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"Who's this!" asked Dollar, instantly aware of the change behind him.
But even Lucy Edenborough would only answer, "Hush, doctor!" as she bent forward with s.h.i.+ning eyes. And certainly a hairpin could not have been dropped unheard before the dark performer relieved the tension by plunging into a scene from _Pickwick_.
It was the scene of Mr. Jingle's monologue on the Rochester coach--and the immortal nonsense was inimitably given. Yet n.o.body could have been less like the emaciated prototype than this tall tanned man, with the short black mustache, and the flas.h.i.+ng teeth that bit off every word with ineffable snap and point.
"Mother--tall lady, eating sandwiches--forgot the arch--crash--knock--children look round--mother's head off--sandwich in her hand--no mouth to put it in----" and his own grim one only added to the fun and swelled the roar.
He waited darkly for them to stop, the wilful absence of any amus.e.m.e.nt on his side enormously increasing that of the audience. But when it came to the episode of Donna Christina and the stomach-pump, with the culminating discovery of Don Bolaro Fizzgig in the main pipe of the public fountain, the guffaws of half the house eventually drew from the other half the supreme compliment of exasperated demands for silence.
Mrs. George Edenborough was one of the loudest offenders. George himself had to wipe his eyes. And the crime doctor had forgot that there was such a thing as crime.
"That chap's a genius!" he exclaimed, when a double encore had been satisfied by further and smaller doses of Mr. Jingle, artfully held in reserve. "But who is he, Mrs. Edenborough?"
"Poor Mr. Scarth!" crowed the bride, br.i.m.m.i.n.g over with triumphant fun.
But the doctor's mirth was at an end.
"That the fellow who can't manage a bit of a boy, when he can hold an audience like this in the hollow of his hand?"
And at first he looked as though he could not believe it, and then all at once as though he could. But by this time the Edenboroughs were urging Scarth's poverty in earnest, and Dollar could only say that he wanted to meet him more than ever.
The wish was not to be gratified without a further side-light and a fresh surprise. As George and the doctor were repairing to the billiard-room, before the conclusion of the lengthy program, they found a group of backs upon the threshold, and a ribald uproar in full swing within. One voice was in the ascendent, and it was sadly indistinct; but it was also the voice of the vanquished, belching querulous futilities. The cold steel thrusts of an autocratic Jingle cut it shorter and shorter. It ceased altogether, and the men in the doorway made way for Mr. Scarth, as he hurried a disheveled youth off the scene in the most approved constabulatory manner.
"Does it often happen, George?" Dollar's arm had slipped through his former patient's as they slowly followed at their distance.
"Most nights, I'm afraid."
"And does Scarth always do what he likes with him--afterward?"
"Always; he's the sort of fellow who can do what he likes with most people," declared the young man, missing the point. "You should have seen him at the last concert, when those fools behind us behaved even worse than to-night! It wasn't his turn, but he came out and put them right in about a second, and had us all laughing the next! It was just the same at school; everybody was afraid of Mostyn Scarth, boys and men alike; and so is Jack Laverick still--in spite of being of age and having the money-bags--as you saw for yourself just now."
"Yet he lets this sort of thing happen continually?"
"It's pretty difficult to prevent. A gla.s.s about does it, as I told you, and you can't be at a fellow's elbow all the time in a place like this.
But some of Jack's old pals have had a go at him. Do you know what they've done? They've taken away his Old Etonian tie, and quite right too!"
"And there was nothing of all this last year?"
"So Lucy says. I wasn't here. Mrs. Laverick was, by the way; she may have made the difference. But being his own master seems to have sent him to the dogs altogether. Scarth's the only person to pull him up, unless--unless you'd take him on, doctor! You--you've pulled harder cases out of the fire, you know!"
They had been sitting a few minutes in the lounge. n.o.body was very near them; the young man's face was alight and his eyes were s.h.i.+ning. Dollar took him by the arm once more, and they went together to the lift.
"In any case I must make friends with your friend Scarth," said he. "Do you happen to know his number?"
Edenborough did--it was 144--but he seemed dubious as to another doctor's reception after the tragedy that might have happened in the adjoining room.
"Hadn't I better introduce you in the morning?" he suggested with much deference in the lift. "I--I hate repeating things--but I want you to like each other, and I heard Scarth say he was fed up with doctors!"
This one smiled.
"I don't wonder at it."
"Yet it wasn't Mostyn Scarth who gave Doctor Alt away."
"No?"
Edenborough shook his head as they left the lift together. "No, doctor.
It was the chemist here, a chap called Schickel; but for him Jack Laverick would be a dead man; and but for him again, n.o.body need ever have heard of his narrow shave. He spotted the mistake, and then started all the gossip."
"I know," said the doctor, nodding.
"But it was a terrible mistake! Decigrams instead of milligrams, so I heard. Just a hundred times too much strychnine in each pill."
"You are quite right," said John Dollar quietly. "I have the prescription in my pocket."
"_You_ have, doctor?"
"Don't be angry with me, my dear fellow! I told you I had heard one version of the whole thing. It was Alt's. He's an old friend--but you wouldn't have said a word about him if I had told you that at first--and I still don't want it generally known."
"You can trust me, doctor, after all you've done for me."
"Well, Alt once did more for me. I want to do something for him, that's all."
And his knuckles still ached from the young man's grip as they rapped smartly at the door of No. 144.
II
It was opened a few inches by Mostyn Scarth. His raiment was still at concert pitch, but his face even darker than it had been as the crime doctor saw it last.
"May I ask who you are and what you want?" he demanded--not at all in the manner of Mr. Jingle--rather in the voice that most people would have raised.
"My name's Dollar and I'm a doctor."
The self-announcement, pat as a polysyllable, had a foreseen effect only minimized by the precautionary confidence of Doctor Dollar's manner.
"Thanks very much. I've had about enough of doctors."
And the door was shutting when the intruder got in a word like a wedge.
"Exactly!"
Scarth frowned through a c.h.i.n.k just wide enough to show both his eyes.
It was the intruder's tone that held his hand.
"What does that mean?" he demanded with more control.
"That I want to see you about the other doctor--this German fellow,"
returned Dollar, against the grain. But the studious phrase admitted him.
"Well, don't raise your voice," said Scarth, lowering his own as he shut the door softly behind them. "I believe I saw you down-stairs outside the bar. So I need only explain that I've just got my bright young man off to sleep, on the other side of those folding-doors."