With the memory of Lady Kathleen's severed ear fresh upon him, a sudden and passionate desire to kill the man there and then, as he stood lowering at him, arose in Westerham's heart. But he forced his anger down, though his voice trembled with rage as he said: “I think you had better be careful.”
Patmore drew back a step; he saw he had gone too far.
There was a pause, and then Westerham said: “Very well. I suppose I have no option but to agree. Where shall I meet you to-morrow?”
“You are hardly likely to kick up a fuss,” Patmore answered, eyeing him shrewdly, “so let's say the same place at noon. Mind you, you had better understand clearly that if you try to play me false it will be all the worse for you and Lord Penshurst and Lady Kathleen. We have made up our minds.
“If you give me in charge, you cannot make me open my mouth, and what is more you will finish the whole business. If you play me false you will never see Lady Kathleen again, and your secret goes to Germany.”
Westerham made a sudden movement forward and looked into Patmore's face. “What is the secret?” he cried eagerly.
For a moment Patmore looked scared, and then he wagged his head wisely, and Westerham's heartgave a great throb of relief, for he felt certain that the man did not know. Melun had kept the secret to himself.
Westerham drew away again and made to pass down the steps. “Very well,” he said, “I will be here at noon.”
“With the money?”
“With the money.”
But Patmore was not satisfied, and hurrying after him, plucked at his sleeve. “I have your word?” he asked.
Westerham turned on him fiercely. “No,” he said through his teeth, “certainly not; I would not take the word of a dog like you, and there is no reason why I should give mine. You can take what I say or leave it.”
For a few moments Patmore seemed doubtful. Then he nodded his head.
“All right,” he said sulkily.
Westerham walked briskly away, and made across the street without turning his head. But as he walked he drew from his pocket a little mirror, which he had hidden in his handkerchief, and by straining his eyes considerably he was able to see that Patmore still stood in a hesitating way beneath the monument of Queen Anne.
But as Westerham reached the pavement Patmore moved away, and Westerham ran round the heads of the horses of a waiting omnibus and there stood still, sheltered behind a lamp-post in the centre of the road.
Patmore had reached the pavement opposite the Church House, and had turned up a little court between the two drapers' shops.
He disappeared from view, and Westerham, crossing the street, hid in the doorway of the jeweller's at the corner. Craning his neck, he could see Patmore hurrying towards Amen Court.
Then Westerham took a big risk. He dashed up Paternoster Row and turned up to the left. He ran straight ahead until he reached Cheapside and saw that Lowther's car was in waiting. It was a big car with a limousine body, and Westerham, plunging in, pulled down the window at Lowther's back and spoke rapidly to him. “Go on for twenty yards,” he said, “then turn, and just crawl down the street.”
Westerham had run as he had never run before, and was slightly out of breath; he knew he must have beaten Patmore by a good many yards, and as there was no car in sight he thought he might have to follow him when he marched into Newgate Street.
But just as he had calculated he would, Patmore came hastily into the main thoroughfare and glanced up and down. He gave one quick look at the motor as it moved slowly westward. Lowther, to excuse the slowness of his pace, was seemingly having great trouble with a clutch.
A motor-omnibus rattled past them, and on this Patmore climbed.
This complicated matters considerably. It would have been comparatively a simple matter to follow a motor-car, but to hang behind a motor-omnibus in such a way that they could, without being noticed themselves, see if Patmore left it, was a more difficult piece of work altogether.
Their anxiety was considerably lessened whenthe motor-car drew up at the further end of Holborn viaduct. They saw Patmore leave it and jump into a waiting taxicab.
The taxicab shot straight ahead up Holborn, and from the fact that Patmore had not troubled to look about him Westerham judged that he was not anticipating pursuit.
The taxicab, which they kept well in view, ran quickly through Oxford Circus and on to Orchard Street; there it turned north, and they followed it as closely as they dared past Baker Street to St. John's Wood Chapel.
As it shot ahead up the Finchley Road, Westerham wondered whether Patmore was making for Mme. Estelle's. He decided, however, that this could scarcely be, as he had taken the precaution of having the house closely watched throughout the day, and up to the time he left Downing Street there had been no report as to the return of any of its wonted inmates.
Soon, too, it became apparent that Laburnum Road was not the goal. The taxicab rushed past Swiss Cottage and on to Finchley. Here it branched off to the north, and finally turned up a newly laid-out road.
Westerham called to Lowther to pull up at the corner, as he knew their destination must now be in sight.
So certain was Westerham that they were now nearing the goal that he left the car and walked on foot to the corner of the road. Just as he imagined would be the case, the taxicab had drawn up outside a neat, brand-new, red-bricked villa.
He dodged round the corner again, and hastily,lifted the car's bonnet. He called on Lowther to get down, and together the two men began to examine a sparking plug with wholly fictitious energy. The returning taxicab passed them at a good pace, the driver paying no heed either to them or to the car.
Westerham took a deep breath and withdrew his head from the covering bonnet.
“Come along, Lowther,” he said, “I fancy that the last act is about to begin.
“I wonder,” he added more to himself than to his companion, “whether Lady Kathleen is here?”
As he paused at the gate he clapped his hand to Lowther's hip-pocket and nodded with approval.
“Loaded?” he asked.
Lowther nodded.
“All right,” he said; “you may need it, but we will go quietly to start with. I am going in first. If I don't appear in five minutes come in after me, and don't stick at trifles. I may want you before then, and if I do I will give a sharp whistle, so——”
He rehearsed the whistle under his breath.
Lowther signified his understanding, and stepped back into the shade of one of the brick pillars of the gate as Westerham swung into the garden and ran quickly on silent feet up the steps.
He fumbled for a few moments in the darkness till he found the electric bell. This he pushed, purposely giving the same number of rings which he had heard Melun give knocks on the door at Limehouse.
There was a light in the dining-room window, and a few minutes later the door was quietlyopened. Westerham put his foot against it and squeezed inside. The hall was dimly lit, but there was sufficient light to see Patmore's face go white as he realised that he had been fooled.
In a moment Westerham had him pinned against the wall.
“Don't cry out,” he whispered, “or it will be the worse for you.”
With his great strength he pinned Patmore's flabby arms to his side and ran him through the door on the right, which stood open.
Still holding Patmore in his grip, he kicked the door to and thrust him down into a chair.
“Tell me where Lady Kathleen is?” he said in a low, fierce whisper.
Patmore remained silent.
“Tell me,” said Westerham again, “and tell me quickly. Tell me at once or you will regret it.”
Patmore gave a sudden wrench and twisted one of his arms free. He reached out and grasped a heavy silver candlestick.
But again Westerham was too quick for him. He dealt him a blow on the muscles of his shoulder which half-paralysed Patmore's arm. The candlestick dropped with a clatter from his hand.
Westerham gave his pent-up passion full play, and it was a miracle that he did not kill his man. He dragged an antimacassar from a chair and used it as a gag. With one powerful hand he dragged Patmore by the neck to the window; with the other he threw up the casement and whistled sharply for Lowther.
Lowther came running up the steps and through the open door.
“We'll bind this cur,” said Westerham through his teeth. And they fastened his hands and his feet together.
“Now then,” said Westerham to Lowther, “heat that poker in the fire.”
For a second Lowther hesitated to obey.
“Do as I tell you,” whispered Westerham, and his face was the face of a madman.
Lowther thrust the poker between the bars.
Lowther found a syphon of soda-water and brought Patmore to by squirting his face; then Westerham lifted the man up as though he were a child and threw him into the car. Lowther climbed to the steering wheel and headed south for Kent.
Westerham knew where Lady Kathleen was held prisoner.
As the car ran southwards and came to Oxford Street, Westerham thrust Patmore on to the floor and sat holding him between his knees.
Without pity, he again seized the shrinking man's neck in his great hands.
“Understand,” he said in a low voice, “that if you attempt to cry out you will be strangled.”
Patmore made a choking noise to indicate that he understood, and the car went on at a great pace through Regent Street across Piccadilly, and so reached Whitehall.
Westerham had decided that, apart from the necessity of giving Lord Penshurst the good news, it would be better to take the Premier with them to the farm in Kent at which Westerham had learned Kathleen was imprisoned.
It was close on midnight when Lowther brought the car to a standstill in Downing Street. Mendip, who had abandoned his obviously futile watching in Queen Victoria Street, had returned some time before, and now rushed out to meet them.
“He's inside,” said Lowther, jerking his head back, and Mendip thrust his head through the window peering into the gloom in search of Westerham.
“It is all right,” said Westerham, quietly.“Don't rouse anybody, but get Lord Penshurst out here at once. I have got a man in here with me and my hands are full.”
He gave Patmore's back a by no means tender squeeze as a further indication that he had no intention of relinquishing his grip.
Mendip ran inside, and finding the Premier, brought him to the car.
“Well,” he said eagerly, “have you news at last?”
“Yes,” answered Westerham. “I have discovered Lady Kathleen's whereabouts, and I think we shall be just in time. But we must start at once, and you had better come with us. Mendip, get Lord Penshurst a hat.”
They were off again in a few minutes, Mendip riding beside Lowther, and the Premier beside Westerham in the body of the car.
He inquired eagerly as to the man whom Westerham still held between his knees, and Westerham, to Patmore's shame, briefly outlined what had passed since he had kept the appointment at St. Paul's.
There were some things which he did not tell the Premier, and Patmore, wincing under yet another squeeze from Westerham's ruthless fingers, held his peace.
The man had given them fairly accurate directions as to the road which they must take, and Lowther made good speed through New Cross and so to Bromley. They kept on down the main road till they passed Farnborough, where, in accordance with Patmore's instructions, he branched off to the left, and leaving Cudham behind them, heswept down the hill to Westerham, the place from which Sir Paul took his name.
They were now, indeed, travelling along the same route which Melun had taken when he had kidnapped Lady Kathleen in Richmond Park.
As they ran through Sevenoaks Westerham lowered the windows and made Patmore kneel on the front of the seat, so that he could the better point out the way to Lowther.
Lowther knew the district fairly well, and whistled to himself as Patmore directed him to turn up to the right before they reached Hildenborough.
The car was now heading for Edenbridge, and he knew they were racing along the foot of that great range of hills, the southern slopes of which are almost as precipitous and desolate as the moors of Devon.
Before long Patmore directed Lowther to turn to the right again, and he had to put the car on to her second and then on to her third speed as the hill rose up almost sheer before them.
“How much further is it?” he asked over his shoulder as the engines of the motor complained bitterly at the ascent.
“About another half-mile. Then you get on to a sort of plateau. There you must turn to the left.”
“How far will the turning be from the house?” asked Westerham.
“I'm not sure,” replied Patmore, “but I should think about five hundred yards. You will have to drive through what is practically a bridle-path and take it gently. It is an awkward place on a dark night.”
The man was in considerable pain as the resultof the treatment he had met with at Finchley, and now and again he groaned so pitifully that at last Westerham let him slide down from the seat on to the floor of the car again.
Lord Penshurst asked what ailed him. And Patmore would have spoken had not Westerham dug his fingers into his ribs. Patmore knew well enough what that dig in his ribs meant, and wisely kept silent.
As the car groaned and snorted her way up the hill Westerham took counsel with himself. He was doubtful as to the wisdom of running up to the door, lest the noise of the car's approach should give Melun and the other inmates of the farm warning of their approach. He reflected, however, that the warning would be very slight, and that, for all he could tell, every moment might count. So he held on, and as they turned into the bridle-path he urged Lowther to use all the speed he dared.
It was intensely dark beneath the trees, and Westerham sitting in the blackness of the body of the car, could hear light boughs and sometimes heavy branches scrape along the sides.
Suddenly the car stopped and, looking out of the window, Westerham, whose eyes were used to the darkest night, could discern that they were in a little clearing.
He jumped out and, turning round, he took out a spare revolver which he had brought with him and placed it in Lord Penshurst's hand.
“Lord Penshurst,” Westerham said,“it is necessary for someone to keep an eye on this man. I have no idea how many of Melun's gang may be waiting for us. I am told probably not more than two; but one cannot take anything of that sort on trust, and to avoid all unnecessary risks I shall want Mendip and Lowther with me.”
The Premier, whom the drive and the near approach of danger had rendered alert and almost cheerful, nodded at Westerham in the darkness.
“All right,” he said, and his gnarled but still sinewy hand took a firm grip on Patmore's collar.
“You had better sit still,” he said, and Patmore cringed at the Premier's knees. His spirit was entirely broken by the agony he was now enduring.
The ray from one of the lamps outlined the shape of a gate.
“Here we are,” cried Westerham in a low voice, and in a second he had jumped forward and pulled the iron catch back and taken a stride forward. But his eager foot found no foothold. His hand was torn from its grasp of the gate, and he pitched forward, to find himself plunged up to the neck in icy water.
So great was the shock that he cried out a little as he spluttered and blew the water from his mouth. A couple of strokes brought him back to the gate again, and as he clutched it he looked up at the silent house.
Even as he did so he caught a little spit of flame from one of the windows and a bullet splashed into the water beside his head. There was another spit of flame, and he felt his knuckles tingle as though they had been rapped with a red-hot iron.
Then Mendip gripped him by the collar, and with his aid he scrambled up on to the path.
Lowther, who had been quick to see the necessity of instant action, was by this time firing back atthe place from which the little spits of flame had come far above them. In the darkness he answered shot for shot.
After the sound of the shots came a complete silence, and Westerham, as he stood stock-still beside the gate, which was now swinging idly over the pond, could hear the patter of the water on the path as it dripped from his clothes.
Mendip, as soon as he had seen that Westerham was safe, had run along the hedge, and now he gave a shout.
“This is the gate we want,” he cried.
But a third spit of flame came from the darkness overhead, and Westerham heard Mendip swearing softly under his breath. Whoever their unknown assailant might be, he was no mean marksman.
Westerham and Lowther ran to Mendip's aid.
“What's up?” asked Westerham.
“Nothing,” answered Mendip, and he got the gate opened. The three men dashed up the path and reached the door of the farmhouse; but it was made of stout oak, and securely fastened within.
They thrust their shoulders against it without avail, and then stood looking at one another, panting, and for the moment baffled.
It was then that Westerham's quick ear caught a woman's voice. He whipped round and looked across the sheet of water. His eyes were now well accustomed to the gloom, and he saw the form of a woman leaning far out of a window and gesticulating wildly.
He held up his hand to the others for silence, and then once more came a voice which he instantly recognised. It was the voice of Mme. Estelle.
“Be quick! Be quick!” she cried. “If you don't wish to be too late, you must swim the pond, the door is barred.”
Westerham cast a quick glance behind him, and his eyes fell on the gate.
“Use that as a battering ram,” he ordered, and then his jaws closed over the butt of his revolver.
Without hesitation he waded in, and a few strong strokes brought him beneath the window out of which Mme. Estelle leant and waved.
He knew instinctively by her accents that she was terrified beyond measure and that he need not expect treachery from her.
With one hand he clutched the sill, with the other he reached up and shifting the safety-cap on with his thumb, let his revolver fall into the room.
Soaked as he was with water, it was not an easy task to hoist himself up and clamber through the window, and when at last he stood within the room he leant against the wall partially exhausted and breathing hard.
Mme. Estelle stood before him wringing her hands.
“Be quick!” she said again. “Be quick! be quick! or you will be too late. That fiend Melun is at his work.”
By the light of the candles which flickered on the mantelpiece Westerham made his way to the door.
Seizing the handle, he turned it, but the lock held fast. He examined it swiftly, and to his joy saw that it opened outwards. He drew back a yard, and then sent the whole of his great weight crashing against the panels. And with good fortune the door of the room, although stoutly built, was partiallyrotten. It burst wide open before his weight and sent him sprawling on to his face in the passage.
As he lay there half-stunned his pulses throbbed again as the noise which came from the main entrance told him that Lowther and Mendip were making good use of the gate.
He dragged himself up to his knees, still clutching his revolver, and at the same moment the outer door gave up its resistance, and Lowther and Mendip came headlong into the hall-way.
He heard them give a warning shout as he struggled to his feet, steadying himself by the pillars of the banisters.
Looking up the stairs, he saw the brutal face of Crow on the landing, his strong, yellow teeth bared in a vicious snarl.
Westerham heard the sound of a shot, and at the same time felt the hands of Mme. Estelle give him a push.
Her intention was unselfish, almost heroic; she saved Westerham's life, but lost her own.
She pitched forward with a little gasping sigh and lay still, huddled on the stairs. Westerham heard a second shot rap out from behind his back, and saw Crow stagger on the landing. The man reeled for a couple of paces and then fell heavily.
Westerham had by this time fully got back his senses and his breath; and now he heard coming from somewhere high above him scream after scream of dreadful terror.
He plunged up the staircase, and stepping across the body of Crow as it lay on the landing, raced upthe second flight of stairs. For a moment he paused, in order to make doubly sure whence the dreadful screaming came.
Then he had no doubt, and dashed on, up to the third flight, till he came to the topmost landing.
Here he was confronted by a door, and he groaned within himself. He was living in some awful nightmare at which a door faced him at every turn.
He emptied his revolver in the lock and hurled himself in frenzy against this further obstruction; it gave way, and he tottered into the room, the lights of which for a moment dazzled him.
His half-blinded eyes were greeted by the sight which he had dreaded ever since he had come to the farm on the hill.
Kathleen was fighting desperately, and for life, with Melun.
With a great cry Westerham leapt forward, but he was too late to exercise that vengeance which had now full possession of his soul.
Melun flung Kathleen to one side, and for a second turned his pallid face, in which his eyes were burning like a madman's, full on Westerham as he dashed on him.
Then without a sound he leapt aside, and vaulting on to the sill of the open window, jumped out.
Instinctively Westerham knew what was coming, and catching Kathleen to him, held her head against his breast, stopping her ears with his hands. As his palms closed upon them his heart grew sick as he remembered the dreadful thing which had come to Downing Street earlier in the day.
But to his unutterable joy—joy which was almosta shock—his hands told him that Melun's hideous warning had been but a brutal hoax.
Kathleen was never told of it.
Then as he stood there with his eyes bent on her hair, he heard the sickening sound of Melun's body thud on to the stones below.
Releasing Kathleen's ears, he put his hand under her chin and lifted up her face. He marvelled that she had not fainted, but the dreadful horror in her eyes struck into his heart like a blow.
He had to hold her to prevent her falling to the floor, and so he stood for some few seconds with Kathleen limp and shivering in his arms.
Bracing himself for one last effort, Westerham lifted Kathleen up and bore her out of the room. Half-dazed, he stumbled down the stairs with her until he reached the hall.
In the doorway he saw Lord Penshurst, still clinging grimly to Patmore's collar, but at the sight of Kathleen the Premier released his hold and came running forward with outstretched arms.
“Just a minute,” said Westerham, quickly, and he walked into the room, the door of which he had shattered.
In the meantime Mendip and Lowther had picked up Mme. Estelle and carried her into the same room, and now she lay on the couch, her face growing grey with the shadows of death, and her breath coming fast and feebly. Her eyes stared up at the ceiling with an intense and horrible fixity.
Westerham pushed an armchair round with his foot and set Kathleen down on it so that her back was turned to the dying woman.
Lord Penshurst fell on his knees beside the chair,and seizing his daughter's hands, held them against his breast, and for a little while wept quietly.
Westerham crossed over to Mme. Estelle and stood over her. He put his hand against her heart and listened to her breathing.
“I am afraid,” he said in a low voice to Mendip, “that we can do nothing for her. It is a bad business. Heaven forgive her for anything she has done amiss! She did her best to make amends.”
Then he drew Lowther out of the room and told him to fetch a lamp from the car. Patmore was sitting on the stairs with his face hidden in his hands.
“Never mind him,” said Westerham, as Lowther gave the man a glance, “we shall have no more trouble from that quarter.”
When Lowther had fetched the lamp Westerham took it and began rapidly to examine round the ground floor of the rambling building. He was seeking for the courtyard into which Melun had fallen.
At last they found it, and found, too, all that remained of Melun. He was battered and crushed and bruised almost beyond recognition.
Westerham set his face and straightened the twisted and distorted body out. Then began the grim task of searching the dead man's clothes. He turned out every pocket, and with a knife ripped open every lining. But the papers which he sought were not there.
He straightened himself, and picking up the lamp led the way back into the house.
By this time Kathleen, though very pale and stillshaken, was quite composed. Indeed, she was now more self-possessed than the Premier. She was doing her utmost to quiet his still painful agitation.
Westerham looked into Kathleen's face, and seeing how strong and resolute it was, felt no hesitation in speaking before her.
“Lord Penshurst,” he said, very quietly, “Melun is dead.”
The Premier glanced at him quickly and then turned to his daughter.
“Thank heaven!” he cried.
“Hush,” said Kathleen, gently, and taking her father by the arm she pointed to Mme. Estelle.
Mendip had done what he could, and the unhappy woman had, to some extent, come back to consciousness.
She was indeed sufficiently alive to catch Westerham's words. She brought her fast fading eyes down from the ceiling and searched Westerham's face.
“Melun!” she muttered to herself: “Melun!”
Westerham drew near and knelt down by the couch. He took one of her hands, which was even then growing cold.
“Melun?” she asked again in a voice scarcely above a whisper.
Westerham put his mouth down to her ear and said slowly, “He is dead.”
The shock of the news acted on the woman in a most extraordinary way. With a convulsive movement she suddenly gathered herself together and sat bolt upright on the couch. She would have fallen back again had not Westerham caught her in his arms.
“The papers!” she gasped.
“Yes?” said Westerham, kindly and soothingly. “Where are they?”
With a faint movement she pointed towards Westerham's feet. “There!” she gasped.
To Westerham it seemed as if she were already beginning to wander in her mind, but he said still kindly and soothingly, “Yes, yes, I know! But where?”
The woman opened her mouth and made two or three efforts before she spoke again, and then she only breathed the word “Boots!”
Westerham's gaze wandered over the sideboard.
“See if you can find any brandy,” he said to Mendip.
Mendip could find no brandy, but brought some almost neat whisky over in a glass.
Westerham took the glass from Mendip's hand and pressed it to Mme. Estelle's lips. She revived a little, and suddenly spoke clearly and in almost her normal voice.
“Sir Paul,” she said, “the papers are in your boots!”
For a moment Westerham stared into the dying woman's face, under the impression that her reason had departed from her. But with a start he remembered how he had awoke in St. John's Wood, after being drugged, to find himself dressed in strange clothes and in new footgear. And for the first time the real significance of the removal of all his apparel from his rooms in Bruton Street struck him with full force. He remembered, too, that from the night he had left Mme. Estelle, Melun, by one swift action after another, had kept him constantlyon the move, so that it had been impossible for him so much as to order fresh clothes.
To the astonishment of Lord Penshurst and Kathleen, and to the wonderment of Lowther and Mendip, Westerham propped Mme. Estelle up against the pillows and began rapidly to remove his boots.
Comfortable though they had been, it had always struck him that they were unnaturally deep between the outer and the inner sole. The meaning of that came clearly home to him now.
No sooner had he pulled off his boots than he took a knife and began to rip feverishly at the heels. He succeeded in detaching them, and was then able easily to rip open the soles.
He was now fully prepared for any turn of events, but he could not repress an exclamation, as in tearing away the upper layers of leather, his eyes fell on a dozen neatly-folded sheets of tissue paper.
He drew them out, and with a cry Lord Penshurst snatched them from his hand.
Westerham saw at a glance that the Premier had regained the papers he had lost—the papers which had jeopardised, not only the peace of nations, but his own and his daughter's honour.
Westerham seized the other boot, but Mme. Estelle shook her head. “Look afterwards,” she gasped, “not now.”
Westerham held the whisky to her lips again, and again she rallied slightly.
“The papers,” she said faintly,“were deposited at the poste-restante, St. Martin's-le-Grand, in my name. But Melun really thought you had discovered where they were and took them away. There was not a single place in which we could hope to hide them safely. It was I who thought of your boots.
“I did it,” she said, with a wan little smile at Westerham, “partly to save you. I knew that so long as you were safe the papers were safe.
“Melun was so certain that he would win,” she went on wearily, “I don't think he really thought of doing you any injury. It struck him that it would be an immense joke after he had got his way to tell Lord Penshurst that the man who was trying to find the papers had them in his possession all the time. I think sometimes he was mad.”
Madame paused, and her eyes contracted as though with pain.
“Forgive!” she gasped. Then her eyes became fixed and staring.
It was Westerham who drew the dead woman's eyelids down.
It was long past dawn when they reached Downing Street, and Lord Penshurst at once sent in cipher a short message to the Czar, informing his Majesty of the recovery of the papers.
Afterwards, in the Premier's own room, Westerham sat for a short while with Kathleen and Lord Penshurst. But little was said, for, just as some sorrows are too deep for tears, so there is some gratitude beyond thanks.
“Westerham,” said the Premier, earnestly,“it is simply impossible that I shall ever be able to repay you the great service you have rendered me. But, believe me, if there is anything in the world it is within my power to give you, you have but to ask to receive it.”
Westerham looked across at Kathleen, but said nothing. The time had not yet come when he could ask Lord Penshurst for that which would a thousand times repay him.
THE END
Transcriber's note:What appeared to be clear typographical errors were corrected; any other mistakes or inconsistencies were retained.Paragraphs that were separated by an illustration were rejoined and the image placed before or after the paragraph.All quotation marks have been retained as they appear in the original publication.
What appeared to be clear typographical errors were corrected; any other mistakes or inconsistencies were retained.
Paragraphs that were separated by an illustration were rejoined and the image placed before or after the paragraph.
All quotation marks have been retained as they appear in the original publication.