<h2><SPAN name="#id10">CHAPTER IX--A Journalistic Mission</SPAN></h2>
<p>It is like stating that the world is round
to say that London is the best of
hiding-places. It is the best, because there
are many Londons, and one London knows
practically nothing about any of the other
Londons. When, therefore, Mercy Milton
disappeared from Northmuir House,
Belgrave Square, Joan Carthew promptly
appeared at her old camping-ground, the
boarding-house in Woburn Place.</p>
<p>Joan was no longer penniless, and as far
as Lord Northmuir was concerned, she was
easy in her mind. A man of his stamp was
unlikely to risk the much-prized "honour
of his name" to seek her with detectives;
while, unassisted, he would have to shrug his
weary old shoulders and resign himself to
loss and loneliness.</p>
<p>But ambition kindled restlessness. She
grudged wasting a moment when her fortune
had to be made, her permanent place in
life fixed. Besides, she was dissatisfied with
her adventure in the house of Lord Northmuir.
She had not come off badly, yet it
galled her to remember that in self-defence
she had been driven to confess her scheme
to its victim, and that--this expedient not
proving efficacious--she had eventually been
forced to run away like the coward she was
not. On the whole, she had to admit that
if Lord Northmuir had not in the end got
the better of her, he had come near to doing
so. The sharp taste of failure was in her
mouth, and the only way to be rid of it was
to get the better of somebody else--somebody
disagreeable, so that the sweets of
success might be unmixed with bitterness.</p>
<p>Existence as Lord Northmuir's adopted
relative had been deadly dull; existence as
his wife would have been worse; and the
remembrance of boredom was too vivid
still for Joan to regret what she had sacrificed.
Nevertheless, she realised that it had been a
sacrifice which she would not a little while
ago have believed herself fool enough, or
wise enough, to be capable of making. She
wanted her reward, and that reward must
mean new excitements, difficulties, and dangers.</p>
<p>"I should like to do something big on a
great London paper," she said to herself on
the first night of her return to Woburn
Place. "What fun to undertake a thrilling
journalistic mission, and succeed better than
any man! I wonder whether Mr. Mainbridge,
who was a reporter on <em class="italics">The Planet</em>,
is here still. He wasn't at dinner, but then
he used often to be away. I must ask in the
morning."</p>
<p>Joan went to sleep with this resolve in
her mind, and before breakfast she had
carried it out. Mr. Mainbridge was still one
of Miss Witt's boarders, and had often
inquired after Miss Carthew. He had come
in late last night, was now asleep, but would
be down to luncheon, and there was no
doubt that he would be delighted to see the
object of his solicitude.</p>
<p>All turned out as Miss Witt prophesied,
and Joan was even nicer to the reporter
than she had been before. He invited her
to dine that evening at an Italian restaurant,
and she consented. When they had come
to the sweets, Mr. Mainbridge could control
his pent-up feelings no longer, and was
about to propose when Joan stopped him.</p>
<p>"We are too poor to indulge in the luxury
of being in love," said she, with a sweet
frankness which took the sting from the
rebuff and dimly implied hope for the future.
"I shall not marry until I am earning as
much money as--as the man I love. I
could not be happy unless I were independent.
Oh, Mr. Mainbridge! if you do care
to please me, prove it by introducing me to
the editor of your paper! I want to ask
him for work."</p>
<p>The stricken young man felt his throat
suddenly dry. In his first acquaintance
with Joan he had boasted of his "influence"
with the powers that were upon that new
and phenomenally successful daily, <em class="italics">The Planet</em>.
As a matter of fact, the influence existed
in Mainbridge's dreams, and there only.
Sir Edmund Foster, the proprietor and
editor, hardly knew him by sight, and
probably would not recognise him out of Fleet
Street. To ask such a favour as an
introduction for a strange young girl, however
attractive, was almost as much as the poor
fellow's place was worth, but he could not
bear to refuse Joan.</p>
<p>"Tell Sir Edmund that I have information,
important to the paper, for his private ear,"
added the girl, reading her admirer's mind
as if it had been a book.</p>
<p>"But--but if--er--you haven't really
anything which he----" stammered Mainbridge.</p>
<p>"Oh, I have! I guarantee he shall be
satisfied with me and not angry with you.
Only I must see him alone. Tell him I come
from"--Joan hesitated for an instant, but
only for an instant--"from the Earl of
Northmuir."</p>
<p>Mainbridge was impressed by the name
and her air of self-confidence. Encouraged,
he promised to use every effort to bring
about the introduction, if possible the very
next day. If he succeeded, he would
telegraph Joan the time of the appointment,
which would certainly not be earlier than
three in the afternoon, as Sir Edmund never
appeared at the office until that hour.</p>
<p>"Then I won't stop for the telegram and
give him a chance to change his mind before
I can drive from Woburn Place to Fleet
Street," said Joan. "I will be at the office
at three in the afternoon, and wait until
something is settled, if I have to wait till
three in the morning."</p>
<p>The next day, after luncheon, Joan chose
her costume with extreme care, as she
invariably did when it was necessary to arm
herself for conquest. Radiant in pale blue
cloth edged with sable, she presented herself
at the offices of <em class="italics">The Planet</em>. There was a
waiting-room at the end of a long corridor,
and there she was bidden to sit; but
instead of remaining behind a closed door,
as soon as her guide was out of sight she
began walking up and down near the
stairway where Sir Edmund Foster must sooner or
later pass. She had never seen the famous
man, but she remembered his photograph
in one of the illustrated papers.</p>
<p>Presently a tall, smooth-shaven, sallow
man, with eagle features and bags under his
keen eyes, came rapidly along the corridor,
accompanied by a much younger, less
impressive man, who might have been a secretary.
Joan advanced, pretending to be absorbed
in thought, then stood aside with a start of
shy surprise and a look nicely calculated
to express reverence of greatness. Sir
Edmund Foster glanced at the apparition
and let his eyes linger for a few seconds as
his companion rang the bell of the lift, close
to the wide stone stairway.</p>
<p>"When he hears that there is a young
woman waiting to see him, he will remember
me, and the recollection may influence his
decision," thought Joan, who did not
under-value her beauty as an asset.</p>
<p>Perhaps it fell out as she hoped (things
often did), for she had not read more than
three or four back numbers of <em class="italics">The Planet</em>,
which lay on the waiting-room table, when
Ralph Mainbridge, flushed and almost
tremulous with excitement, came to say that Sir
Edmund had consented to see her at once.</p>
<p>Without seeming as much overpowered as
he expected, the girl prepared to enter the
presence of greatness. But she was not in
reality as calm as she appeared. The
thunderous whirr of the printing-machines had
almost bereft her of the capacity for thought,
just at the moment when she wished to think
clearly. Her nerves were twanging like the
strings of a violin which is out of tune, and
it was an intense relief to be shot up in the
alarmingly rapid lift to a quieter region.
The rumbling roar was deadened on Sir
Edmund's floor, and as the door of his private
office closed on her, it was shut out altogether.</p>
<p>"Miss Carthew, from Lord Northmuir,"
the famous editor-proprietor said. "I believe
you have some interesting information for
me." He smiled with a certain dry benignity,
for Joan was very pretty, and he was,
after all, a man. "I think I saw you downstairs."</p>
<p>"I saw you, Sir Edmund." Joan's manner
was dignified now, rather than shy. "I
trust you will not be angry, but within
the last two hours everything has changed
for me. Lord Northmuir, whom I know
well through my cousin, Miss Mercy Milton,
his ward (you may have heard of her; we
are said to resemble each other), has now
changed his mind about allowing the piece
of information I meant for you to be
published. He has forbidden his name to be
used, but it was too late to stop that. I can
only beg, for my cousin Miss Milton's sake
more than my own, that you will not let the
fact come to his ears; if it should, she will
suffer."</p>
<p>"You need not fear that," Sir Edmund
reassured her; "but if you have no
information to give me, Miss--er----"</p>
<p>"I had to come and explain why I hadn't,"
Joan cut in. "I hope you won't blame poor
Mr. Mainbridge for putting you to this
trouble. It isn't his fault, and he doesn't
even know."</p>
<p>"Who is Mr. Mainbridge? Oh, ah! yes,
of course. Pray don't regard it as a trouble.
Quite the contrary. But unfortunately, I----"</p>
<p>"You would say you are a very busy man,"
Joan threw into the editor's suggestive
pause. "I won't take up much more of your
time. But I want to say that, although I
have nothing of value, as I hoped, to tell, I
shall have later, if you will consent to engage
me on your staff."</p>
<p>Sir Edmund laughed. He evidently
considered Joan a spoiled darling of Society
with a new whim. "My dear young lady!"
he exclaimed, "in what capacity, pray?
We do not devote space to fashions, even in
a Saturday edition. Would you come to us
as a reporter, like your friend Mr. Mainbridge?"</p>
<p>"As a special reporter," amended Joan.
"I would undertake any mission of importance----"</p>
<p>"There are none going begging on <em class="italics">The
Planet</em>. But" (this soothingly by way of
sugaring a dismissal) "you have only to
get hold of something good and bring it to
me. For instance, some nice, spicy little item
as to the truth of the rumoured alliance
between Russia and Japan. We would pay you
quite well for that, you know, provided you
gave it to us in time to publish ahead of any
other paper."</p>
<p>"How much would you pay me?" asked
Joan, nettled at this chaffing tone of the
famous man.</p>
<p>"Enough to buy a new frock and perhaps
a few hairpins; say a hundred pounds."</p>
<p>"That isn't enough," said Joan; "I
should want a thousand."</p>
<p>Sir Edmund turned a sudden, keen gaze
upon the girl; then his face relaxed. "We
might rise to that. At all events, I'm safe
in promising it."</p>
<p>"It <em class="italics">is</em> a promise, then?"</p>
<p>"Oh, certainly."</p>
<p>"Thank you. Let me see if I understand
clearly. I'm not quite the baby you think,
Sir Edmund. I read the papers--yours
especially--and take, I trust, an intelligent
interest in the political situation. Now, the
latest rumour is that Russia is secretly
planning an understanding with Japan and
China. What you would like to know is
whether there is truth in the rumour, and
what, in that event, England would do."</p>
<p>"Exactly. That is what all the papers
are dying to find out."</p>
<p>"If you could get the official news before
any of them, you would give the person who
obtained it for you a thousand pounds.
If, in addition, they, or one of them--let us
say <em class="italics">The Daily Beacon</em>--got the <em class="italics">wrong</em> news
on the same day, you would no doubt add
five hundred to the original thousand; for
revenge is sweet, even to an editor, I suppose,
and <em class="italics">The Beacon</em> has, I have heard, contrived
to be first in the field on one or two important
occasions within the last few years."</p>
<p>This allusion was a pin-prick in a sensitive
place, for Joan was aware that <em class="italics">The Daily
Beacon</em> and <em class="italics">The Planet</em> were deadly rivals
as well as political opponents. Mainbridge
had told her the tale of <em class="italics">The Planet's</em>
humiliation by the enemy, and she had not forgotten.
<em class="italics">The Beacon</em> had been able, at the very time
when <em class="italics">The Planet</em> was arguing against their
probability, to assert that certain political
events would take place, and in time these
statements had been justified, to the
discomfiture of <em class="italics">The Planet</em>.</p>
<p>Sir Edmund frowned slightly. "<em class="italics">The
Daily Beacon</em> possesses exceptional advantages,"
he sneered. "It is difficult for less
favoured journals to compete with it for
political information."</p>
<p>"I believe I can guess what you refer to,"
answered Joan. "I hear things, you know,
from my cousin, Miss Milton." (This to
shield Mainbridge.) "Lord Henry Borrowdaile,
an Under Secretary of State, is a
distant relative of Mr. Portheous, the
proprietor of <em class="italics">The Daily Beacon</em>, and it is said
that there has been a curious leakage of
diplomatic secrets, once or twice, by which
<em class="italics">The Beacon</em> profited."</p>
<p>"You are a well-informed young lady."</p>
<p>"I hope to earn your cheque as well as
your compliment," said Joan. "Perhaps
you will write it before many days have passed."</p>
<p>"It must be before many days, if at all."</p>
<p>"I understand that time presses, if you
are to be first in the field, for the great secret
can't be kept from the public for more than
a week or ten days at most. But look
here, Sir Edmund, would you go that extra
five hundred if, on the day that your paper
published the truth about the situation,
<em class="italics">The Beacon</em> made a fool of itself by printing
exactly the opposite?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said the editor, "I would."</p>
<p>"Well, we shall see what we shall see,"
returned Joan. She then took leave of Sir
Edmund, who was certainly not in a mood
to blame Mainbridge for an introduction
under false pretences, even if he were far
from sure that charming Miss Carthew could
accomplish miracles.</p>
<p>As for Joan, her head was in a whirl.
She wanted to do this thing more than she
had ever wanted anything in her life, though
it had not entered her head a few moments
ago. She would not despise fifteen hundred
pounds; but it was not of the money she
was dreaming as she told her cabman to
drive to Battersea Park, and keep on driving
till ordered to stop. The strange girl could
always collect and concentrate her thoughts
while driving, and this was her object now.</p>
<p>Joan had never met Lord Henry Borrowdaile,
but during her year at Northmuir
House she had known people who were
friends or enemies of the young man and
his wife. She had her own reason for
listening with interest to intimate talk about the
character and private affairs of persons who
were important figures in the world, for at
any time she might wish to use knowledge
thus gained. She did not believe, from what
she had heard, that Lord Henry Borrowdaile,
son of the Marquis of Wastwater, was
a man to betray State secrets for money.
He was "bookish" and literary, and though
he was not rich, neither did he covet riches.
But he did adore his beautiful young wife,
and was said by those who knew him to be
as wax in her hands. She was popular, as
well as pretty; was vain of being the leader
of a very gay set, and dressed as if her
reputation depended upon being the best-gowned
woman in London. Because Lady Henry
posed as an <em class="italics">ingénue</em>, who scarcely knew
politics from polo, Joan suspected her. "It
is she who worms out secrets from her husband
and sells them to Portheous," Joan said
to herself. "Oh! to be a fly on the wall
in the Borrowdailes' house for the next week!"</p>
<p>This wish was so vivid, that like a
lightning flash it seemed to illumine the dim
corners of the girl's brain. She suddenly
recalled another story of the inestimable
Mainbridge's, told in connection with the
rivalry of <em class="italics">The Daily Beacon</em> and <em class="italics">The Planet</em>.</p>
<p>"An eminent statesman's servant told the
secret of his master's intended resignation,"
she said to herself. "Why shouldn't a
servant at the Borrowdailes'----"</p>
<p>She did not finish out the thought at the
moment; the vista it opened was too wide
to be taken in at a glance. But after driving
for an hour round and round Battersea
Park, the patient cabman suddenly received
an order to go quickly to Clarkson's, the
wigmaker. At the shop, the hansom was
discharged, and it was a very different-looking
fare which another cab picked up at
the same door somewhat later.</p>
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