<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="gap3"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
<h3>AN EFFACED IDENTITY.</h3>
<p class="gap2"><span class="smcap">The</span> telegram was signed with the initial "D."—Digby!</p>
<p>The words I read were—"Have discovered T
suspects. Exercise greatest care, and remember
your promise. We shall meet again soon."</p>
<p>The message showed that it had been handed
in at Brussels at one o'clock that afternoon.</p>
<p>Brussels! So he was hiding there. Yes, I would
lose no time in crossing to the gay little Belgian
capital and search him out.</p>
<p>Before giving him up to the police I would meet
him face to face and demand the truth. I would
compel him to speak.</p>
<p>Should I retain possession of the message? I
reflected. But, on consideration, I saw that
when I had left, Phrida might return to recover
it. If I replaced it where I had found it she
would remain in ignorance of the knowledge I had
gained.</p>
<p>So I screwed it up again and put it back among
the cinders in the grate, afterwards leaving the
house.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Next morning I stepped out upon the platform
of the great Gare du Nord in Brussels—a
city I knew well, as I had often been there
on business—and drove in a taxi along the
busy, bustling Boulevard Auspach to the Grand
Hotel.</p>
<p>In the courtyard, as I got out, the frock-coated
and urbane manager welcomed me warmly, for I
had frequently been his guest, and I was shown to
a large room overlooking the Boulevard where I
had a wash and changed.</p>
<p>Then descending, I called a taxi and immediately
began a tour of the various hotels where
I thought it most likely that the man I sought
might be.</p>
<p>The morning was crisp and cold, with a perfect
sky and brilliant sunshine, bright and cheerful
indeed after the mist and gloom of January in
London.</p>
<p>Somehow the aspect, even in winter, is always
brighter across the channel than in our much
maligned little island. They know not the "pea-souper"
on the other side of the Straits of
Dover, and the light, invigorating atmosphere
is markedly apparent directly one enters France
or Belgium.</p>
<p>The business boulevards, the Boulevarde
Auspach, and the Boulevard du Nord, with
their smart shops, their big cafés, and their
hustling crowds, were bright and gay as my taxi
sped on, first to the Métropole, in the Place
de Brouckere.</p>
<p>The name of Kemsley was unknown there. The
old concierge glanced at his book, shook his head,
and elevating his shoulders, replied:</p>
<p>"Non, m'sieur."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Thence I went to the Palace, in front of
the station, the great new hotel and one of
the finest in Europe, a huge, garish place
of gilt and luxury. But there I met with equal
success.</p>
<p>Then I made the tour of the tree-lined outer
boulevards, up past the Botanical Gardens and along
the Rue Royale, first to the Hotel de France, then
to the Europe, the Belle Vue, the Carlton in the
Avenue Louise, the new Wiltscher's a few doors
away, and a very noted English house from the
Boulevard Waterloo, as well as a dozen other
houses in various parts of the town—the Cecil
in the Boulevard du Nord, the Astoria in the Rue
Royale, and even one or two of the cheaper
pensions—the Dufour, De Boek's, and Nettell's,
but all to no purpose.</p>
<p>Though I spent the whole of that day making
investigations I met with no success.</p>
<p>Though I administered judicious tips to concierge
after concierge, I could not stir the
memory of a single one that within the past
ten days any English gentleman answering
the description I gave had stayed at their
establishment.</p>
<p>Until the day faded, and the street lamps
were lit, I continued my search, my taxi-driver
having entered into the spirit of my
quest, and from time to time suggesting other
and more obscure hotels of which I had never
heard.</p>
<p>But the reply was the same—a regretful "Non,
m'sieur."</p>
<p>It had, of course, occurred to me that if the
fugitive was hiding from the Belgian police, who
no doubt had received his description from Scot<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></SPAN></span>land
Yard, he would most certainly assume a
false name.</p>
<p>But I hoped by my minute description to be able
to stir the memory of one or other of the dozens
of uniformed hall-porters whom I interviewed.
The majority of such men have a remarkably
retentive memory for a face, due to long cultivation,
just as that possessed by one's club hall-porter,
who can at once address any of the thousand or so
members by name.</p>
<p>I confess, however, when at five o'clock,
I sat in the huge, noisy Café Métropole over
a glass of coffee and a liqueur of cognac, I
began to realise the utter hopelessness of my
search.</p>
<p>Digby Kemsley was ever an evasive person—a
past master in avoiding observation, as I well
knew. It had always been a hobby of his, he
had told me, of watching persons without himself
being seen.</p>
<p>Once he had remarked to me while we had
been smoking together in that well-remembered
room wherein the tragedy had taken
place:</p>
<p>"I should make a really successful detective,
Royle. I've had at certain periods of my life to
efface myself and watch unseen. Now I've brought
it to a fine art. If ever circumstances make it imperative
for me to disappear—which I hope not,"
he laughed, "well—nobody will ever find me,
I'm positive."</p>
<p>These words of his now came back to me
as I sat there pensively smoking, and wondering
if, after all, I had better not return again
to London and remain patient for the additional
police evidence which would no doubt be forth<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></SPAN></span>coming
at the adjourned inquest in a week's
time.</p>
<p>I thought of the clever cunning exercised by
the girl whom I so dearly loved and in whose
innocence I had so confidently believed, of her
blank refusal to satisfy me, and alas! of her
avowed determination to shield the scoundrel
who had posed as my friend, and whom the
police had declared to be only a vulgar impostor.</p>
<p>My bitter reflection maddened me.</p>
<p>The jingle and chatter of that noisy café, full to
overflowing at that hour, for rain had commenced
to fall outside in the boulevard, irritated me. From
where I sat in the window I could see the crowds
of business people, hurrying through the rain to
their trams and trains—the neat-waisted little
modistes, the felt-hatted young clerks, the obese
and over-dressed and whiskered men from their
offices on the Bourse, the hawkers crying the
"Soir," and the "Dernière Heure," with strident
voices, the poor girls with rusty shawls and
pinched faces, selling flowers, and the gaping,
idling Cookites who seem to eternally pass and
re-pass the Métropole at all hours of the day and
the night.</p>
<p>Before my eyes was there presented the whole
phantasmagoria of the life of the thrifty, hard-working
Bruxellois, that active, energetic race which
the French have so sarcastically designated "the
brave Belgians."</p>
<p>After a lonely dinner in the big, glaring salle-à-manger,
at the Grand, I went forth again upon my
quest. That the fugitive had been in Brussels on
the previous day was proved by his telegram, yet
evasive as he was, he might have already left.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></SPAN></span>
Yet I hoped he still remained in the capital, and if
so he would, I anticipated, probably go to one of
the music-halls or variety theatres. Therefore I
set out upon another round.</p>
<p>I strolled eagerly through the crowded promenade
of the chief music-hall of Brussels—the
Pole Nord, the lounge wherein men and women
were promenading, laughing, and drinking, but
I saw nothing of the man of whom I was in
search.</p>
<p>I knew that he had shaved off his beard and
otherwise altered his appearance. Therefore my
attention upon those about me was compelled to be
most acute.</p>
<p>I surveyed both stalls and boxes, but amid that
gay, well-dressed crowd I could discover nobody
the least resembling him.</p>
<p>From the Pole Nord I went to the Scala,
where I watched part of an amusing revue;
but my search there was likewise in vain, as
it was also at Olympia, the Capucines, and
the Folies Bergères, which I visited in turn.
Then, at midnight, I turned my attention to
the big cafés, wandering from the Bourse along
the Boulevard Auspach, entering each café
and glancing around, until at two o'clock in
the morning I returned to the Grand, utterly
fagged out by my long vigil of over fifteen
hours.</p>
<p>In my room I threw off my overcoat and flung
myself upon the bed in utter despair.</p>
<p>Until I met that man face to face I could not,
I saw, learn the truth concerning my love's friendship
with him.</p>
<p>Mrs. Petre had made foul insinuations, and
now that my suspicions had been aroused that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></SPAN></span>
Phrida might actually be guilty of that terrible
crime at Harrington Gardens, the whole attitude of
my well-beloved seemed to prove that my suspicions
were well grounded.</p>
<p>Indeed, her last unfinished sentence as she had
rushed from the room seemed conclusive proof of
the guilty secret by which her mind was now
overburdened.</p>
<p>She had never dreamed that I held the
slightest suspicion. It was only when she knew
that the woman Petre had met me and had
talked with me that she saw herself betrayed.
Then, when I had spoken frankly, and told
her what the woman had said, she saw that
to further conceal her friendship with Digby was
impossible.</p>
<p>Every word she had spoken, every evasive sentence,
every protest that she was compelled to remain
silent, recurred to me as I lay there staring blankly
at the painted ceiling.</p>
<p>She had told me that she was unaware of
the fugitive's whereabouts, and yet not half
an hour before she had received a telegram
from him.</p>
<p>Yes, Phrida—the woman I trusted and loved
with such a fierce, passionate affection, had lied to
me deliberately and barefacedly.</p>
<p>But I was on the fellow's track, and cost what
it might in time, or in money, I did not intend to
relinquish my search until I came face to face
with him.</p>
<p>That night, as I tossed restlessly in bed, it
occurred to me that even though he might be in
Brussels, it was most probable in the circumstances
that he would exercise every precaution
in his movements, and knowing that the police were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></SPAN></span>
in search of him, would perhaps not go forth in
the daytime.</p>
<p>Many are the Englishmen living "under a cloud"
in Brussels, as well as in Paris, and there is
not a Continental city of note which does not
contain one or more of those who have "gone
under" at home.</p>
<p>Seedy and down-at-heel, they lounge about the
cafés and hotels frequented by English travellers.
Sometimes they sit apart, pretend to sip their cup
of coffee and read a newspaper, but in reality they
are listening with avidity to their own language
being spoken by their own people—poor, lonely,
solitary exiles.</p>
<p>Every man who knows the by-ways of the
Continent has met them often in far-off,
obscure towns, where they bury themselves in the
lonely wilderness of a drab back street and live
high-up for the sake of fresh air and that single
streak of sunshine which is the sole pleasure of their
broken, blighted lives.</p>
<p>Yes, the more I reflected, the more apparent
did it become that if the man whom Inspector
Edwards had declared to be a gross impostor
was still in the Belgian capital, he would most
probably be in safe concealment in one or other
of the cheaper suburbs.</p>
<p>But how could I trace him?</p>
<p>To go to the bureau of police and make a statement
would only defeat my own ends.</p>
<p>No; if I intended to learn the truth I must act
upon my own initiative. Official interference would
only thwart my own endeavours.</p>
<p>I knew Digby Kemsley. He was as shrewd
and cunning as any of the famous detectives,
whether in real life or in fiction. Therefore,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></SPAN></span>
to be a match for him, I would, I already
realised, be compelled to fight him with his own
weapons.</p>
<p>I did not intend that he should escape me
before he told me, with his own lips, the secret
of my well-beloved.</p>
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