The Bandbox by Louis Joseph Vance (10 best books of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Louis Joseph Vance
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âSo,â he commented stupidly, âit wasnât stolen!â
âNaturally not.â
âBut you threw suspicion on Iffââ
âI daresay he was guilty enough in intent, if not in deed. Thereâs not the slightest doubt in my mind that heâs that man Ismay, really, and that he shipped with us for the especial purpose of stealing the necklace if he got half a chance.â
âYou may be right; I donât knowâand neither do you. But do you realise that you came near causing an innocent man to be jailed for the theft?â
âBut I didnât. He got away.â
âBut not Iff aloneâthereâs myself. Have you paused to consider what would have happened to me if the inspector had happened to find that necklace in the hat? Heavens knows how he missed it! He was persistent enough!... But if he had found it, Iâd have been jailed for theft.â
âOh, no,â she said sweetly; âIâd never have let it go that far.â
âNot even if to confess would mean that youâd be sent to jail for smuggling?â
âTheyâd never do that to a woman....â
But her eyes shifted from his uneasily, and he saw her colour change a trifle.
âYou know better than that. You read the papersâkeep informed. You know what happened to the last woman who tried to smuggle. I forgot how long they sent her up forâfive months, or something like that.â
She was silent, her gaze evasive.
âYou remember that, donât you?â
âPerhaps I do,â she admitted unwillingly.
âAnd you donât pretend youâd âve faced such a prospect in order to clear me?â
Again she had no answer for him. He turned up the room to the windows and back again.
âI didnât think,â he said slowly, stopping before herââI couldnât have thought you could be so heartless, so self-centred ...!â
She rose suddenly and put a pleading hand upon his arm, standing very near him in all her loveliness.
âSay thoughtless, Staff,â she said quietly; âI didnât mean it.â
âThatâs hard to credit,â he replied steadily, âwhen Iâm haunted by the memory of the lies you told meâto save yourself a few dollars honestly due the country that has made you a rich womanâto gain for yourself a few paltry columns of cheap, sensational newspaper advertising. For that you lied to me and put me in jeopardy of Sing-Sing ... me, the man you pretend to care forââ
âHold on, Staff!â the woman interrupted harshly.
He moved away. Her arm dropped back to her side. She eyed him a moment with eyes hard and unfriendly.
âYouâve said about enough,â she continued.
âYouâre not prepared to deny that you had these possibilities in mind when you lied to me and made me your dupe and catâs-paw?â
âIâm not prepared to argue the matter with you,â she flung back at him, ânor to hold myself answerable to you for any thing I may choose to say or do.â
He bowed ceremoniously.
âI think thatâs all,â he said pleasantly.
âIt is,â she agreed curtly; then in a lighter tone she added: âThere remains for me only to take my blue dishes and go home.â
As she spoke she moved over to the corner where the bandbox lay ingloriously on its undamaged side. As she bent over it, Staff abstractedly took and lighted another cigarette.
âWhat made you undo it?â he heard the woman ask.
He swung round in surprise. âI? I havenât touched the thing since it was brought inâbeyond kicking it out of the way.â
âThe stringâs offâitâs been opened!â Alisonâs voice was trembling with excitement. She straightened up, holding the box in both hands, and came hastily over to the table beside which he was standing. âYou see?â she said breathlessly, putting it down.
âThe string was on it when I saw it last,â he told her blankly....
Then the memory recurred of the man who had passed him at the doorâthe man who, he suspected, had forced an entrance to his rooms....
Alison was plucking nervously at the cover without lifting it.
âWhy donât you look?â he demanded, irritated.
âIâIâm afraid,â she said in a broken voice.
Nevertheless, she removed the cover.
For a solid, silent minute both stared, stupefied. The hat they knew so wellâthe big black hat with its willow plume and buckle of brilliantsâhad vanished. In its place they saw the tumbled wreckage of what had once been another hat distinctly: wisps of straw dyed purple, fragments of feathers, bits of violet-coloured ribbon and silk which, mixed with wads and shreds of white tissue-paper, filled the box to brimming.
Staff thrust a hand in his pocket and produced the knot of violet ribbon. It matched exactly the torn ribbon in the box.
âSo that,â he murmuredââthatâs where this came from!â
Alison paid no attention. Of a sudden she began digging furiously in the débris in the box, throwing out its contents by handfuls until she had uncovered the bottom without finding any sign of what she had thought to find. Then she paused, meeting his gaze with one half-wrathful, half-hysterical.
âWhat does this mean?â she demanded, as if ready to hold him to account.
âI think,â he said slowlyââIâm strongly inclined to believe it means that youâre an uncommonly lucky woman.â
âHow do you make that out?â she demanded in a breath.
âIâll tell you,â he said, formulating his theory as he spoke: âWhen I came home tonight, a man passed me at the door, fairly running outâI fancy, to escape recognition; there was something about him that seemed familiar. Then I came up here, found my door ajar, when I distinctly remembered locking it, found my windows shut and the shades drawn, when I distinctly remembered leaving them up, and finally found this knot of ribbon on the floor. I was trying to account for it when you drove up. Now it seems plain enough that this fellow knew or suspected you of hiding the necklace in the hat, knew that I had it, and came here in my absence to steal it. He found instead this hat, and knowing no better tore it to pieces trying to find what he was after.â
âBut whereâwhereâs my hat?â
âIâll tell you.â Staff crossed the room and picked up the string and label which had been on the box. Returning, he examined the tag and read aloud: âMiss Eleanor Searle.â He handed the tag to Alison. âFind Miss Searle and youâll find your hat. It happens that she had a bandbox the exact duplicate of yours. I remember telling you about it, on the steamer. As a matter of fact, she was in the shop the afternoon you ordered your hat sent to me, though she steadily refused to tell me who was responsible for that imposition. Now, on the pier today, our luggage was placed side by side, hers with mineâboth in the S section, you understand. My examination was finished first and I was taken back to my stateroom to be searched, as you know. While I was gone, her examination was evidently finished, for when I came back she had left the pier with all her things. Quite plainly she must have taken your box by mistake for her own; this, of course, is her hat. As I said at first, find Miss Searle and youâll find your hat and necklace. Also, find the person to whom you confided this gay young swindling scheme of yours, and youâll find the man who was intimate enough with the affair to come to my rooms in my absence and go direct to the bandbox for the necklace.â
âIâbut I told nobody,â she stammered.
By the look in her eyes he disbelieved her.
âNot even Max, this morning, before he offered that reward?â he asked shrewdly.
âWellâyes; I told him.â
âMax may have confided it to somebody else: these things spread. Or possibly Jane may have blabbed.â
âOh, no,â she protested, but without conviction in her accents; âneither of them would be so foolish....â
âIâd find out, if I were you.â
âI shall. Meanwhileâthis Miss Searleâwhereâs she stopping?â
âI canât tell youâsome hotel. Itâll be easy enough to find her in the morning.â
âWill you try?â
âAssuredlyâthe first thing.â
âThenâthere appears to be nothing else to do but go home,â said the woman in a curiously subdued manner.
Without replying verbally, Staff took up her chiffon wrap and draped it over her shoulders.
âThank you,â said she, moving toward the door. âGood night.â
âOh,â he protested politely, âI must see you out.â
âItâs not necessaryâI can find my way.â
âBut only I know how to fix the front door.â
At the foot of the stairs, while he fumbled with the latch, doubting him, she spoke with some little hesitation.
âI presume,â she said stifflyââI presume that thisâahâends it.â
Staff opened the door an inch and held it so. âIf by âit,ââ he replied, âwe mean the same thingââ
âWe do.â
âIt does,â he asseverated with his twisted smile.
She delayed an instant longer. âBut all the same,â she said hastily, at length, âI want that play.â
âMy play?â he enquired with significant emphasis.
âYes, of course,â she said sharply.
âWell, since Iâm under contract with Max, I donât well see how I can take it away from you. And besides, youâre the only woman living who can play it properly.â
âSo good of you.â Her hand lay slim and cool in his for the fraction of an instant. âGood night,â she iterated, withdrawing it.
âGood night.â
As he let her out, Staff, glancing down at the waiting taxicab, was faintly surprised by the discovery that she had not come alone. A man stood in waiting by the doorâa man in evening clothes: not Max but a taller man, more slender, with a better carriage. Turning to help Alison into the cab, the street lights threw his face in sharp relief against the blackness of the window; and Staff knew him.
âArkroyd!â he said beneath his breath.
He closed the door and set the latch, suffering from a species of mild astonishment. His psychological processes seemed to him rather unique; he felt that he was hardly playing the game according to Hoyle. A man who has just broken with the woman with whom he has believed himself desperately in love naturally counts on feeling a bit down in the mouth. And seeing her drive off with one whom he has every right to consider in the light of a hated rival, he ought in common decency to suffer poignant pangs of jealousy. But Staff didnât; he couldnât honestly make himself believe that he was suffering in any way whatever. Indeed, the most violent emotion to which he was sensible was one of chagrin over his own infatuate myopia.
âAss!â he called himself, slowly reascending the stairs. âYou might âve seen this coming long ago, if you hadnât wilfully chosen to be blind as a bat!â
Re-entering his study, he pulled up with a start and a cry of sincere amazement.
âWell, Iâll be damned!â
âThen why not lead a better life?â enquired Mr. Iff.
He was standing in the doorway to the bedroom, looking much like an exceptionally cruel caricature of himself. As he spoke, he slouched wearily over to the wing-chair Alison had recently occupied, and dropped into it like a dead weight.
He wore no hat. His clothing was in a shocking condition, damp, shapeless and shrunken to such an extent as to disclose exhibits of bony wrists and ankles almost immodestly generous. On his bird-like cranium the pale, smooth scalp shone pink through scanty, matted, damp blond locks. His face was drawn, pinched and pale. As if new to the light his baby-blue eyes blinked furiously. Round his thin lips hovered his habitual smile, semi-sardonic, semi-sheepish.
âDo you mind telling me how in thunder you got in here?â asked Staff courteously.
Iff waved a hand
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