“Oh, Clive, dear, dear Clive, I beg, I implore you, do not let my father hush the matter up any longer! I entreat you give him no rest till he has called in the aid of the police, and left not a stone unturned to end this fearful suspense.
“Only do this for me, and I shall be everlastingly grateful to you. I will do anything and everything that lies in my power to make you happy. I will—what more can I say—at once release you from your engagement to me. I will promise never, under any circumstances, to become your wife; but will remain,
Clive folded the letter and laid it on one side.
The writer and her more than half ironical promise of reward dwindled in importance before the communications she had had to make.
“The advertisements, of course, are accounted for now,” said Clive, slowly; “but not Captain Culvers’s keen interest in them. There’s something that wants explanation there.”
Lord Culvera grew thoughtful.
“Let me think,” he said, presently. “Juliet’s grandmother and Sefton’s are one and the same person—my mother.”
“Ah‑h,” said Clive, drawing a long breath, “and, naturally enough, to Sefton, as well as to Juliet, would come some of her jewellery. That is suggestive.”
“I had entirely forgotten,” Lord Culvers went on, “the seal to which Juliet refers. It was given to the girls, with a number of old trinkets, when they were little more than children.”
“Similar trinkets may have been given to Sefton by his father.”
“No doubt. Now I think of it, there was a ring—what became of it, I wonder? It was a jasper set with diamonds, a long, coffin-shaped thing. Let me think who had that?”
Not for worlds would Clive have interrupted Lord Culvera’s train of thought now.
“Yes, I’m sure it was given to my brother—Sefton’s father, that is,” he said, after a moment’s pause, “and now I think of it, there was some device on it—a rose, I fancy; but I can’t be sure what the motto was. It would be very likely to be the same as on the seal. No doubt there was some reason for my mother’s fancy for the device, or it may have been handed down to her.”
“Sefton most probably received that ring from his father,” said Clive, slowly summing up the case, as it were, and thinking out his ideas as he spoke them. “Now it is possible that he, in his turn, may have given the ring to someone else under circumstances that made the gift of importance;” he broke off for a moment, then added, with a sudden energy, “there is a great deal behind all this, I am convinced. I should like amazingly to know to whom, and under what circumstances, Captain Culvers has given that ring.”
The questions to whom, and under what circumstances Sefton Culvers had given the ring, with its device of a rose, were to be answered in a manner Clive little expected, for at that moment the door opened, and Sefton himself entered the room.
Entered, not in his usual slow, languid manner, and with eyeglass ready to uplift wherewith to stare out of countenance anyone who presumed uninvited to address him; but with a hurried step, and with a white face, and eyes with a startled look in them as of a man suddenly sobered by astounding or terrible news.
He lost no time in greeting or handshaking, but going straight to Clive, laid his hand upon his arm, saying:
“Help me! I want your help.”
Clive stared at him, his bright, prominent eyes seeming almost to start from his head. Help him! Why, if he had entered the room pistols in hand, and said, “Choose your weapon!” it would have seemed far more natural.
Sefton did not give him time to speak his astonishment. He drew a letter from his pocket, and bade him read it.
Its seal, though broken, showed plainly enough the device of a rose, surrounded by a motto. The envelope bore no postmark, and it was addressed to “Captain Culvers,” in Ida’s handwriting.
“It was left at my rooms about half an hour ago—but by whom I haven’t the remotest idea,” continued Sefton.
Clive tore the letter from its envelope, and read as follows:
“Alta Lauria.
“Come without a moment’s delay, and receive back your ring from dying hands.
The paper dropped from his nerveless hand.
“Does it mean—” he began, hoarsely, and then his own words seemed to choke him.
Lord Culvers picked up the letter and read it, then he, too, turned a white, stricken face towards Sefton.
“Tell us, quickly, for Heaven’s sake!” cried Clive, “does she refer to her wedding-ring, or to what?”
He had thought that the mere sight of Ida’s writing once more would be bound
