declared Mr Satterthwaite, warming up to his theme. âShe acted in those theatricals â the charity matinee, you know, last spring. I was very much struck. Nothing modern about her â a pure survival. One can imagine her in the dogeâs palace, or as Lucrezia Borgia.â
The colonel let the car swerve slightly, and Mr Satterthwaite came to an abrupt stop. He wondered what fatality had brought the name of Lucrezia Borgia to his tongue. Under the circumstances â
âDwighton was not poisoned, was he?â he asked abruptly.
Melrose looked at him sideways, somewhat curiously. âWhy do you ask that, I wonder?â he said.
âOh, I â I donât know.â Mr Satterthwaite was flustered. âI â It just occurred to me.â
âWell, he wasnât,â said Melrose gloomily. âIf you want to know, he was crashed on the head.â
âWith a blunt instrument,â murmured Mr Satterthwaite, nodding his head sagely.
âDonât talk like a damned detective story, Satterthwaite. He was hit on the head with a bronze figure.â
âOh,â said Satterthwaite, and relapsed into silence.
âKnow anything of a chap called Paul Delangua?â asked Melrose after a minute or two.
âYes. Good-looking young fellow.â
âI daresay women would call him so,â growled the colonel.
âYou donât like him?â
âNo, I donât.â
âI should have thought you would have. He rides very well.â
âLike a foreigner at the horse show. Full of monkey tricks.â
Mr Satterthwaite suppressed a smile. Poor old Melrose was so very British in his outlook. Agreeably conscious himself of a cosmopolitan point of view, Mr Satterthwaite was able to deplore the insular attitude toward life.
âHas he been down in this part of the world?â he asked.
âHeâs been staying at Alderway with the Dwightons. The rumour goes that Sir James kicked him out a week ago.â
âWhy?â
âFound him making love to his wife, I suppose. What the hell ââ
There was a violent swerve, and a jarring impact.
âMost dangerous crossroads in England,â said Melrose. âAll the same, the other fellow should have sounded his horn. Weâre on the main road. I fancy weâve damaged him rather more than he has damaged us.â
He sprang out. A figure alighted from the other car and joined him. Fragments of speech reached Satterthwaite.
âEntirely my fault, Iâm afraid,â the stranger was saying. âBut I do not know this part of the country very well, and thereâs absolutely no sign of any kind to show youâre coming onto the main road.â
The colonel, mollified, rejoined suitably. The two men bent together over the strangerâs car, which a chauffeur was already examining. The conversation became highly technical.
âA matter of half an hour, Iâm afraid,â said the stranger. âBut donât let me detain you. Iâm glad your car escaped injury as well as it did.â
âAs a matter of fact ââ the colonel was beginning, but he was interrupted.
Mr Satterthwaite, seething with excitement, hopped out of the car with a birdlike action, and seized the stranger warmly by the hand.
âIt is! I thought I recognized the voice,â he declared excitedly. âWhat an extraordinary thing. What a very extraordinary thing.â
âEh?â said Colonel Melrose.
âMr Harley Quin. Melrose, Iâm sure youâve heard me speak many times of Mr Quin?â
Colonel Melrose did not seem to remember the fact, but he assisted politely at the scene while Mr Satterthwaite was chirruping gaily on. âI havenât seen you â let me see ââ
âSince the night at the Bells and Motley,â said the other quietly.
âThe Bells and Motley, eh?â said the colonel.
âAn inn,â explained Mr
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