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Peter Ruff and the Double Four. E. Phillips OppenheimЧитать онлайн книгу.

Peter Ruff and the Double Four - E. Phillips Oppenheim


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Who was this who sought to probe his past, to renew an acquaintance with a dead personality? “M” could be but one person! What did she want of him? Was it possible that, after all, a little flame of sentiment had been kept alight in her bosom, too—that in the quiet moments her thoughts had turned towards him as his had so often done to her? Then a sudden idea—an ugly thought—drove the tenderness from his face. She was no longer Maud Barnes—she was Mrs. John Dory, and John Dory was his enemy! Could there be treachery lurking beneath those simple lines? Things had not gone well with John Dory lately. Somehow or other, his cases seemed to have crumpled into dust. He was no longer held in the same esteem at headquarters. Yet could even John Dory stoop to such means as these?

      He turned in his chair.

      “Miss Brown,” he said, “please take your pencil.”

      “I am quite ready, sir,” she answered.

      He marked the advertisement with a ring and passed it to her.

      “Reply to that as follows,” he said:

      DEAR SIR:

      I notice in the Daily Mail of this morning that you are enquiring through the “personal” column for the whereabouts of Mr. Spencer Fitzgerald. That gentleman has been a client of mine, and I have been in occasional communication with him. If you will inform me of the nature of your business, I may, perhaps, be able to put you in touch with Mr. Fitzgerald. You will understand, however, that, under the circumstances, I shall require proofs of your good faith.

      Truly yours,

      PETER RUFF.

      Miss Brown glanced through the advertisement and closed her notebook with a little snap.

      “Did you say—‘Dear Sir’?” she asked.

      “Certainly!” Peter Ruff answered.

      “And you really mean,” she continued, with obvious disapproval, “that I am to send this?”

      “I do not usually waste my time,” Peter Ruff reminded her, mildly, “by giving you down communications destined for the waste-paper basket.”

      She turned unwillingly to her machine.

      “Mr. Fitzgerald is very much better where he is,” she remarked.

      “That depends,” he answered.

      She adjusted a sheet of paper into her typewriter.

      “Who do you suppose ‘M’ is?” she asked.

      “With your assistance,” Peter Ruff remarked, a little sarcastically—“with your very kind assistance—I propose to find out!”

      Miss Brown sniffed, and banged at the keys of her typewriter.

      “That coal-dealer’s girl from Streatham!” she murmured to herself. …

      A few politely worded letters were exchanged. “M” declined to reveal her identity, but made an appointment to visit Mr. Ruff at his office. The morning she was expected, he wore an entirely new suit of clothes and was palpably nervous. Miss Brown, who had arrived a little late, sat with her back turned upon him, and ignored even his usual morning greeting. The atmosphere of the office was decidedly chilly! Fortunately, the expected visitor arrived early.

      Peter Ruff rose to receive his former sweetheart with an agitation perforce concealed, yet to him poignant indeed. For it was indeed Maud who entered the room and came towards him with carefully studied embarrassment and half doubtfully extended hand. He did not see the cheap millinery, the slightly more developed figure, the passing of that insipid prettiness which had once charmed him into the bloom of an over-early maturity. His eyes were blinded with that sort of masculine chivalry—the heritage only of fools and very clever men—which takes no note of such things. It was Miss Brown who, from her place in a corner of the room, ran over the cheap attractions of this unwelcome visitor with an expression of scornful wonder—who understood the tinsel of her jewellery, the cheap shoddiness of her ready-made gown; who appreciated, with merciless judgment, her mincing speech, her cheap, flirtatious method.

      Maud, with a diffidence not altogether assumed, had accepted the chair which Peter Ruff had placed for her, and sat fidgeting, for a moment, with the imitation gold purse which she was carrying.

      “I am sure, Mr. Ruff,” she said, looking demurely into her lap, “I ought not to have come here. I feel terribly guilty. It’s such an uncomfortable sort of position, too, isn’t it?”

      “I am sorry that you find it so,” Peter Ruff said. “If there is anything I can do—”

      “You are very kind,” she murmured, half raising her eyes to his and dropping them again, “but, you see, we are perfect strangers to one another. You don’t know me at all, do you? And I have only heard of you through the newspapers. You might think all sorts of things about my coming here to make enquiries about a gentleman.”

      “I can assure you,” Peter Ruff said, sincerely, “that you need have no fears—no fears at all. Just speak to me quite frankly. Mr. Fitzgerald was a friend of yours, was he not?”

      Maud simpered.

      “He was more than that,” she answered, looking down. “We were engaged to be married.”

      Peter Ruff sighed.

      “I knew all about it,” he declared. “Fitzgerald used to tell me everything.”

      “You were his friend?” she asked, looking him in the face.

      “I was,” Peter Ruff answered fervently, “his best friend! No one was more grieved than I about that—little mistake.”

      She sighed.

      “In some ways,” she remarked softly, “you remind me of him.”

      “You could scarcely say anything,” Peter Ruff murmured “which would give me more pleasure. I am flattered.”

      She shook her head.

      “It isn’t flattery,” she said, “it’s the truth. You may be a few years older, and Spencer had a very nice moustache, which you haven’t, but you are really not unlike. Mr. Ruff, do tell me where he is!”

      Peter Ruff coughed.

      “You must remember,” he said, “that Mr. Fitzgerald’s absence was caused by events of a somewhat unfortunate character.”

      “I know all about it,” she answered, with a little sigh.

      “You can appreciate the fact, therefore,” Peter Ruff continued, “that as his friend and well-wisher I can scarcely disclose his whereabouts without his permission. Will you tell me exactly why you want to meet him again?”

      She blushed—looked down and up again—betrayed, in fact, all the signs of confusion which might have been expected from her.

      “Must I tell you that?” she asked.

      “You are married, are you not?” Peter Ruff asked, looking down at her wedding ring.

      She bit her lip with vexation. What a fool she had been not to take it off!

      “Yes! Well, no—that is to say—”

      “Never mind,” Peter Ruff interrupted. “Please don’t think that I want to cross-examine you. I only asked these questions because I have a sincere regard for Fitzgerald. I know how fond he was of you, and I cannot see what there is to be gained, from his point of view, by reopening old wounds.”

      “I suppose, then,” she remarked, looking at him in such a manner that Miss Brown had to cover her mouth with her hands to prevent her screaming out—“I suppose you are one of those who think it a crime for a woman who is married even to want to see, for a few moments, an old sweetheart?”

      “On the contrary,” Peter Ruff answered, “as a bachelor, I have no convictions


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