Okewood of the Secret Service

by Valentine Williams


Contents

[CHAPTER I. THE DEPUTY TURN]
[CHAPTER II. CAPTAIN STRANGWISE ENTERTAINS A GUEST]
[CHAPTER III. MR. MACKWAYTE MEETS AN OLD FRIEND]
[CHAPTER IV. MAJOR OKEWOOD ENCOUNTERS A NEW TYPE]
[CHAPTER V. THE MURDER AT SEVEN KINGS]
[CHAPTER VI. “NAME O’BARNEY”]
[CHAPTER VII. NUR-EL-DIN]
[CHAPTER VIII. THE WHITE PAPER PACKAGE]
[CHAPTER IX. METAMORPHOSIS]
[CHAPTER X. D. O. R. A. IS BAFFLED]
[CHAPTER XI. CREDENTIALS]
[CHAPTER XII. AT THE MILL HOUSE]
[CHAPTER XIII. WHAT SHAKESPEARE’S COMEDIES REVEALED]
[CHAPTER XIV. BARBARA TAKES A HAND]
[CHAPTER XV. MR. BELLWARD IS CALLED TO THE TELEPHONE]
[CHAPTER XVI. THE STAR OF POLAND]
[CHAPTER XVII. MR. BELLWARD ARRANGES A BRIDGE EVENING]
[CHAPTER XVIII. THE GATHERING OF THE SPIES]
[CHAPTER XIX. THE UNINVITED GUEST]
[CHAPTER XX. THE ODD MAN]
[CHAPTER XXI. THE BLACK VELVET TOQUE]
[CHAPTER XXII. WHAT THE CELLAR REVEALED]
[CHAPTER XXIII. MRS. MALPLAQUET GOES DOWN TO THE CELLAR]
[CHAPTER XXIV. THE TWO DESERTERS]
[CHAPTER XXV. TO MRS. MALPLAQUET’S]
[CHAPTER XXVI. THE MAN IN THE SUMMER-HOUSE]
[CHAPTER XXVII. THE RED LACQUER ROOM]
[CHAPTER XXVIII. AN OFFER FROM STRANGWISE]
[CHAPTER XXIX. DOT AND DASH]
[CHAPTER XXX. HOHENLINDEN TRENCH]
[CHAPTER XXXI. THE £100,000 KIT]

CHAPTER I.
THE DEPUTY TURN

Mr. Arthur Mackwayte slipped noiselessly into the dining-room and took his place at the table. He always moved quietly, a look of gentle deprecation on his face as much as to say: “Really, you know, I can’t help being here: if you will just overlook me this time, by and by you won’t notice I’m there at all!” That was how he went through life, a shy, retiring little man, quiet as a mouse, gentle as a dove, modesty personified.

That is, at least, how Mr. Arthur Mackwayte struck his friends in private life. Once a week, however, he fairly screamed at the public from the advertisement columns of “The Referee”: “Mackwayte, in his Celebrated Kerbstone Sketches. Wit! Pathos! Tragedy!!! The Epitome of London Life. Universally Acclaimed as the Greatest Portrayer of London Characters since the late Chas. Dickens. In Tremendous Demand for Public Dinners. The Popular Favorite. A Few Dates still Vacant. 23, Laleham Villas, Seven Kings. ’Phone” and so on.

But only professionally did Mr. Mackwayte thus blow his own trumpet, and then in print alone. For the rest, he had nothing great about him but his heart. A long and bitter struggle for existence had left no hardness in his smooth-shaven flexible face, only wrinkles. His eyes were gray and keen and honest, his mouth as tender as a woman’s.

His daughter, Barbara, was already at table pouring out the tea—high tea is still an institution in music-hall circles. Mr. Mackwayte always gazed on this tall, handsome daughter of his with amazement as the great miracle of his life. He looked at her now fondly and thought how.... how distinguished, yes, that was the word, she looked in the trim blue serge suit in which she went daily to her work at the War Office.