The Greatest Works of Earl Derr Biggers (Illustrated Edition). Earl Derr Biggers

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      "All right. You admit you travel under an assumed name?"

      "I don't care for the way you put it. A great many people on the stage have taken more attractive names than their own. I have done nothing to justify your rudeness—"

      "I can quite understand your feeling," said Miss Morrow, with a disapproving glance at the Captain. "From this point I will take up the inquiry."

      "I wish you would," remarked Miss Garland warmly.

      "Had you ever met Sir Frederic Bruce before you came to Mr. Kirk's dinner party last night?" the girl inquired.

      "No, I had not."

      "He was, then, a complete stranger to you?"

      "He certainly was. Why should you ask me that?"

      "You had no private interview with him last night?"

      "No. None."

      Captain Flannery stepped forward, his mouth open, about to speak. Miss Morrow raised her hand. "Just a moment, Captain. Miss Garland, I warn you this is a serious business. You should tell the truth."

      "Well—" Her manner became uncertain. "What makes you think I'm—"

      "Lying? We know it," exploded Flannery.

      "You broke the string of your necklace last night on your way to the bungalow," Miss Morrow continued. "Where did that accident happen?"

      "On the stairs—the stairs leading up from the twentieth floor to the roof."

      "Did you recover all the pearls?"

      "Yes—I think so. I wasn't quite sure of the number. Of course, I needn't tell you they're only imitation. I couldn't afford the real thing."

      Miss Morrow opened her hand-bag, and laid a solitary pearl on the desk. "Do you recognize that, Miss Garland?"

      "Why—why, yes. It belongs to me, of course. Thank you so much. Where— er—where did you find it?"

      "We found it," said Miss Morrow slowly, "under the desk in this room." The woman flushed, and made no reply. There was a moment's strained silence. "Miss Garland," the girl went on, "I think you had better change your tactics. The truth, if you please."

      The actress shrugged. "I fancy you're right. I was only trying to keep out of this. It's not the sort of publicity I want. And as a matter of fact, I'm not in it very deep."

      "But you really broke the string in this office, where you had come for a talk with Sir Frederic?"

      "Yes, that's true. I caught the necklace on a corner of the desk when I got up to go."

      "Please don't start with the moment when you got up to go. Take it from the beginning, if you will."

      "Very good. When I said I had never seen Sir Frederic before last night, I was telling the truth. I had left the elevator and was crossing the hallway to the stairs, when the door of these offices opened and a man stood on the threshold. He said: 'You are Miss Garland, I believe?' I told him that was my name, and he said he was Sir Frederic Bruce, Mr. Kirk's guest, and that he wanted to have a talk with me, alone, before we met up-stairs."

      "Yes—go on."

      "Well, it seemed odd, but he was such a distinguished-looking man I felt it must be all right, so I followed him in here. We sat down, and he started in to tell me who he was—Scotland Yard, and all that. I'm English, of course, and I have the greatest respect for any one from the Yard. He talked around for a minute, and then he went to the point."

      "Ah, yes," smiled Miss Morrow. "That's what we are waiting for. What was the point?"

      "He—he wanted to ask me something."

      "Yes? What?"

      "He wanted to ask me if I could identify a woman who disappeared a great many years ago. A woman who just stepped off into the night, and was never heard of again."

      A tense silence followed these words. Quietly Chan moved a little closer. Barry Kirk's eyes were fixed with interest on Gloria Garland's face. Even Captain Flannery stood eagerly at attention.

      "Yes," said Miss Morrow calmly. "And why did Sir Frederic think you could identify this woman?"

      "Because I was her best friend. I was the last person who saw her on the night she disappeared."

      Miss Morrow nodded. "Then you were present at a picnic party in the hills near Peshawar on a certain night fifteen years ago?"

      The woman's eyes opened wide. "Peshawar? That's in India, isn't it? I have never been in India in my life."

      Another moment of startled silence. Then Flannery roared at her. "Look here—you promised to tell the truth—"

      "I am telling the truth," she protested.

      "You are not. That woman he asked you about was Eve Durand, who disappeared from a party one night outside Peshawar—"

      Chan cut in on him. "Humbly asking pardon, Captain," he said, "you shouldn't be so agile in jumping upon the lady's story." He picked up a couple of clippings from the desk. "Will you be so kind," he added to Miss Garland, "as to mention name of place from which your friend disappeared?"

      "Certainly. She disappeared from Nice."

      "Nice? Where the hell's that?" Flannery asked.

      "Nice is a resort city on the French Riviera," replied Miss Garland, sweetly. "I am afraid your duties keep you too much at home, Captain."

      "Nice," repeated Chan slowly. "Then the name of your friend was perhaps Marie Lantelme?"

      "That was her name," the actress replied.

      Chan selected a clipping, and handed it to Miss Morrow. "Will you condescend to read words out loud?" he inquired. "Most interesting, to be sure."

      Again, as in the dining-room of the St. Francis the day before, Miss Morrow read one of Sir Frederic's treasured clippings.

      "What became of Marie Lantelme? It is now eleven years since that moonlit June night when a company under English management played The Dollar Princess on the stage of the Theatre de la Jetee-Promenade, in the city of Nice. It was a memorable evening for all concerned. The house was sold out, packed with soldiers on leave, and the manager was frantic. At the last moment word had come that his leading lady was seriously ill and with many misgivings he sent for the understudy, a pretty, inconspicuous little chorus girl named Marie Lantelme. It was her big chance at last. She stepped out on the blazing stage and became a woman transformed. The performance she gave will never be forgotten by any one who was in that audience—an audience that went wild, that was on its feet cheering for her when the curtain fell.

      "After the performance the manager rushed in high glee to Marie Lantelme's dressing-room. She was a discovery, and she was his. He would star her in London, in New York. She listened to him in silence. Then she put on her simple little frock and stepped from the stage door out upon the jetty. Fame and riches were waiting for her, if she chose to take them. Whether she chose or not will never be known. All that is known is that when she left the theater she walked off into nothingness. Eleven years have passed, and from that day to this no one has ever heard from Marie Lantelme."

      Miss Morrow stopped reading, her countenance again in great need of ironing out. Captain Flannery stood with open mouth. Only Chan seemed to have retained his cheerful composure.

      "Marie Lantelme was your friend?" he said to Miss Garland.

      "She was," replied the actress, "and somehow Sir Frederic knew it. I was appearing in that same company. I must say the clipping exaggerates a bit —I suppose they have to do it to make things interesting. It was an adequate performance—that's what I would have called it. I don't remember any cheering. But there isn't any doubt about her making good. She could have had other parts—better ones than she had ever had before. Yet it's true enough—she left the theater, and that was the last of her."

      "You had final view of her?" Chan suggested.


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