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The Plague, Pestilence & Apocalypse MEGAPACK™

Page 35

by Robert Reed


  at any rate he could not have been very interested, for he did not turn

  up until to-day . He has just sent a note to tell me that he is staying

  at the George, and I have written to ask him to come up to dinner

  to-night .”

  She made a little face .

  “He’s a detective or something, isn’t he?” she asked .

  “More than a detective .”

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  Sir Ralph was rather inclined to be irritable if you did not rise to

  his values . It was better to over-estimate them than to under-estimate

  them in any case .

  “Surely you have read the papers?” he went on, with his best

  magisterial air . “You couldn’t very well escape his name nowadays .

  He is the man whom the English Government brought over as a sort

  of consultant, to deal with this terrible outbreak of crime .”

  “I’ve heard something about it,” said his wife, carelessly . “The

  ‘Black Hand’ or the ‘Red Hand’—I forget exactly what colour it is .”

  Sir Ralph frowned .

  “You must not treat these matters frivolously, Vera,” he said,

  coldly . “I’ve had reason to speak to you before on similar occasions .

  The ‘Red Hand’ is a very mysterious organization, which is striking

  at the very heart of our domestic security . Any man, and I may add

  any woman, should be extremely grateful to those who, by their

  gifts of divination, are endeavouring to shield the innocent victims

  of a band of organized criminals .”

  Vera hated her husband when he made speeches to her . She knew

  more about the “Red Hand” and its workings than she was prepared

  to discuss with Sir Ralph .

  It was a pose of hers, as it was a pose of certain members of

  her class, to profess a profound ignorance upon matters which were

  engaging the attention of newspaper readers . The pose of ignorance

  is a popular one with members of the leisured classes; popular, be-

  cause it suggests their superiority to the influences which surround

  them; because it signalizes their independence of chronicled facts,

  and because, too, it is the easiest of all poses to assume and to sus-

  tain .Vera had caught the trick and found it a profitable one. It lent

  her an overpowering naivete, which had a paralysing effect upon

  the better-informed but socially inferior members of the commu-

  nity, and it precluded one being bored by a long recital of the news

  which one had read in the morning papers in a more concise or a

  more accurate form . Her interest in the great Italian detective for the

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  moment was a conventionally domestic one, for she rose from the

  music-stool .

  “I shall have to tell Parker to set another place,” she said .

  “If he accepts,” interjected Marjorie .

  Vera raised her eyebrows with a little smile .

  “Don’t be absurd, Marjorie, of course he will accept .”

  “What do we call him—Inspector or Sergeant or something?”

  she asked of Sir Ralph .

  The spirit of revolt was stirring within her, and she permitted

  herself a facetiousness of attitude which ordinarily she would not

  have expressed . And this, despite the subconscious desire to soothe

  him into a complaisant mood .

  She never for one moment imagined that he would advance her

  the money she required, but he might let her have a portion of it if

  she could only invent a story sufficiently plausible. The truth was

  out of the question . She smiled to herself at the thought . She was

  an imaginative woman but not sufficiently so to picture Sir Ralph in

  that moment of confession . She needed the money as she had never

  needed money before . It was not for herself—her own wants were

  few and her tastes simple . She might, perhaps, induce her husband

  to let her have a hundred if she could invent a good reason—and it

  would have to be a superlatively good reason to induce Sir Ralph to

  part with his money .

  Somehow the old weariness of it all, the old distaste for the life

  she was living, came over her, and induced her to treat the subject in

  a manner in which she knew her husband would heartily disapprove .

  “You will call him Doctor Tillizini,’ said Sir Ralph sternly . “He

  is a professor of anthropology in the Florentine School of Medicine .

  He is a gentleman, Vera, and I shall expect you to treat him as such .”

  Marjorie, who had been an interested spectator of the passage

  between husband and wife, had discreetly withdrawn to her book

  and her chair by the window . As Sir Ralph turned to go, she rose .

  “I say, what fun,” she said . “Is he really coming, Uncle?”

  Sir Ralph nodded .

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  “I hope so . I can do no more than invite him, but he is such a busy

  man that he may probably have to go back to town . At any rate, I

  am certain,” he said, a little pompously, “that he will approve most

  heartily of my treatment of that rascal to-day . I think it is monstrous

  the way Hilary George went on…”

  He was still sore over his treatment by his whilom friend, and

  he launched forth into a sea of explanation and justification, and,

  incidentally, gave the girl a fairly garbled version of the scene which

  had occurred outside the Session House—a scene in which he had

  played, by his account, a dignified and proper part, and in which

  Hilary had lost his temper to a distressing degree .

  The fire of Sir Ralph’s eloquence burnt itself down to glowerings

  and splutterings of incoherent disapproval .

  “Hilary George,” he said, “will regret this .” He spoke in the satis-

  fied tone of one who had made special arrangements with Provi-

  dence to that end .

  Marjorie was following her uncle from the room, when a glance

  from Vera brought her back . The older woman waited until the door

  had closed behind her husband .

  “Marjorie,” she said, in the mild and honeyed tone which the girl

  recognized as her “At Home” voice, “I want you to do something

  for me .”

  “With pleasure, dear,” said the girl warmly .

  Lady Morte-Mannery fingered the little silver ornaments on one

  of the tables which abounded in the drawing-room, and placed them

  as though they were pawns in a new game she was playing . She

  seemed to be concentrating her attention upon this pastime as she

  spoke .

  “I want you to do something very special for me,” she repeated .

  “Of course, I know I can trust you about that money, and now I want

  to ask you to help me with a little ruse . This man who is coming

  to-day,” she said, “this Italian person, is really not the kind of man

  I want to meet . I hate detectives and all those crude, melodramatic

  individuals . They talk about crime and things, and besides,” she

  hesitated, “I can trust you, can’t I?”

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  She looked up sharply .

  “Yes,” said the girl gravely, wondering what was coming .

 
“Well, you know, dear,” said Vera slowly, and still playing her

  mysterious game with the comfit boxes and Dutch silver, “I’m a

  member of a club. It’s a ladies’ club; you won’t find it in Whit-

  taker because we do not care to advertise our existence, although of

  course we are registered . Well, we had rather a bother there, two or

  three months ago . We—we . Why should I deceive you?” she said in

  a burst of confidence, and with her rare smile. “We were raided! You

  see, dear, we played rather heavily. We did not confine ourselves to

  the prosaic game of Bridge . Some woman—I forget her name—in-

  troduced baccarat, and we had a little wheel too; you know .”

  She shrugged her shoulders .

  “It was awfully fascinating, and one lost and won quite a consid-

  erable sum . And then there was a bother, and the police came in one

  night quite unexpectedly . Your dear Uncle Ralph was in town for the

  May Meetings, and I had quite a lot of time on my hands .

  “It was very fortunate I escaped any serious consequences of my

  rashness . I gave a false name, and was brought up the next morning

  at Bow Street with the rest of the women—you remember, the case

  created quite a sensation—and I was bound over in a false name .

  Nobody recognized me and nobody but you is any the wiser .”

  She stopped again, and shot a swift, side-long glance at the girl .

  “Oh, you needn’t be shocked,” she said, the acid in her tone as-

  serting itself . “It wasn’t so very dreadful, only this Tillizini man was

  in court that day, and I think he may have recognized me .”

  “How awkward!” said Marjorie . “Really, Vera, I’m not a bit

  shocked, and it’s not for me, any way, to sit in judgment on your

  actions . What do you want me to do?”

  “I want you to help me when I tell Sir Ralph that I am too ill to

  entertain this person . I’ll go straight away to bed, and I want you,

  like an angel, to do the honours .”

  “Why, with pleasure,” said Marjorie, with a little smile .

  “Anyway,” said Vera, a little hardly, “Ralph won’t bully you before

  visitors, nor will he refer pointedly to your needless extravagance in

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  potatoes . Ralph is rather a fanatic on the question of potatoes,” she

  said . “There is a standard by which he judges all phases of domestic

  economy .”

  Marjorie was filled with an infinite pity for the girl. She was not

  more than seven or eight years older than herself, still young enough

  to find joy in the colour and movement of life.

  “I will do anything I can,” she said . For the second time that day

  she laid her hand upon the other’s shoulder .

  “Don’t paw me, dear,” said Vera, with sudden asperity, and the

  warm, generous heart of the girl was chilled . Vera saw this, and tried

  to make amends .

  “Please don’t bother about me, dear,” she said, in a softer tone . “I

  am rather jagged; too jagged, indeed, to meet this—”

  At that point the door of the drawing-room was opened, and Wil-

  liam, the butler, came in importantly . He stood by the open door .

  “Professor Tillizini,” he announced .

  CHAPTER III

  A HUNTER OF MEN

  It seemed to Marjorie that Vera shrank back at the name .

  The girl waited for her to go forward and greet the newcomer, but

  as she made no move Marjorie realized that she was called upon,

  even now, to perform the duties of hostess .

  The man in the doorway was tall; he looked taller, perhaps, be-

  cause of his slimness . He was clad from head to foot in black, and

  the big flowing tie at his neck was of the same sober hue. He carried

  in his hand a black soft felt hat, from which the butler had made

  several ineffectual attempts to detach him .

  His face was long and thin, sallow and lined; his eyes were big and

  grey, and steady . They were terribly alive and expressive, Marjorie

  thought . They gave the impression that the whole process of life was

  comprehended in their depths . His hair was black and was brushed

  smoothly behind his ears . He was neither handsome nor ugly . His

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  face was an unusual one, attractive, because of its very character and

  strength . The mouth was big and sensitive; the ungloved hands were

  long and white, and as delicate as a surgeon’s .

  He gave a quick glance from one to the other .

  “I am so sorry to intrude upon you,” he said . There was no trace

  of any foreign accent in his voice. “I expected to find Sir Ralph. He

  is out—yes?”

  He had a quick, alert method of talking . He was eager to the point

  of anticipating the reply . Before the girl could answer he had gone

  on .“He has kindly asked me to dine to-night . I am so sorry I cannot .

  I must be back in London in an hour or two . There are one or two

  interviews of importance which I have arranged .”

  His smile was a dazzling one; it lit up the whole of his face, and

  changed him from a somewhat morose, funereal figure, to a new and

  radiant being .

  Marjorie noticed that he was almost handsome in his amusement .

  The smile came and went like a gleam of sunshine seen through a

  rift of storm-cloud .

  “You are Miss Marjorie Meagh,” he said, “and you, madam,”

  with a little bow, “are Lady Morte-Mannery .” His head twisted for a

  moment inquiringly . That, and the bow, were the only little signs he

  gave of his continental origin .

  Vera forced a smile to her face . She came forward, a little embar-

  rassed . She had hoped to escape without an introduction and to have

  developed a convenient headache to keep out of his way .

  “I saw you in court,” said Tillizini, quickly . “It was an interesting

  case, was it not? That poor man!”

  He threw out his arms with a gesture of pity .

  “I do not know why you sympathize with him,” said Vera .

  “Seven years!” Tillizini shook his head . “It is a long time, Mad-

  am, for a man—innocent .”

  Again the little shrug . The tall man paced the room nervously .

  “You have heard his story . He said that he came to this house to

  meet an individual who would give him a packet .”

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  “But surely you do not believe that?” said the other, with amused

  contempt .

  “Yes, I believe that,” said Tillizini, calmly and gravely . “Why

  should I not? The man’s every attitude, every word, spoke eloquent-

  ly to me, of his sincerity .”

  “Do you believe, then, in this mysterious Italian?” said Vera .

  “Oh, Vera, don’t you remember?” Marjorie broke in suddenly,

  and with some excitement, “there was an Italian in the town . We saw

  him the day before the robbery . Don’t you remember?” she asked

  again . “A very short man, with a long Inverness cape which reached

  to his heels . We passed him in the car on the Breckley road, and I

  remarked to you that he was either an Italian or a Spaniard because


  of the peculiar way he was holding his cigarette .”

  “Ah, yes!”

  It was Tillizini, tremendously vital, all a-quiver like some deli-

  cately strung zither whose strings had been set vibrating by a musi-

  cian’s hand .

  “He was short and stout, and was dressed in black,” said the girl .

  “A moustache—no?” said Tillizini .

  The girl shook her head .

  “He was clean-shaven .”

  “You were going the same direction—yes?”

  Again the girl nodded, with a smile at the man’s eager question .

  “And did he turn his face towards you or from you? From you?”

  Again the girl nodded .

  “He did not want you to see his face?” Tillizini himself shook his

  head in answer .

  “What rubbish, Marjorie!” broke in Vera, petulantly . “I don’t

  remember anything of the sort . There are always organ-grinders

  with monkeys and things of that sort coming through the village, or

  ice-cream people who come down from Chatham . You are letting

  your imagination run away with you .” Marjorie was amazed . She

  remembered now the incident most distinctly . She had spoken of it

  to Vera in the evening, at dinner . It was amazing that she herself had

  forgotten it until this moment .

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  “But you must remember,” she said .

  “I don’t remember,” answered the other shortly . “Besides, you

  are very wrong to give Mr . Tillizini a false clue . There can be no

  doubt that this man, Mansingham, burgled the house for no other

  reason than to steal Sir Ralph’s collection .”

  “Instigated by the Italian,” said Tillizini . “Oh, you English peo-

  ple,” he said, with a despairing shrug, “I am desolated when I speak

  with you . You have such a fear of melodrama . You are so insistent

  upon the fact that the obvious must be the only possible explana-

  tion!”

  He shook his head again in humorous resignation . From any oth-

  er man the outburst might have sounded as a piece of unpardonable

  impertinence . But Tillizini had the extraordinary gift of creating an

  atmosphere of old-established friendship . Even Vera, frankly an-

  tagonistic, had a vague sense of having discussed this matter before

  in identical terms with the man who spoke so disparagingly of her

  compatriots .

  He looked at his watch .

  “I must see Sir Ralph before I go back. Where shall I find him?”

 

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