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"I leave them entirely to you," the Baronet answered quickly. "Act just as you think fit, only remember there must be no exposure. I can't afford that!"
"The secret discovered by that fellow Holmboe shall be ours," declared Jim Jannaway, slowly and determinedly.
"It might be, if only Erich could discover the key to that infernal cipher. He told me yesterday that he suspected Professor Griffin had already solved the problem."
"If he has, then I'll compel the girl to obtain it for us. You understand!" he exclaimed quickly.
"Even though Charlie has become a weak fool, moved to penitence by some tub-thumping revivalist perhaps, I intend to carry through the scheme I devised. The secret of the treasure of Israel shall be ours, my dear Felix. You shall be the great benefactor to the Jewish race, and discover the sacred relics so long concealed."
"Benefactor!" echoed the red-faced man with a short dry laugh. "Oh yes, I'll show the Jews how I can repay them in their own coin. Only be careful--do, I beg of you. Charlie is not the man to take a blow lying down, you know."
"You ought to know me well enough to be fully aware that I never act without consideration," the younger man protested. "Jim Jannaway is no fool at a game of checkmate, I think."
"There was that affair in Bordeaux," remarked the Baronet in a rather hard voice.
"You believe that Red Mullet knows something of that!" laughed Jim, admiring the fine diamond ring upon his finger. "Bah, he is in entire ignorance. It was an unfortunate incident, I admit. But under the circ.u.mstances couldn't be helped. But there--why need we recall it?
You're so fond of dwelling upon unpleasant themes," he laughed. "You gave an extra five thousand to the Hospital Sat.u.r.day Fund as a conscience-soother, didn't you?"
The Baronet turned upon his heel, and walked to his writing-table, whereon stood an electric lamp shaded with green silk. Then, after turning over some letters, he asked suddenly:
"When does that girl meet Charlie?"
"To-night."
"At her request?"
"Yes."
"Very well. I leave everything to you," Sir Felix said with a mysterious smile. "It would not be against our interests--if--well, if we had her in our hands again."
Jim Jannaway nodded. He understood the suggestion perfectly.
"Charlie ought, I think, to be sent back to the Continent, don't you agree?" he asked. "A timely warning that the police had learned of his return here, and he'd skip across by the next Channel service. Once over there, matters would be quite easy. The Leleu affair has never been cleared up, you know!" he added in a lower voice.
"I leave it entirely in your hands," declared the plutocrat whom the public believed to be a high-minded philanthropist. "Whatever you do must be on your own responsibility, recollect."
"But with your money. I want a couple of hundred."
"Ah! hard up again, Jim," sighed the other. But unlocking the safe opposite, the safe that contained the typed copy of the dead man's doc.u.ment, the Baronet took out some banknotes and handed them to his cat's-paw.
They were French notes. They were safer than English to give to persons like Jannaway, for the numbers could not be traced in cases of inquiries, while they could always be at once exchanged at any of the tourist offices. Sir Felix Challas, though compelled to employ men of the racing-tout stamp like Jim Jannaway, and unscrupulous concession-hunters like "Red Mullet," was ever upon his guard.
He trusted his men, but in "Red Mullet" he had confessed himself sadly disappointed.
"Revivalists and missionaries have a lot to answer for," was one of his pet phrases.
Jim Jannaway, slipping the notes into his pocket-book without troubling to count them, put on his smart overcoat and well-brushed silk hat, and wis.h.i.+ng his employer an airy "good-evening," strolled out into the damp chilliness of Berkeley Square, where he hailed a hansom and drove away.
He had given the man an address in Knightsbridge, but as the cab was turning from the misty gloom of Berkeley Street into the brightness of Piccadilly several persons were waiting at the left-hand kerb in order to cross the road.
Among them he apparently recognised somebody, for in an instant he drew back and turned his head the other way.
Next second the cab had rounded the corner and was on its way along Piccadilly. Yet he knew that he had sat there for several moments in the full glare of the electric lights in front of the Ritz Hotel, and he felt convinced that he had been recognised by the very last person in the world that he desired to encounter.
Jannaway sat there breathless, staring straight before him into the yellow mist, his eyes glaring as though an apparition had arisen before him.
He tried to laugh away his fears. After all, it must be only fancy, he reflected. Somebody bearing a strange resemblance. It could not be she! Impossible. Utterly impossible.
But if it had been she in the flesh--if she had in that instant actually recognised him! What then!
He huddled himself in the corner of the cab, coward that he was, and shuddered at the recollections that crowded through his mind.
Would he ever have entered that hansom if he had known that it would carry him into such exposure--and worse?
But from Jim Jannaway's lips there fell a short bitter laugh. Was not his life made up by narrow "shaves?" Had not he been in hundreds of tight corners before, and with his wonderful tact and almost devilish cunning wriggled out of what would have meant ruin and imprisonment to any other man.
He had been a born adventurer, ever since his day as a stable-lad down at Newmarket, and he had the habit of laughing lightly at his own adventures, just as he was laughing now.
Would he have laughed, however, if he had but known how that chance encounter was to result?
CHAPTER TWENTY FIVE.
THE GIRL AND THE MAN.
Gwen Griffin had appointed half-past eight as the hour to meet her mysterious friend "Red Mullet" outside the "Tube" station at the corner of Queen's Road, Bayswater.
Immediately after dinner she had slipped up to her room, exchanging her silk blouse for a stuff one, and putting on her hat and fur jacket, went out, leaving her father alone in the study. He was--as now was his habit every evening--busy making those bewildering calculations, as he tested the various numerical ciphers upon the original Hebrew text of Ezekiel.
Through the damp misty night she hurried along the Bayswater Road, until she came within the zone of electricity around the station, where she saw the tall figure of her friend, wearing a heavy overcoat and dark green felt hat, awaiting her.
"This is really a most pleasant surprise, Miss Griffin," he cried cheerily, as he raised his hat, and took her little gloved hand. "But-- well, we can't walk about the street in order to talk, can we? Why not drive to my rooms? You're not afraid of me now--are you?" he laughed.
"No, Mr Mullet," was her quick answer. "I trust you, because you have already proved yourself my good friend."
Truth to tell, however, she was not eager to go to that place where she had spent those anxious never-to-be-forgotten days, yet, as he suggested it, she could not very well refuse. One thing was quite certain, she was as safe in his hands as in her own home.
Therefore, he hailed a "taxi" from the rank across the way, and they at once drove in the direction of the Marble Arch.
Hardly, however, had they left the kerb, when a second "taxi" upon the rank, turned suddenly into the roadway and followed them. Within, lolling back and well-concealed in the darkness, sat Jim Jannaway.
A quarter of an hour later, Mullet let himself in with his latch-key, and the girl ascended those carpeted stairs she recollected so well.
In his own warm room Mullet stirred the fire until it blazed merrily, and then helping the girl off with her jacket, drew up a chair for her, taking one himself.
Her sweet innocent face, frankness of manner, and neatness of dress charmed him again, as it had when he had been forced against his will to keep her prisoner there. As he gazed across at her, he, careless adventurer that he had been for years, a man, with a dozen _aliases_ and as many different abodes, recollected their strange _menage_.
"Well," he said with a smile, "I was really delighted to get a note from you, Miss Griffin. You said in it that you wished to consult me. What about?"
"About several things, Mr Mullet," answered the girl, leaning her elbow upon the chair arm and looking straight in his face. "First, I am very unhappy. My position is an extremely uncomfortable one."