The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne : a Novel eBook

William John Locke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 321 pages of information about The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne .

The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne : a Novel eBook

William John Locke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 321 pages of information about The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne .

He handed me the printed form which he had filled in.  In spite of my misery I almost laughed at the fatuity of the man in thinking that those mere unimaginative statistics applicable to five hundred thousand young females in London, could in any way express Carlotta.

“This is all very well,” said I; “but the first thing to do is to lay that Turkish devil by the heels.”

“You can count on our making the most prompt and thorough investigation,” said he.

“And in the mean time what can I do?”

“Your best course, Sir Marcus,” he answered, “is to go home and leave things in our hands.  As soon as ever we have the slightest clue, we shall communicate with you.”

He bowed me out politely.  In a few moments I found myself in the greyness of the autumn afternoon wandering on the Thames Embankment like a lost soul on the banks of Phlegethon.  It seemed as if I had never seen the sun, should never see the sun again.  I was drifting sans purpose into eternity.

I passed by some railings.  A colossal figure looming through the misty air struck me with a sense of familiarity.  It was the statue of Sir Bartle Frere, and these were the gardens beneath the terrace of the National Liberal Club.  It was here that I had first met her.  The dripping trees seemed to hold the echo of the words spoken when their leaves were green:  “Will you please to tell me what I shall do?” I strained my eyes to see the bench on which I had sat, and my eyes tricked me into translating a blurr at the end of the seat into the ghostly form of Carlotta.  My misery overwhelmed me; and through my misery shot a swift pang of remorse at having treated her harshly on that sweet and memorable afternoon in May.

I turned the corner at Whitehall Place and looked down the desolate gardens.  The benches were empty, the trees were bare, “and no birds sang.”  I crossed the road.

The Hotel Metropole.  The great doors stood invitingly open, and from the pavement one could see the warmth and colour of the vestibule.  Here was staying the ArchDevil who had robbed me of my life.  I stood for a moment under the portico shaking with rage.  I must have lost consciousness for a few seconds for I do not remember entering or mounting the stairs.  I found myself at the bureau asking for Hamdi Effendi.  No, he had not left.  They thought he was in the hotel.  A page despatched in search of him departed with my card, bawling a number.  I hate these big caravanserais where one is a mere number, as in a gaol.  “Would to heaven it were a gaol,” I muttered to myself, “and this were the number of Hamdi Effendi!”

A lean man rose from a chair and, holding out his hand, effusively saluted me by name.  I stared at him.  He recalled our acquaintance at Etretat.  I fished him up from the deeps of a previous incarnation and vaguely remembered him as a young American floral decorator who used to preach to me the eternal doctrine of hustle.  I shook hands with him and hoped that he was well.

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Project Gutenberg
The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne : a Novel from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.