<h2><SPAN name="chap27"></SPAN>CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN<br/> MR. ELPHICK’S CHAMBERS</h2>
<p>Spargo went round again to the Temple that night at nine o’clock, asking
himself over and over again two questions—the first, how much does
Elphick know? the second, how much shall I tell him?</p>
<p>The old house in the Temple to which he repaired and in which many a generation
of old fogies had lived since the days of Queen Anne, was full of stairs and
passages, and as Spargo had forgotten to get the exact number of the set of
chambers he wanted, he was obliged to wander about in what was a deserted
building. So wandering, he suddenly heard steps, firm, decisive steps coming up
a staircase which he himself had just climbed. He looked over the banisters
down into the hollow beneath. And there, marching up resolutely, was the figure
of a tall, veiled woman, and Spargo suddenly realized, with a sharp quickening
of his pulses, that for the second time that day he was beneath one roof with
Miss Baylis.</p>
<p>Spargo’s mind acted quickly. Knowing what he now knew, from his
extraordinary dealings with Mother Gutch, he had no doubt whatever that Miss
Baylis had come to see Mr. Elphick—come, of course, to tell Mr. Elphick
that he, Spargo, had visited her that morning, and that he was on the track of
the Maitland secret history. He had never thought of it before, for he had been
busily engaged since the departure of Mother Gutch; but, naturally, Miss Baylis
and Mr. Elphick would keep in communication with each other. At any rate, here
she was, and her destination was, surely, Elphick’s chambers. And the
question for him, Spargo, was—what to do?</p>
<p>What Spargo did was to remain in absolute silence, motionless, tense, where he
was on the stair, and to trust to the chance that the woman did not look up.
But Miss Baylis neither looked up nor down: she reached a landing, turned along
a corridor with decision, and marched forward. A moment later Spargo heard a
sharp double knock on a door: a moment after that he heard a door heavily shut;
he knew then that Miss Baylis had sought and gained admittance—somewhere.</p>
<p>To find out precisely where that somewhere was drew Spargo down to the landing
which Miss Baylis had just left. There was no one about—he had not, in
fact, seen a soul since he entered the building. Accordingly he went along the
corridor into which he had seen Miss Baylis turn. He knew that all the doors in
that house were double ones, and that the outer oak in each was solid and
substantial enough to be sound proof. Yet, as men will under such
circumstances, he walked softly; he said to himself, smiling at the thought,
that he would be sure to start if somebody suddenly opened a door on him. But
no hand opened any door, and at last he came to the end of the corridor and
found himself confronting a small board on which was painted in white letters
on a black ground, Mr. Elphick’s Chambers.</p>
<p>Having satisfied himself as to his exact whereabouts, Spargo drew back as
quietly as he had come. There was a window half-way along the corridor from
which, he had noticed as he came along, one could catch a glimpse of the
Embankment and the Thames; to this he withdrew, and leaning on the sill looked
out and considered matters. Should he go and—if he could gain
admittance—beard these two conspirators? Should he wait until the woman
came out and let her see that he was on the track? Should he hide again until
she went, and then see Elphick alone?</p>
<p>In the end Spargo did none of these things immediately. He let things slide for
the moment. He lighted a cigarette and stared at the river and the brown sails,
and the buildings across on the Surrey side. Ten minutes went by—twenty
minutes—nothing happened. Then, as half-past nine struck from all the
neighbouring clocks, Spargo flung away a second cigarette, marched straight
down the corridor and knocked boldly at Mr. Elphick’s door.</p>
<p>Greatly to Spargo’s surprise, the door was opened before there was any
necessity to knock again. And there, calmly confronting him, a benevolent, yet
somewhat deprecating expression on his spectacled and placid face, stood Mr.
Elphick, a smoking cap on his head, a tasseled smoking jacket over his dress
shirt, and a short pipe in his hand.</p>
<p>Spargo was taken aback: Mr. Elphick apparently was not. He held the door well
open, and motioned the journalist to enter.</p>
<p>“Come in, Mr. Spargo,” he said. “I was expecting you. Walk
forward into my sitting-room.”</p>
<p>Spargo, much astonished at this reception, passed through an ante-room into a
handsomely furnished apartment full of books and pictures. In spite of the fact
that it was still very little past midsummer there was a cheery fire in the
grate, and on a table set near a roomy arm-chair was set such creature comforts
as a spirit-case, a syphon, a tumbler, and a novel—from which things
Spargo argued that Mr. Elphick had been taking his ease since his dinner. But
in another armchair on the opposite side of the hearth was the forbidding
figure of Miss Baylis, blacker, gloomier, more mysterious than ever. She
neither spoke nor moved when Spargo entered: she did not even look at him. And
Spargo stood staring at her until Mr. Elphick, having closed his doors, touched
him on the elbow, and motioned him courteously to a seat.</p>
<p>“Yes, I was expecting you, Mr. Spargo,” he said, as he resumed his
own chair. “I have been expecting you at any time, ever since you took up
your investigation of the Marbury affair, in some of the earlier stages of
which you saw me, you will remember, at the mortuary. But since Miss Baylis
told me, twenty minutes ago, that you had been to her this morning I felt sure
that it would not be more than a few hours before you would come to me.”</p>
<p>“Why, Mr. Elphick, should you suppose that I should come to you at
all?” asked Spargo, now in full possession of his wits.</p>
<p>“Because I felt sure that you would leave no stone unturned, no corner
unexplored,” replied Mr. Elphick. “The curiosity of the modern
pressman is insatiable.”</p>
<p>Spargo stiffened.</p>
<p>“I have no curiosity, Mr. Elphick,” he said. “I am charged by
my paper to investigate the circumstances of the death of the man who was found
in Middle Temple Lane, and, if possible, to track his murderer,
and——”</p>
<p>Mr. Elphick laughed slightly and waved his hand.</p>
<p>“My good young gentleman!” he said. “You exaggerate your own
importance. I don’t approve of modern journalism nor of its methods. In
your own case you have got hold of some absurd notion that the man John Marbury
was in reality one John Maitland, once of Market Milcaster, and you have been
trying to frighten Miss Baylis here into——”</p>
<p>Spargo suddenly rose from his chair. There was a certain temper in him which,
when once roused, led him to straight hitting, and it was roused now. He looked
the old barrister full in the face.</p>
<p>“Mr. Elphick,” he said, “you are evidently unaware of all
that I know. So I will tell you what I will do. I will go back to my office,
and I will write down what I do know, and give the true and absolute proofs of
what I know, and, if you will trouble yourself to read the <i>Watchman</i>
tomorrow morning, then you, too, will know.”</p>
<p>“Dear me—dear me!” said Mr. Elphick, banteringly. “We
are so used to ultra-sensational stories from the <i>Watchman</i>
that—but I am a curious and inquisitive old man, my good young sir, so
perhaps you will tell me in a word what it is you do know, eh?”</p>
<p>Spargo reflected for a second. Then he bent forward across the table and looked
the old barrister straight in the face.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said quietly. “I will tell you what I know beyond
doubt. I know that the man murdered under the name of John Marbury was, without
doubt, John Maitland, of Market Milcaster, and that Ronald Breton is his son,
whom you took from that woman!”</p>
<p>If Spargo had desired a complete revenge for the cavalier fashion in which Mr.
Elphick had treated it he could not have been afforded a more ample one than
that offered to him by the old barrister’s reception of this news. Mr.
Elphick’s face not only fell, but changed; his expression of almost
sneering contempt was transformed to one clearly resembling abject terror; he
dropped his pipe, fell back in his chair, recovered himself, gripped the
chair’s arms, and stared at Spargo as if the young man had suddenly
announced to him that in another minute he must be led to instant execution.
And Spargo, quick to see his advantage, followed it up.</p>
<p>“That is what I know, Mr. Elphick, and if I choose, all the world shall
know it tomorrow morning!” he said firmly. “Ronald Breton is the
son of the murdered man, and Ronald Breton is engaged to be married to the
daughter of the man charged with the murder. Do you hear that? It is not matter
of suspicion, or of idea, or of conjecture, it is fact—fact!”</p>
<p>Mr. Elphick slowly turned his face to Miss Baylis. He gasped out a few words.</p>
<p>“You—did—not—tell—me—this!”</p>
<p>Then Spargo, turning to the woman, saw that she, too, was white to the lips and
as frightened as the man.</p>
<p>“I—didn’t know!” she muttered. “He didn’t
tell me. He only told me this morning what—what I’ve told
you.”</p>
<p>Spargo picked up his hat.</p>
<p>“Good-night, Mr. Elphick,” he said.</p>
<p>But before he could reach the door the old barrister had leapt from his chair
and seized him with trembling hands. Spargo turned and looked at him. He knew
then that for some reason or other he had given Mr. Septimus Elphick a
thoroughly bad fright.</p>
<p>“Well?” he growled.</p>
<p>“My dear young gentleman!” implored Mr. Elphick. “Don’t
go! I’ll—I’ll do anything for you if you won’t go away
to print that. I’ll—I’ll give you a thousand pounds!”</p>
<p>Spargo shook him off.</p>
<p>“That’s enough!” he snarled. “Now, I am off! What,
you’d try to bribe me?”</p>
<p>Mr. Elphick wrung his hands.</p>
<p>“I didn’t mean that—indeed I didn’t!” he almost
wailed. “I—I don’t know what I meant. Stay, young gentleman,
stay a little, and let us—let us talk. Let me have a word with
you—as many words as you please. I implore you!”</p>
<p>Spargo made a fine pretence of hesitation.</p>
<p>“If I stay,” he said, at last, “it will only be on the strict
condition that you answer—and answer truly—whatever questions I
like to ask you. Otherwise——”</p>
<p>He made another move to the door, and again Mr. Elphick laid beseeching hands
on him.</p>
<p>“Stay!” he said. “I’ll answer anything you like!”</p>
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