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THE YELLOW CRAYON
By E. Phillips Oppenheim
CHAPTER I
It was late summer-time, and the perfume of flowers stole into the darkened room through the half-opened window. The sunlight forced its way through a chink in the blind, and stretched across the floor in strange zigzag fashion. From without came the pleasant murmur of bees and many lazier insects floating over the gorgeous flower beds, resting for a while on the clematis which had made the piazza a blaze of purple splendour. And inside, in a high-backed chair, there sat a man, his arms folded, his eyes fixed steadily upon vacancy. As he sat then, so had he sat for a whole day and a whole night. The faint sweet chorus of glad living things, which alone broke the deep silence of the house, seemed neither to disturb nor interest him. He sat there like a man turned to stone, his forehead riven by one deep line, his straight firm mouth set close and hard. His servant, the only living being who had approached him, had set food by his side, which now and then he had mechanically taken. Changeless as a sphinx, he had sat there in darkness and in light, whilst sunlight had changed to moonlight, and the songs of the birds had given place to the low murmuring of frogs from a lake below the lawns.
At last it seemed that his unnatural fit had passed away. He stretched out his hand and struck a silver gong which had been left within his reach. Almost immediately a man, pale-faced, with full dark eyes and olive complexion, dressed in the sombre garb of an indoor servant, stood at his elbow.
"Duson."
"Your Grace!"
"Bring wine--Burgundy."
It was before him, served with almost incredible despatch--a small cobwebbed bottle and a glass of quaint shape, on which were beautifully emblazoned a coronet and fleur-de-lis. He drank slowly and deliberately. When he set the glass down it was empty.
"Duson!"
"Your Grace!"
"You will pack my things and your own. We shall leave for New York this evening. Telegraph to the Holland House for rooms."
"For how many days, your Grace?"
"We shall not return here. Pay off all the servants save two of the most trustworthy, who will remain as caretakers."
The man's face was as immovable as his master's.
"And Madame?"
"Madame will not be returning. She will have no further use for her maid. See, however, that her clothes and all her personal belongings remain absolutely undisturbed."
"Has your Grace any further orders?"
"Take pencil and paper. Send this cablegram. Are you ready?"
The man's head moved in respectful assent.
"To Felix, "No 27, Rue de St. Pierre, "Avenue de L'Opera, Paris. "Meet me at Sherry's Restaurant, New York, one month to-day, eleven p.m.--V. S."
"It shall be sent immediately, your Grace. The train for New York leaves at seven-ten. A carriage will be here in one hour and five minutes."
The man moved towards the door. His master looked up.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: The Yellow Crayon by E. Phillips Oppenheim
- 2: Sabin leaned heavily upon his stick
- 3: Therefore Duson held up his hand
- 4: Duson knocked softly at the door
- 5: Sabin sat motionless in his easy chair
- 6: The cabdriver lingered upon the threshold
- 7: Sabin motioned to his coachman
- 8: I am the husband of the Duchess of Souspennier
- 9: Sabin was thoughtful for a moment
- 10: Sabin and his guest were sitting
- 11: Horser did not immediately reply
- 12: Horser swallowed an exceedingly vicious oath
- 13: Sabin smiled upon him contemptuously the maddening
- 14: Then Horser saw the door leading into the bed chamber
- 15: That fellow Horser is annoyed with me
- 16: Candour is so much more original
- 17: We should have become sentimental
- 18: What opportunities can there be if you sail by the Campania
- 19: I believe that Dalkeith pere is hanging round somewhere
- 20: Felix watched him in amazement
- 21: Sabin contemplated it himself thoughtfully
- 22: He followed her out into the lobby
- 23: Catch the midnight train to Boston and embark on the Saxonia
- 24: When they descended he looked up at Duson
- 25: Souspennier naturalised Englishman
- 26: Horser answered contemptuously
- 27: I shall find her surrounded by spies
- 28: Sabin his isolation was a luxury
- 29: Lord Camperdown asked courteously
- 30: Duson was moving noiselessly about the room
- 31: Felix looked at him thoughtfully
- 32: Sabin was for a moment very serious indeed
- 33: He rang the bell for Duson and handed him the note
- 34: Brott glanced towards his twinkling eyes
- 35: Brott gave signs of the man underneath
- 36: Brott lingered over his farewells
- 37: My cigarettes are very tiny and very harmless
- 38: Souspennier was without friends or influence
- 39: The fact of it is that Brott is in deadly earnest
- 40: He enquired for the Countess Radantz
- 41: She looked at him with curving lips
- 42: The pallor had spread to her cheeks
- 43: Your own proposal is a mockery
- 44: Lord Robert Foulkes was a small young man
- 45: Sabin shook his head very slowly
- 46: Sabin when alone called Duson to him
- 47: And the Dorsets are fierce Tories
- 48: I met her first at Vienna when I was thirty five
- 49: The Duchess of Dorset is another
- 50: Brott causes me some uneasiness
- 51: Brott a particularly brilliant host
- 52: Brott felt perhaps that he was on difficult ground
- 53: Sabin had the air of a man gravely surprised
- 54: The Prince of Saxe Leinitzer bowed low towards the speaker
- 55: And the Count de Brouillac does not play
- 56: General Dolinski there fascinates me
- 57: Do not irritate Saxe Leinitzer
- 58: Lucille gathered up her skirts
- 59: Sabin and Lucille exchanged swift glances
- 60: On the part of my good friend Souspennier
- 61: Sabin reflected for a few moments
- 62: Sabin leaned back in his carriage
- 63: Lady Carmarthen is Wolfendon's cousin
- 64: But Carmarthen House saw nothing of Mr
- 65: Sabin was very nearly embarrassed
- 66: And wearing a delightful rose pink dressing gown
- 67: Lady Carey glanced towards her escort and turned away
- 68: Lady Carey laughed unpleasantly
- 69: Lady Carey shrugged her shoulders
- 70: And found the Prince of Saxe Leinitzer
- 71: By remembering that my wife is the Duchesse de Souspennier
- 72: Lucille shall go to Dorset House
- 73: Why cannot I be satisfied with you
- 74: It is because I never cared a rap about you
- 75: But I won't have Souspennier harmed
- 76: That after you Lucille would be dull
- 77: He will send for Letheringham first
- 78: Brott held out his hand across the table
- 79: And towards its close the Prince of Saxe Leinitzer
- 80: A Brott ministry must never be formed
- 81: Is it that you are so ambitious
- 82: But the price must be yourself wholly
- 83: He looked beyond Lucille to Brott
- 84: Brott has a great friend a man named Grahame
- 85: But Lucille resumed her seat in the carriage
- 86: Lucille smiled at him a maddening smile
- 87: Is not where you serve the eightpenny table d'hote
- 88: Annette turned and left the room
- 89: Sabin repeated to himself thoughtfully
- 90: Sabin was thoughtful for a few moments
- 91: Sabin emerged through the swing door
- 92: To day is the triumph of primitivism
- 93: Though Saxe Leinitzer is our enemy
- 94: I think that before now it would have been aimed at Brott
- 95: Lucille shrugged her beautiful shoulders
- 96: It was I who persuaded Dorset to join
- 97: Now that Brott has broken away from her altogether
- 98: Why did not Saxe Leinitzer return
- 99: Lucille smiled gently upon him
- 100: Brott was born to lead a revolution
- 101: They look to me as their mouthpiece
- 102: Whose name was Baron von Opperman
- 103: Sabin sipped his wine thoughtfully
- 104: Brott was talking to her in smothered and eager undertones
- 105: Duson died absolutely of his own free will
- 106: Lucille and Brott were talking together
- 107: Duson was a man of silent and secretive habits
- 108: The case of Duson will be sifted to the dregs
- 109: Sabin moved uneasily in his chair
- 110: Sabin and Reginald Brott came face to face
- 111: The Prince touched Brott on the arm
- 112: And tell Hyson to bring up some liqueurs
- 113: Brott leaned forward with bright eyes
- 114: Lucille had a copy of the morning paper in her hand
- 115: You are forbidden to join your husband
- 116: Sabin returned and found Duson there dead
- 117: You went secretly to Emil Sachs
- 118: Glanced carelessly enough across at the Duchess
- 119: The Prince of Saxe Leinitzer's carriage is urgently required
- 120: She is really in danger from this Duson affair
- 121: Sabin knocked the ash from his cigarette
- 122: If Passmore had been capable of reverence
- 123: Passmore shrugged his shoulders
- 124: Passmore looked his disappointment
- 125: Lucille has accepted the inevitable
- 126: The same poison which it will be proved that Duson died of
- 127: Brott is a strong man and a determined man
- 128: And nodding at Brott as she passed
- 129: The Prince led Brott into another room
- 130: Brott stepped backwards as though he were shot
- 131: Inside Lucille was pale with fury
- 132: Brott was still awaiting for him
- 133: Brott stopped short upon the pavement
- 134: Lucille looked at her steadily
- 135: Reginald Brott has been shot in Piccadilly
- 136: Break news to Lucille if you think well
- 137: She looked at Lucille in astonishment
- 138: Lucille looked across at him in amazement
- 139: Send for your chief of the police
- 140: Lucille had a sudden inspiration
- 141: Sabin gently raised his eyebrows
- 142: Lucille also leaned towards him
- 143: Sabin made no secret of his departure
- 144: The Order of the Yellow Crayon
- 145: It is the Prince of Saxe Leinitzer
- 146: His Highness the Prince of Saxe Leinitzer has called
- 147: The Prince of Saxe Leinitzer has ignored my summons
