Adrien Leroy - Page 7/550

Outside the club door, Vermont's motor was drawn up at the side waiting

for him. He looked at his watch, and was surprised at the lateness of

the hour. Stepping hastily into the vehicle, he held up two fingers to

the chauffeur, who apparently needed no other instructions; for the car

glided off, and Vermont, as he passed the club, looked up at the windows

with an ugly smile.

As Lord Standon had said, few knew his origin or his business; but, in

reality, his antecedents were of a very ordinary nature. He was the son

of a solicitor who had lived with but one object in his sordid life,

namely, the desire to make his son a man of position with the power to

mix as an equal among that portion of society which only came to Malcolm

Vermont when it wanted its scandals glossed over, or to obtain money.

Ill-natured people were apt to hint that he had amassed his wealth by

means of usury and the taking up of shady cases. At any rate, he made

sufficient to bring up his son in luxury and send him to Oxford, where

Jasper had first come in contact with Adrien Leroy. At the death of his

father, Vermont found himself possessed of an income of a thousand a

year, which enabled him to become a member of Adrien's set,

notwithstanding that the amount was a much smaller one than he had been

led to expect, and, in his opinion, savoured almost of aristocratic

poverty.

The car had rolled silently into a side street off St. James's, where

the chauffeur pulled up sharply at the door of one of the old-fashioned,

though now newly-painted houses. Vermont sprang out and rang the bell

twice.

"Has Miss Lester returned yet?" he asked of the smart maid who opened

the door.

"Yes, sir," she answered, and promptly led the way up a newly-carpeted

staircase, redolent of Parma violet scent and glistening with white

enamelled woodwork and plaster casts. The walls were adorned with

pictures in the worst possible taste and the most glaring colours. As

Vermont reached the first floor, a strong, savoury odour filled the air.

He smiled sarcastically, and sniffed as if the perfume were familiar to

him.

"Miss Lester at supper?" he asked the white-capped maid, as she threw

open the door on the first floor, and stood aside to let the visitor

precede her.

"Yes, sir; supper's been served," was the demure answer.

Vermont passed into the room, which was furnished with the same lack of

taste as the staircase. Two women were seated at the table, apparently

just finishing their supper.