The Story of Charles Strange Volume III Part 7
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"Suppose it had been some enemy--some stickler for law and justice--that I had brought home with me to-night, instead of Lake?"
"But it wasn't," laughed Tom. "It was Lake himself. And I guess he is as safe as you are."
"Be sure of that," added Lake. "But what do you think of doing, Heriot? You cannot hide away for ever in the wilds of Blackfriars. _I_ would not answer for your safety there for a day."
"Goodness knows!" said Tom. "Perhaps Charley could put me up here--in one of his top bedrooms?"
Whether he spoke in jest or earnest, I knew not. He might remember that I was running a risk in concealing him even for an hour or two.
Were it discovered, the law might make me answer for it.
"I should like something to eat, Charley."
Leaving him with Lake, I summoned Leah, and bade her bring up quickly what she had. She speedily appeared with the tray.
"Good old Leah!" said Tom to her. "That ham looks tempting."
"Mr. Tom, if you go on like this, loitering in the open streets and calling at houses, trouble will overtake you," returned Leah, in much the same tone she had used to reprimand him when a child. "I wonder what your dear, good mother would say to it if she saw you throwing yourself into peril. Do you remember, sir, how often she would beg of you to be good?"
"My mother!" repeated Tom, who was in one of his lightest moods. "Why, you never saw her. She was dead and buried and gone to heaven before you knew anything of us."
"Ah well, Master Tom, you know I mean Mrs. Heriot--afterwards Mrs.
Strange. It wouldn't be you, sir, if you didn't turn everything into a jest. She was a good mother to you all."
"That she was, Leah. Excused our lessons for the asking, and fed us on jam."
He was taking his supper rapidly the while; for, of course, he had to be away before church was over and Watts was home again. The man might have been true and faithful; little doubt of it; but it would have added one more item to the danger.
Lake went out and brought a cab; and Tom, his wide-awake low on his brow, his rough coat on, and his red comforter round about his throat, vaulted into it, to be conveyed over Blackfriars Bridge to any point that he might choose to indicate.
"It is an amazing hazard his going about like this," cried Lake, as we sat down together in front of the fire. "He must be got out of England as quickly as possible."
"But he won't go."
"Then, mark my words, Charles, bad will come of it."
CHAPTER IV.
RESt.i.tUTION.
Time had gone on--weeks and weeks--though there is little to tell of pa.s.sing events. Things generally remained pretty much as they had been. The Levels were abroad again. Mrs. Brightman on the whole was better, but had occasional relapses; Annabel spent most of her time at Hastings; and Tom Heriot had not yet been taken.
Tom was now at an obscure fis.h.i.+ng village on the coast of Scotland, pa.s.sing himself off as a fisherman, owning a small boat and pretending to fish. This did not allay our anxiety, which was almost as great as ever. Still, it was something to have him away from London. Out of Great Britain he refused to move.
Does the reader remember George Coney's money, that so strangely disappeared the night of Mr. Brightman's death? From that hour to this nothing has been seen or heard of it: but the time for it was now at hand. And what I am about to relate may appear a very common-place ending to a mystery--though, indeed, it was not yet quite the ending.
In my capacity of story-teller I could have invented a hundred romantic incidents, and worked them and the reader up to a high point of interest; but I can only record the incident as it happened, and its termination was a very matter-of-fact one.
I was sitting one evening in the front room: a sitting-room now--I think this has been said before--smoking my after-dinner cigar. The window was open to the summer air, which all day long had been intensely hot. A letter received in the morning from Gloucesters.h.i.+re from Mr. Coney, to which his son had scrawled a postscript: "Has that bag turned up yet?" had set me thinking of the loss, and from that I fell to thinking of the loss of the Clavering will, which had followed close upon it. Edmund Clavering, by the way, had been with me that day to impart some news. He was going to be married--to a charming girl, too--and we were discussing settlements. My Lady Clavering, he said, was figuring at Baden-Baden, and report ran that she was about to espouse a French count with a fierce moustache.
Presently I took up the _Times_, not opened before that day, and was deep in a police case, which had convulsed the court in Marlborough Street with laughter, and was convulsing me, when a vehicle dashed down Ess.e.x Street. It was the van of the Parcels Delivery Company.
"Mr. Strange live here?" was the question I heard from the man who had descended from the seat beside the driver, when Watts went out.
"All right," said Watts.
"Here's a parcel for him. Nothing to pay."
The driver whipped up his horse, then turned sharply round, and--overturned the van. It was not the first accident of a similar nature, or the last by many, that I have seen in that particular spot.
How it is I don't know, but drivers, especially cabmen, have an unconquerable propensity for pulling their horses round in a perilously short fas.h.i.+on at the bottom of Ess.e.x Street, and sometimes the result is that they come to grief. I threw down my newspaper and leaned out at the window watching the fun. The street was covered with parcels, and the driver and his friend were throwing off their consternation in choice language. One hamper could not be picked up: it had contained wine loosely packed, and the broken bottles were lying in a red pool. Where the mob collected from, that speedily arrived to a.s.sist, was a marvel. The van at length took its departure up the street, considerably shorn of the triumph with which it had dashed down.
This had taken up a considerable s.p.a.ce of time, and it was growing too dark to resume my newspaper. Turning from the window, I proceeded to examine the parcel which Watts had brought up on its arrival and placed on the table. It was about a foot square, wrapped in brown paper, sealed and tied with string; and, in what Tony Lumpkin would have called a confounded cramped, up-and-down hand, where you could not tell an izzard from an R, was directed "C. Strange, Esquire."
I took out my penknife, cut the string, and removed the paper; and there was disclosed a pasteboard-box with green edges, also sealed. I opened it, and from a ma.s.s of soft paper took out a small canvas bag, tied round with tape, and containing thirty golden sovereigns!
From the very depth of my conviction I believed it to be the bag we had lost. It was the bag; for, on turning it round, there were Mr.
Coney's initials, S. C., neatly marked with blue cotton, as they had been on the one left by George. It was one of their sample barley bags. I wondered if they were the same sovereigns. Where had it been?
Who had taken it? And who had returned it?
I rang the bell, and then called to Watts, who was coming up to answer it, to bring Leah also. It was my duty to tell them, especially Leah, of the money's rest.i.tution, as they had been inmates of the house when it was lost.
Watts only stared and e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed; but Leah, with some colour, for once, in her pale cheeks, clasped her hands. "Oh, sir, I'm thankful you have found it again!" she exclaimed. "I'm heartily thankful!"
"So am I, Leah, though the mystery attending the transaction is as great as ever; indeed, more so."
It certainly was. They went down again, and I sat musing over the problem. But nothing could I make out of it. One moment I argued that the individual taking it (whomsoever it might be) must have had temporary need of funds, and, the difficulty over, had now restored the money. The next, I wondered whether anyone could have taken the bag inadvertently, and had now discovered it. I locked the bag safely up, wrote a letter to George Coney, and then went out to confide the news to Arthur Lake.
Taking the short cuts and pa.s.sages that lead from Ess.e.x Street to the Temple, as I generally did when bound for Lake's chambers, I was pa.s.sing onwards, when I found myself called to--or I thought so.
Standing still in the shade, leaning against the railings of the Temple Gardens, was a slight man of middle height: and he seemed to say "Charley."
Glancing in doubt, half stopping as I did so, yet thinking I must have been mistaken, I was pa.s.sing on, when the voice came again.
"Charley!"
I stopped then. And I declare that in the revulsion it brought me you might have knocked me down with a feather; for it was Tom Heriot.
"I was almost sure it was you, Charles," he said in a low voice; "but not quite sure."
I had not often had such a scare as this. My heart, with pain and dismay, beat as if it meant to burst its bonds.
"Can it possibly be _you_?" I cried. "What brings you here? Why have you come again?"
"Reached London this morning. Came here when dusk set in, thinking I might have the luck to see you or Lake, Charley."
"But why have you left Scotland? You were safer there."
"Don't know that I was. And I had grown tired to death of it."
The Story of Charles Strange Volume III Part 7
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The Story of Charles Strange Volume III Part 7 summary
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