A very great deal. You can tell me the truth.
I have, he snapped. Who this girl Engledue is I have not a ghost of an idea. Are you certain she is dead?
Positive. I saw her lying dead in the room which adjoins your library.
What! My wifes room! he cried. Oh, come let us finish all this silly talk.
When you are, at least, frank with me!
I am.
But do you deny that the young lady, Gabrielle Engledue, died there? Do you not recollect that we both stood at her death-bed?
Dont talk such piffle! De Gex snapped, no doubt believing in the end that he would convince me of his ignorance of the whole tragedy.
Whatever had happened on that November night was, no doubt, to the distinct advantage of the wealthy man who stood before me. Yet I was faced with a difficulty. He had uttered that most ugly word blackmail. Suppose he called the police and accused me of it! His word the word of a wealthy financier would, no doubt, be taken by a jury before my own!
On the other hand, I had up my sleeve a trump-card the death and cremation of the mysterious Gabrielle Engledue. Probably the poor victim was poisoned hence the object of her cremation to remove all traces of it! Yet, opposed to that, there still remained my own most serious offence of posing as a medical man and giving a forged certificate concerning the cause of death.
Yes. I was only too keenly alive to my own very precarious position. Yet I was emboldened by De Gexs agitation, and the pallor in his sallow cheeks.
He was, no doubt, feeling very uneasy. And even a millionaire can feel uneasy when faced with a witness of his own offence.
Mr. De Gex, I am not talking rubbish, I said in all seriousness. You appear to forget that night when your wife deserted your son in Westbourne Grove, and then laughed at you over the telephone from a public call-office.
He looked at me very straight with those deep-set eyes of his.
Really, he exclaimed. That is quite a new feature in the affair. Let me see, what did I tell you?
Your man, Horton, invited me, a mere passer-by, into your house in Stretton Street. He said you were very much worried and asked if I would meet you. Why? I cannot imagine. When we met you were very vague in your statements, and at first I could not for the life of me discover why I had been asked to meet you. But soon you confided to me the fact that your wife, being spiteful towards you, had abandoned your heir, little Oswald, in Westbourne Grove, and had then rung up from a call-office telling you to find him.
Bosh! My dear fellow! Bosh! was his reply. First, you were never there; and secondly, Ive never complained of my wifes behaviour to anyone; certainly not to a stranger.
You did to me. I certainly am not dreaming.
But you have already admitted that youve been in hospital in St. Malo suffering from loss of memory.
My memory has now fortunately been restored, I replied.
Distorted without a doubt. You would never travel all the way from London to relate these absolutely silly stories to me if you were in your right senses, my dear Mr. Garfield, he said.
Theyre not silly stories, but hard, indisputable facts! I declared resentfully.
The millionaire had assumed an air of nonchalance, for leaning against a big old buhl table he took out a cigarette from his gold case and slowly lit it, after which he said:
You must, I think, really excuse me. We have to go down into Florence to meet my sister-in-law, who is coming from London. Im afraid, Mr. Garfield, that I cannot help you any further.
You mean you wont!
Not at all. If I knew anything of this young lady who, you said, died in my wifes bedroom in Stretton Street, and at whose bedside you and I stood together, I would tell you. But I really dont.
He tossed his cigarette hastily out of the open window.
No, he added. I wont hear any more. I havent the time or the inclination to listen to the wanderings of any insane person. Ive had enough!
And so have I! I retorted. You are trying to mislead me by affecting ignorance of my very existence, but I dont intend that you shall escape! I added, again raising my voice.
Hush, please, he said in a calmer tone. My wife may overhear.
I dont care! I cried in desperation. You never dreamed that I should arise against you, as I have. You are not fair towards me! If you revealed to me in confidence the reason you gave me that bribe of five thousand pounds, then I, on my part, would have played the straight game.
My dear sir, play whatever game you like. It is immaterial to me whether straight or crooked. I dont know anything about what you have been talking, and you have only wasted your breath and got out of temper for nothing.
Again I looked him straight in the face. There was no doubt that the strain of his clever denials was telling upon him. His dark complexion had paled; in his eyes there was a fierce, haunted look as that of a man who was straining every effort to remain calm under the gravest circumstances.
I have no game to play, I declared. I only demand the truth. Why was I invited into your house in Stretton Street to be present as witness at the poor girls death?
I dont know. Find out for yourself, my dear Mr. Garfield, laughed the rich man. I have no time to discuss this silly affair further. Im sorry you have troubled to come out from London to see me. But really yours has been a fools errand, and he turned towards the door.
A fools errand! I echoed. I am no fool and my errand is in deep earnestness. You may try to befool me, but I tell you that I will leave no stone unturned to solve the problem which you alone can explain.
Well, get along with your work, he laughed in open defiance. I have no further time to waste, and glancing at his watch he opened the door and abruptly left me.
CHAPTER THE FIFTH
THE CITY OF THE LILY
Full of indignation I remained for a few further moments in that wonderful old room, the room of faded tapestries with the marvellous painted ceiling.
From the window was afforded a glorious view over the gardens where, even in winter, tangled masses of flowers ran riot, while beyond lay the picturesque old red-roofed Tuscan city. Fiesole is distinctly a village of the wealthy, for the several colossal villas, built in the days of the Medici and even before, are now owned by rich foreigners, many of them English.
Oswald De Gex was one of them.
He had certainly foiled me. I gritted my teeth and vowed that, come what might, I would compel him to accept the inevitable and reveal to me the truth. I left the room and found my way alone across the great marble entrance hall, and out to where my taxi awaited me.
I drove back to Florence, where, at the station, I obtained my bag, and then went to the Savoy Hotel in the Piazza Vittorio Emanuele, where I engaged a room.
For a long time I sat at my window gazing down upon the busy square below, one of the centres of Florentine life. The bell of the Duomo was ringing, the shops were mostly closed, and all Florence was out in the streets, it being the Festa of the Befana, one of the greatest of all the ever-recurring festas of Florence. Street urchins were parading the thoroughfares with horns and wildly shouting, and there was an exchange of presents on every hand. At the Befana everyone in Firenze goes mad with good intentions.
The artistic side of the ancient Lily City did not interest me. I knew it of old. I had strolled on the Lung Arno, I had long ago with my father on a winter tour looked into the little shops of the coral and pearl merchants on the Ponte Vecchio, and I had taken my apératif at Doneys or at Giacosas. I was no stranger in Florence. My mind was fully occupied by the deep mystery of Gabrielle Engledues death, and of the millionaires flat denial that we had ever met before.