THE EPISODE OF THE ARREST OF THE COLONEL
How much precisely Charles dropped
over the slump in Cloetedorps I never quite knew.
But the incident left him dejected, limp, and dispirited.
“Hang it all, Sey,” he
said to me in the smoking-room, a few evenings later.
“This Colonel Clay is enough to vex the patience
of Job—and Job had large losses, too, if
I recollect aright, from the Chaldeans and other big
operators of the period.”
“Three thousand camels,”
I murmured, recalling my dear mother’s lessons;
“all at one fell swoop; not to mention five hundred
yoke of oxen, carried off by the Sabeans, then a leading
firm of speculative cattle-dealers!”
“Ah, well,” Charles meditated
aloud, shaking the ash from his cheroot into a Japanese
tray—fine antique bronze-work. “There
were big transactions in live-stock even then!
Still, Job or no Job, the man is too much for me.”
“The difficulty is,” I
assented, “you never know where to have him.”
“Yes,” Charles mused;
“if he were always the same, like Horniman’s
tea or a good brand of whisky, it would be easier,
of course; you’d stand some chance of spotting
him. But when a man turns up smiling every time
in a different disguise, which fits him like a skin,
and always apparently with the best credentials, why,
hang it all, Sey, there’s no wrestling with
him anyhow.”
“Who could have come to us,
for example, better vouched,” I acquiesced,
“than the Honourable David?”
“Exactly so,” Charles
murmured. “I invited him myself, for my
own advantage. And he arrived with all the prestige
of the Glen-Ellachie connection.”
“Or the Professor?” I
went on. “Introduced to us by the leading
mineralogist of England.”
I had touched a sore point. Charles
winced and remained silent.
“Then, women again,” he
resumed, after a painful pause. “I must
meet in society many charming women. I can’t
everywhere and always be on my guard against every
dear soul of them. Yet the moment I relax my
attention for one day—or even when I don’t
relax it—I am bamboozled and led a dance
by that arch Mme. Picardet, or that transparently
simple little minx, Mrs. Granton. She’s
the cleverest girl I ever met in my life, that hussy,
whatever we’re to call her. She’s
a different person each time; and each time, hang it
all, I lose my heart afresh to that different person.”
I glanced round to make sure Amelia
was well out of earshot.
“No, Sey,” my respected
connection went on, after another long pause, sipping
his coffee pensively, “I feel I must be aided
in this superhuman task by a professional unraveller
of cunning disguises. I shall go to Marvillier’s
to-morrow—fortunate man, Marvillier—and
ask him to supply me with a really good ’tec,
who will stop in the house and keep an eye upon every
living soul that comes near me. He shall scan
each nose, each eye, each wig, each whisker. He
shall be my watchful half, my unsleeping self; it
shall be his business to suspect all living men, all
breathing women. The Archbishop of Canterbury
shall not escape for a moment his watchful regard;
he will take care that royal princesses don’t
collar the spoons or walk off with the jewel-cases.
He must see possible Colonel Clays in the guard of
every train and the parson of every parish; he must
detect the off-chance of a Mme. Picardet in every
young girl that takes tea with Amelia, every fat old
lady that comes to call upon Isabel. Yes, I have
made my mind up. I shall go to-morrow and secure
such a man at once at Marvillier’s.”
“If you please, Sir Charles,”
Cesarine interposed, pushing her head through the
portiere, “her ladyship says, will you and Mr.
Wentworth remember that she goes out with you both
this evening to Lady Carisbrooke’s?”
“Bless my soul,” Charles
cried, “so she does! And it’s now
past ten! The carriage will be at the door for
us in another five minutes!”
Next morning, accordingly, Charles
drove round to Marvillier’s. The famous
detective listened to his story with glistening eyes;
then he rubbed his hands and purred. “Colonel
Clay!” he said; “Colonel Clay! That’s
a very tough customer! The police of Europe are
on the look-out for Colonel Clay. He is wanted
in London, in Paris, in Berlin. It is le Colonel
Caoutchouc here, le Colonel Caoutchouc there; till
one begins to ask, at last, IS there any Colonel
Caoutchouc, or is it a convenient class name invented
by the Force to cover a gang of undiscovered sharpers?
However, Sir Charles, we will do our best. I
will set on the track without delay the best and cleverest
detective in England.”
“The very man I want,”
Charles said. “What name, Marvillier?”
The principal smiled. “Whatever
name you like,” he said. “He isn’t
particular. Medhurst he’s called at home.
We call him Joe. I’ll send him round
to your house this afternoon for certain.”
“Oh no,” Charles said
promptly, “you won’t; or Colonel Clay himself
will come instead of him. I’ve been sold
too often. No casual strangers! I’ll
wait here and see him.”
“But he isn’t in,” Marvillier objected.
Charles was firm as a rock. “Then send
and fetch him.”
In half an hour, sure enough, the
detective arrived. He was an odd-looking small
man, with hair cut short and standing straight up
all over his head, like a Parisian waiter. He
had quick, sharp eyes, very much like a ferret’s;
his nose was depressed, his lips thin and bloodless.
A scar marked his left cheek—made by a sword-cut,
he said, when engaged one day in arresting a desperate
French smuggler, disguised as an officer of Chasseurs
d’Afrique. His mien was resolute.
Altogether, a quainter or ’cuter little man it
has never yet been my lot to set eyes on. He
walked in with a brisk step, eyed Charles up and down,
and then, without much formality, asked for what he
was wanted.
“This is Sir Charles Vandrift,
the great diamond king,” Marvillier said, introducing
us.
“So I see,” the man answered.
“Then you know me?” Charles asked.
“I wouldn’t be worth much,”
the detective replied, “if I didn’t know
everybody. And you’re easy enough to know;
why, every boy in the street knows you.”
“Plain spoken!” Charles remarked.
“As you like it, sir,”
the man answered in a respectful tone. “I
endeavour to suit my dress and behaviour on every occasion
to the taste of my employers.”
“Your name?” Charles asked, smiling.
“Joseph Medhurst, at your service.
What sort of work? Stolen diamonds? Illicit
diamond-buying?”
“No,” Charles answered,
fixing him with his eye. “Quite another
kind of job. You’ve heard of Colonel Clay?”
Medhurst nodded. “Why,
certainly,” he said; and, for the first time,
I detected a lingering trace of American accent.
“It’s my business to know about him.”
“Well, I want you to catch him,” Charles
went on.
Medhurst drew a long breath.
“Isn’t that rather a large order?”
he murmured, surprised.
Charles explained to him exactly the
sort of services he required. Medhurst promised
to comply. “If the man comes near you, I’ll
spot him,” he said, after a moment’s pause.
“I can promise you that much. I’ll
pierce any disguise. I should know in a minute
whether he’s got up or not. I’m death
on wigs, false moustaches, artificial complexions.
I’ll engage to bring the rogue to book if I see
him. You may set your mind at rest, that, while
I’m about you, Colonel Clay can do nothing
without my instantly spotting him.”
“He’ll do it,” Marvillier
put in. “He’ll do it, if he says it.
He’s my very best hand. Never knew any
man like him for unravelling and unmasking the cleverest
disguises.”
“Then he’ll suit me,”
Charles answered, “for I never knew any
man like Colonel Clay for assuming and maintaining
them.”
It was arranged accordingly that Medhurst
should take up his residence in the house for the
present, and should be described to the servants as
assistant secretary. He came that very day, with
a marvellously small portmanteau. But from the
moment he arrived, we noticed that Cesarine took a
violent dislike to him.
Medhurst was a most efficient detective.
Charles and I told him all we knew about the various
shapes in which Colonel Clay had “materialised,”
and he gave us in turn many valuable criticisms and
suggestions. Why, when we began to suspect the
Honourable David Granton, had we not, as if by accident,
tried to knock his red wig off? Why, when the
Reverend Richard Peploe Brabazon first discussed the
question of the paste diamonds, had we not looked to
see if any of Amelia’s unique gems were missing?
Why, when Professor Schleiermacher made his bow to
assembled science at Lancaster Gate, had we not strictly
inquired how far he was personally known beforehand
to Sir Adolphus Cordery and the other mineralogists?
He supplied us also with several good hints about false
hair and make-up; such as that Schleiermacher was
probably much shorter than he looked, but by imitating
a stoop with padding at his back he had produced the
illusion of a tall bent man, though in reality no
bigger than the little curate or the Graf von Lebenstein.
High heels did the rest; while the scientific keenness
we noted in his face was doubtless brought about by
a trifle of wax at the end of the nose, giving a peculiar
tilt that is extremely effective. In short, I
must frankly admit, Medhurst made us feel ashamed
of ourselves. Sharp as Charles is, we realised
at once he was nowhere in observation beside the trained
and experienced senses of this professional detective.
The worst of it all was, while Medhurst
was with us, by some curious fatality, Colonel Clay
stopped away from us. Now and again, to be sure,
we ran up against somebody whom Medhurst suspected;
but after a short investigation (conducted, I may
say, with admirable cleverness), the spy always showed
us the doubtful person was really some innocent and
well-known character, whose antecedents and surroundings
he elucidated most wonderfully. He was a perfect
marvel, too, in his faculty of suspicion. He suspected
everybody. If an old friend dropped in to talk
business with Charles, we found out afterwards that
Medhurst had lain concealed all the time behind the
curtain, and had taken short-hand notes of the whole
conversation, as well as snap-shot photographs of
the supposed sharper, by means of a kodak. If
a fat old lady came to call upon Amelia, Medhurst
was sure to be lurking under the ottoman in the drawing-room,
and carefully observing, with all his eyes, whether
or not she was really Mme. Picardet, padded.
When Lady Tresco brought her four plain daughters
to an “At Home” one night, Medhurst, in
evening dress, disguised as a waiter, followed them
each round the room with obtrusive ices, to satisfy
himself just how much of their complexion was real,
and how much was patent rouge and Bloom of Ninon.
He doubted whether Simpson, Sir Charles’s valet,
was not Colonel Clay in plain clothes; and he had
half an idea that Cesarine herself was our saucy White
Heather in an alternative avatar. We pointed out
to him in vain that Simpson had often been present
in the very same room with David Granton, and that
Cesarine had dressed Mrs. Brabazon’s hair at
Lucerne: this partially satisfied him, but only
partially. He remarked that Simpson might double
both parts with somebody else unknown; and that as
for Cesarine, she might well have a twin sister who
took her place when she was Mme. Picardet.
Still, in spite of all his care—or
because of all his care—Colonel Clay stopped
away for whole weeks together. An explanation
occurred to us. Was it possible he knew we were
guarded and watched? Was he afraid of measuring
swords with this trained detective?
If so, how had he found it out?
I had an inkling, myself—but, under all
the circumstances, I did not mention it to Charles.
It was clear that Cesarine intensely disliked this
new addition to the Vandrift household. She would
not stop in the room where the detective was, or show
him common politeness. She spoke of him always
as “that odious man, Medhurst.” Could
she have guessed, what none of the other servants
knew, that the man was a spy in search of the Colonel?
I was inclined to believe it. And then it dawned
upon me that Cesarine had known all about the diamonds
and their story; that it was Cesarine who took us
to see Schloss Lebenstein; that it was Cesarine who
posted the letter to Lord Craig-Ellachie! If Cesarine
was in league with Colonel Clay, as I was half inclined
to surmise, what more natural than her obvious dislike
to the detective who was there to catch her principal?
What more simple for her than to warn her fellow-conspirator
of the danger that awaited him if he approached this
man Medhurst?
However, I was too much frightened
by the episode of the cheque to say anything of my
nascent suspicions to Charles. I waited rather
to see how events would shape themselves.
After a while Medhurst’s vigilance
grew positively annoying. More than once he came
to Charles with reports and shorthand notes distinctly
distasteful to my excellent brother-in-law. “The
fellow is getting to know too much about us,”
Charles said to me one day. “Why, Sey,
he spies out everything. Would you believe it,
when I had that confidential interview with Brookfield
the other day, about the new issue of Golcondas, the
man was under the easy-chair, though I searched the
room beforehand to make sure he wasn’t there;
and he came to me afterwards with full notes of the
conversation, to assure me he thought Brookfield—whom
I’ve known for ten years—was too
tall by half an inch to be one of Colonel Clay’s
impersonations.”
“Oh, but, Sir Charles,”
Medhurst cried, emerging suddenly from the bookcase,
“you must never look upon any one as above
suspicion merely because you’ve known him for
ten years or thereabouts. Colonel Clay may have
approached you at various times under many disguises.
He may have built up this thing gradually. Besides,
as to my knowing too much, why, of course, a detective
always learns many things about his employer’s
family which he is not supposed to know; but professional
honour and professional etiquette, as with doctors
and lawyers, compel him to lock them up as absolute
secrets in his own bosom. You need never be afraid
I will divulge one jot of them. If I did, my
occupation would be gone, and my reputation shattered.”
Charles looked at him, appalled.
“Do you dare to say,” he burst out, “you’ve
been listening to my talk with my brother-in-law and
secretary?”
“Why, of course,” Medhurst
answered. “It’s my business to listen,
and to suspect everybody. If you push me to say
so, how do I know Colonel Clay is not—Mr.
Wentworth?”
Charles withered him with a look.
“In future, Medhurst,” he said, “you
must never conceal yourself in a room where I am without
my leave and knowledge.”
Medhurst bowed politely. “Oh,
as you will, Sir Charles,” he answered; “that’s
quite at your own wish. Though how can
I act as an efficient detective, any way, if you insist
upon tying my hands like that, beforehand?”
Again I detected a faint American flavour.
After that rebuff, however, Medhurst
seemed put upon his mettle. He redoubled his
vigilance in every direction. “It’s
not my fault,” he said plaintively, one day,
“if my reputation’s so good that, while
I’m near you, this rogue won’t approach
you. If I can’t catch him, at least
I keep him away from coming near you!”
A few days later, however, he brought
Charles some photographs. These he produced with
evident pride. The first he showed us was a vignette
of a little parson. “Who’s that, then?”
he inquired, much pleased.
We gazed at it, open-eyed. One
word rose to our lips simultaneously: “Brabazon!”
“And how’s this for high?”
he asked again, producing another—the photograph
of a gay young dog in a Tyrolese costume.
We murmured, “Von Lebenstein!”
“And this?” he
continued, showing us the portrait of a lady with a
most fetching squint.
We answered with one voice, “Little Mrs. Granton!”
Medhurst was naturally proud of this
excellent exploit. He replaced them in his pocket-book
with an air of just triumph.
“How did you get them?” Charles asked.
Medhurst’s look was mysterious.
“Sir Charles,” he answered, drawing himself
up, “I must ask you to trust me awhile in this
matter. Remember, there are people whom you decline
to suspect. I have learned that it is always
those very people who are most dangerous to capitalists.
If I were to give you the names now, you would refuse
to believe me. Therefore, I hold them over discreetly
for the moment. One thing, however, I say.
I know to a certainty where Colonel Clay is
at this present speaking. But I will lay my plans
deep, and I hope before long to secure him. You
shall be present when I do so; and I shall make him
confess his personality openly. More than that
you cannot reasonably ask. I shall leave it to
you, then, whether or not you wish to arrest
him.”
Charles was considerably puzzled,
not to say piqued, by this curious reticence; he begged
hard for names; but Medhurst was adamant. “No,
no,” he replied; “we detectives have our
own just pride in our profession. If I told you
now, you would probably spoil all by some premature
action. You are too open and impulsive! I
will mention this alone: Colonel Clay will be
shortly in Paris, and before long will begin from
that city a fresh attempt at defrauding you, which
he is now hatching. Mark my words, and see whether
or not I have been kept well informed of the fellow’s
movements!”
He was perfectly correct. Two
days later, as it turned out, Charles received a “confidential”
letter from Paris, purporting to come from the head
of a second-rate financial house with which he had
had dealings over the Craig-Ellachie Amalgamation—by
this time, I ought to have said, an accomplished union.
It was a letter of small importance in itself—a
mere matter of detail; but it paved the way, so Medhurst
thought, to some later development of more serious
character. Here once more the man’s singular
foresight was justified. For, in another week,
we received a second communication, containing other
proposals of a delicate financial character, which
would have involved the transference of some two thousand
pounds to the head of the Parisian firm at an address
given. Both these letters Medhurst cleverly compared
with those written to Charles before, in the names
of Colonel Clay and of Graf von Lebenstein. At
first sight, it is true, the differences between the
two seemed quite enormous: the Paris hand was
broad and black, large and bold; while the earlier
manuscript was small, neat, thin, and gentlemanly.
Still, when Medhurst pointed out to us certain persistent
twists in the formation of his capitals, and certain
curious peculiarities in the relative length of his
t’s, his l’s, his b’s, and his h’s,
we could see for ourselves he was right; both were
the work of one hand, writing in the one case with
a sharp-pointed nib, very small, and in the other
with a quill, very large and freely.
This discovery was most important.
We stood now within measurable distance of catching
Colonel Clay, and bringing forgery and fraud home
to him without hope of evasion.
To make all sure, however, Medhurst
communicated with the Paris police, and showed us
their answers. Meanwhile, Charles continued to
write to the head of the firm, who had given a private
address in the Rue Jean Jacques, alleging, I must
say, a most clever reason why the negotiations at
this stage should be confidentially conducted.
But one never expected from Colonel Clay anything less
than consummate cleverness. In the end, it was
arranged that we three were to go over to Paris together,
that Medhurst was to undertake, under the guise of
being Sir Charles, to pay the two thousand pounds
to the pretended financier, and that Charles and I,
waiting with the police outside the door, should,
at a given signal, rush in with our forces and secure
the criminal.
We went over accordingly, and spent
the night at the Grand, as is Charles’s custom.
The Bristol, which I prefer, he finds too quiet.
Early next morning we took a fiacre and drove to the
Rue Jean Jacques. Medhurst had arranged everything
in advance with the Paris police, three of whom, in
plain clothes, were waiting at the foot of the staircase
to assist us. Charles had further provided himself
with two thousand pounds, in notes of the Bank of France,
in order that the payment might be duly made, and
no doubt arise as to the crime having been perpetrated
as well as meditated—in the former case,
the penalty would be fifteen years; in the latter,
three only. He was in very high spirits.
The fact that we had tracked the rascal to earth at
last, and were within an hour of apprehending him,
was in itself enough to raise his courage greatly.
We found, as we expected, that the number given in
the Rue Jean Jacques was that of an hotel, not a private
residence. Medhurst went in first, and inquired
of the landlord whether our man was at home, at the
same time informing him of the nature of our errand,
and giving him to understand that if we effected the
capture by his friendly aid, Sir Charles would see
that the expenses incurred on the swindler’s
bill were met in full, as the price of his assistance.
The landlord bowed; he expressed his deep regret,
as M. le Colonel—so we heard him call him—was
a most amiable person, much liked by the household;
but justice, of course, must have its way; and, with
a regretful sigh, he undertook to assist us.
The police remained below, but Charles
and Medhurst were each provided with a pair of handcuffs.
Remembering the Polperro case, however, we determined
to use them with the greatest caution. We would
only put them on in case of violent resistance.
We crept up to the door where the miscreant was housed.
Charles handed the notes in an open envelope to Medhurst,
who seized them hastily and held them in his hands
in readiness for action. We had a sign concerted.
Whenever he sneezed—which he could do in
the most natural manner—we were to open
the door, rush in, and secure the criminal!
He was gone for some minutes.
Charles and I waited outside in breathless expectation.
Then Medhurst sneezed. We flung the door open
at once, and burst in upon the creature.
Medhurst rose as we did so. He
pointed with his finger. “This is Colonel
Clay!” he said; “keep him well in charge
while I go down to the door for the police to arrest
him!”
A gentlemanly man, about middle height,
with a grizzled beard and a well-assumed military
aspect, rose at the same moment. The envelope
in which Charles had placed the notes lay on the table
before him. He clutched it nervously. “I
am at a loss, gentlemen,” he said, in an excited
voice, “to account for this interruption.”
He spoke with a tremor, yet with all the politeness
to which we were accustomed in the little curate and
the Honourable David.
“No nonsense!” Charles
exclaimed, in his authoritative way. “We
know who you are. We have found you out this
time. You are Colonel Clay. If you attempt
to resist—take care—I will handcuff
you!”
The military gentleman gave a start.
“Yes, I am Colonel Clay,” he answered.
“On what charge do you arrest me?”
Charles was bursting with wrath.
The fellow’s coolness seemed never to desert
him. “You are Colonel Clay!”
he muttered. “You have the unspeakable
effrontery to stand there and admit it?”
“Certainly,” the Colonel
answered, growing hot in turn. “I have done
nothing to be ashamed of. What do you mean by
this conduct? How dare you talk of arresting
me?”
Charles laid his hand on the man’s
shoulder. “Come, come, my friend,”
he said. “That sort of bluff won’t
go down with us. You know very well on what charge
I arrest you; and here are the police to give effect
to it.”
He called out “Entrez!”
The police entered the room. Charles explained
as well as he could in most doubtful Parisian what
they were next to do. The Colonel drew himself
up in an indignant attitude. He turned and addressed
them in excellent French.
“I am an officer in the service
of her Britannic Majesty,” he said. “On
what ground do you venture to interfere with me, messieurs?”
The chief policeman explained.
The Colonel turned to Charles. “Your
name, sir?” he inquired.
“You know it very well,”
Charles answered. “I am Sir Charles Vandrift;
and, in spite of your clever disguise, I can instantly
recognise you. I know your eyes and ears.
I can see the same man who cheated me at Nice, and
who insulted me on the island.”
“You Sir Charles Vandrift!”
the rogue cried. “No, no, sir, you are
a madman!” He looked round at the police.
“Take care what you do!” he cried.
“This is a raving maniac. I had business
just now with Sir Charles Vandrift, who quitted the
room as these gentlemen entered. This person
is mad, and you, monsieur, I doubt not,” bowing
to me, “you are, of course, his keeper.”
“Do not let him deceive you,”
I cried to the police, beginning to fear that with
his usual incredible cleverness the fellow would even
now manage to slip through our fingers. “Arrest
him, as you are told. We will take the responsibility.”
Though I trembled when I thought of that cheque he
held of mine.
The chief of our three policemen came
forward and laid his hand on the culprit’s shoulder.
“I advise you, M. le Colonel,” he said,
in an official voice, “to come with us quietly
for the present. Before the juge d’instruction
we can enter at length into all these questions.”
The Colonel, very indignant still—and
acting the part marvellously—yielded and
went along with them.
“Where’s Medhurst?”
Charles inquired, glancing round as we reached the
door. “I wish he had stopped with us.”
“You are looking for monsieur
your friend?” the landlord inquired, with a
side bow to the Colonel. “He has gone away
in a fiacre. He asked me to give this note to
you.”
He handed us a twisted note.
Charles opened and read it. “Invaluable
man!” he cried. “Just hear what he
says, Sey: ’Having secured Colonel Clay,
I am off now again on the track of Mme. Picardet.
She was lodging in the same house. She has just
driven away; I know to what place; and I am after
her to arrest her. In blind haste, MEDHURST.’
That’s smartness, IF you like. Though, poor
little woman, I think he might have left her.”
“Does a Mme. Picardet stop
here?” I inquired of the landlord, thinking
it possible she might have assumed again the same old
alias.
He nodded assent. “Oui,
oui, oui,” he answered. “She has just
driven off, and monsieur your friend has gone posting
after her.”
“Splendid man!” Charles
cried. “Marvillier was quite right.
He is the prince of detectives!”
We hailed a couple of fiacres, and
drove off, in two detachments, to the juge d’instruction.
There Colonel Clay continued to brazen it out, and
asserted that he was an officer in the Indian Army,
home on six months’ leave, and spending some
weeks in Paris. He even declared he was known
at the Embassy, where he had a cousin an attache;
and he asked that this gentleman should be sent for
at once from our Ambassador’s to identify him.
The juge d’instruction insisted that this must
be done; and Charles waited in very bad humour for
the foolish formality. It really seemed as if,
after all, when we had actually caught and arrested
our man, he was going by some cunning device to escape
us.
After a delay of more than an hour,
during which Colonel Clay fretted and fumed quite
as much as we did, the attache arrived. To our
horror and astonishment, he proceeded to salute the
prisoner most affectionately.
“Halloa, Algy!” he cried,
grasping his hand; “what’s up? What
do these ruffians want with you?”
It began to dawn upon us, then, what
Medhurst had meant by “suspecting everybody”:
the real Colonel Clay was no common adventurer, but
a gentleman of birth and high connections!
The Colonel glared at us. “This
fellow declares he’s Sir Charles Vandrift,”
he said sulkily. “Though, in fact, there
are two of them. And he accuses me of forgery,
fraud, and theft, Bertie.”
The attache stared hard at us.
“This is Sir Charles Vandrift,”
he replied, after a moment. “I remember
hearing him make a speech once at a City dinner.
And what charge have you to prefer, Sir Charles, against
my cousin?”
“Your cousin?” Charles
cried. “This is Colonel Clay, the notorious
sharper!”
The attache smiled a gentlemanly and
superior smile. “This is Colonel Clay,”
he answered, “of the Bengal Staff Corps.”
It began to strike us there was something
wrong somewhere.
“But he has cheated me, all
the same,” Charles said—“at
Nice two years ago, and many times since; and this
very day he has tricked me out of two thousand pounds
in French bank-notes, which he has now about him!”
The Colonel was speechless. But
the attache laughed. “What he has done
to-day I don’t know,” he said; “but
if it’s as apocryphal as what you say he did
two years ago, you’ve a thundering bad case,
sir; for he was then in India, and I was out there,
visiting him.”
“Where are the two thousand
pounds?” Charles cried. “Why, you’ve
got them in your hand! You’re holding the
envelope!”
The Colonel produced it. “This
envelope,” he said, “was left with me
by the man with short stiff hair, who came just before
you, and who announced himself as Sir Charles Vandrift.
He said he was interested in tea in Assam, and wanted
me to join the board of directors of some bogus company.
These are his papers, I believe,” and he handed
them to his cousin.
“Well, I’m glad the notes
are safe, anyhow,” Charles murmured, in a tone
of relief, beginning to smell a rat. “Will
you kindly return them to me?”
The attache turned out the contents
of the envelope. They proved to be prospectuses
of bubble companies of the moment, of no importance.
“Medhurst must have put them
there,” I cried, “and decamped with the
cash.”
Charles gave a groan of horror.
“And Medhurst is Colonel Clay!” he exclaimed,
clapping his hand to his forehead.
“I beg your pardon, sir,”
the Colonel interposed. “I have but one
personality, and no aliases.”
It took quite half an hour to explain
this imbroglio. But as soon as all was explained,
in French and English, to the satisfaction of ourselves
and the juge d’instruction, the real Colonel
shook hands with us in a most forgiving way, and informed
us that he had more than once wondered, when he gave
his name at shops in Paris, why it was often received
with such grave suspicion. We instructed the
police that the true culprit was Medhurst, whom they
had seen with their own eyes, and whom we urged them
to pursue with all expedition. Meanwhile, Charles
and I, accompanied by the Colonel and the attache—“to
see the fun out,” as they said—called
at the Bank of France for the purpose of stopping
the notes immediately. It was too late, however.
They had been presented at once, and cashed in gold,
by a pleasant little lady in an American costume, who
was afterwards identified by the hotel-keeper (from
our description) as his lodger, Mme. Picardet.
It was clear she had taken rooms in the same hotel,
to be near the Indian Colonel; and it was she
who had received and sent the letters. As for
our foe, he had vanished into space, as always.
Two days later we received the usual
insulting communication on a sheet of Charles’s
own dainty note. Last time he wrote it was on
Craig-Ellachie paper: this time, like the wanton
lapwing, he had got himself another crest.
“MOST PERSPICACIOUS OF MILLIONAIRES!—Said
I not well, as Medhurst, that you must distrust everybody?
And the one man you never dreamt of distrusting was—Medhurst.
Yet see how truthful I was! I told you I knew
where Colonel Clay was living—and I did
know, exactly. I promised to take you to Colonel
Clay’s rooms, and to get him arrested for you—and
I kept my promise. I even exceeded your expectations;
for I gave you two Colonel Clays instead of
one—and you took the wrong man—that
is to say, the real one. This was a neat little
trick; but it cost me some trouble.
“First, I found out there was
a real Colonel Clay, in the Indian Army. I also
found out he chanced to be coming home on leave this
season. I might have made more out of him, no
doubt; but I disliked annoying him, and preferred
to give myself the fun of this peculiar mystification.
I therefore waited for him to reach Paris, where the
police arrangements suited me better than in London.
While I was looking about, and delaying operations
for his return, I happened to hear you wanted a detective.
So I offered myself as out of work to my old employer,
Marvillier, from whom I have had many good jobs in
the past; and there you get, in short, the kernel
of the Colonel.
“Naturally, after this, I can
never go back as a detective to Marvillier’s.
But, on the large scale on which I have learned to
work since I first had the pleasure of making your
delightful acquaintance, this matters little.
To say the truth, I begin to feel detective work a
cut or two below me. I am now a gentleman of
means and leisure. Besides, the extra knowledge
of your movements which I have acquired in your house
has helped still further to give me various holds
upon you. So the fluke will be true to his own
pet lamb. To vary the metaphor, you are not fully
shorn yet.
“Remember me most kindly to
your charming family, give Wentworth my love, and
tell Mlle. Cesarine I owe her a grudge which
I shall never forget. She clearly suspected me.
You are much too rich, dear Charles; I relieve your
plethora. I bleed you financially. Therefore
I consider myself—Your sincerest friend,
“CLAY-BRABAZON-MEDHURST,
“Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons.”
Charles was threatened with apoplexy.
This blow was severe. “Whom can I trust,”
he asked, plaintively, “when the detectives
themselves, whom I employ to guard me, turn out to
be swindlers? Don’t you remember that line
in the Latin grammar—something about, ‘Who
shall watch the watchers?’ I think it used to
run, ’Quis custodes custodiet ipsos?’”
But I felt this episode had at least
disproved my suspicions of poor Cesarine.