Part 10 (2/2)
She seemed to have something at the back of her head about me.”
”She! Was it a woman?” the young man asked quickly.
Coulson nodded.
”A young lady,” he said,--”Miss Penelope Morse, she called herself.”
Mr. Richard Vanderpole stood quite still for a moment.
”Ah!” he said softly. ”She might have been interested.”
”Does the chief want me at all?” Coulson asked.
”No!” Vanderpole answered. ”Go about your business as usual. Leave here for Paris, say, in ten days. There will probably be a letter for you at the Grand Hotel by that time.”
They walked together toward the main exit. The young man's face had lost some of its grimness. Once more his features wore that look of pleasant and genial good-fellows.h.i.+p which seems characteristic of his race after business hours.
”Say, Mr. Coulson,” he declared, as they pa.s.sed across the hall, ”you and I must have a night together. This isn't New York, by any manner of means, or Paris, but there's some fun to be had here, in a quiet way.
I'll phone you tomorrow or the day after.”
”Sure!” Mr. Coulson declared. ”I'd like it above all things.”
”I must find a taxicab,” the young man remarked. ”I've a busy hour before me. I've got to go down and see the chief, who is dining somewhere in Kensington, and get back again to dine here at half past seven in the restaurant.”
”I guess you'll have to look sharp, then.” Mr. Coulson remarked. ”Do you see the time?”
Vanderpole glanced at the clock and whistled softly to himself.
”Tell you what!” he exclaimed, ”I'll write a note to one of the friends I've got to meet, and leave it here. Boy,” he added, turning to a page boy, ”get me a taxi as quick as you can.”
The boy ran out into the Strand, and Vanderpole, sitting down at the table, wrote a few lines, which he sealed and addressed and handed to one of the reception clerks. Then he shook hands with Coulson and threw himself into a corner of the cab which was waiting.
”Drive down the Brompton Road,” he said to the man. ”I'll direct you later.”
It was a quarter past seven when he left the hotel. At half past a policeman held up his hand and stopped the taxi, to the driver's great astonishment, as he was driving slowly across Melbourne Square, Kensington.
”What's the matter?” the man asked. ”You can't say I was exceeding my speed limit.”
The policeman scarcely noticed him. His head was already through the cab window.
”Where did you take your fare up?” he asked quickly.
”Savoy Hotel,” the man answered. ”What's wrong with him?”
The policeman opened the door of the cab and stepped in.
”Never you mind about that,” he said. ”Drive to the South Kensington police station as quick as you can.”
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