News from the Cape.
At the Holkers’ at Chetwood,
one evening some days later, Cyril Waring met Elma
Clifford once more, the first time for months, and
had twenty minutes’ talk in the tea-room alone
with her. Contrary to his rule, he had gone to
the Holkers’ party that night, for a man can’t
remain a recluse all his life, no matter how hard he
tries, merely because his brother’s suspected
of having committed a murder. In course of time,
the attitude palls upon him. For the first year
after Guy’s sudden and mysterious disappearance,
indeed, Cyril refused all invitations point-blank,
except from the most intimate friends; the shame and
disgrace of that terrible episode weighed him down
so heavily that he couldn’t bear to go out in
the world among unsympathetic strangers.
But the deepest sorrow wears away
by degrees, and at the end of twelve months Cyril
found he could mix a little more unreservedly at last
among his fellow-men. The hang-dog air sat ill
upon his frank, free nature. This invitation
to the Holkers’, too, had one special attraction:
he knew it was a house where he was almost certain
of meeting Elma. And since Elma insisted now on
writing to him constantly—she was a self-willed
young woman was Elma, and would have her way—he
really saw no reason on earth himself why he shouldn’t
meet her. To meet is one thing, don’t you
know—to marry, another. At least so
fifty generations of young people have deluded themselves
under similar circumstances into believing.
Elma was in the room before him, prettier
than ever, people said, in the pale red ball-dress
which exactly suited her gipsy-like eyes and creamy
complexion. As she entered she saw Sir Gilbert
Gildersleeve with his wife and Gwendoline standing
in the corner by the big piano. Gwendoline looked
pale and preoccupied, as she had always looked since
Granville Kelmscott disappeared, leaving behind him
no more definite address for love-letters than simply
Africa; and Lady Gildersleeve was, as usual, quite
subdued and broken. But the judge himself, consoled
by his new honours, seemed, as time wore on, to have
recovered a trifle of his old blustering manner.
A knighthood had reassured him. He was talking
to Mr. Holker in a loud voice as Elma approached
him from behind.
“Yes, a very curious coincidence,”
he was just saying, in his noisy fashion, with one
big burly hand held demonstratively before him.
“A very curious and unexplained coincidence.
They both vanished into space about the self-same
time. And nothing more has ever since been heard
of them. Quite an Arabian Nights’ affair
in its way—the Enchanted Carpet sort of
business, don’t you know—wafted through
the air unawares, like Sinbad the Sailor, or the One-eyed
Calender, from London to Bagdad, or Timbuctoo or St.
Petersburg. The other young man one understands
about, of course; he had sufficient reasons of
his own, no doubt, for leaving a country which had
grown too warm for him. But that Granville Kelmscott,
a gentleman of means, the heir to such a fine estate
as Tilgate, should disappear into infinity leaving
no trace behind, like a lost comet—and at
the very moment, too, when he was just about to come
into the family property—why, I call it…
I call it… I call it—”
His jaw dropped suddenly. He
grew deadly pale. Words failed his stammering
tongue. Do what he would, he couldn’t finish
his sentence. And yet, nothing very serious had
occurred to him in any way. It was merely that,
as he uttered these words, he caught Elma Clifford’s
eye, and saw lurking in it a certain gleam of deadly
contempt before which the big blustering man himself
had quailed more than once in many a Surrey drawing-room.
For Sir Gilbert Gildersleeve knew,
as well as if she had told him the truth in so many
words, that Elma Clifford suspected him of being Montague
Nevitt’s murderer.
Elma came forward, just to break the
awkward pause, and shook hands with the party by the
piano coldly. Sir Gilbert tried to avoid her;
but, with the inherited instinct of her race, Elma
cut off his retreat. She boxed him in the corner
between the piano and the wall.
“I heard what you were saying
just now, Sir Gilbert,” she murmured low, but
with marked emphasis, after a few polite commonplaces
of conversation had first passed between them; “and
I want to ask you one question only about the matter.
Are you so sure as you seem of what you said
this minute? Are you so sure that Mr. Guy Waring
had sufficient reasons of his own for wishing
to leave the country?”
Before that unflinching eye, the great
lawyer trembled, as many a witness had trembled of
old under his own cross-examination. But he tried
to pass it off just at first with a little society
banter. He bowed, and smiled, and pretended to
look arch—look arch, indeed, with that
ashen, white face of his!—as he answered,
with forced humour—
“My dear young lady, Mr. Guy
Waring, as I understand, is Mr. Cyril Waring’s
brother, and as by the law of England the king can
do no wrong, so I suppose—”
Elma cut him short in the middle of
his sentence with an imperious gesture. He had
never cut short an obnoxious and intruding barrister
himself with more crushing dignity.
“Mr. Cyril Waring has nothing
at all to do with the point, one way or the other,”
the girl said severely. “Attend to my question.
What I ask is this: Why do you, a judge who may
one day be called upon to try the case, venture to
say, on such partial evidence, that Mr. Guy Waring
had sufficient reasons of his own for leaving the
country?”
Called upon to try Guy Waring’s
case! The judge paused abashed. He was very
much afraid of her. This girl had such a strange
look about the eyes, she made him tremble. People
said the Ewes women were the descendants of a witch.
And there was something truly witch-like in the way
Elma Clifford looked straight down into his eyes.
She seemed to see into his very soul. He knew
she suspected him.
He shuffled and temporized. “Well,
everybody says so, you know,” he answered, shrugging
his shoulders carelessly. “And what everybody
says must be true. ... Besides, if he,
didn’t do it, who did, I wonder?”
Elma pounced upon her opportunity
with a woman’s quickness. “Somebody
else who was at Mambury that day, no doubt,”
she replied, with a meaning look. “It must
have been somebody out of the few who were at Mambury.”
That home-thrust told. The judge’s
colour was livid to look upon. What could this
girl mean? How on earth could she know? How
had she even found out he was at Mambury at all?
A terrible doubt oppressed his soul. Had Gwendoline
confided his movements to Elma? He had warned
his daughter time and again not to mention the fact,
“for fear of misapprehension,” he said,
with shuffling eyes askance. It was better nobody
should know he had been anywhere near Dartmoor on
the day of the accident.
However, there was one consolation;
the law! the law! She could have no legal proof,
and intuition goes for nothing in a court of justice.
All the suspicion went against Guy Waring, and Guy
Waring—well, Guy Waring had fled the kingdom
in the very nick of time, and was skulking now, Heaven
alone knew where or why, in the remotest depths of
some far African diggings.
And even as he thought it, the servant
opened the door, and, in the regulation footman’s
voice, announced “Mr. Waring.”
The judge started afresh. For
one moment his senses deceived him sadly. His
mind was naturally full of Guy, just now; and as the
servant spoke, he saw a handsome young man in evening
dress coming up the long drawing-room with the very
air and walk of the man he had met that eventful afternoon
at the “Duke of Devonshire” at Plymouth.
Of course, it was only Cyril; and a minute later the
judge saw his mistake, and remembered, with a bitter
smile, how conscience makes cowards of us all, as
he had often remarked about shaky witnesses in his
admirable perorations. But Elma hadn’t failed
to notice either the start or its reason.
“It’s only Mr. Cyril,”
she said pointedly; “not Mr. Guy, Sir Gilbert.
The name came very pat, though. I don’t
wonder it startled you.”
She was crimson herself. The
judge moved away with a stealthy uncomfortable air.
He didn’t half care for this uncanny young woman.
A girl who can read people’s thoughts like that,
a girl who can play with you like a cat with a mouse,
oughtn’t to be allowed at large in society.
She should be shut up in a cage at home like a dangerous
animal, and prevented from spying out the inmost history
of families.
A little later, Elma had twenty minutes’
talk with Cyril alone. It was in the tea-room
behind, where the light refreshments were laid out
before supper. She spoke low and seriously.
“Cyril,” she said, in
a tone of absolute confidence—they were
not engaged, of course, but still, it had got to plain
“Cyril” and “Elma” by this
time—“I’m surer of it than ever,
no matter what you say. Guy’s perfectly
innocent. I know it as certainly as I know my
own name. I can’t be mistaken. And
the man who really did it is, as I told you, Sir Gilbert
Gildersleeve.”
“My dear child,” Cyril
answered—you call the girl you are in love
with “my dear child,” when you mean to
differ from her, with an air of masculine superiority—“how
on earth can that be, when, as I told you, I have
Guy’s confession in writing, under his own very
hand, that he really did it?”
“I don’t care a pin for
that,” Elma cried, with a true woman’s
contempt for anything so unimportant as mere positive
evidence. “Perhaps Sir Gilbert made him
do it somehow—compelled him, or coerced
him, or willed him, or something—I don’t
understand these new notions—or perhaps
he got him into a scrape and then hadn’t the
courage or the manliness to get him out of it.
But at any rate, I can answer for one thing, I were
to go to the stake for it—Sir Gilbert Gildersleeve
is the man who’s really guilty.”
As she spoke, a great shadow darkened
the door of the room for a moment ominously.
Sir Gilbert looked in with a lady on his arm—the
inevitable dowager who refreshes herself continuously
at frequent intervals through six hours of entertainment.
When he saw those two tête-à-tête, he drew back, somewhat
disconcerted.
“Don’t let’s go
in there, Lady Knowles,” he whispered to the
dowager by his side. “A pair of young people
discussing their hearts. We were once young ourselves.
It’s a pity to disturb them.”
And he passed on across the hall towards
the great refreshment-room opposite.
“Well, I don’t know,”
Cyril said bitterly, as the judge disappeared through
the opposite door. “I wish I could agree
with you. But I can’t, I can’t.
The burden of it’s heavier than my shoulders
can bear. Guy’s weak, I know, and might
be led half unawares into certain sorts of crime;
yet I only knew one man ever likely to lead him—and
that was poor Nevitt himself, not Sir Gilbert Gildersleeve,
whom he hardly even knew to speak to.”
As he paused and reflected, a servant
with a salver came up and looked into Cyril’s
face inquiringly.
“Beg your pardon, sir,”
he said, hesitating, “but I think you’re
Mr. Waring.”
“That’s my name,”
Cyril answered, with a faint blush on his cheek.
“Do you want to speak to me?”
“Yes, sir; there’s half-a-crown
to pay for porterage, if you please. A telegram
for you, sir.”
Cyril pulled out the half-a-crown,
and tore open the telegram. Its contents were
indeed enough to startle him. It was dated “Cape
Town,” and was as brief as is the wont of cable
messages at nine shillings a word—
“Coming home immediately to
repay everything and stand my trial. Kelmscott
accompanies me. All well.—Guy
Waring.”
Cyril looked at it with a gasp, and
handed it on to Elma. Elma took it in her dainty
gloved fingers, and read it through with keen eyes
of absorbing interest. Cyril sighed a profound
sigh. Elma glanced back at him all triumph.
“I told you so,” she said, in a very jubilant
voice. “He wouldn’t do that if he
didn’t know he was innocent.”
At the very same second, a blustering
voice was heard above the murmur in the hall without.
“What, half-a-crown for porterage!”
it exclaimed in indignant tones. “Why,
that’s a clear imposition. The people at
my house ought never to have sent it on. It’s
addressed to Woodlands. Unimportant, unimportant!
Here, Gwendoline, take your message—some
milliner’s or dressmaker’s appointment
for to-morrow, I suppose. Half-a-crown for porterage!
They’d no right to bring it.”
Gwendoline took the telegram with
trembling hands, tore it open all quivers, and broke
into a cry of astonishment. Then she fell all
at once into her father’s arms. Elma understood
it all. It was a similar message from Granville
Kelmscott to tell the lady of his heart he was coming
home to marry her.
Sir Gilbert, somewhat flustered, called
for water in haste, and revived the fainting girl
by bathing her temples. At last he took up the
cause of the mischief himself. As he read it his
own face turned white as death. Elma noticed
that, too. And no wonder it did—for
these were the words of that unexpected message—
“Coming home to claim you by
the next mail. Guy Waring accompanies me.—GKANVILLE
Kelmscott.”