Fergus Hume Fullscreen Mystery of the royal coin (1903)

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She heard you were to be here to-day."

Giles wondered why Portia should come to see him, and also why Denham should have committed suicide after receiving a telegram.

Trim could not tell him what the telegram was about, so Giles had to wait until the girl chose to call and enlighten him.

Perhaps she had a message for him from the dead man concerning Anne.

Meanwhile Trim went on to state that Mrs. Morley was leaving Rickwell.

"She has sold all her furniture and has let The Elms," said Trim. "I saw Morris yesterday, and he tells me she is stopping at

'The Merry Dancer' with her children."

"Does she know of her husband's death?" asked Giles.

"Death, sir.

Is Mr. Morley dead?"

"I forgot. You do not know.

Yes, Trim.

He went down in his yacht, The Dark Horse, in the Bay of Biscay."

"Poor woman!" said Trim, looking shocked; "she was so fond of him."

Ware had his own opinion on this point, so made no remark.

He turned over the correspondence that had accumulated during his absence, and found a letter from Mrs. Morley written a day or so previous.

She said therein that she wished to see him particularly, and that she would call as soon as he returned.

She had something most particular to tell him. The word "particular" was underlined.

Giles wondered if she intended to tell him some of Morley's rascalities. But then he remembered that, according to Dane, she knew nothing of the double life which her husband had led.

Anxious to hear what she had to say, he despatched a note by Trim asking her to come to his house, and offering to go to the inn, should she prefer their conversation to take place there.

When Trim departed, Giles proceeded to despatch such business connected with his estates as was necessary.

Hardly had he been an hour engaged in this way when Portia called to see him. She had discarded her rainbow-colored garb, and was clothed in funereal black.

When she entered Giles' study he saw that her eyes were red, and her face swollen with weeping.

He felt extremely sorry for the poor girl, and privately determined to look after her as Denham had requested.

Meantime he did his best to console Portia.

"I am sorry to hear of your father's death," he said sympathetically.

Portia looked at him indignantly.

"Why should you say that?" she demanded; "you were not his friend."

"No.

I certainly was not.

All the same I cannot help regretting that a man with such great gifts should have wasted them in the way he did, and should have put an end to himself."

"There was nothing else for him to do," said the girl mournfully. "He was to be taken to gaol as soon as his leg was better.

The police could not move him immediately, or he would have been put in gaol long ago.

But he's dead now, and I'm glad.

Whatever you may say of him, Mr. Ware, he was my father, and good to me.

Yes, and he was good to Anne also.

She'll tell you so."

"I am sure he was," answered Giles gently. "Your father had his good points, Portia.

How much of his sad history do you know?"

"I know he had his faults," she replied doggedly, "and that he was very badly treated by that beast Morley.

I'm glad Morley is dead."

"How do you know he is?" asked Giles sharply.

"Father got a telegram yesterday from Steel.

Steel promised to let him know if Morley was caught, as father hated him so.

When the telegram came saying that Morley was drowned, father said that he had nothing left to live for, and that he was quite pleased to die.

Then he sent me out of the room and took poison.

I came back in an hour," sobbed Portia, "and found him dead.

He looked so handsome as a corpse."

Giles shivered at this morbid speech, but made no comment thereon. He saw that Portia knew very little, and was determined in her own mind to know no more.

She had elevated her dead father to the rank of a hero, and would not listen to a word against him.