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Hoodwinked
by
“I gathered from his tone he was a bit doubtful about you; but I was glad to get the word. This is the third time you’ve favoured me with a visit and each of the other times something highly exciting followed. Come in and let me make you a cup of tea, won’t you? Is it business that brings you?”
“Yes,” he said, “it’s business.”
They sat down in the big inner studio room; on one side of the fireplace the short, slow-speaking, colourless-looking man who knew the inner blackness of so many whited sepulchres; and on the other side, facing him from across the tea table, this small patrician lady who, having rich kinfolk and friends still richer and a family tree deep-rooted in the most Knickerbockian stratum of the Manhattan social schist, nevertheless chose to earn her own living; and while earning it to find opportunity for service to her Government in a confidential capacity. Not all the volunteers who worked on difficult espionage jobs through the wartime carried cards from the Intelligence Department.
“Yes,” he repeated, “it’s business–a bigger piece of business and a harder one and probably a more interesting one than the last thing you helped on. If it weren’t business I wouldn’t be coming here to-day, taking up your time. I know how busy you are with your own affairs.”
“Oh, I’m not busy,” she said. “This is one of my loafing days. Since lunch time I’ve been indulging in my favourite passion. I’ve been prowling through a secondhand bookstore over on Lexington Avenue, picking up bargains. There’s the fruit of my shopping.”
She indicated a pile of five or six nibbled-looking volumes in dingy covers resting upon one corner of the low mantelshelf.
“Works on interior decorating?” he guessed.
“Goodness, no! Decorating is my business; this is my pleasure. The top one of the heap–the one bound in red–is all about chess.”
“Chess! Did anybody ever write a whole book about chess?”
“I believe more books have been written on chess than on any other individual subject in the world, barring Masonry,” she said. “And the next one to it–the yellow-bound one–is a book about old English games; not games of chance, but games for holidays and parties. I was glancing through it in my car on the way here from the shop. It’s most interesting. Why, some of the games it tells about were played in England before William the Conqueror landed; at least so the author claims. Did you ever hear of a game called Shoe the Wild Mare? It was very popular in Queen Elizabeth’s day. The book yonder says so.”
“No, I never heard of it. From the name it sounds as though it might be rather a rough game for indoors,” commented Mullinix. “For a busy woman who’s made such a big success at her calling, I wonder how you find time to dig into so many miscellaneous subjects.”
“I don’t call the time wasted,” she said. “For example, there’s one book in that lot dealing with mushroom culture. It seems there’s ever so much to know about mushrooms. Besides, who knows but what some day I might have a wealthy client who would want me to design him a mushroom cellar, combining practicability with the decorative. Then, you see, I would have the knowledge at my finger tips.” She smiled at the conceit, busying herself with the tea things.
“Well, I suppose I’m a one-idea-at-a-time sort of person,” he said.
“No, you aren’t! You only think you are,” she amended. “Just now I suppose you are all so wrapped up in the business you mentioned a moment ago that you can’t think of anything else.”
“That’s a fact,” he confessed. “And yet all my thinking doesn’t seem to have got me anywhere in particular.” He paused to glance about. “Where’s your maid? Is she, by any chance, where she could overhear us?”
“No, she’s out. This is her afternoon off.”
“Good! Then I’ll start at the beginning and tell you in as few words as possible the whole thing. But before I do begin, let me ask you a question. It may simplify matters. Anyhow it has a bearing on my principal reason for coming to see you to-day. Isn’t Mrs. Howard Hadley-Smith your cousin?”