Part 17 (1/2)
The words I at last caught were few and uncertain, for De Gex was speaking in a low and highly confidential tone.
At last, however, on approaching a little nearer, I heard him exclaim:
”Jack, your husband, is a young fool! He has no discretion. He gambles on the Stock Exchange without any expert knowledge. He came up here to me yesterday afternoon and told me that he must have ten thousand pounds to tide him over, and prevent him being hammered. I sent him away, but I shall see that he has the money.”
”How really good of you, Mr. De Gex!” exclaimed the girl--for as far as I could see she was hardly a woman. ”I don't know how to thank you sufficiently. I know Jack is a born gambler. His father was on the Stock Exchange before him, and I suppose games of chance are in the breed of the Cullertons.”
”Not in you, I hope, Dorothy,” replied the millionaire. ”You have had the misfortune to marry a gambler, and--well, my dear girl--I pity you. Gambling is worse than drink. The drunkard can be sickened and put off, but the gambler never. Now I want you to promise me one thing.”
”What is that?” she asked.
”I shall see that he has the money. But it will come through a second party, not through me. I do not wish to appear to lend him money, otherwise he will still continue his speculations, feeling that he has me behind him. Now you know the truth, Dorothy. But you must promise me to say nothing. n.o.body must know--not even my wife.”
”Oh! how very good of you to help Jack out of a hole!” she exclaimed.
”Of course I'll remain silent. But it really is awfully kind of you. I don't know how to thank you.”
”I will do it for your sake, Dorothy,” said De Gex, bending to her in confidence. ”I am indebted to _you_--remember!”
”Ah! no!” cried the young woman, whose name apparently was Cullerton.
”No! Please don't refer to that terrible affair!”
Her voice betrayed emotion and apprehension, while at that moment, as she turned her face to the light of the moon, I was able to get a full view of it. It was that of a very beautiful young woman of about twenty-three, rather _pet.i.te_, with fair bobbed hair, regular features, and sweet lips. But the expression upon her countenance was one of fear and apprehension.
”I have no desire to remember it,” said her host. ”We agreed at the time that it should be silence for silence. It was a bargain which we have kept ever since. You have married Jack Cullerton, and you are happy except that your husband is a born gambler. And of that he must be cured.”
”I know. I know!” she said hastily. ”But earlier this evening you promised to tell me about Gabrielle. I must see her. She seems to have disappeared. Where is she?”
”In London, I believe.”
”In London! Yet the last time you spoke of her you said she was in Turin, on her way here, to Florence.”
Oswald De Gex laughed lightly.
”Yes. She came to Florence for a few days, but she has returned to London. Why are you so anxious to see her?”
”I want to see her about a matter which concerns Jack and myself--that's all,” replied young Mrs. Cullerton.
”May I not know?” asked her host.
”It is a purely private matter,” was her reply.
Then from the conversation that followed, it seemed as though the millionaire was apprehensive lest she should meet the mysterious Gabrielle, and I wondered whether it was in order to prevent them meeting that he entertained designs upon her life.
I recollected that little gla.s.s tube which he was carrying in secret in his pocket, and which the scoundrelly Italian had urged him to refrain from using because he might place his own life in jeopardy.
I listened to every word. De Gex was evidently most anxious to know why she sought Gabrielle so eagerly. And Gabrielle, I could only surmise, was the girl I had seen stark and dead in that handsome room in Stretton Street.
That night of watchfulness had borne fruit. I had learnt from De Gex's own lips that another deep and subtle trap was to be laid for me--a trap baited with the tragic-faced girl herself. Further, I had established that he intended that, sooner or later, an accident should befall the dainty little woman in that rich ermine cloak, the woman with whom he was chatting so affably. Also I had learned her ident.i.ty, and it now remained for me to forewarn her of what was intended.
The rich Englishman had talked for about a quarter of an hour with Dorothy Cullerton, when at last they returned to the house, while I made my way in the darkness back to the gate. When I arrived, however, I found that Moroni had locked it after him. I was therefore compelled to climb the wrought ironwork, and after several unsuccessful attempts succeeded in regaining the road.