Although few of its buildings (excepting the
Halls) are of really great antiquity, the precinct
of the Temples shares with the older parts of London at
least one medieval characteristic: it abounds in those
queer little passages and alleys which, burrowing in all
directions under the dwelling-houses, are a source of
endless confusion and bewilderment to the stranger, though
to the accustomed denizen they offer an equally great
convenience. For by their use the seasoned Templar
makes his way from any one part of the precinct to
any other, if not in an actual bee-line, at least in an
abbreviated zig-zag that cuts across the regular
thoroughfares as though they were mere paths traversing
an open meadow. Some of these alleys do, indeed,
announce themselves even to unaccustomed eyes, as
public passage-ways, by recognizable entrance arches;
but many of them scorn even this degree of publicity,
artfully concealing their existence from the uninitiated
by an ordinary doorway, which they share with
a pair of houses. Whereby the unsuspecting stranger,
entering what, in his innocence, he supposes to be the
front doorway of a house, walks along the hall and
is presently astonished to find himself walking out of
another front door into another thoroughfare.
The neighbourhood of Fig Tree Court is peculiarly
rich in these deceptive burrows, indeed, excepting from
the Terrace, it has no other avenue of approach. On
the present occasion I had the choice of two, and was
proceeding along the narrow lane of Elm Court to take
the farther one, which led to the entry of my chambers,
when I caught sight of a man approaching hurriedly
from the direction of the Cloisters. At the first glance,
I thought I recognized him—though he was a mere
silhouette in the dim light—as the loiterer whom I had
seen on the night of my return. And his behaviour
confirmed my suspicion; for as he came in sight of
me, he hesitated for a moment and then, quickening
his pace forward, disappeared suddenly through what
appeared to be a hole in the wall but was, in fact, the
passage for which I was making.
Instantly, I turned back and swiftly crossing the
square of Elm Court, dived into the burrow at its
farther corner and came out into the little square of Fig
Tree Court at the very moment when the mysterious
stranger emerged from the burrow at the other side,
so that we met face to face in the full light of the
central lamp.
Naturally, I was the better prepared for the
encounter and I pursued my leisurely way towards my
chambers with the air of not having observed him;
while he, stopping short for a moment with a wild stare
at me, dashed across the square and plunged into the
passage from which I had just emerged.
I did not follow him. I had seen him and had
thereby confirmed a suspicion that had been growing
upon me, and that was enough. For I need hardly say
that the man was Anthony Wallingford. But though I
was prepared for the identification, I was none the less
puzzled and worried by it. Here was yet another
perplexity; and I was just stepping into my entry to
reflect upon it at my leisure when I became aware of
hurrying footsteps in the passage through which
Wallingford had come. Quickly drawing back into the
deep shadow of the vestibule, I waited to see who this
new-comer might be. In a few seconds he rushed
out of the passage and came to a halt in the middle of
the square, nearly under the lamp, where he stood for
a few moments, looking to right and left and listening
intently. And now I realized the justice of what
Madeline had said; for, commonplace as the man was,
I recognized him in an instant. Brown hat, blue serge
suit, big, sandy moustache and concave, pointed nose;
they were not sensational characteristics, but they
identified him beyond a moment’s doubt.
Apparently, his ear must have caught the echoes of
Wallingford’s footsteps, for, after a very brief pause,
he started off at something approaching a trot and
disappeared into the passage by which I had come
and Wallingford had gone. A sudden, foolish curiosity
impelled me to follow and observe the methods of this
singular and artless sleuth. But I did not follow
directly. Instead, I turned and ran up the other passage,
which leads into the narrow part of Elm Court; and
as I came flying out of the farther end of it I ran
full tilt into a man who was running along the court
towards the Cloisters. Of course the man was
Wallingford. Who else would be running like a lunatic through
the Temple at night, unless it were his pursuer?
With muttered curses but no word of recognition, he
disengaged himself and pursued his way, disappearing
at length round the sharp turn in the lane which leads
towards the Cloisters. I did not follow him, but drew
back into the dark passage and waited. Very soon
another figure became visible, approaching rapidly
along the dimly lighted lane. I drew farther back and
presently from my hiding-place I saw the brown-hatted
shadower steal past with a ridiculous air of
secrecy and caution; and when he had passed, I peered
out and watched his receding figure until it disappeared
round the angle of the lane.
I felt half-tempted to join the absurd procession and
see what eventually became of these two idiots. But I
had really seen enough. I now knew that Wallingford’s
“delusions” were no delusions at all and that
Madeline’s story set forth nothing but the genuine,
indisputable truth. And with these new facts to add
to my unwelcome store of data, I walked slowly back
to my chambers, cogitating as I went.
In truth, I had abundant material for reflection. The
more I turned over my discoveries in Madeline’s flat
the more did the incriminating evidence seem to pile up.
I recalled Polton’s plainly expressed suspicion that the
sender of the infernal machine was a woman; and I
recalled Thorndyke’s analysis of the peculiarities of the
thing with the inferences which those peculiarities
suggested, and read into them a more definite meaning.
I now saw what the machine had conveyed to him, and
what he had been trying to make it convey to me.
The unmechanical outlook combined with evident
ingenuity, the unfamiliarity with ordinary mechanical
appliances, the ignorance concerning the different kinds
of gun-powder, the lack of those common tools which
nearly every man, but hardly any woman, possesses
and can use: all these peculiarities of the unknown
person were feminine peculiarities. And finally, there
had been the plug of knitting-wool: a most unlikely
material for a man to use for such a purpose, or,
indeed, to possess at all.
So my thoughts went over and over the same ground,
and every time finding escape from the obvious
conclusion more and more impossible. The evidence of
Madeline’s complicity—at the very least—in the
sending of the infernal machine appeared overwhelming.
I could not reject it. Nor could I deny what the
sending of it implied. It was virtually a confession
of guilt. And yet, even as I admitted this to myself,
I was strangely enough aware that my feelings
towards Madeline remained unaltered. The rational,
legal side of me condemned her. But somehow, in
some incomprehensible way, that condemnation had a
purely technical, academic quality. It left my loyalty
and affection for her untouched.
But what of Thorndyke? Had his reasoning
travelled along the same lines? If it had, there would
be nothing sentimental in his attitude. He had warned
me, and I knew well enough that whenever there should
be evidence enough to put before a court, the law
would be set in motion. What, then, was his present
position? And even as I asked myself the question,
there echoed uncomfortably in my mind the significant
suggestion that he had thrown out only a few hours
ago concerning the bottle of medicine. Evidently, he
at least entertained the possibility that the Fowler’s
Solution had been put into that bottle after
Monkhouse’s death, and that for the express purpose of
diverting suspicion from the food. The manifest
implication was that he entertained the possibility that
the poison had been administered in the food. But
to suspect this was to suspect the person who prepared
the food of being the poisoner. And the person who
prepared the food was Madeline.
The question, therefore, as to Thorndyke’s state of
mind was a vital one. He had expressed no suspicion
of Madeline. But then he had expressed no suspicion
of anybody. On the other hand, he had exonerated
nobody. He was frankly observant of every member of
that household. Then there was the undeniable fact
that Madeline had been watched and followed.
Somebody suspected her. But who? The watcher was
certainly not a detective. Amateur was writ large all
over him. Then it was not the police who suspected
her. Apparently there remained only Thorndyke,
though one would have expected him to employ a more
efficient agent.
But Wallingford was also under observation, and
more persistently. Then he, too, was suspected. But
here there was some show of reason. For what was
Wallingford doing in the Temple? Evidently he had
been lurking about, apparently keeping a watch on
Thorndyke, though for what purpose I could not
imagine. Still, it was a suspicious proceeding and
justified some watch being kept on him. But the
shadowing of Madeline was incomprehensible.
I paced up and down my sitting room turning these
questions over in my mind and all the time conscious
of a curious sense of unreality in the whole affair; in all
this watching and following and dodging which looked
so grotesque and purposeless. I felt myself utterly
bewildered. But I was also profoundly unhappy and,
indeed, overshadowed by a terrible dread. For out of
this chaos one fact emerged clearly: there was a
formidable body of evidence implicating Madeline. If
Thorndyke had known what I knew, her position would
have been one of the gravest peril. My conscience told
me that it was my duty to tell him; and I knew that
I had no intention of doing anything of the kind. But
still the alarming question haunted me: how much did
he really know? How much did he suspect?
In the course of my perambulations I passed and
repassed a smallish deed box which stood on a lower
book-shelf and which was to me what the Ark of the
Covenant was to the ancient Israelites: the repository
of my most sacred possessions. Its lid bore the name
“Stella,” painted on it by me, and its contents were a
miscellany of trifles, worthless intrinsically, but to me
precious beyond all price as relics of the dear friend
who had been all in all to me during her short life
and who, though she had been lying in her grave for
four long years, was all in all to me still. Often, in the
long, solitary evenings, had I taken the relics out of
their abiding-place and let the sight of them carry my
thoughts back to the golden days of our happy
companionship, filling in the pleasant pictures with the
aid of my diary—but that was unnecessary now, since
I knew the entries by heart—and painting other, more
shadowy pictures of a future that might have been.
It was a melancholy pleasure, perhaps, but yet, as the
years rolled on, the bitterness of those memories grew
less bitter and still the sweet remained.
Presently, as for the hundredth time the beloved
name met my eye, there came upon me a yearning to
creep back with her into the sunny past; to forget, if
only for a short hour, the hideous anxieties of the
present and in memory to walk with her once more “along
the meads of asphodel.”
Halting before the box, I stood and lifted it tenderly
to the table and having unlocked it, raised the lid and
looked thoughtfully into the interior. Then, one by
one, I lifted out my treasures, set them out in order
on the table and sat down to look at them and let them
speak to me their message of peace and consolation.
To a stranger’s eye they were a mere collection of
odds and ends. Some would have been recognizable as
relics of the more conventional type. There were
several photographs of the dead girl, some taken by myself,
and a tress of red-gold hair—such hair as I had been
told often glorifies the victims whom consumption had
marked for its own. It had been cut off for me by
Barbara when she took her own tress, and tied up with
a blue ribbon. But it was not these orthodox relics that
spoke to me most intimately. I had no need of their
aid to call up the vision of her person. The things
that set my memory working were the records of
actions and experiences; the sketch-books, the loose
sketches and the little plaster plaques and medallions
that she had made with my help after she had become
bed-ridden and could go no more abroad to sketch.
Every one of these had its story to tell, its vision to
call up.
I turned over the sketches—simple but careful pencil
drawings for the most part, for Stella, like me, had
more feeling for form than for colour—and recalled
the making of them; the delightful rambles across the
sunny meadows or through the cool woodlands, the
solemn planting of sketching-stools and earnest
consultation on the selection and composition of the
subjects. These were the happiest days, before the chilly
hand of the destroyer had been laid on its chosen
victim and there was still a long and sunny future to
be vaguely envisaged.
And then I turned to the little plaques and
medallions which she had modelled and under my
supervision and of which I had made the plaster moulds and
casts. These called up sadder memories, but yet they
spoke of an even closer and more loving companionship;
for each work was, in a way, a joint achievement
over which we had triumphed and rejoiced together.
So it happened that, although the shadow of sickness,
and at last of death, brooded over them, it was on these
relics that I tended to linger most lovingly.
Here was the slate that I had got for her to stick
the clay on and which she used to hold propped up
against her knees as she worked with never-failing
enthusiasm through the long, monotonous days, and even,
when she was well enough, far into the night by the
light of the shaded candle. Here were the simple
modelling-tools and the little sponge and the Camel-hair
brush with which she loved to put the final finish
on the damp clay reliefs. Here was Lanterri’s
priceless text-book over which we used to pore together
and laud that incomparable teacher. Here were the
plaques, medals and medallions that we had prised out,
with bated breath, from their too-adherent moulds.
And here—the last and saddest relic—was the wax
mould from which no cast had ever been made, the
final, crowning work of those deft, sensitive fingers.
For the thousandth time, I picked it up and let the
light fall obliquely across its hollows. The work was a
medal some three inches across, a portrait of Stella,
herself, modelled from a profile photograph that I had
taken for the purpose. It was an excellent likeness
and unquestionably the best piece of modelling that she
had ever done.
Often, I had intended to take the cast from it, but
always had been restrained by a vague reluctance to
disturb the mould. Now, as I looked at the delicate,
sunken impression, I had again the feeling that this,
her last work, ought to be finished; and I was still
debating the matter with the mould in my hand when
I heard a quick step upon the stair, followed by a
characteristic knock on my door.
My first impulse was to hustle my treasures back
into their box before answering the summons. But this
was almost instantly followed by a revulsion. I
recognized the knock as Thorndyke’s; and somehow there
came upon me a desire to share my memories with
him. He had shown a strangely sympathetic insight
into my feelings towards Stella. He had read my diary.
He now knew the whole story; and he was the kindest,
the most loyal and most discreet of friends. Gently
laying down the mould I went to the door and threw
it open.
“I saw your light burning as I passed just now,”
said Thorndyke as he entered and shook my hand
warmly, “so I thought I would take the opportunity to
drop in and return your diary. I hope I am not
disturbing you. If I am, you must treat me as a friend
and eject me.”
“Not at all, Thorndyke,” I replied. “On the contrary,
you would be doing me a charity if you would
stay and smoke a companionable pipe.”
“Good,” said he, “then I will give myself the
pleasure of a quiet gossip. But what is amiss,
Mayfield?” he continued, laying a friendly hand on my
shoulder and looking me over critically. “You look
worn, and worried and depressed. You are not letting
your mind dwell too much, I hope, on the tragedy
that has come unbidden into your life?”
“I am afraid I am,” I replied. “The horrible affair
haunts me. Suspicion and mystery are in the very air
I breathe. A constant menace seems to hang over all
my friends, so that I am in continual dread of some
new catastrophe. I have just ascertained that
Wallingford is really being watched and shadowed; and not
only Wallingford but even Miss Norris.”
He did not appear surprised or seek for further
information. He merely nodded and looked into my face
with grave sympathy.
“Put it away, Mayfield,” said he. “That is my
counsel to you. Try to forget it. You have put the
investigation into my hands. Leave it there and wash
your own of it. You did not kill Harold Monkhouse.
Whoever did must pay the penalty if ever the crime
should be brought home to the perpetrator. And if it
never can be, it were better that you and all of us
should let it sink into oblivion rather than allow it to
remain to poison the lives of innocent persons. Let us
forget it now. I see you were trying to.”
I had noticed that when he first entered the room,
he cast a single, swift glance at the table which, I was
sure, had comprehended every object on it. Then he
had looked away and never again let his eyes stray in
that direction. But now, as he finished speaking, he
glanced once more at the table, and this time with
undisguised interest.
“Yes,” I admitted. “I was trying to find in the
memories of the past an antidote for the present.
These are the relics of that past. I daresay you have
read of them in the diary and probably have written
me down a mawkish sentimentalist.”
“I pray you, my friend, not to do me that injustice!”
he exclaimed. “Faithful friendship that even survives
the grave, is not a thing that any man can afford to
despise. But for the disaster of untimely death, your
faithfulness and hers would have created for two
persons the perfect life. I assure you, Mayfield, that I
have been deeply moved by the story of your delightful
friendship and your irreparable loss. But don’t let us
dwell too much on the sad aspects of the story. Show
me your relics. I see some very charming little plaques
among them.”
He picked up one with reassuring daintiness of touch
and examined it through a reading-glass that I handed
to him.
“It really is a most admirable little work,” said he.
“Not in the least amateurish. She had the makings of
a first-class medallist; the appreciation of the essential
qualities of a miniature relief. And she had a fine
feeling for composition and spacing.”
Deeply gratified by his appreciation and a little
surprised by his evident knowledge of the medallist’s
art, I presented the little works, one after another, and
we discussed their merits with the keenest interest.
Presently he asked:
“Has it never occurred to you, Mayfield, that these
charming little works ought to be finished?”
“Finished?” I repeated. “But, aren’t they
finished?”
“Certainly not. They are only in the plaster. But a
plaster cast is an intermediate form, just a mere
working model. It is due to the merits of these plaques
and medals that they should be put into permanent
material—silver or copper or bronze. I’ll tell you
what, Mayfield,” he continued, enthusiastically. “You
shall let Polton make replicas of some of them—he
could do it with perfect safety to the originals. Then
we could hand the casts to an electrotyper or a
founder—I should favour the electrotype process for
such small works—and have them executed in
whichever metal you preferred. Then you would be able to
see, for the first time, the real quality of the modelling.”
I caught eagerly at the idea, but yet I was a little
nervous.
“You think it would be perfectly safe?” I asked.
“Absolutely safe. Polton would make gelatine
moulds which couldn’t possibly injure the originals.”
That decided me. I fell in with the suggestion
enthusiastically, and forthwith we began an anxious
consultation as to the most suitable pieces with which to
make a beginning. We had selected half a dozen casts
when my glance fell on the wax mould. That was
Stella’s masterpiece and it certainly ought to be
finished; but I was loath to part with the mould for fear
of an accident. Very dubiously, I handed it to
Thorndyke and asked:
“What do you think of this? Could it be cast
without any risk of breaking it?”
He laid the mould on the table before him so that
the light fell obliquely across it and looked down on it
reflectively.
“So,” said he, “this is the wax mould. I was reading
about it only yesterday and admiring your resourcefulness
and ingenuity. I must read the entry again with
the actual object before me.”
He opened the diary, which he had laid on the table,
and when he had found the entry, read it to himself in
an undertone.
“Dropped in to have tea with Stella and found her
bubbling with excitement and triumph. She had just
finished the portrait medal and though her eyes were
red and painful from the strain of the close work,
in spite of her new spectacles, she was quite happy and
as proud as a little peacock. And well she might be.
I should like Lanterri to see his unknown pupil’s
work. We decided to make the mould of it at once,
but when I got out the plaster tin, I found it empty.
Most unfortunate, for the clay was beginning to dry
and I didn’t dare to damp it. But something had to
be done to protect it. Suddenly I had a brilliant idea.
There was nearly a whole candle in Stella’s
candlestick, quite enough for a mould, and good, hard wax
that wouldn’t warp. I took off the reflector and lighted
the candle, which I took out of the candlestick and
held almost upside down over the clay medal and let
the wax drip on to it. Soon the medal was covered
by a film of wax which grew thicker and thicker, until,
by the time I had used up practically the whole of the
candle, there was a good, solid crust of wax, quite
strong enough to cast from. When I went home, I
took the slate with me with the wax mould sticking to
it, intending to cover it with a plaster shell for extra
safety. But my plaster tin was empty, too, so I put
the slate away in a safe place until I should get some
fresh plaster to make the cast; which will not happen
until I get back from Chelmsford.
“Busy evening getting ready for to-morrow; hope I
shall feel less cheap then than I do now.”
As Thorndyke finished reading he looked up and
remarked: “That was an excellent plan of yours. I
have seen Polton use the same method. But how was
it that you never made the cast?”
“I was afraid of damaging the mould. As you know,
when I came back from Ipswich, Stella was dead,
and as the medal was her last work and her best, I
hardly dared to risk the chance of destroying it.”
“Still,” Thorndyke urged, “it was the medal that
was her work. The mould was your own; and the
medal exists only potentially in the mould. It will come
into actual existence only when the cast is made.”
I saw the force of this, but I was still a little uneasy,
and said so.
“There is no occasion,” said he. “The mould is
amply strong enough to cast from. It might possibly
break in separating the cast, but that would be of no
consequence, as you would then have the cast, which
would be the medal, itself. And it could then be put
into bronze or silver.”
“Very well,” I said, “if you guarantee the safety of
the operation, I am satisfied. I should love to see it in
silver; or perhaps it might look even better in gold.”
Having disposed of the works, themselves, we fell to
discussing the question of suitable settings or frames;
and this led us to the subject of the portraits.
Thorndyke glanced over the collection, and picking up one,
which happened to be my own favourite, looked at it
thoughtfully.
“It is a beautiful face,” said he, “and this seems to
have been a singularly happy portrait. In red chalk
autotype, it would make a charming little picture. Did
you take it?”
“Yes; and as I have the negative I am inclined to
adopt your suggestion. I am surprised that I never
thought of it myself, for red chalk is exactly the right
medium.”
“Then let Polton have the negative. He is quite an
expert in autotype work.”
I accepted the offer gladly and we then came back to
the question of framing. Thorndyke’s suggestion was
that the portrait should be treated as a medallion and
enclosed in a frame to match that of the medal. The
idea appealed to me rather strongly, and presently a
further one occurred to me, though it was suggested
indirectly by Thorndyke, who had taken up the tress
of Stella’s hair and was looking at it admiringly as
he drew it softly between his fingers.
“Human hair,” he remarked, “and particularly a
woman’s hair, is always a beautiful material, no matter
what its colour may be; but this red-gold variety is
one of the most gorgeous of Nature’s productions.”
“Yes,” I agreed, “it is extremely decorative. Barbara
had her tress made up into a thin plait and worked
into the frame of a miniature of Stella. I liked the
idea, but somehow the effect is not so very pleasing.
But it is an oblong frame.”
“I don’t think,” said Thorndyke, “that a plait was
quite the best form. A little cable would look better,
especially for a medallion portrait; indeed I think that
if you had a plain square black frame with a circular
opening, a little golden cable, carried round
concentrically with the opening would have a rather fine
effect.”
“So it would,” I exclaimed. “I think it would look
charming. I had no idea, Thorndyke, that you were
a designer. Do you think Polton could make the
cable?”
“Polton,” he replied, impressively, “can do anything
that can be done with a single pair of human hands.
Let him have the hair, and he will make the cable and
the frame, too; and he will see that the glass cover is
an airtight fit—for, of course, the cable would have
to be under the glass.”
To this also I agreed with a readiness that
surprised myself. And yet it was not surprising. Hitherto
I had been accustomed secretly and in solitude to pore
over these pathetic little relics of happier days and
lock up my sorrows and my sense of bereavement in
my own breast. Now, for the first time, I had a
confidant who shared the knowledge of my shattered
hopes and vanished happiness; and so whole
heartedly, with such delicate sympathy and perfect
understanding had Thorndyke entered into the story of my
troubled life that I found in his companionship not
only a relief from my old self-repression but a sort of
subdued happiness. Almost cheerfully I fetched an
empty cigar-box and a supply of cotton wool and
tissue paper and helped him tenderly and delicately
to pack my treasures for their first exodus from under
my roof. And it was with only a faint twinge of regret
that I saw him, at length, depart with the box under
his arm.
“You needn’t be uneasy, Mayfield,” he said, pausing
on the stairs to look back. “Nothing will be injured;
and as soon as the casting is successfully carried
through, I shall drop a note in your letter-box to set
your mind at rest. Good night.”
I watched him as he descended the stairs, and
listened to his quick foot-falls, fading away up the court.
Then I went back to my room with a faint sense of
desolation to re-pack the depleted deed-box and
thereafter to betake myself to bed.
