Part 31 (1/2)

”Ah! I haven't any idea of the keyword,” I admitted.

”Then you haven't been able to make it out!” she remarked, breathing more freely. ”You don't know to what it refers?”

”No,” I responded frankly. ”I am in ignorance. But if you will remain a moment I'll go to my room and fetch it.”

”You need not,” was her reply. ”It is quite unnecessary.”

”Why?”

”Well, because I chance to know what is contained in it, and that there was nothing of importance.”

Did she imply that she had written that secret message herself? I glanced at her countenance, and somehow became convinced that she was still bent upon the concealment of the truth, a conviction that was both irritating and tantalising.

Mystery had succeeded mystery, until I admit that I was now overcome by blank bewilderment.

CHAPTER TWENTY SEVEN.

WHICH TELLS OF A HEART'S DESIRE.

The result of our consultation did not, as far as I was concerned, enlighten me upon one single point connected with the puzzling affair.

Certain matters were arranged between the man Keene and the woman I so dearly loved, but strangely enough both were equally careful to allow me no loop-hole through which to gain knowledge of their motives or the secret they held.

I made no mention of the remarkable affair at the lonely farm a few miles distant, nor did I inquire of Keene his object in lying concealed there, or of the ident.i.ty of those foreigners who were the man Logan's friends in hiding. I felt it wise to keep all this knowledge to myself.

I told Lolita, however, how I had discovered that the police had introduced a female detective as servant to the Stanchester household, and that her inquiries had been directed towards endeavouring to discover the Owners.h.i.+p of the Louis Quinze shoes, the print of which had been found at the spot where Wingfield had fallen.

The news fell upon her like a thunderbolt. She stood utterly unable to reply.

Keene said nothing. He merely looked at her, and then, sighing, turned away.

I did not tell them that a week ago, when pa.s.sing the cottage of Jacobs, one of the gamekeepers, the man asked me to enter and see something. I had followed the man in, and producing a muddy damp-stained ermine cloak much soiled and ruined by exposure to the weather, he said--

”I found this yesterday in the Monk's Wood, sir, an' I've been wondering if it might belong to anybody up at the Hall?”

Instantly I had recognised it as Lolita's, the one she must evidently have worn on the night of the tragedy! It was torn in one part, and a small piece was missing--the piece which had been found near where the dead man lay!

In a moment I had invented an excuse.

”Why,” I said, ”that's the cape my sister lost when she was staying with me. She went out with her little daughter to pick wild flowers, laid it down in the wood and forgot all about it.”

Then I gladly took possession of it, gave Jacobs a tip, dropping a hint at the same time that it was not necessary for him to talk about it, for if he did there would be all sorts of wild theories formed as to its connexion with the mysterious tragedy. ”The police would be sure to begin worrying over nothing,” I added.

”I quite understand, sir,” was the gamekeeper's answer. ”Mr Redway and his men are worse than useless. They've made a lot of fuss and haven't even found out yet who the poor young man was! I shall say nothing about it, for they'd only begin to question and worry me, as well as you.”

And so I had taken the fur cape, and that same night had surrept.i.tiously buried it in my garden.

When at last the stranger's consultation with Lolita had ended, I recognised how completely my love was in the man's thraldom. He held power over her inevitable and complete. Why?

Was it because he knew her guilty secret?