Part 18 (1/2)
”No, they did not. Should I not tell you if they had? Take care, Arthur. I must fly like the wind. Come away, Pope!”
Arthur walked back to Mr. Galloway's. That gentleman was out. Roland Yorke was out. But Jenkins, upon whom the unfortunate affair had taken great hold, lifted his face to Arthur, his eyes asking the question that his tongue scarcely presumed to do.
”My brother says no one came in while he was here. It is very strange!”
”Mr. Arthur, sir, if I had repined at all at that accident, and felt it as a misfortune, how this would have reproved me!” spoke Jenkins, in his simple faith. ”Why, sir, it must have come to me as a mercy, a blessing; to take me away out of this office at the very time.”
”What do you mean, Jenkins?”
”There's no telling, sir, but Mr. Galloway might have suspected me. It is the first loss we have had since I have been here, all these years; and--”
”Nonsense!” interrupted Arthur. ”You may as well fear that Mr. Galloway will suspect me, or Mr. Yorke.”
”No, sir, you and Mr. Yorke are different; you are gentlemen. Mr. Galloway would no more suspect you, than he would suspect himself. I am thankful I was absent.”
”Be easy, Jenkins,” smiled Arthur. ”Absent or present, every one can trust you.”
Mr. Galloway did not return until nearly one o'clock. He went straight to his own room. Arthur followed him.
”I have seen Hamish, sir. He says no person whatever entered on Friday, while he was here alone.”
Mr. Galloway paused, apparently revolving the news. ”Hamish must be mistaken,” he answered.
”He told me at the time, last Friday, that no one had been in,” resumed Arthur. ”I asked the question when I returned from college, thinking people might have called on business. He said they had not done so; and he says the same now.”
”But look you here, Arthur,” debated Mr. Galloway, in a tone of reasoning. ”I suspect neither you nor Yorke; indeed, as it seems, Yorke put himself out of suspicion's way, by walking off; but if no one came to the office, and yet the note _went_, remember the position in which you place yourself. I say I don't blame you, I don't suspect you; but I do say that the mystery must be cleared up. Are you certain no person came into the office during your presence in it?”
”I am quite certain of that, sir. I have told you so.”
”And is Hamish equally certain--that no one entered while he was here alone?”
”He says so.” But Arthur's words bore a sound of hesitation, which Mr. Galloway may or may not have observed. He would have spoken far more positively had Hamish not joked about it.
”'Says' will not do for me,” retorted Mr. Galloway. ”I should like to see Hamish. You have nothing particular to finish before one o'clock; suppose you run up to Guild Street, and request him to come round this way, as he goes home to dinner? It will not take him two minutes out of his road.”
Arthur departed; choosing the nearest way to Guild Street. It led him through the street Hamish had been careful to avoid on account of a troublesome creditor. Arthur had no such fear. One o'clock struck as he turned into it. About midway down it, what was his astonishment at encountering Hamis.h.!.+ Not hurrying along, dreading to be seen, but flouris.h.i.+ng leisurely at his ease, nodding to every one he knew, his sweet smile in full play, and his cane whirling circlets in the air.
”Hamis.h.!.+ I thought this was forbidden ground!”
”So it was, until a day or two ago,” laughed Hamish; ”but I have managed to charm the enemy.”
He spoke in his usual light, careless, half-mocking style, and pa.s.sed his arm within Arthur's. At that moment a shopkeeper came to his door, and respectfully touched his hat to Hamish. Hamish nodded in return, and laughed again as he walked on with Arthur.
”That was the fiercest enemy in all this street of Philistines, Arthur. See how civil he is now.”
”How did you 'charm' him?”
”Oh, by a process known to myself. Did you come down on purpose to escort me home to dinner? Very polite of you!”
”I came to ask you to go round by Mr. Galloway's office, and to call in and see him. He will not take your word at second hand.”
”Take my word about what?” asked Hamish.
”That the office had no visitors while you were in it the other day. That money matter grows more mysterious every hour.”
”Then I have not time to go round,” exclaimed Hamish, in--for him--quite an impatient accent. ”I don't know anything about the money or the letter. Why should I be bothered?”
”Hamish, you must go,” said Arthur, impressively. ”Do you know that--so far as can be ascertained--no human being was in the office alone with the letter, except you and I. Were we to shun inquiry, suspicion might fall upon us.”
Hamish drew himself up haughtily, somewhat after the fas.h.i.+on of Roland Yorke. ”What absurdity, Arthur! steal a twenty-pound note!” But when they came to the turning where two roads met, one of which led to Close Street, Hamish had apparently reconsidered his determination.
”I suppose I must go, or the old fellow will be offended. You can tell them at home that I shall be in directly; don't let them wait dinner.”
He walked away quickly. Arthur pursued the path which would take him round the cathedral to the Boundaries. He bent his head in thought. He was lost in perplexity; in spite of what Mr. Galloway urged, with regard to the seal, he could not believe but that the money had gone safely to the post-office, and was stolen afterwards. Thus busied within himself, he had reached the elm-trees, when he ran up against Hopper, the bailiff. Arthur looked up, and the man's features relaxed into a smile.
”We shut the door when the steed's stolen, Mr. Arthur,” was his salutation. ”Now that my pockets are emptied of what would have done no good to your brother, I come here to meet him at the right time. Just to show folks--should any be about--that I did know my way here; although it unfortunately fell out that I always missed him.”
He nodded and winked. Arthur, completely at sea as to his meaning, made some trifling remark in answer.
”He did well to come to terms with them,” continued Hopper, dropping his voice. ”Though it was only a five pound, as I hear, and a promise for the rest, you see they took it. Ten times over, they said to me, 'We don't want to proceed to extremities with Hamish Channing.' I was as glad as could be when they withdrew the writ. I do hope he will go on smooth and straight now that he has begun paying up a bit. Tell him old Hopper says it, Mr. Arthur.”
Hopper glided on, leaving Arthur glued to the spot. Begun to pay up! Paid five pounds off one debt! Paid (there could be no doubt of it) partially, or wholly, the ”enemy” in the proscribed street! What did it mean? Every drop of blood in Arthur Channing's body stood still, and then coursed on fiercely. Had he seen the cathedral tower toppling down upon his head, he had feared it less than the awful dread which was dawning upon him.
He went home to dinner. Hamish went home. Hamish was more gay and talkative than usual--Arthur was silent as the grave. What was the matter, some one asked him. His head ached, was the answer; and, indeed, it was no false plea. Hamish did not say a syllable about the loss at table; neither did Arthur. Arthur was silenced now.
It is useless to attempt to disguise the fear that had fallen upon him. You, my reader, will probably have glanced at it as suspiciously as did Arthur Channing. Until this loophole had appeared, the facts had been to Arthur's mind utterly mysterious; they now shone out all too clearly, in glaring colours. He knew that he himself had not touched the money, and no one else had been left with it, except Hamish. Debt! what had the paltry fear of debt and its consequences been compared with this?
Mr. Galloway talked much of the mystery that afternoon; Yorke talked of it; Jenkins talked of it. Arthur barely answered; never, except when obliged to do so; and his manner, confused at times, for he could not help its being so, excited the attention of Mr. Galloway. ”One would think you had helped yourself to the money, Channing!” he crossly exclaimed to him once, when they were alone in the private room.
”No, sir, I did not,” Arthur answered, in a low tone; but his face flushed scarlet, and then grew deadly pale. If a Channing, his brother, had done it--why, he felt himself almost equally guilty; and it dyed his brow with shame. Mr. Galloway noticed the signs, and attributed them to the pain caused by his question.
”Don't be foolish, Arthur. I feel sure of you and Yorke. Though, with Yorke's carelessness and his spendthrift habits, I do not know that I should have been so sure of him, had he been left alone with the temptation.”
”Sir!” exclaimed Arthur, in a tone of pain, ”Yorke did not touch it. I would answer for his innocence with my life.”
”Don't I say I do not suspect him, or you either?” testily returned Mr. Galloway. ”It is the mystery of the affair that worries me. If no elucidation turns up between now and to-morrow morning, I shall place it in the hands of the police.”
The announcement scared away Arthur's caution; almost scared away his senses. ”Oh! pray, pray, Mr. Galloway, do not let the police become cognizant of it!” he uttered, in an accent of wild alarm. And Mr. Galloway stared at him in very amazement; and Jenkins, who had come in to ask a question, stared too.
”It might not produce any good result, and would cause us no end of trouble,” Arthur added, striving to a.s.sign some plausible explanation to his words.
”That is my affair,” said Mr. Galloway.
When Arthur reached home, the news had penetrated there also. Mrs. Channing's tea-table was absorbed with it. Tom and Charles gave the school version of it, and the Rev. Mr. Yorke, who was taking tea with them, gave his. Both accounts were increased by sundry embellishments, which had never taken place in reality.
”Not a soul was ever near the letter,” exclaimed Tom, ”except Arthur and Jenkins, and Roland Yorke.”