<h2 id="c15"><span class="h2line1">CHAPTER XIV</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">THE GIRL AT THE HEXAGON</span></h2>
<p>That the Okewoods obeyed the Chief’s
instructions to the letter I can testify,
for I happened to be drinking my after-luncheon
in the lounge of the hotel at Broadstairs
when they arrived with suitcases and golf-bags.
Desmond was wearing a bandage
about his head, and, after we had exchanged
greetings, I asked him what he had been
doing to himself.</p>
<p>“I got a crack on the head from a ball
playing racquets at Queen’s,” unblushingly
replied this master of improvisation, “and so
I’ve decided to revert to golf. We think
it’s less dangerous, don’t we, Francis?”</p>
<p>“Sure,” rejoined his brother, who likes to
flavour his speech at times with certain exoticisms
acquired from his American wife, “but
a heap less exciting, eh, old man?”</p>
<p>At this time, naturally, I had no idea of
the hidden meaning of these seemingly innocent
remarks. There was certainly nothing
to suggest their secret significance in the
blandly smiling countenances of the two
brothers. That is the Okewood pair all over.
Their team-work is wonderful. They always
remind me of two acrobats on a trapeze:
one is invariably there when he is required
to catch or support the other. I can
imagine no more devastating combination
than these two quiet but supremely competent
young men on any mission requiring a blend
of excessive tact and sublime audacity.</p>
<p>“Are you down here for long?” Desmond
asked me.</p>
<p>I told him I expected to stay for a month.</p>
<p>“Splendid!” he retorted. “That means
there’ll always be a partner for Francis or
me when we’re sick of playing against each
other.”</p>
<p>“It means nothing of the sort,” I replied,
indignant at such shameless opportunism.
“I’ve come down here to finish a book. I’m
not in the War Office, you know: I have to
work for <i>my</i> living.”</p>
<p>“‘The Industrious Apprentice Rebukes
His Idle Companion,’” quoted Francis.
“He’s being smug, Des. Let’s sit on his
head!”</p>
<p>The conversation degenerated into a most
undignified wrestling match, which ended,
after I had been nearly smothered by a
cushion, by my consenting, as a rare and
notable exception, to accompany them forthwith
to the North Foreland for a three-ball
match before tea.</p>
<p>Looking back, I find it hard to realize that
my light-hearted and amusing companions
on that blustery February afternoon were
living under a grave and terrible menace.
Even now I can scarcely bring myself to
believe that Desmond, as debonair, as bright
and as sparkling as ever, had only just
emerged from such nerve-racking experiences
as the affair of the purple cabriolet
and the case of the Constantinople courier.
Now that I come to think of it, I remarked
that his nervous air which had attracted the
attention of old Erasmus Wilkes had completely
vanished. I can well believe Francis
when he says that the one thing his brother
cannot stand is inaction and that danger is
his best tonic.</p>
<p>In the upshot it proved that my two
friends could get on very well without me.
For the best part of four weeks I was left in
peace with my writing, and very often I did
not see the Okewoods until the evening when
we usually assembled in the bar for a cocktail
before dinner. If I had not been so absorbed
in my book, I should probably have noticed
that Desmond appeared to benefit very little
by his change. As it was, it was not until
my bulky parcel of manuscript had been
posted off to London and I accompanied them
to the golf-course for a round before lunch
that I observed how quiet and abstracted
Desmond had become.</p>
<p>I chaffed him mildly on his low spirits;
but he did not, as usual, take up the challenge
and my jokes fell flat. He was playing very
badly on this morning and, usually a strong
and accurate driver, was slicing and pulling
his balls all over the place.</p>
<p>We were on the tee near the Captain Digby
public-house when a telegraph boy appeared
from nowhere, as telegraph boys do, and
thrust a telegram into my hand. Absent-mindedly
I opened it and read:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Dine with me at Hexagon Saturday night
eight <span class="sc">P.M.</span>—Chief.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>At a glance I realized that the message was
not for me and, looking at the envelope, saw
that it was addressed to “Major Desmond
Okewood.” With a word of apology I handed
the telegram to my friend. The change in
his face, as he read it, was extraordinary. A
long sigh, almost a groan, of relief burst
from his lips and his whole face lighted up.
He showed the message to Francis, who
grinned cheerfully and said “Good.”</p>
<p>“Come on,” cried Desmond, suddenly addressing
me. “It’s your honour. I lay you
a new ball I take this hole off you.”</p>
<p>Needless to say, for my thoughts were
anywhere but on the game, I foozled my
drive. But Desmond who, as I have said,
had been playing disgracefully, hit a perfect
ball, and, from that moment on, recovered
his form. He was in the wildest spirits, and
to see him one would have said that the telegram
which had wrought this astonishing
change in him had brought him news of a
great inheritance rather than a banal invitation
to dinner at that rather disreputable
West-End haunt, the Hexagon.</p>
<p>But even if he had known to what perilous
enterprise that invitation was the prelude,
I believe he would have shown himself no less
heartened. Danger, as Francis says, was
ever the best pick-me-up for Desmond Okewood.</p>
<p class="tb">“Okewood,” said the Chief quietly, “the
girl has just come in. Don’t look up for a
moment! She’s taken the table next to the
door: in black she is: you can’t mistake her,
she’s so deathly pale!”</p>
<p>The Chief fell to studying his plate with
every appearance of absorption, while Desmond
Okewood, from behind the cover of
the wine-list, glanced casually across the
roaring evening life of the Hexagon Buffet.</p>
<p>He saw the girl at once. Her extreme
pallor, as the Chief had been quick to note,
was her most distinctive feature. She wore
her hair, which was raven-black, piled high
in the Spanish fashion with a tall, white ivory
comb, richly carved, at the back. She had
retained her fur coat and against its shaggy
blackness one white shoulder gleamed milkily.</p>
<p>She was obviously a familiar visitor at the
Hexagon Buffet, for the head waiter greeted
her with a friendly smile as he fussed the
table to rights. She ordered her dinner composedly
and without hesitation, as one accustomed
to fend for herself. In her whole
comportment there was an air of dignity, of
reserve, which clearly imposed itself on the
<i>maitre d’hôtel</i>, accustomed as he was to the
rather promiscuous familiarity of the other
unaccompanied ladies who frequented the
Buffet. Her orders given, the girl dropped
her eyes to her plate and remained seemingly
lost in thought, her long lashes resting like
black crescents upon her dead-white cheeks.</p>
<p>“Not quite the style of the Hexagon, eh?”
remarked Desmond.</p>
<p>“They get all sorts here now!” retorted
his companion. “The old Hexagon is quite
the rage again, I’m told!”</p>
<p>Fashion, always capricious, is never more
fickle than in the distribution of her favours
among those who cater for the <i>monde ou l’on
s’amuse</i>. For no apparent reason a grill-room,
a bar, a night-club, or the like will
suddenly receive from the hand of the goddess
the patent that confers fame. It lives its
little hour; for a spell it resounds to laughter
and music, the popping of corks, and the
scurry of waiters, while the shareholders
bask in the warmth of unwonted prosperity
like a cat in the sun. Then as mysteriously,
but also as suddenly as success, decline sets
in: the nightly line of private cars and taxis
outside the brilliantly lighted portico dwindles:
the gold lace on the porter’s cap begins
to tarnish; and ultimately provincials, to
whose ears the fame of the resort has only
tardily come, find themselves facing fellow
provincials across a vista of empty tables.</p>
<p>Sometimes the wheel turns full circle and
popularity comes back. So it had gone with
the Hexagon Buffet. Time was, in the days
of the “Crutch and Toothpick Brigade,”
when it had rivalled “Jimmie’s” as the haunt
of the <i>jeunesse dorée</i> in their skin-tight
clothes, their opera-capes, and their covert-coats.
Then oblivion had slowly claimed it
and, in the years between, the riff-raff of the
West End had gathered nightly at the long
bar with the battered brass rail where once
the chappies had stood and chaffed “Maudie”
and “May” over a “B. and S.”</p>
<p>But now, in the fullness of time, prosperity
had returned to the “old Hex.” The fine
proportions of its big central room left ample
space for a dancing-floor between the long
bar at one end and the railed-off enclosure at
the other where one dined or supped. A
jazz band of negroes and an expatriated
mixer who, when America knew not Volstead,
had enjoyed continental fame, showed
that the Hexagon had adapted itself to the
spirit of the age.</p>
<p>Custom flowed back. It was as though the
trainers and the jockeys and the bookmakers,
the fighting-men and their managers, their
impresarii and tame journalists, had suddenly
remembered the old Hexagon. At their
heels came the wealthy patrons of sport, the
older men at first, drawn by memories fast
fading of wild nights in the eighties, then the
young “knuts,” and with them, to dance a
little and eat devilled bones after the theatre,
chorus ladies, revue girls, and females, unattached
or attached, of varying ages and
social standing.</p>
<p>But mingling with this heterogeneous
crowd were old frequenters of the Hexagon
in its evil days, mysterious “financiers,” confidence
trick men with their touts and runners,
slim Latins, with hair like blue satin
and the gait of a panther, from the dancing-clubs,
and benevolent-looking old ladies, a
little too freshly complexioned and a little
too bejewelled, who take an interest in any
girl that is young and pretty. In brief, the
Hexagon was preëminently a resort where
the head of a Secret Service organization, to
say nothing of one of his principal lieutenants,
might expect to make fruitful observations.</p>
<p>It was Saturday night and the Hexagon
was roaring full. On the dancing-floor,
crowded with gliding couples, the red-coated
blacks were syncopating themselves into an
epileptic frenzy; at the long bar, whence resounded
the rattle of the cocktail-shakers, the
white-coated attendants were opening oysters
as though their lives depended on it; while
at the far end of the room, waiters darted
incessantly between the thronged tables.</p>
<p>Through the long violet curtains that
screened the Buffet from the outer lobby new
arrivals kept appearing, men and women, old
and young, in evening dress and in tweeds,
in ermine-collared opera-cloaks and in tailor-mades.
And from the merry, noisy, busy,
jostling assembly rose, as persistently as the
swathes of blue tobacco smoke that drifted
aloft on the overheated air, a confused
Babel of voices as incessant as the hum of
a threshing-floor or the pounding of the sea.</p>
<p>“Her name,” said the Chief suddenly, as
though he divined his companion’s thoughts,
“or at any rate the name by which she chooses
to be known, is Madeleine McKenzie. She
has been coming here now for a week or
more. Nobody knows much about her.
Ah!”</p>
<p>He nudged Desmond’s elbow. Two youths,
very sleek and impeccably attired in evening
dress, had sat down at the girl’s table. One
of them, a fair-haired, clean-looking boy, was
slightly merry with wine.</p>
<p>“And now”—unexpectedly the Chief’s
voice had become grave—“watch!”</p>
<p>His tone quickened Desmond’s whole attention.
Ever since the Chief had asked him
to dine at the Hexagon on this particular
Saturday night, he had been cudgelling his
brains to discover with what motive his
senior officer had wished to entertain him at
this amusing but very bohemian night-resort.
Over their Clover Club cocktails at the bar
and on various pretexts during dinner itself,
Desmond had sought in vain to probe the
depths of his host’s thoughts. Now came
this summons to watchfulness, stirring in
the young man that hunger for adventure
which had carried him to such heights of
success in the Secret Service.</p>
<p>The girl had finished her dinner and was
taking her coffee when a woman with a
basket of flowers approached the table. Desmond
had remarked the flower-seller during
the evening, a rather sinister-looking person
in black with neat lace apron and cuffs, plying
her wares at the bar and among the diners.
She stopped in front of the girl and her two
companions and, resting her basket on her
hip, took from it a little nosegay and laid it
silently upon the girl’s plate. The girl smiled
and pinned the flowers to the lapel of her fur
coat.</p>
<p>“Did you see the flowers?” said the Chief.</p>
<p>“Of course,” replied Desmond.</p>
<p>“I mean, did you notice what flowers they
were?”</p>
<p>Desmond glanced across the room. “They
seem to be a white carnation with some sort
of blue flowers—cornflowers, probably—set
round it!”</p>
<p>“I see!” mused the other. “Then I think
we can be moving, Okewood!”</p>
<p>“And leave the charming and mysterious
Madeleine here?” queried Desmond.</p>
<p>“No,” replied the older man, signing to a
waiter, “she’s going too!”</p>
<p>Hardly were the words out of his mouth
when the girl rose up from her table by the
door, gathering her heavy coat about her.
It was quite obvious that the young men were
seeking to detain her. But laughingly she
put them off.</p>
<p>“Not to-night!” they heard her say as a
sudden lull came in the music. “I shall see
you here again!”</p>
<p>Then, without looking to left or right, she
hurried from the room.</p>
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