A glance around showed the Pentyrch to be a dirty old tramp, which was loping along in the teeth of a northerly gale.
"See yonder!" exclaimed the captain, pointing to a little line of land. "That's the last bit of Europe we'll see! To-morrow the weather will be a lot better. Have a look round the ship before dinner. And don't you trouble about that marvellous plot against you. There's nothing at all in it – take it from me! Your friends are all aware of your hallucinations, and they are much pained by them. So just keep quiet – and rest all you can."
While Bowden ascended to the bridge to relieve the first mate, Gerald explored the ship. He came across one or two rough sailors, who either wished him a sullen "Good-day," or stared at him as though he were some new species.
As a matter of fact, Bowden had given it out to the crew that their passenger was an eccentric, but harmless young man, who was labouring under the delusion that an attempt had been made to kill him. Hence the men's curiosity.
Gerald Durrant was unused to the sea, and in his present unstrung condition, he was indeed scarcely responsible for his actions.
But what the captain had told him had astounded him. The description of his mysterious "friend" Morton – a man who was evidently his enemy – certainly did not tally with that of Bernard Boyne.
Yet he could not erase from his mind the suspicion that Boyne had had a hand in that plot by which he had been carried away from London – just at a moment when his presence there was so much needed.
Again, as he stood against the hatchway gazing wistfully at the distant French coast that was fast disappearing, the thought suddenly occurred to him that if his disappearance was actually due to Boyne, then the latter must have, somehow or other, discovered the fact that he was keeping him under observation.
If Boyne had really found it out, then he would also know that Marigold had been assisting him. This would, no doubt, lead him to suspect the real motive of her two stays at Bridge Place.
Bernard Boyne would entrap her – just as he had been entrapped!
In his despair he saw himself powerless, either to warn or to assist the girl he so fondly loved!
CHAPTER XXII
FROM OUT THE PAST
After Boyne, his wife, and Ena Pollen – the trio of death-dealers – received the news of the death of Augusta Morrison, the go-to-meeting insurance agent of Hammersmith had left the flat and gone forth into Upper Brook Street. He had to meet a man in the smoke-room of the Carlton.
Suddenly, as he passed beneath a street lamp on his way towards Park Lane, a well-dressed girl accosted him, exclaiming with a strong French accent:
"Ah! M'sieur Bennett! At last! I have wanted to see you for – oh! for so long – long time!"
Boyne started. The maid, Céline, for it was she, was the very last person in the world that he desired to meet at that moment. All had been successfully conducted concerning Augusta Morrison, but here arose the aftermath of a very ugly affair – the death of old Mr. Martin in Chiswick.
At first he pretended not to recognise the girl who had been paid off by Ena, for he hoped to wriggle out of the precarious situation by bluff.
"No, no, m'sieur," cried the girl. "Surely you recollect me! I am Céline – who was maid to madame – your friend! You remember poor Mr. Martin – who died so suddenly – eh?" she asked.
He tried to extricate himself, but instantly it occurred to him that she was resuming her blackmail, and that if they were to save themselves, she must be paid more money. She knew something concerning old Martin's sudden end. That was plain. Therefore, she would have to be silenced. In every walk of life to-day the blackmailer of both sexes is to be found in one guise or another.
"And are you really Céline?" he laughed, halting beneath the next lamp, for she had joined him and had walked beside him.
"I am. Madame lives in the house you have just left. I saw her in Melun a little time ago. She so kindly called upon me."
As the girl uttered these words a man joined them, a tall, rather cadaverous-looking stranger in black, evidently a Frenchman.
"This is Monsieur Galtier – Henri Galtier," she explained, introducing them.
"Ah! I recollect. Madame told me that you are to be married – eh, Céline? I congratulate you," said Boyne in an affable manner. "Pardon my foolishness, but at first I did not recognise you as my friend."
The latter word was intentionally diplomatic.
"Yes, I thought you would recollect!" said the girl. "Is Madame upstairs? I want so much to see her."
"No," replied Boyne. "She isn't. I've just called, but she's out."
"There are lights in her windows," remarked the man Galtier in very good English.
"Servants, I suppose," said Boyne carelessly. "I myself went to see her upon some business – about some shares upon which she has asked my advice. She's gone away for the week-end, it seems."
"H'm!" grunted the Anglo-Frenchman. "How are we to know that?"
"Well, I tell you so," was Boyne's blunt response.
"Do you know, M'sieur Bennett, that Madame told me that you were dead? That you died of influenza, and here now you are coming from her house!" said the good-looking French girl.
"Yes; she believed that I was dead. I was away on business in Italy, and some fool spread the report that I had died in a hotel in Naples," laughed Boyne, yet inwardly full of concern. "But it was a shock to her when one afternoon I called."
Céline Ténot was not convinced. She had already received thirty thousand francs to keep a still tongue, but as a matter of fact her lover, Galtier, saw that it would be interesting, in more ways than one, to probe the mystery of the death of old Mr. Martin.
The ill-assorted trio walked together as far as Park Lane. At the corner the man Galtier halted, and addressing the girl in French, said:
"We'll go back, Céline, and see if Madame is really absent, as M'sieur Bennett alleges."
"She is away!" exclaimed Boyne angrily. "Haven't I told you so? Don't I want to see her myself?"
The Frenchman laughed in his face.
"No, no, my dear m'sieur! Do not tell any more lies. We saw you go in a long time ago. You dined there, and Madame is there. We both want to see her – on – on some important business!"
Bernard Boyne held his breath. He was cornered. He had successfully put Gerald Durrant out upon the high seas, but here was Céline, with her lover, watching them enter Ena's flat in order to await the news of the death of their latest victim!
"It's surely late to do business with a lady," remarked Boyne, for want of something else to say. In his excitement over the successful conclusion of the Morrison affair, he was now met with a very unexpected and serious contretemps.
Ena believed that she had successfully settled with the girl, but it was evident that Galtier was a blackmailer who intended to bleed them to the utmost.
Indeed, he had not been long in revealing his hand.
"I think, Mr. Bennett – or whatever your real name may be – you had better drop this mask," the Frenchman said, with a sardonic grin. "Let us come down to the same plane. The fact is you're a crook – and so am I, perhaps. Now then! What about it?"
"Let's walk along," the girl suggested in French.
The trio walked together, Bernard Boyne between the pair. They strolled down Park Lane to Hyde Park Corner, but their conversation was mostly in monosyllables.
Boyne was wondering how he could extricate himself from the highly perilous situation. It was evident that this shrewd Frenchman, who had so suddenly risen in the placid firmament of their future, knew something concerning the death of old Martin.
How much did he know? That was the question.
At first Boyne tried to fence with the pair, but soon he saw that it was of no avail. They both laughed at him openly, and it was clear that they had been watching him for several days.