Part 13 (1/2)
As she sat there, her veil raised, coolly discussing such things as stalls, stall-holders, fancy needlework and church expenses, she smiled sweetly and certainly did not in the least present the woeful picture that she had done as we pa.s.sed through the Chase. They even discussed the tragic discovery in the park. With the well-bred woman's natural tact she could control her outward appearance marvellously. The wife of the estimable rector would certainly never have dreamed the subject of our conversation a quarter of an hour before. They strolled across the tennis lawn together, and her neat figure and graceful swinging carriage was surely not that of a woman suspected of a heartless and brutal a.s.sa.s.sination.
Yet when I argued coldly and methodically with myself; when I recollected her admission, and her eager anxiety to get rid of those boots with the small high heels, I could not disguise from myself the hard fact that if she were not the actual a.s.sa.s.sin she was, at any rate, an accessory.
There had been some strong motive why that young man should die. That was plain, and without the slightest shadow of doubt.
I strolled beside the pair in the garden until my love took leave of her hostess, and then we walked home in the calm golden glow of the sundown.
Before the dressing-bell rang I surrept.i.tiously carried my old suit-case, empty, up to her room, and half-an-hour later fetched it down. It was packed full of all her French boots, and having locked it securely I tied upon it an address-label inscribed to myself to be left at St Pancras cloak-room ”till called for.” Then I rang for a servant, and dispatched it to Kettering station.
The blazing August days went slowly by. The body of the nameless victim had been laid in its grave in Sibberton churchyard, and the inquiries conducted by the obsequious Redway resulted in nothing. As was to be expected, he and his a.s.sistants haunted the village continually, endeavouring to gather all they could, but fortunately no suspicion was cast upon the sweet woman whom I loved. An active search was made for the boots with the Louis XV heels, in which Pink, the doctor, joined, but it never once occurred to them that they had belonged to Lolita.
Or, if it did, the theory had no doubt been dismissed as a wild and unfounded one.
Eager to escape from the place which was undoubtedly so full of tragic memory, Lolita, in the early days of September, went up to Strathpeffer to stay with her aunt, Lady Clayton, as was her habit each year.
On the morning just before she left, however, she came to my room ready dressed for her departure, and again, for the first time since our walk to Stanion, referred to the tragedy.
”Recollect, Willoughby, I am now entirely in your hands,” she said, standing at the window with her eyes fixed aimlessly across the broad level park. ”I cannot bear to remain here now, for I feel every moment that I am being watched, suspected--that one day that awful person Redway will enter my room with--perhaps a warrant for my arrest.”
”There is no evidence,” I pointed out, first ascertaining that there were no eavesdroppers in the corridor outside. ”We have been able to efface everything. The police are utterly puzzled.”
”Thanks to you,” she said, turning her great blue eyes sweetly upon me.
Surely she did not at the moment present the appearance of a murderess, and yet the circ.u.mstances all pointed to one fact--that there was a motive in the death of that young man who had remained unidentified.
”You told me the other day,” she went on, ”that the necklet had been p.a.w.ned. My connexion with the poor young fellow may be established through that. You see I do not conceal my fears from you, Willoughby-- my only friend,” she added.
”You need fear nothing in that direction,” I responded. ”I purchased the necklet, and I have it at this moment safely at home.”
”You have!” she cried, a great weight lifted from her mind. ”Ah! you seem to have left nothing undone to secure my safety.”
”For the reason I explained to you on the night of the unfortunate affair,” I responded, taking her small soft hand in mine and raising it slowly to my lips. She did not attempt to withdraw it. She only sighed, and a slight s.h.i.+ver ran through her as my lips came in contact with her fingers. What did that shudder mean?
Was it that I was actually kissing the hand that had committed murder?
”Lolita!” I said a moment later when I had crushed from my heart the gradually increasing suspicion. ”You have received from the innkeeper, Warr, a letter left for you by a rough uncouth stranger.”
”Ah,” she sighed, ”I have. Richard Keene has returned! You don't know what that means to me.”
”The letter contained news that has filled you with serious apprehension, then?”
”It contained certain information that is utterly astonis.h.i.+ng!”
I explained how I had seen the stranger and overheard his conversation with Warr, whereupon she said--
”I expected that he would return, but it seems that he does not intend to do so. He fears, perhaps, to call upon me--just as I fear that he may reveal the truth.”
For some time I was silent, pretending to occupy myself with some papers, but truth to tell I was considering whether the question I wished to put to her was really a judicious one. At last I decided to speak and make a bold demand. Therefore I said--
”And now, Lolita, that I have rendered you all the a.s.sistance I can, I want to ask you one single plain question--I want you to answer me truthfully, because what you tell me may in the future be of greatest a.s.sistance to me. Recollect that in this affair I am combating the efforts of the police, therefore I wish to know the name of the man who is dead.”
”His name!” she exclaimed, looking straight at me. ”His name--why do you wish to ascertain that?”