Part 87 (1/2)

”It was good of you to come, Lady Joan.”

”Did you think I would stay away?” was her answer. ”But I will tell you that I don't believe it is true.”

”You think that it is too good to be true?”

Her hot eyes had records in them it would have been impossible for him to read or understand. She had been so torn; she had pa.s.sed through such hours since she had been told this wild thing.

”Pardon my not telling you what I think,” she said. ”Nothing matters, after all, if he is alive!”

”Except that we must find him,” said Palliser.

”If he is in the same world with me I shall find him,” fiercely. Then she turned again to Ann. ”You are the girl T. Tembarom loves?” she put it to her.

”Yes, my lady.”

”If he was lost, and you knew he was on the earth with you, don't you know that you would find him?”

”I should know he'd come back to me,” Little Ann answered her. ”That's what--” her small face looked very fine as in her second of hesitation a spirited flush ran over it, ”that's what your man will do,” quite firmly.

It was amazing to see how the bitter face changed, as if one word had brought back a pa.s.sionate softening memory.

”My man!” Her voice mellowed until it was deep and low. ”Did you call T. Tembarom that, too? Oh, I understand you! Keep near me while I talk to these people.” She made her sit down by her.

”I know every detail of your letters.” She addressed Palliser as well as Palford & Grimby, sweeping all details aside. ”What is it you want to ask me?”

”This is our position, your ladys.h.i.+p,” Mr. Palford fumbled a little with his papers in speaking. ”Mr. Temple Temple Barholm and the person known as Mr. Strangeways have been searched for so far without result.

In the meantime we realize that the more evidence we obtain that Mr.

Temple Temple Barholm identified Strangeways and acted from motive, the more solid the foundation upon which Captain Palliser's conviction rests. Up to this point we have only his statement which he is prepared to make on oath. Fortunately, however, he on one occasion overheard something said to you which he believes will be corroborative evidence.”

”What did you overhear?” she inquired of Palliser.

Her tone was not pacific considering that, logically, she must be on the side of the investigators. But it was her habit, as Captain Palliser remembered, to seem to put most people on the defensive. He meant to look as uninvolved as the duke, but it was not quite within his power. His manner was sufficiently deliberate.

”One evening, before you left for London, I was returning from the billiard-room, and heard you engaged in animated conversation with-- our host. My attention was arrested, first because--” a sketch of a smile ill-concealed itself, ”you usually scarcely deigned to speak to him, and secondly because I heard Jem Temple Barholm's name.”

”And you--?” neither eyes nor manner omitted the word listened.

But the slight lift of his shoulders was indifferent enough.

”I listened deliberately. I was convinced that the fellow was a criminal impostor, and I wanted evidence.”

”Ah! come now,” remarked the duke amiably. ”Now we are getting on. Did you gain any?”

”I thought so. Merely of the c.u.mulative order, of course,” Palliser answered with moderation. ”Those were early days. He asked you,”

turning to Lady Joan again, ”if you knew any one--any one--who had any sort of a photograph of Jem. You had one and you showed it to him!”

She was quite silent for a moment. The hour came back to her--the extraordinary hour when he had stood in his lounging fas.h.i.+on before her, and through some odd, uncivilized but absolutely human force of his own had made her listen to him --and had gone on talking in his nasal voice until with one common, crude, grotesque phrase he had turned her hideous world upside down--changed the whole face of it-- sent the stone wall rising before her crumbling into dust, and seemed somehow to set her free. For the moment he had lifted a load from her the nature of which she did not think he could understand--a load of hatred and silence. She had clutched his hand, she had pa.s.sionately wept on it, she could have kissed it. He had told her she could come back and not be afraid. As the strange episode rose before her detail by detail, she literally stared at Palliser.

”You did, didn't you?” he inquired.