Classic Audiobook Collection - The Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume ~ Full Audiobook [mystery]
Episode Date: October 9, 2023The Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume audiobook. Genre: mystery In fogbound Bloomsbury, Madame Jersey runs a shabby-genteel boarding house in Amelia Square, a refuge for the respectable and the ruined alik...e. Her weekly Friday 'At Home' gathers a gallery of odd lodgers and faded acquaintances, until a newcomer arrives: Leonard Train, a self-styled novelist hunting 'Old-World types' for his next book. When Train's friend George Brendon drops in, he wears a rare sprig of yellow holly in his coat, and the landlady's sudden, terrified reaction hints at a past no one in the house truly knows. Hours later, Mrs. Jersey is found murdered, and the quiet square becomes a hive of suspicion, gossip, and concealed motives. As officials begin to pry, Train cannot resist investigating on his own, especially when the yellow holly resurfaces as a clue linking the crime to secrets beyond the boarding house walls. Brendon, already troubled by doubts about his identity and his hopes of marrying Dorothy Ward, finds himself pulled deeper into a web of inheritance claims, missing facts, and a powerful woman who seems determined to manage the story. Victorian manners may rule the drawing room, but in the shadows, someone is fighting to keep the past buried. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:29:11) Chapter 02 (00:53:34) Chapter 03 (01:20:52) Chapter 04 (01:47:26) Chapter 05 (02:14:23) Chapter 06 (02:41:18) Chapter 07 (03:08:00) Chapter 08 (03:36:15) Chapter 09 (04:02:00) Chapter 10 (04:28:25) Chapter 11 (04:57:19) Chapter 12 (05:23:48) Chapter 13 (05:51:42) Chapter 14 (06:17:38) Chapter 15 (06:45:18) Chapter 16 (07:06:26) Chapter 17 (07:30:12) Chapter 18 (07:55:05) Chapter 19 (08:17:52) Chapter 20 (08:45:27) Chapter 21 (09:12:51) Chapter 22 (09:33:10) Chapter 23 (09:56:51) Chapter 24 (10:16:39) Chapter 25 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume
1. Mrs. Jersey receives
She did not put the sacramental phrase on her cards as no invitations were sent out.
These were delivered verbally by boarders desirous of seeing their friends present on Friday evening.
Mrs. Jersey dignified her gatherings with the name of At Homes, but in truth the term was too majestic for the very mild entertainment she provided weekly.
It was really a scratch party.
of nobody's, and they assembled as usual in the drawing-room on this especial evening to play
and not to work. Mrs. Tane laid aside her eternal knitting. Miss Bull dispensed with her game of
patience. Mr. Granger sang his one song of the early Victorian epoch, sometimes twice when
singers were scarce, and Mr. Harmer wore his antiquated dress suit. On these festive occasions it
was tacitly understood that all were to be more or less dressy, as Mrs. Jersey put it, and
and her appearance in the diamonds signalled the need of unusual adornment.
These jewels were the smallest and most inferior of stones,
but diamonds they undeniably were,
and the borders alluded to them as they would have done to the Coenor.
In her black silk gown, her lace cap, and the diamonds,
Mrs. Jersey looked, so they assured her, quite the lady.
Was she a lady?
No one ever asked that leading question,
as it would have provoked an unamborsey.
truth are a most unpleasant reply.
She admitted in expansive moments to have seen better days, but what her actual past had been,
and from her looks she had one, none ever discovered.
The usual story produced by an extra-glass of negas varied so greatly in the telling that
the most innocent border doubted.
But Mrs. Jersey was always treated with respect, and the boarders called her,
Madame in quite a French way.
Why they should do so no one ever knew.
and Mrs. Jersey herself could not have explained.
But the term had become traditional,
and in that conservative mansion tradition was all powerful.
Few friends presented themselves on this particular Friday evening,
for it was extremely foggy, and none of them could afford cabs.
Even those who patronized the nearest bus line
had some distance to walk before they knocked at the Jersey door,
and thus ran a chance of losing their way.
Either in light or darkness the house was hard to find,
for it occupied the corner of a particularly private square,
far removed from the Oxford Street traffic.
As a kind of haven or backwater,
it received into its peace those who found the current of the river of life
running too strong.
Decayed ladies, disappointed spinsters,
superannuated clerks, retired army officers,
bankrupt dreamers.
These were the derelicks which had drifted hither.
Mrs. Jersey called these social and commercial failures,
paying guests, which flattered their pride and cost nothing.
She was something of a humbug and always ready with the small change of politeness.
It was quite an asylum for old age. None of the guests were under fifty,
save a newcomer who had arrived to the previous week, and they wondered why he came amongst them.
He was young, though plain-looking. He was fashionably dressed, though stout,
and he chatted a West End jargon, curiously flippant, when contrasted with.
their prim conversation.
This was the first time he had been present at Madame's reception,
and he was explaining his reasons for coming to Bloomsbury.
Mrs. Jersey introduced him as Leonard Train,
the distinguished novelist,
although he had published only one book at his own cost,
and even that production was unknown to the borders.
They read Thackeray and his contemporaries,
and manifested a proper scorn for the up-to-date novelist
in his analytical methods.
Mr. Train, with a complacency which showed that he entertained the highest opinion of his own powers,
stood on the hearth rug, and delivered himself of his errand to Bloomsbury.
Fashionable novelists, said he in a still small voice,
which contrasted curiously with his massive proportions,
have overdone the business of society and epigrams.
We must revert to the Dickens style.
I have therefore taken up my residence here for a brief period.
to study old-world types.
Here he looked round with a beaming smile.
I am glad to find so rich a field to glean.
This doubtful compliment provoked weak smiles.
The boarders did not wish to be rude,
but they felt it was impossible to approve of the young man.
Not being sufficiently modern to court notoriety,
one and all disliked the idea of being put in a book.
Mrs. Tane, conscious of her weak grammar,
looked uneasily at Miss Bull,
who smiled grimly and then glared at train granger drew himself up and pulled his gray mustache he was the buck of the establishment and armor nodded saying well well his usual remark when he did not understand what was going on
only madame spoke train had taken a sitting-room as well as a bedroom therefore he must be rich and as he had not haggled over terms it was necessary that he should be flattered mrs jersey
saw a chance of making money out of him.
How delightful, she said in her motherly manner.
I hope you will say nice things about us, Mr. Train.
I shall tell the truth, madame.
The truth does not flatter.
Mrs. Jersey became still more motherly and paid a compliment.
That depends, Mr. Train, if the truth were spoken about you, for instance.
It was really a very nice compliment,
but Miss Bull, with malice aforethought, spoiled it in the utterance by laughing pointedly.
Trane, who had already set his face for a smile, grew red,
and Madame darted a look at Miss Bull quite out of keeping with her motherly manner.
More than this, she spoke her mind.
I hope, Mr. Train, that you will speak the whole truth of some of us.
Miss Bull shrugged her thin shoulders,
and in direct contradiction to the traditions of the years,
evening produced her pack of cards.
She played a complicated game called
The Demon and never went to bed until she had achieved success at least
thrice. Even when driven from the drawing room
she would finish the game in her bedroom and sometimes sat up half the night when her
luck was bad. To abstain on this society evening
always annoyed her, and since Madame had been rude, Miss Bull
seized the opportunity to show her indifference and enjoy by doing so her
favorite pastime.
She was a small, thin, dry, old maid with a pallid face and bright black eyes.
Her mouth was hard and smiled treacherously.
No one liked her save Marjorie the niece of Mrs. Jersey.
But Marjorie was supposed to be queer, so her approval of Miss Bull mattered little.
Perhaps Mr. Granger will oblige us with the song, suggested Madame, smoothing her face
but still inwardly furious.
Mr. Granger, who had been waiting for this moment, was only too happy.
He knew but one song and had sung it dozens of times in that very room.
It was natural to suppose that he knew it by heart.
All the same he produced his music and read the words as he sang.
Marjorie played his accompaniment without looking at the notes.
She was as familiar with them as she was with the moment when Mr. Granger's voice would crack.
This night he cracked, as usual.
as usual, and his hearers accepted the apology as usual, so it was all very pleasant.
The death of Nelson, said Granger, is a difficult song to sing when the singer is not in voice.
The fog you know. Quite so, murmured Trane politely. Do you know Willow the Whisp, Mr. Granger?
Mr. Granger did not, much to his regret, and Mr. Harmer joined in the conversation.
Now there's a song.
said, Willow the Whisp.
I knew a man who could bring
the roof down with that song.
Such lungs.
I don't love that loud
shouting myself, said Mrs. Tane
in her fat voice.
Give me something soft and low like,
My pretty Jane.
Ah, you should have heard
Sims Reeves sing it, said Harmer.
I have heard him,
said Leonard, to whom the remark
was addressed.
Harmer was annoyed.
Perhaps you have heard
Greasy and Mario also?
No, sir, but my grandfather did.
Probably, said Harmer, glancing at his fresh face
and bald head in a near mirror.
I was a mere child myself when I heard them.
Do you know much about music, Mr. Train?
I have heard it a good deal talked about,
replied Leonard, with the air of saying something
clever. "'And great rubbish they talk,'
put in Mrs. Tain's smoothing one hand over the other.
"'In my young days we talked of Wagner and Weber. Now it is all
Wagner and Weber. Such affectation.'
"'Ah, manners are not what they used to be,' sighed another old lady
who prided herself on her straight back and clear eyesight.
"'Nor singers,' said Mr. Granger.
There are no voices nowadays. None.
What about Calve and Melba? asked Leonard.
Those are foreigners, said Mr. Granger, getting out of the difficulty.
I speak of our native talent, sir.
Melba comes from Australia.
She is not English.
A foreigner, I tell you.
Don't talk to me, sir.
Mr. Granger was becoming rest of it being thus contradicted,
and privately thought Leonard an impertinent young man.
Madame, seeing that the old gentleman was ruffled, hastily intervened,
If Mrs. Tain will play us the canary bird quadrills, how pleased we shall be.
Mrs. Tane obliged, and Harmer hung over the piano quite enraptured at these airs which
recalled his hot youth.
Afterward, he begged for the Mabel Waltz.
Meantime, Marjorie was sitting in the corner with Miss Bull,
and both were engrossed with patience.
Madame, under cover of the music, talked with train.
You mustn't mind the guests, she said.
They are old and required to be humoured.
It's most amusing, madame.
I shall stop here three weeks to pick up types.
Oh, you must stay longer than that, said Madame,
smiling and patting his hand still in a motherly way.
Now that you have found us out,
we cannot lose you. By the way, here Mrs. Jersey's eyes became very searching. How did you find us out?
It was a friend of mine, madame. He knew that I wanted to get into the Dickens' world and suggested this house.
I am not disappointed. Oh, not at all. And Leonard glanced at Marjorie who was fat, dull, and stupid in her looks.
She certainly resembled one of Dickens' characters, but he could not.
recollect which at the moment do I know the gentleman asked madame who seemed anxious I don't
think so but he is coming to see me tonight you must ask him in here and introduce him I should
like to thank him for having recommended my house we are going to have a conversation in my
room said train dubiously he's such a shy fellow that I don't think he'll come in oh but he must
I love young people.
Madame looked round and shrugged.
It is rather dreary here at times, Mr. Train.
I can quite believe that, replied Leonard,
who already was beginning to find the Dickens-type's rather boring.
Who is that tall old man with the long hair?
Hush, he may hear you.
His name is Raspur.
A great inventor, a most distinguished man.
What has he in front?
"'Oh, all sorts of things,' replied Mrs. Jersey vaguely.
"'His name is quite a household word in Clapham.
"'See, he's inventing something now.'
"'Mr. Raspor, who had rather a haggard appearance
"'as though he used his brains too much,
"'was glooming over the back of an envelope in the stump of a pencil.
"'He frowned as he chewed this latter,
"'and seemed bent upon working out an abstruse problem.
"'But it will really will not do, Mr. Train,' said Madame, shaking her head till the diamonds
twinkled. "'This is our evening of relaxation.'
"'But Miss Bull, against all precedent, is playing patience, and here is Mr. Raspur, inventing.'
She rose to interrupt Mr. Raspur, but remained to ask Leonard if his friend was stopping the night.
"'He will, if he comes at all,' replied Leonard, looking at his watch.
"'But if the fog is very thick, I don't know if he'll turn up.
"'It is now nine o'clock.'
"'We usually disperse at eleven,' said madame.
"'But on this night I must break up at ten as I have—' she hesitated.
"'I have business to do.'
"'I won't trouble you, madame,' said Train.
"'My friend and I can have supper in my room.'
"'That's just it,' said madame, and her voice became rather hard.
I beg Mr. Train that you and your friend will not sit up late.
Why not? We both wish to smoke and talk.
You can do that in the daytime, Mr. Train.
But my house is most respectable, and I hope you will be in bed before eleven.
Leonard would have protested, as he objected to this sort of maternal government,
but Mrs. Jersey rustled away and he was left to make the best of it.
Before he could collect his wits, a message came that he was wanted.
By Jove, it's George, he said, and hurried out of the room.
Mrs. Jersey overheard the name.
I suppose his friend is called George, she thought, and frowned.
Her recollections of that name were not pleasant.
However, she thought no more about the matter, but rebuked Mr. Raspur for his inattention to the Mabel Waltz.
It is so sweet of Mrs. Tain to play it.
i beg pardon beg pardon stuttered rasper putting away his envelope and looking up with a dreamy eye i was inventing a new boot jack i hope to make my fortune out of it
madame smiled pityingly she had heard that prophecy before but poor raspers inventions had never succeeded in getting him the house in park lane he was always dreaming about
but she patted his shoulder and then sailed across to miss bull the music doesn't please you miss bull she said in rather an acid tone it's very nice replied the old maid dealing the cards but i have heard the mabel watts before
"'You may not have the chance of hearing it again,' said Madame.
Miss Bull shrugged her shoulders to signify that it did not matter.
"'I suppose that Mrs. Tain is about to leave us,' she said.
"'There may be changes in the establishment soon, Miss Bull.'
"'It's a world of change,' replied Miss Bull in her sharp voice.
"'Marjorie, was that a heart?'
Marjorie pointed a fat finger to the card in question, and Miss Bull muttered.
something about her eyesight getting worse.
Madame knew that this was just done to annoy her,
as Miss Bull's sight was excellent.
To revenge herself, she took Marjorie away.
Go and tell the servants to send up the negas and sandwiches,
she said sharply.
Marjorie rose heavily.
She was a huge girl of twenty years of age
and apparently very stupid.
Why, sharp little Miss Bull,
who loved no one, had taken to her no one knew,
but the two of her,
were inseparable. Seeing this, Madame usually kept Marjorie hard at work in other quarters
so as to part her from the old maid. But with the cunning of an animal, and Marjorie was
very much of that type, the girl managed to see a great deal of her one friend. Madame had
an idea of the reason for this, but at the present moment did not think it was necessary to interfere.
She was quite capable of crushing Miss Bull when the need arose.
meantime she vented her temper by sending Marjorie away.
The girl departed with a scowl and an angry look at her aunt.
But Miss Bull never raised her eyes,
though she was well aware of what was going on.
Madame was not to be beaten.
I tell you what, dear Miss Bull, she said smiling graciously.
Since you have broken through our rule and have produced the cards,
you shall tell all our fortunes.
Yours?
asked Miss Bull looking up for the first time.
Madame shook her head.
I know mine.
Tell Mr. Raspur if his invention will succeed.
Or perhaps Mr. Granger.
I am at Miss Bull's service, said the polite old gentleman bowing.
Miss Bull swept the cards into a heap.
I'm quite willing, she said in a voice almost pleasant for her.
Anything to oblige, dear Madame.
Mrs. Jersey smiled still more graciously and sailed away to send Mr. Harmer to the guards,
but she wondered inwardly why Miss Bull had given way so suddenly. There was some reason for it,
as Miss Bull never did anything without a reason. But Mrs. Jersey kept her own counsel and still
continued to smile. She had quite made up her mind how to act.
"'Ladies and gentlemen,' she said standing in the middle of the drawing-room.
we must disperse tonight at ten.
I have some business to attend to,
so I request you will all retire at that hour.
In the meantime, Miss Bull has kindly consented to tell your fortunes.
It was extraordinary to see how those withered old people crowded round the table.
There are several fates had long since been settled,
so what they could expect the cards to tell them,
save that they would one and all die soon, it is difficult to say.
yet so ineradicable is the wish to know the future in the human breast that they were as eager as youth to hear what would befall them and miss bull wholly unmoved by their senile excitement dealt the cards with the air of a sphinx
madame meantime retired to her throne and saw that the servants arranged the tray properly she had a gigantic chair which was jokingly called her throne and here she received strangers in quite a majestic way it was a sort of a sort of
Lady Blessington reception on a small scale, as Mr. Harmer assured her, and as he had been to
Gorehouse in his youth, he knew what he was talking about. Knowing his courtly manners and being
greedy of compliments, Mrs. Jersey always tried to make him say that she resembled Lady Blessington.
But this Mr. Harmer refused to do. Not that Mrs. Jersey was bad-looking. She had a fresh-colored
face, bright black eyes, and plenty of white hair like spun silk.
her figure was stout but yet she retained a certain comeliness which showed that she must have been a handsome woman in her youth her manners were motherly but she showed a stern face toward margery and did not treat the girl so kindly as she might have done
as a rule she had great self-command but sometimes gave way to paroxysms of passion which were really terrifying but marjorie alone had been witness of these and mrs jersey passed for a dear gentle old lady
"'Mr. Harmer is to be married,' announced Mrs. Tain, leaving the circle round the car-table.
"'How extraordinary!'
"'So extraordinary that it can't possibly be true,' said Mr. Harmer dryly.
"'Unless Madame will accept me,' he added bowing.
"'I should recommend Miss Bull,' replied Madame very sweetly,
but with a venomous note in her voice.
she might as well have thought to rouse the dead for Miss Bull paid not the slightest attention.
In many ways the self-composed old maid was a match for madame.
At this moment Train entered, and after him came a tall young man, fair-haired and stalwart.
He was handsome, but seemed to be ill at ease, and pulled his yellow mustache nervously as
Train led him to the throne.
"'This is my friend,' said Leonard, presenting him.
he just managed to get here for the fog is so thick here he was interrupted madame cried mrs taine what is the matter mr harmer the water wine quick
there was no need of it mrs jersey had fallen back on the throne with a white face and twitching lips she appeared as though about to faint but restraining herself with a powerful effort she waved her hand to intimate that she needed nothing
at the same time her eyes were fastened not so much on the face of the stranger as on a piece of yellow holly he wore on his coat i am perfectly well said mrs jersey this is only one of my turns i am glad to see you mr
brendon said the stranger who seemed astonished at this reception george brendon interpolated train who was alive with curiosity have you seen him before madame mrs jersey laughed
Artificially.
Certainly not, she replied calmly.
And yours is not a face I should forget, Mr. Brendan.
She uttered the name with a certain amount of hesitation,
as though she was not sure it was the right one.
George nodded.
My name is Brendan, he said rather unnecessarily,
and Mrs. Jersey nodded in her most gracious manner.
I bid you welcome, sir.
Any friend of Mr. Trains is all.
also my friend if there is anything to amuse you here she waved her hand we are simple people fortune-telling a little music and the company of my guests mrs tain mr harmer she introduced them but every now and then her eyes were on the yellow holly brendon remarked it you are noticing my flower mrs jersey he said it is rather rare most extraordinary
replied mrs jersey coolly i have seen holly with red berries before but this yellow there was a great bush of it in my father's garden said mr harmer but i have not seen any for years
perhaps you would like it mrs jersey said brendon taking it from his coat she hastily waved her hand no no i am too old for flowers keep it mr brendon it suits
better with your youth. She looked at his face keenly.
I have seen a face like yours before. Brendan laughed. I am of a commonplace type I fear,
he said. No, not so very common. Fair hair and dark eyes do not usually go together.
Perhaps I have met your father. Perhaps, replied George flagmatically.
Or your mother? Persisted my mother.
Mrs. Jersey.
I dare say.
Then he turned the conversation.
What a delightful old house you have here.
Mrs. Jersey bit her lip on finding her inquiries thus baffled,
but taking her cue expanded on the subject of the house.
It was a fashionable mansion in the time of the Georgia's, she said.
Some of the ceilings are wonderfully painted,
and there are all kinds of queer rooms and cupboards and corners in it.
and so quiet i dare say she went on this room was filled with bows and bells and powder and patches what a sight mr brendon what a sight will you have some negus port wine negus mr brendon
she was evidently talking at random and offered him a glass of negus with a trembling hand brendon evidently more and more astonished that her manner drank off the wine
He made few remarks, being a man who spoke little in general company.
Train had long ago gone to hear Miss Bull tell fortunes, and from the laughter it was evident that his future was being prophesied.
No, no, cried Train. I shall never marry. A literary man should keep himself away from the fascinations of female society.
Do you agree with that, Mr. Brendan? asked Mrs. Jersey curiously.
He shook his head and laughed.
I am not a hermit, Mrs. Jersey.
Then Miss Bull must prophesy about your marriage. Come.
At first, Brendan was unwilling to go,
but after some persuasion he submitted to be led to the table.
Miss Bull was quite willing to do what was asked of her
and spread out the cards.
Brendan waited beside Mrs. Jersey with a most indifferent air.
She was far more anxious to hear the fortune than he was.
you are in trouble announced miss bull in a sepulchral tone and the trouble will grow worse but in the end all will be well she will aid you to get free and will bestow her hand on you
"'She?' asked Brendan, looking puzzled.
"'Miss Bull did not raise her eyes.
"'The lady you are thinking of.'
"'Brendon was rather taken aback,
"'but seeing Mrs. Jersey's curious look,
"'he crushed down his emotion.
"'At my age we are always thinking of ladies,' he said laughing.
"'Train touched his arm.
"'It is,' he began, but Brendan frowned,
"'and Leonard was quick enough to take the hint.
Miss Bull went on telling the fortune.
There were the usual dark and fair people,
the widow, the journey, the money,
and all the rest of the general events and happenings
which are usually foretold.
But there was always trouble, trouble, and again trouble.
But you will come out right in the end, said Miss Bull.
Keep a brave heart.
I am sure Mr. Brendan will do that,
said Madame graciously.
While George bowed,
the compliment, Miss Bull again shuffled the cards and fastened her keen black eyes on
Madame.
"'Will you have your fortune told?' she asked coldly.
"'Oh, certainly,' said Mrs. Jersey in a most gushing manner.
"'Anything to amuse.
But my fortune has been told so often and has never come true.
Never!'
And she sighed in an effective manner.
Miss Bull continued her mystic counting.
she told Madame a lot of things about the house which were known to most present.
Mrs. Jersey laughed and sneered.
Suddenly, Miss Bull turned up a black card.
You will meet with a violent death, she said, and everyone shuddered.
End of Chapter 1.
Chapter 2 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This Librebox recording is in the public domain.
2.
Brendan Story
If Miss Bull wished to make Madame uncomfortable,
she certainly succeeded.
From being voluble, Mrs. Jersey became silent.
The fresh color died out of her face
and her lips moved nervously.
Twice did she make an effort to overcome her emotion,
but each time failed.
Afterwards she took a seat by the fire
and stared into the flames with an anxious look,
as though she saw therein a fulfillment
of the dismal prophecy.
Her depression communicated at some,
to the rest of the company, and shortly before ten the friends took their departure.
The idea of being alone seemed to cheer Mrs. Jersey, and she accompanied her departing
guests to the front door. It was a comparatively thick fog, yet not so bad, but that the visitors
might hope to reach their homes. For some time, Mrs. Jersey stood in the doorway at the top
of the steps and shook hands with those who were going. The boarders who were old and chilly were
too wise to venture outside on such a dreary night, so Mrs. Jersey had the doorstep all to
herself.
"'If you lose your ways,' she called out to the visitors.
"'Come back. You can tell the house by the red light.'
She pointed to the fanlight of crimson glass behind which gas was burning.
"'I will keep that alight for another hour.'
The voices of thanks came back muffled by the fog, but Leonard and George waited to hear no more.
They walked upstairs to train sitting-room, which
was on the first floor. The windows looked out onto a back garden, wherein grew a few scrubby
trees so that the prospect was not cheering. But on this night, the faded crimson curtains were
drawn, the fire was lighted, and a round table in the middle of the apartment was spread for supper.
On one side a door led to Leonard's bedroom. On the other side was the room wherein George was
to sleep. As the firelight played on the old-fashioned furniture and on the mellow colors of curtains
and carpet, Leonard rubbed his hands.
It is rather quaint, he said cheerfully, and lighted the lamp.
Not such a palace as your diggings in Duke Street, said Brendan, stretching his long legs on the chint's
covered sofa.
One must suffer in the cause of art, said Train, putting the shade on the lamp.
I am picking up excellent types here.
What do you think?
There's plenty of material, growled Brendan getting out his pipe.
Don't smoke yet, George.
interposed Train, glancing at the clock.
We must have supper first.
After that, we can smoke till eleven,
and then we must go to bed.
You keep early hours here, Leonard.
I don't. Mrs. Jersey asked me particularly
to be in bed at eleven.
Why? Brendan started and looked hard at his friend.
I don't know, but she did.
Is it an understood thing that you retire at that hour?
Train shook his head and drew in his chair.
By no means.
I have sat up till two before now.
But on this night, Mrs. Jersey wants the house to be considered respectable,
and therefore asked me to retire early.
Perhaps it's on account of you, old man.
Here, he smiled in an amused manner.
She hopes to get you as a boarder.
I wouldn't come here for the world, retorted Brendan with quite unnecessary violence.
Why not? Have some tongue.
Thanks, responded George, passing his plate.
"'Because I don't like the house, and I don't care for Mrs. Jersey.'
"'Why did you advise me to come here, then?' asked Trane, pouring out a glass of claret.
"'Well, you wanted something in the style of Dickens, and this was the only place I knew.
"'How did you know about it?'
George deliberated for a moment, and then fastened his eyes on his plate.
"'I lived here once,' he said in a low voice.
"'Dear me!' gasped Trane.
"'What an extraordinary.
thing. Why so? One must live somewhere. But you don't like Mrs. Jersey. She was not here then.
Who was here? My grandfather on the mother's side. That's fifteen years ago. Leonard looked at the
handsome, moody face of his friend musingly. I never knew you had a grandfather, he said at last.
Do you know anything at all about me? asked Brendan. No, now I come.
to think of it, I don't.
I met you three years ago at Mrs. Ward's house, and we have been friends ever since.
Acquaintances, rather.
Men are not friends until they become confidential with one another.
Well, Trane, George pushed back his chair and wiped his mouth.
Tonight I intend to turn you from a mere acquaintance into a friend.
I shall be delighted, said Trane rather bewildered.
Won't you have more supper?
Brendan shook his head.
lighted his pipe, and again stretched himself on the sofa.
Train, being curious to know what he had to say, was on the point of joining him.
But he was yet hungry, so could not bring himself to leave the table.
He therefore continued his supper, and as Brendan seemed disinclined to talk, held his peace.
Train's parents were dead and had left him a snug little income of five thousand a year.
Not being very strong-minded and being more than a trifle conceded as to his literary abilities,
his money speedily attracted round him
a number of needy hangers on
who flattered him to the top of his bent.
They praised him to his face,
sneered at him behind his back,
ate his meat, borrowed his money,
and kept him in a fool's paradise
regarding human nature.
Poor Leonard thought that all women were angels,
and all men good fellows
with a harmless tendency to borrow.
Such a simple Simon could not
but be the prey of every scoundrel in London,
and it said much for his moral nature that he touched all this pitch without being defiled.
He was called a fool by those he fed, but none could call him a rogue.
It was this simplicity which inspired Brendan with a pitying friendship,
and Brendan had done much to save him from the harpies who preyed on this innocent.
In several cases he had opened train's eyes at the cost of quarrelling with those who lost by the opening.
But George was able to hold his own, and none could save him.
that he benefited pecuniarily by the trust and confidence which Leonard reposed in him.
To avert all suspicion of this sort, he had refused to become train secretary and companion
at an excellent salary. Brendan was poor and wanted that salary, but he valued his independence
and so preferred to fight for his own hand. However, he continued his services to Leonard as a kind
of unofficial mentor. Now that Train came to think of it, Brendan was rather a mysterious
person. He lived by writing articles for the papers and was always well-dressed. His rooms were in
Kensington, and he seemed to know many people whom he did not cultivate. Trane would have given his
ears to enter the houses at which Brendan was a welcome guest. But for the most part,
George preferred to live alone with his pipe and his books. He was writing a novel, and hoped to make a
successful career as a literary man. But as he was barely thirty years of age and had been
settled only five years in London, his scheme of life was rather an embryo.
He appeared to have some secret trouble, but what it was, Trane never knew, as
Brendan was a particularly reticent man.
Why he should propose to be frank on this especial night, Leonard could not understand.
After supper he put the question to him.
Well, said Brendan, without moving or taking his eyes from the fire, it's this way, Train.
I know you are a kind-hearted man,
and although you talk very freely about your own affairs,
yet I know you can keep the secret of a friend.
You can depend upon that, George.
Anything you tell me will never be repeated.
Brendan nodded his thanks.
Also, he continued,
I wish you to lend me three hundred pounds.
A thousand, if you will.
Three hundred will be sufficient.
I'll repay you when I come into my property.
Train opened his eyes.
Are you coming into money? he asked.
That I can't say.
It all depends.
Do you know why I suggested this house to you, Leonard?
He asked suddenly.
To help me in my literary work.
That was one reason, certainly.
But I had another and more selfish one, connected.
George sat up to finish the sentence.
Connected with Mrs. Jersey, he said quietly.
This remarked.
was so unexpected that Leonard did not know what to say for the moment.
I thought you did not know her, he gasped out.
Nor do I.
Does she know you?
Not as George Brendan, or as I am now.
What do you mean?
Train was more puzzled than ever.
It's a long story.
I don't know that I can tell you the whole.
Train looked annoyed.
Trust me.
All in all or not at all, finished her.
Brendan. Quite so.
He paused and drew hard at his pipe.
Since I want money, I must trust you.
Is it only for that reason that you consider me worthy of your confidence?
Asked Leonard much mortified.
George leaned forward and patted him on the knee.
No, old man, I wish you to help me also.
In what way?
With Dorothy Ward, replied George, looking closely at his pipe.
Was she in your mind tonight when that old maid was telling the cards?
asked Trane sitting up with a look of interest.
Brendan nodded.
But I do not wish you to mention her name.
That was why.
I know I was foolish.
Well, she's a pretty girl, and as good as she is pretty.
Which is marvelous, said Brendan, considering the fashionable mother she has.
Train smiled.
Mrs. Ward is certainly a leader of fashion.
And as heartless as any woman I know, observed Brendan.
He glanced affectionately at the yellow holly.
Dorothy gave me this tonight.
Did you see her before you came here?
Yes, I went to afternoon tea.
We...
Brendan examined his pipe again.
We understand one another, he said.
Leonard sprang to his feet.
My dear chap, I congratulate you.
Thanks, but it's a little.
It's too early for congratulation as yet.
Mrs. Ward wants her daughter to make a good marriage.
George Brendan will not be the husband of her choice, but Lord Darrington.
Does she want her daughter to marry that old thing?
You don't understand, Leonard.
I mean that if I become Lord Darrington when the old man dies, Mrs. Ward will consent.
Train sat down helplessly and stared.
I don't understand, he said.
i'll put the thing in a nutshell explained brendon lord derrington is my grandfather you're but he never lived here
no the grandfather who lived here and with whom i stayed was my mother's father he was called lockwood derrington is my father's father now do you understand not quite how can you become lord derrington when he has a grandson that young rip walter vane
Walter Vane is the son of my father's brother,
and my father was the elder and the heir to the title.
Then, if Lord Derrington dies, you become...
Exactly.
But the difficulty is that I have to establish my birth.
Leonard jumped up and clutched his hair.
Here's a mystery, he said, staring at his friend.
What does it all mean?
Sit down and I'll tell you.
Leonard resumed his seat and glanced at the...
clock. We have a quarter of an hour, he said. But I think we'll defy Mrs. Jersey and sit up this
night. No, said Brendan hastily. We may as well do what she wants. I wish to conciliate her.
She is the only person who can help to prove my mother's marriage. Huh, I thought there was
something queer about her. Who was she? My mother's maid, but I had better tell you from the
beginning.
Train sat down and produced a cigarette.
Go on, he said.
No, wait.
I want to know before you begin
why Mrs. Jersey was so struck with that yellow holly.
This time it was Brendan who looked puzzled.
I can't say, Leonard.
Do you think she connected it with some disaster?
asked Train.
From her looks when she set eyes on it, I should think so.
Does Miss Ward know Mrs.
Jersey? No, she knows nothing about her. And it was Miss Ward who gave you the yellow holly.
Yes, when I was at afternoon tea. Then I can't see why Mrs. Jersey should have made such a
spectacle of herself, said Leonard, lighting his cigarette. Tell your story. I'll do so as
concisely as possible, said Brendan, staring into the fire. My mother was the daughter of Anthony
Lockwood, who was a teacher of singing and lived here. She, I am talking of my mother, was very
beautiful and also became famous as a singer at concerts. The son of Lord Darrington, Percy Vane,
saw her and loved her. He subsequently eloped with her. She died in Paris two years later,
shortly after I was born. And you came to live here? Not immediately. I was but an infant in arms,
but my father would not part with me.
He kept Mrs. Jersey.
She was my mother's maid, remember,
as my nurse, and we went to Monte Carlo.
I am afraid my poor father was a bit of a scamp.
He was at all events a gambler
and lost all his money at the tables.
He became poor, and his father, Lord Derrington,
refused to help him.
He was angry at the marriage, I suppose.
That's the point.
Was there a marriage?
But to make a marriage?
things clear I had better go on as I started. My father went to San Remo, and from that place
he sent me home to my grandfather Lockwood. With Mrs. Jersey? No. By that time Mrs. Jersey had left.
I had another nurse and it was she who took me to this house. My grandfather was delighted to
have me, as he always insisted that there was a marriage. I grew up here and went to school,
afterward to college. My grandfather died.
but there was just enough money to finish my education.
The house was sold, and, by a curious coincidence,
Mrs. Jersey took it as a boarding establishment.
Where she got the money, I don't know.
But I passed out of her life as a mere infant,
and I don't suppose she thought anything more about me.
Perhaps she recognized me tonight from my likeness to my father,
as she mentioned that she had seen my face before,
but I can't say.
What became of your father?
That is the tragic part of the story.
He was murdered at a masked ball at San Remo.
The assassin was never discovered,
but it was supposed to be some passionate Italian lover.
My grandfather Lockwood was so angry at the way
in which his daughter had been treated
that he never stood up for my rights.
I would not do so either,
but that I love Miss Ward.
Now it is my intention to see Mrs. Jersey tomorrow
and get the truth out of her.
What does she know?
She knows where the marriage was celebrated, and can prove that my birth is legitimate.
That is why I came here, Leonard.
Why did you not speak to her tonight?
I think it is better she should be in a quieter frame of mind, said Brendan.
She has never seen me since I was a little child, and my name of Brendan is quite unknown to her.
Why do you call yourself Brendan? asked Train.
George began to pace up and down the room.
Pride made me do that, he declared.
When my father was murdered at San Remo,
Lord Darrington denied the marriage and refused to do anything for me.
My grandfather Lockwood gave me his own name,
and I was called George Lockwood for many a long day.
At the age of 15, Mr. Lockwood died,
and then a note came to my guardian saying that Lord Darrington
proposed to allow me a small income.
For what reason?
I can't say.
Perhaps it was remorse.
Train shook his head.
I have met Lord Darrington,
and if such an old tartar feels remorse,
then there is a chance that pigs may fly.
That's an elegant illustration, Leonard,
observed George with a smile.
But to continue,
as I see it is nearly eleven,
even as a boy I felt the indignity put upon me.
I refused, with the permission of my guardian,
the offered some,
and continued at school.
when i left to go to college i changed my name so that lord derrington should not have the chance of insulting me further or of knowing who i was my guardian suggested brendon so as that was as good a name as another i took it
hence mrs jersey can't possibly know me or why i came to see her she will be wiser in the morning added brendon grimly but she evidently saw in you some likeness to your father evidently
From all I have heard, Mrs. Jersey was in love with my father, even though she was only a lady's-maid.
But I know very little about her. My business here is to learn.
But why has she kept silent all these years?
Brendan shrugged his shoulders.
She has had no inducement to speak out, he said.
That is why I wish you to lend me three hundred pounds, Leonard.
She will require a bribe.
And a larger one than that, George, a woman like Mrs. Jersey would not.
part with such a secret for so small a sum. Oh, I can pay her what she demands when in possession
of the estates. But at present she will want to see the color of my money. Train stared into the
fire, meditating on this queer story which was quite a romance. Then he saw an obstacle.
George, he said, even if you prove that you are the heir, you won't get any money. Lord
Darrington is still living. Yes, and from all accounts he means.
to go on living like the truculent old tyrant he is. But the estates are entailed,
and must come to me when he dies, and of course the title is mine, too, when he is done with it.
If Mrs. Jersey learns these facts, she will come to terms on a promise of money when I inherit.
Then you will speak to her in the morning. Yes, she is the only person who can write me.
But I mean to be the husband of Dorothy Ward, and my only chance to get round the mother
is to prove my legitimacy.
I don't think Miss Ward
cares much for her mother.
Who could? asked Brendan
cynically. She is a worthless
little canary bird.
But I tell you, Leonard, that
frivolous as Mrs. Ward appears to be,
she is a most determined woman
with an iron will.
She will make her daughter do as she
is bid, and will sell her to the highest bidder.
As Lord Darrington's grandson
and acknowledge heir, I have a good chance.
"'As George Brendan,' he stopped as the clock struck eleven,
"'as George Brendan, I am going to bed.'
Train rose to light the candles which stood on a side table,
yawning as he did so.
He was much interested in Brendan's story, but the telling of it had tired him.
"'I shall sleep like a top to-night.'
"'Well, get to bed. I'll put out the lamp,' said George, and did so.
"'No,' said Leonard, taking a candle-sum.
in either hand.
I'll see you to your virtuous couch,
and he preceded him into the bedroom.
It was a quaint apartment
with heavy mahogany furniture
and a turkey carpet.
Entering from the sitting room,
George saw that the bed was directly opposite the door.
It's been moved since my time.
What? cried Leonard,
setting down the candles.
Is the furniture the same your grandfather had?
Yes.
Mrs. Jersey bought the house and its content.
They are old-fashioned enough in all conscience.
Look at that ugly wardrobe.
He pointed to one against the inner wall and opposite the window.
The mirror in that used to frighten me as a little chap.
It looked so ghostly in the moonlight.
Huh, it's years and years since I slept in my old bed, said Brendan, taking off his coat.
I should dream the dreams of childhood now that I am back again.
But you needn't say anything of this, Leonard.
"'Of course not,' replied the other.
"'And you need not smash your yellow holly
"'by leaving it in your coat all night.
"'Put it in water.'
"'No.'
"'George stopped the too officious Leonard.
"'Dorothy put it into my coat, and there it shall remain.
"'The berries are firm and won't fall.
"'I'll see to that.'
"'Hush.
"'What's the matter?' asked Trane startled.
"'For answer, Brendan quickly extinguished both candles
and pointed to the door of the sitting-room which stood half open.
Not a word, he murmured to train,
grasping his wrist to enforce attention.
I heard a footstep.
The two men stood in the darkness, silent, and with beating hearts.
A glimmer of light came from the fire and struck across into the bedroom.
Leonard listened with all his ears.
He distinctly heard stealthy footsteps coming along the passage,
which was on the other side of the wall against which stood the wardrobe.
The footsteps paused at the sitting-room door.
They heard this open and scarcely dared to breathe.
Someone entered the room and waited for a moment or so, evidently listening.
Then the door was opened and closed again, and the footsteps died away.
Even then Brendan stopped Leonard from lighting the candles.
Go to bed in the dark, he said softly.
Was it Mrs. Jersey? asked Leonard.
Of course it was.
she came to see if you were in bed.
But why should she?
I can't say.
There's something queer about that old woman.
Go to bed, Leonard.
You can light your candle in your own room.
I shall not light mine.
Train was bursting with indignation.
But it's absurd to be treated like a couple of schoolboys,
he said, taking his candlestick.
There's more in it than that,
said Brendan, pushing him to the door.
door. Get to bed and make no noise. We can talk in the morning. Train darted across the sitting
room and retired. Brendan closed his door softly and listened again. There was no return of the
footsteps, so he slipped into bed without relighting the candle. The clock in the sitting room
chimed a quarter past eleven. End of Chapter 2. Chapter 3 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Three.
The next morning.
Fogs and smokes and chokes, said the fat cook, her elbows on the table and a saucer of
tea at her lips.
I wish I were back in Essex that I do.
The fogs come from there, cried Jarvie, who was page boy in the Jersey mansion, and knew
more than was good for him.
If they drained them, Marsha's fogs wouldn't come here.
Old Raspers says so, and knows a lot he does.
"'He don't know Essex,' grunted the cook.
"'A lovely county.'
"'For frogs,' sniggered Jarvie, devouring his slice of bread.
The housemaid joined in and declared for Devon, whence she came.
The Swiss man-servant talked of his native mountains and was sneered at by the company generally as a foreigner.
Jarvie was particularly insolent, and poor Fritz was reduced to swearing in his own language
whereupon they laughed the more.
It was a most inspiriting beginning to the day's work.
The kitchen in the basement was a large stone apartment
and even on the brightest of days not very well lighted.
On this particular morning, the gas was burning
and was likely to continue a light during the day
as the fog was as thick as ever.
The servants collected round the table
were having an early cup of tea.
To assist the progress of digestion,
they conversed as above
and gradually drifted into talking of their mistress
and of the borders.
Miss Bull in particular seemed to be disliked.
She's a sly cat with that white face of hers, said the cook.
Twice she said the soup was burnt.
I never liked her.
Madame don't either, said Jarvie, ruffling his short hair.
They've been quarreling awful.
I shouldn't wonder if Madame gave her notice.
Ah, Miss Marjorie will have something to say to that, chimed in the housemaid.
She likes Miss Bull.
"'Cause Miss Bull makes much of her, and no one else does.'
"'Well, for my part,' said the cook,
"'I'm always civil to Miss Bull, though she is a cat.
"'If the mistress died, Miss Marjorie would govern the house,
"'and Miss Bull governs her.
"'I don't want to lose no good situation through bad manners.'
"'Madame ain't likely to die,' said Jarvie.
"'She's as healthy as a stray dog, and as sharp.
"'I don't care for old Miss Bull
or for stopping here, as I'm going to get a place as waiter at a club.
Ah, little boy, you will be no waiter, said Fritz.
Shut your mouth, Froggy, snapped Jarvie and produced a cigarette.
Don't you smoke here, you, brat, shrieked the cook, and snatching it from his mouth, flung it into the fire.
Here's madame's tea. Take it to her sitting-room. She's sure to be up and waiting.
Jarvie showed fight at first, but as a little.
the cook had a strong arm, he thought discretioned the better part of valor and went grumbling
up the stairs.
Mrs. Jersey was an early riser, and usually had a cup of tea in her sitting-room at seven o'clock.
After this refresher, she gave audience to the cook, looked over her tradesman's books,
and complained generally that the servants were not doing their duty.
Madame was not at her best in the morning, and Jarvie went up most unwillingly.
The housemaid should have gone, but when she could she sent Jarvie, and,
when he refused to go, Fritz was dispatched
to bear the brunt of Madame's anger.
She usually scolded Fritz in French.
When the boy went, the servants continued chatting and eating.
It was just on seven, and they were reluctantly rising
to begin their duties, when a crash was heard and then a clatter of boots.
There, cried the cook,
that brat's been and smashed the tray.
Won't Madame give it to him?
Mercy, mercy!
Her voice leaped in octave.
He's mad.
This was because Jarvie, with his hair on end and his face perfectly white, tore into the kitchen.
He raced round and round the table his eyes darting from his head.
The servants huddled together in fear, and the cook seized the toasting fork.
They all agreed with her that the page was mad.
Suddenly Jarvie tumbled in a heap and began to moan with his face on the floor.
Oh, the blood, the blood.
What's he saying about blood?
asked the scared cook.
Jarvie leapt to his feet.
She's dead.
She's murdered, he shrieked.
I see her all covered with blood.
Oh, mother, oh, I want my mother.
And down he dropped on the floor again kicking and screaming.
The boy was scared out of his life,
and Fritz laid hold of him, while the other servants headed by the valiant cook,
ran up the stairs and burst into Madame's sitting-room,
which was on the ground floor and no great distance
from the front door.
The next moment they were all out again,
all shrieking murder and calling loudly for the police.
The sleeping boarders took the alarm,
and in the lightest of a tire appeared on the stairs with white faces.
The terrible word shrieked by a dozen voices
through the silent house curdled the blood in their aged veins.
What, with the early hour, the fog, the gas,
and the crying of the servants,
it was like a nightmare.
An hour later the police were
in the house summoned by Miss Bull, who alone of the boarders retained her head.
As Marjorie, who was next in command after her aunt, could not be brought to do anything,
Miss Bull took charge. It was Miss Bull who first ventured into the sitting-room where Madame
huddled up in a chair drawn to the table, lay face downward in such a position as to reveal
a gaping wound in her neck. And it was Miss Bull who sent the servants back to the kitchen,
who closed the door of the death chamber, and who told Jarvey to fetch the nearest policeman.
Consequently, it was Miss Bull whom the inspector addressed, as she seemed to be the sole person in authority.
Mrs. Tane retreated to her bedroom with a prayer book. Mr. Granger went for a walk in the fog. Marjorie sat in a stupor her eyes dull and her slack mouth awry.
The little old maid from being a non-entity became a person of first-class importance.
She displayed perfect tact and self-control in dealing with the terrified old men and women,
and no one would have given her credit for such generalship.
But the hour had come for Miss Bull to assert herself,
and she proved to be equal to the occasion.
Now then, said the inspector,
when he had posted his men and was alone with Miss Bull in the drawing-room.
What do you know of this?
Miss Bull, her face white and drawn,
her eyes sharper than ever,
and her manner perfectly composed, shook her head.
I know absolutely nothing,
she said in her monotonous voice.
Last night we had our usual reception,
but it broke up at ten o'clock.
Madame dismissed the guests at that hour
and stood in the doorway to do so.
I retired to my bedroom with Madame's niece,
and after a game of patience, I went to bed.
Does Mrs. Jersey's niece sleep with you?
Marjorie? No.
She sleeps in a room above.
It was a few minutes to eleven when she left me.
i was in bed shortly after the clock struck the hour i am sure marjorie had nothing to do with it she was quite devoted to her aunt and as the poor girl has no money i don't know how she will live now that madame is dead
the inspector thought for a moment he was a tall thin man rather military in appearance and with a wooden expressionless face which he found of great service in hiding his thoughts when examining those he suspected
He certainly did not suspect Miss Bull, and it seemed inclined to make her his coadjutor.
In proof of this he made her accompany him to the room wherein Mrs. Jersey lay dead.
It's not far from the front door, mused Inspector Quex.
Could anyone have entered?
No, I am sure of that, put in Miss Bull emphatically.
Madame always locked the front door every night herself and kept the key.
It could not be opened in the morning until she chose.
Who opened it this morning?
I did.
I knew that the key would be in Madame's pocket.
And it was?
Yes, she must have locked the door as usual,
and then have gone to put the light out in her sitting-room
before going upstairs.
Was that before eleven?
I can't say.
I did not leave my room after ten.
But Marjorie may have seen someone
as she went up to her bedroom when she loved me.
i'll question the girl said quex and entered the sitting-room it was of no great size with one window which looked out on to the square this was locked and even if it had not been no one could have climbed in as quex saw what the area was below
and madame chained the area gate every night with her own hands explained miss bull who was watching him the inspector turned suddenly toward her it seems to me that the deceased was
overcautious, was she afraid.
I think she was, admitted Miss Bull.
She had a habit of looking over her shoulder, and as I have stated, was particular as
to bolts and bars.
But she was a secretive woman, and never said anything to me about her fears, if she had
any.
Were you great friends?
No, replied the old maid bluntly.
We were not.
Madame behaved in an extremely.
rude manner, and had she lived I should have given her notice. I never liked her, added Miss
Bull with feminine spite. You'll be all the more likely to speak the truth, then, said Quex cynically,
and turned to examine the body. Madame was still in the black silk dress which she wore on the
previous night. Seated at the round centre table, she had evidently been struck from behind
and killed before she had time to cry out. Her arms were on the table,
and her head had fallen forward.
The furniture of the room was not in disorder,
the red tablecloth was not even ruffled.
The murder had been committed without haste or noise,
as Quex pointed out to Miss Bull.
Whosoever murdered her must have been a friend, said he.
It doesn't seem a friendly act to kill a defenseless woman,
said Miss Bull looking coldly on the limp figure.
You don't quite understand.
What I mean is that Mrs. Jersey knew the person
who killed her. Miss Bull shook her head. I don't agree with you. She observed, and Quex was
astonished that she should dare to contradict. She was struck from behind, before she had time
to turn her head. Quite so, but the assassin must have entered the room, and unless the deceased
was deaf. Madame had particularly sharp ears. Then that makes it all the more certain. Had anyone
unexpected entered, she would have been on the alert.
there would have been a struggle.
Now we see that the furniture is not disturbed,
therefore we can argue from this
that Mrs. Jersey was in friendly conversation
with the assassin.
She was seated at the table,
and the assassin was at her back,
which shows a certain amount of trust.
In fact, Miss Bull,
the person who committed this murder
was the last person Mrs. Jersey
expected to hurt her in any way.
She had no enemies that I knew of.
I talk rather of friends
said Quex coolly.
You have not been listening to my argument.
Oh, I quite understand,
but I don't fancy that Madame had any friends either.
She was a woman who kept very much to herself.
Do you know anything of her past?
Absolutely nothing.
She took this house some fourteen or fifteen years ago, I believe.
I have been here ten, and was very comfortable,
save that Madame and
I disagreed on many points.
She was always rude to me, and I don't think she was a lady.
Miss Bull drew herself up.
My father was a general, she declared proudly.
But Quex was too busy examining the room to attend to Miss Bull's family history.
He searched for the weapon with which the crime had been committed, but could find none.
There was no blood on the furniture, although some had trickled down from the wound
onto the tablecloth.
The blow must have been struck strongly and surely,
and with the power of a deadly hatred.
It was at this moment that the doctor arrived,
in turning the body over to him,
Quex conducted Miss Bull back to the drawing-room,
where he examined all who were in the house.
Has anyone left this morning, he asked.
Jarvie had seen Mr. Granger go out and said so.
Even while he was speaking, Mr. Granger returned,
and failed with suspicion.
Quex examined him first.
Granger, when he saw what the inspector was bent upon, expressed the greatest indignation.
"'How dare you accuse a gentleman of such a thing?' he cried.
"'I went out to compose my nerves.'
"'In to the fog?' asked Quex doubtfully.
"'Yes, sir, and I should have gone out into snow and hail if I had desired.
There was no intimation that none were to leave the house.
Had a notice been given to that effect I should have remained,
I beg your pardon, said Quex, seeing that the old gentleman was fuming and seeing also that such a senile creature with so sheep like a face was innocent enough.
But it is my duty to be suspicious.
But not to accuse innocent people of a crime, sir?
No, but for the sake of an example, will you tell me what you did with yourself since leaving the drawing-room last night at ten?
Certainly.
I have no reason to come.
conceal my doings, officer, said Mr. Granger angrily. I retired to my bedroom at ten and to bed.
The last I saw of Madame, she was standing on the doorstep, bidding farewell to her guests.
In the morning I was awakened by the news of the murder and went out to walk off the horror
produced by the sight of that poor woman. Did you see the body? We all saw the body till Miss Bull.
I turned them out and locked the door, put in Miss Bull sharply.
It was as well that nothing should be disturbed in the room till the police arrived.
That was my argument.
And a very good one, said Quex approvingly.
You have a head on your shoulders, Miss.
My father was a general, replied the old maid, nodding,
and I inherit his talent for organization.
The next witness examined was Mark.
and she refused to open her mouth unless she sat by miss bull the old maid held marjorie's hand and coaxed her into answering when she proved her calcitrant quex could not but admire the way in which miss bull managed the lumpish creature
you left the drawing-room with this lady he asked indicating miss bull and speaking in a persuasive tone yes we played patience in miss bull's bedroom i did it twice and what time
did you leave? About eleven, just before it. Did the clock strike the hour when you were in your own
bedroom? No, said Marjorie trying to collect her wits. When I was in the passage. What were you
doing in the passage? It would only take you a few minutes to get to your room, would it not?
Yes, put in Miss Bull. My bedroom is on the second floor, and Marjorie's is on the fourth,
above my head. You could easily have got to your room before the clock struck Marjorie.
I did try to, admitted the girl, but my aunt kept me talking. Quack sat up.
Did you speak to your aunt at that hour? Yes, she met me walking up to my room and scolded
me for being out of bed at that hour. I said I had been with Miss Bull and—and my
Madame made polite remarks about me, said the old maid grimly.
Oh, I can well understand what she said.
But it would seem, Mr. Inspector, that Marjorie was the last person to see Madame alive.
We'll see, said Quex, who was not going to be taught his business even by so clever a person as Miss Bull.
Was there anyone else about? he asked Marjorie.
No.
My aunt said that everyone...
was in bed but me, and that she would not have it. The clock struck eleven, and she called
me names. She then took me by the arm and pushed me into my room and locked the door.
Yes, she did, nodded Marjorie vindictively. She locked the door.
Why did she do that? asked Crek, staring. I don't know. I wasn't doing anything,
grumbled Marjorie. But she said she said she.
She wouldn't have me wandering about the house at all hours of the night and locked me in.
I couldn't get out this morning till Miss Bull let me out.
Marjorie usually brings me my cup of tea, explained Miss Bull,
and as she did not come this morning as usual, I was anxious.
When the alarm came, I went to look for Marjorie in her room.
The key was in the door, but the door was locked.
I released Marjorie.
Oh, the key was in the door, mused Quex.
It would seem, then, that the deceits simply turned the key and left it.
Huh.
I wonder why she locked the girl in.
Miss Bull shrugged her thin shoulders.
It was spite on her part, she said.
Madame never cared to see Marjorie with me.
Because I love you so, said the girl with an adoring look,
and Miss Bull patted her hand fondly.
It was strange,
thought the inspector, that so clever and refined a woman should love so stupid and coarse-looking
a girl. But like does not always draw to like. While Quix was thus examining the witnesses,
Train and Brendan were seated in the sitting-room of the former discussing the crime. Brendan was gloomy,
for in the unexpected death of Mrs. Jersey, he saw the downfall of his hopes of proving his
legitimacy. There's no chance of my marrying Dorothy now, he said with a son. He said with a
sigh. I'll remain plain
George Brendan to the end of my days
and a bachelor at that.
It's awful,
gasped Leonard, who was white and haggard.
I never expected that my search for types
would lead me into the neighborhood of a tragedy.
Who could have killed her?
I can't say.
I wonder if her death has anything to do with your affairs.
Brendan looked up suddenly
and with a stern flushed face.
"'Train,' he said sharply.
"'Whatever you do, say nothing about what I told you last night.'
"'Yes, but what you told me might lead to the discovery of the assassin.'
"'I don't care if it does,' said Brendan angrily,
and rising to his feet to emphasize his determination.
"'You are to keep my confidence.'
"'Oh, I shan't say anything, but do you think?'
"'I think nothing.
but I am sure that my affairs have nothing to do with this death.
I came to see Mrs. Jersey,
and this morning I should have had the truth out of her.
But she is dead,
and so all my projects go to the four winds.
But I don't want them spoken of.
You can depend upon me, said Leonard,
dominated by the strong will of his friend.
But who could have?
I tell you I don't know, cried George restlessly.
how you do harp on that subject.
It is the subject of the hour, retorted train.
And a most unpleasant one.
Here I shall have to remain until that police officer questions me.
What story will you tell?
Any story but the one I told you, retorted Brendan.
Well, said Leonard after a pause,
you can rely upon me.
I shall not say anything to get you into trouble.
Brendan laughed, but not pleasantly.
My good fellow, I have done nothing wrong.
Even if my tale were told,
I could not be accused of having to do anything with this murder.
Oh, I didn't mean that for one moment,
protested Train uneasily.
I know you didn't.
Nevertheless, if this police inspector knew what I told you,
he might get it into his stupid head that,
well, Brendan broke off abruptly.
I don't know what he mightn't think.
however i shall answer his questions as to my visit here and then go away i'll go also said train with a shudder i can't stop here after what has occurred it's terrible to think of that poor woman murdered how lucky i locked my door last night
"'Brendon stopped in his walk and looked sharply at the young man.
"'Why did you lock your door?' he asked surprised.
"'Well, you see, after Mrs. Jersey came into the sitting-room,
"'I didn't like to think of her prowling about.
"'One is so helpless when one is asleep.'
"'And train shuddered.
"'Did you expect her to murder you?' asked Brendan derisively.
"'I didn't expect anything,' retorted Leonard rather nettled,
but I didn't want her to come into my rooms,
so I got out of bed and locked the sitting-room door.
Not your bedroom door.
No, the sitting-room door,
so both you and I were quite safe from her prying.
Brendan looked steadily at train and gave a short laugh.
Yes, as you locked the sitting-room door,
she could as little enter as you or I could go out.
Leonard, he paused and pinched his lip.
I do not think it.
will be wise for you to tell the inspector this.
Why not? You and I are innocent.
That goes without the saying, answered George sharply.
But the less we have to do with this unpleasant matter, the better.
I suppose we, in common with everyone else here,
will be called to give evidence at the inquest.
Once that is done and Mrs. Jersey is safely buried,
I wash my hands of the whole affair.
Train shuddered.
So do I.
said he.
I am the last man in the world
to wish to pursue the subject.
But who can be guilty?
It must be someone in the house.
I suppose so,
replied Brendan,
unless Mrs. Jersey had a visitor last night.
She might have had, said Leonard.
When I locked the sitting-room door,
and that was about half-past eleven, I think,
I heard the closing of the front door.
The deuce you did?
Yes, I put my head out and listened to see if all was quiet.
I distinctly heard the front door close.
She must have had a visitor, said Brendan thoughtfully.
Yet as she alone could have let that visitor out,
and as she must have been alive to do so,
the visitor cannot be the assassin.
The visitor might have killed her,
and then have closed the door himself.
Himself?
How do you know the visitor was a man?
it might have been a woman.
Besides, Miss Bull told me that the door was locked as usual
and that she took the key this morning to open it from Mrs. Jersey's pocket.
No, train. The person who killed Mrs. Jersey is in the house.
But were I you, I should say, as little as possible to the inspector about this?
Leonard took this advice, and when questioned,
simply stated that he had retired to bed at eleven and had heard nothing.
Brendan made a similar statement, and Quack saw no reason to doubt their evidence.
He questioned all the borders and all the servants, but could learn nothing likely to throw any
light on the darkness which concealed the crime. No one had heard a noise in the night. No one had
heard a scream, and it was conclusively proved that everyone in the house was in bed by eleven o'clock,
the majority indeed before that hour. Jarvie had been the last to retire at half-past ten o'clock, and
and then he had left madame in her sitting-room with a book and a glass of negus she sent him off in a hurry and with as he expressed it a flea in his ear being somewhat out of temper
it was thus apparent that marjory who saw madame at the striking of the hour was the last person to see her alive mrs jersey went to her own sitting-room and there had been struck down
it was about twelve o'clock that she was stabbed said the doctor after he had made his examination but i can go only by the condition of the body i should say a little before or after twelve she was stabbed in the neck with a sharp instrument
with a knife said the inspector no rejoined the doctor decisively it was with a dagger by a kind of stiletto it was not by an ordinary knife that the wound was inflicted
and then the doctor who loved to hear himself talk went into technical details about the death he proved beyond doubt that mrs jersey must have died almost immediately with hardly a groan for some reason
Quex took one and all into the chamber of death and showed them the corpse.
Perhaps he expected that the sight would shake the nerves of the murderer,
supposing the murderer was among those who saw the body,
but no one flinched in the way he expected.
Mrs. Jersey was as dead as a doornail,
but no one knew, and no one could prove who had struck the blow.
End of Chapter 3
Chapter 4 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Four.
Nine Days Wonder
On account of its mystery,
the murder of Mrs. Jersey made a great sensation.
The season was dull,
and there was nothing of interest in the newspapers.
Therefore, the mysterious crime was a godsend to the reporters.
They flocked in shoals to Amelia Square
and haunted the Jersey mansion like unquiet ghosts.
Whenever any border went out for a walk,
he or she would be questioned by eager gentlemen of the press.
Idle sightseers of a morbid turn of mind came to look at the place where the crime had been committed,
and pictures of the house appeared in several papers.
From being a peaceful neighborhood, Amelia Square became quite lively.
The borders found all this most unpleasant.
This rude awakening from their sleepy life was too much for them,
and the majority made preparations to leave as soon as the inquest was over.
until then they were under police surveillance and could not leave the neighborhood, a restriction which in itself was sufficiently unpleasant.
Brendan found it particularly so as he was anxious to get back to his own rooms at Kensington and to his work.
But even when he told Inspector Quex that he was merely a visitor and knew nothing about the matter,
that zealous officer objected to his going. Perhaps, had Brendan insisted, he might have gained his point,
but he did not think it was worthwhile to make the fact of his stay in the jury.
Jersey mansion too public, and therefore held his peace. He stopped with Leonard as usual,
but the two men were not such friends as they had been. Why, Trane had changed toward him,
Brendan could not understand, but ever since Leonard had been submitted to the ordeal of
seeing the corpse he had been an altered man. From being gay he was now dull. Instead of
talking volubly as he usually did, he was silent for hours at a stretch, and he appeared to shun
Brendan's company.
George knew that Train was impressionable and sensitive,
and thought that the sight of the dead and the ordeal of the examination had been too
much for his weak nerves.
This might have been the case, but Leonard never gave him the satisfaction of knowing if
his diagnosis was correct.
After a time, George ceased to ply him with questions, and contented himself with the usual
courtes of life.
But in his heart, he felt the change deeply.
fool as train was, Brendan liked him sufficiently to resent his altered demeanor.
At the inquest, nothing was discovered likely to elucidate the mystery.
The borders all gave the same evidence they had already given to queques.
Certainly it came out that Miss Bull had prophesied that Madame would die of violent death,
but when questioned on this point she merely said that she had done so
because the death card had been turned up.
Taken in conjunction with another card, according to the reading of,
employed by fortune-tellers, a violent death was assuredly prophesied.
But as Miss Bull said, no one was more astonished than herself at the speedy
fulfillment of the prediction.
I told the fortunes on that night for amusement only, she said, as I do not believe there
is any sense in such things.
It was mere chance, nothing more.
I am not a believer in cards as prophets.
But the coincidence was so extraordinary that several
Several of the newspapers hinted that the old maid knew more than she chose to tell.
Miss Bull was up in arms at once, and after consulting her solicitor, threatened actions for libel until such statements were withdrawn.
And certainly on the face of it, the accusation was absurd.
The majority of people who did believe in fortune-telling by the cards insisted that Miss Bull was quite an adept.
Several urged her to set up in business, promising her their patronage, but the little old maid drew herself up.
and mentioning that her father had been a general, refused to entertain the idea.
Beyond this episode, there was little interest to be found in the details of the inquest.
It appeared that everyone was in bed by eleven, that everyone had slept soundly more or less,
and that all were astonished and shocked when the tragedy came to light next morning.
Train could have created a sensation by stating that he had heard the front door open after eleven,
but true to his promise to George he said nothing about this.
Miss Bull, on the other hand,
declared that the front door was locked as usual
and that she had taken the key from the dead woman's pocket
to open it when the police entered.
It would appear that Mrs. Jersey had been murdered
by someone in the house.
Yet, not one scrap of evidence could be found
to show that anyone in the house could possibly be guilty.
The borders were all old,
the servants all ordinary human beings,
and no motive could be assigned to any one person for the committal of so cruel a crime.
Moreover, the fact that the instrument used was a stiletto,
and the doctor held to that, showed that the crime must have been committed by a foreigner.
The only foreign person in the house on the night in question was Fritz the Swiss waiter,
but he would not have killed a fly, and, moreover, exculpated himself entirely with the aid of Jarvie in whose room he slept.
The jury brought in a verdict of murder against some person or persons unknown,
and that was all that could be done toward the elucidation of the Amelia Square crime.
There's only one thing that wasn't spoken of, said Quex, when he saw the borders in the drawing-room
for the last time.
It seems that Mrs. Jersey always put out the light above the door at eleven, or when the guests
departed. On this occasion it burned all night, and, as it shines behind Chris,
crimson glass, such a red window might be a guide to anyone who did not know the house,
but who had been given that sign whereby to distinguish it.
"'I can explain that,' said Granger, who was present.
When Madame was bidding farewell to her guests, she thought that some of them might be lost in the fog.
Therefore, she called out after them that she would let the light burn later so that any might
be able to retrace their steps.
"'Well,' said Quex, scratching his face,
head. That explanation is clear. And there is no use for it, put in Miss Bull, since the front
door was locked and no one entered the house on that night. That's just it, said the inspector,
sagaciously. As all you ladies and gentlemen are clearly innocent, the crime must have been
committed by someone from outside. Now, is there anyone to whom Madame gave a latch-key?
None of us had latch-keys, said Harmer.
Madame would not allow such a thing.
Oh, I don't mean you or those like you, Mr. Harmer.
At your age, Elatchke is not necessary.
But Mrs. Jersey may have given one to a friend of hers who came to see her on that night.
Had she any friend in whom she would place such confidence?
No, said Miss Bull decisively.
She trusted no one that far,
and I don't think she had a single friend outside this house.
"'And very few in it,' muttered Mrs. Stain, who on various occasions had suffered from Madame's
tongue. "'In that case,' said Quacks, rising to take his leave, "'there is nothing more to be discussed.
"'Who killed Mrs. Jersey, or why she was killed, will probably never be known.
"'Ladies and gentlemen, good day.'
"'And the inspector bowed himself stiffly out of the room, with the air of a man who
washed his hands of the whole concern.
And after all, what could he do?
There was no proof likely to indicate anyone as the assassin, and since Leonard kept silent
on the point of the front door having been opened after eleven, it was impossible to say
that the criminal had entered the house.
Had Mr. Inspector known of this he might have made further inquiries, but he knew nothing,
and departed extremely perplexed.
The Amelia Square crime was one of those mysterious murder.
which would have to be relegated to obscurity for sheer want of evidence.
When are you going back to Duke Street? asked Brendan as he took his leave of train.
This very day, replied the young man gloomily,
I don't want to stop a moment longer than I can help in this awful house.
I expect many of the others are of your way of thinking, train.
But so far as I can see, there is no hope of learning who killed the woman.
If you had only allowed me to tell Quet,
about the door being opened he might have traced the assassin.
I don't think so, Brendan shook his head.
It was a foggy night, and whosoever entered would be able to slink away without being seen.
I am not so sure of that.
There is only one outlet to the square, and there stands a policeman on guard.
The policeman would not be there all the time, argued Brendan,
to say nothing of the fog, which would hide anyone desirous of evading recognition.
as the assassin assuredly must have wished.
All the same I wish I had told Quex.
Well then, tell him if you like, said George, vexed with this pertinacity.
But you asked me not to.
Only because I fear, with your weak nature, that one question will lead to another until the whole of my private affairs will come to light.
I don't want those to be known at Scotland Yard, let alone the chance that I might be accused of the crime.
"'Oh, that's ridiculous.
You could not have left the sitting-room unless I had let you out,
and there is no door from your bedroom.'
"'That is true enough,' answered Brendan with an ironical smile,
the significance of which was lost on train.
"'But if the whole of my story came to light,
you might be accused of helping me to get rid of the woman.'
"'I?' Leonard's hair almost rose on end.
"'How could I be mixed up in it?'
"'Well, see here,' argued Brendan.
who thought it just as well to make train's own safety depend upon the discretion of too free a tongue.
I tell you about this house, and on my recommendation, you come here.
I come to stop with you and reveal my reasons for coming.
These have to do with the possession of a secret by the murdered woman.
All that, to a policeman, would be suspicious.
What would be easier than for me to go down the stairs,
and when the woman refused to confess as to my legitimacy, to stab her?
Then I could return to my bed, and you could prove an alibi on my behalf by your tail of having locked the sitting-room door.
Train shuddered. I see how easily we can get into trouble. I shall say nothing. I wish I had not come here.
I shall go abroad until all blows over. Why, said Brendan in scorn. What is there to blow over?
No more will be heard of this matter if you hold your tongue. The inquest is at an end. The
woman will be buried shortly, and you will be back leading your own life.
So far as I am concerned, you know that I am not guilty, and that I could not have left my
room since you locked that special door. Then as to hearing the front door open, that may
have been a hallucination on your part. No, I am sure it wasn't. I heard distinctly.
Well, Brendan shrugged his shoulders, but seemed uncomfortable. I dare say the assassin came and
went in that way. But if he or she did, the door was found fast locked in the morning unless
Miss Bull is telling a lie. She might be. I don't see what she has to gain. But there's no
use talking any further. The matter is ended as far as I am concerned. What will you do now?
I am going to see Dorothy, said Brendan, and tell her that there is no chance of our marriage.
nor is there, for I cannot see my way to prove my legitimacy.
We must part, and I shall probably go down the country for six months or so
to finish my novel and to get rid of my heartache.
Train remained silent, looking at the ground.
Then he glanced at his friend in a doubtful way.
What has become of your yellow holly?
Brendan produced it from his pocket.
It withered, so I took it out of my coat and put it into this end.
envelope. Do you know if Miss Ward gave anyone else a piece of Yellow Holly?
Brendan stared at this strange question. Not to my knowledge. Why do you ask?
Terrain shuffled his feet and looked down again. It is an exceptionally rare sort of thing,
he said uneasily, and its effect on Mrs. Jersey was so strange that I wondered if she
connected it with any trouble or disaster. You made the same remark before, said
Brendan dryly, and we could arrive at no conclusion.
But in any case, I don't see that Miss Ward giving me the holly has anything to do with
Mrs. Jersey's alarm, if indeed she was alarmed.
I think she was, said Train decisively, and if I were you, I would ask Miss Ward why she gave
you the yellow holly. What would be the sense in that? You might learn why Mrs. Jersey
was startled. Brendan laughed and shrugged his shoulders.
your active brain is building up a perfect romance he declared there can be no connection between dorothy and mrs jersey did she know you were coming to stop here on that night
yes i told her when i met her in the park in the morning it was then that she asked me to afternoon tea and at the afternoon tea she gave you the holly yes you seem to think she did it on purpose that mrs jersey train interrupted him quickly
It is you who are building up a romance now, he said.
I never thought anything of the sort, but I do say that the coincidence is strange.
What coincidence?
That you should have in your coat a flower.
I suppose one can call buried holly a flower, which awakens unpleasant recollections in Mrs. Jersey's breast.
In a word, train, you fancy that an inquiry into the circumstances of the yellow holly may lead to a detection of the assassin.
"'I don't go so far as that.
"'But I should not be surprised
"'if something of that sort did eventuate.'
"'Then you do go so far as that,' said Brendan with a shrug.
"'However, there is nothing more to be said.
"'My advice to you is to hold your tongue
"'less we should both get into trouble.
"'I am absolutely innocent.'
"'So am I, if it comes to that?
"'All the same, the less said, the better.'
"'Train shook hands with more cordiality
than he had hitherto displayed.
I'll be silent for my own sake
as well as for yours, he said,
and the two parted,
Leonard to pack up,
and Brendan to journey with his bag for Kensington.
Both men were conscious
of a relief when they took leave of each other.
I wish he hadn't come here,
said Train when Brendan departed.
I wish I had held my tongue,
muttered George when he was in his cab.
That fool seems to think
I know something about
this matter. Of course, the economy of the mansion was disordered when the crime was committed.
But, thanks to the firm handling of Miss Bull, who now took the reins which had fallen from the
hands of Madame, a few days put a different complexion on affairs. Marjorie knew where her aunt
kept the money, and Miss Bull made several of the borders behind-hand pay up. Thus, there was enough
money to go on with, and Miss Bull decided to wait until after the funeral before deciding
what she intended to do herself.
When Mrs. Jersey was buried, her lawyer made his appearance with the will.
It was read to Marjorie, and Miss Bull stopped beside the poor girl as the only friend she had in the world.
The will was short and concise, as it seemed that there was very little to leave.
The lawyer read it, and then looked at Marjorie to hear what she had to say.
The girl simply stared at him blankly as though not comprehending his meaning, and Miss Bull touched her elbow.
Do you hear what he says?
she asked rebukingly.
Yes, replied Marjorie,
but I don't understand.
Haven't I any money?
The lawyer would have read the will again,
but Miss Bull held up her hand.
She is stunned with grief, said Miss Bull,
and is not capable of attending to business.
Go and lie down, Marjorie,
and I will speak to this gentleman.
You do exactly what you like, dear Miss Bull,
said Marjorie right,
and then turned to the lawyer.
Let Miss Bull do exactly as she likes.
I leave all in her hands.
The most sensible thing you can do,
said the legal advisor under his breath,
and when Marjorie had left the room,
he turned to the old maid.
Is she an idiot?
By no means.
But she is not very clever.
I have taken a great interest in her
as to tell you the truth, Mr. James,
she was badly treated by her aunt.
if you will explain the will to me i will see what can be done to put things straight i am sorry for the girl and she is devoted to me it is lucky she has such a friend said mr james heartily
he did not care much for miss bull whose very presence seemed to inspire mistrust but she was acting very well on this occasion moreover as marjorie was not likely to prove a lucrative client mr james was anxious to shuffle the business on to miss bull's shoulders and get out of it as fast as he could
"'What is it you wish to know?' he asked.
"'About this will,' said Miss Bull,
laying one thin finger on the document.
"'Madame leaves to Marjorie Watson, her niece,
"'the money in the green box in her sitting-room,
"'and also the jewels, which I presume mean the diamonds.
"'Yes, also, if you will recollect,
"'the clothes of the deceased lady.'
"'Is there anything else?' asked Miss Bull,
"'raising her black eyes inquiringly.
"'What of the lease of the lease of the lease
of this house.
That is the property of Lord
Darrington, and he only let the house to Mrs. Jersey
by the year.
Is not that rather strange?
Very strange.
But the whole connection of Lord Darrington
with my late client is strange.
I know that she received from him
an annuity of 500 a year,
and the lease of this house,
by the year, remember,
from December to December.
Now she is dead,
the annuity lapses,
and the least natural.
will not be renewed after next month.
It is now the end of November, said Miss Bull, quite composed.
I understand you to say that the lease expires when December.
It ends on the 31st of December, explained James.
And as Mrs. Jersey is dead, it will not be renewed.
Lord Derrington, so far as I know, has no interest in Miss Marjorie Watson.
What interest had he in Mrs. Jersey?
asked Miss Bull, senting a scam.
candle and her eyes brightening.
I can't tell you that, and if I could I would not.
Quite right, I beg your pardon for asking,
but you see, in the interests of that poor girl,
I wish to know exactly how matters stand.
They stand as I tell you, said James and Rose to go.
I have nothing more to do in the matter,
and my connection with the late Mrs. Jersey ceases here.
One moment, said Miss Bull,
quietly. What of the furniture? That is also the property of Lord Darrington. He bought the house as it stood from the executor of the last owner, Mr. Anthony Lockwood, fifteen years ago. Mrs. Jersey wished to set up a boarding-house, so Lord Darrington placed her in here. Every stick in the place belongs to him. Should Miss Watson leave, she goes with the jewels, the money in the green box, and with her deceased aunt's clothes.
"'A very poor outfit to start life on at her age,' said Miss Bull, rising in her prim manner.
"'By the way, Mr. James, what is the name of the late Mr. Lockwood's executor?'
"'Rogger Ireland,' replied the lawyer, looking rather surprised.
"'Why do you ask?'
"'For my own satisfaction, Mr. James.
"'If no one else will assist this poor girl, I shall do so.
"'Good day.'
James departed with a better opinion of Miss Bull, although at any time he had no reason to have a bad one.
But her manner inspired mistrust, and kindly as she appeared to be acting towards Marjorie.
He could not help thinking that there was more in her action than mere philanthropy.
You're a deep one, thought James.
I shouldn't wonder if we heard more of you.
But so far as James was personally concerned, he heard no more of the little woman.
Miss Bull collected the borders in the drawing room after dinner and made a speech.
She said that it was Marjorie Watson's intention to keep on the house, and that the terms would be as before.
If any chose to stop, they would be welcome, but those who decided to go could have their bills made out at once.
Having thus acted as the mouthpiece of Marjorie, Miss Bull took the girl away to the sitting-room of the late Mrs. Jersey,
the very one in which the tragedy had taken place.
Marjorie was unwilling to enter, much less hold a conversation there,
but Miss Bull, who had no nerves to speak of and a very strong will,
laughed her out of this folly.
Now, my dear Marjorie, she said when the girl was seated,
I want you to pay the greatest attention to what I am about to say,
and to repeat nothing of my conversation.
You are my best friend, said Marjorie looking at the peaked white face with adoring eyes.
I shall do whatever you say.
Good child, said Miss Bull, patting the hand that was laid confidingly on her lap.
Listen, child. Lord Darrington is the owner of this house, and he leased it to your aunt by the year.
A very strange arrangement for which there ought to be some explanation.
I am going to seek it from Lord Darrington.
But he won't tell you anything, Miss Bull.
The old maid tightened her thin lips.
I think he will, she said in a rather ominous manner.
At all events, there is no harm in my trying.
With regard to the annuity.
What annuity?
I forgot. You don't know about that.
Well, there is no need that you should.
But it seems that Lord Darrington allowed your late aunt an annuity of five hundred a year.
I don't know the reason why he did so, and as such a little,
reason is not pertinent to matters in hand I do not wish to know but the annuity must lapse it is not likely that Lord
Darrington will continue it to you she paused and looked at the girl your parents are dead I
believe Marjorie yes for many years I have been with my aunt she was my only relative dear miss
bull all the better I don't want other people interfering
said Miss Bull in her icy way.
Well, Marjorie,
I shall see if I can get Lord Darrington
to renew the lease to you,
and I shall be your security.
With the money in hand,
I have counted it,
and with that in the bank it amounts to two hundred pounds,
we can continue the boarding-house.
A few of the boarders will go,
but many will remain,
as they will not get anywhere so cheap a place.
You will be the nominal head of the house,
but in reality I'll.
shall manage. Do you agree? I am your slave, cried Marjorie with melodramatic intensity.
You are my friend, said Miss Bull, her thin lips relaxing. I am a lonely woman, Marjorie, though I still have
a surviving sister. Her lips tightened again as she said this, and I love you, my dear, for your
goodness. Well, we shall keep on the boarding-house, and you, poor child, will be preserved.
from the terrible life which would otherwise be your portion.
How good you are!
How good you are!
A little selfish also, said Miss Bull, kissing the girl.
I do not wish to leave this place or lose you.
I am growing old and a change would break my heart.
She said this as though she really believed that she possessed such an organ.
Mrs. Jersey always said that a heart was lacking in Miss Bull's maiden breast.
but certainly the way in which the old woman was treating the helpless girl showed that she was better than she looked.
And perhaps, as Mr. James considered, Miss Bull had an axe to grind on her own account.
However this might be, from that moment Miss Bull was in charge of the Amelia Square establishment.
Whatever means she used to induce Lord Derrington to consent, she certainly managed to get the lease renewed in Marjorie's name.
Some of the borders went, but others came in their place, and these being younger added to the gaiety of the house.
So all was settled, and Miss Bull became a person of importance. She was the power behind the throne,
and ruled judiciously. In this way did she do away with the reputation of the house as a place
where a crime had been committed. In a year, all was forgotten.
End of Chapter 4
Chapter 5 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume
This Librevox recording is in the public domain
Five
A lover's meeting
Everyone who was anyone knew the Honorable Mrs. Ward
She was a fluffy-haired kitten of a woman
More like a Dresden China shepherdess than a mere human being
Nothing could be prettier than her face and figure
and nothing more engaging than her manners.
With her yellow hair, her charming face,
and her melting blue eyes,
she managed to hold her own against younger women.
The late Mr. Ward, Lord Ransom's son,
had been a fast young man devoted to the turf and to his pretty wife.
But he was killed when riding in a steeplechase
two years after his marriage,
and left his widow alone in the world
with one daughter for consolation in her affliction.
Mrs. Ward, being in want of money,
for her deceased father had been a general with nothing but his pay,
played her cards so well with regard to her father-in-law
that he allowed her a good income and thought she was the most perfect of women.
But Lord Ransom was the only one of the family who thought so,
for the other relatives fought rather shy of the pretty pleading widow.
Not that Mrs. Ward minded.
She characterized the women as Frumps and the men as fools
and having enough to live on comfortably set up a house in Curzon Street.
It was thought that she would marry again,
and probably she would have done so
had a sufficiently rich husband with the title been forthcoming.
But somehow no one worth capturing ever came Mrs. Ward's way,
and as time went on she chose to assume the role of a devoted mother,
and, as she phrased it, to live again in her daughter.
This was quite wrong, as Dorothy Ward was a slim, serious-minded girl of nineteen,
not given to gaiety, and was one who was anxious to marry a husband,
with mind rather than with money.
How frivolous little Mrs. Ward came to have such a Puritan daughter
no one could ever make out.
She resembled her mother neither in face nor in manner, nor in tastes.
Mrs. Ward openly lamented that Dorothy was such a difficult girl to manage,
which meant that Dorothy had refused several good matches,
and had declined to be guided entirely by her mother's opinion.
When the Earl of Somersly proposed and was not accepted,
Mrs. Ward was furious, but Dorothy said steadily that she would never marry a brute with the title.
"'You'll marry anyone I choose,' said Mrs. Ward when the two were discussing the matter.
"'Certainly not Lord Somersley,' rejoined Dorothy steadily.
"'And certainly not that penniless George Brendan,' retorted her mother.
"'You shall not throw yourself away on him.'
"'He is a good man and a clever man, and a man
whom any woman might be proud of winning mother.
And a man with no money and no position?
Who is he?
What is his family?
No one ever heard of him.
They will one day when he becomes famous.
Oh, as a writing person.
As though anyone cared two pins about that sort of thing.
I want to see you a countess.
You shall never see me the Countess of Somersley.
I know all about that man.
He is bad and disdain.
Oh, Lord, as if that mattered, cried Mrs. Ward with supreme contempt.
Your father was the same, yet we got on all right.
I am sure you did, said Dorothy with bitter meaning upon which Mrs. Ward showed her claws.
Her friends called her a kitten, but she was a cat in reality and could scratch on occasions.
But all her scratching could not make Dorothy, Lady Summersly.
hating Brendan and knowing that her daughter liked him,
it was supposed by Mrs. Ward's friends
that the young man would be sent to the right about
and that Dorothy would be kept out of his way.
But Mrs. Ward knew her daughter too well
to take such a disastrous course.
My dear, she said to an intimate friend,
if I did that, Dorothy is just the kind of annoying girl
to run away with him and live in a garret.
If I let them meet, they will not think
of marriage, and I dare say Dorothy will get tired of Brendan.
He is so shabby in his dress and so poor that after a time she will cease to like him.
No, no, I'll let him follow her wherever he likes, and meet her on all occasions.
They will grow sick of one another.
In an ordinary case this recipe might have answered.
But Dorothy respected as well as loved George Brendan, and every time she met him, grew to
admire and love him more. Mrs. Ward became quite exasperated and redoubled her efforts to
sicken Dorothy of the creature, as she called Brendan. She took to praising him on all occasions
and sometimes asked him to dinner. At the same time she constantly abused young Walter Vane,
who was Lord Darrington's grandson and heir. He was the man she wished Dorothy to marry,
as one day he would have a title and fifteen thousand a year. But in spite of this Machiavellian policy,
Dorothy still continued to love George
and expressed a hearty dislike for Walter Vane
whom she characterized as a weakling.
If he had only the grit of his grandfather, I might respect him.
Mrs. Ward turned pale under her rouge when she heard this.
Oh, no, no! Lord Darrington is a terrible old man.
Were Walter such as he is, I should not ask you to marry him.
You would marry me to the Prince of Darkness himself
if it suited your purpose.
said her daughter calmly, from which speech it will be seen that Miss Ward had small respect for
her fascinating mother. The two did not assimilate as their dispositions were so different.
Mrs. Ward complained that Dorothy was too religious, and Dorothy found the frivolous
world in which her mother moved dull beyond words. It so happened that Dorothy stayed mostly
at home or went out with one of her aunts, who was something of her type, while Mrs. Ward
enjoyed herself at Hurlingham and Monte Carlo.
The little woman always managed to keep on the right side, as she had no notion of losing
her position in society or the income which Lord Ransom allowed her. But within limits,
she was extremely fast. She generally had a number of young men at her heels, and made use
of them in betting and in getting boxes for the theatres, for suppers at the Cecil and gloves,
when nothing else was to be had. But she managed all these things so discreetly that no one
had a word to say, and the general impression was that she was a dear little woman with a stiff
daughter. Quite a trial. And if some old Frumps did praise up Dorothy and condemn the mother,
they were in the minority. Things were in this position when the murder of Mrs. Jersey took
place. Dorothy read about it in the papers, and knowing that George had gone to stop in the house
with train was extremely anxious to hear particulars. She wrote to his Kensington address asking him to call,
but received no reply. Then she saw that he gave evidence at the inquest, and two days later
George made his appearance at the Curzon Street House. Mrs. Ward, who had been voluble in her
expressions regarding Brendan's love for low company, so she put it, sailed toward him with open hands.
She always welcomed Brendan in this bright, girlish, kittenish way as it was part of her scheme.
She thought, so serious a man would never relish a frivolous mother-in-law, and hoped to get rid of him
in this way. But
Brendan was too much in love with Dorothy
to mind the vagaries of her fashionable
parent. My dear
Mr. Brendan, cried
Mrs. Ward in her usual gushing manner.
I am so glad to see you.
The murder you know. I saw your name in the papers.
How exciting! How romantic!
Tell us all about it.
There is nothing to tell, Mrs. Ward,
said George, glancing round the room and seeing
that Dorothy was absent.
all I know is set forth in the papers.
Mrs. Ward arranged herself on the sofa and laughed joyously.
Quite exciting it is, she said.
I wonder who killed the poor woman,
and how did you come to be there on the very night she died?
This last question was asked sharply and with a keen glance.
George was rather taken aback,
but not thinking she had any intention in what she said,
answered soberly enough.
I went to see a friend.
Mrs. Ward. It was unfortunate that I chose that night.
Well, of course, you didn't know, said Mrs. Ward artlessly.
But fancy knowing anyone living in an out-of-the-way place like that.
But you do know such queer people.
George thought he knew none queerer than Mrs. Ward herself,
but he suppressed this speech as impolite.
My friend is Mr. Leonard Train.
Really? I think I have met him.
his father made a fortune out of mustard or coke or something horrid.
What was he doing there?
Looking for characters for a book.
Oh, Mrs. Ward opened her eyes.
Did he find any?
I believe so, but he has left the house now.
I should think everyone would leave it after the murder, said Mrs. Ward.
Dorothy will be down soon, but meantime, tell me the whole thing from your own clever point of view.
she was so pertinacious that brendon had reluctantly to yield he detailed events as they had been reported by the press but concerning the confidence of leonard he kept silent mrs ward expressed her disappointment when he finished you tell me nothing new
i warned you that i would not replied brendon wondering at her petulant speech but surely you can throw some light on the matter said mrs ward brendon shook his head i fear not
I went to bed at eleven and slept sadly until I was awakened by the clamor.
Mrs. Ward thought for a moment,
Does Mr. Train know anything?
Nothing more than I have told you, declared Brendan uncomfortably.
He disliked deviating from the truth even in the smallest particular,
but he dare not risk the story of his birth becoming public property.
It was strange, he thought, that Mrs. Ward should take such a profound interest in this case.
He had never before heard her talk.
on such a subject. To add to his perplexity, he saw that, in spite of her rouge, in spite of
the shaded windows, she looked haggard. Yet it was impossible that she could be connected with
the matter in any way. He ventured a leading question. Why are you so anxious to know about
this case? Mrs. Ward's reply rather astonished him. I am not blind, she said quietly,
and I know well enough that you admire my daughter?
You are poor. You are unknown. And should Dorothy marry you, she would make a very bad match.
I am aware of that, began George. But, wait, cried Mrs. Ward, raising her hand.
I have not yet done. Notwithstanding all these disadvantages, I made up my mind to place no bar
to your union with my daughter, as she seems to like you. She loves me, Mrs. Ward.
"'Nonsense. Dorothy is too young to know the meaning of the word.
"'I say she likes you, so we can let it stand at that.
"'But in spite of your poverty and obscurity—'
Brendan winced, for Mrs. Ward's tone was insolent in the extreme.
"'I am not willing that you should marry Dorothy unless,' she hesitated.
"'Unless?' queried George, looking steadily at her.
"'Now we come to the point.
unless your character is above suspicion.
What do you mean?
You know well enough.
Here you go to a low house,
and while you are there,
the mistress of it is murdered.
George rose with some indignation.
Good heavens, Mrs. Ward,
you don't suspect me, he cried.
Oh, dear, no.
But it would be unpleasant
for my daughter to have a husband mixed up
with such a shady affair.
I am not mixed up with it,
Mrs. Ward.
It's unpleasant, said Mrs. Ward,
willfully holding to her opinion.
I don't like it.
Find out who killed that woman,
and I say nothing.
But until you do find out,
and until the assassin is brought to justice,
I must ask you to discontinue
your visits to Dorothy.
Brendan saw that she was simply
making an excuse to rid herself
of his presence so as to leave the way clear
for Walter Vane.
But he was too strong a man
to be foiled in this
way, and speedily made up his mind how to act.
Shall we leave the matter to Miss Ward?
That means you wish to see her, said the mother cleverly.
Oh, well, there is no reason why you should not, but it will be for the last time, remember.
Your character must bear inspection.
I think it does, cried George rather nettled.
Mrs. Ward, who by this time was nearly at the door, turned lightly and replied in her most
kittenish way.
Ah, my dear, Mr. Brendan,
I know more than you think.
Lola Veles.
Lola Vela Velaes?
George looked and felt uneasy.
You change colour.
Oh, I have heard all about you and that dancer.
I assure you that my connection with that lady is perfectly innocent.
Mrs. Ward scoffed.
Lady, she said sneering.
What next?
However, I do not wish to hear the particulars.
Such creatures are nothing to me.
And if you clear yourself of this very shady business in Amelia Square
by discovering the true assassin, I shall overlook Lola Veles.
There is no need to overlook her or me.
I think there is, said Mrs. Ward frigidly,
and with a wave of her slim hand.
There is no more to be said, Mr. Brandon.
You know my decision.
And as Dorothy's mother, I have some power, I hope.
Now I will send her to you, and you can say what you like.
In fact, you can communicate to her the state of my feelings.
But, added Mrs. Ward, shooting a Parthian arrow,
I should not mention Lola Veles if I were you.
Goodbye.
I shall not see you for many a long day, I expect.
And hope, said Brendan much mortified.
And hope, replied.
Mrs. Ward, coolly.
You are the last man in the world I should
like for my son-in-law.
Mary that dancer!
And with a shrill and pleasant laugh,
Mrs. Ward vanished.
Brendan paced the room
waiting for Dorothy.
How Mrs. Ward had learned
of his connection with Lola Vela
as he could not understand.
Brendan was perfectly innocent,
and what he had done for the dancer
was dictated by pure kindness.
But even if he explained
the whole circumstances of
his meeting and of his philanthropy to Dorothy,
she was a woman when all was said and done and might not believe him.
On the whole, he decided to take Mrs. Ward's advice
and hold his tongue on the subject of the dancer.
On some future occasion he might be able to explain,
and at the present moment he had the satisfaction of knowing
that his conscience was clear.
He had just arrived at this decision when Dorothy entered the room.
The next moment she was in his arms,
and the two entered Paradise
at once.
My dearest, I am so glad to see you,
said Dorothy in her soft voice as they sat down.
I wrote, but you did not come.
I was engaged, darling.
Dorothy nodded.
I know, at the inquest which was held on that poor creature.
Why do you take an interest in the case, Dorothy?
Oh, because he went to stop at the house,
and it was so strange that she should have died on that very night.
"'So your mother says,' said George uncomfortably.
"'I really think she believes that I have something to do with the matter.'
"'Oh, that's nonsense,' said Dorothy serenely.
"'But mother does not like you very much, George, and—'
"'She hates me, you mean?'
"'Well,' responded Miss Ward, candidly,
"'if you ask me to tell the truth, I think she does.
"'But you know what my mother is?
"'I—no, if I cannot say good of it.'
her, let me at least say nothing bad.
But I love you, George. You know that.
My own heart. And Brendan took her in his strong arms, thanking God for the gift of so steadfast
a heart. For a few minutes silence reigned, and the lovers looked at one another with fond
affection. Dorothy was tall and slim and dark, with a Spanish face of that delicate
high-bred cast, which is seen to perfection among the women of Andalusia.
judging by her large dark eyes and the serious expression of her lips dorothy ward might have had moorish blood in her veins perhaps she had as one of her father's ancestors when ambassador to madrid in the reign of the first james had brought back with him a spanish wife
and dorothy inherited all the iberian beauty of that lady she should have been called inez or pequita for the purely english name of dorothy suited her badly that is a milkmaid's name
and Miss Ward was more of the court than of the pasture.
Her dark beauty contrasted well with the fair calmliness of George Brendan,
and seated side by side on the sofa they looked an extremely handsome couple.
Certainly they might have appeared happier,
for Dorothy was downcast and in Brendan's blue eyes their alerted a worried look.
He was wondering how he could communicate Mrs. Ward's decision to the girl.
Dorothy looked at him and smiled.
A penny for your thought.
George, she said, taking his hand.
I'll sell them as bankrupt stock,
said Brendan drawing her closer,
and then he took his courage in both hands
for the necessary confession.
This may be my last visit, Dorothy, he said.
She looked at him in surprise.
Why do you say that?
Your mother.
Oh, never mind, my mother, broke in the girl petulantly.
I know she objects to our marriage, so...
on the contrary she told me that she would not object if i could clear myself of complicity in this crime george did she accuse you of not in so many words interrupted the lover but i saw very plainly what she meant
the fact that i slept in that house on the night mrs jersey was murdered is to her mind a proof that i have something to do with the matter but you can prove conclusively that you have not insisted dorothy certainly
Mr. Train, with whom I was stopping, can prove that I did not leave my room.
The key of the sitting-room door was in his possession, and to get out I should have had to make use of him.
George paused and thought for a moment.
But there is one thing.
What is it? asked Dorothy, seeing that he hesitated.
I don't know if I ought to tell you.
Whatever concerns you concerns me, she said, pressing his hand to her heart.
You know that I love you as dearly as.
as you love me, and nothing you tell me shall ever part us.
Oh, I don't think what I am about to say will have that effect, was Brendan's reply,
but I have a confession to make about my, my birth. Dorothy looked at him in amazement.
About your birth, she repeated. Yes, you may as well know all, and I know you will not betray me,
even to your mother. To her least of all, said Dorothy vehemently. Tell me quick.
encouraged by her faith and by the tender clasp of her hand george related to her the story of his birth and his connection with lord derrington also he detailed how he had gone to seek mrs jersey and how she had been murdered before he could get the truth out of her
or even see her finished george and now you know dearest why i do not wish you to repeat this story if your mother knew it she might think think well she certainly would not let you marry me
she has made her mind up already so far as that is concerned said dorothy quickly it is mr vane whom she wishes me to marry my cousin although he does not know it said george quietly
but i want your advice dorothy and will be guided by it what shall i do you see now that mrs jersey is dead there is no chance of getting at the truth why not advertise i have tried that for some months in every country paper in the kingdom
but there has been no response.
My father and mother must have been married
in some out-of-the-way village,
in some lonely church.
The parson and those who know about the marriage
may be dead.
In fact, it is extremely probable that they are.
Mrs. Jersey was present as my mother's maid
and she might have been able to tell me where the church is.
I only want to find the register of the marriage
and get the certificate.
Then I shall see Lord Darrington
and insist on my rights being recognized.
he can't leave either the title or the money away from me have you seen him at all yet not to speak to but he was pointed out to me i hear he is an old tyrant
dorothy shuddered a most terrible old man he always reminds me of one of those italian despots there is nothing he would not do provided that the law could not touch him
and i dare say from your description the things he desires to do are of the kind that the law would make him answerable for george said dorothy after a pause do you think he has anything to do with this murder
brendon turned slightly pale and set his lips firmly no dearest was his reply but delivered with some uncertainty he does not know at all events from me that i am seeking for a restitution of my rights and therefore would have no reason to rid himself of this woman
besides i don't know if he is aware of her existence it will be seen that brendon was ignorant that lord derrington was the owner of the jersey mansion and had allowed madame an annuity
had he known this much he might have been able to shape his course better but being in the dark he had to do the best he could with dorothy's assistance he had asked for her advice and she gave it george i should get back my birthright if i were you
"'But I may be dragged into this murder case.'
"'No. Mr. Train can save you from being accused of that.
"'It is only right that you should take your proper position in society.
"'You know I would marry you as you are, and defy my mother and the world.
"'But you owe it to your dead mother and to yourself
"'to show that you have the right to your father's name.'
"'In that case I shall do what you advise,' cried George,
"'taking heart from her firm tone.
and the first thing i shall do will be to see mr ireland who is he george my guardian he took charge of me after my grandfather lockwood died and it was by his advice that i changed my name to baffle the inquiries of lord derrington
he will know all about the marriage and may be able to indicate where my parents went when they eloped i have never asked him for a detailed statement but i shall do so now
once i find a clue i shall not rest until i prove my legitimacy for your sake my dear for your sake and he kissed her and for your own said dorothy as they rose i shall say nothing to my mother or to any one george but
Tell me all that you do.
I shall make a regular report, replied Brendan.
But we will probably have to meet elsewhere,
as your mother has asked me to discontinue my visits here.
I shall speak to her, said Dorothy angrily.
No, do not do that.
She will only grow angry and make things harder for you, my own heart.
Goodbye, and God bless you.
They kissed and parted at the door.
Brendan was just stepping out into the hall when a thought occurred to him.
He re-entered and closed the door.
Dorothy, he asked in a low whisper,
Why did you give me the yellow holly on that night?
She looked surprised.
It was to please you, she said softly.
And to tell you the truth, George,
I thought that the holly was a proof that my mother was relenting toward you.
How do you mean, Dorothy?
It was my mother who gave you.
me the holly, she explained. I came from the park and told her you were going to stop with
Mr. Train, and that she could set her mind at rest as I should not see you for a few days.
She seemed pleased, and taking the yellow holly from a vase in her boudoir, she gave me a
sprig, saying that I could give it to you for consolation. Did you tell her that you had
fastened it in my coat? Yes, but she only laughed and said it would please you.
Why do you ask me this, George?
There is no reason for my asking, he replied, suppressing the truth.
But yellow holly is rare.
Very rare. I don't know where my mother got the sprig.
After this they parted, and Brendan walked thoughtfully away.
Mrs. Jersey had been startled by the sight of the holly.
Mrs. Ward had given the sprig to Dorothy, who had presented it to him.
He asked himself if there was a reason for Mrs. Ward's action.
End of Chapter 5.
Chapter 6 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
6. What Mr. Ireland knew.
After his disagreeable experience in the Bloomsbury District,
Brendan was not very anxious to go there again,
but it was necessary that he should do so if he wanted to see his guardian.
From force of habit he still continued to call him so,
although Mr. Ireland had long since ceased to act in that capacity.
George had a sincere respect for him and frequently paid him a visit.
Usually it was one of ceremony or of enjoyment,
but on this occasion the young man went in search of knowledge.
Ireland was an eccentric character who collected, of all things, bill posters.
Most collectors turned their attention to stamps, to snuff boxes,
to autographs, and such-like trifles.
but Mr. Ireland hunted for those gigantic and gaudy pictures which make gay the thoroughfares of the city.
When George entered the dull old house in an equally dull Bloomsbury Street,
he found the hall decorated with an immense advertisement of Bovril.
Proceeding upstairs, he was met on the landing by the famous cats who served to draw attention to Nestle's milk,
and finally entered a large room on the first floor where Mr. Ireland sat at his desk,
surrounded by a perfect art gallery.
Here was Fry's chocolate.
There, the magic carpet of Cook,
and the wall opposite to the three windows
looking out onto the street,
was plastered with theatrical advertisements,
more or less crude in color and out of drawing.
These were not modern,
but had been acquired by Ireland
in the dark ages when street art was in its infancy.
The effect of the whole was bizarre and striking,
but George was too used to the spectacle
to pay much attention to the gallery.
The room was very bare,
so as to give space for the collection.
Mr. Ireland sat at a mahogany desk in the center
which was placed on a square of carpet.
Beside this desk stood a chair,
and in one corner of the room was a safe painted green.
Other furniture there was none,
and what with the huge pictures,
the bare floor, and the want of curtains to the windows,
the effect was comfortless and dreary,
but Mr. Ireland did not seem to mind in the least,
He was a tall, old man with rather long white hair and a clean-shaven benign face.
His unusual height did away with the impression of his excessive stoutness, for he appeared
to be as fat as Daniel Lambert.
George often wondered at his size, considering that the man ate comparatively little.
Mr. Ireland was dressed in glossy brothcloth, scrupulously brushed, and wore an old-fashioned
gladstone collar.
He had mild blue eyes, rather watery, and a large
mouth with full red lips. This hint of sensuality was contradicted by the serenity and pallor of his
face and by his life, which was as correct as his dress and as methodical as his hours.
Never was there so methodical a man. He lived by the clock, and with him one day exactly resembled
another. He rose at a certain hour, and retired precisely when the hand on the clock indicated another.
his meals were always regular, and he had stated hours for walking when he went out,
whether it was wet or fine, sunny or foggy.
The man was like a machine, and George, when living with him in his early days,
had often found these restrictions irksome.
It was one o'clock when Brendan called, and Mr. Ireland had just finished his luncheon.
At two precisely he would leave the house for his one-hour's constitutional.
Brendan was aware of this and had timed his visit accordingly.
Nevertheless, Ireland looked at his watch and mentioned the fact.
I can only give you an hour, George, he said.
You know my habits.
An hour will be sufficient, replied Brendan taking the one chair.
You are not looking very well, sir, he added, noting the faggot air of the old man.
I have not been sleeping so soundly as usual.
rejoined Ireland, producing a box of cigars and passing them.
At my age, and I am now 75.
I can't be expected to enjoy my bed so much as a young person.
Take a cigar.
The old brand, said Brendan selecting one.
I never vary, replied his guardian gravely.
Pass that matchbox, George.
Have you a light?
Good.
Now we can talk.
for the next 55 minutes.
What is it?
As time was short and Mr. Ireland would be sure
to terminate the interview exactly at the stated hour,
George plunged immediately into the business
which had brought him hither.
I wish to hear the story of my parents,
he said deliberately.
The cigar fell from the fat fingers of Ireland,
and he stared in amazement at the young man.
It is rather late in the day for that, is it not?
he asked,
picking up the cigar and recovering himself.
Better late than never, quoted George, puffing a cloud of smoke.
A proverb is no answer, said Ireland testily.
Then if you wish to know, sir, I am in love.
That is no answer either.
It will lead to a very explicit answer, rejoined the young man coolly.
Love leads to marriage, and in my case marriage cannot take place unless I know that I am legitimate.
"'Of course you are. I have always maintained that you are.'
"'What proof have you?' asked George eagerly.
Ireland hesitated and wiped his mouth in quite an unnecessary manner with a red silk handkerchief.
"'Your father always declared that Miss Lockwood was his lawful wife and treated her with every respect.
"'Did my father ever tell you where the marriage was celebrated?'
"'No, I never asked.
nor did your grandfather Lockwood.
It was not till after your mother's death
that Lord Derrington denied the marriage.
Then Mr. Vane was in Italy
and never troubled about the matter.
He should have done so for my sake,
said George indignantly.
Certainly, and I urged him to do so,
said Mr. Arland heavily.
I was in Italy at the time,
and you were only an infant in arms.
Who was my nurse,
then.
Jane Fraser, the Scotch nurse
who afterward brought you to your
grandfather Lockwood when Mr. Vane
was murdered.
Do you remember the other nurse, the first one I
had? Mr. Ireland
grew indignant and puffed angrily
at his cigar.
I do indeed, he said wrathfully.
A vulgar forward, hussy.
She was not bad looking either
and set up for being a lady.
Here he began to laugh.
Would you believe it, George, my boy?
She was in love with your father
and showed it so plainly
that he was obliged to get rid of her.
What was her name?
Eliza Stokes,
and she was handsome in a bouncing way.
What became of her?
I can't tell you,
said Ireland with sudden reserve.
Did you see her after she was dismissed?
Ireland turned his cigar slowly,
and did not look at George when he replied.
Yes, I did.
When and where it does not matter.
But it does matter, to me, cried Brendan anxiously.
It is to know about her that I came here to see you today.
I thought you came about your birth, said Ireland sharply.
That, among other things.
The old man looked down again and appeared to be in deep thought.
He was turning over in his own mind how much or how little he should
tell George. And the young man looked at him anxiously. Much depended upon the speech of Mr. Ireland.
At last the silence was broken and by a most unexpected remark.
I loved your mother, said Ireland. I never knew that, said Brendan softly, for he saw that the man
was moved at the recollection of some early romance. I never spoke of it before, was the
reply, and Ireland laid down his cigar to speak the more freely.
Yes, I loved Rossina Rockwood with all my heart and soul.
I was not bad looking in those days, George, and I had a good income, but she preferred
that scamp. And he struck his hand heavily on the table with glowing eyes.
You are talking of my father, sir, said Brendan stiffly.
I ask your pardon. But if you will.
wish me to tell the story of that most unfortunate affair, you cannot hope that I shall keep my
temper. I was very badly treated by—well, with a glance at George Ireland nodded.
Let the dead rest in peace.
I think it will be as well, said Brendan coldly.
Ireland again struck the table. His pallid skin became a deep crimson, and his eyes flashed.
George rose in alarm for the old man.
struggled to speak with such an obvious effort
that he thought an apoplectic fit would end
the conversation. He hastily poured out a glass of water
and begged Ireland to loosen his neckcloth.
But the man shook his head and going to one of the windows
opened it. For a few moments he inhaled the air
and returned to his seat more composed.
I beg your pardon, George, he gasped when he recovered his voice.
But if you wish me to tell you anything,
you must not speak to me like that.
I have a bad temper.
I never knew that, said Brendan in a soothing tone.
You were always kind to me.
I have a superlatively bad temper, repeated Ireland.
But you were her child.
How could I be angry with her child?
Wait, wait, I shall tell you all I can.
Give me a few moments.
He was so moved with emotion and with a
recollection of the past, that he buried his head in his arms which were resting on the table.
Brendan, respecting this feeling, walked to the end of the room and stared at a picture which
represented a star of the ballet. But he did not see the saucy face, the twirling skirts.
He was thinking how strange it was that Ireland should never have confessed this love before.
Certainly he had never displayed such emotion. A change had come over the man, whereby he more
plainly revealed his feelings than he was wont to do. George put this down to old age and to less
self-control consequent on the same. Shortly, he heard Ireland calling to him and returned to his
seat to find the old man smoking quietly and rather ashamed of his outbreak.
But you shall see no more of that, he said. I am sorry to be obliged to ask you for a story of
the past, said Brendan apologetically, but it means so much to me.
i'll tell you all i can said ireland taking no notice of the apology but looking at the ash on his cigar he paused for a moment to collect his thoughts and then began abruptly
i first met your mother at her father's house in amelia square where i went to take lessons in singing lockwood was famous for his method in those days and his fame was increased by the appearance of your mother rosina at many concerts
She was a most beautiful creature, and was as much admired for her beauty as for her voice.
Ah, what a voice! It was like the thrill of a lark, flexible and silvery, and with an immense range.
She was quite the rage for a season, and was called the English Jenny Lind.
Many offers were made to her for the operatic stage. I dare say she would have
accepted in the end had she not met with Percy Vane and he? Ireland's hand clenched.
My father, said George wilfully disregarding this sign of temper. How did he meet her?
He saw her at a concert and fell in love with her. Then he came to take singing lessons with the
voice of a frog. Bah, it was a mere blind. It was Rosina Lockwood he was after. I saw it.
Oh, yes.
The eyes of love are keen,
and although Rosina
would not waste a look on me,
I watched her every action.
Many a night have I paced
Amelia Square watching her window.
When she sang, I was entranced,
when she smiled.
Here the old man shook his head
and made an effort to recover himself.
Brendan saw that the recital was painful to him,
and but that he was so active,
to get at the proofs of his birth
would have asked him to desist.
But there was too much at stake
for such consideration to be shown.
Go on, he said softly,
and Ireland resumed.
Percy Vane was a handsome man
and rich.
I warned Lockwood
that he was in love with Rosina,
but the old man would not heed.
He was flattered by the attention
Rosina received.
All through that season,
Vane was in attendance.
on Rosina.
At the end of it he eloped with her, yes.
He met her outside St. James Hall, and they eloped.
Where did they go to? asked Brendan eagerly.
That I cannot say.
Rosina wrote three weeks afterward from Paris, signing herself vain,
and stating that she was the wife of Percy.
Was my grandfather angry?
Yes, and no.
He was angry that he should have lost her,
for she was of use to him
as an advertisement of his method of singing,
and also she earned a great deal of money.
The house in Amelia Square was large
and required a good deal to keep it up.
Besides, Anthony Lockwood was extravagant.
That was why you were left so badly off.
Brendan shrugged his shoulders.
It was good of my grandfather to leave me anything,
he said.
But in what way was my
Mr. Lockwood pleased?
You hinted that he was not quite angry.
Well, said Ireland,
slowly twirling the cigar in his fingers.
You see, he was flattered
that his daughter should have married
into the aristocracy.
Then there was no question of the marriage then?
No.
Lord Darrington said nothing
till your mother was dead,
and even then he said very little.
It was,
when Vane was murdered at San Remo that he first decisively asserted that no marriage had taken place.
He did so because Lockwood insisted that Darrington should acknowledge you as the heir.
He refused to do so, and said that his second son was the heir.
That is Walter Vane's father.
Exactly.
And now the father is dead.
Walter Vane stands in your shoes.
I wish you could.
could prove the marriage, my boy, said Ireland, shaking his head, but it will be a difficult
task.
I don't care how difficult it is, replied Brendan resolutely. I am determined to learn the truth.
Who is the lady? asked Ireland.
Miss Dorothy Ward, you don't know anything of her.
Ireland shook his head. I left the adoration of the aristocracy to Lockwood, he said
was something like a sneer. But that's neither here nor there, my boy. To make a long story short,
I met your mother in Paris, and shortly afterward she died, giving birth to you.
Eliza Stokes was with her when she died, and you were given into the charge of that woman.
Your mother was buried in Per La Chais. Vain put up a stone to her. Oh, he behaved very well. I don't.
deny that added Ireland but with a dark face he was really fond of her and I suppose there was a marriage did my mother ever say anything about it never you asked me that before it was an accepted fact after the death of a Rosina her husband went to Italy I was there too and it was at Milan that the episode occurred which led to the dismissal of Eliza's
what was that why there was a young english waiter quite a boy he was who fell in love with eliza when she was taking charge of you at the hotel de ville
she refused to marry him and hinted that she loved your father vain heard of this and taxed her with impertinence the end of it was that eliza said too much and was dismissed and jane fraser was sent from england by vane's mother to know
you. That looks as though Lady
Darrington believed in the marriage.
It does, admitted Brendan hopefully.
She would not have sent a nurse had anything been wrong.
On the other hand, if she had been quite certain about the marriage,
she might have offered to take charge of me.
She did, I believe, but your father was so fond of you,
for your mother's sake, that he could scarcely bear you out of his sight.
However, Eliza went and Jane.
came, and then your father went to San Remo. You were then two years of age. Did not my father return
to England during all that time? No. When he left England with your mother, he never returned.
She died in Paris, and with you in charge of a nurse, Vane wandered about the continent. I was
twice in Italy and saw him. The second time it was at San Remo. If I was in the same time it was at San Remo.
If you disliked my father so much, why did you seek him out?
To see you, George. You were her child, and I loved Rosina so dearly.
Ireland stopped, gulped down his emotion, and proceeded more calmly.
Yes, I was at San Remo when your father was murdered.
You never told me that before, said Brandon.
I never told you anything before, replied Ireland dryly.
and i should not tell you now but that my health is getting so bad that i may not live long i have an incurable disease which will sooner or later carry me off no i don't want sympathy
let me finish the story and then we need not refer to it again i had intended to leave a written statement behind me for you george but this is better as you can ask me questions about what you do not understand
i understand all so far said george thoughtfully but about this murder mr ireland who killed my father that was never discovered
he went to a masked ball and was seen leaving the room in the company of a blue domino his body was found on the stones of the beach early next morning he had been stabbed to the heart
with a stiletto asked brendon recollecting the manner of mrs jersey's death yes hence it was supposed that he had been stabbed by some jealous italian who had followed him and the lady but the truth was never known
i think myself that vane was murdered on the parade and that his body was thrown over on to the beach the man who killed him must then have taken away the lady who was the lady the blue domino
no one ever learned she was cloaked and masked your father was a gay man george and it was rumoured that he was in love with the wife of a certain officer it might be that the husband but of course
I cannot say.
The Blue Domino may not have been the woman in question.
The whole thing is a mystery.
Your father's body was taken to England,
and as Lord Darrington refused to acknowledge the marriage,
Lockwood took charge of you.
I remember, and Jane Fraser was my nurse for many years.
She was at San Remo when the murder took place.
Yes, and so was Eliza Stokes.
What was she doing there?
Well, this waiter, by the way, his name was George also,
although you were called after Lockwood's father,
well, George Rates,
seeing that Eliza was dismissed,
got her a situation at a hotel in San Remo.
He came there also during the season,
and I believe the two married.
But Eliza Stokes never came near your father.
What became a parameter
afterward. Ireland hesitated. I can't say, he said. But I can, observed George Cooley.
She was murdered the other day at the Amelia Square house as Mrs. Jersey. I heard of that crime.
But how do you identify Eliza Stokes with Mrs. Jersey? My old nurse Jane Fraser told me.
When I began these inquiries, I looked up, Jane, who now lives in a little Essex village.
She told me all she could, which was not much.
But she stated that when here one day on a visit to you,
she had met Eliza Stokes, and in spite of her age and grey hairs,
she had recognized her.
Eliza told her that she was called Mrs. Jersey,
and had taken a boarding-house in Amelia Square.
I then determined to speak to Mrs. Jersey
whom I thought might have been present at the marriage,
or at all events might know where it had been celebrated.
It is probable she did, said Ireland.
as she was with your mother as made when the elopement took place.
Did you see Mrs. Jersey, or Eliza Stokes, as I still regard her?
I saw her, but she was murdered before I could manage to speak to her on the subject.
Did you know?
I know that Eliza Stokes had changed her name to Mrs. Jersey and was in Amelia Square, said Ireland.
But I only learned this the other day.
Who told you?
A woman called Miss Bull, said Ireland.
Miss Bull, repeated George.
I remember that was the border who foretold a violent death to Mrs. Jersey.
But you read about that in the papers.
Ireland nodded.
I did, he said.
And I also saw that you were in the house when Mrs. Jersey was murdered.
You were a witness.
I can tell you about that.
I...
There is no need to do.
tell me. I have not the time. Ireland looked at his watch. In ten minutes I leave for my walk.
George remonstrated. But this is so important. Not so important as my health. I can give you only the ten minutes, George.
This Miss Bull called to ask me about the lease of the house to Mrs. Jersey. I knew nothing about
that. When Lockwood died, I sold the house to Lord.
"'What? To my grandfather?'
"'Yes. But had I known he was the purchaser, I should not have let him had it.'
He bought it through an agent. Since then I heard nothing more about the house. I did not even
know it was a boarding establishment until it appeared as such in the papers the other day.
I wondered what you were doing at the inquest. I can explain.'
Ireland held up his hand.
I need no explanation.
I know that Mrs. Jersey was really Eliza Stokes.
I gathered that from the description given by Miss Bull
in the course of our conversation.
My suspicions were aroused by the fact
that Lord Darrington had leased the Amelia Square House to Mrs. Jersey.
Why did he do that?
George spoke more to himself than to Ireland.
well said the old man rising it is my belief that lord darington knows there was a marriage and assisted mrs jersey so that she should hold her tongue now there is no more time i must go out and ireland walked to the door
george followed knowing it was vain to attempt to turn him from his purpose as the old man was most obstinate one moment he said on the doorstep this blue domino connected with my father's murder was she never traced
no there was no means of tracing her except that she wore a piece of holly she carried no distinguishing mark holly cried george astounded yellow holly yes
I don't know how you come to mention it,
but the holly warned by the blue domino
with whom your father went away had yellow berries.
End of Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
7. The Red Man
As Brendan was in the neighborhood of Amelia Square,
he paid a visit to the boarding house.
Having learned from...
from Ireland that Miss Bull had informed him how Lord Derrington was connected with the late
Mrs. Jersey, George thought it just as well that she should be questioned. Certainly Miss Bull,
who appeared to be a dour and secretive sort of person, might not speak. On the other hand,
if he could induce her to be frank he might learn from her, presuming she knew, the reason why
Lord Derrington had leased the Amelia Square House to Mrs. Jersey. It was a forlorn hope, but
Brendan was so eager to learn the truth that he clutched even at this straw. Therefore, on leaving
Ireland, he turned his steps in the direction of the boarding-house. Much as he disliked entering
it again, it was necessary that he should do so. On his way, Brendan meditated on Ireland's
remarks about the holly. He remembered the agitation of Mrs. Jersey when she saw the sprig in his
coat. She had been at San Remo when his father was stabbed, and Ireland had mentioned that the woman
with whom the deceased man had left the ballroom wore a sprig of yellow holly.
Had the berries been red, George might not have thought so much of the matter.
But yellow holly is comparatively rare, and evidently Mrs. Jersey's alarm had been caused by her recollection of the murder.
The sight of the holly had revived her memory.
I wonder if she had anything to do with the murder, mused George as he turned into Amelia Square.
Could she have been the woman in the Blue Domino?
certainly she was a servant and my father would have had nothing to do with her but at the ball she would wear a domino and be closely masked but even so by what means could she have induced my father to leave the room with her
i don't suppose she murdered him herself for she had no reason to do so unless it was jealousy which for a woman in her position was absurd bah i am making a mountain out of a molehill
eliza stokes probably never went to the ball and had nothing to do with the blue domino or with the matter of the crime from what ireland says however a piece of yellow holly was mentioned in connection with the murder and mrs jersey then eliza stokes probably heard of it
that was why she shivered and turned pale when she saw the sprig in my coat having thus decided the question though not in a very satisfactory way george rang the bell and was admitted into the house by jarvey
The boy welcomed him with a grin, as George had given him half a crown when he left the mansion after the inquest.
"'Miss Bull, sir, yes, sir,' said Jarvie.
"'Step this way.'
And he introduced Mr. Brendan into the sitting-room in which the murder had taken place.
It was empty, but Jarvie departed immediately to fetch Miss Bull.
George knew the room well.
It had been used by his grandfather as a breakfast room, and many a meal had he enjoyed at that very table.
As the furniture had been sold to Lord Darrington, together with the house, the table was the very
article of furniture at which Mrs. Jersey had been stabbed when seated.
Brendan looked from the table to the door and wondered if the assassin had entered stealthily
with a bared weapon and had stabbed the wretched woman before she had time to turn her head.
But on second thoughts, he was inclined to think that the assassin had been in friendly
conversation with Mrs. Jersey before inflicting the fatal stroke.
Even in the short distance between table and door,
Mrs. Jersey would have had time to spring to her feet and give the alarm.
No, thought George, as he seated himself.
What I said to train is correct.
The assassin engaged Mrs. Jersey in friendly conversation
and then watched for an opportunity to strike from behind.
He would have continued trying to puzzle out the circumstances of the crime,
but that Miss Bull entered accompanied by Marjorie.
The little old,
made looked whiter and more haggard than ever, but her eyes gleamed brightly and she seemed to be
in perfect health. Marjorie, now being the nominal head of the house, appeared more important,
but she kept her eyes on Miss Bull's face and in all things took her orders from this superior being.
Miss Bull was a despot, although kindly enough, and Marjorie was her slave.
How are you, Mr. Brendan, said Miss Bull, smiling in her prim way, but without offering her hand.
I did not expect to see you again.
Why not? asked George quickly.
Miss Bull shrugged her thin shoulders
and fastened her beady eyes on his face.
Many of the borders left on account of madame's murder,
so I thought you had done the same.
I was only a visitor, Miss Bull.
Had I been a border I should not have left,
the murder did not scare me.
No, replied Miss Bull indifferently.
I don't suppose it did.
I only talked for the same.
of talking.
Brendan knew this was untrue as Miss Bull was not a woman to waste words.
Besides, the old maid's eyes were fixed with a certain amount of curiosity on his face,
and he could not conceive why this was so.
He was rather embarrassed how to begin the conversation, especially as Marjorie was present.
Something of this showed itself in his manner, for Miss Bull drew Marjorie's hand within her own
and nodded affably.
Miss Watson is the head of the house.
she said do you come to see her or me mr Brendan I come to see you said George hoping she would send it the inconvenient third away but she did nothing of the sort in that case Marjorie can stop as my friend mr. Brendan anything you say before her will go no further she keeps my secrets
always always cried marjorie her eyes on the old maid i would rather die than reveal your secrets miss bull rather tragic my dear rather tragic replied the elder patting the hand she held i have really no secrets worth revealing
a lonely old woman mr brendon solaced by the friendship and devotion of this lonely girl marjorie who had flushed at the rebuke stopped and kissed the old maid's hand
Miss Bull patted her head and turned cheerfully to her visitor.
Yes, Mr. Brendan, she said in an interrogative manner.
Again George felt awkward, but judged it best to plunge into the middle of the matter and get it over as soon as possible.
You called to see a certain Mr. Ireland, he said, about the lease of this house.
I have come to ask you why you did so.
Miss Bull stopped padding Marjorie's hand and her lips tightened.
I don't see what business that is of yours, she said tartly.
On the face of it, Miss Bull, I admit that the question sounds impertinent.
But I am anxious to learn something about Mrs. Jersey's early life, and since you know something.
I know nothing, interrupted Miss Bull quickly.
Absolutely nothing.
I came here as a boarder many years ago, and as is my custom, I kept to myself.
Madame and I did not get on well together.
she was not a lady.
Do you know what she was? asked Brendan, shrewdly.
I have already said that I know nothing, replied Miss Bull coldly.
Evidently it was impossible to learn anything from so secret of a woman.
Nevertheless, George tried another tack.
Do you know if Mrs. Jersey left any writings behind her?
He asked this because it struck him that Mrs. Jersey might have been tempted
to write out her relations with the Vane family.
It was apparent that Lord Derrington had given her a lease of the house to silence her about the possible marriage,
so for the sake of her niece, Mrs. Jersey might have left some confession which would secure its renewal.
And that the lease had been renewed was evident from the fact that the boarding-house was still being carried on in the old way and by the niece.
Miss Bull did not reply to this question herself.
That is not my business, she said.
Miss Watson took possession of her aunt's papers.
They were in a green box, said Marjorie artlessly.
What did they consist of? asked Brendan.
You need not answer that question, Marjorie, said Miss Bull quickly,
and from that moment Marjorie preserved a lumpish silence.
George rose in despair.
You will not help me, he said, taking up his hat.
So far as I can see, there is no reason why we should help you,
was Miss Bull's reply, and she rose in her turn.
Brendan saw nothing for it but to go, yet he hesitated to abandon the chance of learning something from Miss Bull.
He stared at her pinched white face and wondered if it would be any good appealing to that love of romance which is inherent in the heart of every woman.
Old and withered as Miss Bull was, she might so often under the influence of a love-tail.
Brendan disliked telling his business to strangers, especially anything regarding Dorothy whom he looked upon as a sacred.
vestal not to be lightly mentioned. However, so much was at stake that he determined to speak
openly on the bare chance of Miss Bull yielding. But he could not speak in the presence of the
girl Marjorie. She was such a sullen animal that to mention his love in her presence would be
like casting pearls before swine. He therefore turned to Miss Bull, who stood with folded hands
eyeing him frigidly. "'If I could see you alone,' said Brendan. "'Miss Bull can't
asked a shrewd glance at him, rapidly made up her mind, and told Marjorie to go.
The girl looked at him tigrishly, as she was evidently jealous and sulkily withdrew.
When the door closed, Brendan resumed his seat, but Miss Bull remained standing.
This was not a good sign, but George was now committed to a certain course and had to follow it.
Miss Bull, he said deliberately,
What I am about to tell you, being my own private business, I must ask you to keep
to yourself.
I don't want to hear it, said Miss Bull.
I never care for other people's secrets.
This is not a secret, Miss Bull.
It is merely that I am engaged to be married.
Indeed, and what interest can that have for me, Mr. Brendan?
This much.
You are a woman and must feel interested to a certain extent in a love romance.
I am aware that I am appealing to you in a way which you may regard as foolish, but I
am so anxious for certain information, and from what Mr. Ireland said, you alone can give it.
To put the thing in a nutshell, I am in love, and you can forward my marriage, if you will.
Miss Bull heard him in silence, but as he talked, a faint crimson flushed her face, and a softer
light shone in her hard eyes. She put her hand to her heart, as though she felt a cruel pain,
and sank into a chair.
Alarmed by her pallor which had now returned, George would have called for assistance,
but she stopped him.
I shall be all right shortly.
She muttered in faint tones.
Marriage, love, what have I to do with such things?
She paused and then continued, her voice-gathering strength as she proceeded.
Who is the bride, Mr. Brendan?
She is not a bride yet.
She never may be, replied the young man, gloomily.
for if she does not become my wife she will accept no one else.
I can trust her implicitly.
Her name is Dorothy Ward.
Miss Bull rose with an ejaculation and her face grew red.
Is her mother the Honorable Mrs. Ward who married Lord Ransom's son?
Yes, do you know her? asked George, surprised at her emotion.
I have heard of her, replied Miss Bull, resuming her seat with feigned indifference,
but with barely concealed agitation.
Dorothy Ward, a handsome girl,
I have seen her in the park.
She is as good as she is beautiful,
cried Brendan enthusiastically.
I'll take your word for that,
said Miss Bull in a softer tone.
Mr. Brendan, I will help you.
Don't ask me why.
Perhaps it is on account of your romance.
Perhaps because, because.
Her hand clenched itself,
and she fought down an outburst.
No matter.
I will do what I can
to forward the marriage.
What do you wish to know?
About Mrs. Jersey.
In relation to Lord Darrington?
Yes, he was the landlord of this house, I believe.
He was and is.
It was leased to Mrs. Jersey,
furniture and all, by the year.
By the year, said Brendan, surprised.
Why not a seven-year's lease in the ordinary way?
I cannot say, I am only telling you what Mrs. Jersey's lawyer told me.
Lord Darrington bought this house from Mr. Ireland with the furniture as it stood,
and as it stood he gave it to Mrs. Jersey.
She turned it into a boarding-house some fifteen years ago.
I don't think she added or took away any furniture.
It is in the same condition as when it left Mr. Ireland's hands,
and he, I believe, sold it on account of the last owner.
He did, admitted George.
The last owner was Mr. Anthony Lockwood.
He was...
George had it in his mind to state that Lockwood was his grandfather.
But the time was not yet ripe for such a disclosure,
and he said nothing at the moment.
He was a singing master.
He finished rather lamely.
Mr. Ireland told me all about him.
That is all correct, so far as I know, Mr. Brendan.
I dare say you wish to know why I some.
Mr. Ireland.
I did so on behalf of Marjorie Watson
as I wanted the girl to continue
the boarding-house.
I like the poor creature,
and when her aunt died
she was left very badly off.
Didn't Mrs. Jersey leave any money?
No.
She lived principally on an annuity
from Lord Derrington.
Ah, said Brendan
his suspicions becoming more
and more confirmed.
So he allowed her an annuity.
Why?
I can't tell you that.
But with the death of Mrs. Jersey, the annuity
naturally ceased.
I asked Mr. Ireland about the lease and then sought out Lord
Darrington.
I represented to him the position of Marjorie Watson,
and he was good enough to renew the lease in her name on my security.
Still by the year, asked George.
Still by the year.
So now the poor girl can live.
You are a good woman, Miss Bull, to help her.
in this way. I am not good, cried Miss Bull vehemently.
God knows I have enough sins to repent of. Don't call me good, Mr. Brendan. I am only a
desolate old woman who has had a hard life. I should have been married and settled, but, but...
She shook her head, and the tears came into her hard eyes.
God help me, I have had sorrows, and will have them till I die. That shows you have a good heart.
said George, alluding not to her sorrows, but to her actions toward Marjorie.
"'Well, Miss Bull,' he rose,
"'you have told me what I want to know.
I hope to make use of it.
In return for your confidence I should tell you.'
"'Tell me nothing,' cried the old maid quickly.
"'I don't wish to hear your secrets.
The less said the soonest mended.
When Miss Ward becomes Mrs. Brendan,' she added with a dry smile,
you can send me a piece of wedding cake.
She will not become Mrs. Brendan, said George, shaking his head.
I will be frank with you, Miss Bull. My name is not Brendan.
She rose from her seat and looked at him steadily, perusing every line in his face.
I thought I had seen someone like you before.
I see now, now, don't tell me your name is, is, but it's impossible.
My real name is,
George Vane. I am Lord
Darrington's grandson.
The little woman looked at him wildly
for a moment and then quietly
slipped to the ground.
She had fainted in real earnest,
and George rang the bell for assistance.
Marjorie, who had evidently
been lurking outside, rushed in.
When she saw her friend
extended pale and lifeless on the carpet,
she turned on George with a furious face.
What have you been doing to the poor darling?
She demanded. You, you,
She raised her hand to strike, but Brendan caught her by the wrist.
I have been doing nothing, he declared, quelling the rage of the she-bear by the power of his glance.
Miss Bull fainted unexpectedly.
Thank goodness, here is someone.
It was one of the servants, but Marjorie waved her off.
No one but me, no one but me, she cried, and took the slender form of her friend up in her arms.
Wait here, she added to George.
"'I'll be down soon.'
When she left the room,
George looked at the servant
who was a quiet, respectable old woman.
"'Is that girl mad?' he asked.
"'She's queer, poor soul, sir,' replied the woman,
"'and entirely devoted to Miss Bull.
"'And well she may be,
"'for it is Miss Bull who manages the house.
"'The girl is a natural, sir.'
"'She looks like it,' replied George, sitting down.
"'You can go.'
I shall wait here until Miss Bull recovers.
Yes, sir, replied the woman, and departed.
But as she closed the door, George heard her muttering something to herself
about the danger of Marjorie's claws scratching him.
Brendan did not feel very comfortable on this point himself.
He saw that Marjorie was a kind of untamed animal
who had been brought into subjection by Miss Bull.
No other person could manage her,
and should she return still in a passion,
Brendan feared less she should use physical violence.
Still, he held his ground, as he was anxious to learn how the old maid was feeling,
and still more anxious to find out, if possible, why she had fainted on hearing his name.
I wonder if Mrs. Jersey told her anything, muttered George as he looked out of the window.
But that's impossible. Mrs. Jersey would keep her own secret so as to terrorize over Darrington.
Besides, Miss Bull declared her.
that she recognized my face.
I wonder if she knew my father,
and if she can throw any light on the murder.
It is strange that she should be connected with the matter
and live in the same house as Mrs. Jersey.
Upon my word, said George in disgust,
it seems as though there were a gang of shady people here
connected with my affairs.
And she was moved by the mention of Dorothy's name.
I wonder what that meant.
But whatever it did mean he did,
did not learn that day. Marjorie returned and stated that Miss Bull was better, but was too faint
to resume the conversation. She begged Mr. Brendan to call another day. Marjorie gave this message
in quite a friendly way and nodded smilingly to the astonished George.
You are better disposed toward me, he said taking up his hat. Miss Bull told me to be kind to you,
she declared still smiling, and then with a burst of good nature, I will be kind.
Do you want to know about the papers?
If you choose to tell me, said George artfully,
but rejoicing at the opportunity this offered of learning something.
Yes, I do choose, said Marjorie.
She asked me to be kind to you.
Well, then tell me, replied George, humoring her.
There was a lease in the green box and many bills, said Marjorie.
A few photographs, and that was all.
I couldn't see the store.
story. What story, Miss Watson? Marjorie nodded with a cunning smile and answered in a whisper as though her
aunt was still alive and within hearing. She told me it was a story she was writing. Oh, such a long
story. Sheets and sheets of a story. Poolscap sheets. She kept them in a long blue envelope and would
not let me see them. George reflected that evidently Mrs. Jersey had been writing out an account of
her early life, and Marjorie's next words put the matter beyond doubt.
My aunt said that she would let me have the story to read after she died,
but I could not find it in the green box.
Perhaps you did not look thoroughly, suggested George.
Yes, I did, and I looked in all other places, but I could not find it.
The story was Italian, went on Marjorie staring at him,
for when my aunt wasn't looking, I peeped.
"'San Remo is in Italy, isn't it?'
"'I believe so,' replied George more and more convinced
that Mrs. Jersey had left a confession behind her.
"'Did you tell Miss Bull?' Marjorie nodded.
"'She said I wasn't to say a word about it,
but she will not be angry at my telling you.
She likes you and says you are like someone she once knew and loved.'
"'Brendon did not pursue the conversation.
He was afraid lest Marjorie might say too much and Miss Bull might be angry.
And it was necessary that he should keep on good terms with Miss Bull.
Evidently she had known his father.
She may even have loved him.
But George had heard so much that day that his brain was quite bewildered,
and he wanted to be alone to think the matter out.
Only one last request he made of Marjorie.
Will you show me the photographs which were in the green box?
he asked persuasively.
I can't, she replied, drawing down her lip like a child.
Miss Bull has them.
But she'll show them to you, brightening, for she likes you.
I like you, too.
You are so handsome.
With a laugh and a blush at this naive compliment, George left the house promising to call again.
With his head filled with many thoughts consequent on his two interviews,
he emerged from Amelia Square and walked down to Oxford Street.
A shout aroused him from his daydreams as he reached the corner.
He saw a tall, red-headed man crossing the road and a cab was bearing down on him.
The man stood paralyzed in the center, and it was apparent that the horse would soon be on him.
George, almost without thinking, dashed into the street, and seizing the animal, reined it back on his haunches with a powerful hand.
There was a shout of admiration from the throng on the foot-ball.
a few oaths from the driver of the handsome, and the next minute, the red-headed man was
thanking his preserver on the pavement and shaking his hand violently.
"'Don't you think I'll forget it, sir?' he said with rather an American accent.
"'You have saved Bodsey, and Bodsey can help you at a pinch.'
Brendan was too bewildered by this extraordinary address to take it all in.
Besides, the admiring crowd pressed around.
Seeing this, Bodsey took him by the arm and ran him round the corner into a quiet street.
George recovered and looked at the man he had saved.
He was a tall man with a thin face, though his body was rather stout.
His hair was red, his eyes were blue, and he had an alert manner about him which made
Brendan wonder how such a sharp person ever came to place himself in the position of being
run over.
But Bodsey gave him no time to think.
What is your name?
George Brendan.
Bodsey stepped back, and a look of genuine surprise overspread his freckled face,
and he was apparently more astonished than he showed, as Brendan guessed by the trembling of his hands.
I have lived over fifty years in the world, said Bodsey,
and this is the queerest thing I ever dropped across,
and I drop across many queer things, stranger.
Well, Mr. Bodsey, if that is your name, said George good-humoredly,
It is a good thing I have saved your life.
But you seem as though you could.
I can, I can, interrupted Bodsey, anticipating the remark.
But have you heard of that disease, fear of open spaces?
No, replied Brendan.
What is it?
I shan't give you the medical name, said Bodsey, as you would not understand.
But it is a dread to cross any open space.
At times it takes me unexpectedly, and I get a bit of a little bit of a
a sort of paralysis of the will and cannot move. That was why I stopped in the middle of the road.
I should have been killed, but for you. Perhaps I had better see you home then, said Brendan.
No, I shall take a cab. It is only now and then that the thing takes me. It can't be cured,
and maybe it will get worse. At present it does not prevent me attending to my work.
Come home with me and I'll tell you more. I live in number forty-three. I live in number forty-three. I live in number forty-three.
Amelia Square.
What, in that house?
cried George, for this was the number of the Jersey mansion.
Yes.
What do you know of it?
Nothing.
Oh, yes, you do.
But you won't trust me.
However, I'll see you again, and I'll trust you.
Take care of Lola Belize.
She means you harm.
The next moment he was gone, and George was staring after him.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
8. A beckont.
Lola Veles was the rage for a season.
She sprang into fame in a single night, and thenceforth held an undisputed position
as the favourite of the London public.
She was not exceptionally handsome, nor was her dancing distinguished by any special
grace, but about her there was something weird and original which appealed to her audience.
Such an extraordinary dancer had never been seen on the stage. She capered like one in a frenzy,
with mad leaps and bounds, and throughout her orgiastic performance behaved as one possessed.
It was not so much the poetry of motion as the madness of movement.
George Brendan had been instrumental in introducing her to the public, and she owed her
position as much to his kindness as to her own genius.
It was a snowy winter's night when Brendan found her.
He had just entered Pembroke Square, where he had lodgings, when he heard a moan.
Turning aside into the shadow of a wall, he found a woman lying there, exhausted with
cold and hunger.
Always anxious to do good, he brought the poor creature to his rooms.
Under the influence of food and wine and warmth, she revived sufficiently to tell her story.
Her name, she stated, was Lola Veles.
She was Spanish by birth but had lived many years in Italy.
Trained as a dancer, she had appeared at several of the best theaters with more or less success.
But owing to her violent temper, she had lost all chance of gaining a permanent position.
But that Lola was rendered weak by privations, she would not have told George the exact truth.
But she confessed to her temper, to a certain episode connected with the stabbing of a woman of whom she was jealous.
and to the many quarrels which had resulted in her being thrown out of employment.
Finding Italy too hot to hold her,
she had danced her way to Paris through various small towns,
but here, as elsewhere, her temper proved her ruin.
Then she had crossed the channel,
only to find that the market was overstocked with dancers.
Unable to obtain employment and having very little money,
the unfortunate woman had fallen lower and lower
until she was reduced to begging in the streets.
Finally, she was turned out of her poor lodgings and had expended her last sixpence on food.
It was shortly after this that Brendan found her.
He acted the part of a good Samaritan.
Giving her a sovereign, he sent her away, restored in a measure to her right mind.
The next day he saw the proprietor of a music hall with whom he was acquainted
and procured her an engagement in a ballet.
It was a Dresden China piece, and the violent dancing of Lola was by no one.
means suited to the fatto costumes and stately dances of the powder and patches type.
But the manager, a shrewd Jew called Koloski, saw in his new recruit the possibilities of success.
He staged a ballet adapted from the Bacchanals of Euripides and Lola danced the part of Agave,
the mother of Pentheus, who was rendered insane by Bacchus.
Her success was immediate. She enacted the part with a reckless abandon and a wild frenzy
which thrilled the house.
For the moment, Lola was not herself,
but the wild, Theban queen
raging in the orgies of the wine god.
All London came to see
the frantic revels over which Lola presided,
and night after night
the little music hall was failed to overflowing.
Lola made good use of her fame.
She insisted that her salary should be raised,
took modest lodgings in Bloomsbury,
and for a time,
saved her money as a provision
against old age and poverty.
on the stage she was a dancing demon but at home no one could have been more modest there was not a breath of scandal against her in spite of mrs wards hint to brendon this change in the formerly reckless woman was caused by love and gratitude to george
he had saved her from starvation from death he had procured her the engagement which had led to her success and present ease and figuratively speaking she cast herself and all she had at his feet
brendon found the success of gratitude rather trying even then he was in love with dorothy whom he had met twice or thrice and he was not disposed to accept the wild passion which lola so freely offered to him
he tried to make her see reason to look upon him as a friend and nod as a lover but in her insane way she resolutely refused to regard him as other than the man she intended to marry in spite of her tempers and her wild career lola had never aired and so far brendon
could well have made her his wife.
But he did not love her,
and hardly relished the idea
of taking this wild creature
to his heart and home.
Lola could not understand this coldness.
She was accustomed to see men at her feet
and to spurn them.
Now that she was willing to surrender her liberty
and to give her love,
it exasperated her to think
that the one man she had chosen
would have none of her.
As yet, she knew nothing
of Brendan's love for Dorothy,
but with the instinct of a jealous,
woman, guessed that some such passion
enggrossed the mind of the man she desired to marry.
Again and again she deluged George with questions,
which he always refused to answer, so she could learn nothing.
Weiried of her persistency, Brendan stopped away,
and for a few weeks Lola did not see him.
She followed him to his rooms, but found him absent.
Then she saw his name in the papers connected with the Amelia Square tragedy
and wrote to him.
He accepted her invitation and came down.
to supper, less because of her desire than because he wished to speak to her about Bodsey.
The name of Lola Velaes on the lips of the red man had startled Brendan almost as much
as the fact that Bodsey appeared to be acquainted with him. George could not recall meeting
the man and as he was not yet sufficiently famous for his name to be on the lips of the public,
he wondered how it came about that Bodsey knew of his existence.
Anxious to know who the man was, he sent a note, marked private, to Miss Bull, and received a
stating that Mr. Bodsey was a new border, and so far as she knew, a gentleman who lived on
his income. But this did not satisfy, Brendan, as it did not account for Bodsey's knowledge.
There remained Lola to question, and to Lola George went a night or two after the rescue of the
Red Man. George made up his mind, and a strong mind it was that he would not leave Lola
until he knew positively how her name came to be mentioned by Botsie. At eleven o'clock,
Lola was anxiously awaiting his arrival, and when he entered her little sitting-room,
she flew to kiss his hand, her usual extravagant form of greeting.
George, like all Englishmen, hated scenes, and these Lola was always making.
In vain had he tried to break her of these melodramatic tendencies.
Her hot southern blood would not cool, and she overwhelmed him with protestations of more
than friendship.
Of these he took no notice, and as it takes too to make him,
make love as well as to make a quarrel, Lola was yet far from gaining her heart's desire.
This was a formal offer of marriage.
Having just returned from the music hall,
Lola wore a loose teagown of scarlet trimmed with glittering jet.
It was a bizarre garment, but the vivid color suited her dark face and southern looks.
She was rather tall, very slender, and she moved with the dangerous grace of a pantherous.
Her face was oval, sallow and thin, with ever-changing expressions.
She was never two minutes the same, but her prevailing mood was one of fierce intensity.
The smouldering fire in her great black eyes blazed into passionate love as she swept forward to greet her visitor.
My deliverer, my adored, she cried in moderately good English, and kissed his hand with burning lips.
George snatched it away.
Don't, Lola.
You know I hate.
that sort of thing.
And so saying he threw down his coat and hat on the sofa at the far end of the room.
Lola shrugged her shoulders and coiled up a dress of her black hair which had come loose.
Putting it in its place, she glanced into the mirror over the fireplace to see that her comb was at the right angle.
She wore a diamond comb in the Spanish fashion.
So fond was she of jewels that George sometimes fancied she must have Jewish blood in her veins.
All her savings went in jewels, diamonds.
for choice.
They are pretty, Lola would say, when Brendan remonstrated with her.
And when I am poor, they can be changed into money.
Oh, yes, why not?
Ah, but you are a cold blood, you English man, she said, in allusion to Brendan's action.
But what would you?
It is the fogs and cold snows.
Come, my friend, to the table, to the table.
She clapped her hands and seizing George by the arm forced him into a seat.
The supper looked very tempting.
Lola had a knife for the beautiful and arranged the table herself.
A tall silver lamp with a pink shade shed a rosyate light on the white cloth,
the glittering crystal, and the quaint silver spoons and forks.
Lola had picked up these things at odd times and displayed very good taste in her selection.
In the center of the table was an oval silver dish filled with pink roses.
What extravagance, said George.
ah bah i got them from st romo from a friend of mine said lola removing a dish-cover they cost me not one sous george my dear friend the quixote is in the flask there and this macaroni eh
george passed his plate the viands were cooked in the italian fashion and there was a foreign air about the supper which was grateful after a long course of english cooking what with the foreign dishes the pink-shaded lamp and the
the candles likewise in pink shades on mantelpiece and sideboard, George felt as though he were in a
Soho restaurant. The night was cold, he was hungry, and at the supper with its surroundings,
was novel. He therefore made a good meal. Lola watched him eat with satisfaction.
Ah, you like my housekeepers? She said, meaning housekeeping. It is to your mind? Yes.
"'Eh, my friend, I could feed you as fat as pigs if you would but allow me.'
"'I don't want to be fat,' retorted George, reaching for the Kianti.
"'Give me a cigarette, Lola.'
She produced her own case, and not only supplied him with one,
but insisted on placing it between his lips and on lighting it.
George wriggled uncomfortably, but it was no use objecting to Lola's ways.
She would indulge her whims at any price,
and he did not wish to leave until he had accomplished his mission.
There, little friend, cried Lola when he was seated comfortably by the fire,
and she was puffing also at a cigarette.
Now we must talk. Why have you not been? Oh, you wicked young boy.
I have been engaged, replied George, secretly admiring the careless grace
with which she was half lying, half sitting in the armchair opposite.
She showed a dainty foot encased in a red stocking and a red shoe.
Lola was all in crimson from head to foot, save for the jet and her dark face and hair.
She looked like some sorceress bent upon on holy conjurations.
Engaged, she repeated with a flash of her wonderful eyes.
That is words for, I don't want to come.
George laughed, shook his head, and changed the subject.
Her remark about having a friend in San Remo ran in his mind.
Have you ever been there?
He asked, naming the town.
Ah, ba, have I been anywhere?
All Italy I know.
All, all.
You know it better than Spain, yet you are Spanish.
I am whatever you desire, my George.
Yes, I am of Spain, of Cadiz, where my parents sold oil to their ruin.
They came to Italy, to Milan, and made money to live from wine.
I was trained to dance, they died, and I, my friend.
"'You told me all this before,' interrupted Brendan ruthlessly.
"'I ask if you have ever been to San Remo.'
"'Why, yes, assuredly, and why not?'
She looked at him with narrowing eyes as she put the question blinking like a cat.
"'There is no reason, only I was thinking,' he paused.
"'A, you think, of what?'
"'Of something which does not concern you, Lola.'
"'All that is of you is to me,' she raised.
responded. I love you. Lola, be reasonable. Shuh, I mock myself of your reason, she cried,
snapping her fingers and speaking in quite a French way. I leave reasons to your chilly English ladies.
I, eh, but you know I am of the south. To you, do you, my adored preserver, do I give myself.
George grew angry. If you talk like this, Lola,
I shall go away.
Ah, then good night to you.
Let it be adieu, and never come back.
Not at all.
Be a reasonable woman and sit down.
Give me some more wine and a cigarette.
I want to ask you a question.
Lola poured out the wine and tossed him a cigarette,
but she refused to sit down or to compose herself.
In a flaming temper she whirled about the room talking all the time.
Ah, yes, but it is so always.
I am a fool to love you, cold one,
pig of an Englishman.
That's grateful, said George quietly,
and she was at his feet.
Ah, but no, I am a bad woman's.
I am entirely all wicked.
You are an angel of the good God.
Dearest, my own.
She stretched adoring hands
and her eyes glittered like stars.
George reasoned with her.
Lola.
Do you wish me to be pleased with you?
Assuredly, and why not?
Then sit down in your chair like a Christian and talk sensibly.
She sat down, or rather flung herself into the chair
with a whirl of scarlet draperies.
Decidedly I am a Christian.
I go to Mass.
I confess?
Yes, I confess to the priest how I love you.
Do you really love me, Lola?
I was told that you wished me harm.
She started from her chair with a passionate gesture.
Who says it is liars of the worst?
Tell me who speak, that I may tear and scratch.
No, no, I don't want a scandal.
For her sakes, oh yes, she subsided sulkily.
I am nothings.
For whose sake?
Asked Brendan rather alarmed, for he did not wish this tigress to know about Dorothy.
The other woman's?
Oh, yes, there is someone else.
i know you are mine all and would be but for the other woman's imbecile that i am to think of you who kick me hard hard and i can learn nothing nothing if i did if i knew i
she stopped and breathed hard i wonder you don't have me watched said george thoroughly angry at her unreasonable attitude lola tossed her head and her expression changed to one of alarm
brendon saw the change and guessed its meaning you did have me watched and what if i did she demanded deviedly you are mine
i am not yours he retorted angrily i have given you no cause to think that i would marry you lola burst into tears you took me from the stones and snows she wept with extravagant grief why did i not die
you fed me with foods and made me shine in this london you win my heart and then then psh she snapped her fingers you toss it aside
why did you have me watched asked george sternly i want to know of the other woman she replied sullenly there is no he broke off it has nothing to do with you
lola sprang to her feet with fierce eyes then there is another another oh you cruel name of names but i shall find her i shall tell her
you shall tell her nothing you shall not see her but i will eh yes you do not know me this with a stamp i know you cannot behave decently lola if you have me watched again if you dare to-to
"'Bah,' George snapped in his turn.
"'I have had enough of this.
"'Behave, or I go and will not return.'
"'She flung herself at his feet with a wail.
"'Ah, but no,' she sobbed.
"'I do love you so dearly.
"'I will die if you love me not.'
George drew himself roughly away
and taking her by the hands, placed her in a chair
where she hid her face and sobbed.
"'Who was it you got to watch me?
You hired to watch me?
George advisedly used the word hired
as he thought she might have engaged
one of her friends to do the dirty work
instead of engaging a professional.
Yet he knew she was quite capable
of going to a private inquiry office.
I shall not tell you,
said Lola, sitting up
with a hard expression on her mouth
and in her eyes.
Did you pay him much?
asked Brendan dexterously.
I paid him what I chose,
retorted Lola,
falling into the trap.
ah then it was a professional detective you engaged you have been to one of those inquiry offices that is my business said lola who seeing she had made a slip became more obstinate than ever more to show her calmness she lighted a fresh cigarette and smoked it defiantly
george shrugged his shoulders he was not going to argue with her remembering that bodsey had mentioned her name and that bodsey appeared to know all about himself he began to put two and two together certainly he might be wrong and bodsey might have nothing to do with the matter
still it was worth while trying to startle lola into a confession by the use of his name his rescue of bodsey hinted that the long arm of coincidence might be at work
well i don't know where he comes from began george lola snapped him up ah yes and you think it is a man bah why not a woman my dear she sneered
oh you may have half a dozen at work male and female both said george taking his seat but i should have thought that the red man was clever enough too she threw away her cigarette and rose to her feet with such manifest alarm that george knew his gift
was correct. You talk foolish. George looked at her angry face serenely. Did Bodsey when he said
you wished me harm? What? She flung her arms with blazing eyes. Did he say I do wish you harm?
Was it that—that cow, pig? Don't call names, Lola, and don't distress yourself. It was Bodzie.
Lola saw that she had gone too far, and had, vulgarly speaking, given herself away.
She tried to recover lost ground.
I do not know his names, she said sullenly, then burst out.
But I wish you no harm.
A, will you believe that, my preserver?
I'll believe nothing if you will not tell me the truth, said Brendan a little cruelly.
Come, Lola, admit that you paid Bodsey to watch me.
I did not pay.
No, not one soup.
He did it for love.
Oh, indeed.
So Bodsey is in love with you.
Lola threw her head back defiantly.
Yes, he is, and I care not one, two, three little trifles for him.
Chup, he is old, he is red, he is one big fool that I can twist and twist.
And you apparently have done so.
Well then, Lola, did you get him from a private inquiry office?
No, I did not so.
He loved me and sent me flowers.
Oh, many, many flowers.
Those roses.
She pointed to the silver dish.
So you can't tell the truth even in that, said George deliberately.
What of the friend in San Remo?
It is his friend.
He had flowers from his friend.
He told that.
Brendan sat up with an eager look in his eyes.
So Bodsey knew someone in San Remo.
Probably he had been there,
and Bodsey was acquainted with his eyes.
his name. Brendan began to think that there was some meaning in all these things and plied Lola
with questions. She was sulky at first and would not answer. But Brendan knew how to manage her,
and before the conclusion of the conversation, he got the whole truth out of her. This was
accomplished by using what the Americans call, bluff. So Bodzie knows San Remo and he is 50
or over 50 years of age. Hmm. He knows all the history.
of the place, I suppose.
I know not.
Nothing do I know.
Ah, that's a pity.
Bardsy could tell you some nice tales.
He fixed a keen glance on her.
About some Yellow Holly, for instance.
Lola winced for the shot had gone home.
But she still held to her declaration of ignorance.
I know nothings, absolutely.
But apparently this man knows a great deal.
He is in love with you and must have told you much.
Did he inform you of a certain murder which took place at San Remo?
Ah, bah, why should he?
I knew of all already.
You? How did you know?
My fathers and my mothers, they lived in San Remo when...
Oh, they did tell me all of that Englishman.
Did they know who murdered him?
asked George, marveling at this unexpected discovery.
No. No one knows anythings.
Was there no suspicion?
Not one's suspicions. I know nothings, she repeated doggedly.
It strikes me that you do. How did you and Bodsey come to be talking of this matter?
We did not talk. Lola looked down at her foot as she told the lie and moved it restlessly.
George Rosen took up his hat. Throwing his coat over his arm, he moved toward the door.
good night mademoiselle she sprang to her feet and flew after him no no she cried in lively alarm you must not go my dearest dear
what is the use of my stopping when he will not show your gratitude toward me by telling the truth george hated to make such a speech as this but it was the only way in which he could move her i will tell i will tell sit down
the coat you shall not go i will say all ask what you will seat my little cabbage a wine in the glass ah yes and a cigarette come be good am i mademoiselle
no said george smiling at her pleading face you are my friend lola now that you are sensible ah only friend she said sadly but i speak
Yes?
George began at once to question her, lest the yielding mood should pass away.
You made the acquaintance of Bodsey at the hall.
Lola nodded.
He loved me.
He sent me flowers.
He was made a presentation to me by Kolaski.
I learned that he looks after people, but you call a—a—a—a spy, yes.
Go on.
And I made him watch you.
I told him your name.
Did he know my name?
asked Brendan quickly.
He knew everything.
Oh, yes.
All, all.
Brendan was taken aback.
All, all what?
He asked, amazed.
Why?
Lola twirled her fingers.
All what you would not tell to me, my dear,
that your names is vain and me, Lord.
Darrington.
Did Bodsey mention Lord Darrington?
Yes?
Oh, many times he speaks of Milor.
I speaks of San Remo.
This, this bodzi, ask me of the Blue Domino,
of the Holy.
Of the murder, in fact.
It is quite so, my friend.
Of the murder of your father.
What?
George started from his seat.
Did he know that the man who was murdered at San Remo was my father?
Yes, and that it was difficult about the marriages?
That all.
also. He appears to know the whole story. And he mentioned Lord
Darrington. That is how he comes to be acquainted with these facts. A spy.
Darrington is employing him, and the man is boarding in Amelia Square. George
struck his hands together. By Jove, it's a conspiracy, and I never knew anything.
I do not wish to have the marriages right, George, said Lola with a pout.
If you are as what you are, then you will marry me.
She will not be Madame.
She, who?
The woman you...
You...
Love.
Lola got out the word with difficulty and burst into extravagant rage.
But she will not have you.
No, you are mine.
You will be Brendan's.
As I know you and not vain.
Never, milor.
I will not let it.
If you are Milor,
you marry her.
Did Bazzi tell you the name of the lady?
No, but he will tell.
But she is a well-born one, and I am of the gutter.
But I love you.
Ah, yes, I love you.
She threw her arms around him.
Be still, Brendan's, and not, Milor, and I am yours.
No, no.
George took her arms from his neck and spoke more soberly.
Lola, hold your tongue about what you have.
have told me, and I'll see you again. If you speak, I see you no more.
I will be silent, she said as Brendan put on his coat. But you are cruel, wicked. You shall
never be milor, never. How do you know? asked George contemptuously. Lola's eyes blazed.
I know, I know, you will never be milor.
End of Chapter 8.
Chapter 9 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Nine.
Clever, Mrs. Ward
An invitation. An invitation to dinner.
By, Joe, I never thought I'd get that far.
The Honorable Mrs. Ward, too.
Hurrah!
Leonard Train made these remarks over a letter which had come by the morning post.
It was a delicate, perfumed, friendly note,
begging dear Mr. Train to come to dinner the next evening without ceremony.
I have just learned that your dear mother was at school with me,
wrote Mrs. Ward in her most gushing style.
So you will see why I write informally.
Do come.
The do was underlined,
and Leonard could hardly contain himself for joy at this proof
that a member of the aristocracy was disposed to be friendly.
A woman of the highest fashion, too,
chuckled Leonard.
To account for Trains' exuberant joy
which seemed out of all proportion to its reason,
it must be explained that notwithstanding his money
and what he regarded as his talents,
he had never managed to enter the fashionable world.
As he was as vain as a peacock,
and anxious to shine and be admired
among people worth knowing,
this was a great grief to him.
George took him to several houses,
but Leonard did not seem to be a success,
for after one visit he was not,
never asked again, although he left guards assiduously.
This invitation of Mrs. Ward's was purely voluntary, as she had met him only once,
and had snubbed him when she did meet him. At the time he had thought her a horrid woman,
but now he was prepared to bow down and worship. Leonard's father had been in trade,
and the nice little income he inherited had been made out of a patent medicine, most drastic
in its effects, that claimed to cure all diseases. Train senior, a shrew, a shrew, a shrew,
rude innkeeper had bought it from one of his customers, a drunken doctor meant for better things,
but who had fallen on evil days. By judicious advertisement and with the aid of many bought
testimonials from penniless members of the aristocracy, Train managed to make the drug a success.
Trains' Trump pill was seen on every boarding, and Mr. Ireland possessed one of the original
posters. Soon, Train Sr. became rich, very rich, and having improved his
manners and suppressed his parents, he was taken up by people of good position who needed
ready money. He bought his way into the fringe of the fashionable world, and finally married
a rather elderly lady who had blue blood, extravagant tastes, and no money. She presented
him with Leonard, and then thinking she had done her duty, arranged to enjoy herself.
Mrs. Trains spent the proceeds of the Trump bill recklessly, and before her husband died,
she managed to get through the greater part of his wealth.
Train settled an income of $5,000 a year on his son,
and let Mrs. Train do what she liked with the rest.
Then he died, and Mrs. Train sent Leonard to Eton afterward to college.
When he was thus off her hands,
she enjoyed herself amazingly,
and finally died in Paris,
after spending every penny of the principal and interest
of the large fortune left by her husband.
Leonard mourned his mother,
although he had seen very little of her.
Then he settled in London
on his five thousand a year
and posed as a literary man.
But the desire of his life
was to be fashionable.
Hence his delight at the letter.
Of course I'll go,
soliloquized Leonard when calmer.
I wonder if George will be there.
He loves that Ward girl, so he might.
Mrs. Ward does not approve of the match,
so he might not.
I wonder.
if there is a regular engagement.
If not, I might have a shot myself.
The Honorable Mrs. Train.
No, that would be the mother.
It will be seen that Leonard was not very faithful to his absent friend,
but the fact is that Train was less devoted to Brendan than he had been.
The episode of Amelia Square made him fight rather shy of George.
The story of the marriage was shady, and in some way,
Leonard couldn't exactly explain how, seemed to be connected with the murder of Mrs. Jersey.
Moreover, Leonard knew something which he had not mentioned to Brendan, and would not have
mentioned it for the fashionable world. However, he had said nothing about George's history and so
far had kept faith. But Brendan saw that Leonard was no longer so pleased to see him as formerly.
He therefore avoided the fat young man, and Leonard did not seem to mind the avoidance.
indeed he appeared to be rather relieved than otherwise.
Brendan never asked himself the reason of this behavior,
as he thought at best let sleeping dogs lie,
that Leonard would speak never entered his head.
And Leonard never intended to speak,
being weak but honorable in his own foolish way.
But when Mrs. Ward's invitation came,
he walked blind-folded into a trap set by that clever little woman.
She asked train to dinner,
not because she had known his mother, although that was true enough,
but for the simple reason that she wished to hear what he knew about the Amelia Square tragedy.
Brendan had told her much, but it was probable that Train,
being a weak idiot in the hands of a pretty woman like herself, would tell her more.
Mrs. Ward was by no means reconciled to the possibility of Brendan marrying her daughter
and wished to find some scandal smirching George that she might induce Dorothy to break the engagement.
she would have utilized the tales about Lola and Brendan
but that she was not sure of her ground in this particular direction
and moreover having seen the Spanish dancer
feared lest so passionate a woman should make an open scandal
it was the aim of Mrs. Ward's life to do wrong things
and to avoid troubles arising from them
therefore she for the time being put Lola on the shelf
and arranged in her own scheming mind to make use of Leonard
I can work him like a lump of putty, said Mrs. Ward contemptuously.
A vulgar illustration, but a true one.
Besides, she said it in the solitude of her own room when she was dressing for dinner,
so no one heard its vulgarity or its truth.
When Leonard entered the drawing-room, he was welcomed by Dorothy,
who told him that Mrs. Ward would be down shortly.
It is only a small dinner, Mr. Train, she said.
Mr. Vane is coming, no one else.
"'I expected to find my friend Brendan here,' said Leonard, thinking how beautiful she looked.
"'No, Mr. Brendan is very busy at the present time with his book. He would have come otherwise.'
"'All things should give way where a lady is concerned,' said Trane gallantly.
Miss Ward laughed. She had heard much of Trane from Brendan and thought him a kindly but foolish young man.
"'I am not a woman of that sort, Mr. Train. I have no desire
that a man should neglect his work for frivolity.
You are a great friend of Mr. Brendan.
The greatest he has.
And he was stopping with you in the house
where that tragedy took place.
He told me about it.
Train secretly wished that George had held his tongue
on this particular point,
as he had his own reasons
for not wishing to be questioned.
With the very best intentions as to holding his tongue,
he knew his weakness for babbling well enough,
and found it easier to abstain from talking all
than to be temperate in his speech.
Brendan certainly stopped with me, he said reservedly,
but we were sound asleep when the murder took place.
Neither of us heard anything.
After the inquest we both returned to the West End.
It was a most unpleasant experience, said Dorothy thoughtfully.
Very, assented train wiping his face.
I shall never go in search of types again.
You can find amusing types in the West End.
remarked Dorothy in a low voice.
Here is one.
The young man who entered the room
was a small, attenuated, precise atom
of a creature, immaculately dressed
and with a rather shrill voice.
He answered to the name of Honorable Walter Vane
and was the cousin of Brendan,
although he did not know of the relationship.
But Dorothy and Trane both knew
and compared Vane's physique
disadvantageously with that of Brendan.
The one man was a splendid specimen
of humanity, the other a peevish hypochondriac.
Walter Vane had been fast in his time, and although he was not yet 30, he was now suffering
from the consequences of his rapid ways. He was in the twenties, yet he was bald. He was as
nervous as an old woman and finicky as an elderly spinster. Lord Darrington, who was a bluff,
old giant of the country squire type, sneered at his degenerate descendant. All the same,
he would not replace him by George, who was a man.
in looks and tastes after the old lord's own heart.
Beastly night,
List Vane greeting Dorothy and taking no notice of Leonard.
I think there will be snow.
I hope I won't get a bad cold.
I am so subject to cold.
Mr. Trane, Mr. Vane, said Dorothy, introducing the two.
Vane stared and muttered something about pleasure.
Leonard caught no other word.
He then continued his conversation with Miss.
ward. I sneezed twice at the merry music hall the other night.
That is where Velez dances, said Leonard determined to speak.
Vane stared again, and it was Dorothy who answered.
My mother went to see her and says she is a most extraordinary dancer.
Oh, clever in a sort of mad way and a regular bad one, shuckled the little man.
Dorothy turned away. She did not like this conversation as it offended her taste.
But the next words of Vane made her pause.
I saw your friend Brendan at the Hall Miss Ward, the writing man, you know.
A fine-looking chap, but sulky.
The best man in the world, said Leonard, whereupon Dorothy gave him an approving look.
She wondered what Vane would say did he know that the man he criticized so freely was his cousin,
and the legitimate heir to the Darrington title, if he had his rights.
Well, he has his larks like everyone else.
else. They say he is sweet on the dancer.
Mr. Vane, cried Dorothy the blood rushing to her face.
The little man became confused, conscious that he had transgressed the bounds of good
breeding. He knew that Brendan admired Dorothy, and that Dorothy took pleasure in his
society, but he was unaware that any deeper feeling existed. Mrs. Ward had kept that
sort of thing from him, as she did not want Vane to leave the coast clear for Brendan.
and Vane was so egotistical that he never for one moment dreamed that George was his rival.
Even if he had, he would have laughed the idea to scorn.
In his eyes, Brendan was merely a writing fellow,
and not to be named in the same breath with his noble attenuated rickety self.
Well, good people, cried Mrs. Ward entering the room at this very opportune moment.
Are you all here?
Mr. Vane, I am pleased.
Mr. Train, how good of you to come?
Ah, Mrs. Ward sighed.
You have your dear mother's eyes,
and lovely eyes they were.
Having slipped in this compliment
to put Leonard at his ease and throw him off his guard,
Mrs. Ward delivered him to Dorothy
and took Vane into a shady corner.
Dinner will be ready soon,
she said fanning herself,
although it was a cold winter's night.
I hope you are hungry, Mr. Vane.
I was,
admitted her guest,
but I have to nurse my appetite
carefully you know Mrs. Ward,
and I am rather put out.
Not by Mr. Train, I hope.
He is a nice fellow,
really, very nice,
with money made out of pigs or whiskey or something,
said Mrs. Ward vaguely,
for she was not certain.
What did he say?
He said nothing,
but Miss Ward did.
Mrs. Ward shrugged.
Oh, well, you know,
No, dear Dorothy has such odd ideas and all that sort of thing.
I suppose it was something about books or philosophies, or grammar, or something.
Enough to spoil anyone's appetite, I'm sure.
No, but I mentioned that Brendan, you know the writing fellow.
Yes, I know, said Mrs. Ward viciously and at once on the alert.
Well, I said that it was rumored he was sweet on Lola Vales, and Miss Ward fired up.
"'Is she so great a friend of his as all that?'
"'Oh, by no means,' responded Mrs. Ward vivaciously.
"'A mere acquaintance, you know.
"'They talk books, I believe,
"'and how moths get wings like those animals before the flood.
"'She thinks he is a goody-goody.
"'I'm sure he's dull enough.
"'Lola Veles, oh, a perfect dear.
"'How she can kick!'
"'So Mr. Brendan is in.
"'Well, I never should have thought it of him.
But these quiet men are always the worst.'
So Mrs. Ward rattled on in her incoherent manner,
but perfectly clear in her own mind as to the good Vane's injudicious observation would do.
If Dorothy once got it into her brain that George was an admirer of Lola,
then there would be a chance of breaking the engagement.
Before Vane could make any more remarks, the gong thundered.
Mrs. Ward rose at once rather glad of the stoppage of conversation.
She liked a lively man, and Vane was a fool.
But for all that she was quite prepared to give him Dorothy,
as she would have given her to a prize idiot,
provided the idiot was sufficiently rich.
"'You take in Dorothy,' she said to Vane,
thus getting him off her shoulders,
but not hoping to find Leonard a pleasant change.
"'I will take Mr. Train under my wing.'
"'In this order they entered the dining-room.'
Mrs. Ward trying to stifle a yawn and wondering how she would get through such a dull evening.
Luckily, Vane mentioned that his grandfather had expressed his intention of looking in during the course of the evening.
If you will not mind, Mrs. Ward, he said politely.
Oh, I'm rather glad, replied the little woman drawing off her gloves.
Such a delightful old gentleman. His anecdotes are quite in the best style.
He told one to a bishop the other day, said Vane last.
laughing. Really, how amusing. And what did the bishop say? He said nothing, but he looked
sermons. Ah, sighed Mrs. Ward. Bishops are so particular. I find them delightful, said Dorothy,
filling in the paws. Of course, my dear, because they talk of Renaud and missionaries and those
sort of dry things. I remember the bishop of Timbuktu or Central Africa.
or some of those places one never heard of,
telling me how his old curate was eaten alive
by blacks and mosquitoes.
I quite forget which,
but he was eaten.
I trust the blacks and mosquitoes
didn't find the curate tough.
I'm sure I don't know.
He was just 30, I believe, and bald.
You said he was an old curate.
Oh, dear me, Dorothy,
how can you expect me to explain what I mean?
At dinner, too.
I mean he was young in years and old in saintliness.
Do try this dish, Mr. Train.
It is so good.
Leonard did try it and did full justice to the merits of Mrs. Ward's cook.
She kept a particularly good chef as she knew the value of good cooking.
People like nice things to eat, she explained to Leonard while Dorothy labored to entertain Vane.
It makes one so popular if one chef can always be relied upon.
I have known a woman's position ruined by inattention to the kitchen.
One can break all the ten commandments if only one feeds the men.
Then thinking she had said too much, she added sweetly,
But of course I am only joking, Mr. Train,
as one must be good and all that sort of thing.
I'm sure you are all that is good and kind, Mrs. Ward.
Now that's really very nice of you.
Mr. Brendan would never say,
a really nice thing like that.
Of course, he's a great friend of yours, isn't he?
And he stopped with you and that poor woman.
Leonard uttered an ejaculation.
It seemed to him that he was pursued by the Amelia Square tragedy.
First, Dorothy, and now her mother.
Was there no other topic of conversation?
He would have answered an ordinary person rudely,
being wearied of being questioned,
but Mrs. Ward having the key of the door
which led into the fashionable world,
was to be conciliated.
He replied to her almost in the same words
as he had used to Dorothy.
Mr. Brendan did stop with me, he said,
but we were asleep when the murder took place.
How extraordinary, said Mrs. Ward languidly,
yet with a keen eye on the change in Leonard's face.
I wonder who killed her.
No one knows, replied Trains shortly.
Does no one suspect anyone?
I believe not.
The police are quite at fault.
Oh, the police, said Mrs. Ward in a proper tone of contempt.
They never do anything except make love to cooks.
Do you suspect anyone?
Leonard flushed.
I, Mrs. Ward, why should I suspect anyone?
Oh, I don't know.
You have a clever face.
Just the kind of a face that one would think a brilliant detective would have.
"'You must have some suspicions.'
Again her eyes searched his face.
"'No,' he protested.
"'I was asleep.
I know nothing about the matter.'
"'How stupid of you!' said Mrs. Ward,
beginning to think that her condescension
in asking Leonard to dinner was wasted.
"'But you men are always so blind, poor dears.
"'What kind of a woman was Mrs. Jersey?'
"'A nice motherly old creature.'
"'I know.
No, like a monthly nurse.
Was Mr. Brendan introduced to her?
Yes, I took him into the drawing-room.
Really? Have they drawing-rooms in Bloomsbury?
How nice and civilized.
Well, did Mrs. Jersey and Mr. Brendan get on well together?
I want to know because, you see Mr. Train, he admires Dorothy,
and it is such a sign of a man's good nature if he gets on well with strangers.
I suppose Mrs. Jersey liked him.
I think she did, replied Leonard, on whose weak head the claret was beginning to take effect.
But she was rather startled when she saw him first.
Mrs. Ward's eyes flashed so brightly that Leonard would have been warned of his indiscretion
had he not been looking at his plate.
Oh, how very interesting.
But she never saw him before.
Why should she be startled?
It wasn't at him exactly, said Leonard, but at a piece of Yellow Holly he wore in his coat.
Yellow Holly, repeated Mrs. Ward with feigned surprise. Why, of course, Mr. Brendan wore a sprig,
my daughter gave it to him. So he told me, Mrs. Ward. And I gave it to Dorothy, continued Mrs. Ward,
who for some reason wished to make an explicit statement. It is very rare, you know, and a
man who lives in Devonshire sent me a bunch. Dorothy mentioned that Mr. Brenton had begged for a piece.
Yes, he would naturally wear it on that night as he had just left my house. But why was this
unfortunate woman surprised? I can't say, but she was, answered Trane. She turned white,
and we all thought she was about to faint. Did she give any explanation? No. In a few moments
she recovered and nothing more was said.
Oh, Mrs. Ward seemed disappointed.
Was that all?
Why, Leonard turned his dull eyes on her flushed face.
What else did you expect to hear, Mrs. Ward?
Nothing, nothing, she said hurriedly, for she did not wish to make him suspicious.
But it seems so odd.
Dorothy giving the holly, you know, and that Mrs. Jersey should be upset.
We must continue this conversation, Mr. Train.
It is really most interesting,
but you literary men are quite fascinating.
After dinner in the drawing-room, Mr. Train.
Dorothy, she signaled with her fan and her daughter arose.
Don't be too long over your wine, said Mrs. Ward as she left the room.
We can't spare you, Mr. Train.
Leonard believed that all this attention was due to his own fascinations.
His head was still heated with the wine he had drunk,
yet he began to regret that he had said anything about the yellow holly.
Certainly he had not promised George to be silent on this especial point,
but he nevertheless thought it wiser to hold his tongue
about all that had taken place in Amelia Square on the night of the murder.
Warned in this way by his mother's sense,
Train took no more wine,
but after a rather dull conversation with Vane he went into the drawing-room.
Dorothy was at the piano and thither repaired Vane,
but Mrs. Ward seated near the fire,
called Leonard to her side.
I must introduce you.
Lord Darrington, Mr. Train.
The grandfather of George was a huge man, burly, red-faced, white-haired, and with a rather
truculent expression.
He was over seventy, yet carried his ears like a boy.
Under his bushy white eyebrows, he shot a quick glance at Leonard from a pair of keen
gray eyes and summed him up at once as a fool.
But Lord Darrington had been a diplomatist many years before.
and knew that even fools are sometimes useful.
Moreover, he had learned from Mrs. Ward's aimless chatter
that Train was a great friend of Brendan's,
and he knew more about George than George thought.
However, Darrington after that one glance of contempt
was very civil to Leonard.
I am glad to meet you, he said with a nod.
You go in for books, I understand, for Mrs. Ward.
He had a deep raucous voice like that of an early starling
and spoke in an abrupt staccato kind of way.
Trane, who stood before him like a rabbit before a snake,
compared him, in his own mind, with Becky Sharp's friend, the Marquis of Stein.
Darrington was quite as wicked and savage and unscrupulous as that celebrated nobleman.
"'I do write a little,' said Leonard nervously.
"'I believe in action rather than in writing,' said Darrington.
"'There are far too many books written.
dreamers, all of you.
Dreams may come true.
And when they do come true, what is the use of them?
Bah, in my young days we lived.
Now people dream.
I'm sure there's no dreaming about society nowadays, said Mrs. Ward laughing.
Everyone is as sharp as a needle to get the better of his or her neighbor.
Mutual deception society, said Darrington.
"'You give me so much, and I'll let you go so far. That's the sort of thing.
But there is a great deal of philanthropy nowadays.'
"'And what good does philanthropy do, Mr. Train?' said Darrington.
"'Only makes people lazy. People are too sentimental. I would give half these paupers the cat
if I had my way.'
"'Train was quite sure that he would, for, with his red face and heavy jowel and savage,
air of command, he looked the picture of a Roman emperor.
Darrington had the instincts of a despot, and Leonard could imagine him slaying and burning and
doing all manner of evil things. He wondered how Brendan ever came to have such a villainous
grandfather. It was on the tip of his tongue to say something about Brendan just to observe
the effect on Darrington. But his courage failed him, and he held his peace. And at that moment,
fate intervened. The drawing-room door opened.
and a servant announced,
Mr. Brendan.
The next moment,
George came face to face
with his grandfather.
End of Chapter 9.
Chapter 10 of the Yellow Holly
by Fergus Hume.
This Librevox recording
is in the public domain.
10. Diplomacy
It was a most awkward meeting.
Dorothy, Train, and Brendan
knew the truth,
but Mrs. Ward and Vane were ignorant.
As to look at
Lord Derrington himself, George was not sure.
After his conversation with Lola, he had a vague idea that since Bodsey was connected in some way with his grandfather,
Lord Derrington must have somehow learned that Brendan was the name his grandson had taken.
There was no other way of accounting for the mention of Derrington's name by the private inquiry agent.
However this might be, Lord Derrington was too clever a man to betray himself.
George felt that the old man knew who he was, but he could not.
be sure, for Darrington welcomed him with a well-bred air, as he would have done a stranger.
Mrs. Ward watched the meeting curiously, and Brendan noticed her inquiring gaze.
But he put this down to his knowledge that Darrington knew he was a suitor for Dorothy's hand
and wished the girl to marry Vane. Leonard was the only person in the room who displayed any
visible disturbance. He grew red and restless.
Brendan was perfectly calm.
"'How delightful of you to come, Mr. Brendan,' said Mrs. Ward, rising and apparently forgetting that she had forbidden him the house.
"'I must introduce you. Lord Darrington, Mr. Brendan. And you know, Mr. Train.'
"'We are old friends,' said George calmly. Miss Ward. He bowed to Dorothy, who emulated his serenity although she felt anxious.
But when she saw her lover's composure, she knew that nothing disagreeable would occur.
occur, and her apprehensions were relieved.
There ensued a general conversation relative to the weather, to the doings of a certain
politician, and to sundry other subjects more or less vague.
George talked excellently, and was conscious that Derrington was listening with approval.
Again and again he wondered if the old man really knew who he was, and again and again
he failed to arrive at any conclusion.
After a time Leonard went with Dorothy to the piano, where she played for his delftain.
and Mrs. Ward seized the opportunity to show vain some new photographs of herself.
Darrington and Brendan were practically alone, and the old Lord appeared anxious to make himself
agreeable. George was watchful for the cloven hoof, but it did not peep out.
Truculant as Darrington was, yet he could play the part of a highly bred, polished gentleman
of the old school to perfection. He did so on this occasion.
I have heard of you from Mrs. Ward, he said,
in his harsh tones, which no amount of politeness could render agreeable, but I do not think
we have met before.
No, I cannot recall any meeting, replied George, wondering if the other was about to hint that
he had seen someone resembling him.
I have seen you in the distance, however.
Distance lends enchantment to the view in my case.
You are pleased to say so, Lord Derrington.
I generally do say what I please, responded the old man, shooting a sharp claspard.
at George.
Are you related to the Brendan's of Shropshire?
No, I have not that privilege.
Darrington chuckled at this reply.
He thought George had a good deal of the man in him when he answered thus fearlessly.
I have seen your name somewhere lately, he observed.
But I can't recall where or in what connection.
Brendan laughed quite at his ease, although he did not know of this was an attempt to make him speak out.
However, he did speak out with the idea of seeing what would happen.
I can supply the connection, said he lightly, but keenly observant of the old man's face.
My name appeared as a witness at an inquest a week or so back.
Ah, now I remember, Mr. Brendan?
Quite so.
It was that Amelia Square murder.
You have a good memory, Lord Tarrington.
In this case, you flatter me, Mr. Brendan.
There is no difficulty at it.
in my remembering the especial case, as Mrs. Jersey was a tenant of mine.
George was not supposed to know this and displayed suitable surprise.
Indeed, he said, then you have lost a good tenant.
Possibly, replied Darrington rather grimly. She always paid her rent regularly.
You saw her. Yes, my friend Mr. Train was stopping in the house.
That young man, Darrington cast a look in the house. Darrington cast a look in the
Leonard's direction. I did not know he was there on that night.
He was a witness also, said Brendan significantly.
I can't remember all the names, sir. Well,
I stopped for the night with Mr. Train, and during the night, Mrs. Jersey was murdered.
You heard nothing, you saw nothing. I was sound asleep the whole time, said
Brendan calmly. Huh, Darrington pulled at his grey moustache in the very same way as
George did when he was reflective.
What a pity.
You might have discovered the assassin.
I don't think the assassin will ever be discovered.
That's luck for the assassin, rejoined the old lord cynically.
You appear to be very certain, Mr. Brendan.
George shrugged his shoulders.
No more certain than the police are, he replied.
They examined everyone in the house, and no one could be accused.
There was absolutely no evidence.
and the assassin could not have entered the house as the door was locked and the key was in the pocket of the murdered woman derrington for some reason appeared to be rather relieved i read all that in the papers he said roughly
you are telling me nothing new but there you didn't say you would by the way you stopped at that house do you know a miss bull george nodded she told my fortune he said she told mrs jersey
fortune also, and a very true fortune did she tell, said Darrington grimly. What did she
prophesy about you? The usual thing, said Brendan curtly. Trouble, I suppose. These card
people generally prophesy trouble, as it is certain to occur. There was trouble and enemies,
and the promise that I should get my wish, said Brendan with a quick look. Darrington laughed.
What is your wish?
If I tell it, I won't get it, replied George also laughing.
But I don't believe in fortune-telling. It is rubbish.
It wasn't in Mrs. Jersey's case, said the other, who appeared to be a trifle superstitious.
Oh, that was a mere coincidence.
But you asked me about Miss Bull, sir. Do you know her?
Darrington nodded.
She came to me on behalf of Mrs. Jersey's niece and wished the lease renewed.
I heard her story and consented.
I dare say the niece will be quite as good a tenant as the aunt.
This conversation was all very well, but there was nothing to be learned from it on either side.
Brendan could not discover if his grandfather knew to whom he was speaking,
and Darrington found it impossible to learn if George could tell him anything of the case
which had not been reported in the papers.
For some reason, Darrington wished to know what had transpired,
and Brendan felt convinced
that this anxiety was more than that of a landlord for the loss of a good tenant.
He wondered if Darrington knew that Mrs. Jersey had written out a confession and that it was missing.
He would have liked to find out, but since he could not reveal himself as Darrington's grandson,
there was no chance of getting this information. Besides, Darrington appeared to grow weary of
discussing the murder. It is worn threadbare, he said. All the papers have been talking about it.
Agree with you, Mr. Brendan, that the assassin will never be discovered.
Never, said George, looking full at the determined face of the old man.
Are you quite sure?
I am sure of nothing in this world, save that you said so yourself, Mr. Brendan.
However, there are pleasanter subjects to talk of.
What about yourself?
Your aims, your ambitions, your chances of success.
Are those pleasant subjects?
laughed Brendan.
To an old man such as I am,
nodded the other.
I like to hear of the castles in the air
which youth builds.
I am afraid my castles
will never turn to bricks and mortar,
said Brendan with a sigh.
However, he was not averse
to showing his grandfather that he was
no fool, but a man with a head on his shoulders.
George had a quick brain
and a strong will
and a considerable fund of information.
He had taken a good degree,
at Oxford, and his literary articles always received praise from the public and from his brethren
of the press. Moreover, George was fond of politics and could converse excellently on that
fascinating subject. He laid himself out to please Darrington, knowing that the old tyrant was
disappointed in the languid vein who was chattering commonplace to Mrs. Ward. In a short time,
Brendan and Darrington were engaged in a discussion about Ireland and Irish Home Rule,
and the old lord approved highly of Brendan's sentiments.
You ought to be in the house, Mr. Brendan.
I have no one to help me to such a goal.
Darrington was about to speak and fastened his little eyes on the keen, handsome face of the younger man.
But he suddenly changed his mind and turned away to talk to Mrs. Ward.
Brendan knew that he had succeeded in pleasing the old gentleman
and was glad that so much was accomplished.
If Darrington found that he was clever and present,
and likely to add luster to the family name, it was not improbable that he would
recognize the marriage. But by this time George had it in his mind that Darrington knew who he was,
and had been talking advisedly under the cover of pretended ignorance, so as to see what manner of
man his unacknowledged grandson was. Well, thought Brendan, he has learned that I am no fool at all
events. Mrs. Ward came across to George and left Derrington talking to Dorothy for whom he
professed a great admiration. He knew that Dorothy liked Brendan as Mrs. Ward had told him so,
and he frankly acknowledged to her that Brendan was a clever man.
I wish my grandson had his brains, said Darrington regretfully.
I am pleased you like him, responded Dorothy, who could not tell him that Brendan was his grandson
and hardly knew what to say. He is a good.
as good as he is clever.
This remark did not please
Darrington.
I don't like good young men.
They generally become bad old scamps.
Were you a good young man, Lord Darington?
asked Dorothy demurely.
He appreciated the joke.
One of the best, he said with a twinkle in his eye.
Consequently, I have gone to the other extreme
for many years.
They say one always returns to his first love.
said Dorothy, smiling,
so you may revert to your godly youth.
Darrington shook his wicked old head.
My first loves are all dead and buried, my dear.
But this, Brendan, you like him.
Dorothy did not see why she should conceal her feelings.
I love him, she said quietly and firmly.
Ha, replied Darrington, showing no surprise.
Mrs. Ward hinted at something of that sort.
But I thought that Walter,
Please say no more, Lord Derrington.
Well, then I won't.
Derrington's eyes rested wrathfully on the withered young man he called grandson.
I don't wonder at your choice, my dear.
What Walter requires is a nurse.
That is a profession I have not taken up, said Dorothy laughing.
She was very anxious to say something good about George to Derrington,
on the chance that it might soften his hard old heart.
But after all, George had spoken for himself and was his own best advocate.
If she interfered, seeing that she was supposed to know nothing of the relationship,
she might make mischief.
Therefore she held her tongue on the subject nearest to her heart,
and talked in the most general manner.
Derrington said no more about Brendan,
but Dorothy noticed that his eyes were rarely off the face of her lover.
George had certainly made an impression.
meantime, Vane joined Mrs. Ward and Dorothy, seeing that Leonard was alone, beckoned him to approach.
Darrington was not particularly pleased at having his conversation with a pretty girl interrupted,
but he was polite, and on learning that Trane knew Brendan intimately, he began to ask him about his friend.
Train, to please Dorothy, and because he really admired George, spoke most enthusiastically.
Dorothy listened in silence well, pleased.
From Darrington's curiosity and persistent questioning,
she began to think he knew something of the relationship.
But really, you know, she is a great artist,
Mrs. Ward was saying to Brendan,
There is something so original about her.
They were speaking of Lola Veles,
and it was Vane who had introduced the subject.
As Mrs. Ward was a married woman
and knew the seamy side of social life,
Vane had no hesitation in speaking about the dancer to her.
george to whom the subject was distasteful tried to avoid the discussion but mrs ward on the alert for information would return again and again to the topic
they say you know her very well she declared they who asked brendon lifting his eyebrows i do for one said vain in his weak voice a fellow told me that she owed her success to you i am not sorry to put you right on that point replied brendon his weak voice said vane in his weak voice a fellow told me that she owed her success to you i am not sorry to put you right on that point replied brendon his
eyes hardening. Many false rumors are about, to one of which you alluded the other day,
Mrs. Ward. This is another. What I know of Senora Veles and how I know her can be put in a nutshell,
and George quietly related his rescue of the dancer.
Then you did make her the success she is, cried Mrs. Ward when he ended.
Oh, yes, it's no use denying it. You picked a jewel out of the gutter and gave it a chance of shining.
Perhaps I did that much, but she made a success by her genius.
I hope she is grateful, murmured Vane with a malicious smile.
Brendan turned on him sharply.
I don't know what you mean by gratitude, he said deliberately.
Well, drawled the little dandy.
She is pretty and...
She is not at all pretty, Mr. Vane, and were she as lovely as Cleopatra, it would not matter to me.
My connection with her ceased when she made her success.
George quite forgot the presence of Mrs. Ward and spoke vehemently.
Can't you understand that a man may do a kind action without being biased by the beauty of a woman?
Some men can, said Mrs. Ward politely, and I am sure you are one, Mr. Brendan.
But suppose the woman.
I don't suppose anything, Mrs. Ward. I know.
Signora Veles was poor.
i helped her to attain the position she now holds because i endeavour to follow the preaching of christ and she is to me a grateful friend there is no more and no less to be said and a trifle ruffled george turned on his heel to join dorothy
well i'm sure murmured mrs ward and in my own house too vain sniggered there must be something in it he said and the profane language he used
of course i don't believe a word he says neither do i she's too pretty so these two scandal-mongers talked on and george had only made matters worse by his explanation
however he believed that he had nipped the scandal in the bud and strolled into the next room with dorothy to quiet his mind behind them they left derrington talking to train and rather enjoying himself
the room in which they found themselves was a pretty little apartment hung with amber silk and illuminated with lights and yellow shades the furniture was also yellow and the carpet of a primrose hue
mrs ward only introduced her most intimate friends into this boudoir as it was her own special sanctum and if its walls could have spoken they could have supplied all the existing society papers with gossip enough to last a century
do you think lord derrington knows who you are asked dorothy as they seated themselves on a kind of divan i am not sure replied george who did not want to tell her what he knew lest he should have to introduce the name of lola
"'I have an idea that he does.'
Dorothy shook her head.
"'I don't think so.
"'If he knows you, he must be aware that you know him
"'and about the relationship and would not speak so freely.
"'I think he is taken with you, George.
"'Well, he has been putting me through my paces.
"'I only hope that our chance meeting of tonight may bear fruit.
"'What is train doing here?
"'Your mother only had him in her house once before
"'and she does not like him.
I can't make out why she asked him, said Dorothy.
He is a dull young man, though harmless enough.
But my mother made a point of asking him to dinner.
Huh, I wonder what that's for, said Brendan, wrinkling his brows,
for he knew well that Mrs. Ward did nothing without expecting an equivalent return.
Then he recollected her questions about the crime,
and wondered if she had invited Leonard so as to pump him.
It was just what Mrs. Ward did intend to do,
but George could not think she had sufficient interest in the crime
to justify such a course of action.
Besides, he felt that he could trust Leonard to hold his tongue
in spite of the man's weakness.
But in this he reckoned without Mrs. Ward,
who could have wild an anchorite to chatter,
had she been so minded.
And that is what she was doing at the very moment.
Almost as soon as the lovers had disappeared into the yellow boudoir,
Lord Derrington had taken his departure.
He insisted that Vane should come also,
and would not allow the little dandy to take leave of Dorothy,
nor would he take leave himself.
This was done to punish Vane.
Miss Ward is quite happy in there,
he said to Mrs. Ward at the door of the drawing-room.
I won't have her disturbed.
Oh, but really?
cried Mrs. Ward, who did not want Vane to go away with a bad impression.
Dorothy is simply bored with him.
if she is bored with such a brilliant fellow she would not enjoy the company of shakespeare himself i'm sure i shouldn't murmured mrs ward shakespeare must have been an awful bore but do say good-bye lord derrington dorothy will be so disappointed
no she won't snarled derrington who was enjoying himself at thus thwarting mrs ward's schemes come along walter take me home and tell me your latest ailment
"'Good night, Mrs. Ward.'
And he went.
Darrington was chuckling, and Vane looked very sulky,
so Mrs. Ward saw that the old man had done this thing to spite her.
"'Horid creature,' she pouted.
"'He ought to be dead and buried.
It isn't respectable being alive at his time of life.
He'll make Walter Vane angry with me, and I'm sure.'
Here she caught sight of Leonard's astonished face
and became aware she was divulging secrets.
At once she smoothed her brow and began to smile.
This was an excellent opportunity to find out what she wanted.
Taking Leonard's arm, she led him to a chair some distance from the door of the boudoir.
Now, let us have a nice long talk, dear Mr. Train, she said, settling herself amiably.
Mr. Brendan and Dorothy are no doubt talking tadpoles or frogs or something nasty.
They won't be out for a long time, so we can renew our pleasant conversation.
i don't think it was very pleasant said train unwillingly what an ungallant thing to say i mean to talk about crime it's most amusing i mean instructive
oh yes i have read many of those novels what do they call them detective novels a very low form of literature said the superior leonard oh they are amusing and interesting and send one to sleep when one
cat in spite of drops and morphia, babbled Mrs. Ward in her childish manner.
And I have often thought how nice it would be if one could really try and find out who killed a
person. Now in this case, Mr. Train, I am sure you heard something or saw something.
Upon my word, I neither saw nor heard, protested Leonard. I was in bed all the time.
Didn't you hear a scream? No. Then you must have heard the fall of the body.
or the shutting of the door as the...
Ah!
Mrs. Ward saw from the expression of Leonard's face
that she had touched upon something.
You did hear.
No, no, he stammered,
wondering how he was to get out of confessing
about the opening of the front door without appearing rude.
Nonsense.
Confess, confess, you silly man.
But Leonard was too loyal.
To lead her away from the point he asked a question.
Mrs. Ward, that yellow holly.
Yes, what about it?
She leaned forward eagerly.
Did you give a sprig of it to anyone else?
No, I only gave it to my daughter, and she...
She gave it to Brendan.
Yes, I know.
But did Miss Ward give any of it to a third person?
Certainly not.
To do so, she would have had to get it from me.
But beyond the sprig that was given,
and which Mr. Brendan had...
no holly went out of this house it is very rare is it not i believe so i dare say there wasn't another bunch in london on that particular night of course there might have been still but why do you ask all this
well said leonard it seems to me that the yellow holly has something to do with the crime mrs ward drew a long breath but said no word he was speaking half to
himself and she did not wish to interrupt his train of thought. But she listened with all her ears.
Leonard continued. I found a berry in the room where she was killed. Yes, they took us in to see the
body and a horrid sight it was. I turned my eyes to the floor, and there I saw, just by the table,
a kind of amber bead. I dropped my handkerchief so that Quex might not suspect and I picked it up.
when in my own room I examined it.
It was one of the yellow holly berries.
Mrs. Ward threw herself back with a kind of unholy triumph.
Do you know what you are saying, Mr. Train?
She said in a half-whisper.
You are accusing Mr. Brendan.
No, no, Train started to his feet.
Mrs. Ward pulled him down again and pointed with her fan toward the boudoir.
Hush, he might come out,
she whispered.
But can't you see?
Brendan wore the sprig in his coat on that night.
He must have been in the room and have dropped the berry.
What was he doing there if it was not to—
No, said Train hoarsely.
I have thought of that myself, but it is quite impossible, I tell you.
He could not have got out of his room unless he had come to me.
How do you mean?
I locked the door of the sitting-room, which was between his bedroom and mine.
There was no exit from his bedroom, and to get out and down the stairs he would have had to open the sitting-room door.
Now the key was under my pillow and the door was locked in the morning.
No, Mrs. Ward, Brendan, is innocent.
He might have stolen the key while you slept.
Train shook his head.
Impossible.
I sleep very lightly, and on that night I hardly slept at all.
Why?
Was anything wrong?
I can't tell you that, Mrs.
Ward without violating the confidence of my friend.
Indeed, I have said too much.
Promise me you will not speak of what I have told you.
I promise, but I am quite sure that the Holly Berry was dropped by George Brendan,
and that he was in Mrs. Jersey's sitting-room on that night.
He is the criminal.
I tell you he is not, Mrs. Ward.
Don't excite yourself, Mr. Train.
Here is Mr. Brendan and Dorothy.
She sailed toward them with open hands.
Finished your talk.
We must say good-night.
And to herself she murmured while smiling.
I've got you at last.
I've got you at last.
And Brendan shook hands with Madame Judas,
quite unconscious of her premeditated treachery.
End of Chapter 10.
Chapter 11 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This Librevox recording is in the public
domain.
Eleven. Mr. Bodsey
at home. Under the rule of Miss Bull, for Marjorie was a mere figurehead, the house in
Amelia Square was much more lively. Most of the old boarders had departed, as their nerves
would not permit them to stop in a dwelling wherein a crime had been committed.
Mrs. Tain carried her knitting to her sister's house at Clapham.
Mr. Granger took the death of Nelson to a boarding house on Highgate Hill, and
Harmer went to rejuvenate his antiquity at some German baths.
In place of these ancient creatures came bright young men and girls who were up to date in every
way.
None of them minded about the crime.
The house was cheap, it was now bright, and in a few months the tragedy was almost forgotten.
No one would have recognized the changed atmosphere of the place, save for Miss Bull, who still
sat nightly playing patience in her favorite corner.
So little did she mind the horror of the murder that she took.
up her abode in Madame's sitting-room where it happened. She still retained her own bedroom,
and Marjorie kept hers. But the sitting-room Miss Bull found very pleasant, for she could ask her
friends into it for afternoon tea without having to mix with the two lively boarders in the drawing-room.
And the majority of them were extremely lively, so much so that Miss Bull sent several away
and checked the exuberant spirits of the others. The girls played ping-pong. The men sang
music-hall ditties, and in conjunction they tried to gamble.
But Miss Bull soon put a stop to that.
She had no notion that the house should get a bad name after her difficulty in obtaining
the lease from Lord Darrington.
Of course, in spite of the fast air which certainly pervaded the house, all things were
very proper.
Miss Bull was a lady and saw that things were kept decent.
The boarders feared her bright black eyes and her sharp tongue, and were always glad
when she retired to her sitting-room.
when they waxed too noisy the little old maid would appear like an unquiet ghost and the clamor would die away.
But Miss Bull was also liked as she was a very affable hostess.
She was thoroughly happy now as she had what she most desired, power,
and thought, like Satan, that it was better to rule in a certain place than to serve in the higher spheres.
Marjorie was now, as ever, her docile slave, and Miss Bull governed with a rod of iron.
She dismissed some of the servants, among them Jarvie,
who had bettered himself by becoming a page boy in a West End mansion.
Among the new boarders Miss Bull took most notice of Bodsey,
who occupied the rooms formerly inhabited by train.
On his arrival he had asked particularly for these rooms,
saying that he had once lived in them when he stopped with Mrs. Jersey many years before.
After some thought Miss Bull remembered the man.
He had boarded in the house and had been a great favorite with Madame.
but had later gone to America,
and for some time had remained away.
He expressed the greatest sorrow for the death of the old lady,
but declared that he was very pleased with the house as managed by Miss Bull.
The little woman liked him,
as his conversation was amusing and he was most polite.
But had she known that he was a private inquiry agent,
she might not have approved of him so much.
Miss Bull was a lady and drew the line at spies.
What bothers her to her?
he was, she never inquired, as she was the least curious of women. His habits were certainly
eccentric, for sometimes he would remain away for a week, and at other times would stop
constantly in the house. He often remained in bed for the day and had his meals brought to him.
This he called his bed cure and stated that he suffered from nerves. He told Miss Bull
quite gratuitously that he had a small income and supplemented it by taking photographs of
scenery and selling them to London firms.
But he declared that he was not a professional photographer.
He simply travelled here and there,
and photographed any scenery which struck him as pretty.
The London photographers gave him good prices for these,
but he stated that he merely did such artistic work
for the sake of an occupation.
I am simple in my tastes, said Mr. Bodsey,
and what I have keeps me in luxury.
But a man, even of my age, must be up and doing.
Better to wear out than rust out.
Miss Bull assented. For the greater part of her life, she had been rusting, and now that she had taken command of the house, found that wearing out gave her an interest in things, and prevented her from being bored.
She liked to hear Bodsey tell of his travels, and frequently asked him into her sitting-room for that purpose. He seemed to have been everywhere, and to have seen everything.
It appeared from his own confession that he began his travels at the early age of seventeen when he went to Milan.
and the man talked freely about himself, so freely that Miss Bull, in spite of her suspicious
nature, never dreamed that all this chatter was for the purpose of throwing dust in her sharp eyes.
A week after the little dinner at Mrs. Ward's, Bodsey sent a note to Brendan asking him to call
on a certain afternoon, and when George, anxious to continue the acquaintance and curious to know
how Bodsey had procured his address arrived, he was shown up to the well-known room.
Bodzie welcomed him with enthusiasm and much in the same style as Lola did but in a less theatrical manner.
My preserver, said Bodsey shaking hands vigorously, and George laughed.
You put me in mind of a lady I know, he said. She uses the same term, quite unnecessarily as it happens.
I don't agree with you, answered Bodsey to the astonishment of his visitor.
When a woman is rescued from starvation, she has a right to come.
call her good Samaritan the best of names.
Oh, said Brendan taking a seat.
So Lola has told you.
Bodsey nodded.
I guess so, said he with a pronounced
American twang, somewhat too pronounced, George thought.
She told me all about your visit
the other night. Did she never speak of me before?
Why, of course she spoke.
I tell you, sir, that girl is just bubbling over with
gratitude. And you're a good man.
Mr. Brendan.
Yes, sir, some.
You saved her and you saved me,
and I shan't forget,
and neither will she.
Yet you said when we last met
that she meant me harm.
Jealousy, Mr. Brendan,
sheer jealousy.
I heard her talking of you
and wishing to marry you
so you can guess.
That you wish to put me against her.
Not exactly that,
responded Bodsey coolly.
I wished to.
to choke you off.
You see, Mr. Brandon, I love her.
So she told me.
Quite so, and she informed me
that she had informed you.
Well, I was a trifle jealous
as I'd lay down my life
to make that lady Mrs. Bodsey.
But when I learned that you admired
and were almost engaged to Miss Ward,
how the devil did you find that out? asked George.
Without the use of the word devil,
said Bodsey dryly.
That is a long story, Mr. Brandon.
You seem to know a great deal about me,
said Brendan nettled.
I made it my business to find out, sir.
Don't you think that is rather impertinent?
Well, drawled Bodsey, combing his fingers
through his ruddy locks.
You might put it that way if you like.
A fortnight ago I should not have minded
whether you thought me impertinent or not.
but now that you saved my life i don't mind telling you that i wish to gain and retain your good opinion why asked george more and more puzzled because i'm that rare animal a grateful man
you have had a bad time all your life mr brendon but now you shall have a good one and i am the man who is going to help you right along george looked at him helplessly he found it difficult to understand
what all this meant.
Of course I know from what Lola said
that you are a private inquiry agent,
he remarked with hesitation.
By doc and company,
said Bodsey briskly.
23 Augustus Street Strand.
That's me, Mr. Brendan,
but you needn't mention it in this shanty.
Are you an American, Mr. Bodsey?
I am anything that suits.
I can talk all languages
and try to tell the truth in every one.
And the best day's work you ever did for yourself, Mr. Brendan,
was in dragging me from under the feet of that horse.
Yes, sir, I'm in line with you forever.
This is all amusing but a trifle confusing, said Brendan,
feeling that he must get to the bottom of this chatter.
Will you answer a few questions, Mr. Bodsey?
Yes, fire ahead.
Wait, will you take a whiskey?
No thanks.
"'Yes, I'll take a cigar.'
"'Henry Clay,' said Bodsey, passing along a box.
"'And the questions?'
"'You are a private inquiry agent,' asked George,
when the cigar was well alight and Bodsey had subsided into a chair.
"'That so.
"'Vydoc and Company.
"'An attractive title, I guess.'
"'And you were employed by Lola to watch me.'
"'I was.
"'Love will do anything.'
for the object of its affections.
Humpf.
There are different ways of looking at that.
But you were also engaged by Lord Derrington to watch me.
Bazzi did not display the least surprise.
That's very creditable to your observation, Mr. Brendan.
It's true.
How did Lord Derrington find out that I was passing under the name of George Brendan?
Well, sir, if you will shove advertisements into the paper asking about
the celebration of the marriage of Percy Vane and Miss Rosina Lockwood, you must expect to
be dropped upon.
Oh, that was the way you found out.
That was the way, nodded Bodsey.
You had the answers.
I had no answers, said Brendan quickly.
I am quite sure of that, replied the detective coolly.
We should have heard of you in a court of law had you been successful.
But what I mean to say is that you asked for
the answers to be sent to G. B. Pembroke Square, Kensington. Darington spotted that,
and a seeing that the marriage referred to was that of his son to—
George waved his hand impatiently. I see, I see. He hired you and you looked me up.
Quite so. I have had you under observation for the last six months.
Confound it, cried Brendan uncomfortably, and I never knew. Bodsey winked.
I know my business, he said.
You don't find me sending myself up on any occasion.
Any more questions, sir?
Only one, replied George.
Will you tell me exactly what you are doing in this galley?
Certainly.
You shall have the whole story, Mr. Brendan.
But in the first place, I shall ask you a question in my turn.
Do you know why I asked you to come and see me today?
Brendan shook his head.
I have not the least idea, he confessed.
I'll enlighten you, was the other man's reply,
to warn you that you are in danger of arrest.
I, in danger of arrest, George jumped up.
What do you mean?
Oh, my meaning is clear enough.
There is a chance that you may be accused of having murdered Mrs. Jersey.
George dropped back into his chair with a white,
face. You must be mad to say such a thing. Who accuses me? Lord Darrington. On what grounds?
On certain information he obtained from Mrs. Ward. What? Is she in it too? Very much in it.
She is your bitter enemy. You see, Mr. Brendan, it is not her game that you should marry the
daughter. Mrs. Ward knows that you are a clever man with the will of your own.
and that she will not be able to twist you around her finger,
which is what she wishes to do with any son-in-law who may come her way.
That young fool vain is the man she wants.
He will inherit the title and a good income.
Mrs. Ward, should he marry the girl, will benefit.
If the title and income came your way,
she would make very little out of the business.
Consequently, she will stick at nothing to get you out of the way.
but she doesn't know that I claim to be Lord Derrington's grandson.
Indeed, she does, replied Bodsey quickly.
Derrington told her all about it.
Why?
Now that, said Bodsey, shaking his head and looking puzzled,
is one of the things I can't make out.
George thought for a moment.
I was at Mrs. Ward's the other evening, he said slowly.
Lord Derrington was there.
Did he know then that I was his grandson?
He did.
He has known ever since you put the advertisement in the paper and I looked you up.
Huh.
Then he was putting me through my paces, said Brendan to himself.
What a clever man he is in concealing his thoughts.
And Mrs. Ward knew also who I was.
Bodsey nodded.
Yes.
And after that evening she came to see Lord Darrington to suggest how
you should be got rid of.
Ah, George was now perfectly cool as he saw that Bodsey being so frank was ready to be his friend.
And how did she propose to do that, Mr. Bodsey, by having me arrested?
With the alternative that you should give up all attempts to prove your birth and go to Australia.
And surrender my claim to Miss Ward's hand, I suppose.
Of course.
But that would go without speaking if you went to Australia.
It's a case of threatening Mr. Brendan.
Was Lord Darrington agreeable to this suggestion?
Yes. He hates you, and told me to see you and put the matter to you.
You have a week to think over it, and at the end of that time, Mr. Brendan, if you don't
leave England, you will be arrested.
No, replied Brendan calmly.
I will not be arrested.
Setting aside the fact that there is no evidence which implicates me in the
the crime, Lord Darrington, for his own sake, will not have his grandson arrested and his dirty
linen washed in public. Whether there was a marriage or not, I am his flesh and blood. Why does
he hate me? I can't say, sir, he never explained, but he does hate you. Hump, I see no reason.
A man can't help his birth, and I am quite as presentable as Walter Vane. Much more so, said Bodsey quickly.
He is a fool and a miserable little beast.
He sent a bracelet to Miss Vales.
Oh, and naturally you think the worst of him.
Well, it is no use my conjecturing the reason of Lord Darrington's dislike,
but I can well understand why Mrs. Ward wishes me out of the way.
On what grounds does she accuse me of being concerned in this crime?
On the strength of a story related by a friend of yours who...
I knew it, interrupted.
Brendan, starting up and beginning to pace the room.
That was why she asked Leonard Train to dinner.
That's the man, said Bodsey coolly.
He occupied these rooms, I believe, and on the night of the murder you stopped with him.
I did, in yonder bedroom.
So he betrayed me.
My dear, sir, I don't think he could help himself.
Mrs. Ward is as clever as the devil, and as unscrupulous.
She got out of him.
that you had been in the sitting-room of Mrs. Jersey at midnight.
That is untrue, began George violently when Bodsey stopped him.
So it is, to Mrs. Ward, to Lord Darrington, and to the public.
But so far as I am concerned, Mr. Brenton, it is a fact.
You were in Mrs. Jersey's room about the time she was murdered.
How can you prove that? asked George quickly and very pale.
Oh, I can prove it easily enough, and I will soon.
But confess.
That I killed the woman.
No, I never laid a finger on her.
I believe that, said Bodsey.
If I thought you were guilty, I should.
No, not even then.
You saved my life, and I'm grateful.
I believe you are my friend, said George gloomily, sitting down.
You would have been arrested by now, where I should.
not, Mr. Brendan.
No, I tell you neither
Mrs. Ward nor Lord Derrington
will go so far. They will try
and intimidate me, but they
won't succeed. You'll
fight them. George
said his face, while there is
breath in my body.
I knew you were a pluckyon,
said Bodsey admiringly,
but you must be aware that your
position is perilous.
How so? Mr.
Train can prove that he locked the sitting
room door. That one there, and George pointed. The key was under his pillow, and in the morning
the door was still fast. How could I have got out to visit Mrs. Jersey's room without his knowledge?
That is what Puzzles Train and Mrs. Ward and Lord Darrington, was Bodsey's reply. They
asked me what I thought. Well, one moment, interrupted Brendan. Why does Train believe that I was in
Mrs. Jersey's room.
He found beside the table a yellow holly berry, and you wore her.
George started.
I did. I did, he muttered.
It must have been brushed off the sprig when I stooped to touch her.
Ah, said Bodsey in a voice of triumph.
Then you admit you were in the room.
Yes, to you, but to no one else.
I'm glad you trust me so far, said Bodsey genuinely pleased.
your confidence is not misplaced, Mr. Brendan.
And you saw Mrs. Jersey.
I saw her body.
She was dead.
At what time was that?
About 12 o'clock.
Why did you not give the alarm?
What?
George smiled derisively.
You think I should have put the rope around my neck?
No, but, well, no matter.
We can talk of that later.
but as to getting out of this room when the door was locked.
I didn't get out of this room, Mr. Bodsey.
I...
Wait a bit.
Come into the room you slept in, said the detective, leading the way.
I have made a discovery.
The bedroom was in the same condition as when Brendan had last seen it,
with the exception that the wardrobe was moved to one side.
The wall at the back, which divided the room from the passage,
appeared a blank, but on the room.
touching a spring, a masked door opened. Shelves were revealed and it was evident that this
door formed the back of a cupboard that was in the passage. A cupboard used by the housemaid,
as was apparent from the dust shovel and brooms lying within it. For a moment, Bodsey left the
door open and looked at Brendan with quiet triumph. Then he snapped the door to and the wall appeared
in its former black condition. No one without making a close examination would have suspected the
presence of that secret door.
A housemate might open the cupboard door in the passage at any time, explained Mr. Bodsey accounting
for his action, and it would never do for her to look through the back of the shelves into
this room.
She might talk, Mr. Brendan, and then there would be trouble.
Yes, Bodsey rubbed his nose and looked at the astonished George.
I am sure there would be great, trouble.
I congratulate you on your cleverness, Mr.
Mr. Bodsey, said Brendan when he had somewhat recovered. You have discovered my secret.
I should like to know how you discovered it. Well, said Bodsey, pushing the wardrobe back to
its place with an effort. You see, when I learned through the advertisement that George
Brendan was the grandson of Lord Derrington, I told him of it. He related your history,
including the murder of my father. Yes, including that, replied Bodsey with a queer
expression. But that has nothing to do with the matter in hand, Mr. Bendon.
I'm not so sure, retorted George. I should not be at all surprised to find that Mrs. Jersey
was murdered to keep her quiet on that point. How do you make that out? Well, she was in San
Remo at the time my father was murdered. She loved him, and, I dare say, in spite of having been
discharged, watched him. She might know who the lady in blue
but I forgot. You are ignorant of all these things.
Not at all. Don't I tell you that Lord
Darrington told me the whole story?
I see what you mean.
You think that Mrs. Jersey might know who killed your father,
and, for the sake of shutting her up,
the assassin committed the second murder.
That is my idea, said George Cooley.
It's ingenious, but it won't hold water.
However, we can talk of that on another occasion.
In the meantime, I wish to tell you how I discovered the secret door.
There's no need to.
Darrington told you that I knew this house, as my grandfather had brought me up in it.
When you knew through Mrs. Ward that I had passed a night here,
and learned through her by means of train that the yellow holly berry had been found in the
woman's sitting room, you set to work to find out how I escaped from this room.
You knew that train had locked the door.
Yes, answered Bodsey.
He told Mrs. Ward that.
He seems to have told her everything.
However, to make a long story short,
you hunted for an exit and you found it.
That's so, replied Bodsey quietly.
And now we had better return to the sitting-room
and talk over the matter quietly.
One moment, said George,
have you told Lord Darington?
or Mrs. Ward of this discovery.
No, and I won't tell them either.
I wish to get you out of trouble, Mr. Brendan.
They haven't the least idea that you could leave the room,
and the impression with them is that train is screening you.
Bodsey shrugged his shoulders with contempt
and passed George another cigar.
Just as though the man would incriminate himself if that were so.
George did not light his cigar.
"'Well, as you have told me so much, Mr. Bodsey, I may as well confess.
"'If I am to help you, I must know all.'
"'Then you shall know, whatever I can tell you.'
George hesitated, and Bodsey guessed that he was not going to be so frank as was necessary.
However, he made no remark, and Brendan continued.
"'I came to this house to see Mrs. Jersey and get the truth out of her.
It was my intention to speak to her the next morning.
However, in the drawing room she stated that she wished the company to disperse at ten o'clock
as she had business to attend to.
Also, she came up to this room to see if I and my friend were in bed at eleven.
I guessed that she intended to see someone, and wondering if the expected person had anything
to do with my business, I determined to see her on that night.
When train was asleep, I locked my bedroom door and made
use of the cupboard. How did you know of its existence? I lived here as you know. This is a
queer old house full of these sort of things. I expect that door was made by some scamp so that he
might be able to lead a double life. Bodsey nodded. I know. Fair to the world and black
to the heart. As a boy I discovered the cupboard, replied Brendan, not taking notice of this
interruption, and I am ashamed to say that I sometimes made use of it in my teens to go to the
theatre unbeknown to my grandfather. On that night I used it again, and went to the sitting-room
of Mrs. Jersey. It was about twelve o'clock. The door of the room was closed. I opened it,
and saw her sitting at the table, dead, as she was discovered in the morning. In stooping over to
see if she still breathed, the berry must have fallen. It says a great great
deal for Trains' acuteness that he suspected me on such evidence.
I now see why he was so different to me when we parted, and why he has been so stiff of late.
What did you do after you found that the woman was dead?
I returned to my bedroom and said nothing about it.
You see, since I wanted something from Mrs. Jersey, and that desire might have come out in the
evidence, there was every chance that I would be accused of having murdered her.
There was certainly motive enough.
i don't agree with you replied bodsey however i quite understand that under the circumstances you lost your nerve you returned to your room and expressed suitable surprise the next morning
george nodded quite so and then trains having locked this door made me think that all was safe had he not told oh he has told very little rejoined bodsey after all nothing can be done if i hope
hold my tongue.
Nothing will be done in any case,
said George grimly.
But I thank you for warning me, Mr. Bodsey.
What are your plans?
I have none at present.
Lord Darington asked me to watch you.
That you certainly have done,
and if you choose you can go on watching me.
But why do you stop in this house?
Oh, I knew Mrs. Jersey some years ago,
and returned here for all time's sake.
George shrugged his shoulders.
He felt convinced that Bodsey was not speaking openly.
But then Brendan on his part had held something back.
Neither man was sufficiently sure of the other to be perfectly frank.
But the main thing was that Bodsey being friendly was content to let matters stand as they were.
That is, so far as regarded George himself,
for Brenton felt that the detective's presence in that house had something to do with the murder.
He rose to go.
"'Well, how do we stand?' asked Bodsey.
"'Much as we did before,' replied George,
"'save that I know you will hold your tongue and not get me into trouble.
"'I shall certainly do that.
"'But remember, Mrs. Ward.'
"'Lord Darrington can stop her mouth.'
"'Ah, but will he?' asked Bodsey dubiously.
"'I shall call on Lord Darrington and see,' answered Brendan,
with a nod left the room.
He's a plucket one, said Bodsey.
End of Chapter 11. Chapter 12
of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Twelve. A fireside tyrant.
Lord Derrington should have been born Emperor of ancient Rome or of modern Russia.
He would have made an admirable despot as he was fairly good-humored when all about him
were on their knees serving him. Even then his temper was none of the best. Those who held their
own he hated, while the many who gave in to his domineering will received unmerited contempt as
their reward. Even at 75, the old man's temper had not cooled, and the majority of people avoided
him as they would the plague. Originally, he had started life with a sufficiently imperious will,
and thanks to his position as a titled and wealthy orphan, he had been enabled to exercise it at a very
early age. The habit of seeing everyone terrified of his mere glance grew upon him, and he became
unbearable, not only to live with, but even to meet. His wife, after presenting him with two sons,
had died gladly, seeing no other way of escaping her tyrant, and the report went that he had
browbeaten her out of existence. Darrington would have married again for the sake of his boys,
but, like Henry VIII, whom he greatly resembled, he could find no one would.
willing to endure his yoke. Consequently, he became something of a woman hater and entered the
political world. In this he met with a certain amount of opposition which did him good, and might
have been trained into a moderately decent member of society, but that his reformation was cut short
by his being appointed ambassador to a prominent European power. Here his temper had full swing,
and he bullied everybody for three years. At the end of that time, he nearly caused a war and was
recalled. There was some talk of his being appointed Viceroy for India, but those in power had
sufficient pity on the country not to send him. Darrington in India would have been on
his native heath for tyrannizing. Failing from his reputation to get another appointment,
Darrington took to quarreling with his sons. Percy the elder had a spice of the paternal temper
and refused to submit. Consequently, he was forbidden the house and crowned his iniquities
in the old man's eyes by marrying Rosina Lockwood.
This was a severe blow to Darrington,
who had the pride as well as the temper of Lucifer.
He refused to hold any communication with Percy,
and thus the son remained abroad,
living on an income inherited from his mother
until he was murdered at San Remo.
As his income ceased on his death,
for it reverted to his mother's relatives,
George the boy was left dependent
on the charity of his two grandfathers.
Darrington denied the marriage and refused to acknowledge the infant.
Lockwood took the child to his home and brought him up.
Then the lad disappeared when Lockwood died and reappeared under the name of Brendan.
Derrington had discovered his grandson's identity in the way described by Botsey.
The younger vein was a fool, meek as Moses, and completely cowed by his terrible father.
He married an equally meek lady, and the two were crushed by the old time.
tyrant. Finally, both died, as gladly as the late Lady Darrington had done, and left Walter
Vane to carry on the title. The old lord detested Walter as a milksop, but he refused to acknowledge
George, preferring the fool to the clever man from sheer hatred of Brendan's father.
Derrington House in St. Giles Square was an immense palatial mansion which cost no end of money
to keep up, and as its lord was not over-rich, he would have had been.
have done better to remove to a more modest residence.
But Darrington's pride would not permit him to scrimp his living, and he dwelt alone in the
big house.
When Walter's parents were alive, they had occupied a corner, so that Darrington could bully
them at his leisure, and now Walter himself remained as a whipping boy.
But he was cunning enough to keep out of his grandfather's way, and contrived to be more
independent than his parents had been.
Perhaps Darrington was too old to carry on an act of war,
but he certainly gave Walter more license than he had ever accorded to any human being.
A good deal of contempt for the weak little dandy had to do with this permitting him to act as he pleased.
There is no excitement in whipping a sheep.
The meeting with George at Mrs. Ward's had touched the old man dearly.
He had never set eyes on Percy's son before,
and had no idea that the young fellow was so handsome and clever.
Darrington felt that he could take some pride in George as a man who would not permit himself to be bullied.
He had as strong a will as his grandfather, and the older man respected him.
Moreover, George's refusal to accept an income when he took a feigned name and his determined fight for his birthright pleased the despot.
But for his pride and hatred of the father, Darrington might have acknowledged the marriage.
He knew in his own mind that such a marriage had taken place,
that George was legitimate, but he did not know where the ceremony had been celebrated.
The sole evidence he possessed was a letter written by Percy from Paris, stating that he had
married Rosina Lockwood. Darington at the time accepted the fact and had never thought of
inquiring about details from his son, and of course when Percy died it was too late.
Mrs. Jersey knew, and Mrs. Jersey had made use of her knowledge, but she never told
Darrington anything. Had she done so, her hold over him might have waxed feeble,
although owing to her knowledge and to the old man's determination not to acknowledge George,
it could not be done away with altogether. The library in Darrington House was a vast and splendid
apartment with a magnificent collection of books. Its owner, driven back on himself by his
misanthropic detestation of his species, and the dislike his fellowmen had for him, read a great
deal. Sometimes he wrote articles for the quarterly's, principally on political questions.
He went out into society in spite of his age, out of sheer contrariety, and not because he
enjoyed himself. Like Vespasian, he was determined to die standing and showed himself
at several great houses, at race meetings, at Herlingham, and sometimes in the house.
His movements were carefully chronicled in the Morning Post, and he took care to let his
friends know that he was still alive.
for the rest he sat in his library reading or writing his memoirs these he had arranged to have published after his death and there were many families who would have given much money to have seen them behind the fire
darrington had known every one worth knowing for the last half century and had as bitter a pen as he had a tongue also he knew many secrets of diplomacy so it may be guessed that many great families did not look forward to the publication of these memoirs with particular pleasure
darington knew this and chuckled grimly much as heine did in the like case one afternoon he was adding a chapter to the book when a card was brought to him daring to nearly jumped from his seat when he read the name of george brendon
at first he was inclined to tear up the card and send the pieces out to the insolent young man who thus dared to trespass on his privacy but on second thoughts he decided to accord him an interview he knew the pieces out to the insolent young man who thus dared to trespass on his privacy but on second thoughts he decided to accord him an interview he knew
that by this time Mr. Botsey must have informed George that his grandfather knew him as Brendan,
and the old autocrat wished to see if George would behave as pleckily at their second interview
as he had done at the first. Moreover, he could not forget the good looks and clever conversation
of the young man. It would be absurd to say that Derrington's heart yearned over this unacknowledged
twig of the family tree, for, according to common report, he had no heart. But he certainly felt an
unwanted emotion when Brendan, tall and handsome, composed and ready for battle stepped into the room.
Darrington knew that the young man was ready for battle, for he saw the light of war in his eyes.
When the door was closed and the two were alone, Darringtoned took his station on the hearth rug with an
impass of expression of countenance. He waited for George to open the war of words, and after a
polite greeting he waited in silence. George was not at all embarrassed.
He knew perfectly well that he had a difficult task before him and did not choose to shirk it.
With the family obstinacy, he was determined on obtaining his birthright,
and if he set all London alight with scandal he was bent upon gaining his end.
The two men stared coolly at one another like two fencers,
but at the outset the buttons were off the foils.
"'I am sure you are not surprised to see me, Lord Darrington,' said Brendan,
with his eyes fixed on the old man's grim face.
"'Not half so surprised as you were at seeing Potsie,' said Darrington not to be outdone in coolness.
George smiled.
"'I was not at all surprised at seeing the man,' he said calmly.
"'It was my happy lot to rescue him from an accident, and it was my intention to call on him.'
"'For what reason?' asked Darrington, who could not help betraying astonishment in spite of
his self-control. You must excuse my not answering that question. Oh, certainly, replied Lord
Darrington with ironical politeness. But you are not so diplomatic as I thought. Because I decline a
reply. Because you allow me to see that you are on good terms with the man I employ,
a clever diplomatist would have allowed me to think that Bodsey was hostile and so have used the
man against me.
There is no need for me to stoop to such crooked ways, said Brendan with some scorn,
and I always find the truth tells in the long run.
Ah, you've never been an ambassador.
When I am, I shall still tell the truth.
Darrington smiled grimly.
Oh, then it is your intention to enter political life?
I think we discussed that fully the other evening.
"'Darrington sat down and leaned his elbows on the table.
"'His temper was rising, as he was not accustomed to be treated in this off-hand way.
"'Come, sir, let us understand one another.
"'State the situation so as to clear the ground for a proper argument.'
"'Certainly,' said George, with frigid politeness.
"'You know who I am, I understand.'
"'No, I don't.
"'So far as I know you are George Brendan.'
"'I met you at Mrs. Ward's and—'
"'And were good enough to hold a long conversation with me,'
finished George smartly.
"'I see, sir, it is necessary for me to be explicit.'
"'It's the best course,' rejoined Darrington,
looking at him with hard eyes and secretly admiring his self-control.
Then I have to state that my name is George Vane
and that I am the son of Percy Vane and Rosina Lockwood.
Indeed. What proof have you of this?
The evidence of my nurse Jane Fraser, who attended to me when my father, your eldest son, was alive.
The testimony of my former guardian, Mr. Ireland, who took charge of me after the death of my mother's father.
Finally, my certificate of birth, which I will show you whenever you choose.
Darrington was confounded by this call, Mansor. He would have blustered, but George's politeness
gave him no chance of losing his temper,
and without fuel it would not blaze up.
You seem to be well provided with proofs, said he grimly.
Let us admit, for the sake of argument,
that you are my grandson.
But the marriage?
Ah, that is the difficult point,
and it is unpleasant for me to talk of the subject.
Injustice to the memory of my mother I hold that there was a marriage.
And injustice to my family,
I hold that there was none.
In that case, Lord Derrington, we join issue.
You are quite a lawyer, sir, sneered the old man.
I thought of studying for the bar at one time.
Indeed, and why did you not?
I had no money to pay my fees, said George coldly.
The old Lord winced.
He could not but admire his pluck
and aware that the young fellow was his own flesh and blood,
regretted that he should lack any chance of embarking on what promised to be a brilliant career.
You could have had money had you chosen, said he roughly.
I know, for that reason I changed my name to Brendan.
Well, said Darrington irritably,
let us come to the point.
You say you are my grandson.
I admit that, as I am aware of what evidence you can bring forward,
but I decline to admit that you are my heir.
The onus of proof lies with you.
I am prepared to discover the proof
if your lordship will behave in an honorable manner.
What?
Roared Darrington, rising with a fierce look.
Do you mean to say you jack and apes
that I am behaving dishonorably?
Extremely so, said Brendan coldly.
You have had me watched by a detective.
You threatened through his.
him to have me arrested for a crime of which I am innocent, if I do not give up my attempts to
gain my birthright, and—
Here George leaned forward.
Dorothy Ward.
Do you call these actions honorable?
How dare you?
How dare you?
Was all that Darrington could say.
You should know how I dare, sir, considering I am your grandson.
I'll have you thrown out of the house.
George rose.
I am willing to leave you, sir, if that is the tone you take.
But as to being thrown out, that is quite another question.
Do you know who I am? questioned the other blustering.
Very well. You are the man who is keeping me out of my rights.
I am not. I say you are.
The two faced one another without blenching.
Derrington tried to cow George, and George refused to be cowed.
it was the old lord's eyes which fell first brendon had youth as well as will on his side and these dominated derrington for the first time in his tyrannical life he gave way
there is no need for you to go yet he grunted flinging himself into a seat i am willing to hear what you have to say brendon sat down also i don't think i have any more to say
then why did you come here to ask you if you consider it honourable to threaten me i have already done so there is no more to be said on my part
darrington dug a pen viciously into the blotting-pad he did not know very well what to say had george sworn and blustered he might have been able to talk him down and to bully him into giving way but brendon was perfectly calm and polite he was not to be intimidated in any way
and the ordinary methods would not do in this case.
Darrington was reduced to reason.
What is it you wish?
I wish you to recognize my mother's marriage
and to state that I am your heir.
Anything else?
sneered Darrington.
Yes.
You will publicly recognize me.
You will allow me an income sufficient
to maintain the dignity of my real name of George Vane
and you will order Mrs. Warrington.
to keep silent mrs. Ward what have I to do with her a great deal apparently you told her
my story and as she does not want me to marry her daughter she will move heaven and
earth to ruin me by using her knowledge how can she ruin you I think you
understand sir the story told by my friend train friend Judas rather no he is only a
weak man, who is as waxed in the hands of a clever and pretty woman, but Mrs. Ward got
sufficient out of him to place me in a somewhat perilous position.
Were you in the room where the woman was murdered? Speak plainly.
I came on here purposely to speak plainly, rejoined Brendan dryly, for your safety as well
as for my own.
Safety, sir, Darrington grew crimson.
What that devil do you mean?
I mean that I can speak freely to you as I know perfectly well that for the honor of our family.
Our family, confound you.
Our family, repeated George, of which someday I hope to be the head.
For its honor, I say, you will not take these matters into court.
I was in the room of Mrs. Jersey.
I saw her dead.
And you know who killed her?
No, I can't say that for certain.
George looked keenly at his grandfather.
The old man appeared uneasy.
Suddenly, Brendan spoke.
I should like to know what you were doing in Mrs. Jersey's house
on the night she was murdered.
Darrington dashed down his pen furiously and rose.
You go too far, sir.
You go too far, he roared.
Not any further than you intended to go.
If you threaten me, I have a right to protect myself.
In what way?
by telling you that if i am in a perilous position you are also do you mean to say that i murdered the woman by no means said brendon quickly i should not think of doing such a thing but i do say you were in that house after eleven
i was not panted the old nobleman savagely and glared at his grandson with bloodshot eyes you were insisted brendon there is no need to tell you how i got out of my bedroom unbeknown to train but i did
i came downstairs to see mrs jersey at half-past eleven or thereabouts i crept down the stairs and saw you standing in the light of the hall lamp you had on a fur coat and i recognized you by your unusual height
also by the color of your coat some months before you wore that coat it is a claret-colored one trimmed with sable at a race-meeting you were pointed out to me and it was the first time i had set eyes on you it was you in the hall
did you see my face asked derrington no but the coat and the height and my knowledge that you were connected with mrs jersey i wasn't connected with the jade flashed out derrington
she came to me years ago and said she could prove the marriage i tried to get out of her the name of the church where it took place she refused to give it and said if i did not pension her off she would go to your guardian ireland and get him to help her to prove that you were legitimate
i hated your father sir and as to your mother no cried brendon rising not a word against my mother only this that she was not well-born the daughter of a music-master not the wife for my son
she was his wife however leave my mother's name out of it and go on sir you say that mrs jersey could have proved the marriage
yes growled derrington rather cowed by brendon's manner i did not wish her to do so for the reasons i have stated very unworthy reasons said george coldly
you know nothing about it sir flamed out the old man slapping his hand on the table my family is as old as the conquest as the future head of it i am glad to hear that
darrington looked as though he could have struck george who simply made the remark to punish him for his insolence never mind that said he controlling his temper
i bought that house from your mother's father the music-master he sneered and gave it to mrs jersey rent free i also allowed her an annuity she held her tongue for many years then she saw that confounded advertisement in the papers
and threatened to tell you the truth on the chance of getting more money out of you when I was dead.
I refused, and then she told me that she had written out a confession.
I thought as much, interrupted George, but that has been stolen.
By whom? By the assassin.
And who is the assassin?
I can't say, but if use is made of that confession,
either you or I will learn who killed Mrs. Jersey.
why you or i because we alone can make use of the confession and pay money for it the thing would be no use to anyone else but i now understand mrs jersey's possession of the house were you in it on that night
"'Darrington looked at Brendan and hesitated.
"'Then in strange contradiction to his usual manner,
"'he turned away his face.
"'I decline to answer that question,' he growled.
"'But I saw you,' insisted George.
"'You saw? There is nothing more to be said.
"'Hold your tongue!'
"'Willingly,' said George politely,
"'if you will silence Mrs. Ward.
"'I have no influence with the woman.'
"'Oh, I think.
think so. She wishes Dorothy to marry my cousin.
Pure cousin. Can you deny the relationship?
Darrington shirked the question by assenting to Brendan's request.
I may be able to make Mrs. Ward hold her tongue, he growled.
I am quite sure she will do anything you tell her,
in the hope that you will approve of a match between my cousin and her daughter.
And you wish me to approve? sneered the old man.
As to that, it matters little.
Mrs. Ward wishes Dorothy to be Lady Darrington
and to have your very excellent income.
Whether she marries me or vain, it comes to the same thing.
I can't understand Mrs. Ward's dislike and mischief-making
since that is the case.
I can, snapped Darrington.
You are too clever for her, and Walter is a fool.
Perhaps so.
However, as I shall marry Dorothy, it doesn't much matter.
how can you marry her situated as you are i shall be george vane some day sir and then dorothy will be my wife i believe she will muttered derrington looking at the firm face of the young man
humph so you intend to look for the certificate of marriage no for the confession of mrs jersey afterward for the church which will be mentioned in that confession the register will prove the marriage without the marriage without the confession the register will prove the marriage without
the necessity of the certificate.
I shouldn't wonder, though, added
Brendan, if Mrs. Jersey had stolen that from my mother when she died.
Mrs. Jersey was jade enough for anything, said Darrington.
Well, she is dead, and there is no use saying bad about her.
How will you set to work to get that certificate?
George wrinkled his brows.
There is only one way, sir.
I must find out who killed Mrs. Jersey.
if you can help me i can't i know no more who murdered the woman than you do yet you were in the house on that night
darrington grew wrathful don't talk rubbish sir if i was i should not mind admitting the fact as it is he broke off gnawing his lip and avoiding brendon's eyes that the old man knew something vital to the case brendon was certain that he would never confess
what it was, George felt perfectly sure.
He abandoned the point, as he did not wish to make Lord
Darrington incriminate himself, and he might do so.
Brendan was satisfied that he had seen him in the house on the night when Mrs.
Jersey was murdered.
There is no more to be said, he remarked, taking up his hat.
No, except that I'll give you a fair chance of finding the church.
Bodsey shall watch you no more.
Thank you.
"'And Mrs. Ward?'
"'She shall be made to hold her tongue.'
"'George bowed.
"'I am obliged to you, sir.
"'I now see that you intend to fight fairly.
"'Good day.'
"'And he departed.
"'Darrington stood where he was in deep thought.
"'Suddenly he struck a mighty blow on the desk.
"'By heaven, he's a man after my own heart,' said the old scamp.
"'He shall be my heir, he shall marry the room.'
that girl. But to exercise his wits he shall fight every inch of the way to attain his ambition.
End of Chapter 12. Chapter 13 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume. This Librevovox recording is in the public
domain.
13. A woman scorned. Dorothy was by no means of a jealous disposition.
Moreover, her love for George was so deep and pure that she trusted him entirely.
nevertheless having learned from a few words dropped by vain that brendon knew lola she felt desirous of seeing the woman that lola was her rival she never for one moment believed as she knew vain's malicious nature and evil tongue
but the fact remained that brendon's name was coupled with that of the dancer and this incipient scandal annoyed miss ward there was no need for her to ask george why such a report should prevail for she knew that he would be able to explain in a satisfaction
manner, and trusting him already it was useless to demand details.
Her feelings would remain the same after the telling of his story as they were now,
therefore she avoided the disagreeable subject.
Nevertheless, she was woman enough to desire a sight of Lola, and induced her mother to take
her to the music hall.
Mrs. Ward was very pleased to do so, but she was too clever to hint that she guessed Dorothy's
reason for making this request.
Certainly, my dear, she said briskly.
I am very glad that you are coming out of your shell.
Men hate a woman who can't talk of everything,
and nothing is talked about but Lola.
I must educate myself to please men, then, said Dorothy dryly,
so I may as well begin with the dancer.
On what night can we go?
Oh, Friday we'll do.
Mr. Vane has invited us to dine at the Cecil,
so I'll ask him to get us a box.
Dorothy would rather have gone with anyone than with Mr. Vane as she disliked his feeble attempts at love-making.
However, there was nothing for it but to accept, since she had brought it on herself.
With a smile which encouraged her mother to think she would behave sensibly toward Vane,
she agreed to the proposed dinner party and companionship, and Mrs. Ward wrote a note at once.
I hope when she sees Lola and hears the stories about that Brendan man that she may refuse to have anything more to do,
with him, was Mrs. Ward's remark as she sealed her note.
I don't want to get the Brendan man into trouble by having him arrested for the murder,
and I don't think Darrington would let me if I did wish it.
Her last speech was prophetic, for the next day Lord Darrington paid a visit to Curzon Street
and had a short interview with Mrs. Ward, the gist of which was that she must hold her tongue.
Brendan called to see me the other day, explained Darrington looking grim,
and he showed me plainly that he had nothing to do with the matter.
But how about the holly berry?
That is easily explained, replied Darrington,
who anticipating the question had prepared an answer.
Brendan was one of the first to see the body,
and in touching it the berry fell from the sprig.
Afterward, mind you afterward, Mr. Train found the berry,
and not knowing that Brendan had seen the body that morning,
thought he had been in the room on the spring.
the previous night.
I'm sure he was, insisted Mrs. Ward.
You were sure of nothing of the sort.
Brenton could not have got downstairs without the connivance of
train, and you heard what train said.
He is such a fool.
The more likely to tell the truth, said Darrington.
Then he asked after a pause,
why did you tell Dorothy to give the sprig of Holly to Brendan on that night?
Mrs. Ward shrugged her shoulders and looked down nervously.
"'Oh, it was the merest kindness on my part,' she said, trying to speak quietly.
Darrington contradicted her at once.
"'It was nothing of the sort,' he declared with roughness.
"'You wished him to have the yellow holly in his coat when he saw Mrs. Jersey
"'so that the woman might betray herself.'
"'I knew nothing about Mrs. Jersey at the time.'
Oh, but you did?
With regard to the holly,
you knew from me how it was used
in connection with the death of my son
at San Remo,
and what I did not tell you,
you learned from other people.
Mrs. Ward looked defiant.
Well, I did.
I am sure everyone knew about the murder at the time,
she said.
And I met some old Frumps
who gave me all details.
I quite understand that.
But how did you know about Mrs.
"'Mrs. Jersey.'
"'That's my business,' cried Mrs. Ward, becoming imprudent.
"'You are right about the holly. I sent to Devonshire expressly to get some.
It was my intention to enclose a sprig in a letter to Mrs. Jersey so as to frighten her.'
"'What good would that have done?'
"'My business again,' snapped Mrs. Ward, becoming bolder.
"'I had my reason for wishing to recall your son's death to her mind, and I knew that the
Yellow Holly would do so most successfully.
When Dorothy came from the park
and told me that Brendan was to stop with his friend
at Mrs. Jersey's boarding-house,
I thought it would be better to let George wear the sprig.
And I managed it in such a way that neither Dorothy nor George
guessed how I planned the business.
And I succeeded.
Mrs. Jersey saw the sprig and nearly fainted.
I knew then that...
Here she stopped.
Darrington saw that it was usually,
useless to question her further. She would only lie and had been telling lies for all he knew.
Moreover, he did not think she could tell him anything pertinent to the case.
I shall ask you nothing more, he said, rising to take his leave.
You have some reason for all this intrigue, I have no doubt. What your intentions are matters
little to me. I came merely to warn you that Brendan is to be left alone.
You won't have him arrested?
No, and what is more, I won't have him spoken about in connection with that crime.
Mrs. Ward forgot her desire to conciliate, Darrington, forgot her desire to marry vain to Dorothy,
forgot everything in a sudden access of rage.
I shall do what I choose, she cried.
No, said Darrington quietly, and looking her full in the face,
You will obey me.
Obey you, Lord Darrington.
"'Yes. I have tried to conduct this interview quietly, Mrs. Ward, and to hint that your wiser plan is to be silent. But—'
"'I don't want hints. I wish for plain speaking,' raged the little woman. "'How dare you address me like this?'
The old gentleman leaned forward suddenly and whispered a short sentence in her ear.
Mrs. Ward's face turned pearly white and she tottered to a chair, closing her eyes as she fell into it.
Darrington surveyed her with a pitiless expression.
You will be silent about Brendan, he asked.
Yes, moaned Mrs. Ward.
I will say nothing.
When Darrington departed, Mrs. Ward retired to bed after canceling her engagements for the evening.
For 24 hours she stopped there, explaining to Dorothy that she was taking a rest cure.
It apparently did her good, for on the evening of the day appointed for the meeting at the Cecil,
she arose looking bright and quite herself again.
She had quite got over the fright given to her by Darrington,
and when she saw him later treated him quite in her old manner.
On his side, the old gentleman made no difference,
but he wondered how she was carrying herself so boldly.
At once it occurred to his suspicious mind
that there was some reason for this defiant behavior,
and he determined to watch her.
For this purpose he joined the party.
It is the first time I have been to a mute.
Music Hall for years, he explained to Dorothy.
But Walter has been talking so much about this new dancer that I felt I must see her.
Why did you not dine with us at the Cecil? asked Dorothy.
I always prefer to dine at home, my dear young lady.
Besides, it does not do for an old man to wag his grey beard uninvited among the young.
Meantime, Mrs. Ward was chatting amicably to vain, and to a vapid
war office clerk who had formed a fourth at the Cecil dinner party.
He was a titled clerk and heir to great estates, so Mrs. Ward made much of him.
She was very diplomatic and never neglected younger sons.
One never knows but what they may be rich some day, said Mrs. Ward in explanation of her wisdom.
The box was large and easily held the party.
Mrs. Ward had a position directly in front where she could see and be seen, but Dorothy
kept herself behind the curtains.
She could see the stage excellently,
but she did not wish to be recognized
by any chance acquaintance.
In an opposite box
sat a red-haired man
an immaculate evening dress.
Derrington recognized him as bodsey,
but did not think it necessary
to show his recognition.
He sat at the back of the box
between Vane and the War Office clerk
and kept a watchful eye on Mrs. Ward.
That little woman sparkled like a diamond.
She criticized,
the house, admired the decorations, and applauded the comic songs.
It might have been that this indifferent attitude was one of defiance as she must have known
that Derrington was watching her. But she acted her part consummately, and he could not help
admiring her coolness.
What an admirable actress, thought the old lord, and what a dangerous woman.
The ballet of the beck-and-alls came at the end of the first part of the program.
When the curtain rose, Dorothy was so anxious to behold Lola
that she leaned forward so as to show her face to the whole house.
Bodsey saw her and put his glass to his eyes.
He smiled slightly, and Darrington wondered why he did so.
But at that moment, and while the stage was filling with dancers,
he arose to receive some newcomers.
These were none other than Miss Bull and Marjorie for whom Bodsey had procured the box.
The little old maid was whiter than not.
ever and wore her usual gray dress. Marjorie was smartly gowned in green, and with her light hair
and stupid red face looked anything but beautiful. She placed herself in the best possible position,
being evidently directed to do so by Miss Bull, for that lady preferred the shade. At all
events, she secluded herself behind a curtain and kept her beady black eyes persistently on
the stage. On seeing that the two were comfortable, Bodsey disappeared and did not return
till the end of the ballet.
Darrington saw all this,
but no one else in Mrs. Ward's box
took any notice.
And why should they?
Bodsey and his party
were quite unknown to them.
The ballet was modelled
closely on the lines laid down
by Euripides in his tragedy.
The opening scene was the marketplace
of Thebes,
and the stage was filled mostly with men.
Pentheus, the king,
is informed that the whole female
population of the city,
together with his mother Agave, have gone to the mountains to worship a stranger.
The seer, Tyresius, knows by his psychic powers that the stranger is none other than Bacchus,
the god of wine, and implores Pentheus not to provoke his enmity.
The king spurns this advice and gives orders that the so-called god shall be arrested.
It was at this moment that Agave appears.
Dorothy looked at her eagerly.
Agave has not yet assumed her bacchanalian garb,
she is still in the quiet dress of a grecian matron but her gestures are wild and she is rapid in her movements in the dance which followed she is interrupted by pentheus who strives to calm her frenzy
but agave knowing the god of wine is at hand becomes as one possessed bacchus appears and is arrested by pentheus he is chained and hurried into the palace
agave warns the king against the impiety he is committing pentheus defies the gods there is a peal of thunder in the palace of pethius sinks into ruins
at the back appears the ruins of the city walls which have also fallen and on the summit of the heaped stones stands bacchus the god confessed at a wave of his wand vines begin to clamor over the ruins and the cries of the bacchanalians are heard
Pentheus tries to seize the God again, and darkness covers the stage.
The last thing seen was Lola dancing in a wild red light with extravagant gestures.
Dorothy could not say that Lola was handsome, but she had about her a wild grace, which was very fascinating.
When dancing, she seemed to think of nothing but the rebels in which she was engaged.
She never cast a look at the house, and Dorothy noticed this.
She was therefore somewhat surprised when, during the second scene,
she saw Lola deliberately look in the direction of the box
and stare at her piercingly for quite a moment or two.
Rather confused by this sudden regard, the girl drew back.
Lola noticed her no more but continued to dance.
The second scene was the camp of the Bacchanals,
where Pentheus, as a follower of the god, comes to see the orgies.
It was a mountainous scene with a lurid red sky broken by masses
of black clouds.
There is no need to describe the ballet in detail.
The frenzied dancers of the bacchanal
seemed to send the audience wild.
There was something fierce and murderous
about these orgiastic movements.
And through the wild throng darted Lola
in leopard skin and garlands bearing a cup of wine
and flinging herself about in wild madness.
She appeared to be a devil,
and Dorothy shrank back at the sight of her wild face.
The music also was
terrible and excited the dancers to further efforts of madness.
It was a feast of witches, a Valporgis knight, a revel of the earth powers.
There was nothing spiritual about this riot of the flesh.
The audience shuddered at the fierce rapture of the dancers, at the alluring pain of the
music, at the reckless abandon of Lola Veles.
It's too awful, murmured Dorothy, moving to the back of the box beside Darrington.
That woman is a deep.
demon. Yet your friend Mr. Brendan helped her to this position, said the old man, grimly.
I am sure he cannot approve of this dancing, shuddered the girl who was very pale.
There is nothing improper about it, said Darrington.
No, everything is right in that way, but it is maddening and unholy and altogether terrible.
The music is something like that in Tannhouser, cruel, evil, belize.
Ah, your poor spiritual nature shrinks from that sort of thing.
But Mrs. Ward seems to enjoy it.
She certainly did, craning forward so as to get a full view of the stage Mrs. Ward's eyes were alight.
She would have enjoyed being in the throng herself, and would have danced as madly as the
worst of them.
And queerly enough, Miss Bull appeared also spellbound.
Her face was flushed, her eyes glittered, and her breath came
and went in quick pants.
It's wonderful Marjorie,
she said, leaning out of the box
and fixing her eyes intently
on the whirling mass.
It's very pretty,
said Marjorie stupidly.
Her dull brain
could not understand
the wild madness of the scene
and she was as unmoved
as though she had been listening
to a sermon.
Dorothy, Dorothy,
whispered Mrs. Ward,
come back to your seat.
Lola juggles the head of Pentheus.
It is the great
dance. No, answered Dorothy and clung to Darrington's arm. I will stop here. It is too terrible.
The old man understood, and in the darkness of the box he sipped his arm round her.
In that kind embrace, Dorothy felt safe. If she looked upon that madness again, she felt that
she must cry out. Darrington quite appreciated her feelings. It was the repulsion experienced
by the spiritual against the material.
The action of the ballet proceeded rapidly.
Antheus climbed a tree, the back an audience surrounded it and dragged him down.
Lola emerged from a frantic crowd bearing his head.
Then began the dance, slowly at first, with solemn pacings and stately gestures.
The limelights red and blue and green and yellow were flashed on the swaying form of Lola
as she eyed the head with terrible glances.
then the music flashed out into a wild gallop the scene became pandemonium lightning flashed thunder rolled the violins shrieked in the orchestra the dancers spun whirled plunged and sprang and bounded and frantically rushed about the stage
everywhere at unexpected moments lola appeared tossing smiting and caressing the head of pentheus whirling out and in as the rainbow lights played upon her restless figure
finally when the orgy was at its height came a flash of lightning a crash of thunder the riot died away the bacchanalian sprang from the stage
darkness descended the music sank to lulling tones and quiet silvery moonlight flooded the stage there alone in the centre sat agave restored to her right mind weeping over the head of her sun and on this scene of sorrow the curtain felled
slowly to the strains of sweet music.
The audience drew long breaths
and felt as though a nightmare were at an end.
"'Let us go now,' said Dorothy,
standing up and still clinging to Darrington's arm.
"'I wish I had not come.'
She was interrupted by an ejaculation from her mother.
Mrs. Ward also was standing up,
but her eyes were fixed on Miss Bull.
The little old maid as though feeling the influence of that glance
slowly looked in Mrs. Ward's direction.
The eyes of the two women met.
From those of Miss Bull flashed a look of hate,
and she withdrew behind the curtain of the box.
Mrs. Ward was white and shaking.
Clutching Vane's arm she requested to be taken to her carriage.
It is too much for me, she said,
alluding to the ballet.
Darrington stood on the pavement when the room rolled away,
bearing the mother and daughter, both silent, both pale.
He was alone as Vane and the war office clerk were back in the hall.
Huh, said Darrington, his eyes fixed on the retreating carriage.
So you know that little woman who called to see me about the lease.
I wonder how that comes about.
Miss Bull knew Mrs. Jersey, and you, Mrs. Ward, sent that yellow holly.
I wonder.
The old man stopped.
He could not quite understand what Mrs. Ward was doing, but he repeated his former observation.
A dangerous woman, said he, I shall speak to Baudsie about her. And making up his mind to this,
he went in search of the detective. All that night Dorothy was haunted by strange dreams,
in which the figure of Lola played a prominent part. Usually calm and self-possessed,
Dorothy slept like a child, but the fear of her.
music, the mad dancing, the knowledge that George knew this terrible woman, for so she appeared
to the girl, caused her to sleep brokenly. She was up early, and after a breakfast that was a mere
farce, she took her way to the park. It was her usual custom to walk in a lonely part about eight
o'clock in the morning, but on this occasion she was at her usual spot by half-past seven. This
was a seat under a spreading tree in the center of a wide lawn. Few people came there at so early an hour,
and Dorothy often read for an hour before returning home.
In a mechanical manner she took a book out of her pocket.
It was the meditations of Marcus Aurelius
and tried to fasten her attention on the soothing words of the stoic emperor.
But it was impossible.
Before her inner vision passed the wild, flushed face of Lola Veles
and Dorothy could not drive it away.
While endeavoring to do so, someone came to sit on the seat.
Dorothy rather surprised looked up.
She saw Lola staring at her intently.
The dancer looked pale and worn.
About her there was none of the unholy influence of the previous night.
As the morning was cold, she wore a sealskin coat and toke
with a scarf of red silk twisted round her throat.
This touch of color was all that was about her likely to suggest her foreign origin.
With her pale face and piteous mouth and appealing eyes,
She looked like a broken-hearted woman.
Dorothy's first movement was to go away,
but when she saw the sorrow on that wild face,
she remained where she was.
The two gazed at one another for a time,
and the thought in the mind of each was the same.
Both thought of George Brendan.
Lola began to speak without any preamble.
Mr. Budzi pointed you to me at the last night,
she said in her imperfect English.
He declared you did walk early,
and I have been with my...
eye on your mansion since six hours. What you call a clock? I see you come. I follow you.
I am here, Miss Vard. I am here. What do you want? asked Dorothy calmly. Her nerves much more under
control than Lola's were. Yet both were agitated. Ah, cried the foreign woman throwing back her head.
Give him to me. I love him. I worship him. Give him to me.
"'Of whom do you speak, mademoiselle?'
"'Ah, mademoiselle, so he speaks one angry.
"'But I am no French. I am Signora. I am Spanish.
"'I have warm blood here in my heart.'
"'She struck her breast fiercely, and if you take him from me I will kill you.
"'Yes, I will give you the death. Quick, sure, sudden.'
Her face drew near to Dorothy's as she spoke, and the girl could feel her hot breath on her
cheek. But Dorothy had a brave heart of her own and did not flinch. For all she knew,
Lola might intend to stab her at the very minute. The parkkeeper was some distance away,
and it was useless to create a scandal by calling him to her assistance. Lola was just the kind of
mad creature to make a scene. Retaining control of herself, though her heart was beating rapidly,
Dorothy fixed her eyes firmly on those of Lola. Sit a little further away, she said.
and we will talk calmly.
Are you not afraid?
asked Lola surprised.
She had always found the savage attitude so effective.
Dorothy laughed.
I was never afraid of anything or of any one in my life,
she said coolly,
and I am not going to begin now.
What do you want, mademoiselle?
Why do you threaten me?
Ba, cried the other,
but moving back a little as requested.
you know, you blonde white cat, you. It is George.
What about George? He is mine. He loves me. You would take him from me.
If you are speaking of George Brendan. Of who else should I speak? You know? Ah, you know.
Yes, I know. I heard some rumors as to how he helped you. But I do not believe for one moment that he loves you.
He does.
You dare ask that he loves.
I shall do nothing of the sort.
We may as well understand one another,
as you have no right to thrust yourself upon me.
I do do what I do, please, said Lola sullenly.
These sorts of things are not allowed in England.
I am sorry for you, and so I speak.
Otherwise I should call the parkkeeper.
I want not any sorrow.
I do want my own jeal.
"'Mr. Brendan is engaged to marry me,' said Dorothy deliberately.
Lola sprang to her feet with flashing eyes.
"'It will not be,' she almost shouted.
"'I love him.'
"'Sit down,' said Dorothy, much in the same tone as she would have used to a
fractious child, and Lola resumed her seat immediately.
The woman was a creature of impulse.
Had Dorothy raged also, she would have gained the ascendancy.
but this calmness to use a nautical simile
took the wind out of her sails.
She could only do as she was told.
But I will have my Georges, she muttered.
Listen to me, said Dorothy quietly.
I have no right to answer your questions.
But I am sorry for you.
I will speak to Mr. Brendan.
No.
Lola looked up in terror.
You must not do that.
He will be very angry.
Oh, much, much enraged.
Then that shows me you have been speaking on truth.
Mr. Brendan does not love you.
But I say yes, yes, yes.
Lola sprang to her feet again and poured forth her wrath.
Ah, you think he will be milor, and that you will marry him, but...
What do you know about that?
asked Dorothy, rising indignantly.
Oh, I do know much, much.
Lola snapped her fingers.
Yes, I know that which I do know.
I can stop him from being Milor,
and that I will.
I will.
If he is Milor, he will marry you, you.
But as my own George, he will make me, me,
she struck her breast again.
Me, Lola Veles, Madame his wife.
You are talking nonsense, said Dorothy coolly,
though she felt annoyed and puzzled.
What can you know?
That which I do know.
Wait.
Oh, wait a day.
One day, two day, three day, and then...
She snapped her fingers.
You see?
Yes.
You see how clever I am?
I go.
I go, you white cat.
I go to get my Georges.
Lola darted away at a run, which slackened to a rapid walk as she neared the park gates.
Dorothy sat down again, too amazed to follow.
End of Chapter 13
Chapter 14 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
14
Mrs. Ward's trump card
Colaskey was a large, fat, good-natured blackguard of a man
quite without principle.
He came from some remote village in the Balkans and was of Jewish birth.
In his early days he arrived in London penniless
and strove to make a living by selling toys in the street.
Then he turned a scene-shifter at a music hall,
and while thus engaged educated himself to write and read
and to speak English with wonderful fluency.
Also he saved money and speculated in a small way,
having the marvelous Hebrew instinct of picking out lucrative ventures.
Shortly, he became stage manager.
Then he found a clever woman who sang badly and acted wonderfully.
Kulaski advertised.
her into a success and she proved grateful.
There is no need to trace his steady rise,
but one thing led to another until he became proprietor
of the very music hall which had witnessed his humble beginning.
When he first set eyes on Lola,
he had guessed that it would pay to invest money in her.
The success of the ballet proved that Kulaski was right as usual,
and he smiled his oily smile when he saw the crowded houses
and looked over the receipts.
The ballet would run for more than a year,
He was sure of that, and said about some other business now that the music hall was flourishing.
It was at this point that Lola demanded a week's holiday.
Kalaski whimpered.
He usually did so to make people think he was weak.
But under his apparent weakness he was possessed of an iron strength.
Having great experience of women, he thought to control Lola,
but she being gifted with a superlative temper left in his face.
All his cleverness could not make.
her swerve from the point.
I want a week to myself, she said doggedly.
They were talking in French, as Kulaski could swear more easily in that tongue and wanted
freedom of speech.
But my dear child, Kulaski was always paternal.
It will not do.
You are the draw.
And if you go out of the bill, the people will not come to my house.
I don't care.
I want a week and a week I will have.
Why do you wish for this week?
"'That's my business.'
"'Kalasky tried temper.
"'If you go, you leave my theatre once and for all the time.'
"'Psh' said Lola, snapping her fingers in his dismayed face.
"'I draw, and you are in no hurry to get rid of me.'
"'Colasky tried reproaches.
"'If you were a grateful woman.'
"'Ah, bah, what of gratitude.
"'You wanted me, or you would have seen me die in the gutter.'
Kulaski began to whimper.
You will ruin me, my dear.
It would serve you right if I did.
You have ruined others in your time.
Don't you think I know you?
Come, she rapped on the table.
I want the week.
Tomorrow and till next Wednesday I am out of the bill.
But it cannot be done.
It must be.
I want it to be done.
Kolaski tried bribing.
I will raise your salary if you stay.
oh la la la la la i am quite pleased with what i get if i wished my salary raised i should have it raised i go for a week
in the face of this obstinacy colaski gave in but first of all he tried threats and alola threatened to throw a chair at him he finally agreed that she should have her week and alola walked out of the office without thanking him that was the last he saw of her for seven days
he made the most of her absence declaring that she had been called away to nurse a dying mother and would reappear with a broken heart to keep her engagements with the public bodsey saw this notice
it was the first he had heard of lola's escapade and he went at once to her rooms in bloomsbury to ask where she was going lola had already gone and according to the landlady had left no information as to her whereabouts did she take a box asked bodsey
A small box. She went away in a cab.
Where did she tell the cabman to drive to?
To Oxford Street.
Bodsey was disappointed.
He saw that Lola had taken every precaution to hide her trail
and that there was not much chance of finding her.
However, he went to see Kalaski.
The manager began to talk of the dying mother and Bodsey shut him up.
Rubbish! That's for the public.
I want to know where she is.
"'My dear, I do not know,' said Kulaski,
and for the first time in his wicked old life he told the truth.
"'Not to be beaten, Bodsey sought out George Brendan.
But George was as ignorant as the manager and the landlady.
"'I haven't the slightest idea,' he said when Bodsey asked.
"'And to tell you the truth, I don't see why you should try to find out.
"'I want to know.'
"'That is apparent on the face of it.
but you are not engaged to marry her, are you, Mr. Bodsey?
No such luck, replied the detective with a dismal face.
Then I don't see what right you have to control her movements.
Did she write and tell you where she was going?
No, and if she had done so, I should not tell you,
replied George, annoyed by the man's persistence.
You may as well be civil to me, Mr. Brandon.
You know that I am your friend.
"'Oh, I've heard all that before.
"'But people who talk much of friendship and gratitude are generally humbugs.'
"'I am not,' said Bodsey quietly.
"'See here, Mr. Brandon. Lola is in love with you.
"'That's my business. Leave it alone.'
"'Bodzie took up his hat.
"'Oh, very well. If you will not be civil, I cannot help you to learn who killed your father.'
"'What?'
George sprang from the table at which he was writing and seized the man's arms.
Do you know that?
Gently, Mr. Brendan.
No, I do not know, but...
Then what do you mean by saying...
We had better have a chat, said Bodsey and sat down.
But I wish to know where I stand.
Lola loves you.
Do you love her?
No, said Brendan, seeing that he would have to humor the man,
I am engaged to marry Miss Ward.
Will you help me to marry Lola?
Willingly, though to tell you the truth, I know very little about you,
and to make that girl marry you.
Oh, Lola can look after herself, Mr. Brendan.
If she becomes my wife, she will have the upper hand,
but I'm so deeply in love with her that I am willing to play second fiddle.
Can't you dispossess her of this infatuation for you?
George shook his head and groaned.
"'No, she won't listen to reason.'
"'Well,' drawled Bodsey recurring to his American accent,
"'I don't blame her for that.
"'She is in love, and love listens to no one and no thing.
"'I wouldn't listen to reason either if it entailed giving up, Lola.
"'See here, Bodsey, if you can persuade this woman to get over her liking for me
"'and to marry you, I shall be delighted.
I do not know where she is just now,
but it is my impression that she has gone away
because she is afraid of me.
Afraid of you.
Oh, that's absurd.
No, it isn't.
The other morning she saw Miss Ward
and there was a scene in the park.
Bodsey hung his red head.
I fear that is my fault, he confessed.
I pointed out, Miss Ward to Lola and...
And it was I who foolishly mentioned
that Miss Ward sometimes took a walk in the morning, in the park.
Oh, said Bodsey, I mentioned that also.
Did you wish Lola to see Miss Ward? asked George angrily.
No, nor did I intend to say anything about the walking in the early morning.
I simply pointed her out in the box to Lola,
so that Lola might see there was no chance of your marrying her.
As if any woman would accept such an excuse,
said Brendan contemptuously.
Then she questioned you about the walk.
Yes, she mentioned something about what you had told her,
and I was rather free with my tongue.
I am not usually, said Baudsie penitently.
But there's something about Lola that makes me behave like a child.
I'm wax in her hands.
So she saw Miss Ward.
Yes, and she knows that I am angry.
Of course Miss Ward sent to tell me at once.
once, and I called on Lola to give her a talking to, but she was gone when I arrived.
Would you have spoken harshly to her?
Certainly.
She had no right to trouble Miss Ward.
But now you know why I think she has left town.
In a week she will come back thinking my anger is at an end.
And will it be? asked Baudsie doubtfully.
It is at an end now.
I am quite content not to see Lola again so long as she leaves Miss Ward alone.
I will try and keep her away, said the detective,
but I have very little influence with her.
Tell her I am angry and will be still more angry
if she does not keep away from Curzon Street.
Well, we have discussed this matter.
I now want to hear what you meant by your reference to my father.
Do you know who killed him?
Bodsey shook his head.
I can't say for certain, but I can tell you who might know.
Who is that?
Mr. Roger Ireland.
George looked astonished.
But that is ridiculous, he said.
Mr. Ireland told me that he did not know.
Oh, I don't say that he knows for certain,
but he is better acquainted with the matter than you think.
How did you come to know, Mr. Ireland?
He called to see Miss Bull and I dropped across him.
How did you get talking of the case?
Well, you see, said,
said Bodsey easily. We naturally talked of Mrs. Jersey, and one thing led to another, until I
discovered that Ireland had been in San Remo when your father was murdered. I wished to find out
who killed him, so I questioned Mr. Ireland. Why do you wish to know who killed my father? asked
George. Because I think that the murder of Mrs. Jersey is connected with that crime.
See here, Bodsey cleared his throat.
Mrs. Jersey was in San Remo at the time of the death.
How do you know that?
Don't I tell you I questioned Mr. Ireland.
George looked sharply at the detective.
What magic did you use to make him talk?
Mr. Ireland knows how to hold his tongue.
Well, when he found that I was looking after the case of Mrs. Jersey,
and I made no secret of that,
he was good enough to tell me all he knew.
He thought, as I did, that the murder in San Remo was connected with the crime of Amelia Square.
Oh?
George wasn't at all satisfied, as he could not conceive how Bodsey had induced Ireland to talk.
However, he thought it wise to say no more, as he did not wish to make Bodsey angry and thus run a chance of losing his explanation.
Go on.
There is nothing more to say, said Bodsey rising.
Mr. Ireland declined to tell me who he thought was guilty,
but he hinted that he had seen the lady in the blue domino unmasked.
Did he recognize her?
I think he did, but he assured me that he could not be sure
and that he had not seen the lady again.
Then he did know the face.
Bodsey's face assumed an impenetrable expression.
I can only refer you to Mr. Ireland, he said, and as to Lola,
"'Oh, she'll turn up again,' said Brendan irritably.
"'Don't worry me about Lola.
"'I wish you would marry her and take her back to your native land.'
"'What land am I native of, Mr. Brendan?' asked Bodsey calmly.
"'America, I understand. You hinted as much when we met.'
"'Bodsey shook his head.
"'I am as English as you are,' he declared.
"'Well,' said Brendan with a shrug,
I thought as much.
Your accent fails at times.
You are not a good actor, Bodsey.
I may be a better actor than you think, Mr. Brandon.
What do you mean by that?
Never you mind, sir.
I can hold my tongue when it suits me,
and on this occasion it does suit me.
But remember, Mr. Brandon,
that whatever happens, you have a friend in me.
What is going to happen?
Bodsey shook his head solemnly.
"'One never knows. We are not out of the wood yet, Mr. Brendan.
Are you referring to my father's murder?'
"'And to Mrs. Jerseys. I have my suspicions, and—'
"'Well, there's nothing more to be said. When I am certain, I shall let you know.
You have your suspicions, then.'
"'Yes, but I shall not impart them to anyone, not even to you.'
"'One moment, Bodsey,' said Brendan, as a man. "'Yes, but I shall not impart them to anyone, not even to you.'
one moment bodsey said brendon as the man had his hand on the door do you suspect miss bull why should i suspect her asked the detective in surprise because she was not on good terms with mrs jersey and you have taken up your abode in the house
to watch her you would say well maybe rejoined the man composedly i know what i know and when i am more certain of what i know sir he nodded good day he said and went abruptly
it struck george that bodsey was a most mysterious person and knew far more about the san remo murder than derrington could have told him still it was possible that derrington had unbosomed himself to bodsey and-y knew far more about the san remo murder than derrington could have told him still it was possible that derrington had unbosomed himself to bodsey and
it was necessary to do so if he wanted the murder of Mrs. Jersey cleared up.
And at Arrington, from his refusal to admit that he was at the house on the night
and about the time the crime was committed, seemed to know something that might lead to the
detection of the assassin.
"'Hump,' said George to himself when alone,
"'I have a great mind to go around and see that old man.
It seems to me that Bodsey is trying to serve two masters.
It is impossible that my grandfather can know the truth.
Yet going by his height and figure, and that sable claret-colored coat,
he was certainly in the house on the night in question.
But it's none of my business.
He sat down again to his work and tried to interest himself in the chapter he was writing.
But it was all in vain.
Bodsey's speech and Bodzie's manner,
and a conviction that the man was playing his grandfather false,
kept recurring to his mind.
after an hour's futile work he threw down the pen in despair and went out to call on derrington on arriving at st giles square he saw a carriage at the door of the mansion on asking for lord derrington george was informed that his lordship was engaged with mrs ward and could see no one
brendon turned away wondering that he had not recognized the carriage and he was still more vexed with himself when dorothy put her head out of the brougham and called to him my dearest he said softly so that the coachman and footman might not hear this is an unexpected pleasure why are you not inside
"'My mother wished to see Lord Darington alone,' replied Dorothy.
"'I am waiting till she comes out.
She has been with him for half an hour.
I don't know what they are talking about.'
"'It was at this moment that a message was brought out of the house from Mrs. Ward
saying that her daughter could drive home as she would not be disengaged for another hour.
Dorothy looked puzzled.
"'I can't understand,' she said.
"'There is something wrong with my mother.'
lord derrington came to see her one day and she has been upset ever since george shook his head he suspected mrs ward of knowing more than she chose to confess and based his suspicions on the fact of the yellow holly which she had given to dorothy to present to him
she had made her daughter a cat's pall but why she should wish to startle mrs jersey with the reminder of the san remo murder was a thing george could not understand meanwhile he kept these suspicions to himself and made some excuse
"'Oh, Mrs. Ward and my grandfather are probably talking over my iniquities,' he said easily.
"'But I don't see why I should not take advantage of this chance.'
"'What do you mean, George?' asked Dorothy with a becoming blush.
"'Well, here is the broom, and here you are. Why shouldn't we drive around the park before you go home?'
"'My mother will be angry,' said Dorothy hesitatingly. Then she blushed again.
"'But I shall brave her anger.'
"'We have much to talk about, as I wish to speak of Lola Belize.'
"'Dorothy, you surely do not think.'
"'No, no, but I want to ask you a few questions.
"'I believe she is mad, George.
"'Get in, and we will drive round the park.'
"'The order was given. George seated himself beside his divinity,
"'and they drove away for a pleasant hour.
"'You see fate plays into our hands,' said George,
"'taking those of Dorothy in his own.
And then the conversation became quite private and very, very confidential.
Meantime, Mrs. Ward was seated in a chair facing Lord Darrington.
The old gentleman looked savage, but Mrs. Ward was quite at her ease.
They had been having a war of words, and Mrs. Ward so far had come off best.
The conversation had been in reference to the sentence whispered in the little woman's ear
when he had made her promise to hold her tongue about George.
"'Of course I do think it is the meanest thing a man can do,' said Mrs. Ward bitterly.
"'What if I did cheat at cards? Every woman does that, and I was losing no end of money.'
"'I don't think your friends would take that view,' said Darrington grimly.
"'I came to hear of the matter quite by chance, and it is plain that you won over a hundred pounds by cheating.'
"'It's that horrid Mrs. Weyfleet who told you.'
"'No.'
if mrs waifleet knows she has held her tongue i learned it from a source of which you are ignorant but the fact remains you cheated and if your friends knew it you would be ostracized by all of them
as if they did not do these things themselves retorted mrs ward but since you have been so nasty i intend to be nasty too i shouldn't advise you to be nasty to me mrs ward
I have a large reserve fund of strength.
You'll need it all to hold your own against me.
Lord Darrington nodded.
I quite admit that you are a dangerous woman, he said quietly.
Well, and in what way have you made up your mind to be nasty?
Mrs. Ward laughed.
You needed to repeat my adjectives, she said in her most frivolous manner.
If you want to know the way in which I intend to be nasty,
protect myself.
What do you mean by that?
I mean this, cried the little woman growing angry all at once.
I am not going to be threatened about that unfortunate episode connected with the cards.
It was that horrid Mrs. Weafleet who told you, so don't deny it.
I am not going to be threatened without holding my own.
Besides, I want Dorothy to marry your grandson.
Which one?
asked Darrington Cooley.
You have only Walter Vane.
Excuse me, George Brendan, whether there is a marriage or not, is equally my grandson.
I believe you admire him.
Very much, and it is in my mind to acknowledge him as my heir.
I thought as much after you're sticking up for him the other day, said Mrs. Ward furiously.
Now look here, Lord Darrington.
"'If Dorothy marries that Brendan creature,
"'I won't be able to do a thing with her.
"'You know quite well, I won't.'
"'That means you won't be able to handle my money
"'through George after I am dead,' said Darrington grimly.
"'You can put it that way if you like.
"'But Walter shall be Dorothy's husband.
"'I have made up my mind.'
"'Because he's a fool and putty in your hands.'
"'I shouldn't be vulgar if I were you,' said Miss
Mrs. Ward, in a dignified manner, and quite forgetting that she had once used the same illustration
herself in connection with Brendan.
But so long as George leaves Dorothy alone, I shall say nothing.
That's really very good of you, Mrs. Ward.
You're being nasty won't make me change my mind.
But you quite understand the situation, Lord Derrington.
Walter is to marry my daughter, and George is to be kept away.
I don't see how he is to be kept away.
away. I assure you, Brendan is a strong man and his will is quite equal to mine.
Nonsense. You have the strongest will in London. And you come here to try and break it?
Life is a game, said Mrs. Ward, leaning back with a pretty air of philosophy. And at present,
I hold the trump card.
What is it? asked Darrington, wondering by what means she hoped to make him consent to her demands.
"'I'll tell you presently,' said Mrs. Ward in a most masterful tone which amused Darrington.
"'But you understand that if George Brendan doesn't keep away,
"'I shall give information to the police and have him arrested in connection with that murder.'
"'Oh, no, you won't,' said Darrington good-humouredly.
"'Oh, yes, I shall. As to your accusation about my having cheated,
you shall say nothing about that.'
"'Indeed, I shall do so if you trouble.
Brendan. Think of Dorothy. I do think of Dorothy, and I'm very sorry she has such a mother.
You dare to insult me, began Mrs. Ward, when Darrington, who was losing patience, cut her short.
I've had enough of this, he said sharply. You shall hold your tongue about Brendan,
or I'll tell what I know. Then I'll do the same. Darrington bowed politely. By all me,
means, he said,
My reputation is already so bad that a word or two from you can scarcely make it worse.
Oh, it's more than that, said Mrs. Ward quietly,
and as she spoke in so positive a manner that Darrington began to recollect his worst sins.
Do you remember the night you came home here at one o'clock, and found me in this very room?
Yes, you came with the amiable intention of telling me that
George Brendan was going to pass the night at Mrs. Jersey's, and that you suspected that he was up to
mischief.
I took the trouble to come from a party for that very purpose, was Mrs. Ward's plaintive reply,
and how was I received?
I told you to mind your own business, if I remember.
And you swore at me, said the little woman, as if a man who calls himself a gentleman.
Mrs. Ward, I am getting tired of this circumlocution.
What is it you have to say?
Well, on that night you were in a fur coat.
My usual coat in winter.
It was the night when Mrs. Jersey was killed.
Was it indeed?
I never noticed the coincidence.
No, but you knew about it, said Mrs. Ward.
You threw your coat on yonder sofa.
I seated myself near it by chance.
There was something hard in the pocket of the coat.
When you were out of the room, I took the something out.
There it is, and she laid an Italian stiletto on the table.
What is that? asked Darrington calmly, but with an anxious face.
That, said Mrs. Ward, touching it daintily with her finger,
is the weapon with which Mrs. Jersey was stabbed.
end of chapter fourteen chapter fifteen of the yellow holly by fergus hume this librovoc's recording is in the public domain fifteen a recognition
if mrs ward expected to startled derrington into a confession she was never more mistaken in her calculations lord derrington had not moved in diplomatic circles all his life without knowing how to guard against the display of emotion with an utterly expression
face he looked at the stiletto. It was a slender steel blade with a silver handle of Renaissance
workmanship, evidently a valuable and curious relic of the Middle Ages. It might have been made
by Chilini himself, and have been worn by Chazare Borgia. But Darrington stared at it as though
he knew nothing about it. Well, said Mrs. Ward sharply and rather disappointed he did not grovel
on the instant. What do you say?
"'Darrington looked at her in a rather humorous manner.
"'What do you want me to say?' he asked.
"'Confess that I killed Mrs. Jersey,
"'and then brought this weapon carefully home in my pocket
"'for you to discover and use against me.'
"'That is a subterfuge,' said Mrs. Ward.
"'You did not expect to find me waiting for you,
"'and you never meant that dagger to be discovered, Lord Darrington.'
"'I certainly never did.'
he assented heartily.
I cannot imagine how you came to know more than I did.
What do you mean? asked the little woman sharply.
Well, you see, said Lord Derrington quietly,
this is a very clever bit of business on your part,
but so far as I am concerned, it has nothing to do with me.
I never saw that weapon before.
Oh, that's rubbish, said Miss.
Mrs. Ward with a mirthless laugh.
I found it in the pocket of your fur coat on the very.
You say you found it there, said Darrington meaningly.
Do you deny that it was in the pocket?
Certainly. Had it been in the pocket, I should have known it was there.
But it was not in the pocket.
Mrs. Ward stared.
You are very brazen, she said.
You knew it was there all the time.
In the pocket?
asked Darrington politely and perfectly calm.
Mrs. Ward hesitated.
Then she faced him defiantly.
I am so sure of my ground, she declared,
that I don't mind saying it wasn't exactly in the pocket.
There was a hole in the pocket,
and the dagger had slipped down into the lining
between the inside fur and the outer cloth.
It lay sideways,
and what with its position and the heavy fur?
I could not have known it was there,
finished Darrington balancing a paper cutter on his forefinger.
You have found a mare's nest, my dear Mrs. Ward.
And if this is your trump card, I am sorry to say it won't take the trick you wish to secure.
I did not know that this—he touched the stiletto, was in the lining of my fur coat.
Then it was, and Mrs. Jersey was stabbed with it.
Isn't that taking a great deal for granted?
said Derrington with raised brows.
Mrs. Jersey, according to the doctor,
if I recall the report of the inquest rightly,
was certainly stabbed with a weapon similar to this.
But why do you say this is the one?
Because I believe you were in the house on that night.
Which house? Be explicit, please.
Mrs. Ward was growing angry at this calm defiance.
In the house in a million?
a square. You went there to prevent that Brendan creature from making Mrs. Jersey confess.
Lord Darrington laughed.
You would not make a good lawyer, said he. By your own showing, I did not know that
Brendan was to be at Mrs. Jersey's on that night. I certainly came to tell you, said Mrs. Ward,
feeling that she had missed a point, but you could easily have heard it elsewhere.
Who from?
Brendan did not advertise in the papers
that he was stopping with Mrs. Jersey on the night in question.
Then Mr. Train.
I met Mr. Train for the first time at your house the other night.
Dorothy told you, said Mrs. Ward,
determined not to surrender any advantage she might have gained.
You can ask your daughter,
and she will tell you that I had not seen her all that week.
Is there anyone else, Mrs. Ward?
The little woman rose to her feet with an artificial laugh and shook out perfume from her silken skirts.
You are very clever and obstinate, Lord Derrington, but how will you explain this?
She pointed to the stiletto.
To the authorities.
There will be no need for me to do that, said Derrington and took up the weapon.
Mrs. Ward stretched out her hand.
My property, if you please, Lord Derrington.
The old gentleman opened a drawer,
dropped the weapon into it,
and closed the drawer with a snap.
It's locked now, he said coolly.
I shall take charge of this.
How dare you?
I insist.
Oh, dear, no.
You insist on nothing.
Lord Darrington rose,
looking like a giant as he towered over the little woman.
My dear, Mrs. Ward,
said he quietly but in his deepest tones.
I have been very patient with you, but this thing must end.
You must promise to hold your tongue about Brendan and—
And about you, I suppose, she sneered.
About me?
Darrington Stone expressed surprise.
What have you to hold your tongue about as regards me?
Mrs. Ward stamped, though as a rule she was not given to betraying violent emotion.
Oh, it's too ridiculous, she said furiously.
I can say to the police how I found the stiletto in your coat, I suppose.
I should advise you not to talk to anyone about a thing which exists only in your imagination.
The stiletto.
What are you talking of, Mrs. Ward?
It's in that drawer, she pointed to the table.
Oh, dear, no, it isn't, said Darrington blandly.
There is no stiletto. There never was one.
"'We have had a nice talk, shall we say, about chiffon's?'
In spite of her rage at being outwitted, Mrs. Ward gave a hollow laugh at the thought of
Lord Derrington discussing chiffon's.
"'A nice talk, I say, and now we must part.'
"'Not before I have had my say,' said Mrs. Ward savagely.
"'I see perfectly well that I have been foolish to let that stiletto get into your hands,
but I thought I was dealing with a man of honour.'
ah mrs ward few of us can aspire to your high principles the sneer infuriated her you can deny the stiletto if you like to the public but you dare not do so to me
why not for the sake of argument we will admit the existence of the weapon you come here with it in your hand and state that you found it in my coat in the lining of the coat and i did i did you know i did
indeed i know nothing of the sort i deny that the stiletto was ever in pocket or in lining i did not see you take it out i waited till you were out of the room before i examined the coat
of course but by doing so you have defeated your own object had you produced the weapon from the coat and showed it to me at the very moment your accusation might have held water as it is the
The thing is simply ridiculous.
You come here. You accuse me of a crime.
I did not accuse you, said Mrs. Ward, beginning to find that Darrington was too much even for her.
I believe Brendan killed the woman. Oh, yes. He went to the house and you saw him.
He and Mrs. Jersey had words, as she would not confess, and Brendan killed her with a stiletto.
Then you came in, and to save him you put the dagger into your pocket.
sent him up to bed and promised to hold your tongue and...
Derrington laughed.
You have a most vivid imagination, Mrs. Ward, he said with a shrug.
But as it happens, you are talking nonsense.
I was not at Amelia Square that evening, but at my club, as any member then present can assure you.
I can prove what is called an alibi, Mrs. Ward, which means that I can account for every moment
of my time, from the minute
I left this house to the minute
I returned to find you here.
As to the stiletto you say
you took out of my pocket, that is rubbish.
On the whole, I think you had better hold your tongue.
If I go to the police, they will open that drawer.
Oh, no, in Englishman's house is its castle, you know,
and a man in my position cannot be treated in the way you
suggest with impunity.
Moreover, Mrs. Ward, there is ample time to destroy the stiletto.
Which you will do, she said, recovering her composure now that she found it was useless to protest.
No, I wouldn't even mind showing it to the police and saying how you brought it here with an accusation.
If the police can prove that this is the weapon with which Mrs. Jersey was stabbed,
and if you and the police can prove that the stiletto was in my pocket on the night of the murder,
than you and the police.
Darrington made an ironical bow,
are extremely clever.
Oh, very well, said Mrs. Ward,
realizing her defeat,
I shall say nothing about you,
but Brendan.
You will hold your tongue about him also.
I quite understand
how you proposed to hold this stiletto
and the tail of its being discovered
in my pocket over me.
If I did not consent
to the marriage of Miss.
Ward and Walter, eh?
I must do the best for my
child. Even going
so far as threats?
Well, I have too
high a respect for Miss Ward to ask
her to marry such a worm as Walter.
She would do better to
take Brendan.
She shan't marry him.
Why do you hate the man so?
asked Darrington looking
into her eyes. I know
he is a strong man, and
for the money's sake you do not
want him to be your son-in-law.
But even this does not account for your hatred.
Why do you hate him?
I have nothing to say, retorted Mrs. Ward,
who had flushed and paled alternately during this speech.
Please see me to the door.
Darrington walked to the door and opened it with a bow.
Willingly?
I think we understand one another.
I think we do, said Mrs. Ward with an
artificial laugh. You do credit to your reputation, Lord
Darrington. Praise from Mrs. Ward is praise indeed, said the
ironical old gentleman as he descended the stairs side by side with the woman
who could have found it in her heart to kill him. I am sorry
to ask you to leave me so soon, as our conversation was most enjoyable. But I
have to see a certain Mr. Ireland. Is that Rendon's guardian? asked Mrs. Ward.
coming to a sudden stop in the hall.
"'His former guardian,' corrected Darrington.
"'How do you come to know of him, Mrs. Ward?'
"'I think Dorothy mentioned the name,' she said in rather a faltering tone.
"'Dear me, how my face burns. I wish I had a veil.'
"'I am sorry, Mrs. Ward, but the late Lady Darrington's veils are not modern enough for you.'
"'What nonsense?' said Mrs. Ward, who appeared flurried.
Please tell your man to call a cab.
I sent away the carriage.
Let me send you home in mine.
No, no, I want to go at once.
And she approached the door quickly.
When did you say Mr. Ireland was coming?
Derrington glanced at his watch.
He is due now, he said, and looked at her wondering why she asked the question.
Mrs. Ward's face was turned away.
She was dressed in furs and carried a muff.
When the door was opened by the footman, a gentleman appeared on the threshold.
Mrs. Ward lifted her muff to her face, but not before the stranger had caught a sight of her face
and had uttered an ejaculation of surprise.
You? he said stepping forward.
What do you mean? said Mrs. Ward with her face still hidden.
Lord Darrington, this friend of yours is making a mistake.
Tell that man to be quick calling a cab.
And she moved past the stranger.
"'Pardon,' he said politely,
"'but I wish to speak with you.'
"'Darrington bent his bushy brows.
"'Let the lady pass,' he said.
"'Who are you, sir, to stop the egress of my guests?'
"'My name is Roger Ireland,' said the stranger quietly.
"'And I have been looking for that lady for over thirty years.'
"'What does that man mean?' asked Mrs. Ward haughtily,
but looking disturbed.
Lord Darrington, said Ireland,
I think if you will permit this lady and me
to have a talk.
There seems to be some mistake, said Darrington.
Mrs. Ward, will you not wait until we rectify it?
No, the man is mad.
Let me pass, sir.
There is the cab.
She would have stepped out,
but Ireland again placed his bulky form in her way.
It was all done so tactfully
that the footman on the pavement did not notice anything unusual.
The man was waiting by the cab to assist Mrs. Ward in,
but Ireland would not let her pass.
Lord Darrington, he said softly, lest the footman should overhear.
This is the lady who was with your son when he was murdered.
Darrington was not easily startled, but he turned to suddenly wait.
Mrs. Ward shrank back into the hall.
Now that the truth was told she seemed,
to recover from her fears and to regain all her tact.
I shall not want the cab at present, she said to the footman.
Tell the man to wait.
Lord Darrington, if you do not wish these private affairs to be discussed in the presence of the servants,
we had better return to the library.
Lord Darrington could only stare being confounded at her coolness.
He was much moved by the unexpected mention of his dead son, and without a word went
up the stairs again, while Mrs. Ward followed and Ireland.
came at her heels. She looked as though she were a prisoner between two guards.
When they found themselves in the library, Darrington closed the door and went to his seat.
He looked much older, having aged in a most extraordinary manner under the shock of Ireland's
information. Mrs. Ward was perfectly cool and resumed her former seat. As to Ireland, he let
himself carefully down into the most capacious armchair he could find. Mrs. Ward opened the
conversation at once.
You say you saw me at San Remo, she asked.
I did, replied Ireland in his heavy voice.
I was there at the time Mr. Percy Vane was murdered.
Darrington groaned, and I was at the masked ball where...
The Vaglioni, said Mrs. Ward.
Well, you were there.
You say you saw me.
In a blue domino?
There were plenty of blue dominoes at that ball.
At least I should think there were.
Yes, but you wore a sprig of yellow holly.
That was why I recognized you when you were masked.
How did you know it was I?
Because early in the evening you went into a box.
I was there talking to the Marquesa Beltrami,
to whom the box belonged.
You removed your mask, and I had ample opportunity to observe you.
What reason had you to observe me?
asked Mrs. Ward, just as though she were counsel examining a witness.
Well, said Ireland, smoothing his face. You see, I knew Mr. Vane very well. He married a woman of whom I was fond.
Derrington shifted restlessly in his chair. Do not be afraid, Lord Derrington. I do not intend to talk of Rosina Lockwood.
You are talking to me at present, said Mrs. Ward sharply.
You can talk to Lord Derrington later.
I rather think, ma'am, said Ireland, that Lorde Darrington will want to talk to you.
At present I say nothing, was his lordship's reply, and he watched the two faces before him
with close attention.
You saw me unmask in a certain box, said Mrs. Ward quickly.
Do you mean to say that after all these years, over thirty years, that you recognized me again?
I was a girl then.
I am a...
She was about to say old woman
as being more emphatic with the adjective,
but her vanity made her swallow the word.
I am a woman now.
Quite so.
But you have a mole on your forehead
just above the left eyebrow.
I knew you by that.
And then I have a splendid memory for faces,
and yours.
Ireland bowed gallantly.
Is too beautiful to
forget easily. Mrs. Ward shrugged her shoulders. She did not want compliments, but she wished very
much to get out of the trouble in which she found herself involved. It's a most remarkable memory,
she said. It is, madam, assented Ireland. My memory was always considered remarkable. And the fact is that
I was thinking of the murder almost at the moment I entered the hall. Consequently, your face was in
my mind's eye. That made the chance of recognizing you more sure.
Had I not been thinking of old days I might not have guessed so readily who you were.
Why were you thinking of the murder then? asked Darrington.
Well, my lord, you sent for me to speak with me about George.
Mrs. Ward gave a short laugh and Darrington smiled. So I was naturally thinking of George.
such a thought led to my thinking of his parents and finally i remembered the circumstance of your son's death as i thought you might wish to talk of it and therefore desired to get my memory in order in this way did i recognize the lady
that is all very well said mrs ward you say you recognize me mr ireland is that your name it is but your memory is not so good as mine we met only one
once. Derrington was not so sure if Mrs. Ward's memory was not good, for he remembered how she
had tried to get away before the arrival of Ireland. "'Go on, go on,' he said irritably.
"'I wish to know the worst.'
"'The worst is that I am supposed to have guilt, Percy Vane,' said Mrs. Ward coolly.
"'So you accuse me of that?' she asked Ireland.
"'By no means. But you were at that ball.'
I was, in a blue domino with a sprig of holly at my breast.
And you were with Mr. Vane?
No, I was not.
You went out with Mr. Vane.
I did not.
It was my sister.
Your sister, said Darrington.
Huh, and he relapsed into silence.
Mrs. Ward shot a suspicious look at him, but his inscrutable face betrayed nothing.
I remember, said Ireland in a slow, prosy way,
that there were two Miss Howard's at San Remo,
at the Hotel of Englander.
They were with their father, General Howard.
I never met them,
but Mr. Vane went frequently to call at the house.
He did, said Mrs. Ward,
if by house you mean the hotel?
The fact is, my sister, Jenny, was in love
with Captain Vane.
I heard it was you, said Ireland distrustfully.
It was my sister, said Mrs. Ward coldly.
We thought Mr. Vane would marry her,
but he certainly showed no signs of proposing.
I suppose he was too fond of his dead wife,
and she shot a sneering look at Lord Darrington who winced.
Don't say a word against Rosina Lockwood, said Ireland quickly.
You see what he did.
"'He calls her,' said Mrs. Ward to Darrington.
"'There was no marriage.'
"'Mam?' cried Ireland, rising.
"'Oh, never mind,' replied Mrs. Ward, waving her hand.
"'There is no need for you to lose your temper, my good man.
I am not going to speak of the woman.'
"'She was an angel.'
"'And a woman. That's the generic name for the sex.
However, it was my sister Jenny who loved Percy Vane.
she would go to the ball and persuaded me to go with her we slipped out of the hotel and went without a chaperon our father would have been shocked had he known but it was merely the escapade of two schoolgirls
i went with a friend and jenny looked about for mr vane we agreed to meet after an hour and go home as there were other blue dominoes at the ball we each wore and mrs ward repeated the word to emphasize the fact
each a sprig of yellow holly i went to a box to have supper with a certain cousin of mine and my sister then departed with mr vane why did she leave the ballroom asked
because mr vane was shocked he recognized her voice and made her unmask he insisted on taking her home first and then intended to return for me as he could not find me at the moment they went out together mr ireland
and that is the last i saw of mr vane what was the last your sister saw of him she was at the hotel and in our bedroom when i returned which i did after looking vainly for her
she said that mr vane had escorted her to the hotel and had left her at the gate at her earnest request as jenny was so afraid lest my father should hear of our escapade she said good-night to mr vane and then went to her room
When we heard of the murder next morning, she became very ill, and my father took her away.
But she always declared to me that she did not know who murdered Percy Vane.
Did your father ever know that she was in Vane's company on that night? asked Ireland.
Never. We kept our folly a profound secret from him.
Did anyone else know?
You did, said Mrs. Ward sharply.
and Mr. Vane did, and a servant at the hotel, an English servant who attended to us.
In fact, it was she who procured the yellow holly by which Jenny and I were to identify one another.
What was her name? asked Darrington quickly, and raising himself in his chair with eagerness to hear the answer.
Eliza Stokes.
Ah, I thought so.
Mrs. Jersey.
Yes, Mrs. Jersey.
Jersey. And now, Lord Darrington, you know how I come to take such an interest in the death of that
woman. Yes, but I cannot understand how you came to know that Mrs. Jersey was Eliza Stokes.
That's my business, flashed out Mrs. Ward. Or why? Pursued Darrington unmoved. Why you sent her the
yellow holly? Because I was not quite positive if she really was Eliza Stokes.
I thought that the Yellow Holly, being connected in her mind with the death of Mr. Vane,
would make her betray herself.
It did in a way, but to Brendan, he would not have told you.
He would doubtless have told Dorothy, and she would have told me.
Ireland, in his thoughtful, ponderous way, turned this matter over in his own mind.
Where is your sister now? he asked.
Mrs. Ward replied with some reserve.
I can't tell you that.
She went out of her mind for a time after the murder of Mr. Vane,
and after she came out of the asylum,
we were all afraid to live with her.
My father put her under someone's charge,
and when he died she was allowed an annuity.
Her guardian died, and my sister vanished.
We made no attempt to find her,
and it was supposed that she had put an end to herself.
Ireland looked at Darrington.
Did you ever meet her?
Miss Jenny Howard, my lord, he asked.
No, said Darrington,
but I have known Mrs. Ward for many, many years.
Quite twenty, said Mrs. Ward with an artificial laugh.
We grow old.
No, Mr. Ireland, Lord Darrington never met my sister.
Why, you ask, I cannot conceive.
Because Lord Darrington is under a wrong impression.
He has met your sister, and is,
this very room i beg your pardon began derrington aye ireland cut him short she called to see you here about the renewal of the amelia square lease miss bull said his lordship i thought there was something familiar about her face so miss bull is mrs ward's sister she told me so herself was ireland's reply
End of Chapter 15
Chapter 16 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
16. The Pipe of Peace
Brendan was much astonished today or two later
to receive an invitation to dine with his grandfather.
After the somewhat stormy interview he had participated in
with the old tyrant, George certainly never expected to be treated well
by the man whose path he had crossed.
He had heard many tales of Darrington's pride
and of his relentless pursuit of those whom he conceived
had done him wrong.
As George had fought the old man with his own weapons
and had come off Victor, he did not expect to be pardoned.
But in this he was wrong.
Darrington, sickened with Walter's milk and water ways,
saw in Brendan a worthy successor,
who would be able to hold his own in will and word
and would shed fresh luster on the house.
had George been polite, and with the old Lord sneeringly called cringing,
he would never have received the invitation.
As it was, Darrington took him to his hard old heart.
He chuckled to think of Walter's dismay when he heard that he had an elder cousin
and would not be likely to inherit the title or the money.
However astonished, Brendan was too much a man of the world to reveal his feelings.
On the evening in question, he presented himself at the mansion in St. Giles Square,
scrupulously groomed and brushed.
Darrington looked approvingly on his dress,
which set off a handsome figure to advantage.
Also the haughty bearing of Brendan pleased him,
and he unbent so far as to advance to George with outstretched hand.
We had rather a rough interview, George, he said.
So I have invited you to smoke the pipe of feces.
Brendan shook the old man's hand quietly,
but without much enthusiasm.
He could not conjecture what did.
Darrington meant by behaving in a way so different to what he usually adopted.
His host felt the slack hand clasp and winced on seeing the want of response in Brendan's
face.
Queerly enough, Darrington, contrary to accepted opinion, had a heart, and was so much taken
with George that he wished to draw him to himself.
Still, he could not but admit that seeing how he had treated the young fellow in the past,
it was not to be expected that Brendan would act the part of an affectionate relative
immediately. Darrington rather admired George for his uncompromising attitude.
Dinner will be ready soon, said the old lord, waving Brendan to a seat. Only are two selves.
I wish to consult you. Consult me. George could not keep the astonishment out of his face.
It's rather late in the day, is it not? remarked Darrington, dryly. But you see, I am old, George,
and have not much time to spare.
"'Yes, I wish you to consult with me after dinner about—'
"'But that can come in the course of our conversation.
"'Meantime, let us talk of anything you like.
"'The weather, sir.'
"'No, confound you!' snapped Darrington with a flash of his old, irritable self.
"'Talk of wine, wit, and women, if you like, but spare me platitudes.'
Brendan stared at his shoes and smiled under his moustache.
"'I do not think I can say anything very original.
about the subjects you mention, he said quietly.
Talk of Miss Ward, then.
You can be original on that point.
Brendan would rather not have mentioned Dorothy,
but he was quite determined to show his grandfather
that he fully intended to marry his lady love
and that he was not afraid to speak his mind.
I do not fancy that there is anything particularly original
in a love story.
I met Miss Ward some three years before.
I have loved her ever since,
and we will marry when,
"'There, there,' interrupted Darrington, waving his hand.
"'Let us not get on to that subject as yet.
"'We can talk of it after dinner.
"'In fact, you may as well know that I asked you here to discuss your position.
"'We must have an understanding.'
"'I think you must intend it to be a pleasant one,' said Brendan,
"'as you have asked me to dinner.'
"'And to smoke the pipe of peace?'
"'There's the gong.
"'A-ho!' he rose rather sluggishly.
"'Gout is stiffening my limbs!'
It struck Brendan that his grandfather looked old and very haggard.
He had lost his fresh colour, his eyes were sunken,
and the defiant curl was out of his enormous moustache.
He moved slowly toward the door,
and George felt sorry to see him so lonely.
He knew that Darrington hated all his relatives,
and that his relatives cordially hated him,
so there was none to comfort the old man in his declining years.
Walter Vane was less than nothing, as his mere presence served to irritate his grandfather.
Moved by a sudden impulse, George made no remark, but moved to the elder man's side and offered his arm.
The footman was holding the door open, and Darrington could not express even by a look the satisfaction he felt.
With a surly grunt he took Brendan's arm, but George guessed by the way.
warm pressure that Derrington was pleased.
That simple, kindly movement served to draw the two men closer together, and they sat down
to an excellent dinner in good spirits.
It was quite a banquet, for Derrington lived in a most expensive manner, and in spite of a
sadly diminished income, he would never abate the splendor of the style in which he had
lived all his life.
The table was a round one, laid with exquisite taste, and was placed under a kind of velvet
tent, which shut off the rest of the room and made the meal particularly cozy.
George, who had a taste for art, admired the finish of the silver, the beauty of the
Crown Derby service, the glitter of the cut glass, which was unusually massive, and the
adornments of the table. It was a perfect little banquet, and after the somewhat
stale food of his lodgings, George enjoyed the meal greatly. Darrington himself did not
eat much, but he took great pleasure in seeing George enjoy his viands.
I had a fine appetite myself once, he observed. You have inherited it from me.
Never be ashamed to eat, George. It means good work. The man who starves himself
starves his public. You mean in the quality of his work, sir? Of course. Poor living means
poor thoughts. Well, said Brendan with a smile.
I don't think rich living means rich thoughts.
Certainly not.
Whoever said it did.
Remember the saying of the Greeks.
And Eagad, they were the only people who ever knew how to live.
What saying is that? asked George.
Moderation is the cornerstone of dissipation.
Ah, that's good, sir.
But were the Greeks ever dissipated?
No, because they followed the
advice of that epigram? George, if you expect me to explain epigrams, I shall lose my respect for you.
Have you any, sir? You wouldn't be here if I had not, said Darrington, pulling his huge
moustache. There's your cousin Walter. My cousin, sir. Of course, you know that. George thought it
wiser to say nothing, although it was strange that Darrington should mention the relationship
himself. The old man gave him a quick glance and continued,
As I say, there is your cousin Walter. I wouldn't ask him to dinner on any account. He's a fool, sir.
He means well. If there is one class of people I hate more than another, it is that
pharisaic lot who mean well. They make all the mischief. With the best intentions,
put in Brendan taking some wine.
Best intentions are fatal.
How many plans have come to naught because of best intentions?
Take some of that port.
No more, thank you, sir.
I insist.
There are walnuts.
I don't mind the nuts, but the port,
George shook his head.
Darrington, at his own table, was too polite to press the matter,
but he scored up another victory to Brendan's strong will.
More, he passed off the matter with a laugh,
You have the hereditary gout, I see, George, when you are afraid of a glass of port.
It's not that, sir, but I drink very little.
I work on milk.
Ba!
Darrington made a wry face.
Then your work is all the better for it?
Those who drink beer, think beer.
And those who drink milk think cows, I should say?
Your knowledge on that point prevents contradiction on mine.
"'Darrington chuckled. This was just the kind of epigrammatic reply he relished.
"'You must enter the diplomatic service, sir,' said he, looking approvingly from under his bushy brows.
"'Don't you think I'm rather old?
"'Brains are never old, sir. And you have them. It's what the diplomatic service in this country
requires and what it never gets. I was in the service myself at one time. So I have heard.
said Brendan, cracking nuts composedly.
"'A? What did you hear?'
"'You must excuse me at your own table, sir.'
"'Poo, if you want to say anything disagreeable, my own table is the safest place you can say it at.
I can't throw things at you.'
"'Still, a guest must be polite,' argued George.
"'I like my guess to be truthful.'
"'Very well, sir, if you will have it.
and I feel that it would be bad manners to refuse your request.
It is said that you nearly set Europe by the years when you were ambassador.
Derrington roared.
I did.
I did.
And I wish I had brought about the war I wanted.
It would have done no end of good.
Does war ever do good?
asked Brendan doubtfully.
Certainly.
It stirs up things and teaches men how to use their hands and
brains. Without war there is too much wrapping up in cotton wool. Don't tell me, George, that you
aren't a soldier at heart, for nearly all your ancestors fought for their country. And fought
their country also, I believe. When they didn't get their rights, said Darrington grimly,
I have been a fighter myself all my life, and I've held my own. So they say, sir, and I admire you
for it.
"'Very good of you, I'm sure,' said Darrington ironically.
"'But in my old age I can't hold my own, so I have to call in you.'
George looked surprised.
"'Do you intend to do me the honour to ask for my advice, sir?'
"'Bless my soul, are you also without understanding, sir?'
"'Didn't I say so when you first came?'
"'Of course, I forgot.'
"'You shouldn't forget, though it's useful at
times to do so.
In what cases, sir?
Forget a woman's age,
forget to talk about yourself,
and forget your relations if you can.
Come, he added, seeing George laughing.
The wine and food have thawed you.
There's coffee in the library,
and we can talk over our cigars.
Up I get.
George, your arm.
He not only asked for it,
but took it with marked pleasure.
the footmen in attendance returned to the servants hall to state that the old devil the domestic name for derrington had quite taken to the new young gentleman had the servants known who george was they would have had a long gossip
as it was they simply said that the old devil was always taking fancies and soon grew tired meanwhile brendon was seated in a comfortable chair enjoying one of the best cigars he had ever placed between his lips
at his elbow smoked a cup of mocha and in the chair on the other side of a roaring fire of sea-tember smiled lord derrington he looked a grim and determined old gentleman as he bent his shaggy brows on his grandson he was becoming more and more delighted with the young man
i shall have a prop for my old age at last he thought damn he's a fine fellow ah youth youth
george was very comfortable and also felt grateful for the kindness which his grandfather was showing him at the same time he felt as though he were acting wrongly in hobnobbing with a man who persistently blackened his mother's memory
but brendon thought he saw signs of repentance in derrington and wished to improve the situation if he could it was difficult for him to quite forgive the old rascal but he was sorry for his loneliness and haggard looks besides george was a christian
and more than merely going to church on Sunday.
I suppose you wondered when you received my invitation,
said Darrington in his heart a tone.
I did, sir. I wondered very much.
And you felt inclined to refuse.
I had almost made up my mind to.
Why did you change your mind?
George pondered and looked again at his neat shoes.
Well, sir, said he after a pause,
I thought that after a dinner
we might come to understand each other better
and I am anxious for peace.
And for recognition of your birth?
Naturally, the one included the other.
Does that mean you will fight
till you get what you want?
Yes, said George curtly,
and then closed his lips with a firm determination
to give battle if necessary.
At the same time he felt it was rather awkward
after eating Derrington's food.
A sudden impulse made him rise.
What's the matter now? asked Darrington not moving.
Well, sir, burst out Brendan with a candor unusual in him.
I have a feeling that we are going to quarrel, and in your own house,
and after that very excellent dinner I don't want to behave rudely.
It will be better to postpone this talk to some other time.
Not a bit a bit, said Darrington quietly.
We are relatives and quarrel.
between relatives do not count.
Sit down.
I have something important to say to you.
George sat down and prepared for the worst.
We'll leave the question of your birth alone for the present,
said the elder in a hard tone.
At this moment I wish to talk of Mrs. Jersey's death.
Yes, said Brendan, looking down,
also about your father's death.
What has that to do with this, sir?
I believe the one is connected with the other.
George remembered what Botsie had said.
I've heard that remark before, he observed.
Of course.
That detective I employed to watch you made it.
He did.
I think you trust that man too much, sir, said Brendan after a pause.
Do you?
I thought he was a friend of yours.
Oh, George shrugged his shoulders.
I saved his life, but that does not constitute friendship.
I would fight a man who saved my life, said Darrington grimly.
Well, sir, I don't think Bodsey is worthy of your confidence.
I know he isn't, but you see I can't help myself.
George looked up quickly.
Blackmail?
Something of that sort.
I intend to trust my own flesh and blood.
That is, I intend to tell you.
you all I know connected with the Jersey case, and ask you to help me to get the better of Bodsey.
I shall do my best, sir. Willingly? Assuredly, sir. Darrington was rather moved. I have not behaved well,
George. That's true enough, sir, said George, who was not going to be weak. But you can make
amends by acknowledging that my mother was an honest woman. I believe she was, George. I believe she was,
George, for none but an honest woman could have born a son like you.
But you see, I know no more than you do where the marriage took place.
Do you acknowledge that there was a marriage, said George, starting to his feet?
Darrington rose also, and the tall men faced one another.
Then the elder placed his hands on the shoulders of the younger, with a look on his face
which Brendan had never seen before.
And certainly the look was new to Darrington.
my boy said he i am sure there was a marriage i am sure that you are my legitimate heir and by heavens i intend to acknowledge you as such before the weeks out
brendon was so moved by the sudden recognition for all he longed for that a sudden weakness seized him and he sat down covering his face with his hands
derrington thought the young man did so to conceal his tears but in reality george was putting up a short thanksgiving for this wonderful and bloodless victory his grandfather again touched his shoulder my boy he said again and his voice was broken with emotion
I have behaved badly.
I ask your pardon.
George put out his hand blindly and grasped that of his grandfather.
When it was once in the old man's grip,
he raised his grandson with a jerk
and made him look him in the face.
You forgive me, he asked.
With all my heart and soul, said Brendan quietly,
and after another handshake, they resumed their seats.
The scene which both had dreaded was over,
and now they sat like two friends who had known each other for years.
George felt that as Darrington had done justice to the memory of his mother,
and Darrington was pleased to feel that he now had a grandson and an heir worthy of his name.
I can marry Dorothy now, said Brendan with a contented sigh.
If my influence can help you, yes.
Darrington paused and shook his head.
but there is a lioness in the path, George.
Mrs. Ward.
Exactly.
She will move heaven and earth to prevent the marriage.
George looked puzzled.
I see no reason why she should oppose it
if I am acknowledged as your heir.
Nor do I.
I thought myself that it was simply the money she wanted,
and if you were the son-in-law,
she would not get her claws on the gold.
but there is more in it than that.
She seeks revenge.
On me, I have never harmed her.
It's a vicarious revenge.
I believed that woman loved your father, George,
and that he slighted her.
That is why she wants to visit his sin,
as with a vindictive spirit she may regard it, on you.
Did Mrs. Ward know my father, sir?
asked George quickly.
Yes, she met him at San Remo.
Then she knew he was murdered.
Of course.
I saw Mrs. Ward the other day, George.
She came here to force me to harm you
and to consent to Walter marrying Dorothy.
Oh, you never agreed to that.
I have answered her challenge by asking you to dinner
and will acknowledge you my heir.
Mrs. Ward will then try and make mischief.
Can she do so?
so. Yes, she knows that I was in Mrs. Jersey's house on that night.
And you were, sir. Darrington made a most unexpected reply. No, I was not.
End of Chapter 16. Chapter 17 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume. This Liverpool's recording
is in the public domain. 17. Lord Darrington explains.
George was rather puzzled to reconcile the apparent contradiction in Darrington speech.
The old gentleman saw his bewilderment, and before the young man could speak, he anticipated his question.
You are perplexed, he said quietly. I thought you would be. To explain myself clearly,
it will be better to tell you the whole story from the beginning. What story?
The story of your mother's marriage and of my quarrel with your father. Do not be afraid.
I shall say nothing to hurt your pride.
George nodded.
I am sure of that.
We are friends now.
Darrington was much gratified by this speech,
but he merely acknowledged it with a grunt
and began his family history at once.
Your father and I never got on well,
he said frankly,
and I fear it was my fault.
I wanted Percy to obey me implicitly,
and as he was of an age to judge for himself,
he objected.
You would have done the like in his case.
I certainly should, sir.
Every man should judge for himself.
If he has brains to do so.
But I fear Percy was not overburdened with brains.
He was gay and thoughtless and thriftless.
Your talents, George, come from your mother.
She must have been a remarkable woman.
So Mr. Ireland says,
Pooh, he was in love with her, and a man in love is incapable of giving an opinion.
However, I saw your mother several times when she sang, although I never met her to speak to.
She was very beautiful and had an intellectual face.
Yes, George, it is from her that you inherit your brain.
From my side of the family you inherit a strong will and a propensity to fight.
There is Irish blood in our base.
said Darrington grimly.
Was my father a fighter?
In a way, yes,
but he had not a strong will,
save in resisting me.
George smiled and said nothing,
but he privately thought that if Mr. Percy Vane
could hold his own against Darrington,
he must have had a stronger will
than the old gentleman gave him credit for.
However, to continue,
pursued Darrington pushing away his empty cup.
Percy saw Miss Lockwood
He fell in love with her
And finally he eloped
I wrote him a letter
Saying he was to return
Or I would never see him again
He declined to return
And remained on the continent
With his wife
I never did see him again
Added Darrington quietly
For three years later
He was murdered at San Remo
In his letter to you
Did my father say he was married
He did
but at the time as he did not say where the marriage was celebrated,
I thought he mentioned it out of obstinacy.
George colored,
I don't see why you should have so misjudged my mother, he said hotly.
Admitting that she was not born in the purple,
she was in a good position and had no reason to run away with my father.
She was in love with him, I believe.
Even then she would not have eloped unless it was to be married.
Darrington nodded.
"'You are perfectly right,' he said.
"'I tried to disbelieve in the marriage,
"'but in my own heart I knew there was one.
"'I have behaved very badly, George.'
"'You have, sir.
"'But as we are now reconciled,
"'the less said about the thing the better.
"'You are quite sure you do not know
"'where the marriage was celebrated.
"'No, George, I do not.
"'After the death of your father, I tried to find out,
"'but it was impossible.'
had i really seen the register of the marriage i should have acknowledged you as my heir as a matter of fact added derrington with a burst of candor i did not trouble much to search as i feared at last the marriage should be verified
george wriggled in his seat let us say no more he said very good i have confessed my sins and have received absolution from you at the present moment
We will leave the murder of your father at San Remo alone, and come to the appearance of Mrs. Jersey
in my life.
You were with your grandfather Lockwood in Amelia Square.
I had constituted my second son, my heir, and I had relegated to obscurity the escapade
of my son Percy.
All was nicely settled, in my humble opinion, when Mrs. Jersey appeared to make trouble.
That was eight years after your father's death.
Where was she in the meantime?
I cannot say.
She told me nothing of her history,
but from a word or two which she let slip,
I believe she must have been in the United States.
Why she went there from San Remo,
or for what reason I cannot say.
She came here to see me.
We had an interview in this very room to demand money.
What threat did she make?
That she would tell where the men
marriage took place.
And you bribed her to keep silence.
Darrington winced at the scorn in his grandson's voice
and took a turn up and down the room.
I am no saint, I admit, he said.
And at the time, George, I did not know that you would turn out
such a fine fellow. I dreaded a scandal, and there was your
uncle to be considered. I had made him my heir.
And what about me, sir?
were the sins of my father to be placed on my shoulders.
I have admitted that I was in the wrong, said Darrington impatiently.
Spare me further sermons.
I beg your pardon, said George quietly.
But please touch as lightly as possible on these matters.
We will admit that you acted according to your lights.
False lights, said his grandfather sadly.
However, we need speak no more on that.
particular point.
Mrs. Jersey said that she knew
where the marriage was celebrated,
adding that if I did not give her
an annuity, she would go to Lockwood
and help him to prove that you were
my legitimate grandson and heir.
Did she say
if the marriage was celebrated in England
or abroad? No, sir.
Mrs. Jersey was a remarkably
clever woman, and if my son Percy had married
her, she would have made a man of him.
Then she really
was in love with my father.
Very deeply in love,
as she told me herself.
But she did not regard
his memory with such veneration
as to desire to aid his son.
She was content
that you should lose your rights,
provided that I paid her an annuity.
I tried in vain
to learn from her
where the marriage had been celebrated.
She refused to open her mouth,
so I allowed her an annuity
of five hundred a year.
"'That was a large sum,' interposed George.
"'Darrington shrugged his shoulders.
"'Much larger than I could afford, my good sir,' he said.
"'But Mrs. Jersey dictated her own terms.
"'I arranged that the money should be paid through my lawyers, and she vanished.
"'Where, too?'
"'I can't say.
"'She might have gone to rejoin Mr. Jersey if there ever was such a person.
She sent a messenger regularly to the office of my lawyers for the money, but did not trouble me in any way.
Her next appearance was shortly after the death of your grandfather.
What did she want this time?
To set up a boarding house in Amelia Square.
She said that her life was lonely, a remark which made me think Mr. Jersey was a myth,
and that she wanted company.
I expect she learned in some way that I was by.
old Lockwood's house.
Why did you buy it?
I have a lot of property
in that district, and I wanted
to round it off with this house.
Ireland, in his rage
at me for my treatment of your mother
would not have sold it to me.
I bought the house through an agent.
Mrs. Jersey must have heard
of the purchase, for it was then
that she came to me and asked me to set her
up in the house as a landlady.
I wonder why
she did that, said George,
thoughtfully. She was lonely, I understand. George looked at his shoes. As Eliza Stokes, she lived in that
house along with my mother previous to the elopement. I expect she had a kind of affection for it.
Well, whatever her reason was, I did what she asked. She agreed to pay me a rent, and her money
was as good as anyone else's. Besides, I felt that as my tenant I could keep her under my own eye.
When she was away, I never knew but what she might die and part with the secret to someone else
who might come on me for blackmail also.
I thought at best Mrs. Jersey should have the house, so she went into it and used the old furniture.
I don't deny but what she was a good business woman and made the house pay.
At all events, she was never behind hand with her rent.
I wonder she paid you any at all.
Oh, she had her annuity and was afraid of pressing.
me too hard. I refused to let her the house on a seven-year's lease. She only had it from year to year,
and in that way I kept a check on her. She knew if I once lost my temper that I would throw her over
and acknowledge you as my heir. I wish you had done so, said Brendan moodily. It would have
saved a lot of trouble. I do so now, replied Darrington testily, better late than never. Well,
Mrs. Jersey lived and flourished for 15 years.
I tried to find you out, George, lest she should get at you.
Oh, was that why you offered to make me an allowance?
It was.
I intended to give you a yearly income on condition that you went to Australia.
Then I could be sure that Mrs. Jersey would not seek you out.
But you refused my offer and disappeared.
I went to college under the name of Brendan.
observed George.
And that is why Mrs. Jersey never found you,
and why I could not come across you until you put those
advertisements about the marriage into the papers.
It was that which...
Yes, so Bodsey told me. You had me watched.
I did, said Darrington,
and in that way I found out that you were going to stop in Mrs. Jersey's house.
How did you learn that, sir? asked George in surprise.
I never told.
anyone. Oh, yes, you told Lola. So I did, said Brendan quickly. She bothered me to come and see her,
and I said that I was going to stop in the neighborhood of Amelia Square with a friend and would
call on her the next day. I expect she told this to Botsie. Exactly, and Bodsey told me. I was
afraid lest you should make Mrs. Jersey confess. I wrote to her and asked her to see me. She refused to
come to my house, so I made up my mind to seek her out in Amelia Square.
I arranged by letter with her to call about eleven o'clock at her place and see her secretly.
Why secretly, and why at night?
Can't you see, George?
My height and figure make me so conspicuous that I knew I would be recognized if I went in the
daytime, and then people would ask themselves why Lord Darrington went to see a lodging
housekeeper.
You could have put it down to her being a tenant.
Ah, said Darrington grimly.
I never thought of that.
I received a note from Mrs. Jersey saying she would wait for me on Friday evening at 11 o'clock in her sitting-room.
It was a foggy night, if you remember.
Very foggy.
I suppose you traced the house by means of the red light over the door.
I did not trace the house at all, said Darrington quietly.
I did not go near the house.
But I saw you, insisted George.
You saw my coat and a man with my tall figure,
and having my association with yourself in your head,
you jumped to the conclusion that the figure was me.
Then if not you, who was the man?
Bodsey, said Darrington curtly.
George stared.
In your coat, he said incredulously.
It seems strange, said.
said Darrington, but the fact is that Baudsie is one of the few who have got the better of me in my life.
It was in this way that he prevented me from seeing Mrs. Jersey.
On that night I visited him at his rooms which then were in Bloomsbury.
I desired to tell him that I intended to see Mrs. Jersey and to warn her against revealing
anything.
I don't suppose the warning was needed, as she knew when she was well off.
But the fact is, Mrs. Jersey was not in good health
and was feeling compunction about keeping you out of your rights.
I learned from Bodsey that Mrs. Jersey had written out a confession of the whole matter
and that she intended to leave this to her niece Marjorie Watson
so that I might be forced to continue the lease of the house.
George uttered an ejaculation.
I thought from what Marjorie said that there was some such confession, he remarked.
but it is missing. It was not found among her papers after her death,
unless Miss Bull took it and forced you to—
No, interrupted Darrington vigorously. She came here quietly and put the case of the poor girl to me.
She also undertook that the rent would be paid regularly, and that through Miss Watson she would manage the house.
I was quite satisfied with the existing arrangements, and, moreover, thought that if such a confession were found,
out of gratitude Miss Watson might bring it to me.
If Miss Bull had told her to, she would have done so, but not otherwise, said George.
She is under Miss Bull's thumb.
The best place she could be, George.
The girl is a born idiot from what I saw of her.
However, you know why I renewed the year-by-year lease.
Where the confession is I have no idea.
But the person who holds it will certainly make use of it,
to extort money, and then we will learn who killed Mrs. Jersey. I dare say,
the assassin must have taken the papers. Well, Darrington proceeded with his account of his
doings on that night. As I said, I went to see Bodsey at his rooms. I took a cab, and as the
fog was thick I had considerable difficulty in finding the place. The rain and fog chilled me,
for I am not so young as I was,
and when I arrived I was shivering.
But I was too anxious to tell Bodsey
about Mrs. Jersey to trouble.
He heeded some water to give me a glass of hot whiskey.
While the water was boiling,
I told him I was going to see Mrs. Jersey.
He asked me how I could get into the house
without being admitted by one of the servants
and thus run a chance of my visit being known.
Did it never strike him
that Mrs. Jersey expected you,
and would admit you when you rang.
Yes, it did strike him,
but he knew that I didn't want anyone to know
that she had a visitor so late at night.
I don't know why you took all these precautions, sir.
Darrington smiled dryly.
Perhaps they were rather unnecessary,
but I thought it best to be on the safe side.
As a matter of fact, I had a latchkey.
I thought that Mrs. Jersey never allowed latch keys.
This one came to me when I bought the house and was given to me by the agent.
I told Mrs. Jersey I had it and that I would let myself in.
She expected me at eleven.
I know she did, said George, for on that night she asked the boarders to be in bed by eleven
and broke up her party at ten.
I wondered if she was having anyone to meet her then.
She was expecting me.
It was after ten when I told Bodsey, and I explained to,
to him that I had a latchkey.
He gave me the whiskey, and being chilled, I drank it.
Then I fell asleep.
George looked up suddenly.
The whiskey was drugged, he guessed.
It was, assented Darrington,
and while I was insensible,
Bodsey took the latchkey out of my pocket and put on my coat.
He is rather my height,
so with that and the fur coat I expect he passed himself off
as me to Mrs. Jersey,
until she saw his face.
When she did, she would have nothing to do with him.
Although, added George, he was an old boarder in the house.
Wait till I tell you the rest, said Darrington, and then you can give an opinion.
When I woke, it was after twelve.
I never suspected that the whiskey had been drugged and thought that it was some sort of illness.
Bodsey was in the room when I awoke.
He did not tell me that he had been drugged.
had been to Mrs. Jersey, and I now saw that it was too late to go.
He advised me to see her on the morrow, saying that it was doubtful if you would speak to her
on that night.
I intended to wait till the next day, but as a matter of fact, I became anxious to see if anyone
was with her, and I went down the stairs.
By means of that secret door, Bodsey told me.
Well, I crept downstairs and saw, as I thought, you.
It was, of course, Bodsey.
He was standing at the door of the sitting-room.
I was afraid, lest you, as I thought it was, should see me so I went upstairs again.
And Bodsey left the house.
However, I never suspected him.
I went home and found Mrs. Ward waiting for me.
She came to tell me that she had heard from Dorothy that you purposed to stop with train at Mrs. Jersey's house and came to warn me.
"'How good of Mrs. Ward!'
"'She is a dangerous woman, George.'
"'I threw my coat on yonder's sofa, and she sat near it.
Feeling something in the pocket, her curiosity led her to take out something
when I was absent from the room.
"'It was a stiletto.'
George started from his seat.
"'A stiletto?'
"'Yes.'
"'Darrington opened the door in his desk and took out the weapon which Mrs. Ward had brought,
This was between the fur and the lining of the coat.
What, with the weight of the coat,
and the position of this weapon lying along the bottom of the coat,
I never suspected it.
I brought it home quite unconsciously.
Mrs. Ward found it, took it away with her,
and came the other day to accuse me of having murdered Mrs. Jersey.
How dare she do such a thing?
Oh, Mrs. Ward is capable of all things.
However, you can see from what I tell you what happened.
Bodsey put the stiletto in my coat,
and either forgot to take it out or left it there
so that I might be incriminated.
Did he tell you this?
He told me, when I rebuked him too sharply,
that he could get me into trouble and explained how he had been in the house.
He also referred to the stiletto.
I denied that I had seen it,
and it was only when Mrs. Ward brought it the other day
that I saw that this part of Bodsey's story was true.
What did you do?
I accused him of having killed the woman.
What did he say?
He denied that he had done so.
He declared that he went to Mrs. Jersey's sitting-room door,
close upon twelve,
having let himself in noiselessly by the front door.
He discovered Mrs. Jersey lying dead
as she was found in the morning.
On the floor was the stiletto.
Fearing lest he should be accused of the crime,
Bodsey left the house quickly,
but took the stiletto with him
so that he might find out who had done the deed.
He changed his mind or left it by mistake in my fur coat.
Did he ask for money?
No, he has not done so yet.
But he told me very plainly
that no one could prove that he had been in the house on that night,
and that if he had been seen,
the coat would make people think it was I.
Exactly what I did think, said George.
Well, I had to hold my tongue,
for you see I was in a most awkward position
and I could prove nothing.
I bluffed Mrs. Ward,
but if the matter came into court,
things would look extremely unpleasant for me.
I can see that, said Brendan, but Bodsey.
He has made himself secure,
as no one can prove
that he was in the house on that night.
Even you thought it was I.
I can't say for certain if Bodsey committed the murder,
or if he really did find the woman dead as he said,
but he swears to his innocence.
As yet he has not made any use of his power,
but I am quite sure that he will try and get money out of me,
so I have asked you here to advise me about the matter.
Do you think Bodsey has the confession?
He may have.
"'If so, he knows where the marriage was celebrated.'
"'Brendon mused for a time.
"'I think it best to do nothing at the present moment,' he said.
"'Bodsey is friendly to me as I saved him from being run over.
"'If he thought I knew this, he might turn crusty and make trouble.
"'Better wait. For what?' asked Darrington restlessly.
"'To see what he will do.
"'If he does blackmail you, call me in.'
"'Darrington drew a long breath.
"'Yes, I think you are right,' he said.
"'We will wait.
"'But I don't trust that man.'
"'He's a scoundrel,' said George.
"'But I know how to conquer him.'
"'End of Chapter 17.
"'Chapter 18 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
"'This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
"'18. Miss Bull's story.
Miss Bull was alone in the sitting room of the late Mrs. Jersey.
Marjorie had gone out shopping and the old maid left to her own resources, amused herself as
usual with playing patience.
With the exception of a few old ladies in the drawing room the house was empty and Miss Bull
found the quiet very soothing.
After a time she grew weary of the game and seated herself in an armchair to meditate.
Her thoughts were sad.
Here she was.
an old spinster dragging out her miserable old age in a London lodging house,
while her sister lived and fared sumptuously in accordance with her position.
Miss Bull looked back on all the trials she had passed through
and wondered how she had been able to stand them.
For a moment a revolt took place in her breast at the cruel fate she had endured,
but the feeling died away, and she relapsed into the patient misery,
which was her usual frame of mind.
It can't last much longer.
said Miss Bull with a sigh.
I am getting old, and the end is coming.
The sooner the better.
As she gave vent to this dreary sentence,
there was a ring at the door.
Miss Bull paid little attention to it
as she never had any visitors.
But this day proved to be an exception,
for George was admitted into the room.
He advanced cordially toward Miss Bull.
I have come to see you again, you see, said Brendan.
Miss Bull gave him
her hand with a great deal of pleasure and invited him to be seated.
Now that she had thawed towards George, she treated him kindly and her face wore a less stony look.
As the sun melts the frost, so did the reserved nature of the old maid melt when in the sunshine of Brendan's presence.
More than that, Miss Bull actually congratulated herself on Marjorie's absence, as it gave her a chance of having the company of George all to herself.
I am very glad to see you, Mr. Brendan, she said,
ringing the bell. You will have some tea.
Thank you, replied Brendan, who thought she might thaw still more under the influence of the tea-earn.
I suppose you wonder why I have come again so soon.
Miss Bull smiled in her calm way.
You have come to make further inquiries likely to forward your fight for your birthright.
George laughed.
There's no need for that, thank God, said he.
My grandfather has agreed to acknowledge me.
Then there was a marriage.
I cannot be certain of that yet.
How do you know about that?
Miss Bull answered quietly.
You told me last time you were here
that you were Lord Darrington's grandson,
and I heard that there was some doubt
about the legitimacy.
I know it was common talk at one time,
replied Brendan, satisfied with this explanation.
Did Mrs. Jersey ever speak about it?
No, she never did.
What did she know?
about it. I think you can best answer that question, Miss Bull.
George looked hard at her, and a faint tinge of color crept into her face. Before she could
reply with a counter-question, the servant brought in the tea. Miss Bull waited to supply George
with a cup before she spoke. By that time, the servant had left the room, and the door, as
Miss Bull assured herself, was closed. I don't know what you allude to, Mr. Brendan. Perhaps if I
allude to your life in San Remo, you.
Miss Bull started to her feet, and the cup she held fell on the carpet.
San Remo, she muttered.
Yes, Miss Howard, said Brendan, using her real name purposely.
The little old maid put one thin hand to her head.
Miss Howard?
The daughter of the late General Howard, said George.
My father was a general.
He was, General Howard.
You are, Miss General.
"'Genny Howard.'
Miss Bull started and then sat down.
Her face expressed pain.
"'He used to call me Jenny.
Jenny Howard.
Yes, there was a happy girl of that name, but she—she died.
"'Not at all,' said Brendan briskly to arouse her from this dreamy state.
She lived and changed her name to Bull.
The woman pushed back her white hair and made an effort to be calm,
but her lip quivered.
Why have you come here to awaken these painful memories? she asked.
Because I wish to know how my father came by his death.
I do not know. Indeed, I do not know, moaned Miss Bull, putting out her hand as though to ward off the thought.
You may not know for certain, but you have some idea.
Your sister, Mrs. Ward.
Miss Bull's face flushed crimson and she drew a deep breath.
"'Oh, it's violet's work, is it?' she said, and her eyes grew hard.
"'And pray, Mr. Brendan, has she sent you to cross-question me?'
"'No, I come on my own behalf. You knew my father.'
"'Percy Vane. Yes, I knew him. He loved me. Ah, indeed he did.'
That night he asked me to be his wife, and had he not been murdered. Did he ask you when he was
taking you home? asked George, wondering how Miss Bull would have behaved as his stepmother.
Taking me home? He never did that on the night of the ball. Your sister, Mrs. Ward. I have no sister.
I disown, Violet. She is a wicked woman. George was quite of this opinion, yet for the sake of
Dorothy he dissented. She has her good points, Miss Bull. No, no, she has no good points.
She is selfish, vain, cruel, and deceitful.
A child of the devil.
How do you know that I am her sister?
And how did you come to learn my name?
Lord Darrington told me, and it was told to him by Mr. Ireland.
Your guardian.
Miss Bull tapped her hand on the woodwork of her chair.
He recognized me when I called to see him on that day about the lease.
But he promised to hold his tongue.
He would have done so had he not been startled by meeting Mrs. Ward and recognizing in her the woman who had left the ball with my father. And Violet admitted this. No, she said that you had left the ball with my father. It was you who wore the blue domino and the holly sprig.
Liar, liar, muttered Miss Bull. But she is always the same. When I saw her at the music hall the other night, her face wore the same false smile.
oh that i could see her punished as she deserves god will punish her miss bull he has delayed long said the old maid with a bitter smile my sister has enjoyed the good things of this life
she has had money position praise and all that a woman desires as for myself she looked around the room and burst into a bitter laugh yet jenny howard was always consider
the prettier sister of the two.
Then it really was Mrs. Ward who left the ball.
It was.
She lays the blame on my shoulders.
Miss Bull paused, and her mouth worked nervously.
Does she accuse me of the crime?
No.
She says that you left Mr. Vane at the gate of the hotel.
Oh, muttered Miss Bull.
Percy came as far as that with her, did he?
And she said he left her at the door.
door of the room where the ball was being held.
Liar, liar! She always was.
She always will be. Can the leopard change his spots?
By this time the ice and Miss Bull's nature had melted
under the heat of her indignation. She walked hurriedly
up and down the room, her eyes bright and her cheeks flushed.
George was pleased to see this, as he thought she was the more likely to tell the truth
when thus moved by emotion than if she had remained calm.
miss bull was so angered by the memory of her wrongs that she struck her hand against the mantelpiece so as to inflict pain the shock seemed to nerve her for she drew a long breath and returned to her seat with her eyes fixed on george she began abruptly
violet has told her story she said now i will tell you mine i want to know however exactly what she said in the exact words if you can remember them i did not know however exactly what she said in the exact words if you can remember them
i did not hear her speak confessed george it was my grandfather and mr ireland to whom she told the story story fable lie romance said miss bull vehemently well tell me what you can remember
this george did as concisely as possible for he feared lest marjorie should interrupt the interview miss bull listened with a downcast face and pursed up lips not a word did she say but when jrude
George ended, she looked up with a bitter smile.
She has simply put herself in my place, she said.
Wait.
For a moment or so she tried to compose herself.
Then she raised her head and looked her visitor squarely in the eyes.
I am going to tell the truth, said Miss Bull bravely.
Therefore I have no need to shun your gaze.
Mr. Brendan, I loved your father.
So Mrs. Ward said,
and Violet loved him also.
He must have been a singularly attractive man,
remarked Brendan wondering at this revelation.
My mother eloped with him, her maid was in love with him,
and now you and Mrs. Ward.
Oh, Violet really did not love him.
It was simply a desire to take him from me
that made her behave as she did.
Violet never loved anyone in her life,
save the person she sees in the mirror every day.
"'A selfish woman, Mr. Brendan, and a wicked one.
"'This was no news to George,
"'so he strove to coax her to tell him that which he wished to know.
"'I don't quite understand, but if you will relate the story—'
"'I shall do so at once.
"'You may as well know all,
"'and know also what a bad woman I have for a sister.
"'If she was dying,' cried Miss Bull vehemently,
"'I wouldn't raise a finger to save her life.'
We should forgive our enemies, hinted George.
I can't forgive her.
I never will forgive her.
She ruined my life, George Brendan.
She ruined my life.
Brendan said nothing,
and in a few moments Miss Bull
composed herself sufficiently to tell what she knew.
My father was General Howard, she said quietly,
and Violet was my only sister.
We never got on my.
well together. Violet was jealous of admiration, and as I was said to be prettier than she was,
she hated me intensely. Whenever anyone liked me, Violet would do her best to take him away from me.
I can quite believe that, said George, recalling Mrs. Ward's arts. She did not always succeed,
however, continued Miss Bull with a flush. I had my admirers also, and some I could keep. But when
Violet could manage it, she always took them away.
You hinted that she took my father away, said Brendan.
She did. At least she tried to. But if he had not been murdered, I should have been Mrs. Vane
in spite of Violet's arts. Well, tell me how you came to San Remo and met my father.
Oh, I knew him before that. We were six months at Como and saw your father frequently then.
He and the general used to talk politics.
Mr. Vane was always bringing us books and magazines, and we used to climb Mount Bisbino.
What a delightful summer that was.
I remember you then, she added, looking at George with interest.
You were scarcely two years old.
A dear, good, fair little fellow.
I met you and the nurse sometimes, and often carried you.
Was the nurse's name Eliza Stokes?
No, it was, let me see.
Some Scotch name.
Jane Fraser, I think.
Ah, then Eliza Stokes was not at Como.
I never saw her.
Mr. Vane told me that you had had another nurse,
but that he had to dismiss her at Milan for impertinence.
George saw that Miss Bull was not keeping strictly to the truth
and corrected her at once.
You knew Eliza Stokes at San Remo.
So I did, I quite forgot.
Miss Bull put her hand to her head with a puzzled air.
But since my illness I have forgotten so much.
It is all a blank to me.
Tell me, Mr. Brendan, have you ever felt as though you were a ghost?
No, replied George, keeping his countenance with difficulty.
I don't think I have ever experienced that feeling.
Miss Bull looked vaguely at the window.
it is a strange feeling after which remark she lapsed into silence still staring brendon remembered that she had been in an asylum and thought that her mind was still weak it might be that after all she had not told an untruth but had quite forgotten eliza stokes
george was confirmed in his supposition by her next remark eliza stokes i remember mrs jersey you knew she was mrs jersey yes that was why i came to this house did you like her then
Miss Bull's eyes flashed.
She was another violet.
I hated her.
Oh, how I hated her.
I found her through my sister
mentioning that Lord Darrington
had given her this house,
so I came here to board.
But your sister knows nothing about you.
She says you ran away
and that it was supposed you were dead.
Miss Bull laughed bitterly.
My sister knows perfectly well
that I live here,
but it suits
her to disown the relationship.
It is my wish also, and for that reason I changed my name.
No one would recognize pretty Jenny Howard and poor Miss Bull.
She paused for a moment and then continued.
Yes, I knew that Eliza Stokes had become Mrs. Jersey,
and that is why I came here.
But if you hated her...
I did, I did, but she was the only person who could talk about Mr. Vane.
She loved him also, but not as I did, and we have talked for hours in this very room.
We quarreled, certainly, but at times she was very nice. I miss our talks greatly.
It really seemed as though Miss Bull was weak in the head. She admitted to hating Mrs. Jersey,
and yet she came to stop with her. It might be that Mrs. Jersey looked after her as a kind of keeper,
and that she acted the tyrant.
At that moment as though answering his thought,
Miss Bull made a sudden observation.
Mrs. Jersey knew that I had been in an asylum.
She would have sent me back if she could, the vile woman.
But I was never afraid of her.
Never.
And she always talked to me of Mr. Vane,
concluded Miss Bull in a softer tone.
Did she know who killed him?
Miss Bull shook her head.
No, she never knew.
No one ever knew.
I sometimes thought that Violet, but she declared that he left her at the door of the ballroom.
Miss Bull, said George, growing impatient of this disconnected recital, will you go on with your story?
Story. Yes, it is a story. A sad romance. She passed her hand again over her forehead as though wearied and resumed with an effort.
Mr. Vane left Como and came to Milan. Afterward he went on.
on to San Remo. My father, who liked his society, joined him there. We stopped at the Hotel
of Englander. Eliza Stokes was a housemaid there, and it was while attending to our bedroom that
she told me she had been your nurse. She was a large, stout girl with red cheeks. As Mrs. Jersey,
she was vastly improved, but as a girl, Miss Bull shuddered in a prim way and continued. Yet she had her
admirers. A waiter called George Rates wished to marry her. She had accepted him, but while
within sight of Mr. Vane she could not love him. How do you mean? Well, Eliza used to spy on Mr. Vane and
follow him in his walks. She was quite insane about him. I told Mr. Vane, and he kept away from the
hotel. And George Rates was jealous of Eliza's love for Mr. Vane. But he was jealous of Eliza's love for Mr. Vane.
He never loved her, nor Violet.
He loved no one but me.
And he told you so at the masked ball.
Yes.
There was to be a masked ball, and both Violet and I were anxious to go.
We made a friend of Eliza, and she got us two blue dominoes.
That we might recognize one another, we each wore a sprig of yellow holly.
My father was supposed to know nothing about the matter, but we told a young Oxford
cousin of ours. He met us at the ball and afterward took Violet away. I found Mr. Vane and we danced
together. He did not know me at first, but afterward when we went into a quiet room, I unmasked.
He was vexed at first that I and Violet should come to the ball unattended, as he said my father would
be so angry, which was quite true. Then he told me that he loved me and asked me to become his wife.
I accepted, and he kissed me.
Miss Bull paused, moved by an emotion too deep for words.
I was fond of you as a baby, George, and he, your father, knew I would be a good mother to you.
Did he speak of his first wife, of my mother?
Yes, he told me how dearly he had loved her.
Did he say where the marriage was celebrated?
No, I never thought to ask him.
"'I always thought there was a marriage.
"'Why should I not?
"'Until I later heard that Lord Darrington denied
"'that such had taken place.
"'But that was after I came out of the asylum,'
"'added Miss Bull with the troubled air.
"'So it might be my fancy.'
"'No, it is true.
"'Lord Darrington did deny the marriage,
"'but he now recognises that it took place.
"'We wish to find where.'
"'I cannot help you, Mr. Brendan.
Mr. Vane never mentioned it to me.
He told me that he loved me.
Then he went away to get me a nice
and said he would take me home and return for Violet.
I waited, but as he did not appear,
I went to look for him.
He was gone.
With your sister?
Yes, said Miss Bull, clenching her fists.
Violet overheard a part of our conversation.
She had just come down from the box of the Marquesa Beltrami.
That was where she unmasked and Mr. Ireland recognized her.
She must have seen me with Mr. Vane, continued Miss Bull, taking no notice of this interruption.
So she stole behind us and heard what we were to one another.
Then she slipped on her mask and followed Mr. Vane.
She said she did not want a nice, but that she desired to go home at once.
Mr. Vane wanted to wait for her.
For Violet.
Yes, he thought that I had run after him, and as Violet wore a blue domino with the sprig of Holly, he fancied she was me.
I understand. So he took her home. She said he left her at the door, and then came back to look for—for Violet, said Miss Bull contemptuously.
She disguised her voice, and he quite thought she was myself. But from what Mr. Ireland said, Mr. Vane saw Violet home to the gates of the hotel.
I waited for a time, and as your father did not come back, I ran home alone.
Violet was in our bedroom, and said that Mr. Vane had left her at the door of the ballroom and had gone back for me.
Then the next morning we heard of the murder.
I never knew until you told me how Violet had managed to get Mr. Vane away from me.
She tricked you, said George sympathizingly.
She tricked everyone.
When I heard of your father's death, I felt very ill.
The world became a blank to me.
When I came to myself, I was in an asylum.
Then I grew better and was let out.
My father died, and an annuity was allowed to me.
I heard about Mrs. Jersey taking this house,
and wishing for someone to talk to about your father,
I came here, and here I have been ever since.
A lonely woman, Mr. Brendan.
but I find Marjorie a great comfort.
Then you do not know who killed my father.
No, Miss Bull shook her head.
He was struck down on the parade when returning to the ballroom.
It must have been after he saw my sister home.
Do you think Mrs. Ward knows the truth?
She might.
Perhaps someone followed,
and Violet might have been mistaken for some person.
I know there was a married woman in San Francisco.
and Remo deeply in love with Mr. Vane.
What an attractive man he must have been.
Oh, he was the handsomest man in the world, cried Miss Bull, with genuine enthusiasm,
and so kind.
No wonder Eliza Stokes loved him.
But he loved no one but me.
No one but me.
What did Eliza Stokes say when she heard of his death?
Oh, she almost went out of her mind.
I did all together, said poor Miss Bull with a wan smile.
And as they found her a nuisance in the hotel, she went away.
George Rates went also.
Did she marry him?
No.
I asked her when I met her here as Mrs. Jersey.
She said that she returned to England and that Rates had been run over and killed in the street.
She then went to America and married Mr. Jersey.
He died and left her some money.
Then she set up.
this house so she said nothing of the annuity from Lord
Derrington no it wasn't to her interest to do so she could hold her tongue when she
liked we very often quarreled but on the whole we were as good friends as two women
well could be who had loved the same man George rose to go thank you for
telling me so much miss Bull he said what was the name of the woman who loved my
father. Oh, she was a common woman who kept a shop.
Velez was the name.
Velez, cried George, and added to himself.
So that is how Lola knows.
End of Chapter 18.
Chapter 19 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Nineteen.
The Inquiry Agent.
As George stepped to
out of the front door he came face to face with Bodsey who was mounting the steps.
The man seemed excited and carried a carelessly folded newspaper which he had apparently been
reading. He did not seem pleased to meet Brendan and looked at him in a suspicious manner.
I didn't expect to see you here, he said with a certain degree of roughness.
I did not know that this house was interdicted to me, replied Brendan sharply.
He liked neither the tone nor the peremptory manner of Bodsey, and
moreover was not prepossessed in his favor by the report which Lord Derrington had made of
the man's duplicity.
"'I am glad to meet you, however,' continued George, as I wish to have a few words.
"'I am too busy to give you any time,' retorted Bodsey and tried to enter the house.
"'Nevertheless, you will give me a quarter of an hour,' said George, blocking the doorway
with his stalwart form.
"'What I have to say cannot be left until a more convenient period.
I tell you I am busy, Mr. Brendan.
And I tell you that I intend to have this interview, rejoined Brendan imperiously.
You talk a great deal about gratitude, Bodsey, yet you are unwilling to put yourself out for me in the least degree.
Bodsey became penitent at once.
It is true, Mr. Brandon, but I am very worried.
He cast a glance at the newspaper in his hand.
However, you have first call upon my time, so we will go to my room.
That's as it should be.
No more words passed.
Bodsey mounted the stairs and let George into the well-remembered room.
Brendan took a chair, and Bodsey with an anxious look threw himself into another.
The man's face was flushed, his red hair was in disorder, and his eyes were bright.
As a rule, he was calm and self-controlled, so George conjectured that something particularly
important must have occurred to upset him.
However, Bodsey's troubles were none of his business,
and he began talking at once of his reason for seeking the interview.
I had a conversation with Lord Darrington the other evening, he said deliberately,
and we talked of you.
Then you heard no good of me, replied Bodsey with a sneer.
Lord Darrington does not like me.
That matters little.
No liking can exist between a man in Lord Darrington's position and his paid servant.
Oh, you call me that, do you, sir?
What else are you?
Lord Darrington engaged you as his agent to watch me in that you have done.
Not lately.
I have given you a free hand.
In any case, I have a free hand, said George loftily.
You were grateful enough for my service in saving your life to release me from your espionage,
but had you not done so, I should have taken means to put a stop to your dogging my footsteps.
You would not have known had I not told.
told you, Mr. Brandon. Oh, yes, I should. In any case, I should have seen my grandfather,
and he would have told me. No, sir, he is your enemy. That is where you are wrong,
Bodsey. He is my friend. The detective looked astonished. Do you mean to say that Lord
Darrington has climbed down? He demanded incredulously. It is strange, is it not? said George in a
bantering tone. But, as a matter of fact, after a long conversation, Lord
Darington and myself came to understand one another. He intends to recognize me as his heir.
Has he then learnt where the marriage took place? asked Bodsey, starting from his seat,
and again glancing anxiously at the newspaper which lay on a small table at his elbow.
No, we have yet to find that out. But he is quite satisfied, from the hints of the late
Mrs. Jersey that a marriage did take place, and he wishes to make amends to me for his unjust
conduct as regards my mother's memory and myself.
Whoa! What means did you take to force him to recognize you?
I used no force at all, responded Brendan very dryly.
Lord Darrington would not climb down unless he were made to.
As a matter of fact, he did. The olive branch was held out by him.
"'All this is none of your business, Mr. Bodsey,
"'and I only tell it to you to clear the ground
"'for what I am about to say.'
"'It's something disagreeable, I bet,'
"'said Bodsey scanning the set face of his visitor.
"'Your penetration does you credit, sir.
"'It is disagreeable.'
"'Bodzie settled himself comfortably in his chair.
"'Then the sooner we grasped the nettle,
"'the sooner will the pain be over,'
"'he said with quite an eastern wealth of parable.
"'But first, Mr. Brandon, I should like to know your exact position.'
"'Oh, that is easily explained, and there is no reason why you should not know what all London will know soon.
Lord Darrington will join with me in searching for the register of marriage, and meanwhile will recognize me as his grandson and the heir to his estates.'
"'Not a very large income for a future peer,' murmured Bodsey.
George took no notice of this.
In a fortnight, I leave my Kensington rooms and take up my residence with Lord
Darrington in St. Charles Square.
Then I shall assume my real name of George Vane.
And you will marry Miss Ward, I suppose.
That is entirely my business, said George placidly.
You will gain nothing by insolence, Bodsey.
The man rose with a wounded air.
Upon my word, Mr. Vane, he said, giving George his correct name to show that he
recognized his new position.
I have not the slightest
intention of being insolent.
I am glad for your sake that things are as they are,
and pleased for my own,
since Lola may now give up thoughts of you
and turn to me.
That's all very well, Bodsey,
said Brendan quietly.
You profess a great friendship for me,
but how can I trust you?
I have never deceived you yet.
I have not given you the chance of doing so.
But if the opportunity offered, and it was convenient to you, I am quite sure you would
sell me, as the saying goes, to the highest bidder.
Why should you doubt me? asked Bodsey still wounded.
I can only judge the future by the past, and since you are quite ready to play Lord
Darrington false.
Who says that? cried the man sitting down but looking defiant.
I say so. Lord Darrington has told me all.
"'All what?' demanded Bodsey, willfully ignorant.
"'All that took place on the night when you came to this house to impersonate him.'
"'Bodsey laughed and his face cleared.
"'If that is your disagreeable business, sir, I can easily put that to rights.'
"'Can you explain why you drugged him, why you threatened him?'
"'I did not threaten him.'
"'Lord Darrington informed me that you threatened to get him into trouble.
That was why he consulted me, and that is why I have come to tell you that if you fight Lord
Darrington, you will fight me also.
Lord Darrington is old, but I am young and I am quite equal to dealing with you.
I never denied that, said Baudsie calmly.
I quite recognize that you are a strong man, Mr. Vane, although it is not to my interest to
admit as much.
That's your business, rejoined George Cooley.
I play with all my friends.
cards on the table. What those are which you have concealed, I do not know, but I am quite prepared
to play the game. And at the present moment, you need not call me by my father's name. I have not yet
assumed my position. When I do, George Vane will have nothing to do with you. But George Brendan has,
said Bodsey with a flash of his eyes. Don't press too hard, Mr. Brendan. I am willing to do you a
service, and you are misjudging me.
I am sorry you should think so.
Let us cease this bickering.
I am willing to hear what you have to say.
If you are satisfied with my explanation,
will you endeavor to get Lola to marry me?
That has nothing to do with me.
But you have influence with her.
It shall not be used to make her miserable.
I know nothing about you save what my grandfather told me,
and his report does not bias me.
in your favor. For all I know, you might make poor Lola the worst husband in the world.
Bodsey shrugged his shoulders. Lola is well able to look after herself, he said. I think I mentioned
that before. But if you are satisfied with what I am about to tell you, will you help me?
I'll do my best, said George impatiently. Lola is sure to lose this engagement sooner or later
through her vile temper. I do not want to see her on the streets again.
and she may as well be supported by you in a respectable manner as by anyone else.
Besides, as you truly say, she can take care of her own skin.
But I shall not advise her to marry you unless you prove to me that you did not intend to blackmail Lord Darrington.
Nothing was further from my thoughts, said Bodsey earnestly.
It was to my interest that your grandfather should hold his tongue about my having been to this house.
He would not have known had you,
not told him voluntarily. Oh, yes, he would have discovered in some way. I thought it best to be
on the right side by confessing voluntarily what I had done. I said I could get him into trouble,
and I admit that I did threaten him so far, simply to make him hold his tongue. You were
afraid lest you should be accused of the crime. Bodzie looked at George in surprise. That
possibility never crossed my mind, he replied calmly.
"'I certainly did not kill the woman.
Do you think I did, Mr. Brandon?'
George shrugged his shoulders,
"'going by circumstantial evidence.'
"'Oh,' Bodsey flipped away that objection
with a snap of his fingers.
"'That's all right. I will explain.'
"'No, Mr. Brendan.
"'Why I wished Lord Derrington to be silent
"'was that I might carry out my plan
"'so as to learn who killed Mrs. Jersey.'
"'Then you are looking after the case.
"'On behalf of Lord Darrington,
"'he has an idea that the assassin became possessed of a confession
"'which Mrs. Jersey left behind her.
"'How do you know she left it?
"'Because I knew Mrs. Jersey very well,
"'and as I told you long since, I was once aboard her here.
"'One day she let slip that she had someone in her power
"'and would leave the evidence of that power behind her
"'so that her niece might benefit.
I told this to Lord Derrington.
He insisted that I should try and discover the assassin
so as to get that confession,
which compromises him back again.
To spur me on, he has promised me a reward of a thousand pounds
should I obtain the confession and the conviction of the assassin.
As I want money to marry Lola, I am doing my best.
I came to live here for that purpose.
Lord Darrington talking of my visit
the house on the night of the crime would have jeopardized my plans. Therefore I was obliged,
as you say, to threaten him so as to make him keep silent. So far, do you blame me, Mr.
Brendan? No, replied George after some thought. The end justifies the means. But you might have
adopted less rascally means. I have not adopted any. I have not asked Lord
Darrington for money, so I'm not a blackmailer,
nor do I intend to claim from him anything but what is justly mine.
And what is justly yours, if you please?
The reward of one thousand pounds for the discovery of the assassin.
Oh, have you learned who killed her?
Not yet, but I may learn.
At present I confess I am in fault.
George pondered a little.
So far, Bodsey spoke frankly enough.
but he could not help mistrusting him.
However, since the man was in the telling vein,
he thought it best to betray no doubts
lest Bodsey should turn rusty.
Well, the discovery is in your own hands, he said,
and I sincerely trust you will gain that thousand pounds.
I am as unwilling as my grandfather
that Mrs. Jersey's connection with this unfortunate business
should become public.
I am perfectly convinced that the person who took that confession
stabbed the unfortunate woman.
"'Do you think so?' asked Bodsey, stealing a glance at the newspaper.
George nodded.
"'The confession was written.
I learned that much from Marjorie.
Mrs. Jersey told her it was a story.
Well, as the confession was not found among Mrs. Jersey's papers when she died,
it must have been taken by someone.
But I can't think what interests such a thing can have had for anyone unless—'
"'Unless what, Mr. Brandon?
unless it contained the name of the person who assassinated my father.
How could Mrs. Jersey know that?
She was at San Remo when my father was killed.
She loved him, and she used to follow him.
How I learned these things, Bodsey, does not matter.
But it is just possible that Mrs. Jersey,
or Eliza Stokes as she was then,
might have some knowledge of who committed the crime.
If that was set down in her confession,
as is highly probable.
I can quite understand
that the original assassin
killed her to gain a dangerous document
such as it undoubtedly was.
Then you think
that the assassin of your father
was also the assassin of Mrs. Jersey?
I fancy so,
as I can explain
the disappearance of the confession
in no other way.
And if I remember rightly, Bodsey,
it was you who said
that the San Remo crime
was connected with the one committed
in this house.
I did say,
say so, replied Bodsey thoughtfully. He pondered for a few minutes, and then looked up briskly.
Well, Mr. Brandon, that point cannot be settled without proof, and there is no use our wasting
time in indulging in vain speculations. Let me tell you about the night I went to see, Mrs. Jersey.
Go on, said Brendan, crossing his legs. I am all attention. I knew before your grandfather
came to see me that you were about to pass the night here.
Lola told me.
Yes, I was foolish enough to tell her,
though to be sure I had no great reason
to conceal my visit to train.
I never knew that a murder would take place.
So Lola told you.
Bodsey nodded.
She did, but I never intended to bother about the matter,
as I did not think there was anything in your visit.
But Lord Darrington came and put a different complexion on the affair.
It was his belief that you intend
intended to force Mrs. Jersey into confessing about the marriage.
I came to appeal to her, said Brendan dryly.
There was no thought of forcing in my mind.
Lord Darrington judged you by himself and thought there might be.
I rather agreed with him.
Then, knowing his temper, I fancied if he went to see Mrs. Jersey
there would be a row and a scandal, and I did not want that to happen.
I was making a very good thing out of Lord D'ernard.
Harrington, admitted Bodsey frankly, and if a scandal had taken place, my occupation would
have been gone. I therefore determined to drug him and to go myself. But why in his coat?
I thought that Mrs. Jersey might not admit me. George pounced on him at once. There was no need
that she should do so. You took the latch-key my grandfather carried. Oh, you know that, do you?
said Bodsey composedly.
Then I may as well be absolutely frank.
It is your best course.
Oh, I'm not on trial, Mr. Brandon.
It is only my friendship for you that is making me speak out.
I accept that excuse.
Go on.
Bodsey shrugged his shoulders to show his annoyance
at the uncompromising attitude of his visitor.
I feared lest Mrs. Jersey should order me out of the house
unless I could gain time by being mistaken for Lord Arrington.
I drugged the old gentleman, and then,
taking his coat and the latch-key, I went to see Mrs. Jersey.
At what time were you there?
Some time before twelve.
I cannot say for certain.
Well, Mr. Brandon, I let myself in with the latch-key,
and I found the house by the red light over the door.
In former years it had been my custom to guide myself in that way,
I told Lola so.
Why did you tell her that?
Oh, she knew that you were going late to the house
and made a fuss about the chance of your being lost in the fog.
I said that probably train would tell you of the red light
and that you could guide yourself by that.
Huh, Lola was always unnecessarily kind, said George.
Well?
Well, I closed the door softly and went into the sitting-room.
You knew where that was.
Of course. Don't I tell you I once lived in this house?
I entered the sitting room.
The lamp was burning, and Mrs. Jersey was seated at the table.
Bodsey shuddered.
There is no need to tell you more.
I left the room at once for the sight horrified me.
Why did you pause in the hall?
I thought I heard a footstep on the stairs,
and the shock gave me one of my fits.
the fear of open spaces, you know.
How did you come to learn that I paused in the hall?
Because I had come down the stairs to see who was with Mrs. Jersey.
Ah, then it must have been your footstep I heard, said the detective.
Well, I soon recovered and left the house.
What about the stiletto?
It was lying on the floor near the table.
I saw it glittering in the lamplight.
As there was blood on it and there was blood on it
I saw the wound, I knew that Mrs. Jersey had been killed by it. I slipped it into my pocket
with a vague idea that thereby I might trace the assassin. Did you leave it purposely in the coat?
No, said Bodsey frankly. I did not. I was so moved and, as a woman would say,
flustered by the death that I forgot all about it. Lord Darrington woke up and went home.
I said nothing about the murder to him at the time. I said nothing about the murder to him at the time.
I had not the nerve.
It was only after he departed that I remembered the stiletto.
I thought he might make a row and accuse me of the crime.
But he said nothing, and I judged it wise to let sleeping dogs lie.
So, that is all I can tell you, Mr. Brendan,
and you will see that I am not such a bad man as you try to make me out.
Oh, you have spoken clearly enough, said George.
Then after a pause.
Yes, I think you are honest.
so far as I can judge. I trust you.
Bodsey looked delighted.
Will you have a glass of wine with me to show that?
He asked, rising.
On the Arab principle of bread and salt, said Brendan.
Certainly.
Bodsey nodded in a pleased manner and went to his sideboard at the end of the room.
George mechanically took up the newspaper.
His eyes were caught by a cross-heading,
strange affair in an Essex church,
and by the words, destruction of the registers.
Just as he was about to glance over the article,
never thinking what it meant to him,
Bodsey returned with the wine in two glasses.
He uttered an exclamation of dismay
when he saw the paper in George's hand.
Hang it, I never meant you to see that, he said.
Why not? replied George.
Is it this news about a lady trying to tear the registers?
He started and looked at Bodsey,
who was uneasy and pale.
It's Lola, said George.
No, and yet.
Why should you not know?
I believe it is, Lola, though no name is mentioned.
George picked up the paper again and read rapidly.
No name was mentioned as it was said that the strange lady
who had been arrested refused to give any name.
It seemed that she went to Wargrove Church
and asked to see the registers for a certain year,
the registers of marriage.
The sexton took the fee and showed the books.
Then it appeared that the strange lady searched for an hour.
The sexton left the vestry for a few minutes.
When he returned he saw that she had torn a page out of the book.
Being taken by surprise, she had tried to conceal her theft,
but the sexton seized her, rescued the torn page and called for assistance.
The end of it was that the strange lady,
who was described as having a foreigner, was a rubeer.
rested and placed in prison.
It is Lola, said George breathlessly.
Yes, assented Bodsey also pale.
She evidently tried to destroy the evidence of your mother's marriage.
George gave a cry.
Wargrove, he said.
Wargrove in Essex.
It was in the parish church that the marriage took place.
And Lola knew.
Lola?
He paused.
The eyes of the two men met.
End of Chapter 19
Chapter 20 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
20
The Trouble of Lola
It was 4 o'clock when George left Bodsey.
The two had spoken little of the newspaper paragraph
which informed them of Lola's escapade.
Although her name was not mentioned,
there was no doubt in the mind of Brendan
that she was the culprit.
The newspaper gave the year of the book when the sheet was torn, and that corresponded to the year when Percy Vane married, or had been supposed to marry, Rosina Lockwood.
And this was the explanation of Lola's absence from town. She had not fled from the rebuke of Brendan, but had gone to do him an injury by destroying the evidence of his parents' marriage.
This finally was the meaning of her wild threat to Dorothy. By preventing George from proving his legitimacy, Lola hoped to put a
a final end to his chance of making Miss Ward his wife.
Bodsey was much upset over the news. He would have flown immediately to Wargrove, but some
special business kept him in town. However, he purposed to go the next morning by the first train.
Bodsey did not think that Brendan had sufficient interest in Lola to go down to Wargrove at once,
but George was going that very day all the same. Lola could not have known that his parents had
been married at Wargrove without having seen Mrs. Jersey's confession,
wherein the fact was probably mentioned. Therefore, she must have obtained the confession
in some way. How she achieved this George could not conjecture.
Then he thought of Lola's hot Spanish blood, of the stiletto, a peculiarly foreign weapon,
and shuddered. It occurred to him that Lola herself must have stabbed the woman.
However, he put this thought aside for the moment and set about getting to
Wargrove. On consulting in ABC, he found that a train left Liverpool Street station for South End
at ten minutes past five, and that Wargrove was a tiny rural town which could be reached in an hour.
Ever quick and expeditious in his movements, George had entered a strand shop to buy the railway
guide and having ascertained about the train, he simply stepped into his cab and ordered the man
to drive to Liverpool Street. At the appointed time he was on his way down the country.
This precipitancy of action was due to a dread less Bodsey should change his mind and see Lola first.
Certainly, the detective had spoken frankly, and his conduct appeared to be dictated by sentiments of honor.
Nevertheless, George felt that Bodsey was playing a part and that this apparent honesty was not his real character.
It behooved him to be on his guard against him, and to know as much about the death of Mrs. Jersey as Bodsey did,
so as to be able to counterplot him if necessary.
From the fact that she was in Wargrove, Lola evidently had possession of the confession.
If Bodsey saw her, he would doubtless try and get it from her to learn the name of Percy Vane's assassin.
George wished, therefore, to forestall Bodsey, and to make Lola surrender the confession,
always presuming she had it, to himself.
For this reason he departed quickly for Wargrove.
At the Liverpool Street Station, he examined all the passengers as they entered the train.
Bodsey did not put in an appearance, and as the next train would not depart for another two hours,
George felt that he had stolen a march on the detective.
Bodsey would never think that he had acted with such promptitude.
It was a dull journey, as Brendan was worried by a commercial traveler who would talk politics.
George put him off as civilly as possible, and finally turned his prattle,
for it was little else to his own advantage by asking for the whereabouts of Wargrove.
It seemed that the new town of Wargrove was the place where the train stopped,
but Old Wargrove was three miles distant, and it was there that the parish church was situated.
The commercial traveller followed up this information with many details
concerning the manners and customs of the natives which bored George due distraction.
However, he listened quietly and paid as little attention as was consistent with politeness.
His officious companion watched for the station and roared out the name when the
the train stopped.
George thanked him and delighted, glad to be relieved of such a weary talker.
And till the train was moving, the man leaned out of the window shouting directions as to the best way to reach old Wargrove.
As it proved, there was no necessity for George to go there.
Lola was stopping in the policeman's house prior to her removal to the prison at Chelmsford.
Her attempt at robbery had been committed on the previous day, and Brendan thought she would have already been removed.
However, he was informed that there was some delay owing to the illness of the Chomsford
Inspector, and therefore Lola would have to remain in Wargrove for another twelve hours.
Brendan was glad to hear this as it would save him a long journey.
He thanked the policeman who had explained and was directed by the man to the house of his
superior officer, which was on the outskirts of the town.
George soon found a semi-detached house with a notice on it, and on knocking at the door
explained his errand to a brisk little woman. She pursed up her lips, looked inquisitively at him
with bright eyes and called her husband. The policeman was a burly, slow-bitted fat man who seemed
nervous on being asked for a sight of the prisoner, for such Lola was, to all intents and purposes.
He did not want to exceed his duty. George produced a sovereign, but the official, although
his eyes twinkled, hesitated to take the bribe. It was then that Mrs. Policeman came to
Brendan's assistance.
Nonsense, Jeremiah, she said briskly.
Let the young gentleman see his young lady.
She's dying to have a sight of him.
How do you know that she is my young lady?
asked George.
Mrs. Policeman nodded with her arms akimbo.
Why, she's been crying out in that foreign way of hers for
Georges, Georges.
That is my name, certainly.
And you are her gentleman.
She told me what you were like, and cried all the
time, poor soul. Tall, fair, with eyes of blue.
It's all very well, grumbled Jeremiah, but tis against the law.
You can be present at our interview, if you like.
There, Jeremiah, you can't have the gentleman saying fairer than that.
Here the sharp little woman nudged her husband's arms. This was a hint for him to swallow
his scruples and take the sovereign.
Jeremiah agreed, and shortly the sovereign was in his pocket.
and he was leading George to a back upstairs room.
We'd have put her in the best parlor, he said,
as I always like to make him comfortable.
But she'd have run away,
so we was obliged to keep her in the room with the bars on the window.
Poor Lola, thought George as he conjured up
the small, stuffy room and the barred window.
But the room was not so comfortless as Jeremiah stated,
thanks to Mrs. Policeman.
It was small, certainly,
but it was neatly furnished as a bed-sid window.
room. The window was certainly barred, but there was no other sign that it was a prison cell.
Before introducing George to this abode, it struck Jeremiah that the prisoner had been inquired
for as, the young lady. He stopped Brendan at the door. Might you know her name, sir?
Of course I know it, replied George promptly. Don't you? Now I do, said Jeremiah with a heavy nod,
but it was a rare time before she'd speak.
My Mrs. got it out of her.
Lola Ville it is, she says,
and she's by way of being on the stage.
She is the most celebrated dancer in London,
and her name is Lola Belize, said George.
I don't suppose she'll be punished much for this.
She's mad at times.
Oh, if she's mad she'll get off lightly,
but them parish register to be torn.
It's a bad work that.
"'My father, Warris Exston,' explained Jeremiah soberly.
"'And naturally you think Mademoiselle Belize
"'has committed the most atrocious of crimes.'
"'But don't stand chattering here, my good fellow.
"'I have to return by the nine train.'
"'I'll wait outside,' said Jeremiah,
"'on whom Brendan's generosity and peremptory manner
"'had made an impression.
"'But you won't give her poison or knives, or that, sir.'
"'George laughed.
"'No.
is the last person to use them if I did supply her with such articles.
She's a lively young woman, said the policeman, and slowly unlocked the door.
George was admitted and then Jeremiah, so as to give the lovers, as he thought them,
an opportunity of meeting unobserved, retired, locking the door after him.
Lola and George were together.
She was seated by the window staring out into the darkness.
On the table was a small lamp, and
a fire burned in the grate. Lola started up when the door closed again.
Who is? Who is? She asked in her rapid way and came toward him. Lola, began George, but he
got no further. She ran forward and flung herself with tears at his feet, clutching his legs
and wailing. Oh, my dear one, hast thou come in anger? Trample me. Make me as earth,
beloved, but be not enraged. Ah, no, ah no! Lola,
"'Get up and don't be a fool,' said Brendan, speaking roughly to brace her nerves.
She rose, sobbing, and crept to a chair in a slinking manner quite unlike her usual free grace.
She did not raise her eyes, and George was pained to see the change.
Badly as she had acted he felt sorry at beholding her depressed, and like a sick beast in confinement.
"'Lola,' he said, taking a chair near her,
"'I have come as your friend.'
"'Not in anger?'
Ah, but yes, in anger.
I am not angry.
I am very sorry.
Ah, but in your eyes, they sparkle.
I see me s'arts.
I do try to steal the church books.
You are furiously enraged.
Look at me and see.
But Lola would not,
so George took her chin
and made her gaze directly into his eyes.
Lola's were filled with tears,
but after a time she began to smile.
Ah, you are not enraged.
it was for you I did it.
I wish my dear George to myself.
All, all.
You know that is impossible.
But it is not, I will have you.
Not at all, said George deliberately.
You will marry Bodzi.
That pig, cow, horrible and miserable.
No-an-no, she sprang to her feet.
Jamet, oh grand, jamie.
I do swear,
and, producing a small black crucifix from her dress, she gisted vehemently.
She was a most impossible person to deal with, being as wild as a tigress and as impulsive as a child.
George made her resume her seat and drew his chair close to her. Much delighted, Lola took his hand
within her own and looked at him affectionately. Brendan did not like the position at all,
but it was necessary to humor Lola if he wished to arrive at the truth.
He spoke to her very directly.
Now, Lola, I wish you to tell me the truth.
But I will?
When you are kindness, I tell you all.
Do you know that you have done a wrong thing?
Pshu! she said contemptuously.
I give that old man's knocks on the heads, but he is alive.
Oh, yes, I did not kill him.
I don't mean the assault, though that is bad enough.
But you're trying to destroy the register of the marriage.
"'It is your fault,' cried Lola impetuously.
"'For loves of my George I did so.
"'I wish you not to marry any but me.'
"'We can talk of that later, Lola.
"'Answer me a few questions and make no remarks.'
"'I will do what you say, my friend,' said Lola, nodding.
George thought for a moment,
"'how did you learn that Wargrove was the place
"'where my parents were married?'
"'I tell not that. Indeed I will not.
It is my businesses.
Mine also.
You must tell.
But I will not.
For my sake, Lola.
Ah, you want to know all, and then trick me.
I will not tell.
Then I will explain to you.
Aha, you cannot.
You know nothing's at all.
Pa.
La la la la la.
George spoke sternly.
Lola, I know more than you give me credit for.
I have seen the dagger.
this time he struck home for she started what dagger the stiletto you left in mrs jersey's room i did nothing's i was not there yes you were for all i know you may have killed the woman
but it is foolish you talk george i did not she was frightened oh very much afraid so much that she gave you the confession you asked for ah yes yes yes yes
cried Lola. Then seeing she had betrayed herself, she began to be alarmed.
Ah, you will say nothing. I would not tell Ennis but, Major.
He loves me. He will not see me dead.
Good heavens, Lola. Did you kill the woman?
That fat ladies in black silk?
Ah, no, I did not. But she was so afraid of the knife.
You left her alive on that night.
Why, yes, Majorge. We part. Oh, such good.
friends. Lola blew a kiss from her fingertips. She quite pleased. He meants. Well, Lola, as you have
told so much, you must tell me all. There is nothing to say, she replied, turning sullen.
George rose. Then I shall go away, he declared. I came here to be your friend, Lola, and to save you
from getting into further trouble. But if you will not be candid, he moved to the door.
What is, Candid's? I know not. I know not.
George. She sprang to her feet. Ah, my heart, do not go. Soul of my soul, leave me not.
I will do anything's what you ask of me. Then tell me the whole story of your visit to Mrs. Jersey.
But you will marry Miss Vard. I do that in any case. See here, Lola, he added artfully.
This marriage register which you wish to destroy does not matter now. My grandfather has
acknowledged me as his air.
She looked at him with wide eyes and pale cheeks.
"'And you will be my lord?
You will marry, Miss Vard.
You will.
You will!'
Her mouth began to work piteously like a child being reproved.
I will always be your friend, Lola.
You will marry Miss Vard, she persisted.
Lola, he took her hand.
"'If we married we would never be happy.
I and you are different people.
Do you wish to see me happy?
Yes, if I die I would have you happy, she sobbed.
Then allow me to marry Miss Ward and give me up.
Ah, but it is asking much.
Always too much.
Well, said George a trifle cruelly.
You offered to die for me just now,
yet to see me happy you won't deny yourself anything.
Yes, yes.
but it is all so quick, my dear.
Give times.
Oh, give time till I become used.
She sobbed for a moment, then dried her eyes and sat down briskly.
I am ready, my George.
You shall be happy, but you must not forget, poor Lola.
Ah, no.
Of course not, replied George, patting her hand.
Now tell me the story.
Wait, was it your mother who told you of my father's death?
Yes, assented Lola.
She often talked of your fathers.
I heard she was in love with him, said George slowly.
Lola shrugged her shapely shoulders.
That I know not.
My dear mother was handsome.
Oh, yes, and dark, and fond of gayness.
She might have loved, eh, it is not impossible's.
Did she ever hint who killed my father?
Lola shook her head.
No, no.
Never did she say anythings.
He was found dead, stabbed,
she made a gesture.
That was all, all.
Evidently she could tell him nothing,
so George reverted to more immediate matters.
How about that night?
You knew that I was going to Mrs. Jersey's on that night.
Ah, but yes? You did tell me.
Then what made you come also?
Was it to see me?
Lola put her finger in her mouth and looked down.
No, my George.
I did want that confessions of the fat old lady to stop you being Milor,
and then I thought you would marry only poor Lola.
How did you know about the confession?
That big man told me.
Bodzie?
Why did he tell you?
Psh, said Lola contemptuously.
He loves me, so, I can twist and twist him so.
She made a rapid motion with her fingers.
We did talk of the death of our fathers.
I lamented that my poor mother did loves your fathers unhappily, as I did love you.
And I was enraged to think that your fathers had died.
I did ask Bodsey who made the stab, gave the death.
Eh, it is.
So I asked, she added, nodding.
He could not say, but he declares that Mrs. What do you call her?
Hey, but my friend, Mrs.—'
Mrs. Jersey.
Bodzie declared that she knew.
Lola nodded.
"'It was so,' she assented.
"'Mrs. What you call that fat ladies?
"'She write out all she know,
"'of your father's death and of his marriages.
"'I say to myself that I would get that confession
"'and learn where the marriage was made.
"'Then I would burn the book that no one might learn.
"'After I would say to you
"'that I could tell who killed your father
"'if you made me, Madame, your wife.'
"'That's a very pretty plot,' said Brendan,
not knowing whether to be angry with her wrongdoing or touched by a love that to gain him would not hesitate to commit a crime.
So far you have carried it out. You have the confession. Lola put her hand on her breast.
He is here, she said, nodding. I carries him always, always. Give it to me, Lola. Her eyes opened in wide alarm.
Oh, no, you will not ask me. I keep him to myself all.
george saw that the moment was not propitious but he was determined to get the confession before he left her however he begged her to continue her story how did you know the house he asked it was the scarlet windows
i remember bodzi gave you that for guide bah he knew not i was going said lola with a shrug i got out of him the full man all that i did want i thought i would get to the fat ladies
on the night you were with her, that I might have you for help if she was enraged.
It seems to me that you protected yourself very well.
With the daggers, oh yes, I said to myself that if my George did not come for the fogs,
that Mrs. What you say, Jarzy, oh yes, would be enraged, and I would have trouble.
I took the stiletto to save myself.
How did you get into the house?
Wait, ah, wait.
i did not dance all that night i said i was ill and i came always i took the daggers and a cloak and i went to the square it is not far from my houses
no you just turned the corner of the street said brendon well i walked by the walls it was after ten o'clock i walk round and round the squares and i then see a red lights the door open it was open and many people came
came out of the houses. The fat lady was on the steps waving her hands, so? Lola waved her
hand. A crowd was around. I came into the crowd, and when the fat lady was down shaking
with the handshake, I did slip into the house. That was clever of you, said George,
wondering at the dexterity with which Lola had managed to enter without exciting suspicion.
And then what did you do? Did you meet anyone? Ah, but no. I ran in the
Into a place.
There was a room with a light,
and that I did go into.
Mrs. Jersey's sitting-room, murmured George.
Yes.
I was afraid to be thrown out, my dear,
and I hid it behind her curtain of the window.
The fat lady she did come in and close the door.
She talked to herself of Lord Derrington coming,
and did seem enraged at him wishing to come.
You understand?
Yes, what then?
A little boy did come in with wine and cake,
She did send him away, being angry, and did close the door.
She took from a box.
A green box, Lola.
Yes, a green box.
She did take a blue, what you call, paper.
A blue envelope.
Ah, yes, it is so, and she looked at a paper.
A white paper she took from the envelope.
She laughed and said that Milar would love to have this.
I say to myself behind the curtains,
It is the confessions. I will have it.
Then she did put it in the envelopes and leave it on the tables.
It was near me. I could steal.
And you did, said George impatiently.
But no, my George.
I did try, and Madame she saw my arm.
With a cry she leaped to the doors.
I come out and say that I wish to talk of the deaths of Monsieur Vaines.
She turns most white and did not cry no more.
Then she asked me what I want.
You needn't tell all in detail, Lola.
Be as short as possible.
Oh, well, but yes, assuredly.
I told Madame I was of San Remo
and did talk of my dear mother
and of her love for Monsieur Vain.
But this pig woman's insult my mother.
I become enraged.
I bring my dagger and wave it so.
Again, Lola made a dramatic gesture.
I say that I kill her.
She fall on her knees and hide her face.
Then I did take the confessions out of the blue envelopes and hide it.
That was very clever of you, Lola.
Did Mrs. Jersey see?
Ah, but no she did not.
I take it when she was with the eyes covered.
Then having all what I was desired,
and seeing her so afraid, I had the contempt look.
I say,
There, there, and I throw the dagger at her feet.
Then I go to the door and say I would depart.
she begged me to stop i did stop and we talk of san arremo and of my mother i say that you were my love and that m vane was the father of you then she knew who i was on that night
ah yes but she did i say you wish to see her the next day she say i will tell him nothing and now go for i have to see a great gentleman's i was quite happy did she not miss the confession
No, I said nothing of wanting that.
It was in my pocket.
The blue envelope was on the table.
She never thought but what it was within.
Then she asked me to say nothing to anyone about San Aramo,
and we part quite happy.
She allowed me out of the door and closed it again.
Oh, so softly.
I saw her no more.
You left the dagger behind.
It was on the floors where I threw it.
I wished to get away with the confessions,
lest she should call me thieves.
I did not wait for to take the dagger.
I departed.
That is all.
Huh, said George.
The story seemed likely enough.
After letting Lola out of the house,
Mrs. Jersey then came to see if he and Trane were in bed.
Expecting Lord Darrington,
and knowing from Lola who he was,
she no doubt expected George to interrupt the interview.
But, finding him, as she thought in bed,
she departed satisfied.
then she met marjorie and after locking her in her room went down to meet her death it was eleven when all this happened and bodsey in the coat of lord derrington arrived close upon twelve
therefore as lola left mrs jersey alive and bodsey found her dead she must have been killed in the interval and whomsoever had done this had used the dagger left by lola however george had learned all he wished to know in the meantime and it only remained to get the confession from lola
she refused to give it up george entreated cajoled stormed insisted she still held out no i will not i will not she kept saying
finally he hit on a solution of the difficulty if you do not give it to me it will be taken from you when you go to prison ah but will it cried lola wide-eyed with alarm certainly and will probably be published in the first
papers. Keep it if you like, Lola, but don't blame me if you get into trouble over it.
I assure you, if you keep it, they will take it. Lola pulled a white packet from her breast
and ran with it to the fire. They will not have it. I burn, I burn. And she threw the papers on the
fire. George shot past her, snatched them out before they could catch a light, and thrust them
into his pocket. Lola turned on him like a tigress and he thought she would strike him. She seemed
inclined to do so. Then, unexpectedly, she threw up her arms and fell into a chair weeping.
It is the end. You love me no more. We part. We part. The confessions will part us. All,
alas. End of Chapter 20. Chapter 21 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
21. The Confession of a Jealous Woman
George returned to town with the confession of Mrs. Jersey in his pocket.
On arriving at the Liverpool Street Station, he wrote a note to Kalaski telling him of Lola's
plight and advising him to engage counsel for her defense. He added that he would come around
the next day to see Kalaski and discuss what could be done toward extricating Lola from the
mess she had involved herself in. Having thus done what he could, Brendan took the
underground railway to Kensington and alighted at the High Street station.
In another half hour, he was in his rooms.
After making a good meal, for he felt the need of food to sustain him, he ordered coffee,
and sat down to read the manuscript of Mrs. Jersey.
The coffee was brought, George lighted his pipe, and having poked the fire into a blaze,
made himself comfortable.
The confession of the wretched woman, who had come to so tragic an end, was written on several
sheets of foolscap loosely pinned together.
Her calligraphy was vile, and George had great difficulty in making out some of the words.
Also, the English was not faultless, but good grammar and fine writing were scarcely to be expected from a woman in the position of Eliza Stokes.
But she wrote in a most cold-blooded way, and seemingly exulting in her wickedness.
All through her confession ran a venomous strain of deadly hatred toward George's mother,
and indeed against any woman who paid attention to vain.
Jenny Howard was not spared, and the woman Veles, who kept an oil shop, sneered Mrs. Jersey, was
mentioned. When Brendan discovered that Mrs. Jersey had Italian blood in her veins, he saw perfectly
well whence she got her savage nature and undisciplined affections. She was like a wild beast,
let loose among more civilized animals, and the wonder was that with such a nature she had not
committed more crimes than those she confessed to. The woman was a dangerous creature, and
Brendan, when he laid down the manuscript,
thought it was just as well that she had
been removed even by the violent
means which Providence permitted.
My parents were
of humble station, began Mrs. Jersey
abruptly. I believe
my mother was a ladies' maid.
She married my
supposed father, who was a butler.
I say my
supposed father, as I have reason
to believe that I was the daughter of a
certain Italian count, who had loved
and betrayed my mother.
in her moments of rage my mother would taunt my supposed father with this but when calm she always denied that there was any truth when i grew old enough to understand she rebuked me for asking about the matter
you are my daughter she said abruptly and the daughter of samuel stokes who is the biggest fool and the greatest craven i know it will be seen that there was no love lost between my parents my father stokes as i may call him
though I believe the Count was my real sire,
was always very kind to me,
and shielded me from my mother's rage.
She treated me very cruelly,
and when fifteen I was glad
to go out as a scullery maid
so as to escape her persecution.
Shortly after I took up life on my own account,
she died in a fit of violent rage,
during which she broke a blood vessel.
I think Stokes was glad when she died.
She made his life a misery when she lived,
and tormented everyone around her.
If I have faults, it is not to be expected
that I could inherit a decent nature from such a mother.
I never loved her,
and when she died I did not shed a single tear.
I remember singing at my work on the day I received the news.
One of my fellow servants asked me why I was so gay.
I replied that I had heard of my mother's death.
After that, they hated me, and I had to leave.
my situation.
But had any one of them
possessed such a mother,
any one of them would have been as gay and relieved
as I was.
So much for my mother.
As for my presumed father, Stokes,
I saw very little of him.
He retired from business
and bought a public house.
Then he married again,
and was not inclined to see much of me.
I did not mind,
as I never loved him in spite of his kindness.
I dare say I should
have returned his affection, but my mother had beaten all love out of me.
It is needless to give my early life in detail. I rose from scullery-made to housemaid.
Then I became parlor-maid in a suburban villa, where the wages were poor and the food was bad.
I took charge of children when not doing housework, and managed to get on. But I was ambitious.
I wished to get among the servants of the aristocracy. A friend of mine who was
made to the Duchess of, blank, taught me her duties, and I procured a situation.
I pleased my mistress, and she promised to do much for me.
However, she died, and I was thrown on the world.
I saw an advertisement for a ladies' maid and got the situation.
It was in this way that I became the servant of that woman whom I hated so deeply.
She was called Rosina Lockwood, and was no better born than myself.
Her father was a low man who taught singing,
and she appeared herself on the stage.
I never thought she was beautiful myself.
She had good hair, and her complexion was passable,
but her figure was bad and she had no brains.
An inane silly, foolish woman.
How Percy Vane could have eloped with her beats me.
But men are such fools.
He would not look at me,
yet I was ten times as lovely as this singing woman
and quite as well-born.
Oh, how I hated her.
At first I rather liked Miss Lockwood.
She was kind to me in her silly way,
and the gentlemen who were in love with her
gave me plenty of money to deliver notes and other things.
There was one gentleman who was the best of them all,
and the biggest fool over her blue eyes and fair hair.
His name was Ireland, and he had plenty of money.
He came to learn singing from old Lockwood simply
to be near her, and proposed three times to my knowledge.
But she would have nothing to do with him, which was foolish as he had money, and she could
have twisted him round her finger.
Why he loved her so and what he saw in her I can't say.
She had nothing attractive about her, so far as I could see.
I was a handsome girl in those days, though I say it myself.
But if a woman is good-looking, why shouldn't she say so?
I had a perfect figure and a complexion like cream and roses.
My hair was as black as night, and my eyes were sparkling and large.
I taught myself to read and write, and I learned French.
Also I learned to play the piano, and to conduct myself like a lady as I always was.
I often dreamed that I would marry a gentleman, and I could have done so,
but that my foolish heart was captured by the only man who would have
nothing to do with it or with me.
I never loved
till I set eyes on him.
There was a footman who wanted to marry me
to join our savings and set up in a public house,
but I told him I was born for better things.
Then a coachman asked me to be his wife,
but I hated a man who had to do with horses.
Oh, I had plenty of offers, as a handsome girl should.
But I knew my own value,
and looked about for the gentleman who would give me my rightful
position as a lady.
From my Italian father
I inherited aristocratic tastes
and I was not going to remain
a low vulgar common servant on my life.
Not me.
Then he came to the house.
Oh, my adored one,
my idol, my angel,
how magnificent and beautiful thou wast.
Percy was his dear name,
and his blood was very blue.
Lord Darrington was his father,
a most aristocratic nobleman
who was an old brute from my experience of him.
But he was of high rank, I don't deny,
and Percy had the blood of heroes in his veins.
He came to take lessons in singing.
But after a time I saw that he was in love with my mistress.
Afterward I found out that he had seen her at a concert
and had fallen in love with her.
I don't believe it.
Who could have loved that bad figure and that silly brain?
now a woman like myself, but he never cared for me, although I adored him from the first time I set eyes on his manly form.
It was her arts that captured him, else he would have turned from her to me. But he never did.
How handsome and fascinating was my hero, Percy Vane. Fair hair and blue eyes, and the figure of a lifeguardsman,
just the kind of man I liked. He was kind of a man. He was kind.
to me, for her sake, I suppose, and gave me money and presents. She said she loved him,
and used to make me sick with talking of him. I let her think I was her dear friend,
as if she had known my true feelings she would have sent me away, and then I would never have
seen my hero again. I made the best of my position, for at least I saw him as often as she did,
and that was something. They both looked on me as their friend. Had they on me as their friend? Had they
only known how I hated her and loved him.
Lord Derrington was angry with Percy for loving my mistress, and I don't wonder at it,
a low-singing woman. Percy had some money of his own inherited from his mother, and he proposed
an elopement. He said that Lord Derrington could not leave the estates away from him, and that
someday he would come in for the title. She never lived to be Lady Darrington. I was glad of that.
I should have killed her had she reached that pitch of splendor.
Her position should have been mine.
But it never was.
Well, they eloped.
After singing at a concert in St. James Hall,
he met her outside and took her to Liverpool Street Station.
I was waiting there with the luggage.
We went down to a place called Wargrove in Essex,
and the very next day they were married in the church of that parish.
I was furious, but what could I do?
had I told Lord Derrington he might have stopped the marriage, but Percy would never have forgiven me,
and I did not wish to lose sight of him.
As Mrs. Vaines made I had chances of seeing him daily, and of basking in the light of his eyes.
It was weak of me, but I loved him so dearly that I could have done anything simply to be in his presence.
But I wish now that I had prevented the marriage. Since I could not get him, I didn't see why she should
bear off the prize. But I was a girl then, and sentimental and foolish. And she was a cat, as she
always was. Afterward we went to Paris, and from that place Percy wrote to tell his grandfather that
he was married. I know he did not mention the place, for the letter was given to me to post, and I opened it.
I never gave it a thought at the moment, but afterward, Percy's mistake in not telling where the marriage
had taken place did me a lot of good.
I should not now be writing in this house,
but for that lucky omission.
Lord Darrington would have nothing to do with his son,
and there was trouble with Mr. Lockwood.
But I don't think they minded much.
Percy was wrapped up in the creature,
and she loved him in her silly, simpering way.
I pretended to be quite happy,
but I inwardly was raging all the time.
For his sake, I put up with the unpleasant position,
and I never received my reward.
Never, never, never.
Oh, how some women's hearts are broken
by the cruelty and neglect of men.
I lived with the two of them
during their married life.
A son was born, and she died.
I was glad when she died,
and I was sorry she left the boy.
Percy was wrapped up in the child
and gave him to me to nurse.
Mrs. Vane was buried in Pelle Lachais,
and then Perlachais, and then,
with myself and the baby went to Monte Carlo.
He gambled there in order to forget his grief,
though I don't see what he had to moan over,
seeing what a silly fool his late wife was.
Percy lost money and wrote to his father who declined to help him.
Then he went to Italy and wandered about.
Now that he was free I hoped to marry him.
When not nursing that horrid child,
he was called George after his maternal grandfather
and was a scrubby little beast.
Some said he was a fine child.
I could not see it myself.
He was her child,
and that was enough to make me hate him as I did.
But as I say, when not nursing him,
I devoted myself to study
so as to be worthy of the time when Percy would marry me.
I knew that the future Lady Derrington
would hold a high rank,
and I qualified myself to fill the position gracefully.
I did work.
I learned arithmetic.
and could write beautifully.
I talked Italian and French like a native.
I got an old artist to teach me to paint in watercolors,
and I bought a book which taught the manners of good society.
Also, I tried to dress well and do my hair becomingly.
Percy saw the change in me,
and congratulated me on the improvement which had taken place in me since leaving England.
Had he only known that it was for his sake I had improved?
As to that child I should have liked to drown it, or to have given it to gypsies.
As Lady Darrington I did not wish to be troubled with her brat.
Besides, Percy loved the boys so that he used to make me envious the way he nursed him.
But had I got rid of the child, and I thought of a thousand safe ways I could have done so,
I should only have been sent away, and then some woman would have got hold of him.
I thought it best to bear with my aching pain
and put up with the child so that I might be near to watch over Percy.
The end of it came in Milan.
We were stopping at the Hotel de Ville,
and there was a waiter who fell in love with me.
He was an English boy called George Rates,
a horrid, scrubby, red-haired, nasty, pale-faced creature
who worried me to death.
Besides, he was younger than I was,
and I wished for a husband to protect me.
I should have had to look after George Rates,
whereas Percy in the days to come would look after me.
Besides, I felt that it was an impertinence
for a low-waiter to expect me to marry him.
Me, who had done so much to improve myself,
and who looked forward to taking proud rank
among the British aristocracy.
At first I laughed at him,
but he became such a nuisance
that I told him plainly that I would have nothing
to do with him. He then accused me of being in love with my master. I acknowledged it proudly.
Why should I not? A woman should glory in her love. I did. I told George Rates that I worshipped
the very ground Percy walked on. I gave my passionate feelings full vent and bore him to the
ground under the storm of my indignation. He told the other servants and they insulted me,
especially the English ones, as there were two or three in the hotel.
I was persecuted, but I bore all for his dear sake.
Then it came to his ears.
Percy heard what I had said to George Rates.
He called me in.
He accused me of making him ridiculous,
of being out of my mind of a thousand and one cruel things.
I lost my head.
I told him how I loved him.
I knelt at his feet.
I implored that he would reward my mind.
my love, my long, long sufferings. He laughed in my tearful face. At that moment I hated him,
but not for long. My life was bound up in his. When he dismissed me, I thought that my heart
was broken. I was dismissed. He procured a new nurse from England, a scotch hussy, as ugly as she
was silly. I saw her often in Milan after my dismissal.
Oh, that time.
Oh, those weary days.
I wept.
I prayed.
I moaned.
I was a wreck.
With what money I had, I went to a convent near Milan and stopped there for a month.
But I could not remain away from him.
I came out.
He was gone.
I went to inquire at the hotel.
He had gone to Rome.
Afterward, a message came that all letters were to be sent to San Remo.
I determined to go to San Remo and to be near him.
I would have died, else.
George Rates, who was still in love with me, proved a willing tool.
I could not get to San Remo without money.
He offered to advance me the railway fare,
and he got me a situation in the Hotel d'Angletaire's housemaid.
He also was going there for the season as a waiter.
I said that if he took me to San Remo, I would marry him.
He did so.
and I, but that comes later. Sufficient it is to say that George believed in my promise,
and that I found myself again in the presence, the heavenly presence, of my adored Percy.
But I had only come to submit myself to fresh anguish. He saw me, but took no notice of me.
I was afraid to follow him too closely, lest he should ask the police to interfere.
George Rates was jealous, too, and I had to consider.
him as failing Percy rewarding my love, I could fall back on George.
He was always useful to supply the money for me to get back to England, where I was
certain of a situation. I handled the situation in a masterly manner, and contrived to
see Percy without his seeing me, and without exciting too openly the jealousy of George
Rates. But it was the horrid girl that caused me pain. She was one of the daughters of General
Howard, whom Percy had met at Como.
The two girls both laid themselves out to catch, my darling.
But their arts did not succeed at Como.
Jenny was the one who tried hardest to get him,
but Violet took her chance also.
When they came to San Remo, they stopped at the Hotel of Anglaterre.
I looked after their room,
and knowing what they were, I made myself their friend.
They knew me as the former nurse of Percy's horrid little son
and wondered how I came to be a housemaid.
I told some story which satisfied.
them. I forget what it was. They believed in me thoroughly, and they found out that I loved Percy.
Then they were amused, and I hated them for it. They told Percy that I was watching him,
and he came to the hotel no more. But I still pretended to be their friend for my own ends.
There was a masked ball coming off, and the Miss Howard's wished to go and be known to their father.
I entered into the spirit of the joke. I procured them two blue dollars. I procured them two blue dollars,
and each a sprig of yellow holly so that they might know one another.
They went to the ball thus disguised.
I went also, in the same dress.
I had got a third blue domino and I also wore a sprig of holly.
In my pocket I took a stiletto.
Why did I do that?
Because I was determined to kill anyone who tried to make love to my Percy.
I knew that Jenny Howard, the little cat, would try and get him to love her,
and I would have killed her with pleasure had she become Percy's bride.
As I was masked I had no fear of being discovered should I stab anyone,
and, moreover, were there trouble, the Miss Howard's being dressed as I was,
even to the sprig of yellow holly, might be accused of any crime that might happen.
Moreover, even if I killed, Jenny, I knew that the two sisters quarreled,
and that on the evidence of the holly and the domino, Violet might be charged with the crime.
Oh, I made myself quite safe.
I am a clever woman.
About the stiletto.
I received that from a low shopkeeper called Peles,
who was in love with Percy.
She and her husband kept an oil shop,
and her husband was very jealous of her.
She was madly in love with Percy,
as I found out when buying something at her shop,
and I got to know her intimately,
so that I could make use of her if the occasion arose.
I did make use of her by getting the stiletto, and I took it to the ball.
I heard Percy proposed to marry Jenny, and I was minded then to kill her.
I drew the stiletto from my breast and would have rushed forward, hoping to escape in the
confusion when I killed her. But my heart failed me. Even when she was left alone, my heart
failed me. Jenny took off her mask, and I left her sitting waiting for Percy's return.
Then I followed Percy and saw Violet join him.
I knew it was Violet, owing to the unmasking of Jenny, and moreover, I had seen Violet listening
as I was. She loved him also, the cat. However, I saw that she wanted to get Percy out of the
place by making him think she was Jenny. She did. I followed. He took her home to the gates of the
hotel and left her there. When he was coming back to the ball, I stopped him at the bottom of the
parade. There was no one in sight. It was late, and a clear moon was shining.
Percy thought I was violet whom he mistook for her sister. He addressed me in such endearing tones
as Jenny, and remonstrated so gently about what he called the rashness of following him
from the hotel that I lost my temper. I snatched off the mask and poured out my wrath.
Percy burst out laughing when he recognized me. He said, never mind what he said.
but it was an insult and my italian blood boiled in my veins i drew the stiletto and rushed on him at that moment my hand was caught from behind and i fell it was that man ireland who was then at san remo and a great friend of percy's he had wrenched the stiletto out of my hand
For a moment no one said anything, and I arose to my feet.
Ireland addressed me as Miss Howard, Miss Violet Howard.
Percy laughed again and corrected his mistake,
saying that I was a lovesick nursemaid whom he had discharged.
Then I lost my temper.
Stop.
I must say exactly how it happened.
Percy was leaning against the parapet of the parade in a careless attitude.
He did not even move when I rushed on him with a stiletto.
And had Ireland not caught my arm, I should have killed him.
Ireland said that he had followed me, thinking I was Violet Howard, to ask me to return to the hotel.
He talked some rubbish about a gentle-born English girl being out at night.
But when he found that I was only a servant, there was no more of that talk.
Poor Eliza Stokes could have been out till dawn for all these gentlemen cared.
They laughed at me, Percy leaning against the parapet, Ireland beside me, holding the still-eastern.
carelessly in his hand.
As I said, I lost my temper,
and I told Percy what I thought of that fool, Rosina Lockwood.
He lost his temper also, but that only made me more angry.
At last he dashed forward,
and I believe he would have struck me but that Mr. Ireland intervened.
I don't know exactly how it happened,
but in moving, Mr. Ireland evidently forgot how he held the stiletto,
and put out his hand with the weapon pointing outward.
In rushing on me, Percy came against it, and it ran right into his heart.
With a choking cry he fell dead.
I was terrified, and began to wring my hands.
Ireland knelt down and found that Percy was dead.
He seized my wrist and told me to hold my tongue lest I should be accused of the death.
I said it was his fault.
He replied, it was an accident.
But I had got the stiletto, I had tried to kill Percy,
and Ireland declared that if I said anything
that he would denounce me as the criminal.
I was terrified as I saw the danger in which I was placed.
Ireland suggested that we should throw the body over the parapet onto the beach
and that it would be thought robbers had killed Percy.
I agreed, and we threw the body of my darling over.
Oh, how my heart ached when I heard it fall on the cruel, cruel stones.
With Ireland, I arranged to hold a bit of my darling.
my tongue, and on his part he promised he would say nothing.
The next day the news of the discovery of the body came.
I was nearly out of my mind.
Signora Beliz, from whom I had borrowed the stiletto,
knowing of my love for Percy, and being in love with him herself
accused me of the crime. I denied it and said that if she did not hold her tongue,
I would tell her husband how she had loved Percy.
She was afraid of her husband who was a jealous brute.
So she remained quiet.
I gave her back the stiletto which I had obtained from Ireland.
We were both safe, but I was so ill that I left the hotel and returned to England.
George Rates, who never suspected my share in the death, followed.
It was at this point that George ceased reading.
He now knew the worst.
His father had died by accident, and Ireland had been the unwitting cause of his death.
Brendan wondered how the old man
could have carried the knowledge
all these years without speaking.
He determined to have an interview with him.
But at last he knew the truth
about the death in San Remo.
It inculpated no one,
and he could not see how,
according to Bodsey,
it could be connected with the murder of Mrs. Jersey.
End of Chapter 21.
Chapter 22 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This Librevox recording is in the
public domain.
22. Who Bodzie was?
George read the remainder of Mrs. Jersey's confession and then put it away.
Even when he got to the end, he could not connect the San Remo crime with that of
Amelia Square. It was in his mind to see his grandfather and tell the story to him,
backed by the production of the confession. But on second thought, he decided to see
Bodsey first. He wired for an appointment and received a reply stating that Bodsey was going
out of town at three o'clock that day, but would be in his rooms until then.
George lost no time. He called a cab, and within an hour of receiving the answer to his request,
he was on his way to Bloomsbury. On arriving, he found that the detective expected him,
and went to his room. Bodsey was still in a disturbed state, as he was most anxious to get down
the country and to help Lola out of her difficulty. He received Brendan irritably and in silence.
George saw that the man was all nerves and did not resent his sharp greeting.
He sat down and opened the conversation.
You are going down to see Lola, he asked.
Of course, I am much worried over her.
She may get into serious trouble over this freak.
Well, why not tell the judge she is insane at times,
then she will get off lightly.
Would that be true? asked the detective struck by the idea.
As true as most things,
She really is not accountable for her actions when she gets into these frenzies,
and in such a one she must have been to attempt the burglary.
Poor soul, I wonder how she is now.
Oh, she is not troubled much.
Her spirits are as good as usual.
She hardly seems to realize the enormity of her offense.
How do you know? asked Bodsey with a stare.
Because I saw her last night.
You saw her?
I did.
after I left you I took the train to Wargrove
and had an interview with her.
You might have told me, Mr. Brandon,
said Bodsey in a wounded tone.
Where would have been the use of that?
I can manage my own business, I hope.
Considering how I love her, it is my business also.
George shrugged his shoulders.
Well, you see, Bodsey, it was your intention to see Lola first.
I guessed as much, so I stole a march on you.
"'Bodsey fenced.
"'I don't see how you can say that.
"'I can.
"'You know that Lola was in this house
"'on the night the woman died.
"'I presume so since she got the confession,
"'and she must have secured it to know
"'where your parents were married.
"'Well, then, knowing that,
"'you wished to get that confession.'
"'Yes, I did,' said the detective.
"'And why not?
"'I desired to know if Mrs. Jersey
"'said anything about the San Remo crime in it.
I can tell you that. She did. I have the confession.
Bodsey bounded from his chair. Where is it? he asked.
In my rooms locked away. I do call that a shame, grumbled Bodsey. You might have trusted me,
Mr. Brandon. Might I? Would you have trusted me? I do. You know I do.
To such an extent as suits yourself. But would you have
shown me that confession had it come into your possession.
You are not showing it to me, said Bodsey evasively. That is not an answer. But I'll
show you the confession whenever you like. Come now. Would you have shown it to me?
Since you have read it, why ask me that question? snapped the detective. You know. Yes,
I know that you would have burnt the confession. I know that to have a paper in existence which sets
forth that Mr. Bodsey's true name is George Rates is not to your liking.
I never did anything to disgrace that name, Mr. Brendan.
That is between yourself and your conscience, replied George Cooley, and has nothing to do with me.
You are George Rates.
Bodsey shrugged his shoulders.
There is no use denying it, he said.
You have my wife's handwriting.
Was Mrs. Jersey really your wife?
She was. We married soon after we left San Remo. She was hard up, or she would not have married me.
And you went to the States. We did. There I took the name of Jersey, and tried a variety of things,
none of which came to any good. Then I left Eliza. Why did you do that? Because she was a devil,
said Bodsey, his face lighting up. I tried all the means in my power to make her
happy, but she was always squarling and nagging and lamenting that she had not married that
vain, your father, Mr. Brendan. Did she tell you about the murder? It wasn't a murder,
protested Bodsey. No, she did not tell me, but, from a hint or two she dropped about getting
money from Mr. Ireland, I guess that he had something to do with it. I came across to England and I saw
him. He told me the whole story. Did you get money from him?
I did not.
I am an honest man, although you do not seem to think so.
I left all that blackmailing to my wife.
She came over to get money out of Ireland.
He simply said that he would tell the whole truth
and would call the woman Velaes as a witness about the dagger.
But that woman is dead.
Oh, no, she isn't, said Bodsey coolly.
Lola told me that she was alive and still in San Remo.
she could have made things very hot for my wife but failing ireland my wife mrs jersey we will call her had another string to her bow she heard how lord derrington denied the marriage and how you were living with your grandfather lockwood
she went to darington and-i know the rest and you came to live in this house not at the time i went back to the states but as i could do nothing there i returned to england
Then I took up the private inquiry business and called myself Bodsey.
I came to see my wife.
She would not let me call myself her husband,
and as I had no great liking for her, I agreed.
I was in this house for a few weeks, and then I got my own diggings.
I saw as little of Mrs. Jersey as was possible.
Why was that?
Well, sir, replied Bodsey frankly,
I didn't hold with the annuity she was getting.
in a word you disapproved of the blackmail that's a good useful word sir said bodsey easily yes i did i never would take a penny from her and when i lived here during the few weeks i paid my board yes sir i am an honest man
george stretched out his hand and shook that of bodsey heartily i am convinced you are bodsey and i apologize for my suspicions but in
some ways, eh?
I didn't act very straight, you mean.
Well, sir, when one deals with a criminal case,
one can't be too careful.
I have had to tell lies, sir.
And I say, Mr. Brendan, cried the detective
with a burst of confidence, I would not have shown you that
agreement. I guess that Eliza would state who I was,
and I didn't wish you to think that I was connected with her.
Why not? Well, sir,
I fancied seeing what you know that you might suspect me of killing her.
No, Bodsey, as you have acted so fairly all through, I am convinced that you are innocent on that score.
But why did you say that the San Remo crime was connected with the death of Mrs. Jersey?
Bodsey opened his eyes.
Can't you see, sir?
The stiletto.
Oh, you mean that the weapon used by Lola was the same one as my father was killed with?
"'Surgeonly, Mr. Brandon,
"'it belonged to Signora Vela's the mother.
"'She gave it to Lola,
"'for I saw it in her rooms
"'before the death of Mrs. Jersey,
"'and I recognized it from the description given by my wife.
"'But there are dozens of stilettos like that one.
"'Lord Darrington showed it to me.
"'Yes, that's true enough.
"'But, you see, from what my wife told me,
"'I knew that she had got the dagger
"'from the woman Velaise.
It wasn't hard to see, when I dropped across a similar weapon in the room of a woman also called
Belize that it was the same. Now you see how it is that Lola knew so much about the death of your
father and how she and I came to talk of the matter. How did you drop on the subject in the first place?
The name was enough for me. I saw Lola, and I fell in love with her as you know. Then I remembered
the name Veles and got an introduction to you.
to her. One thing led to another until I knew the whole story, and she admitted that the
stiletto was the one with which Mr. Vane had been killed. George thought for a few minutes.
Tell me, Bodsey, he said at length. Did you suspect Lola of committing the crime?
Yes, I did, admitted Bodsey frankly. You see, she has a devil of a temper. I never knew that she
had gone to see Mrs. Jersey on that night, although I might have guessed it because of the way
she tried to learn the whereabouts of the house. You mean the crimson light? Her excuse was foolish,
I thought the other day when you stated it, said George. But when did you first suspect her?
When I picked up the stiletto, I recognized it at once. It was my intention to take it round to
her, so that she should not be incriminated, but I was so upset.
as I said the other day, that I forgot all about the matter.
When I did think, it was too late, for Darrington woke up and put on his coat.
I wondered whether he would mention the stiletto to me, but he never did.
Because he knew nothing about it, said George.
Mrs. Ward stole it as I told you.
Oh, I see how it is now, but I really did suspect Lola.
I asked her if she was in the house.
She said that she had been, although she denied it at first.
That's Lola's way, said George.
She always begins by denial.
How did you bring her to confess?
I threatened to identify the stiletto.
Then she told the truth, if it was the truth, said Baudsie doubtfully.
Oh, I think so.
I don't believe she killed the woman.
But you know her temper?
Yes, I do.
But since she has got what she wanted, the confession
there was no sense in her committing a murder.
No, I quite believe that she threw the dagger
at Mrs. Jersey's feet as she said.
It is just like one of Lola's impulse of actions.
Bodsey scratched his head.
I wonder who did kill Eliza, he muttered.
If Lola is innocent and I am innocent,
he looked at Brendan.
I can't help you, replied George, rising.
The thing is quite beyond me.
It must have been someone in the house.
No, replied Bodsey positively.
Remember Mr. Train heard a door close, the front door, sometime about half-past eleven.
That was you, was it not?
No, sir.
I did not arrive till close on twelve, and Mrs. Jersey was already dead.
The door must have been opened and closed by the murderer and he left just before I arrived.
But how could he have entered? You alone had the latch key. As to Lola, she slipped in while
Mrs. Jersey was dismissing her guests. Bodsey shook his head. I can't understand it, sir.
Of course there was another gentleman who had the house for a short time. He looked meaningly at
Brendan. George looked puzzled. What do you mean? he asked.
Well, sir, began Bodsey with his invariable for.
formula. I don't like to mention names, and I am sure what I say will go no further, but there
is Mr. Ireland. Brendan started to his feet with an agitated face. "'Ireland. Oh, no, that's
impossible,' he declared. "'Quite impossible. Why should he have a latch-key?'
"'After your grandfather's death, he was in possession of the house for a time, and the
keys would be with him. In handing them to Lord Darrington's agent, he might
have forgotten one. It's improbable. I don't think so. It was a chance, I think, at first,
but when he knew that Mrs. Jersey occupied the house, he might have found the latchkey useful to
see her when he felt inclined. I dare say she tried to get money out of him again. But he refused
her. He did once, said Bodsey meaningly. But Mr. Ireland was not so young as he had been,
and dreaded lest his.
Accident should be known.
It was an accident, said George.
Much as I deplore the death of my father,
yet I acquit Ireland of all blame.
But he didn't know she lived here
until Miss Bull told him.
Oh, yes, he did.
I'm sure Mrs. Jersey would let him know
that she was just round the corner.
She always kept in touch with useful friends.
But why should he kill her so suddenly?
well he might have heard that she had written out a confession or even about Lord
Derrington's visit and then he would come round to ask her if she had incriminated him in
her confession he would ask her for a sight of it not having it for she found the blue envelope
empty after Lola left she would deny that she had it the stiletto left by Lola would be on
the table what was more natural than for Ireland to pick it up and kill her in a sudden access of
dread. Remember
Mrs. Jersey could accuse him of the
crime, as it was known that Ireland
was jealous of your mother's marriage to vain.
Oh, there was plenty of motive.
As to his having refused
her before, he was getting old,
and thinking he might be brought to justice
by her confession, for he never
knew when she would die or into whose
hands it would fall he might have lost his nerve.
It strikes me that if he struck the blow he had a
great deal of nerve, said George.
dryly, but you go on a lot of suppositions. You suppose that Ireland retained a latch-key of
this house, that he knew Mrs. Jersey had written out a confession, that he knew my grandfather
was coming on that night. In fact, that's all theory, Bodsey. I do not believe Mr. Ireland
had anything to do with the matter. Then who had? asked the detective. What would you say to
Marjorie? What? The niece? That half-witted girl?
"'Exactly, half-witted.
"'She is more like an animal than anything human.
"'She gets these sudden fits of rage.
"'When Miss Bull fainted, Marjorie rushed in
"'and threatened me with her fists.
"'Seeing what an uncontrollable temper she had,
"'it occurred to me that she might have killed her aunt.
"'But Miss Bull says that the aunt locked the girl in her room.
"'Of course, but Miss Bull may know the truth
"'and may be shielding Marjorie.
"'She seems to have a stranger.
affection for the girl.
What if Mrs. Jersey, to vary the story, found Marjorie down the stairs after Lola was gone,
and instead of rebuking her, as Miss Bull said in the passage,
at eleven o'clock, mind?
Later, I think, said George quickly.
You did not arrive till nearly twelve, and the woman was just dead.
I don't think a few minutes would make much difference, said Bodsey quietly.
But go on, sir.
Let me hear your theory.
Well, I fancy that Mrs. Jersey caught Marjorie down the stairs,
and took her into her own room to rebuke her quietly,
so that the rest of the house might not hear.
Also, she would be anxious to learn if the girl had overheard her conversation with Lola.
If Marjorie had, she would assuredly have told Miss Bull.
Mrs. Jersey would be afraid of that,
and I dare say she stormed at Marjorie to make her speak.
But there could have been no row, sir. No one heard a disturbance.
Oh, the borders are old and sleep lightly.
But I am bound to say that I did not hear a disturbance myself, said George reflectively.
Mrs. Jersey may have argued quietly.
Then, as you say, the stiletto was on the table.
Marjorie, goaded into action might with the sudden rage of a dumb animal might have.
Well, it's not impossible.
but about the door closing when marjorie saw what she had done pursued george still trying to guess what had taken place her first impulse would be to run away she would steal out and open the door i am pretty sure miss bull was on the watch and saw her
She would draw the girl back and close the door at half-past eleven as train heard.
Then she would pacify Marjorie and lock her in her bedroom after previously instructing her what to say next morning.
That is what I believe, Bodsey.
It's a very pretty case, murmured the detective, and things might have happened as you say.
But if it is the case, there is not much chance of learning the truth.
Both Marjorie and Miss Bull will be silent.
and after all my theory regarding Ireland is just as good Mr. Brendan.
George rose to go.
Stick to your theory and I'll stick to mine, he said smiling.
But what about Lola?
Well, sir, I'll go down with Kulaski and see her.
We will do whatever we can to get her out of her trouble.
And you, sir?
Oh, I shall have nothing more to do with Lola.
Take her away to the States as your wife, Bonsie,
and I will get my grandfather to give you the thousand pounds to start life on.
It's very good of you, sir, said Bodsey gratefully.
And will you try and persuade her to marry me?
Yes, she knows, as I told her, that, register or no register,
my grandfather intends to recognize me as his heir.
Therefore she is certain as she may well be, that I shall marry Miss Ward.
She will gradually get over her fancy for me and will be quite content
to take you.
Bodsey sighed.
I hope so.
I love that woman, sir.
Yet she is a violent woman,
almost as violent as your first wife.
Yes, assented Bodsey rather dolefully.
It seems as though I was always to fall
into the hands of violent women.
What do you intend to do now, sir?
Leave matters alone, Bodsey.
I don't want to learn who killed Mrs. Jersey.
Now I know about my father's marriage
I shall change my name
Take my rightful one
And have done with all this crime and mystery
The Yellow Holly can go hang for me
End of Chapter 22
Chapter 23 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus hume
This Librevox recording is in the public domain
23
The Turning of the Lane
The proverb says that
Good Luck comes to those who know
how to wait. It had certainly come to George Brendan, or as he was now called, George Vane.
After the interview with Bodsey, the young man called at St. Giles Square and related to his
grandfather all he had learned. The old man was much astonished.
I don't think Ireland was to blame, he said, not even in holding his tongue.
After all, the thing was an accident, although undoubtedly that woman was the cause. Have you seen Ireland?
"'Not yet, but I will soon.'
"'Then tell him from me that I don't consider he was responsible,
"'and that I quite believe, from what I know of Mrs. Jersey,
"'that he has told the entire truth.'
"'I will, sir,' answered George.
"'I suppose you mean that if he really committed the crime
"'with the malice aforethought, Mrs. Jersey would have blackmailed him.'
"'Lord Darrington nodded approvingly.
"'You are what the Scotch call quicken the uptake, George.'
"'That is what I mean.
"'Mrs. Jersey must have been afraid for herself,
"'or she would never have kept her claws off Ireland's money.
"'She had plenty of mine,' added the old gentleman grimly.
"'Bad lot, George.'
"'I quite agree with you, sir.
"'Poor Bodsey was honest, however.'
"'Well,' Lord Darrington did not assent immediately to this.
"'If Bodsey had been really honest,
"'he would have asked me to be silent on the matter.'
and need not have used threats, however unwilling he was to carry them out.
No, George. Bodsey is like the serpent in the bamboo, straight so long as it is kept in check.
I suppose he will marry the girl. I think so. He is madly in love with her. I promised that you
would give him a thousand pounds if he went to America.
The deuce you did? said Darrington wrathfully.
Why not, sir? rejoined Brendan calmly.
We want him out of our lives.
He knows too much.
Better sent him abroad
so that he may not make any remark
about this unpleasant family history.
Lord Darrington winced.
George certainly had rather
an unpleasant way of putting things.
However, the old man
silently acknowledged the justice of the speech.
You are right, he said.
But Bodsey ought to do something for his money.
You mean that he ought to discover the assassin.
"'Yes, I do.
"'Whosoever killed that woman should be brought to justice, George.'
"'Brendon looked down.
"'I think it will be best to let sleeping dogs lie, sir,' he said significantly.
"'Because of some scandal,' said Darrington looking hard at him.
"'Are you alluding to the possibility of Mrs. Ward having killed her?'
"'At this supposition George laughed right out.
"'No, sir.
I don't think Mrs. Ward would go so far as that.
She would, were there no law, to restrain her?
I dare say.
She has the instincts of a female despot.
But as there is a law, she would not jeopardize her neck.
No, I mean Ireland.
Darrington sat up.
Nonsense.
Do you mean to say he is guilty?
I don't think so.
But Bodsey has an idea.
And George related the story of the detective.
"'Darrington grunted in a disgusted manner.
"'The man's a born idiot,' he said.
"'Why should Ireland run the risk of getting his neck into a noose for a second crime?
"'If he thought that she would leave a confession behind inculpating him,
"'he would have waited to make certain.
"'I don't believe there is a word of truth in the matter.
"'However, when you see him, you can question him about his doings on that night.'
"'I shall certainly do that,' replied.
replied Brendan quietly.
But failing Ireland, and his guilt is presumed by Bodsey,
there remains Marjorie.
That idiot of a girl?
Yes?
George detailed his reasons for believing in Marjorie's guilt.
Again, Darrington sniffed.
It's all supposition.
If the girl came into the room,
if the stiletto were on the table,
if Mrs. Jersey scolded her into a fury.
Pa, I don't believe it.
and you really wish to find the assassin i should like to know out of mere curiosity but if it is your opinion that things should be left as they are why bodsey can take his thousand pounds in sale for america whenever he chooses
but i grudge setting the rascal up in business added derrington who was still sore about the way in which he had been threatened after this conversation george took his leave dorothy was out of town so he could not visit her
after the interview with ireland in derrington's library mrs ward had found it convenient to go down the country she felt that she was in an unpleasant position not that there was any danger of her being accused of murdering vain
but if the police got hold of the story they might make inquiries in fact they certainly would make inquiries and then the disagreeable fact would come out that miss bull was her sister mrs ward knew that she had not behaved well to jenny and that-and that she had not behaved well to jenny and that
that if the truth were known, her friends would blame her.
As Mrs. Ward did not like blame and dislike to have her actions criticized,
she went down the country saying to Dorothy she desired a change of air.
Lord Derrington wrote a note to Mrs. Ward after George had departed.
I'll ask her to come up, said Derrington grimly, as he sealed the letter.
George will return in three days with the copy of the marriage certificate,
and with news of how that case has been disposed of.
mrs ward shall apologize to him and formally consent to the marriage dorothy shall come also and walter derrington rubbed his hands chuckling he was rather anxious to see walter's face when he heard that he was no longer the air
meantime george went with kalaski and bodsey to chelmsford to see after lola calaski was in despair as if lola received a term of imprisonment his ballet would be brought to an untimely end
Now that Lola was out of the bill, the hall was not so full as usual, and Kulaski foresaw that if Lola did not come back he would lose money.
He therefore went down, prepared to spend a large sum to set her free.
But there was no need for fear. Lola was brought up before the magistrates, and evidence was given as to her excitable nature.
The old sexton produced the torn register and detailed how he had been assaulted. He thought the lady was queer himself.
Calaski went into the box, also Bodsey and George.
The result of their evidence as to Lola's foreign ways
was that the magistrate admonished her and inflicted a small fine.
This was triumphantly paid by Kulaski who returned to town
with his principal dancer under his jealous eye.
More than that, Kulaski made quite a story out of the events.
It was known in London that Lola Veles had been arrested,
as all the London papers copied the account of the trial
which had appeared in the country press.
Kalaski put it about
that Lola had gone off her head
owing to grief for her dying mother.
Few people believed this,
but the public was so pleased
to see the favorite again
that she was saluted with cheers.
In a few days,
everyone forgot about the matter,
which after all did not amount to much.
Luckily, it was not stated
why Lola had wished to destroy the register.
There were several marriage entries on the page,
and no one could say which of these she wished,
obliterated. Besides, Brendan got the magistrate to suppress the book and not let the press
report the matter. He accomplished this by telling the magistrate exactly how the matter stood.
So the judicial authority used his power and the fourth estate quailed. Everything was
settled in a most satisfactory manner. Later on, Brendan had copies made of the marriage
entry of Percy Vane, Bachelor, and Rosina Lockwood Spinster, and brought them to his grandfather.
The old man read them carefully, then laid down the paper with a sigh of relief.
"'I never thought I would be pleased to see that in black and white,' he said.
"'And are you pleased now?'
"'Of course I am. You are to revive the glories of the Darrington Vane family.
They have faded of late, but you, sir.'
He clapped his grandson on the back, and George laughed at the old man's enthusiasm.
There is one strange thing, he said after a pause.
Seeing that my parents were married so near London,
I cannot understand how the marriage was not discovered before.
Derrington looked thoughtful also.
It is strange, he admitted.
But you remember the tale of Poe's purloined letter?
People always look in the most unlikely places first,
and because the church was so near to town,
and nobody had replied to the advertisement,
they, the searchers, I mean, must have thought that the marriage took place in some
Moreland parish where people never looked at the journals. It was the very closeness of
Wargrove Church to London, George, that prevented the certificate being discovered sooner.
I suppose you are right, said Brendan, but it does seem strange. Everything in life is strange,
said Darrington. And not the least strange thing is that I kick out Walter to make room for
you. By the way, George, he will be here soon. Have you told him? Yes, and he wants to see you
about the matter. I said that he could in my presence. What he has to say I don't know.
There is another reason for your remaining, George. Mrs. Ward and her daughter are coming here.
She won't be pleased to see me, said Brendan. Oh, I think she will. After Ireland put her in a
corner she grew afraid, and now she would like to see the matter settled at any price.
When she is your mother-in-law, George, keep her out of your house or there will be trouble.
You must stand sentinel, sir. She won't come near me then.
Eagad, that's true. She is afraid of me. I hold that stiletto, you see, and I know about her
doings at San Remo. The Minx, said Darrington with great vigor. I wonder that
her daughter is so charming.
So good you mean, said George fondly,
whereat Darrington gave a sigh.
Oh, love, love, and again, love, said he,
it seems I am going to have a most sentimental time with you, too.
Be at rest, sir.
Neither Dorothy nor I am sentimental.
We are too serious for that.
That's worse.
I hate serious lovers.
"'Then we will be gay,' said George with a laugh.
"'Don't overdo it,' replied Darrington with a kindly smile.
"'Be as you are, both of you, and I shall not complain.'
"'Ah, here is Walter.
"'Well, my boy, have you come to see your new cousin?'
Walter Vane entered the library with an injured air.
He looked neater and more fragile than ever, and wonderfully old, considering his ears.
"'Darrington looked from him to the fine figure of George
"'with a queer look in his eyes.
"'No one would ever take you for relatives,' he said.
"'Why, they say we are like one another,' said Walter.
"'Mrs. Ward remarked on the likeness when we dined with her.
"'I wondered why we should resemble one another,
"'but it is explained now.'
"'And Walter cast a not unkindly look in his cousin's direction.
"'Darrington snarled.
George is like me, and you take after your father, Walter,
who was a shrimp if ever there was one?
George hastened to the rescue of his cousin.
It seems to me that the conversation is getting somewhat personal, he remarked.
Walter, I hope you bear me no grudge for stepping into your shoes.
Walter took the hand in his own limp grasp.
Well, of course it is hard on a fellow, he answered in a rather whining manner,
but you and I got on well together,
so I would rather it was you than another fellow.
That train friend of yours, for instance,
he's such a cad.
But a very good fellow for all that, said Brendan dryly.
Oh, people always say that of a fellow who has nothing to recommend him, retorted Walter.
But as you are the head of the family, I am glad you are not a bounder.
That's very kind of you, said George dryly.
"'And very silly of Walter,' growled the grandfather.
"'What do you mean, sir, by talking rubbish?
"'Is it likely that any one of my blood would be what you call a bounder?'
"'No,' said Walter, pacifying the old man.
"'I only mean—'
"'Never mind what you mean. It's sure to be something foolish.'
"'This,' said Derrington, pointing with his cane to George,
"'is the future head of our family.'
Pay him all respect.
We'll get on capitally, said George, clapping Walter on the back.
And what about my income? asked Walter.
You will have what you have now, said Darrington.
Don't bother me about the matter.
You and George can settle it between you.
Considering how he had been ousted, Walter really took things very calmly.
But he had not enough vigor to protest.
He sighed.
his grandfather had cowed him and walter profoundly admired his newly-found cousin who did not hesitate to stand up to the despot he began to think it was a good thing that george had come into the family he would at least save him walter from constant bullying
this interesting family council was interrupted by the entrance of mrs ward as pert and pretty as ever she had quite recovered her spirits and knowing that derrington would say nothing about the card-cheating or about the card-cheating or about the
San Remo matter, she was prepared to be as insolent as she dared. But she was quite determined
not to cross swords again with the old man. Like a burnt child, she dreaded the fire.
Darrington was altogether too much, even for her. As it was, she came sailing in with the
prettiest air in the world, and held out both hands, her head on one side like a sick canary.
"'My dear Lord Darrington, how well you are looking. How?'
Here her astonished eyes fell on George.
"'You,' said Mrs. Ward aghast.
"'Mr. Brendan, and here?'
"'Not Mr. Brendan,' said Darrington, enjoying her confusion.
"'But my grandson, George Vane.'
Dorothy, who had remained below to give some instructions to the footman,
entered the room just in time to hear this announcement. She flew to her lover.
My dearest George, I am glad, glad, so glad. And before them all, she kissed him.
Mrs. Ward screamed, Dorothy, what manners? Very good manners, said Darrington coolly, seeing that they are
natural. Well, Mrs. Ward, George, my grandson and a
"'Hare,' added the old man with emphasis,
"'has something to say to you.'
"'Really? I shall be most happy to hear it.'
George took his cue.
"'I have to ask you for the hand of your daughter, Dorothy,'
he said, looking very proud and manly as he stood with the girl's hand within his own.
"'Really?' said Mrs. Ward again.
"'I don't know. I fancied that Walter, you see.'
and she cast her eyes on the neat little man oh i scratch said walter in his elegant way there's no fighting against george he has all the luck you call him george why shouldn't i he's my cousin the head of the house
when i go to my long home finished errington well mrs ward do you consent to the match do mother said
said Dorothy imploringly.
Mrs. Ward sank into a chair
and pretended to be overcome by emotion.
In fact, she did this merely to gain time
as she did not wish to answer too quickly.
It was plain that Walter,
whom she had wished Dorothy to marry,
took, in her own phraseology, a back seat.
George was promoted, Vice Walter resigned.
George would be Lord Darrington
and would have the money.
He was an obstinate man, certainly,
and would be difficult to manage.
Still, she might be able to get the better of him.
She could always work him through Dorothy,
if Dorothy would only get over her absurd notions of religion
and all that sort of thing.
On the whole, Mrs. Ward thought it was best to agree.
Knowing what Darrington knew,
and how obstinate both lovers were,
she did not see very well what else she could do.
However, she made the most of her compulsory surrender.
After a few sighs and having squeezed a few tears,
she cried to her daughter in a muffled voice expressive of deep emotion.
Dorothy, my dear child!
Dorothy, with a look at George, went and knelt down by her mother's chair.
She was not the dupe of this play-acting,
but knowing that her mother would insist on making an effective scene,
wished to get it over as speedily as possible.
Mrs. Ward put her hand on Dorothy's shoulder in a maternal,
manner. Do you love George, she asked. Yes, said Dorothy simply. You know I love him.
George, do you love my child? I do, replied George curtly, while Darrington surveyed this
touching scene with a grim smile. He always loved to watch the antics of Mrs. Ward. She believed in them
so thoroughly herself, and they deceived no one gifted with ordinary intelligence. It is home,
"'Hard,' said Mrs. Ward with a deep sigh,
"'to see a child leave its parent.
"'But you love her, you have won her.'
"'Here she rose, and raising Dorothy from her knees,
"'gave her to George.
"'Take her, George, and with her, take a mother's blessing.'
"'The idea of Mrs. Ward's blessing was too much for Walter,
"'and he went off into a shriek of laughter
"'which ended in his leaving the room.
"'George was quite unmoved.
"'He thanked Mrs. Ward and kissed Dorothy.
then he took her to a distant seat near the window where they could talk sensibly lord derrington was left to console the afflicted mother this he proceeded to do immediately
egad you did it well he said looking at the pretty woman i don't believe miss terry or mrs siddance could have done it better mrs ward flushed a little but still kept up the pose nature spoke my dear lord derrington i am aware that you consider
nature vulgar.
I was not aware that I did.
I see so little of it
that your scene touched me,
positively touched me.
Mrs. Ward saw that it was useless
to hide the truth from this keen-eyed old man
any longer.
Oh, don't be nasty,
she said plaintively, and wrestled up to him.
Of course I wanted Dorothy to marry Walter,
but George does just as well.
I don't think she has made a bad exchange,
Mrs. Ward.
He's good-looking enough, said the little woman,
but so serious and dull.
Of course, I suppose you'll allow him an income.
He shall have all that is necessary
to keep up his position as my heir,
said Darington dryly.
I hope he and Dorothy will live here.
The house is big enough.
And they won't have to pay any rent,
which is always a consideration, isn't it?
Oh, I hope, dear Dorothy will
be happy. I shall see much of her, much of my darling child.
No, said Darrington, thinking it just as well to nip these plans in the bud.
You care very little about Dorothy, and you don't like George.
When they are married, you must stop away as much as is consistent with your feelings.
I'll do what I like, said Mrs. Ward, beginning to tap her foot.
No, I don't think you will. You threatened me in this.
room. I was only playing a game, protested Mrs. Ward.
Well, I can play a game also. Mrs. Jersey has left behind her a confession in which she
details how you managed to cheat your sister, Miss Bull. If you don't leave that couple severely
alone, I shall show the confession to Dorothy. You would never be so cruel. Oh, yes, I would,
replied Darrington, who had not the slightest intention of fulfilling his threat.
"'I never did anything to my sister.
Mrs. Jersey tells lies.'
Darrington made a gesture of disgust.
"'There, there,' he said.
"'What is the use of talking further?
Things are settled.
When Dorothy and George are married,
I'll see what I can do for you.'
Mrs. Ward's face became wreathed with smiles.
She was such a frivolous, heartless little woman
that she could change from one mood to another
with wonderful rapidity.
Oh, thank you, dear Lord
Darrington, she said artlessly
and pressing his arm.
I know you are the most generous of men.
But I really can't stop talking here all day.
She rustled over to Dorothy.
My darling, I must go and do some shopping.
No, you can stay here.
I will call again in an hour.
George, she presented her cheek.
You can kiss your mother-in-law.
George did so delicately, so as not to spoil the tint of the cheek.
Mrs. Ward departed.
He's like a block of wood, she said to herself.
Never did a man kiss me so coldly before.
Ah, the bear!
End of Chapter 23.
Chapter 24 of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
24. A startling surprise.
Having thus settled matters in a satisfactory manner with Mrs. Ward and Dorothy, George sought out Ireland the next day. He passed a delicious hour with Dorothy, and they renewed the vows they had made when there was little chants of a bright future. Now the future was altogether bright, and the two built castles in the air. George was to marry Dorothy. They were to take up their residence with Lord Darrington, and George was to enter Parliament on the first opportunity.
"'But you must not neglect your literary work,' said Dorothy.
"'The novel must be finished.'
"'I hope that many novels will be finished,' said George, laughing.
"'I will be like Beaconsfield, and write novels between miles of politics.
"'It will be an amusement.'
"'Which will be the amusement?' asked Dorothy.
"'Both. Politics is an amusing game,
"'and when one has time to write what one pleases,
and at the pace one pleases, that is amusing also.
You will be my inspiration.
My Egeria.
That is very like Beaconsfield, replied Miss Ward.
He always called some unknown woman his Egeria.
I am more lucky.
I know who my Egeria is.
More talk of this light and fanciful kind passed.
It would have sounded foolish to sensible people,
but George and his beloved were so happy that they talked
nonsense out of sheer lightness of heart.
At the end of the hour
Mrs. Ward carried off Dorothy
and George took leave of his grandfather.
It was the next
day that he went to see Ireland.
At the door he was informed
that Ireland had been very ill with his heart
and that the doctor had been called in.
Nevertheless, Ireland
would not obey the advice of his physician
and stop in bed. He was up
and dressed as usual, and in his study.
George entered
the large bare room papered with
the gaudy advertisements and saw his former guardian seated at his desk as usual.
The man looked very ill. His large, placid face was extremely pale. There were dark circles
under his eyes, and he even seemed to have grown lean. His clothes hung loosely on him,
and he did not rise when George entered. The young man knew that Ireland must be ill to fail in
this courtesy, as he was extremely punctilious. "'Excuse me, George,' he said,
with an attempt at cheerfulness.
But I am not so well as I might be.
You are looking ill, very ill, said George, taking his seat.
Ireland nodded.
I can't live long, he remarked in his heavy voice.
So the doctor informs me.
My heart is extremely weak.
I may die at any moment.
George was shocked.
It's not so bad as that, I hope, he said.
It's as bad.
as it well can be. For the last few days I have deviated sadly from my usual habits.
I have not taken a walk, and my system of life is quite upset. It's the beginning of the end.
He paused and sighed. You are looking well, George. I have every reason to. Mrs. Ward has
consented to my marriage. With her daughter? How is that? Well, well,
the church where my parents were married has been discovered.
Ireland looked interested.
That is good news.
Where were they married?
In More Grove Church, it is a parish in Essex, an hour's journey from town.
Quite a small place.
Ireland made the same remark that George himself had made.
Strange, he said, that being so near the town the place was not discovered before.
I have no doubt that your advertisement set many people hunting.
Well, I'm glad that the marriage has been proved at last,
both for your sake and injustice to the woman I loved,
to her dear memory.
She was Rosina Vane after all.
That has been proved beyond a doubt.
My grandfather has seen the copy of the certificate and now holds it.
Is he pleased?
Very pleased.
He is now as a child.
friendly toward me as he has been hitherto hostile.
Ireland nodded, breathing heavily.
I thought he would be.
He and I had a long talk about you on the day I called.
That was when I saw Mrs. Ward and...
You can go on, said George, seeing his hesitation.
I know the whole story.
What story?
asked Ireland suspiciously.
The story of what happened at San Remo.
Mrs. Ward, I know, was Violet Howard, and her sister Jenny is Miss Bull.
Yes. Poor Jenny. She was the better of the two. And now she drags out a miserable life in a London lodging house.
While, Violet, who is a bad woman. And the mother of Dorothy, interrupted George imperiously.
Say no more, sir. You are quite right. As I can't say good of the woman, let me see.
say no bad. Well, you know how she loved your father. I think she flirted with him,
but it was Jenny who really loved. And look at her reward, said Ireland with a deep sigh.
Those who tried to do their best always come off worst. I loved your mother, George,
and I have been a lonely man all my life. It was a sad case. George wished to get at the truth,
but he was so sorry for Ireland, who had passed so many miserable years that he did not like
to inflict more pain. Nevertheless, it was necessary to learn if Ireland had really visited
Mrs. Jersey on that night, so as to set Bodsey's mind at rest. If George did not learn the
truth, Bodsey might attempt the discovery, and he would handle the old man in a much worse
manner than George was likely to do. While pondering how he could set about his unpleasant task,
George was saved from making the first step, always the most difficult, by an observation from Ireland which paved the way to an explanation.
How did you discover the church?
He asked idly.
In a rather queer way, Lola Veles.
Ireland opened his eyes which had been closed and looked up.
Who is Lola Veles? he asked anxiously.
She is a dancer whom I helped.
Oh, quite in a proper way, Mr. Ireland.
you know the name.
Ireland, contrary to George's expectation, nodded.
There was a woman in San Remo about the time of your father's death.
She was called Veles and was in love with him.
He seems to have been a fascinating man, said George, smiling to said Ireland at his ease.
But this Lola is the daughter of the woman you mention.
It was she who found the church.
By this time Ireland was quite awake and keenly anxious for,
for details.
How did she learn its name?
He demanded quickly.
She found it in the confession of Mrs. Jersey.
Ireland snapped the paper cutter he was holding
and leaning back in his chair looked anxiously at George.
What do you mean?
Well, replied the young man,
keeping his eyes fixed on Ireland's face.
It seems that Mrs. Jersey left a confession behind her
as to what took place at San Remo.
Who has that confession?
i have i got it from lola and how did she manage to obtain it for answer george related how lola had called to see mrs jersey and how she had managed to steal the confession
it was from reading it finished george that she learned of the church in which my parents were married desiring that i should marry her and thinking i would not do as were my birth proved she went to the church to destroy the registers
she was caught with the torn leaves and arrested arrested yes i wonder you did not see the case reported in the papers i have been too ill to read the papers lately said ireland looking round looking round looking round the case reported in the papers lately i have been too ill to read the papers lately said ireland looking
the room in rather a helpless way and none of my servants told me what happened oh lola was let off with a small fine she is now back dancing at her music-hall she gave the confession to me did anyone else see it the authorities
no you can set your mind at rest mr ireland i got it from lola before she was taken to prison no one has seen it but myself and lord darrington
Ireland drew a long breath of relief.
You made a strange remark just now, George,
he said not looking at the young man.
You told me to set my mind at rest.
Why did you say that?
I have read the confession, said George quietly.
Mr. Ireland rose from his chair and began to pace the room.
He seemed so weak that George wished him to return,
but the old man waved his hand impatiently.
It's all right.
it's all right, he said then stopped opposite to George.
Then you know.
I know that my father's death was due to an accident.
What?
Did that wretched woman tell the truth?
She told the truth.
And she did not accuse me of having murdered your father.
No, she did not.
I suppose she thought it was as well to go to her long home
with as few sins as possible on her conscience.
But she certainly exonerated.
you. Thank God for that, said Ireland, and returned to his seat. Then he looked at his
visitor in a piteous manner. George, he said in faltering tones, I have suffered greatly on account
of that most unhappy accident. I'm sure you must have, sir, but don't let it worry you anymore.
It was an accident, and both Lord Darrington and I heartily forgive you for having been the unconscious
cause of my father's death.
Ireland nodded.
Thank God again, he said solemnly.
Your father and I were not very good friends, as I found it difficult to forgive him for having
taken from me the woman I loved, but at San Remo we got on better together.
I stifled my resentment so that I might see as much of you as possible, George.
Knowing that I was not on good terms with vain, I thought that Mrs. Jersey might have
accused me of the crime. She did try to get money out of me. So Bodsey told me.
Bodsey? Who is he? I forget you don't know. He is a private inquiry agent who has been
looking after the case on behalf of Lord Derrington. I learned from the confession of Mrs. Jersey
that he is her husband. George Rates. I remember. She told me she married him and went to
America. It was after her return from America that she tried to get money out of me. I refused,
not that I did not realize the danger to which she could expose me, but I knew that if I once
yielded I would be in her power. Besides, I had a defense, as she got the stiletto from the woman
Veles. And it was with that same stiletto that Mrs. Jersey was killed. By whom? asked Ireland. Did her
husband. No, we do not know who killed her. Perhaps you may know. I. Ireland looked genuinely surprised.
No, how should I know? Well, said George rather awkwardly. It seems that Bodsey has got it into his head that you knew about this confession.
I did not. That you were afraid it would be published after her death, and that you went to the house on that night to get her.
I did not. How could I have entered the house? Baudsie thinks you had a latch key.
No, all the keys were handed to Lord Darrington's agent when the house was sold.
In plain words, George, this man, Bodsey, rates, whatever he calls himself, accuses me of the
murder. He doesn't exactly accuse you, but... I don't know what else you would call his statements
but accusations, retorted Ireland with some heat, but I never was near the house. I certainly thought
that Mrs. Jersey might leave some such confession, but I never asked her about it. I never thought
that such a healthy woman would die before me, and I knew that sooner or later my bad heart would
carry me off in spite of the regularity of my life. Then you cannot guess who killed her. No, I was never
near the house. I was in bed and asleep. My servants will tell you so. I need not ask them,
said George quickly. I never thought you were guilty, and I only came to receive your assurance
so that I might tell Bodsey and prevent him troubling you. If Bodsey comes here, I'll soon make
short work of him, said Ireland sharply. I am not afraid. You need not be, Mrs. Jersey's own
confession exonerates you. I don't mind even that. I would have faced the worst had it to be
faced. I never was a coward, except in one thing. He paused and looked timidly at George.
I shrank from telling you how I was the unhappy cause of your father's death. You were not the
cause, in my opinion. Mrs. Jersey was the cause. Well, I thought you would shrink from me, did you know
all. I do know all, and I do not shrink from you, replied George, leaning across the desk to shake
Ireland's hand. It was a pure accident, and has been related by your enemy. I am so glad the truth is
known to you at last, faltered the old man, and that you see how unconsciously I caused the death.
You are her son, George, the son of the only woman I ever loved. Aultered the old man. Aftor. Aft that you see how unconsciously I caused.
the woman for whose sake I have remained lonely all these years.
Had you condemned me?
His emotion prevented him from saying more.
George grew alarmed by his pallor.
Please think no more of the matter, Mr. Ireland.
He said, you are ill.
Go and lie down.
Yes, I'll lie down.
Ireland leaned heavily on George's arm.
I shall lie down forever.
But I am glad you.
you know. I am glad
you are not angered.
We are the best of friends,
Mr. Ireland. You have
always been kind to me.
And I am sure my dead
mother blesses you for all your goodness
to her orphan boy.
Rosina,
Rosina, murmured Ireland.
How I loved her.
You have her eyes, George,
and her kind nature.
Come, let me get to bed.
soon the curtain will drop i am afraid my visit has been too much for you no i am glad you came i am glad you spoke out i always intended to do so but i feared lest you should blame me
by this time they were ascending the stairs george conducted the old man to his room and sent for the doctor ireland undressed and got to bed then he insisted he insisted that he was sending the stairs george conducted the old man to his room and sent for the doctor ireland undressed and got to bed then he insisted
on George leaving him.
But you are ill, protested the young man.
I am dying, but what of that?
I am glad to die.
I shall meet Rosina again after long, long years of sorrow.
Go, George.
We understand one another, and you have forgiven me.
There is no more to be said.
There is nothing to forgive, replied George softly.
then to humor his old guardian he departed.
A strong grip of the hand was exchanged between them.
George left the room and saw Ireland lying as still as any corpse.
Only his lips moved, and they murmured continuously.
Rosina, Rosina.
He was true to the woman he loved, to the very end.
George left the house as there was nothing he could do,
but he intended to call in again.
meanwhile he repaired to amelia square to see bodsey derrington wished him to tell the detective to stop looking after the case and discharge him from his employment in his pocket george had a check for one thousand pounds and when this was paid the whole case was to be relegated to obscurity
now that derrington was reconciled to his grandson he was anxious for obvious reasons that the sordid tragedy of mrs jersey's death should not come to light he had not played a very respectable part in it himself and moreover he did not wish that confession published
it would only be a case of washing the family linen in public and both george and he agreed that this was undesirable the sooner bodsey married lola and went to america the better derrington thought
and for his own sake bodsey would hold his tongue seeing what a close connection he was of the dead woman bodsey was at home and saw george at once he looked rather excited and could hardly keep his seat well mr brendon he asked what is it
"'I should rather ask you that,' said George.
"'You seem excited.'
"'Not very.
Only I have been fortunate in some business and—'
"'What is the business?'
"'I'll tell you that later.
"'What is yours?'
"'A pleasant one,' rejoined George.
"'Here is the check for one thousand pounds which my grandfather promised you.
"'Mary Lola and go to the States and stop searching for the assassin of Mrs. Jersey.'
"'Thank you.
replied Bodsey taking the check eagerly.
Your grandfather is a prince, Mr. Brendan.
As to the case, why should I stop searching?
You will never find the assassin.
Pardon me, said Bodsey in high glee.
I have found the assassin.
Yes, as George uttered an ejaculation.
Miss Bull killed Mrs. Jersey.
End of Chapter 24.
of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
This LeBrovoc's recording is in the public domain.
25. The Truth
George stared at the triumphant detective in surprise.
It seemed impossible that what he stated could be true.
Miss Bull was the very last person whom Brendan would have accused.
No one had been more candid than she had been,
and no one at the time of the discovery of the crime had done more to help the detectives.
You must mean Marjorie, said George after a time.
No, I don't, replied Bodsey in a determined voice.
I mean that little white old woman with the black eyes, Miss Bull, or as you know her, Miss Jenny Howard.
But what reason?
Ah, that's a long story. She shall tell you herself.
Have you had her arrested?
Not yet, but she will be arrested before she.
the end of the day, I have already communicated with Scotland Yard.
George rose and walked to the window. He felt irritable and upset now that the truth had come to
light. He wished that Bodsey had not been so confoundly interfering, and the detective's
next words annoyed him still further. It was your idea about Marjorie that put me on the scent,
he said with great complacency. Though, to be sure, I had my suspicions before. It
was to watch Miss Bull that I came here. What made you think that she was guilty? She has confessed,
in the calmest manner too, that, I mean before, why did you suspect her? Well, it seemed to me that
she was the only person who could have killed Eliza. She and Eliza hated one another because of
their mutual love for your father. George groaned, what a lot of trouble. What a lot of trouble.
his father had caused with his handsome looks and charming manners.
Even after his death, the fatal attraction he exercised seemed to bring about disaster.
She did not kill Mrs. Jersey on that account, he said.
Wait till you here. She will tell you. In fact, she asked me to send for you as she
wishes to speak. Where is she now? In the famous sitting-room playing patience.
Doesn't she realize the peril of her position?
in a way she does but she seems quite ready to face the worst poor woman said george thinking of the sad life which the old maid had led if she has sinned she has suffered
if people use knives in that way they must be punished was the rather harsh retort of bodsey don't talk stuff bodsey you have your own sense to think of i never committed murder
no one said you had but you may do so before you die bodsey shuddered i hope not mr vane he said i don't know why you should say such a thing i am an honest man
you say that so often that i shall begin to disbelieve it replied brendon rather cynically but if you marry lola either you will kill her or she will kill you i'll take my chance of that and if you
george made an impatient gesture with his hand and returned to his seat never mind further chatter let me hear how you came to learn that this poor creature struck the blow if you talk that way of a criminal mr vane what will you say
of a good woman. My good man, there is more joy over a sinner that repenteth.
But Miss Bull doesn't repent, said Bodsey. I'll hear the story before I give an opinion on that point.
You say that it was some remark I made, which... Yes, it was, said Bodsey eagerly in
throwing himself into a seat. Your remark that Marjorie might be guilty. One moment, interrupted George
in his turn. I may tell you that.
that I have seen Mr. Ireland, and he declares that he never was near the house on that night,
that he knew nothing of the confession, and that he had no latch-key. He is innocent. Now that I have
heard, Miss Bull, I know that, sir. She's the one. Well, and how did you find out?
Bodsey cleared his throat and began with a most important air.
I rather agreed with your idea that Marjorie might be guilty, he said, and
And when I turned it over in my own mind, I thought it more and more probable.
I therefore determined to get Marjorie alone and work on her fears.
Pa, said Brendan with disgust.
Well, sir, retorted Bodsey shrugging his shoulders.
I had to get at the truth somehow, and detective's work is not all so honorable as novelists make out.
I got Marjorie alone.
And how did you set to work?
Well, it was this morning in the sitting-room.
Miss Bull had gone out and had left Marjorie to make up some accounts.
The girl was laboring away at them and getting into a hopeless mess.
I came to speak with her and offered to do them.
I soon put the accounts to rights and then began to talk of Miss Bull.
Why of Miss Bull?
Why? Baudsie pinched his lip.
I thought at the time that Marjorie was guilty, and the...
that if in talking to her I laid the blame on Miss Bull that the girl would speak out.
You traded on the poor wretches friendship. Baudsie, I'm ashamed of you. I'm ashamed of myself,
replied the detective penitently. But Lord bless you, Mr. Vane, one gets used to this sort of thing.
In our business, the means justify the ends far more than in religion. I certainly don't
think it justifies any end in religion, said John.
George sharply. Well, you accused Miss Bull of the crime. In a way I did. Marjorie denied it.
What did you say? That she might as well confess. I declared that I had evidence to prove
Miss Bull's guilt and that she would be arrested when she came back. I declare Mr. Vainai thought
that girl would strike me. She was like a wildcat. I wish she had, growled George,
whose generous spirit was revolted by the use Bodsey had put Marjorie to.
She said if I arrested Miss Bull, she would kill me.
I said, as you killed your aunt.
She up and said,
Yes, I did kill her.
Miss Bull is innocent and you know she is.
Of course, when she admitted the fact,
I at once began to suspect Miss Bull.
Why did you do that?
Because if Marjorie had been guilty,
she would not have owned up.
But if Miss Bull was guilty,
Marjorie would certainly take the guilt on herself.
Poor girl, murmured George.
There is something noble in that dull soul.
Botsie could not see this and mentally disagreed with it.
However, he did not want to argue down
Brendan's too tender conscience,
so he went on with his recital.
While Marjorie was threatening me
and taking the guilt on herself,
Miss Bull came in.
That stupid girl ran to tell her and fell at her feet, crying that I knew all, but that she would die for her dear Miss Bull.
And what did the woman say?
She asked me if I knew.
I said I did.
She demanded how I found out.
I told her that that was my business.
She began to smell a rat and suspected that I was bluffing.
She would have held her tongue, but Marjorie was in such terror for her.
her friend that she came out with the whole story.
Miss Bull tried to stop her, but Marjorie kept repeating that she would die for her dear Miss Bull,
and so let the cat out of the bag.
The girl is half-witted, all this may not be true.
Oh, yes, it is.
When Miss Bull saw that the game was up, she sat down and admitted that she had killed Mrs. Jersey.
She also said that she was glad the truth had come to light,
that she wished to die and so on.
She was raving, said George incredulously,
not thinking anyone would incriminate himself
or herself so freely.
No, she wasn't.
She told me the whole story in the calmest manner,
just as though she were asking me to have a cup of tea.
Then she asked me to send for you
and sat down to play patience.
I wonder you are not having her watched,
said George with scorn.
Oh, she won't rubble.
"'Run away,' replied Bodsey easily, and not perceiving the irony of the remark.
"'Come along, Mr. Vane. We'll go down and see her. She is desperately anxious to see you.
Do any of the boarders know? Not yet, but they will when she is arrested.' George shuddered
and followed Bodsey down the stairs. It seemed terrible to him that such a fragile little
creature as Miss Bull should be subjected to this disgrace. He did not condone.
her crime. She had acted wrongly and must take the consequences. But he could not forget that
she was Dorothy's aunt, and he wished he could see some way of rescuing her from this dreadful
position. Ms. Bull was, as Bodsey had stated, playing patience. Seated at the very table where
her victim had sat, she dealt the cards and seemed quite interested in the game. Marjorie was seated
in a chair near at hand, looking with tearful eyes into the face of her friend.
Beyond the fact that Miss Bull was whiter than usual, she showed no signs of emotion.
You have come, George, she said addressing him by his name.
I am glad to see you. Mr. Bodsey, you may go.
The detective was taken aback and would have remonstrated, but Marjorie rose and approached him.
You have done your worst, she said her eyes flashing.
Go, or I'll twist your neck.
Bodzie shrugged his shoulders and with a glance at George went out.
After all, he had heard the story before, and did not particularly care to hear it again.
Besides, Bodsey was a kindly man, and he felt sorry that he had proceeded to such extremities.
Miss Bull shuffled her pack of cards and laid them away in a box.
"'I shall play that game no more,' she said.
"'I have been playing patience all my life, but,
The end has come, and I am glad it has come.
Hush, Marjorie, for the girl had burst into tears.
I will see that you are left well off and looked after, my dear.
I don't want that.
I want you, sobbed the girl.
She slipped to the floor and laid her head on Miss Bull's knee like a faithful dog.
Miss Bull patted her head and allowed her to remain in this position while she spoke to George.
Marjorie sobbed for a time,
then remained quiet, listening to every word, and quite content to feel the gentle hand of the
old maid smoothing her hair.
"'I suppose you were astonished when Mr. Bodsey told you,' said Miss Bull, looking with piercing
eyes at Brendan.
"'I was.
I never thought that you—you—that I would kill Mrs. Jersey,' finished the woman quietly.
"'Why not?
She was a bad, wicked creature, and caused the death of your first.
father. She boasted of it. Where, when? asked the astonished young man.
In this very room, in my presence. But to make you understand, I had better tell you all.
One moment, Miss Bull. When you told the fortunes on that night, did you intend to kill Mrs. Jersey?
No, the death card did turn up. That was a strange coincidence, George. When I came down the
stairs, I had no more idea than you of killing the wretched woman.
What made you do it?
I am telling you, replied Miss Bull, folding her hands on her lap.
Wait, and here.
Mrs. Jersey was very rude to me on that night.
I intended to remonstrate with her.
She added insult to injury by locking Marjorie in her bedroom so as to keep her from me.
I heard her scolding Marjorie in the passage, and when all was quiet and Mrs. Jersey had gone down the stairs, I went up to Marjorie's room and unlocked the door.
Mrs. Jersey had struck the poor child, and she was sobbing on her bed. I then determined to go down for the second time and see Mrs. Jersey.
For the second time? Were you down before?
I was, replied Miss Bull calmly.
I wondered who Mrs. Jersey had coming to see her, particularly after she had lost her courage when she saw the yellow holly in your coat.
You noticed that? Yes, and I noticed the holly also. I wondered why you wore it.
The sight of it put into my mind that fatal night when he—' Miss Bull brushed aside her thoughts.
But no matter. I thought I would see if Mrs. Jersey was seeing anyone, and also—'
I wish to talk about the yellow holly.
But why should you trouble about her seeing anyone?
Miss Bull looked down, and then looked up abruptly.
Mrs. Jersey would have sent me back to the asylum if she could,
and I was always afraid lest she should see someone secretly about the matter.
I crept down the stairs, leaving Marjorie in my room playing at patience.
Mrs. Jersey's door was closed.
I heard the murmur of voices, and I put my ear to the keyhole.
I heard that dancer.
Afterward I learned that it was the dancer.
I heard her accuse Mrs. Jersey
of having killed Percy Vane.
On what grounds did Lola base that accusation?
She said her mother told her.
I remember, muttered George.
The mother, on receiving back the stiletto,
certainly might have thought so.
And what did Mrs. Jersey say?
He asked aloud.
She denied it and made some sort of excuse.
I remained to hear no more.
I knew then that Mrs. Jersey had killed my Percy.
But she did not.
It was an accident.
I know, she explained.
But she was the cause.
I was right to kill her.
But for her, Percy would have been alive.
I would have been his wife.
And you, George, would have been my step.
son. What did you do next? I went up to my room and resumed my game of patience. I intended to have a talk with
Mrs. Jersey the next morning, but when I found that she had struck Marjorie, I came down at once.
That was after eleven. About a quarter passed. Mrs. Jersey was in her room. We talked,
and I told her what I had heard. She denied it. I pointed to the third. I pointed to the
stiletto which was on the table as a proof that the girl had been here. Mrs. Jersey said that it
was the same stiletto with which Percy had been killed as Lola had received it from her mother.
That put the thought into my head that God intended Mrs. Jersey should be slain with the same
weapon with which my darling had been stabbed. A terrible thought. You should have put it away.
I did, but it came again.
I accused Mrs. Jersey of having killed Percy.
She gloried in the fact that it was through her he had died.
She declared that if Ireland had not held her hand,
she would have laid him dead at her feet.
She exulted that the accident had fulfilled her intention
and taunted me with the fact that I never became his wife.
I was very quiet, added Miss Bull, her eyes glittering,
but my blood was boiling.
mrs jersey turned her back on me with an insolent laugh and sat down the stiletto was on the table her head was turned away i softly took the dagger and
no no cried margery wailing you never did it you never did it dear miss bull it was i who don't be a fool child i did it and i would do it again miss bull rose
george you now know all go no do not shake hands i have avenged your father and i expect i will be hanged marjorie burst out into renewed weeping and miss bulls soothed her talking to george the while
tell my sister she said that the name of howard will not be mentioned i will die under my false name no disgrace will be brought on her
as to dorothy here miss bull's eyes grew tender no disgrace will befall her marry her george love her make her a good husband and take this kiss to her from a sorely tried woman
before the astonished george knew what she was about he felt a pair of cold lips pressed to his own the next moment she had pushed him out of the room and had locked the door that was the last george saw of her
whether marjorie had agreed to die with her or whether miss bull knowing what a miserable life the girl would lead after her death compelled her to take the poison it will never be known but when the door was burst open the two women were found on the floor
in one another's arms.
On the table was an empty glass,
and it was ascertained
that Miss Bull and Marjorie had taken
prussic acid.
Bodsey entered the room an hour after the death,
alarmed by the silence.
He found that his prey had escaped.
Miss Bull was buried under her false name,
and Marjorie was buried with her.
Nothing of Miss Bull's sad past
or of her killing Mrs. Jersey came to light.
She passed away with her only friend,
and her story was told.
Six months later,
George Vane was seated in the library
of the mansion in St. Giles Square.
It was after dinner,
and Lord Darrington occupied his usual chair.
The old man looked brighter and happier
than he had looked for many years.
Daily, George grew a greater favorite with him,
and on the morrow, George was to be married.
Lord Darrington had insisted
that, as it was his last night as a bachelor,
George should dine alone with him,
and would not admit even Walter.
It's the last time I'll have you all to myself, George,
said the old man piteously.
After tomorrow, Dorothy will possess you.
Not at all, replied George.
You will have us both.
We will come back from the honeymoon in a month,
and then we will live here.
That's all been arranged, said Darrington testily.
But we won't be two independent bachelors.
"'All the better,' replied his grandson cheerily.
"'A lady in the house will make a lot of difference.
"'You won't know this place when Dorothy is flitting about.'
"'Don't.
"'Her mother is the kind of woman who flits,
"'and I won't have her doing the butterfly business in that way.'
"'Oh, I don't think we'll be troubled much with Mrs. Ward.
"'Since the shock inflicted by her sister's sad death,
"'she has become religious.'
"'Bah, that's only.
a phase.
Poor Miss Bull, said
Darrington.
I like to think of her under that name.
She had a sad life.
I don't wonder she killed herself.
Do you think she was mad, George?
No, but I think the memory of her wrongs
which were all caused by Mrs. Jersey
was too much for her.
She was mad for the moment,
but she told me the terrible story
in the calmest manner.
And who came in at the front door that
night, asked Darrington.
No one. After the murder, Miss Bull opened it to fly, panic-struck, I expect.
But Marjorie came downstairs and stopped her.
Miss Bull closed the door and remained to face the worst.
Well, she is dead and buried, and the scandal is laid at rest.
Unless that Bodsey revives it.
Oh, you can trust Bodsey, said George, smiling.
He and Lola are quite happy, and she is.
He has almost forgotten me.
I got a letter from Bodsey the other day.
He is acting as his wife's agent, and they are making a lot of money.
All the better.
He won't talk about that business.
By the way, I forgot to ask you about Ireland's money.
The money he left me.
I have settled that on Dorothy.
How suddenly he died, said George reflectively.
Just an hour after I left the house.
I hope his end was peace.
I think it was, as he felt relieved that you and I had forgiven him.
There was nothing to forgive.
It was an accident, and if any blame is due, it is to that Jersey woman.
Well, she is dead, and the woman who killed her is dead.
So let them all rest in peace.
But it was good of Ireland leaving me his money.
I don't see who else he had to leave it to.
and five thousand a year is not to be despised.
Have you settled it all on Dorothy?
Every penny.
Don't you approve?
Oh yes, so long as Mrs. Ward doesn't get it.
She's a reformed character.
Why, the other day she told me that she considered Dorothy irreligious.
Pah, new brooms.
She'll soon grow weary of that pose.
When the effect of poor Jenny Howard's death
wears off, she will be as gay and silly as before. Don't have her in this house, that's all.
You can depend upon that, sir. But Dorothy will be here. Dorothy, whom I shall see tomorrow
crowned with orange blossoms and... Darrington laughed, but not unkindly. Well, well, better
orange blossoms than yellow holly. George nodded. I hope never
to see Yellow Holly again, he said, and Darrington agreed.
So their conversation ended on the threshold of George's new life, with that last reference to the old.
End of the Yellow Holly by Fergus Hume.
I hope you've enjoyed this presentation as much as I've enjoyed presenting it to you.
