<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="gap3"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<h3>"DEAR OLD DIG."</h3>
<p class="gap2"><span class="smcap">I told</span> Edwards nothing of Sir Digby's curious
request, of his strange confidences, or of the mysterious
letter to "E. P. K.", which now reposed
in a locked drawer in my writing-table.</p>
<p>My friend, be he impostor or not, had always
treated me strictly honourably and well. Therefore,
I did not intend to betray him, although he might
be a fugitive hunted by the police.</p>
<p>Yet was he a fugitive? Did not his words to
me and his marvellous disguise prior to the tragedy
imply an intention to disappear?</p>
<p>The enigma was indeed beyond solution.</p>
<p>At seven o'clock my visitor, finding necessity to
revisit Harrington Gardens, I eagerly accompanied
him.</p>
<p>There is a briskness and brightness in Piccadilly
at seven o'clock on a clear, cold, winter's night
unequalled in any thoroughfare in the world. On
the pavements and in the motor-buses are thousands
of London's workers hurrying to their homes in
western suburbs, mostly the female employees of
the hundreds of shops and work-rooms which supply
the world's fashions—for, after all, London has now<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></SPAN></span>
ousted Paris as the centre of the feminine mode—the
shops are still gaily lit, the club windows have not
yet drawn their blinds, and as motors and taxis
flash past eastward, one catches glimpses of pretty
women in gay evening gowns, accompanied by their
male escorts on pleasure bent: the restaurant,
the theatre, and the supper, until the unwelcome
cry—that cry which resounds at half-past twelve
from end to end of Greater London, "Time, please,
ladies and gentlemen. Time!"—the pharisaical
decree that further harmless merriment is forbidden.
How the foreigner laughs at our childish obedience
to the decree of the killjoys. And well he may,
especially when we know full well that while the
good people of the middle class are forced to return
to the dulness of their particular suburb, the people
of the class above them can sneak in by back doors
of unsuspected places, and indulge in drinking,
gambling, and dancing till daylight. Truly the
middle-class Londoner is a meek, obedient person.
One day, however, he may revolt.</p>
<p>Piccadilly was particularly bright and gay that
night, as, passing the end of St. James's Street, we
sped forward in the taxi towards Brompton Road
and past the Natural History Museum to Gloucester
Road.</p>
<p>On our arrival the door of the flat was opened by
a constable without a helmet. Recognising the
famous inspector, he saluted.</p>
<p>The body of the unknown girl had been removed
to the mortuary for a post-mortem examination,
but nothing else had been moved, and two officers
of the C.I.D. were busy making examination for
finger-prints.</p>
<p>I allowed them to take mine for comparison, but
some they found upon the mahogany table and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></SPAN></span>
upon the back of a chair were undoubtedly those of
the victim herself.</p>
<p>The small glass-topped specimen-table still lay
where it had been overturned, and the fragments of
the two green-glass flower-vases were strewn upon the
carpet with the drooping red anemones themselves.</p>
<p>Regarding the overturned table the two detectives
held that it had separated the assassin from his
victim; that the girl had been chased around it
several times before her assailant had thrown it
down, suddenly sprung upon her, and delivered the
fatal blow, full in her chest.</p>
<p>"We've thoroughly examined it for finger-prints,
sir," the elder of the two officers explained to my
companion. "Both on the glass top and on the
mahogany edge there are a number of prints of the
victim herself, as well as a number made by another
hand."</p>
<p>"A man's?" I asked.</p>
<p>"No; curiously enough, it seems to be a woman's,"
was the reply.</p>
<p>"A woman's!"</p>
<p>I thought of that sweet perfume, and of the person
who had lurked in the shadow of the stairs!</p>
<p>"That's interesting," remarked Edwards. "They
may be those of the woman who wore green combs
in her hair, or else of the porter's wife."</p>
<p>"The owner's man-servant is away abroad on
business for his master, we've found out," answered
the man addressed. "So of late the porter's wife,
who lives in the basement of the next house, has
been in the habit of coming in every day and tidying
up the room. We took her prints this morning,
and have found quite a lot about the place. No,"
added the man emphatically, "the finger-prints on
that little table yonder are not those of the porter's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></SPAN></span>
wife, but of another woman who's been here recently.
We only find them upon the door-handle and on the
edge of the writing-table, against which the woman
must have leaned. We'll have them photographed
to-morrow."</p>
<p>The men then showed us the marks in question—distinct
impressions of small finger-tips, which
they had rendered vivid and undeniable by the
application of a finely-powdered chalk of a pale
green colour.</p>
<p>Apparently the two experts had devoted the whole
day to the search for finger-print clues, and they
had established the fact that two women had been
there—the victim and another.</p>
<p>Who was she?</p>
<p>The investigation of the papers in my friend's
writing-table had not yet been made. Inspector
Edwards had telephoned earlier in the day, stating
that he would himself go through them.</p>
<p>Therefore, exercising every care not to obliterate
the three finger-marks upon the edge of the table, the
officers proceeded to break open drawer after
drawer and methodically examine the contents while
I looked on.</p>
<p>The work was exciting. At any moment we might
discover something which would throw light upon
the tragedy, the grim evidence of which remained
in that dark, still damp stain upon the carpet—the
life-blood of the unknown victim.</p>
<p>Already the face of the dead girl had been
photographed, and would, before morning, be
circulated everywhere in an endeavour to secure
identification.</p>
<p>I had learnt from Edwards that before noon that
morning, upon the notice-board outside Bow Street
Police Station, there had been posted one of those<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></SPAN></span>
pale, buff-coloured bills headed in great, bold
capitals: "Body found," in which the description
had been filled in by a clerkish hand, and at the
bottom a statement that the corpse was lying at the
Kensington Mortuary awaiting identification.</p>
<p>That she was a lady seemed established by her
dress, her well-kept hands, innocent of manual
labour, by the costly rings and bracelet she was
wearing, and the fact that, in the pocket of her
coat was found her purse containing eleven pounds
in gold and some silver.</p>
<p>Sir Digby's papers promised to be extremely
interesting, as we cleared the books off a side-table
and sat down to carefully investigate them.</p>
<p>The writing-table was a pedestal one, with a
centre drawer and four drawers on either side. The
first drawer burst open was the top one on the left,
and from it Edwards drew two bundles of letters,
each secured by faded pink tape.</p>
<p>These bundles he handed to me, saying—</p>
<p>"See what you think of these, Mr. Royle!"</p>
<p>One after another I opened them. They were all
in the same sprawly handwriting of a woman—a
woman who simply signed herself "Mittie."</p>
<p>They were love-letters written in the long ago,
many commencing "My darling," or "Dearest,"
and some with "Dear old Dig."</p>
<p>Though it seemed mean of me to peer into the
closed chapter of my friend's history, I quickly
found myself absorbed in them. They were the
passionate outpourings of a brave but overburdened
heart. Most of them were dated from hotels in
the South of England and in Ireland, and were
apparently written at the end of the eighties. But
as no envelopes had been preserved they gave no
clue to where the addressee had been at the time.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Nearly all were on foreign notepaper, so we agreed
that he must have been abroad.</p>
<p>As I read, it became apparent that the writer and
the addressee had been deeply in love with one
another, but the lady's parents had forbidden their
marriage; and as, alas! in so many like cases, she
had been induced to make an odious but wealthier
marriage. The man's name was Francis.</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"He is, alas! just the same," she wrote in one
letter dated "Mount Ephraim Hotel, at Tunbridge
Wells, Thursday": "We have nothing in common.
He only thinks of his dividends, his stocks and
shares, and his business in the City always. I am
simply an ornament of his life, a woman who acts
as his hostess and relieves him of much trouble in
social anxieties. If father had not owed him
seventeen thousand pounds he would, I feel certain,
never have allowed me to marry him. But I paid
my father's debt with my happiness, with my very
life. And you, dear old Dig, are the only person
who knows the secret of my broken heart. You will
be home in London seven weeks from to-day. I
will meet you at the old place at three o'clock on
the first of October, for I have much—so very much—to
tell you. Father knows now how I hate this
dull, impossible life of mine, and how dearly I love
your own kind self. I told him so to-day, and he
pities me. I hope you will get this letter before
you leave, but I shall watch the movements of your
ship, and I shall meet you on the first of October.
Till then adieu.—Ever your own <span class="smcap">Mittie</span>."</p>
</div>
<p>At the old place! Where was it, I wondered?
At what spot had the secret meeting been effected
between the man who had returned from abroad<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></SPAN></span>
and the woman who loved him so well, though she had
been forced to become the wife of another.</p>
<p>That meeting had taken place more than twenty
years ago. What had been its result was shown
in the next letter I opened.</p>
<p>Written from the Queen's Hotel at Hastings on
the fourth of October, the unfortunate "Mittie,"
who seemed to spend her life travelling on the
South Coast, penned the following in a thin, uncertain
hand:—</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"Our meeting was a mistake, Dig, a grave mistake.
We were watched by somebody in the employ of
Francis. When I returned to Tunbridge Wells he
taxed me with having met you, described our
trysting-place—the fountain—and how we had
walked and walked until, becoming too tired, we
had entered that quiet little restaurant to dine.
He has misjudged me horribly. The sneak who
watched us must have lied to him, or he would
never have spoken to me as he did—he would not
have insulted me. That night I left him, and am
here alone. Do not come near me, do not reply
to this. It might make matters worse. Though
we are parted, Dig, you know I love you and only
you—<i>you</i>! Still your own <span class="smcap">Mittie</span>."</p>
</div>
<p>I sat staring at that half-faded letter, taking no
heed of what Edwards was saying.</p>
<p>The fountain! They had met at the fountain,
and had been seen!</p>
<p>Could that spot be the same as mentioned in the
mysterious letter left behind by the fugitive Cane
after the sudden death of the Englishman away in
far-off Peru?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Did someone, after all the lapse of years, go there
on every twenty-third of the month at noon wearing
a yellow flower, to wait for a person who, alas!
never came?</p>
<p>The thought filled me with romance, even though
we were at that moment investigating a very remarkable
tragedy. Yet surely in no city in this
world is there so much romance, so much pathos,
such whole-hearted love and affection, or such
deep and deadly hatred as in our great palpitating
metropolis, where secret assassinations are of daily
occurrence, and where the most unpardonable sin
is that of being found out.</p>
<p>"What's that you've got hold of?" Edwards
asked me, as he crossed to the table and bent
over me.</p>
<p>I started.</p>
<p>Then, recovering myself—for I had no desire that
he should know—replied, quite coolly:</p>
<p>"Oh, only a few old letters—written long ago, in
the eighties."</p>
<p>"Ah! Ancient history, eh?"</p>
<p>"Yes," I replied, packing them together and retying
them with the soiled, pink tape. "But have
you discovered anything?"</p>
<p>"Well," he replied with a self-conscious smile,
"I've found a letter here which rather alters my
theory," and I saw that he held a piece of grey
notepaper in his hand. "Here is a note addressed
to him as long ago as 1900 in the name of Sir
Digby Kemsley! Perhaps, after all, the man
who died so mysteriously in Peru was an impostor,
and the owner of this place was the real
Sir Digby!"</p>
<p>"Exactly my own theory," I declared.</p>
<p>"But that fountain!" he remarked. "The foun<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></SPAN></span>tain
mentioned in the letter left behind by the man
Cane. We must take immediate steps to identify
it, and it must be watched on the twenty-third
for the coming of the woman who wears a yellow
flower. When we find her, we shall be able to
discover something very interesting, Mr. Royle.
Don't you agree?"</p>
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