Carruthers scowled. “No,” he said bluntly. “I am not. He’ll read the news-Argus a long time before he reads anything about that, Jimmie.”
But therein Carruthers was wrong—the news-Argus carried the “story” of Markel’s diamond necklace in three-inch “caps” in red ink on the front page in the next morning’s edition—and Carruthers gloated over it because the morning news-Argus was the only paper in New York that did. Carruthers was to hear more of Markel and Markel’s necklace than he thought, though for the time being the subject dropped between the two men.
It was still early, barely ten o’clock, when Carruthers left the club, and, preferring to walk to the newspaper offices, refused Jimmie Dale’s offer of his limousine. It was but five minutes later when Jimmie Dale, after chatting for a moment or two with those about in the lobby, in turn sought the coat room, where Markel was being assisted into his coat.
“Getting home early, aren’t you, Markel?” remarked Jimmie Dale pleasantly.
“Yes,” said Markel, and ran his fingers fussily, comb fashion, through his whiskers. “Quite a little run out to my place, you know—and with, you know what, I don’t care to be out too late.”
“No, of course,” concurred Jimmie Dale, getting into his own coat.
They walked out of the club together, and Markel climbed importantly into the tonneau of a big gray touring car.
“Ah—home, Peters,” he sniffed at his chauffeur; and then, with a grandiloquent wave of his hand to Jimmie Dale: “’Night, Dale.”
Jimmie Dale smiled with his eyes—which were hidden by the brim of his bat.
“Good-night, Markel,” he replied, and the smile crept curiously to the corners of his mouth as he watched the gray car disappear down the street.
A limousine drew up, and Benson, Jimmie Dale’s chauffeur, opened the door.
“Home, Mr. Dale?” he asked cheerily, touching his cap. “Yes, Benson—home,” said Jimmie Dale absently, and stepped into the car.
It was a luxurious car, as everything that belonged to Jimmie Dale was luxurious—and he leaned back luxuriously on the cushions, extended his legs luxuriously to their full length, plunged his hands into his overcoat pockets—and then a change stole strangely, slowly over Jimmie Dale.
The sensitive fingers of his right hand in the pocket had touched, and now played delicately over a sealed envelope that they had found there, played over it as though indeed by the sense of touch alone they could read the contents—and he drew his body gradually erect.
It was another of those mysterious missives from—her. The texture of the paper was invariably the same—like this one. How had it come there? Collusion with the coat boy at the club? That was hardly probable. Perhaps it had been there before he had entered the club for dinner—he remembered, now, that there had been several people passing, and that he had been jostled slightly in crossing the sidewalk. What, however, did it matter? It was there mysteriously, as scores of others had come to him mysteriously, with never a clew to her identity, to the identity of his—he smiled a little grimly—accomplice in crime.