Part 59 (2/2)

”Well, Edge, if you're satisfied, I can't stand out. For a week then--silence.”

”Absolute!” said Harry. ”Without a look or a word?”

”You have my promise,” said Wilmot Edge.

”And mine. But--but I shall feel very awkward,” sighed poor Mr Neeld. He might have added that he did feel a sudden and poignant pang of disappointment. Lived there the man who would not have liked to carry that bit of news in his portmanteau when he went out of town? At least that man was not Mr Jenkinson Neeld.

”I'll choose my time, and I won't keep you long,” said Harry.

With that they left him. But they had a word together before Edge caught his 'bus in Piccadilly.

”Cool young chap!” said he. ”Took it quietly enough.”

”Yes, considering the enormous difference it makes,” agreed Neeld. His use of that particular phrase was perhaps an unconscious reminiscence of the words in the Journal, the words that Addie used when she burst into Madame de Kries's room at Heidelberg.

Edge chuckled a little. ”Not much put out about the girl either, eh?”

”Now you say so----” Neeld shook his head. ”I hope he'll do it tactfully,” he sighed.

Edge did not seem to consider that likely. He in his turn shook his head.

”I said no more than I thought about Addie Tristram,” he remarked. ”But the fact is, they're a rum lot, and there's no getting over it, Neeld.”

”They--er--have their peculiarities, no doubt,” admitted Mr. Neeld.

XXVI

A BUSINESS CALL

”My dear, isn't there something odd about Mr Neeld?” Mrs Iver put the question, her anxious charity struggling with a natural inquisitiveness.

”About Neeld? I don't know. Is there?” He did not so much as look up from his paper. ”He's coming with us to Blent to-night, I suppose?”

”Yes. And he seems quite excited about that. And he was positively rude to Miss Swinkerton at lunch, when she told him that Lady Tristram meant to give a ball next winter. I expect his nerves are out of order.”

Small wonder if they were, surely! Let us suppose Guy Fawkes's scheme not prematurely discovered, and one Member of a full House privy to it and awaiting the result. That Member's position would be very like Mr Neeld's. Would he listen to the debate with attention? Could he answer questions with sedulous courtesy?

From the moment of his arrival Mr Neeld had been plunged into the Tristram affair, and surrounded by people who were connected with it.

But it must be admitted that he had it on his brain and saw it everywhere. For to-day it was not the leading topic of the neighborhood, and Miss S.'s observation had been only by the way. The engagement was the topic, and only Neeld (or perhaps Mina Zabriska too, at Blent), insisted on digging up a hypothetical past and repeating, in retrospective rumination, that Harry Tristram might have been the lucky man. As for such an idea--well, Miss S. happened to know that there had never been anything in it; Janie Iver herself had told her so, she said.

The question between Janie and Miss S., which this a.s.sertion raises, may be pa.s.sed by without discussion.

He had met Gainsborough essaying a furtive entry into Blentmouth and heading toward the curiosity-shop--with a good excuse this time. It was Cecily's birthday, and the occasion, which was to be celebrated by a dinner-party, must be marked by a present also. Neeld went with the little gentleman, and they bought a bit of old Chelsea (which looked very young for its age). Coming out, Gainsborough sighted Mrs Trumbler coming up High Street and Miss S. coming down it. He doubled up a side street to the churchyard, Neeld pursuing him at a more leisurely pace.

”It's positively worthy of a place at Blent--in the Long Gallery,”

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