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crime.

      “Well, I suppose I may consider myself in the hands of counsel. Tell me what it is you want to know!” Mrs. Hillmer pouted, with the air of a child about to undergo a scolding.

      “Are you acquainted with Mr. Corbett’s present address?” he said.

      “No. I have neither seen him nor heard from him since early in November.”

      “Can you be more precise about the period?”

      “Yes, perhaps.” She arose, took from a drawer in the sideboard a packet of bills – receipted, he observed – searched through them and found the document she sought. “I purchased a few articles about that time,” she explained, “and the account for them is dated November 15. I had not seen my – ” She blushed, became confused, laughed a little, and went on. “I had not seen Mr. Corbett for at least a week before that date – say November 8th or 9th.”

      Lady Dyke disappeared on the evening of the 6th!

      Bruce swallowed his astonishment at the odd coincidence of dates, for he said, with an encouraging laugh, “Out with it, Mrs. Hillmer. You were about to describe Mr. Corbett correctly when you recollected yourself.”

      Mrs. Hillmer, still coloring and becoming saucily cheerful, cried, “Why should I trouble myself when you, of course, know all that I can tell you, and probably more? He is my brother, and a pretty tiresome sort of relation, too.”

      “I am obliged for your confidence. In return, I am free to state that your brother is now in the South of France.”

      “As you are here, Mr. Bruce,” she said, “I may as well get some advice gratis. Can people writ him in the South of France? Can they ask me to pay his debts?”

      “Under ordinary circumstances they can do neither. Certainly not the latter.”

      “I hope not. But they sometimes come very near to it, as I know to my cost.”

      “Indeed! How?”

      Mrs. Hillmer hesitated. Her smile was a trifle scornful, and her color rose again as she answered: “People are not averse to taking advantage of circumstances. I have had some experience of this trait in debt-collectors already. But they must be careful. You, as a legal man, must know that demands urged on account of personal reasons may come very near to levying blackmail.”

      “Surely, Mrs. Hillmer, you do not suspect me of being a dun. Perish the thought! You could never be in debt to me.”

      “Very nice of you. Don’t you represent those people on Leadenhall Street, then?”

      “What people?”

      “Messrs. Dodge & Co.”

      “No; why do you ask?”

      “Because my brother entered into what he called a ‘deal’ with them. He underwrote some shares in a South African mine, as a nominal affair, he told me, and now they want him to pay for them because the company is not supported by the public.”

      “No, I do not represent Dodge & Co.”

      “Is there something else then? Whom do you represent?”

      “To be as precise as permissible, I may say that my inquiries in no sense affect financial matters.”

      “What then?”

      “Well, there is a woman in the case.”

      Mrs. Hillmer was evidently both relieved and interested.

      “No, you don’t say,” she said. “Tell me all about it. I never knew Bertie to be much taken up with the fair sex. I am all curiosity. Who is she?”

      He did not take advantage of the mention of a name which in no way stood for Sydney. Besides, perhaps the initial stood for Herbert. He resolved to try another tack.

      Glancing at his watch he said: “It is nearly seven o’clock. I have already detained you an unconscionable time. You were going out. Permit me to call again, and we can discuss matters at leisure.”

      He rose, and the lady sighed: “You were just beginning to be entertaining. I was only going to dine at a restaurant. I am quite tired of being alone.”

      Was it a hint? He would see. “Are you dining by yourself, then, Mrs. Hillmer?”

      “I hardly know. I may bring my maid.”

      Claude now made up his mind. “May I venture,” he said, “after such an informal introduction, to ask you to dine with me at the Prince’s Restaurant, and afterwards, perhaps, to look in at the Jollity Theatre?”

      The lady was unfeignedly pleased. She arranged to call for him in her brougham within twenty minutes, and Bruce hurried off to Victoria Street in a hansom to dress for this unexpected branch of the detective business.

      When he told his valet to telephone to the restaurant and the theatre respectively for a reserved table and a couple of stalls, that worthy chuckled.

      When his master entered a brougham in which was seated a fur-wrapped lady, the valet grinned broadly. “I knew it,” he said. “The guv’nor’s on the mash. Now, who would ever have thought it of him?”

      CHAPTER V

      AT THE JOLLITY THEATRE

      By tacit consent, Claude and his fair companion dropped for the hour the rôles of inquisitor and witness.

      They were both excellent talkers, they were mutually interested, and there was in their present escapade a spice of that romance not so lacking in the humdrum life of London as is generally supposed to be the case.

      Bruce did not ask himself what tangible result he expected from this quaint outcome of his visit to Sloane Square. It was too soon yet. He must trust to the vagaries of chance to elucidate many things now hidden. Meanwhile a good dinner, a bright theatre, and the society of a smart, nice-looking woman, were more than tolerable substitutes for progress.

      As a partial explanation of his somewhat eccentric behavior, he volunteered a lively account of a recent cause celebre, in which he had taken a part, but the details of which had been rigidly kept from the public. He more than hinted that Mr. Sydney Corbett had figured prominently in the affair; and Mrs. Hillmer laughed with unrestrained mirth at the unwonted appearance of her brother in the character of a Lothario.

      “Tell me,” said Bruce confidentially, when a couple of glasses of Moët ’89 had consolidated friendly relations, “what sort of a fellow is this brother of yours?”

      “Not in any sense a bad boy, but a trifle wild. He will not live an ordinary life, and at times he has been hard pressed to live at all. As a matter of fact, it is this scrape he blundered into with Messrs. Dodge & Co. that induced him to masquerade temporarily under an assumed name.”

      “Then what is his real name?”

      “Ah, now you are pumping me again. I refuse to tell.”

      “But there are generally serious reasons when a man disguises himself in such fashion.”

      “The reason he gave me was that he dreaded being writted for liability regarding the shares I mentioned to you. It was good enough. Now you come with this story of meddling with somebody else’s wife. Surely this is an additional reason. I supplied him with funds until we quarrelled, and then he went off in a huff.”

      “What did you quarrel about?”

      “That concerns me only.” Mrs. Hillmer was so emphatic that Bruce dropped the subject.

      When they drove to the theatre Mrs. Hillmer, on alighting at the entrance, said to her coachman, “You may return home now, and bring Dobson to meet me at 11.15.”

      “May I venture to inquire who Dobson is?” said Claude.

      “Certainly. Dobson is my maid.”

      This woman puzzled him the more he saw of her. He was now quite positive that she lived on the fringe of Society. Her status was, at the best, dubious. Yet he had never heard of her before, nor met her in public. None of his friends were known to