“Oh, shells, as I told you before, squire. Shells, almost certainly. And perhaps the brass bottle that the genie threw into the sea after he'd escaped from it—the Arabian Nights tale, you remember. Once one starts digging in real earnest one never can tell what one may not find.”
Wendover made a gesture of impatience.
“I suppose you're looking for something.”
“I've told you exactly what I expect to find, squire. And it's no good your going off to pump these diggers, or even the inspector, for they don't know what they're looking for themselves. The general public can ask questions till it's tired, but it won't learn much on the beach. That'll tend to keep its excitement at fever-heat and prevent it looking any farther for points of interest.”
As they neared the hotel they overtook Mme. Laurent-Desrousseaux, who was walking leisurely up the road. Sir Clinton slowed down to her pace, and opened a brisk conversation as he came abreast of her. Wendover, feeling rather out of it, inspected Mme. Laurent-Desrousseaux covertly with some disfavour.
“Now, what the devil does Clinton see in that vamp?” he asked himself as they moved on together. “He's not the usual idiot, by a long chalk. She'll get no change out of him. But what does he expect to get out of her? It's not like him. Of course, she's a bit out of things here; but she doesn't look the sort that would mind that much, somehow. And he's evidently laying himself out to get her good graces. It's a bit rum.”
He could not deny that the personal attractions of Mme. Laurent-Desrousseaux were much above the average; and, despite himself, he felt a tinge of uneasiness in his mind. After all, even the cleverest men get caught occasionally; and it was plain enough that Sir Clinton was doing his best to make friends with the Frenchwoman.
They had just entered the hotel grounds when Wendover saw approaching them down the drive the figure of Cargill. The Australian seemed to have something to say to them, for he quickened his pace when he caught sight of Sir Clinton.
“I've come across something else that might be of importance,” he said, addressing the chief constable without a glance at the others. “It's a——”
He broke off abruptly, with a glance at Mme. Laurent-Desrousseaux. It seemed almost as though he had not seen before that she was there, or as if he had just recognised her.