<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0037" id="link2HCH0037"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XXXVII </h2>
<p>Old Mrs. Hutchinson's letter had supplied much detail, but when her son
and grand-daughter arrived in the village of Temple Barholm they heard
much more, the greater part of it not in the least to be relied upon.</p>
<p>“The most of it's lies, as folks enjoys theirsels pretendin' to believe,”
the grand-mother commented. “It's servants'-hall talk and cottage gossip,
and plenty made itself up out o' beer drunk in th' tap-room at th' Wool
Park. In a place where naught much happens, people get into th' way 'o
springin' on a bit o' news, and shakin' and worryin' it like a terrier
does a rat. It's nature. That lad's given 'em lots to talk about ever
since he coom. He's been a blessin' to 'em. If he'd been gentry, he'd not
ha' been nigh as lively. Th' village lads tries to talk through their
noses like him. Little Tummas Hibblethwaite does it i' broad Lancashire.”</p>
<p>The only facts fairly authenticated were that the mysterious stranger had
been taken away very late one night, some time before the interview
between Mr. Temple Barholm and Captain Palliser, of which Burrill knew so
much because he had “happened to be about.” When a domestic magnate of
Burrill's type “happens to be about” at a crisis, he is not unlikely to
hear a great deal. Burrill, it was believed, knew much more than he
deigned to make public. The entire truth was that Captain Palliser
himself, in one of his hasty appearances in the neighborhood of Temple
Barholm, had bestowed a few words of cold caution on him.</p>
<p>“Don't talk too much,” he had said. “Proof is required before talk is
safe. The American was sharp enough to say that to me himself. He was
sharp enough, too, to keep his man hidden. I was the only person that saw
him who could have recognized him, and I saw him by chance. Palford &
Grimby require proof. We are in search of it. Servants will talk; but if
you don't want to run the risk of getting yourself into trouble, don't
make absolute statements.”</p>
<p>This had been a disappointment to Burrill, who had seen himself developing
in magnitude; but he was a timid man, and therefore felt it wise to convey
his knowledge merely through the conviction carried by a dignified silence
after his first indiscreet revelation of having “happened to be about” had
been made. It would have been some solace to him to intimate to Miss
Alicia by his bearing and the manner of his services that she had been
discovered, so to speak, in the character of a sort of accomplice; that
her position was a perilously uncertain one, which would probably end in
utter downfall, leaving her in her old and proper place as an elderly,
insignificant, and unattractive poor relation, without a feature to
recommend her. But being, as before remarked, a timid man, and recalling
the interview between himself and his employer held outside the
dining-room door, and having also a disturbing memory of the sharp, cool,
boyish eye and the tone of the casual remark that he had “a head on his
shoulders” and that it was “up to him to make the others understand,” it
seemed as well to restrain his inclinations until the proof Palford &
Grimby required was forthcoming.</p>
<p>It was perhaps the moderate and precautionary attitude of Palford &
Grimby, during their first somewhat startled though reserved interview
with Captain Palliser, which had prevented the vaguely wild rumors from
being regarded as more than villagers' exaggerated talk among themselves.
The “gentry,” indeed, knew much less of the cottagers than the cottagers
knew of the gentry; consequently events furnishing much excitement among
the village people not infrequently remained unheard of by those in the
class above them. A story less incredible might have been more considered;
but the highly colored reasons given for the absence of the owner of
Temple Barholm would, if heard of, have been more than likely to be
received and passed over with a smile.</p>
<p>The manner of Mr. Palford and also of Mr. Grimby during the deliberately
unmelodramatic and carefully connected relation of Captain Palliser's
singular story, was that of professional gentlemen who for reasons of good
breeding were engaged in restraining outward expression of conviction that
they were listening to utter nonsense. Palliser himself was aware of this,
and upon the whole did not wonder at it in entirely unimaginative persons
of extremely sober lives. In fact, he had begun by giving them some
warning as to what they might expect in the way of unusualness.</p>
<p>“You will, no doubt, think what I am about to tell you absurd and
incredible,” he had prefaced his statements. “I thought the same myself
when my first suspicions were aroused. I was, in fact, inclined to laugh
at my own idea until one link connected itself with another.”</p>
<p>Neither Mr. Grimby nor Mr. Palford was inclined to laugh. On the contrary,
they were extremely grave, and continued to find it necessary to restrain
their united tendency to indicate facially that the thing must be
nonsense. It transcended all bounds, as it were. The delicacy with which
they managed to convey this did them much credit. This delicacy was
equaled by the moderation with which Captain Palliser drew their attention
to the fact that it was not the thing likely-to-happen on which were
founded the celebrated criminal cases of legal history; it was the
incredible and almost impossible events, the ordinarily unbelievable
duplicities, moral obliquities and coincidences, which made them what they
were and attracted the attention of the world. This, Mr. Palford and his
partner were obviously obliged to admit. What they did not admit was that
such things never having occurred in one's own world, they had been
mentally relegated to the world of newspaper and criminal record as things
that could not happen to oneself. Mr. Palford cleared his throat in a
seriously cautionary way.</p>
<p>“This is, of course, a matter suggesting too serious an accusation not to
be approached in the most conservative manner,” he remarked.</p>
<p>“Most serious consequences have resulted in cases implying libelous
assertions which have been made rashly,” added Mr. Grimby. “As Mr. Temple
Barholm intimated to you, a man of almost unlimited means has command of
resources which it might not be easy to contend with if he had reason to
feel himself injured.”</p>
<p>The fact that Captain Palliser had in a bitterly frustrated moment allowed
himself to be goaded into losing his temper, and “giving away” to Tembarom
the discovery on which he had felt that he could rely as a lever, did not
argue that a like weakness would lead him into more dangerous
indiscretion. He had always regarded himself as a careful man whose
defenses were well built about him at such crises in his career as
rendered entrenchment necessary. There would, of course, be some pleasure
in following the matter up and getting more than even with a man who had
been insolent to him; but a more practical feature of the case was that
if, through his alert observation and shrewd aid, Jem Temple Barholm was
restored to his much-to-be-envied place in the world, a far from unnatural
result would be that he might feel suitable gratitude and indebted-ness to
the man who, not from actual personal liking but from a mere sense of
justice, had rescued him. As for the fears of Messrs. Palford &
Grimby, he had put himself on record with Burrill by commanding him to
hold his tongue and stating clearly that proof was both necessary and
lacking. No man could be regarded as taking risks whose attitude was so
wholly conservative and non-accusing. Servants will gossip. A superior who
reproves such gossip holds an unattackable position. In the private room
of Palford & Grimby, however, he could confidently express his
opinions without risk.</p>
<p>“The recognition of a man lost sight of for years, and seen only for a
moment through a window, is not substantial evidence,” Mr. Grimby had
proceeded. “The incident was startling, but not greatly to be relied
upon.”</p>
<p>“I knew him.” Palliser was slightly grim in his air of finality. “He was a
man most men either liked or hated. I didn't like him. I detested a trick
he had of staring at you under his drooping lids. By the way, do you
remember the portrait of Miles Hugo which was so like him?”</p>
<p>Mr. Palford remembered having heard that there was a certain portrait in
the gallery which Mr. James Temple Barholm had been said to resemble. He
had no distinct recollection of the ancestor it represented.</p>
<p>“It was a certain youngster who was a page in the court of Charles the
Second and who died young. Miles Hugo Charles James was his name. He is my
strongest clue. The American seemed rather keen the first time we talked
together. He was equally keen about Jem Temple Barholm. He wanted to know
what he looked like, and whether it was true that he was like the
portrait.”</p>
<p>“Indeed!” exclaimed Palford and Grimby, simultaneously.</p>
<p>“It struck me that there was something more than mere curiosity in his
manner,” Palliser enlarged. “I couldn't make him out then. Later, I began
to see that he was remarkably anxious to keep every one from Strangeways.
It was a sort of Man in the Iron Mask affair. Strangeways was apparently
not only too excitable to be looked at or spoken to, but too excitable to
be spoken of. He wouldn't talk about him.”</p>
<p>“That is exceedingly curious,” remarked Mr. Palford, but it was not in
response to Palliser. A few moments before he had suddenly looked
thoughtful. He wore now the aspect of a man trying to recall something as
Palliser continued.</p>
<p>“One day, after I had been to look at a sunset through a particular window
in the wing where Strangeways was kept, I passed the door of his
sitting-room, and heard the American arguing with him. He was evidently
telling him he was to be taken elsewhere, and the poor devil was
terrified. I heard him beg him for God's sake not to send him away. There
was panic in his voice. In connection with the fact that he has got him
away secretly—at midnight-it's an ugly thing to recall.”</p>
<p>“It would seem to have significance.” Grimby said it uneasily.</p>
<p>“It set me thinking and looking into things,” Palliser went on. “Pearson
was secretive, but the head man, Burrill, made casual enlightening
remarks. I gathered some curious details, which might or might not have
meant a good deal. When Strangeways suddenly appeared at his window one
evening a number of things fitted themselves together. My theory is that
the American—Tembarom, as he used to call himself—may not have
been certain of the identity at first, but he wouldn't have brought
Strangeways with him if he had not had some reason to suspect who he was.
He daren't lose sight of him, and he wanted time to make sure and to lay
his plans. The portrait of Miles Hugo was a clue which alarmed him, and no
doubt he has been following it. If he found it led to nothing, he could
easily turn Strangeways over to the public charge and let him be put into
a lunatic asylum. If he found it led to a revelation which would make him
a pauper again, it would be easy to dispose of him.”</p>
<p>“Come! Come! Captain Palliser! We mustn't go too far!” ejaculated Mr.
Grimby, alarmedly. It shocked him to think of the firm being dragged into
a case dealing with capital crime and possible hangmen! That was not its
line of the profession.</p>
<p>Captain Palliser's slight laugh contained no hint of being shocked by any
possibilities whatever.</p>
<p>“There are extremely private asylums and so-called sanatoriums where the
discipline is strict, and no questions are asked. One sometimes reads in
the papers of cases in which mild-mannered keepers in defending themselves
against the attacks of violent patients are obliged to use force—with
disastrous results. It is in such places that our investigations should
begin.”</p>
<p>“Dear me! Dear me!” Mr. Grimby broke out. “Isn't that going rather far?
You surely don't think—”</p>
<p>“Mr. Tembarom's chief characteristic was that he was a practical and
direct person. He would do what he had to do in exactly that businesslike
manner. The inquiries I have been making have been as to the whereabouts
of places in which a superfluous relative might be placed without
attracting attention.”</p>
<p>“That is really astute, but—but—what do you think, Palford?”
Mr. Grimby turned to his partner, still wearing the shocked and disturbed
expression.</p>
<p>“I have been recalling to mind a circumstance which probably bears upon
the case,” said Mr. Palford. “Captain Palliser's mention of the portrait
reminded me of it. I remember now that on Mr. Temple Barholm's first visit
to the picture-gallery he seemed much attracted by the portrait of Miles
Hugo. He stopped and examined it curiously. He said he felt as if he had
seen it before. He turned to it once or twice; and finally remarked that
he might have seen some one like it at a great fancy-dress ball which had
taken place in New York.”</p>
<p>“Had he been invited to the ball?” laughed Palliser.</p>
<p>“I did not gather that,” replied Mr. Palford gravely. “He had apparently
watched the arriving guests from some railings near by—or perhaps it
was a lamp-post—with other news-boys.”</p>
<p>“He recognized the likeness to Strangeways, no doubt, and it gave him what
he calls a 'jolt,'” said Captain Palliser. “He must have experienced a
number of jolts during the last few months.”</p>
<p>Palford & Grimby's view of the matter continued to be marked by
extreme distaste for the whole situation and its disturbing and irritating
possibilities. The coming of the American heir to the estate of Temple
Barholm had been trying to the verge of extreme painfulness; but,
sufficient time having lapsed and their client having troubled them but
little, they had outlived the shock of his first appearance and settled
once more into the calm of their accustomed atmosphere and routine. That
he should suddenly reappear upon their dignified horizon as a probable
melodramatic criminal was a fault of taste and a lack of consideration
beyond expression. To be dragged-into vulgar detective work, to be
referred to in news-papers in a connection which would lead to confusing
the firm with the representatives of such branches of the profession as
dealt with persons who had committed acts for which in vulgar parlance
they might possibly “swing,” if their legal defenders did not “get them
off,” to a firm whose sole affairs had been the dealing with noble and
ancient estates, with advising and supporting personages of stately name,
and with private and weighty family confidences. If the worst came to the
worst, the affair would surely end in the most glaring and odious
notoriety: in head-lines and daily reports even in London, in appalling
pictures of every one concerned in every New York newspaper, even in
baffled struggles to keep abominable woodcuts of themselves—Mr.
Edward James Palford and Mr. James Matthew Grimby—from being
published in sensational journalistic sheets! Professional duty demanded
that the situation should be dealt with, that investigation should be
entered into, that the most serious even if conservative steps should be
taken at once. With regard to the accepted report of Mr. James Temple
Barholm's tragic death, it could not be denied that Captain Palliser's
view of the naturalness of the origin of the mistake that had been made
had a logical air.</p>
<p>“In a region full of rioting derelicts crazed with the lawless excitement
of their dash after gold,” he had said, “identities and names are easily
lost. Temple Barholm himself was a derelict and in a desperate state. He
was in no mood to speak of himself or try to make friends. He no doubt
came and went to such work as he did scarcely speaking to any one. A mass
of earth and debris of all sorts suddenly gives way, burying half-a-dozen
men. Two or three are dug out dead, the others not reached. There was no
time to spare to dig for dead men. Some one had seen Temple Barholm near
the place; he was seen no more. Ergo, he was buried with the rest. At that
time, those who knew him in England felt it was the best thing that could
have happened to him. It would have been if his valet had not confessed
his trick, and old Temple Barholm had not died. My theory is that he may
have left the place days before the accident without being missed. His
mental torment caused some mental illness, it does not matter what. He
lost his memory and wandered about—the Lord knows how or where he
lived; he probably never knew himself. The American picked him up and
found that he had money. For reasons of his own, he professed to take care
of him. He must have come on some clue just when he heard of his new
fortune. He was naturally panic-stricken; it must have been a big blow at
that particular moment. He was sharp enough to see what it might mean, and
held on to the poor chap like grim death, and has been holding on ever
since.”</p>
<p>“We must begin to take steps,” decided Palford & Grimby. “We must of
course take steps at once, but we must begin with discretion.”</p>
<p>After grave private discussion, they began to take the steps in question
and with the caution that it seemed necessary to observe until they felt
solid ground under their feet. Captain Palliser was willing to assist
them. He had been going into the matter himself. He went down to the
neighborhood of Temple Barholm and quietly looked up data which might
prove illuminating when regarded from one point or another. It was on the
first of these occasions that he saw and warned Burrill. It was from
Burrill he heard of Tummas Hibblethwaite.</p>
<p>“There's an impident little vagabond in the village, sir,” he said, “that
Mr. Temple Barholm used to go and see and take New York newspapers to. A
cripple the lad is, and he's got a kind of craze for talking about Mr.
James Temple Barholm. He had a map of the place where he was said to be
killed. If I may presume to mention it, sir,” he added with great dignity,
“it is my opinion that the two had a good deal of talk together on the
subject.”</p>
<p>“I dare say,” Captain Palliser admitted indifferently, and made no further
inquiry or remark.</p>
<p>He sauntered into the Hibblethwaite cottage, however, late the next
afternoon.</p>
<p>Tummas was in a bad temper, for reasons quite sufficient for himself, and
he regarded him sourly.</p>
<p>“What has tha coom for?” he demanded. “I did na ask thee.”</p>
<p>“Don't be cheeky!” said Captain Palliser. “I will give you a sovereign if
you'll let me see the map you and Mr. Temple Barholm used to look at and
talk so much about.”</p>
<p>He laid the sovereign down on the small table by Tummas's sofa, but Tummas
did not pick it up.</p>
<p>“I know who tha art. Tha'rt Palliser, an' tha wast th' one as said as him
as was killed in th' Klondike had coom back alive.”</p>
<p>“You've been listening to that servants' story, have you?” remarked
Palliser. “You had better be careful as to what you say. I suppose you
never heard of libel suits. Where would you find yourself if you were
called upon to pay Mr. Temple Barholm ten thousand pounds' damages? You'd
be obliged to sell your atlas.”</p>
<p>“Burrill towd as he heard thee say tha'd swear in court as it was th' one
as was killed as tha'd seen.”</p>
<p>“That's Burrill's story, not mine. And Burrill had better keep his mouth
shut,” said Palliser. “If it were true, how would you like it? I've heard
you were interested in 'th' one as was killed.'”</p>
<p>Tummas's eyes burned troublously.</p>
<p>“I've got reet down taken wi' th' other un,” he answered. “He's noan
gentry, but he's th' reet mak'. I—I dunnot believe as him as was
killed has coom back.”</p>
<p>“Neither do I,” Palliser answered, with amiable tolerance. “The American
gentleman had better come back himself and disprove it. When you used to
talk about the Klondike, he never said anything to make you feel as if he
doubted that the other man was dead?”</p>
<p>“Not him,” answered Tummas.</p>
<p>“Eh! Tummas, what art tha talkin' about?” exclaimed Mrs. Hibblethwaite,
who was mending at the other end of the room. “I heerd him say mysel,
`Suppose th' story hadn't been true an' he was alive somewhere now, it'd
make a big change, would na' it?' An' he laughed.”</p>
<p>“I never heerd him,” said Tummas, in stout denial.</p>
<p>“Tha's losin' tha moind,” commented his mother. “As soon as I heerd th'
talk about him runnin' away an' takin' th' mad gentleman wi' him I
remembered it. An' I remembered as he sat still after it and said nowt for
a minute or so, same as if he was thinkin' things over. Theer was summat a
bit queer about it.”</p>
<p>“I never heerd him,” Tummas asserted, obstinately, and shut his mouth.</p>
<p>“He were as ready to talk about th' poor gentleman as met with th'
accident as tha wert thysel', Tummas,” Mrs. Hibblethwaite proceeded, moved
by the opportunity offered for presenting her views on the exciting topic.
“He'd ax thee aw sorts o' questions about what tha'd found out wi' pumpin'
foak. He'd ax me questions now an' agen about what he was loike to look
at, an' how tall he wur. Onct he axed me if I remembered what soart o'
chin he had an' how he spoke.”</p>
<p>“It wur to set thee goin' an' please me,” volunteered Tummas, grudgingly.
“He did it same as he'd look at th' map to please me an' tell me tales
about th' news-lads i' New York.”</p>
<p>It had not seemed improbable that a village cripple tied to a sofa would
be ready enough to relate all he knew, and perhaps so much more that it
would be necessary to use discretion in selecting statements of value. To
drop in and give him a sovereign and let him talk had appeared simple.
Lads of his class liked to be listened to, enjoyed enlarging upon and
rendering dramatic such material as had fallen into their hands. But
Tummas was an eccentric, and instinct led him to close like an oyster
before a remote sense of subtly approaching attack. It was his mother, not
he, who had provided information; but it was not sufficiently specialized
to be worth much.</p>
<p>“What did tha say he'd run away fur?” Tummas said to his parent later.
“He's not one o' th' runnin' away soart.”</p>
<p>“He has probably been called away by business,” remarked Captain Palliser,
as he rose to go after a few minutes' casual talk with Mrs. Hibblethwaite.
“It was a mistake not to leave an address behind him. Your mother is
mistaken in saying that he took the mad gentleman with him. He had him
removed late at night some time before he went himself.”</p>
<p>“Tak tha sov'rin',” said Tummas, as Palliser moved away. “I did na show
thee th' atlas. Tha did na want to see it.”</p>
<p>“I will leave the sovereign for your mother,” said Palliser. “I'm sorry
you are not in a better humor.”</p>
<p>His interest in the atlas had indeed been limited to his idea that it
would lead to subjects of talk which might cast illuminating side-lights
and possibly open up avenues and vistas. Tummas, however, having
instinctively found him displeasing, he had gained but little.</p>
<p>Avenues and vistas were necessary—avenues through which the steps of
Palford and Grimby might wander, vistas which they might explore with
hesitating, investigating glances. So far, the scene remained
unpromisingly blank. The American Temple Barholm had simply disappeared,
as had his mysterious charge. Steps likely to lead to definite results can
scarcely be taken hopefully in the case of a person who has seemed
temporarily to cease to exist. You cannot interrogate him, you cannot
demand information, whatsoever the foundations upon which rest your
accusations, if such accusation can be launched only into thin air and the
fact that there is nobody to reply to—to acknowledge or indignantly
refute them—is in itself a serious barrier to accomplishment. It was
also true that only a few weeks had elapsed since the accused had, so to
speak, dematerialized. It was also impossible to calculate upon what an
American of his class and peculiarities would be likely to do in any
circumstances whatever.</p>
<p>In private conference, Palford and Grimby frankly admitted to each other
that they would almost have preferred that Captain Palliser should have
kept his remarkable suspicions to himself, for the time being at least.
Yet when they had admitted this they were confronted by the disturbing
possibility—suggested by Palliser—that actual crime had been
or might be committed. They had heard unpleasant stories of private
lunatic asylums and their like. Things to shudder at might be going on at
the very moment they spoke to each other. Under this possibility, no
supineness would be excusable. Efforts to trace the missing man must at
least be made. Efforts were made, but with no result. Painful as it was to
reflect on the subject of the asylums, careful private inquiry was made,
information was quietly collected, there were even visits to gruesomely
quiet places on various polite pretexts.</p>
<p>“If a longer period of time had elapsed,” Mr. Palford remarked several
times, with some stiffness of manner, “we should feel that we had more
solid foundation for our premises.”</p>
<p>“Perfectly right,” Captain Palliser agreed with him, “but it is lapse of
time which may mean life or death to Jem Temple Barholm; so it's perhaps
as well to be on the safe side and go on quietly following small clues. I
dare say you would feel more comfortable yourselves.”</p>
<p>Both Mr. Palford and Mr. Grimby, having made an appointment with Miss
Alicia, arrived one afternoon at Temple Barholm to talk to her privately,
thereby casting her into a state of agonized anxiety which reduced her to
pallor.</p>
<p>“Our visit is merely one of inquiry, Miss Temple Barholm,” Mr. Palford
began. “There is perhaps nothing alarming in our client's absence.”</p>
<p>“In the note which he left me he asked me to—feel no anxiety,” Miss
Alicia said.</p>
<p>“He left you a note of explanation? I wish we had known this earlier!” Mr.
Palford's tone had the note of relieved exclamation. Perhaps there was an
entirely simple solution of the painful difficulty.</p>
<p>But his hope had been too sanguine.</p>
<p>“It was not a note of explanation, exactly. He went away too suddenly to
have time to explain.”</p>
<p>The two men looked at each other disturbedly.</p>
<p>“He had not mentioned to you his intention of going?” asked Mr. Grimby.</p>
<p>“I feel sure he did not know he was going when he said good-night. He
remained with Captain Palliser talking for some time.” Miss Alicia's eyes
held wavering and anxious question as she looked from one to the other.
She wondered how much more than herself her visitors knew. “He found a
telegram when he went to his room. It contained most disquieting news
about Mr. Strangeways. He—he had got away from the place where—”</p>
<p>“Got away!” Mr. Palford was again exclamatory. “Was he in some institution
where he was kept under restraint?”</p>
<p>Miss Alicia was wholly unable to explain to herself why some quality in
his manner filled her with sudden distress.</p>
<p>“Oh, I think not! Surely not! Surely nothing of that sort was necessary.
He was very quiet always, and he was getting better every day. But it was
important that he should be watched over. He was no doubt under the care
of a physician in some quiet sanatorium.”</p>
<p>“Some quiet sanatorium!” Mr. Palford's disturbance of mind was manifest.
“But you did not know where?”</p>
<p>“No. Indeed, Mr. Temple Barholm talked very little of Mr. Strangeways. I
believe he knew that it distressed me to feel that I could be of no real
assistance as—as the case was so peculiar.”</p>
<p>Each perturbed solicitor looked again with rapid question at the other.
Miss Alicia saw the exchange of glances and, so to speak, broke down under
the pressure of their unconcealed anxiety. The last few weeks with their
suggestion of accusation too vague to be met had been too much for her.</p>
<p>“I am afraid—I feel sure you know something I do not,” she began. “I
am most anxious and unhappy. I have not liked to ask questions, because
that would have seemed to imply a doubt of Mr. Temple Barholm. I have even
remained at home because I did not wish to hear things I could not
understand. I do not know what has been said. Pearson, in whom I have the
greatest confidence, felt that Mr. Temple Barholm would prefer that I
should wait until he returned.”</p>
<p>“Do you think he will return?” said Mr. Grimby, amazedly.</p>
<p>“Oh!” the gentle creature ejaculated. “Can you possibly think he will not?
Why? Why?”</p>
<p>Mr. Palford had shared his partner's amazement. It was obvious that she
was as ignorant as a babe of the details of Palliser's extraordinary
story. In her affectionate consideration for Temple Barholm she had
actually shut herself up lest she should hear anything said against him
which she could not refute. She stood innocently obedient to his wishes,
like the boy upon the burning deck, awaiting his return and his version of
whatsoever he had been accused of. There was something delicately heroic
in the little, slender old thing, with her troubled eyes and her cap and
her quivering sideringlets.</p>
<p>“You,” she appealed, “are his legal advisers, and will be able to tell me
if there is anything he would wish me to know. I could not allow myself to
listen to villagers or servants; but I may ask you.”</p>
<p>“We are far from knowing as much as we desire to know,” Mr. Palford
replied.</p>
<p>“We came here, in fact,” added Grimby, “to ask questions of you, Miss
Temple Barholm.”</p>
<p>“The fact that Miss Temple Barholm has not allowed herself to be
prejudiced by village gossip, which is invariably largely unreliable, will
make her an excellent witness,” Mr. Palford said to his partner, with a
deliberation which held suggestive significance. Each man, in fact, had
suddenly realized that her ignorance would leave her absolutely unbiased
in her answers to any questions they might put, and that it was much
better in cross-examining an emotional elderly lady that such should be
the case.</p>
<p>“Witness!” Miss Alicia found the word alarming. Mr. Palford's bow was
apologetically palliative.</p>
<p>“A mere figure of speech, madam,” he said.</p>
<p>“I really know so little every one else doesn't know.” Miss Alicia's
protest had a touch of bewilderment in it. What could they wish to ask
her?</p>
<p>“But, as we understand it, your relations with Mr. Temple Barholm were
most affectionate and confidential.”</p>
<p>“We were very fond of each other,” she answered.</p>
<p>“For that reason he no doubt talked to you more freely than to other
people,” Mr. Grimby put it. “Perhaps, Palford, it would be as well to
explain to Miss Temple Barholm that a curious feature of this matter is
that it—in a way—involves certain points concerning the late
Mr. Temple Barholm.”</p>
<p>Miss Alicia uttered a pathetic exclamation.</p>
<p>“Poor Jem—who died so cruelly!”</p>
<p>Mr. Palford bent his head in acquiescence.</p>
<p>“Perhaps you can tell me what the present Mr. Temple Barholm knew of him—how
much he knew?”</p>
<p>“I told him the whole story the first time we took tea together,” Miss
Alicia replied; and, between her recollection of that strangely happy
afternoon and her wonder at its connection with the present moment, she
began to feel timid and uncertain.</p>
<p>“How did it seem to impress him?”</p>
<p>She remembered it all so well—his queer, dear New York way of
expressing his warm-hearted indignation at the cruelty of what had
happened.</p>
<p>“Oh, he was very much excited. He was so sorry for him. He wanted to know
everything about him. He asked me what he looked like.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” said Palford. “He wanted to know that?”</p>
<p>“He was so full of sympathy,” she replied, her explanation gaining warmth.
“When I told him that the picture of Miles Hugo in the gallery was said to
look like Jem as a boy, he wanted very much to see it. Afterward we went
and saw it together. I shall always remember how he stood and looked at
it. Most young men would not have cared. But he always had such a touching
interest in poor Jem.”</p>
<p>“You mean that he asked questions about him—about his death, and so
forth?” was Mr. Palford's inquiry.</p>
<p>“About all that concerned him. He was interested especially in his looks
and manner of speaking and personality, so to speak. And in the awful
accident which ended his life, though he would not let me talk about that
after he had asked his first questions.”</p>
<p>“What kind of questions?” suggested Grimby.</p>
<p>“Only about what was known of the time and place, and how the sad story
reached England. It used to touch me to think that the only person who
seemed to care was the one who—might have been expected to be almost
glad the tragic thing had happened. But he was not.”</p>
<p>Mr. Palford watched Mr. Grimby, and Mr. Grimby gave more than one dubious
and distressed glance at Palford.</p>
<p>“His interest was evident,” remarked Palford, thoughtfully. “And unusual
under the circumstances.”</p>
<p>For a moment he hesitated, then put another question: “Did he ever seem—I
should say, do you remember any occasion when he appeared to think that—there
might be any reason to doubt that Mr. James Temple Barholm was one of the
men who died in the Klondike?”</p>
<p>He felt that through this wild questioning they had at least reached a
certain testimony supporting Captain Palliser's views; and his interest
reluctantly increased. It was reluctant because there could be no shadow
of a question that this innocent spinster lady told the absolute truth;
and, this being the case, one seemed to be dragged to the verge of depths
which must inevitably be explored. Miss Alicia's expression was that of
one who conscientiously searched memory.</p>
<p>“I do not remember that he really expressed doubt,” she answered,
carefully. “Not exactly that, but—”</p>
<p>“But what?” prompted Palford as she hesitated. “Please try to recall
exactly what he said. It is most important.”</p>
<p>The fact that his manner was almost eager, and that eagerness was not his
habit, made her catch her breath and look more questioning and puzzled
than before.</p>
<p>“One day he came to my sitting-room when he seemed rather excited,” she
explained. “He had been with Mr. Strangeways, who had been worse than
usual. Perhaps he wanted to distract himself and forget about it. He asked
me questions and talked about poor Jem for about an hour. And at last he
said, `Do you suppose there's any sort of chance that it mightn't be true—that
story that came from the Klondike?' He said it so thoughtfully that I was
startled and said, `Do you think there could be such a chance—do
you?' And he drew a long breath and answered, `You want to be sure about
things like that; you've got to be sure.' I was a little excited, so he
changed the subject very soon afterward, and I never felt quite certain of
what he was really thinking. You see what he said was not so much an
expression of doubt as a sort of question.”</p>
<p>A touch of the lofty condemnatory made Mr. Palford impressive.</p>
<p>“I am compelled to admit that I fear that it was a question of which he
had already guessed the answer,” he said.</p>
<p>At this point Miss Alicia clasped her hands quite tightly together upon
her knees.</p>
<p>“If you please,” she exclaimed, “I must ask you to make things a little
clear to me. What dreadful thing has happened? I will regard any
communication as a most sacred confidence.”</p>
<p>“I think we may as well, Palford?” Mr. Grimby suggested to his partner.</p>
<p>“Yes,” Palford acquiesced. He felt the difficulty of a blank explanation.
“We are involved in a most trying position,” he said. “We feel that great
discretion must be used until we have reached more definite certainty. An
extraordinary—in fact, a startling thing has occurred. We are
beginning, as a result of cumulative evidence, to feel that there was
reason to believe that the Klondike story was to be doubted—”</p>
<p>“That poor Jem—!” cried Miss Alicia.</p>
<p>“One begins to be gravely uncertain as to whether he has not been in this
house for months, whether he was not the mysterious Mr. Strangeways!”</p>
<p>“Jem! Jem!” gasped poor little Miss Temple Barholm, quite white with
shock.</p>
<p>“And if he was the mysterious Strangeways,” Mr. Grimby assisted to shorten
the matter, “the American Temple Barholm apparently knew the fact, brought
him here for that reason, and for the same reason kept him secreted and
under restraint.”</p>
<p>“No! No!” cried Miss Alicia. “Never! Never! I beg you not to say such a
thing. Excuse me—I cannot listen! It would be wrong—ungrateful.
Excuse me!” She got up from her seat, trembling with actual anger in her
sense of outrage. It was a remarkable thing to see the small, elderly
creature angry, but this remarkable thing had happened. It was as though
she were a mother defending her young.</p>
<p>“I loved poor Jem and I love Temple, and, though I am only a woman who
never has been the least clever, I know them both. I know neither of them
could lie or do a wicked, cunning thing. Temple is the soul of honor.”</p>
<p>It was quite an inspirational outburst. She had never before in her life
said so much at one time. Of course tears began to stream down her face,
while Mr. Palford and Mr. Grimby gazed at her in great embarrassment.</p>
<p>“If Mr. Strangeways was poor Jem come back alive, Temple did not know—he
never knew. All he did for him was done for kindness' sake. I—I—”
It was inevitable that she should stammer before going to this length of
violence, and that the words should burst from her: “I would swear it!”</p>
<p>It was really a shock to both Palford and Grimby. That a lady of Miss
Temple Barholm's age and training should volunteer to swear to a thing was
almost alarming. It was also in rather unpleasing taste.</p>
<p>“Captain Palliser obliged Mr. Temple Temple Barholm to confess that he had
known for some time,” Mr. Palford said with cold regret. “He also informed
him that he should communicate with us without delay.”</p>
<p>“Captain Palliser is a bad man.” Miss Alicia choked back a gasp to make
the protest.</p>
<p>“It was after their interview that Mr. Temple Barholm almost immediately
left the house.”</p>
<p>“Without any explanation whatever,” added Grimby.</p>
<p>“He left a few lines for me,” defended Miss Alicia.</p>
<p>“We have not seen them.” Mr. Palford was still as well as cold. Poor
little Miss Alicia took them out of her pocket with an unsteady hand. They
were always with her, and she could not on such a challenge seem afraid to
allow them to be read. Mr. Palford took them from her with a slight bow of
thanks. He adjusted his glasses and read aloud, with pauses between
phrases which seemed somewhat to puzzle him.</p>
<p>“Dear little Miss Alicia:</p>
<p>“I've got to light out of here as quick as I can make it. I can't even
stop to tell you why. There's just one thing—don't get rattled, Miss
Alicia. Whatever any one says or does, don't get rattled.</p>
<p>“Yours affectionately,</p>
<h3> “T. TEMBAROM.” </h3>
<p>There was a silence, Mr. Palford passed the paper to his partner, who gave
it careful study. Afterward he refolded it and handed it back to Miss
Alicia.</p>
<p>“In a court of law,” was Mr. Palford's sole remark, “it would not be
regarded as evidence for the defendant.”</p>
<p>Miss Alicia's tears were still streaming, but she held her ringleted head
well up.</p>
<p>“I cannot stay! I beg your pardon, I do indeed!” she said. “But I must
leave you. You see,” she added, with her fine little touch of dignity, “as
yet this house is still Mr. Temple Barholm's home, and I am the grateful
recipient of his bounty. Burrill will attend you and make you quite
comfortable.” With an obeisance which was like a slight curtsey, she
turned and fled.</p>
<p>In less than an hour she walked up the neat bricked path, and old Mrs.
Hutchinson, looking out, saw her through the tiers of flower-pots in the
window. Hutchinson himself was in London, but Ann was reading at the other
side of the room.</p>
<p>“Here's poor little owd Miss Temple Barholm aw in a flutter,” remarked her
grandmother. “Tha's got some work cut out for thee if tha's going to quiet
her. Oppen th' door, lass.”</p>
<p>Ann opened the door, and stood by it with calm though welcoming dimples.</p>
<p>“Miss Hutchinson “—Miss Alicia began all at once to realize that
they did not know each other, and that she had flown to the refuge of her
youth without being at all aware of what she was about to say. “Oh! Little
Ann!” she broke down with frank tears. “My poor boy! My poor boy!”</p>
<p>Little Ann drew her inside and closed the door.</p>
<p>“There, Miss Temple Barholm,” she said. “There now Just come in and sit
down. I'll get you a good cup of tea. You need one.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />