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"But, as Brownson said, how about the letter?"
Indiman drew from his pocket the wig, to which the curl-papers were still attached. He unrolled one and showed it to me. I could see that the strip was written in French on one side of the paper and in violet ink. "It will be easy enough to piece it together again," he said.
"Plain enough now, isn't it, why L. Hernandez cared not at all how often Brownson's men rummaged table-drawers and chair-seats. The letter was safe until the time should come to use it. Only it never came."
"I suppose you are going abroad?"
"I shall sail Thursday."
"And you will be gone how long?"
"That depends, doesn't it, upon the pleasure of that most gracious lady the Countess Gilda. I may be back in a fortnight, and in that case I will make an engagement with you. We will take a ride together on a trolley-car."
"Agreed," said I.
It was a warm afternoon in the middle of May, and I was lounging in the deserted common room of the Utinam Club when Esper Indiman walked in.
We shook hands.
"You landed to-day?" I asked.
"Yes, by the Deutschland."
It was impossible for me to utter the inquiry that rose to my lips.
Indiman hesitated just a trifle, then he went on:
"I delivered my letter to the Countess, and she was most obliged. She asked me to stay on, but I had a previous engagement to plead: you remember that I had agreed to go on a trolley-ride on or about this date?"
"I remember," I answered. "Let us interview Oscar, then, upon the subject of dinner; it will be cooler up at Thirty-fourth Street.
Afterwards we will have our adventure on the trolley."
Well, we went and had our dinner, but, as you shall see, the trolley-ride had to be indefinitely postponed. We had started down Fifth Avenue, and near Madison Square we ran squarely into Indiman's cousin, George Estes. He was standing near a brilliantly illumined shop-window, and gazing intently at a small object that lay in the hollow of his hand.
"Oh, it's you," he said, absently. Then, with a little laugh, "What do you think of this?" He held out to us a small b.u.t.ton fashioned of some semiprecious stone like Mexican opal; it glowed with an elusive reddish l.u.s.tre.
"It looks almost alive," commented Indiman.
"The vital spark, eh? Well, you're not so far out, for it means a man's life."
"What is it, George?" asked Indiman, gravely.
"Not to-night, old chap. It may be a mistake--probably is. Or say that I was kidding you."
"That won't do, George. You've said both too much and too little. Cab there!" he called, and a hansom drew up to the curb.
"You'll excuse me, Thorp--a family affair." He motioned to the boy to enter; he obeyed, sulkily enough, and they drove off.
VII
The Opal b.u.t.ton
Now, as a matter of fact, I had no part in the affair of the opal b.u.t.ton; for on the very next day following our meeting with Estes I came down with typhoid and spent the next two months in the hospital. I saw little of Indiman during that time, but his seeming neglect was fully explained by the story he told me the night I was well enough to get back to 4020 Madison Avenue.
"You remember, of course," began Indiman, "that I went off with Estes that May evening with just an apology to you about a family affair.
Really, I knew nothing; but the boy's manner struck me as peculiar, and, while the incident of the opal b.u.t.ton was trifling in itself, I was sure that there was something behind it. But when I plumped the question squarely at Estes he had nothing to say except that the jewel had been slipped into his hand while he stood looking into a shop-window. Where it came from he did not know; what it meant he either could not or would not tell. So I had to drop the subject for the time. But it came up again of its own accord four days later, the exact date being May 15th. So much by way of preamble; the story proper I will read from my notes.
"'De Quincey was right, and murder should be a fine art. But the Borgias--only amateurs! The far-famed Aqua Tofana--pooh! Any chemist will put it up for ten cents. Only be careful how you use it. Chemical a.n.a.lysis has advanced somewhat since the day of the divine Lucrezia, and a jury would convict without leaving their seats.'
"'Rather rough on your business, I should think,' said Estes, speaking somewhat thickly, for the port had stopped with him overfrequently of late. 'Is poisoning really out of date?' he continued.
"'As absolutely as crinoline and the novels of G. P. R. James,'
answered our host, lightly. But I, who was watching him closely, saw his eyes harden. Estes had said more than one imprudent thing that evening, and this time he had gone too far. I would have to get the boy away somehow.
"There were three of us dining with Balencourt that evening at his chambers in the Argyle--Estes, Crawfurd, and myself; and as usual we had had an excellent dinner, for Balencourt knew how to live. Who was Balencourt? Well, n.o.body could answer that precisely, but his letters of introduction had been unexceptionable and his checks were always honored at Brown Brothers. Moreover, Crawfurd had met him frequently at the Jockey Club in Paris, and there was his name on White's books for any one to read. A man of forty-five perhaps, clean-shaven, well set up, an inveterate globe-trotter, a prince among raconteurs, and the most astounding polyglot I have ever met. I myself have heard him talk Eskimo with one of Peary's natives, and he had collated some of his researches into Iranic-Turanian root-forms for the Philological Society. But let us go back to our walnuts.
"Crawfurd picked up the thread. 'Then the science of a.s.sa.s.sination is a lost art,' he said, tentatively.
"'Oh, I did not say that,' replied Balencourt, carelessly. 'There are other ways--better ones.'
"'You mean beyond the risk of detection?'
"'Perfectly.'
"'Eliminating the toxic poisons of all kinds?'
"'If you like.'
"'I doubt it.' said Crawfurd, with a little hesitation.
"'And I deny it,' interrupted Estes, rudely, and stared straight at Balencourt. A quick glance answered his challenge; it was like the engaging of rapiers.
"'Perhaps Mr. Estes desires proof,' said Balencourt, slowly.
"'I do.'
"'Let us say between--'
"'To-night and the 1st of August.'
"'That will suit me perfectly. My pa.s.sage is booked on the Teutoninc for the following Wednesday.'
"'It is also the day set for my wedding to Miss Catherwood,' said Estes, quietly.
"Balencourt took it admirably. 'So you have obtained the decision at last,' he said, smiling lightly. 'My felicitations.'
"Crawfurd rose to his feet. The jovial flush had strained away from his fat cheeks, and his jaw hung loose and pendulous. 'For G.o.d's sake, fellows--' he began, but Balencourt stopped him with a gesture.