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<h2> CHAPTER X. THE SECRET OF MR. BLAKE'S STUDIO </h2>
<p>"Mr. Blake is at dinner, sir, with company, but I will call him if you say
so."</p>
<p>"No," returned Mr. Gryce; "show us into some room where we can be
comfortable and we will wait till he has finished."</p>
<p>The servant bowed, and stepping forward down the hall, opened the door of
a small and cosy room heavily hung with crimson curtains. "I will let him
know that you are here," said he, and vanished towards the dining-room.</p>
<p>"I doubt if Mr. Blake will enjoy the latter half of his bill of fare as
much as the first," said I, drawing up one of the luxurious arm-chairs to
the side of my principal. "I wonder if he will break away from his guests
and come in here?"</p>
<p>"No; if I am not mistaken we shall find Mr. Blake a man of nerve. Not a
muscle of his face will show that he is disturbed."</p>
<p>"Well," said I, "I dread it."</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce looked about on the gorgeous walls and the rich old fashioned
furniture that surrounded him, and smiled one of his grimmest smiles.</p>
<p>"Well, you may," said he.</p>
<p>The next instant a servant stood in the doorway, bearing to our great
astonishment, a tray well set with decanter and glasses.</p>
<p>"Mr. Blake's compliments, gentlemen," said he, setting it down on the
table before us. "He hopes you will make yourselves at home and he will
see you as soon as possible."</p>
<p>The humph! of Mr. Gryce when the servant had gone would have done your
soul good, also the look he cast at the pretty Dresden Shepherdess on the
mantel-piece, as I reached out my hand towards the decanter. Somehow it
made me draw back.</p>
<p>"I think we had better leave his wine alone," said he.</p>
<p>And for half an hour we sat there, the wine untouched between us,
listening alternately to the sound of speech-making and laughter that came
from the dining-room, and the solemn ticking of the clock as it counted
out the seconds on the mantel-piece. Then the guests came in from the
table, filing before us past the open door on their way to the parlors.
They were all gentlemen of course—Mr. Blake never invited ladies to
his house—and gentlemen of well known repute. The dinner had been
given in honor of a certain celebrated statesman, and the character of his
guests was in keeping with that of the one thus complimented.</p>
<p>As they went by us gaily indulging in the jokes and light banter with
which such men season a social dinner, I saw Mr. Gryce's face grow sober
by many a shade; and when in the midst of it all, we heard the voice of
Mr. Blake rise in that courteous and measured tone for which it is
distinguished, I saw him reach forward and grasp his cane with an
uneasiness I had never seen displayed by him before. But when some time
later, the guests having departed, the dignified host advanced with some
apology to where we were, I never beheld a firmer look on Mr. Gryce's face
than that with which he rose and confronted him. Mr. Blake's own had not
more character in it.</p>
<p>"You have called at a rather inauspicious time, Mr. Gryce," said the
latter, glancing at the card which he held in his hand. "What may your
business be? Something to do with politics, I suppose."</p>
<p>I surveyed the man in amazement. Was this great politician stooping to act
a part, or had he forgotten our physiognomies as completely as appeared?</p>
<p>"Our business is not politics," replied Mr. Gryce; "but fully as
important. May I request the doors be closed?"</p>
<p>I thought Mr. Blake looked surprised, but he immediately stepped to the
door and shut it. Then coming back, he looked at Mr. Gryce more closely
and a change took place in his manner.</p>
<p>"I think I have seen you before," said he.</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce bowed with just the suspicion of a smile. "I have had the honor
of consulting you before in this very house," observed he.</p>
<p>A look of full recognition passed over the dignified countenance of the
man before us.</p>
<p>"I remember," said he, shrugging his shoulders in the old way. "You are
interested in some servant girl or other who ran away from this house a
week or so ago. Have you found her?" This with no apparent concern.</p>
<p>"We think we have," rejoined Mr. Gryce with some solemnity. "The river
gives up its prey now and then, Mr. Blake."</p>
<p>Still only that look of natural surprise.</p>
<p>"Indeed! You do not mean to say she has drowned herself? I am sorry for
that, a girl who had once lived in my house. What trouble could she have
had to drive her to such an act?"</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce advanced a step nearer the gentleman.</p>
<p>"That is what we have come here to learn," said he with a deliberation
that yet was not lacking in the respect due to a man so universally
esteemed as Mr. Blake. "You who have seen her so lately ought to be able
to throw some light upon the subject at least."</p>
<p>"Mr.—" he again glanced at the card, "Mr. Gryce,—excuse me—I
believe I told you when you were here before that I had no remembrance of
this girl at all. That if such a person was in my house I did not know it,
and that all questions put to me on that subject would be so much labor
thrown away."</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce bowed. "I remember," said he. "I was not alluding to any
connection you may have had with the girl in this house, but to the
interview you were seen to have with her on the corner of Broome Street
some days ago. You had such an interview, did you not?"</p>
<p>A flush, deep as it was sudden, swept over Mr. Blake's usually unmoved
cheek. "You are transgressing sir," said he and stopped. Though a man of
intense personal pride, he had but little of that quality called temper,
or perhaps if he had, thought it unwise to display it on this occasion. "I
saw and spoke to a girl on the corner of that street some days ago," he
went on more mildly, "but that she was the one who lived here, I neither
knew at the time nor feel willing to believe now without positive proof."
Then in a deep ringing tone the stateliness of which it would be
impossible to describe, he inquired, "Have the city authorities presumed
to put a spy on my movements, that the fact of my speaking to a poor
forsaken creature on the corner of the street should be not only noted but
remembered?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Blake," observed Mr. Gryce, and I declare I was proud of my superior
at that moment, "no man who is a true citizen and a Christian should
object to have his steps followed, when by his own thoughtlessness,
perhaps, he has incurred a suspicion which demands it."</p>
<p>"And do you mean to say that I have been followed," inquired he, clenching
his hand and looking steadily, but with a blanching cheek, first at Mr.
Gryce then at me.</p>
<p>"It was indispensable," quoth that functionary gently.</p>
<p>The outraged gentleman riveted his gaze upon me. "In town and out of
town?" demanded he.</p>
<p>I let Mr. Gryce reply. "It is known that you have lately sought to visit
the Schoenmakers," said he.</p>
<p>Mr. Blake drew a deep breath, cast his eyes about the handsome apartment
in which we were, let them rest for a moment upon a portrait that graced
one side of the wall, and which was I have since learned a picture of his
father, and slowly drew forward a chair. "Let me hear what your suspicions
are," said he.</p>
<p>I noticed Mr. Gryce colored at this; he had evidently been met in a
different way from what he expected. "Excuse me," said he, "I do not say I
have any suspicions; my errand is simply to notify you of the death of the
girl you were seen to speak with, and to ask whether or not you can give
us any information that can aid us in the matter before the coroner."</p>
<p>"You know I have not. If I have been as closely followed as you say, you
must know why I spoke to that girl and others, why I went to the house of
the Schoenmakers and—Do you know?" he suddenly inquired.</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce was not the man to answer such a question as that. He eyed the
rich signet ring that adorned the hand of the gentleman before him and
suavely smiled. "I am ready to listen to any explanations," said he.</p>
<p>Mr. Blake's haughty countenance became almost stern. "You consider you
have a right to demand them; let me hear why."</p>
<p>"Well," said Mr. Gryce with a change of tone, "you shall. Unprofessional
as it is, I will tell you why I, a member of the police force, dare enter
the house of such a man as you are, and put him the questions I have
concerning his domestic affairs. Mr. Blake, imagine yourself in a
detective's office. A woman comes in, the housekeeper of a respected
citizen, and informs us that a girl employed by her as seamstress has
disappeared in a very unaccountable way from her master's house the night
before; in fact been abducted as she thinks from certain evidences,
through the window. Her manner is agitated, her appeal for assistance
urgent, though she acknowledges no relationship to the girl or expresses
any especial cause for her interest beyond that of common humanity. 'She
must be found,' she declares, and hints that any sum necessary will be
forthcoming, though from what source after her own pittance is expended
she does not state. When asked if her master has no interest in the
matter, she changes color and puts us off. He never noticed his servants,
left all such concerns to her, etc.; but shows fear when a proposition is
made to consult him. Next imagine yourself with the detectives in that
gentleman's house. You enter the girl's room; what is the first thing you
observe? Why that it is not only one of the best in the house, but that it
is conspicuous for its comforts if not for its elegancies. More than that,
that there are books of poetry and history lying around, showing that the
woman who inhabited it was above her station; a fact which the housekeeper
is presently brought to acknowledge. You notice also that the wild surmise
of her abduction by means of the window, has some ground in appearance,
though the fact that she went with entire unwillingness is not made so
apparent. The housekeeper, however, insists in a way that must have had
some special knowledge of the girl's character or circumstances to back
it, that she never went without compulsion; a statement which the torn
curtains and the track of blood over the roof of the extension, would seem
to emphasize. A few other facts are made known. First, a pen-knife is
picked up from the grass plot in the yard beneath, showing with what
instrument the wound was inflicted, whose drippings made those marks of
blood alluded to. It was a pearl-handled knife belonging to the writing
desk found open on her table, and its frail and dainty character proved
indisputably, that it was employed by the girl herself, and that against
manifest enemies; no man being likely to snatch up any such puny weapon
for the purpose either of offence or defence. That these enemies were two
and were both men, was insisted upon by Mrs. Daniels who overheard their
voices the night before.</p>
<p>"Mr. Blake, such facts as these arouse curiosity, especially when the
master of the house being introduced upon the scene, he fails to manifest
common human interest, while his housekeeper betrays in every involuntary
gesture and expression she makes use of, her horror if not her fear of his
presence, and her relief at his departure. Yes," he exclaimed, unheeding
the sudden look here cast him by Mr. Blake, "and curiosity begets inquiry,
and inquiry elucidated further facts such as these, that the mysterious
master of the house was in his garden at the hour of the girl's departure,
was even looking through the bars of his gate when she, having evidently
escaped from her captors, came back with every apparent desire to reenter
her home, but seeing him, betrayed an unreasonable amount of fear and fled
back even into the very arms of the men she had endeavored to avoid. Did
you speak sir?" asked Mr. Gryce suddenly stopping, with a sly look at his
left boot tip.</p>
<p>Mr. Blake shook his head. "No," said he shortly, "go on." But that last
remark of Mr. Gryce had evidently made its impression.</p>
<p>"Inquiry revealed, also, two or three other interesting facts. First, that
this gentleman qualified though he was to shine in ladies' society, never
obtruded himself there, but employed his leisure time instead, in walking
the lower streets of the city, where he was seen more than once conversing
with certain poor girls at street corners and in blind alleys. The last
one he talked with, believed from her characteristics to be the same one
that was abducted from his house—"</p>
<p>"Hold there," said Mr. Blake with some authority in his tone, "there you
are mistaken; that is impossible."</p>
<p>"Ah, and why?"</p>
<p>"The girl you allude to had bright golden hair, something which the woman
who lived in my house did not possess."</p>
<p>"Indeed. I thought you had never noticed the woman who sewed for you, sir,—did
not know how she looked?"</p>
<p>"I should have noticed her if she had had such hair as the girl you speak
of."</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce smiled and opened his pocketbook.</p>
<p>"There is a sample of her hair, sir," said he, taking out a thin strand of
brilliant hair and showing it to the gentleman before him. "Bright you
see, and golden as that of the unfortunate creature you talked with the
other night."</p>
<p>Mr. Blake stooped forward and lifted it with a hand that visibly trembled.
"Where did you get this?" asked he at last, clenching it to his breast
with sudden passion.</p>
<p>"From out of the comb which the girl had been using the night before."</p>
<p>The imperious man flung it hastily from him.</p>
<p>"We waste our time," said he, looking Mr. Gryce intently in the face. "All
that you have said does not account for your presence here nor the tone
you have used while addressing me. What are you keeping back? I am not a
man to be trifled with."</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce rose to his feet. "You are right," said he, and he gave a short
glance in my direction. "All that I have said would not perhaps justify me
in this intrusion, if—" he looked again towards me. "Do you wish me
to continue?" he asked.</p>
<p>Mr. Blake's intent look deepened. "I see no reason why you should not
utter the whole," said he. "A good story loses nothing by being told to
the end. You wish to say something about my journey to Schoenmaker's
house, I suppose."</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce gravely shook his head.</p>
<p>"What, you can let such a mystery as that go without a word?"</p>
<p>"I am not here to discuss mysteries that have no connection with the
sewing-girl in whose cause I am interested."</p>
<p>"Then," said Mr. Blake, turning for the first time upon my superior with
all the dignified composure for which he was eminent, "it is no longer
necessary for us to prolong this interview. I have allowed, nay encouraged
you to state in the plainest terms what it was you had or imagined you had
against me, knowing that my actions of late, seen by those who did not
possess the key to them, must have seemed a little peculiar. But when you
say you have no interest in any mystery disconnected with the girl who has
lived the last few months in my house, I can with assurance say that it is
time we quitted this unprofitable conversation, as nothing which I have
lately done, said or thought here or elsewhere has in any way had even the
remotest bearing upon that individual; she having been a stranger to me
while in my house, and quite forgotten by me, after her unaccountable
departure hence."</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce's hand which had been stretched out towards the hitherto
untouched decanter before him, suddenly dropped. "You deny then," said he,
"all connection between yourself and the woman, lady or sewing-girl, who
occupied that room above our heads for eleven months previous to the
Sunday morning I first had the honor to make your acquaintance."</p>
<p>"I am not in the habit of repeating my assertions," said Mr. Blake with
some severity, "even when they relate to a less disagreeable matter than
the one under discussion."</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce bowed, and slowly reached out for his hat; I had never seen him
so disturbed. "I am sorry," he began and stopped, fingering his hat-brim
nervously. Suddenly he laid his hat back, and drew up his form into as
near a semblance of dignity as its portliness would allow.</p>
<p>"Mr. Blake," said he, "I have too much respect for the man I believed you
to be when I entered this house to-night, to go with the thing unsaid
which is lying at present like a dead weight upon my lips. I dare not
leave you to the consequence of my silence; for duty will compel me to
speak some day and in some presence where you may not have the opportunity
which you can have here, to explain yourself with satisfaction. Mr. Blake
I cannot believe you when you say the girl who lived in this house was a
stranger to you."</p>
<p>Mr. Blake drew his proud form up in a disdain that was only held in check
by the very evident honesty of the man before him. "You are courageous at
least," said he. "I regret you are not equally discriminating." And
raising Mr. Gryce's hat he placed it in his hand.</p>
<p>"Pardon me," said that gentleman, "I would like to justify myself before I
go. Not with words," he proceeded as the other folded his arms with a
sarcastic bow. "I am done with words; action accomplishes the rest. Mr.
Blake I believe you consider me an honest officer and a reliable man. Will
you accompany me to your private room for a moment? There is something
there which may convince you I was neither playing the fool nor the
bravado when I uttered the phrase I did an instant ago."</p>
<p>I expected to hear the haughty master of the house refuse a request so
peculiar. But he only bowed, though in a surprised way that showed his
curiosity if no more was aroused. "My room and company are at your
disposal," said he, "but you will find nothing there to justify you in
your assertions."</p>
<p>"Let me at least make the effort," entreated my superior.</p>
<p>Mr. Blake smiling bitterly immediately led the way to the door. "The man
may come," he remarked carelessly as Mr. Gryce waved his hand in my
direction. "Your justification if not mine may need witnesses."</p>
<p>Rejoiced at the permission, for my curiosity was by this time raised to
fever pitch, I at once followed. Not without anxiety. The assured poise of
Mr. Blake's head seemed to argue that the confidence betrayed by my
superior might receive a shock; and I felt it would be a serious blow to
his pride to fail now. But once within the room above, my doubts speedily
fled. There was that in Mr. Gryce's face which anyone acquainted with him
could not easily mistake. Whatever might be the mysterious something which
the room contained, it was evidently sufficient in his eyes to justify his
whole conduct.</p>
<p>"Now sir," said Mr. Blake, turning upon my superior with his sternest
expression, "the room and its contents are before you; what have you to
say for yourself."</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce equally stern, if not equally composed, cast one of his
inscrutable glances round the apartment and without a word stepped before
the picture that was as I have said, the only ornamentation of the
otherwise bare and unattractive room.</p>
<p>I thought Mr. Blake looked surprised, but his face was not one that
lightly expressed emotion.</p>
<p>"A portrait of my cousin the Countess De Mirac," said he with a certain
dryness of tone hard to interpret.</p>
<p>Mr. Gryce bowed and for a moment stood looking with a strange lack of
interest at the proudly brilliant face of the painting before him, then to
our great amazement stepped forward and with a quick gesture turned the
picture rapidly to the wall, when—Gracious heavens! what a vision
started out before us from the reverse side of that painted canvas! No
luxurious brunette countenance now, steeped in pride and languor, but a
face—Let me see if I can describe it. But no, it was one of those
faces that are indescribable. You draw your breath as you view it; you
feel as if you had had an electric shock; but as for knowing ten minutes
later whether the eyes that so enthralled you were blue or black, or the
locks that clustered halo-like about a forehead almost awful in its
expression of weird, unfathomable power, were brown or red, you could not
nor would you pretend to say. It was the character of the countenance
itself that impressed you. You did not even know if this woman who might
have been anything wonderful or grand you ever read of, were beautiful or
not. You did not care; it was as if you had been gazing on a tranquil
evening sky and a lightning flash had suddenly startled you. Is the
lightning beautiful? Who asks! But I know from what presently transpired,
that the face was ivory pale in complexion, the eyes deeply dark, and the
hair,—strange and uncanny combination,—of a bright and
peculiar golden hue.</p>
<p>"You dare!" came forth in strange broken tones from Mr. Blake's lips.</p>
<p>I instantly turned towards him. He was gazing with a look that was half
indignant, half menacing at the silent detective who with eyes drooped and
finger directed towards the picture, seemed to be waiting for him to
finish.</p>
<p>"I do not understand an audacity that allows you to—to—" Was
this the haughty gentleman we had known, this hesitating troubled man with
bloodless lips and trembling hands?</p>
<p>"I declared my desire to justify myself," said my principal with a
respectful bow. "This is my justification. Do you note the color of the
woman's hair whose portrait hangs with its face turned to the wall in your
room? Is it like or unlike that of the strand you held in your hand a few
moments ago; a strand taken as I swear, hair by hair from the comb of the
poor creature who occupied the room above. But that is not all," he
continued as Mr. Blake fell a trifle aback; "just observe the dress in
which this woman is painted; blue silk you see, dark and rich; a wide
collar cunningly executed, you can almost trace the pattern; a brooch;
then the roses in the hand, do you see? Now come with me upstairs."</p>
<p>Too much startled to speak, Mr. Blake, haughty aristocrat as he was,
turned like a little child and followed the detective who with an assured
step and unembarassed mien led the way into the deserted room above.</p>
<p>"You accuse me of insulting you, when I express disbelief of your
assertion that there was no connection between you and the girl Emily,"
said Mr. Gryce as he lit the gas and unlocked that famous bureau drawer.
"Will you do so any longer in face of these?" And drawing off the towel
that lay uppermost, he revealed the neatly folded dress, wide collar,
brooch and faded roses that lay beneath. "Mrs. Daniels assures us these
articles belonged to the sewing-woman Emily; were brought here by her.
Dare you say they are not the ones reproduced in the portrait below?"</p>
<p>Mr. Blake uttering a cry sank on his knees before the drawer. "My God! My
God!" was his only reply, "what are these?" Suddenly he rose, his whole
form quivering, his eyes burning. "Where is Mrs. Daniels?" he cried,
hastily advancing and pulling the bell. "I must see her at once. Send the
house-keeper here," he ordered as Fanny smiling demurely made her
appearance at the door.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Daniels is out," returned the girl, "went out as soon as ever you
got up from dinner, sir."</p>
<p>"Gone out at this hour?"</p>
<p>"Yes sir; she goes out very often nowadays, sir."</p>
<p>Her master frowned. "Send her to me as soon as she returns," he commanded,
and dismissed the girl.</p>
<p>"I don't know what to make of this," he now said in a strange tone,
approaching again the touching contents of that open bureau drawer with a
look in which longing and doubt seemed in some way to be strangely
commingled. "I cannot explain the presence of these articles in this room;
but if you will come below I will see what I can do to make other matters
intelligible to you. Disagreeable as it is for me to take anyone into my
confidence, affairs have gone too far for me to hope any longer to
preserve secrecy as to my private concerns."</p>
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