"At your service, sir."
I turned round and led the way back into the court.
"This is not a professional visit, I trust?" I said as we pa.s.sed into the smoke room.
"Not entirely, sir," Mr. Cullen admitted. "At the same time--" He paused and looked out the window steadily for a moment, as though in search of inspiration.
"I trust," I began hastily, "that Mr. Bundercombe has not--"
"Precisely about him, sir, that I came to see you," Mr. Cullen interrupted. "I am bound to admit that a few weeks ago there was no man in the world I would have laid my hands on so readily. That day at the Ritz, however, changed my views completely. I feel," he added, with a dry smile, "that I got more than level with Mr. Bundercombe when I sent for his wife."
"So it was you who sent the cables that brought her over!" I remarked.
"But please remember, sir," he begged apologetically, "that I had never seen the lady. I sent the cables, confidently antic.i.p.ating that she would disclaim all knowledge of Mr. Bundercombe. When she arrived, and I realized that she was actually his wife, I forgave him freely for all the small annoyances he had caused me: my visit to you this morning, in fact, is entirely in his interests."
"What has Mr. Bundercombe been up to now?" I asked nervously.
"Nothing serious--at any rate, that I know of," Mr. Cullen a.s.sured me.
"For the last fortnight--ever since Mrs. Bundercombe"s arrival, in fact-- Mr. Bundercombe has somehow or other managed to keep away from all his old a.s.sociates and out of any sort of mischief. Last night, however, I was out on duty--I haven"t had time to go home and change my clothes yet--in a pretty bad part, shadowing one of the most dangerous swell mobsmen in Europe--a man you may have heard of, sir. He is commonly known as Dagger Rodwell."
I hastily disclaimed any acquaintance with the person in question.
"Tell me, though," I begged, "what this has to do with Mr. Bundercombe?"
"Just this," Mr. Cullen explained: "I ran my man to ground in a place where I wouldn"t be seen except professionally--and with him was Mr.
Bundercombe."
"They were not engaged," I asked quickly, "in any lawbreaking escapade at the time, I trust!"
Mr. Cullen shook his head rea.s.suringly.
"Rodwell only goes in for the very big coups," he said. "Two or three in a lifetime, if he brought them off, would be enough for him. All the same there"s something planning now and he"s fairly got hold of Mr.
Bundercombe. He"s a smooth-tongued rascal--absolutely a gentleman to look at and speak to. What I want you to do, sir, if you"re sufficiently interested, is to take Mr. Bundercombe away for a time."
"Interested!" I groaned. "He"ll be my father-in-law in a couple of months."
"Then if you want him to attend the ceremony, sir," Mr. Cullen advised earnestly, "you"ll get him out of London. He"s restless. You may have noticed that yourself. He"s spoiling for an adventure, and Dagger Rodwell is just the man to make use of him and then leave him high and dry--the b.o.o.by for us to save our bacon with. I don"t wish any harm to Mr.
Bundercombe, sir--and that"s straight! Until the day I met Mrs.
Bundercombe at Liverpool I am free to confess that I was feeling sore against him. To-day that"s all wiped out. We had a pleasant little time at the Ritz that afternoon, and my opinion of the gentleman is that he"s the right sort, I"m here to give you the office, sir, to get him away from London--and get him away quick. I may know a trifle more than I"ve told you, or I may not; but you"ll take my advice if you want to escape trouble."
"I"ll do what I can," I a.s.sured him a little blankly. "To tell you the truth I have been fearing something of this sort. During the last few days especially his daughter tells me he has been making all sorts of excuses to get away. I"ll do what I can--and many thanks, Mr. Cullen. Let me offer you something."
Mr. Cullen declined anything except a cigar and went on his way. I called a taxi and drove round to the very delightful house the Bundercombes had taken in Prince"s Gardens. I caught Mr. Bundercombe on the threshold. He would have hurried off, but I laid a detaining hand on his arm.
"Come back with me, if you please," I begged. "I have some news. I need to consult you all."
Mr. Bundercombe glanced at his watch. His manner was a little furtive. He was not dressed as usual--in frock coat, white waistcoat and silk hat, a costume that seemed to render more noticeable his great girth and smooth pink-and-white face--but in a blue serge, double-breasted suit, a bowler hat, and a style of neckgear a little reminiscent of the Bowery. Something in his very appearance seemed to me a confirmation of Mr. Cullen"s warning. He looked at his watch and muttered something about an appointment.
"I promise not to keep you more than a very few minutes," I a.s.sured him.
"Come along!"
I kept my arm on his and led him back into the house.
"Eve is in the morning room," he whispered. "Let"s go in quietly and perhaps we shan"t be heard."
We crossed the hall on tiptoe in the manner of conspirators. Before we could enter the room, however, our progress was arrested by a somewhat metallic cough. Mrs. Bundercombe, in a gray tweed coat and skirt of homely design, a black hat and black gloves, with a satchel in her hand, from which were protruding various forms of pamphlet literature, appeared suddenly on the threshold of the room she had insisted upon having allotted for her private use, and which she was pleased to call her study.
"Mr. Bundercombe!" she exclaimed portentously, taking no notice whatever of me.
"My dear?" he replied.
"May I ask the meaning of your leaving the house like a truant schoolboy at this hour of the morning, and in such garb!" demanded Mrs. Bundercombe, eying him severely through her pince-nez. "Is your memory failing you, Joseph Henry? Did you or did you not arrange to accompany me this morning to a meeting at the offices of the Women"s Social Federation?"
"I fear I--er--I had forgotten the matter," Mr. Bundercombe stammered. "An affair of business--I was rung up on the telephone."
Mrs. Bundercombe stared at him. She said nothing; expression was sufficient. She turned to me.
"Eve is in the morning room, Mr. Walmsley," she said. "I presume your visit at this hour of the morning was intended for her."
"Precisely," I admitted. "I will go in and see her."
I opened the door and Mr. Bundercombe rather precipitately preceded me. If he had contemplated escape, however, he was doomed to disappointment. Mrs.
Bundercombe followed us in. She reminded us of her presence by a hard cough as Eve saluted me in a somewhat light-hearted fashion.
"Mind, there"s mother!" Eve whispered, with a little grimace. "Tell me why you have come so early, Paul. Are you going to take me out motoring all day? Or are you going to the dressmaker"s with me? I really ought to have a chaperon of some sort, you know, and mother is much too busy making friends with the leaders of the Cause over here."
She made a face at me from behind a vase of flowers. Mrs. Bundercombe apparently thought it well to explain her position.
"I find it," she said, "absolutely inc.u.mbent upon me, while on a visit to this metropolis, to cultivate the acquaintance of the women of this country who are in sympathy with the great movement in the States with which I am a.s.sociated. It is expected of me that I should make my presence over here known."
"Naturally," I agreed; "naturally, Mrs. Bundercombe. I see by the papers that you were speaking at a meeting last night. That reminds me," I went on, "that I really did come down this morning on rather an important matter, and perhaps it is as well that you are all here, as I should like your advice. I have received an invitation to stand for the division of the county in which I live."
They all looked puzzled.
"To stand for Parliament, I mean," I hastily explained to them. "It seems really rather a good opportunity--as, of course, I am fairly well known in the district, and the majority against us was only seventy or eighty at the last election."
"Say, that"s interesting!" Mr. Bundercombe declared, putting down his hat, "I didn"t know you were by way of being a professional man, though."
"I"m not," I replied. "You wouldn"t call politics a profession exactly."
Mr. Bundercombe was more puzzled than ever. His hand caressed his chin in familiar fashion.
"Well, it"s one way of making a living, isn"t it?" he asked. "We call it a profession on our side."
"It isn"t a way of making a living at all!" I a.s.sured him. "It costs one a great deal more than can be made out of it."
Mr. Bundercombe stopped scratching his chin.
Mrs. Bundercombe sat down opposite me and I was perfectly certain that she would presently have a few remarks to offer. Eve was looking delightfully interested.