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The shopman laughed.
"It makes a big change. Walk round the shop for five minutes so as to get used to them. Coat ready? Now try this on. That will do, I think.
Put on these tinted specs, and you're complete."
Once more Loide looked in the mirror. His bent appearance altered his shape as much as the shopman's art had altered his face--he felt absolutely satisfied.
Having paid the bill, he left the shop, and started walking towards the bridge; but he did not walk far--he would have been lame in reality--he hailed a hansom.
The direction he gave the driver was the main road, in a street off which Gerald was lodging.
Reaching the end of it he alighted, paid his fare, and boldly walked to No. 9--the number Gerald had given to the police.
It was an ordinary lodging house, and the lawyer was pleased to see a bill in the window, bearing the legend, "Bed for Single Gentleman."
He knocked at the door. He was after that bed.
Yes, the landlady was in, said the girl; would he step inside and wait a minute?
He stepped. The landlady came; she quoted her terms for a bedroom for a week.
Would the gentleman like to see it? The gentleman would--and did.
The second floor was devoted to bedrooms. Loide approved of the one shown him.
He commented on the fact that the tenant of the next room slept late, as his boots were still outside his door; and with a darkened brow the landlady replied to the effect that those who stopped out all night usually slept late the next day.
Loide's heart beat quicker--he guessed the boots were Gerald's.
He was sleeping in the next room, sleeping there with nineteen thousand pounds in his possession.
In the next room--there were possibilities. Loide smiled pleasantly, and his heart felt lightened.
He paid a deposit, and said that if the landlady would get him a chop that would be all he would require till supper.
He was left alone.
Turning the key in the lock he carefully felt the walls separating him from the adjoining room--as he suspected, lath and plaster! Presently he heard some one moving in there, heard distinctly through the thin wall.
Then the door was opened, and the boots taken in. Gerald was going out.
He went. Ear to crack in the door, the lawyer heard the man he was so anxious about speak to the landlady on the next floor, saying he would return in about two hours' time, and would she get him a steak and potatoes for then.
Two hours! There would be time.
The lawyer stood on his bed and took down from its nail a framed and highly colored statement to the effect that The Way of the Transgressor is Hard.
On that part of the wall the frame had covered he operated with his pocket-knife.
Stripping the paper, he cut away plaster and laths till he could see the back of the paper of the adjoining chamber.
He sighed with satisfaction. His task was over.
He did not care how soon Gerald came back. He would have his eye on him.
CHAPTER x.x.xV
NOT A MAN TO STICK AT TRIFLES
The lawyer then rolled up a sheet of stiff note paper from his bag into funnel shape, pinned it so, and made a tiny hole in the wall paper of the other room.
Fitting the small end of his funnel to the hole, he commanded a perfect view of the next room.
He was surprised, too, to find how it improved the sight looking through the tube--it was like a telescope, it seemed to bring things so near.
With the framed text hanging on its hook again, there was not the slightest suspicious thing about the room, and when his chop came up, everything was finished.
Soon after his dinner things were cleared away, Gerald returned.
The lawyer had not troubled to enter the adjoining chamber; the fact that it had been left unlocked convinced him that his man carried the notes on his person.
And he did at that stage, for he had just returned from his interview with the dentist.
With locked door, and eye to his funnel, Loide watched.
He was seized with a frenzy as he saw Gerald take the notes from an envelope, and count them one by one--nineteen of them.
Had the look on the lawyer's face been seen by Gerald, that gentleman would not have hummed so blithely and looked so happy.
Gerald put the notes in his breast pocket, and pinned the top of it up--he was taking great care of them.
Loide had made up his mind to get those notes. He rather fancied that he would get them that night.
He generally got what he laid himself out to get. He was not a man to stick at trifles.
Presently Gerald drew from his pocket and opened a little box.
Loide knew what it was--he had seen them in a shop window.
A small alarm with points to be pressed into the floor, so that when the door it lay against was pushed--the lawyer's hope of getting possession of the notes that night received a rude shock.
The moment Gerald had swallowed his meal he went out again. He came back within an hour, and once more the lawyer's eye was busy.
Gerald took a ticket from his pocket and put it on the mantelpiece. To the girl who was dusting the room he said:
"Tell Mrs. Parkes I am leaving to-morrow morning; ask her to have my bill made out, including the morning's breakfast."