Agatha Webb eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 328 pages of information about Agatha Webb.

Agatha Webb eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 328 pages of information about Agatha Webb.

He thought that he might get entrance into the club-houses easily enough.  He possessed a certain amount of insinuation when necessity required, and, if hard-featured, had a good expression which in unprejudiced minds defied criticism.  Of porters and doorkeepers he was not afraid, and these were the men he must first encounter.

At the first club-house he succeeded easily enough in getting word with the man waiting in the large hall, and before many minutes learned that the object of his search was not to be found there that evening.  He also learned his name, which was a great step towards the success of his embassy.  It was Wattles, Captain Wattles, a marked man evidently, even in this exclusive and aristocratic club.

Armed with this new knowledge, be made his way to the second building of the kind and boldly demanded speech with Captain Wattles.  But Captain Wattles had not yet arrived and he went out again this time to look him up at the restaurant.

He was not there.  As Sweetwater was going out two gentlemen came in, one of whom said to the other in passing: 

“Sick, do you say?  I thought Wattles was made of iron.”

“So he was,” returned the other, “before that accident to his arm.  Now the least thing upsets him.  He’s down at Haberstow’s.”

That was all; the door was swung to between them.  Sweetwater had received his clew, but what a clew!  Haberstow’s?  Where was that?

Thinking the bold course the best one, he re-entered the restaurant and approached the gentlemen he had just seen enter.

“I heard you speak the name of Captain Wattles,” said he.  “I am hunting for Captain Wattles.  Can you tell me where he is?”

He soon saw that he had struck the wrong men for information.  They not only refused to answer him, but treated him with open disdain.  Unwilling to lose time, he left them, and having no other resource, hastened to the last place mentioned on his list.

It was now late, too late to enter a private house under ordinary circumstances, but this house was lighted up, and a carriage stood in front of it; so he had the courage to run up the steps and consult the large door-plate visible from the sidewalk.  It read thus: 

HABERSTOW.

Fortune had favoured him better than he expected.

He hesitated a moment, then decided to ring the bell.  But before he had done so, the door opened and an old gentleman appeared seeing a younger man out.  The latter had his arm in a sling, and bore himself with a fierceness that made his appearance somewhat alarming; the other seemed to be in an irate state of mind.

“No apologies!” the former was saying.  “I don’t mind the night air; I’m not so ill as that.  When I’m myself again we’ll have a little more talk.  My compliments to your daughter, sir.  I wish you a very good evening, or rather night.”

The old gentleman bowed, and as he did so Sweetwater caught a glimpse (it was the shortest glimpse in the world) of a sweet face beaming from a doorway far down the hall.  There was pain in it and a yearning anxiety that made it very beautiful; then it vanished, and the old gentleman, uttering some few sarcastic words, closed the door, and Sweetwater found himself alone and in darkness.

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Agatha Webb from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.