<h4>III——THE JOURNEY'S
END</h4>
</center>
<p>Kirkwood, following the exodus, closed the door with
elaborate care and slowly, deep in thought, returned to the
table.</p>
<p>Dorothy seemed not to have moved, save to place her elbows
on the marble slab, and rest her cheeks between hands that
remained clenched, as they had been in the greatest stress of
her emotion. The color had returned to her face, with a
slightly enhanced depth of hue to the credit of her excitement.
Her cheeks were hot, her eyes starlike beneath the woven, massy
sunlight of her hair. Temporarily unconscious of her
surroundings she stared steadfastly before her, thoughts astray
in the irridescent glamour of the dreams that were to
come....</p>
<p>Brentwick had slipped down in his chair, resting his
silvered head upon its back, and was smiling serenely up at the
low yellow ceiling. Before him on the table his long white
fingers were drumming an inaudible tune. Presently rousing, he
caught Kirkwood's eye and smiled sheepishly, like a child
caught in innocent mischief.</p>
<p>The younger man grinned broadly. "And you were responsible
for all that!" he commented, infinitely amused.</p>
<p>Brentwick nodded, twinkling self-satisfaction. "I contrived
it all," he said; "neat, I call it, too." His old eyes
brightened with reminiscent enjoyment. "Inspiration!" he crowed
softly. "Inspiration, pure and simple. I'd been worrying my
wits for fully five minutes before Wotton settled the matter by
telling me about the captain's hiring of the motor-car. Then,
in a flash, I had it.... I talked with Charles by
telephone,—his name is really Charles, by, the bye,—overcame
his conscientious scruples about playing his fish when they
were already all but landed, and settled the artistic
details."</p>
<p>He chuckled delightedly. "It's the instinct," he declared
emphatically, "the instinct for adventure. I knew it was in me,
latent somewhere, but never till this day did it get the
opportunity to assert itself. A born adventurer—that's what I
am!... You see, it was essential that they should believe we
were frightened and running from them; that way, they would be
sure to run after us. Why, we might have baited a dozen traps
and failed to lure them into my house, after that stout
scoundrel knew you'd had the chance to tell me the whole
yarn... Odd!"</p>
<p>"Weren't you taking chances, you and Charles?" asked
Kirkwood curiously.</p>
<p>"Precious few. There was another motor from Scotland Yard
trailing Captain Stryker's. If they had run past, or turned
aside, they would have been overhauled in short order."</p>
<p>He relapsed into his whimsical reverie; the wistful look
returned to his eyes, replacing the glow of triumph and
pleasure. And he sighed a little regretfully.</p>
<p>"What I don't understand," contended Kirkwood, "is how you
convinced Calendar that he couldn't get revenge by pressing his
charge against Miss Calendar—Dorothy."</p>
<p>"Oh-h?" Mr. Brentwick elevated his fine white eyebrows and
sat up briskly. "My dear boy, that was the most delectable dish
on the entire menu. I have been reserving it, I don't mind
owning, that I might better enjoy the full relish of it.... I
may answer you best, perhaps, by asking you to scan what I
offered to the fat scoundrel's respectful consideration, my
dear sir."</p>
<p>He leveled a forefinger at the card.</p>
<p>At first glance it conveyed nothing to the younger man's
benighted intelligence. He puzzled over it, twisting his brows
out of alignment. An ordinary oblong slip of thin white
cardboard, it was engraved in fine script as follows:</p>
<table border="1"width="39%">
<tr>
<td width="100%">
<p align="left">MR. GEORGE BURGOYNE CALENDAR<br/>
<br/>
81, ASPEN VILLAS, S. W.</p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>"Oh!" exclaimed Kirkwood at length, standing up, his face
bright with understanding. "<i>You</i>—!"</p>
<p>"I," laconically assented the elder man.</p>
<p>Impulsively Kirkwood leaned across the table. "Dorothy," he
said tenderly; and when the girl's happy eyes met his, quietly
drew her attention to the card.</p>
<p>Then he rose hastily, and went over to stand by the window,
staring mistily into the blank face of night beyond its unseen
panes.</p>
<p>Behind him there was a confusion of little noises; the sound
of a chair pushed hurriedly aside, a rustle of skirts, a happy
sob or two, low voices intermingling; sighs.... Out of it
finally came the father's accents.</p>
<p>"There, there, my dear! My dearest dear!" protested the old
gentleman. "Positively I don't deserve a tithe of this. I—"
The young old voice quavered and broke, in a happy laugh....
"You must understand," he continued more soberly, "that no
consideration of any sort is due me. When we married, I was too
old for your mother, child; we both knew it, both believed it
would never matter. But it did. By her wish, I went back to
America; we were to see what separation would do to heal the
wounds dissension had caused. It was a very foolish experiment.
Your mother died before I could return...."</p>
<p>There fell a silence, again broken by the father. "After
that I was in no haste to return. But some years ago, I came to
London to live. I communicated with the old colonel, asking
permission to see you. It was refused in a manner which
precluded the subject being reopened by me: I was informed that
if I persisted in attempting to see you, you would be
disinherited.... He was very angry with me—justly, I admit....
One must grow old before one can see how unforgivably one was
wrong in youth.... So I settled down to a quiet old age,
determined not to disturb you in your happiness....
Ah—Kirkwood!"</p>
<p>The old gentleman was standing, his arm around his
daughter's shoulders, when Kirkwood turned.</p>
<p>"Come here, Philip; I'm explaining to Dorothy, but you
should hear.... The evening I called on you, dear boy, at the
Pless, returning home I received a message from my solicitors,
whom I had instructed to keep an eye on Dorothy's welfare. They
informed me that she had disappeared. Naturally I canceled my
plans to go to Munich, and stayed, employing detectives. One of
the first things they discovered was that Dorothy had run off
with an elderly person calling himself George Burgoyne
Calendar—the name I had discarded when I found that to
acknowledge me would imperil my daughter's fortune.... The
investigations went deeper; Charles—let us continue to call
him—had been to see me only this afternoon, to inform me of
the plot they had discovered. This Hallam woman and her son—it
seems that they were legitimately in the line of inheritance,
Dorothy out of the way. But the woman was—ah—a bad lot.
Somehow she got into communication with this fat rogue and
together they plotted it out. Charles doesn't believe that the
Hallam woman expected to enjoy the Burgoyne estates for very
many days. Her plan was to step in when Dorothy stepped out,
gather up what she could, realize on it, and decamp. That is
why there was so much excitement about the jewels: naturally
the most valuable item on her list, the most easy to convert
into cash.... The man Mulready we do not place; he seems to
have been a shady character the fat rogue picked up somewhere.
The latter's ordinary line of business was diamond smuggling,
though he would condescend to almost anything in order to turn
a dishonest penny....</p>
<p>"That seems to exhaust the subject. But one word more....
Dorothy, I am old enough and have suffered enough to know the
wisdom of seizing one's happiness when one may. My dear, a
little while ago, you did a very brave deed. Under fire you
said a most courageous, womanly, creditable thing. And Philip's
rejoinder was only second in nobility to yours.... I do hope to
goodness that you two blessed youngsters won't let any
addlepated scruples stand between yourselves and—the prize of
Romance, your inalienable inheritance!"</p>
<p>Abruptly Brentwick, who was no longer Brentwick, but the
actual Calendar, released the girl from his embrace and hopped
nimbly toward the door. "Really, I must see about that petrol!"
he cried. "While it's perfectly true that Charles lied about
it's running out, we must be getting on. I'll call you when
we're ready to start."</p>
<p>And the door crashed to behind him....</p>
<p>Between them was the table. Beyond it the girl stood with
head erect, dim tears glimmering on the lashes of those eyes
with which she met Philip's steady gaze so fearlessly.</p>
<p>Singing about them, the silence deepened. Fascinated, though
his heart was faint with longing, Kirkwood faltered on the
threshold of his kingdom.</p>
<p>"Dorothy!... You did mean it, dear?"</p>
<p>She laughed, a little, low, sobbing laugh that had its
source deep in the hidden sanctuary of her heart of a
child.</p>
<p>"I meant it, my dearest.... If you'll have a girl so bold
and forward, who can't wait till she's asked but throws herself
into the arms of the man she loves—Philip, I meant it, every
word!..."</p>
<p>And as he went to her swiftly, round the table, she turned
to meet him, arms uplifted, her scarlet lips a-tremble, the
brown and bewitching lashes drooping over her wondrously
lighted eyes....</p>
<p>After a time Philip Kirkwood laughed aloud.</p>
<p>And there was that quality in the ring of his laughter that
caused the Shade of Care, which had for the past ten minutes
been uneasily luffing and filling in the offing and, on the
whole, steadily diminishing and becoming more pale and wan and
emaciated and indistinct—there was that in the laughter of
Philip Kirkwood, I say, which caused the Shade of Care to utter
a hollow croak of despair as, incontinently, it vanished out of
his life.</p>
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