The Sleuth of St. James's Square eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 298 pages of information about The Sleuth of St. James's Square.

The Sleuth of St. James's Square eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 298 pages of information about The Sleuth of St. James's Square.

She took a hansom.

With some concern she examined the contents of her purse.  There was a guinea, a half crown and some shillings in it — the dust of the bin.  And her profession, as Hecklemeir had said, was ended.

She leaned over, like a man, resting her arms on the closed doors.

The future looked troublous.  Money was the blood current in the life she knew.  It was the vital element.  It must be got.

And thus far she had been lucky.

Even in this necessity Bramwell Winton had emerged, when she could not think of any one.  He would not have much.  These scientific creatures never accumulated money, but he would have a hundred pounds.  He had no wife or children to scatter the shillings of his income.

True these creatures spent a good deal on the absurd rubbish of their hobbies.  But they got money sometimes, not by thrift but by a sort of chance.  Had not one of them, Sir Isaac Martin, found the lost mines from which the ancient civilization of Syria drew its supply of copper.  And Hector Bartlett, little more than a mummy in the Museum, had gone one fine day into Asia and dug up the gold plates that had roofed a temple of the Sun.

He had been shown in the drawing rooms, on his return, and she had stopped a moment to look him over — he was a sort of mummy.  She was not hoping to find Bramwell Winton one of these elect.  But he was a hive that had not been plundered.

She reflected, sitting bent forward in the hansom, her face determined and unchanging.  She did not undertake to go forward beyond the hundred pounds.  Something would turn up.  She was lucky . . . others had gone to the tower; gone before the firing squad for lesser activities in what Hecklemeir called her profession, but she had floated through . . . carrying what she gleaned to the paymaster.  Was it skill, or was she a child of Fortune?

And like every gambler, like every adventurer in a life of hazard, she determined for the favorite of some immense Fatality.

It was an old house she came to, built in the prehistoric age of London, with thick, heavy walls, one of a row, deadly in its monotony.  The row was only partly tenanted.

She dismissed the hansom and got out.

It was a moment before she found the number.  The houses adjoining on either side were empty, the windows were shuttered.  One might have considered the middle house with the two, for its step was unscrubbed, and it presented unwashed windows.

It was a heavy, deep-walled structure like a monument.  Even the street in the vicinity was empty.  If the biologist had been seeking an undisturbed quarter of London, he had, beyond doubt, found it here.

There was a bridged-over court before the house.  Lady Muriel crossed.  She paused before the door.  There had been a bell pull in the wall, but the brass handle was broken and only the wire remained.

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The Sleuth of St. James's Square from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.