Welcome to Storytime Haven! ๐โจ
Join us for a thrilling ride through the pages of Edgar Wallace’s ‘Diana of Kara-Kara,’ a captivating mystery full of secrets, unexpected twists, and unforgettable characters. Set in a world where orphans, hidden fortunes, and life-altering decisions intersect, this novel is sure to keep you on the edge of your seat! ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ๐ฐ
๐ธ **Story Overview:**
In this gripping tale, Diana Ford, a young orphan, is thrust into a world of legal battles and dangerous secrets when her late aunt’s estate comes into question. With a fortune at stake, Diana must navigate a maze of mystery, deception, and betrayal. Who can she trust? And what dark secrets lie buried in the shadows of Kara-Kara?
๐ธ **Key Themes:**
โข Orphans and the search for identity ๐ง
โข Secrets and hidden wealth ๐
โข Moral dilemmas and justice โ๏ธ
โข The struggle between good and evil โ๏ธ
โข Complex relationships and power dynamics ๐ก
๐ธ **Why You Should Listen:**
โข Dive into a world of suspense, mystery, and intrigue ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ
โข Uncover twists that will keep you guessing until the very end ๐
โข Perfect for fans of classic literature, detective fiction, and crime thrillers ๐
๐ธ **Join Storytime Haven:**
Be sure to subscribe to **Storytime Haven** for more classic audiobooks and thrilling adventures! ๐ฒ
Don’t miss out on future episodes!
๐ **Subscribe here:** ๐
(https://bit.ly/StorytimeHavenOfficial) ๐
-Diana of Kara-Kara ๐ | A Gripping Mystery by Edgar Wallace ๐ [https://youtu.be/aJgwGssVCNI]
-The Uttermost Farthing: A Savant’s Vendetta ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ๐ [https://youtu.be/jiAYBvvbiik]
-The Dalehouse Murder ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ๐ A Classic Mystery Novel by Francis Everton [https://youtu.be/CRSrdVT9-J0]
-Other People’s Money ๐ฐ๐ | A Tale of Intrigue and Deception [https://youtu.be/Ty_WRw4A8Nc]
-The Dalehouse Murder ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ๐ A Classic Mystery Novel by Francis Everton [https://youtu.be/CRSrdVT9-J0]
-Lady Molly of Scotland Yard ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ๐ A Thrilling Mystery by Baroness Orczy (https://youtu.be/iqk1bdxgxfQ)
-๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ Room 13 by Edgar Wallace ๐ A Mystery That Defies Logic! (https://youtu.be/6Ke40FuHGyY)
-Captain Blood โ๏ธ A Swashbuckling Pirate Adventure by Rafael Sabatini (https://youtu.be/m1L8rFgAUgo)
– ๐ The Brooklyn Murders | A Gripping Mystery by G. D. H. Cole ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ (https://youtu.be/hxETC8UMHls)
-The Four-Fingered Glove; Or, The Cost of a Lie ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ๐ผ Mystery & Deception! (https://youtu.be/xd4cmygl4j8)
-๐ Knock, Knock, Knock and Other Stories ๐ | Ivan Turgenev’s Haunting Tales ๐ญ (https://youtu.be/1oy3o8oLPgI)
๐ The Mystery of 31 New Inn ๐จ (https://youtu.be/zrdRhAyszt4)
-๐ The Crime at Black Dudley ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ | A Classic Mystery by Margery Allingham (https://youtu.be/joaM5KlETp8)
๐ The Blue Castle by L. M. Montgomery | A Tale of Love & Freedom ๐โจ (https://youtu.be/nM3YR4cXHmc)
-๐ The Quest of the Sacred Slipper ๐ (https://youtu.be/jZazMRhq9kw)
– ๐โจ Call Mr. Fortune: A Classic Detective Mystery by H. C. Bailey | Full Story โจ๐ (https://youtu.be/cR36exYi72c)
-๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ The Scarlet Bat: A Detective Story ๐ | A Gripping Mystery by Fergus Hume [https://youtu.be/8nXt_IMhSLE]
๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ The Middle Temple Murder | A Gripping Mystery by J. S. Fletcher ๐ [https://youtu.be/Zo8voYCJ8WI]
๐ธ **About Edgar Wallace:**
Edgar Wallace was a British author and playwright best known for his works in the crime and mystery genres. His writing has influenced generations of readers, and ‘Diana of Kara-Kara’ is one of his most beloved stories. ๐๏ธ
๐ธ **Perfect for:**
โข Mystery lovers ๐ต๏ธโโ๏ธ
โข Fans of Edgar Wallaceโs thrilling tales ๐
โข Those who enjoy a classic detective story with twists and turns ๐งฉ
**Hashtags:**
#DianaOfKaraKara #EdgarWallace #MysteryNovel #ClassicLiterature #CrimeFiction #SuspensefulStories #Orphans #HiddenWealth #SecretsAndLies #DetectiveFiction #Storytime #Audiobook #HistoricalFiction #MurderMystery #EdgarWallaceBooks #ClassicAudiobooks #ThrillerStories #SuspenseThriller #ClassicMystery #BookLovers #LiteratureLovers #FictionAddict #CrimeThriller #SuspenseAndIntrigue #KaraKara #AudiobookLovers
๐ธ **Enjoyed the Story?**
Don’t forget to like, comment, and share this video with fellow book lovers! ๐๐ข
Subscribe now for more captivating stories on **Storytime Haven!** ๐
**Navigate by Chapters or Titles:**
00:00:35 Chapter 1.
00:12:59 Chapter 2.
00:24:32 Chapter 3.
00:34:21 Chapter 4.
00:45:47 Chapter 5.
00:53:25 Chapter 6.
01:01:22 Chapter 7.
01:25:44 Chapter 8.
01:34:22 Chapter 9.
01:55:01 Chapter 10.
01:59:45 Chapter 11.
02:14:52 Chapter 12.
02:39:58 Chapter 13.
02:50:42 Chapter 14.
03:04:51 Chapter 15.
03:15:21 Chapter 16.
03:31:20 Chapter 17.
03:35:07 Chapter 18.
03:40:02 Chapter 19.
04:05:35 Chapter 20.
04:31:01 Chapter 21.
04:35:09 Chapter 22.
04:50:47 Chapter 23.
05:03:31 Chapter 24.
05:10:11 Chapter 25.
05:22:14 Chapter 26.
05:34:02 Chapter 27.
Welcome to Storytime Haven, where we embark on thrilling journeys through the pages of classic tales. Today, we dive into the mystery and intrigue of Edgar Wallace’s ‘Diana of Kara-Kara.’ A gripping tale of orphans, secrets, and hidden wealth, this story unveils the complexities of relationships and the struggles of the human spirit. Join us as we follow the twists and turns of Diana Fordโs life, filled with unexpected encounters and life-altering decisions. Prepare yourself for a narrative that will captivate and surprise at every chapter. Chapter 1. โShe is an orphan,โ said Mr. Collings emotionally. Orphans were Mr. Collingsโ weakness. In ordinary intercourse as between lawyer and client, he was a stern, reserved man with a cold passion for compromise. Litigants entered his office charged with bubbling joy that their enemies had delivered themselves into their hands; they came talking five figure damages and the stark ruin of men and corporations who and which had offended them. They slunk out again into the glare of an Australian sun, their cases demolished, their spirits broken, their futures clouded. Mr. Collings did not believe in litigation. He believed that things could be arranged. If it was possible for a murdered man to walk into Mr. Collingsโ office and say: โIโve got an excellent case against Binks: he has just shot me dead. Do you think I can get damages?โ Mr. Collings would reply: โI very much doubt it. There is a great deal to be said for Binks. And arenโt you in rather an awkward position yourself? You are carrying about a bullet which undoubtedly is the property of Binks. You never know what point of view a jury will take. You had better let me try to settle this.โ But in the matter of orphans Mr. Collings was slightly unbalanced. He was strictly brought up by parents who compelled him to read books on Sunday that were entirely devoted to orphans and good organ-grinders and little girls who quoted extensively from precious books and died surrounded by weeping negroes. In such literature the villains of the piece were young scoundrels who surreptitiously threw away their crusts and only ate the crumbly part of bread; desperadoes who kicked dogs and threw large flies into spidersโ webs and watched the spider at his fell work with glee. โShe is an orphan,โ said Mr. Collings again, and blew his nose loudly. โShe has been an orphan for ten years,โ said Mr. William Cathcart cynically. Mr. Collings was stout, bald, given to afternoon naps; Mr. Cathcart was thin, narrow-faced, not so bald, and never slept at all, so far as anybody knew. He hated orphans. They stood for questions of _cestui que use_, problems of _cy-pres_, perplexities of _donatio mortis causa_ and the Guardianship of Infants Act. He never saw an orphan without his hand going instinctively to his hip pocket. โAnd the most irregular orphan I have ever met,โ continued Mr. William Cathcart remorselessly. โAn infant in law with a bank balance of a hundred thousand! I refuse to drop a tear–positively!โ Mr. Collings wiped his eyes. โShe _is_ an orphan,โ he insisted. โMrs. Tetherby gave her the money during her lifetime: there is nothing irregular in that. If I gave an–an orphanโ–he swallowed hard–โa penny, a pound–a thousand–is that a breach of the law, an impropriety, even though it is practised _de die in diem_?โ Mr. Cathcart considered. โYou might in certain circumstances be acting _de sont tort_,โ he said. Mr. Collings pondered this; found the term almost inapplicable, but not so much so that he could be offensive in a gentlemanly way. Wisely he returned to lamb. โMrs. Tetherby was inert. Stout women are often inert—-โ โLazy,โ suggested the dyspeptic Cathcart. โShe was fond of Diana. Few aunts are fond of nieces. Her will proves that. She left everything—-โ โThere was nothing to leave,โ interrupted Mr. William Cathcart with sour satisfaction. How that man hated orphans! โThere was nothing to leave because in her lifetime she gave Diana full control of her money.โ โShe was inert,โ murmured Mr. Collings. โShe loved this orphan child—-โ โIf there was one woman in the world who ought never to have been allowed—-โ โNever ought have been,โ corrected Mr. Collings gently. โ–to have charge of a girl of Diana Fordโs temperament, it is or was Mrs. Tetherby. A child of sixteen who has a raging love affair with a student—-โ โA theological student,โ insisted Mr. Collings. โDonโt forget that. A young woman may well feel that she could give her heart to a theological student when a medical student would have revolted all that was most sensitive in her nature.โ โA theological student makes it worse.โ โAt least Mrs. Tetherby consulted us on that matter.โ Mr. Collings was a shade reproachful. โInert or energetic, she consulted us.โ โShe consulted us to discover whether she would be liable to trial for murder if she waylaid and shot Mr. Dempsi. She said that she had set a dog on to him, but he was incapable of taking a hint. Those were her words.โ โDempsi is dead,โ said Mr. Collings in a hushed voice. โI spoke to Diana on the subject only eight months ago–when her dear aunt died. I asked her if the wound had left a scar. She said she scarcely remembered a scratch, and that she often amused herself in the evenings by trying to draw him from memory.โ โA heartless little devil,โ said Mr. Cathcart. โA child–youth has no memory, not even for its stomach aches,โ said Mr. Collings oracularly. โDid you discuss those too?โ sneered his partner. Mr. Collings raised his eyebrows. Such a man as he is hopeless in the face of sheer vulgarity. โAn orphan….โ he began. The clerk at the door spoke in the strained way of managing clerks. โMiss Diana Ford, sir,โ he said. The legal house of Collings & Cathcart exchanged glances. โShow the young lady in.โ The door closed. โBe gentle with her, William.โ Mr. Cathcart writhed. โWill she be gentle with me?โ he asked bitterly. โWill you guarantee that she will be reasonably polite to me–and back your guarantee with real money?โ There came through the door a peach tree, blossoming in the spring of the year; summer dawn on riverside meadows with the dew winking from a thousand gossamers. The froth of hawthorn in an English country lane; a crystal brook whispering between slim larches. Miss Diana Ford. During the war Mr. Cathcart had held a commission in the Army Service Corps (Home Service) and had acquired the inventory habit. He saw: Girl: Slim, medium size. One. Eyes: Grey-blue; large, more or less innocent. Two. Mouth: Red, Bow-shaped, largish. One. Nose: Straight, in perfect shape. One. Hair: Slightly golden, bobbed. One complete head. Diana was as unrecognisable from the inventory as the average man from the description on his passport. She had the atmosphere of spring and dawn. Her colouring belonged to such season and time, having a pink of its own and a whiteness which looked pink when compared with white. She moved with such supple grace that Mr. Cathcart suspected an entire absence of corsets–he was a married man. She came impulsively to Mr. Collings and kissed him. Mr. William Cathcart closed his eyes, so did not meet the smirk of satisfaction which his partner loosened for his benefit. โGood morning, Uncle. Good morning, Uncle Cathcart.โ โโMorninโ,โ said Mr. Cathcart, hostile to the last. โโMorninโ!โ she boomed in imitation. โAnd Iโve come feeling awfully nice toward you! I called you โUncleโ!โ โI heard you,โ glowered the newly elected relative. โIt would be much better, Miss Ford, if we proceeded on business lines—-โ โYou can proceed on tram lines if that pleases you,โ she sighed, taking off her hat and tossing it on to the nearest deed-box. โOh, Uncle Collings, Iโm _sick_!โ Mr. Cathcart half rose in his alarm. โSick of Australia, sick of the station, sick of the people, sick of everything. Iโm going home.โ โHome!โ gasped Mr. Collings. โBut, my dear little Diana. If by โhomeโ you mean England and not–er—-โ โHeaven,โ suggested Mr. Cathcart. โI mean England, of course I mean England. I am going to stay with my cousin, Gordon Selsbury.โ Mr. Collings scratched his nose. โAn elderly person, of course?โ โI donโt know.โ She shrugged her indifference. โMarried, er—-?โ โI suppose so. If heโs nice. All the nice men are married–present company excepted.โ Mr. Collings was a bachelor and could afford to laugh very heartily. Mr. Cathcart, on the other hand, _was_ married and was not even amused. โYou have cabled and written, of course: there is no objection to your going to–er–Mr. Selsburyโs?โ โNone whatever.โ She was overridingly brisk. โHe will be delighted to have me.โ โTwenty!โ said Mr. Cathcart and shook his head. โAn infant in law! I really think we must know more about Mr. Selsbury and his condition before–eh, Collings?โ Mr. Collings looked appealingly at the girl; she had never seemed more or looked less orphaned than at that moment. โIt would be wise, perhaps–?โ he no more than suggested. When Diana smiled her eyes wrinkled up and you saw both rows of her small white teeth. โI have taken my cabin: a lovely one. With a bathroom and sitting-room. The walls are panelled in blue brocade silk and there is a cute little brass bedstead in the middle–so that you can fall out either side.โ Mr. William Cathcart felt it was the moment to bring down his foot. โI am afraid I cannot consent to your going,โ he said quietly. โWhy?โ Up went her chin. โYes, why?โ demanded Mr. Collings. He was anxious to know. โBecause,โ said Mr. Cathcart, โbecause, my dear young lady, you are an infant in the eyes of the wise old law of this country; because Mr. Collings and I stand _in loco parentis_ to you. Now I am old enough to be your father—-โ โAnd grandfather,โ she said calmly. โBut does that matter? There was a lad of sixty trying to find opportunities for squeezing my hand all the way down in the train from Bendigo. Age means nothing if your heart is young.โ โExactly!โ said Mr. Collings, whose heart was very young. โThe long and the short of it is that you canโt go,โ said Mr. William Cathcart defiantly. โI do not wish to apply for an order of the court—-โ โOne moment, little friend of the poor,โ said Diana. She threw several priceless law books and a pile of affidavits from a chair and sat down. โA few moments ago–correct me if I am wrong: I seldom am–you produced your hoary Mr. Loco Parentis to crush me to the earth. Meet Colonel Locus Standi!โ โEh?โ said William, dithered. โMy knowledge of legal formula is slight,โ said Diana gravely. โI have lived a pure and a sheltered life amidst the rolling grass lands of Kara-Kara, but ignorant orphan though I am….โ Mr. Collings sighed. โ… I understand that before a lawyer applies to the courts he must have a client. For no lawyer, except perhaps a lawyer who has been crossed in love and is not quite sane, goes to law without a client.โ Mr. William Cathcart shrugged his shoulders. โYou must make your own bed,โ he said. โThe court canโt even make me do that,โ she replied. Mr. Cathcart saw her walking across to him and took up his pen hastily. โUncle Cathcart,โ she said in a low voice, โI did so hope and pray that we should part friends! Every night when I kneel by my bed and say โPlease, God, give Uncle Cathcart a sense of humour and make him a nice man,โ I have expected the miracle to happen.โ Uncle Cathcart wriggled. โHave your own way,โ he said loudly. โI canโt put an old head on young shoulders. Those who live longest will see most.โ โThe proof of the pudding is in the eating,โ she added gently. โYou forgot that one.โ At luncheon, Mr. Collings tapped the ash of his cigar into the coffee saucer. โWhat is this fellow like–this Selsbury?โ โHeโs wonderful!โ she said dreamily. โHe rowed six in the University eight–Iโm simply crazy about him.โ The startled Mr. Collings gazed at her in fascinated horror. โIs he crazy about you?โ he gasped. Diana smiled. She was adjusting her nose with the aid of a mirror concealed in the flap of her handbag. โHe will be,โ she said softly. Chapter 2. Neither by nature crazy, nor by inclination eccentric, Mr. Gordon Selsbury had at moments serious but comfortable doubts as to whether he was not a little abnormal; whether he was not, in fine, one of those rare and gifted mortals to whom was given Vision beyond the ordinary. His environment was the commonplace City of London; his occupation a shrieking incongruity for a spiritual man–he was an insurance broker. And a prosperous insurance broker. Sometimes he sat before the silver fire grate of his sitting-room, amazed at the contradictory evidence of his own genius. Here (said he, thinking impartially) was a man with a Conscious Soul, beside whom other men were clods, vegetables, animals of the field, slaves to their material demands. Lifted above the world and its peculiarly grimy interests, he was a man whose spiritual head rose above fog and was one with the snow-capped mountains and the blue skies. And yet–here was the truly astonishing thing–he could grapple most practically with these materialists and could tear from the clenched and frenzied paws large quantities of soiled and greasy money…. โNo, Trenter, I shall be out to-morrow afternoon. Will you please tell Mr. Robert that I will see him at my office. Thank you, Trenter.โ Trenter inclined his head respectfully and went back to the telephone. โNo, sir, Mr. Selsbury will not be at home to-morrow.โ Bobbie Selsbury was annoyed. โWill you tell him that he promised to play in a foursome with me, tell him–ask him to come to the telephone.โ Gordon got up from his tapestried armchair with an expressionless face. Before the servants he revealed nothing in the least degree emotive. โYes, yes, I know!โ wearily. โBut I had a prior engagement. You must get somebody else. Old Mendlesohn … whatโs the matter with him? Rubbish, my dear fellow…. At any rate, you must get somebody–Iโm tremendously busy to-morrow…. I donโt feel like discussing my business on the telephone. Good-bye.โ He paced his dignified way to his den. Gordon Selsbury once rowed six in the Varsity boat–there were crossed oars above his fireplace, though he thought the display in bad taste. He had once been a fresher whose chief joy in life had been to steal policemenโs helmets and ride a bicycle down forbidden pathways, and to sprint from proctors. It seemed difficult to believe. He was tall and good-looking in the Apollo Belvedere manner. Fair, with a forehead which was large and thoughtful, he baffled instant analysis by carrying through life two inches of sidewhisker on either cheek. Men seeing him first thought he wrote music or played a โcello. Women on introduction guessed him as a dancer of amazing agility, or possibly a film artist. โTrenter….โ Trenter waited, his head attentively thrust forward, a simulation of intense interest on his sharp features. He continued to wait, even as Gordon continued to frown at the fireplace. โTrenter….โ โYes, sir?โ Slowly Mr. Selsbury turned his head until his eyes met Trenterโs. โI saw you kissing the parlourmaid this morning. You are a married man, I believe?โ Trenter blinked apprehensively. He was indeed married. โI do not wish that sort of thing to happen again,โ said Gordon, mildly scandalised. โYou are a married man with responsibilities which cannot be ignored or set on one side. Eleanor, as I understand her name to be, is a young girl, possibly inflammable, certainly impressionable. To cloud a young girlโs life by awakening in her heart a passion which you cannot return is most reprehensible. Even I have been rocked by the current which the stone you cast has set into motion. My shaving water was late this morning. This must not occur again.โ โNo, sir,โ said Trenter. News comes instantly to the servantsโ hall in any event. Now, telepathy lagged behind Trenterโs spoken word. Eleanor, tall, svelte, pallid of face, black eyebrows and eyes that flashed, interrupted the operation of a lip-stick to listen. She was tremulously indignant. โBecause heโs a St. Andrew, does he think that we havenโt any human feelings? The poor cold-blooded fish! Iโll let him know that I wonโt be talked about and my name took away–taken away, I mean–by a prying, sneaking, rubber-soled spy. He is too!โ โWhoโs this St. Andrew?โ Trenter was suspicious of all saints, being by marriage a Primitive Baptist. โHeโs the man that women tempted and he wouldnโt,โ said Eleanor, prepared to drop the illustration. But Trenter was of another mind. โWhoโs been tempting him?โ he asked, darkling eyed. โNobody: not if itโs me you mean. Iโd like to see him put his arm round _my_ waist! Heโd never forget it!โ โHe wouldnโt forget himself anyway,โ said Trenter, relieved. She tossed her head sceptically. โOh, I donโt know!โ she said, and nodded to a warm, large woman in the gingham and apron of her profession. โAsk cook!โ Trenter was dazed. โGood God!–not you, cook?โ he asked in a whisper. Happily Mrs. Magglesark was not a quick thinker. โYes; I saw him too,โ she said, and Eleanor, in terror that the telling of the story should go elsewhere, trod on the opening of the cookโs narrative. โMe and cook–that is to say cook and I–were on top of a โbus last Sunday—-โ โIn Knightsbridge.โ Thus the cook claimed her equal share of the copyright. โWe were laughing and talking when cook said โLook, Nelly–thereโs the boss.โโ โI said โIf that isnโt his nibs!โโ amended Mrs. Magglesark. โAnd there he was!โ said Eleanor. โWith a girl, very tall and dressed in black, and he was holding her hand!โ โIn the street?โ incredulously. โIn the car: from the top of a โbus you can look down into cars, if theyโre open. Many a sight Iโve seen!โ โWas she pretty?โ asked Trenter, man-like. Eleanorโs lips pursed. โWell, I suppose some people would call her pretty. Did you think she was pretty, cook?โ Mrs. Magglesark, having reached the age when she regarded all young people as passable, thought she was pretty. โHolding her hand!โ Trenter was very thoughtful. โIt wasnโt Mrs. van Oynne?โ โWho is she?โ โSheโs been here twice to tea. An American lady, rather well-dressed. Heloise! Thatโs her name. And a good-looker. She usually wears black and paradise feathers.โ โ_She_ wore paradise feathers!โ said cook and Eleanor together. Trenter nodded. โThatโs her,โ he said, โbut thereโs nothing in it. Sheโs a highbrow. Reads books and all that. Last time she was here, she and him discussed the Ego Soul. The little bits I heard I couldnโt make head or tail of.โ Eleanor was impressed. โFunny for him to be discussing eggs,โ she said. It was not funny for Gordon Selsbury to discuss anything. With Heloise van Oynne there seemed to be no subject, from kidney beans to metaphysics, that he could not examine profitably. It is true that he did most of the talking, but her rapt gaze rectified deficiencies of speech. Gordon sat with her that afternoon in the tearoom of the Coburg Hotel, and they were comparatively alone. โThere is something I have wanted to say to you ever since I met you, Heloise,โ he said softly. โA month! It almost seems incredible! If our theories are substantial it is incredible. We met before in the Temple of Atlantis, where the bearded priests chanted the day through. And you were a great lady and I was a humble gladiator. That the gladiatorial games and even the factions of the circus have a more remote antiquity than Rome, I am certain. Who knows but that the last remnants of dying Atlantis were not the first peoples of Etruscan civilisation …?โ Her fine eyes agreed with that theory. They said as plainly as though the words were spoken: โHow brilliant of you to associate Etruria with the mythical civilisation of Atlantis!โ On the other hand, her eyes did not say many things that she thought. โWhat is so fine about friendship,โ Gordon was going on, โis that we have lifted common interest above the sordid range of philanderism.โ โHowโs that?โ Her head was bent forward eagerly, enquiringly. Trenter had the same trick, only he looked pained. โI meanโ–Gordon Selsbury flicked a crumb of cake daintily from his knee–โwe have never tarnished the bright surface of our friendship with that weakness which is so glibly styled โlove.โโ โOh!โ Heloise van Oynne sat back in her basket chair. โThatโs so,โ she said, and if there was a sense of immense satisfaction in her tone, even one attuned to her spiritual wavelength would not have observed the circumstance. โThe perfect sympathy, the perfect understanding, the dovetailing of mind into mind, the oneness of a mutual soul–these transcend all sentient impressions, whatever be the label they bear.โ She smiled slowly and with infinite sweetness and comradeship. Heloise invariably smiled at Gordon that way when she wasnโt quite sure what he was talking about. Though, as to souls—- โThe soul is certainly the finest thing we have around,โ she said, in deep thought. โThatโs where weโve got most people skinned–I should say, at a disadvantage, you and I, Gordon. One doesnโt like to bare oneโs heart; one shrinks instinctively even from self-revelation.โ She sighed as one who had got through an exercise of considerable difficulty. Then, observing by certain signs that he had only, so to speak, removed the lid of his introspections and that the real contents of his mind would shortly spill, to be gathered up and replaced by her none too sure hands, she interjected hastily: โYou were telling me, Gordon, about a cousin of yours in Australia–she must certainly be interesting, and Iโm just mad to hear about your relations. I like you, Gordon–a lot. Thereโs nothing about you that doesnโt fascinate me.โ She laid a gloved hand on his knee. No other woman could lay a hand, gloved or ungloved, on Gordon Selsburyโs knee without his calling for the police. But Heloise … he laid his hand gently on hers. โDiana? Well, really, I know nothing about her except that she had that tremendous affair with a fellow called Dempsi. I told you that. Sheโs very well off, I believe. Iโve taken a little notice of her–sent her a few books and a word or two of advice. I often think that a manโs advice is ever so much more acceptable to a young girl than a womanโs. When were we talking about her? Oh, of course, I remember! It was when we had that tremendous talk on the growth of the Ego….โ โIs she fair or dark?โ Heloise nimbly blocked the road to metaphysics. โI really donโt know. I had a letter from my aunt–her aunt also–just before the poor creature died. She said that Diana had forgotten Dempsi and wondered where she could get his photograph–the man is dead. Has it ever occurred to you, Heloise, how absurd are such terms as life and de—-โ โDiana!โ mused Heloise, aloud. โPoor little Australian girl. I should like to meet her, Gordon.โ Gordon shook his head, smiling gently. โI cannot imagine anything less likely,โ he said, โthan your meeting her.โ Chapter 3. Cheynel Gardens is one of those very select thoroughfares that no cab-driver has ever found without the assistance of a local guide. Taximen have โheard of it,โ dimly remember having dropped a fare there at some time or other; but where it is, only the police and the postmen know. Often people who live in Cheynel Gardens have only the haziest idea whether they are in Mayfair or Marylebone. Gordon occupied a corner house that had a garden, probably the garden after which the thoroughfare was named, for there was no other. If a garden can be so called that consists of a twelve by ten paved courtyard occupied by two large bushes in tubs. It was the last house on the left as you turned in from Brook Street, a handsome, sober pile of red brick and yellow sandstone, with a big study to which stained-glass windows gave the appearance of a well-furnished chapel. His study was indeed a holy place, for none entered without invitation. It had two doors, one of thick oak, one of deadening baize, so that no sound might disturb Gordonโs close and careful scrutiny of _The Economist_, which, with the _Insurance Review_, formed his light reading. By day he perused _The Times_, by night he read heavy studies in sociology, or, if he were tired, _Zur Genealogie der Moral_–Nietzsche being one of his favourite authors. He descended from the cab that brought him home, gave the driver a ten per cent. tip worked out to the nearest penny, and erring on his own side, and walked slowly up the steps. The door opened instantly. It was part of the daily ritual. Trenter took his hat, his walking-stick and his gloves, and Gordon said: โNo letters?โ If Trenter had said no, the ritual would have been interrupted. โYes, sir, and—-โ No need to say more. Gordon was staring at four immense trunks that almost completely covered the floor space of the hall. Three of them were conspicuously labelled โNot wanted on voyage.โ The fourth had a big red โCabinโ pasted on its side. โWhat–on–earth–are–these?โ asked Gordon breathlessly. โThe young lady arrived this afternoon, sir.โ Trenter was all a-twitter. โThe young lady arrived–which young lady, may I ask?โ โMiss Ford, sir.โ Gordonโs forehead wrinkled. He had heard the name in some connection. Ford … Ford? It was familiar. โNo, sir–Miss Diana Ford from Australia.โ The cousin! Mr. Selsbury inclined his head graciously. The instincts of hospitality were not entirely atrophied, and the Selsburys were a race of courtly men. โWill you tell Miss Ford I am returned and will be glad to see her in The Study?โ Trenterโs face twitched. โSheโs in The Study, sir,โ he almost pleaded. โI told her that nobody ever went when you were away and that I kept it locked.โ Gordon was taken aback. It is disconcerting to a host to find his hospitality anticipated and taken as a right. โIndeed!โ he said, and smiled. โMiss Ford couldnโt be expected to understand our ways, Trenter. I will see her.โ He knocked at the door and a voice bade him enter. โI am delighted to meet you, Cousin Diana,โ he said, and looked round to discover how she might be met. Then from his favourite chair a white hand appeared. โCome in, Gordon…. Iโm sure itโs Gordon.โ She jumped up and round to face him. She had taken off her shoes for greater comfort, and in her silk-stockinged feet looked very small. He thought she was pretty, just as he would have thought that a kitten was pretty. How very amusing. โWell, young lady,โ he said with paternal good-humour, โso here you are! I never expected to see you. Have you had a good voyage—-?โ โAre you married?โ She asked the question rather tensely. โNo, Iโm not married. Iโm a confirmed old bachelor.โ โAh!โ She sighed happily. โI was awfully scared of that complication–you havenโt kissed me.โ Gordon was not aware that he had not kissed her, any more than he was aware that he had not hit her on the head with the book he was carrying. The Selsburys were a courtly race. He stooped and struck her gently with his lips. โSit down, my dear–you will have tea, of course? I am truly sorry that I kept you waiting. Where are you staying?โ She flashed one look at him. โHere,โ she said. For a second he could not comprehend. โI mean, what hotel–where are you–er–sleeping to-night?โ โHere,โ said Diana. In moments of crisis Gordon never lost his head. He once stood on the deck of a sinking cross-Channel steamer discussing the atomic theory with a Cambridge don. He had twice heard burglars in the house, and had often been called upon without notice at public meetings to propose the health of the chairman. โYou mean that you are coming to stay with me–for a little while? I would be delighted, but unfortunately this is a bachelor establishment. There are no women in the house except the domestic staff.โ He spoke kindly; his argument was logical, his attitude correct in every detail. โYou want a woman about the house; it was very nearly time I came,โ she said, as unflurried as Gordon himself. He stifled his sigh. The position was embarrassing–other men would have been thrown off their feet and either lost their tempers or behaved in some way hurtfully. โI shall be delighted to have you here–for a few days,โ he smiled. โSo run along and telephone to your chaperone and ask her to bring her trunks here—-โ Diana pulled on her shoes, unconcerned. โIโve been admiring your oars,โ she said. โYou rowed six, didnโt you–and won! How splendid!โ โYes, yes–er–yes.โ Gordon was not proud of his bygone athleticism. โOr shall I telephone?โ โTo whom?โ innocently. โTo your chaperone … the lady with whom you are travelling….โ โDonโt be silly. โ He stiffened; went limp again: turned a shade paler. โI travelled alone–as much alone as one can be with a hundred and fifty saloon passengers who played deck games and enjoyed them. An intellectual woman can have no possible community of interest with people who enthuse over bucket quoits.โ A chair was within reach of his hand and he sat down. Men like Gordon Selsbury seldom lose grip of a situation, however awkward it may be. The sheer weight of their wisdom and their personality has a tendency to roll flat obstacles of the most tremendous nature. โNow Iโm going to be a father and an uncle and a wise old cousin to you,โ he said, good nature rigidly and obstinately imprinted in his smile. โYouโre a young girl and somebody has got to tell you that you cannot stay alone–er–as the guest of a bachelor.โ She stood, her hands behind her, not the ghost of amusement in her face, unmoved and immovable. โAnd Iโve got to tell you, Gordon Selsbury, that I not only can, but Iโm going to stay here! I am not responsible for your being a bachelor. You ought to be married. It is unnatural to live in a big house like this by yourself. I have come to stay and, possibly, keep house for you. You must let me have a list of the dishes you like for breakfast. I like grape fruit and hominy with a small crisp slice of bacon. At the same time, Gordon, I am not averse to devilled kidneys _ร la chef_–do you like waffles? Iโm crazy about them! We had a Japanese cook who made them to perfection. Another wonderful breakfast dish is tomatoes chiffre….โ โDiana,โ he said gravely, โyou are distressing me. Of course you canโt _possibly_ stay here! My dear child, I have to consider your good name; in after years you will realise what a dreadful thing you have proposed. Now, my dear, Iโm going to โphone Laridgeโs Hotel and ask them to reserve a nice room for you.โ He half rose; her hands dropped to his shoulders and she pushed him down. It was surprising how strong she was. โLet us have no scandal,โ said Diana firmly. โThere is only one way to get me out of this house and that is for you to send for a policeman. And a single policeman could do very little. I have an automatic in my dressing-bag…. I shall not hesitate to shoot.โ He gazed at her in horror. She returned the gaze without reproach, without doubt. She had the Will to Stay. He recognised a variation of the Nietzsche principle. โThere is only one thing left for me to do, Diana,โ he said. His gravity was so profound that he intoned his speech; it became a Gregorian chant in the minor key. โI must go out from my house and leave you here. I myself must take a room in a near hotel.โ โYouโll do nothing of the kind,โ she said. โIf you do I shall put advertisements in all the papers: โMissing from his home since Friday, Mr. Gordon Selsbury. Tall, fair, fresh complexion, rather good-looking.โ Gordon licked dry lips. Life was drab and sordid, but nothing in life was quite so vulgar and hateful as the popular press. The only time in his life that he had ever experienced a nightmare, the vision had taken a particularly hideous shape. He dreamt that he had been locked up for smothering a chorus girl, and was ordered by the judge to write his impressions of the murder in a Sunday newspaper. โYou will perhaps think better of this in a few days,โ he said huskily. โI feel sure that, when you realise what you are doing—-โ She sat down at his beautifully tidy writing-table, took up a pen, and snatched from his stationery rack a sheet of notepaper. โNow tell me what you like for breakfast,โ she said. โSmoked haddock … salmon steak … fish is good for the brain. Do you mind if I call you Gord?โ Chapter 4. One day Diana came back from a conscientious tour of the stores and found a thin and middle-aged lady sitting in the drawing-room. She greeted Diana with a deferential smile. She was such a middle-aged lady as might have stepped from the pages of a late Victorian novel, and Diana regarded her steadily, for she wore no hat, had the skimpy beginnings of a purple wool jumper on her knees, and in her hands two knitting needles that seemed to be operating of their own volition all the time she talked. โGood afternoon! Youโre Miss Ford, arenโt you, my dear? Iโm Miss Staffle, and I do hope we are going to be good friends!โ โI hope so,โ said Diana. โWeโll be better friends when I understand. Are you a guest of ours?โ Click-flash-flicker went the needles. Diana looked in awe. She was the only woman in the world who had never knitted a jumper. โWell … yes. Mr. Selsbury thought you would be rather lonely. It doesnโt do for us girls to be too much alone. We brood.โ โIโm brooding at this minute.โ Diana was very incisive in business hours. โDo I understand that you have been engaged as a chaperone?โ โCompanion,โ murmured Miss Staffle. โThat makes it easier,โ Diana opened her pocket-book. โYour salary is—-?โ Miss Staffle murmured the amount. โHere is two monthsโ pay,โ said Diana. โI have decided not to engage a companion.โ She rang the bell; the needles became stationary. โEleanor,โ to the svelte parlourmaid, โMiss Staffle is leaving before tea. Will you see that her boxes are brought down, and tell Trenter to have a nice clean taxi waiting?โ โBut, my dearโ–Miss Staffleโs voice was slightly acidulated–โMr. Selsbury engaged me, and I am afraid….โ โMr. Selsbury doesnโt want a companion,โ said Diana. โNow, my angel, are you going to give me trouble, or are you going to be a sweet little cherub and fly?โ Gordon came home prepared to face a storm and ready to present a rocky face either to the waves of her wrath or the drizzle of her tears. He found her trying a new record on a brand-new gramophone, her feet moving lightly to the magical rhythm of โI Ainโt Nobodyโs Darling.โ He resented the gramophone, but had other matters of greater moment to discuss. There was no sign of the excellent Miss Staffle. โAnybody been?โ he asked carelessly. She stopped whistling. โNobody except an elderly lady who made the curious mistake of thinking I wanted a companion.โ โWhere is she?โ asked Gordon, his heart sinking. โI didnโt trouble to take her address,โ said Diana. โWhy–did you want her?โ โYou sent her away?โ Diana nodded. โYes; her industry was appalling.โ And then, as a thought occurred: โWas the jumper for _you_?โ โYou sent a–er–um–person I engaged away from my house?โ sternly. โReally, Diana! This is a little too much! Letโs have this out, my dear.โ Diana changed the record. โTea will be served in ten minutes,โ she said. โAnd Gordon, my dear, your shoes are muddy. Run up and change them.โ Revolt flew red signals on his cheeks. โI will do nothing of the kind!โ he said sharply. โI will not be ordered about in my own house. Diana, you have gone too far! This intolerable situation must end here and now.โ He brought his hand slapping down on the back of the easy chair. He was determined. โEither you or I leave this house to-night,โ he said. โI have had enough! Already the servants are talking. I saw a particularly sinister smile on Trenterโs face when you came down to breakfast in your negligee this morning. I have a position, a reputation, a name in the City of London–I must guard my interests against the thoughtless, selfish folly of reckless adolescence!โ โWhat a name to call a lady!โ she said reproachfully. โI will not temporise; I will not allow a very serious situation to be turned into a jest. Either you leave Cheynel Gardens or I.โ She thought a moment, then walked out of the room. Gordon heard her at the telephone in the hall and smiled. A little firmness was all that was required. โIs that the _Morning Telegram_? This is Miss Diana Ford speaking. Will you send a reporter to 61 Cheynel Gardens—-โ In two seconds he was in the hall and had covered the transmitter with a frantic hand. โWhat are you going to do?โ he asked frenziedly. She shrugged a shoulder. โLife without you is insupportable, Gordon,โ she said brokenly. โYou are the only relation I have in the world, and if you turn me out what is there left but the river?โ โYouโre mad,โ he wailed. โThe coroner will take that charitable view, I hope–donโt interrupt me, Gordon. They want to speak to me.โ By sheer force he lifted her away from the instrument and took the receiver in his own hand. โDonโt bother to send anybody … she is quite well … alive. I mean, thereโs no suicide …โ Out of breath, he strode back to The Study. โYour conduct is abominable! You are shameless! I can well understand why your wretched Dempsi ran away, preferring to die in the bush than be any longer associated with such an infernal little termagant!โ The Selsburys were a courtly people, but there was a limit to their patience. He was savage, cruel, and knew he was behaving unpardonably before the words were out of his mouth. โIโm sorry,โ he muttered. Her face was set, a mask that showed nothing of her thoughts. โIโm extremely sorry. I shouldnโt have said that–please forgive me.โ Still she did not speak. Her eyes were tragic in their steadfast, unwinking gaze. He stole quietly from the room, and then she spoke her thoughts aloud. โHow absurd not to have the telephone connected with the study! Iโll write to the Post Office this very night.โ A very silent dinner. Gordon was going out and was resplendent in his raiment. โI am taking a friend to a theatre to-night,โ he said. โI havenโt seen a show for years,โ she sighed. โThis would not interest you. It is a Russian play dealing with social unrest.โ She sighed again. โI love Russian plays. All the characters die so nicely and you know where you are. In a musical comedy you can never be sure who anybody is.โ Gordon shuddered. โThis is not a play for a young girl,โ he said gently. She was unconvinced. โIf you very much wanted me to come, I could dress in five minutes,โ she suggested. โI hardly know what I shall do with myself to-night.โ โThink out to-morrowโs breakfast,โ he said bitterly. Alone, she gave her mind alternately to serious thought and the new gramophone. She did think of Dempsi sometimes, and a little uneasily. Not that she had loved that strange progeny of Michael Dempsi and Marie Stezzaganni. Dempsi came into her life as an earthquake intrudes upon the domesticity of a Californian farmer. He shifted the angle of things and had been a great disturbance. She never really remembered Dempsi, except that he was very slight and very wiry and very voluble. She remembered that he had thrown himself at her feet, had threatened to shoot her, had told her he adored her and was ready to forsake his career in the church. Finally, on a hot February morning (she remembered that the roses were thick in the big garden) he had flung his worldly possessions at her feet, taken an intense and tearful farewell, and had dashed madly into the bush, never to return. In point of fact, the nearest bush country was a hundred miles away, but he had said that he was going to the bush โto end a life already prolonged beyond the limits of human endurance and find forgetfulness in oblivion,โ and he had probably kept his word. So far as the โbushโ part of the contract was concerned. She did not mourn him. If she wondered at all, it was as to the circumstances in which he would reappear and claim some eight thousand pounds neatly tied in one package that it might be the more effectively and dramatically thrown at her feet, and which in truth missed her feet by a wide margin and struck the station cat, who, being newly maternal, flew at Dempsi and accelerated his wild flight. She did not tell her aunt about the eight thousand; Mrs. Tetherby being, as she had been described, โinert,โ had an objection to fuss of any kind. More than this, she possessed one curious weakness–a horror of debt. The knowledge that she was under monetary obligation kept her awake. An overlooked garage account once reduced her to a state of nervous prostration. Other peopleโs money she would not touch, and, on an occasion when, having paid her shearers, she was requested by the men to keep the money from Saturday to Monday, she paced the verandah for two nights, a shot gun under her arm. It was largely due to this weakness that all money affairs were in Dianaโs hands from the age of fifteen. Diana put the eight thousand to her own account and spent an interesting three months planning and drawing expensive memorials to the departed Dempsi. In the back pages of a dictionary, under the heading โForeign words and phrases,โ she discovered an appropriate epitaph. SATIS ELOQUENTIร SAPIENTIร PARUM โHe had great eloquence but little sense. โ As the years passed, and her uneasiness increased, she made half-hearted attempts to discover his relatives, though she knew that he was without so much as a known cousin. And then, gradually, Dempsi had receded into the background. She was beloved of a romantic squatter. This affair ended abruptly when the romantic squatterโs unromantic wife arrived in a high-powered car and bore him off to serve the remainder of his sentence. Diana gave exactly five minutes of her thoughts to Dempsi. For the remainder of the evening she practised a new waltz step which had surprisingly found its way into jazz. โWhat I canโt understand,โ said Trenter, โis why the boss allows this sort of thing to go on. Itโs downright improper, a young woman living in a bachelorโs house. It reminds me of a case old Superbus once told me about–heโs a court bailiff and naturally he sees the seamy side of life—-โ โI wouldnโt have a bailiff for a friend if you paid me a million,โ said Eleanor, who had been brought up in an atmosphere of financial embarrassment. โIโd sooner have a burglar. Donโt you worry about our young Di, Arthur. Sheโs all there! Personally speaking, Iโm glad sheโs arrived. What about me–havenโt I any morals? Hasnโt me and cook–cook and I, that is to say–lived in the same house with a bachelor for a year?โ โYouโre different,โ said Trenter. โGuess again,โ said Eleanor. โThe house hasnโt been what it was.โ A touch of sadness in Trenterโs voice had its origin in obscure sources. Methodical as Gordon was, he never counted his cigars. Diana, on the other hand, had an eye for quantity. It was she who asked delicately whether he thought there were mice in the house, and, if so, did he think that they preferred Coronas to cheese. โThereโs a big change coming–a terrific change. I feel it in my bones,โ he said. โAnd I know! Iโve always had second sight even as a boy.โ โYou should wear glasses,โ said Eleanor. Chapter 5. On an afternoon in late summer Heloise van Oynne looked across the darkening river, seemed for a moment absorbed in the gay lighting of one of the moored house-boats, and then: โTell me some more about Diana, please. She must be fas-cinating!โ she pleaded. Her companion shifted a little uncomfortably. He had already said more about Diana than he wished or intended saying. โWell … you know all about Diana. I hope you will meet her … some day.โ There was just that little pause before the last word that meant so much to a woman with an acute sense of tone, and Heloise was supersensitive because it was her business to be. To-day she seemed unusually ethereal. She was pretty, slim (Diana would have called her โskinnyโ), spirituelle. In the deep, dark eyes was mystery … elusiveness; something that occasionally made his flesh creep pleasantly. Gordon Selsbury was not in love. He was not the easily loving kind. It pleased him to know that he had a mystery of his own–he had once been described as โsphinx-like.โ If Diana had been older and were not his cousin, and had not in her masterful way installed herself in his house, defiant of the conventions, and were not so infernally sarcastic and self-sufficient–well, he might feel nicer toward her. Talking of Diana…. He looked at the watch on his wrist. He had told her he would be in for dinner. Heloise saw the movement and smiled inwardly. โWas it serious, that affair of hers?โ she asked gently. Gordon coughed. Heloise never met him but she talked of Dianaโs affair. It was a curious piece of femininity that he did not expect to find in a woman. Not his kind of woman. He was relieved of the necessity for answering. โWho is that man, Gordon?โ The skiff had passed twice under the hotel terrace where they sat at tea that afternoon, and twice the big, red-faced man had peered up at the two people. โI donโt know. Shouldnโt we be going?โ She made no attempt to rise. โWhen do I see you again, Gordon? Life is so blank and miserable without you. Does Diana monopolise you so entirely? People wouldnโt understand, would they? I donโt love you and you do not love me. If you thought I loved you, you would never see me again.โ She laughed quietly. โIt is just your soul and mindโ–her voice was very low–โjust the clear channel of understanding that makes our minds as one. Love doesnโt bring that, or marriage.โ โIt is rather wonderful.โ He nodded many times. โExtraordinary–people would never understand.โ She thought they wouldnโt. โIโm just aching for The Day to come,โ she said, staring across the river. โI donโt think it ever will come: not The Day of my dreams.โ Gordon Selsbury had this premonition too; had been waiting all afternoon to translate his doubt into words. โIโve been thinking the matter over, Heloise–that trip to Ostend. Of course, it would be lovely seeing one another every day and all day, and living, if not under the same roof, at least in the same environment. The uninterrupted contact of mind–that is beautifully appealing. But do you think it wise? I am speaking, of course, from your point of view. Scandal doesnโt touch a man grossly.โ She turned her glorious eyes to his. โโThey say: what say they? Let them say,โโ she quoted contemptuously. He shook his head. โYour name is very precious to me,โ he said, not without a hint of emotion, โvery precious, Heloise. I feel that, although the Ostend season is past and most of the hotels are closed and visitors have dispersed, as I understand they do disperse from fashionable seaside resorts, there is a possibility, a bare possibility, that we should see somebody there who knew me–us, I mean–and who would put the worst possible construction upon what–er–would be the most innocent intellectual recreation. It is extremely dangerous.โ She was laughing hardly as she rose. โI see,โ she said. โYou are really conventional underneath, Gordon. It was a mad idea–donโt let us talk any more about it. It hurts me a little.โ In silence he paid the bill, in silence followed her into his car. He was hurt too. Nobody had ever called him conventional. Half way across Richmond Park he said: โWe will go: let us say no more. I will meet you as we arranged.โ The only answer she made was to squeeze his arm until they were flying down Roehampton Lane, and then, dreamily: โThere is something Infinite in friendship like ours, Man. It is all too wonderful….โ Diana was reading a magazine in The Study when Gordon came in. She threw down the magazine and jumped up from the chair (she sat at his desk when she read, with the exasperating result that the writing surface, which he left neat and ordered on his going out, was generally in a state of chaos on his coming in). โDinner,โ she said tersely. โYouโre late, Gord, devilishly late.โ Mr. Selsburyโs expression was pained. โI wish you would not call me โGord,โ Diana,โ he complained gently. โIt sounds–well, blasphemous.โ โBut oh, it fits,โ she said, shaking her head. โYou donโt know how it fits!โ Gordon shrugged his shoulders. โAt any rate, โdevilishโ is not ladylike.โ โWhere have you been?โ she asked with that disconcerting brusqueness of hers. โI have been detained—-โ โNot at your office,โ said Diana promptly, as she sat down at the table and pointed an accusing finger. โYou havenโt been back since luncheon.โ Mr. Selsbury cast a resigned look at the ceiling. โI have been detained on a purely private business matter,โ he said stiffly. โDear, dear!โ said Diana, unimpressed. Nothing really impressed Diana. She had, she boasted, passed the impressionable age. Gordon had come to admit to himself that she was pretty; in a way she was beautiful. She had blue eyes, willow pattern blue, and a skin like satin. He admitted that her figure was rather lovely. If she had been older or younger, if her hair had not been bobbed–if she had a little more respect for wisdom, an appreciation of thought, a little something of hero-worship! He strolled gloomily to the window and stared blankly into the dusk. Diana was an insoluble problem. Trenter came in at that moment. โTrenter.โ โYes, sir.โ The butler crossed to his employer. โDo you see that man on the other side of the road–that red-faced man?โ It was the stranger of the skiff. Gordon recognised him at once. โIโve seen him before to-day … rather a coincidence.โ โYes, sir,โ agreed Trenter. โThatโs Mr. Julius Superbus.โ Gordon gaped at him. โJulius Superbus–what the devil do you mean?โ โLanguage!โ murmured a voice in the background. How like Diana. โWhat on earth do you mean? That is a Roman name.โ Trenter smirked. โYes, sir. Mr. Superbus is a Roman, the last Roman left in England. He comes from Cรฆsar Magnus–itโs a little village near Cambridge. I used to be in service there, thatโs how I come to know him.โ Gordon frowned heavily. By what strange chance had he come to see this oddly named creature twice in one day–at Hampton, rowing a boat with some labour; in Cheynel Gardens, apparently absorbed in the study of a near-by lamp-post? โWhat is he–by profession?โ โA detective, sir,โ said Trenter. Gordon went suddenly pale. Chapter 6. Sometimes, mostly all the time, Gordon forgot that before the name of Heloise van Oynne was that magical prefix โMrs.โ Too nice-minded to discover, even by an indirect method, the extent of her indiscretion, Gordon had conceived in his mind a marriage between two persons diametrically unsuited one to the other. He fashioned Mr. van Oynne in the image of a gross, unimaginative business man, without soul, and saw dimly a struggle between opposing ideals; sullen fury or blank indifference on the manโs part, and, in the case of Heloise, a refined suffering and an infinite restlessness in her, until there came into her life the other half of her intellectual being. Which was Gordon. He looked out of the window again. Mr. Julius Superbus was deliberately charging a black pipe from a sealskin tobacco pouch. He seemed the kind of man who would stoop to the meanest methods to gain his ends. And a prurient brute who would think nothing of writing reports highly disparaging to a slim, aesthetic girl. A detective! In desperation he turned to Diana. โDiana, do you mind if I have The Study for a little while? I want to see a man. โ She waved a cheery farewell as she disappeared through the door at the far end of the room. โBring him in.โ โBring him in, sir?โ Trenter was intrigued. Gordon repeated the order. โHeโs not a gentleman, sir,โ warned Trenter, desiring exculpation in advance. This was in case Mr. Superbus was even less of a gentleman than he thought him to be. Gordon has never any illusions on the subject. He said as much tersely, and Trenter went forth in a spirit of joyful anticipation, knowing that the nature of this interview would be repeated to him when next he met his friend. A wait, and then: โMr. Superbus, sir,โ said Trenter correctly. He bowed the visitor into the study, and withdrew. There was nothing in the appearance of Mr. Superbus that was suggestive of Roman culture at its zenith. He was very short, and waddled rather than walked. He was fat so that, if he were standing on two square feet of his own property, his waistcoat might have been arrested for trespass on neighbouring land. His face was very red and broad; he had a stubbly black moustache, which was obviously dyed; on his otherwise bald head, twenty-seven hairs were parted, thirteen on one side and fourteen on the other. He had often counted them. He stood, breathing audibly and twisting his hat in his blue hands. โSit down, Mr. Superbus,โ said Gordon awkwardly. โTrenter was telling me that you are–in fact, you have the distinction of being a Roman?โ Mr. Superbus bent forward before he sat, as though to assure himself that his feet were all present and correct. โYes, sir,โ he said, in a rich, deep voice. โI believe I am. Us Superbussesโ–he gave the word a pronunciation which suggested that he had been named after a public vehicle of unusual size–โhave come down for generations. Thereโs only four of us now–thereโs me, my brother Augustus, whoโs married to a young woman in Coventry; thereโs Agrippa, whoโs doing very well with her third husband–this one doesnโt drink, Iโm happy to say–and thereโs Scipius: heโs on the stage.โ โReally!โ said Gordon, dazzled for the moment. โYes, heโs on the stage,โ said Mr. Superbus with great satisfaction, โand doing very well. They say heโs the best carpenter theyโve ever had at the Gaiety. Yes, weโre an ancient family. Iโve never got the rights of it, but an old gentleman who lives at Cambridge told me that, if everybody had his due, I ought to be a member of the Roman Royal Family, being the eldest. โ Near Cรฆsar Magnus is the University of Cambridge, and there have been soured antiquarians who have suggested that the illustrious family of Superbus owed its origin to the freakish whim of certain freshmen whose gowns rustled in Petty Cury a hundred years ago. That these same students, in their humour, had adopted the family of an indigent carter, one Sooper, and had christened the family afresh. Mr. Superbus had heard these rumours and had treated them with contempt. โHow we came to start I donโt know,โ he said, on his favourite topic; โbut you know what women are when Romans are about!โ Gordon did not even trouble to guess. โNow, Mr. Superbus, you have–er–a very important position. Youโre a detective, I understand?โ Mr. Superbus nodded soberly. โIt must be an interesting life, watching people,โ he suggested, โgoing into court and li–testifying to their various misdoings?โ โI never go into court,โ said Mr. Superbus. And here, apparently, he had a grievance. โMy work, so to speak, is commercial. Not that I shanโt go into court if a certain coop comes off.โ โCoop?โ Gordon was puzzled. โCoop,โ repeated Mr. Superbus emphatically. โWhat do you mean–coop? Are you looking for people who steal chickens?โ asked Gordon, at sea. โBy โcoopโ I mean–well, you know what I mean, sir. Suppose I bring off a big bit of business–โ โOh, coup!โ said Gordon, enlightened. โI see. You have a coup?โ โI always called it coop myself,โ said Mr. Superbus graciously, and leaving Gordon with the impression that he was being humoured. โYes, Iโve got a coop up my sleeve.โ He lowered his voice and stretched himself to as near Gordon as his body could reach. โIโm after Double Dan,โ he whispered hoarsely. A heavy burden rolled from Gordonโs heart. So the โMrs.โ had nothing to do with the matter at all! Nor the gross husband, who thought more of his dogs and his horses than of the flaming intellect of his beautiful wife. (Gordon was thorough: the gross husband must have his pets.) โI seem to remember the name,โ he said slowly. โDouble Dan? Isnโt that the man who impersonates people?โ โYouโve got it, sir,โ said Mr. Superbus. โHe donโt impersonate them, he _is_ them! Take Mr. Mendlesohn—-โ Now Gordon remembered. โYouโd never think anybody could impersonate him, though, with his white whiskers and him not being married, it wasnโt so hard. He got away with eight thousand pounds, did Dan. Got Mr. Mendlesohn out of the way, walked into his private office and sent a new clerk out with a cheque. Thatโs why Mr. Mendlesohnโs gone into the country. He darenโt hold up his head.โ โOh, I see,โ said Gordon slowly. โYouโre acting on behalf of—-?โ โThe Brokersโ Association–he goes after brokers.โ Gordon seldom laughed, but he was laughing softly now. โAnd you have been following me round to protect me, eh?โ โNot exactly that, sir,โ said Mr. Superbus with professional reserve. โWhat I was trying to do was to get to know you, so that Iโd make no mistake if Dan tried to โdoubleโ you.โ โHave a cigar?โ said Gordon. Mr. Superbus said he didnโt mind if he did; that he would take it home, and smoke it in the seclusion of his own house. โMy good lady likes the smell of a cigar,โ he said. โIt keeps away the moths. Iโve been married now for three and twenty years, and there isnโt a better woman on the face of the earth than my good lady.โ โA Roman?โ asked Gordon. โNo, sir,โ replied Mr. Superbus gravely. โDevonshire.โ Diana, coming into the room half an hour later, saw Gordon standing with his back to the fireplace, his hands clasped behind him, his head slightly bent, a picture of practical thought. โWho was that funny little man I saw go out of the house?โ she asked. โHe is a man named Superbus,โ said Gordon, roused from his reverie with a start, โwho has been making certain enquiries. Heโs been trying to trace somebody who has robbed a man of eight thousand pounds.โ โOh!โ said Diana, and sat down quickly. The ghost of the late Mr. Dempsi was very active at that moment. Chapter 7. Diana liked Bobbie Selsbury the moment she saw him. He was a smaller edition of his brother, a brusque, cynical young man, with a passion for revue and the more clingy variations of modern dancing. Also he was engaged to a girl in Canada, and had no intense interest in any other woman. She liked him most because he was entirely without that brand of soul which wriggled so frequently under the scalpel of his brother. He came to dinner twice, and on the second occasion Gordon thought his relative was on sufficiently good terms with his unwanted guest, to discuss openly the impropriety of her continued stay. โBobbie is what is known as a man of the world,โ said Gordon. When Gordon introduced the virtues of his friends, he did so in the manner of a chairman at a public meeting bringing an unknown speaker to the notice of an audience. โHe has a keener concept of relative social values than either I, who am a little old-fashioned, or you, my child, who have led a cloistered life. I think we can safely leave the issue in Bobbieโs hands. Now, Bobbie, Iโm going to put the matter to you without prejudice. Is it right that Diana should be staying in the same house as I, without a chaperone?โ โI donโt see why she should want a chaperone with a dry old stick like you,โ said Bobbie instantly. โBesides, youโre cousins. She has certainly made Cheynel Gardens a place worth visiting, which it never was before.โ โBut the world–โ protested Gordon. โThe other day you were telling me how superior you were to the world and its opinions,โ said the traitor Bobbie. โYou told me that the views of the hoi polloi passed you by without making the least impression. You said that a man should rise superior to the test of public approval. You said—-โ โWhat I said,โ snapped Gordon testily, โhad a general application to certain schools of philosophical thought. It did not apply, and never will apply, to questions of behaviour and propriety.โ โDiana is here, and youโre a lucky devil to have somebody to darn your socks. Does he pay you anything, Diana?โ She shook her head. โI am living on my little capital,โ she said plaintively, and Gordon felt a brute, but it was not until the next morning that he raised the subject again. โIโm afraid Iโve been rather thoughtless, Diana,โ he said. โWill you please buy anything you want and give me a note of any money you require?โ She leant back in her chair, laughing softly. โYou dear goop!โ she said. โOf course I donโt want money! I am rolling in riches.โ โThen why did you tell Bobbie—-โ โI like sympathy,โ she said calmly. โAnd nobody gives me sympathy except Eleanor. Sheโs rather a pretty girl, isnโt she?โ โI havenโt noticed,โ said Gordon. โI knew you hadnโt,โ she said, โwhen I discovered that youโd never kissed her.โ Gordonโs mouth was occupied with bacon at the moment, but he stood up and made an unearthly noise of protest. โNo, I donโt ask servants such questions,โ said Diana primly, โbut a woman has instincts, and thereโs always a way of finding these things out. Gordon, you are exonerated,โ she added with a generous gesture. โYour philosophy of life is amazing,โ he said, after he had recovered some of his calm. โWhatever made you think I should kiss her?โ โBecause sheโs pretty,โ said Diana. โAll men want to kiss pretty girls if theyโre normal. Lots of people have wanted to kiss me.โ Gordon raised his eyebrows without looking up. He was not revolted; he was simply resigned. โYou havenโt asked me whether I let them,โ she said after waiting. โIโm not interested,โ said Gordon coldly. โNot a teeny weeny bit?โ Anxiety was in her voice, but he was not deceived. He had learnt by hard experience that when Diana was most wistful, she was usually gurgling with internal laughter. A terrible girl. โIโve only had two affairs,โ she went on, regardless of his distaste. โThere was Dempsi and there was Dingo.โ โWho was Dingo?โ he was trapped into asking. โHis name wasnโt really Dingo, it was Mr. Theophilus Shawn. He was a married man with five children.โ โGood God!โ Gordon dropped his knife and fork on the plate helplessly. โHe never kissed me,โ she said. โHis wife came and took him away just as I was getting to like the smell of cloves–he used to eat cloves. He said it made his hair grow. Whenever he ran short of cloves he got into his car and drove to the hotel to get some. Heโd go a dozen times a day. He was staying with Auntie; she met him at a lecture on sunspots, but she didnโt know anything about his wife until she came for him. She was an awfully nice woman, and thanked me for looking after her husband. She said she hadnโt seen him sober before–she was awfully interested in him. I think wives should get to know their husbands before theyโre married, donโt you?โ Mr. Selsbury sighed. โI think youโre talking a lot of abject nonsense,โ he said, โand I wish to heaven youโd get to know your husband!โ She smiled, but did not reply. She felt that he had been shocked enough for one day. He was making as if to get up from the breakfast table when she remembered a question she wanted to ask him. โGordon, that man who came yesterday, the man with the Hebrew name—-โ โRoman. You mean Superbus?โ She nodded. โWhom did he want?โ she asked, playing with her serviette ring. โHe was looking for a robber, a man namedโ–he cast up his eyes, trying to recall the title–โDouble Dan, a swindler.โ โIs that so?โ drawled Diana, her eyes on the tablecloth. โAre you going, Gordon? What time will you be home?โ โWhen my business permits me to return,โ he said in his stateliest fashion. โDo you realise, Diana, that nobody has ever asked me that question in my life?โ โWhy, I ask you every day,โ she said in wonder. โI mean, nobody except you. My comings and goings have never been questioned, and for the life of me I donโt see why they should be questioned now.โ โIโm not questioning you, Iโm merely asking you,โ said Diana, aggrieved. โI only want to know because of dinner.โ โI may not be home to dinner,โ said Gordon shortly, and went forth to an actuarial orgy, for business had improved at an enormous rate recently, and he was engaged in organising a new form of insurance. He had at least the will power to put out of his head a problem which rippled the smooth current of his thoughts. Only in the luncheon hour did he return to grapple with the projected soul tour. He wished that Heloise had chosen some other venue than Ostend. Ostend in itself was improper, and associated in all respectable minds with licence and luxury. He felt that he might have been a little more firm about Diana staying on at Cheynel Gardens if he himself had not outraged, or contemplated the outrage of convention…. Convention was an ugly word, a bourgeois word…. What he really meant was … he thought in vain for a synonym. The Ostend idea was a mad idea, and he wondered who had thought of it. At the same time, there was no reason why he should be recognised if he kept away from the quay, where the incoming Continental boats pull in; and, if necessary, he could alter his appearance slightly … he went hot and cold at the thought. There was something furtive and underhand about the very notion. Diana had made mock of those little smears of sidewhiskers, and he never went to the barber but that individual made some reference to the appendages. He had seriously considered their removal. Especially since Heloise had wondered why he wore them. She thought they made him look rather older than he was. It would be in the nature of a subtle compliment to her if he appeared on The Day clean-shaven. As to the other matter, one did not go to Ostend in a morning coat and top hat. He might wear his sports suit or–but he had a tailor with views, and to this merchant of habit he appealed on his way home. The tailor listened alertly. โIf you are going abroad, I should advise a couple of tweed suits. Grey checks are being worn by everybody–a check with a little red in it. No, sir, oh dear, no! Lord Furnisham had a suit of that character only last month, and he, as you know, is a man of taste and refinement. _And_ one of the leading men at the Convocation of Laymen–a dear friend of the Archbishopโs.โ Gordon saw the patterns, was panic-stricken by their joviality. And yet…. Who would recognise Gordon Selsbury in a fashionable grey check with a little red in it? โRather noisy, donโt you think?โ he wavered. The tailor smiled tolerantly at a bolt of blue serge. โMy clients do not think so,โ he said. He was so great a tailor that he had clients. โVery well.โ Gordon gave the order. He told himself that he was not committed to the trip. But if he did go, he possessed an outfit. That was a comfort. Heloise was staying at the Majestic (if it was still open). Gordon would arrange for rooms at the Splendid–with the same contingency. They were to meet after breakfast every morning and lunch together at a little cafรฉ on Place des Armes. On one day they would go to Bruges together and see the pictures. A tour of the Littoral was a possibility. Between whiles there were books to be discussed, the lectures of a brand-new exponent of a brand-new philosophy to be attended. He held what may be described as an ethical clinic at Mariakirk and was the original excuse for the trip. A party of Thinkers was projected to sit at the feet of De Waal (that was his name) and learn laboriously the difference between right and wrong, right being what had hitherto appeared to be wrong, and wrong being proved, by the new school of thought and its principal exegete, to be so absurdly right that the wonder was that nobody had seen it all along. The party had fallen through. The new Master had been discredited by a newer, a German who demonstrated that there was neither right nor wrong in any kind of question whatsoever. Gordonโs dilemma was born of this projected Pilgrimage of Reason, and one aspect of the holiday worried him: the possibility of something happening which would make it imperative that he should be communicated with. In reality this was the strongest argument against the trip. Only by taking somebody into his confidence could such an adventure be undertaken. Diana was, of course, impossible. Gordon pinched his lip and rehearsed the terms in which he would convey to his agent the exact character of his journey. His attempt to put into words so remarkable and so unbelievable a project left him with a cold sense of dismay. Of all the people he thought likely he started with Bobbie; he also ended with Bobbie. Robert G. Selsbury had an office on Mark Lane, where, from ten oโclock in the morning until four oโclock in the afternoon, he bought and sold tea, coffee and sugar to his own considerable profit. Gordon had only been to the office once. He thought it was rather stuffy and rather redolent of the two principal commodities in which Bobbie dealt. His own office in Queen Victoria Street was both rich and chaste and odourless, except for the faint fragrance of lavender–Gordon was strong for germicides, and that mostly employed to destroy the ravaging microbe had that suggestion of the lavender fields. Bobbie never came to see his brother without the sense that he ought to be wearing a boudoir cap and bedroom slippers. The principal stockholder of R. G. Selsbury Ltd. was examining a sample of china tea when his brother was announced. โMr. Gordon?โ asked Bobbie incredulously, and when the girl confirmed the tidings: โPush him in,โ he said, and Gordon, who would have resented even the gentlest of pushes, entered unaided. โWhatโs the matter?โ asked Bobbie. Gordon seated himself very carefully, put down his glossy silk hat on the table and slowly stripped his gloves. โRobert, Iโm rather in a tangle and I want you to help me out.โ โIt canโt be money–it must be love. Who is she?โ โIt is neither money nor love,โ retorted Gordon with some asperity. โIt is … well, a delicate matter.โ Bobbie whistled, and a whistle can be very offensive. โIโm going to tell you the facts.โ Gordon had to struggle with himself; he was on the point of inventing an excuse for calling and making a hasty retreat. โIs it about Diana?โ โNo, it _isnโt_ about Diana,โ snapped the elder. โDiana has nothing whatever to do with it. It is like this–old man….โ The โold manโ sobered Bobbie. It showed that his brother was not his normal self. So he listened without interruption to the lamest story he had ever heard; to the most transparent invention that had yet been displayed for the scorn of sceptic. โWho is Mrs. van Oynne?โ he asked at last. โSheโs … well, I donโt want to discuss her. I met her at a conversazione of the Theosophical Society. Sheโs rather … wonderful.โ โI should say so,โ said Bobbie drily. โOf course you wonโt go?โ It needed but this piece of assurance to decide Gordon. โOf course I _shall_ go,โ he said firmly. โI need the change; I need the intellectual recreation.โ โBut why go to Ostend to discuss souls? Whatโs the matter with Battersea Park?โ insisted Bobbie. โItโs the most lunatic idea I have heard! And of course, if youโre spotted in Ostend your name for henceforth and everlasting will be Waste Product Esquire. I suppose youโre telling the truth. From any other man I wouldnโt think twice about it; Iโd know that it was a clumsy lie. Have you thought of Diana?โ A staggering question: Gordon was taken aback. โI donโt see how this affects Diana. What the dickens has she got to do with it?โ โSheโs an inmate of your house,โ said Bobbie, in a serious mood. โAny reflection upon your good name is a reflection upon hers.โ โShe can leave–I wish to heaven she would leave!โ retorted Gordon viciously. โYou donโt imagine that I intend allowing the possibility of Diana knowing to stand in my way? She is an interloper–in a way I despise her. Sheโs hateful to me sometimes. Are you going to help me or arenโt you?โ He flung the ultimatum across the table. Bobbie elected for peace. โI donโt suppose I shall have to wire to you much,โ he said. โNothing is likely to turn up in your absence. What are you going to tell Diana?โ Mr. Selsbury closed his eyes wearily. โDoes it matter what I tell Diana?โ A brave question. In his heart he knew that a story must be invented, and a very plausible story. โIโm not a particularly nimble liar,โ he said. โThink out something for me.โ Bobbie sniffed. โI am on my knees to you for the compliment,โ he said, but irony was wasted on Gordon. โWhy not tell her you are going north for the shooting?โ โI dislike subterfuge,โ Gordon deprecated with a wry face. โWhy should I tell her anything? When does shooting start?โ โIt has started. Go to Scotland: it is remote. Youโre not likely to meet anybody you know because you wonโt be there.โ Gordon thought the flippancy in bad taste. โIt is repugnant to me–this necessity for invention,โ he said. โWhy must I give an account of my comings and goings? It is preposterous! I had better make my objective Aberdeen, I suppose?โ Diana! Of all the absurd arguments that had been raised against the Ostend trip, this was the most futile. The very mention of her name was a spur. By the time he had reached Cheynel Gardens the trip was definitely and irrevocably settled. He found a cable waiting for him at home. It was from his New York agent, advising him that Mr. Tilmet would call upon him on the Friday, and he realised with a shock that the to be, or not to be, of Ostend had put out of his mind an important business deal. His agent had purchased on his behalf the business of Tilmet and Voight, a none too prosperous firm of marine insurance brokers, operating in one of those queerly ancient offices on the Water Front. Mr. Tilmet had expressed a desire to be paid the money, fifty thousand dollars, in London, which he would visit _en route_ to the Continent. The documents had arrived by an earlier mail, and Gordon had been advised that, the hour of Mr. Tilmetโs arrival being uncertain, and his immediate departure for the more attractive countries of Europe being very likely, Mr. Tilmet would call at Cheynel Gardens to settle the deal. He glanced at the _Times_ shipping list, noted that the _Mauretania_ had been signalled five hundred miles west of the Lizard at twelve oโclock on the previous day, and made a mental calculation. He must have the money in the house to-morrow, though he objected emphatically to doing business except at his office. Still, the circumstances were unusual and the bargain excellent. He was not prepared to develop a grievance. Making a note on his memorandum pad, and a second note on the cover of his cheque-book, he went up to dress. He was dining with Heloise, and was carrying to her the news that he had made a decision in the matter which she had thought, and which she had had every right to think, had been settled beyond doubt. Coming down, he saw Diana on the stairs below. She also was in evening dress, a wonderful creamy white. There were two ropes of pearls about her neck; she wore no other jewellery. He followed her into The Study, and, as she turned, stared. It was a transfigured Diana, something ethereal, unearthly in her loveliness. โWhy, Diana, you look awfully pretty,โ he said. The generosity of his race compelled the statement. โThank you,โ she said indifferently. โI always look well in this colour. You are dining out too, I see? Where are you going?โ He hesitated. โIโm dining at the Ritz,โ he said. โAnd you?โ โIโm going to the Embassy. Mr. Collings is over here on business; he called this afternoon. Heโs my lawyer and a darling.โ Gordon murmured something agreeable. Diana, at any rate, was off his conscience for the night. And she certainly was lovely. Receptive to his unspoken admiration, she purred a little to herself, then, to his wrath, undid the excellent impression that she had made by unlocking a drawer in his sacred table. โI say, who gave you the key of that?โ he asked indignantly. โI found one that fitted,โ she said, without embarrassment. โThe drawer was empty except for a few queer German books, so I threw them out and had the lock changed. I must have some place to keep my things.โ He choked down his rising ire. โWhat things have you got?โ he asked. โMy jewel case.โ โThat ought to be in the safe.โ โWhat is the combination?โ she asked. โTelma,โ he said, before he knew what he was saying. And not another soul in the world knew that secret! Before his exasperation could find adequate expression, she had taken from the drawer and laid on the desk a small black object, at the sight of which Gordon recoiled. โYou really ought not to keep firearms in the house, Diana,โ he said nervously. โIf you go fooling with a thing like that, you might do yourself an enormous amount of harm–in fact, kill yourself.โ โFiddlesticks!โ said Diana. โI know that gun inside out. I could hit that keyhole three times in the fiveโ–she pointed to the door. โWell, donโt,โ said he loudly. โIs it loaded?โ โNaturally itโs loaded,โ she replied, handling the weapon tenderly. โThereโs nothing in the breach, but the magazine is full. Shall I show you how it works?โ โNo, put the beastly thing away.โ Diana obeyed, locked the drawer and put the key in her handbag. โTelma–I must remember that,โ she mused. โIโd like you to forget it. I really never intended telling you or anybody else the combination of my safe. It isnโt right that you should know. You might inadvertently—-โ โI never do things inadvertently,โ said Diana. โI do them maliciously, or sinfully, but I do them deliberately. You can drop me at the Embassy,โ she said, as Eleanor helped her on with her cloak. โYouโre so near to the Ritz that you could fall into the front porch. Unless youโre going to pick up somebody?โ She looked round at him suspiciously. As a matter of fact, Gordon did intend picking up somebody, and his immediate objective was Buckingham Gate, where, in consequence of his change of plans, he arrived five minutes late. The restraint which Mrs. van Oynne showed was heroic. He was apologetic; under the influence of the bright restaurant and soft music, explanatory. โDiana again!โ she said petulantly. โI almost think I dislike that Jane.โ โDiana, you mean?โ โI meant Diana,โ said Heloise hurriedly. โGordon, you donโt know how Iโm looking forward to Saturday.โ โIt occurred to me,โ said he, โthat Saturday is rather a busy day, and the trains will be full with people going away for the week-end.โ She drew a long sigh. โWe need not be travelling together,โ she said with resignation. โMy, how scared you are!โ โIโm not scared,โ protested the injured Gordon. โIโm scared for you–yes. That is the only thought I have. By the way, I told Robert.โ โThatโs your brother? What did he say?โ She was curious. โWellโ–Gordon hesitated–โRobert is a man of affairs, with little or no imagination, and at first he thought …โ he shrugged his shoulders–โwell, you know what a certain type of mind would think, my dear Heloise.โ โCouldnโt we go on Friday?โ โThatโs impossible. Iโve got a man coming to see me on Friday.โ He explained at length Mr. Tilmetโs business, and the method he would follow to discharge the debt. Throughout the meal she observed that he was a little _distrait_, and explained his long silences by his dormant uneasiness about the forthcoming trip. In this surmise she was wrong. Gordon was thinking of Diana, and wondering how it was that he had never observed those factors of colouring and feature which had been so emphatic that night. In a way he had begun to tolerate Diana, and to find a grim amusement in his own discomfiture. She had proved a wonderful manager, had reduced expenses perceptibly; though her record of excellence as a housekeeper had been somewhat spoiled by an incident which came to Gordon in a roundabout way. She had entered the kitchen just after the butcher had left. One glance at the joint had been sufficient, and, as the butcher boy was gathering up his reins to drive off, a small shoulder of mutton came hurtling through the kitchen window. The elevation was excellent, the direction slightly faulty; the shoulder of mutton caught the butcher on the side of the head and almost knocked him off his perch. Then Diana appeared in the doorway. โCold storage,โ she said laconically. โBring home-killed meat, or never darken our doors again!โ The driver went off in a condition bordering upon hysteria. Thereafter, the meat supply showed a marked improvement. At first Gordon had been serious when this matter was reported to him respectfully and inoffensively by Trenter, who drew a small commission on all tradesmenโs bills and took a charitable view of their shortcomings. But now, sitting vis-ร -vis his pretty companion, the matter occurred to him in a fresh light. โWhy are you smiling?โ asked Heloise. โWas I?โ he said apologetically. โI hadnโt the slightest idea. I was thinking of something–er–something that happened in my office.โ Not in his wildest mood had he ever dreamt that he would lie about Diana. Mr. Collings, that eminent lawyer, had many friends in London, including important personages at Australia House. Diana went into the Embassy expecting a tรชte-ร -tรชte meal, and found herself greeted by stately and elderly men and their stately and middle-aged wives. She was introduced to an Under Secretary for the Colonies, and manลuvred herself to his side when she learnt that he was one of the coming men in the Government. Diana had suddenly decided that Gordon ought to have a title. Chapter 8. When she got home that night she found Gordon had arrived before her. He was thoughtful, unusually subdued; most remarkable of all, was to be seen, for he invariably went to bed as soon as he reached home after a dinner or theatre, and never by any chance was he in a conversational mood at such hours. โGood time?โ he asked. โVery. I met the cream of the Colonial Office. It was thin but genuine cream. Were you very late, and was she very annoyed?โ Such a query, ordinarily, would be ignored. โFive minutes or so; the lady was naturally—-โ โPeeved?โ she suggested. โAnd it was a lady, after all? Gordon, let me see her?โ He smiled. โShe wouldnโt interest you, Diana. She is rather an intellectual.โ Diana was not offended. โThe only thing I approve about the Bolsheviks is that they killed off the _intelligentsia_ first,โ she said without heat. โI suppose they got tired of seeing their plays and hearing about their spiritual insides. What do you talk about–Bimetallism or Free Will?โ He humoured her, being in a somewhat sympathetic mood. The strain of holding friendship to lecture-hall level was beginning to tell. โBooks and people,โ he said lightly. โAnd you?โ She threw her cloak over the back of a chair, pulled a stool to the fire and sat down, warming her knees. Gordon, the soul of delicacy, strolled out of the line of vision. โWe talked about tradesmen and the superiority of Australian beef and the difficulty of finding servants and Mrs. Carter-Corrilloโs fearful indiscretion–she went to France with the third secretary of the Montenegrin Embassy. She was only there three days, but, as Lady Pennefort said, there are twenty-four hours in every day. Some women are fools–and most men. This young manโs career is ruined, even though he swears that their mutual interest in the gravel deposits of Abbeville was the explanation of the visit. They are both keen on geology.โ โAnd why shouldnโt that be the true explanation?โ demanded Gordon stoutly, his heart warming to the geological third secretary. โWhy should not men and women have mutual scientific interests?โ โWeโll hear what the judge says,โ she answered complacently. โMr. Carter-Corrillo is suing for a divorce.โ โOn what grounds–incompatibility of interest in strata?โ sneered Gordon. โDonโt be silly. Conventions are the by-laws of society. It is presumed that, if you break a by-law, you are capable of breaking the law.โ He stared, amazed at her cool inconsistency. โHere are you, living, unchaperoned, in the house of a bachelor—-โ โCousins are different,โ she said promptly. โNobody suggests that the third secretary is Mrs. Carter-Corrilloโs cousin. That would make a difference. Besides, everybody knows how much you dislike me.โ โI donโt dislike you,โ after a momentโs thought; โbut if you think I do, why do you stay?โ โI have a mission,โ she said, with a finality of tone that brought the subject out of discussion. Gordon broke the news of his impending departure after breakfast the next morning. โI am thinking of running up to Scotland to have a shot at the birds,โ he said. He felt rather like a liar. โWhat have they been doing?โ she asked, her grey-blue eyes wide. โNothing. One shoots them at this season of the year. You have game laws in Australia, I suppose?โ โI donโt know. I have shot wallaby and dingo and rabbits and things, but never birds. To Scotland? Thatโs an awful long way. Gordon, I shall be worried about you. There was a railway accident in the newspapers this morning. Youโll send me a wire?โ โFrom every station,โ he said sarcastically, and was ashamed of himself when she thanked him so warmly. โIโm glad–that is my eccentricity, a horrid fear that people I like are in railway accidents. Of course, I could always wire to the stationmaster to enquire about you, or to your hotel.โ Slowly it dawned upon Gordon Selsbury that in an unguarded and fatally foolish moment he had enormously complicated a situation already far from simple. To escape, to offer excuses, even to laugh off her anxiety, simulated or real, was impossible. A solution came to him and was instantly rejected. It came again because it was, in all the circumstances, the only solution. But it was one that could only be applied at the cost of his self-respect. Almost he cursed Heloise or whoever was the fool who had suggested this mad excursion. Trenter was laying out his masterโs clothes for dinner when Gordon strolled into his dressing-room. โUm … donโt go, Trenter. When did you have your holiday?โ โFirst week in April, sir.โ Gordon considered. โDo you know Scotland?โ โYes, sir; Iโve been with several house parties for the September shooting.โ โGood. The fact is, Trenter, Iโm going away on a–a peculiar mission. It is a secret even from my most intimate friends. There are reasons, very excellent reasons with which I need not trouble you, and which you certainly would not understand, why I should go secretly to one place whilst I am supposed to be at another.โ Trenter aimed wildly, but scored on the target at the first shot. โA lady, sir?โ he ventured respectfully, meaning no harm–offering, in fact, a tribute to the known chivalry of the Selsburys. โNo!โ There was reason enough for the large and angry blush that darkened Gordonโs face. โNo, of course not. Business. Nothing at all to do with a lady.โ โIโm sorry, sir,โ said Trenter, and was. โWe wonโt discuss my mission. What I want to say is this. Miss Ford, who is rather of a nervous disposition, has asked me to send her wires at intervals of the journey….โ โAnd you want me to go to Scotland and send them,โ said Trenter brilliantly. Gordon had never respected his servantโs intelligence so much as he did at that moment. โExactly. It will save me a lot of worry. And,โ he added mysteriously, โif the wires fall into other hands, they will help deceive a Certain Person!โ Trenter nodded wisely. He couldnโt guess who the Certain Person was: even Gordon did not know. But lying grew easier with practice–he had grown reckless. โNot a word of this in the servantsโ hall,โ warned Gordon. The servitor smiled. Gordon had not seen him smile before. It was a strange sight. โNo, sir; I shall tell them that my aunt in Bristol is ill (which she is) and that youโve given me leave. How long do you want me to be away, sir?โ โA week,โ said Gordon. Mr. Trenter went down to the servantsโ hall importantly. โThe old manโs given me a weekโs holiday to see my aunt. Iโm leaving to-morrow.โ Eleanor was constitutionally suspicious. โBit sudden, isnโt it? Heโs going away to-morrow too. You men are devils! Us women never know what youโre up to.โ Trenter smiled cryptically. It added to his self-confidence to be suspected of devilish deeds. โNoos verrong,โ he said, and added the information: โFrench.โ โIs Miss Diana going?โ asked the cook. โWith me or him?โ demanded Trenter insolently. โSheโs not going with _him_! And do I blame him? No! Sheโs no lady, thatโs my firm opinion.โ โThen keep it to yourself!โ said Eleanor, shrill of voice. โI donโt want you to say anything about Miss Diana!โ โYou women stick together.โ Trenter could not but admire the trait. โAnd you men stick at nothing.โ Eleanorโs sincerity gave sanction to inconsequence. โSheโs too good for him. I suppose youโre both off on some gallivanting business? So far as I am concerned youโre welcome! Youโve been an experience, and every girl ought to have experience–up to a point. Your wife can have you.โ โIf Iโve told you once, Iโve told you forty million times that Iโm not married!โ hissed Trenter. โI had to be married because he wanted a married man for a butler, and if Iโd said I was single I should have lost the job. That temper of yours, my girl, is going to be your ruin.โ โWell, donโt talk disp–whatever the word is–about Miss Diana,โ she sulked. โI donโt trouble my head about her, because I donโt think thereโs anybody in the world like you, Eleanor,โ he urged. She admitted later that there was much to be said for his point of view. Chapter 9. In the early days, when Trenter had known him, Mr. Superbus was a court bailiff, a man who seized the property of unsuccessful litigants, who served writs, attached furniture, and committed all those barbarous acts peculiar to his office. But progression, the inexorable law of getting on, the natural craving for success, brought Mr. Superbus from the atmosphere of a dull county court to a small office in the Insurance Trust Building, and the distinction of having his name painted upon the glass panel of the door. He was officially styled โFirst Enquiry Clerk.โ The โdetectiveโ which was printed on the corner of his visiting card was wholly unofficial, and his request to his superiors that a nickel badge should be designed that he might wear on his waistcoat and display at fitting moments when it was necessary to disclose his identity, was refused as being โimpracticable and undesirable.โ The cinematograph is at once educative and inspirational. Mr. Superbus spent most of his spare evenings in watching the pictures. Those he liked best dealt with the careers of young, beautiful but penurious girls, who were pursued by rich and remorseless villains, and were rescued in the nick of time from a fate which is popularly supposed to be worse than death, by a handsome young hero, with the assistance of a stern-faced officer of the law, who smoked cigars, wore a derby hat, and from time to time turned back his coat to display the badge of his calling. A film which had no detective, and dealt merely with the love of a millionaireโs beautiful young wife for his secretary, was unpalatable to him, even though it featured his favourite artists and showed, in the course of its telling, tremendous railway accidents, landslides, riots and the enervating effects of cocaine. Before the open window of his parlour, Mr. Superbus sat in a state of profound meditation. Though the day was chilly, he was in his shirt-sleeves, for he was one of those hot-blooded men in whom the variations of climate peculiar to his native land produced no effect. It was an open secret that he was one of those hardy souls who swam in the Serpentine every Christmas Day, preferably breaking the ice to get in, and his portrait appeared with monotonous regularity every twenty-sixth of December in all the better-class illustrated newspapers. His good lady came bustling in with a shiver. She restricted her own bathing operations to the decent privacy of a four by seven bathroom. โYouโll catch your death of cold there, Julius,โ she said. โFancy sitting there from morning till night doing nothing!โ โIโm not doing nothing,โ said Julius quietly. โIโm thinking.โ โWell, thatโs what I call doing nothing,โ said Mrs. Superbus, bustling round and laying the cloth. She had an extraordinary appreciation of her husbandโs qualities, admired him secretly, but felt that the smooth harmonies of matrimony might well be disturbed if she committed the error of showing her feelings. โItโs beyond me how you puzzle these things out,โ she said. โItโs brains,โ explained Julius. โYou get such ideas,โ she said in despair. โI wonder you donโt go on the stage.โ It was her conviction that the stage was the ultimate goal of all genius; its greatest reward; its most natural line of development. โThis Double Dan is certainly a bit of a puzzle, though Iโve worked out bigger problems in my time, mother.โ She nodded in agreement. โThe way you mended the cistern last week beats me,โ she said. โAfter that Iโll believe anything. Who is this Double Dan?โ โHeโs a swindler,โ said Mr. Superbus, โa parasite of society, a human vampire–but Iโll get him!โ โIโm surprised the police donโt go after him,โ she said. He was naturally irritated, and his laughter lacked sincerity. โThe police! No, mother, the man whoโs going to get Double Dan has got to be clever, heโs got to be cunning, heโs got to be artful.โ โI donโt know anybody artfuller than you, Julius,โ said his wife graciously, and Mr. Superbus accepted the compliment as his right. He might speak disparagingly of the police, as he did; as all private detectives, authors of mystery stories and such-like are in the habit of doing. But his knowledge that Double Dan was in London, the hint that had been whispered up from the underworld that Mr. Gordon Selsbury was to be the new victim; these and a hundred other little pointers of incalculable value came to him fourth-hand from Scotland Yard. After his midday dinner he put on his coat and strolled to Cheynel Gardens. Gordon was out, and he was received by Diana. โWhy, of course, youโre Mr.—-โ โSuperbus,โ said Julius. โThe Roman!โ Mr. Superbus confessed to that distinction. He might have added โultimus Romanorum,โ only he was unacquainted with the phrase. Instead he remarked, a little pathetically: โThere ainโt many of us left.โ โI bet there ainโt,โ said Diana. โSit down and have some tea. You want to see Mr. Selsbury, but he wonโt be back for an hour.โ โI did and I didnโt,โ said Julius the obscure. โWhat I want to do is to keep a certain eye on a certain fellow.โ He did not particularise the eye, but Diana guessed that it might be that which was nearest to her: it looked the less glassy of the two. In the matter of the certain fellow she sought information. โDouble Dan–I remember. Who is he, Mr. Superbus?โ โWell, maโam—-โ โMiss.โ โYou donโt look it,โ he said gallantly, if vaguely. โThis Double Dan is a desperado, and is believed to emanate from the West.โ โDo you mean West London?โ โI mean America,โ said Julius, โwhere most of the desperadoes come from. And go to,โ he added, with a recollection of certain past defaulters, whose disappearance had been hampering to him as a bailiff of the court. She listened attentively while Mr. Superbus described the misdoings of the impersonator. โThereโs nothing this fellow canโt do, miss,โ said Superbus impressively. โHe can make himself fat, he can make himself thin; he can impersonate a tall man or a short man, an old man or a young man. By all accounts he was an actor onthealls.โ โOnthealls?โ She wrinkled her brow, thinking for the moment that Mr. Superbus had dug up one of those natty colloquialisms that enlivened the Senate in those days when Cicero could always be depended upon to pass a few bright, snappy remarks about the Tribune Clodius. โAn actor onthealls,โ repeated Mr. Superbus, astounded that he was unintelligible. โOh, I see!โ a great light dawning upon her mind. โOn the halls? You mean the vaudeville stage?โ โSo they say,โ said Mr. Superbus. โAnyway, heโs been too clever for the regular police. Itโs now up to them who have made a study of crime, so to speak, to bring him to justice.โ He looked cautiously round the apartment and lowered his voice. โBy all accounts, Mr. Selsburyโs the next.โ Diana sat bolt upright in her chair. โYou means heโs to be the next person robbed?โ Mr. Superbus nodded gravely. โFrom information received,โ he said. โBut does he know?โ โIโve dropped an โint, miss,โ said Julius. โBut on the whole itโs better that he didnโt know. A man gets jiggered, so to speak, if he knows a crook is after him, and that hampers the officers of the law.โ He shook his head. โMany a good case have I lost that way.โ โWhat do you mean exactly by impersonation?โ asked Diana, troubled. โDo you mean to say that, when Mr. Selsbury is out, somebody who looks very much like him is liable to walk into this house and help himself to anything that he can find?โ โCheques mostly, or money,โ affirmed Julius. โHe works big, this fellow. Nothing small about him, you understand. You could leave your silver around, and he wouldnโt touch so much as an egg-spoon. Heโs one of the big gang–Iโve had my eye on him for years.โ โThis is very alarming,โ said Diana after a long silence. โIt is alarming,โ agreed Julius, โbut at the same time, if youโve got the right kind of man around to protect you, a fellow whoโs a bit sharp, itโs not alarming. But heโs got to be clever, and heโs got to have experience of what I might term the criminal classes, I should say.โ โYou mean yourself?โ Diana smiled faintly, not in the mood to be amused. โI mean me,โ said Julius. โIf I was you, miss, Iโd drop a hint to Mr. Selsbury. Maybe he takes more notice of what his daughter says.โ At parting he took her hand in his own large, purple paw, called her โMiss Selsburyโ and asked to be remembered to her father. When Gordon came home, she told him of the visit. โSuperbus, eh?โ said Gordon good-naturedly. โHe called for a tip. But why, in the name of heaven, he should start in to alarm you, I donโt know. I must speak to the Association about it.โ โHe didnโt alarm me at all,โ said Diana, โexcept when he asked to be remembered to my father, and said that you were more likely to be influenced by your young and gentle daughter—-โ โDoes he think Iโm your father?โ demanded Gordon indignantly. โThat fellowโs got a nerve! As for Double Dan, I shouldnโt think very much about him if I were you, Diana. He certainly caught old Mendlesohn, but then, old Mendlesohn is a philandering old fool. He allowed himself to be trapped by the woman who works with the scoundrel and acts as his decoy duck.โ The mail boat was in, Gordon noted, glancing at his newspaper the next morning. He had arranged to remain at home that day, and his accountant called at the house with a carefully engrossed receipt form and the office cheque-book. Gordon filled a blank for eleven thousand and a few odd pounds. โI want fifty thousand dollars in gold bills; youโll buy them at the Bank of England. Bring them back here in a taxicab, Miller. You have told the office that wires are to be telephoned to me? Good. I expect a message from Mr. Tilmet.โ The message did not come until long after the bills had been deposited in The Study safe. It was from Paris, to the effect that Mr. Tilmet had landed at Cherbourg and would be in London on the Sunday; he added that he would leave for Holland that same night. Gordon, in his genteel way, consigned the American to the devil. He saw Heloise that afternoon. She was a being exalted at the prospect of the trip, and his last desperate appeal to her that it should be cancelled was unmade. They were to meet at a quarter to eleven on the platform at Victoria, and were to travel as strangers until they reached Ostend. The passage looked likely to be a good one; the weather bureau reported a smooth sea and light easterly winds. Trenter had packed his big carry-all, and had included one of the new suits–that grey check with a little red in it–which had arrived belatedly from the tailor. The case had been secretly transported to a hotel in the neighbourhood of Victoria, where Gordon had to change. Nothing remained to be done but to prepare the telegrams which Trenter was to send. He could do this with a light heart, for it had occurred to him that if, taking advantage of his absence, the criminal impersonator should call (he regarded this as the least likely of any happening) the wires would confound and expose him. He felt almost as if he were doing a worthy deed. The first he marked in the corner โEuston,โ and inscribed โJust leaving, Gordon.โ He wrote a number of โGood journey, all wellsโ for York, Edinburgh and Inverness. Surprisingly, Diana came to him that day for some money. โI arranged the transfer of my money to the London branch of the Bank of Australasia, but there has been some sort of hitch. I called to-day and the transfer has not arrived. Save me from penury, Gordon–Iโm a ruined woman.โ She displayed dramatically the empty inside of a notecase. Gordon felt a queer satisfaction in signing a cheque for her, recovered a little of the kind-fatherly feeling appropriate to their relationship. โAnd to think that, if you had really turned me out, I should have starved!โ taking the slip from his hand. โGordon, behind a rugged and unprepossessing exterior, you hide a heart of gold.โ โI sometimes wish you were a little more serious,โ he said in good humour. โIโm always wishing that you werenโt,โ she said. Gordon was temporarily deprived of the full use of The Study in the afternoon. There could be no more remarkable proof of Dianaโs dynamic qualities than the arrival of post office linesmen to move the telephone from the hall to Gordonโs room–and that within forty-eight hours of her notifying the Postmaster General of her desires. Gordon demurred at first. The telephone was an invasion of his privacy. Diana was flippant and he was in no spirit for a fight. Bobbie was at dinner that night, and, when they were alone, asked her a question that he had asked himself many times. โWhy do you stick this kind of existence, Diana? Youโve heaps of money and could be having a really good time instead of rushing round after Gordon.โ She looked up under her curling lashes. โDoes Gordon want me here? Has he ever wanted me? No, sir! When I came I left my baggage in the hall: I intended taking his advice about hotels and things. I never had the slightest intention of stopping–till I saw him and heard him, and read the panic he was in at the idea of my remaining in the house, and heard him become paternal and my-dear-little-girly. So I stayed. The day Gordon wants me to stay–I go!โ The atmosphere of the house was electric: Bobbie felt it, Diana was conscious of an uneasiness that was not to be accounted for by the errors of banking officials. Even in the servantsโ hall hysteria made a mild manifestation. Eleanor had a premonition which she called by another name. โIโm sure somethingโs going to happen.โ When she was nervous her voice grew high-pitched. โDonโt be ridiculous.โ Trenterโs voice lacked confidence. โI wish you wasnโt–werenโt going away,โ she sobbed. โIโve got the creeps. That window man will do something. The moment I saw him I said โthat manโs a villain,โ didnโt I, cook?โ โYou did. You said โIโm sure thereโs something wrong about that man,โโ agreed cook. As for Gordon Selsbury, he went to bed at ten. At one oโclock he was pacing his room. At three he went down to The Study and started the percolator working. Whilst the coffee was in process of making, he opened the safe and took out the fifty thousand dollars, counted them and put them back. The safe looked very fragile, he thought. Once this wretched trip was over he would attend to the matter. The house was not difficult to burgle. The big, stained-glass window–an enterprising craftsman with a penknife could get in…. In a corner of the room flush with the window was a small door, hidden behind a curtain. This led to the courtyard and was never used. As to its design, and what purpose it was intended to serve, only the builder and original owner of the house might testify. His name was Gugglewaite, he had been three times divorced, and was at the moment in heaven–or his well-edited epitaph lied. Gordon went upstairs for his pass-key, opened the door and stepped out into the โgarden.โ It was very dark and still, and the wet wind smelt sweet and fresh. Across the yard was a door that gave to a small side passage. The wall was high, but no obstacle to an active burglar. He shivered and went in again to his coffee and a returning serenity induced by the fire he had kindled and the comfort of his surroundings. He would have gladly given a thousand–ten thousand–to cancel his fool adventure; to remain here with … well, with Diana. He told himself this with a certain defiance as though one half of a dual personality were challenging the other. Diana was really a dear. He wished he had been a little more loyal to her and had talked less about Dempsi … a boy and girl affair and perfectly understandable. On Dempsi, his identity, his appearance, he mused till the light began to show in a ghostly fashion behind the painted window. There was no thrill in the secrecy, the plotting, the wile within wile. Gordon smelt the meanness of it, and sometimes he quavered. It made matters a thousand times worse that Diana was so sweet about everything. It had occurred to him that he would have to depend upon her to deal with Mr. Tilmet when he called. Nobody else could possibly cope with that elusive gentleman. โSurely,โ she said without hesitation. โHave you the receipt ready and the final contract? It isnโt worth paper unless it has been drawn up by an American notary. Auntie bought an oil well in Texas and she had to find an American attorney before the contract could be made.โ โAnd she was swindled, of course?โ said Gordon. โAll these oil properties are swindles.โ โShe made seventy thousand dollars out of the deal,โ said Diana. โAuntie had an irresistible attraction for bargain money. The bills are in the safe?โ โWith the contract and the receipt. Really, Diana, youโre almost a business woman!โ โYour patronage is offensive, but I feel sure that you mean well,โ said Diana without heat. โLet me see that money.โ He opened the safe and she counted it, bill by bill, before she snapped the door close and spun the handle. โGood,โ she said. โI will have a spring clean whilst you are away. I have sent for a man to clean the windows of The Study. They are in a shocking state. And, Gordon, with Trenter and you away, I shall need extra help. I will have a man and his wife here. There is an attic room where they can sleep: is that in order?โ Diana was brisk, business-like, imposingly capable. Gordon realised that she was unconsciously ramming home her indispensability. Eleanor, coming in to put the room in order, found him in his dressing-gown, asleep before the black ashes of the fire, and her squeal of fear woke him. โOh, sir, you gave me such a fright!โ He rose stiffly, blinking at her. โDid I …? Iโm sorry, Eleanor. Will you send Trenter to me in my room?โ A bad start to a very bad dayโs business. He ached from head to foot, until his bath gave him some bodily ease. โEleanor says you were asleep before the study fire. When did you come down, Gordon?โ Diana asked at breakfast. โAbout three oโclock, I think. I remembered work that had to be done.โ She was concerned. โWhy donโt you go by the night train–you could sleep?โ she suggested, and he forced a smile. โI shall sleep all right,โ he said with spurious gaiety. The talk went off in another direction, and then Bobbie came in for final instructions. Gordon was unaccountably irritated by this act of devotion to duty, and his โGood-morningโ was like the crack of a whip. โAfter you have gone,โ said Diana, โI shall ask Trenter to show me such of your clothes as need go to the cleaners.โ โTrenter is going before me,โ he said hastily. โHeโs catching a train to Bristol. His aunt is seriously ill.โ โWhat on earthโs the matter with you?โ gasped Bobbie. Gordon turned, ready to be offensive, but it was not he at whom Bobbie was staring. Dianaโs face was ghastly; her eyes were wide with a terror she could not conceal; her skin the colour of chalk. Gordon jumped up and ran to her. โWhateverโs the matter?โ he asked, in genuine alarm. โNothing,โ she said with a gasp. โPerhaps Iโm feeling the parting. I always go like this when my cousins go away!โ โHave you had bad news?โ Her letters were open on the table. She shook her head. โNo; the butcherโs arithmetic is a little embrangled. Ever heard that word before, Gordon? I guess you havenโt! I found it in _Tom Brownโs School Days_. Bobbie, donโt stare, itโs very rude….โ Under her covering hand was the letter she had been reading. Mr. Dempsi was very much alive: was in London at that moment. The opening lines of his letter were significant. โMy bride! I have come to claim you!โ Dempsi always wrote like that. Chapter 10. Ten minutes later, Bobbie walked into his brotherโs room without knocking, and interrupted what seemed to be a very confidential interview. Trenter pocketed a sheaf of telegrams in haste, but not so quickly that Bobbie did not see them. He made no comment until Mr. Trenter, in his best suit and looking unusually spruce, had made a hurried departure. โTrenterโs going down to see his sick aunt,โ explained his master. โHe looks like that,โ said Bobbie. โThe chrysanthemum in his buttonhole will cheer her immensely. Is the faithful Trenter in the swindle too?โ โI donโt know what you mean by โswindle,โโ said Gordon loudly. โI wish I hadnโt told you anything about it!โ โYou wouldnโt, only you wanted somebody to stand by you in case anything went wrong. That is, anything but you.โ Gordon glared at him. โI shall not go wrong, believe me!โ โI donโt,โ said Bobbie. And then, hastily: โAt least, I do, but nobody else would.โ โYou canโt understand these–itโs a hateful word, but there is no better–affinities,โ said Gordon, โthese understandings and yearnings for something which–which–well, somebody else canโt give you. Some magic that draws a manโs confidence and kills all sense of time and obligation.โ Bobbie nodded wisely. โI know–a woman.โ Gordon stood erect. โBobbie,โ he said awfully, โI tell you this is not an affair–at any rate, it is different from other kinds of affairs.โ โSo are all other kinds of affairs,โ said Bobbie. โThatโs why the judges have been working overtime. I dare say I _am_ cynical: I can afford to be, Iโm a bachelor. The lady has a husband?โ โHeloise is married,โ said Gordon gravely. โHeloise? I must remember that name. And Trenter, I presume, is going into the country to post the necessary telegrams to give verisimilitude to an otherwise unconvincing narrative. I hate quoting Gilbert at you, but the situation is a little Gilbertian. What is she like?โ Gordon was not inclined to particularise. โOf course, if youโre going to make trouble—-โ โDonโt be an ass,โ said Bobbie. โIโm not going to give you away because, for some extraordinary reason, I believe you.โ A knock at the door: it was Eleanor. โWill you see Mr. Superbus?โ she said. โNo,โ snapped Gordon. โGet me a cab.โ โWhoโs Mr. Superbus?โ โHeโs the detective I told you about; the man that is watching for Double Dan.โ Bobbie whistled: it was an exasperating trick of his. โDouble Dan? By Jove! I didnโt think of him. Gordon, youโre taking a risk. Is there any money in the house?โ โI told you.โ โYou keep telling me youโve told me things. I think your mind is wandering.โ โThereโs fifty thousand dollars in the safe. Dianaโs looking after it. The combination word is โTelmaโ–I told her, and I might as well tell you. It is for Tilmet, whoโs calling on Sunday, but Diana will look after that.โ โDouble Dan,โ repeated Bobbie softly. โAnd youโre the very bird he could impersonate to the life! Sometimes I do it myself unconsciously. A little pomp, a little strut, a little preciousness of speech—-โ Gordon waved him out of the room. He had reached the limit of his patience. Diana was out when he came down, and he was not sorry. Also, the telephone receiver was on the table; he replaced it in the hook. โWhere is Miss Ford?โ he asked. โMiss Ford had to go out. She asked me to say good-bye to you, sir,โ said Eleanor. โWill you see Mr. Superbus?โ โNo, I will not see Mr. Superbus. Tell him–well, tell him anything you like. Iโve got a train to catch.โ He was gone in such a hurry that Bobbie had not time to get the information he had come to procure–Gordon had not told him the address to which he was to wire. There was time to go after him, but his immediate objective was unknown. It was obviously too early for the train, and Bobbie had such a sense of delicacy that he would not take the risk of a chance meeting with the fascinating Mrs. van Oynne. He sat down, waiting for Dianaโs return, and puzzling over the change which a letter had wrought in her. That it was a letter, he knew. Sharper of eye than his brother, he had noticed the closely written page beneath her hand. Diana had her secrets too. As for Gordon, he was a fool, an utter, hopeless, dithering maniac! Bobbie got up and walked across to the safe, hesitated a moment, then manipulated the dial and pulled the door open. Except for a receipt form and a four page contract, the safe was empty. Of money there was none! Chapter 11. It was half an hour before Diana came back, and she still showed the effects of the shock she had received at breakfast time. โHullo, Bobbie!โ She glanced at his face. โWhat is the matter?โ โDianaโ–he spoke slowly–โyouโre in some kind of trouble.โ โSome kind!โ She flung her hat recklessly on the table. โEvery kind, my dear child!โ He did not smile. โGordon told me that he had left fifty thousand dollars in the safe to pay an American whoโs calling on Sunday. He gave me the combination.โ She stood before him, her hands behind her. โWell?โ โThe money is not there.โ A little pause. โAnd do you know why?โ she asked. โI donโt know. Iโve been worried to death. He didnโt take it?โ She shook her head. โNo, I took it,โ she said. โBobbie, Dempsi is alive!โ โAlive? Dempsi? Impossible!โ She nodded many times. โHe is alive! Iโve had a letter from him this morning–thirteen pages–you could have used any one of them as a mustard leaf. Iโm scared!โ โBut I thought he was lost in the bush?โ said Bobbie. She smiled painfully and dropped into the chair in which Gordon had spent the night. โHe was found in the bush,โ she said. โHe had fever or something and was discovered by the Jackies. They took him to their village. Bobbie, Dempsi is half Irish and half Italian. Which half is most mad? Because thatโs the half that wrote.โ Bobbie considered for a long time. โHe knows youโre not married?โ She shook her head. โWhat?โ โNo,โ said Diana calmly. โWe talked on the telephone just after you left the room, and his first words were: โAre you single? Weโll be married to-morrow. If youโre married, youโll be a widow to-night!โ I knew at once that it was Dempsi.โ โWhat did you say?โ he asked, awe-stricken. โI told him I was married,โ she said, with such coolness that he was inarticulate. โI couldnโt very well explain why I was here if I wasnโt married, could I? Then he got so violent that I told him I was a widow. Bobbie, isnโt lying easy?โ Bobbie could say nothing. โThen he sprang another one on me, and I told him that I was living with my Uncle Isaac–I used to have an Uncle Isaac,โ she said in self-defence. โHe was a sort of an adopted uncle. He died of delirium tremens. All our family have done something out of the common. I couldnโt say I was living alone in this big house, and anyhow, Gordon is away. Itโs wonderful luck, his going.โ Bobbie paced the floor in a state of supreme agitation. โWhat about the money?โ he asked. โI owed it to him. Before he ran away into the bush we had a terrible scene. He wanted me to elope with him, and when I wouldnโt, he said he would commit suicide. He was like a madman; he cried over me, he kissed my feet, and then went off to lose himself in the bush. He didnโt even do that properly.โ โAnd the money?โ โHe gave it to me, or the cat or somebody. Anyway, I had it. Dempsi hadnโt a relation in the world, and I just banked the money with my own.โ She bit her lip. โI intended putting up such a beautiful monument to him,โ she added thoughtfully. Bobbie drew a sigh of relief. โWell, my dear girl, as youโve obviously sent him the money, the worst is over. You can replace it: the banks do not close till twelve.โ โHow am I to replace it?โ she asked scornfully. โIโve no money in my own bank, except a few pounds that I opened the account with when I came to London. I took the fifty thousand dollars and put eight thousand pounds to my own account. Hereโs the rest.โ She drew out a wad of bills and handed them to him. Bobbie looked at her aghast. โBut this Tilmet, this American–youโve got to find the money for him?โ โI thought youโd get it for me,โ she said, her big eyes fixed pleadingly on him. He looked at his watch. โItโll want some doing. You canโt raise eight thousand in real money in two hours. Is this money of Gordonโs in your bank?โ She nodded. โIโm sending Dempsi a cheque by special messenger. Heโs living in a little hotel in the Edgware Road.โ โHe mentioned the money then?โ โHe made a casual reference,โ she said, โwhich my conscience probably magnified into a demand. Phew!โ She fanned herself with her hand. Bobbie locked away the remaining ten thousand dollars. โIโll see what I can do. May I telephone?โ She nodded. โYou may do anything you please except ask me to marry Dempsi,โ she said wearily. His first call was to his bank, and the conversation was not encouraging. Bobbie had just paid from his account heavy bills, and he was slightly overdrawn. To the suggestion that the overdraft should be increased, the manager turned an unsympathetic ear. And then, at the end of the third call, when Bobbie was in a condition of frenzy, Eleanor came in with a telegram, and the girl opened it quickly. โSaved!โ she whooped. โWhat is it?โ said Bobbie, snatching the form from her hand. It was dated Paris and was from the Americanโs secretary. โFeared Mr. Tilmet has contracted measles. Will not be able to arrive in London for another fortnight.โ โThank God for measles!โ wailed Diana. Bobbie wiped his streaming forehead. โIโve a good mind to take the remainder of this money away,โ he said, โI donโt like it being in the house.โ For answer, she opened the drawer of the desk and took out the black-muzzled Browning. โBurglars are my specialty,โ she said. โWould you mind putting that lethal weapon away?โ said Bobbie. โWhat a bloodthirsty little devil you are!โ โI am,โ said Diana. โThereโs murder in my bones at this particular moment. Yes, Eleanor?โ โAre you going to see Mr. Superbus?โ โI didnโt know he was here. Ask him to come in, will you?โ Mr. Superbus came, in his stately, senatorial fashion, and was introduced to Bobbie. It was obvious he sought a very private interview indeed, but Diana explained in what relationship Bobbie stood. โIโm sorry to have missed Mr. Selsbury,โ said Julius. โInformation having come to me last night through my secret agent about a certain party.โ โYou mean Double Dan?โ Diana reacted instantly. For the moment she hadnโt a care in the world. โItโs no laughing matter, miss.โ Mr. Superbus shook his head, and invited, with a wave of the hand, bent forward to see his feet and sat down slowly. โNo, it isnโt any laughing matter, maโam–miss. If he walked in at that doorโ–he pointed–โmade up for the part, youโd think it was your father.โ Diana raised a protesting hand. โMay I explain, in passing, that Mr. Selsbury is not my father?โ Julius graciously indicated that she had his permission. โDan is wonderful! I was telling my good lady only this morning that, if she sees a fellow looking like me trying to get into the house when Iโm supposed to be away, she must make him take his shirt off–Iโve got a lucky mole on my shoulder, miss–maโam–miss. Why moles are supposed to be lucky Iโve never discovered.โ Diana turned to Bobbie. โThis is rather alarming.โ โOh, I donโt know,โ said Bobbie. โLots of people have moles.โ โDonโt be absurd. I mean Double Dan.โ โBut why should he come here?โ asked Bobbie, well aware that the contents of the safe, such as they were, justified a visit. But it was Mr. Superbus who answered. โThatโs what they all say, but thereโs always a reason, miss. My good lady said to me โWhy should he come here?โ but I pointed out that–whatโs in that safe? Any valuables there?โ He pointed to the wall. โNothing very much,โ said Diana hastily. โTell us some more about this person, Mr. Superbus.โ Mr. Superbus smiled to himself. โIโm the greatest living authority on him,โ he said modestly, โthatโs what I am! Heโs a very plausible fellow, and works with a girl. Whether or not–well, letโs say itโs his wife. She wangles the information out of the fellow that Dan is going to rob. Do you see?โ Diana nodded. โI see. Sheโs a sort of decoy who gets to know the victim.โ โKnow him! Well, I should say she did, miss–it would be much easier to tell you everything if you was maโam.โ โWell, imagine I am,โ smiled Diana. โShe gets to know him very well?โ Mr. Superbus nodded. โI should say so! She starts a hand-holding friendship, if I might describe it.โ โBut surely not always?โ interrupted Bobbie. โShe didnโt catch old Mendlesohn that way? He must be sixty-five!โ Mr. Superbus was amused. โSixty-five! Why, of course she did! The sixty-fivers are the worst. Theyโre easy. Mind you, thereโs nothing more than a high-class friendship in it, if I may use the word. The people she likes to get hold of are the thinkers–sheโs got a classy line of language. You know the sort of stuff that highbrows talk.โ โA soul, in fact?โ smiled Diana. โDoes she represent herself as being married?โ He nodded. โYes, thereโs always a husband in the background. Sometimes he lives abroad, sometimes heโs in a lunatic asylum, but heโs mostly out of the way.โ Bobbie staggered and caught hold of a chair for support. Happily, Diana did not notice his wan excitement. โAnd then what happens?โ she asked, a little nervous as to whether Mr. Superbus was still confounding โmissโ with โmaโam.โ โWell, she lures him away,โ said Mr. Superbus. โThereโs no other word for it. She _lures_ him away. And whilst theyโre away, up comes Double Dan with all the dear departedโs little tricks–his voice, his funny little ways, which the girl has been studying and passing on to Dan. You understand, miss? Iโve collected all this information myself. Itโs a coop with me. โCoopโ is French for โcop.โโ โAnd the girl?โ asked Diana. โOh, she gets away too–pretends her husbandโs come back unexpectedly from foreign parts; but she does it so that the fellow canโt return home. Usually heโs told people that heโs going away for a fortnight or so, and naturally, he doesnโt want to come back.โ โHow perfectly disgusting!โ said Diana with a wry face. โThatโs what I say,โ said Mr. Superbus earnestly. โHaving allowed a gentleman to go so far—-โ โAt any rate, we need not have any fear about Mr. Selsbury,โ said Diana with a quiet smile. Evidently Mr. Superbus _had_ fears about Mr. Selsbury. He looked around in his mysterious way, and then: โHeโs gone out of town, hasnโt he?โ Diana nodded. โFor any length of time?โ โFor a week,โ said Diana. Superbus rubbed his chin. โItโs rather a delicate matter, but I am a family man, maโam–miss. Has he gone away on business–no chance of a—-?โ โOf a what?โ โOf a lure?โ Diana laughed softly. โAbsolutely no chance.โ Diana was thinking quickly. โWhat sort of a woman would this be–his confederate, I mean–pretty?โ โHandsome is as handsome does,โ replied Julius. โAre you going, Bobbie?โ Bobbie was following the detective from the room. โYes, Iโve got to see a man,โ he said a little incoherently. There was still time to catch Gordon, and he was resolved to take the risk. With Bobbie out of the way, the girl rang the bell, and, when Eleanor came, she found her mistress at the writing-table, blotting an envelope. โPut your hat on, Eleanor, and deliver this letter to the Marble Arch Hotel. Take a taxi.โ โYes, madam,โ said Eleanor in surprise. โAsk to see Mr. Dempsi.โ Diana made an attempt to be unconcerned, and failed dismally. โIf he kisses the letter, or anything like that–you mustnโt be surprised. He is very impulsive: he might even kiss you,โ she added. Eleanor stiffened. โIndeed, miss?โ โHe wonโt mean anything by it.โ Diana was tremulously diplomatic. โHe always kisses people when he sees them. I–I shouldnโt be surprised if he kissed me when he calls–weโre old friends, and people do that sort of thing in–in Australia.โ โIndeed, madam?โ said Eleanor, her interest in the British Empire awakened. โIโm afraid Mr. Selsbury wouldnโt understand,โ Diana went on lightly. โMen are rather narrow. If you told him—-โ โI should never dream of telling Mr. Selsbury, madam,โ said Eleanor indignantly. The girl came in dressed before she went. โI beg your pardon, Miss Ford, but it has just occurred to me,โ she said hesitantly. โIf this foreign gentleman should kiss me, might I be bold enough to ask you not to mention it to Trenter?โ โYou may rely on me, Eleanor,โ said Diana firmly. โWe women must stand together.โ She watched the girl through the window till she was out of sight, then flopped back in her chair. The papers stood in a rack at her hand, unopened, unread. She reached out and found one, but there was no drama that could quite over-shadow that which was being played out in her heart. She heard a tap and looked round. It was not at the door; it seemed to be at the stained-glass window. There was a little window square, level with the ledge, which could be opened and closed as a casement, and against this she saw the shadow of a head, and, with her heart thumping wildly, walked across the room. โWho is there?โ she asked. Then came a voice that chilled her to the marrow. โDonโt you know me, beloved?โ โMr. Dempsi!โ she gasped. โYou mustnโt come here, really you mustnโt! My–my Uncle Isaac isnโt at home, and I canโt receive you.โ With an effort of will she jerked open the window and looked down upon a bearded face and eyes that shone. A wide-brimmed sombrero at the back of his head; hanging from his shoulders, a long black cape. He might have stepped from an opera. โI–I canโt see you now, really I canโt! Wonโt you call next Wednesday week?โ So that was Dempsi! She remembered dimly some resemblance to the bare-faced boy she had known. Perhaps that wild glitter of eye, that furious gesticulation. โDiana,โ he breathed, โIโve come back from the grave to claim you!โ โYes, yes, but not now,โ she said, in an agony of apprehension. โGo back to your grave till three oโclock. Iโll see you then.โ The shadow disappeared. How had he got there? Curiosity. Opening the window an eighth of an inch, she saw him scaling the wall with an agility which would have been admirable in any other conditions. Slowly she walked up the stairs to her room, closed and locked the door behind her, and sat down heavily on her bed. Once upon a time her aunt had carefully loaded a shot-gun designed for this same Dempsi. Tears came into her eyes. โDear auntie!โ she half-sobbed. โYou understood men so well!โ Chapter 12. Gordon hesitated a little time before the mirror in his bedroom at the hotel, the razor poised in his hand, his cheeks crisp with lather. There is no more solemn act undertaken by man than destruction of such facial landmarks (if the term be allowed) as are represented by cultivated hair. There is something so irrevocable, so tremendous in self-destruction of whiskers, that it is amazing so few great poets have utilised the theme. Setting his jaw, Gordon attacked with a firm hand, the bright blade flashed in the pale sunlight … the deed was done. Rubbing his face clean of lather, he gazed in surprise at the result. His appearance was wholly changed. It would not be extravagant to describe it as improved. Those two flickers of the razor had made him ten years younger. โBoyish!โ exclaimed Gordon, neither in despair nor pleasure, yet with something of both emotions. Until then he had not seen the suit, that fashionable grey check with a little red in it. His first impression of the pattern had mellowed with time…. โMy God!โ breathed Gordon. He was not a profane man. Once Diana had wrung from him such an expression, but Diana and her startling point of view was the mildest of provocation compared with the horror that lay unfolded on the bed. As a length of cloth it had called for attention. It was humanly impossible to pass it by without some such comment as โThat is rather unusual.โ But in the piece it had dignity; there was a suggestion of weaversโ genius and ingenuity. As a suit, embellished with a saucy waist, and with buttons that were in themselves a quiet smile…. Gordon felt a trickle of something at his temples and requisitioned his handkerchief. He could not possibly wear this. The alternative, for a short sea voyage, was a black morning coat and top hat–equally impossible. Time was flying. He put on the trousers. They did not look so bad … he dressed. Standing before the long glass in the wardrobe, he looked and wondered. One thing was certain: not his dearest friend would recognise him–and his overcoat would hide much. The reflection of this new Gordon Selsbury fascinated him. โHow do you do?โ he asked politely. The figure in the mirror bowed gravely. He was a perfect stranger to Gordon, a young bookmaker, Gordon thought, and was growing interested when he realised with a shock that it was himself. Packing hastily, he rang the bell three times for the valet. If you rang twice the porter came, once, the chambermaid. So he rang three times. The chambermaid appeared. Happily the hotel is a house of call. Guests come overnight and leave in the morning. Nobody recognises anybody except under the urgent promptings of lawyersโ clerks, supported by the visitorsโ book. Ten per cent of the staff was permanently giving evidence at the law courts. โThe valet,โ said Gordon and, when that individual appeared, gave instructions regarding the grip containing his discarded suit and hat-box. It occurred to him at that moment that one does not journey to Scotland in a top hat, and he was rather glad that Diana had been out when he left. โI want these things to be kept in the hotel cloak-room,โ said Gordon. โI will be back next Friday night and collect them.โ Now the valet knew him; had seen him, not at the hotel, but at a very select club in Pall Mall where the man had been a waiter before the craze for improvement had driven him to the brushing of odd peopleโs odder clothing. โExcuse me, sir, youโre Mr. Selsbury, arenโt you?โ Gordon went red. โYes, I am Mr. Selsbury,โ he said with a touch of hauteur. His signature in the visitorsโ book was unintelligible. The reception clerk thought it was Silsburg. โI donโt think I should leave your bag in the hotel, sir,โ said the valet gravely. Something of authority upon the ritual of adventure, he spoke with the best of intentions. โNext Friday particularly weโve got a big dinner here–to one of the Colonial Premiers. The hotel will be full of people–you donโt want to meet anybody you know?โ The assumption that he was privy to the clandestine character of Gordonโs movements made the visitor incapable of protest. โTell me the train youโre coming by; Iโll meet you at the station with the grip–Iโll put it straight away into the railway parcels office,โ said the valet gently, almost tenderly. Gordon could think of no improvement on this method; at the same time, the valet must be under no misapprehension. โThank you–er—-โ โBalding–I used to be a waiter at the Junior University Club, sir.โ โYes, of course. I think your idea is an excellent one. The fact is, Iโm leaving London on a … mission, and I have to be very careful … thousands of pounds are involved.โ โI see, sir.โ Balding was so serious as to be almost plaintive. He had met gentlemen at the hotel in similar circumstances, only _they_ had said that they were in the secret service. โThank you, sir … very kind of you, Iโm sure.โ Balding slipped the note into his waistcoat pocket indifferently. โIโll take this now, sir.โ He lifted the grip from the bed. โWill you be coming by the first or the second continental on Friday? Ostend four-thirty, Paris eight-thirty.โ โFour-thirty,โ said Gordon. The die was cast. He gathered the second and smaller grip, paid his bill at the desk and went out. It was chiming the quarter before eleven when he entered Victoria Station; the train left at twelve. There was no need to rush for seats. He had his Pullman reservation in his pocket. Happily the day was raw, the sun and rain alternately, blustering wind all the time. He could turn up the collar of his greatcoat. On the indicator board he read: โWind N. N. W. Sea moderate to rough. Visibility good.โ He was glad, at any rate, that the visibility was good. And then he looked around for Heloise. They had arranged to meet for the briefest space of time. At ten minutes to eleven, he grew restive, was on the point of picking up his valise, when he saw her hurrying toward him, glancing furtively behind. And there was something in her face that made his breath come a little more quickly. โFollow me into the waiting-room!โ She had passed him with this muttered message. Like a man in a dream, Gordon picked up his bag and followed. The big waiting-hall was nearly empty, and to its emptiest corner she led him. โGordon, a dreadful thing has happened.โ Her agitation communicated itself to his unquiet bosom. โMy husband has returned unexpectedly from Kongo. He is following me … he is mad–mad! Oh, Gordon, what have I done!โ He did not swoon; rather, he experienced all the sensations without losing consciousness. โHe swears I have transferred my affections, and says he will never rest until he stretches the man dead at my feet. He said he would do dreadful things … he is a great admirer of Peter the Great.โ โIs he?โ said Gordon. It seemed a futile question to ask, but he could think of nothing else. And he was not a little bit interested in Mr. van Oynneโs historical leanings. โGordon, you must go on to Ostend and wait for me,โ she said rapidly. โI will come as soon as possible … oh, my dear, you donโt _know_ how Iโm feeling!โ Gordon was so immensely absorbed in his own feelings that he made no effort of imagination. โDidnโt you tell him that our … our friendship was just … spiritual?โ he asked. Her smile was faint and sad and shadowy. A ghost who had overheard a good one in a smoking-room might have laughed as hilariously. โMy dear … who _would_ believe that? Now hurry, I must go.โ Her little hand trembled for a second on his arm and she was gone. He picked up his bag, it was curiously heavy, and followed her into the station. She was nowhere in sight. A porter stretched a suggestive hand toward his baggage. โContinental train, sir … have you got a seat?โ Gordon looked up at the clock. It wanted five minutes of eleven. โEleven-five the boat train, sir,โ said the porter. โEleven-five? I thought it was eleven,โ said Gordon numbly. โThereโs plenty of time, sir.โ Still Gordon stood, motionless. For some extraordinary reason his mind had refused to function; he was wholly incapable of decision or movement. The engine of his faculties had gone cold and refused to start. โGet me a cab, please.โ The mechanism of the request saved him. โYes, sir.โ The bag was taken from his unresisting hand. He followed the porter to the busy courtyard, pathetic in his helplessness. โWhere shall I tell him to go, sir?โ The porter stood invitingly, the cab door in his hand, a friendly smile on his face. He had not yet been tipped. โScotland,โ said Gordon hollowly. โScotland–you mean Scotland Yard?โ This touched the spring: all the wheels in Mr. Selsburyโs mind began revolving at once. โNo, no–to the Grovely Hotel. Thank you very much.โ The gratuity that Gordon crushed into the outstretched hand was munificent, princely. One glance at its value and the porter staggered against the door, closed it with a strangled โGrovely!โ and the cab rattled out of the station precincts. At that moment Bobbie Selsbury was engaged in a frenzied seat-to-seat search for his erring brother. Gordon was cooler now, though not out of danger. He could think: he could also for the moment inhibit thought. A jealous and revengeful husband, probably armed, certainly homicidal, and a student of Peter the Great and his methods, could not be wholly inhibited. Gordon wondered whether in his library he had a really frank and unexpurgated history of Peter. The hotel linkman opened the door of the cab, professionally pleased at his return. โKeep the cab,โ warned Gordon. He was by no means certain that he was capable, unaided, of calling another. At the desk of the reception clerk he recovered his key and the right to its employment, and carrying his bag to his room, rang the bell three times for the valet. The porter answered him, but not by mischance, as was proved. โBalding is off duty, sir,โ he explained. โHe goes off at eleven on Saturdays.โ โWhen will he be back?โ โOn Monday, sir. We have a whole day every second week. Is there anything I can get you, sir?โ Gordon shook his head. He only wanted his bag and his lost respectability. Removing his overcoat, he looked at himself in the glass. โThat isnโt me,โ he said brokenly. His appearance had changed, even in the short space of time elapsing between this and his last inspection. The type was hideously familiar. He had seen it once in a vulgar film where everybody chased everybody else. He remembered that the heroine wore white stockings and black boots. There were two alternatives. He might remain a prisoner in that room until Balding returned from his holiday; he could go home, get into the house unobserved and change. He had many black-tailed coats, batteries of silk hats, forests of quiet, grey-striped trousers. This idea was more attractive. Diana would lunch at one oโclock; the dining-room was across the hall from The Study. It would be a simple matter to slip upstairs, change and come down to meet the astonished eyes of Diana. How surprised she would be, and how amusing and unbending he would be! โDidnโt expect to see me, eh? Well, the fact is, I had an important cablegram–just as I was getting into the train. My sidewhiskers? Yes, I took them off as a little surprise for you. Rather an improvement, donโt you think?โ His heart warmed to the plan, and there was a glow in the thought that the desire of the morning, that he should sleep in his own bed that night, would be gratified. And there was the companionship of Diana, hitherto an unconsidered attraction. Diana grew on him: he admitted this to himself. If Heloise did go after him to Ostend, that would be unfortunate. He hated the idea of giving her a journey for nothing. But she would not leave for a day or two, and he would find means of communicating with her…. He shuddered; for at the back of the vision of Heloise, stood the large, brutal husband who was mad, mad. There were two hours to wait before he could put his plan into operation. He telephoned from his bedroom to a booksellerโs in the Buckingham Palace Road. โHave you a good life of Peter the Great?โ he asked. They had two. He ordered them to be sent to him immediately. He was rather amused with himself. He was less amused when he heard of the fate of one who had aspired to the affections of Catherine, and whose head had been placed into a large glass jar and displayed in Catherineโs boudoir to remind her that husbands have their feelings. There was another gentleman who loved Catherine, and him Peter had hanged on a high gibbet, under which he promenaded arm in arm with Catherine. The arm and arm was a domestic touch not lost upon Gordon. On the whole, he decided thoughtfully, a profound admiration for Peterโs character would have no softening tendency upon any man, especially a man who was mad, mad. He put away his book, drew on his overcoat, and, passing down in the elevator, found his cab still waiting, the meter bloated with charges. He had forgotten all about the cab. At the corner of the street he paid the man and walked rapidly into Cheynel Gardens, his nose showing above the collar of his overcoat. Happily, the street was empty. He almost ran when he reached the familiar faรงade of his house, turned into the side passage, and, with a trembling hand, fitted the key into the lock of the back gate. Suppose it were bolted? The horrid doubt was no sooner in his mind than it was dispelled. The key turned easily, and he found himself looking up at the familiar window of his study. Tiptoeing to the little door, he listened. There was no sound, and, with minute care to avoid making the slightest noise, he pushed his pass-key slowly in the lock, and pushed the door open a fraction of an inch. Not a sound. He opened it a little further, slipped behind the curtain which hid the door, and closed it behind him. The room was empty, the two doors into the hall ajar. He could hear the solemn ticking of the grandfather clock on the staircase. His first step, he had decided, must be to get into touch with Bobbie. Listening at the hall door, he heard the click of steel on china–Diana was at lunch, as he had expected. He closed first the baize, and then the inner door softly, shot a bolt and tiptoed across the room. Bless Diana for bringing the telephone into The Study! Bobbieโs office responded. A late leaving clerk had heard the ring of the โphone and came back to answer. โNo, sir, Mr. Selsbury is not in to-day.โ Gordon rang off without disclosing his identity, and tried Bobbieโs lodgings in Half Moon Street, with no better success. He was wasting valuable time, he realised, and Bobbie could wait. He put on the receiver and stood up, stretching himself, with an easy, happy, home-coming smile. Yes, Diana would be surprised. He crossed the room to the hall. His hand was on the handle when, glancing round, he saw the curtain which hid the door into the courtyard move and billow. He had left the door open, he thought, and was on the point of returning to close it, when a hand came round the edge of the curtain, and he stood, frozen to the spot. Again the draperies moved, and a woman came into view. It was Heloise! Gordon did not believe the evidence of his eyes. She was some vision conjured up by an overheated brain, a symptom of disordered nerves. โYou are not real,โ he said dully. โAvaunt!โ โGordon!โ The outstretched hands, the plea in her eyes. Gordon Selsbury stood with his back to the door. โHow did you come here?โ he croaked. โThrough the garden gate–the way you came…. I followed you. Gordon, he is furious! You must protect me.โ He could only stare at her owlishly. โYou mean–Peter?โ he nodded. โPeter? No, my husband, Claude. He knows everything!โ dramatically. โIs he … an editor?โ He was talking foolishly: nobody knew that better than Gordon; but the works were beginning to slow down again. And then she came to him and dropped both her hands on his arm. โYou want me to stay here, donโt you? You wonโt turn me out …? He followed me, but I slipped him.โ โStay here?โ Gordon hardly recognised his own voice. โAre you mad?โ She looked at him suspiciously. โAre you married?โ โNo.โ And then a flashing inspiration. โYes.โ โYes-no,โ she said impatiently. โWhat are you–divorced?โ โNo. You see how absurd it is, Heloise.โ โYou are married to Diana.โ She pointed an accusing finger. Gordon could only nod idiotically. โYou really must go,โ he squeaked. โThis may mean ruin for me!โ Her lips curled as she drew back, hands on hips. โDo I get any of that ruin?โ she demanded. โYou must go back to your husband.โ His brain was alert now. โTell him you have made a mistake—-โ โHe pretty well guesses that,โ she interrupted bitterly, and slowly took off her wrap. Instantly Gordon seized it. โPut it on, put it on!โ he wailed, but she twisted herself loose. โI will not go, I will not! Oh, Gordon, you canโt turn me out after all weโve been to one another! After all the confidences!โ He was pushing her toward the courtyard door, a man beside himself, frenzied with fear, terrified beyond hope of succour. โOut of the side door!โ he hissed. โI will meet you in half an hour, at a teashop somewhere. Heloise, donโt you realise my reputation depends—-โ It needed but this to pull the mask from her face. โTeashop! I am to be thrown to the lions!โ He looked hard at her. Could a woman pun in such a solemn moment? โAs to your reputation,โ she drawled coolly, โthat sort of thing doesnโt make me get out of bed and walk round, I assure you! I will not leave this house–alone!โ Gordon covered his mouth with his hand. He was in no danger of talking. He wanted to cover her mouth with his hand, but she was too far away. It was an involuntary gesture which silenced her. She heard the knock at the door, and then Dianaโs voice: โWho is there?โ He pointed to the side door, grimacing. Heloise was adamant. โWhoโs there?โ said Diana. โSide door,โ whispered Gordon frantically. Heloise shook her head, hesitated, and then stole silently behind the curtain into the recess. It was her final compromise. โWho is there? Who locked the door?โ Dianaโs voice was urgent. Gordon straightened his coat, smoothed his hair, unlocked the door and threw it wide open. โItโs all right, dear.โ He was grinning inanely like a cat. โHa ha–itโs only Gordon–Gord, as you would say! Iโm just coming out … here I am back again … like a bad penny.โ In Dianaโs eyes was a glitter which he did not like, and as she advanced he backed instantly before her. โOnly old Gordon–ha ha!โ he said feebly. โVery funny. Iโll laugh to-morrow,โ said Diana. The vulgarity of the ancient music-hall gag did not even arouse him. โSo itโs only old Gordon, is it?โ She nodded wisely. โSit over there–old Gordon!โ She pointed to a chair. โNow look here, my dear girl.โ It was a very colourless imitation of his best manner. โThe whole thing can be explained. I lost my train….โ She was opening a drawer in the writing table, slowly, deliberately, her eyes never leaving his face. When her hand came to view, it held a Browning. _Click!_ The jacket snapped back. It was loaded. โWhat are you doing, Diana?โ he squeaked again. Her eyes were now murderous. โWill you be good enough not to call me Diana?โ she asked icily. โSo youโve come, have you? And even I, who expect most things, didnโt expect you. But, my friend, youโve come at an opportune hour!โ โLook here, old girl–โ he began. โYou can omit the familiarities.โ She waved him down to his chair. โNever imagine that you will deceive me–I know you!โ โYou know me?โ he said hoarsely. He had come to a point where he wasnโt quite certain whether he knew himself. โI know you,โ she repeated slowly. โYouโre Double Dan!โ He leapt to his feet, the pistol covering him. Waving wild hands, he strove to speak. โYouโre Double Dan,โ she said, and the fire in her eyes was now ominous. โIโve heard about you. Youโre the impersonator. You and your woman confederate lure innocent men from their homes, that you can rob them.โ She looked round. โWhere is the woman? Doesnโt she appear on the scene, or does her work finish when the luring is completed?โ โDiana, I swear to you youโre mistaken. Iโm Gordon, your cousin.โ She smiled slowly. โYou havenโt been as careful as usual, Dan. And the fact that I call you by your Christian name need not inspire you with a desire to get better acquainted. You havenโt studied him. My cousin, Gordon Selsbury, had little side-whiskers–didnโt you know that?โ โI–I had an accident. In fact,โ said Gordon, โI took them off … to please you.โ Her sneering smile chilled him through and through. โMy cousin Gordon is not the kind of man who would have an accident with his whiskers,โ she said with cold deliberation. โWhere is your lady friend?โ He tried to look away from the curtained recess, stared solemnly ahead of him, but involuntarily his eyes strayed to the garden door. And then Diana saw the slightest of movements. โCome out, please,โ she said. There was no response. โCome out, or Iโll shoot!โ The curtain grew agitated. Heloise, white of face, flew across the room, flinging herself upon Gordonโs heaving bosom. โDonโt let her shoot me! Donโt let her shoot me!โ she shrieked. Diana looked and nodded. โSo this man is your husband!โ she said. Walking back to the door, she closed it. โNow listen to me, Double Dan and Mrs. Double Dan, or whatever your names may be. You are here to commit a felony, and I could, if I wished, send for the police and hand you over to justice. Iโm not sure that I shanโt take that course. For the moment, however, your presence is providential.โ And then, in scorn: โGordon Selsbury! Do you imagine Gordon Selsbury would bring a woman to this house furtively? Do you imagine he would come dressed like a third-class comedian? Never dare mention Mr. Selsburyโs name again in my presence!โ Gordon opened and closed his mouth, but no words came. โYou will stay here until I give you permission to go.โ She went to the garden gate, closed and slammed it, then came back to Gordon. โYou had a key? Give it to me,โ she said curtly. Gordon obeyed, lamb-like, watching her as she double-locked the door. And then he made his last desperate attempt. โDiana, I can explain everything,โ he said hoarsely. โI am–the fact is–Iโll tell you the truth. I was going abroad, and the fact is, I am Gordon, although I may not seem so. I admit Iโm wearing the most disgustingly loud suit, and that I have in other ways changed my appearance, but that also can be explained.โ There was a knock on the panel of the door. โWait,โ said Diana, and walked backward to the entrance. โWho is it?โ โEleanor, madam. A telegram.โ โPush it under the door.โ An orange envelope came into sight, and, picking it up, she tore away the cover and read the form. โGo on,โ she signalled to Gordon. โYou say you are Gordon Selsbury? Tell me some more. But before you do so, listen to this: โโJust leaving Euston. Take care of yourself. Gordon.โ โNow there need be no deception on either side. Open your heart to me, little man. Who are you–Gordon Selsbury or Double Dan?โ โAnything!โ The wail of the damned. โGordon Selsbury or Double Dan?โ she demanded inexorably. He threw out his hands. โDouble Dan,โ snarled Gordon. Of the two alternative rรดles, this seemed the more creditable. Chapter 13. He had never seen anybody as scared as Heloise was; that was the one clear impression which Gordon carried away from the interview. She, the self-possessed woman of the world, a soul, one superior to the lesser grades of humanity, seemed to have cowered and shrunk under the domination of Dianaโs baleful eye. Gordon sighed, tied his baize apron a little tighter round his waist, and wondered where Trenter kept his stock of plate powder. On the whole, it was good that Trenter was away, and that he was spared the sight of his masterโs humiliation. If indeed it was a humiliation to be thrust into an ill-lit pantry with instructions to clean the silver, and be ready at a momentโs notice to make himself presentable. Gordon tried again and attacked a cream-jug half-heartedly. His hands were not designed for housework. Yet he would as soon have thought of cutting his throat with a fruit knife (half-a-dozen of which awaited his attention) as disobey Dianaโs imperious gesture which had sent him off to the pantry to clean silver. He was not asleep; he had made absolutely certain of this; he was wide awake, in his shirt sleeves, a baize apron covering his detestable suit, and he was polishing a cream, or it may have been a milk jug. That fact being firmly and inevitably established, he had some basis for reasoning and wonder. Chief cause for wonder was why Diana kept him in the house at all, believing him to be Double Dan; why she did not send immediately for the police and have him taken off to the nearest lock-up. He was devoutly thankful that she hadnโt! The second cause for wonder was what had happened to the remainder of the domestic staff? Eleanor he had not seen. There was no evidence that the cook was on the premises. Here again this fact provided him with a certain amount of satisfaction–but where were they? He was to learn. Diana made her appearance at the door of the pantry and he stared at her open-mouthed. Around her dainty waist was a broad leather belt, and, hanging by two straps, was a pistol holster, from the opening of which protruded the black handle of a Browning. โDo you know anything about potatoes?โ she asked curtly. Gordon was ashamed to discover that he knew nothing about potatoes, except that they were vegetables. โHave you ever _peeled_ potatoes?โ โI canโt remember,โ he said. โWhen I was at school I think we used to peel potatoes—-โ โIโm not interested in what happened at Borstal–that is the name of the juvenile convict establishment, isnโt it? Put that milk-jug down and come into the kitchen.โ He followed her meekly. There was no sign of the cook; Eleanor was invisible, and he learnt the reason. โIโve sent my servants away for a week-end holiday,โ she said. โI want no scandal attaching to my cousinโs name. I will not even have it known that this attempt has been made to swindle him. You understand that you will not try to leave the house?โ โYes,โ he nodded. โNaturally, it is impossible that I should keep up day and night watching you,โ she said, โso I have asked a friend to come in and help me.โ A gleam of hope showed in Gordonโs eyes. โA detective,โ she said impressively, โa Mr. Superbus–a name, I think with which you are well acquainted.โ โThat … that …?โ spluttered Gordon indignantly. โThat,โ she said. A bell shrilled in the kitchen. She looked up at the indicator. The little disc which represented the front door was oscillating violently. โThere are the potatoes,โ she pointed to them. Gordon saluted. He was once in the army and it seemed natural to salute. No sooner had she gone than he decided upon his course of action. He was well enough acquainted with the house to know that there was a kitchen door and for this he made. It was locked; the key had been taken away; the windows of scullery and kitchen were heavily barred against burglars. Gordon returned to his potatoes with a sigh. He sighed easily in these hours. Again the bell rang. Diana heard it as she unbuckled the strap of her revolver belt, and put away the weapon into the hall cupboard. She hesitated a second with her hand on the doorknob, and then the thunderous rat-tat forced her to action. She opened the door. The moment had come. Before she saw the bearded gentleman she knew he was there. โThree oโclock!โ he cried exultantly, and threw out both his hands. โThree oโclock, my bride, my dove, my life!โ โCome in,โ said Diana practically. He would have taken her in his arms, but she held him at a distance. โThe servants,โ she said and swiftly eluded his embracing arms. โIn here,โ she opened The Study door. โGuiseppi, you must behave–you really must. My uncle—-โ โYour uncle!โ He gazed at her ecstatically. She nodded. โIn this house?โ She ought to have been warned by his fervour, but the immediate necessities of the moment threw her off her balance. โWhy, of course heโs here,โ she said. โYour uncle is here!โ There was triumph in his tone, his wild eyes fixed her. โWhy … why yes, Guiseppi,โ she faltered and he closed his eyes in a rapt smile. โThen the dream of my life is to be fulfilled. Your telephone–I may use it, yes?โ He was at the telephone before she could say yes or no. She heard him give a number, his hotel, and then: โYou will have my bags sent here at once, to Cheynel Gardens, yes? Two bags, do you not understand English? My grip, bags, send them to this place. What is the name, Cheynel? Yes, that is it, Cheynel Gardens, Number 61. You cannot mistake it. My pyjamas you will not forget. They are under my pillow.โ โGuiseppi!โ she gasped. โWhat are you doing? Wait! You canโt stay here!โ โYes, here, under your roof. The glory of it! It is wonderful, a fulfilment of dreams, oh my starry vision! Without your good uncle it was impossible. You have a new aunt? Ah, the poor Mrs. Tetherby! It was comical, to me tragic, yet this moment comical again!โ โBut Guiseppi,โ she wailed, โyou canโt stay. My uncle doesnโt like people staying in the house….โ He patted her shoulder. โWe shall charm him. We shall overcome his objections! Tell me his hobby, I will speak about it. There is no subject under the sun on which I cannot speak.โ This she believed. โYour aunt! To me your aunt! Bring her at once that I may shake her hand and kiss her on both cheeks. The aunt of Diana! Oh divine relationship!โ In a dazed kind of way Diana realized that the Italian side of Mr. Dempsi had developed to an enormous and unbearable extent. He could not keep still for a moment. Now he was at the fireplace, examining the crossed oars. โYou have learnt to row, my little Diana? That is wonderful! We shall row together upon the stream of Time, drinking the waters of Lethe and forgetting the past.โ In two strides he had reached her, gripping both her hands in his. โDiana, do you realise how I have dreamt of all this, through the long nights in the bush, in the waste places of the Northern Territories, where I wandered seeking gold and forgetfulness and finding neither? In the silence of the native hut, broken by the little birdsโ twittering in the darkness, and no other sound but the sighing of the wind–your face was there! Your exquisite memorable features, the glory of your hair, your eyes that smiled and tormented….โ He broke off abruptly. โYour uncle … produce him….โ Gordon had peeled his third potato when Diana staggered into the kitchen. They were big potatoes when he started to deal with them. They were very small when he had finished. It was difficult to know where the skin began and ended; he had cut deep to make sure. At the sight of her tragic face he dropped his potato. โAnything wrong?โ โWrong? Everythingโs wrong!โ she said bitterly. โIโm going to give you your chance. I donโt like your name, Dan, and Iโve changed it. Youโre Isaac!โ โWho!โ he twittered. โYouโre Isaac, my uncle Isaac!โ He put down the knife, wiped his hands on his apron and went slowly across to her. โI am not your uncle Isaac,โ he began. โTake off _that_!โ she pointed to the apron. โPut on your coat and come upstairs. Remember, youโre uncle Isaac and that terrible female–where is she?โ โHow the dickens do I know where she is?โ asked the annoyed Gordon. โWait!โ Diana flew up the stairs to the top of the house and in the spare room where she had intended putting the hired man and wife, she found Heloise sitting disconsolately on the edge of the bed, a suspicious wetness about her eyes. When the door was unlocked and flung open, the woman jumped up. โNow, see here, Mrs. Selsbury,โ she began in her high voice, โI donโt know the law of this country but youโve no right to lock me in—-โ โDo you want me to send for the police?โ asked Diana, calm but menacing. โI tell you youโre all wrong, Mrs. Selsbury,โ said Heloise with great earnestness. โYouโve made the biggest mistake of your life. That poor fish is your husband.โ โI have no husband–fish, flesh, fowl or herring,โ said Diana. โI never had a husband,โ and then remembering, โI am a widow.โ Heloise was momentarily staggered. โYou can forget all that has happened to-day,โ said Diana speaking a little wildly. โA visitor has come–he is staying in the house … an old friend of mine … in fact, I was once engaged to him until he died in the bush.โ โIs he here?โ asked the startled Heloise. โHe is here,โ nodded Diana, โand he is remaining. Obviously, I cannot allow him to stay unless I have a chaperone. You are,โ she spoke deliberately, โAunt Lizzie.โ Heloise could only look at her. โYouโre Aunt Lizzie and your wretched criminal husband, or whatever he is (I can only hope for the best) is Uncle Isaac. Go right down into the kitchen and tell him.โ โLet me get this right,โ said Heloise slowly. โI am Aunt Lizzie … you want me to be your Aunt Lizzie…. and that poor child is to be …?โ โUncle Isaac.โ โI havenโt gotten it right yet,โ said Heloise, โthis is a cinema lot … youโre playing somepโn,โ she had forgotten momentarily that she was a lady of fashion and culture. โIโm Aunt Lizzie…. โ She sank under the burden that had been imposed upon her. โYouโre all crazy, thatโs what. Iโm an American citizen, or near American…. Toronto, but I live so close that I could throw a stone across the border. And Iโm Aunt Lizzie!โ Chapter 14. Gordon was playing absently with potato peelings when she came in. โYouโre Uncle Isaac!โ she said in a strained, hazy fashion. โWhere have you been, Heloise?โ The sight of his companion in misfortune brought him with a jerk to normal. Heloise was real, something to cling to; he forgot his resentment in the joy of seeing something that anchored him to Gordon Selsbury. โSay Gordon, that Jane … sheโs Diana, huh?โ He nodded. โYour wife, you never told me that?โ โShe is not my wife … she has no right here … if I gave you cause to think I was married it was because I wanted you to go. Donโt you see what youโve done? Youโve ruined me! If you had only kept away–if you had only kept away!โ he moaned. โSheโs your widow,โ she was very quiet and restrained. He decided that she had lost her reason. โYes, if you like, sheโs my widow,โ he said soothingly. โSit down…. I will get you a glass of water.โ โDiana!โ said Heloise in wonder. โThatโs your little Australian girl…. Gordon, was she a cop?โ โA what?โ โA headquarters woman! Sheโs got the style. Come on.โ โWhere?โ โShe wants us …โ said Heloise listlessly. โWhatโs the good of fighting, Gordon? Weโre entangled in the mesh of circumstance.โ It was a favourite profundity of Heloise; he had heard her say it many times. But they were not entangled then. Five minutes later. A small brown-faced man was shaking Gordon by the hand, by both hands, by alternate hands. In the interval of shaking, he held hands. โYour uncle … and so young! And yet, he is older than he seems! And this is Aunt Lizzie!โ He kissed the patient Heloise on both cheeks. Gordon was a dumbfounded spectator. Who was this infernal little cad, he demanded–Diana had omitted an introduction. After a while it came. โThis, Uncle Isaac, is Mr. Guiseppi Dempsi–you remember how often I have spoken of him.โ Her steely glance was unnecessary. Gordon remembered. โI thought he was dead.โ So intense were his feelings that his voice dropped to a deep base. It startled even himself. โBut I am alive! Rejoice, Uncle Isaac! Your little Wopsy is alive! I have come back from the shades! A syrenโs sweet magic brought me across the world, yea, even through the shadows….โ He pointed with his whole hand to Diana and then. โMy bride!โ he said tremendously. Gordon looked from one to the other. โDempsi … bride … bride Dempsi….โ โPerfectly ridiculous,โ said Gordon and quailed under a fiendish glare from Diana. But Mr. Dempsi was too happy to find anything in the interruption but a piece of rare good humour. โWe will have long talks, you and my uncle!โ he said and beamed round on his hostess. โTell me, little one, have I changed? Ah, but I was a boy then, a weak, vacillating ignorant boy. I did not realize that to win a woman she must be carried off her feet. To whine and wail for her, that is no good; to be diffident and timid–that is no good. To sigh at her feet bores her, to be humble arouses the greatest contempt … women desire in men the grand manner, biff, bang, boff!โ โUncle has to go now to … to feed the chickens,โ said Diana hurriedly. Mr. Guiseppi Dempsi must neither biff, bang nor boff at 61 Cheynel Gardens. Dismayed she realized how broken were the reeds on which she had leant. They also were to know. She came into the kitchen after them. โYouโre no good, either of you,โ she was in despair. โI suppose youโre good crooks, but that is because you havenโt the brains to be anything else. You stood like wax figures from the Chamber of Horrors and did _nothing_!โ โWhat were we supposed to do?โ Gordon was stung into enquiring. โIf Iโd done what I wanted to do, Iโd have thrown the little wop into the street! But youโre master here. You wonโt accept a perfectly simple explanation—-โ โYour perfectly simple explanation doesnโt go with Aunt Lizzie,โ she stopped him in her most imperial manner. โYou might have deceived me but for that–be sensible, man. I _know_ youโre Double Dan. I want to use you if I can–if I canโt Iโll send for the police. Iโm expecting Mr. Superbus at any moment–you will be under his eye; try to conduct yourself as an uncle would.โ Gordon writhed. โHow can I behave like an uncle when youโre setting an infernal bottle-nosed enquiry agent to watch me?โ demanded Gordon hotly. โIt is no crime to be an uncle, my good girl! You canโt say โWatch that man, heโs my Uncle Isaac!โ By your standard of ethics, an uncle may be a suspicious circumstance, but in this country it isnโt … what excuse can you give?โ Her lips curled. โI can say that you are weak-minded,โ she said, cold-bloodedly, โand that is just what I am going to say!โ Gordon leant against the table for support. โIโm not weak-minded,โ he protested. They waited until the sound of Dianaโs footsteps had died away. โThis comes of trips to Ostend,โ said Mr. Selsbury with a catch in his voice. โIf youโd gone to Ostend that couldnโt have happened,โ said Heloise fiercely. โDoes it occur to you that my husband has followed us and is at this moment sitting on the doorstep waiting to free your poor spirit from this earthly bondage?โ Gordon passed his hand wearily over his forehead. He was in the depths of despondency. โI donโt care,โ he said. โI donโt care about your husband. Heโs probably a sensible man to whom one could explain things. Diana is so infernally sure of herself that you canโt argue with her.โ Sitting on the edge of the table, she had lit a cigarette, and was sending blue, twisting rings of smoke into the air. She did not speak for a long time, and then only to break in upon Gordonโs gloomy thoughts. โMy, I wish I was back home in my little apartment on a hundred โnโ thoity-ninth Street!โ she quavered. Mr. Selsbury was visibly surprised. He had never heard her say โthoityโ before. Diana had come to feel unaccountably fagged. There was no adequate reason, for as a rule she was tireless; but the succession of demands upon her nervous energy was telling. She had to watch for tradesmen, she had to answer the door; a dozen times she was called from The Study to interview callers of all kinds who, obeying the large notice she had hand-printed and stuck on the kitchen door, โPlease come to the main entrance: this door is not in use,โ fed her with packages of grocery, baskets of meat, trays of fish. The amount of food that was consumed at No. 61 was appalling; she, at any rate, was appalled. Toward evening, when Dempsi was fidgetting for the dinner she had forgotten to order, a man called. He was poorly dressed, unsavoury of appearance. His thin, yellow face was unshaven and he carried his head slightly askew. The sight of Diana took him aback for a moment. โGood evening, miss,โ he said, touching his cap. โIโve called for the money.โ โWhose money?โ she asked, surprised. โMine: I cleaned the windows yesterday.โ Then she recalled him. Heloise had complained that the man was โnosing round The Study,โ and expressed doubts about his honesty and bona fides. โName of Stark, miss,โ he said encouragingly. โI remember.โ She went in search of her bag. When she came back, he was examining the lock of the door with professional interest. He was once a lock-maker, he offered the excuse for his curiosity. If Diana had not been wearing very soft-soled boots, the excuse would have been unnecessary. โMr. Selsbury not in, miss?โ as she counted the money in his hand. โNo,โ she said shortly. โMr. Trenter in, miss?โ โNo.โ Her eyes gleamed. โWill Mr. Selsbury be away long–I wanted to see him about a job?โ โI donโt know when he will be back,โ she said. โThere are several men in the house: would you like to see one?โ His expression changed. โNo, thank you, miss.โ She closed the door on him and wondered when the Watch Dog would arrive. There was still a lot of money in the safe. Those unaware of her obligations to Mr. Dempsi might imagine there was more. Dempsi had wandered out of the room when she came in, and she went swiftly to the safe. It was one of those old-fashioned receptables that had, in addition to the combination, a further lock operated by a key. Gordon had once told her that the key was never used; he had once mislaid it and had to summon experts to open the door. She searched his writing-table, pulling out drawers (she opened them all without difficulty) and at last, in a small envelope inscribed gratuitously โKey,โ she found what she sought. โThank goodness!โ said Diana. A turn of her wrist and the safe was secure even against those who by cunning or violence had obtained the code word. Mr. Julius Superbus came importantly, descending from a taxicab and drawing out after him a large tin box, mottled red and black. He produced, also from the interior of the cab, a large scrap-book fastened about with a broad green canvas strap. He also delivered from the cab a daring golf cap. These he deposited on the sidewalk, paid the taximan his fare, climbing inside to verify what had seemed to be a preposterous statement of claim, and donated the driver sixpence. Diana in the note she had scrawled had added a P.S. โSpare no expense.โ Gathering his belongings under both arms, he went up the steps, stooped and pressed the bell with his nose, a clever little device that had once come to him as an inspiration and which in itself advertised his originality. Diana answered the door. โYou sent for me,โ said Julius simply. โI have come.โ She was obviously relieved to see him, and piloted him into the dining-room. โMr. Superbus, I am going to make great demands upon you, and Iโm sure I shall not ask in vain. I am in the greatest trouble.โ He inclined his head. โHave you searched all your clothes?โ he asked quickly. โYouโve lost something–I know this by, so to speak, a method of my own. Itโs natural to suspect servants–but do they do it, maโam? Not once in fifty times—-โ โIโve lost nothing. Mr. Superbus, my uncle is here—-โ She was doubtful as to how she should go on. Should she take him entirely into her confidence? A wild idea, but not without its advantage. โRelations,โ the Roman pronounced, โare best apart. They come, they borrow money, they eat you out of house and home, and when they go, they havenโt a good word for you. Uncles especially. Leave him to me, maโam; Iโll put the case to him man to man. Heโll be out of this house …โ he looked at his watch–โin five minutes.โ She enlightened him briefly: her uncle was a welcome visitor; a nice man, very much like Mr. Selsbury in appearance and as young. Only … she tapped her forehead. Mr. Superbus understood. โTact,โ he said, โtact and humour. Let โem think theyโre havinโ their way and then the iron hand in the velvet glove–an expression I invented myself,โ he appended modestly. โLeave him to me. You couldnโt come to anybody better than me, maโam. Weโve had several lunatics in our familyโ–Diana stepped back a pace–โand his good lady is here?โ โAunt Lizzie.โ โThat makes it a _little_ awkward,โ regretted Superbus, โowing to the difficulty of watching him when heโs asleep. Unless Aunt Lizzie would mind? I am a family man.โ โShe might object,โ said Diana. โNo, I donโt think that you need do that. If you can keep a general eye on him. He must not leave the house on any excuse.โ Mr. Superbus smiled. โYou neednโt worry about that, maโam,โ he said. There followed more instructions and warnings. Diana flew into The Study to pacify a distracted Dempsi, whose urgent voice had interrupted her twice during the interview with the detective. Mr. Superbus went into the kitchen thoughtfully. He saw no resemblance between Gordon Selsbury and his uncle. He noted that in Aunt Lizzieโs face was an expression of uneasiness. โGood afternoon,โ he said. โMy nameโs Smith.โ Gordon pointed to the door. โGo out and change it,โ he said. Mr. Superbus was amused. โI thought Iโd pop down and have a look at you, Uncle Isaac,โ he said, and bowed to the lady, โand Aunt Lizzie.โ He radiated compassion. โGet out!โ roared Gordon, red of face. โGo back to the lady who employs you and tell her that I give her ten minutes to hand me my keys and kick her infernal Dempsi out of the house!โ โWhatโs the good?โ It was Heloise who spoke. โIf you make a fuss youโll be seeing the judge on Monday.โ โI donโt care!โ Gordon was toeing the limit. โI simply donโt care. Iโm the master of this house and I will assert myself.โ โSay, Gor-don! What am I–one of the extras? Ainโt I got any say in this? You donโt care! Well, Iโm certainly glad youโre that way–itโs grand. But I allowed myself to be trapped by a she-octopus and Iโll find another way of getting out than taking the short trail to the hutch. And the only way out is to behave.โ Mr. Superbus agreed. He was not unprepared for the claim that Gordon was master of the house: against this strange hallucination on the part of Uncle Isaac that he was his own nephew, Diana had warned him. โYouโre a good lad and Iโm a good lad,โ he murmured. โWeโre all good lads together.โ He winked at Heloise. Susceptible to such signals, Heloise winked back. It was maddening–to what degree, Gordon learnt painfully. Mr. Superbus was so kind and so helpful and so tolerant. Gordon went into his pantry and searched for a large, razor-sharp carving knife. There are some things no man can endure–kindness is one of them. Chapter 15. โLife,โ said Mr. Dempsi, stretching the toes of his small feet to the fire with a luxurious intake of breath, โis a beautiful thing. From the utter depths of loveless despair to the sublime accomplishment of heartโs desire–what a transition, my own!โ โMr. Dempsi–โ began Diana. โWopsy,โ he murmured reproachfully. โWell–Wopsy. I have allowed you to stay because I wanted a quiet talk with you. A quiet talk,โ she stressed the qualification as he reached out for a hand that was not there. โSilence is so wonderful.โ He turned his languishing eyes upon her. โSilence and thought and The Woman.โ But Diana had her piece to say, carefully prepared and rehearsed in the solitude of her room. โFive years ago you were good enough to ask me to marry you. I refused. People say that young girls are brainless–the fact that I declined the honour you offered is proof to the contrary. What I felt then, I feel now. My heart is in the grave!โ โ_My_ grave.โ His smile was melancholy but complacent. โDonโt be silly. You are alive, Iโm sorry–I mean I should be sorry if you werenโt. I had a lover–my heart went out to him, Wopsy,โ–her voice trembled, she thought there were tears in his sympathetic eyes, โbut he passed.โ โRan away from you?โ Mr. Dempsi sat up. โWhen I say โpassedโโ–there was more than a trace of acid in Dianaโs voice–โI mean … to the Great Beyond.โ โPegged out?โ Dempsi shrugged. โThese things happen. Once I loved a girl–oh, Diana, such a girl amongst girls! Tall, divinely fair, gracious in every look and movement. She also passed–to the Great Beyond.โ โShe died?โ whispered Diana. โShe went on to the stage–in America,โ said Dempsi. โShe was dead to me. I cut her out of my heart. I could have killed myself, but I said: โWopsy, have you forgotten your little Diana–your first, your only love?โ With a courage that I have often admired, I forgot her. She is now the greatest screen vamp in Hollywood. I see her frequently without a tremor. Such things happen.โ Diana was unmoved, though a little discouraged. โMy love will never be forgotten,โ she gulped. โWopsy, you see how impossible it is–did you get the money?โ โThe money–you sent it to me? But, Diana, how foolish!โ โI sent it by cheque,โ she said. He sank back again in his chair. โYou are a foolish little one. Money!โ He laughed cruelly. โHow you Anglo-Saxons worship money! To men of my temperament …!โ He snapped his fingers. โAs to your unfaithfulness to the great ideal I provided, your heartless disregard for my memory, I forgive you. You were only a child–you could not be expected to cherish the memory of the man who died for you. That is past. We belong to the Day–to-morrow, Monday, Tuesday we shall be married.โ โWhat are we doing on Wednesday?โ she asked. โForgive me for looking so far ahead.โ For a second he was disconcerted, uneasy: that he betrayed in his laughter. โMy dear little Diana, how droll you are—-โ โListen, Dempsi or Wopsy, as the case may be–you are returning to your hotel to-morrow. We are not getting married on Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday. Shall I tell you why? I see that you are interested. Because I donโt want to marry you.โ His face darkened. โThis is Uncle Isaac!โ he said between his teeth. โThe influence of that man is diabolical! All my life I have been thwarted by aunts and uncles. He shall answer to me–Guiseppi Dempsi!โ He flung out of his chair, took two strides toward the door, when she caught his arms desperately. โLet me go,โ he stormed. โIf you leave this room I will telephone for the police!โ The tension relaxed. โFor me–the police for me!โ He covered his face in his hands and his shoulders heaved convulsively. Diana felt no regrets. โAnd she of whom I dreamt threatens me. Let me die!โ Diana let him. At the end of three minutes he was still alive. โMr. Dempsi, dry your eyes.โ Like a faithful but heart-broken hound, he obeyed. โYou may stay here to-night,โ she said; โyour bedroom is at the top of the stairs. I hope you sleep well. If you want anything, ring the bell. Good-night.โ He turned wearily toward the door. โThis is not Diana.โ His dejection would have touched a heart of stone. Diana was unmoved. She heard his door close, went silently up the stairs and slipped a key into the lock. He heard, too late, the grating of steel against steel. Before he could reach the door the lock snapped. โWho is that–who has locked the door? Open it at once.โ โIt is I,โ said Diana in a low voice. โBut, Diana, this is extraordinary!โ โI do it for your own protection,โ she whispered through the keyhole. โUncle Isaac does not like you–and _he is armed_.โ A silence. โBut this is dangerous! If there is a fire—-โ โUse the extinguisher!โ she hissed. โIt is hanging in the wardrobe.โ She was tired, aching in every limb, immensely lonely. Oh, for the comforting presence of Gordon! Or even Eleanor, at that moment sitting in agitated conference with Mrs. Magglesark, discussing the strange behaviour of mistresses in general and Australian mistresses in particular. Happily there was Mr. Superbus. The faint sound of music came up from the servantsโ hall as she descended the stairs. Mr. Superbus was playing a mouth-organ softly, almost musically. Aunt Lizzie sat before the kitchen fire, chin in hand. Uncle Isaac leant against the kitchen dresser, glowering at the musician. The harmonies were confirmed as she opened the door. โHad a pleasant evening?โ she asked. โIโve had nothing to eat but bread and cheese,โ said Gordon. โThis little joke of yours is going too far, Diana.โ She looked at him aghast. โWe didnโt have any dinner!โ she said in dismay, tempered with the satisfaction that Dempsi was at that moment starving in his locked room. โI havenโt even had bread and cheese–it is time for you to go to bed.โ โIโll go when I please,โ said Gordon loudly. Mr. Superbus shook his head reprovingly. โNaughty, naughty!โ he chided. โThatโs not like my Uncle Isaac. And heโs been such a good boy, maโam, singing as gay as a lark.โ Gordon blushed. โI didnโt sing, you jackass!โ he growled. โDidnโt he sing, Aunt Lizzie?โ She shrugged indifferent shoulders. โWell, if he didnโt sing he โummed,โ insisted Mr. Superbus. His repertoire on the mouth-organ included the Eton Boating Song–Gordon was an old Etonian. Doubtless he had โummed: no Etonian could resist the lilt of it. โTo bed,โ said Diana curtly. Swinging her keys, she had the appearance of a jailer. โYou will regret this,โ said Gordon between his teeth. โI can bring a thousand people to identify me.โ โAnd how many to identify Aunt Lizzie?โ asked Diana with a curl of her lips. Gordon had no answer. She had the exasperating habit of shutting every door in his face, dispelling every wild vision of liberty that hope conjured to shape. Heloise was not silenced. โWhy, thatโs not going to be difficult,โ she drawled. โIโm Mrs. van Oynne of 71 Clarence Gate Gardens.โ โVery good,โ nodded Diana. โYou are at liberty to telephone to the police and allow them to identify you. Iโll tell them that by an error I have mistaken you for Double Danโs–what is the word? partners? They will put things right.โ Heloise got up. โI was never strong for fighting,โ she said. โIโm going to bed.โ Diana led the way, Gordon came after, Mr. Superbus followed, emitting soft tuning noises from his mouth-organ. Were it in his repertoire, Gordon would have selected โThe Death of Asaโ as an appropriate accompaniment to that solemn march. He imagined himself a malefactor on his way to execution. Diana had the air of hangman and private torturer. โGood-night,โ he said mechanically, and stopped at the door of his room. โNot in there!โ Her loud whisper was threatening. He followed to the floor above. The room chosen was that in which Diana said she intended sleeping the man and wife who were to be engaged for the autumn cleaning. Heloise went in–she knew the room. โGood-night,โ she said. โYou have forgotten something,โ said Diana. โIf you think Iโm going to kiss you, thereโs a surprise coming to you, girl,โ said Heloise, and tried to shut the door. โYour husband,โ said Diana primitively. The door slammed, Diana heard a chair dragged across the room, and guessed that the back of it was being propped under the handle. Gordonโs throat went dry. โYou have quarrelled?โ said Diana. โOr perhaps you donโt….โ โI donโt!โ The voice came from his stomach–he had never suspected such a range of sound in himself. โThatโs very awkward.โ She tapped her lips with a key. โYouโll have to go into the spare room. Come down.โ The spare room was at the far end of the passage and the bed had not been made up. โThere are the blankets,โ said Diana and pointed. โTo-morrow I will find sheets for you. The bed is more comfortable than any youโll find at the police station.โ She locked the door on him. The window was open, but there was no method of reaching safety. Here the wall dropped sheerly to the bottom of the area, and if you missed the area there was a row of sharp, spiked railings. Gordon decided to go to bed. For an hour he tossed from side to side, his nerves on edge, sleep farther from him than ever. There might be a spare key to the room in one of the drawers. He searched diligently, but without success. Then he tried the door. From somewhere outside came the sound of a knife-cleaner working eccentrically. Or it may have been the noise of a carpet-sweeper being pushed across the floor by one who had no conception of rhythm. As he turned the handle, the noise ceased and a voice said: โSleep well, Uncle Isaac.โ Mr. Superbus, that faithful watch dog, was sleeping on the mat. Chapter 16. Diana stirred uneasily in her sleep and woke. There was no sound but the distant snore of Mr. Superbus, but she had an uncanny instinct that all was not well. Slipping out of bed, she pulled on her dressing-gown and looked out of the window. She saw a figure on the sidewalk. A man, slight of build, round-shouldered. She saw him clearly in the light of the street standard which was immediately opposite the house. She guessed his face rather than saw it, and wondered where she had seen him before. Stark, the window-cleaner! Now she knew him. As she looked, he stood back quickly, bringing himself against the railings. Craning her neck, she saw a shadowy policeman slowly passing the end of the street. He reached the opposite corner and stopped, came a few steps down Cheynel Gardens and stopped again. There was the flare of a match. It was the hour when policemen produce surreptitious pipes in defiance of all regulations. The figure against the railings remained motionless. โWhat do you want?โ demanded Diana. Mr. Stark looked up. โNothing, lady. I canโt sleep,โ he stammered. โSee the policeman: heโll nurse you,โ said Diana. He disappeared up the passage leading to the courtyard, but presently he came back and walked boldly back to the main street. Diana saw the smoking policeman cross the road. There was a brief conversation and Mr. Stark disappeared. Diana thought she had seen the policemanโs hands moving scientifically over the loaferโs body. She was thoroughly awake now. The hour was 3.15. She took up her handbag, unlocked and opened her door and listened. The watchful Julius was awake instantly. โIt is only I, Mr. Superbus,โ she said, relieved to find him so alert. โI am afraid youโre having a very uncomfortable time.โ โNo, miss: I seldom sleep. Napoleon was that way by all accounts. Want anything, maโam?โ โIโm going to make myself a cup of tea,โ she said, and went down the gloomy stairs to the kitchen. She was very hungry–she made tea, found a tinful of biscuits and called her protector in a whisper to share the feast. โWe might as well have some light,โ she said, and lit the hall lamp. โCome in, Mr. Superbus.โ The door of The Study did not yield to her pressure, and she frowned. โIโm sure I did not lock this door,โ she said, and found the pass-key in her bag. The door was bolted on the inside! โWait here whilst I dress,โ she said. The eyes of Julius Superbus bulged. Excitement toned his complexion from petunia to old gold. He was not nervous; he was not frightened. Danger made him go pale. Mark Antony was that way. She was down again in an incredibly short space of time, took the revolver belt from the hall cupboard and fixed it about her waist. Mr. Superbus saw the gun in her hand and felt more comfortable. โOpen the door, please.โ There was a faint rustle of movement on the other side of the door. A not so faint click as if lights were being extinguished. โGuard the back of the house,โ she said in a low voice. โHe will probably escape over the wall. Take no risks–strike him down at once. He may be armed!โ Mr. Superbus did not move. He was rooted to the spot, as they say. โWhat about getting a policeman?โ he asked hollowly. She shook her head. โI donโt want the police here. Do as I tell you, please.โ Mr. Superbus tried to lift a foot and winced; his rheumatism had โcome onโ again. โI wonโt leave you here by yourself,โ he said unsteadily; โit would be cowardly, leaving a lady by herself.โ From the hall there was one entrance to The Study. You might reach it, however, through the small ante-room which Gordon used as a book store. He refused to dignify the place with the description of โlibrary.โ โStay here,โ she whispered, and sped along the dark passage. The door was unlocked, the smell of books came to her in the darkness, and she stepped stealthily into the room, pistol in hand. The second door into The Study opened. The big room was in darkness except for the faint light of the painted window. โHands up!โ she called. โI see you!โ The light control was at the other end of the room–she felt cautiously forward. She had taken a few steps when the door into the hall jerked open and a figure darted through, slamming the door…. Superbus would have him, she thought exultantly as she ran in pursuit. But there was no sound of struggle, and when she flew into the hall it was empty. โMr. Superbus!โ she called. โHere, maโam.โ He came out of The Study behind her. โI follered you,โ he said; โit wasnโt right to let a lady take risks. Did you see him?โ โOh, why didnโt you do as I told you?โ she wailed. โMy duty was to foller you.โ Julius was dogged. โIt was safer.โ Which was true. She put on all the lights of The Study. Nothing apparently had been disturbed except—- She had left the pointer of the combination on the letter โX.โ It was now on โA.โ โBring in the tea,โ she said, and continued her inspection. Mr. Superbus returned with the tray she had filled. โWhat we want are cloos,โ he said gently, so gently that she did not hear him aright. โThe wine cellars are closed. I donโt want the bother of unlocking them–and I never drink.โ โCloos,โ said Julius loudly. โOh! I thought you said … well, find some.โ Bent double, he prowled round the room. Diana ate biscuits ravenously. โSomebody has been here,โ he pointed to the big chair near the fireplace. โLook at that cushion–thereโs the mark of a head.โ โMine,โ she was laconic, a trifle unkind. โLook for cigar-ash, my dear Watson!โ He eyed her with a certain amount of suspicion which was largely justified. โCome and eat,โ she said, and dropped the biscuit tin within reach. โNow how on earth did he get out?โ โWho?โ โDoub–Uncle Isaac.โ She corrected her error instantly. Julius could afford to smile. โHe didnโt get out. Iโve never left my post, maโam. My own theory is that it was a burglar.โ โHow did he leave the house?โ she asked. โThe front door is still chained and bolted. He must still be in the house.โ โDonโt say that, miss–maโam,โ begged Julius nervously. โIf he was in this house I wouldnโt be responsible for myself. I go mad when I see burglars–thatโs why the doctor ordered me to keep away from โem.โ โHeโs in the house; probably hiding in the kitchen. Have some biscuits; when Iโve finished my tea weโll go look for him.โ Julius had no appetite. โThis is a case for the regular police,โ he said earnestly. โTheyโre paid for it, anyway. The Government supports their widows. Besides,โ unselfishly, โthey get promotion for capturing burglars. I believe in doing somebody a good turn whenever I can. Shall I get a copper?โ She motioned him to remain. โStay here: I will look.โ He refused to stay. His place was by her side and a little behind her. He liked the way she handled that Browning. She seemed the kind of woman who would stand no nonsense. The kitchen drew blank. โI never thought he was here,โ she said. โNo, it was Uncle Isaac.โ Mr. Superbus, back in The Study, propounded a startling theory. โThereโs such things as subterranean passages,โ he said. โIโve seen โem. You push back a panel and thereโs a flight of stairs, leading to an underground vault. You touch a spring—-โ โThere are no springs to be touched at 61 Cheynel Gardens,โ she said, โand no panels, and no underground vaults except the cellar where the furnace is. Go down and satisfy yourself.โ Mr. Superbus countered graciously that her word was sufficient. The hour was a quarter after four oโclock. Mr. Superbus lit the fire, going very slowly down to the kitchen to find the kindling wood, and coming very swiftly up again. His teeth were chattering: it was very chilly in the kitchen, he said. โThere was nothing to hurt you in the kitchen,โ she said. Julius was amused. โHurt _me_? Iโd like to see the thing that tried it on! I donโt know what fear is, maโam. All our family is that way. My brother Augustus walks through a churchyard every night from the Duchessesโ Arms—-โ โDoes she know him so well–how odd!โ she said. โItโs the name of an inn, maโam. Heโs married. Yes, he walks through the churchyard and heโs never seen anything. His wife–sheโs got a bitter tongue–says that sheโs not surprised. He canโt see her by the time he gets home. My sister Agrippa is as brave as a lion–it runs in the family. Whatโs that!โ He half rose. From the hall came the sound of stealthy footsteps. โGo out and see.โ She reached for the gun. Mr. Superbus went reluctantly, making a wide detour. You can as easily see into the hall from the far side of the room as from the doorway. She saw him creep slowly onward until he was in a position, by stretching his neck, to command a view of the hall. โDonโt shoot, maโam,โ he quavered; โitโs Aunt!โ Heloise advanced into the room, a scowl on her face. โWhatโs the trouble?โ she demanded. โI heard somebody running upstairs.โ Her eyes fell on the biscuit tin. She reached for a handful, sat down before the unlit fire and munched moodily. โThereโs a cat and canary feeling about this house,โ she said. โI wish I was home!โ Diana was impressed by the abysmal dejection of the woman. โGet another cup and saucer, Mr. Superbus,โ she said. โAunt Lizzie would like some tea.โ Julius had gone down on his knees before the fireplace, in that attitude resembling a priest of some mystic sect of fire-worshippers. Straightening his back, he looked up anxiously. โYou will find a cup and saucer on the servery at the end of the passage,โ said Diana. โYou need not go down to the kitchen.โ Julius rose with relief. โ_I_ donโt mind the kitchen,โ he said untruly. It was Heloise who lit the fire and crouched above it, folded arms on knees, staring down at the little banners of flame. It seemed to her that a million years had passed since she had discussed anybodyโs soul. Watching her, Diana had a view of a delicately moulded cheek and the tip of a well-shaped nose, and experienced an inexplicable wave of compassion toward the woman. โWhat is Double Dan to you?โ she asked. Heloise shrugged her left shoulder. โAre you married to him?โ Mrs. van Oynne was sensitive to atmosphere. No English barometer (the most restless of all scientific instruments except perhaps a Japanese seismograph) was quite as responsive to the emotions of others as was the little detector which registered sympathy in the nimble brain of Heloise. โSome day I will tell you,โ she said, in a tone of deepest melancholy, โbut not now–not now!โ She drew a long, shivering sigh. โI donโt suppose youโre following this kind of life for the fun of it,โ Diana went on, her heart softening toward her unwilling guest. โYouโve said it!โ Heloise nodded slowly. โIf I could do anything–โ began Diana. Mr. Superbus arrived with the extra cup and saucer, and confidences were temporarily sidetracked. โSleep well, Aunt Lizzie?โ asked Julius, drinking audibly. She shook her head. โNo, I canโt sleep in strange beds. Besides, Iโve got trouble–big trouble. People canโt sleep when theyโre in trouble.โ โAh!โ said Julius wisely. โMy theory is that you _have_ slept.โ She looked round at him over her shoulder. โWhere do you get that theory? Donโt you think I know whether I slept or not, you poor … Mr. Superbus?โ โNo,โ said Julius calmly; โthereโs one thing nobody knows–you can never know that youโre asleep. Youโre a bit of a sonombulist?โ he asked with elaborate carelessness. โHowโs that?โ โSonombulist–walk in your sleep. I got an idea I saw you about one oโclock?โ She turned her face away to the contemplation of the fire. โGot ideas too? That mind of yours is surely active. If I thought youโd seen me at one oโclock, why, Iโd die right here at this very minute. I was taking off–you married?โ Julius, with some complacence, confessed that he was. โWell, I guess I can discuss corsets without offending against Public Morality. You didnโt see me at one oโclock–Iโd be sorry to think you had.โ Julius was embarrassed but not completely discouraged. โMaybe it was three oโclock–I saw somebody coming downstairs. Ha ha, Aunt Lizzie, I saw you!โ He lifted a roguish finger. โYouโre nutty,โ she said tersely, yawned and got up. โI guess I could sleep now. And Iโm going to hang a stocking over the keyhole of my door.โ She directed this remark at Mr. Superbus and he choked indignantly at the base insinuation. โDid you see her?โ asked Diana after Heloise had gone. โNo, maโam, I didnโt,โ admitted Julius. โYou can often get people to confess that way. Itโs called the Third Decree in America. Iโve tried it myself. We had a charwoman help once who used to pinch my tobacco for her husband. I tried it on her–and other cases.โ โYou think it was Aunt Lizzie that was in the room?โ โCertain!โ said Julius. โNotice how quiet she walks? Thatโs a bad sign—-โ โNotice how she reeks of Origon?โ mimicked Diana. โI didnโt see her reeking,โ admitted Mr. Superbus, confused. โI wonder you didnโt–those heavy perfumes are almost visible. And there was no scent of Origon in the room–no fresh scent, anyway.โ It was still dark when she drew up the blind and looked out. She felt very wide awake without knowing exactly in what manner her activity might be best employed. โTake this key, go up into Uncle Isaacโs room, open the door quietly and see if he is there. And then get out–quick!โ Julius did not like that word โquick!โ Climbing the stairs leisurely, he listened at the door of Uncle Isaacโs room. There was no sound. Which was satisfactory. On the other hand, the very stillness might be ominous. Mad people are notoriously cunning. He remembered gruesome stories he had heard of cat-footed maniacs who had crept up behind their guards and cut their throats with pieces of old iron secretly sharpened. Julius Superbus drew a long breath. The blood of his Cรฆsarian ancestors ran a little coldly; the pumping station under his left-hand waistcoat pocket increased its thump noisily. Again he listened. If Uncle Isaac was asleep, he would make no noise. Therefore, if there was no sound, he must be asleep. He went downstairs again. โSleeping like an innocent child,โ he reported, โone โand under his cheek anโ a sort of smile on his face.โ She took the key from his hand and looked at it. โYou went in?โ โRight in,โ said Julius, sunning his back at the fire. โPut on the light, had a good look around.โ She looked at the flat steel in her hand. โI only asked you,โ she said, โbecause I gave you the key of The Study by mistake.โ Julius was a man of infinite resource. โIโve got a way of opening doors thatโs known only to three people in the world.โ โCome up with me,โ she said, rising. โIโve got a way too–I use the right key.โ He walked behind her, temporarily at a disadvantage. She opened the door of Gordonโs prison quickly and snapped on the light. The room was empty. Chapter 17. Knotted to the bedstead was a rope. It was of amateur make, being three strips of blanket plaited together, and the rope led through the open window. Diana looked down. The end of the rope dangled less than six feet from the window-sill. He must have dropped twenty feet to the stone flags below. โThatโs funny,โ said Superbus, game to the last. โWhen I looked in—-โ โLet us keep to facts,โ begged Diana, her youthful brows wrinkled. โWhat is the use of a rope if it only falls him a few feet from the sill–and why didnโt he pull the bed to the window?โ She pulled the bed herself–it moved easily. The weight of a man would have drawn it across the floor. Thoughtfully she took stock of the apartment. In one corner stood a long, mirror-fronted wardrobe. Drawing her Browning, she pulled open the door. โCome out, please,โ she said coldly. Gordon stepped forth with some dignity. Standing in the doorway, Mr. Superbus witnessed the astonishing spectacle and shook his head reproachfully. โUncle Isaac, Uncle Isaac!โ he said reprovingly. โI never thought youโd play a trick like that on an old friend!โ โWill you kindly tell me why you destroyed my bed linen?โ asked Diana, and her cool claim to the ownership of anything in the house aroused Gordon to fury. โYour bed linen is my bed linen!โ he spluttered. She raised her hand. โWe will not go into that matter, Uncle Isaac,โ she said with freezing politeness. โWill you be kind enough to draw in the blanket and close the window? It will be light soon, and I have no wish to give the milkman a topic for discussion. I have my cousinโs interests to guard.โ โSend for Bobbie,โ said Gordon, suddenly quiet. โI donโt think he will have any doubt as to who I am.โ โIf by โBobbieโ you mean Mr. Robert Selsbury,โ said Diana, โIโve already telephoned to him. He is out of town–probably decoyed away by your agents.โ Gordon was stricken to silence. The last avenue of escape was closed. โVery well,โ he said. โI promise you I will give you no further trouble.โ He pulled in the rope, let down the window and drew the blinds. โNow, if you donโt mind,โ he said, โI would like to go to sleep. I have been up the whole of the night.โ She nodded. โYou may sleep, but Mr. Superbus will sit in this room. I will lock the door on you both—-โ โPersonally, I prefer sitting outside,โ said Mr. Superbus hastily. โI should like a smoke.โ โYou will remain,โ said Diana with firmness. โIf he does, Iโll chuck him out of the window,โ said Gordon savagely. Mr. Superbus backed from the room. โHeโll be all right, maโam–miss,โ he said. โTrust old Uncle Isaac. โ Diana knew that it was useless to insist. She shut the door on her captive and went down to The Study, being confident that he would make no further attempt at escape. She must get in touch with Bobbie, must even risk his annoyance at being dragged from his bed at that unearthly hour. She took up the telephone and put through a call. It was answered with surprising rapidity. The voice of an unknown man spoke: she guessed it was Bobbieโs servant. โIt is Miss Ford speaking. Can I speak to Mr. Selsbury?โ โHe hasnโt been home all night, miss. Iโve been sitting up for him. He said he might get into London at daybreak.โ โWhere is he?โ she asked. โHeโs gone to Ostend, miss. He telephoned me from Dover.โ The news was unexpected and a little alarming. โHas he gone alone?โ she asked. โTo the best of my knowledge and belief, miss,โ said Bobbieโs man, tactfully, diplomatically and legally. Diana hung up the receiver. Had they lured Bobbie, she wondered? Chapter 18. Bobbie Selsbury had gone to Victoria to rescue his brother at the eleventh hour from a situation which could be mildly described as dangerous. He had searched one Continental train from end to end, and was half way through another when the guardโs whistle sounded, and he was faced with the alternatives of leaving his search incomplete or going on to Dover. He decided upon the latter course, continuing his inspection of the compartments, roving Pullman cars, peeping in upon indignant honeymoon couples, without discovering the object of his search. At Dover he discovered that there had been a relief train leave Victoria at a quarter to eleven; the passengers were already on the steamer. Gordon may have come by that, he thought, and made his decision. He had no passport, but most of the restrictions affecting Continental travel, especially travel to Belgium, had been removed, and he was able to convince the passport officer at the barrier that his business was of such urgency, and his identity so well established, that a little licence might be extended to him; and, on the promise that he would return after leaving the ship, he was allowed to pass to the quayside. He stopped only to get a call through to London, and, by great good luck, found the Dover-London wire disengaged. The boat was crowded, and he was no sooner on board than he saw how impossible it was to make sure that Gordon was not on the boat by a search whilst the ship was in port. The _Princess Juliana_ carried Bobbie to sea. He arrived at Ostend at four oโclock in the afternoon, having satisfied himself that, although there were many suspicious characters on the ship, Gordon and Mrs. van Oynne were not two of them. He spent two hours seeking the British Vice-Consul and persuading that gentleman to give him the necessary certificate to be readmitted, and to placate the passport officer on the other side, who had already been notified of his unauthorized departure. Very few of the Ostend hotels were open, but Bobbie made a tour of all, examining their visitorsโ books. Gordon was not in Ostend. That was a relief. He might have changed his mind at the last moment and gone to Paris, but that was unlikely. Bobbie believed his brother, though he imposed the limit of strain upon his credulity. He returned to Dover by the night boat, and came in the grey dawn to the port, where he was held for two hours by the outraged passport authorities, missing the boat train and finally catching a slow train from the town station. He arrived in London at ten, unshaven, weary and irritable, and he did then what he might well have done at first–he drove straight to Scotland Yard, and, fortune favouring him, found Inspector Carslake in his room. Carslake and he had been in France together, and for twelve months had worked side by side in the Intelligence Bureau, where enemy regiments were identified and their positions plotted, by methods which would have puzzled cleverer people than my dear Watson. As briefly as possible Bobbie told his story, and the inspector listened with unusual interest. โItโs curious you should come to me. I have charge of the Double Dan cases, and I must say that this looks like a typical coup of his.โ โGordon isnโt an easy man to impersonate,โ warned Bobbie, โthough I told him he was when I was trying to scare him.โ โAnybody is easy to Double Dan,โ said Carslake at once. โTall, short, thin or fat. Heโs a specialist–the only man at the game as far as I know. You didnโt see the woman, Mrs. van Oynne?โ Bobbie shook his head. โDo you know where she lives?โ โI havenโt the slightest idea.โ โHe will do nothing till Monday,โ said Carslake thoughtfully. โDan only works in banking hours, but when he does work he moves! I take off my hat to Dan–heโs clever.โ โWho is he?โ โA man named Throgood. He used to be an actor–I believe heโs played opposite some of the best people in America. He was the English dude type. He himself is English or Welsh. His partner is an American or a Canadian, and an ex-chorus girl. Maybe itโs the same–rather slight, short, with golden hair, blue eyes?โ Bobbie shook his head. โDoesnโt sound like Mrs. van Oynne,โ he said, hope dawning in his breast. โPerhaps Iโm mistaken. Youโre sure?โ Carslake nodded. โWe trailed her to Paris and missed her. I shouldnโt think heโd be working again for a very long time. He likes to allow the excitement to die down, and I shouldnโt think that heโd take on a new partner; they require very careful training.โ He chuckled. โDouble Danโs getting on the nerves of some of your commercial people,โ he said, โbut I donโt think I should worry very much about him. Anyway, Iโll come along and see you on Monday.โ Bobbie went home, feeling happier than he had been for the past twenty-four hours. Chapter 19. His servant had news for him. โMiss Ford rang you up this morning, sir.โ โOh, what had she to say?โ Bobbie turned, lather brush in hand. โShe only asked if you were at home.โ โWhat time was this?โ โAbout five oโclock, sir.โ โFive oโclock! You graven image, why didnโt you tell me?โ Lathered as he was, he dashed to the telephone and got through to Diana. โIs that you, Bobbie? Can I see you to-day?โ โIโll come at once.โ There was a silence at the other end of the wire. โI donโt think you need come at once,โ said Diana. โJust call in–donโt be surprised if you find somebody here youโve heard me speak about.โ โNot Dempsi?โ he asked, astonished. โYes, he is … staying for a day or two. Iโll explain when you come.โ Bobbie whistled softly. He lunched in the gloomy solitude of his club (it was Sunday, the day on which all clubs are at their worst) and early in the afternoon strolled round to Cheynel Gardens. The door was opened by a stage butler. Bobbie looked fascinated at the glittering display of shirt-front and the ill-fitting dress suit, several times too small for its wearer. โMrs. Ford is in The Study,โ said the apparition gruffly. Bobbie gazed in wonder; the servitor with the concertina trousers might have stepped out from any burlesque of any triangle drama. Had there been printed across the dazzling shirt-front โJames: an old family servant, devoted to the children,โ he could not have been more obvious. โSo youโre the new butler?โ The new butler put his hand on his heart, bowed and growled: โYes, sir–name of Smith.โ He was squinting, his face fearfully distorted. โWell, Iโm going to call you Superbus. Take that look off your face and stop looking round corners.โ Mr. Superbus obeyed. He was for a while disappointed. โLord, sir, did you recognise me?โ he asked. โMaybe Mrs. Ford told you?โ Bobbie smiled derisively. โRecognise you! Good heavens, why, you absolutely shouted! I spotted you the moment I saw you!โ โThatโs funny,โ said Mr. Superbus. โMy good lady always says that when I disguise my face that way she would pass me in the street.โ โHow can you blame her? Who wouldnโt pass you in the street with that face? Even your wife has some illusions left, I suppose. Now, Superbus, what is the game?โ Julius was all innocence. A wreath of wild flowers about his head would not have made him more coyishly artless. Bobbie was not deceived. โGame, sir?โ โWhy are you in this house, got up like a comic seneschal? Does Miss Ford know who you are?โ Mr. Superbus closed the door quickly and put his finger to his lips. โโUsh!โ he said mysteriously. Bobbie waited. โWell, Iโm โushing,โ he said impatiently. Julius tiptoed to The Study and beckoned him through the doorway. He had the air of a respectable conspirator; one who knew that whenever the mine exploded he would be out of the way and could, in certain eventualities, be an acceptable witness for the prosecution. โShe sent for me,โ he said darkly. โAsked me to come and stay here–I come! Could I refuse? If thereโs any danger I like to be on the spot. Thatโs me!โ Bobbie thought he understood Dianaโs motive. She wanted a man in the house; he was not alone in respecting the genius of Double Dan. โOh, I see. Sensible girl!โ Mr. Superbus nodded. โYes, sir, very sensible. I donโt know anybody sensibler. She came to the right man. Me.โ โI was talking to myself,โ a little stiffly. Julius inclined his head again. โYes, sir; we both heard you,โ he said. โIโve got wonderful ears.โ โI understand Miss Ford was alone in the house and she asked you to come and stay? Iโm glad.โ โWell, not exactly alone,โ explained Mr. Superbus, loath to share the honours which were rightly his as Chief Protector. โOf course, thereโs Uncle Isaac.โ Bobbieโs mouth opened. โUnc–Uncle Isaac? Uncle Isaac who?โ Julius had meant to ask this question at the first opportunity. โI donโt know his other name–very bad-tempered gentleman. He has fits; and….โ He tapped his forehead, but Bobbie did not grasp the sense of the pantomime. โUncle Isaac! Suffering Moses!โ Mr. Superbus shook his head. โNo, sir, _he_ hasnโt come yet. They must be Hebrew gentlemen. Only Uncle Isaac and Mr. Dempsi.โ Bobbie knew about Dempsi. โ–and Aunt Lizzie,โ concluded Julius. Bobbie staggered, grasped the mantelpiece for support, and turned a wan countenance to the shirt-fronted butler. The unreality of the position was intensified. Presently Julius would produce two rabbits and a bowl of goldfish from a silk hat, and Diana would skip on to the scene in a ballet dress and a fixed smile. And then Bobbie would wake up. โDo you mind pouring out a drink?โ he asked faintly. โMy handโs not steady.โ The Great Detective opened the tantalus with an air of pride and poured forth a potion. โSay โwhen,โโ he said. He would have made a good barman, he was so talkative. โAunt Lizzie, I think you said?โ Bobbie had reviewed his relations, but no Aunt Lizzie showed in their serried ranks. โYes, sir–she came with Uncle Isaac, yesterday afternoon. Rare pretty young lady she is too. Naturally she and Uncle Isaac donโt get on well together. Fancy calling her Lizzie! Itโs common. And when thereโs nice names like Maud and Ethel and Agnes to choose from.โ Bobbie got back to normal with a struggle. โWhy–why shouldnโt she be called Lizzie? Itโs–itโs an auntish name. Aunt Lizzie!โ Mr. Superbus helped himself from the decanter. He it was who had discovered the tantalus in a cabinet. And rights of discoverers are indisputable. โGood health, sir!โ he said, and drank. โAunt Lizzie!โ muttered Bobbie. โWhat I canโt understand,โ said Julius, wiping his mouth deftly, โis, when sheโs got a good name like Heloise–thatโs what he calls her when theyโre alone….โ It was not the whisky, for he had not drunk thereof; nor the smell of it, for the aroma had not reached him. The room suddenly spun before his eyes. He saw twenty-four Superbuses wiping twenty-four moustaches. โHeloise! Heloise!โ he muttered. โHas she–has she got hair dark as the ravenโs?โ Julius considered. He had never met a raven, but he understood that it was a very dark bird. โYes, sir.โ โAnd eyes that probe your soul?โ asked Bobbie. Again the detective considered. โWell, she ainโt done any probing as far as Iโm concerned,โ he confessed, โbut thereโs something about them thatโs–well, peculiar.โ โAnd the sweetest voice in the world?โ Here again Mr. Superbus was handicapped by a lack of experience. Voices were just voices to him. โIโve never heard her singing,โ he confessed, โor talking much. She swears a bit at Uncle Isaac, which in my opinion isnโt ladylike. Nor smoking, for the matter of that. The way some of these ladies smoke is very sad. Smoking stunts the growth–which a doctor told me, and what a doctor donโt know ainโt worth knowing.โ Bobbie interrupted him. โWhere–where is Uncle Isaac?โ The reply came like a thunderclap. โCleaning the silver.โ Bobbie reeled. โCleaning the silver!โ he said, dazed. โIโll wake up in a minute.โ He pinched himself, Mr. Superbus watching and ready to offer suggestions. They were unnecessary: Bobbie found a tender spot. โIโm awake–itโs real. Uncle Isaac is cleaning the silver! Where are the servants–the other servants?โ Julius could take exception at the โother.โ โMiss Ford sent them out, if you mean the servants. Iโm here professional. I donโt mind tellinโ you, sir, that my job is to see that Uncle Isaac donโt go out too.โ Bobbie began at last to see daylight. If it was Gordon, his desire for liberty was not only pardonable but praiseworthy. โDoes he want to go?โ Julius thought the question unnecessary. Surely a member of the family knew all about the family skeletons? At the same time it was only natural that he should pretend he didnโt. Julius was a just man. โHeโs a bit nutty. See what I mean? Heโs got delusions, hallucinations–to use a medical expression. Sees things, thinks heโs somebody else. Iโve had hundreds of such cases through my hands.โ โBut who put him to clean the silver?โ insisted Bobbie. โMiss Ford. Said it would keep him occupied.โ A step in the hall, a heavy step. โThatโs him coming now. Donโt be afraid of Uncle Isaac, sir: heโs as harmless as a child—-โ Gordon came in at that moment, but stopped dead at the sight of the visitor. He was in his shirt-sleeves, he carried a duster in his hand, his front was covered with a large white apron and a bib that was kept in place by a pin. Bobbie could not speak–he could only stare and stare. โBy heavens, itโs–Uncle Isaac!โ he said in a voice that was almost inaudible to Mr. Superbus. โYou know him, sir?โ he smiled. โI thought it would be very strange if you didnโt. Members of the same family, so to speak, and very likely inflicted in the same way.โ โYe-yes, I know him.โ Mr. Superbus approached the unhappy object of their discussion. โDo you want something, Uncle Isaac?โ he asked kindly, and patted Gordonโs arm. So broken was Mr. Selsburyโs spirit that his keeper remained alive and uninjured. โYes–no,โ he said hoarsely. Julius shook his head. โHe canโt make up his mind about anything. It takes you that way. I wonder how he ever got married.โ Gordon steadied himself. โWhere is–Aunt Lizzie?โ he gulped. โIn her room, Uncle Isaac, reading.โ For a second Gordonโs face was contorted. โDonโt call me uncle,โ he grated, holding himself in hand. โIโm not _your_ uncle, anyway.โ โNo, sir,โ admitted Julius. โI havenโt got any uncles. Not as far as I know. They run in some families and they donโt run in others.โ Suddenly his brow clouded, and he glared at Gordon with such intense malignity that even Bobbie quailed. โHere–Iโve just got an idea in my head, sir,โ he slowly, โa sort of inspiration. _Is_ that Uncle Isaac?โ Bobbie started. โEh?โ โDo you know Uncle Isaac?โ The idea or inspiration had taken firm hold of his imagination. โSuppose Double Dan was passinโ himself off as him!โ Bobbie looked past the man to his brother. Gordon was frowning and shaking his head. He wished to keep in the character of the patriarch for some extraordinary reason. โOh, yes,โ said Bobbie, โthat is Uncle Isaac.โ He was almost breathless. Julius was not immediately convinced. โAre you sure?โ dubiously. Bobbie became very confident. โOh, rather! That is Uncle Isaac all right–how absurd, of course it is Uncle Isaac. I knew him in a minute.โ No man readily sacrifices his inspirations–Julius was but human, though there were moments when this was hard to believe. โOh!โ he said disappointedly. โMind you, Double Danโs clever.โ โNonsense!โ said Bobbie with loud scorn. โHe couldnโt impersonate Uncle Isaac. I would know him anywhere!โ โOh, couldnโt he …!โ sneered Superbus. โYou donโt know Double Dan!โ Bobbie had done some quick thinking. He must talk to Gordon alone. Mr. Superbus being impervious to the hints which followed: โI want to have a little talk with my uncle,โ said Bobbie, โon family business. Do you mind leaving us alone for a minute?โ Julius was in two minds about the matter. โDonโt let him escape,โ he cautioned. โHeโs as artful as a monkey! You ought to hear what he did to me last night!โ โCertainly not.โ Bobbie was ready to promise that he would bring his brother to execution. Still Mr. Superbus lingered. Diana had gone out, leaving instructions which were to be carried out to the letter. Julius was a stickler for duty. โAnd donโt let him telephone.โ Even this Bobbie promised, and Julius took a reluctant leave. โIโll be on hand if heโs troublesome,โ he said from the doorway. โNow, no larks, uncle!โ โUncleโ mutely promised. The portal closed, Bobbie went softly and listened. For a few seconds he waited, and then jerked open the door. Julius was stooping to lace his shoes. A less inquisitive man might have been suspected of having his ear to the keyhole. โWant me?โ he asked with a blameless smile. โNo,โ said Bobbie, so emphatically that Mr. Superbus could not mistake his meaning. The door closed again. โGordon, what on earth—-?โ Gordon threw out despairing arms. โBobbie, Iโm in a hell of a mess,โ he said, his tone one of anguish beyond remedy. โWhat has happened–what does it mean?โ asked the bewildered Bobbie. โWhy didnโt you get in touch with me before?โ Gordonโs gesture cut short his questioning. โI tried to telephone you, but I couldnโt get on, and ever since, that infernal jackass has been keeping guard over the instrument. Is it a crime to kill an amateur detective? Iโve forgotten. I know that in some circumstances murder is justifiable.โ โWhat has happened?โ asked Bobbie again. For fully three minutes Gordon paced the room, so agitated that he could not steady his voice. His relief at Bobbieโs arrival had brought the inevitable reaction. Presently he grew calmer. โWhen I got to the station to meet–you know—-โ โHeloise?โ Gordon winced. He didnโt want to talk about Heloise. The very sound of her name gave him a little pain. โI found her in a state of terrible fear. You can imagine how I felt when she told me that her husband was watching the barriers and thirsting for my blood! She wanted me to go on and await her, but of course I bolted back; went to the hotel to change, and found that the valet who had my bag and had taken it to the station parcels office, was away for the week-end. I came home, and she must have followed.โ โHeloise?โ Gordon swallowed something. โSay โsheโ or โher,โโ he begged. โI feel better about her when sheโs a pronoun!โ โShe must have followed?โ repeated Bobbie in horror. โThen she _is_ here! She–she isnโt Aunt Lizzie by any chance?โ โShe _is_ Aunt Lizzie! Aunt Lizzie! Oh, Bobbie, isnโt this the most awful thing that ever happened? What am I going to do? I canโt leave the house—-โ โBut why?โ asked Bobbie, thunderstruck. No man stood less in need of cross-examination at that moment than Gordon. He had hopes that Bobbie, with his curious insight into human affairs, would accept the situation without demanding analysis. โI canโt understand,โ began Bobbie. โYouโve only to explain to Diana—-โ Gordonโs laugh was harsh. Bobbie had heard him laugh once before like that–when he was recovering from gas after having a tooth out. โI havenโt told you the worst,โ said Gordon gloomily. โDiana found me here and accused me of being Double Dan. I was struck dumb. The idea was so grotesque that I could not find words to answer her. Suppose somebody came to you in the street and accused you of murder, what would you say? Something amusing? I havenโt the gift of persiflage. I could have got out of it even then, but that infernal woman made her appearance and hung round my neck! In a sense she was justified. Diana threatened to shoot her. A woman doesnโt like that. What was I to do? My dilemma was a terrible one! I had the alternative of admitting that I was Double Dan, impersonator and teller of plausible stories, or of telling the unbelievable truth, which means that she would have thought that I was engaged in a vulgar affair with Heloise.โ This argument seemed very sound to Bobbie. โWho called her Aunt Lizzie?โ he asked. He might have saved himself the trouble. โWho do you think?โ asked Gordon bitterly. โDiana! Bobbie, that girl is driving me mad! Why did she come from Australia to upset my life? And Iโm a member of the British Empire League! Curse the Empire! Diana is terrible! She is carrying on with Dempsi under my eyes. The most shocking little cad! A bounder of bounders! And Bobbie, she pretends to be a widow! I donโt know whose widow–I sometimes think it is mine. If that is so, the things she says about me are enough to make me turn in my grave!โ Bobbie was very grave and thoughtful. This was a situation so bizarre that it could not be tested by his own experience. โI see,โ he said slowly. โDeuced awkward, old man.โ Gordon had expected some other comment. In all the conditions โdeuced awkwardโ seemed rather mild. โYouโve got to help me get out of this,โ he said impatiently. โAnd weโve got to deal drastically with Dempsi. Why, he wanted to marry her this afternoon! Said he knew a place that specialised in Sunday afternoon marriages! The parson called twice! Dempsi carries a special license in his pocket, the hateful little dago! I shall do something desperate. I shall shoot them both.โ Bobbie was looking at him curiously. His real anger was so patently directed toward Dempsi, whose chief offence seemed to be that he wanted to marry Diana: which seemed a reasonable and laudable ambition. โI shouldnโt shoot them,โ said Bobbie slowly. โYouโll only get yourself talked about. And besides, I donโt see that it is any business of yours. They were old friends, lovers—-โ โDo you want to drive me mad?โ snarled Gordon. โLovers! They were never lovers! Diana–Diana, of all women in the world, to–to–carry on like this! Encouraging him–thereโs no other word for it! Diana, whom I believed the very soul of modesty!โ Bobbie had no especial interest in Dianaโs soul; he thought she was a nice girl. โIt must have come as a bit of a shock to you,โ he said sardonically, and Gordon was hurt at the innuendo. โWhat does Aunt Lizzie say about it?โ This was a subject on which he could not speak with normal politeness. โDoes it matter what she says? Bobbie, do you know what Diana tried to do? And this reveals an undreamt-of indelicacy of mind. She tried to give us the same room! A wretched little servantsโ room at the top of the house. She says that Heloise is my accomplice…. Itโs no laughing matter!โ Bobbie was rolling helplessly in his chair. โDiana is treating me like a dog.โ Bobbie surveyed his relative critically. โAnd you look a bit of a dog too in those clothes,โ he said. โWhere did you dig up that suit? Gordon, Iโve seen a judge send down a man for five years for wearing a suit like that. He said it revealed his criminal psychology.โ โNow, Bobbie, youโve got to help me.โ Gordon was not amused. โIโm going to get away. Once I can get to the hotel to my bag, or even if I could get to Scotland–which wouldnโt be a bad move–Iโm safe. But I havenโt a penny! She made me turn out my pockets at the point of a pistol. She is the most thorough woman I have ever met. Swore that I had been trying to get at the safe and searched me for skeleton keys!โ Bobbie felt in his pockets. The trip to Ostend had exhausted most of the spare cash–and it was Sunday. โIโm afraid Iโve no money with me,โ he said. โI can get a cheque cashed at the club for a tenner—-โ โThat doesnโt matter,โ interrupted Gordon. โIโll tell you what I want you to do–a very simple service that you can render and will save all bother. When Diana comes—-โ Here, Bobbie thought the solution was a very simple one. โWhen she comes Iโll just tell her that youโre really Gordon Selsbury,โ he said, and Gordon leapt up from the chair where he had been sitting. โDo you want to ruin me?โ he hissed. โTell her Iโm Gordon Selsbury? Iโve told her, havenโt I? But I gave up telling her when I remembered Heloise. How am I going to explain her?โ The crux of the problem was now displayed. Bobbie had no cut and dried solution. Such as presented were so nobbly and damp that he rejected them without examination. โIโd forgotten about Aunt Lizzie,โ he said thoughtfully. Gordonโs triumph brought little happiness to him. โDonโt you see itโs impossible? Now, Iโve been thinking the matter over and Iโve worked out a much better plan than yours. I can get away when this dithering old ass isnโt looking–which is pretty often. Diana has to go out early to-morrow to her bankers. That will be my chance, but I must have some money. I want it before the banks open, so you cannot possibly help me there. What you can do is this: persuade Diana to let you have the key of the safe. Sheโs put the lock on as well as the combination. Iโve tried to open it, so I know. Get the key and pass it to me at the first opportunity.โ Bobbie was looking at him very hard now, and Bobbie was whistling. โGive you the key of the safe?โ he said slowly. โBy Jove!โ His eyes were bulging, his jaw had dropped. โWhatโs the matter?โ demanded Gordon with a sinking feeling in his heart. Slowly and distinctly the words came. โYou infernal rascal!โ Gordon stepped back as if he had been struck. โWhat do you mean?โ he gasped. Yet he could not mistake the meaning of words and looks. Bobbieโs attitude had undergone a remarkable change. The friendliness had gone from his tone, the light of fun from his face. He glared at the man before him; judgment and condemnation and doom was in his eyes. โYou _are_ Double Dan!โ he breathed. โBy jinks! I was deceived! Youโre clever, my man, diabolically clever. Carslake said you were, and like a fool I thought he was exaggerating. You _are_ Double Dan! My brother has whiskers! Where are yours? I thought there was something strange about you when I saw you. And now that I come to think of it, that cock-and-bull story of yours about Aunt Lizzie is just the kind of story you would tell if you were detected–phew! Bravo, little Diana!โ Gordon went purple and red; he uttered strange, wild animal noises that had no meaning. โI swear—-โ Bobbie shook his head. โIt wonโt do, my friend,โ he said. โI see the whole plot. Of course, you and your accomplice pumped my unfortunate brother, who is on his way to Paris or some other unreachable place. You discovered that I knew he was going to Ostend, and you changed your plans. Gordon went to Paris as I feared—-โ โAlone?โ Gordon was becoming an adept in self-control. Alone? That was a poser for Bobbie. โI didnโt think of that. But thereโs no reason why part of your original story shouldnโt be true. The husband appears, the lady begs the victim to go and she will follow. That is it!โ โI tell you—-โ Bobbie stopped his protest. โNo, no, my man, it wonโt do,โ he said sternly. โMy cousin, Miss Ford, who has so cleverly trapped you, must have some special reason for not wishing to hand you over to justice–had I been she, I would have sent for the police. She has probably taken the wisest course–I will not interfere with her plans.โ He laughed softly–Gordon thought that the immaculate agriculturist Abel must have laughed like that; there was something to be said for Cain. โGive you the key of the safe, eh? I was nearly deceived; upon my word, I was. Now go on with your dusting, little man, and thank your lucky stars youโre not in prison.โ Gordon went on with his dusting–he dusted the perspiration from his brow, and the duster was not particularly clean. The result was startling. โBobbie!โ he wailed. Bobbie turned on his heel. โDo you want me to kick you?โ he demanded. Evidently Gordon didnโt. He began to rub the back of a chair listlessly. He had no heart in his work, and without enthusiasm even dusting is a failure. Bobbie opened the door and found Mr. Superbus sitting on the bottom stair, manicuring his nails with a clasp-knife. โGiving you any trouble, sir?โ he asked eagerly, and was disappointed when Bobbie Selsbury shook his head. โNone whatever.โ He walked back into the room. โNow then, Uncle Isaac, clear out!โ โDid he try to escape, sir?โ asked the interested custodian. Bobbie laughed his Cain and Abel laugh. His brother wondered where Diana kept her little gun. โDid he try to escape? I should jolly well say he did!โ said Bobbie. โLook after him, Mr. Superbus. You have in your able hands a man of singular cunning and resource.โ Mr. Superbus shook his head sorrowfully. โYouโre a naughty old Uncle Isaac, thatโs what you are,โ he said. โIโm surprised at you.โ Gordon collected his dusters and staggered from the room. He was at the end of his dream. โIโm a naughty old Uncle Isaac,โ he moaned. โIโm a naughty old Uncle Isaac!โ His moan came up from the deep recesses of the kitchen. Chapter 20. โBobbie!โ The girl came toward him with both hands outstretched. Behind her in the hall he saw a strange shadow. โHullo, dear! I came as soon as you wanted me, I hope?โ Mr. Dempsi was now visible. His black sombrero gave him a sinister appearance. His voice was querulous, his manner menacing. โDear?โ he asked deeply. โWho calls you โdearโ? What is this man to you, Diana?โ โMy dear Mr. Dempsi,โ she said wearily, โthis gentleman.โ But he was furious; flung his hat on the ground and swung his cloak from him with the air of a _capelerro_. Bobbie expected to see a belt with knives and pistols–the poker dot waistcoat was an anticlimax. โI will not endure it,โ he stormed. โDo you hear, sir? You address this lady as dear–explain!โ She saved Bobbie the trouble. โThis is Mr. Selsbury, my cousin.โ Diana was dangerously quiet. Probably Mr. Dempsi, from his long acquaintance with her, recognised the signs. โAh! Your cousin! I see the likeness. The same beautiful eyes, the same firm but gentle mouth. The slight figure, the lovely hand—-โ Bobbie was annoyed. โThank you very much, but when youโve finished cataloguing my features and describing my delectable points, perhaps youโll tell me who you are?โ He was antagonistic, and he needed no introduction. For he knew the bearded man, and shared the spurious Gordonโs resentment and utter dislike. โThis is Mr. Dempsi,โ said Diana. โYouโve heard me speak of him?โ There was an appeal in her eyes which Bobbie could not resist. He made a show of being happy to meet Mr. Dempsi. As an effort of simulation it was a failure. โWonโt you change your coat, Wop–Wopsy–upstairs?โ she suggested. Dempsi kissed her hand. โMy beloved–I go. Your word is law! Sir–cousin–Bobbie, forgive me.โ Bobbie forced a smile of friendliness. His gentle cousin thought he was ill. Mr. Dempsi went singing up the stairs: _Donna e mobile_ was the song. He sang it happily and flatly, as though his throat rebelled against this rejoicing in the fickleness of woman. โSuffering cats!โ said Bobbie, awe-stricken. โIs that the First Love?โ She nodded. โAnd is that his style of conversation–a bit wearing, isnโt it?โ โWearing? Bobbie, heโs just like that to every man who looks at me! Heโs changed in appearance–I suppose six years makes an awful difference. I used to think there was room for nothing but improvement, for he was only a boy then. But, oh, Bobbie, heโs worse! He wanted to strangle the waiter at the Ritz-Carlton at lunch because he was rather good-looking and had a sense of humour–he smiled when I made a feeble joke. And, Bobbie, Double Dan—-โ She saw that Bobbie knew, and sighed gratefully. Bobbie was to be a tower of strength: she had guessed that all along. โHeโs here,โ said the young man. โYouโve seen him? Thank heavens! He _is_ like Gordon, isnโt he? The make-up is astounding. Iโve tried to find out the secret. But heโs so useful about the house. That alone betrays him. Gordon lived in the clouds, where there were no laundry bills and no patent sweepers. And he came in time to be Uncle Isaac. No, we havenโt any real Uncle Isaac, but he served beautifully, and, what is more, he brought with him a perfectly good aunt—-โ โThe audacious scoundrel!โ Bobbie cried wrathfully. โWhy, do you know, he nearly deceived me? I wasnโt as clever as you. I talked with him for ten minutes about his troubles. Heโs evidently studied every detail of appearance and association. And he makes no mistakes–he called me Bobbie the first time he saw me.โ โHe called me Diana. But he didnโt deceive me–not for a moment,โ said the girl, flopping into Gordonโs big chair. โThis morning I caught him trying to get into Gordonโs dressing-room! He has to be watched day and night, and of course he has a perfectly good excuse for everything he does. He said he wanted some clothes!โ Bobbie thought that a desire to change into clothing less vocal than the suit he was wearing was not reprehensible even in Double Dan. But the audacity of the man! โThe villain! I wish to heaven I hadnโt gone to Ostend.โ She reminded herself that she must ask him why he went at all. That could wait, however. โI had to arrange everything on the spot,โ she said, going back to the hectic moments of Saturday. โLuckily I remembered that little manโs โphone number–you werenโt here when he told me? Hate, hate, ho, Ammersmith. Then I had to invent a story–oh, positively dozens of stories! They werenโt lies–just expedients. The stroke of genius was the one about Uncle Isaac being eccentric. Happily Dempsi loves him.โ โWho?โ asked the startled Bobbie. โNot Uncle Isaac surely? He gave me the impression–but that was in his rรดle of Gordon–that he hated him.โ โNo, I mean Superbus. He took to him at once–it was the sort of thing he would do. He kept white mice when he was a boy and adored them! Dempsi thinks that he and Mr. Superbus must have both descended from Julius Cรฆsar. He spent all the morning in the book room searching for Cรฆsarโs Life.โ โHow does Double Dan accept your treatment of him–and your discovery that he was a fake?โ โThat is the surprising thing,โ said Diana in wonder. โHe was meekness itself–I never saw a man so quickly accept a situation as he did.โ โAnd the perfectly good aunt?โ Diana shrugged. โShe was difficult. That is natural, being a woman. But she is tame now. I called her Aunt Lizzie to save a scandal. Butโ–her voice sank–โtheyโre not married!โ Bobbie tried hard to look surprised. โArenโt they?โ Diana shook her head. There was some good Puritan blood in the Fords. Bobbie never received evidence of its presence without a little shock of surprise. โNo! Isnโt it terrible? Theyโre not married. They are not even engaged: I could tell that by the way she orders him about. She does so with the air of a woman who has nothing to lose. But Iโm determined on one thing. I thought it out before I went to bed. He shall marry her before he leaves this house! She has been hopelessly compromised. This adventure shall have one good result.โ Bobbie was not enthusiastic. โI shouldnโt meddle if I were you,โ he said, but made no impression on her. Gordon Selsbury came into the room unnoticed. He carried a dustpan and a short-handled broom. He stood for a while irresolutely, neither of the pair noticing him. Then: โHave you heard from Gordon?โ Her face lit up. โIโve had the loveliest wires from him. Really he has been most thoughtful! The dear man has telegraphed from almost every station.โ Bobbie coughed. โSomehow I thought he would,โ he said. She was searching her handbag and brought out a folded paper. โHere is the last, from Crewe; it didnโt arrive until ten oโclock this morning. โHaving a comfortable journey. Hope everything is going smoothly–Gordon.โโ Bobbie sat up. โOh, I say, thatโs too bad,โ he protested warmly–too warmly, he realised. โI mean, itโs too bad that didnโt arrive until to-day. Write to the Post Office.โ Gordon growled under his breath, and took another step into the room. Diana saw him, but made no sign. He was one with the furniture. โIf heโd only stay away for another week!โ she sighed. It was the opportunity for which Bobbie had hoped. โYou know, old Gordon isnโt such a bad chap,โ he said. โI know oneโs first impression is that he is a terrible prig, and his manner is bad, I admit; and heโs a thought conceited. These intellectuals are. Though why, Iโve never understood.โ She shook her head. Evidently she had already found excuses for Gordon, and there was no need for his championship. โConceited? But most men are, donโt you think? I wouldnโt call it conceit–heโs a little self-important, thatโs all.โ The hand that wielded the broom trembled, the dust-pan wobbled. โYes, I suppose thatโs what he is,โ said Bobbie thoughtfully. โGordon was rather spoilt as a kid, and that makes a man a little self-important.โ โAnd pharisaical, donโt you think?โ suggested Diana, considering. โI ought not to say anything unkind. Really Iโm not. He isnโt any worse for our frankness.โ Mr. Gordon Selsbury half rose from his knees, his mouth working, his face pale with fury. โIโm inclined to agree with you,โ said Bobbie regretfully. โAnd poor old Gordon _has_ faults.โ โThe faults of age,โ said Diana. โHeโs the sort of man who has been forty-five ever since he was born; but, thank God, heโs not flighty!โ she added piously. The sweeper nodded in agreement, but his faint smile was to vanish. โDonโt put any man on a pedestal, my dear,โ said Bobbie in the paternal manner. โSneak!โ said Gordon fiercely but inaudibly. โThe best of men make mistakes,โ the traitor brother continued. โHis very innocence is a disadvantage. I could well imagine that a woman with the right line of talk could twist him round her little finger!โ She dissented. Diana had her own views, and they were mainly unbendable. โIf I were his wife I should trust Gordon, Bobbie,โ she said seriously. โHeโs the very soul of honour. Whatever you say of Gordon, youโve got to admit heโs that. He wouldnโt do anything undignified or vulgar. I could imagine many things, but I could not imagine Gordon going to Ostend, even in a mood of theosophical ecstasy, without a chaperone.โ Bobbie shifted uneasily. He was by nature honest, in spite of his being a tea-broker. There were certain fundamentals in his code with which he could not dispense, even to shield Gordon. โN-no, perhaps not,โ he said. She smiled scornfully. โPerhaps! You know he wouldnโt, Bobbie! I canโt think of his doing a thing like that. Why, Gordon is the very antithesis of vulgarity! Could you imagine him engaged in a clandestine friendship with a woman like Aunt Lizzie? It is absurd. Can you imagine him walking into this house with a strange female and pretending that he doesnโt know her when he is detected? I should imagine not!โ Still Bobbie had a duty to perform. โI think youโre mad to trust any man absolutely,โ he said firmly. โNo man is worthy of that confidence.โ She laughed. โYouโre a cynical bachelor.โ A voice came from the background. An indignant and an emphatic voice. โThat is just what I say,โ said Gordon. โI canโt imagine a more immoral point of view, striking at the very roots–er–um—-โ He almost cringed under Dianaโs gaze. โHow dare you interrupt?โ she demanded. โI–er–I—-โ Bobbie took a hand. โNow see here, my friend, you take my advice and drop this pretence,โ he said gravely. โYou will deceive nobody–though I can understand why you have not given up hope–and you may get yourself into very serious trouble. If I had my way, you would be in that position at this moment, but my cousin, for an excellent reason, has refrained from handing you over to the police. That generosity ought to be appreciated by you.โ Gordon set his teeth, cast broom and brush to the devil and leapt up. โI donโt care–I will tell the truth,โ he said doggedly. โIn spite of everything–in spite of all appearances, I am Gordon Selsbury.โ He looked round: Superbus was at the door, a buff envelope in his hand. It was no use; he went down on his knees and groped for the dustpan. He was beaten. โA wire for you, maโam. I never knew they came on Sunday.โ She took the envelope and tore it open. โAnother! โAberdeen. Very good journey and looking forward to my return. Gordon.โโ Bobbie gaped. โWhat an artist!โ he said. She turned on him with a frown. โI say, what a nasty journey!โ corrected Bobbie. She nodded slowly, thoughtfully. โDo you know, Iโm beginning to feel quite different toward Gordon,โ she said. The sweeper sat up on his heels expectantly. For a second she became conscious of his presence. โWell, what are you waiting for?โ she asked coldly. โNothing–nothing.โ The despairing man stooped to his task. โWhere is your–your accomplice?โ she asked. Gordon turned his head. โSheโs reading–โHow to be Happy though Married,โโ he said cynically. Kindness was wasted on such a man. โWhat are you going to do with Dempsi?โ asked Bobbie, leaning across and dropping his voice. She made a little face. โIโm in despair, Bobbie. I canโt count on his losing himself again. The only thing he shows any signs of losing is his head–and I never knew him when he had one worth losing. Well?โ It was Superbus again. She wished he wouldnโt put his hand on his heart before he bowed. โThat parson gentlemanโs called again,โ he said in a hoarse whisper. โHeโs the Vicar of Banhurst.โ Superbus was country-bred and was schooled in the values of ecclesiastical rank. The Vicar of Banhurst was a person of eminence. To Diana he was part of the marriage trap. The steel grille that would cut her off from freedom. She was panic-stricken by his very presence in the house. โTell him Iโm ill,โ she said frantically. โTell him–Iโm–Iโm very ill. Ask him to come to-morrow. And please, please donโt tell Mr. Dempsi he is here.โ โHe said if youโd call him up–โ Superbus offered tentatively the clerical card. She waved it away. โI donโt want his address–I donโt _want_ it!โ Mr. Superbus did his bow and went out. Her face was the picture of woe. โBobbie, what am I to do? Thatโs the third time heโs called to-day.โ โWho is he?โ โThe clergyman. Dempsiโs idea! He thinks our marriage is a matter of hours! It is so like Dempsi, so absurdly, so tragically mad; but heโd hardly been with me two minutes before he told me he was sending for the parson to โmake us oneโ! And I know which one! I read the review of a book to-day by a man whose name I forget. It doesnโt matter. He says that there are conditions in which assassination is the purest and noblest expression of public sentiment. Will you get it for me?โ โBut he couldnโt marry you in the evening,โ persisted Bobbie. โIt is against the law.โ She was darkly amused. โAgainst the law! What is a little thing like that to Dempsi? He is the law!โ โIt seems a simple matter to get him away.โ Bobbie searched his mind for a solution. โHave you any plan?โ Had she any plan? Was there a moment of consciousness in the day that she did not form a new scheme to rid herself of her electric incubus? โIโve a hundred, and theyโre all futile and foolish. I thought of running away. That seems about the only sane idea I have had.โ โRunning away? To where?โ he asked. โTo Scotland. To join Gordon.โ Bobbie jumped up, a very perturbed young man. โYou mustnโt do that!โ he cried. โWhatever you do, donโt do that, Diana! In the first place, none of us knows where he is; in the second place–well … I shouldnโt do it.โ Her eyebrows rose. โWhy not? I could tell Gordon the whole truth, and Iโm sure he would be nice and sympathetic. I feel very sure of Gordon in a great crisis like this–it is a very dear feeling to have.โ She smiled a little pathetically. โSuppose Dempsi followed you–and he certainly would,โ urged Bobbie. โSuppose he found that youโd deceived him, and came upon you on the moors with Gordon?โ The smile deepened; into her eyes came a faraway look. โThatโs an idea. Gordon would have his gun on the moors,โ she said. โHush! Here he comes.โ Bobbie had agreed readily to stay the night, for the great Superbus was tired, being human, as he explained, and having only one pair of eyes that needed rest. There was a slight scene at dinner (Heloise cooked this, and Dianaโs respect for her increased). Dempsi, in his most extravagant mood, called for wine. He wanted wine, red wine–to drink the health of his bride. He demanded that it be red and rosy. That it bubbled with the laughter of sunny vineyards. That its hue be as of the warm, rich blood of youth, palpitating, pulsing, seething with love. This he said in so many words. Bobbie said something terse and offensive, and offered him a whisky and soda. Mr. Dempsi looked black, and Diana hastily intervened. But she might as well have attempted to stay the tide of time. Dempsi made a remarkably quick recovery; spoke tremulously of his happiness; kissed Dianaโs hand; gave her for the third time the history of his life. When he lay in the foul huts of the natives, recovering from his fever, when he searched the world through for traces of his lost love, when, under the starry skies of the Australian bush, he pressed on desperately, doggedly, unflinchingly, following the trail of his divine lady–this was the thought he had–Diana! That some day she should be his! The past sad years should be blotted out and forgotten. All the misery of life would vanish as in a cloud. โRot!โ said Bobbie. Mr. Dempsi dissolved into tears. โReally, Diana, I canโt stand that fellow,โ said Bobbie, when the devoted lover had flooded from the room. Diana lay back limp in her chair, fanning herself with her handkerchief. โBobbie, heโs–heโs terrible!โ she moaned. โBobbie, there must be some other solution than murder?โ Mr. Dempsi, in his temperamental way, recovered his equilibrium before he had crossed the hall. Julius Superbus was making up The Study fire as he came in–Dempsi went straight to him, laid his hand on his shoulder, too overcome for speech. โAh, my friend!โ he murmured. Julius, at a loss for a suitable response, played for safety. โGood-evening, sir,โ he said, and patted his fellow Roman on the head. โThe one friend I have in this house–the one understanding soul! The one honest creature that is faithful to my memory.โ Mr. Dempsi invariably spoke of himself as though he had recently returned from a brief holiday in heaven. โI wouldnโt say that, sir,โ said Julius generously. โThere are others.โ โI do say it! I, Guiseppi Dempsi! Who denies my right?โ he demanded fiercely. Julius backed off. โNot me, sir, Iโm sure,โ he said hastily. โItโs the last thing in the world Iโd dream of doing.โ Guiseppi grew gentle again. โThe moment I saw you, I said: โHere is a man with vision, a big man, a man of sensibility! Superbus has a heart, feeling, _simpatico_–a man of affairs, a keen-eyed officer of the law!โ Mr. Superbus moved uneasily. He had all an amateur detectiveโs fear of misrepresentation. He coughed. โNot exactly an officer of the law, sir. In a sense I am, and in a sense Iโm not, though I used to be when I was a bailiff in the County Court.โ Dempsi smiled. โBut now you are a detective. A disciple of the immortal Holmes–what a man, what ingenuity! You are this–you told me?โ Julius hastened to correct a wrong impression. โPrivate, sir, private. As I explained to you, sir, I was brought in—-โ Dempsi never allowed anybody else to talk. โTo watch for a despicable scoundrel,โ said Dempsi hotly. โThat such should be at liberty! Double Dan! Even his name is deplorable! Ah! You are surprised that I have heard of this violator of sanctuaries? You clever detective, you are astounded and flabbergasted that I also know of this pestiferous brigand? Superbus, I ask a favour: when you have discovered him, send for me.โ There was a significant glitter in his eyes. His half-closed hands already dripped with the blood of his victim. Mr. Superbus was spellbound. โSend for me,โ repeated Dempsi deliberately. โI havenโt killed a man for years. But I will not speak of that. I am too sorry for his wife and family. I have a tender heart.โ He gazed at Julius in admiration. โSo you are a detective! One of that great and silent army of watchers, everlastingly on duty, standing between peaceable citizens like Guiseppi Dempsi and the vultures who prey upon society!โ Dempsi held out his hand. Mr. Superbus, his eyes modestly lowered, took it. He felt for once that he was being taken at a proper valuation. Dempsi was a man of the world, a Sir Hubert whose praise was praise indeed. Julius made a mental note of the words for future exhibition. At any moment Dempsi might switch off to an unimportant subject. โYes, it is a bit of a job,โ agreed Julius. โThe public donโt understand.โ โThey wouldnโt,โ said Mr. Dempsi scornfully. โWe take some risks,โ Mr. Superbus went on. โYou canโt get about town without taking risks–I was nearly run over by a โbus yesterday.โ Dempsi was impressed. โNo!โ Julius nodded. โI was–in the execution of me duty,โ he said. โI saw a suspicious looking man–he looked like a fellow that had been owing me money for years–and crossed the road to have a look at him.โ His gesture suggested a swerving motor โbus. โAs near as that,โ he said simply but impressively. Dempsi shuddered appropriately. โAh, it is fine work! Have you brought many men to justice? I see you have, but it is too painful to talk about. I understand your fine feelings–you are worthy.โ โWell, Iโve brought them to the County Court,โ said Julius. โThatโs not exactly to justice. People who canโt pay their bills and owe tradesmen money.โ The other regarded him in awe. โI wonder you can sleep at night,โ he said in a hushed voice. Julius smiled callously. He suggested thereby that the ruin of small litigants meant less to him than the indubitable fact that flies have corns and suffer from asthma. โThey never get on my mind,โ he said; โand as for sleeping–Iโm a pretty good sleeper; nothing disturbs me. โ He hoped, at any rate, that nothing would disturb him that night, for he was sleeping on a made-up bed in The Study. It was Dianaโs idea and he viewed all Dianaโs ideas with a suspicion which was, it must be confessed, justifiable. โAh, a good conscience!โ said Dempsi. โWhat a beautiful thing!โ Mr. Superbus wasnโt sure whether this admirable characteristic of his was due entirely to conscience. โA good digestionโs got something to do with it,โ he said. โIโm a careful feeder.โ โTell me,โ said Dempsi confidentially, โhave you served her long–my queen?โ Mr. Superbus called up to memory his acquaintance with contemporary history. โI thought you had a king in Italy?โ he said. Dempsi laughed. โNo, no, you mistake me–my sweet lady–my Diana?โ he asked softly. โI am jealous of your privilege in serving her.โ โOh, you mean maโam? No, Iโve only just got to know her.โ Dempsi changed the subject abruptly. โI will go to bed. To-night there is no lock upon my door. If Double Dan comes, you will let me know?โ He need not ask that question. Given consciousness and the ability to scream, all the house would know from Julius that the monster had arrived. โWhy, certainly. But I can manage him.โ Dempsi bit his lower lip, viewing his friend thoughtfully. โYes, yes, I shall know the moment the firing starts–at the first bang I will be by your side.โ Julius turned white. In moments of great excitement all great Romans go white. Cรฆsar Borgia had that failing. And for the matter of that, so had Nero, the celebrated fire-bug. โFiring?โ he asked faintly. Dempsi nodded. โHe is armed–certain to be. But remember this–and let it be in your mind all the time; the thought may comfort you–when you fall I shall be ready to take your place.โ Julius stretched his neck forward. โWhen–when I fall?โ he said unsteadily. โIโm not likely to fall if I keep to the carpets–itโs the par-kay that does me in.โ โYou will look up and see meโ–Dempsi obviously relished the picture he drew–โperhaps the last thing you will ever see on earth–standing over your prostrate body, pierced, my poor Superbus, by a dozen bullets. I shall be there, face to face with your murderer!โ Julius closed his eyes and his lips moved. Yet he was not at his devotional exercises. Before his horrified vision spread a veritable panorama of tragedy with one notable figure in the foreground somewhat inanimate. Chapter 21. โBut you shall not die unavenged, my Superbus!โ Dempsiโs affectionate hand was on his arm. Julius moved away from the fire; he had gone suddenly hot. โYouโre sure he carries firearms?โ Dempsi nodded. โLoaded? Thatโs against the lore, sir. A man could be pinched for that.โ Mr. Dempsi treated the matter light-heartedly. Julius could not but feel that his indifference was almost criminal. โCertain,โ he said carelessly. โIโve never met a desperado yet–and Iโve met a few–that didnโt carry a loaded gun–generally throwing a hollow-nosed bullet. And theyโre pretty good shots.โ He appeared to take a pride in their marksmanship. Julius leered at him–there is no other description for the grimace. โYes, I suppose so,โ he said huskily. โOf course, my good lady—-โ Dempsi did not let him finish. He became suddenly serious as though the gravity of the situation had forced itself upon him. โYour wife? Have no fear, Superbus,โ he said quickly. โShe shall never want. I will make it my business to see that she is provided for. And your deed shall be commemorated: I promise you that. I myself have suffered from a thoughtless failure to immortalise my name. I have in my mind a great tablet of black marble, chaste of design. Simple yet grand. Plain, yet in a sense decorative. And an inscription in letters of gold: โโTo the memory of Julius Superbus, A Hero, a Gentleman and a Roman.โโ His voice trembled as he spoke. Already he stood before the monument in tears. Julius wiped the perspiration from his pale face. โYes, very pretty,โ he said, and now his hoarseness was chronic. โAs I was saying, my good lady will be pleased. She always had a good opinion of me, though sheโs never mentioned it. But at the same time, though Iโm very much obliged to you, and nobody could be kinder about it—-โ โCanโt you see her standing reading the inscription?โ asked Dempsi in a hushed voice. โCanโt you imagine her looking up to the slab–fixed in a respectable church, perhaps under a stained-glass window–with proud, shining eyes, her children by her side—-โ โI havenโt got any children,โ said Julius loudly. Dempsi spread out his expressive hands. โShe may marry again,โ he said considerately. โShe is probably in the prime of life. There may still be happiness for her.โ Mr. Superbus sat down limply. โYou ainโt half putting the wind up me!โ he said fretfully. Dempsi bent over him, speaking softly. โTo-night I sleep in sound of your voice. Have no hesitation in calling me. Perhaps I may arrive in time to save you. I pray that this may be. I like you. We are–who knows?–kinsmen. He who strikes you, strikes me–Guiseppi Dempsi.โ Mr. Superbus got up; his knees were without strength, his tongue was parched. โWell, if youโre sleeping here, and Mr. Bobbie is sleeping here, there doesnโt seem any call for me to stay, does there? Not that it worries me. Far from it. Danger is always welcome to a Superbus. Itโs my good lady Iโm thinking of. I was going to sleep in this room. Seems silly.โ โI shall be on hand,โ said Mr. Dempsi, and examined the short-barrelled revolver he had taken from his hip pocket. Julius almost swooned. โIโm a match for any man of my own weight,โ he said, his voice trembling as he thought of the terrible risk which any burglar of his own weight would run, โif heโll only give me a chance. But they donโt give you a chance. Theyโre on you before you know where you are–is that fair?โ Dempsi did not answer. Aunt Lizzie had chosen that moment to wander into the room. Julius seized the opportunity to steal from the unnecessary gaiety that shone through Mr. Dempsiโs sympathy–his eagerness to frame epitaphs which Julius would never see, his cold-blooded plottings for the future of his good lady. Chapter 22. The atmosphere of a kitchen, however clean and well-ordered it may be, is calculated to pall on any man of intellect and genius. It needs the gross mind of a materialist, a man like the husband of Heloise (Gordonโs expression was one of distaste as he thought of that man) to appreciate the lingering fragrance of long-baked and long-consumed pies, the everlasting aroma which the spluttering hot oven has sent forth from time to time through the years, to permeate the homely furniture, and through that medium to retain its delicate nidus for the joy of those lovers of good food to whom such smells were appetising. Gordon had read everything that was readable. He had skipped through two cookery books, and had read the old newspapers in the wood cupboard. The almanac above the kitchen range he knew by heart, so that he could have told you the exact date when everybody of importance was born, married or assassinated. Happily, he had seen little of Heloise and less of Diana. At the thought of Diana his expression changed from one of great sadness to one of intense malignity. And then he would laugh softly, for, despite all that had been said (and that in his hearing) he possessed a sense of humour. How remarkably capable she was! In his bitterest moments this fact worked out from the confusion of his resentment. And how lovely! Once he had tried to patronise her … he blushed at the memory. Suppose he hadnโt gone away on this mad adventure, would he have recognised all her excellent qualities as he saw them now? It was doubtful. He was so keyed up, his nerves were stretched at such tension, that every note of her was detected and valued. And of course she was behaving in this outrageous way in his interest. He warmed at this thought. But Dempsi … his heart went back into the refrigerator. The door opened slowly and he looked up, hoping to see the subject of his thoughts. But he was to be disappointed. It was Heloise. She threw down the book she was carrying, tore off the selvedge of an old newspaper that lay on the table, and, by its aid and the kitchen fire, lit a cigarette. He got up from the Windsor chair before the fire, and, without a word of thanks, she dropped into his place. She smoked, watching the fire. She was pretty too, but in a harder way. He felt just a little sorry for her…. Presently Gordon broke into her thoughts. โYouโve landed me in a pretty fine mess,โ he said without heat. She looked up at him sideways, flicking the ash from her cigarette with a cute little snap of her forefinger. โ_Iโve_ landed _you_!โ she said ironically. โI like that–anyway, thereโs no call to get mad, Man.โ A cold chill ran down his spine at that familiar form of address. โI wish you wouldnโt call me Man. It belongs to bobbed hair and empress gowns and art serge … and soul.โ She laughed quietly; she hadnโt laughed for a long time. โYou used to like me calling you Man–in the days of our spiritual freedom, when deep called to deep–oh, gee! I forget the mush! And only two days ago I was word-perfect–knew every line.โ Gordon rivetted his shocked gaze upon her. โI donโt understand … knew your lines? What do you mean?โ She was examining the cigarette between her fingers. He had a dreadful foreboding that a revelation was imminent. โI mean all that stuff we used to talk–the O Man! stuff and the O Woman! stuff. And about our being on planes, and affinities of souls. My, but I had a bad time trying not to go to sleep. Youโre different now–I kinder like you this way. Iโm strong for common sense and nature. Man! Iโve been the making of you.โ โThe breaking of me, you mean,โ he snapped, the old grievance revived. โIf you hadnโt come here, I could have explained everything to Diana–Miss Ford.โ โI like โDianaโ better,โ she said. โThat young dame is surely no miss. Sheโs either been married or sheโs studied first-hand. If I hadnโt come!โ She jerked up her head derisively. โWhy did you?โ he asked. Even now he half believed the story she had told. Illusions die hard, but she was mercifully sudden. โBecause my man double-crossed me,โ she said coolly. Gordon could not believe the evidence of his ears. โYour man? Your husband, you mean?โ She flung away the cigarette, stood up and stretched her hands about her head. โMy husband is the straightest thing that ever happened,โ she answered. โIโm talking of Dan–Double Dan, you call him!โ The tick-tick of the kitchen clock filled the interval. โYouโre working–with–Double–Dan?โ he breathed. Even now he could not believe her. She smiled pityingly. โSurely,โ she nodded. โWhy do you think I allowed myself to be made love to by you? Be honest with yourself and tell me what there is in your equipment that a woman could rave about?โ He stammered a wrathful denial. โI didnโt make love to you,โ said Gordon hotly. โWe talked about things … and you … and me–about our tastes….โ โIf you had as much experience as I have,โ said Heloise, โyouโd know that that was being made love to.โ She nodded wisely. โMaybe you didnโt know–you know now.โ Gordonโs anger was rising. โWe talked on–on a higher plane,โ he said sharply. โWe talked of … imponderable things. There was never … never a caress. I hardly held your hand. Do you suggest there was anything in our little talks about prehistoric creatures,โ he sneered, โor in our interchange of thought about the subconscious ego?โ To his horror she nodded. โSure! Thatโs how highbrows make love. When they start in to tell me about the Dinornis and the Silurian age, I know they got a crush on me.โ She herself might have been a Dinornis or something equally extinct and terrible by his attitude toward her. โThen it _was_ a plot to get me away?โ he asked breathlessly. โDidnโt you know?โ She was frankly surprised. โYouโre a slow thinker–but youโre right! It was my job to get you away good and safe, and I could have done it, whilst Double Dan—-โ โImpersonated me!โ He saw all things clearly. Mysteries were mysteries no more. There was little left upon which a harassed man need speculate. Her face was sombre and brooding. Evidently she was thinking happily. โHe put one over on me. Gosh! That fellowโs mind is so constructed that he couldnโt go straight if he was sliding down a tube! And I went into it with my eyes open–yes, sir. Some of the boys whoโd worked with him and one of his partners told me heโd do it before I left Manhattan Island. I had my warning–but Iโm one of those dames who know it all and I wouldnโt believe โem. Thatโs the kind of mad woman I am. And all they said came true. Yesterday morning, when everything was fixed for me to tote you to Ostend, I went to see him to split the Mendlesohn money. No, I wasnโt in that. But the little friend of mine who brought Father Eli to the verge of marriage had to go back home. Her eldest boy was ill, and I advanced her her share. Forty-sixty, thatโs how I shared, and how Freda had arranged to share. And thatโs how I paid her–and it was worth it. Freda put in a whole lot of good, solid work for that guy. Only interest he had in life was stamps–postal stamps. Freda studied those darned foolish things so that she jumped every time the postman knocked. Dan would part on terms–and Iโm his friend! Used to be in the same touring company as me, back home!โ Gordon was rubbing his head mechanically. โYour–your husband, is he?โ Her scorn was visible. โMy husband!โ she scoffed. โNow listen! Iโm a respectable married woman and you gotta remember that, Man! Married ten years. Iโve the daisiest little apartment over in New York–and a real nice lovely boy of a husband.โ โIn New York?โ he managed to ask. She hesitated. โWhy, heโs not in New York now: heโs in the State Penitentiary–an innocent man, as heaven is my judge! You know what these Central Office men are! Theyโd swear you into the chair for a nickel. And John could have got evidence that he was a sleep-walker. Yes, sir. Heโs been that way for years. When the bulls got him in Ackensmidtโs Jewellery Store, he didnโt know how he got there himself–heโs one of the best singers in the Sing Sing Glee Party, is John. But heโs due home in a month and naturally Iโm going home to meet him.โ โBut is he a–a thief?โ he blurted. A pink and angry flush spread on the classic face of Heloise. โSay, where did you get all that personal stuff? Thief! Johnโs no thief–heโs had a lot of bad luck, I guess. But sleep-walking is at the bottom of it. When heโs awake he wouldnโt take anything unless he got a receipt for it. Itโs at nights he goes kinder crazy. No, sir, John is a gentleman–though heโs on the register as a safe and strong-room expoit–expert.โ He was calmer now and prepared, if necessary, to enquire into the profits of the business. โHeโs a bank-smasher!โ he said sagely. โHow interesting! And of course he smashes the banks where he hasnโt a deposit.โ The futility of his remark was palpable even to himself. โSure thing. Thatโs what John is. I used to work with him, but it got him rattled when I was around, so I fixed to work with Dan, whoโs a snake but a workman. Iโll say that for him–heโs all for business. Dan always treats his partner as a lady. When Iโve said that I come right to the end of Danโs attractions.โ She spoke as an actress might speak about a fellow member of the cast–without anger, fairly. Gordon stopped strumming funeral marches on the kitchen table and became alive to the realities. โBut is Dan coming here?โ he asked. โDisguised as me! Is–is that the game? What a blind idiot I was! And you, of course, were the decoy … and all that soul stuff, as you call it, was—-?โ โBunk,โ she said. โIt would have been bunk anyway if Iโd meant it. That kind of talk is never anything else.โ He was still helplessly puzzled. โBut … why did you come here?โ โBecause I want my money back–the money I advanced to my little friend. And he just wouldnโt split with me. Said he hadnโt got Mendlesohnโs cheque–canโt you see Dan taking cheques? Said he was short of money–that fellow has got Ananias down for the count. Yes, sir. Why, he was so stuffed with bills you couldnโt touch him without he crackled! He had so much money he had to carry it under his arm! When I told him I wouldnโt go on till heโd settled the old account, he told me to go to blue blazes. Or some place. Said Iโd no right to pay the girl, and that heโd finish the job without me. But he wonโt!โ Gordon glowered down on her. โWhy do you tell me this? Donโt you realise that youโve placed yourself in my hands?โ he asked. โI have only to โphone the police and youโre finished!โ She was not perturbed. โMan, youโve got a head like a haunted house! Forget it–Uncle Isaac!โ He wilted under the blow. Uncle Isaac! He was in a hopeless position. โHow shall I recognise him–this Double Dan–when he comes? When do you expect him?โ Whatever happened, Double Danโs scheme should be brought to failure, he decided. โWhy, Dan sort of happens naturally,โ she said lazily. โI lift my tile to him every time. He is certainly the most artistic guy in the business. I canโt let my feelings prejudice me. He a great artist. The Lord didnโt give him any ideas about simple division, but weโre not all born mathematicians. Youโll not know him when he comes. He doesnโt always pretend to be the sucker heโs robbing. Sometimes heโs a butler.โ Gordon started. Superbus! Yet it seemed impossible that a man could sink so low that he would impersonate the Roman. โYou mean–our stout friend the detective?โ โWell, Iโve known him before to make up like a detective whoโs watching for him, and, whatโs more, get away with it. Itโs one of Danโs favourite disguises, and heโs got others. Iโm giving you a million dollarsโ worth of information, Man. You ought to thank me on your knees, but you wonโt. Another good one of his is to be a visiting clergyman–thatโs one of his best. He told me once that heโd made a quarter of a million dollars out of the church.โ โA minister–thereโs been one here to-day,โ said Gordon thoughtfully. โWhy donโt you turn Kingโs evidence against him?โ โStateโs evidence, I guess that means? No, sir. That means nothing to me, and youโre insulting me by suggesting it. This is a private matter between D. D. and H. C.–Chowster is my name–my father was a Reverend Chowster of Minneapolis and Iโm a high-school girl and donโt forget it. Anyway, Iโm just too much of a lady to start makinโ entries in the squeal book. Birth and education count for something, Man.โ He covered his face with his hands. โWhat a fool Iโve been, what a fool!โ he groaned. Heloise looked at him: in this mood he was interesting. โWhy, I guess every manโs a fool–heโs born that way, and has got twenโy years to pull himself right before some woman comes along and spoils his chance. I used to know a boy in Ontario, where I was born–Minneapolis, I mean–who got right after he was married, but he was an exception. And heโd done the mischief then.โ โIโll not stand it,โ said Gordon between his teeth. โWhatever happens, Iโm going to put a spoke in the wheel of this Double Dan.โ โYou donโt say?โ She was politely intrigued. โAm I going to remain quietly by and see a couple of crooks—-โ โOh, say!โ she protested. โ–robbing society with impunity?โ โThatโs fine. And if Dan gets busy heโll rob with any old thing thatโs handy. Heโs a genius that way. My John says that Dan could open a safe with a hairpin—-โ โIโll report this to the police,โ said Gordon firmly. โI was a fool not to take this step before. It may mean exposure, it may mean social ruin; it will certainly mean….โ He stopped before he came to the possible effect upon Diana. โIโll have you both in gaol–both of you.โ She was unaffected by his fury. โHoney bunch, oh honey!โ she cooed. โDonโt get mad, baby!โ He turned on her in fury. โYouโve done your best to make Miss Ford think Iโm–Iโm something to you. I would have forgiven you everything but that.โ โWell, ainโt you?โ she drawled. โAh, peachy boy, donโt be mad at your little snookums! Smile, baby, show little toothsies.โ Diana, in the opening of the kitchen door, heard only this. โWill you kindly reserve your love-making until you are out of my house?โ she asked severely. At the sound of her voice Gordon reeled. The final straw had dropped brutally upon a camel, already over-burdened. โWhy, I donโt know,โ said Heloise, her insolent gaze turned on the intruder. โIt seems to me that a cookโs got a right to a liโl bit of love, honey? Iโll admit that Uncle Isaac ainโt so cute as darling Wopsy. But heโs a real nice boy in Aunt Lizzieโs eyes.โ Gordon would have intervened, but his spirit was broken. He slunk into the scullery and dropped his aching head upon the knife-machine. Chapter 23. For once Diana was silenced. It was absurd that she should attempt to justify herself to a woman of this character. Yet she did. โMr. Dempsi is–is a very dear friend. To compare your–oh, itโs horrible!โ She was sickened–the realisation of her own hypocrisy did not lessen the nausea. There was no comparison. Of the two men, Double Dan was the more appealing. No index of her mind went unread by the shrewd watcher. โI gotta stick by this anyhow. Itโs no vacation for me,โ said Heloise with a sigh. The effect was magical–the frown vanished from Dianaโs face and a soft light came to her eyes. โIโm sorry for you sometimes,โ she said. Heloise raised her left shoulder. โWhy, Iโm sorry most times. Gee! Itโs a helluva life,โ she said bitterly. Dianaโs heart went out to the woman. Her loneliness, the atmosphere of tragedy which now enveloped her, called for tenderness and help. โI ought to have realised that,โ she said gently. โIโm sorry I was sharp.โ The great strategist is he who recognises the moment when his enemy is wavering. Heloise brought up her heavy guns. โI was a good woman before I met him,โ she said with a little sob. Gordon, a horrified listener, came gasping into the kitchen. โYou–you—-!โ โSilence!โ Under the flashing eyes of Diana Ford his courage failed. Like the fishermanโs wife, he could only stand and watch and suffer. โHe just naturally dragged me down.โ Heloise was playing for safety and freedom, and she was a champion player. Dianaโs voice quivered as she turned on the shrinking man. โYou brute! To think that a man like you should be allowed to prey upon humanity! I suspected something like this! You are a human tiger, unfit to live–Why donโt you leave him, Heloise?โ she asked tenderly. Heloise wiped her eyes and sniffed. โHeโs got me–so.โ She put down her thumb suggestively. โThat kind of man doesnโt let up on a woman once sheโs in his power. Sheโs his till doom.โ Gordon shuffled his feet and she stepped back, fear in her face. โDonโt let him touch me!โ she cried in terror. In another second Dianaโs arm was about her. โStand back,โ she said sternly. โDoes he–does he strike you?โ Heloise nodded with just that show of reluctance that was so convincing. โIโm just black and blue sometimes,โ she wept. โHeโll beat me for this, sure. Donโt trouble about me, Miss Ford–Iโm naturally worthless. I must stand by Dan to the end of the chapter–heaven help me!โ โYou villain!โ The girl was in tears too. Gordon was beyond weeping. โBut why canโt you leave him?โ Dianaโs voice was low and vibrant. โAre you married?โ The slow smile that dawned on the sad face told its own black story. โThat kinder man doesnโt marry,โ said Heloise quietly. The basilisk glare of Dianaโs eyes turned to Gordon, dumb and motionless. โBut he shall!โ she said slowly. Heloise went swiftly past her and fell on her knees at Gordonโs feet. He did not even attempt to draw his hands away when she clutched them. This nightmare would pass–he was sure of that. Monstrous things like this did not happen in a well-ordered world. He had only to keep quiet and calm and presently Trenterโs voice would say: โEight oโclock, sir; Iโm afraid it is raining.โ Trenter always apologised for the weather. And he would open his eyes…. Through the haze of his dream came the moaning sound of Heloise pleading. โDan, you heard what the good young lady said. Marry me, Dan–wonโt you marry me?โ Gordon smiled foolishly. To Diana it was devilish. โMake me like I was when you took me from my liโl Connecticut home,โ sobbed Heloise. Not for nothing had she played a small town tour with that masterpiece _Rich Men and Poor Women_. โDonโt you see it, Dan? The old farm anโ the old cows cominโ along the boardwalk, anโ canโt you hear the cracked bell of the chapel, anโ donโt you remember my old mother sittinโ right there on the porch readโnโ the good old Book? Make it come back again, Dan.โ Her voice rose to a thin, agonized wail. For a second Gordon returned to near normal. โWhat do you mean by this tomfoolery?โ he squeaked, trying to disengage his hand. โMan!โ Diana was unconscious of the plagiarism. โBe careful!โ He shook his head. โI tell you—-โ โYou shall marry her!โ โI–I canโt–I wonโt…. Iโll see you all to the devil.โ Heloise cowered under the stroke of fate. โYou promised me, Dan! You promised me! Youโre not going back on your word? Dan, say it ainโt true–itโs not true, Dan?โ It was terrible, thought Diana, her heart broken by the womanโs woe. โYou donโt mean it, Dan, do you? Itโs only your joking way?โ Gordon showed his teeth in a fiendish grimace. โAh, I can see you smiling. I can see the liโl twinkle in your eye! Weโll quit this business like this pretty young lady says anโ shake the whole outfit, wonโt we, Dan? And Iโll be just your liโl wife sittinโ on the back porch, whilst youโre mixinโ the hen-feed in the garden.โ โDamn the hen-feed!โ he yelled. โCurse you and your back porch! I wonโt marry you. Diana, canโt you see that sheโs a fake? Sheโs acting! Iโm nothing to her!โ โHe spurns me,โ groaned Heloise, and fell prostrate to the floor. Instantly Diana was beside her and had raised the bowed head. โCome with me, my dear. Appeal is wasted on a man like that. Ah, you can laugh!โ โIโm not laughing,โ said Gordon indignantly. โWhat the devil is there to laugh at? If I laughed at anybody I would laugh at you, you … you booby!โ She cast upon him one harrowing glance of contempt, and then devoted her attention to the girl. โIf I gave you the money to get to your home, would you go?โ Heloise nodded weakly. โYou shall have it to-morrow. Come with me.โ Heloise gently freed herself of the detaining arm. โNo–no, Iโll stay,โ she said brokenly. โI guess thereโs something I want to say to Dan, something that I want no other woman to hear.โ Diana went pale. โI think I understand,โ she said quietly, and went out, closing the door softly behind her. Heloise waited, crept to the door and listened before she spun round, joy in her face. โWhoop-ee!โ She danced round the kitchen. โI got my fare! I got my fare! Oh boy, some leading woman! Heloise, your salary is raised and your nameโs in lights.โ โYou, you wicked woman!โ gasped Gordon. โHow dare you–how dare you!โ โAw, listen!โ Hand on hip, she faced him, looking from under her curling lashes. โI gotta get somethinโ on the side. Be reasonable, Man. Iโm broke–I couldnโt raise two dollars. Suppose Dan does pay up–whereโs my transportation coming from? Have a heart, birdie.โ โYouโve deceived Miss Ford.โ โNow listen to Holy Mike! Havenโt you deceived her? Anyway, you donโt deserve a nice liโl girl like that. Donโt think I despise her because sheโs easy. Thatโs a real nice girl. You lied when you said you were married–you may be, but it is not to Diana. And never will be. Sheโs got brains.โ He strode up and down the kitchen with furious strides, muttering under his breath. Presently he confronted her. โYou take away my character–you accuse me of the most abominable acts. You swear away my reputation in a most disgraceful manner. I am Double Dan in her eyes.โ She had found and lit another cigarette and was sitting on the table, her feet swinging. โGee, youโve gotta get a sense of humour, boy,โ she said good-naturedly. โYouโre too serious, thatโs whatโs wrong with you! Sheโs a good dresser too–that gown she was wearing this afternoon certainly made me feel old.โ He was cooling down now. The uselessness of argument or appeal was so apparent that he fell into her mood. โI shall finish in a lunatic asylum,โ he said, โjust as surely as Double Dan will finish in jail.โ โDonโt you worry. The liโl game is going to end very soon. Iโm through. Johnโs due home in a fortnight, and Iโm just longing for the smell of rubber anโ oil anโ breakfast. Thatโs what a ship smells like to me. Iโm going to have it out with Dan.โ โYou mean, he is coming–that we shall meet?โ asked Gordon eagerly. โWe shall meet and he shall part,โ she said cryptically, โthatโs what. The poor Limburger! And heโs going to split fair. Did he think Iโd sit down anโ take his twenโy-eighty? No, sir. As a woman the idea revolts me. I was brought up in a strict fifty-fifty school!โ Gordon was himself again. โNow I warn you this matter has gone as far as it is going,โ he said impressively. โThere are fifty thousand dollars in The Study safe, and Iโve no doubt in my mind that that is his objective, though how he came to know this—-โ โFifty thousand!โ she breathed. โThat explains everything! You told me in one of your heart-to-heart talks that you always kept a thousand pounds, but not—-โ โThis money was drawn to pay an American,โ said Gordon impatiently. โThere is no reason why I should explain why it is here. It is in the safe–that is sufficient.โ Heloise had become very thoughtful. โThen he knew!โ she said. โThe piker! Wouldnโt that make you sore! Fifty thousand dollars–ten thousand pounds–seven hundred thousand francs–every mark in the world–and all to be cleaned up on his lonesome!โ She was apparently oblivious of Gordonโs presence. The immensity of Danโs treachery was all-absorbing. โSo thatโs why he wanted to work alone! โGet him to Ostend,โ he said, โand leave the rest to me!โ And the rest was fifty thousand dollars! That fellow couldnโt go straight if he was fired from a gun. Not a word to me either–he expected to get a thousand pounds, he said–it is the most unprofessional thing Iโve ever heard about in my life!โ โMy dear woman,โ said Gordon testily, โthe ethics of the case do not interest me—-โ โBut heโs gonna split this two ways,โ said Heloise grimly, โor my name is Johanna Dub. Heโs going to act honest even if it hurts him. Yes, sir. Thereโs going to be honour amongst Double Dan and Heloise Chowster. Shame on you, Dan, you great big yegg!โ The perfidy of the man had changed her whole outlook on life. Her very ideals were tottering. โHeโll split it no-ways, understand that!โ Gordon was firm. โI will not see myself robbed. Do you think Iโm a fool?โ She searched his face for rebutting evidence. โWhy, that idea certainly did occur to me,โ she said mildly; and then her tone changed. Dianaโs step was on the stair. โI wonโt plead with you any more, Dan, thereโs nothinโ to be gained. I–I wish you luck! Wonโt you take my hand for the last time?โ Bewildered, Gordon stared at her, then he saw Diana and understood. โDonโt let us part this way, Dan. I forgive you everything youโve done. Good-bye, Dan, old friend.โ She put out her hand timidly. Gordon could have smacked her. โGood-bye!โ โYou brute–take her hand at once!โ hissed Diana. He took it limply. โAll right–good-evening.โ Diana knew that the criminal classes were callous, but she had never realised how brutal they could be. โCome with me, my dear,โ she said. โYou need not see him any more.โ โThank you,โ said Gordon; โthatโs the first kind thing youโve said.โ Diana treated him with the scorn he deserved. โMiss Fordโ–Heloise was looking wistfully at her benefactress–โdare I ask you sumpโn?โ โWhy, surely.โ Heloise touched her skirt disparagingly. โSomehow these clothes donโt seem right in my state of mind. I know youโll think Iโm crazy, but clothes mean an awful lot, even to a woman like me, and these are kind of too gay for a broken-hearted girl. If youโve got sumpโn quiet and sorrowful—-โ Diana smiled. How well she understood! โI know just how youโre feeling. Come to my room, Heloise. You need have no fear. I will send Superbus to look after this–this man.โ Gordon thrust out a warning finger. โDiana, I beg of you not to help this wretched female. And for heavenโs sake donโt give her any of your new clothes–if you do, sheโll impersonate you—-โ Dianaโs glance would have withered a waterlily. โYou despicable brute! Go to your bed and sleep–if you can!โ Chapter 24. It was Monday morning. A church clock striking one reminded Gordon of this interesting fact. An hour had passed since Bobbieโs โgood-nightโ had come to him through the closed door of his room. โGood-night,โ said Gordon. โI wasnโt speaking to you,โ snapped Bobbie. He had been out all the evening interviewing Inspector Carslake, and the excursion had not been altogether profitable. Bobbieโs door closed. He heard the click of Dianaโs lock being fastened. Dempsi passed, after rhapsodizing at the closed portals of Dianaโs bower. From somewhere below came the snores of Julius Superbus. Every exit from the house was closed, save one. The little casement in the big windows of The Study. Gordon had made a careful examination, for there was a possibility that Diana had taken the precaution of screwing it tight. But this she had neglected, satisfied probably with the presence in The Study of Mr. Superbus. Twice Gordon had tiptoed to the door of his room and turned the handle. It was unlocked to-night. With Bobbie in the house Diana had relaxed her vigilance. Half-past-one chimed. Gordon got off the bed, put on his soiled collar and his coat and gathered up his shoes. He was penniless, but the servants at the hotel knew him, and he would be able to write a cheque on the hotel note-paper and get all the cash he wanted. And then he would return and deal with Mr. Dempsi. He had not yet decided as to the method of Dempsiโs death, but it would be painful. As for Heloise … he hoped that she would be gone. Extinguishing the light, he opened the door and listened. There was no sound, and, creeping down the stairs, he passed silently into The Study. Mr. Superbus was breathing regularly–the window rattled a little; the floor vibrated; but no other ill effects followed. As Gordon stood listening, the detective grunted and turned over on his side. The snores ceased–Julius was in a deeper sleep than ever. Now was his chance; yet he had not taken a step before he halted. A circle of light had appeared at the window. He waited, holding his breath. There was a rasping sound, and the casement opened. He saw the dark bulk of a figure wriggle through. A long pause, in which the newcomer was invisible, then the circle of light appeared again. This time on the safe. A burglar! His first impulse was to leap at the man and grapple with him. His second was to approach with less commotion…. โHands up, or Iโll fire!โ At the first sibilant of the words, the light went out, and then: โDonโt shoot, guvโnor. Itโs a cop!โ โDonโt shout, you fool!โ hissed Gordon. โThereโs a man sleeping in the room–whereโs your gun?โ โDonโt carry a gun.โ โWhat are you doing here?โ The unknown burglarโs impatient click of lips was certainly called for. โDonโt ask silly questions–I said it was a cop, didnโt I?โ Gordon groped for the flash-lamp and turned it full on the manโs face. โI know you,โ he said immediately. The thin lips parted in a grin. โYou โave the advantage of me,โ he said with mordant humour. โYou are the man who was cleaning the windows yesterday morning?โ The burglar nodded. โGot me first time. Starkโs my name–Iโm not giving any trouble, and if you tell the judge I had a gun youโre a liar.โ He raised his voice a little. Gordon glanced round fearfully, but the detective was snoring again. โSsh! Not so loud. Have you opened the safe?โ The idea came to him at that second: a brain flash of singular brilliance. โI should have done if youโd been a minute later,โ said Stark plaintively. โYouโve spoilt a good nightโs work.โ Gordon nodded. โOpen it,โ he said, and Stark could not believe his ears. โWhat!โ โOpen it. Iโll pay you well–and Iโll give you your liberty. Youโll only have to work on one lock–the combination is โTelmaโ–got that?โ โDo you mean it, guvโnor?โ incredulity dominant. โYes, yes. I lost my key,โ replied Gordon. โNow get to work–can you manage without the lights?โ The other grinned in the darkness. โSure. Only amatchoors want a lot of light. A flash is best–and brightest.โ He produced from under his coat a short jemmy and a longer and thinner instrument. He may have been, and was, a poor window-cleaner. As burglar he belonged to the aristocracy. โEver seen a safe opened before?โ he asked over his shoulder. Gordon shook his head. โNo–not this way,โ he admitted. โTakes years to learn and thereโs not much money in it,โ said Mr. Stark sadly. โSpoilt by foreigners this trade is, ruined by competition and outsiders, like everything else. Americans mostly. Why they donโt keep in their own country I donโt know. Very smart fellows–Iโll say that, though theyโre taking the bread out of our mouths; but weโve got as good men if they only had a bit of encouragement and capital behind โem.โ The door swung out. โThere you are, sir!โ Gordon peered over the manโs shoulder. โOpen?โ he asked, in a tone which combined surprise and annoyance. The man who sold him the safe was indeed a teller of untrue stories. โYes.โ โShow the light. Here it is. Moses! thereโs not ten thousand there!โ He grasped what there was, and raised his head to listen–somebody was coming down the stairs. โNow go quick–thereโs somebody coming. Here, take this!โ He thrust a bill into the burglarโs hand. In a second Stark was through the window. Gordon was following, when a quivering voice from the sofa called: โWhoโs there—-?โ Mr. Selsbury did not wait to explain. As the detective, with surprising courage, ran toward him, Gordon jumped from the window. โStop!โ It was another voice–Dempsi! Gordon dropped to the courtyard as the other fired. โBang–bang!โ Twice he shot, and there was a scream of pain. Diana heard it, and sprang from bed. Drawing her wrap about her as she ran, she flew down the stairs and into The Study. In the centre of the room stood Dempsi, and at his feet a figure–the wriggling figure of Julius Superbus. โHe has paid the price of duty,โ said Dempsi. And so it proved. Ten little toes had Mr. Superbus brought to 61 Cheynel Gardens. One would never go forth again attached to his patrician feet. Chapter 25. Summing up the matter, as she did in a night made busy with the comings and goings of doctors, and vocal with the low-voiced agony of Mr. Superbus, Diana was glad that the man had escaped. She was sorry, extremely sorry about the Julian toe–a small toe by all accounts, and not especially valuable or wholly necessary to his complete enjoyment of life–still, it was his, and had been (as he explained between paroxysms) a close companion throughout his chequered life. He recounted stories about it, half fond, half wistful. Once he had dropped a hammer on it and had cursed it for being in the way. He regretted that now. It had been a gentle, easy-going toe, and had never given him trouble. Other toes had developed callosities that were painful; but this child of his heart amongst the pedal appendages had never given him a momentโs unease. Yes, she was rather sorry, even though the doctor said he was in no pain and (not knowing the fearless character of the man) had given an opinion that Julius was more frightened than hurt. But she was glad Double Dan had gone … ever so glad. And the shooting had produced one most desirable result–Dempsi had been completely subdued ever since. Not once had he described her as his angel or his serene vision. He who had searched the heavens and starry spaces thereof for illustrations of her beauty, her charm and her numerous attractions, was satisfied with the most commonplace terminology. โThe fact is,โ said Bobbie, โthe poor Wop has never used an automatic before, and the darn thing went off before he realised he had touched the trigger.โ โPoor Wop!โ Dianaโs nose went up. โPoor Mr. Superbus rather!โ This was so long after breakfast that Bobbie had had time to make a call at Dianaโs bank, and Mr. Dempsi was a notable absentee. โHow did you sleep?โ he asked sympathetically. โTerribly! Bobbie, did you get the money?โ โYes, by great good luck your credits came through on Saturday. I have the money. The manager was full of apologies on behalf of self and bank. Here it is.โ He produced from his hip pocket a thick wad of bills. โIn American money. By some strange accident it is clean.โ She was thoughtful, biting her lip. โI had a wire from Gordon. He has reached Inverness,โ she mentioned. โIโm sure he has,โ said Bobbie drily. โAnd how is the old K Bus?โ โPoor old fellow!โ she laughed quietly. โI think heโs almost reconciled to his very great loss. I shouldnโt be surprised if he didnโt develop into a war-hero, but for the moment heโs worrying what his good lady will say about the lost toe. From what he says I gather that she counts them every night.โ Bobbie grinned at the fire. There seemed something inexpressibly comic about a man losing a toe. โNothing has been heard of Double Dan?โ he asked, and she shook her head. โNo, he seems to have disappeared. We know by the marks on the brickwork that he climbed the wall, and according to Mr. Superbus, he had a companion. In one way Iโm glad heโs gone.โ Bobbie looked at the girl in astonishment. โGlad?โ he said. โGood lord, why?โ โFor the poor girlโs sake.โ Dianaโs face was saddened. โYou donโt know what sheโs suffered at his hands, Bobbie. Thereโs a whole lot of good in Heloise. Of course she feels his going. Thatโs the curse of it–a woman never loses hope.โ โHe must have got away pretty quickly,โ said Bobbie. โI was down immediately after Dempsi, and though I searched the house and the courtyard at once, there was no sign of the devil.โ She made a little gesture of distaste. โDonโt let us talk about him,โ she said briefly and went on to talk of Dempsi. โHe has been simply splendid. Really I have had a pleasant shock: the only one of that variety he has ever given me. I shouldnโt have thought that a man of his excitable temperament could have taken the matter so calmly. But he is subdued. A little nervous, I think, about the shooting. He was very anxious to know if I had informed the police, but of course I hadnโt–so far as Mr. Superbusโ toe was concerned. Heโs going to-day.โ โNot Dempsi?โ She nodded. โHe says heโll wait for me for a thousand years,โ she sighed. โI told him a hundred would be long enough–heigho! He hasnโt spoken otherwise about marriage all the morning. I almost like him for it.โ The subject of conversation strolled into the room a few minutes later. He was looking haggard, Bobbie thought, and remarkably unattractive. โGood morning, Mr. Selsbury–you have not seen Aunt Lizzie? I wished to condole with her. It is terrible when lovers are parted–but how terrible for you! Double Dan, you say? It makes my flesh creep. Yetโ–his admiring eyes beamed upon his hostess–โyet our little Diana did not fear! Ah, that was most wonderful. But tell me–who is Aunt Lizzie?โ โA friend of mine,โ said Diana shortly. Dempsi shook his head in sorrow. โI shall never forgive myself for shooting Superbus–in the toe,โ he said in a tone of bitter regret. Bobbie laughed. โYou sound as though youโd like to have shot him through the head,โ he said, and Mr. Dempsi recoiled before the bloodthirsty suggestion. โI? Heaven forbid! I admire Superbus. He is to me most admirable.โ โHe shouldnโt have slept,โ said Diana. โHe promised me that if he did fall off, he would have one eye open. Those were his words. I donโt know how he would manage, but he was so confident that I didnโt come down to look.โ She ran to the door. The tap, tap of a stick on the parquet floor of the hall announced the coming of the invalid, his right foot a picturesque cushion of white bandages. There was a crutch under one arm, and he heaved himself forward in jerks. To Diana he accorded a wan smile. Bobbie took one arm, Mr. Dempsi the other. They reached the sofa to the accompaniment of many grunts and โughs.โ โYou are feeling better, Mr. Superbus?โ He shook his head, being unwilling at this early stage to dispense with the anxiety, the care and the apprehension that was his due. โMiddling, maโam, middling. Naturally, Iโm a little bit shook up. I always get that way when I figure in a shooting affray–if I may use the term–and Iโve been in a few in my time. Iโll tell you about them one day, miss. But this, in a way, is the worst, and I admit I donโt feel up to the mark. What my good lady will say when she finds Iโve lost a toe—-โ He shook his head mournfully. Diana tried to cheer him. โIโm sure she wonโt make a fuss, Mr. Superbus. Women are very brave in such moments of trial. And a toe more or less isnโt essential to married happiness.โ Mr. Superbus wasnโt so sure, being at that moment in his most sentimental mood. His eyes were moist. โItโs a dreadful thing to think, maโam,โ he said, his lip a-tremble, โthat only yesterday that little toe of mine was alive and well; to-day–where is it?โ Mr. Dempsi covered his eyes with his long, thin hand. โAnd I did it,โ he said, his bosom heaving. โDonโt take on so, sirโ–Julius had the air of a Christian martyr excusing the lions. โWhy, it might have happened to any gentleman. I wish youโd shot him–or her.โ Dianaโs eyes narrowed. โOr her?โ she repeated. โWhat makes you say that? Was the other person a woman?โ โIt might have been. โ Julius was not prepared to be more explicit. In truth, he wasnโt particularly sure himself, but being gifted by nature with the mystery novelistโs successful trick of passing on suspicion to the most unlikely quarters, he suggested a woman accomplice, if only to be the only person in the room who knew the truth. Which was that the second person was a man and used expressions that no lady could possibly employ. โWhether it is one or the other I am unable to make a statement at present,โ he said sombrely. โThat will come out at the trial.โ โWhat really happened?โ Bobbie put the question. He had still only a disjoined idea of what had occurred in the dark. Julius fumbled in his pocket and found a massive notebook, opened it deliberately, and, after much searching, found the page he sought. โAt two A.M. on or about the fifteenth inst.,โ he said sonorously and with complete relish, โI was aroused from my slumbers by an uneasy apprehension that trouble was abroad, viz: burglars or other bad characters. I proceeded at once to rise from my bed, which was twenty-five feet six inches from the window (I got Aunt Lizzie to measure it)โ he explained in parenthesis. โThe Study was in darkness, but I saw the figure of a man. As I darted forward to arrest him, there arose, seemingly from my feet, a person or persons unknown. Realising that danger threatened, I immediately grappled with them–I suppose you heard the sign of a struggle?โ he asked anxiously. Diana had heard nothing. Bobbie shook his head. โI didnโt, but I wasnโt near enough,โ he explained. Mr. Dempsi, his hand behind him, his bearded chin on his waistcoat, did not look up. โSuddenly,โ resumed Superbus, โthere was a shot and I knew no more.โ โBut you say it might have been a woman?โ Diana was not inclined to lose sight of that point. โIt might have been a man or a woman,โ said Julius. โThat will come out when I tell the secret story, so to speak. For the present I will describe it as a person or persons unknown. I donโt mind admitting,โ he added, โthat they was strangers to me, and I never want to see โem again. Whereโs Uncle Isaac? I havenโt seen him this morning.โ โBut when you grappled, Mr. Superbus, you surely knew whether it was a man or a woman?โ insisted Diana. Julius inclined his head. โSpeaking as a married man,โ he said discreetly, โI ought to know.โ โBut you โgrappledโ?โ โIn a sense,โ said Mr. Superbus, โonly in a sense. When a man grapples with–with–a problem, does he catch it by the ear, or punch it under the jaw? No, maโam. When I say grappled, Iโm speaking in a general way. โBut you saw—-โ Here Julius was on safer ground. โWell, it looked like a man…. Iโll tell you the truth, it looked like Uncle Isaac. Donโt imagine for one second that it _was_ Uncle Isaac,โ he warned them. โI cast no aspersions. He got through the door before I could properly see him.โ โYou must have been mistaken, Mr. Superbus,โ said Diana. โI saw it slip past me and out of that door.โ Julius pointed. โYou were mistaken,โ said Diana. โThe man went out of the window and from the window into the courtyard. And then over the wall. The window was found open.โ But Julius was really not interested in the escaping criminal. On the other hand, he was very much interested in his own emotions. For once he felt that the eyes of the world were on him. โAs I lay there,โ he said, โthe whole of my life flitted before me. I saw my old school and the schoolmaster waiting for me at the door with his cane behind his back. I saw the public-house what I used to use as a young man, and where I met my good lady, owing to taking her father home one night and helping the family to put him to bed—-โ โYes, yes,โ interrupted Bobbie, a little unkindly, โit must have been a dreadful experience. Now tell us how you came to be asleep whilst these people were breaking open the safe?โ Mr. Superbus raised his eyebrows and shut his eyes. โDrugs,โ he said. โThe coffee must have been drugged last night. Iโm a light sleeper. The slightest noise and Iโm awake!โ Bobbie nodded. โOh, you _did_ hear the pistol then?โ he said. Diana thought his remark somewhat offensive. Chapter 26. With the remark that he had to go to his good lady or his good lady would have to come to him, Julius had taken his departure in a motor ambulance. He could as well have gone by taxi, but he expressed a preference for an ambulance. โOne with a red cross,โ he suggested. Diana had โphoned a garage, and Julius Superbus made his exit dramatically, covered with blankets, flat on a stretcher, and smiling the smile of one who was not long for this world but wasnโt afraid to go. โAnd what my missus will say when I come home short, I shudder to think,โ he said pathetically. โI donโt know: the only satisfaction Iโve got is that it was done on dooty.โ This significantly. When he had gone, Diana asked: โWhat is a toe worth, Bobbie? I must send the poor dear something. Would two hundred pounds be too little?โ โIt was a little toe,โ said Bobbie thoughtfully; โa big toe would have cost you more. Try him with two hundred.โ Diana wrote at once. She felt in excellent humour despite the empty safe with its hanging door; despite the shadow of tragedy which had impinged upon the house. Eleanor and the cook had made an early return. She had told them to stay away until Tuesday. They had argued (so they said) as to whether she had said Monday or Tuesday, and, to be on the safe side, had returned on the earlier day. Cookโs triumph (she had supported the Tuesday view) was tempered by the chagrin of a lost twenty-four hours of well-paid idleness. Heloise, from an upper window, saw the detective take his ceremonious departure. She had reason to be glad that Dempsiโs shots had done no greater mischief. She had been noticeably nervous all that morning, starting at every sound. Once Diana had found her hiding–there was no other word for it–in the little book-room and, detected, she had been so frightened and confused that Diana for a second was puzzled, till she remembered that the abrupt departure of Double Dan must have shocked the poor girl beyond understanding. Diana had finished her letter when Heloise came aimlessly into the room and looked round. Dempsi was sitting on the sofa, his face in his hands, looking moodily into the fire. Bobbie was in his own room, engaged in some mysterious business of his own (he was writing frantic telegrams to Gordon, imploring him to return; these he addressed to every hotel in Paris where he was likely to be found). Diana looked up with a smile, blotted the envelope and fixed a stamp. โYou must talk with Aunt–with Helosie–and amuse her,โ she said. โHuh?โ Dempsi broke off his meditations with a start. โYou have met Heloise?โ So many unlikely things had happened in the past forty-eight hours that it was quite possible she had omitted an introduction. She would not have been surprised if Dempsi denied having ever met Aunt Lizzie. โOh yes, we have met,โ he said awkwardly. โDid the shot waken you? I owe you ten thousand apologies if it did.โ She shook her head sadly. โNo, no. My mind was too full of–something else. Something that I cannot explain. Uncle–Uncle Isaac has really gone?โ Diana nodded. โGone! Out of my life! It doesnโt seem possible.โ Dempsi was vaguely interested, fixing her with a blank look; he also was thinking of something else. โDear lady, you seem very sad,โ he said mildly. Her tragic eyes moved till they rested on his. โSad! When I think of my old home and my dear father in Michigan—-โ โI thought you said Connecticut,โ interrupted Diana. Heloise was a quick thinker. โMother lives there,โ she said gently. โPoppa is in Michigan. Theyโre living apart.โ โI see,โ said Diana helpfully, โhappily separated. Most of oneโs friends are. It is so convenient for everybody–it simply means if you keep on good terms with both, that you double the number of your friends. You must feel rather nice about returning to America–having two homes that will welcome you.โ Heloise looked hard at the girl. She was never quite sure whether she was being very serious or very sarcastic. Other people disliked Diana for the same reason. โSo youโre going home?โ Dempsi roused himself to take a benevolent interest in Aunt Lizzie. โYes, Iโm going back to a new life, thanks to Miss Ford,โ she said quietly. โSome day this life will seem like a bad dream; I shall forget everything, except those who have robbed me of that which was dearer than life itself.โ The embarrassed Diana made her escape. โYou go to America?โ โYes.โ โIt is a beautiful country. A wonderful country!โ mused Dempsi. The click of the door as Diana disappeared brought him to his feet, and his expression had undergone a remarkable change. He looked down at Heloise keenly, as he rasped: โNow, where is that money?โ Heloise glanced at the door, looked over her shoulder: the room was empty. โYou know where it is, Sally!โ he said harshly. โNow come across!โ She was not sad any more; on the contrary, she was on the verge of fury. Hands on hips, she faced him. โSay, Dan, youโre the cleverest thing in male impersonators I know,โ she said shrilly. โI guess I wouldnโt be surprised to see you come into this room disguised as a performing flea. But the innocent child is outside your repertoire. You wouldnโt last three bars as Little Eva. Who took the money? You cheap skate! Youโre not going to put that over on me! You took the money. You took it, and helped that poor fool make a getaway at the same time. I guess you were working on the safe when he came in.โ โYou lie!โ He was beside himself with wrath. โI came in after youโd got it out. I didnโt mean to shoot–I guess that was the maddest thing I ever did. But I saw this guy getting through the window, and I guessed what happened. He gave you the money to let him escape!โ She showed her white teeth in a grimace of fury. โYou mean Iโve got it right now? In my pocket?โ โSure I mean that,โ he said doggedly. She heaved up a long, impatient sigh. โYouโre going to hear from my husbandโs lawyers! Thatโs what! And right here and now Iโm telling you sumpโn, you four-flushinโ dog! You took the money, and shot that poor boob when he came in to see who it was breaking the tin! What were you doing in the room all dressed up ready to jump the first train out of London–and leave me flat? You sneak! Havenโt I worked hard for you? Havenโt I sat for hours making an exhibition of my darned ego for that soul-lizard? Didnโt I get out of him the story of Diana, and give you the script and band parts and light cues? Didnโt I pump him till there was nothโnโ left but the squeak and the handle? And–do–you–dare–to turn me down?โ He dared nothing. Her victory was complete when he began to make excuses. โThere was fifty thousand dollars in that safe. All Iโve got is a crossed cheque thatโs as useful as confetti at a funeral. It will take two days to clear: Selsbury will be back to-night.โ โFifty thousand dollars!โ she sneered. โYou told me nothing about that. Maybe you forgot it? You said there wasnโt a thousand pounds in the job. Didnโt you? You said youโd be glad if you got back expenses. Am I lying? And whatโs that cheque anyway? Money she owed Dempsi? Great snakes–the money Dempsi threw at her! I told you that, and Iโd forgotten it!โ She ran her fingers through her hair. Her smile was fixed and terrifying. The smile of the Medusas was jocund by comparison. โI forgot about it until I got a note from her enclosing the money,โ he protested. โWhy, when that cheque came along, you could have blown me down. It was then I saw big money in the proposition and decided to go after the rest of the stuff. It looked easy to me.โ Impolite scepticism showed in her eye, and his injured air only intensified her suspicions. โNow, Dan, youโre a wonderful teller of tales and I guess if I were a bit younger Iโd fall for it!โ she said practically. โBut youโre going to be a good little boy and โfess up to Auntie that you took that money, and then youโll say โAuntie, weโll split it fifty-fifty.โ And if you donโt, Dan, why, itโs โGood morning, judgeโ for yours!โ He tried blandishment. โHonest, now, Sally, youโve got it,โ he said genially. โLetโs get right down to cases and—-โ โWould I be here doing this act and allowing my emotions to destroy my beauty if I had it? Shouldnโt I be stepping on it? Would you be exchanging persiflage with anything but the dust of my trail?โ This point appeared logical. โThatโs true,โ he said. โThen who opened the safe–not Selsbury?โ โYou did,โ she nodded, and he went purple. โCurse you! I told you I didnโt take it….โ The door handle turned. Without looking round they knew it was Diana. She had omitted to enclose a cheque in her letter, she remarked at large, but they were too absorbed in their talk to heed her. โI just love the country,โ sighed Heloise. โTo hear the old blue jays singing and watch the clouds coming up over the hill and feel the breeze in your face–why, thereโs nothing quite like it, Mr. Dempsi.โ โIโve never seen you two talking before,โ said Diana with a smile. Which was true. In a few seconds she was gone…. โNow see here, Sally, we havenโt time to act foolishly over this business. The stuff was taken, maybe by that guy Selsbury. What did you come here for, anyway?โ It was a question that he had been seeking an opportunity to ask. โI came here when I found you were trying to work the job as a one-man performance. I know you, Dan; youโve got a mighty bad reputation amongst honest crooks.โ He laughed without merriment. โIโm trying to live it down. Where has he gone–did he tell you he was leaving?โ โNo; weโd given up confidences before he left. You said he would come back. Iโve got it in my bones that youโre right. I guess he got it.โ โBut he couldnโt have worked a job like this single-handed,โ said the other. โWhy, your husband couldnโt have opened that safe more scientifically….โ She was not willing to be turned by gross flattery. โCut out the small talk and get right down to the grand facts of life,โ she said briskly. โDid I find Selsbury and affinitize him or did I not? Did I….โ He snarled at her like an angry mongrel. โโDid I, didnโt Iโ–great Moses! Do I want all that stuff? Why did you allow him to come back here?โ โLet him come back?โ she said scornfully. โI made him come back! When I got him into the house, I had him like that. I knew how youโd turn up. I knew there was money here, and I was going to stay with it. Itโs a funny thing about me that, of all the affinities Iโve met, nothโnโ is quite so close as money. Nothโnโ understands me better or talks more like Governor George Demosthenes.โ The man was finished. He too was a philosopher. โWell, thereโs no help for it,โ he said with a groan that he could not suppress. โWeโll have to share. The old terms, mind–none of your fifty-fifty stuff. Seventy-thirty.โ โSeventy-thirty! Well, I admire cold blood! Itโs fifty-fifty or nothing with me, Dan. But there ainโt anything to share.โ Here he corrected her. โSheโs paying up. Iโve given her back the cheque. If you wait half-an-hour sheโll have it cashed. Now are you satisfied? Sixty-forty?โ โFifty-fifty!โ said Heloise firmly. โYouโd never forgive yourself if you gave me less.โ They wrangled for ten minutes; in the end Heloise gained a victory for principle. Chapter 27. Eleanor came furtively in search of her mistress and found her in Gordonโs room, valiantly overhauling his wardrobe. โThe clergyman, miss,โ she said, with an air of mystery that was natural. The well-trained servant has an air appropriate to the calling of every visitor. Dread and a funereal solemnity for doctors, a primness for elderly ladies, a suppressed blitheness to announce the young, mystery for the clergy; only a lawyer baffles interpretation. The secret dispositions of lawyers have never been probed. โThe clergyman!โ Dianaโs heart fell. โA priest, maโam, by his clothes,โ said Eleanor. She was a Primitive Methodist and was secretly thrilled by priests and nuns. Not before had Diana considered Mr. Dempsiโs sectarian leanings. Nor had she before had sufficient confidence to meet the man whom she guessed had been sent by Dempsi to arrange the details of her servitude. โI will come down,โ she said, and took the card from Eleanorโs hand. She read the few printed words carefully, then she read them again and passed her hand over her eyes. โFather Guiseppi Dempsi, Vicar of Banhurst.โ โFather Guiseppi Dempsi!โ she said aloud, and in another second was flying down the stairs. She recognised him instantly, clean-shaven, dark, the old grin in his brown eyes. She would have known him even had he not been wearing his black cassock. โDiana!โ he said. โAfter all these years!โ โMr. Dempsi,โ she grasped, gripping the thin hand outstretched, โit _is_ you! You donโt know how glad I am to see you!โ Dempsi, the real Dempsi! Then who was the other? The solution of the mystery came to her in a flash, and in the realisation the whole weight of the universe was lifted from her heart. โFather Dempsi!โ she said, in a wondering way, still holding his hand. โIt doesnโt seem possible!โ โI was rather a fool, wasnโt I?โ he said without any trace of embarrassment. โYes, I went into the Church. But I should have let you know.โ โThe money!โ she said, suddenly. โThe money you gave me–you will want that?โ He laughed a little sheepishly. โI wondered if any was left. Honestly, I need money just now. My boysโ club is insolvent and the new church hall wants an organ….โ She nodded. She was still bewildered. Almost hysterical. And then came an excited Bobbie with a rush, flinging open the door. โDiana!โ he began. Behind him stood Gordon. A somewhat severely clad Gordon, yet different. She ran to him–before she realised what happened, she had kissed him. Gordon returned the kiss without any visible effort. โGordon, do you know the Reverend Guiseppi Dempsi? Youโve heard me talk about Mr. Dempsi?โ Gordon stared at the priest open-mouthed. โThe Reverend Guiseppi Dempsi?โ he said. โI thought–er—-โ He grasped the hand of the smiling clergyman. โI knew it couldnโt be that little … how do you do?โ โDiana and I are very old acquaintances–old friends, I ought to say,โ said Dempsi, beaming from one to the other. โOld lovers, I nearly said, but the love was a little one-sided.โ He chuckled. โExtraordinary!โ Gordon could say no more. โBut, Gordon, how is it youโre back? I had a wire this morning from Inverness. You couldnโt have got back—-โ โBy aeroplane,โ said Gordon without a blush. โI had a feeling that all was not well with you.โ โGordon, did you really?โ Her colour came and went. โYou are psychic, arenโt you? And Gordon, dear, youโve had your whiskers shaved!โ He nodded gravely. โI meant to tell you I intended doing that–you once said that you did not like them. No more than that was necessary. They vanished in the twinkling of an eye.โ It was Gordonโs moment. He was colossal. Eleanor opened the front door to a gentleman who was difficult to place. โMiss Ford at home?โ โYes, sir, but sheโs engaged.โ The stranger had no visiting-card apparently, for he announced himself. โI am Inspector Carslake from Scotland Yard,โ he said. โI should like to see the safe that was opened last night. It isnโt necessary to disturb Miss Ford.โ Eleanor, in a flutter, opened the door wider and showed him into The Study. โ…leave by the first train,โ Mr. Dempsi was saying. โWeโll split later.โ โWeโll split before we part,โ said Heloise firmly, โfor fear an accident happens–to the money.โ The other shrugged. โIโd hate to have a mind like yours,โ he said. And then the visitor came in. Heloise recognised him before he saw her face. There was a newspaper within reach, and she snatched it up, disappeared behind the printed page, and, reading, walked slowly from The Study into the little library. โDonโt go,โ said Dempsi. Then he too saw the detective, and here the recognition was mutual. โThe cobwebs on your chin are strangers to me,โ said Carslake, โbut that noble brow and those sparkling eyes belong to an old friend of mine, Dan Throgood, yclept Double Dan.โ โIโm afraid youโve made a mistake,โ said โDempsiโ with some hauteur. โWhat youโre afraid of is that I havenโt,โ said Carslake, and glanced at the broken door of the safe. โYour work?โ โNo. Thatโs not my line. Youโve nothing on me, Carslake. Iโve been staying here as a guest of Mr. Selsbury.โ โAnd now youโre going to be a guest of the King,โ said Carslake, slipping a pair of handcuffs from his pocket. โI must say, Dan, that you see life!โ It was later in the day, and from information received, that the inspector called at 61 Cheynel Gardens to arrest and detain one Sarah Chowster, British subject _alias_ Heloise van Oynne. But Heloise had gone. None knew whither. โCan I see Miss Ford,โ he asked, โor Mr. Selsbury?โ Eleanor asked him to wait, and, passing into The Study, listened intently at the door. โ…I really was going back to Australia, Gordon.โ โIโll follow you, and if necessary lose myself in the bush,โ said Gordonโs voice. There was a long silence. Eleanor opened the door an inch and looked. Then she went back to the detective. โMr. Selsbury and Miss Ford are engaged,โ she said. Thank you for joining us on this adventure through ‘Diana of Kara- Kara’ by Edgar Wallace. We hope you enjoyed the story and the fascinating characters that brought it to life. If you liked what you heard, be sure to subscribe to Storytime Haven for more classic tales that stir the imagination. Until next time, let your love for timeless stories continue to grow. Stay tuned for more exciting narratives, and weโll see you in our next chapter.
1 Comment
๐ง Enjoying the audiobook? ๐ Please like, share, subscribe and comment! ๐โจ