Then Joseph went away. The door between the shop and the hall was half open, and he looked in. A strange man was sitting in the outer shop, a pipe in his mouth, and James was leaning his head upon his hands, with wild and haggard eyes gazing straight before him.
"Poor devil," murmured Joseph. "I feel for him, I do indeed. He had the key made--for himself; he certainly let me use it once, but only once, and who"s to prove it? And he"s had the opportunity every day of using it himself. That"s very awkward, Foxy, my boy. If I were Foxy, I should be in a funk, myself."
He strolled away, thinking that all promised well. Lotty most favorably and unsuspiciously received in her new character; no one knowing the contents of the packet; his grandfather gone silly; and for himself, he had had the opportunity of advising exactly what he wished to be done--namely, that silence and inaction should be observed for a s.p.a.ce, in order to give the holders of the property a chance of offering terms. What better advice could he give? And what line of action would be better or safer for himself?
If James had known who was in the house-pa.s.sage, the other side of the door, there would, I think, have been a collision of two solid bodies.
But he did not know, and presently Lala Roy came back, and the torture began again. James took down books and put them up again; he moved about feverishly, doing nothing, with a duster in his hand; but all the time he felt those deep accusing eyes upon him with a silence worse than a thousand questions. He knew--he was perfectly certain--that he should be found out. And all the trouble for nothing!
and the Bailiff"s man in possession, and the safe robbed, and those eyes upon him, saying, as plain as eyes could speak, "Thou art the Man!"
"And Joe is the man," said James; "not me at all. What I did was wrong, but I was tempted. Oh, what a precious liar and villain he is!
And what a fool I"ve been!"
The day pa.s.sed more slowly than it seemed possible for any day to pa.s.s; always the man in the shop; always the deep eyes of the silent Hindoo upon him. It was a relief when, once, Mr. Chalker looked in and surveyed the shelves with a suspicious air, and asked if the old man had by this time listened to reason.
It is the business of him who makes plunder out of other men"s distresses--as the jackal feeds upon the offal and the putrid carca.s.s--to know as exactly as he can how his fellow-creatures are situated. For this reason such a one doth diligently inquire, listen, pick up secrets, put two and two together, and pry curiously into everybody"s affairs, being never so happy as when he gets an opportunity of going to the rescue of a sinking man. Thus among those who lived in good repute about the lower end of the King"s Road, none had a better name than Mr. Emblem, and no one was considered to have made more of his chances. And it was with joy that Mr. Chalker received Joe one evening and heard from him the dismal story, that if he could not find fifty pounds within a few hours, he was ruined. The fifty pounds was raised on a bill bearing Mr. Emblem"s name. When it was presented, however, and the circ.u.mstances explained, the old gentleman, who had at first refused to own the signature, accepted it meekly, and told no one that his grandson had written it himself, without the polite formality of asking permission to sign for him. In other words Joseph was a forger, and Mr. Chalker knew it, and this made him the more astonished when Mr. Emblem did not take up the bill, but got it renewed quarter after quarter, subst.i.tuting at length a bill of sale, as if he was determined to pay as much as possible for his grandson"s sins.
"Where is he?" asked the money-lender angrily. "Why doesn"t he come down and face his creditors?"
"Master"s upstairs," said James, "and you"ve seen yourself, Mr.
Chalker, that he is off his chump. And oh, sir, who would have thought that Emblem"s would have come to ruin?"
"But there"s something, James--Come, think--there must be something."
"Mr. Joseph said there were thousands. But he"s a terrible liar--oh, Mr. Chalker, he"s a terrible liar and villain! Why, he"s even deceived me!"
"What? Has he borrowed your money?"
"Worse--worse. Do you know where I could find him, sir?"
"Well, I don"t know--" Mr. Chalker was not in the habit of giving addresses, but in this case, perhaps Joe might be squeezed as well as his grandfather. Unfortunately that bill with the signature had been destroyed. "I don"t know. Perhaps if I find out I may tell you. And, James, if you can learn anything--this rubbish won"t fetch half the money--I"ll make it worth your while, James, I will indeed."
"I"ll make him take his share," said James to himself. "If I have to go to prison, he shall go too. They sha"n"t send me without sending him."
He looked round. The watchful eyes were gone. The Hindoo had gone away noiselessly. James breathed again.
"After all," he said, "how are they to find out? How are they to prove anything? Mr. Joseph took the things, and I helped him to a key; and he isn"t likely to split, and--oh, Lord, if they were to find it!" For at that moment he felt the duplicate key in his waistcoat-pocket. "If they were to find it!"
He took the key out, and looked at the bright and innocent-looking thing, as a murderer might look at his blood stained dagger.
Just then, as he gazed upon it, holding it just twelve inches in front of his nose, one hand was laid upon his shoulder, and another took the key from between his fingers.
He turned quickly, and his knees gave way, and he sunk upon the floor, crying:
"Oh, Mr. Lala Roy, sir, Mr. Lala Roy, I am not the thief! I am innocent! I will tell you all about it! I will confess all to you! I will indeed! I will make atonement! Oh, what a miserable fool I"ve been!"
"Upon the heels of Folly," said the Sage, "treadeth Shame. You will now be able to understand the words of wisdom, which say of the wicked man, "The curse of iniquity pursueth him; he liveth in continual fear; the anxiety of his mind taketh vengeance upon him." Stand up and speak."
The Man in Possession looked on as if an incident of this kind was too common in families for him to take any notice of it. Nothing, in fact, is able to awaken astonishment in the heart of the Man in Possession, because nothing is sacred to him except the "sticks" he has to guard.
To Iris, the event was, however, of importance, because it afforded Lala Roy a chance of giving Arnold that photograph, no other than an early portrait of Mr. Emblem"s grandson.
CHAPTER XII.
IS THIS HIS PHOTOGRAPH?
The best way to get a talk with his cousin was to dine with her.
Arnold therefore went to Chester Square next day with the photograph in his pocket. It was half an hour before dinner when he arrived, and Clara was alone.
"My dear," she cried with enthusiasm, "I am charmed--I am delighted--with Iris."
"I am glad," said Arnold mendaciously.
"I am delighted with her--in every way. She is more and better than I could have expected--far more. A few Americanisms, of course--"
"No doubt," said Arnold. "When I saw her I thought they rather resembled Anglicisms. But you have had opportunities of judging. You have in your own possession," he continued, "have you not, all the papers which establish her ident.i.ty?"
"Oh, yes; they are all locked up in my strong-box. I shall be very careful of them. Though, of course, there is no one who has to be satisfied except myself. And I am perfectly satisfied. But then I never had any doubt from the beginning. How could there be any doubt?"
"How, indeed?"
"Truth, honor, loyalty, and candor, as well as gentle descent, are written on that girl"s n.o.ble brow, Arnold, plain, so that all may read. It is truly wonderful," she went on, "how the old gentle blood shows itself, and will break out under the most unexpected conditions.
In her face she is not much like her father; that is true; though sometimes I catch a momentary resemblance, which instantly disappears again. Her eyes are not in the least like his, nor has she his manner, or carriage, or any of his little tricks and peculiarities--though, perhaps, I shall observe traces of some of them in time. But especially she resembles him in her voice. The tone--the timbre--reminds me every moment of my poor Claude."
"I suppose," said Arnold, "that one must inherit something, if it is only a voice, from one"s father. Have you said anything to her yet about money matters, and a settlement of her claims?"
"No, not yet. I did venture, last night, to approach the subject, but she would not hear of it. So I dropped it. I call that true delicacy, Arnold--native, instinctive, hereditary delicacy."
"Have you given any more money to the American gentleman who brought her home?"
"Iris made him take a hundred pounds, against his will, to buy books with, for he is not rich. Poor fellow! It went much against the grain with him to take the money. But she made him take it. She said he wanted books and instruments, and insisted on his having at least a hundred pounds. It was generous of her. Yes; she is--I am convinced--a truly generous girl, and as open-handed as the day. Now, would a common girl, a girl of no descent, have shown so much delicacy and generosity?"
"By the way, Clara, here is a photograph. Does it belong to you? I--I picked it up."
He showed the photograph which Lala Roy had given him.
"Oh, yes; it is a likeness of Dr. Washington, Iris"s adopted brother and guardian. She must have dropped it. I should think it was taken a few years back, but it is still a very good likeness. A handsome man, is he not? He grows upon one rather. His parting words with Iris yesterday were very dignified and touching."
"I will give it to her presently," he replied, without further comment.
There was, then, no doubt. The woman was an impostor, and the man was the thief, and the papers were the papers which had been stolen from the safe, and Iris Deseret was no other than his own Iris. But he must not show the least sign of suspicion.
"What are you thinking about, Arnold?" asked Clara. "Your face is as black as thunder. You are not sorry that Iris has returned, are you?"
"I was thinking of my engagement, Clara."