The Mysterious Mr. Miller - Part 47
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Part 47

"To convey a letter for me to the secretary at the Italian Emba.s.sy in Grosvenor Square. He will give you instructions regarding me."

"Then you are known at the Emba.s.sy!" the police agent exclaimed, in surprise.

"I think you will find that I am."

The nurse brought a pen, ink and a sheet of paper, upon which after great difficulty I wrote a note recalling my confidential visit regarding Nardini's death, and explaining that the police were in error in thinking that I had any hand in the death of the guardian of the Villa Verde. I had been at the villa, I admitted, but out of curiosity, as I had watched the action of Miller and his companions. If any one were sent to me from the Emba.s.sy, I said, I would make a confidential statement.

When I had sealed the letter, the police agent took it, and next morning I received a call from the official with whom I had had a chat on the occasion of my visit to the Emba.s.sy. To him I explained the whole circ.u.mstances in strictest confidence, and described the secret hiding-place in the dead man's library where were concealed a number of official papers that were evidently of great importance.

He heard me to the end, and afterwards rea.s.sured me by saying:--

"We have already given the police _commissario_ instructions not to take any further steps against you, Mr Leaf. We quite accept your explanation, and at the same time thank you for this further information you are able to give us. A search shall be made at the spot you indicate."

And then I took a piece of paper and pencil, and drew a plan of the concealed cupboard and how to open the panel.

Shortly after the Emba.s.sy official had left the police agent again visited me, presented his apologies for having disturbed me, and then throughout the day I remained alone with my own apprehensive thoughts regarding Ella.

She was prevented from coming to me on account of that man in whom she went in such deadly terror. Nothing had yet got into the papers concerning the dastardly attempt upon me, for the police had been very careful to keep it from those inquisitive gentlemen-of-the-press who called at the hospital every few hours to gather news of the latest accidents or tragedies. But if Lucie had told her I knew how alarmed and anxious she would be. She loved me--ah, yes, she loved me. Of that I felt confident.

Yet would she ever be mine? Was it the end--the end of all? Was the old sweet life of that summer beside the sea dead and gone for evermore?

Should I never see a red rose, her favourite flower, bloom upon its bush without this sickness of soul upon me? Should I never smell the salt of the sea, or drink the cornfields' breaths on a moonlit night without this madness of memory that is worse than all death?

Was she lost to me--lost to me for ever?

I forgot that the inquest upon Miller was to be held that afternoon, and that Lucie was the princ.i.p.al witness. The Coroner, a sharp-featured, grey-bearded man, came to my bedside, and with a clerk and the foreman of the jury, put me upon oath and took my evidence--evidence to the effect that I had dined in company with the deceased at the American's flat. I explained how our host had mixed those final drinks--draughts that he intended should be fatal.

Then when I had concluded by declaring that I had no previous knowledge of Himes, the Coroner made me sign the statement, and returned to where the jury awaited him.

The Coroner's officer, a police-sergeant in uniform, told me that they were taking precautions to keep the affair out of the papers, as they feared that the publication of the evidence might defeat their efforts to trace Himes.

Shortly after five o'clock Lucie came again, looking pale and agitated after the ordeal of giving evidence. A verdict of "death from poison wilfully administered" had been returned.

The Coroner and jury had questioned her closely regarding her father's mode of life and his recent movements. Of the latter she was, of course, unaware. She only knew that he had been called unexpectedly to Rome, and had returned direct to England. Of the reason of his flying visit to Italy she was entirely unaware. He seldom, she said, ever told her about his own affairs, being naturally a close man regarding everything that concerned himself.

"They asked me about the man Himes," she said, as she sat by my bedside, "and I was compelled to tell them how he had once been poor dad's most intimate friend."

"Did he ever meet Ella, do you think?" I asked suddenly.

"Never to my knowledge. Why?"

"I was only wondering--that's all. Perhaps he knew Gordon-Wright."

"I believe he did. They met one night when we were living in rooms at Fulham, if I recollect aright, and about six months later they went for a holiday together in Germany."

"Did you ever meet that Italian doctor Gennaro Gavazzi who lived in Rome?"

She looked at me with a quick suspicion that she was unable to disguise.

"Why do you ask that?" she inquired, without reply to my question.

"Because he was a friend of your father's. You told me so. I once knew him slightly," I added, in order to rea.s.sure her.

"And you didn't know much good concerning him, eh?" she asked, looking at me apprehensively.

"He was private secretary to Nardini, I believe, was he not?"

"Yes, and his factotum. He did all his dirty work--a scoundrel of the very first water."

"And yet your father was very friendly with him. He has been staying in Rome with him."

"I believe he did. But I could never discover why poor dad was so fond of that man's society. To me, it was always a mystery." And then she went on, in a low, broken voice, to describe to me all that had occurred at the inquest.

"There was a short, dark-bearded Italian present who asked me quite a number of questions regarding poor old dad. I wonder who he was."

"One of your father's Italian friends most probably," I said, rea.s.suring her, for I did not wish her to learn that the man was a police agent from Rome seeking to establish the dead man's ident.i.ty. "But," I added, suddenly changing the subject because she had grown despairing, "you have told me nothing of Ella. Did you go to Porchester Terrace last night, as you promised?"

"I did, but she has left London with her father. She returned to Wichenford the day before yesterday."

"Gone! And where is Gordon-Wright?"

"All I've been able to find out is that he is absent from London. I called myself at his rooms in Half Moon Street, and his man told me that he was out of town--on the Continent, he believes, but is not certain."

"Or he may be with my love," I remarked bitterly, clenching my hands in my fierce antagonism. For me nothing lived or breathed save one life, that of my love; for her alone the sun shone and set.

The days dragged wearily by, for I was still kept in the hospital. The shock my system had suffered had been a terrible one, and according to the doctors it had been little short of a miracle that my life had been saved.

The funeral of Mr Miller, attended by his sister and three other friends, had taken place, and Lucie had accompanied her aunt back to Studland, taking with her all the dead man's effects.

She had said nothing about the large sum in Italian bank-notes that must have been in his possession, and this somewhat puzzled me. The proceeds of the great theft at the Villa Verde must be concealed somewhere--but where?

As soon as I was able to travel I went down to Worcester, and hiring a dogcart drove out six miles along the Tenbury Road through a picturesque and fertile country glorious in its autumn gold, when of a sudden the groom raised his whip, and pointing to the left across the hedgerow to a church spire on rising ground in the distance said:--

"That's Wichenford yonder, sir. The Place is a mile and a half farther on."

I had never been to Ella's home, and was wondering what kind of house it was.

At about two miles along a road to the left we came to fine lodge-gates that swung open to allow us to pa.s.s, and then driving up a long beech avenue there suddenly came into view a splendid old Tudor mansion of grey stone half covered with ivy. It had no doubt gone through some changes in modern times, but the older parts, including the Great Hall and the Tapestry Gallery, certainly were of pure Tudor structure. To me it seemed probable that the original purpose was to erect a manor house of the E form, so common in Tudor times; but if that was the intention it was never carried out, for only one block with the central projection had been completed, and the house must have taken its present form about the time of Charles the First, when two wings had been added in the rear of the then existing building.

In any case I had no idea that Wichenford Place, the home of the Worcestershire Murrays for the past three centuries, was such a magnificent old mansion.

The great oak door was open, therefore, after ringing the bell, I pa.s.sed through the porch, entered the hall and glanced around, finding it most quaint and interesting, and full of splendid old furniture. Its high flat ceiling was of large size and excellent proportions, the panelling was of oak, rich in character and colouring, with beautiful carving along the top in many places. The fireplace I noticed had fluted pilasters of an early type and a mantel surmounted by arches of wood finely carved with caryatid figures supporting the frieze. The ancient fire-back bore the date 1588, while in the old armorial gla.s.s of the long windows could be seen the rose of the Tudors with the Garter and the shield of the Murrays emblazoned with various quarterings. It was a delightful old home, typically English.

Above the panelling hung many time-mellowed old family portraits, while at the far end a fine old long clock in marquetrie case ticked solemnly, and the door was guarded by the figure of a man armed cap-a-pie.

A clean-shaven man-servant in livery came along the hall towards me, and I inquired for Mr Murray.

"Not at home, sir," was his prompt answer.

"Miss Ella?"