s Clotilde?" was the question that confronted Bertie almost before
he had got into the hall. His denial of any knowledge of such a person
was met with an outburst of bitter laughter.
"How well you have learned your lesson!" exclaimed Mrs. Heasant. But
satire gave way to furious indignation when she realised that Bertie did
not intend to throw any further light on her discovery.
"You shan't have any dinner till you've confessed everything," she
stormed.
Bertie's reply took the form of hastily collecting material for an
impromptu banquet from the larder and locking himself into his bedroom.
His mother made frequent visits to the locked door and shouted a
succession of interrogations with the persistence of one who thinks that
if you ask a question often enough an answer will eventually result.
Bertie did nothing to encourage the supposition. An hour had passed in
fruitless one-sided palaver when another letter addressed to Bertie and
marked "private" made its appearance in the letter-box. Mrs. Heasant
pounced on it with the enthusiasm of a cat that has missed its mouse and
to whom a second has been unexpectedly vouchsafed. If she hoped for
further disclosures assuredly she was not disappointed.
"So you have really done it!" the letter abruptly commenced; "Poor
Dagmar. Now she is done for I almost pity her. You did it very well,
you wicked boy, the servants all think it was suicide, and there will
be no fuss. Better not touch the jewels till after the inquest.
"Clotilde."
Anything that Mrs. Heasant had previously done in the way of outcry was
easily surpassed as she raced upstairs and beat frantically at her son's
door.
"Miserable boy, what have you done to Dagmar?"
"It's Dagmar now, is it?" he snapped; "it will be Geraldine next."
"That it should come to this, after all my efforts to keep you at home of
an evening," sobbed Mrs. Heasant; "it's no use you trying to hide things
from me; Clotilde's letter betrays everything."
"Does it betray who she is?" asked Bertie; "I've heard so much about her,
I should like to know something about her home-life. Seriously, if you
go on like this I shall fetch a doctor; I've often enough been preached
at about nothing, but I've never had an imaginary harem dragged into the
discussion."
"Are these letters imaginary?" screamed Mrs. Heasant; "what about the
jewels, and Dagmar, and the theory of suicide?"
No solution of these problems was fort
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