"A divorce? Why, Cyril, I am awfully sorry. I had heard that your marriage hadn"t turned out any too well, but I had no idea it was as bad as that. You have proof, I suppose."
"Ample."
"Tell me the particulars. I never have heard anything against your wife"s character."
"You mean that you have never heard that she was unfaithful to me. Bah, it makes me sick the way people talk, as if infidelity were the only vice that d.a.m.ned a woman"s character. Guy, her character was rotten through and through. Her infidelity was simply a minor, though culminating, expression of it."
"But how did you come to marry such a person?"
"You know she was the Chalmerses" governess?"
"Yes."
"I had been spending a few weeks with them. Jack, the oldest son, was a friend of mine and she was the daughter of a brother officer of old Chalmers"s who had died in India, and consequently her position in the household was different from that of an ordinary governess. I soon got quite friendly with Amy and her two charges, and we used to rag about together a good deal. I liked her, but upon my honour I hadn"t a thought of making love to her. Then one day there was an awful row. They accused her of carrying on a clandestine love affair with Freddy, the second son, and with drinking on the sly. They had found empty bottles hidden in her bedroom. She posed as injured innocence--the victim of a vile plot to get her out of the house--had no money, no friends, no hope of another situation. I was young; she was pretty. I was dreadfully sorry for her and so--well, I married her. As the regiment had just been ordered to South Africa, we went there immediately. We had not been married a year, however, when I discovered that she was a confirmed drunkard. I think only the fear of losing her position had kept her within certain bounds. That necessity removed, she seemed unable to put any restraint on herself. I doubt if she even tried to do so."
"Poor Cyril!"
"Later on I found out that she was taking drugs as well as stimulants.
She would drink herself into a frenzy and then stupefy herself with opiates. But it is not only weakness I am accusing her of. She was inherently deceitful and cruel--ah, what is the use of talking about it!
I have been through h.e.l.l."
"You haven"t been living together lately, have you?"
"Well, you see, she was disgracing not only herself but the regiment, and so it became a question of either leaving the army or getting her to live somewhere else. So I brought her back to Europe, took a small villa near Pau, and engaged an efficient nurse-companion to look after her. I spent my leave with her, but that was all. Last spring, however, she got so bad that her companion cabled for me. For a few weeks she was desperately ill, and when she partially recovered, the doctor persuaded me to send her to a sanitarium for treatment. Charleroi was recommended to me. It was chiefly celebrated as a lunatic asylum, but it has an annex where dipsomaniacs and drug fiends are cared for. At first, the doctor"s reports were very discouraging, but lately her improvement is said to have been quite astonishing, so much so that it was decided that I should take her away for a little trip. I was on my way to Charleroi, when the news reached me that Amy had escaped. We soon discovered that she had fled with a M. de Brissac, who had been discharged as cured the day before my wife"s disappearance. We traced them to within a few miles of Paris, but there lost track of them. I have, however, engaged a detective to furnish me with further particulars. I fancy the Frenchman is keeping out of the way for fear I shall kill him. Bah! Why, I pity him, that is all! He"ll soon find out what that woman is like. He has given me freedom! Oh, you can"t realise what that means to me. I only wish my father were alive to know that I have this chance of beginning life over again."
"I was so sorry to hear of his death. He was always so kind to us boys when we stayed at Lingwood. I wrote you when I heard the sad news, but you never answered any of my letters."
"I know, old chap, but you must forgive me. I have been too miserable--too ashamed. I only wanted to creep away and to be forgotten."
"Your father died in Paris, didn"t he?"
"Yes, luckily I was with him. It was just after I had taken Amy to Charleroi. He was a broken-hearted man. He never got over the mess I had made of my life and Wilmersley"s marriage was the last straw. He brooded over it continually."
"Why had your father been so sure that Lord Wilmersley would never marry? He was an old bachelor, but not so very old after all. He can"t be more than fifty now."
"Well, you see, Wilmersley has a bee in his bonnet. His mother was a Spanish ballet dancer whom my uncle married when he was a mere boy. She was a dreadful old creature. I remember her distinctly, a great, fat woman with a big, white face and enormous, gla.s.sy, black eyes. I was awfully afraid of her. She died when Wilmersley was about twenty and my uncle followed her a few months later. His funeral was hardly over when my cousin left Geralton and nothing definite was heard of him for almost twenty-five years. He was supposed to be travelling in the far East, and from time to time some pretty queer rumours drifted back about him.
Whether they were true or not, I have never known. One day he returned to Geralton as unexpectedly as he had left it. He sent for me at once.
He has immense family pride--the ballet dancer, I fancy, rankles--and having decided for some reason or other not to marry, he wished his heir to cut a dash. He offered me an allowance of 4000 a year, told me to marry as soon as possible, and sent me home."
"Well, that was pretty decent of him. You don"t seem very grateful."
"I can"t bear him. He"s a most repulsive-looking chap, a thorough Spaniard, with no trace of his father"s blood that I can see. And as I married soon afterwards and my marriage was not to his liking, he stopped my allowance and swore I should never succeed him if he could help it. So you see I haven"t much reason to be grateful to him."
"Beastly shame! He married Miss Mannering, Lady Upton"s granddaughter, didn"t he?"
"Yes."
"She is a little queer, I believe."
"Really? I didn"t know that. I have never seen her, but I hear she is very pretty. Well, I"m sorry for her, brought up by that old curmudgeon of a grandmother and married out of the schoolroom to Wilmersley. She has never had much of a chance, has she?"
"There are no children as yet?"
"No."
"So that now that your father is dead, you are the immediate heir."
The door was flung open and Peter rushed into the room brandishing a paper.
"Oh, sir, it"s come at last! I always felt it would!" He stuttered with excitement.
"What on earth is the matter with you?"
"I beg pardon, sir, but I am that hovercome! I heard them crying "hextras," so I went out and gets one--just casual-like. Little did I think what would be in it--and there it was."
"There was what?" Both men spoke at once, leaning eagerly forward.
"That Lord Wilmersley is dead; and so, my lord, I wish you much joy and a long life."
"This is very sudden," gasped Crichton. "I hadn"t heard he was ill. What did he die of?"
""E was murdered, my lord."
CHAPTER IV
ON THE SCENE OF THE TRAGEDY
"When, how, who did it?" cried Cyril incoherently. "Give me the paper."
"Murder of Lord Wilmersley--disappearance of Lady Wilmersley," he read.
"Disappearance of Lady Wilmersley," he repeated, as the paper fell from his limp hand.
"Here, get your master some whiskey; the shock has been too much for him," said Camp bell. "Mysterious disappearance of Lady Wilmersley,"
murmured Crichton, staring blankly in front of him.
"Here, drink this, old man; you"ll be all right in a moment," said Campbell, pressing a gla.s.s into his hand.
Cyril emptied it automatically.
"The deuce take it!" he cried, covering his face with his hands.
"Shall I read you the particulars?" Campbell asked, taking the paper.
Cyril nodded a.s.sent.