The Golden Scorpion
suddenly he perceived the open drawer. He stopped. His expression changed to one of surprise and anger, and the girl's slim fingers
y-"I returned none to
nd shrank from him as
case would have been much more easy if I had associated your symptoms with the presence in my table drawer of"-he hesitated-"o
explanation of his romance; here was his disguised
ried. "Oh, let me go! P
seless. What h
ld ornament on the table. "I look at
his acquaintance in order to steal the fragment of the golden scorpion was impossible, for he had
n the drawer?" h
e table and naively exhibited that which fitted
u obtain this
embling and her eyes wells of sorrow
you-will yo
a lie-and now, by another lie, you seem to think that you can induce me to overlook a deliberate attemp
blow and regarded him pitifu
" she whispered. "At firs
d n
ll you th
are a pe
e-one of your Englishwomen. Perhaps I cannot help what I do.
a remote one. There is Eastern blood in your veins, no doubt, but you are educated, you a
ecognize, but
a gesture of
om the shock of finding you to be-what you are, I am utterly mystified as to your object. I am a poor man. The entire contents of my house would fet
of colour was returning to her cheeks. Stuart studied her attentively-even delightedly, for all her shortcomings, and knew in his heart that he could never give her
you another question: have you attempted t
y, and her cheeks, which had
," she confessed, "
someone els
d again, and she stared
lse?" she
A man ... wearing
ands in entreaty. "Do not ask me of
nt was creeping upon him and supplanting the contemptuous anger which the discovery
ad been no dream but an almost incredible reality. He now saw before him an agent of the man in the cowl; he perc
nything to do with the mat
She flinched again as she had done when he had taunted her wi
in the death of Sir F
ly, and her widely opened eyes were
aking, biting her lip which
d Stuart, feeling himself to sta
of him-this Sir
ughed unm
of sharing the fate of that di
enly rested her jewelled hands upon his shoulders, and he fou
ou believe me?" she whispered, and her fin
sence was intoxicating. "Pe
tell you true! I tell you for your own sake. Do with me what you please. I do not care. It does not matter. You ask me
y there. Had the fire been actually burning, it must long ago have been destroyed. More than ever mystified, for the si
d bag and ran from the room. Stuart heard the door close, and racing back to the table he p
!" he
ed the key on the outside. He
ain, throwing open the French windows. Brilliant moonlight bathed the little lawn with its bordering of high privet hedges. Stuart ran out as the sound of the receding car reached his ears. By the time that he had
go out with Miss
, Mrs. M'Gregor, but s
d ye or did ye no' hear the
uart patiently. "I feel sure you must be very tired and you can jus
and ill at ease, Mrs
, Mr. Keppe
curtains over the window recess, but without troubling to close the window which he had opened. Then he returned to the writing-table and took up the seal
ntably, he hitherto had failed to recall: that fearful wailing in the night-whic
orpion's tail. Finally, his hands resting upon the table, he found that almost unconsciously he had b
danger. Before,
in this at least surely she had been si
ntel-piece had ch