A Knight on Wheels - BestLightNovel.com
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"I think the occasion calls for sealing-wax," he said.
He found an old stump in the writing-case, and sealed up the envelope, impressing it with his father's seal. Presently the deed was done. The Epistle of Theophilus lay on the table before its author, signed, sealed, addressed, and stamped. Philip looked at the clock, and whistled. It was a quarter past twelve.
He drew aside the curtains and inspected the night. The plate-gla.s.s window had become mysteriously opaque; so he raised the sash--to lower it again with all speed, coughing. A thick brown fog, of the brand affectionately known among its habitual inhalers as "London particular,"
was lying in a sulphurous pall over the choking city.
"All the same, my lad," decided Philip, "you had better trot out and post it. It will be delivered at t.i.te Street to-morrow morning, and perhaps some Christian person there will forward it. Perhaps Jean Leslie will. Wish I could post myself, too," he added wistfully. "h.e.l.lo, what's that?"
From the little lobby outside came the sharp rat-tat of a knocker--low, clear, and rhythmical. To judge by the sound, the outer door was standing open, and some person unknown was indulging in a playful little tattoo.
_"Officers' wives get pudding and pies, Soldiers' wives get skill-y!"_
it said.
Philip's heart almost broke from its moorings. Hastily he picked up the shaded lamp from the table and turned its light to illuminate the doorway.
Next moment there came a quick and familiar step outside. The door of the room opened gently; and there appeared, radiant and dazzling against the blackness behind, a Vision.
"_Peggy!_"
"Yes--just me!" replied the Vision demurely.
CHAPTER x.x.x
THE SILENT KNIGHT
PEGGY walked to the fire and warmed her hands delicately. She was wrapped in a dark-blue velvet opera-cloak trimmed with fur. One corner had fallen back, showing the pink silk lining. Presently she slipped this garment off, and throwing it across a chair sat down upon the padded top of the fireguard with a contented sigh and smiled seraphically upon her host. The clock struck half-past twelve.
"Peggy," enquired the respectable Philip severely, "what on earth are you doing here?"
"I came to see you, Theophilus," replied Peggy. "Aren't you glad to see me?"
"Such conduct," observed Philip resolutely, "is most reprehensible."
"Yes, isn't it? But I was at a dance close by, and I thought you would like to see my new frock. Do you think it is pretty?"
Philip merely gaped. He was all at sea. Peggy regarded him covertly for a moment, and spoke again.
"When a lady," she remarked reproachfully, "takes the trouble to climb up four flights of stairs to show a gentleman her new frock, it is usual for the gentleman to say something appreciative."
"I think it is beautiful," said Philip, feasting his eyes upon her.
Peggy, noticing this, decided to divert his attention from the wearer to the garment.
"And yet," she said, "if you were asked to describe it to-morrow, you would not be able to remember a single thing about it."
"I should remember every detail," replied Philip, "but I should not be able to describe it. There's a difference, you know."
"Try--now," suggested Peggy.
Philip meekly fell in with her mood. He knew enough of the character of the girl before him to be quite certain that she had not visited his flat at midnight in order to show him her new frock. She wanted him for something: perhaps she was in trouble. Well, she would tell him in due course. For the moment, extenuating irrelevancies were to be the order of the day.
"Miss Peggy Falconer," he began conscientiously, "looked charming in a white silk--"
"Satin," corrected the charming one.
"--satin creation, which was partly obscured from view by a sort of kilt--"
"A tunic."
"--a tunic, of pink gauze."
"Of rose-coloured _chiffon_."
"Thank you. Miss Falconer wore the neatest little white satin shoes, tied up with ribbon, and white silk--"
"They are not usually mentioned."
"Sorry! Miss Falconer wore long white gloves--"
"They are taken for granted."
"Well, anyhow," persisted the hara.s.sed Philip, "round her hair Miss Falconer wore a band of some stuff or other--"
"Of _tulle_."
"--of tulle, which very cleverly matched the colour of her ki--tunic.
Over her shoulders she wore a filmy scarf, of the same stu--material.
Her waistband, which she wore rather high up, contained a small bunch of carnations. Finally her appearance caused considerable gratification to one of her oldest friends, who did not know that she was in town."
"I only got back this afternoon," said Peggy, who by this time had risen to her feet and was inspecting Philip's _lares et penates_. "By the way, your front door was ajar, Philip. Your last visitor must have left it open. Very careless! You might have been robbed."
"I expect it was Friend Grice."
Peggy babbled on. She was speaking vivaciously, and rather more rapidly than was her wont; another woman would have said that she was talking to exclude other topics.
"It is more than a year since I was in these rooms, Philip. They are as snug as ever, but horribly untidy. Why do you always keep books on the floor? And your mantelpiece--tragic!" She ran her finger along the edge, and held it up reproachfully. "Look! Filthy!" The tip of her glove was black. "I shall have to take my gloves off, I see, to keep them clean."
"I apologise. You have dropped in just before our annual dust-up. Most unfortunate!"
"Are these your household G.o.ds?" continued Peggy, coming to a halt before the mantelpiece.
"Yes."