Bruna Walden. Bellefonte, Pa., March 23, 1928. = THE HILL STREET MURDER. Through the silence outside of the brief hour before dawn, and the si- lence of the sleeping household, Greg- ory Dent sat at his desk and wrote. He wrote fiercely, with a spluttering pen, like a man who has burning mat- ter in his brain of which he must rid himself. In his travel-stained clothes —he had motored ‘without a stop from a northern town—he seemed a little out of place in a study which lacked no possible touch of elegance. It was the study of a wealthy man, and a man of taste. The two simple bronzes which were the sole adorn- ments of his writing table were per- fect in outline and workmanship; the pen with which he wrote was of beat- en gold—a gift from an Indian nabob; the blotter was bound in silver scroll- work which had once decorated the treasare box of a Burmese temple. Grimly and forcefully the pen wrote out its devastating message. The man in whose strong blunt fingers it was gripped never hesitated for a word, never paused to reread what he had written. It was the ruin of a once powerful and proud commerical undertaking which he was pronounc- ing, but ruin which, on the hard facts, was fully deserved. He pursued his task without falter- ing until its completion. Then, for a brief space of time, he leaned back in his chair with an air of relief. Presently he arose, opened a cup- board of lacquer work, brought out whisky and a siphon, helped himself to a drink, took up the pen once more, and signed the sheets he had written. Afterwards he turned over the pages of the telephone directory, found the number he wanted, and raised the re- ceiver from its stand. “Number 890 Mayfair,” he demand- ed .... “Sir Gregory Dent speaking from Number 17-A Hill Street. Is that Miss Fisher’s All Night Type- writing Agency? ... Good. Could you send me a stenographer round at once to Hill Street. She must bring a machine and do half an hour's typ- ing on the premises. And wait a mo- ment—she can take a taxi and keep it waiting, but stop at the corner of the street as I don’t want to wake my people . . . Right, then I'll expect her in a quarter of an hour.” He set down the receiver and for the first time read through what he had written. Apparently it met with his approval, for he made no change in any of the sheets. He lighted a cigaret and leaned back once more in his comfortably padded chair. Out- side, the silence of the passing night was still unbroken. He rose again to his feet, walked quietly to the door, opened it, and stood for a moment in the hall. He was a large man, clumsily but pow- erfully built, with harsh features, re- deemed to some extent by the softer curves of his mouth. As he listened the faintest of smiles softened some of the hard lines. - On the floor above Angela would be sleepping. Present- ly, when this self-imposed task was brought to a conclusion, he would steal up the stairs and listen from his dressing-room. If by any chance she were awake . . He returned to his seat, and pres- ently the sound for which he waited arrived—the sound of footsteps upon the pavement. He left his place and himself opencd the front door. A plainly dressed young woman, in a long dark coat and dark turban hat stood there. With a little gesture im- posing silence he ushered her into the study and led her to the table. “There are seven pages of very important reports,” he explained. “I want them typed with two copies. Af- terwards each copy is to be put into an envelope; the first addressed to Lord Eustace Martinhoe, chairman of the Dent Financial Trust, 82-B, Bish- opgate, E. C. 2; the second to Sir Walter Cranley, Baronet, 14-A, Scud- damore Gardens, S. W. 1; and the third to Jacob Houlder, Esquire, Sec- retary to the Dent Financial Trust, also to 32-B Bishopgate. Have you those addresses all right?” “Thank you, yes.” He drew several Treasury notes from his pocket and laid them on the table. “I don’t know exactly what your charges are,” he continued, “but work at this time of the night is worth paying well for. I am going to try to keep awake long enough to see you out, but I am very tired; if I should drop off to sleep, put the let- ters into the envelopes and deliver them for me. The meeting to which they refer is not held until three o’clock tomorrow afternoon, but I want them to be received several hours beforehand. Can you be sure of delivering them for me by ten o’clock 7” “Yes, I can do that.” “Good. Then, if by any chance I am asleep when you have finished, don’t wake me to sign them. Just put ‘Gregory Dent and sign them per pro, in your own name as typist . . . Loosen your coat if you find the room warm. You had better put your type- writer upon this table. Allow me.” “Thank you, I can mange.” With quick and deft fingers, she slipped the machine from its case and laid a little roll of paper by its side. She unfastened her coat, but kept it on, and stretched out her hand for the copy which he offered her. She read the first sheet quickly; at the second she paused. Very deliberately she looked around. ‘Gregory Dent had gone back to the cabinet and was searching for another siphon of soda-water. Her eyes rest- ed upon him for a moment. At the sound of a movement from him, she recovered herself with an effort. By the time he had found the siphon and turned around. She was reading page three with apparent absorption. When she had come to the end of the manu- script he noticed her pallor and the fact that her fingers were trembling. “You look too delicate for this night-work,” he said, not unkindly. “I’m afraid I have nothing to offer you, except whisky and soda. I've just motored up from the country, and if I wake the servants I shall dis- turb my wife.” “There is no necessity, thank you,” she assured him. “I am not in need of anything. The room was a little warm after the street. I am quite all right.” “Used to this work?” he asked, looking at her keenly. “I have been in my father’s office for a year,” she confided—*“ever since I realized that it might some time be necessary for me to earn my own liv- ing. I have been at Miss Fisher’s for a few months.” “What made you come to London?” he asked. She shrugged her shoulders. “I wanted to get away from home be- fore the crash came. Couldn’t help, and it worried me to see my father getting thinner and thinner from anx- iety.” Te nodded. “A business that is go- ing the wrong way is a cruel thing,” he observed. “Certain you can read this copy?” “Easily.” He moved to the door to be sure that it was closed, and dragged a heavy screen in front of it in order to deaden the sound still more effec- tually. Presently the clicking of the machine commenced. Rapidly, ex- pertly the typist proceeded with her task. Gregory Dent, his labors over, sank into an easy chair and closed his eyes. There would be trouble tomorrow— trouble and plenty of it—not of his making, though. Besides, there would be the plaudits of all those whose money he had contrived to save. A happy day, on the whole, he decided. His great task accomplished, he would rest. It had been a long winter, and it was time he had a holiday. Would Angela care for Monte Carlo? he wondered. An excellent idea, anyhow. Angela loved te gamble. Well, she should gamble to her heart’s content. Or would she prefer Cannes. with its sunny skies and gaily crowded prom- enade? He suddenly pictured her up- on the Croisette, strolling arm in arm with him. Yes, it must be Cannes, he thought drowsily. . . . Presently he dozed for a few min- utes. The click of typewriter ceased. He opened his eyes with a queer sense of disquietude and looked into the face of death. Benskin, hardened though he was to the sight of tragedy, gave a little shiver of horror as he leaned down to make his examination of the man, who, an hour before, had been so full of life. “Death,” the doctor pointed out in a hushed whisper, “must have been almost instantaneous. "You see, he was shot apparently at close range by a bullet which went straight through the heart. I doubt whether he had time even to realize what had happened.” Benskin glanced round the room. The sergeant, a policeman, and an awed and trembling butler in the background were its sole remaining occupants. “Is the body exactly as you found it?” he asked the sergeant. ““The doctor was the first one to touch it, sir,” the sergeant assured him, “Any weapon?” “Not a sign of one.” “Anyone here before you?” “Only the maid who found the body and the butler. Neither of them came farther into the room than the cor- ner of the screen. The butler tele- phoned at once from the hall, lock- ing up the room. He handed me the key upon my arrival.” “Then he was probably shot from the corner of the screen,” Benskin re- flected, examining a slight cut in the dead man’s head and a smear of blood upon the leg of an overturned chair. “You are sure that nothing else has been touched, sergeant?” “Certain, sir” was the firm reply. “According to the doctors, Sir Greg- ory must have been dead for a couple of hours at least, but no one seems to have heard the shot, or to have had any idea that anything happened. A maid came into the room as usual at about seven o’clock. She rushed away screaming and fetched the but- ler. It seems that Sir Gregory, wno had been up in Manchester on busi- ness, was not expected home last night. He must have arrived some time after the household had gone to bed and let himself in with his latch- key.” “Do you know of whom the house- hold consists?” “Only Lady Dent, so far as I can find out. There are no children and ro one staying in the house.” “Has Lady Dent been told yet?” “Not to my knowledge.” The doctor moved towards the door. “I shall have to prepare my report,” he said. “The body will have to be removed to the mortuary, too, as soon as you have finished your examination. There is nothing more I can do.” He took his leave, and Benskin turned towards the sergeant. “Is there anyone else who sleeps in the front of the house?” he asked. “Lady Dent’s maid. She has been used to sleeping in the dressing-room apparently when Sir Gregory has been away.” “Go and fetch her.” The sergeant obeyed, and presently ushered in a pale-faced, petite Franchwoman, with fluffy hair and deep-set eyes. Benskin handed her a chair. “You are Lady Dent's maid, I un- derstand,” he said. “Tell me your name.” “Celeste Vignolle, Mecnsieur,” she replied, with a little break in her voice. “I have been her Ladyship’s maid for two years. Oh, but what a tragedy!” “Has anyone told her Ladyship what has happened?” “Mon Dieu, no!” the girl exclaimed, wringing her hands. “Who would dare?” “As the doctor has gone, I am afraid I must,” Benskin decided. “There is a dressing-room, I under- stand, adjoining her Ladyship’s bed- room?” “Certainly, sir. I sleep there when Sir Gregory is away.” “You slept there last night?” “Yes. sir. Sir Gregory was not expected home.” “You heard nothing?” “Nothing, Monsieur.” “No shot, or the opening or clos- ing of doors?” “Nothing at all, sir. I was out myself till midnight. Her Ladyship had given me permission.” “Was her Ladyship out too?” “No, sir. I put her to bed before I went out at ten o’clock.” “When you came back did you en- ter by the front door?” “Yes, sir. Her Ladyship lent me her latch-key.” : “Was there any light in the study then?” “No, sir.” Benskin reflected for a moment. “Take me up-stairs,” he directed. “Tell her Ladyship that someone is waiting to speak to her and ask her to see me for a moment in the dress- ing-room. And Mademoiselle, I wish to be the first one to tell her of what has happened. You understand. You do not mention the police.” The girl shuddered. “Is it I who would wish to speak of these things?” she cried. “Her Ladyship will be broken-hearted.” She hurried away, and Benskin fol- Jowed her up-stairs. From the dress- ing-room into which she ushered him, he listened. She was apparently obeying orders, for scarcely a sen- tence was spoken. It was all the more of a shock to Benskin, therefore, when Lady Dent appeared. She was young—she seemed little more, in- deed, than a child—with beautiful deep-set eyes and fragile complexion. She had the air, however, of one al- ready in the throes of mortal terror. She was shivering in every limb and ghastly pale. “What has hapepned?” she cried. “Who are you and what do you want ?” “How do you know that anything has happened Lady Dent?” “How dc I know—" She stopped herself suddenly. “What do you do here? Who are you? What is all this mystery?” “What time did you go to bed last night, Lady Dent?” Benskin inquired. “At ten o’clock,” she replied. “I had a headache.” “Did you hear any sounds in the night 7” “None.” “Did you expect your husband to come home?” “Of course not. He is coming this afternoon, in time for a meeting at three o'clock. Tell me who you are and what you want.” “My name is Benskin, and I am very sorry to bring you bad news,” was the sympathetic rejoinder. “Your husband returned last night and met with an accident. He appears to have been shot.” “A serious one, I fear.” “You mean—" “I mean that he is dead.” The woman threw up her arms, gazed at him for a moment with dis- tended eyes, and sank sobbing upon the bed. In a moment, however, she was on her feet again. “But this is horrible!” she cried “Do you mean that he shot himself 2” “Either that,” Benskin replied, “or he was murdered.” She held on to the foot of the bed. “Murdered! But who could have murdered him?” “That is what I want to find out, and so, I am sure, do you,” Benskin said. “Will you permit me, Lady Dent, to glance into your room?” She sank upon the bed, waving him away. He rang the bell for her maid and passed into the bedroom beyond. At the room itself, with its apple- green decorations, its French bed- stead, its charming furniture he scarcely glanced. He stood for a mo- ment at the window, drew aside the chintz curtains and looked down into the street. He was in the room for less than a minute altogether. Then he made his way down-stairs back in- to the jealously guarded study. Benskin locked the door on the in- side and commenced his search. First of all, he stood for several minutes at the writing table, examining the traces of its recent use. He removed the sheet of blotting-paper and placed it in his pocket, held the ink-pad up to the light, moved back to the dead man’s side, and, turning his right hand over gently, found a smudge of ink upon the forefinger. The tumbler, with its dregs of whisky and soda, was still there and a half-burnt cigaret. The telephone book stood open, and Benskin made a note of the page. Then he went through the drawers and took poses- sion of some loose pages of manu- script he found there, which he ex- amined through a pocket microscope. Afterwards he searched the room meticulously, but in vain, for any trace of the missing weapon. Finally he rang for the butler. “I understand that Sir Gregory was not expected home last night?” he asked. “He certainly was not, sir,” the man replied. “I should have received orders to have waited up, or to have left some things out for him.” “And no one in the house has any idea as to what hour he arrived?” “No one, sir. The servants’ quar- ters lie rather far back, and we shouldn’t hear anything that took place in the front of the house, or in the street.” Benskin nodded. “The room had better be kept locked up for another hour,” he ordered. “The sergeant will stay with you in case anything is wanted, and the doctor will be here again later on. If Lady Dent has any close friends or relatives in the vi- cinity they had better be sent for.” “Very good, sir.” He departed, and Benskin beckoned to the sergeant who had been waiting in the hall. “It appears that you were quite right and that Sir Gregory was not expected home last night,” he con- fided. “He arrived unexpectedly, ob- viously for some special reason. He wrote letters imemdiately on his ar- rival, and telephoned. Disconnect the other telephone, sergeant, and answer every inquiry yourself from here un- til I see you again. All messages that come through to the house to. be censored, You understand?” “Quite well, sir,” the sergeant as- sured him. re Benskin gave one last pitying glance at the crumpled figure upon the floor. Then he started out in search of the murderer, The young woman who was pres- ently shown into the waiting room eof Miss Fisher’s Typewriting Agency, in response to Benskin’s inquiry some ten days later, impressed him from the first with her good looks, her composure and complete self-control. “You wish to see me?” she asked. “l am Miss Horton.” “I wished to see you,” he admitted, handing her a card. “Forgive me for not sending in my name.” She glanced at it and looked across at him with no sign of alarm. “A de- tective,” she observed. “What do you want with me?” “I have come to you on somewhat serious business,” he replied, “and 1 should tell you at once that although I should advise you to be frank with me, if you have nothing to conceal. vou are not obliged to answer my questions.” “There is no reason why I should rot.” “Then why didn’t you come forward at the inquest on Sir Gregory Dent and give your evidence?” “Why should I? I wasn’t summoned. I could tell the police nothing. Sir Gregory was quite all right when I : saw him last.” “Nevertheless you seem to have been the last person who saw him alive,” Benskin reminded her. “I am quite sure that you have intelligence enough to know that that makes your evidence important.” She made no reply beyond the merest shrug of the shoulders. “Any other questions?” “You typed three letters for Sir Gregory Dent that night, the delivery of which would practically have de- stroyed the chance of your father’s firm being included in the Dent cot- ton amalgamation scheme,” Benskin continued. “Not one of those com- munications reached its destination.” This time her composure was dis- turbed. How can you possibly know what I typed?” she exclaimed, with a little start. “I will set you a good example,” he declared “by answering your ques- tion. I know because I found the original copy, which Sir Gregory had | written with his own hand, in one of the drawers of the writing-table. I knew he had probably written it that night because his fingers were badly smudged with ink; there was a telephone book open upon his desk, from which I discovered quite easily that he had telephoned for a stenog- rapher to this office and that you had answered the summons. There were other signs of a typewriter hav- ing been used. I discovered that those communications had never been de- livered at their destinations, by in- quiry in the usual course. was that your father’s firm—which, if Sir Gregory Dent was not misin- formed during his visit north, is in a precarious financial condition—w as included in the amalgamation and re- lieved of its responsibilities.” “You are quite clever,” she admit- ted. “Any more questions?” Benskin reflected for a moment. “Who let you in when you arrived at the house, and what time was it?” “About half past three. Sir Greg- ory let me in himself. There seemed to be no one else up.” “You saw no one else all the time you were in the house?” “Not a soul. If I had, I might have thought of coming and giving evi- dence. As it is, nothing 1 could say would have been of any use.” Benskin looked at her steadily. “I wonder,” he suggested, “if it had oc- curred to you that without Sir Greg- ory’s death it would have been use- | less for you to have suppressed the In other | delivery of those letters? words, Sir Gregory Dent’s presence : at the meeting the next afternoon ! would have meant your father’s ruin.” | “I am not so sure,” she replied, | after a moment’s hesitation. “Sir Gregory was very unfair in his stric- tures, and the other directors might | have taken a different view. Of | course,” she went on, “I can see what ! you're aiming at. You are suggesting | that I murdered Sir Gregory Dent.” | “You were, at any rate, the last | person known to have been with him,” | Benskin reminded ker, “and further- more you had a motive.” “On the other hand,” she objected, “how can you believe it possible that I went there with any such idea in my head? He rang up the typewrit- ing office quite unexpectedly. I nev- er heard of him before. I answered the call because I happened to be the girl on duty.” “A good point,” Benskin admitted. “Besides,” she added, “I never fired a pistol in my life. I shouldn’t know what to do with one if I had it.” “Then what was this one doing in your room?” Benskin asked, produc- ing a weapon suddenly from his pock- et. She stared at it transfixed. “In my room?” she repeated. “I never saw it befove.” “Really!” he murmured. “Yet it was found in your apartment at Cran- ford Court, carefully wrapped up in brown paper and hidden in the bot- tom of one of your drawers. With it was this pocketbook, which, as you will see, contains a very considerable sum in bank-notes. I have ascer- tained that the pocketbook was the property of Sir Gregory Dent.” “I never saw either the pistol or the pocketbook before,” she insisted. He replaced them in his pocket, “What were you doing at a typewrit- ing agency in London?” he asked. “Your father was in a very large way of business. There could have been no necessity for you to earn your own living.” “Perhaps there wasn’t,” she admit- ted, “but my father had taken us all into his confidence. We knew that the crash was likely to come. I pre- ferred to be independent when it ar- rived.” He nodded. “A reasonable explana- tion,” he admitted. “Now Miss Hor- ton,” he went on, “I am going to speak to you very seriously. I repeat that you were the last person known to have seen Sir Gregory Dent alive. You had a sufficient motive for the The result ; lit carefully in his pocket. ' crime, apart from the theft of the | pocketbook. Sir Gregory was killed | ed i by a bullet from a weapon of some- | what peculiar guage. This weapon, | which was found concealed in your | room, is of the same guage. “No—don’t speak for a moment, i please. You must understand, as a i young woman of common sense, that ; the situation is extremely serious. I i should be perfectly justified in arrest- ‘ing you at this moment. Is there any- ‘thing you can_tell me, as the repre- i sentative of the police, which woud ! assist us in tracing the murderer of Sir Gregory? Think over that ques- i tion, please. I shall ask you no oth- er.” | “Nothing,” she answered stubborn- ily. | “Then I can only wish you good { morning.” { “You aren’t going to arrest me then 7” “There is no charge against you at present. Stop! There is one more question I am going to ask. When i you left the house, the taxicab, I un- ! derstand, was waiting for you at the corner of the street. You closed the : door softly?” © “As softly as I could,” she an- swered. “It made a certain amount of noise,” i “Did you hesitate at all upon pavement, or look back towards house 7” She looked at him curiously. wonder why you ask me that,” she !said. “As a matter of fact, I was trying to get away quietly and I dropped my typewriter. I had to ‘stop and pick it up, and I did look | back at the house to see if I had dis- 'turbed anyone.” i Benskin’s smile of satisfaction was | cryptic. i “One last word, Miss Horton,” he concluded. “Don’t attempt to leave ! your apartments or change your mode iof living. You will be under sur- veillance for the present. Good morn- ing.” Benskin had his first conference with the sub-commissioner that af- ,ternoon. When he had concluded his report, the latter looked across the desk at him in surprise. i “But my dear Benskin,” he protest- ed, “surely on that evidence you ‘ought to apply for a warrant against the young woman.” ! “I can get it at any moment,” Ben- skin pointed out, “and she is, of | course, under police surveillance. At i the same time,” he went on earnestly, | “forgive me, Major Houlden, if I am even a little overanxious not to put ia person on trial for her life until I iam perfectly convinced in my own , mind of her guilt. She probably did i kill Sir Gregory, and if so she will | have to answer for it. She can’t es- jcape. 1 promise you that—but I once made what I always felt was a moral mistake. I don’t want to do that again. I want to be sure.” The sub-commissioner was not al- together sympathetic. : “I don’t blame you for being care- ful, Benskin,” he admitted, “but you can’t bring the kid-glove business in- i to a case of this sort. If there is any i other person in the world against the the “1 i whom you can collect as much evi- . dence. as you have against this wom- an, bring him in. A day or two long- er won't hurt us. However in the | language of the Scots—‘I hae me ‘ doots.* ” ' “And I my fears,” Benskin ac- i knowledged. Benskin, waiting in the lounge of | a popular Dansant Restaurant, drew frora his pocket the dossier for which he had applied a few mornings be- fore, and read it through carefully. “HERMYANAS. Of Greek par- entage, born in the Argentine. Age, probably thirty-two. Pro- fessional dancer in Nice and Monte Carlo. Understood to i have left the Riviera on account of money trouble. First engaged at Marabout’s Cabaret Club for six months; afterwards opened small but fashionable night club called Lamb’s Cabaret. Under- stood to be the sole proprietor. Financial reputation now excel- lent. Understood to have woman backer. Nothing against him in this country. Reputation on Ri- viera indifferent.” He folded up the report and placed Almost as he did so the young woman for whom he was waiting entered. In her very smart clothes and from her generally chic appearance, few people would have taken Celeste for a lady’s-maid. “Medemoiselle,” Benskin murmured, rising to his feet and confronting her. She looked at him pleasantly, but with no sign of recognition. “We met,” he reminded her, “un- der somewhat unhappy circumstanc- es. ~ All the gaiety seemed to fade from her face. “You are the detective!” she exclaimed. “There is not the slightest need to be frightened of me,” he reassured her. “I am not really very formidable. Are you alone? Might I have a few minutes with you?” He spoke in French, and the sound of her own language seemed to soothe er, “I am alone,” she admitted, “but— you will not speak of that—I cannot bear it.” “I have ordered some tea,” he said as he drew his chair confidentially towards her. “Mademoiselle,” he con- tinued, “it is not my wish to disturb you, yet I have a word or two to say about that night.” “But why should you speak of it again?” “You forget,” he reminded her, “that it has become my business to trace the murderer of Sir Gregory Dent.” “But how can I help? Why do you speak to me about it?” He looked at her for a moment as though measuring her powers of re- sistance. She had, he decided, more nerve than he had at first given her credit for. “Mademoiselle,” he said, “fortun- ately you were not called at the in- quest, so you have no statement upon oath, but your account of that night’s proceedings was not true, and I am going to give you an opportunity of correcting it.” “What do you mean?” she demand- “You told me that you went out on the night of Sir Gregory Dent’s death and returned about midnight.” “Well 7” “It was not you who went out. It was her Ladyship.” Celeste was silent. “A serious affair like this,” he ex- plained gravely, “requires very care- ful investigation, and you know in the long run everything becomes known. Lady Dent, it appears, is passionate- ly fond of dancing, and Sir Gregory, naturally, objected to her visiting night clubs and those places. When- ever there was an opportunity you changed identities. You are reason- ably alike, and you wear the same clothes. This arrangement enabled Lady Dent to spend many evenings: away from home, when even the ser- vants believed that it was you who was out so late. On that particular night you remained in the dressing- room, and it was you who went to bed at ten ’oclock. Her Ladyship went out. Where? At what time did she return?” “I can tell you nothing, Monsieur,” Celeste declared, and now there was dawning terror in her face. “You must understand,” he went on: gently, “that in the end I shall dis- cover everything. You do no good by keeping silent. You only force me to remember that you have made a: false statement to the police, which is: niore or less a criminal offense. Con- sider, Mademoiselle. You have no one to harm. You have yourself to: save.” She toyed nervously with her hand- kerchief. The music of the jazz band seemed to be filling the air with mock- ery. “Where did her Ladyship go, and what time did she return?” Benskin asked again. “Remember you can do her Ladyship no good by refusing to answer. You can do yourself a great deal of harm.” “She went to the Lamb’s Cabaret. Club,” Celeste confided slowly. “She: returned about two o’clock.” “The Lamb’s Cabaret Club,” Ben- skin repeated, “run, I believe, by a man named Hermyanas whose private address is in Cranford Court.” “Perhaps,” she admitted. “I db not know.” “ Her Ladyship returned alone?” “How should I know ? I was in:bed.”” “In bed in the dressing-room ad- joining the bedroom,” Benskin re- minder her, with a touch of sternness in his tome. “Isn't it true, Made- moiselle, that Hermyanas returned home with her Ladyship?” She locked up at him piteously. “Mademoiselle,” he said, “it is pain ful, I know, but the truth must come out.” “Mr. Hermyanas came back with my mistress just before two,” she ac- knowledged. “It was madness. I told her Ladyship so. She would never listen to me. She was folle about him, and he—when Sir Gregory was ill—he hung about all the: time. He believed if anything happened she would marry him.” : Benskin summoned a waiter and paid for the tea which neither of them: had touched. Then he rose to his feet. . “You are a very sensible girl,” he said, “and I shall forget that first story of yours. Now you must come with me for a little time.” “You are not going to arrest me?” she cried. He shook his head. “Not formal- ly,” he assured her. “I shall have ta: take you somewhere: where you cam communicate with no one for the next few hours. Afterwards: you will be: free to go home, or wherever you: like.” Benskin unfolded’ his napkin, or- dered a bottle of wine, and looked around with interest. and! admiration at the furnishing and’ decoration of London’s smallest and most select: ‘night club. : | “Charming!” he murmured to the | attentive maitre d’hotel who stood by ! his side. “Is it true Mr. Hermyanas: is the sole proprietor?” The man shrugged his shoulders. “One believes: so,” he admitted, “He is here: tonight 2?” “But certainly.” “Will you say that a gentleman would like a word with him as soo as possible.” : The maitre d’lotel bowed and de- parted to execute his mission. Pres- ently a dark sallow-skinned young man of medium height, dressed with meticulous care, approached the table with a slight swagger. “You wish to speak to me,” he ob- served condescendingly. “I do,” Benskin assented. “Will you: sit down for a moment. The matter is confidential.” Hermyanas fingered his eye-glass. “This is rather my busy time,” he re- marked. “If it is anything to do with joining the: club—"’ “It is not,” Benskin: interrupted. “I do not as a rule frequent night clubs.” Something in his manner must have seemed to the other ominous, for he subsided into the indicated chair with a nervous little gesture. Benskin leaned over towards him. “Hermyanas,” he warned him, “do not try any tricks. I have a warrant for your arrest.” There was a livid streak in the young man’s face. His fingers gripped at the table-cloth.. “My arrest!” he gasped. “You are joking. I have never broken the laws. We serve no drinks after hours. “You are arrested on a more ser- ious charge,” Benskin told him grave- Iy—“on the charge of murdering Sir Gregory Dent on the morning of the thirteenth. It is my duty to caution you, Hermyanas, that I am bound to take note of anything you say.” There was no instant fear of speech from Hermyanas, for with a terrified little groan he collapsed in his chair. When he came to himself, the hand- cuffs were upon his wrists and the gallows before his eyes. The sub-commissioner offered his compliments to Benskin the following morning. He had a few questions to ask, however. “How did you come to connect Her- myanas with the affair at all?” he inquired. “That came about quite naturally,” (Continued: on Page 7, Col. 1)