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"I shall never believe it. Tell me now about Mr. Weatherley? Was he very sorry when he arrived for having caused you so much anxiety?"
"I have not yet seen Mr. Weatherley," Arnold replied. "Up till the time when I left the office, he had not arrived."
She set down the gla.s.s which she had been in the act of raising to her lips. For the first time she seemed to take this matter seriously.
"What time was that?" she asked.
"Ten minutes past twelve."
She frowned.
"It certainly does begin to look a little queer," she admitted. "Do you think that he has met with an accident?"
"We have already tried the hospitals and the police station," he told her.
She looked at him steadfastly.
"You have an idea--you have some idea of what has happened," she said.
"Nothing definite," Arnold replied, gravely. "I cannot imagine what it all means, but I believe that Mr. Weatherley has disappeared."
CHAPTER XXVI
ARNOLD BECOMES INQUISITIVE
For several moments Fenella sat quite still. She was suddenly an altered woman. All the natural gayety and vivacity seemed to have faded from her features. There were suggestions of another self, zealously kept concealed. It was a curious revelation. Even her tone, when she spoke, was altered. The words seemed to be dragged from her lips.
"You have some reason for saying this," she murmured.
"I have," Arnold admitted.
Just then the waiter entered the room, bringing in a portion of the lunch which they had ordered. Fenella rose and walked to a mirror at the other end of the apartment. She stood there powdering her cheeks for a moment, with her back turned to Arnold. When the waiter had gone, she returned, humming a tune. Her effort at self-rehabilitation was obvious.
"You gave me a shock, my friend," she declared, sitting down.
"Please do not do it again. I am not accustomed to having things put to me quite so plainly."
"I am sorry," Arnold said. "It was hideously clumsy of me."
"It is of no consequence now," she continued. "Please to give me some of that red wine and go on with your story. Tell me exactly what you mean!"
"It is simply this," Arnold explained. "A few days ago, I noticed that Mr. Weatherley was busy writing for several hours. It was evidently some private matter and nothing whatever to do with the business. When he had finished, he put some doc.u.ments into a small safe, locked them up, and, very much to my surprise, gave me the key."
"This was long ago?"
"It was almost immediately after Mr. Rosario's murder," he replied.
"When he gave me the key, he told me that if anything unexpected should happen to him, I was to open the safe and inspect the doc.u.ments. He particularly used the words 'If anything unexpected should happen to me, or if I should disappear.'"
"You really believe, then," she asked, "that he had some idea in his mind that something was likely to happen to him, or that he intended to disappear?"
"His action proves it," Arnold reminded her. "So far as we know, there is no earthly reason for his not having turned up at the office this morning. This afternoon I shall open the safe."
"You mean that you will open it if you do not find him in the office when you return?"
"He will not be there," Arnold said, decidedly.
Her eyes were filled with fear. He went on hastily.
"Perhaps I ought not to say that. I have nothing in the world to go on. It is only just an idea of mine. It isn't that I am afraid anything has happened to him, but I feel convinced, somehow, that we shall not hear anything more of Mr. Weatherley for some time."
"You will open the safe, then, this afternoon?"
"I must," Arnold replied.
For several minutes neither of them spoke a word. Fenella made a pretense at eating her luncheon. Arnold ate mechanically, his thoughts striving in vain to focus themselves upon the immediate question. It was she who ended the silence.
"What do you think you will find in those doc.u.ments?"
"I have no idea," Arnold answered. "To tell you the truth," he went on earnestly, "I was going to ask you whether you knew of anything in his life or affairs which could explain this?"
"I am not sure that I understand you," she said.
"It seems a strange question," Arnold continued, "and yet it presents itself. I was going to ask you whether you knew of any reason whatsoever why Mr. Weatherley should voluntarily choose to go into hiding?"
"You have something in your mind when you ask me a question like this!" she said. "What should I know about it at all? What makes you ask me?"
Then Arnold took his courage into both hands. Her eyes seemed to be compelling him.
"What I am going to say," he began, "may sound very foolish to you.
I cannot help it. I only hope that you will not be angry with me."
Her eyes met his steadily.
"No," she murmured, "I will not be angry--I promise you that. It is better that I should know exactly what is in your mind. At present I do not understand."
His manner acquired a new earnestness. He forgot his luncheon and leaned across the table towards her.
"Fenella," he said, "try and consider how these things of which I am going to speak must have presented themselves to me. Try, if you can, and put yourself in my position for a few minutes. Before that evening on which Mr. Weatherley asked me to come to your house, nothing in the shape of an adventure had ever happened to me. I had had my troubles, but they were ordinary ones, such as the whole world knows of. From the day when I went to school to the day when I had to leave college hurriedly, lost my father, and came up to London a pauper, life with me was entirely an obvious affair. From the night I crossed the threshold of your house, things were different."
There was a cloud upon her face. She began to drum with her slim forefingers upon the tablecloth.
"I think that I would rather you did not go on," she said.
He shook his head.