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"Your knowledge ends there, Susan?"
"Yes."
"May I take these letters? They may prove a clue."
"Yes."
"Will you accept my a.s.surance that I will do all possible to have this matter out, and clear it up satisfactorily?"
"Yes."
"Very well, then; for the present, good-bye. Next time I see you I may have something to report."
The two men left the room. Gerald seemed a changed man.
His ability to look after other people's affairs in better fashion than his own has been mentioned. He proposed looking after the present business.
"Farmer," he said, "you believe all you have just heard?"
"Of course, and a d.a.m.ned nice----"
"Let me take this matter in hand for you."
"For me?"
"Yes. There's nineteen thousand pounds hanging to it."
"Stolen, if Susan's story is right."
"Let me trace the money."
"You?"
"Yes. I was in a private detective's agency once, and I know how to set about an affair of this sort."
"What would you do?"
"Get to New York, ascertain all about the man who figured in your name.
Get identification. See if the man who was 'packed' was Josh Todd."
"Yes."
"Then ascertain how he shipped. Go across the Atlantic, and find out who paid him the money, and how."
"Yes."
"It is not likely that any man would take nineteen thousand pounds in gold--it would be too weighty."
"No."
"If he took notes, the numbers are traceable."
"True."
"It is worth inquiring into. Being a murder case, the police will give every a.s.sistance. What do you say?"
"I don't believe in throwing good money after bad. I fancy that money, if it has been stolen, will never be seen again."
"And I think you are wrong. Fifty pounds wouldn't affect you. Spend that. Let me have it for pa.s.sage over, and necessary expenses. It is not a great sum even if it is lost. It's a small stake to try to get nineteen thousand pounds with."
"M' yes."
"It shall not cost you more. There's much in that letter Todd wrote to Susan. It bristles with clues if they can only be followed. I believe I can follow them."
"You seem confident."
"Because I know what I am talking about. What do you say?"
"I'll go to the fifty pounds--but, mind, not a cent more. I am not a wealthy man, and fifty pounds is fifty pounds to me."
"I know that. By the same rule, nineteen thousand pounds would be acceptable."
"Acceptable! When I think of that villain Josh, I----"
"Don't get excited. Does no good. Just tell me all about your aunt who left you this money."
"I have not seen her for years. I was with her when a little boy. I think I am the only relation she had."
"Well, I can soon trace out the property, the name of her lawyers, and what her property was."
"You can?"
"Certainly. The will's been proved. I go to Somerset House and pay a search fee; reading the will over does the rest."
"I see."
"Now, give me a check on the Oakville branch of the New York Central Bank, and let me get to work at once."
"How about your own payment?"
"I don't ask for any now. Wait till I find the money. Payment shall be based on result."
"What is the payment to be?"
"Not money."
"Not money!"