“Mrs. Fane is not allowed to see visitors, sir,” she said. “She gets so excited.”
“What is the matter with her?” asked Jim, rather amused at the unmistakable ejection.
“Paralysis in both legs,” said Madge Benson, and Jim uttered an exclamation of pity.
“Don’t think I’m not grateful to you, Mr. Steele,” said the woman earnestly; “when I saw that smoke coming out into the passage my heart nearly stopped beating. That is the second accident we have had.”
She was so anxious for him to be off that he made no attempt to continue talking.
So that was Mrs. Fane, thought Jim, as he strode along to his office. A singularly beautiful woman. The pity of it! She was still young and in the bloom of health save for this terrible affliction.
Jim had a big heart for suffering humanity, and especially for women and children on whom the burden of sickness fell. He was halfway to the office when he remembered that Mrs. Fane had recognized him and called him by name! How could she have known him—she who had never left her sick-room?
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
“Mr. Groat will not be down to breakfast. He was working very late, miss.”
Eunice nodded. She preferred the conversation of Digby Groat to the veiled familiarity of his shrewd-faced servant. It would be difficult for her to define in what way Jackson offended her. Outwardly he was respect itself, and she could not recall any term or word he had employed to which she could reasonably take offence. It was the assurance of the man, his proprietorial attitude, which irritated her. He reminded her of a boarding-house at which she had once stayed, where the proprietor acted as butler and endeavoured, without success, to combine the deference of the servant with the authority of the master.
“You were out very early this morning, miss,” said Jackson with his sly smile as he changed her plates.
“Is there any objection to my going out before breakfast?” asked Eunice, her anger rising.
“None at all, miss,” said the man blandly. “I hope I haven’t offended you, only I happened to see you coming back.”
She had been out to send the parcel and the letter to Jim, the nearest district messenger office being less than a quarter of a mile from Grosvenor Square. She opened her lips to speak and closed them again tightly. There was no reason in the world why she should excuse herself to the servant.
Jackson was not ready to take a rebuff, and besides, he had something important to communicate.
“You weren’t disturbed last night, were you, miss?” he asked.
“What do you mean?” demanded Eunice, looking with a start.
His keen eye was on her and without any reason she felt guilty.
“Somebody was having a joke here last night, miss,” he said, “and the governor is as wild as… well, he’s mad!”
She put down her knife and fork and sat back in her chair.
“I don’t quite understand you, Jackson,” she said coldly. “What is the joke that somebody was having, and why do you ask me if I was disturbed? Did anything happen in the night?”
The man nodded.
“Somebody was in the house,” he said, “and it is a wonder that Mr. Groat didn’t hear it, because he was working in his laboratory. I thought perhaps you might have heard him searching the house afterwards.”
She shook her head. Had the Blue Hand been detected? she wondered.
“How do you know that a stranger was in the house?” she asked.
“Because he left his mark,” said the man grimly. “You know that white door leading to the laboratory, miss?”
She nodded.
“Well, when Mr. Groat came out about half-past two this morning he was going to turn out the hall lights when he saw a smudge of paint on the door. He went back and found that it was the mark of a Blue Hand. I’ve been trying to get it off all the morning, but it is greasy and can’t be cleaned.”
“The mark of a Blue Hand?” she repeated slowly and felt herself change colour. “What does that mean?”
“I’m blessed if I know,” said Jackson, shaking his head. “The governor doesn’t know either. But there it was as plain as a pike-staff. I thought it was a servant who did it. There is one under notice and she might have been up to her tricks, but it couldn’t have been her. Besides, the servants’ sleeping-rooms are at the back of the house, and the door between the front and the back is kept locked.”
So the mysterious visitor had not been satisfied with warning her. She had warned Digby Groat as well!
Eunice had nearly finished breakfast when Digby made his appearance. He was looking tired and haggard, she thought. He never looked his best in the early hours, but this morning he was more unprepossessing than usual. He shot a swift suspicious glance at the girl as he took his place at the table.
“You have finished, I’m afraid, Miss Weldon,” he said briefly. “Has Jackson told you what happened in the night?”
“Yes,” said Eunice quietly. “Have you any idea what it means?”
He shook his head.
“It means trouble to the person who did it, if I catch him,” he said; then, changing the conversation, he asked how his mother was that morning.
Eunice invariably called at Mrs. Groat’s room on her way down, and she was able to tell him that his mother was mending rapidly and had passed a very good night.
“She can’t get well too soon,” he said. “How did you sleep, Miss Weldon?”
“Very well,” she prevaricated.
“Have you tried my chocolates?” he smiled.
She nodded.
“They are beautiful.”
“Don’t eat too many at once, they are rather rich,” he said, and made no further reference either to that matter or to the midnight visitor.
Later in the morning, when she was going about her work, Eunice saw workmen engaged on cleaning the canvas door. Apparently the blue stain could not be eradicated, and after a consultation with Digby the canvas was being painted a dull blue colour.
She knew that Digby was perturbed more than ordinarily. When she had met him, as she had occasionally that morning, he had worn a furtive, hunted look, and once, when she had gone into his study to bring to his notice an account which she had unearthed, he was muttering to himself.
That afternoon there was a reception at Lord Waltham’s house in Park Lane, in honour of a colonial premier who was visiting England. Digby Groat found it convenient to cultivate the acquaintance of the aesthetic Lord Waltham, who was one of the great financial five of the City of London. Digby had gone cleverly to work to form a small syndicate for the immediate purchase of the Danton estate. The time had not yet come when he could dispose of this property, but it was fast approaching.
There were many women in that brilliant assembly who would have been glad to know a man reputedly clever, and certainly the heir to great wealth; but in an inverted sense Digby was a fastidious man. Society which met him and discussed him over their dinner-tables were puzzled by his avoidance of woman’s society. He could have made a brilliant marriage, had he so desired, but apparently the girls of his own set had no attraction for him. There were intimates, men about town, who were less guarded in their language when they spoke across the table after the women had gone, and these told stories of him which did not redound to his credit. Digby in his youth had had many affairs—vulgar, sordid affairs which had left each victim with an aching heart and no redress.
He had only come to “look in,” he explained. There was heavy work awaiting him at home, and he hinted at the new experiment he was making which would take up the greater part of the evening.
“How is your mother, Groat?” asked Lord Waltham.
“Thank you, sir, I think she is better,” replied Digby. He wanted to keep off the subject of his mother.
“I can’t understand the extraordinary change that has come over her in late years,” said Lord Waltham with a little frown. “She used to be so bright and cheerful, one of the wittiest women I have ever met. And then, of a sudden, all her spirits seemed to go and if you don’t mind my saying so, she seemed to get old.”
“I noticed that,” said Digby with an air of profound concern, “but women of her age frequently go all to pieces in a week.”
“I suppose there’s something in that. I always forget you’re a doctor,” smiled Lord Waltham.
Digby took his leave and he, too, was chuckling softly to himself as he went down the steps to his waiting
