Young Raynor was not in the smallest
degree upset at sight of the thing. He was mildly
surprised, and expressed it by a low, soft whistle
as he reached out his hand and took up the bracelet.
“Well, of all the mutton heads!
Shows what a thoughtless beggar I am!” he said
with a slight lurch of the shoulders and an impatient
twitch of the head. “No need to ask you
how you came by the blessed thing, dear boy.
Found it in the inside pocket of that coat you’re
wearing, I know. That’s where I put the
bally thing, I recollect. What an ass of me to
forget all about it. Hope she won’t think
I’ve bagged it.”
“She?” said Cleek, with
admirable composure, considering that this open admission,
this evidence of there being nothing to conceal, threatened
to upset all his calculations. “Antecedent
of that personal pronoun, please; who may the ‘she’
in question be?”
“Why, Mignon, of course.”
“Mignon?”
“Yes, Mademoiselle Mignon De
Varville, the famous Whirlwind Dancer of the Paris
Varietés. You know her, or ought to, considering
that you got a peep at her phiz in spite of me this
afternoon.”
“Not ‘Pink Gauze’? The lady
of the tobacco jar?”
“The very identical. Little bit of all
right, that eh, what?”
“Looked like it, at all events,”
said Cleek, selecting a cigar and lighting up.
“What a lucky beggar you are, dear chap all
the good things seem to go your way. And so” puff!
puff! “Pink Gauze gave you the bracelet,
eh? When? Last night? Or didn’t
you see her then?”
“Oh, I saw her last night, right
enough; in fact, I’ve seen her pretty nearly
every night since she came over from Paris, but she
didn’t give me the bracelet to take care of
then. That was on the night before over
at her little place, you know.”
“No, I’m blest if I do.
How should I? Never saw or heard of her, dear
boy, till I had the misfortune to break that tobacco
jar and tumble out her photo. So her name’s
Mignon de Varville, is it? And she’s got
a little place of her own, eh? Where? In
this neighbourhood?”
“Lord, no! Beyond Wimbledon.
Rippin’ little place, too. Clinkin’
little house standing in its own grounds and fitted
up to the nines. Took it furnished, and gives
the rippin’est suppers and the jolliest dances
going. Hot stuff, I give you my word.
Brought over her entire troupe with her. Rehearsing
now, and with all their evenings to themselves.
Going to open in London in a fortnight’s time,
she says, and no English hotels for her and
her little lot. There are ten of ’em:
five spiffin’ pretty girls, and five of the
most awful-lookin’ Johnnies you ever saw in
evening clothes since the hour you were christened.
Coarse as dog’s hair, every mother’s son
of ’em, but clinkin’ good chaps, for all
that. Plenty of champagne, and jolly good champagne
it is, too, dear boy; and after supper there’s
always a dance, two of the chaps and two of the girls
sitting out and furnishing the music. And Lord,
you don’t know what a dance is, Barch, till
you’ve had one with Mignon de Varville, my boy!”
Cleek did not dispute the assertion.
He had had many with the lady in those old days that
lay forever behind; and it needed no man’s word
to tell him how tirelessly, how joyously, and with
what mad abandon Margot could dance when the
fever of music and wine got into her blood.
“My hat! I’ll be
choking you from sheer jealousy, presently, you lucky
beggar!” he said enviously. “All the
plums seem to fall over on your side of the
wall, dash you! and here am I sitting solitary and
alone in a howling wilderness with not even one.
I say, how the dickens did you ever come across this
French lot? Blest if I can seem to meet with
any French, English, or any other
sort, dash it! Where did you meet the charming
Mignon? In Paris?”
“No fear! You can fall
in with anything going in London if you only know
the ropes, dear boy, and are popular. Flossie
Twinkletoes introduced me to her. She’d
just come over from Paris, and Flossie was out of
work through the failure of ‘The Seaside Girl,’
and asked me to take her to supper and meet a friend
of hers. I did and the friend was
Mignon. After that well, you know how
it is, dear boy. When a fellow knows his way
about women will run after him. Mignon
and I took to each other from the first, and we’ve
been jolly good pals ever since. Invited me to
her place before we’d known each other half an
hour. Fact, dear boy. And she’s rather
exclusive, too, I can tell you. Just how
exclusive you may guess when I tell you that I’m
the only living man outside of those who belong to
her troupe that ever sees the inside of her house
or shares one of those rippin’ evenings there.”
The curious one-sided smile travelled
up Cleek’s cheek, hovered there a moment, and
then disappeared. He said nothing upon the subject,
but it was perfectly clear to him just why
Mr. Harry Raynor was the only stranger present.
He knew Margot and he knew her methods. This one
man was desirable because she had an especial use
for him; and he meant to make it his business to find
out just what that especial use might be. So,
then, she had abandoned her customary tactics for once,
and had brought some of the female members of her
crew to England with her, had she?
The murder of De Louvisan looked more
than ever like an Apache crime, in the light of these
things. But why an Apache crime? Margot’s
game was always money; and the pseudo Count de Louvisan
had not a shilling to bless himself with. Again,
if it were an Apache crime, how came a man who was
undeniably Lord St. Ulmer undeniably everything
that he claimed to be mixed up in the affair
to such an extent as he was? And what of Lady
Clavering? Where did she come in? What had
taken her out upon the Common last night? What
of young Geoff? What of his father? And
what, of all things, about Lady Katharine Fordham?
None of these people could be connected
with Margot with the Apaches. He had
his own ideas relative to Lady Katharine’s part
in the puzzle, but there was still that bundle of
buried clothing, still the fact that it was found
in the grounds of Wuthering Grange, and that it was
highly improbable either Margot or any of her crew
could have put it there. Still, Margot had a
purpose in “catching” Mr. Harry Raynor;
and if Ah, well, you never can
tell. Shallow-looking pools are sometimes very
deep. Which, then, was Mr. Harry Raynor:
the brainless fool he appeared, or a very excellent
actor playing a very cunning part?
During the moment it had taken for
these thoughts to travel through his mind, Cleek’s
whole attention seemed to be claimed by his cigar,
which, for some unknown reason, appeared to have an
objection to draw. Now, however, he flung the
thing aside.
“Pardon me, dear boy, if I have
seemed inattentive,” he said. “Please
go on. What was it you were saying? Oh,
ah! I recollect: about your being the only
guest that Mademoiselle What’s-her-name ever
asks to her blessed kick-ups. Lay you a tanner
I can tell you why, old chap.”
“Can you? Then why?”
“Either she’s clean gone
on you which, no doubt, is very likely or
she’s trying to get something out of you.
Ever give you what our Yankee cousins call the touch?
Ever try to get anything out of you?”
“Not a blessed rap. Never
wanted anything from me. That is, anything
in the money line, I mean. Hinted pretty strongly
at something else, however; but, of course, I wasn’t
taking any on that score!”
“Weren’t you? Why not?”
“Don’t be an ass, Barchie!
You’ve seen the pater and mater, and you can
judge for yourself just how impossible it would be
to even hint at having a girl like Mignon asked over
here to dinner one night just simply because she has,
as she says, an intense yearning to see how people
of the better class in England live and conduct themselves
in their own homes.”
Cleek reached for another cigar and
lit it. Oho! so that was how the cat jumped,
was it? That was Margot’s little game, eh?
She had taken up with this engaging young man merely
for the purpose of getting an entree to Wuthering
Grange. Clearly, then, there must be something
or some one under the roof of this house that she
desired to get in contact with; and having failed
to get invited, as she had hoped Yes,
of course! Cunning of her, diabolically cunning.
Forgotten all about the bracelet, eh? Not she!
He knew her like a book. It would be an excuse
to come over in person to ask for its return.
“So sorry; but called away suddenly, and couldn’t
possibly wait for you to bring it back.”
That sort of thing, and well, there you
are. Ah, she was the very embodiment of craft
and cunning, that lady: cut her off at one door
and she would make her way round to the other.
“Wasn’t aware that it
was anything of that sort, dear chap, or I shouldn’t
have asked,” said Cleek, responding with the
utmost serenity to young Raynor’s remark.
“Of course you couldn’t do anything of
that sort, so it was deuced wise of you to ignore
the hint. Rum what fancies women of that sort
have, eh? And how blessed crafty they are in getting
what they want! You look out, dear boy, that she
doesn’t come over here after that bracelet.
Lay you a sov that’s why she got you to take
charge of it.”
“Lay you another it isn’t,”
replied the young man, with a smile of confidence.
“You don’t know the facts, dear boy, or
you wouldn’t jump to such silly conclusions.
She gave it to me because the blessed thing would
keep coming undone and falling off and interfering
with our waltzing. Besides, it wasn’t she it
was I that suggested that I should put
it in my pocket for safe keeping until the dancing
was over; and, like a blithering idiot, you see, I
forgot all about it. Blessed lucky thing for
me that I had to lend you a suit of evening clothes,
b’gad, or I might not have found the bracelet
for heaven knows how long.”
“And a blessed lucky thing for
me that you turned up in time to lend it to me,”
said Cleek, in reply. “Never was in such
a beastly funk in all my life, dear chap. Could
have said a prayer, if I knew any, I was so blessed
glad when I looked out and saw you standing in the
passage. I say, how did you come to be there,
Raynor? Thought you were heaven knows how far
away, and blest if I can think where you came from.”
“Popped out of St. Ulmer’s
room. Next one to yours. Was in there when
that sneak thief appeared.”
“In there? My hat!
What a rum idea! Thought you didn’t care
for the old josser. At least, you spoke as though
you didn’t this afternoon; and to have you sitting
in there and kow-towing to a gouty old sick man ”
“Wasn’t sitting in there,
dear boy. Had just popped in on my way up to
dress. Evening papers full of that business at
Gleer Cottage last night. Bought several of them
at the railway station. Happened to think that,
maybe, the old bounder hadn’t read the news and
would be interested in it, so just dropped in to give
them to him. That was all.”
“Oh, I see,” said Cleek.
“That accounts for it, of course. Wondered
how the dickens you came to be there, and what on
earth had called you back home so early after you’d
told me not to expect you until twelve. By the
way, dear boy, what did call you back, if it isn’t
an impertinence to ask. Needn’t bother
to reply if you’d rather not.” This
latter, for the reason that at the mention of his
coming back earlier than expected, young Raynor’s
lips had come together in a sharp, hard, narrow line,
and his eyes had assumed an absolutely savage expression.
“Sorry if I’ve poked my nose in where
I’m not wanted, old chap, deuced sorry.”
“Oh, that’s all right,”
said Raynor, reaching for the decanter and pouring
out a fresh peg of brandy. “Don’t
bother about treading on my corns. Of
course I’m a bit sore on the subject, but well,
I like you, Barch; I like you no end. Besides,
I was going to tell you, anyhow. Remember, don’t
you, that I said I was going to give you a shock?”
“Oh, ah! Yes. Blest
if I hadn’t forgotten. And I thought I was
going to give you one, too, about the bracelet; but
it didn’t come off. Maybe yours won’t
either, dear boy.”
“Oh, don’t you make any
mistake upon that score. Lay you a fiver it makes
you sit up when I spring it on you. Shove that
siphon over this way, will you, dear boy? Thanks,
very much. I say, Barch chin’-chin’,
old chap! I say, you want to know what
sent me back so unexpectedly, do you, eh? Well,
you may.”
“May I? Thanks. Then what did?”
“Same thing that called me away in the first
place a blessed swindle!”
“The dickens you say? What sort of a swindle,
old chap, eh?”
“A forged letter. Somebody
wanted to get me away from this house for some purpose
or another, and to keep me away until late to-night,
too. I don’t know why, and I don’t
know what for, but I’m jolly well certain who
the party is, b ‘gad; and it’s a howlin’
eye-opener, I give you my word! Wait a
bit!”
He got up suddenly, walked to the
door, opened it a foot or so, peeped out, then reclosed
it and walked back to his seat. He poured out
a third brandy, and drank it almost neat this time,
then put his elbows upon the table, and, leaning forward,
looked straight into Cleek’s eyes.
“Barch, I’ve discovered
something,” he said in a lowered voice.
“My father’s playing a double game.
He’s a damned old two-faced hypocrite, that’s
what, and I’ve found him out at last!”
The cigar dropped suddenly from Cleek’s
fingers, and he ducked down in quest of it. He
simply had to have some excuse to cover up the
state of his feelings, or they would have got the
better of him. A while ago he had said to himself
that the fellow was despicable enough to implicate
his own parents if it were necessary to save his skin;
but even then he had only half believed it; now, however,
he knew, and a fierce indignation bit into the very
soul of him.
The worm had suddenly developed into a viper.
He went on groping for the dropped
cigar. He might have found it at once had he
chosen to do so, but he did not. It needed a moment
or two to whip his savage desires into subjugation,
to get himself well in hand again that he might face
this unnatural son without giving way to the temptation
to thrash him; and all the while his head was whirling
with the crushing recollections that were crowding
into it.
If it were worth his while to
save his own skin, to divert suspicion from himself
Well, was it not worth his while now? The chase
was narrowing, and perhaps he knew it one
could not be certain what such a man would
find means of discovering. Perhaps he knew of
the unearthing of the buried clothing. Perhaps
he knew that there was proof the murderer had been
traced to Wuthering Grange, and knowing, realized the
necessity for diverting suspicion from himself, if
he were guilty? But, guilty or innocent, principal
or accessory, this one thing was certain: last
night a murder had been committed; last night a dead
man had been spiked to the wall in true Apache fashion;
and this Mr. Harry Raynor, who was casting slurs upon
his own father, was hand and glove with the Apache
queen!