The Crimson Blind. Fred M. White
a bottle of claret and the cigars into the small library, Williams,” he said. “And open the window, the dust stifles me.”
The dignified butler bowed respectfully. He resembled the typical bad butler of fiction in no respect, but his thoughts were by no means pleasant as he hastened to obey. Enid was loitering in the hall as Williams passed with the tray.
“Small study and the window open, miss,” he whispered. “There’s some game on—oh, yes, there is some blessed game on again to-night. And him so anxious to know how Miss Christiana is. Says she ought to call him in professionally. Personally I’d rather call in an undertaker who was desperately hard up for a job.”
“All right, Williams,” Enid replied. “My sister is worse to-night. And unless she gets better I shall insist upon her seeing a doctor. And I am obliged for the hint about Mr. Henson. The little study commands the staircase leading to my sister’s bedroom.”
“And the open window commands the garden,” Williams said, drily.
“Yes, yes. Now go. You are a real friend, Williams, and I will never forget your goodness. Run along—I can actually feel that man coming.”
As a matter of fact, Henson was approaching noiselessly. Despite his great bulk he had the clean, dainty step of a cat; his big, rolling ears were those of a hare. Henson was always listening. He would have listened behind a kitchen door to a pair of chattering scullery-maids. He liked to find other people out, though as yet he had not been found out himself. He stood before the world as a social missioner; he made speeches at religious gatherings and affected the women to tears. He was known to devote a considerable fortune to doing good; he had been asked to stand for Parliament, where his real ambition lay. Gilead Gates had alluded to Reginald Henson as his right-hand man.
He crept along to the study, where the lamps were lighted and the silver claret-jug set out. He carefully dusted a big arm-chair and began to smoke, having first carefully extinguished the lamps and seen that the window leading to the garden was wide open. Henson was watching for something. In his feline nature he had the full gift of feline patience. To serve his own ends he would have sat there watching all night if necessary. He heard an occasional whimper, a howl from one of the dogs; he heard Enid’s voice singing in the drawing-room. The rest of the house was quite funereal enough for him.
In the midst of the drawing-room Margaret Henson sat still as a statue. The distant, weary expression never left her eyes for a moment. As the stable clock, the only one going on the premises, struck ten, Enid crossed over from the piano to her aunt’s side. There was an eager look on her face, her eyes were gleaming like frosty stars.
“Aunt,” she whispered; “dear, I have had a message!”
“Message of woe and desolation,” Margaret Henson cried. “Tribulation and sorrow on this wretched house. For seven long years the hand of the Lord has lain heavily upon us.”
She spoke like one who was far away from her surroundings. And yet no one could look in her eyes and say that she was mad. It was a proud, passionate spirit, crushed down by some bitter humiliation. Enid’s eyes flashed.
“That scoundrel has been robbing you again,” she said.
“Two thousand pounds,” came the mechanical reply, “to endow a bed in some hospital. And there is no escape, no hope unless we drag the shameful secret from him. Bit by bit and drop by drop, and then I shall die and you and Christiana will be penniless.”
“I daresay Chris and myself will survive that,” Enid said, cheerfully. “But we have a plan, dear aunt; we have thought it out carefully. Reginald Henson has hidden the secret somewhere and we are going to find it. The secret is hidden not far off, because our cousin has occasion to require it frequently. It is like the purloined letter in Edgar Poe’s wonderful story.”
Margaret Henson nodded and mumbled. It seemed almost impossible to make her understand. She babbled of strange things, with her dark eyes ever fixed on the future. Enid turned away almost despairingly. At the same time the stable clock struck the half-hour after ten. Williams slipped in with a tray of glasses, noiselessly. On the tray lay a small pile of tradesmen’s books. The top one was of dull red with no lettering upon it at all.
“The housekeeper’s respectful compliments, miss, and would you go through them to-morrow?” Williams said. He tapped the top book significantly. “To-morrow is the last day of the month.”
Enid picked up the top book with strange eagerness. There were pages of figures and cabalistic entries that no ordinary person could make anything of. Pages here and there were signed and decorated with pink receipt stamps. Enid glanced down the last column, and her face grew a little paler.
“Aunt,” she whispered, “I’ve got to go out. At once; do you understand? There is a message here; and I am afraid that something dreadful has happened. Can you sing?”
“Ah, yes; a song of lamentation—a dirge for the dead.”
“No, no; seven years ago you had a lovely voice. I recollect what a pleasure it was to me as a child; and they used to say that my voice was very like yours, only not so sweet or so powerful. Aunt, I must go out; and that man must know nothing about it. He is by the window in the small library now, watching—watching. Help me, for the love of Heaven, help me.”
The girl spoke with a fervency and passion that seemed to waken a responsive chord in Margaret Henson’s breast. A brighter gleam crept into her eyes.
“You are a dear girl,” she said, dreamily; “yes, a dear girl. And I loved singing; it was a great grief to me that they would not let me go upon the stage. But I haven’t sung since—since that—”
She pointed to the huddled heap of china and glass and dried, dusty flowers in one corner. Ethel [Updater’s note: Enid?] shuddered slightly as she followed the direction of the extended forefinger.
“But you must try,” she whispered. “It is for the good of the family, for the recovery of the secret. Reginald Henson is sly and cruel and clever. But we have one on our side now who is far more clever. And, unless I can get away to-night without that man knowing, the chance may be lost for ever. Come!”
Margaret commenced to sing in a soft minor. At first the chords were thin and dry, but gradually they increased in sweetness and power. The hopeless, distant look died from the singer’s eyes; there was a flush on her cheeks that rendered her years younger.
“Another one,” she said, when the song was finished, “and yet another. How wicked I have been to neglect this balm that God sent me all these years. If you only knew what the sound of my own voice means to me! Another one, Enid.”
“Yes, yes,” Enid whispered. “You are to sing till I return. You are to leave Henson to imagine that I am singing. He will never guess. Now then.”
Enid crept away into the hall, closing the door softly behind her. She made her way noiselessly from the house and across the lawn. As Henson slipped through the open window into the garden Enid darted behind a bush. Evidently Henson suspected nothing so far as she was concerned, for she could see the red glow of the cigar between his lips. The faint sweetness of distant music filled the air. So long as the song continued Henson would relax his vigilance.
He was pacing down the garden in the direction of the drive. Did the man know anything? Enid wondered. He had so diabolically cunning a brain. He seemed to find out everything, and to read others before they had made up their minds for themselves.
The cigar seemed to dance like a mocking sprite into the bushes. Usually the man avoided those bushes. If Reginald Henson was afraid of one thing it was of the dogs. And in return they hated him as he hated them.
Enid’s mind was made up. If the sound of that distant voice should only cease for a moment she was quite sure Henson would turn back. But he could hear it, and she knew that she was safe. Enid slipped past him into the bushes and gave a faint click of her lips. Something moved and whined, and two dark objects bounded towards her. She caught them together by their collars and cuffed them soundly. Then