in Harry Raynor’s
tobacco jar, for an evening coat consorted well with
an evening frock, and some woman who was not Ailsa
Lorne, nor yet Lady Katharine Fordham, had worn an
evening frock at Gleer Cottage last night.
Where was Harry Raynor last night?
That, too, would want looking into in the light of
present events. And possessing two evening suits,
which had that interesting young gentleman worn yesterday?
This one, which he had lent to Cleek, or the one he
would himself wear at dinner to-night? A great
deal would depend upon that point as great
a deal as sometimes sends men to the gallows.
For whensoever he had last worn this suit, this bracelet
was put in the pocket of it. Upon that point there
could be no shadow of doubt; for although he had forgotten
all about the thing as evidenced by his
leaving it in the pocket when sending the clothes
to Cleek he could not possibly have put
this coat on again without noticing how abominably
the thing sat upon the wearer, and discovering the
cause of it.
And if he had worn this particular
suit last night, and Margot could be proved to have
visited Gleer Cottage at, or about, the time of the
murder Cleek shut off that train
of thought, and puckered up his lips until they were
white and full of creases, and sighed inwardly, thinking
of the loving mother and of the added cross for the
shoulders of the bitterly disappointed father, a man
and a hero, a soldier and a gentleman, cursed with
such offspring as this!
“And the little beast would
sacrifice the pair of them for the price of a night’s
orgy, and turn suspicion even against his mother to
save his own skin if he were in danger,” was
his unspoken summing up of Harry Raynor’s character.
“Gad, how little there is in heredity, after
all, when we so often see eagles breeding jackdaws
and lions bringing forth mice!”
The dinner gong sounded again; and
it was only then that he realized how long a time
he had spent mooning over a stolen bracelet and a gnat
that seemed suddenly to have grown into a bird of
prey.
He turned round on his heel and switched
off the light. “A bombshell for you,
my laddie!” he said in the soundless words of
thought, as he put the bracelet into the tail pocket
of his coat and nodded as if young Raynor were there
in person to be addressed; then he walked out and shut
the door behind him, and went down to the business
of dining.
He found the General and his son and
Mrs. Raynor and Ailsa awaiting him in the drawing-room,
and was not considering what he now knew at
all surprised to learn that Lady Katharine had developed
a bad headache, gone to bed, and wished no dinner
at all.
“I can’t think what’s
come over her,” said Ailsa when she made this
announcement.
“Oh, can’t you?”
said young Raynor with a cackling laugh. “Lord!
women don’t look far beneath the surface of
things, do they, Barch? Who wouldn’t go
to bed with a headache after a visit from a goat like
Geoff Clavering?”
“Harry, dearest, do think what
you are saying, and before whom, darling!” bleated
apologetically his adoring mother. “You
mustn’t mind him, Mr. Barch; he is so
full of spirit, the dear boy.”
Cleek did not reply, neither did the
General. Possibly both were secretly battling
with a desire to catch hold of this young man and to
kick him as far as the human foot could propel him;
and it was, no doubt, a relief to all when the two
footmen swung open the great double doors leading
into the dining-room and announced gravely that dinner
was served.
With the matter of that dinner it
is doubtful if anybody but Cleek really enjoyed the
hour spent in consuming it, and even he merely because
the girl of his heart was beside him, and that
would make a heaven with any healthy and well-conditioned
man in the universe. But it was certain that
nobody was deeply regretful when the end came, and
Mrs. Raynor, rising, gave the hint to Miss Lorne that
it was time to return to the drawing-room and to leave
the gentlemen to their half hour with the coffee,
the liqueurs, and the cigars. But to-night
the General would have none of these.
“Young men to young men’s
pleasure, gentlemen. I’m an old fogy, and
I’m sleepy,” he said immediately after
the ladies had retired. “Besides, my monthly
copy of the Gardener and Fruit Grower arrived
this evening, and I haven’t looked at it yet.
So, if you will excuse me, Mr. Barch ”
“My dear General, pray make
no apologies,” said Cleek, struggling between
the necessity for keeping up his rakish attitude and
the desire to be a man in the eyes of this rugged
old soldier, who was fighting a braver battle now
than he had ever fought in the days when king and
country called him. “If a man may not consider
his personal convenience in his own house, what’s
the good of saying that an Englishman’s home
is his castle?”
“Ah, we outlive old notions,
Mr. Barch, we outlive them!” replied the General
with a kindly smile and something that was like a smothered
sigh. “Pray make yourself thoroughly at
home, however. I hear from Harry that you have
decided to honour us with a week’s visit, and
I am very greatly pleased. Hawkins, in the absence
of Johnston, see that the gentlemen want for nothing.”
“Very good, sir. Serve your coffee in your
study, sir?”
“No, I shan’t take any.
See that I’m not disturbed; and don’t bother
to valet me to-night; I shall be reading late.
Good-night, Harry; good-night, Mr. Barch.”
And with that he walked out of the room and left them.
“Now, then, Hawkins,”
said young Raynor as soon as his father was fairly
out of sight and sound, “set the decanters and
the glasses on the table here, and you and Hamer clear
off about your business as fast as you can toddle.
We don’t need you. Hook it!”
“Very good, sir,” replied
Hawkins deferentially, and obeyed the order to the
letter.
Harry Raynor waited a moment to give
both time to leave the room and to get beyond earshot,
then caught up a decanter, drew a glass toward him,
and poured out a stiff peg of brandy.
“I say, Barch, I’ve got
a flea to put into your ear,” he said earnestly,
“and I didn’t want those blighters hanging
round to hear it; that’s the reason I packed
them off as I did. I’m going to give you
a shock that will set you thinking.”
“Are you?” said Cleek
with the utmost serenity. “Well, I’m
going to give you one, too, dear boy; and as
first horse at the post wins I say, what
price this little caper? How did you come by this,
dear boy and when?”
He dipped round and down into his
coat-tail pocket, as he spoke, pulled out the scent
bracelet, and laid it on the table before him.