“One moment”—the Comte stretched out a hand as Derek was turning to leave the room. “You are mistaken, Monsieur. You are completely mistaken. I am, I hope, a ‘gentleman.’ ” Derek laughed. “Any letters that a lady might write to me I should hold sacred.” He flung back his head with a beautiful air of nobility. “The proposition that I was putting before you was of quite a different nature. I am, as I said, extremely short of money, and my conscience might impel me to go to the police with certain information.”
Derek came slowly back into the room.
“What do you mean?”
The Comte’s agreeable smile flashed forth once more.
“Surely it is not necessary to go into details,” he purred. “Seek whom the crime benefits, they say, don’t they? As I said just now, you have come into a lot of money lately.”
Derek laughed.
“If that is all—” he said contemptuously.
But the Comte was shaking his head.
“But it is not all, my dear sir. I should not come to you unless I had much more precise and detailed information than that. It is not agreeable, Monsieur, to be arrested and tried for murder.”
Derek came close up to him. His face expressed such furious anger that involuntarily the Comte drew back a pace or two.
“Are you threatening me?” the young man demanded angrily.
“You shall hear nothing more of the matter,” the Comte assured him.
“Of all the colossal bluffs that I have ever struck—”
The Comte raised a white hand.
“You are wrong. It is not a bluff. To convince you I will tell you this. My information was obtained from a certain lady. It is she who holds the irrefutable proof that you committed the murder.”
“She? Who?”
“Mademoiselle Mirelle.”
Derek drew back as though struck.
“Mirelle,” he muttered.
The Comte was quick to press what he took to be his advantage.
“A bagatelle of one hundred thousand francs,” he said. “I ask no more.”
“Eh?” said Derek absently.
“I was saying, Monsieur, that a bagatelle of one hundred thousand francs would satisfy my—conscience.”
Derek seemed to recollect himself. He looked earnestly at the Comte.
“You would like my answer now?”
“If you please, Monsieur.”
“Then here it is. You can go to the devil. See?”
Leaving the Comte too astonished to speak, Derek turned on his heel and swung out of the room.
Once out of the hotel he hailed a taxi and drove to Mirelle’s hotel. On inquiring, he learned that the dancer had just come in. Derek gave the concierge his card.
“Take this up to Mademoiselle and ask if she will see me.”
A very brief interval elapsed, and then Derek was bidden to follow a chasseur.
A wave of exotic perfume assailed Derek’s nostrils as he stepped over the threshold of the dancer’s apartments. The room was filled with carnations, orchids, and mimosa. Mirelle was standing by the window in a pegnoir of foamy lace.
She came towards him, her hands outstretched.
“Dereek—you have come to me. I knew you would.”
He put aside the clinging arms and looked down on her sternly.
“Why did you send the Comte de la Roche to me?”
She looked at him in astonishment, which he took to be genuine.
“I? Send the Comte de la Roche to you? But for what?”
“Apparently—for blackmail,” said Derek grimly.
Again she stared. Then suddenly she smiled and nodded her head.
“Of course. It was to be expected. It is what he would do, ce type là. I might have known it. No, indeed, Dereek, I did not send him.”
He looked at her piercingly, as though seeking to read her mind.
“I will tell you,” said Mirelle. “I am ashamed, but I will tell you. The other day, you comprehend, I was mad with rage, quite mad”—she made an eloquent gesture. “My temperament, it is not a patient one. I want to be revenged on you, and so I go to the Comte de la Roche, and I tell him to go to the police and say so-and-so, and so-and-so. But have no fear, Dereek. Not completely did I lose my head; the proof rests with me alone. The police can do nothing without my word, you understand? And now—now?”
She nestled up close to him, looking at him with melting eyes.
He thrust her roughly away from him. She stood there, her breast heaving, her eyes narrowing to catlike slits.
“Be careful, Dereek, be very careful. You have come back to me, have you not?”
“I shall never come back to you,” said Derek steadily.
“Ah!”
More than ever the dancer looked like a cat. Her eyelids flickered.
“So there is another woman? The one with whom you lunched that day. Eh! am I right?”
“I intend to ask that lady to marry me. You might as well know.”
“That prim Englishwoman! Do you think that I will support that for one moment? Ah, no.” Her beautiful lithe body quivered. “Listen, Dereek, do you remember that conversation we had in London? You said the only thing that could save you was the death of your wife. You regretted that she was so healthy. Then the idea of an accident came to your brain. And more than an accident.”
“I suppose,” said Derek contemptuously, “that it was this conversation that you repeated to the Comte de la Roche.”
Mirelle laughed.
“Am I a fool? Could the police do anything with a vague story like that? See—I will give you a last chance. You shall give up this Englishwoman. You shall return to me. And then, chéri, never, never will I breathe—”
“Breathe what?”
She laughed softly. “You thought no one saw you—”
“What do you mean?”
“As I say, you thought no one saw you—but I saw you, Dereek, mon ami; I saw you coming out of the compartment of Madame your wife just before the train got into