Part 17 (1/2)

He found that Colonel Grey had indeed returned. He sent up his card; the maid came back and at once took him up to the Colonel's sitting-room. Grey received him with an air of inquiry, which grew yet more inquiring when Mr. Flexen told him that he was engaged in investigating the affair of Lord Loudwater's death. Therefore, Mr.

Flexen came to the point at once.

”I have been informed that Lord Loudwater paid you a visit last night, and that a violent quarrel ensued, Colonel Grey,” he said.

”Pardon me; but the violence was all on Lord Loudwater's part,” said Colonel Grey in an exceedingly unpleasant tone. ”I merely made myself nasty in a quiet way. Violence is not in my line, unless I'm absolutely driven to it; and any one less likely to drive any one to violence than that obnoxious and noisy jacka.s.s I've never come across. The fellow was all words--abusive words. He'd no fight in him. I gave him every reason I could think of to go for me because I particularly wanted to hammer him.

But he hadn't got it in him.”

Grey spoke quietly, without raising his voice, but there was a rasp in his tone that impressed Mr. Flexen. If a man could give such an impression of dangerousness with his voice, what would he be like in action? He realized that here was a quite uncommon type of V. C. He realized, too, that Lord Loudwater had made the mistake of a lifetime in his attempt to bully him. Moreover, he had a strong feeling that if it had seemed to Colonel Grey that Lord Loudwater was better out of the way, and a favourable opportunity had presented itself, he might very well have displayed little hesitation in putting him out of the way. He felt that the obnoxious peer would have been little more than a dangerous dog to him.

He did not speak at once. He looked into Colonel Grey's grey eyes, and cold and hard they were, weighing him. Then he said: ”Lord Loudwater threatened to hound you out of the Army, I'm told.”

”Among other things,” said Grey carelessly.

Mr. Flexen guessed that the other things were threats to divorce Lady Loudwater.

”That would have been a very serious blow to you,” he said.

”You're quite--right,” said Colonel Grey.

Mr. Flexen could have sworn that he had started to say: ”You're quite wrong,” and changed his mind.

The Colonel seemed to hesitate for words; then he went on: ”It would have been a very heavy blow indeed. You can see that for a man who enlisted in the Artists' Rifles in 1914, and fought his way up to the command of a regiment, nothing could be more painful. It would have been heartbreaking; I should have been years getting over it.”

The rasp had gone out of his voice. He was speaking in a pleasant, confidential tone, and Mr. Flexen did not believe a word he said. At the least he was exaggerating the distress he would have felt at leaving the Army; but Mr. Flexen had the strongest feeling that he would have felt next to no distress at all. Again he was astonished. Colonel Grey was lying to him just as Lady Loudwater had lied. What could be their reason?

What on earth had they done?

He kept his astonishment out of his face, and said in a sympathetic voice: ”Yes, I can see that. And then, again, it would have been painful and very unpleasant to feel that your thoughtlessness had landed Lady Loudwater in the Divorce Court.”

”Oh, Lord, no!” said Colonel Grey quickly. ”There was no chance of any divorce proceedings. Even for a divorce case, at any rate one brought by the husband, there must be _some_ grounds; he must have _some_ evidence.

The c.o.c.k-and-bull story of a gamekeeper is hardly enough to found a divorce case on, is it?”

”Oh, I don't know. The gamekeeper might convince a jury. You know what juries are. You can never tell what form their stupidity will take,” said Mr. Flexen.

”But apart from the lack of evidence, there was no chance of a divorce case. I tell you, Loudwater hadn't got it in him,” said Grey confidently. ”He'd have threatened and been abusive. He'd have gone on throwing that c.o.c.k-and-bull story at Lady Loudwater for as long as she continued to stick to him; but it would have stopped at that. His infernal temper never went any deeper than his lungs. Lady Loudwater had nothing to fear.”

”Yet you think that he would have done his best to hound you out of the Army?” said Mr. Flexen, finding this conception of Lord Loudwater as a harmless, if violent, vapourer somewhat inconsistent.

”That's quite another matter,” said Grey quickly. ”It merely meant using his influence behind my back with some scurvy politician. There wouldn't have been any publicity attached to that, any exposure of his bullying.

He'd have done that all right.”

”I should have thought that a man of Lord Loudwater's violent temper would rather have sought an open row,” Mr. Flexen persisted.

”Of course--if he'd been really violent. But he wasn't, I tell you. He was only a bl.u.s.tering bully where women and servants were concerned--people he could cow. I tell you, I made it quite clear that he crumpled up directly you stood up to him. Why, hang it all! Any man with the soul of a mouse who really believed that I had been making love to his wife, couldn't have taken the things I told him without going for me at any risk. And as I'm still rather crocked up, and he knew it, there must have seemed precious little risk about it. I tell you that he was just a bl.u.s.tering ruffian.”

Mr. Flexen had a strong impression that Colonel Grey was unused to being as expansive as this, that he was talking for talking's sake, possibly to put him off asking some question which would be difficult or dangerous to answer. He could not for the life of him think what that question could be.