She looked at the little crystal clock beside her bed, and saw that it was a quarter to one. That would give her time to take off her gold dress and put it away and get into a dressing-gown. She could fill in the time with brushing her hair.
When she had done all these things, she looked at the clock again. Just on one o’clock. She opened her bedroom door and looked out. A light burned there all night. It was one of the things that made Sylvia feel safe and rich. Poor Mummy was always so dreadfully cross if you left a light on for a single minute. Of course she couldn’t help it, poor darling-she just had to scrimp and save, but it was dreadfully wearing. So now a light burned all night long upon every floor, and Sylvia, waking and turning over, could see a golden thread lying across her door-sill and go to sleep again feeling oh, so thankful not to be poor Sylvia Thrale any more.
She went to the head of the stairs and looked over. She could see the drawing-room door, and the light shining on the pale green stair-carpet. That made her feel good too, because you couldn’t expect a colour like that to wear, and it didn’t matter-most joyfully it didn’t matter.
She trailed her white crepe dressing-gown down to the next flight. From there she could see the hall, and a corner of the fireplace, and the dining-room door. Walls and woodwork were a pale, bright primrose. There was a scarlet rug, and a table, a screen and a clock in scarlet lacquer. As she came through the hall, the clock struck one with a keen, ringing note. She stood with her hand on the dining-room door and waited for the sound to die away. Then she went in, not putting on the light, but leaving the door wide behind her. She could find her way to the window in the dark, and what she had to say need not take a minute.
There were two windows of the old-fashioned sash type. She reached the nearer one and slid back the catch, standing between the heavy violet curtain and the glass. A coldness came from it. She shivered and pulled up the swansdown collar of her wrap. Then she stooped to raise the window.
It was heavy, but it moved. She heard it creak. Then she heard something else-a footstep just outside, crossing the pavement, coming quickly up to the door. She pressed her face to the glass. Suddenly, terribly, she was afraid. She couldn’t really see anything. There was no lamp very near, and the porch run out over the steps with pillars upon either side. They cut off what light there was. She had only seen a shadow, but she heard a horrifying and familiar sound, the little rattle which a latchkey makes when it is put into the lock, and hard upon that the click of the latch. The door swung in, swung back. The inner door swung in. A cold air came with it into the hall-through the open dining-room door. Sylvia turned round, flattening herself behind the curtain, because it was Francis who had come into his own house in the middle of the night-it couldn’t be anyone else but Francis.
And he would want to know what she was doing down here in her dressing-gown. Sylvia, whose stupidity had driven Gay to desperation, was not at all stupid about this. She ceased in fact to be Sylvia Colesborough at all. She was immemorial woman, and there, on the other side of the open door, was immemorial man, a creature to be deceived. If she had been capable of thought at all, she would have thought, “I must hide,” and have remained cowering behind her curtain. But she did not think. She ran out into the middle of the dining-room and called in a plaintive voice,
“Oh, Francis, is that you? Do put on the light. I can’t see where I am.”
The light went on. Francis Colesborough stood by the door with his hand on the switch. At this moment he looked his age. He had fair hair with a sprinkle of grey in it, grey eyes, hard and intent, a certain elegance of bearing. His skin lacked colour. The light which he had turned on picked out the lines of fatigue about eyes and mouth. He said with a kind of angry impatience,
“What are you doing, Sylvia?”
She smiled that lovely vague smile of hers.
“I wanted a biscuit-I thought I could find them in the dark. And then I heard you and went to look out of the window.”
His hand dropped rather heavily from the switch.
“You weren’t expecting me?”
She had found the biscuits. She picked out two or three and turned with them in her hand.
“Did you say you were coming back?”
“No, I didn’t.”
She began to tell him about the Westgates’ party.
“Are you glad to see me?” he said abruptly in the middle of a sentence.
Sylvia trailed towards him in her lovely white wrap, offered a cheek to be kissed, yawned a little and said,
“But I’m always pleased to see you, darling.”
XII
It was in my pocket,” said Algy Somers.
Montagu Lushington looked at the creased envelope which had come out of Algy’s tail-pocket the night before. He said nothing. Algy went on.
“It’s that envelope-there isn’t any doubt about it at all. I didn’t read the address, as I told you. I didn’t know that I had looked at the envelope, but as soon as I saw that blot I knew I had seen it before, and where. It’s shiny where the ink has dried, and I suppose that must have caught my eye, and I remembered it afterwards, though I didn’t notice it at the time.”
Montagu Lushington looked up.
“The envelope that was taken out of my despatch-case.”
“Yes, sir.”
“The empty envelope.” There was a little weight on the second word.
Algy’s face was set and grave. He said “Yes, sir” again.
“And planted on you-put into your tail-pocket-” The slow almost meditative tone quickened suddenly. “With what object?”
Algy’s face did not change, or his voice. He said,
“I’ve thought about that. It would support the theory that the papers were taken before you went down to Wellings.”
“If it had been found on you-yes.”
“It was intended to be found. I found it too soon, that’s all. Or perhaps I was meant to find it. It may have been part of an attempt to stampede me-I don’t know. There’s a lot of talk going on. I was at the Westgates’ last night. All Linda’s crowd had got the story.”
Mr. Lushington wished-profanely-that someone would tell him how people got hold of these things.
“Well, they do,” said Algy. “The men tell their wives, and the women tell each other-everyone adds a little. But they all know that important papers have gone missing, and most of them are half way to believing I took them. Somewhere about day after tomorrow they’ll be quite sure I did. Then it’s finish for me.”
Montagu Lushington looked down at the envelope again.
“I don’t see why this was planted on you.”
Algy had one of those flashes. He said,
“Has no one suggested having my rooms searched?”
He got a quick upward glance. There was a pause, and Lushington said,
“I should not have entertained such a suggestion.”
“But it was made?” Algy’s tone warmed a little.
“I think that is a question which should not be put.”
“But I do put it, sir. I don’t see how I’m to meet this thing unless I know what I’m up against.”
“Very well then, you may take it that the suggestion has been made.”
“By whom?” Algy was pale.
“Do you expect me to tell you that?” said Montagu Lushington.
“Yes, I do, sir. You have just asked me why this envelope should have been planted in my pocket. I say it was planted in order that it might be found there. How was it going to be found there? My rooms were to be searched. Don’t you think I have a right to know who has been suggesting that my rooms should be searched?”
Montagu Lushington said abruptly, “It was Carstairs. That makes nonsense of your suggestion, but the person who planted the envelope might have had knowledge of the line which Carstairs was taking-there is that.”
“I’m not making any suggestion about Mr. Carstairs-he’s out of the question. But someone thought, or hoped, that there would be a search, and was willing to take a risk in order to make sure that something would be found. If you had authorized the search, and that envelope had been found in my coat, no one in the world would have believed that I was innocent. It would have been absolutely damning.”