After this climax the interview was
not so long as it was interesting. Two men as
far apart as the poles, as remote from each other in
mind and body, in training and education or lack
of it, in desires and intentions, in points of view
and trend of being, as nature and circumstances could
make them, talked in a language foreign to each other
of a wildly strange thing. Palliser’s arguments
and points of aspect were less unknown to T. Tembarom
than his own were to Palliser. He had seen something
very like them before, though they had developed
in different surroundings and had been differently
expressed. The colloquialism “You’re
not doing that for your health” can be made to
cover much ground in the way of the stripping bare
of motives for action. This was what, in excellent
and well-chosen English, Captain Palliser frankly
said to his host. Of nothing which T. Tembarom
said to him in his own statement did he believe one
word or syllable. The statement in question
was not long or detailed. It was, of course,
Palliser saw, a ridiculously impudent flinging together
of a farrago of nonsense, transparent in its effort
beyond belief. Before he had listened five minutes
with the distinctly “nasty” smile, he burst
out laughing.
“That is a good `spiel,’
my dear chap,” he said. “It’s
as good a `spiel’ as your typewriter friend
used to rattle off when he thought he saw a customer;
but I’m not a customer.”
Tembarom looked at him interestedly
for about ten seconds. His hands were thrust
into his trousers pockets, as was his almost invariable
custom. Absorption and speculation, even emotion
and excitement, were usually expressed in this unconventional
manner.
“You don’t believe a darned
word of it,” was his sole observation.
“Not a darned word,” Palliser
smiled. “You are trying a `bluff,’
which doesn’t do credit to your usual sharpness.
It’s a bluff that is actually silly. It
makes you look like an ass.”
“Well, it’s true,” said Tembarom;
“it’s true.”
Palliser laughed again.
“I only said it made you look
like an ass,” he remarked. “I don’t
profess to understand you altogether, because you
are a new species. Your combination of ignorance
and sharpness isn’t easy to calculate on.
But there is one thing I have found out, and that is,
that when you want to play a particular sharp trick
you are willing to let people take you for a fool.
I’ll own you’ve deceived me once or twice,
even when I suspected you. I’ve heard
that’s one of the most successful methods used
in the American business world. That’s why
I only say you look like an ass. You are an
ass in some respects; but you are letting yourself
look like one now for some shrewd end. You either
think you’ll slip out of danger by it when I
make this discovery public, or you think you’ll
somehow trick me into keeping my mouth shut.”
“I needn’t trick you into
keeping your mouth shut,” Tembarom suggested.
“There’s a straightway to do that, ain’t
there?” And he indelicately waved his hand
toward the documents pertaining to the Cedric Company.
It was stupid as well as gross, in
his hearer’s opinion. If he had known
what was good for him he would have been clever enough
to ignore the practical presentation of his case
made half an hour or so earlier.
“No, there is not,” Palliser
replied, with serene mendacity. “No suggestion
of that sort has been made. My business proposition
was given out on an entirely different basis.
You, of course, choose to put your personal construction
upon it.”
“Gee whiz!” ejaculated
T. Tembarom. “I was ’way off, wasn’t
I?”
“I told you that professing
to be an ass wouldn’t be good enough in this
case. Don’t go on with it,” said Palliser,
sharply.
“You’re throwing bouquets.
Let a fellow be natural,” said Tembarom.
“That is bluff, too,”
Palliser replied more sharply still. “I
am not taken in by it, bold as it is. Ever since
you came here, you have been playing this game.
It was your fool’s grin and guffaw and pretense
of good nature that first made me suspect you of
having something up your sleeve. You were too
unembarrassed and candid.”
“So you began to look out,”
Tembarom said, considering him curiously, “just
because of that.” Then suddenly he laughed
outright, the fool’s guffaw.
It somehow gave Palliser a sort of
puzzled shock. It was so hearty that it remotely
suggested that he appeared more secure than seemed
possible. He tried to reply to him with a languid
contempt of manner.
“You think you have some tremendously
sharp `deal’ in your hand,” he said,
“but you had better remember you are in England
where facts are like sledge-hammers. You can’t
dodge from under them as you can in America.
I dare say you won’t answer me, but I should
like to ask you what you propose to do.”
“I don’t know what I’m
going to do any more than you do,” was the
unilluminating answer. “I don’t mind
telling you that.”
“And what do you think he will do?”
“I’ve got to wait till
I find out. I’m doing it. That was
what I told you. What are you going to do?”
he added casually.
“I’m going to Lincoln’s
Inn Fields to have an interview with Palford & Grimby.”
“That’s a good enough
move,” commented Tembarom, “if you think
you can prove what you say. You’ve got
to prove things, you know. I couldn’t,
so I lay low and waited, just like I told you.”
“Of course, of course,”
Palliser himself almost grinned in his derision.
“You have only been waiting.”
“When you’ve got to prove
a thing, and haven’t much to go on, you’ve
got to wait,” said T. Tembarom—“to
wait and keep your mouth shut, whatever happens,
and to let yourself be taken for a fool or a horse-thief
isn’t as gilt-edged a job as it seems. But
proof’s what it’s best to have before
you ring up the curtain. You’d have to have
it yourself. So would Palford & Grimby before
it’d be stone-cold safe to rush things and
accuse a man of a penitentiary offense.”
He took his unconventional half-seat
on the edge of the table, with one foot on the floor
and the other one lightly swinging.
“Palford & Grimby are clever
old ducks, and they know that much. Thing they’d
know best would be that to set a raft of lies going
about a man who’s got money enough to defend
himself, and to make them pay big damages for it
afterward, would be pretty bum business. I guess
they know all about what proof stands for. They
may have to wait; so may you, same as I have.”
Palliser realized that he was in the
position of a man striking at an adversary whose
construction was of India-rubber. He struck home,
but left no bruise and drew no blood, which was an
irritating thing. He lost his temper.
“Proof!” he jerked out.
“There will be proof enough, and when it is
made public, you will not control the money you threaten
to use.”
“When you get proof, just you
let me hear about it,” T. Tembarom said.
“And all the money I’m threatening on
shall go where it belongs, and I’ll go back
to New York and sell papers if I have to. It won’t
come as hard as you think.”
The flippant insolence with which
he brazened out his pretense that he had not lied,
that his ridiculous romance was actual and simple truth,
suggested dangerous readiness of device and secret
knowledge of power which could be adroitly used.
“You are merely marking time,”
said Palliser, rising, with cold determination to
be juggled with no longer. “You have hidden
him away where you think you can do as you please
with a man who is an invalid. That is your dodge.
You’ve got him hidden somewhere, and his friends
had better get at him before it is too late.”
“I’m not answering questions
this evening, and I’m not giving addresses,
though there are no witnesses to take them down.
If he’s hidden away, he’s where he won’t
be disturbed,” was T. Tembarom’s rejoinder.
“You may lay your bottom dollar on that.”
Palliser walked toward the door without
speaking. He had almost reached it when he whirled
about involuntarily, arrested by a shout of laughter.
“Say,” announced Tembarom,
“you mayn’t know it, but this lay-out would
make a first-rate turn in a vaudeville. You
think I’m lying, I look like I’m lying,
I guess every word I say sounds like I’m lying.
To a fellow like you, I guess it couldn’t help
but sound that way. And I’m not lying.
That’s where the joke comes in. I’m
not lying. I’ve not told you all I know
because it’s none of your business and wouldn’t
help; but what I have told you is the stone-cold
truth.”
He was keeping it up to the very end
with a desperate determination not to let go his
hold of his pose until he had made his private shrewd
deal, whatsoever it was. At least, so it struck
Palliser, who merely said:
“I ’m leaving the house
by the first train to-morrow morning.” He
fixed a cold gray eye on the fool’s grin.
“Six forty-five,” said
T. Tembarom. “I’ll order the carriage.
I might go up myself.”
The door closed.
Tembarom was looking cheerful enough
when he went into his bedroom. He had become
used to its size and had learned to feel that it was
a good sort of place. It had the hall bedroom
at Mrs. Bowse’s boarding-house “beaten
to a frazzle.” There was about everything
in it that any man could hatch up an idea he’d
like to have. He had slept luxuriously on the
splendid carved bed through long nights, he had lain
awake and thought out things on it, he had lain and
watched the fire-light flickering on the ceiling,
as he thought about Ann and made plans, and “fixed
up” the Harlem flat which could be run on fifteen
per. He had picked out the pieces of furniture
from the Sunday Earth advertisement sheet, and had
set them in their places. He always saw the six-dollar
mahogany-stained table set for supper, with Ann at
one end and himself at the other. He had grown
actually fond of the old room because of the silence
and comfort of it, which tended to give reality to
his dreams. Pearson, who had ceased to look
anxious, and who had acquired fresh accomplishments
in the form of an entirely new set of duties, was
waiting, and handed him a telegram.
“This just arrived, sir,”
he explained. “James brought it here because
he thought you had come up, and I didn’t send
it down because I heard you on the stairs.”
“That’s right. Thank you, Pearson,”
his master said.
He tore the yellow envelop, and read
the message. In a moment Pearson knew it was
not an ordinary message, and therefore remained more
than ordinarily impassive of expression. He
did not even ask of himself what it might convey.
Mr. Temple Barholm stood still a few
seconds, with the look of a man who must think and
think rapidly.
“What is the next train to London, Pearson?”
he asked.
“There is one at twelve thirty-six,
sir,” he answered. “It’s the
last till six in the morning. You have to change
at Crowley.”
“You’re always ready,
Pearson,” returned Mr. Temple Barholm. “I
want to get that train.”
Pearson was always ready. Before
the last word was quite spoken he had turned and
opened the bedroom door.
“I’ll order the dog-cart;
that’s quickest, sir,” he said. He
was out of the room and in again almost immediately.
Then he was at the wardrobe and taking out what Mr.
Temple Barholm called his “grip,” but
what Pearson knew as a Gladstone bag. It was always
kept ready packed for unexpected emergencies of travel.
Mr. Temple Barholm sat at the table
and drew pen and paper toward him. He looked
excited; he looked more troubled than Pearson had seen
him look before.
“The wire’s from Sir Ormsby Galloway,
Pearson,” he said.
“It’s about Mr. Strangeways.
He’s done what I used to be always watching
out against: he’s disappeared.”
“Disappeared, sir!” cried
Pearson, and almost dropped the Gladstone bag.
“I beg pardon, sir. I know there’s
no time to lose.” He steadied the bag
and went on with his task without even turning round.
His master was in some difficulty.
He began to write, and after dashing off a few words,
stopped, and tore them up.
“No,” he muttered, “that
won’t do. There’s no time to explain.”
Then he began again, but tore up his next lines also.
“That says too much and not
enough. It’d frighten the life out of
her.”
He wrote again, and ended by folding
the sheet and putting it into an envelop.
“This is a message for Miss
Alicia,” he said to Pearson. “Give
it to her in the morning. I don’t want
her to worry because I had to go in a hurry.
Tell her everything’s going to be all right;
but you needn’t mention that anything’s
happened to Mr. Strangeways.”
“Yes, sir,” answered Pearson.
Mr. Temple Barholm was already moving
about the room, doing odd things for himself rapidly,
and he went on speaking.
“I want you and Rose to know,”
he said, “that whatever happens, you are both
fixed all right—both of you. I’ve
seen to that.”
“Thank you, sir,” Pearson
faltered, made uneasy by something new in his tone.
“You said whatever happened, sir—”
“Whatever old thing happens,” his master
took him up.
“Not to you, sir. Oh, I hope, sir, that
nothing—”
Mr. Temple Barholm put a cheerful hand on his shoulder.
“Nothing’s going to happen
that’ll hurt any one. Things may change,
that’s all. You and Rose are all right,
Miss Alicia’s all right, I’m all right.
Come along. Got to catch that train.”’
In this manner he took his departure.
Miss Alicia had from necessity acquired
the habit of early rising at Rowcroft vicarage, and
as the next morning was bright, she was clipping
roses on a terrace before breakfast when Pearson brought
her the note.
“Mr. Temple Barholm received
a telegram from London last night, ma’am,”
he explained, “and he was obliged to take the
midnight train. He hadn’t time to do any
more than leave a few lines for you, but he asked
me to tell you that nothing disturbing had occurred.
He specially mentioned that everything was all right.”
“But how very sudden!”
exclaimed Miss Alicia, opening her note and beginning
to read it. Plainly it had been written hurriedly
indeed. It read as though he had been in such
haste that he hadn’t had time to be clear.
Dear little Miss Alicia:
I’ve got to light out of here
as quick as I can make it. I can’t even
stop to tell you why. There’s just one
thing— don’t get rattled, Miss Alicia.
Whatever any one says or does, just don’t let
yourself get rattled.
Yours affectionately,
T. Tembarom.
“Pearson,” Miss Alicia
exclaimed, again looking up, “are you sure
everything is all right?”
“That was what he said, ma’am. `All right,’
ma’am.”
“Thank you, Pearson. I am glad to hear
it.”
She walked to and fro in the sunshine,
reading the note and rereading it.
“Of course if he said it was
all right, it was all right,” she murmured.
“It is only the phrasing that makes me slightly
nervous. Why should he ask me not to get rattled?”
The term was by this time as familiar to her as any
in Dr. Johnson’s dictionary. “Of course
he knows I do get rattled much too easily; but why
should I be in danger of getting rattled now if nothing
has happened?” She gave a very small start
as she remembered something. “Could it be
that Captain Palliser—But how could he? Though
I do not like Captain Palliser.”
Captain Palliser, her distaste for
whom at the moment quite agitated her, was this morning
an early riser also, and as she turned in her walk
she found him coming toward her.
“I find I am obliged to take
an early train to London this morning,” he
said, after their exchange of greetings. “It
is quite unexpected. I spoke to Mr. Temple Barholm
about it last night.”
Perhaps the unexpectedness, perhaps
a certain suggestion of coincidence, caused Miss
Alicia’s side ringlets to appear momentarily
tremulous.
“Then perhaps we had better
go in to breakfast at once,” she said.
“Is Mr. Temple Barholm down?”
he inquired as they seated themselves at the breakfast-table.
“He is not here,” she
answered. “He, too, was called away unexpectedly.
He went to London by the midnight train.”
She had never been so aware of her
unchristian lack of liking for Captain Palliser as
she was when he paused a moment before he made any
comment. His pause was as marked as a start,
and the smile he indulged in was, she felt, most
singularly disagreeable. It was a smile of the
order which conceals an unpleasant explanation of
itself.
“Oh,” he remarked, “he has gone
first, has he?”
“Yes,” she answered, pouring
out his coffee for him. “He evidently had
business of importance.”
They were quite alone, and she was
not one of the women one need disturb oneself about.
She had been browbeaten into hypersensitive timidity
early in life, and did not know how to resent cleverly
managed polite bullying. She would always feel
herself at fault if she was tempted to criticize
any one. She was innocent and nervous enough
to betray herself to any extent, because she would
feel it rude to refuse to answer questions, howsoever
far they exceeded the limits of polite curiosity.
He had learned a good deal from her in the past.
Why not try what could be startled out of her now?
Thus Captain Palliser said:
“I dare say you feel a little
anxious at such an extraordinarily sudden departure,”
he suggested amiably. “Bolting off in the
middle of the night was sudden, if he did not explain
himself.”
“He had no time to explain,” she answered.
“That makes it appear all the
more sudden. But no doubt he left you a message.
I saw you were reading a note when I joined you on
the terrace.”
Lightly casual as he chose to make
the words sound, they were an audacity he would have
known better than to allow himself with any one but
a timid early-Victorian spinster whose politeness was
hypersensitive in its quality.
“He particularly desired that
I should not be anxious,” she said. “He
is always considerate.”
“He would, of course, have explained
everything if he had not been so hurried?”
“Of course, if it had been necessary,”
answered Miss Alicia, nervously sipping her tea.
“Naturally,” said Captain
Palliser. “His note no doubt mentioned that
he went away on business connected with his friend
Mr. Strangeways?”
There was no question of the fact that she was startled.
“He had not time enough,”
she said. “He could only write a few lines.
Mr. Strangeways?”
“We had a long talk about him
last night. He told me a remarkable story,”
Captain Palliser went on. “I suppose you
are quite familiar with all the details of it?”
“I know how he found him in
New York, and I know how generous he has been to
him.”
“Have you been told nothing more?”
“There was nothing more to tell.
If there was anything, I am sure he had some good
reason for not telling me,” said Miss Alicia,
loyally. “His reasons are always good.”
Palliser’s air of losing a shade
or so of discretion as a result of astonishment was
really well done.
“Do you mean to say that he
has not even hinted that ever since he arrived at
Temple Barholm he has strongly suspected Strangeways’
identity—that he has even known who he
is?” he exclaimed.
Miss Alicia’s small hands clung to the table-cloth.
“He has not known at all.
He has been most anxious to discover. He has
used every endeavor,” she brought out with some
difficulty.
“You say he has been trying
to find out?” Palliser interposed.
“He has been more than anxious,”
she protested. “He has been to London
again and again; he has gone to great expense; he has
even seen people from Scotland Yard. I have
sometimes almost thought he was assuming more responsibility
than was just to himself. In the case of a relative
or an old friend, but for an entire stranger—Oh,
really, I ought not to seem to criticize. I
do not presume to criticize his wonderful generosity
and determination and goodness. No one should
presume to question him.”
“If he knows that you feel like this—”
Palliser began.
“He knows all that I feel,”
Miss Alicia took him up with a pretty, rising spirit.
“He knows that I am full of unspeakable gratitude
to him for his beautiful kindness to me; he knows
that I admire and respect and love him in a way I
could never express, and that I would do anything
in the world he could wish me to do.”
“Naturally,” said Captain
Palliser. “I was only about to express my
surprise that since he is aware of all this he has
not told you who he has proved Strangeways to be.
It is a little odd, you know.”
“I think “—Miss
Alicia was even gently firm in her reply —“that
you are a little mistaken in believing Mr. Temple
Barholm has proved Mr. Strangeways to be anybody.
When he has proof, he will no doubt think proper
to tell me about it. Until then I should prefer—”
Palliser laughed as he finished her sentence.
“Not to know. I was not
going to betray him, Miss Alicia. He evidently
has one of his excellent reasons for keeping things
to himself. I may mention, however, that it
is not so much he who has proof as I myself.”
“You!” How could she help
quite starting in her seat when his gray eyes fixed
themselves on her with such a touch of finely amused
malice?
“I offered him the proof last
night, and it rather upset him,” he said.
“He thought no one knew but himself, and he was
not inclined to tell the world. He was upset
because I said I had seen the man and could swear
to his identity. That was why he went away so
hurriedly. He no doubt went to see Strangeways
and talk it over.”
“See Mr. Strangeways? But
Mr. Strangeways—” Miss Alicia rose
and rang the bell.
“Tell Pearson I wish to see
him at once,” she said to the footman.
Palliser took in her mood without
comment. He had no objection to being present
when she made inquiries of Pearson.
“I hear the wheels of the dog-cart,”
he remarked. “You see, I must catch my
train.”
Pearson stood at the door.
“Is not Mr. Strangeways in his room, Pearson?”
Miss Alicia asked.
“Mr. Temple Barholm took him
to London when he last went, ma’am,”
answered Pearson. “You remember he went
at night. The doctor thought it best.”
“He did not tell you that, either?” said
Palliser, casually.
“The dog-cart is at the door, sir,” announced
Pearson.
Miss Alicia’s hand was unsteady when the departing
guest took it.
“Don’t be disturbed,”
he said considerately, “but a most singular
thing has happened. When I asked so many questions
about Temple Barholm’s Man with the Iron Mask
I asked them for curious reasons. That must
be my apology. You will hear all about it later,
probably from Palford & Grimby.”
When he had left the room Miss Alicia
stood upon the hearth- rug as the dog-cart drove
away, and she was pale. Her simple and easily
disturbed brain was in a whirl. She could scarcely
remember what she had heard, and could not in the
least comprehend what it had seemed intended to imply,
except that there had been concealed in the suggestions
some disparagement of her best beloved.
Singular as it was that Pearson should
return without being summoned, when she turned and
found that he mysteriously stood inside the threshold
again, as if she had called him, she felt a great sense
of relief.
“Pearson,” she faltered,
“I am rather upset by certain things which
Captain Palliser has said. I am afraid I do not
understand.”
She looked at him helplessly, not
knowing what more to say. She wished extremely
that she could think of something definite.
The masterly finish of Pearson’s
reply lay in its neatly restrained hint of unobtrusively
perceptive sympathy.
“Yes, Miss. I was afraid
so. Which is why I took the liberty of stepping
into the room again. I myself do not understand,
but of course I do not expect to. If I may be
so bold as to say it, Miss, whatever we don’t
understand, we both understand Mr. Temple Barholm.
My instructions were to remind you, Miss, that everything
would be all right.”
Miss Alicia took up her letter from
the table where she had laid it down.
“Thank you, Pearson,”
she said, her forehead beginning to clear itself
a little. “Of course, of course. I
ought not to— He told me not to—
get rattled,” she added with plaintive ingenuousness,
“and I ought not to, above all things.”
“Yes, Miss. It is most important that you
should not.”