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Chapter 30
THE Doctor remained at the door while the maid put down her lamp, and he checked her as she pro ceeded to the blinds and the other duties of the moment.

“Leave the windows, please; it’s warm. That will do thanks.” He closed the door on her extin guished presence and he held it a little, mutely, with observing eyes, in that of Dennis and Rose.

“Do you want me?” the latter promptly asked, in the tone, as he liked, of readiness either to meet him or to withdraw. She seemed to imply that at such an hour there was no knowing what any one might want. Dennis’s eyes were on her as well as the Doctor’s, and if the lamp now lighted her consciousness of looking horrible she could at least support herself with the sight of the crude embarrassment of others.

The Doctor, resorting to his inveterate practice when confronted with a question, consulted his watch. “ I came in for Mr. Vidal, but I shall be glad of a word with you after I’ve seen him. I must ask you, therefore “ and he nodded at the third door of the room “ kindly to pass into the library.”

Rose, without haste or delay, reached the point he indicated. “ You wish me to wait there? ”

“If you’ll be so good.”

“While you talk with him? ”

“While I talk with him.’ ”

Her eyes held Vidal’s a minute. “I’ll wait.” And she passed out.

The Doctor immediately attacked him. “ I must appeal to you for a fraction of your time. I’ve seen Mrs. Beever.”

Dennis hesitated. “ I’ve done the same.”

“It’s because she has told me of your talk that I mention it. She sends you a message.”

“A message?” Dennis looked as if it were open to him to question indirectness. “Where then is she? ”

“With that distracted girl.”

“Miss Martle?” Dennis hesitated. “Miss Martle so greatly feels the shock? ”

“ ‘Feels’ it, my dear sir?” the Doctor cried. “She has been made so pitifully ill by it that there’s no saying just what turn her condition may take, and she now calls for so much of my attention as to force me to plead, with you, that excuse for my brevity. Mrs. Beever,” he rapidly pursued, “requests you to regard this hurried inquiry as the sequel to what you were so good as to say to her.”

Dennis thought a moment; his face had changed as if by the action of Rose’s disappearance and the instinctive revival, in a different relation, of the long, stiff habit of business, the art of treating affairs and meeting men. This was the art of not being surprised, and, with his emotion now con trolled, he was discernibly on his guard. “ I’m afraid,” he replied, “ that what I said to Mrs. Beever was a very small matter.”

“She doesn’t think it at all a small matter to have said you’d help her. You can do so in the cruel demands our catastrophe makes of her by con sidering that I represent her. It’s in her name, therefore, that I ask you if you’re engaged to be married to Miss Armiger.”

Dennis had an irrepressible start; but it might have been quite as much at the freedom of the question as at the difficulty of the answer. “ Please say to her that I am.” He spoke with a clearness that proved the steel surface he had in a few minutes forged for his despair.

The Doctor took the thing as he gave it, only drawing from his pocket a key, which he held straight up. “ Then I feel it to be only right to say to you that this locks ” and he indicated the quarter to which Rose had retired “ the other door.”

Dennis, with a diffident hand cfut, looked at him hard; but the good man showed with effect that he was professionally used to that. “ You mean she’s a prisoner? ”

“On Mr. Vidal’s honour.”

“But whose prisoner? ”

“Mrs. Beever’s.”

Dennis took the key, which passed into his pocket. “ Don’t you forget,” he then asked with inscrutable gravity, “ that we’re here, all round, on a level ”

“With the garden?” the Doctor broke in. “I forget nothing. We’ve a friend on the terrace.”

“A friend?”

“Mr. Beever. A friend of Miss Armiger’s,” he promptly added.

Still showing nothing in his face, Dennis perhaps showed something in the way that, with his eyes bent on the carpet and his hands interclenched behind him, he slowly walked across the room. At the end of it he turned round. “ If I have this key, who has the other? ”

“The other?”

“The key that confines Mr. Bream.”

The Doctor winced, but he stood his ground. “ I have it.” Then he said as if with a due recognition of the weight of the circumstance: “ She has told you? ”

Dennis turned it over. “ Mrs. Beever? ”

“Miss Armiger.” There was a faint sharpness in the Doctor’s tone.

It had something evidently to do with the tone in which Dennis replied. “ She has told me. But if you’ve left him ”

“I’ve not left him. I’ve brought him over.”

Dennis showed himself at a loss. “ To see me? ”

The Doctor raised a solemn, reassuring hand; then, after an instant, “ To see his child,” he colour lessly said.

“He desires that?” Dennis asked with an accent that emulated this detachment.

“He desires that.” Dennis turned away, and in the pause that followed the air seemed charged with a consciousness of all that between them was repre sented by the unspoken. It lasted indeed long enough to give to an auditor, had there been one, a sense of the dominant unspeakable. It was as if each were waiting to have something from the other first, and it was eventually clear that Dennis, who had not looked at his watch, was prepared to wait longest. The Doctor had moreover to recognise that he himself had sought the interview. He impa tiently summed up his sense of their common attitude. “I do full justice to the difficulty created for you by your engagement. That’s why it was important to have it from your own lips.” His companion said nothing, and he went on: “ Mrs. Beever, all the same, feels that it mustn’t prevent us from putting you another question, or rather from reminding you that there’s one that you led her just now to expect that you’ll answer.” The Doctor paused again, but he perceived he must go all the way. “ From the bank of the river you saw something that bears upon this ” he hesitated; then daintily selected his words “remarkable performance. We appeal to your sense of propriety to tell us what you saw.”

Dennis considered. “ My sense of propriety is strong; but so just now is my sense of some other things. My word to Mrs. Beever was con tingent. There are points I want made clear.”

“I’m here,” said the Doctor, “ to do what I can to satisfy you. Only be go good as to remember that time is everything.” He added, to drive this home, in his neat, brisk way: “ Some action has to be taken.”

“You mean a declaration made? ”

“Under penalty,” the Doctor assented, “ of con sequences sufficiently tremendous. There has been an accident of a gravity ”

Dennis, with averted eyes, took him up. “That can’t be explained away? ”

The Doctor looked at his watch; then, still holding it, he quickly looked up at Dennis. “ You wish her presented as dying of a natural cause? ”

Vidal’s haggard face tur............
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