Part 51 (1/2)

And O'Hara hurried away, took a cab, drove for the Palace; while Harris, left alone, sat serious, with sprawling straight legs, and presently muttered: ”Blind me, I must be going dotty or something! p'raps it's this arm....”

He had not thought of killing Frankl, until it had been suggested!--some cla.s.s-habit, or instinct, of honour among thieves (which, however, his reason despised)...But five minutes after O'Hara had gone he started alert, staring, with tight fist, and, ”All right, you two”, said he, ”blood it is!”

He sat again: and again, after twenty minutes, the house gave a sound--Frankl, who had let himself in by the front door, each member possessing a key to that.

”Well, Alf”, said he, ”all alone? Then, we two can have a little chat between us little two”.

And he stood and talked, while Harris sprawled and listened, Frankl's road to his end being more circuitous than O'Hara's, more hedged, too, with reasons, scruples, sanctions: but he reached it, pointing out that a half is greater than a third; also that O'Hara would be a continual witness against Harris' past, whereas he, Frankl, left England for Asia the next morning.

Alfie pretended aversion to bloodshed, but finally consented; upon which Frankl went away, and took cab for Scotland Yard: his idea being to have Harris arrested red-handed in the murder of O'Hara.

The streets through which he drove wore a singular aspect--of commotion, hurry, unrest, two dragoon-orderlies galloping past him at the Marble Arch, in Whitehall the tramp of some line-regiment battalion, and he said to himself: ”He is going to fight it out with them, I suppose--Satan take the lot!”

At Scotland Yard he said to the Inspector in Charge, having given his card, that if two officers were placed at his disposition, he might be able to lead them to the arrest of a man long ”wanted”, who now premeditated another murder.

Meantime, O'Hara was in conversation with Loveday in the Regent's library, nearer the centre of which stood a group of four with their heads together--Prime Minister, First Lord, War Office Secretary, a Naval Lord; further still, a spurred General, cloaked over his out-stuck sword, writing, with a wet white brow; and, ”I suppose he will want to see you”, said Loveday, ”if you have anything to say. But the doctors have first to be reckoned with: I suppose you know that he has been stabbed and beaten”.

”Stabbed! by whom?”

”By Harris”.

”No! When?”

”This afternoon”.

”Ah! I did not know”.

”It was by your recommendation, it appears, that Harris became Captain Macnaghten's servant”, said Loveday with his smile, looking very gaunt and bent-down.

”Tut, sir!”--from O'Hara--”you are not my judge: I am here to see the Lord of the Sea, my King”.

”Ah!--you still give him the t.i.tle”.

And now O'Hara, drawing his chair nearer to ask: ”_How did he take it?_”

stretching back the waiting mouth to hear that thing.

”The Lord Regent? Well, at eight-thirty he went to the House of Lords, where they beat him nearly to death on the throne, the gentle hearts, and the doctors forbade me to speak to him of the Sea; but his eyes seemed to question me, so I leant over, and told him”.

”Yes--and whatever did he say?”

He said: ”'What, old Pat?'”

O'Hara rose to stand by a hearth, black-robed to the heels and tonsured, and at the angle of his jaw some sinews ribbed and moved: not a syllable now from him.

”I am going in now to him”, said Loveday: ”if you care to wait here, I will see”--and pa.s.sing through a palace pretty busy that night with feet and a thousand working purposes, went to sit at the sick bed, the doctors retiring.

”How is the pain?”

”The pain”, said the Regent very weakly, ”is nonsense: I am not going to be bullied by doctors, but shall do exactly as I like”.

”And what is that, Richard?”