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"Very well, sir. I have not twenty-five pounds----"
"Thirty, if you please. I shall want thirty."
"I have not quite that amount here, but I can get it."
When the man came back with a small canvas bag in his hand, Beaumont-Greene had pocketed the letter. He received the money, counted it, thanked the tailor, and turned to go.
"If you please, sir----"
"Yes?"
"I should like to keep your father's letter, sir. As a form of receipt, sir. When you settle I'll return it. If--if anything should happen to--to you, sir, where would I be?"
Beaumont-Greene's temper showed itself.
"You all talk as if I was on my death-bed," he said.
The tailor stared. Others, then, had suggested to this large, unwholesome youth the possibility of premature decease.
"Not at all, sir, but we do live in the valley of shadders. My wife's step-father, as fine and hearty a specimen as you'd wish to see, sir, was taken only last month; at breakfast, too, as he was chipping his third egg."
Beaumont-Greene said loftily, "Blow your wife's step-father and his third egg. Here's the letter."
He flung down the letter and marched out of the shop. The tradesman looked at him, shaking his head. "He'll never come back," he muttered.
"I know his sort too well." Then, business happening to be slack, he re-read the letter before putting it away. Then he whistled softly and read it for the third time, frowning and biting his lips. The "Beaumont-Greene" in the signature and on the envelope did not look to be written by the same hand.
"There's something fishy here," muttered the tradesman. "I must show this to Amelia."
It was his habit to consult his wife in emergencies. The chief cutter and two a.s.sistants said that Amelia was the power behind the throne.
Amelia read the letter, listened to what her husband had to say, stared hard at the envelope, and delivered herself--
"The hand that wrote the envelope never wrote the letter, that's plain--to me. Now, William, you've got me and the children to think of.
This may mean the loss of our business, and worse, too. You put on your hat and go straight to the Manor. Mr. Warde's a gentleman, and I don't think he'll let me and the children suffer for your foolishness. Don't you wait another minute."
Nor did he.
After prayers that night, Warde asked Beaumont-Greene to come to his study. Beaumont-Greene obeyed, smiling blandly. Within three weeks he was leaving; doubtless Warde wanted to say something civil. The big fellow was feeling quite himself. He had paid Scaife and Lovell, not without a little pardonable braggadocio.
"You fellows have put me to some inconvenience," he said. "I make it a rule not to run things fine, but after all thirty quid is no great sum.
Here you are."
"We don't want to drive you into the workhouse," said Scaife. "Thanks.
Give you your revenge any time. I dare say between now and the end of the term you'll have most of it back."
Warde asked Beaumont-Greene to sit down in a particular chair, which faced the light from a large lamp. Then he took up an envelope. Suddenly cold chills trickled down Beaumont-Greene's spine. He recognized the envelope. That scoundrel had betrayed him. Not for a moment, however, did he suppose that the forgery had been detected.
"On the strength of this letter," said Warde, gravely, "you borrowed thirty pounds from a tradesman?"
Denial being fatuous, Beaumont-Greene said--
"Yes, sir."
"You know, I suppose, that Harrow tradesmen are expressly forbidden to lend boys money?"
"I am hardly a boy, sir. And--er--under the circ.u.mstances----"
Warde smiled very grimly.
"Ah--under the circ.u.mstances. Have you any objection to telling me the exact circ.u.mstances?"
"Not at all, sir. I wished to make some presents to my friends. I am going to give a large leaving-breakfast."
"Oh! Still, thirty pounds is a large sum----"
"Not to my father, sir. I--er--thought of coming to you, sir, with that letter."
"Did you?"
Warde took the letter from the envelope, and glanced at it with faint interest, so Beaumont-Greene thought. Then he picked up a magnifying gla.s.s and played with it. It was a trick of his to pick up objects on his desk, and turn them in his thin, nervous fingers. Beaumont-Greene was not seriously alarmed. He had great faith in a weapon which had served him faithfully, his lying tongue.
"Yes, sir. I thought you would be willing to advance the money for a few days, and then----"
"And then?"
"And then I thought I wouldn't bother you. It never occurred to me that I was getting a tradesman into trouble. I hope you won't be hard on him, sir."
"I shall not be hard on him," said Warde, "because"--for a moment his eyes flashed--"because he came to me and confessed his fault; but I won't deny that I gave him a very uncomfortable quarter of an hour. He sat in your chair."
Beaumont-Greene shuffled uneasily.
"Have you this thirty pounds in your pocket?" asked Warde, casually.
Beaumont-Greene began to regret his haste in settling.
"No, sir."
"Some of it?"
"None of it."
"You sent it to London? To buy these handsome presents?"
"Ye-es, sir."
"You hadn't much time. Lock-up's early, and you received the money in gold. Did you buy Orders?"
Beaumont-Greene's head began to buzz. He found himself wondering why Warde was speaking in this smooth, quiet voice, so different from his usual curt, incisive tones.