Part 42 (1/2)

”This thump on the head from poor old Orrick may satisfy them,”

continued Varney. ”But my idea is that it won't. I think Orrick was acting independently this afternoon. A kind of free lance, you know. I think he met me by accident. There's a train to New York at eight-ten,”

he added, looking about for his hat. ”I believe I'd clear out if I were you.”

”Something's back of this!” broke out Stanhope suddenly. ”Some dirty scheme--some infamous plot--”

”Yes, you are right,” said Varney with an effort. ”There is a plot back of it. But I don't know that that makes it any better for you--”

”I insist that you explain yourself at once!”

”I was just about to. I came here three days ago, a stranger--on a little stay. A friend who is with me got interested in a reform movement here. Politics, you understand. The other side to injure him, published the story that I was you, under an _alias_. Naturally we didn't like that. We bought the paper just to say that I wasn't. I supposed that had settled it. It seems I was wrong. You see, a good deal of feeling had been worked up meantime--”

”h.e.l.lo!” exclaimed Stanhope suddenly raising his hand. ”What's that?”

Varney listened. ”Men's voices,” he said slowly.

The door flew open and a man whose ordinary impa.s.sivity was touched with a pleasurable excitement stood on the threshold.

”If you please, sir, there's some rough-looking men just sneaked up on the lawn. Ten or twelve--sort of a mob-like, Hi should say--”

”What do they want?” demanded Stanhope in a high voice.

”No good, sir, I'm thinking,” said the servant shaking his head. ”I was at an upstairs window and saw 'em come sneaking up one by one, hentering at different places. I made a noise not honlike the click of a 'ammer of a gun, and they took alarm and scattered back. But they hain't gone away, sir. Not by a long shot they hain't.”

Henry's master leaned against his handsome writing table, his face white as a sheet. It appeared to be a moment when quick action was rather important.

”They'll try the bell first,” said Varney. ”Lock all the doors and windows downstairs, my man. Quick! When they ring, open a window upstairs, and ask what they want.”

Henry recognized the note of competent authority. He a.s.sumed, anyway, that it was the strange gentleman's quarrel they had so fortunately been let into, and it was only fair that he should manage it. ”Very good, sir,” he said and flew.

”But I'm afraid,” added Varney to Stanhope, ”there is no doubt what they want.”

A single quiet footfall sounded on the porch and the door-bell pealed.

In the silence that followed, the noise of the turning of locks and the drawing of bolts was distinctly audible in the study.

”d.a.m.n you!” cried Stanhope, pale with the sudden white-hot pa.s.sion of the unstable. ”This is your doing--you--you masquerader!”

The two men stood facing each other, hardly a yard apart. They were almost exactly of a figure, Stanhope being if anything a shade the taller. Each was conscious as he regarded the other that he might be looking at himself, intangibly altered, in a mirror; and the fancy was pleasing to neither.

”I suppose I might as reasonably call you that,” said Varney quietly. ”I might as reasonably say that this knock on the head from Sam Orrick was your doing. The fact is that you were a fool to come back here. But as for those poor fellows out there--”

The door-bell rang again, insistently, and he broke off. A window upstairs rattled open, and they heard a man's steady voice:

”'I there on the piazza! What do you want?”

”I want to see Mr. Stanhope a minute,” called a thicker voice from below. ”On important business.”

”'E's not 'ere,” said faithful Henry. ”'E's expected to arrive to-morrow.”

”You're a ---- ---- liar!”