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CHAPTER VII

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the next morning’s post brought some fifty or so letters to throstle hall, forwarded on from london.

letters from russia, letters from japan, letters from paris, constantinople and madrid; bills, circulars, lottery announcements, touting letters, begging letters, letters from lunatics, financiers, friends, politicians and enemies.

it was a post the receipt of which would have driven an ordinary man to distraction, but it did not distract sir anthony gyde.

he reviewed them sitting up in bed propped up with pillows, a cup of tea by his side and his correspondence spread upon the coverlet.

he sorted them by the simple process of casting them upon the floor, some on the right, some on the left. the ones on the right went to the waste-paper basket, the ones on the left to his secretary. he had nearly finished, when he came upon an envelope thin and narrow, poverty stricken, stamped in the left-hand corner as if in defiance of convention and addressed in a handwriting unique, in that it managed to be both prim and fantastic.

there are letters, men, streets, and numerous other things in this life, that produce upon the mind of the person who sees them for the first time, an impression to be summed up in the one word—bad.

the letter in sir anthony’s hand would have struck you or me, most probably, with an unfavourable impression, but it did not seem to affect him; he was used to all sorts of impressions.

when you possess a fortune to be reckoned in millions, derived from possessions all over the world, you must accommodate your temper to the receipt of more things than rents and felicitations. gyde, for instance, was accustomed to receive at least one letter in the course of every month, threatening either his life or his reputation; so accustomed, indeed, that he looked forward perhaps with interest to their receipt.

he opened the murderous and mean-looking letter in his hand, and came upon neither skull nor cross-bones, nor coffin, nor threat, but simply,

“skirle cottage,

“blencarn fell,

“i will be at home this afternoon at three o’clock. i must see you, without fail, at that hour.

“klein.”

leloir, the valet, was in the bath-room stropping a razor, when he heard a stifled cry from the bedroom adjoining; running in, he found his master standing on the floor, holding the bedpost with one hand, whilst with the other he held the letter we have just read.

his face was of that peculiar grey we associate with damp walls, mildew, ruin. he was shaking in every member, and the bed shook, as if the terror of the man, or his rage, had diffused itself even into the inanimate.

leloir withdrew; he had too intimate a knowledge of his master to intrude upon him when he was in one of his takings.

i have said that when gyde lost himself in one of his attacks of anger, a devil stepped forth and was seen. speaking less hyperbolically, the man became a ravening beast, and he would as soon have struck leloir to the ground, or anyone else, indeed, when in one of these attacks, as not.

now, left to himself, with nothing to vent his anger upon, the attack left him without an explosion, the shaking of the bed ceased, he called his man to him, ordered his bath to be prepared, and whilst this was being done, he examined the envelope in which the letter had arrived.

it bore the postmark “skirwith,” and in the corner was written the word “local.”

it had evidently been posted at the village of skirwith some time on the day before, though the office stamp was half obliterated and quite useless as an indication of the date.

having examined the envelope carefully, he replaced the letter in it and laid it on the mantelpiece, bathed, dressed, put the letter in his pocket, and then sent for his secretary to the library, where he began dictating letters in answer to the important ones he had received that morning.

but he dictated no reply to the humble-looking epistle post-marked skirwith.

at half-past one he had luncheon.

shortly after luncheon he ordered his motor-car to be got ready to take him to the railway station at carlisle, in time to catch the express to london at five; also a second car to take his secretary, dispatch boxes and odds and ends. the french cook was not given the dignity of a car. the cook, who was a personage in his way, would be driven to little salkeld station in the dogcart, and find his way to carlisle by train. leloir would go with his master.

it was like the mobilization of a small army every time sir anthony gyde chose to change his residence, even for a few days.

at half-past two a small arol-johnston car, used for short distances, was brought to the door.

sir anthony got into it, having given leloir strict injunctions as to the luggage, etc. he told the man that he was about to visit an outlying farm on the estate, and that he would be back in time for the motor to take him to the train. then he started.

he was his own chauffeur.

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