And yet this morning"--her voice changed to a tone of bitter irony--"this morning, if you please, no one knows anything about it, and everyone has slept well. Bah!"
She snapped her fingers again, and it seemed almost as if she waited to know what I should say. But I realised that this woman was an intimate of the doctor; and it was my business, then, to fear everyone in that house, save Debora. So I went on smoking, and, still without turning my head, talked to the woman I saw in the mirror.
"Have you anything else to say?" I asked calmly.
"Oh! a great deal," she flashed back at me, forgetting the cautious voice in which she had spoken. "I want, first of all, to know who you are, and how you come to be in this house so mysteriously and so suddenly; for who saw you arrive? That I shall discover some day for myself. I discover everything in time. And I want to tell you something."
She moved a step nearer to my chair, and now I turned my head and looked into her eyes.
"He did not succeed last night; but perhaps the next time he will not fail. So surely as I stand here, so surely do I know that he will kill her." She nodded her head with incredible swiftness two or three times, and drew back from me, with her lips tightly pursed.
I lost control of myself in the sudden shock of her words; I sprang to my feet. "What do you mean?" I asked in horror. "What do you know?"
"Only what I have said," she mocked at me, as she made for the door. "I would advise you, Mr. Mysterious, to look well after this girl you love--this frail thing of prettiness. For the doctor will surely kill her!" Then she was gone, and I was left staring helplessly at the closed door.
So much had that thought been in my own mind that her words seemed but an echo. I thought I saw that this man, Bardolph Just, cheated of his purpose in securing the girl, had made up his mind to get rid of her--out of some insane jealousy that prompted him not to allow her to go to the arms of another man. Yet, when I came to think over the problem, it occurred to me that if, as he had faintly suggested, he wanted control of her fortune, this would be but the act of a madman.
The only possibility was that the fortune might in some way be secured by him without her.
But now that the matter had been confirmed in this startling fashion I knew that it was imperative that I should keep a stricter watch than ever upon Debora. For suddenly it seemed to me that my absurd belief in the man was no longer justified. I saw that the doctor had merely adopted that att.i.tude of penitence, the better to put me off my guard.
Yet, even while I promised myself that I would do valiant things, I could only remember my own helplessness, in being entirely dependent upon the very man against whom I wished to arm myself. I had in my pocket but a shilling or two, which he had given me for my journey down into London--that journey which I had never taken.
As for any future that might once have seemed bright before me--what future had I? I was practically in hiding under another name, and I had no resources save those I might derive from one who knew my secret, and was, in a great sense, my enemy. I was in love--surely more hopelessly than mortal man had ever been before; and I was liable at any moment to be betrayed by the man Harvey Scoffold, who had penetrated my story.
Altogether, as I came to review the position, I could have heartily wished myself back in my prison again, save for one element in the business. That element was Debora Matchwick, and I knew that in the strange game I was playing Fate had destined me to fight on her side, in a matter of life and death.
Bardolph Just returned early in the afternoon, and went straight to his study. Debora I had seen for an instant as she crossed the hall; she gave me a quick smile, and that was all. There seemed to be brooding over the whole house an atmosphere of expectancy--quite as though we waited for something that was to happen, and faced it each in his or her particular way. I found myself listening for the doctor"s step in the house, while I felt equally certain that for his part he was wondering what move I should take, and was calmly preparing to meet such a move, whatever it might be.
The long day drew to a close, and presently the harsh bell clanged through the house as a summons to dinner. I happened to be in my room at the time, and as I stepped out of it to go down the stairs, I saw that the doctor was waiting at the head of the stairs, and was peering over into the hall below. He turned his head when he heard my step behind him, and spoke in a whisper. He spoke as though we were on the friendliest terms, and almost as if there were some secret understanding between us. As I stepped up to him he put his hand on my shoulder, and, laughable as it may seem, I felt a little thrill of grat.i.tude and tenderness for the man run through me--such was the fascination of him.
All my suspicions of him seemed to go to the wind.
"I thought I ought to prepare you, John, in case you didn"t know," he whispered. "Two bits of news--Harvey Scoffold has come to dinner, which may mean mischief; and Capper"s missing."
He imparted that last sc.r.a.p of information with something so like a chuckle that I looked at him quickly, with a new suspicion in my mind.
Oddly enough, he must have guessed what I meant, for he shook his head and grinned.
"Oh, nothing to do with me, I a.s.sure you," he said. "Only he has gone off without a word to anyone--and I don"t quite like it. Of course, I"m relieved to know that he has gone; the old fool was like a ghost wandering about the place. But still, I"d like to know where he is."
"I don"t see that it matters very much," I replied. "But what makes you think that Scoffold may mean mischief?"
Still keeping his hand on my shoulder, he turned me about, and began to walk with me down the stairs. "Because it"s a long time since he has visited me until the other night, and now he comes again. You see, he knows our story, and he"s utterly unscrupulous. More than that, he"s always in want of money."
"I"ll try what personal violence will do, if he tries any tricks with me," I muttered savagely. And once again I heard the doctor chuckle.
Harvey Scoffold was in the dining-room when we entered, and was talking to Debora. He was flourishing about in his big, bullying way, with his hands thrust in his pockets, and his feet wide apart. He turned round to greet us at once. I noticed that he looked sharply from the doctor to me, and back again, as though he suspected we had been discussing him; but the next moment he gripped our hands warmly, and began to pour out apologies.
"I hope you don"t mind a lonely man coming in, and taking advantage of your hospitality in this fashion," he began to the doctor. "But it suddenly occurred to me that I might run over to see you--and I acted on the impulse of a moment."
"Delighted, I"m sure," murmured Bardolph Just. Yet he scarcely looked delighted. "You know you"re always welcome, Harvey."
"Thanks--a thousand thanks!" exclaimed the big man. "You fellows interested me so much the other night while we smoked our cigars, that I rather wanted to have that little discussion out with you. You don"t mind?"
We were seated at the table by this time, and I saw the doctor look up quickly at him, with something of a scowl on his face. "I mind very much," he said sharply. "Drop it."
A little startled, Harvey Scoffold sat upright, looking at him for a moment; then he nodded slowly. "Very good--then the subject is dropped,"
he said. "It would not have been mentioned again by me, but that I thought I might be of some a.s.sistance in the matter."
There was no reply to that, and we presently drifted into other topics of conversation. But after a time it seemed as though Harvey Scoffold, in sheer venom, must get back to that subject, if only by a side door, for he presently asked a question casually that bore straight upon it.
"By the way, that quaint old servant, Capper--is he any better?"
The doctor slowly finished the wine he was drinking, and set the gla.s.s down, and wiped his lips; then, without looking at his questioner, he answered--
"Capper is gone!" he said.
Two persons at the table echoed that last word together--Harvey Scoffold and Debora exclaimed, as in one voice, "Gone!"
"Having had enough of our society, the man has taken himself off as mysteriously as he came," went on the doctor calmly. "I never understood his coming; still less do I understand his going, although I confess that the latter movement is the more reasonable. Perhaps he has remembered where his master is, and has gone to join him."
I stole a glance at the startled face of the girl. She seemed strangely excited. Harvey Scoffold, evidently at a loss for conversation, hummed the mere shred of an air between his lips, and looked at the ceiling.
The doctor"s face I could not see, because he was behind the lamp. I longed for the dinner to pa.s.s, because I wanted to get at my man, and find out just what game was afoot; I was in a mood to choke whatever news he had out of him, if necessary.
Debora rose at last, and went out of the room. No sooner was the door closed than the doctor shifted his chair a little, so as to bring him clear of the lamp, and brought a fist down on the table with a bang.
"Now, Scoffold," he said violently, "what"s the move?"
"Yes, what"s the move?" I echoed, leaning towards the man also.
He glanced from one to the other of us with a look of smiling innocence on his face. "The move?" he said. "I"m afraid I don"t understand. In the name of all that"s marvellous, can"t a man come to dinner with friends without being asked what the move is?"
"You"re not the man to do anything without a purpose," cried Bardolph Just. "You discovered something the last time you were here, and you evidently want to discover something else. Let me warn you----"
"Stop! stop!" broke in Harvey Scoffold, raising his hands protestingly.
"I need no threats and no warnings, because there is nothing to threaten about, nor to warn about. My hands are clean, and I trust they may remain so. If I referred to the matter at all to-night, it was simply because I was naturally very deeply interested in the story I heard, and I wanted to know what further developments there might be, that is all."
"Well, there are no further developments," growled the doctor. "I doubt if there will be any further developments."
"I"m delighted to hear it, and I"m only worried about one thing--that"s the man Capper. He may make mischief, and he may get himself into trouble--poor old fellow!--wandering about the world friendless. I"m quite sorry for Capper."
The doctor excused himself almost immediately, and went to his study. To my surprise, Scoffold linked his arm in mine, and drew me with him towards the door of the house. "It"s a fine night, and a walk will do you good," he said. "Walk back with me to my place."
"That"s rather too far," I said, for I remembered that he had chambers in the West-end of London.
"I"ve taken another lodging," he said, without looking at me. "It"s about a mile from here--or perhaps a little more--in a sort of rural cottage, where I can smell the roses when I wake in the morning. Cheap and wholesome, and all that sort of thing. Come along."
It was still quite early, and I reflected that no harm was likely to come to the girl in the short time I should be away. Besides, in a fashion, this man drew me to him, by reason of the fact that I was afraid of him, and of what he might do or say. So we went out of the house together, and traversed the dark grounds, and so came arm-in-arm into the open road. Smoking our cigars like two gentlemen at ease, we strolled along under the stars.
I found that he had taken a lodging in a quaint little cottage, with a long garden in front of it, in a queer little back street in Highgate--I should scarcely have believed that such a place existed in what was really London. He fitted his key into the door, and we went into a tiny pa.s.sage and up some stairs. As we reached the top of the stairs, a clean-looking old woman came out of the room below, and called to him.
"Your servant is waiting up for you, sir," she said.