The Black Bag - Louis Joseph Vance (best reads of all time txt) 📗
- Author: Louis Joseph Vance
- Performer: -
Book online «The Black Bag - Louis Joseph Vance (best reads of all time txt) 📗». Author Louis Joseph Vance
a smile more like his wonted boyish grin than anything he had succeeded
in conjuring up throughout the day. Her own smile answered it, and with a
murmured word of gratitude and a little, half timid, half distant bow for
Brentwick, she passed on into the hallway.
Kirkwood lingered with his friend upon the door-stoop. Calendar, recovered
from his temporary consternation, was already at the gate, bending over
it, fat fingers fumbling with the latch, his round red face, lifted to the
house, darkly working with chagrin.
From his threshold, watching him with a slight contraction of the eyes,
Brentwick hailed him in tones of cloying courtesy.
“Do you wish to see me, sir?”
The fat adventurer faltered just within the gateway; then, with a truculent
swagger, “I want my daughter,” he declared vociferously.
Brentwick peered mildly over his glasses, first at Calendar, then at
Kirkwood. His glance lingered a moment on the young man’s honest eyes, and
swung back to Calendar.
“My good man,” he said with sublime tolerance, “will you be pleased to take
yourself off—to the devil if you like? Or shall I take the trouble to
interest the police?”
He removed one fine and fragile hand from a pocket of the flowered
dressing-gown, long enough to jerk it significantly toward the nearer
street-corner.
Thunderstruck, Calendar glanced hastily in the indicated direction.
A blue-coated bobby was to be seen approaching with measured stride,
diffusing upon the still evening air an impression of ineffably capable
self-contentment.
Calendar’s fleshy lips parted and closed without a sound. They quivered.
Beneath them quivered his assortment of graduated chins. His heavy and
pendulous cheeks quivered, slowly empurpling with the dark tide of his
apoplectic wrath. The close-clipped thatch of his iron gray mustache, even,
seemed to bristle like hairs upon the neck of a maddened dog. Beneath him
his fat legs trembled, and indeed his whole huge carcass shook visibly, in
the stress of his restrained wrath.
Suddenly, overwhelmed, he banged the gate behind him and waddled off to
join the captain; who already, with praiseworthy native prudence, had
fallen back upon their cab.
From his coign of strategic advantage, the comfortable elevation of
his box, Kirkwood’s cabby, whose huge enjoyment of the adventurers’
discomfiture had throughout been noisily demonstrative, entreated Calendar
with lifted forefinger, bland affability, and expressions of heartfelt
sympathy.
“Kebsir? ‘Ave a kebsir, do! Try a ride be’ind a real ‘orse, sir; don’t you
go on wastin’ time on ‘im.” A jerk of a derisive thumb singled out the
other cabman. “‘E aren’t pl’yin’ you fair, sir; I knows ‘im,—‘e’s a
hartful g’y deceiver, ‘e is. Look at ‘is ‘orse,—w’ich it aren’t; it’s a
snyle, that’s w’at it is. Tyke a father’s hadvice, sir, and next time yer
fairest darter runs awye with the dook in disguise, chyse ‘em in a real
kebsir, not a cheap imitashin…. Kebsir?… Garn, you ‘ard-‘arted—”
Here he swooped upwards in a dizzy flight of vituperation best unrecorded.
Calendar, beyond an absentminded flirt of one hand by his ear, as who
should shoo away a buzzing insect, ignored him utterly.
Sullenly extracting money from his pocket, he paid off his driver, and in
company with Stryker, trudged in morose silence down the street.
Brentwick touched Kirkwood’s arm and drew him into the house.
XVIIIADVENTURERS’ LUCK
As the door closed, Kirkwood swung impulsively to Brentwick, with the
brief, uneven laugh of fine-drawn nerves.
“Good God, sir!” he cried. “You don’t know—”
“I can surmise,” interrupted the elder man shrewdly.
“You turned up in the nick of time, for all the world like—”
“Harlequin popping through a stage trap?”
“No!—an incarnation of the Providence that watches over children and
fools.”
Brentwick dropped a calming hand upon his shoulder. “Your simile seems
singularly happy, Philip. Permit me to suggest that you join the child in
my study.” He laughed quietly, with a slight nod toward an open door at the
end of the hallway. “For myself, I’ll be with you in one moment.”
A faint, indulgent smile lurking in the shadow of his white mustache, he
watched the young man wheel and dart through the doorway. “Young hearts!”
he commented inaudibly—and a trace sadly. “Youth!…”
Beyond the threshold of the study, Kirkwood paused, eager eyes searching
its somber shadows for a sign of Dorothy.
A long room and deep, it was lighted only by the circumscribed disk of
illumination thrown on the central desk by a shaded reading-lamp, and the
flickering glow of a grate-fire set beneath the mantel of a side-wall. At
the back, heavy velvet porti�res cloaked the recesses of two long windows,
closed jealously even against the twilight. Aside from the windows, doors
and chimney-piece, every foot of wall space was occupied by towering
bookcases or by shelves crowded to the limit of their capacity with an
amazing miscellany of objects of art, the fruit of years of patient and
discriminating collecting. An exotic and heady atmosphere, compounded of
the faint and intangible exhalations of these insentient things, fragrance
of sandalwood, myrrh and musk, reminiscent whiffs of half-forgotten
incense, seemed to intensify the impression of gloomy richness and
repose…
By the fireplace, a little to one side, stood Dorothy, one small foot
resting on the brass fender, her figure merging into the dusky background,
her delicate beauty gaining an effect of elusive and ethereal mystery in
the waning and waxing ruddy glow upflung from the bedded coals.
“Oh, Philip!” She turned swiftly to Kirkwood with extended hands and a low,
broken cry. “I’m so glad….”
A trace of hysteria in her manner warned him, and he checked himself upon
the verge of a too dangerous tenderness. “There!” he said soothingly,
letting her hands rest gently in his palms while he led her to a chair. “We
can make ourselves easy now.” She sat down and he released her hands with a
reluctance less evident than actual. “If ever I say another word against my
luck—”
“Who,” inquired the girl, lowering her voice, “who is the gentleman in the
flowered dressing-gown?”
“Brentwick—George Silvester Brentwick: an old friend. I’ve known him for
years,—ever since I came abroad. Curiously enough, however, this is the
first time I’ve ever been here. I called once, but he wasn’t in,—a few
days ago,—the day we met. I thought the place looked familiar. Stupid of
me!”
“Philip,” said the girl with a grave face but a shaking voice, “it was.”
She laughed provokingly…. “It was so funny, Philip. I don’t know why I
ran, when you told me to, but I did; and while I ran, I was conscious
of the front door, here, opening, and this tall man in the flowered
dressing-gown coming down to the gate as if it were the most ordinary thing
in the world for him to stroll out, dressed that way, in the evening. And
he opened the gate, and bowed, and said, ever so pleasantly, ‘Won’t you
come in, Miss Calendar?’—”
“He did!” exclaimed Kirkwood. “But how—?”
“How can I say?” she expostulated. “At all events, he seemed to know
me; and when he added something about calling you in, too—he said ‘Mr.
Kirkwood ‘—I didn’t hesitate.”
“It’s strange enough, surely—and fortunate. Bless his heart!” said
Kirkwood.
And, “Hum!” said Mr. Brentwick considerately, entering the study. He had
discarded the dressing-gown and was now in evening dress.
The girl rose. Kirkwood turned. “Mr. Brentwick—” he began.
But Brentwick begged his patience with an eloquent gesture. “Sir,” he said,
somewhat austerely, “permit me to put a single question: Have you by any
chance paid your cabby?”
“Why—” faltered the younger man, with a flaming face. “I—why, no—that
is—”
The other quietly put his hand upon a bell-pull. A faint jingling sound was
at once audible, emanating from the basement.
“How much should you say you owe him?”
“I—I haven’t a penny in the world!”
The shrewd eyes flashed their amusement into Kirkwood’s. “Tut, tut!”
Brentwick chuckled. “Between gentlemen, my dear boy! Dear me! you are slow
to learn.”
“I’ll never be contented to sponge on my friends,” explained Kirkwood in
deepest misery. “I can’t tell when—”
“Tut, tut! How much did you say?”
“Ten shillings—or say twelve, would be about right,” stammered the
American, swayed by conflicting emotions of gratitude and profound
embarrassment.
A soft-footed butler, impassive as Fate, materialized mysteriously in the
doorway.
“You rang, sir?” he interrupted frigidly.
“I rang, Wotton.” His master selected a sovereign from his purse and handed
it to the servant. “For the cabby, Wotton.”
“Yes sir.” The butler swung automatically, on one heel.
“And Wotton!”
“Sir?”
“If any one should ask for me, I’m not at home.”
“Very good, sir.”
“And if you should see a pair of disreputable scoundrels skulking, in the
neighborhood, one short and stout, the other tall and evidently a seafaring
man, let me know.”
“Thank you, sir.” A moment later the front door was heard to close.
Brentwick turned with a little bow to the girl. “My dear Miss Calendar,” he
said, rubbing his thin, fine hands,—“I am old enough, I trust, to call you
such without offense,—please be seated.”
Complying, the girl rewarded him with a radiant smile. Whereupon, striding
to the fireplace, their host turned his back to it, clasped his hands
behind him, and glowered benignly upon the two. “Ah!” he observed in
accents of extreme personal satisfaction. “Romance! Romance!”
“Would you mind telling us how you knew—” began Kirkwood anxiously.
“Not in the least, my dear Philip. It is simple enough: I possess an
imagination. From my bedroom window, on the floor above, I happen to behold
two cabs racing down the street, the one doggedly pursuing the other. The
foremost stops, perforce of a fagged horse. There alights a young gentleman
looking, if you’ll pardon me, uncommonly seedy; he is followed by a young
lady, if she will pardon me,” with another little bow, “uncommonly pretty.
With these two old eyes I observe that the gentleman does not pay his
cabby. Ergo—I intelligently deduce—he is short of money. Eh?”
“You were right,” affirmed Kirkwood, with a rueful and crooked smile.
“But—”
“So! so!” pursued Brentwick, rising on his toes and dropping back again;
“so this world of ours wags on to the old, old tune!… And I, who in my
younger days pursued adventure without success, in dotage find myself
dragged into a romance by my two ears, whether I will or no! Eh? And now
you are going to tell me all about it, Philip. There is a chair…. Well,
Wotton?”
The butler had again appeared noiselessly in the doorway.
“Beg pardon, sir; they’re waiting, sir.”
“The caitiffs, Wotton?”
“Yessir.”
“Where waiting?”
“One at each end of the street, sir.”
“Thank you. You may bring us sherry and biscuit, Wotton.”
“Thank you, sir.”
The servant vanished.
Brentwick removed his glasses, rubbed them, and blinked thoughtfully at the
girl. “My dear,” he said suddenly, with a peculiar tremor in his voice,
“you resemble your mother remarkably. Tut—I should know! Time was when I
was one of her most ardent admirers.”
“You—y-you knew my mother?” cried Dorothy, profoundly moved.
“Did I not know you at sight? My dear, you are your mother reincarnate, for
the good of an unworthy world. She was a very beautiful woman, my dear.”
Wotton entered with a silver serving tray, offering it in turn to Dorothy,
Kirkwood and his employer. While he was present the three held silent—the
girl trembling slightly, but with her face aglow; Kirkwood half stupefied
Comments (0)