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"You are being asked for on the telephone, sir," he announced. "It is a trunk call. I have switched it through to the study."
"Any name?" Sir Timothy asked indifferently.
The man hesitated. His eyes sought his master's respectfully but charged with meaning.
"The person refuses to give his name, sir, but I fancied that I recognised his voice. I think it would be as well for you to speak, sir."
Lady Cynthia sank into a chair.
"You shall go and answer your telephone call," she said, "and leave Hedges to serve me with one of these strange drinks. I believe I see some of my favourite orangeade."
Sir Timothy made his way into the house and into the low, oak-beamed study with its dark furniture and latticed windows. The telephone bell began to ring again as he entered. He took up the receiver.
"Sir Timothy?" a rather hoa.r.s.e, strained voice asked.
"I am speaking," Sir Timothy replied. "Who is it?"
The man at the other end spoke as though he were out of breath.
Nevertheless, what he said was distinct enough.
"I am John Walter."
"Well?"
"I am just ringing you up," the voice went on, "to give you what's called a sporting chance. There's a boat from Southampton midday tomorrow. If you're wise, you'll catch it. Or better still, get off on your own yacht. They carry a wireless now, these big steamers. Don't give a criminal much of a chance, does it?"
"I am to understand, then," Sir Timothy said calmly, "that you have laid your information?"
"I've parted with it and serve you right," was the bitter reply. "I'm not saying that you're not a brave man, Sir Timothy, but there's such a thing as being foolhardy, and that's what you are. I wasn't asking you for half your fortune, nor even a dab of it, but if your life wasn't worth a few hundred pounds--you, with all that money--well, it wasn't worth saving. So now you know. I've spent ninepence to give you a chance to hop it, because I met a gent who has been good to me. I've had a good dinner and I feel merciful. So there you are."
"Do I gather," Sir Timothy asked, in a perfectly level tone, "that the deed is already done?"
"It's already done and done thoroughly," was the uncompromising answer.
"I'm not ringing up to ask you to change your mind. If you were to offer me five thousand now, or ten, I couldn't stop the bally thing. You've a sporting chance of getting away if you start at once. That's all there is to it."
"You have nothing more to say?"
"Nothing! Only I wish to G.o.d I'd never stepped into that Mayfair agency.
I wish I'd never gone to Mrs. Hilditch's as a temporary butler. I wish I'd never seen any one of you! That's all. You can go to h.e.l.l which way you like, only, if you take my advice, you'll go by the way of South America. The scaffold isn't every man's fancy."
There was a burr of the instrument and then silence. Sir Timothy carefully replaced the receiver, paused on his way out of the room to smell a great bowl of lavender, and pa.s.sed back into the garden.
"More applicants for invitations?" Lady Cynthia enquired lazily.
Her host smiled.
"Not exactly! Although," he added, "as a matter of fact my party would have been perhaps a little more complete with the presence of the person to whom I have been speaking."
Lady Cynthia pointed to the stream, down which the punt was slowly drifting. The moon had gone behind a cloud, and Francis' figure, as he stood there, was undefined and ghostly. A thought seemed to flash into her mind. She leaned forward.
"Once," she said, "he told me that he was your enemy."
"The term is a little melodramatic," Sir Timothy protested. "We look at certain things from opposite points of view. You see, my prospective son-in-law, if ever he becomes that, represents the law--the Law with a capital 'L'--which recognises no human errors or weaknesses, and judges crime out of the musty books of the law-givers of old. He makes of the law a mechanical thing which can neither bend nor give, and he judges humanity from the same standpoint. Yet at heart he is a good fellow and I like him."
"And you?"
"My weakness lies the other way," he confessed, "and my sympathy is with those who do not fear to make their own laws."
She held out her hand, white and spectral in the momentary gloom. At the other end of the lawn, Francis and Margaret were disembarking from the punt.
"Does it sound too shockingly obvious," she murmured, "if I say that I want to make you my law?"
CHAPTER x.x.xIII
It would have puzzled anybody, except, perhaps, Lady Cynthia herself, to have detected the slightest alteration in Sir Timothy's demeanour during the following day, when he made fitful appearances at The Sanctuary, or at the dinner which was served a little earlier than usual, before his final departure for the scene of the festivities. Once he paused in the act of helping himself to some dish and listened for a moment to the sound of voices in the hall, and when a taxicab drove up he set down his gla.s.s and again betrayed some interest.
"The maid with my frock, thank heavens!" Lady Cynthia announced, glancing out of the window. "My last anxiety is removed. I am looking forward now to a wonderful night."
"You may very easily be disappointed," her host warned her. "My entertainments appeal more, as a rule, to men."
"Why don't you be thoroughly original and issue no invitations to women at all?" Margaret enquired.
"For the same reason that you adorn your rooms and the dinner-table with flowers," he answered. "One needs them--as a relief. Apart from that, I am really proud of my dancing-room, and there again, you see, your s.e.x is necessary."
"We are flattered," Margaret declared, with a little bow. "It does seem queer to think that you should own what Cynthia's cousin, Davy Hinton, once told me was the best floor in London, and that I have never danced on it."
"Nor I," Lady Cynthia put in. "There might have been some excuse for not asking you, Margaret, but why an ultra-Bohemian like myself has had to beg and plead for an invitation, I really cannot imagine."
"You might find," Sir Timothy said, "you may even now--that some of my men guests are not altogether to your liking."
"Quite content to take my risk," Lady Cynthia declared cheerfully. "The man with the best manners I ever met--it was at one of Maggie's studio dances, too--was a bookmaker. And a retired prize-fighter brought me home once from an Albert Hall dance."
"How did he behave?" Francis asked.
"He was wistful but restrained," Lady Cynthia replied, "quite the gentleman, in fact."
"You encourage me to hope for the best," Sir Timothy said, rising to his feet. "You will excuse me now? I have a few final preparations to make."
"Are we to be allowed," Margaret enquired, "to come across the park?"
"You would not find it convenient," her father a.s.sured her. "You had better order a car, say for ten o'clock. Don't forget to bring your cards of invitation, and find me immediately you arrive. I wish to direct your proceedings to some extent."
Lady Cynthia strolled across with him to the postern-gate and stood by his side after he had opened it. Several of the animals, grazing in different parts of the park, p.r.i.c.ked up their ears at the sound. An old mare came hobbling towards him; a flea-bitten grey came trotting down the field, his head in the air, neighing loudly.