<h2><SPAN name="THE_COMEDY_AT_FOUNTAIN_COTTAGE" id= "THE_COMEDY_AT_FOUNTAIN_COTTAGE"></SPAN>THE COMEDY AT FOUNTAIN COTTAGE</h2>
<p>Carrados had rung up Mr Carlyle soon after the inquiry agent had
reached his office in Bampton Street on a certain morning in April.
Mr Carlyle’s face at once assumed its most amiable expression
as he recognized his friend’s voice.</p>
<p>“Yes, Max,” he replied, in answer to the call,
“I am here and at the top of form, thanks. Glad to know that
you are back from Trescoe. Is there—anything?”</p>
<p>“I have a couple of men coming in this evening whom you
might like to meet,” explained Carrados. “Manoel the
Zambesia explorer is one and the other an East-End slum doctor who
has seen a few things. Do you care to come round to
dinner?”</p>
<p>“Delighted,” warbled Mr Carlyle, without a
moment’s consideration. “Charmed. Your usual hour,
Max?” Then the smiling complacence of his face suddenly
changed and the wire conveyed an exclamation of annoyance. “I
am really very sorry, Max, but I have just remembered that I have
an engagement. I fear that I must deny myself after all.”</p>
<p>“Is it important?”</p>
<p>“No,” admitted Mr Carlyle. “Strictly speaking,
it is not in the least important; this is why I feel compelled to
keep it. It is only to dine with my niece. They have just got into
an absurd doll’s house of a villa at Groat’s Heath and
I had promised to go there this evening.”</p>
<p>“Are they particular to a day?”</p>
<p>There was a moment’s hesitation before Mr Carlyle
replied.</p>
<p>“I am afraid so, now it is fixed,” he said.
“To you, Max, it will be ridiculous or incomprehensible that
a third to dinner—and he only a middle-aged
uncle—should make a straw of difference. But I know that in
their bijou way it will be a little domestic event to
Elsie—an added anxiety in giving the butcher an order, an
extra course for dinner, perhaps; a careful drilling of the one
diminutive maid-servant, and she is such a charming little
woman—eh? Who, Max? No! No! I did not say the maid-servant;
if I did it is the fault of this telephone. Elsie is such a
delightful little creature that, upon my soul, it would be too bad
to fail her now.”</p>
<p>“Of course it would, you old humbug,” agreed
Carrados, with sympathetic laughter in his voice. “Well, come
to-morrow instead. I shall be alone.”</p>
<p>“Oh, besides, there is a special reason for going, which
for the moment I forgot,” explained Mr Carlyle, after
accepting the invitation. “Elsie wishes for my advice with
regard to her next-door neighbour. He is an elderly man of retiring
disposition and he makes a practice of throwing kidneys over into
her garden.”</p>
<p>“Kittens! Throwing kittens?”</p>
<p>“No, no, Max. Kidneys. Stewed k-i-d-n-e-y-s. It is a
little difficult to explain plausibly over a badly vibrating
telephone, I admit, but that is what Elsie’s letter assured
me, and she adds that she is in despair.”</p>
<p>“At all events it makes the lady quite independent of the
butcher, Louis!”</p>
<p>“I have no further particulars, Max. It may be a solitary
diurnal offering, or the sky may at times appear to rain kidneys.
If it is a mania the symptoms may even have become more pronounced
and the man is possibly showering beef-steaks across by this time.
I will make full inquiry and let you know.”</p>
<p>“Do,” assented Carrados, in the same light-hearted
spirit. “Mrs Nickleby’s neighbourly admirer expressed
his feelings by throwing cucumbers, you remember, but this man puts
him completely in the shade.”</p>
<p>It had not got beyond the proportions of a jest to either of
them when they rang off—one of those whimsical occurrences in
real life that sound so fantastic in outline. Carrados did not give
the matter another thought until the next evening when his
friend’s arrival revived the subject.</p>
<p>“And the gentleman next door?” he inquired among his
greetings. “Did the customary offering arrive while you were
there?”</p>
<p>“No,” admitted Mr Carlyle, beaming pleasantly upon
all the familiar appointments of the room, “it did not, Max.
In fact, so diffident has the mysterious philanthropist become,
that no one at Fountain Cottage has been able to catch sight of him
lately, although I am told that Scamp—Elsie’s
terrier—betrays a very self-conscious guilt and suspiciously
muddy paws every morning.”</p>
<p>“Fountain Cottage?”</p>
<p>“That is the name of the toy villa.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but Fountain something, Groat’s
Heath—Fountain Court: wasn’t that where
Metrobe——?”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes, to be sure, Max. Metrobe the traveller, the
writer and scientist——”</p>
<p>“Scientist!”</p>
<p>“Well, he took up spiritualism or something, didn’t
he? At any rate, he lived at Fountain Court, an old red-brick house
in a large neglected garden there, until his death a couple of
years ago. Then, as Groat’s Heath had suddenly become a
popular suburb with a tube railway, a land company acquired the
estate, the house was razed to the ground and in a twinkling a
colony of Noah’s ark villas took its place. There is Metrobe
Road here, and Court Crescent there, and Mansion Drive and what
not, and Elsie’s little place perpetuates another
landmark.”</p>
<p>“I have Metrobe’s last book there,” said
Carrados, nodding towards a point on his shelves. “In fact he
sent me a copy. ‘The Flame beyond the Dome’ it is
called—the queerest farrago of balderdash and metaphysics
imaginable. But what about the neighbour, Louis? Did you settle
what we might almost term ‘his hash’?”</p>
<p>“Oh, he is mad, of course. I advised her to make as little
fuss about it as possible, seeing that the man lives next door and
might become objectionable, but I framed a note for her to send
which will probably have a good effect.”</p>
<p>“Is he mad, Louis?”</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t say that he is strictly a lunatic,
but there is obviously a screw loose somewhere. He may carry
indiscriminate benevolence towards Yorkshire terriers to irrational
lengths. Or he may be a food specialist with a grievance. In effect
he is mad on at least that one point. How else are we to account
for the circumstances?”</p>
<p>“I was wondering,” replied Carrados
thoughtfully.</p>
<p>“You suggest that he really may have a sane
object?”</p>
<p>“I suggest it—for the sake of argument. If he has a
sane object, what is it?”</p>
<p>“That I leave to you, Max,” retorted Mr Carlyle
conclusively. “If he has a sane object, pray what is
it?”</p>
<p>“For the sake of the argument I will tell you that in
half-a-dozen words, Louis,” replied Carrados, with
good-humoured tolerance. “If he is not mad in the sense which
you have defined, the answer stares us in the face. His object is
precisely that which he is achieving.”</p>
<p>Mr Carlyle looked inquiringly into the placid, unemotional face
of his blind friend, as if to read there whether, incredible as it
might seem, Max should be taking the thing seriously after all.</p>
<p>“And what is that?” he asked cautiously.</p>
<p>“In the first place he has produced the impression that he
is eccentric or irresponsible. That is sometimes useful in itself.
Then what else has he done?”</p>
<p>“What else, Max?” replied Mr Carlyle, with some
indignation. “Well, whatever he wishes to achieve by it I can
tell you one thing else that he has done. He has so demoralized
Scamp with his confounded kidneys that Elsie’s neatly
arranged flower-beds—and she took Fountain Cottage
principally on account of an unusually large garden—are
hopelessly devastated. If she keeps the dog up, the garden is
invaded night and day by an army of peregrinating feline marauders
that scent the booty from afar. He has gained the everlasting
annoyance of an otherwise charming neighbour, Max. Can you tell me
what he has achieved by that?”</p>
<p>“The everlasting esteem of Scamp probably. Is he a good
watch-dog, Louis?”</p>
<p>“Good heavens, Max!” exclaimed Mr Carlyle, coming to
his feet as though he had the intention of setting out for
Groat’s Heath then and there, “is it possible that he
is planning a burglary?”</p>
<p>“Do they keep much of value about the house?”</p>
<p>“No,” admitted Mr Carlyle, sitting down again with
considerable relief. “No, they don’t. Bellmark is not
particularly well endowed with worldly goods—in fact, between
ourselves, Max, Elsie could have done very much better from a
strictly social point of view, but he is a thoroughly good fellow
and idolizes her. They have no silver worth speaking of, and for
the rest—well, just the ordinary petty cash of a frugal young
couple.”</p>
<p>“Then he probably is not planning a burglary. I confess
that the idea did not appeal to me. If it is only that, why should
he go to the trouble of preparing this particular succulent dish to
throw over his neighbour’s ground when cold liver would do
quite as well?”</p>
<p>“If it is not only that, why should he go to the trouble,
Max?”</p>
<p>“Because by that bait he produces the greatest disturbance
of your niece’s garden.”</p>
<p>“And, if sane, why should he wish to do that?”</p>
<p>“Because in those conditions he can the more easily
obliterate his own traces if he trespasses there at
nights.”</p>
<p>“Well, upon my word, that’s drawing a bow at a
venture, Max. If it isn’t burglary, what motive could the man
have for any such nocturnal perambulation?”</p>
<p>An expression of suave mischief came into Carrados’s
usually imperturbable face.</p>
<p>“Many imaginable motives surely, Louis. You are a man of
the world. Why not to meet a charming little
woman——”</p>
<p>“No, by gad!” exclaimed the scandalized uncle
warmly; “I decline to consider the remotest possibility of
that explanation. Elsie——”</p>
<p>“Certainly not,” interposed Carrados, smothering his
quiet laughter. “The maid-servant, of course.”</p>
<p>Mr Carlyle reined in his indignation and recovered himself with
his usual adroitness.</p>
<p>“But, you know, that is an atrocious libel, Max,” he
added. “I never said such a thing. However, is it
probable?”</p>
<p>“No,” admitted Carrados. “I don’t think
that in the circumstances it is at all probable.”</p>
<p>“Then where are we, Max?”</p>
<p>“A little further than we were at the beginning. Very
little.... Are you willing to give me a roving commission to
investigate?”</p>
<p>“Of course, Max, of course,” assented Mr Carlyle
heartily. “I—well, as far as I was concerned, I
regarded the matter as settled.”</p>
<p>Carrados turned to his desk and the ghost of a smile might
possibly have lurked about his face. He produced some stationery
and indicated it to his visitor.</p>
<p>“You don’t mind giving me a line of introduction to
your niece?”</p>
<p>“Pleasure,” murmured Carlyle, taking up a pen.
“What shall I say?”</p>
<p>Carrados took the inquiry in its most literal sense and for
reply he dictated the following letter:—</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>“‘<span class="smcap">My dear
Elsie</span>,’—</p>
</div>
<p>“If that is the way you usually address her,” he
parenthesized.</p>
<p>“Quite so,” acquiesced Mr Carlyle, writing.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>“‘The bearer of this is Mr Carrados, of whom I have
spoken to you.’</p>
</div>
<p>“You have spoken of me to her, I trust, Louis?” he
put in.</p>
<p>“I believe that I have casually referred to you,”
admitted the writer.</p>
<p>“I felt sure you would have done. It makes the rest
easier.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>“‘He is not in the least mad although he frequently
does things which to the uninitiated appear more or less eccentric
at the moment. I think that you would be quite safe in complying
with any suggestion he may make.</p>
<p>“‘Your affectionate uncle,</p>
<p class="alignright">“‘<span class="smcap">Louis
Carlyle.</span>’”<br/></p>
</div>
<p>He accepted the envelope and put it away in a pocket-book that
always seemed extraordinarily thin for the amount of papers it
contained.</p>
<p>“I may call there to-morrow,” he added.</p>
<p>Neither again referred to the subject during the evening, but
when Parkinson came to the library a couple of hours after midnight
to know whether he would be required again, he found his master
rather deeply immersed in a book and a gap on the shelf where
“The Flame beyond the Dome” had formerly stood.</p>
<p>It is not impossible that Mr Carlyle supplemented his brief note
of introduction with a more detailed communication that reached his
niece by the ordinary postal service at an earlier hour than the
other. At all events, when Mr Carrados presented himself at the toy
villa on the following afternoon he found Elsie Bellmark
suspiciously disposed to accept him and his rather gratuitous
intervention among her suburban troubles as a matter of course.</p>
<p>When the car drew up at the bright green wooden gate of Fountain
Cottage another visitor, apparently a good-class working man, was
standing on the path of the trim front garden, lingering over a
reluctant departure. Carrados took sufficient time in alighting to
allow the man to pass through the gate before he himself entered.
The last exchange of sentences reached his ear.</p>
<p>“I’m sure, marm, you won’t find anyone to do
the work at less.”</p>
<p>“I can quite believe that,” replied a very fair
young lady who stood nearer the house, “but, you see, we do
all the gardening ourselves, thank you.”</p>
<p>Carrados made himself known and was taken into the daintily
pretty drawing-room that opened on to the lawn behind the
house.</p>
<p>“I do not need to ask if you are Mrs Bellmark,” he
had declared.</p>
<p>“I have Uncle Louis’s voice?” she divined
readily.</p>
<p>“The niece of his voice, so to speak,” he admitted.
“Voices mean a great deal to me, Mrs Bellmark.”</p>
<p>“In recognizing and identifying people?” she
suggested.</p>
<p>“Oh, very much more than that. In recognizing and
identifying their moods—their thoughts even. There are subtle
lines of trouble and the deep rings of anxious care quite as patent
to the ear as to the sharpest eye sometimes.”</p>
<p>Elsie Bellmark shot a glance of curiously interested speculation
to the face that, in spite of its frank, open bearing, revealed so
marvellously little itself.</p>
<p>“If I had any dreadful secret, I think that I should be a
little afraid to talk to you, Mr Carrados,” she said, with a
half-nervous laugh.</p>
<p>“Then please do not have any dreadful secret,” he
replied, with quite youthful gallantry. “I more than suspect
that Louis has given you a very transpontine idea of my tastes. I
do not spend all my time tracking murderers to their lairs, Mrs
Bellmark, and I have never yet engaged in a hand-to-hand encounter
with a band of cut-throats.”</p>
<p>“He told us,” she declared, the recital lifting her
voice into a tone that Carrados vowed to himself was wonderfully
thrilling, “about this: He said that you were once in a sort
of lonely underground cellar near the river with two desperate men
whom you could send to penal servitude. The police, who were to
have been there at a certain time, had not arrived, and you were
alone. The men had heard that you were blind but they could hardly
believe it. They were discussing in whispers which could not be
overheard what would be the best thing to do, and they had just
agreed that if you really were blind they would risk the attempt to
murder you. Then, Louis said, at that very moment you took a pair
of scissors from your pocket, and coolly asking them why they did
not have a lamp down there, you actually snuffed the candle that
stood on the table before you. Is that true?”</p>
<p>Carrados’s mind leapt vividly back to the most desperate
moment of his existence, but his smile was gently deprecating as he
replied:</p>
<p>“I seem to recognize the touch of truth in the inclination
to do <i>anything</i> rather than fight,” he confessed.
“But, although he never suspects it, Louis really sees life
through rose-coloured opera glasses. Take the case of your quite
commonplace neighbour——”</p>
<p>“That is really what you came about?” she interposed
shrewdly.</p>
<p>“Frankly, it is,” he replied. “I am more
attracted by a turn of the odd and grotesque than by the most
elaborate tragedy. The fantastic conceit of throwing stewed kidneys
over into a neighbour’s garden irresistibly appealed to me.
Louis, as I was saying, regards the man in the romantic light of a
humanitarian monomaniac or a demented food reformer. I take a more
subdued view and I think that his action, when rightly understood,
will prove to be something quite obviously natural.”</p>
<p>“Of course it is very ridiculous, but all the same it has
been desperately annoying,” she confessed. “Still, it
scarcely matters now. I am only sorry that it should have been the
cause of wasting your valuable time, Mr Carrados.”</p>
<p>“My valuable time,” he replied, “only seems
valuable to me when I am, as you would say, wasting it. But is the
incident closed? Louis told me that he had drafted you a letter of
remonstrance. May I ask if it has been effective?”</p>
<p>Instead of replying at once she got up and walked to the long
French window and looked out over the garden where the fruit-trees
that had been spared from the older cultivation were rejoicing the
eye with the promise of their pink and white profusion.</p>
<p>“I did not send it,” she said slowly, turning to her
visitor again. “There is something that I did not tell Uncle
Louis, because it would only have distressed him without doing any
good. We may be leaving here very soon.”</p>
<p>“Just when you had begun to get it well in hand?” he
said, in some surprise.</p>
<p>“It is a pity, is it not, but one cannot foresee these
things. There is no reason why you should not know the cause, since
you have interested yourself so far, Mr Carrados. In fact,”
she added, smiling away the seriousness of the manner into which
she had fallen, “I am not at all sure that you do not know
already.”</p>
<p>He shook his head and disclaimed any such prescience.</p>
<p>“At all events you recognized that I was not exactly
light-hearted,” she insisted. “Oh, you did not say that
<i>I</i> had dark rings under my eyes, I know, but the cap fitted
excellently.... It has to do with my husband’s business. He
is with a firm of architects. It was a little venturesome taking
this house—we had been in apartments for two years—but
Roy was doing so well with his people and I was so enthusiastic for
a garden that we did—scarcely two months ago. Everything
seemed quite assured. Then came this thunderbolt. The
partners—it is only a small firm, Mr Carrados—required
a little more capital in the business. Someone whom they know is
willing to put in two thousand pounds, but he stipulates for a post
with them as well. He, like my husband, is a draughtsman. There is
no need for the services of both and so——”</p>
<p>“Is it settled?”</p>
<p>“In effect, it is. They are as nice as can be about it but
that does not alter the facts. They declare that they would rather
have Roy than the new man and they have definitely offered to
retain him if he can bring in even one thousand pounds. I suppose
they have some sort of compunction about turning him adrift, for
they have asked him to think it over and let them know on Monday.
Of course, that is the end of it. It may be—I don’t
know—I don’t like to think, how long before Roy gets
another position equally good. We must endeavour to get this house
off our hands and creep back to our three rooms. It is ...
luck.”</p>
<p>Carrados had been listening to her wonderfully musical voice as
another man might have been drawn irresistibly to watch the piquant
charm of her delicate face.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he assented, almost to himself, “it is
that strange, inexplicable grouping of men and things that, under
one name or another, we all confess ... just luck.”</p>
<p>“Of course you will not mention this to Uncle Louis yet,
Mr Carrados?”</p>
<p>“If you do not wish it, certainly not.”</p>
<p>“I am sure that it would distress him. He is so
soft-hearted, so kind, in everything. Do you know, I found out that
he had had an invitation to dine somewhere and meet some quite
important people on Tuesday. Yet he came here instead, although
most other men would have cried off, just because he knew that we
small people would have been disappointed.”</p>
<p>“Well, you can’t expect me to see any self-denial in
that,” exclaimed Carrados. “Why, I was one of them
myself.”</p>
<p>Elsie Bellmark laughed outright at the expressive disgust of his
tone.</p>
<p>“I had no idea of that,” she said. “Then there
is another reason. Uncle is not very well off, yet if he knew how
Roy was situated he would make an effort to arrange matters. He
would, I am sure, even borrow himself in order to lend us the
money. That is a thing Roy and I are quite agreed on. We will go
back; we will go under, if it is to be; but we will not borrow
money, not even from Uncle Louis.”</p>
<p>Once, subsequently, Carrados suddenly asked Mr Carlyle whether
he had ever heard a woman’s voice roll like a celestial
kettle-drum. The professional gentleman was vastly amused by the
comparison, but he admitted that he had not.</p>
<p>“So that, you see,” concluded Mrs Bellmark,
“there is really nothing to be done.”</p>
<p>“Oh, quite so; I am sure that you are right,”
assented her visitor readily. “But in the meanwhile I do not
see why the annoyance of your next-door neighbour should be
permitted to go on.”</p>
<p>“Of course: I have not told you that, and I could not
explain it to uncle,” she said. “I am anxious not to do
anything to put him out because I have a hope—rather a faint
one, certainly—that the man may be willing to take over this
house.”</p>
<p>It would be incorrect to say that Carrados pricked up his
ears—if that curious phenomenon has any physical
manifestation—for the sympathetic expression of his face did
not vary a fraction. But into his mind there came a gleam such as
might inspire a patient digger who sees the first speck of gold
that justifies his faith in an unlikely claim.</p>
<p>“Oh,” he said, quite conversationally, “is
there a chance of that?”</p>
<p>“He undoubtedly did want it. It is very curious in a way.
A few weeks ago, before we were really settled, he came one
afternoon, saying he had heard that this house was to be let. Of
course I told him that he was too late, that we had already taken
it for three years.”</p>
<p>“You were the first tenants?”</p>
<p>“Yes. The house was scarcely ready when we signed the
agreement. Then this Mr Johns, or Jones—I am not sure which
he said—went on in a rather extraordinary way to persuade me
to sublet it to him. He said that the house was dear and I could
get plenty, more convenient, at less rent, and it was unhealthy,
and the drains were bad, and that we should be pestered by tramps
and it was just the sort of house that burglars picked on, only he
had taken a sort of fancy to it and he would give me a fifty-pound
premium for the term.”</p>
<p>“Did he explain the motive for this rather eccentric
partiality?”</p>
<p>“I don’t imagine that he did. He repeated several
times that he was a queer old fellow with his whims and fancies and
that they often cost him dear.”</p>
<p>“I think we all know that sort of old fellow,” said
Carrados. “It must have been rather entertaining for you, Mrs
Bellmark.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I suppose it was,” she admitted. “The
next thing we knew of him was that he had taken the other house as
soon as it was finished.”</p>
<p>“Then he would scarcely require this?”</p>
<p>“I am afraid not.” It was obvious that the situation
was not disposed of. “But he seems to have so little
furniture there and to live so solitarily,” she explained,
“that we have even wondered whether he might not be there
merely as a sort of caretaker.”</p>
<p>“And you have never heard where he came from or who he
is?”</p>
<p>“Only what the milkman told my servant—our chief
source of local information, Mr Carrados. He declares that the man
used to be the butler at a large house that stood here formerly,
Fountain Court, and that his name is neither Johns nor Jones. But
very likely it is all a mistake.”</p>
<p>“If not, he is certainly attached to the soil,” was
her visitor’s rejoinder. “And, apropos of that, will
you show me over your garden before I go, Mrs Bellmark?”</p>
<p>“With pleasure,” she assented, rising also. “I
will ring now and then I can offer you tea when we have been round.
That is, if you——?”</p>
<p>“Thank you, I do,” he replied. “And would you
allow my man to go through into the garden—in case I require
him?”</p>
<p>“Oh, certainly. You must tell me just what you want
without thinking it necessary to ask permission, Mr
Carrados,” she said, with a pretty air of protection.
“Shall Amy take a message?”</p>
<p>He acquiesced and turned to the servant who had appeared in
response to the bell.</p>
<p>“Will you go to the car and tell my
man—Parkinson—that I require him here. Say that he can
bring his book; he will understand.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>They stepped out through the French window and sauntered across
the lawn. Before they had reached the other side Parkinson reported
himself.</p>
<p>“You had better stay here,” said his master,
indicating the sward generally. “Mrs Bellmark will allow you
to bring out a chair from the drawing-room.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, sir; there is a rustic seat already
provided,” replied Parkinson.</p>
<p>He sat down with his back to the houses and opened the book that
he had brought. Let in among its pages was an ingeniously contrived
mirror.</p>
<p>When their promenade again brought them near the rustic seat
Carrados dropped a few steps behind.</p>
<p>“He is watching you from one of the upper rooms,
sir,” fell from Parkinson’s lips as he sat there
without raising his eyes from the page before him.</p>
<p>The blind man caught up to his hostess again.</p>
<p>“You intended this lawn for croquet?” he asked.</p>
<p>“No; not specially. It is too small, isn’t
it?”</p>
<p>“Not necessarily. I think it is in about the proportion of
four by five all right. Given that, size does not really matter for
an unsophisticated game.”</p>
<p>To settle the point he began to pace the plot of ground, across
and then lengthways. Next, apparently dissatisfied with this rough
measurement, he applied himself to marking it off more exactly by
means of his walking-stick. Elsie Bellmark was by no means dull but
the action sprang so naturally from the conversation that it did
not occur to her to look for any deeper motive.</p>
<p>“He has got a pair of field-glasses and is now at the
window,” communicated Parkinson.</p>
<p>“I am going out of sight,” was the equally quiet
response. “If he becomes more anxious tell me
afterwards.”</p>
<p>“It is quite all right,” he reported, returning to
Mrs Bellmark with the satisfaction of bringing agreeable news.
“It should make a splendid little ground, but you may have to
level up a few dips after the earth has set.”</p>
<p>A chance reference to the kitchen garden by the visitor took
them to a more distant corner of the enclosure where the rear of
Fountain Cottage cut off the view from the next house windows.</p>
<p>“We decided on this part for vegetables because it does
not really belong to the garden proper,” she explained.
“When they build farther on this side we shall have to give
it up very soon. And it would be a pity if it was all in
flowers.”</p>
<p>With the admirable spirit of the ordinary Englishwoman, she
spoke of the future as if there was no cloud to obscure its
prosperous course. She had frankly declared their position to her
uncle’s best friend because in the circumstances it had
seemed to be the simplest and most straightforward thing to do;
beyond that, there was no need to whine about it.</p>
<p>“It is a large garden,” remarked Carrados.
“And you really do all the work of it yourselves?”</p>
<p>“Yes; I think that is half the fun of a garden. Roy is out
here early and late and he does all the hard work. But how did you
know? Did uncle tell you?”</p>
<p>“No; you told me yourself.”</p>
<p>“I? Really?”</p>
<p>“Indirectly. You were scorning the proffered services of a
horticultural mercenary at the moment of my arrival.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I remember,” she laughed. “It was Irons,
of course. He is a great nuisance, he is so stupidly persistent.
For some weeks now he has been coming time after time, trying to
persuade me to engage him. Once when we were all out he had
actually got into the garden and was on the point of beginning work
when I returned. He said he saw the milkmen and the grocers leaving
samples at the door so he thought that he would too!”</p>
<p>“A practical jester evidently. Is Mr Irons a local
character?”</p>
<p>“He said that he knew the ground and the conditions round
about here better than anyone else in Groat’s Heath,”
she replied. “Modesty is not among Mr Irons’s
handicaps. He said that he——How curious!”</p>
<p>“What is, Mrs Bellmark?”</p>
<p>“I never connected the two men before, but he said that he
had been gardener at Fountain Court for seven years.”</p>
<p>“Another family retainer who is evidently attached to the
soil.”</p>
<p>“At all events they have not prospered equally, for while
Mr Johns seems able to take a nice house, poor Irons is willing to
work for half-a-crown a day, and I am told that all the other men
charge four shillings.”</p>
<p>They had paced the boundaries of the kitchen garden, and as
there was nothing more to be shown Elsie Bellmark led the way back
to the drawing-room. Parkinson was still engrossed in his book, the
only change being that his back was now turned towards the high
paling of clinker-built oak that separated the two gardens.</p>
<p>“I will speak to my man,” said Carrados, turning
aside.</p>
<p>“He hurried down and is looking through the fence,
sir,” reported the watcher.</p>
<p>“That will do then. You can return to the car.”</p>
<p>“I wonder if you would allow me to send you a small
hawthorn-tree?” inquired Carrados among his felicitations
over the teacups five minutes later. “I think it ought to be
in every garden.”</p>
<p>“Thank you—but is it worth while?” replied Mrs
Bellmark, with a touch of restraint. As far as mere words went she
had been willing to ignore the menace of the future, but in the
circumstances the offer seemed singularly inept and she began to
suspect that outside his peculiar gifts the wonderful Mr Carrados
might be a little bit obtuse after all.</p>
<p>“Yes; I think it is,” he replied, with quiet
assurance.</p>
<p>“In spite of——?”</p>
<p>“I am not forgetting that unless your husband is prepared
on Monday next to invest one thousand pounds you contemplate
leaving here.”</p>
<p>“Then I do not understand it, Mr Carrados.”</p>
<p>“And I am unable to explain as yet. But I brought you a
note from Louis Carlyle, Mrs Bellmark. You only glanced at it. Will
you do me the favour of reading me the last paragraph?”</p>
<p>She picked up the letter from the table where it lay and
complied with cheerful good-humour.</p>
<p>“There is some suggestion that you want me to accede
to,” she guessed cunningly when she had read the last few
words.</p>
<p>“There are some three suggestions which I hope you will
accede to,” he replied. “In the first place I want you
to write to Mr Johns next door—let him get the letter
to-night—inquiring whether he is still disposed to take this
house.”</p>
<p>“I had thought of doing that shortly.”</p>
<p>“Then that is all right. Besides, he will ultimately
decline.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” she exclaimed—it would be difficult to
say whether with relief or disappointment—“do you think
so? Then why——”</p>
<p>“To keep him quiet in the meantime. Next I should like you
to send a little note to Mr Irons—your maid could deliver it
also to-night, I dare say?”</p>
<p>“Irons! Irons the gardener?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” apologetically. “Only a line or two,
you know. Just saying that, after all, if he cares to come on
Monday you can find him a few days’ work.”</p>
<p>“But in any circumstances I don’t want
him.”</p>
<p>“No; I can quite believe that you could do better. Still,
it doesn’t matter, as he won’t come, Mrs Bellmark; not
for half-a-crown a day, believe me. But the thought will tend to
make Mr Irons less restive also. Lastly, will you persuade your
husband not to decline his firm’s offer until
Monday?”</p>
<p>“Very well, Mr Carrados,” she said, after a
moment’s consideration. “You are Uncle Louis’s
friend and therefore our friend. I will do what you ask.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” said Carrados. “I shall endeavour
not to disappoint you.”</p>
<p>“I shall not be disappointed because I have not dared to
hope. And I have nothing to expect because I am still completely in
the dark.”</p>
<p>“I have been there for nearly twenty years, Mrs
Bellmark.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I am sorry!” she cried impulsively.</p>
<p>“So am I—occasionally,” he replied.
“Good-bye, Mrs Bellmark. You will hear from me shortly, I
hope. About the hawthorn, you know.”</p>
<p>It was, indeed, in something less than forty-eight hours that
she heard from him again. When Bellmark returned to his toy villa
early on Saturday afternoon Elsie met him almost at the gate with a
telegram in her hand.</p>
<p>“I really think, Roy, that everyone we have to do with
here goes mad,” she exclaimed, in tragi-humorous despair.
“First it was Mr Johns or Jones—if he is Johns or
Jones—and then Irons who wanted to work here for half of what
he could get at heaps of places about, and now just look at this
wire that came from Mr Carrados half-an-hour ago.”</p>
<p>This was the message that he read:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p><i>Please procure sardine tin opener mariner’s compass and
bottle of champagne. Shall arrive 6.45 bringing Crataegus
Coccinea.</i>—<span class="smcap">Carrados.</span></p>
</div>
<p>“Could anything be more absurd?” she demanded.</p>
<p>“Sounds as though it was in code,” speculated her
husband. “Who’s the foreign gentleman he’s
bringing?”</p>
<p>“Oh, that’s a kind of special hawthorn—I
looked it up. But a bottle of champagne, and a compass, and a
sardine tin opener! What possible connexion is there between
them?”</p>
<p>“A very resourceful man might uncork a bottle of champagne
with a sardine tin opener,” he suggested.</p>
<p>“And find his way home afterwards by means of a
mariner’s compass?” she retorted. “No, Roy dear,
you are not a sleuth-hound. We had better have our
lunch.”</p>
<p>They lunched, but if the subject of Carrados had been tabooed
the meal would have been a silent one.</p>
<p>“I have a compass on an old watch-chain somewhere,”
volunteered Bellmark.</p>
<p>“And I have a tin opener in the form of a bull’s
head,” contributed Elsie.</p>
<p>“But we have no champagne, I suppose?”</p>
<p>“How could we have, Roy? We never have had any. Shall you
mind going down to the shops for a bottle?”</p>
<p>“You really think that we ought?”</p>
<p>“Of course we must, Roy. We don’t know what
mightn’t happen if we didn’t. Uncle Louis said that
they once failed to stop a jewel robbery because the jeweller
neglected to wipe his shoes on the shop doormat, as Mr Carrados had
told him to do. Suppose Johns is a desperate anarchist and he
succeeded in blowing up Buckingham Palace because
we——”</p>
<p>“All right. A small bottle, eh?”</p>
<p>“No. A large one. Quite a large one. Don’t you see
how exciting it is becoming?”</p>
<p>“If you are excited already you don’t need much
champagne,” argued her husband.</p>
<p>Nevertheless he strolled down to the leading wine-shop after
lunch and returned with his purchase modestly draped in the light
summer overcoat that he carried on his arm. Elsie Bellmark, who had
quite abandoned her previous unconcern, in the conviction that
“something was going to happen,” spent the longest
afternoon that she could remember, and even Bellmark, in spite of
his continual adjurations to her to “look at the matter
logically,” smoked five cigarettes in place of his usual
Saturday afternoon pipe and neglected to do any gardening.</p>
<p>At exactly six-forty-five a motor car was heard approaching.
Elsie made a desperate rally to become the self-possessed hostess
again. Bellmark was favourably impressed by such marked
punctuality. Then a Regent Street delivery van bowled past their
window and Elsie almost wept.</p>
<p>The suspense was not long, however. Less than five minutes later
another vehicle raised the dust of the quiet suburban road, and
this time a private car stopped at their gate.</p>
<p>“Can you see any policemen inside?” whispered
Elsie.</p>
<p>Parkinson got down and opening the door took out a small tree
which he carried up to the porch and there deposited. Carrados
followed.</p>
<p>“At all events there isn’t much wrong,” said
Bellmark. “He’s smiling all the time.”</p>
<p>“No, it isn’t really a smile,” explained
Elsie; “it’s his normal expression.”</p>
<p>She went out into the hall just as the front door was
opened.</p>
<p>“It is the ‘Scarlet-fruited thorn’ of North
America,” Bellmark heard the visitor remarking. “Both
the flowers and the berries are wonderfully good. Do you think that
you would permit me to choose the spot for it, Mrs
Bellmark?”</p>
<p>Bellmark joined them in the hall and was introduced.</p>
<p>“We mustn’t waste any time,” he suggested.
“There is very little light left.”</p>
<p>“True,” agreed Carrados. “And Coccinea
requires deep digging.”</p>
<p>They walked through the house, and turning to the right passed
into the region of the vegetable garden. Carrados and Elsie led the
way, the blind man carrying the tree, while Bellmark went to his
outhouse for the required tools.</p>
<p>“We will direct our operations from here,” said
Carrados, when they were half-way along the walk. “You told
me of a thin iron pipe that you had traced to somewhere in the
middle of the garden. We must locate the end of it
exactly.”</p>
<p>“My rosary!” sighed Elsie, with premonition of
disaster, when she had determined the spot as exactly as she could.
“Oh, Mr Carrados!”</p>
<p>“I am sorry, but it might be worse,” said Carrados
inflexibly. “We only require to find the elbow-joint. Mr
Bellmark will investigate with as little disturbance as
possible.”</p>
<p>For five minutes Bellmark made trials with a pointed iron. Then
he cleared away the soil of a small circle and at about a foot deep
exposed a broken inch pipe.</p>
<p>“The fountain,” announced Carrados, when he had
examined it. “You have the compass, Mr Bellmark?”</p>
<p>“Rather a small one,” admitted Bellmark.</p>
<p>“Never mind, you are a mathematician. I want you to strike
a line due east.”</p>
<p>The reel and cord came into play and an adjustment was finally
made from the broken pipe to a position across the vegetable
garden.</p>
<p>“Now a point nine yards, nine feet and nine inches along
it.”</p>
<p>“My onion bed!” cried Elsie tragically.</p>
<p>“Yes; it is really serious this time,” agreed
Carrados. “I want a hole a yard across, digging here. May we
proceed?”</p>
<p>Elsie remembered the words of her uncle’s letter—or
what she imagined to be his letter—and possibly the preamble
of selecting the spot had impressed her.</p>
<p>“Yes, I suppose so. Unless,” she added hopefully,
“the turnip bed will do instead? They are not sown
yet.”</p>
<p>“I am afraid that nowhere else in the garden will
do,” replied Carrados.</p>
<p>Bellmark delineated the space and began to dig. After clearing
to about a foot deep he paused.</p>
<p>“About deep enough, Mr Carrados?” he inquired.</p>
<p>“Oh, dear no,” replied the blind man.</p>
<p>“I am two feet down,” presently reported the
digger.</p>
<p>“Deeper!” was the uncompromising response.</p>
<p>Another six inches were added and Bellmark stopped to rest.</p>
<p>“A little more and it won’t matter which way up we
plant Coccinea,” he remarked.</p>
<p>“That is the depth we are aiming for,” replied
Carrados.</p>
<p>Elsie and her husband exchanged glances. Then Bellmark drove his
spade through another layer of earth.</p>
<p>“Three feet,” he announced, when he had cleared
it.</p>
<p>Carrados advanced to the very edge of the opening.</p>
<p>“I think that if you would loosen another six inches with
the fork we might consider the ground prepared,” he
decided.</p>
<p>Bellmark changed his tools and began to break up the soil.
Presently the steel prongs grated on some obstruction.</p>
<p>“Gently,” directed the blind watcher. “I think
you will find a half-pound cocoa tin at the end of your
fork.”</p>
<p>“Well, how on earth you spotted that——!”
was wrung from Bellmark admiringly, as he cleared away the
encrusting earth. “But I believe you are about right.”
He threw up the object to his wife, who was risking a catastrophe
in her eagerness to miss no detail. “Anything in it besides
soil, Elsie?”</p>
<p>“She cannot open it yet,” remarked Carrados.
“It is soldered down.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I say,” protested Bellmark.</p>
<p>“It is perfectly correct, Roy. The lid is soldered
on.”</p>
<p>They looked at each other in varying degrees of wonder and
speculation. Only Carrados seemed quite untouched.</p>
<p>“Now we may as well replace the earth,” he
remarked.</p>
<p>“Fill it all up again?” asked Bellmark.</p>
<p>“Yes; we have provided a thoroughly disintegrated subsoil.
That is the great thing. A depth of six inches is sufficient merely
for the roots.”</p>
<p>There was only one remark passed during the operation.</p>
<p>“I think I should plant the tree just over where the tin
was,” Carrados suggested. “You might like to mark the
exact spot.” And there the hawthorn was placed.</p>
<p>Bellmark, usually the most careful and methodical of men, left
the tools where they were, in spite of a threatening shower.
Strangely silent, Elsie led the way back to the house and taking
the men into the drawing-room switched on the light.</p>
<p>“I think you have a tin opener, Mrs Bellmark?”</p>
<p>Elsie, who had been waiting for him to speak, almost jumped at
the simple inquiry. Then she went into the next room and returned
with the bull-headed utensil.</p>
<p>“Here it is,” she said, in a voice that would have
amused her at any other time.</p>
<p>“Mr Bellmark will perhaps disclose our find.”</p>
<p>Bellmark put the soily tin down on Elsie’s best
table-cover without eliciting a word of reproach, grasped it firmly
with his left hand, and worked the opener round the top.</p>
<p>“Only paper!” he exclaimed, and without touching the
contents he passed the tin into Carrados’s hands.</p>
<p>The blind man dexterously twirled out a little roll that
crinkled pleasantly to the ear, and began counting the leaves with
a steady finger.</p>
<p>“They’re bank-notes!” whispered Elsie in an
awestruck voice. She caught sight of a further detail.
“Bank-notes for a hundred pounds each. And there are dozens
of them!”</p>
<p>“Fifty, there should be,” dropped Carrados between
his figures. “Twenty-five,
twenty-six——”</p>
<p>“Good God,” murmured Bellmark; “that’s
five thousand pounds!”</p>
<p>“Fifty,” concluded Carrados, straightening the edges
of the sheaf. “It is always satisfactory to find that
one’s calculations are exact.” He detached the upper
ten notes and held them out. “Mrs Bellmark, will you accept
one thousand pounds as a full legal discharge of any claim that you
may have on this property?”</p>
<p>“Me—I?” she stammered. “But I have no
right to any in any circumstances. It has nothing to do with
us.”</p>
<p>“You have an unassailable moral right to a fair
proportion, because without you the real owners would never have
seen a penny of it. As regards your legal right”—he
took out the thin pocket-book and extracting a business-looking
paper spread it open on the table before them—“here is
a document that concedes it. ‘In consideration of the
valuable services rendered by Elsie Bellmark, etc., etc., in
causing to be discovered and voluntarily surrendering the sum of
five thousand pounds deposited and not relinquished by Alexis
Metrobe, late of, etc., etc., deceased, Messrs Binstead &
Polegate, solicitors, of 77a Bedford Row, acting on behalf of the
administrator and next-of-kin of the said etc., etc., do
hereby’—well, that’s what they do. Signed,
witnessed and stamped at Somerset House.”</p>
<p>“I suppose I shall wake presently,” said Elsie
dreamily.</p>
<p>“It was for this moment that I ventured to suggest the
third requirement necessary to bring our enterprise to a successful
end,” said Carrados.</p>
<p>“Oh, how thoughtful of you!” cried Elsie.
“Roy, the champagne.”</p>
<p>Five minutes later Carrados was explaining to a small but
enthralled audience.</p>
<p>“The late Alexis Metrobe was a man of peculiar character.
After seeing a good deal of the world and being many things, he
finally embraced spiritualism, and in common with some of its most
pronounced adherents he thenceforward abandoned what we should call
‘the common-sense view.’</p>
<p>“A few years ago, by the collation of the Book of
Revelations, a set of Zadkiel’s Almanacs, and the complete
works of Mrs Mary Baker Eddy, Metrobe discovered that the end of
the world would take place on the tenth of October 1910. It
therefore became a matter of urgent importance in his mind to
ensure pecuniary provision for himself for the time after the
catastrophe had taken place.”</p>
<p>“I don’t understand,” interrupted Elsie.
“Did he expect to survive it?”</p>
<p>“You cannot understand, Mrs Bellmark, because it is
fundamentally incomprehensible. We can only accept the fact by the
light of cases which occasionally obtain prominence. Metrobe did
not expect to survive, but he was firmly convinced that the
currency of this world would be equally useful in the spirit-land
into which he expected to pass. This view was encouraged by a lady
medium at whose feet he sat. She kindly offered to transmit to his
banking account in the Hereafter, without making any charge
whatever, any sum that he cared to put into her hands for the
purpose. Metrobe accepted the idea but not the offer. His plan was
to deposit a considerable amount in a spot of which he alone had
knowledge, so that he could come and help himself to it as
required.”</p>
<p>“But if the world had come to an
end——?”</p>
<p>“Only the material world, you must understand, Mrs
Bellmark. The spirit world, its exact impalpable counterpart, would
continue as before and Metrobe’s hoard would be spiritually
intact and available. That is the prologue.</p>
<p>“About a month ago there appeared a certain advertisement
in a good many papers. I noticed it at the time and three days ago
I had only to refer to my files to put my hand on it at once. It
reads:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>“‘Alexis Metrobe. Any servant or personal attendant
of the late Alexis Metrobe of Fountain Court, Groat’s Heath,
possessing special knowledge of his habits and movements may hear
of something advantageous on applying to Binstead & Polegate,
77a Bedford Row, W.C.’</p>
</div>
<p>“The solicitors had, in fact, discovered that five
thousand pounds’ worth of securities had been realized early
in 1910. They readily ascertained that Metrobe had drawn that
amount in gold out of his bank immediately after, and there the
trace ended. He died six months later. There was no hoard of gold
and not a shred of paper to show where it had gone, yet Metrobe
lived very simply within his income. The house had meanwhile been
demolished but there was no hint or whisper of any lucky find.</p>
<p>“Two inquirers presented themselves at 77a Bedford Row.
They were informed of the circumstances and offered a reward,
varying according to the results, for information that would lead
to the recovery of the money. They are both described as
thoughtful, slow-spoken men. Each heard the story, shook his head,
and departed. The first caller proved to be John Foster, the
ex-butler. On the following day Mr Irons, formerly gardener at the
Court, was the applicant.</p>
<p>“I must now divert your attention into a side track. In
the summer of 1910 Metrobe published a curious work entitled
‘The Flame beyond the Dome.’ In the main it is an
eschatological treatise, but at the end he tacked on an epilogue,
which he called ‘The Fable of the Chameleon.’ It is
even more curious than the rest and with reason, for under the
guise of a speculative essay he gives a cryptic account of the
circumstances of the five thousand pounds and, what is more
important, details the exact particulars of its disposal. His
reason for so doing is characteristic of the man. He was conscious
by experience that he possessed an utterly treacherous memory, and
having had occasion to move the treasure from one spot to another
he feared that when the time came his bemuddled shade would be
unable to locate it. For future reference, therefore, he embodied
the details in his book, and to make sure that plenty of copies
should be in existence he circulated it by the only means in his
power—in other words, he gave a volume to everyone he knew
and to a good many people whom he didn’t.</p>
<p>“So far I have dealt with actualities. The final details
are partly speculative but they are essentially correct. Metrobe
conveyed his gold to Fountain Court, obtained a stout oak coffer
for it, and selected a spot <i>west</i> of the fountain. He chose a
favourable occasion for burying it, but by some mischance Irons
came on the scene. Metrobe explained the incident by declaring that
he was burying a favourite parrot. Irons thought nothing particular
about it then, although he related the fact to the butler, and to
others, in evidence of the general belief that ‘the old cock
was quite barmy.’ But Metrobe himself was much disturbed by
the accident. A few days later he dug up the box. In pursuance of
his new plan he carried his gold to the Bank of England and changed
it into these notes. Then transferring the venue to one due
<i>east</i> of the fountain, he buried them in this tin, satisfied
that the small space it occupied would baffle the search of anyone
not in possession of the exact location.”</p>
<p>“But, I say!” exclaimed Mr Bellmark. “Gold
might remain gold, but what imaginable use could be made of
bank-notes after the end of the world?”</p>
<p>“That is a point of view, no doubt. But Metrobe, in spite
of his foreign name, was a thorough Englishman. The world might
come to an end, but he was satisfied that somehow the Bank of
England would ride through it all right. I only suggest that. There
is much that we can only guess.”</p>
<p>“That is all there is to know, Mr Carrados?”</p>
<p>“Yes. Everything comes to an end, Mrs Bellmark. I sent my
car away to call for me at eight. Eight has struck. That is Harris
announcing his arrival.”</p>
<p>He stood up, but embarrassment and indecision marked the looks
and movements of the other two.</p>
<p>“How can we possibly take all this money, though?”
murmured Elsie, in painful uncertainty. “It is entirely your
undertaking, Mr Carrados. It is the merest fiction bringing me into
it at all.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps in the circumstances,” suggested Bellmark
nervously—“you remember the circumstances,
Elsie?—Mr Carrados would be willing to regard it as a
loan——”</p>
<p>“No, no!” cried Elsie impulsively. “There must
be no half measures. We know that a thousand pounds would be
nothing to Mr Carrados, and he knows that a thousand pounds are
everything to us.” Her voice reminded the blind man of the
candle-snuffing recital. “We will take this great gift, Mr
Carrados, quite freely, and we will not spoil the generous
satisfaction that you must have in doing a wonderful and a splendid
service by trying to hedge our obligation.”</p>
<p>“But what can we ever do to thank Mr Carrados?”
faltered Bellmark mundanely.</p>
<p>“Nothing,” said Elsie simply. “That is
it.”</p>
<p>“But I think that Mrs Bellmark has quite solved
that,” interposed Carrados.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />