Part 20 (1/2)

”No--n.o.body's--the boy himself need never know. There's a young bride here who'll nurse him like an angel and hold her tongue till doomsday.

She and her husband may be in the secret, but not another soul!”

And when Jack Laverick came out of chloroform, to feel a frosty tickling under the tabernacle of bedclothes in which his broken bone was as the Ark, the sensation was less uncomfortable than he expected. But that of a dull deep pain in the head drew his first complaint, as an item not in the estimate.

”What's my head all bandaged up for?” he demanded, fingering the turban on the pillow.

”Didn't you know it was broken, too?” said Lucy Edenborough gravely. ”I expect your leg hurt so much more that you never noticed it!”

IV

Ten days later Mostyn Scarth called at Doctor Alt's, to ask if he mightn't see Jack at last. He had behaved extremely well about the whole affair; others in his position might easily have made trouble. But there had been no concealment of the fact that injuries were not confined to the broken leg, and the mere seat of the additional mischief was enough for a man of sense. It is not the really strong who love to display their power. Scarth not only accepted the situation, but voluntarily conducted the correspondence which kept poor Mrs. Laverick at half Europe's length over the critical period. He had merely stipulated to be the first to see the convalescent, and he took it as well as ever when Dollar shook his head once more.

”It's not our fault this time, Mr. Scarth. You must blame the s.e.x that is privileged to change its mind. Mrs. Laverick has arrived without a word of warning. She is with her son at this moment, and you'll be glad to hear that she thinks she finds him an absolutely changed character--or, rather, what he was before he ever saw Winterwald a year ago. I may say that this seems more or less the patient's own impression about himself.”

”Glad!” cried Scarth, who for the moment had seemed rather staggered.

”I'm more than glad; I'm profoundly relieved! It doesn't matter now whether I see Jack or not. Do you mind giving him these magazines and papers, with my love? I am thankful that my responsibility's at an end.”

”The same with me,” returned the crime doctor. ”I shall go back to my work in London with a better conscience than I had when I left it--with something accomplished--something undone that wanted undoing.”

He smiled at Scarth across the flap of an unpretentious table, on which lay the literary offering in all its glory of green and yellow wrappers; and Scarth looked up without a trace of pique, but with an answering twinkle in his own dark eyes.

”Alt exalted--restored to favor--Jack reformed character--born again--forger forgot--forging ahead, eh?”

It was his best Mr. Jingle manner; indeed, a wonderfully ready and ruthless travesty of his own performance on the night of Dollar's arrival. And that kindred critic enjoyed it none the less for a second strain of irony, which he could not but take to himself.

”I have not forgot anybody, Mr. Scarth.”

”But have you discovered who did the forgery?”

”I always knew.”

”Have you tackled him?”

”Days ago!”

Scarth looked astounded. ”And what's to happen to him, doctor?”

”I don't know.” The doctor gave a characteristic shrug. ”It's not my job; as it was, I'd done all the detective business, which I loathe.”

”I remember,” cried Scarth. ”I shall never forget the way you went through that prescription, as though you had been looking over the blighter's shoulder! Not an expert--modest fellow--pride that apes!”

And again Dollar had to laugh at the way Mr. Jingle wagged his head, in spite of the same slightly caustic undercurrent as before.

”That was the easiest part of it,” he answered, ”although you make me blush to say so. The hard part was what reviewers of novels call the 'motivation.'”

”But you had that in Schickel's spite against Alt.”

”It was never quite strong enough to please me.”

”Then what was the motive, doctor?”