Strictly business: more stories of the four million eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 274 pages of information about Strictly business.

Strictly business: more stories of the four million eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 274 pages of information about Strictly business.

Especially did he shine in the matter of dress.  In this he was the despair of imitators.  Always correct, exquisitely groomed, and possessed of an unlimited wardrobe, he was conceded to be the best-dressed man in New York, and, therefore, in America.  There was not a tailor in Gotham who would not have deemed it a precious boon to have been granted the privilege of making Bellchambers’ clothes without a cent of pay.  As he wore them, they would have been a priceless advertisement.  Trousers were his especial passion.  Here nothing but perfection would he notice.  He would have worn a patch as quickly as he would have overlooked a wrinkle.  He kept a man in his apartments always busy pressing his ample supply.  His friends said that three hours was the limit of time that he would wear these garments without exchanging.

Bellchambers disappeared very suddenly.  For three days his absence brought no alarm to his friends, and then they began to operate the usual methods of inquiry.  All of them failed.  He had left absolutely no trace behind.  Then the search for a motive was instituted, but none was found.  He had no enemies, he had no debts, there was no woman.  There were several thousand dollars in his bank to his credit.  He had never showed any tendency toward mental eccentricity; in fact, he was of a particularly calm and well-balanced temperament.  Every means of tracing the vanished man was made use of, but without avail.  It was one of those cases—­more numerous in late years—­where men seem to have gone out like the flame of a candle, leaving not even a trail of smoke as a witness.

In May, Tom Eyres and Lancelot Gilliam, two of Bellchambers’ old friends, went for a little run on the other side.  While pottering around in Italy and Switzerland, they happened, one day, to hear of a monastery in the Swiss Alps that promised something outside of the ordinary tourist-beguiling attractions.  The monastery was almost inaccessible to the average sightseer, being on an extremely rugged and precipitous spur of the mountains.  The attractions it possessed but did not advertise were, first, an exclusive and divine cordial made by the monks that was said to far surpass benedictine and chartreuse.  Next a huge brass bell so purely and accurately cast that it had not ceased sounding since it was first rung three hundred years ago.  Finally, it was asserted that no Englishman had ever set foot within its walls.  Eyres and Gilliam decided that these three reports called for investigation.

It took them two days with the aid of two guides to reach the monastery of St. Gondrau.  It stood upon a frozen, wind-swept crag with the snow piled about it in treacherous, drifting masses.  They were hospitably received by the brothers whose duty it was to entertain the infrequent guest.  They drank of the precious cordial, finding it rarely potent and reviving.  They listened to the great, ever-echoing bell, and learned that they were pioneer travelers, in those gray stone walls, over the Englishman whose restless feet have trodden nearly every corner of the earth.

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Strictly business: more stories of the four million from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.