<h2 class="chap"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XV<br/> <span class="chap">THE LIKENESS OF PHILIP MALTABAR</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">We</span> stood looking at them in wonder. Her
face had seemed suddenly to light up in some
mysterious way, so that for the moment one
quite forgot that she was plain at all.</p>
<p>“It is really you!” she murmured. “How
wonderful!” She held out both her hands.
Bruce Deville took them a little awkwardly. It
was easy to see that her joy at this meeting
was not altogether reciprocated. But she
seemed utterly unconscious of that. There was
quite a becoming pink flush on her sallow
cheeks, and her dark eyes were wonderfully
soft. Her lips were parted with a smile of welcome,
and showed all her teeth—she had gleaming
white teeth, beautifully shaped and regular.</p>
<p>“To think that we should meet again like
this,” she continued, parting with his great
brown hand with some evident reluctance.</p>
<p>“We were bound to meet again some day,”
he answered, deprecatingly. “After all, there
is nothing very extraordinary about it. The
world is a small place.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="page" name="Page_154" id="Page_154" title="154"></SPAN></p>
<p>“You never kept your promise,” she reminded
him, reproachfully. “You never came
near our hotel. I waited for you a week.”</p>
<p>“I could not; I was leaving Baeren that same
afternoon.”</p>
<p>She turned to us at last.</p>
<p>“This is the most delightful meeting in the
world, so far as I am concerned,” she declared,
still a little breathlessly. “Mr. Deville once
saved my life.”</p>
<p>He made some sort of a protest, but she took
no notice. She was determined to tell her
story.</p>
<p>“I was traveling with a friend through the
Italian lakes, and we were out for a drive near
Baeren. We were coming down a terrible hill,
with a precipice on one side and the sheer
mountain on the other. The road was only
just wide enough for our carriage, and suddenly
a great bird flew out from a hole in the
mountain and startled our horses. The driver
must have been half asleep, and when they
plunged he lost his balance and was thrown
off. The horses started galloping down the
hill. It was almost like the side of a house, and
just in front was a sharp turn, with only a little
frail palisading, and the precipice just below.
We must have gone straight over. He could
not possibly have turned at the pace they were
going. If they had the carriage must have<SPAN class="page" name="Page_155" id="Page_155" title="155"></SPAN>
swung over. We were clinging to one another,
and I am afraid we were dreadful cowards. It
was like certain and fearful death, and just then
Mr. Deville came round the corner. He seemed
to see it all in a moment, and ran to meet us.
Oh, it was horrible!” she cried, throwing her
hands up with a little shiver. “I shall never
forget it until I die. Never!”</p>
<p>She paused for a moment. Adelaide Fortress
and I had been hanging over her every word.
There was something very thrilling about the
way she told her story. Mr. Deville alone
seemed uninterested, and a little impatient. He
was turning over the pages of a magazine, with
a restless frown upon his strong, dark face.</p>
<p>“It seemed to me,” she continued, lowering
her shaking voice, “that he was down under
the horses, being dragged——”</p>
<p>Bruce Deville closed the magazine he had
been reading with a bang. He had evidently
been a passive auditor as long as he was able
to endure it. “Let me finish,” he said, shortly.
“I am blessed with strong arms, and I stopped
the horses. It was not a particularly difficult
task. The ladies walked back to the hotel, and
I went to look for the driver, who had broken
his leg.”</p>
<p>“And I have never seen him since!” she exclaimed,
breathlessly.</p>
<p>“Well, I couldn’t help that,” he continued.<SPAN class="page" name="Page_156" id="Page_156" title="156"></SPAN>
“I believe I promised to come to the hotel and
call upon you, but when I thought it over it
really didn’t seem worth while. I was on my
way to Geneva, walking over the hills, and I
was rather anxious to get there, and as I found
some men to take the carriage and the driver
back, I thought I might as well continue my
journey. I wanted to get to Geneva for my letters.”</p>
<p>She laughed quietly. Her eyes continually
sought his, soft with admiration and pleasure.</p>
<p>“You are like all the men of your country,
who are brave and noble,” she said. “You will
do a great deed, but you do not like to be
thanked. Yet we waited there for days, hoping
to see you. I have looked for you wherever I
have been since then, and to think that now—on
this very saddest journey I have ever been
forced to take—that I should call here, by accident,
and the door should open, and you
should walk in. Ah!”</p>
<p>“It is quite a romance,” Adelaide Fortress
remarked, with a faint smile upon her lips.
“How grateful you must be that you came to
see me this afternoon, Bruce! By the by, do
you mind ringing the bell—unless you prefer
stewed tea?”</p>
<p>He got up and rang it with avidity.</p>
<p>“I am glad you recognize the fact that we
have come to tea,” he remarked. “Miss Ffolliot<SPAN class="page" name="Page_157" id="Page_157" title="157"></SPAN>
and I met at the gate. You ought to give us
something specially good for venturing out on
such a day.”</p>
<p>“I will give you some Buszard’s cake,” she
answered, laughing; “some kind friend sent it
to me this morning. Only you mustn’t eat it
all up; it has to last me for a week.”</p>
<p>“How is your father, Miss Ffolliot?” the girl
asked, turning to me abruptly.</p>
<p>“I am sorry to say that he is very unwell,”
I answered, “and he is obliged to keep to his
room. And I am afraid that he will not be able
to leave it for several days.”</p>
<p>She did not appear much concerned. I
watched her closely, and with much relief.</p>
<p>“I am sorry,” she remarked, politely. “However,
so far as I am concerned, I suppose after
all there would be very little object in my seeing
him. I have been to most of the oldest
residents round here, and they all seem certain
that they have never heard of the name Maltabar.”</p>
<p>I saw Bruce Deville start, and the hand
which held his teacup shook. Adelaide Fortress
and he exchanged swift glances. The girl,
whose eyes were scarcely off him for a moment,
noticed it too, although I doubt if she attached
the same significance to it.</p>
<p>“You do not know—you have not heard recently
of any one of that name?” she asked<SPAN class="page" name="Page_158" id="Page_158" title="158"></SPAN>
him. “Please tell me! I have a reason for being
very much interested.”</p>
<p>He shook his head.</p>
<p>“If I have ever heard the name at all it must
have been very long ago,” he said; “and certainly
not in connection with this part of the
world.”</p>
<p>She sighed.</p>
<p>“I suppose you do not know who I am, or
why I am here,” she said. “My name I told
you once, although I daresay you have forgotten
it. It is Berdenstein. The man who was
found dead, who was killed close to here, was
my brother.”</p>
<p>He murmured a few words of sympathy, but
he showed no surprise. I suspected that he had
known who she was and of her presence here
before.</p>
<p>“Of course I came here directly I heard of
it,” she continued, ignoring us altogether, and
talking only to him. “It is a terrible trouble
to me, and he was the only relative I had left
in the world. You cannot wonder, can you,
that I want to find out all about it?”</p>
<p>“That is a very hard task,” he said. “It is a
task best left, I think, in the hands of the proper
authorities.”</p>
<p>“They do not know as much as I know,” she
answered. “He had an enemy.”</p>
<p>“The man Maltabar, of whom you spoke?”</p>
<p><SPAN class="page" name="Page_159" id="Page_159" title="159"></SPAN></p>
<p>“Yes. It was for him I inquired at once.
Yet I suppose I must conclude that he is not
at any rate a resident around here. I thought
that he might have changed his name, and I
have described him to a great many people.
Nobody seems to recognize him.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you think,” Adelaide Fortress said,
quietly, “that you have done all that it is possible
for any one to do? The police are doing
their utmost to solve the mystery of your
brother’s death. If I were you I should leave it
to them.”</p>
<p>She shook her head.</p>
<p>“I am not satisfied to do nothing,” she said.
“You cannot imagine what it feels like to lose
some one very dear to you in such a terrible
way. I think of it sometimes until I tremble
with passion, and I think that if I could meet
the man who did it face to face, I would stab
him to the heart myself, with my own hands. I
am weak, but I feel that I could do it. I cannot
go away from here if I would. Something
seems to tell me that the key to the whole mystery
lies here—just at hand. No, I cannot go
away. I must watch and wait. It may come to
me at any moment.”</p>
<p>No one answered her. She was conscious of
a certain antagonism to her, betrayed by our
lack of response to that little outburst and our<SPAN class="page" name="Page_160" id="Page_160" title="160"></SPAN>
averted faces. She looked from one to the
other of us, and finally at Bruce Deville.</p>
<p>“At least, you must think that I am right,”
she cried, appealingly. “You are a man, and
you would feel like that. I am sure of it. Isn’t
it natural that I should want justice? He was
all I had in the world.”</p>
<p>“He is dead,” Bruce Deville said, gently.
“Nothing can bring him back to life. Besides——”</p>
<p>He hesitated. The girl leaned forward, listening
intently.</p>
<p>“Besides what?”</p>
<p>“Hasn’t it ever occurred to you,” he said,
slowly, “that if a man hated your brother so
much as to follow him down here and kill him,
that so great a hatred must have sprung from
some great cause? I know nothing, of course,
of your brother’s life, or of the manner of his
life. But men do not strike one another without
provocation. They do not kill one another
without very great provocation.”</p>
<p>“I see what you mean,” she said, slowly.
“You mean that my brother must first have
been the sinner.”</p>
<p>“I am not taking that for granted,” he said,
hastily; “only one cannot help thinking sometimes
that it might have been so.”</p>
<p>“He was my brother,” she said, simply.
“He was all that I had in the world. My desire<SPAN class="page" name="Page_161" id="Page_161" title="161"></SPAN>
for justice may be selfish. Yet I hate the man
who killed him, and I want to see him punished.
I do not believe that any sin of his could ever
have deserved so terrible a retribution.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps not,” he said; “yet there is so little
that you can do. To search for any one by
the name of Maltabar around here you have
proved a hopeless task; and that is your only
clue, is it not?”</p>
<p>“I am sending,” she said, “for a London detective.
I shall remain here until he arrives, at
any rate.”</p>
<p>Again we looked at one another questioningly,
and our silence was like a fresh note of
antagonism to her avowed purpose. She could
not fail to notice it, and she commenced to talk
of other things. I believe but for Mr. Deville’s
presence she would have got up and left us.
Open war with us women could not have troubled
her in the least. Already I could tell that
she had contracted a dislike to me. But for his
sake she was evidently anxious—oppressively
anxious—to keep friendly.</p>
<p>She tried to draw him into more personal
conversation with her, and he seemed quite
ready to humor her. He changed his seat and
sat down by her side. Adelaide Fortress and I
talked listlessly of the Bishop’s visit and our intending
removal from the neighborhood. We
studiously avoided all mention of my last visit<SPAN class="page" name="Page_162" id="Page_162" title="162"></SPAN>
to her and its sensational ending. We talked
as ordinary acquaintances might have talked,
about trifles. Yet we were both of us equally
conscious that to a certain extent it was a farce.
Presently there was a brief silence. The girl
was talking to Mr. Deville, evidently of her
brother.</p>
<p>“He was so fond of collecting old furniture,”
she was saying. “So am I. He gave me a little
cabinet, the image of this one, only mine
was in black oak.”</p>
<p>She bent over a little piece of furniture by
her side, and looked at it with interest.</p>
<p>“Mine was exactly this shape,” she continued;
“only it had a wonderful secret spring.
You pressed it just here and the top flew up,
and there was space enough for a deed or a photograph.”</p>
<p>She touched a portion of the woodwork idly
as she spoke, and there was a sort of click.
Then she sprang to her feet with a little tremulous
cry.</p>
<p>A portion of the back of the cabinet had
rolled back at the touch of her fingers. A
cabinet photograph was disclosed in the niche.
She was bending over it with pale cheeks and
bloodless lips.</p>
<p>“What is it?” I cried, with a sudden pain at
my heart. “What have you found there?”</p>
<p><SPAN class="page" name="Page_163" id="Page_163" title="163"></SPAN></p>
<p>She turned around and faced Adelaide Fortress.
Her eyes were flashing fire.</p>
<p>“You are all deceiving me,” she cried, passionately.
“I was beginning to suspect it. Now
I know.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” I cried.</p>
<p>She pointed to the photograph with trembling
fingers.</p>
<p>“You have all declared that the name of Maltabar
is strange to you. It is a lie! That is
the likeness of the man I seek. It is the likeness
of Philip Maltabar.”</p>
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