“Well,” she said at last. “My mistress is away. I think you ought to see her, sir.”
“Why, Mrs. Alford? You are the trusted servant of the family, and surely you know the whole facts?”
“I do,” she answered in a low, tense voice. “They are most remarkable.”
“Then tell me all you know, and in return I will try to explain some matters which are no doubt to you and to Mrs. Tennison a mystery.”
“Well, after tea on the day in question, the seventh of November, Miss Gabrielle went out to go to Addison Road to Mrs. Gill’s dancing class. She was in the best of health and in high spirits because she had that morning received an invitation to go and stay with her cousin Leonora at Newmarket on the following Wednesday. As far as we know she had not a single trouble in the world.”
“She had no admirers – eh?”
“Yes, several. But she had no serious flirtations, as far as we can make out,” replied Mrs. Alford. “Her mother had gone to pay a visit, and when Miss Gabrielle went out she told me that she would be home at nine o’clock. Though we waited till midnight she did not return. We remained up all night, and next morning when I went to Mrs. Gill, in Addison Road, I found that she had left there at half-past six to return home. We then went to Kensington Police Station, and gave her description to the police.”
“What was their theory?” I asked.
“They thought she had left home of her own accord – that she had a lover in secret. At least, the inspector hinted at that suggestion.”
“Of course her mother was frantic,” I remarked. “But had you no suspicion of any person posing as her friend?”
“None. It was not till six days later – about one o’clock in the day, when a constable called and told Mrs. Tennison that a young lady answering the description of her daughter had been found at the roadside, and had been taken to the cottage hospital at Petersfield. We both took the next train from Waterloo, and on arrival at the hospital found the poor girl lying in bed. But so strange was her manner that she was unable to recognize either of us. All she could say were the words ‘Red, green and gold!’ and she shuddered in horror as though the colours terrified her. These words she constantly repeated – ‘red, green and gold!’ – ‘red, green and gold!’”
“What was the doctor’s opinion?”
“He was as much puzzled as we were, sir. Apparently my poor young mistress was found early in the morning lying in the hedge on the main Portsmouth Road. Her clothes were wet, for it had rained during the night. Her boots were very muddy, and her clothes in an awful state. She seemed as if she had wandered about for hours. But all she could say to us were the words: ‘Red, green and gold.’”
“Did not she recognize her mother?” I inquired.
“No, sir. She hasn’t recognized her – even now!”
“Doctors have seen her, I suppose?”
“Oh, yes, half a dozen of them – including Doctor Moroni, the great Italian doctor. He took her to Florence for treatment, but it did her no good – none in the least.”
“How did you know Moroni?” I asked quickly.
“I think he became interested in her through one of the doctors to whom Mrs. Tennison took her.”
“Mrs. Tennison did not know Moroni before this affair?” I inquired.
“No, sir. Not to my knowledge. He’s a very nice gentleman, and has been awfully kind to Miss Gabrielle,” replied Mrs. Alford. “Like all the other doctors he thinks that she has sustained some very severe shock – but of what nature nobody can tell.”
“What other doctor has seen her?” I asked.
“Oh! – well, Sir Charles Wendover, in Cavendish Square, has taken a great interest in her. He has seen her several times, but seems unable to restore her to her normal state of mind.”
Sir Charles was one of our greatest mental specialists, I knew, and if he had been unable to do anything, then her case must be hopeless.
“But Doctor Moroni took her away to Italy,” I said. “For what reason?”
“He took her to Professor Casuto, of Florence – I think that’s the name – but he could do nothing, so she was brought back again.”
“Now tell me frankly, Mrs. Alford,” I said, looking the stout, well-preserved woman full in the face. “Have you ever heard the name of De Gex – a rich gentleman who lives in Stretton Street, just off Park Lane?”
“De Gex!” she repeated, her countenance assuming a blank expression. “Yes, I’ve heard of him. I’ve read of him in the papers. He’s a millionaire, they say.”
“You have never heard of him in connexion with Miss Tennison? Is she acquainted with him?”
“Not to my knowledge. Why do you ask?”
“I have a distinct reason for asking,” was my reply. “Remember that I am seeking to solve the enigma of your young mistress’s present extraordinary state of mind. Any information you can give me will assist me towards that end.”
As I spoke I heard a sweet contralto voice in the adjoining room break out into a song from one of the popular revues. It was Gabrielle’s voice, I knew.
“All the information I possess, sir, is at your disposal,” the woman assured me. “I only wish Mrs. Tennison was here to answer your questions.”
“But you know as much as she does,” I said. “Now tell me – what is your theory? What happened to your young mistress during the time she disappeared?”
Mrs. Alford lifted her hands in dismay.
“What can we think? She went away quite bright and happy. When she was found wandering on the road between London and Portsmouth her memory was a blank. She was haggard, worn, and much aged – aged in those few days of her absence. She could remember nothing, and all she could repeat were those strange words ‘Red, green and gold.’”
“I wonder why those colours were so impressed upon her memory?” I remarked.
“Ah! That is what puzzles the doctors so. Each evening, just as it grows dark, she sits down and is silent for half an hour, with eyes downcast as though thinking deeply. Then she will suddenly start up and cry, ‘Ah! I see – I see – yes – that terrible red, green and gold! Oh! it’s horrible – bewildering – fascinating – red, green and gold!’ The three colours seem to obsess her always at nightfall. That is what Doctor Moroni told me.”
I paused for a few moments.
“You’ve never heard her speak of Mr. De Gex? You’re quite sure?”
“Quite,” was Mrs. Alford’s reply. “My young mistress was studying singing at the Royal Academy of Music. Hark! You hear her now! Has she not a beautiful voice? Ah, sir – it is all a great tragedy! It has broken her mother’s heart. Only to think that to-day the poor girl is without memory, and her brain is entirely unbalanced. ‘Red, green and gold’ is all that seems to matter to her. And whenever she recollects it and the words escape her drawn lips she seems petrified by horror.”
What the woman told me was, I realized, the actual truth. And yet when I recollected that I had seen the dark-eyed victim lying dead in that spacious room in the house of Mr. De Gex in Stretton Street, I became utterly bewildered. I had seen her dead there. I had held a mirror to her half-open lips and it had not become clouded. Yet in my ears there now sounded the sweet tuneful strains of that bird-song from “Joy Bells.”
Truly, the unfortunate girl possessed a glorious voice, which would make a fortune upon the concert platform or the stage.
I did my level best to obtain more information concerning the Italian doctor and the man De Gex, but the woman could tell me absolutely nothing. She was concealing nothing from me – that I knew.
It was only when I mentioned the French banker, Monsieur Suzor, that she started and became visibly perturbed.
“I have no knowledge of the gentleman,” she declared. Yet had I not seen them together in Kensington Gardens?
“I don’t know whether he is known to you as Suzor,” I said. Then I described him as accurately as I could.
But the woman shook her head. For the first time she now lied to me. With my own eyes I had seen the man approach her and the girl, and after they had greeted each other, she had risen and left the girl alone with him.
Curiously enough when the pair were alone together they seemed to understand each other. I recollected it all most vividly.
To say the least it was strange why, being so frank upon other details, she so strenuously denied all knowledge of the affable Frenchman who had been my fellow-traveller from York almost immediately preceding my strange adventures in the heart of London.