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"No, sir."
"Why not?"
Jay looked at Mary Trevert.
"Well, sir, I thought perhaps I'd better tell Miss Trevert first. Bude thought so, too. That there Manderton has made so much unpleasantness in the house with his prying ways that I said to myself, sir ..."
Bruce Wright looked at Mary.
"Would you mind if I asked Jay not to say anything about this to anybody just for the present?" he asked.
"You hear what Mr. Wright says, Jay," said Mary. "I don't want you to say anything about this matter just yet. Do you understand?"
"Yes, Miss. Will that be all, Miss?"
"Yes, thank you, Jay!"
"Thanks very much, Jay," said the boy. "This may be important. Mum's the word, though!"
"I _quite_ understand, sir," answered the valet and left the room.
Hardly had the door closed on him than the girl turned eagerly to Bruce.
"It _is_ important?" she asked.
"It may be," was the guarded reply.
"Don't leave me in the dark like this," the girl pleaded. "This horrible affair goes on growing and growing, and at every step it seems more bewildering ... more ghastly. Tell me where it is leading, Mr. Wright! I can't stand the suspense much more!"
Her voice broke, and she turned her face away.
"You must be brave, Miss Trevert," said the boy, putting his hand on her shoulder. "Don't ask me to tell you more now. Your friends are working to get at the truth ..."
"The truth!" cried the girl. "G.o.d knows where the truth will lead us!"
Bruce Wright hesitated a moment.
"I don't think you have any need to fear the truth!" he said presently.
The girl took her handkerchief from her face and looked at him with br.i.m.m.i.n.g eyes.
"You know more than you let me think you did," she said brokenly. "But you are a friend of mine, aren't you?"
"Yes," said Bruce, and added boldly:
"And of his too!"
She did not speak again, but gave him her hand. He clasped it and went out hurriedly to catch his train back to London.
CHAPTER XVIII
THE SILENT SHOT
That faithful servitor of Fleet Street, the Law Courts clock, had just finished striking seven. It boomed out the hour, stroke by stroke, solemnly, inexorably, like a grim old judge summing up and driving home, point by point, an irrefutable charge. The heavy strokes broke in upon the fitful doze into which Robin Greve, stretched out in an armchair in his living-room, had dropped.
He roused up with a start. There was the click of a key in the lock of his front door. Bruce Wright burst into the room.
The boy shut the door quickly and locked it. He was rather pale and seemed perturbed. On seeing Robin he jerked his head in the direction of the courtyard.
"I suppose you know they're still outside?" he said.
Robin nodded nonchalantly.
"There are three of them now," the boy went on. "Robin, I don't like it.
Something's going to happen. You'll want to mind yourself ... if it's not too late already!"
He stepped across to the window and bending down, peered cautiously round the curtain.
Robin Greve laughed.
"Bah!" he said, "they can't touch me!"
"You're wrong," Bruce retorted without changing his position. "They can and they will. Don't think Manderton is a fool, Robin. He means mischief ..."
Robin raised his eyebrows.
"Does he?" he said. "Now I wonder who told you that ..."
"Friends of yours at Harkings asked me to warn you ..." began Bruce awkwardly.
"My friends are scarcely in the majority there," retorted Robin. "Whom do you mean exactly?"
But the boy ignored the question.
"Three men watching the house!" he exclaimed; "don't you think that _this_ looks as though Manderton meant business?"
He returned to his post of observation at the curtain.
Robin laughed cynically.
"Manderton doesn't worry me any," he said cheerfully. "The man's the victim of an _idee fixe_. He believes Parrish killed himself just as firmly as he believes that I frightened or bullied Parrish into doing it ..."
"Don't be too sure about that, Robin," said the boy, dropping the curtain and coming back to Robin's chair. "He may want you to think that. But how can we tell how much he knows?"