Guy in luck.
Guy Waring reached Waterloo ten minutes
too late. Nevitt had gone on by the West of
England express. The porter at the labelling
place “minded the gentleman well.”
He was a sharp-looking gentleman, with a queer look
about the eyes, and a dark moustache curled round
at the corners.
“Yes, yes,” Guy cried
eagerly, “that’s him right enough.
The eyes mark the man. And where was he going
to?”
“He had his things labelled,”
the porter said, “for Plymouth.”
“And when does the next train
start?” Guy inquired, all on fire.
The porter, consulting the time-table
in the muddle-headed way peculiar to railway porters,
and stroking his chin with his hand to assist cerebration,
announced, after a severe internal struggle, that
the 3.45 down, slow, was the earliest train available.
There was nothing for it then, Guy
perceived, but to run home to his rooms, possessing
his soul in patience, pack up a few things in his
Gladstone bag, and return at his leisure to catch the
down train thus unfavourably introduced to his critical
notice.
If Guy had dared, to be sure, he might
have gone straight to a police-station, and got an
inspector to telegraph along the line to stop the
thief with his booty at Basingstoke or Salisbury.
But Guy didn’t dare. For to interfere with
Nevitt now by legal means would be to risk the discovery
of his own share in the forgery. And from that
risk the startled and awakened young man shrank for
a thousand reasons; though the chief among them all
was certainly one that never would have occurred to
any one but himself as even probable.
He didn’t wish Elma Clifford
to know that the man she loved, and the man who loved
her, had become that day a forger’s brother.
To be sure, he had only seen Elma
once—that afternoon at the Holkers’
garden-party. But, as Cyril himself knew, he had
fallen in love with her at first sight—far
more immediately, indeed, than even Cyril himself
had done. Blood, as usual, was thicker than water.
The points that appealed to one brother appealed also
to the other, but with this characteristic difference,
that Guy, who was the more emotional and less strong-willed
of the two, yielded himself up at the very first glance
to the beautiful stranger, while Cyril required some
further acquaintance before quite giving way and losing
his heart outright to her. And from that first
meeting forward, Guy had carried Elma Clifford’s
image engraved upon his memory—as he would
carry it, he believed, to his dying day. Not,
to be sure, that he ever thought for a moment of endeavouring
to win her away from his brother. She was Cyril’s
discovery, and to Cyril, therefore, he yielded her
up, as of prior right, though with a pang of reluctance.
But now that he stood face to face at last with his
own accomplished crime, the first thought that rose
in his mind spontaneous was for Elma’s happiness.
He must never let Elma Clifford know that the man
she loved, and would doubtless marry, was now by his
act—a forger’s brother.
Three forty-five arrived at last,
and Guy set off, all trembling, on his fatal quest.
As he sped along, indignant at heart with Nevitt’s
black treachery, on the line to Plymouth, he had plenty
of time to revolve these things abundantly in his own
soul. And when, after a long and dusty drive,
he reached Plymouth, late at night, he could learn
nothing for the moment about Montague Nevitt’s
movements. So he was forced to go quietly for
the evening to the Duke of Devonshire Hotel, and there
wait as best he might to see how events would next
develop themselves.
A day passed away—two days—but
nothing turned up. Guy wasted much time in Plymouth
making various inquiries before he learnt at last
that a man with a queer look about the eyes, and a
moustache with waxed ends, had gone down a night or
so earlier by the other line to a station at the foot
of Dartmoor, by the name of Mambury.
No sooner, however, had he learnt
this promising news, than he set off at once, hot
at heart as ever, to pursue the robber. That
wretch shouldn’t get away scot free with his
booty; Guy would follow him and denounce him to the
other end of the universe! When he reached Mambury,
he went direct to the village inn and asked, with
trembling lips, if Mr. Montague Nevitt was at present
staying there. The landlord shook his head with
a stubborn, rustic negative. “No, we arn’t
a-got no gentleman o’ thik there name in the
house,” he said; “fact is, zur, to tell
’ee the truth, we arn’t a-had nobody stoppin’
in the Arms at all lately, ‘cep’ it might
be a gentleman come down from London, an’ it
was day afore yesterday as he did come, an’
he do call ’unself McGregor.”
Quick as lightning, Guy suspected
Nevitt might be passing under a false name. What
more likely, indeed, seeing he had made off with Guy’s
three thousand pounds?
“And what sort of a man is this
McGregor?” he asked hastily, putting his suspicion
into shape. “What age? What height?
What kind of a person to look at?”
“Wull, he’s a vine upstandin’
zart of a gentleman,” the landlord answered
glibly in his own dialect; “as proper a gentleman
as you’d wish to zee in a day’s march;
med be about your height, zur, or a trifle more, has
his moustaches curled round zame as if it med be a
bellick’s harns; an’ a strange zart o’
a look about his eyes, too, as if ur could zee right
drew an’ drew ’ee.”
“That’s him!” Guy
exclaimed, with a start, in profound excitement.
“That’s the fellow, sure enough. I
know him. I know him. And where is he now,
landlord? Is he in the house? Can I see
him?”
“Well, no, ’ee can’t
zee him, zur,” the landlord answered, eyeing
the stranger askance; “he be out, jest at present.
He do go vur a walk, mostly, down yonner in the bottom
alongside the brook. Mebbe if you was to vollow
by river-bank you med come up wi’ him by-an’-by
... and mebbe, agin, you medn’t.”
“I’ll follow him,”
Guy exclaimed, growing more excited than ever, now
this quarry was almost well within sight; “I’ll
follow him till I find him, the confounded rascal.
I’ll follow him to his grave. He shan’t
get away from me.”
The landlord looked at him with a
dubious frown. That one could smile and smile
and be a villain didn’t enter into his simple
rustic philosophy.
“He’s a pleasant-spoken
gentleman is Maister McGregor,” the honest Devonian
said, with a tinge of disapprobation in his thick voice.
“What vur do ’ee want to vind ’un?
That’s what I wants to know. He
don’t look like one as did ever hurt a vlea.
Such a soft zart of a voice. An’ he do
play on the viddle that beautiful—that beautiful,
why, ’tis the zame if he war a angel from heaven.
Viddler Moore, he wur up here wi’ his music
last night; an’ Maister McGregor, he took the
instrument vrom un, an’ ‘Let me have
a try, my vrend,’ says he, all modest and unassoomin’;
and vi’ that, he wounded it up, an’ he
begun to play. Lard, how he did play. Never
heard nothing like it in all my barn days. It
is the zame, vor all the world, as you do hear they
viddler chaps that plays by themselves in the Albert
Hall up to London. Depend upon it, zur, there
ain’t no harm in him. A vullow as
can play on the viddle like thik there, why, he couldn’t
do no hurt, not to child nor chicken.”
Guy turned away from the door, fretting
and fuming inwardly. He knew better than that.
Nevitt’s consummate mastery of his chosen instrument
was but of a piece, after all, with the way he could
play on all the world, as on a familiar gamut.
It was the very skill of the man that made him so
dangerous and so devilish. Guy felt that under
the spell of Nevitt’s eye he himself was but
as clay in the hands of the potter.
But Nevitt should never so trick him
and twist him again. To that his mind was now
fully made up. He would never let that cold eye
hold him fixed as of yore by its steely glance.
Once for all, Nevitt had proved his power too well.
Guy would take good care he never subjected himself
in future to that uncanny influence. One forgery
was enough. Henceforth he was adamant.
And yet? And yet he was going
to seek out Nevitt; going to stand face to face with
that smiling villain again; going to tax him with
his crime; going to ask him what he meant by this double-dyed
treachery.
The landlord had told him where Nevitt
was most likely to be found. He followed that
direction. At a gate that turned by the river-bank,
twenty minutes from the inn, a small boy was seated.
He was a Devonshire boy of the poorest moorland type,
short, squat, and thick set. As Guy reached the
gate, the boy rose and opened it, pulling his forelock
twice or thrice, expectant of a ha’penny.
“Has anybody gone down here?” Guy asked,
in an excited voice.
And the boy answered promptly, “Yes,
thik there gentleman, what’s stoppin’
at the Talbot Arms. And another gentleman, too;
o’ny t’other one come after and went t’other
way round. A big zart o’ a gentleman wi’
’ands vit vor two. He axed me the zame question,
had anybody gone by. This is dree of ’ee
as has come zince I’ve been a zitting here.”
Guy paid no attention to the second-named
gentleman, with the hands fit for two, or to his inquiries
after who might have gone before him. He fastened
at once on the really important and serious information
that the person who was stopping at the Talbot Arms
had shortly before turned down the side footpath.
“All right, my boy,” he
said, tossing the lad sixpence, the first coin he
came across in his waistcoat pocket. The boy
opened his eyes wide, and pocketed it with a grin.
So unexpected a largess sufficed to impress the handsome
stranger firmly on his memory. He didn’t
forget him when a few days later he was called on to
give evidence—at a coroner’s inquest.
But Guy, unsuspicious of the harm
he had done himself, walked on, all on fire, down
the woodland path. It was a shady path, and it
led through a deep dell arched with hazels on every
side, while a little brawling brook ran along hard
by, more heard than seen, in the bottom of the dingle.
Thick bramble obscured the petty rapids from view
and half trailed their lush shoots here and there across
the pathway. It was just such a mossy spot as
Cyril would have loved to paint; and Guy, himself
half an artist by nature, would in any other mood
have paused to gaze delighted on its tangled greenery.
As it was, however, he was in no mood
to loiter long over ferns and mosses. He walked
down that narrow way, where luxuriant branches of
fresh green blackberry bushes encroached upon the track,
still seething in soul, and full of the bitter wrong
inflicted upon him by the man he had till lately considered
his dearest friend. At each bend of the footpath,
as it threaded its way through the tortuous dell,
following close the elbows of the bickering little
stream, he expected to come full in sight of Nevitt.
But, gaze as he would, no Nevitt appeared. He
must have gone on, Guy thought, and come out at the
other end, into the upland road, of which the porters
at Mambury Station had told him.
At last he arrived at a delicious
green nook, where the shade of the trees overhead
was exceptionally dense, and where the ferns by the
side were somewhat torn and trodden. Casting his
eye on the ground to the left, a metal clasp, gleaming
silvery among the bracken, happened to attract his
cursory attention. Something about that clasp
looked strangely familiar. He paused and stared
hard at it. Surely, surely he had seen those
metal knobs before. A flash of recognition ran
electric through his brain. Why, yes; it was
the fastener of Montague Nevitt’s pocket-book—the
pocket-book in which he carried his most private documents;
the pocket-book that must have held Cyril’s
stolen six thousand. Guy stooped down to pick
it up with a whirling sense of surprise. Great
heavens! what was this? Not only the clasp, but
the pocket-book itself—the pocket-book
filled full and crammed to bursting with papers.
Ah, mercy, what papers? Yes, incredible—the
money! Hundred-pound notes! Not a doubt
upon earth of it. The whole of the stolen and
re-stolen three thousand.
For a minute or two Guy stood there,
unable to believe his own swimming eyes. What
on earth could have happened? Was it chance or
design? Had Nevitt deliberately thrown away his
ill-gotten gains? Were detectives on the track?
Was he anxious to conceal his part in the theft?
Had remorse got the better of him? Or was he frightened
at last, thinking Guy was on his way to recover and
restore Cyril’s stolen property?
But no, the pocket-book was neither
hidden in the ferns nor yet studiously thrown away.
From the place where it lay, Guy felt confident at
once it had fallen unperceived from Nevitt’s
pocket, and been trodden by his heel unawares into
the yielding leaf-mould.
Had he pulled it out accidentally
with his handkerchief? Very likely, Guy thought.
But then, how strange and improbable that a man so
methodical and calculating as Nevitt should carry such
valuable belongings as those in the self-same pocket.
It was certainly most singular. However, Guy
congratulated himself, after a moment’s pause,
that so much at least of the stolen property was duly
recovered. He could pay back one-half of the
purloined sum now to Cyril’s credit. So
he went on his way through the rest of the wood in
a somewhat calmer and easier frame of mind. To
be sure, he had still to hunt down that villain Nevitt,
and to tax him to his face with his double-dyed treachery.
But it was something, nevertheless, to have recovered
a part, at any rate, of the stolen money. And
Nevitt himself need never know by what fortunate accident
he had happened to recover it.
He emerged on the upland road, and
struck back towards Mambury. All the way round,
he never saw his man. Weary with walking, he
returned in the end to the Talbot Arms. Had Mr.
McGregor come back? No, not yet; but he was sure
to be home for dinner. Then Guy would wait,
and dine at the inn as well. He might have to
stop all night, but he must see McGregor.
As the day wore on, however, it became
gradually clear to him that Montague Nevitt didn’t
mean to return at all. Hour after hour passed
by, but nothing was heard of him. The landlord,
good man, began to express his doubts and fears most
freely. He hoped no harm hadn’t come to
the gentleman in the parlour; he had a powerful zight
o’ money on un for a man to carry about; the
landlord had zeen it when he took out his book from
his pocket to pay the porter. Volks didn’t
ought to go about with two or dree hundred pound or
more in the lonely lanes on the edge of the moorland.
But Guy, for his part, put a different
interpretation on the affair at once. In some
way or other Montague Nevitt, he thought, must have
found out he was being tracked, and, fearing for his
safety, must have dropped the pocket-book and made
off, without note or notice given, on his own sound
legs, for some other part of the country.
So Guy made up his mind to return
next morning by the very first train direct to Plymouth,
and there inquire once more whether anything further
had been seen of the noticeable stranger.