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"There are many motives for crime besides robbery," Francis declared.
"Don't be afraid, Andrew, that I am going to turn amateur detective and make the unravelment of this case all the more difficult for Scotland Yard. If I interfere, it will be on a certainty. Andrew, don't think I'm mad but I've taken up the challenge our great philanthropist flung at me to-night. I've very little interest in who killed this boy Victor Bidlake, or why, but I'm convinced of one thing--Brast knew about it, and if he is posing as a patron of crime on a great scale, sooner or later I shall get him. He may think himself safe, and he may have the courage of Beelzebub--he seems rather that type--but if my presentiment about him--comes true, his number's up. I can almost divine the meaning of his breaking in upon our conversation to-night. He needs an enemy--he is thirsting for danger. He has found it!"
Wilmore filled his pipe thoughtfully. At the first whiff of tobacco he began to feel more normal.
"After all, Francis," he said, "aren't we a little overstrung to-night?
Sir Timothy Brast is no adventurer. He is a prince in the city, a persona grata wherever he chooses to go. He isn't a hanger-on in Society. He isn't even dependent upon Bohemia for his entertainment.
You can't seriously imagine that a man with his possessions is likely to risk his life and liberty in becoming the inspiration of a band of cutthroats?"
Francis smiled. He, too, had lit his pipe and had thrown himself into his favourite chair. He smiled confidently across at his friend.
"A millionaire with brains," he argued, "is just the one person in the world likely to weary of all ordinary forms of diversion. I begin to remember things about him already. Haven't you heard about his wonderful parties down at The Walled House?"
Wilmore struck the table by his side with his clenched fist.
"By George, that's it!" he exclaimed. "Who hasn't!"
"I remember Baker talking about one last year," Francis continued, "never any details, but all kinds of mysterious hints--a sort of mixture between a Roman orgy and a chapter from the 'Arabian Nights'--singers from Petrograd, dancers from Africa and fighting men from Chicago."
"The fellow's magnificent, at any rate," Wilmore remarked.
His host smoked furiously for a moment.
"That's the worst of these multi-millionaires," he declared. "They think they can rule the world, traffic in human souls, buy morals, mock at the law. We shall see!"
"Do you know the thing that I found most interesting about him?" Wilmore asked.
"His black opals," the other suggested. "You're by the way of being a collector, aren't you?"
Wilmore shook his head.
"The fact that he is the father of Oliver Hilditch's widow."
Francis sat quite still for a moment. There was a complete change in his expression. He looked like a man who has received a shock.
"I forgot that," he muttered.
CHAPTER X
Francis met Shopland one morning about a week later, on his way from Clarges Street to his chambers in the Temple. The detective raised his hat and would have pa.s.sed on, but Francis accosted him.
"Any progress, Mr. Shopland?" he enquired.
The detective fingered his small, sandy moustache. He was an insignificant-looking little man, undersized, with thin frame and watery eyes. His mouth, however, was hard, and there were some tell-tale little lines at its corners.
"None whatever, I am sorry to say, Mr. Ledsam," he admitted. "At present we are quite in the dark."
"You found the weapon, I hear?"
Shopland nodded.
"It was just an ordinary service revolver, dating from the time of the war, exactly like a hundred thousand others. The enquiries we were able to make from it came to nothing."
"Where was it picked up?"
"In the middle of the waste plot of ground next to Soto's. The murderer evidently threw it there the moment he had discharged it. He must have been wearing rubber-soled shoes, for not a soul heard him go."
Francis nodded thoughtfully.
"I wonder," he said, after a slight pause, "whether it ever occurred to you to interview Miss Daisy Hyslop, the young lady who was with Bidlake on the night of his murder?"
"I called upon her the day afterwards," the detective answered.
"She had nothing to say?"
"Nothing whatever."
"Indirectly, of course," Francis continued, "the poor girl was the cause of his death. If she had not insisted upon his going out for a taxicab, the man who was loitering about would probably have never got hold of him."
The detective glanced up furtively at the speaker. He seemed to reflect for a moment.
"I gathered," he said, "in conversation with the commissionaire, that Miss Hyslop was a little impatient that night. It seems, however, that she was anxious to get to a ball which was being given down in Kensington."
"There was a ball, was there?" Francis asked.
"Without a doubt," the detective replied. "It was given by a Miss Clara Bultiwell. She happens to remember urging Miss Hyslop to come on as early as possible."
"So that's that," Francis observed.
"Just so, Mr. Ledsam," the detective murmured.
They were walking along the Mall now, eastwards. The detective, who seemed to have been just a saunterer, had accommodated himself to Francis' destination.
"Let me see, there was nothing stolen from the young man's person, was there?" Francis asked presently.
"Apparently nothing at all, sir."
"And I gather that you have made every possible enquiry as to the young man's relations with his friends?"
"So far as one can learn, sir, they seem to have been perfectly amicable."
"Of course," Francis remarked presently, "this may have been quite a purposeless affair. The deed may have been committed by a man who was practically a lunatic, without any motive or reason whatever."
"Precisely so, sir," the detective agreed.
"But, all the same, I don't think it was."