"On my pin-cushion, when I go upstairs to bed," he said at last--"although it strikes me as a most unmaidenly action for Hilda."
"So unmaidenly," I replied, "that you will probably find the letter on the hall table by your candle. Come and see."
My faith in Miss Beverley"s sense of propriety was fully justified, for we found the letter in the hall beside the candlesticks exactly as I had foretold. Probably it had not lain there more than five minutes.
"What do you think of that?" I enquired.
"By Heavens, Holmes," exclaimed d.i.c.ky, who after his late lofty flight had characteristically relapsed into one of his most imbecile moods, "this is wonderful!"
We bore the letter back to the billiard-room.
"Four sheets!" murmured The Freak dejectedly. "Well, the longer I look at them the less I shall like them. Here goes!"
He began to unfold the crackling doc.u.ment.
"What is that protuberance down there, between your finger and thumb?" I enquired. "It may epitomise the letter for you."
d.i.c.ky turned the envelope upside down, and shook it over the billiard-table. Something fell out, rolled a short distance, and lay sparkling and shimmering on the green cloth.
d.i.c.ky picked up the ring very slowly, and regarded it long and intently.
Then he turned to me.
"Thank G.o.d!" he said, softly and quite reverently; and I knew he spoke less for himself than for a certain superior young woman upstairs, who considered him flippant, lacking in depth, and altogether unworthy of her.
CHAPTER X
STILL AT LARGE
I saw very little of The Freak the following winter. For one thing, I went abroad again. The Government of the Auricula Protectorate had decided to connect their capital with the sea by means of a ca.n.a.l. I happened to know the district, for I had been engaged eight years previously upon the great dam, thirty miles from Auricula, which now holds in beneficent restraint the turbid waters of the Rumbolo River. I accordingly applied for work in connection with the scheme. By the greatest luck in the world one Vandeleur, C.B., a magnate of no small standing in the Auricula district, happened to be home on leave. He had visited my dam in his official capacity, and had noted that it was still standing. He spoke the word, and I got my ca.n.a.l.
The next four months I spent upon the continent of Africa, sketching, surveying, and drawing up specifications. Then I came home to be married.
At the very first dinner-party to which we were bidden on our return from our honeymoon I encountered The Freak.
I saw him first, so to speak. Covers had been laid, as they say in country newspapers, for twenty-two persons. My wife, through the operation of an inscrutable but inexorable law, had been reft from my side, and was now periodically visible through a maze of table decorations, entertaining her host with what I could not help regarding as the most unfeeling vivacity and cheerfulness. I began to take an inventory of the company. We had been a little late in arriving--to be precise, the last--and I had had no opportunity of observing my fellow-guests. My own partner was a Mrs. Botley-Markham, an old acquaintance of mine. She combined short sight and an astonishingly treacherous memory for names and faces with a rooted conviction that the one infallible sign of good breeding is never to forget a name or a face. ("A truly _Royal_ attribute," she had once announced in my presence.) I was therefore agreeably surprised to find that she remembered not merely my face, but my name and _metier_. After putting me at my ease with a few kindly and encouraging remarks upon the subject of ca.n.a.ls, she turned to her other neighbour.
"Dear Sir Arthur," I heard her say, "this is indeed a pleasant surprise!"
"Dear lady," replied a hearty voice, "the pleasure is entirely mine."
I leaned carelessly forward to inspect the menu, and shot a sidelong glance in the direction of Sir Arthur. I was right. It was The Freak, in his most acquiescent mood. I wondered what his surname was, and whether he knew it.
"We had such a teeny talk last time we met," continued Mrs.
Botley-Markham. "Now we can chat as long as we please."
Heaving a gentle sigh of relief, Mrs. Botley-Markham"s rightful dinner-partner helped himself to a double portion of the _entree_ and set to work.
The chat commenced forthwith.
"And how is Gipsy?" enquired Mrs. Botley-Markham.
"Gipsy," replied Sir Arthur without hesitation, "is top-hole."
"How quaint and original you always are in your expressions!" cooed my neighbour. "But I am so glad to hear about Gipsy. Then the dear thing has quite recovered?"
"Absolutely," replied d.i.c.ky courageously.
Mrs. Botley-Markham cooed again. Then she enquired, confidentially:--
"Now tell me, what _was_ it?"
"What _was_ it?" echoed The Freak cautiously. "Ah!"
"Yes; what _was_ it?" pursued his interlocutor, much intrigued. "Don"t tell me they never found out!"
"Never. At least," admitted The Freak guardedly, "not for some time."
"Then they actually operated without being sure?" exclaimed Mrs.
Botley-Markham, shuddering.
d.i.c.ky, making up his arrears with a portion of quail, inclined his head gravely, and the quail reached its destination.
"And when they did find out," pursued Mrs. Botley-Markham, clasping her hands--she had finished her quail--"what _was_ it? Tell me, dear Sir Arthur!"
Sir Arthur cogitated for a moment, and then took the plunge.
"It was clavicle," he said solemnly.
a.s.suming that my friend was labouring under the same disadvantage as myself--namely, inability to decide whether Gipsy was a woman, child, horse, dog, cat, or monkey--to invent a mysterious and non-committal disease upon the spur of the moment struck me as quite a stroke of genius on d.i.c.ky"s part. Connie would enjoy hearing about this.
"How truly terrible!" said Mrs. Botley-Markham, in an awe-struck voice.
"Clam--clavicle is a very rare disease, is it not?"
"Rare and mysterious," replied my friend in the same tone. "In fact, the doctor--"
"You mean Sir Herbert?"
"No, the other blo--the other gentleman--the anaesthetist, you know! He told me that he had never encountered a case of it before."
"How truly terrible!" said Mrs. Botley-Markham again. "And all the time you suspected appendicitis."
The Freak acquiesced readily. Here was light. Gipsy apparently was human--not equine, canine, feline, or simian.
"And the little one?" enquired Mrs. Botley-Markham tenderly.