Number Seventeen | Page 4

Louis Tracy

elderly servant, enter or leave the opposite flat, and he had encountered
the tenant herself so seldom that he was not quite certain of recognizing
her apart from the environment of the staircase which provided their

occasional meeting place.
Then he sighed. Romance evidently denied her magic presence to one
who wooed her assiduously by his pen. He was yet to learn that the
alluring sprite had not only favored him with her attentions during the
past twenty minutes, but meant to stick to him like his own shadow for
many a day. And he frowned, too.
He did not approve of that pretty girl's father visiting the attractive Mrs.
Lester in conditions which savored of something underhanded and
clandestine. The man had deliberately misled his daughter. He left her
with a lie on his lips; yet never were appearances more deceptive, for
the stranger had the outward aspect of one whose word was his bond.
"Oh, dash it all, what business is it of mine, anyhow?" growled
Theydon, and he laughed sourly as he sat down to write a letter which
Bates could take to the post, thus himself practicing a slight deceit
intended solely to account for the deferred bringing of the tray.
It was apparently an unimportant missive which could well have been
postponed till the morning, being merely an announcement to a firm of
publishers that he would pay a business call later in the week. In less
than five minutes it, and another, making an appointment for
Wednesday, this being the night of Monday, were written, sealed,
directed and stamped.
He rang. Bates came, with laden hands, thinking the tray was in
demand.
"Kindly post those for me," said Theydon, glancing at the letters.
"Better take an umbrella. It's raining cats and dogs."
The man had found the door open, and left it so when he entered.
Before he could answer, the door of No. 17 was opened and closed,
with the jingle inseparable from the presence of many small panes of
glass in leaden casing, and footsteps sounded on the stairs. For some
reason-- probably because of the unusual fact that any one should be
leaving Mrs. Lester's flat at so late an hour, both men listened.

Then Bates recollected himself.
"Yes, sir," he said.
Oddly enough, the man's marked pause suggested a question to his
employer.
"Mrs. Lester's visitor didn't stop long," was the comment. "He came up
almost on my heels."
"I thought it must ha' bin a gentleman," said Bates.
"Why a 'gentleman'?" laughed Theydon.
"I mean, sir, that the step didn't sound like a lady's."
"Ah, I see."
Vaguely aware that he had committed himself to a definite knowledge
as to the sex of Mrs. Lester's visitor, Theydon added:
"I didn't actually see any one on the stairs, but I heard an arrival, and
jumped to the same conclusion as you, Bates."
Tacitly, master and man shared the same opinion-- it was satisfactory to
know that Mrs. Lester's male visitors who called at the unconventional
hour of 11:30 p. m. were shown out so speedily. Innesmore Mansions
were intensely respectable.
No lady could live there alone whose credentials had not satisfied a
sharp-eyed secretary. Further, Theydon was aware of a momentary
disloyalty of thought toward the distinguished-looking father of that
remarkably handsome girl, and it pleased him to find that he had erred.
Bates went out, closing the door behind him: he donned an overcoat,
secured an umbrella and presently descended to the street. Yielding
again to impulse, Theydon reopened the window and peered down. The
stranger was walking away rapidly. A policeman, glistening in cape
and overalls, stood at the corner, near a pillar box.

The tall man, who topped the burly constable by some inches, halted
for a moment to post a letter. Whether by accident or design he held his
umbrella so that the other could not see his face. Then he disappeared.
Bates came into view. He dropped Theydon's letters into the box, but
he and the policeman exchanged a few words, which, his employer
guessed, must surely have dealt with the vagaries of the weather.
For an author of repute Theydon's surmises had been wide of the mark
several times that night. The policeman had seen the unknown coming
out from the doorway of Nos. 13-18, and had noted his stature and
appearance.
"Who's the toff who just left your lot?" he said, when Bates arrived.
"Dunno," said Bates. "Some one callin' on Mrs. Lester, I fancy. Why?"
"O, nothing. On'y, if I was togged up regardless on a night like this I'd
blue a cab fare."
"I didn't see him meself," commented Bates. "My boss 'eard him come,
an' both of us 'eard him go. He didn't stay more'n five minnits."
"Wish I was in his shoes.
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