| BOOK I | ||
| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
| I | Mistress and Agent | [1] |
| II | The Hunter and his Quarry | [13] |
| III | First Blood | [22] |
| IV | Beating her Wings | [32] |
| V | Evicted | [41] |
| VI | Cricket and Philosophy | [52] |
| VII | An Undernote of Music | [61] |
| VIII | Roses | [70] |
| IX | Summer Lightning | [78] |
| X | The Still Figure in the Chair | [85] |
| XI | The Baying of the Hounds | [93] |
| XII | Retreat | [100] |
| XIII | A Creature of Impulse | [105] |
| XIV | Searching the Paper | [114] |
| XV | On the Spree | [121] |
| XVI | The Night Side of London | [129] |
| XVII | The Victims of Society | [138] |
| XVIII | Letty’s Dilemma | [147] |
| XIX | A Report from Paris | [155] |
| XX | Like a Trapped Animal | [162] |
| BOOK II | ||
| I | Rather a Ghastly Part | [172] |
| II | Playing with Fir | [180] |
| III | Monsieur s’Amuse | [188] |
| IV | At the “Dead Rat” | [196] |
| V | The Awakening | [204] |
| VI | The Echo of a Crime | [210] |
| VII | A Country Walk | [218] |
| VIII | The Missing Letty | [227] |
| IX | Foiled! | [235] |
| X | Mysteries in Mayfair | [244] |
| XI | The Way of Salvation | [253] |
| XII | Jean le Roi | [262] |
| XIII | The King of the Apaches | [271] |
| XIV | Behind the Palm Trees | [281] |
| XV | The Only Way | [289] |
| XVI | Man to Man | [296] |
| XVII | Lord and Lady Bountiful | [304] |
THE MISSIONER
BOOK I
CHAPTER I
MISTRESS AND AGENT
The lady of Thorpe was bored. These details as to leases and repairs were wearisome. The phrases and verbiage confused her. She felt obliged to take them in some measure for granted; to accept without question the calmly offered advice of the man who stood so respectfully at the right hand of her chair.
“This agreement with Philip Crooks,” he remarked, “is a somewhat important document. With your permission, madam, I will read it to you.”
She signified her assent, and leaned wearily back in her chair. The agent began to read. His mistress watched him through half closed eyes. His voice, notwithstanding its strong country dialect, had a sort of sing-song intonation. He read earnestly and without removing his eyes from the document. His listener made no attempt to arrive at the sense of the string of words which flowed so monotonously from his lips. She was occupied in making a study of the man. Sturdy and weather-beaten, neatly dressed in country clothes, with a somewhat old-fashioned stock, with trim grey side-whiskers, and a mouth which reminded her somehow of a well-bred foxhound’s, he represented to her, in his clearly cut personality, the changeless side of life, the side of life which she associated with the mighty oaks in her park, and the prehistoric rocks which had become engrafted with the soil of the hills beyond. As she saw him now, so had he seemed to her fifteen years ago. Only what a difference! A volume to her—a paragraph to him! She had gone out into the world—rich, intellectually inquisitive, possessing most of the subtler gifts with which her sex is endowed; and wherever the passionate current of life had flown the swiftest, she had been there, a leader always, seeking ever to satisfy the unquenchable thirst for new experiences and new joys. She had passed from girlhood to womanhood with every nerve of her body strained to catch the emotion of the moment. Always her fingers had been tearing at the cells of life—and one by one they had fallen away. This morning, in the bright sunshine which flooded the great room, she felt somehow tired—tired and withered. Her maid was a fool! The two hours spent at her toilette had been wasted! She felt that her eyes were hollow, her cheeks pale! Fifteen years, and the man had not changed a jot. She doubted whether he had ever passed the confines of her estate. She doubted whether he had even had the desire. Wind and sun had tanned his cheeks, his eyes were clear, his slight stoop was the stoop of the horseman rather than of age. He had the air of a man satisfied with life and his place in it—an attitude which puzzled her. No one of her world was like that! Was it some inborn gift, she wondered, which he possessed, some antidote to the world’s restlessness which he carried with him, or was it merely lack of intelligence?