<h2 id="c5"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER IV</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">THE STRANGE EXPERIENCE OF MISS PATRICIA MAXWELL</span></h2>
<p>Desmond and Francis Okewood faced
each other across the table in the snug
living-room of Desmond’s little service flat
in Saint James’s. The curtains were drawn,
for it was five o’clock of a winter evening;
and the tantalus, siphon, and glasses which
filled the tray between them suggested that
the two brothers were prepared to celebrate,
in their peculiar fashion, the rites of the
hour. However, a tea-wagon, appropriately
decked out, that stood near the window, indicated
that a visitor of less masculine tastes
was expected.</p>
<p>“Well,” remarked Desmond, resuming his
train of thought which he had interrupted to
light a cigarette, “if old Clubfoot, as you say,
has any money, I’d like to know where he
gets it from, that’s all!”</p>
<p>Francis grunted. “He’s got it all right,
don’t worry,” he retorted, “as Patricia Maxwell
will tell you in a minute . . .”</p>
<p>“Provided she hasn’t forgotten the appointment,”
said Desmond, looking at the
clock.</p>
<p>“She’ll be here to the tick,” his brother replied,
“unless she has altered from what she
used to be when I knew her in the States!”</p>
<p>“A friend of Monica’s, didn’t you say she
was?”</p>
<p>(Monica was Francis Okewood’s American
wife.)</p>
<p>Francis nodded. “They went to the same
school in America. We met her again last
year in California. That’s why she came
to me with this extraordinary story of hers.
But here she is, I think!”</p>
<p>Old Batts, the valet of the flats, appeared
at the door.</p>
<p>“Miss Maxwell!” he announced.</p>
<p>Patricia Maxwell was of that not uncommon
type of American girl who in the daytime
looks as though she had stepped out of
the current number of a fashion paper, and
in the evening as though she would appear
in the forthcoming issue. From the crown
of her little brown hat to the sole of her
neatly shod foot she was absolutely flawless,
perfectly coiffed, perfectly dressed, perfectly
gloved, perfectly shod. An orphan, her more
than comfortable means enabled her, through
frequent visits to Europe, to appreciate her
country to the full, besides permitting her to
admit with impunity her real age which was
on the right side of thirty. Her little London
house, within a stone’s throw of the
Park, was, like herself, a gem of good taste.
She knew everybody and liked almost everybody,
and everybody liked her.</p>
<p>“So this is the famous brother?” she said
when Francis introduced Desmond. “If you
only knew how perfectly thrilled I am to meet
you two together! But you’ll have to promise
not to laugh at my story, Major Okewood!
I dare say it’ll seem just silly to
<i>you</i>!”</p>
<p>“On the contrary, Miss Maxwell,” Desmond
answered with his rather languid air,
“I am honestly quite extraordinarily curious
to hear it. Believe me, a yarn that’ll interest
this brother of mine must be something well
out of the ordinary!”</p>
<p>And over the tea-cups in that tranquil
room, while outside the cars and taxis purred
and hooted up and down the slope of Saint
James’s Street, she told her story. Long before
she had done, Desmond, nursing his
knee, his eyes fixed on the speaker’s face, had
let his cigarette go out as it dangled from his
lips.</p>
<p>“I expect your brother has told you,” she
said, “that I’m a collector of enamels. I
guess it’s a kind of hobby of mine. Every
time a special piece comes up for sale in London
or Paris or Vienna, one of the dealers
is pretty sure to notify me, and if it’s any
way possible, I go along and see it.</p>
<p>“Well, the other day a dealer friend of
mine called me on the ’phone and told me
that a Russian ikon—you know, one of these
sacred pictures you see in Russian homes and
churches—was to be sold at Blackie’s. It
was a beautiful piece, he said, with the figures
of the Madonna and Child in green-and-blue
enamel under a silver sheeting—probably
twelfth or thirteenth century work.
He thought it would fetch under a hundred
pounds and wanted to bid for me. But I like
auctions and I said I’d go myself. I went
into Blackie’s the day before the sale and fell
in love with the ikon at once. It was quite
small, not above about nine inches by six,
I guess, and heavy for its size, the silver covering
cut out so as to show the enamel figures
underneath—you know the way it is—black
with age.</p>
<p>“Well, yesterday was the day of the sale,
and Süsslein, my little dealer, went along
with me. The ikon was part of the collection
of some Russian Count—I forget the name—one
of the <i>émigrés</i> from the Russian
Revolution who had served with Denikin
against the Bolsheviks. We sat there all
through the afternoon and by the time the
ikon came up the hall was three-quarters
empty.</p>
<p>“One of the dealers started the bidding at
ten guineas, and between three or four of
us we ran it up to seventy-five. Then the
others began to drop out, and by the time
we’d got to a hundred there were only three
of us left—Harris, who buys for Lord Boraston,
me, and a funny-looking little runt of
a man with a grey chin-beard and spectacles.
He wasn’t one of the ordinary dealers, so I
sent Süsslein to find out just who he was.
When he came back he whispered to me he
was a man called Achille Saumergue, who
was believed to be a Frenchman. Nobody
had ever seen him before.</p>
<p>“At two hundred guineas we topped
Harris’s limit, and he passed away, leaving
me and old Saumergue to it. He and I kept
on quietly tossing the ball to and fro until—I’m
cutting this all short, you know—I
brought him up all standing with an advance
of fifty guineas on his three hundred and
fifty. I jumped the price up a bit because
Hermann, the auctioneer, who’s an old
friend of mine, kept looking at the clock, and
I knew the poor man was dying to shut down
and go home.</p>
<p>“Then old Saumergue asked if he might
telephone—I suppose he’d reached his limit.
As he went out, I noticed that Süsslein went
after him. He’s pretty slick, and I guessed
he meant to pick up what he could outside the
telephone box.</p>
<p>“But, my gracious! in two minutes my
little friend was back in no end of a way.
Why, the man was so white I thought he was
ill! He started telling me a long story
about old Saumergue buying in the ikon for
some Russian family where it was an heirloom,
that it was really a rather inferior
specimen, and a lot of stuff like that. That’s
the line of talk dealers always hand out when
they want to shoo you off a piece.</p>
<p>“But it didn’t go any with me, Major
Okewood. I wanted that little old ikon, and
I meant to have it. But do you think what
I wanted mattered? Say, for about five
minutes that little Jew never let up knocking
that holy picture, saying the price was
ridiculous, and how I must be plumb crazy
to bid four hundred guineas for a thing that
wasn’t worth above forty!</p>
<p>“As Hermann picked up his hammer
again, I just waved the dealer aside. That
old skate and I went at it once more. Everybody
in the place was crowded round us now,
sort of in two camps—you know the way it
is—and it was so quiet you could almost
hear a pin drop, I guess.</p>
<p>“‘May I say four hundred and fifty
guineas? It’s a lovely piece,’ Hermann calls
out in his soft voice, and the old man nods.
He was standing up, very serious, blinking
through his spectacles, but I could see his
hands shaking with excitement.</p>
<p>“‘Five hundred!’ I said from my place
just under the desk—they had given me a
Heppelwhite chair from the Zossenberg sale
next week to sit in.</p>
<p>“‘And twenty-five!’ says the old man with
a kind of gasp.</p>
<p>“‘Fifty?’ asks Hermann, looking at me.
I nodded.</p>
<p>“Süsslein pulled my sleeve. ‘Let him have
the ikon!’ he whispered. ‘It don’t matter
any to you, a common old thing like that!
For God’s sake, let him have it, Miss Maxwell!’</p>
<p>“I shook my head.</p>
<p>“‘Six hundred!’ I said.</p>
<p>“‘Any advance on six hundred?’ asks
Hermann, and brings his hammer down
pretty sharply. ‘Six hundred guineas I’m
bid. For the first time! It’s getting late,
and we all want to go home, I’m sure. For
the second time . . .’</p>
<p>“‘Seven hundred!’ says the old Frenchman
faintly.</p>
<p>“All this time Süsslein was whispering in
my ear. The man was all worked up.
‘You’ve got to let him have it,’ he kept on
saying. ‘Take my advice, Miss Maxwell,
and let the thing be. It’ll bring you no luck!
Believe me, I know what I’m saying!’ His
voice was shaking and his eyes were starting
out of his head.</p>
<p>“But I meant to have that ikon, though,
by this, the price was ’way beyond my figure.
The end came quick.</p>
<p>“‘Shall we say eight hundred?’ asks Hermann.</p>
<p>“I nodded. With that the old man turned
on his heel and walked straight out of the
place. The ikon was mine.</p>
<p>“Süsslein didn’t say any more. He left
me there. He seemed a changed man. And
I took the ikon home. As I told Süsslein,
I had it all planned out where I was going
to hang it in the little space between the
panels over the desk in my boudoir.</p>
<p>“This morning, before I was up, Süsslein
was round at the house. He said he wanted
to speak to me urgently. He had come, he
told me, on behalf of a client to offer me a
thousand pounds for the ikon. I told him I
wasn’t selling. He asked me what I would
take. I told him I didn’t intend to part with
my treasure.</p>
<p>“‘My client,’ he said, ‘is most anxious,
for family reasons, to acquire the ikon,’ and
he offered me two thousand guineas, and
then three.</p>
<p>“By this time I was getting pretty peeved,
and I told Süsslein so. ‘If your client can
prove to my satisfaction,’ I told him, ‘that
this ikon really is an heirloom in his family,
it’s a different matter. At present it looks to
me as though you and he had realized too
late that I had got on to something pretty
good. I’m not selling, and you can tell your
client so!’ And with that I sent him about
his business.</p>
<p>“I had a lot of trouble to get rid of him.
Like so many dealers, he seemed to think
it was all a question of money. He couldn’t
realize that I’d never part with anything
that went so well with the dull green wainscot
of my boudoir unless, of course, they
could prove to me that the ikon had been
stolen or something of that kind.”</p>
<p>“Your dealer pal didn’t tell you the name
of his client?” asked Desmond.</p>
<p>“I asked him, of course, but he said he
was not at liberty to reveal it. But it didn’t
matter any, for, about an hour later, he
arrived in person.”</p>
<p>“The client?”</p>
<p>“Sure. A Russian, a certain Dr. Madjaroff.
I was sick and tired of the whole
thing, so I told the butler to say I was busy.
But he said he’d wait till I was disengaged.
So, just to get rid of him, I saw him. My
dear, he was the most extraordinary-looking
person, a vast man with a great bushy black
beard and a clubfoot . . .”</p>
<p>There was a crash from the fender. Desmond
Okewood had suddenly dropped the
knee he had been hugging and overset the
fire irons.</p>
<p>“He spoke in French,” Patricia Maxwell
went on. “He said that, through a misunderstanding,
Monsieur Saumergue, who
had been bidding for him at Blackie’s yesterday,
had failed to secure the ikon. ‘But,’ he
said, ‘I am prepared to pay handsomely for
the mistake. I will now write you my cheque
for three thousand five hundred guineas!’
And he actually produced a cheque-book and
a fountain pen!</p>
<p>“I told him I didn’t want to sell. But do
you think he’d take ‘no’ for an answer? Not
on your life! ‘Would I name my own figure?’
he said, and when I stood up and repeated
that I meant to keep the ikon and
that he was wasting his time, he offered me
first five thousand guineas and at last, by
stages, six thousand five hundred.</p>
<p>“You know, that man rather frightened
me. I’m supposed to be a pretty determined
sort of person myself, but never in my life
have I run up against such a dominating
personality as this Dr. Madjaroff. He was
so big and hairy with the vitality of some
great animal like a buffalo or . . . or a
rhinoceros.</p>
<p>“When I turned down his offer of six
thousand five hundred guineas, he bent his
dark bushy eyebrows at me.</p>
<p>“‘Miss Maxwell,’ he said, ‘I’ve set my
heart on that ikon. You’ve got to let me
have it.’</p>
<p>“I told him I was sorry, but it was quite
impossible.</p>
<p>“‘I’ve offered you thirty, fifty times its
value,’ he returned. ‘Believe me, you will
be well advised to accept my offer.’</p>
<p>“‘My mind is made up,’ I replied, and
rang to show him the interview was at an
end. ‘The ikon is not for sale.’</p>
<p>“Do you know, the queerest change came
over that old guy! All his hair seemed to
bristle and his eyes just burnt like two hot
coals. He raised up his stick—he had a
crutch-stick that he walked with—as though
to strike me, then turned his back on me and
hobbled out of the house. My! I tell you I
felt relieved to see him go . . .”</p>
<p>Desmond broke in quickly. “I hope you
didn’t leave the ikon hanging up in your
house?” he said. His languid air had given
way to a brisk and eager manner. His steely
blue eyes searched the girl’s face as he spoke.</p>
<p>“Why, no!” said Miss Maxwell. “As a
matter of fact, I brought it along to show
you!”</p>
<p>So saying she opened her capacious leathern
handbag and produced a flat brown
paper parcel. Unwrapping it, she drew
forth the ikon, which she handed to Desmond.</p>
<p>He bore it quickly to the electric-light
bracket by the fire-place and carefully examined
it. Once or twice he balanced it in
his hand as though appraising the weight.</p>
<p>“Now, why do you suppose,” the American
asked, “that this Russian is so dead set
on getting hold of this old ikon? It’s beautiful
work and all that, of course, but it’s not
worth six thousand five hundred guineas or
the half or even the quarter of the eight
hundred I paid . . .”</p>
<p>But Desmond had turned away and was
talking to his brother.</p>
<p>“We want to make sure,” he was saying.
“Tell him I’ll come round at once and see
him.”</p>
<p>Francis Okewood stepped across to a desk
in the corner on which the telephone stood
and asked for a number.</p>
<p>“Why,” exclaimed Miss Maxwell, “that’s
Süsslein’s number!”</p>
<p>But Francis held up his hand for silence,
the telephone receiver to his ear.</p>
<p>“I want to speak to Mr. Süsslein,” he said,
and stood listening for a moment.</p>
<p>“I see,” he said presently. “No, I hadn’t
heard.”</p>
<p>He hung up the receiver and faced them.</p>
<p>“Süsslein was found dead in his office
after lunch!” he said quietly.</p>
<p>“Dead?” exclaimed the American in a
shocked voice.</p>
<p>“He had hanged himself,” Francis answered
gravely.</p>
<p>“That settles it!” said Desmond, looking
up from his study of the ikon. “This means
that The Man with the Clubfoot is at his old
tricks again!”</p>
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