The girl maintained her gravity with an effort.
'Did he go quietly?' she asked.
'To say that he went like a lamb,' answered the Saint, 'means nothing at all. He would have made a lamb look like a hungry tiger outside a butcher's shop on early-closing day.'
He retailed the part of his ruse at which she had not been audience, and had his reward in the way she sat back and looked at him.
'You're a marvel,' she said, and meant it.
'All this flattery,' said the Saint, 'is bad for my heart.'
He picked up one of the newspapers that had come in with the tray, and read through the agony column care-fully, without finding what he sought. He had no more luck with any of the others.
'He hasn't had time,' said Jill.
Simon nodded.
'To-morrow,' he said, 'for a fiver. Care to bet?'
They spent the day inside the Ritz, very lazily; but neither of them was inclined to take a risk at that moment. Meanwhile, Scotland Yard, lashed by the biting comments of Chief Inspector Teal, tore its hair and ransacked London, The Ritz, naturally, was never thought of; and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Halliday never once set foot outside the hotel.
The advertisement appeared in
INJUSTICE.—
'It brings tears to my eyes,' said the Saint.
'Do you believe it?' asked Jill.
Simon shrugged.
'It isn't impossible,' he said. 'You say you're certain he had a hand in the framing of your father. Well, we now know a few things about
Jill Trelawney nodded, buttering a slice of toast.
'And yet,' she said, 'it's a trap.'
'Not for the police. Essenden wouldn't dare—not in the face of what we know. For trafficking in illicit drugs, five years' penal servitude.'
'No, not the police. Just himself.'
Simon lighted a cigarette.
'Do you want to buy?'
'We buy.' She looked at him. 'Or I buy. I shall see Essenden to-night.'
'Where?'
'At his house. I've been there before. Shall I forget it?' She smiled at him, and he laughed. 'That's where he'll be expecting me, from to-day onwards. He wouldn't expect me to write—he knows me too well.'