“Bernard Winterfield, Esqre.”) are in my possession.
The Christian name sufficiently identifies the inscription with the Winterfield whom I know.
The circumstances under which the discovery was made were related to me by the proprietor of the asylum.
When the boy was brought to the house, two French ladies (his mother and sister) accompanied him and mentioned what had been their own domestic experience of the case.
They described the wandering propensities which took the lad away from home, and the odd concealment of his waistcoat, on the last occasion when he had returned from one of his vagrant outbreaks.
On his first night at the asylum, he became excited by finding himself in a strange place. It was necessary to give him a composing draught.
On going to bed, he was purposely not prevented from hiding his waistcoat under the pillow, as usual.
When the sedative had produced its effect, the attendant easily possessed himself of the hidden garment.
It was the plain duty of the master of the house to make sure that nothing likely to be turned to evil uses was concealed by a patient.
The seal which had secured the envelope was found, on examination, to have been broken.
“I would not have broken the seal myself,” our host added. “But, as things were, I thought it my duty to look at the inclosures.
They refer to private affairs of Mr. Winterfield, in which he is deeply interested, and they ought to have been long since placed in his possession.
I need hardly say that I consider myself bound to preserve the strictest silence as to what I have read.
An envelope, containing some blank sheets of paper, was put back in the boy’s waistcoat, so that he might feel it in its place under the lining, when he woke.
The original envelope and inclosures (with a statement of circumstances signed by my assistant and myself) have been secured under another cover, sealed with my own seal.
I have done my best to discover Mr. Bernard Winterfield.
He appears not to live in London.
At least I failed to find his name in the Directory.
I wrote next, mentioning what had happened, to the English gentleman to whom I send reports of the lad’s health.
He couldn’t help me.
A second letter to the French ladies only produced the same result.
I own I should be glad to get rid of my responsibility on honorable terms.”
All this was said in the boy’s presence. He lay listening to it as if it had been a story told of some one else.
I could not resist the useless desire to question him.
Not speaking French myself (although I can read the language), I asked Doctor Wybrow and his friend to interpret for me.
My questions led to nothing.
The French boy knew no more about the stolen envelope than I did.
There was no discoverable motive, mind, for suspecting him of imposing on us.
When I said,
“Perhaps you stole it?” he answered quite composedly,
“Very likely; they tell me I have been mad; I don’t remember it myself; but mad people do strange things.”
I tried him again.
“Or, perhaps, you took it away out of mischief?”
“Yes.”
“And you broke the seal, and looked at the papers?”
“I dare say.”
“And then you kept them hidden, thinking they might be of some use to you? Or perhaps feeling ashamed of what you had done, and meaning to restore them if you got the opportunity?”
“You know best, sir.”
The same result followed when we tried to find out where he had been, and what people had taken care of him, during his last vagrant escape from home.
It was a new revelation to him that he had been anywhere.
With evident interest, he applied to us to tell him where he had wandered to, and what people he had seen!
So our last attempts at enlightenment ended.
We came to the final question of how to place the papers, with the least possible loss of time, in Mr. Winterfield’s hands.
His absence in Paris having been mentioned, I stated plainly my own position toward him at the present time.
“Mr. Winterfield has made an appointment with me to call at his hotel, on his return to London,” I said.
“I shall probably be the first friend who sees him.
If you will trust me with your sealed packet, in consideration of these circumstances, I will give you a formal receipt for it in Doctor Wybrow’s presence—and I will add any written pledge that you may require on my part, acting as Mr. Winterfield’s representative and friend.
Perhaps you would like a reference as well?”
He made a courteous reply.
“A friend of Dr. Wybrow’s,” he said, “requires no other reference.”