Blind Love - Page 5/304

It was a sheet of delicately-made paper, pierced with a number of

little holes, infinitely varied in size, and cut with the smoothest

precision. Having secured this curious object, while the librarian's

back was turned, Dennis Howmore reflected.

A page of paper, unintelligibly perforated for some purpose unknown,

was in itself a suspicious thing. And what did suspicion suggest to the

inquiring mind in South-Western Ireland, before the suppression of the

Land League? Unquestionably---Police!

On the way back to his employer, the banker's clerk paid a visit to an

old friend--a journalist by profession, and a man of varied learning

and experience as well. Invited to inspect the remarkable morsel of

paper, and to discover the object with which the perforations had been

made, the authority consulted proved to be worthy of the trust reposed

in him. Dennis left the newspaper office an enlightened man--with

information at the disposal of Sir Giles, and with a sense of relief

which expressed itself irreverently in these words: "Now I have got

him!"

The bewildered banker looked backwards and forwards from the paper to

the clerk, and from the clerk to the paper. "I don't understand it," he

said. "Do you?"

Still preserving the appearance of humility, Dennis asked leave to

venture on a guess. The perforated paper looked, as he thought, like a

Puzzle. "If we wait for a day or two," he suggested, "the Key to it may

possibly reach us."

On the next day, nothing happened. On the day after, a second letter

made another audacious demand on the fast failing patience of Sir Giles

Mountjoy.

Even the envelope proved to be a Puzzle on this occasion; the postmark

was "Ardoon." In other words, the writer had used the postman as a

messenger, while he or his accomplice was actually in the town, posting

the letter within half-a-minute's walk of the bank! The contents

presented an impenetrable mystery, the writing looked worthy of a

madman. Sentences appeared in the wildest state of confusion, and words

were so mutilated as to be unintelligible. This time the force of

circumstances was more than Sir Giles could resist. He took the clerk

into his confidence at last.

"Let us begin at the beginning," he said. "There is the letter you saw

on my bed, when I first sent for you. I found it waiting on my table

when I woke; and I don't know who put it there. Read it."

Dennis read as follows: "Sir Giles Mountjoy,--I have a disclosure to make, in which one of the

members of your family is seriously interested. Before I can venture to

explain myself, I must be assured that I can trust to your good faith.

As a test of this, I require you to fulfil the two conditions that

follow--and to do it without the slightest loss of time. I dare not

trust you yet with my address, or my signature. Any act of

carelessness, on my part, might end fatally for the true friend who

writes these lines. If you neglect this warning, you will regret it to

the end of your life."