The clerk was puzzled. “If you mean that he wasn’t in London, then—” he began.
Violet did not show the man the letter which she had in her pocket. Perhaps it was best that Dibbin himself should read it first. But she did say: “He could not have had an interview with a Mr. Van Hupfeldt, for instance?”
“Now, that is very odd, miss,” said the clerk. “That is the very name of the gentleman who wired instructions to-day for Mr. Dibbin to go at once to Portsmouth. And, by Jove! begging your pardon, but the telegram came from your place, Rigsworth, in Warwickshire. I never thought of that before.”
“It doesn’t matter,” said Violet, sweetly; “I shall endeavor to meet Mr. Dibbin at King’s Cross. And will you please not mention to any one that I have called here?”
The knowledge that Van Hupfeldt was striving to decoy Dibbin away from London revealed that the pursuit had begun. For an instant she was tempted to appeal to David for help. But she had given her word not to see him, and that was sacred, even in relation to one whom she considered to be the worst man breathing.
The clerk promised readily enough to observe due discretion anent her visit. He would have promised nearly anything that such a nice-looking girl sought of him. Suddenly Violet recollected that the house-agent might know the whereabouts of the real Sarah Gissing. She asked the question, and, Dibbin being a man of dockets and pigeon holes, the clerk found the address for her in half a minute, told her where Chalfont was, looked up the next train from Baker-St., and sent her on her way rejoicing.
Violet, like the majority of her charming sex, paid small heed to time, and, indeed, time frequently returns the compliment to pretty women. It was five hours ere Dibbin was due at King’s Cross, and five hours were sufficient for almost any undertaking. So she journeyed to Chalfont, found the genuine Sarah, and was alarmed and reassured at the same time by the girl nearly fainting away when she set eyes on her.
Here, then, at last, was real news of her Gwen. She could have listened for hours. The landlady of the little hotel charitably let the two talk their fill, and sent tea to them in the small parlor where David had met Sarah. Like David, too, whom Sarah did not forget to describe as “that nice young gentleman, Mr. Harcourt,” Violet outstayed the train time, and, when she did make an inquiry on this head, it was impossible to reach King’s Cross at six-thirty P.M.
Amid all the tears and poignancy of grief aroused by the recital of her sister’s lonely life and tragic end, there was one strange, unaccountable feature which stood out boldly. Neither by direct word nor veiled inference did Sarah Gissing attribute deliberate neglect or unkindness to Strauss. If anything, her simple story told of a great love between those two, and there was the evidence of it in Gwendoline’s latest distracted words about him. Of course, had Violet read the diary, this would have been clear enough; but, in view of the man’s present attitude, this testimony of the servant’s was hard to understand.