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<h2> CHAPTER XVI — MRS. PETT TAKES PRECAUTIONS </h2>
<p>Mrs. Pett, on leaving the luncheon-table, had returned to the drawing-room
to sit beside the sick-settee of her stricken child. She was troubled
about Ogden. The poor lamb was not at all himself to-day. A bowl of clear
soup, the midday meal prescribed by Doctor Briginshaw, lay untasted at his
side.</p>
<p>She crossed the room softly, and placed a cool hand on her son's aching
brow.</p>
<p>"Oh, Gee," said Ogden wearily.</p>
<p>"Are you feeling a little better, Oggie darling?"</p>
<p>"No," said Ogden firmly. "I'm feeling a lot worse."</p>
<p>"You haven't drunk your nice soup."</p>
<p>"Feed it to the cat."</p>
<p>"Could you eat a nice bowl of bread-and-milk, precious?"</p>
<p>"Have a heart," replied the sufferer.</p>
<p>Mrs. Pett returned to her seat, sorrowfully. It struck her as an odd
coincidence that the poor child was nearly always like this on the morning
after she had been entertaining guests; she put it down to the reaction
from the excitement working on a highly-strung temperament. To his present
collapse the brutal behaviour of Jerry Mitchell had, of course,
contributed. Every drop of her maternal blood boiled with rage and horror
whenever she permitted herself to contemplate the excesses of the late
Jerry. She had always mistrusted the man. She had never liked his face—not
merely on aesthetic grounds but because she had seemed to detect in it a
lurking savagery. How right events had proved this instinctive feeling.
Mrs. Pett was not vulgar enough to describe the feeling, even to herself,
as a hunch, but a hunch it had been; and, like every one whose hunches
have proved correct, she was conscious in the midst of her grief of a
certain complacency. It seemed to her that hers must be an intelligence
and insight above the ordinary.</p>
<p>The peace of the early afternoon settled upon the drawing-room. Mrs. Pett
had taken up a book; Ogden, on the settee, breathed stentorously. Faint
snores proceeded from the basket in the corner where Aida, the Pomeranian,
lay curled in refreshing sleep. Through the open window floated sounds of
warmth and Summer.</p>
<p>Yielding to the drowsy calm, Mrs. Pett was just nodding into a pleasant
nap, when the door opened and Lord Wisbeach came in.</p>
<p>Lord Wisbeach had been doing some rapid thinking. Rapid thought is one of
the essentials in the composition of men who are known as Gentleman Jack
to the boys and whose livelihood is won only by a series of arduous
struggles against the forces of Society and the machinations of Potter and
his gang. Condensed into capsule form, his lordship's meditations during
the minutes after he had left Jimmy in the dining-room amounted to the
realisation that the best mode of defence is attack. It is your man who
knows how to play the bold game on occasion who wins. A duller schemer
than Lord Wisbeach might have been content to be inactive after such a
conversation as had just taken place between himself and Jimmy. His
lordship, giving the matter the concentrated attention of his trained
mind, had hit on a better plan, and he had come to the drawing-room now to
put it into effect.</p>
<p>His entrance shattered the peaceful atmosphere. Aida, who had been
gurgling apoplectically, sprang snarling from the basket, and made for the
intruder open-mouthed. Her shrill barking rang through the room.</p>
<p>Lord Wisbeach hated little dogs. He hated and feared them. Many men of
action have these idiosyncrasies. He got behind a chair and said "There,
there." Aida, whose outburst was mere sound and fury and who had no
intention whatever of coming to blows, continued the demonstration from a
safe distance, till Mrs. Pett, swooping down, picked her up and held her
in her lap, where she consented to remain, growling subdued defiance. Lord
Wisbeach came out from behind his chair and sat down warily.</p>
<p>"Can I have a word with you, Mrs. Pett?"</p>
<p>"Certainly, Lord Wisbeach."</p>
<p>His lordship looked meaningly at Ogden.</p>
<p>"In private, you know."</p>
<p>He then looked meaningly at Mrs. Pett.</p>
<p>"Ogden darling," said Mrs. Pett, "I think you had better go to your room
and undress and get into bed. A little nice sleep might do you all the
good in the world."</p>
<p>With surprising docility, the boy rose.</p>
<p>"All right," he said.</p>
<p>"Poor Oggie is not at all well to-day," said Mrs. Pett, when he was gone.
"He is very subject to these attacks. What do you want to tell me, Lord
Wisbeach?"</p>
<p>His lordship drew his chair a little closer.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Pett, you remember what I told you yesterday?"</p>
<p>"Of course."</p>
<p>"Might I ask what you know of this man who has come here calling himself
Jimmy Crocker?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Pett started. She remembered that she had used almost that very
expression to Ann. Her suspicions, which had been lulled by the prompt
recognition of the visitor by Skinner and Lord Wisbeach, returned. It is
one of the effects of a successful hunch that it breeds other hunches. She
had been right about Jerry Mitchell; was she to be proved right about the
self-styled Jimmy Crocker?</p>
<p>"You have seen your nephew, I believe?"</p>
<p>"Never. But—"</p>
<p>"That man," said Lord Wisbeach impassively, "is not your nephew."</p>
<p>Mrs. Pett thrilled all down her spine. She had been right.</p>
<p>"But you—"</p>
<p>"But I pretended to recognise him? Just so. For a purpose. I wanted to
make him think that I suspected nothing."</p>
<p>"Then you think—?"</p>
<p>"Remember what I said to you yesterday."</p>
<p>"But Skinner—the butler—recognised him?"</p>
<p>"Exactly. It goes to prove that what I said about Skinner was correct.
They are working together. The thing is self-evident. Look at it from your
point of view. How simple it is. This man pretends to an intimate
acquaintance with Skinner. You take that as evidence of Skinner's honesty.
Skinner recognises this man. You take that as proof that this man is
really your nephew. The fact that Skinner recognised as Jimmy Crocker a
man who is not Jimmy Crocker condemns him."</p>
<p>"But why did you—?"</p>
<p>"I told you that I pretended to accept this man as the real Jimmy Crocker
for a purpose. At present there is nothing that you can do. Mere
impersonation is not a crime. If I had exposed him when we met, you would
have gained nothing beyond driving him from the house. Whereas, if we
wait, if we pretend to suspect nothing, we shall undoubtedly catch him
red-handed in an attempt on your nephew's invention."</p>
<p>"You are sure that that is why he has come?"</p>
<p>"What other reason could he have?"</p>
<p>"I thought he might be trying to kidnap Ogden."</p>
<p>Lord Wisbeach frowned thoughtfully. He had not taken this consideration
into account.</p>
<p>"It is possible," he said. "There have been several attempts made, have
there not, to kidnap your son?"</p>
<p>"At one time," said Mrs. Pett proudly, "there was not a child in America
who had to be more closely guarded. Why, the kidnappers had a special
nick-name for Oggie. They called him the Little Nugget."</p>
<p>"Of course, then, it is quite possible that that may be the man's object.
In any case, our course must be the same. We must watch every move he
makes." He paused. "I could help—pardon my suggesting it—I
could help a great deal more if you were to invite me to live in the
house. You were kind enough to ask me to visit you in the country, but it
will be two weeks before you go to the Country, and in those two weeks—"</p>
<p>"You must come here at once, Lord Wisbeach. To-night. To-day."</p>
<p>"I think that would be the best plan."</p>
<p>"I cannot tell you how grateful I am for all you are doing."</p>
<p>"You have been so kind to me, Mrs. Pett," said Lord Wisbeach with feeling,
"that it is surely only right that I should try to make some return. Let
us leave it at this then. I will come here to-night and will make it my
business to watch these two men. I will go and pack my things and have
them sent here."</p>
<p>"It is wonderful of you, Lord Wisbeach."</p>
<p>"Not at all," replied his lordship. "It will be a pleasure."</p>
<p>He held out his hand, drawing it back rapidly as the dog Aida made a snap
at it. Substituting a long-range leave-taking for the more intimate
farewell, he left the room.</p>
<p>When he had gone, Mrs. Pett remained for some minutes, thinking. She was
aflame with excitement. She had a sensational mind, and it had absorbed
Lord Wisbeach's revelations eagerly. Her admiration for his lordship was
intense, and she trusted him utterly. The only doubt that occurred to her
was whether, with the best intentions in the world, he would be able
unassisted to foil a pair of schemers so distant from each other
geographically as the man who called himself Jimmy Crocker and the man who
had called himself Skinner. That was a point on which they had not
touched, the fact that one impostor was above stairs, the other below. It
seemed to Mrs. Pett impossible that Lord Wisbeach, for all his zeal, could
watch Skinner without neglecting Jimmy or foil Jimmy without taking his
attention off Skinner. It was manifestly a situation that called for
allies. She felt that she must have further assistance.</p>
<p>To Mrs. Pett, doubtless owing to her hobby of writing sensational fiction,
there was a magic in the word detective which was shared by no other word
in the language. She loved detectives—their keen eyes, their quiet
smiles, their Derby hats. When they came on the stage, she leaned forward
in her orchestra chair; when they entered her own stories, she always
wrote with a greater zest. It is not too much to say that she had an
almost spiritual attachment for detectives, and the idea of neglecting to
employ one in real life, now that circumstances had combined to render his
advent so necessary, struck her as both rash and inartistic. In the old
days, when Ogden had been kidnapped, the only thing which had brought her
balm had been the daily interviews with the detectives. She ached to
telephone for one now.</p>
<p>The only consideration that kept her back was a regard for Lord Wisbeach's
feelings. He had been so kind and so shrewd that to suggest reinforcing
him with outside assistance must infallibly wound him deeply. And yet the
situation demanded the services of a trained specialist. Lord Wisbeach had
borne himself during their recent conversation in such a manner as to
leave no doubt that he considered himself adequate to deal with the matter
single-handed: but admirable though he was he was not a professional
exponent of the art of espionage. He needed to be helped in spite of
himself.</p>
<p>A happy solution struck Mrs. Pett. There was no need to tell him. She
could combine the installation of a detective with the nicest respect for
her ally's feelings by the simple process of engaging one without telling
Lord Wisbeach anything about it.</p>
<p>The telephone stood at her elbow, concealed—at the express request
of the interior decorator who had designed the room—in the interior
of what looked to the casual eye like a stuffed owl. On a table near at
hand, handsomely bound in morocco to resemble a complete works of
Shakespeare, was the telephone book. Mrs. Pett hesitated no longer. She
had forgotten the address of the detective agency which she had employed
on the occasion of the kidnapping of Ogden, but she remembered the name,
and also the name of the delightfully sympathetic manager or proprietor or
whatever he was who had listened to her troubles then.</p>
<p>She unhooked the receiver, and gave a number.</p>
<p>"I want to speak to Mr. Sturgis," she said.</p>
<p>"Oh, Mr. Sturgis," said Mrs. Pett. "I wonder if you could possibly run up
here—yes, now. This is Mrs. Peter Pett speaking. You remember we met
some years ago when I was Mrs. Ford. Yes, the mother of Ogden Ford. I want
to consult—You will come up at once? Thank you so much. Good-bye."</p>
<p>Mrs. Pett hung up the receiver.</p>
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