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"I guess they found Miss Elizabeth a pretty tough nut to crack," the detective went on. "Anyhow, you know what her price was from her name, which is hers right enough. Wenham, who was a year younger than his brother, was the first to bid it. Three months ago, Mr. and Mrs. Wenham Gardner, Miss Beatrice, and the devoted father left New York in the Lusitania and came to London."
"Where is this Wenham Gardner, then?" Tavernake demanded.
Pritchard took his cigar case from his pocket and selected another cigar.
"Say, that's where you strike the nail right on the head," he remarked.
"Where is this Wenham Gardner?"
"I don't mind telling you, Mr. Tavernake, that to discover his whereabouts is exactly what I am over on this side for. I have a commission from the family to find out, and a blank cheque to do it with."
"Do you mean that he has disappeared, then?" asked Tavernake.
"Off the face of the earth, sir," Pritchard replied. "Something like two months ago, the young married couple, with Miss Beatrice, started for a holiday tour somewhere down in the west of England. A few days after they started, Miss Beatrice comes back to London alone. She goes to a boarding-house, is practically penniless, but she has shaken her sister--has, I believe, never spoken with her since. A little later, Elizabeth alone turns up in London. She has plenty of money, more money than she has ever had the control of before in her life, but no husband."
"So far, I don't see anything remarkable about that," Tavernake interposed.
"That may or may not be," Pritchard answered, drily. "This creature, Wenham Gardner--I hate to call him a man--was her abject slave--up till the time they reached London, at any rate. He would never have quit of his own accord. He stopped quite suddenly communicating with all his friends. None of their cables, even, were answered."
"Why don't you go and ask Mrs. Gardner where he is?" Tavernake demanded bluntly.
"I have already," Pritchard declared, "taken that liberty. With tears in her eyes, she a.s.sured me that after some slight quarrel, in which she admits that she was the one to blame, her husband walked out of the house where they were staying, and she has not seen him since. She was quite ready with all the particulars, and even implored me to help find him."
"I cannot imagine," Tavernake said, "why any one should disbelieve her."
The detective smiled.
"There are a few little outside circ.u.mstances," he remarked, looking at the ash of his cigar. "In the first place, how do you suppose that this young Wenham Gardner spent the last week of his stay in New York?"
"How should I know?" Tavernake replied, impatiently.
"By realizing every cent of his property on which he could lay his hands," the detective continued. "It isn't at any time an easy business, and the Gardner interest is spread out in many directions, but he must have sailed with something like forty thousand pounds in hard cash.
A suspicious person might presume that that forty thousand pounds has found its way to the stronger of the combination."
"Anything else?" Tavernake asked.
"I won't worry you much more," the detective answered. "There are a few other circ.u.mstances which seem to need explanation, but they can wait.
There is one serious one, however, and that is where you come in."
"Indeed!" Tavernake remarked. "I was hoping you would come to that soon."
"The two sisters, Beatrice and Elizabeth, have been together ever since we can learn anything of their history. Those people who don't understand the disappearance of Wenham Gardner would like to know why they quarreled and parted, why Beatrice is keeping away from her sister in this strange manner. I personally, too, should like to know from Miss Beatrice when she last saw Wenham Gardner alive."
"You want me to ask Miss Beatrice these things?" Tavernake demanded.
"It might come better from you," Pritchard admitted. "I have written her to the theatre but naturally she has not replied."
Tavernake looked curiously at his companion.
"Do you really suppose," he asked, "that, even granted there were any unusual circ.u.mstances in connection with that quarrel--do you seriously suppose that Beatrice would give her sister away?"
The detective sighed.
"No doubt, Mr. Tavernake," he said, "these young ladies are friends of yours, and perhaps for that reason you are a little prejudiced in their favor. Their whole bringing-up and a.s.sociations, however, have certainly not been of a strict order. I cannot help thinking that persuasion might be brought to bear upon Miss Beatrice, that it might be pointed out to her that a true story is the safest."
"Well, if you've finished," Tavernake declared, "I'd like to tell you what I think of your story. I think it's all d--d silly nonsense! This Wenham Gardner, by your own saying, was half mad. There was a quarrel and he's gone off to Paris or somewhere. As to your suggestions about Mrs. Gardner, I think they're infamous."
Pritchard was unmoved by his companion's warmth.
"Why, that's all right, Mr. Tavernake," he affirmed. "I can quite understand your feeling like that just at first. You see, I've been among crime and criminals all my days, and I learn to look for a certain set of motives when a thing of this sort happens. You've been brought up among honest folk, who go the straightforward way about life, and naturally you look at the same matter from a different point of view.
But you and I have got to talk this out. I want you to understand that those very charming young ladies are not quite the cla.s.s of young women whom you know anything about. Mind you, I haven't a word to say against Miss Beatrice. I dare say she's as straight as they make 'em. But--you must take another whiskey and soda, Mr. Tavernake. Now, I insist upon it. Tim, come right over here."
Mr. Pritchard seemed to have forgotten what he was talking about. The room had been suddenly invaded. The whole of the little supper party, whose individual members he had pointed out to his companion, came trooping into the room. They were all apparently on the best of terms with themselves, and they all seemed to make a point of absolutely ignoring Pritchard's presence. Elizabeth was the one exception. She was carrying a tiny Chinese spaniel under one arm; with the fingers of her other hand she held a tortoise-sh.e.l.l mounted monocle to her eye, and stared directly at the two men. Presently she came languidly across the room to them.
"Dear me," she said, "I had no idea that even your wide circle of acquaintances, Mr. Pritchard, included my friend, Mr. Tavernake."
The two men rose to their feet. Tavernake felt confused and angry. It was as though he had been playing the traitor in listening, even for a moment, to these stories.
"Mr. Pritchard introduced himself to me only a few minutes ago," he declared. "He brought me in here and I have been listening to a lot of rubbish from him of which I don't believe a single word."
She flashed a wonderful smile upon him.
"Mr. Pritchard is so very censorious," she murmured. "He takes such a very low view of human nature. After all, though, I suppose we must not blame him. I think that as men and women we do not exist to him. We are simply the pegs by means of which he can climb a little higher in the esteem of his employers."
Pritchard took up his soft hat and stick.
"Mrs. Gardner," he said, "I will confess that I have been wasting my time with this young man. You are a trifle severe upon me. You may find, and before long, that I am your best friend."
She laughed delightfully.
"Dear Mr. Pritchard," she exclaimed, "it is a strange thought, that! If only I dared hope that some day it might come true!"
"More unlikely things, madam, are happening every hour," the detective remarked. "The world--our little corner of it, at any rate--is full of anomalies. There might even come a time to any one of us three when liberty was more dangerous than the prison cell itself."
He nodded carelessly to Tavernake, and with a bow to Elizabeth turned and left the room. Elizabeth remained as though turned to stone, looking after him as he descended the stairs.
"The man is a fool!" Tavernake cried, roughly.
Elizabeth shook her head and sighed.
"He is something far more ineffective," she said. "He is just a little too clever."
CHAPTER, XV. GENERAL DISCONTENT
Elizabeth did not at once rejoin her friends. Instead, she sank on to the low settee close to where she had been standing, and drew Tavernake down to her side. She waved her hand across at the others, who were calling for her.