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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75461 ***
+
+
+The Case of Miss Elliott
+
+by Baroness Orczy
+
+Published 1909, Greening & Co., Ltd. (London)
+
+
+
+Contents.
+
+ I. The Case of Miss Elliott
+ II. The Hocussing of Cigarette
+ III. The Tragedy in Dartmoor Terrace
+ IV. Who Stove the Black Diamonds?
+ V. The Murder of Miss Pebmarsh
+ VI. The Lisson Grove Mystery
+ VII. The Tremarn Case
+ VIII. The Fate of the “Artemis”
+ IX. The Disappearance of Count Collini
+ X. The Ayrsham Mystery
+ XI. The Affair at the Novelty Theatre
+ XII. The Tragedy of Barnsdale Manor
+
+
+
+[Frontispiece: A horse-drawn hansom cab at night-time. In the shadowy
+interior of the cab sits a man in evening dress, leaning against the
+side of the cab as if dozing. Another man stands beside the cab,
+tentatively reaching in. Caption: “’E was dead and no mistake.”]
+
+
+
+I. The Case of Miss Elliott
+
+Chapter I
+
+The man in the corner was watching me over the top of his great
+bone-rimmed spectacles.
+
+“Well?” he asked, after a little while.
+
+“Well?” I repeated with some acerbity. I had been wondering for the
+last ten minutes how many more knots he would manage to make in that
+same bit of string, before he actually started undoing them again.
+
+“Do I fidget you?” he asked apologetically, whilst his long bony
+fingers buried themselves, string, knots, and all, into the capacious
+pockets of his magnificent tweed ulster.
+
+“Yes, that is another awful tragedy,” he said quietly, after a while.
+“Lady doctors are having a pretty bad time of it just now.”
+
+This was only his usual habit of speaking in response to my thoughts.
+There was no doubt that at the present moment my mind was filled with
+that extraordinary mystery which was setting all Scotland Yard by the
+ears, and had completely thrown into the shade the sad story of Miss
+Hickman’s tragic fate.
+
+The _Daily Telegraph_ had printed two columns headed “Murder or
+Suicide?” on the subject of the mysterious death of Miss Elliott,
+matron of the Convalescent Home, in Suffolk Avenue—and I must confess
+that a more profound and bewildering mystery had never been set before
+our able detective department.
+
+“It has puzzled them this time, and no mistake,” said the man in the
+corner, with one of his most gruesome chuckles, “but I daresay the
+public is quite satisfied that there is no solution to be found, since
+the police have found none.”
+
+“Can you find one?” I retorted with withering sarcasm.
+
+“Oh, my solution would only be sneered at,” he replied. “It is far too
+simple—and yet how logical! There was Miss Elliott, a good-looking,
+youngish, lady-like woman, fully qualified in the medical profession
+and in charge of the Convalescent Home in Suffolk Avenue, which is a
+private institution largely patronised by the benevolent.
+
+“For some time, already, there had appeared vague comments and rumours
+in various papers, that the extensive charitable contributions did not
+all go towards the up-keep of the Home. But, as is usual in
+institutions of that sort, the public was not allowed to know anything
+very definite, and contributions continued to flow in, whilst the
+Honorary Treasurer of the great Convalescent Home kept up his
+beautiful house in Hamilton Terrace, in a style which would not have
+shamed a peer of the realm.
+
+“That is how matters stood, when on 2nd November last the morning
+papers contained the brief announcement that at a quarter past
+midnight two workmen walking along Blomfield Road, Maida Vale,
+suddenly came across the body of a young lady, lying on her face,
+close to the wooden steps of the narrow foot-bridge which at this
+point crosses the canal.
+
+“This part of Maida Vale is, as you know, very lonely at all times,
+but at night it is usually quite deserted. Blomfield Road, with its
+row of small houses and bits of front gardens, faces the canal, and
+beyond the foot-bridge is continued in a series of small riverside
+wharves, which is practically unknown ground to the average Londoner.
+The foot-bridge itself, with steps at right angles and high wooden
+parapet, would offer excellent shelter at all hours of the night for
+any nefarious deed.
+
+“It was within its shadows that the men had found the body, and to
+their credit be it said, they behaved like good and dutiful
+citizens—one of them went off in search of the police, whilst the
+other remained beside the corpse.
+
+“From papers and books found upon her person, it was soon ascertained
+that the deceased was Miss Elliott, the young matron of the Suffolk
+Avenue Convalescent Home; and as she was very popular in her
+profession and had a great many friends, the terrible tragedy caused a
+sensation, all the more acute as very quickly the rumour gained ground
+that the unfortunate young woman had taken her own life in a most
+gruesome and mysterious manner.
+
+“Preliminary medical and police investigation had revealed
+the fact that Miss Elliott had died through a deep and
+scientifically-administered gash in the throat, whilst the surgical
+knife with which the deadly wound was inflicted still lay tightly
+grasped in her clenched hand.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+The man in the corner, ever conscious of any effect he produced upon
+my excited imagination, had paused for a while, giving me time, as it
+were, to co-ordinate in my mind the few simple facts he had put before
+me. I had no wish to make a remark, knowing of old that my one chance
+of getting the whole of his interesting argument was to offer neither
+comment nor contradiction.
+
+“When a young, good-looking woman in the heyday of her success in an
+interesting profession,” he began at last, “is alleged to have
+committed suicide, the outside public immediately want to know the
+reason why she did such a thing, and a kind of freemasonic, amateur
+detective work goes on, which generally brings a few important truths
+to light. Thus, in the case of Miss Elliott, certain facts had begun
+to leak out, even before the inquest, with its many sensational
+developments. Rumours concerning the internal administration, or
+rather maladministration of the Home began to take more definite form.
+
+“That its finances had been in a very shaky condition for some time
+was known to all those who were interested in its welfare. What was
+not so universally known was that few hospitals had had more
+munificent donations and subscriptions showered upon them in recent
+years, and yet it was openly spoken of by all the nurses that Miss
+Elliott had on more than one occasion petitioned for actual
+necessities for the patients—necessities which were denied to her on
+the plea of necessary economy.
+
+“The Convalescent Home was, as sometimes happens in institutions of
+this sort, under the control of a committee of benevolent and
+fashionable people who understood nothing about business, and less
+still about the management of a hospital. Dr. Kinnaird, President of
+the institution, was a young, eminently successful consultant; he had
+recently married the daughter of a peer, who had boundless ambitions
+for herself and her husband.
+
+“Dr. Kinnaird, by adding the prestige of his name to the Home, no
+doubt felt that he had done enough for its welfare. Against that, Dr.
+Stapylton, Honorary Secretary and Treasurer of the Home, threw himself
+heart and soul into the work connected with it, and gave a great deal
+of his time to it. All subscriptions and donations went, of course,
+through his hands, the benevolent and fashionable committee being only
+too willing to shift all their financial responsibilities on to his
+willing shoulders. He was a very popular man in society—a bachelor
+with a magnificent house in Hamilton Terrace, where he entertained the
+more eminent and fashionable clique in his own profession.
+
+“It was the evening papers, however, which contained the most
+sensational development of this tragic case. It appears that on the
+Saturday afternoon Mary Dawson, one of the nurses in the Home was
+going to the house surgeon’s office with a message from the head
+nurse, when her attention was suddenly arrested in one of the passages
+by the sound of loud voices proceeding from one of the rooms. She
+paused to listen for a moment and at once recognised the voices of
+Miss Elliott and of Dr. Stapylton, the Honorary Treasurer and Chairman
+of Committee.
+
+“The subject of conversation was evidently that of the eternal
+question of finance. Miss Elliott spoke very indignantly, and Nurse
+Dawson caught the words:
+
+“‘Surely you must agree with me that Dr. Kinnaird ought to be informed
+at once.’
+
+“Dr. Stapylton’s voice in reply seems to have been at first bitingly
+sarcastic, then threatening. Dawson heard nothing more after that, and
+went on to deliver her message. On her way back she stopped in the
+passage again, and tried to listen. This time it seemed to her as if
+she could hear the sound of some one crying bitterly, and Dr.
+Stapylton’s voice speaking very gently.
+
+“‘You may be right, Nellie,’ he was saying. ‘At any rate, wait a few
+days before telling Kinnaird. You know what he is—he’ll make a
+frightful fuss and——’
+
+“Whereupon Miss Elliott interrupted him.
+
+“‘It isn’t fair to Dr. Kinnaird to keep him in ignorance any longer.
+Whoever the thief may be it is your duty or mine to expose him, and if
+necessary bring him to justice.’
+
+“There was a good deal of discussion at the time, if you remember, as
+to whether Nurse Dawson had overheard and repeated this speech
+accurately: whether, in point of fact, Miss Elliott had used the words
+‘_or_ mine’ or ‘_and_ mine.’ You see the neat little point, don’t
+you?” continued the man in the corner. “The little word ‘and’ would
+imply that she considered herself at one with Dr. Stapylton in the
+matter, but ‘or’ would mean that she was resolved to act alone if he
+refused to join her in unmasking the thief.
+
+“All these facts, as I remarked before, had leaked out, as such facts
+have a way of doing. No wonder, therefore, that on the day fixed for
+the inquest the coroner’s court was filled to overflowing, both with
+the public—ever eager for new sensations—and with the many friends of
+the deceased lady, among whom young medical students of both sexes and
+nurses in uniform were most conspicuous.
+
+“I was there early, and therefore had a good seat, from which I could
+comfortably watch the various actors in the drama about to be
+performed. People who seemed to be in the know pointed out various
+personages to one another, and it was a matter of note that, in spite
+of professional engagements, the members of the staff of the
+Convalescent Home were present in full force and stayed on almost the
+whole time. The personages who chiefly arrested my attention were,
+firstly, Dr. Kinnaird, a good-looking Irishman of about forty, and
+President of the institution; also Dr. Earnshaw, a rising young
+consultant, with boundless belief in himself written all over his
+pleasant rubicund countenance.
+
+“The expert medical evidence was once again thoroughly gone into.
+There was absolutely no doubt that Miss Elliott had died from having
+her throat cut with the surgical knife which was found grasped in her
+right hand. There was absolutely no signs of a personal struggle in
+the immediate vicinity of the body, and rigid examination proved that
+there was no other mark of violence upon the body; there was nothing
+therefore, to prove that the poor girl had not committed suicide in a
+moment of mental aberration or of great personal grief.
+
+“Of course, it was strange that she should have chosen this curious
+mode of taking her own life. She had access to all kinds of poisons,
+amongst which her medical knowledge could prompt her to choose the
+least painful and most efficacious ones. Therefore, to have walked out
+on a Sunday night to a wretched and unfrequented spot and there
+committed suicide in that grim fashion seemed almost the work of a mad
+woman. And yet the evidence of her family and friends all tended to
+prove that Miss Elliott was a peculiarly sane, large-minded, and happy
+individual.
+
+“However, the suicide theory was at this stage of the proceedings
+taken as being absolutely established, and when Police-Constable Fiske
+came forward to give his evidence no one in the court was prepared for
+a statement which suddenly revealed this case to be as mysterious as
+it was tragic.
+
+“Fiske’s story was this: Close upon midnight on that memorable Sunday
+night he was walking down Blomfield Road along the side of the canal
+and towards the foot-bridge, when he overtook a lady and gentleman who
+were walking in the same direction as himself. He turned to look at
+them, and noticed that the gentleman was in evening dress and wore a
+high hat, and that the lady was crying.
+
+“Blomfield Road is at best very badly lighted, especially on the side
+next to the canal, where there are no lamps at all. Fiske, however,
+was prepared to swear positively that the lady was the deceased. As
+for the gentleman, he might know him again or he might not.
+
+“Fiske then crossed the foot-bridge, and walked on towards the Harrow
+Road. As he did so, he heard St. Mary Magdalen’s church clock chime
+the hour of midnight. It was a quarter of an hour after that, that the
+body of the unfortunate girl was found, and clasping in her hand the
+knife with which that awful deed had been done. By whom? Was it really
+by her own self? But if so, why did not that man in evening dress who
+had last seen her alive come forward and throw some light upon this
+fast thickening veil of mystery?
+
+“It was Mr. James Elliott, brother of the deceased, however, who first
+mentioned a name then in open court, which has ever since in the minds
+of every one been associated with Miss Elliott’s tragic fate.
+
+“He was speaking in answer to a question of the coroner’s anent his
+sister’s disposition and recent frame of mind.
+
+“‘She was always extremely cheerful,’ he said, ‘but recently had been
+peculiarly bright and happy. I understood from her that this was
+because she believed that a man for whom she had a great regard was
+also very much attached to her, and meant to ask her to be his wife.’
+
+“‘And do you know who this man was?’ asked the coroner.
+
+“‘Oh, yes,’ replied Mr. Elliott, ‘it was Dr. Stapylton.’
+
+“Every one had expected that name of course, for every one remembered
+Nurse Dawson’s story, yet when it came, there crept over all those
+present an undescribable feeling that something terrible was
+impending.
+
+“‘Is Dr. Stapylton here?’
+
+“But Dr. Stapylton had sent in an excuse. A professional case of the
+utmost urgency had kept him at a patient’s bedside. But Dr. Kinnaird,
+the President of the institution, came forward.
+
+“Questioned by the coroner, Dr. Kinnaird, however, who evidently had a
+great regard for his colleague, repudiated any idea that the funds of
+the institution had ever been tampered with by the Treasurer.
+
+“‘The very suggestion of such a thing,’ he said, ‘was an outrage upon
+one of the most brilliant men in the profession.’
+
+“He further added that, although he knew that Dr. Stapylton thought
+very highly of Miss Elliott, he did not think that there was any
+actual engagement, and most decidedly he (Dr. Kinnaird) had heard
+nothing of any disagreement between them.
+
+“‘Then did Dr. Stapylton never tell you that Miss Elliott had often
+chafed under the extraordinary economy practised in the richly-endowed
+Home?’ asked the coroner again.
+
+“‘No,’ replied Dr. Kinnaird.
+
+“‘Was not that rather strange reticence?’
+
+“‘Certainly not. I am only the Honorary President of the
+institution—Stapylton has chief control of its finances.’
+
+“‘Ah!’ remarked the coroner blandly.
+
+“However, it was clearly no business of his at this moment to enter
+into the financial affairs of the Home. His duty at this point was to
+try and find out if Dr. Stapylton and the man in evening dress were
+one and the same person.
+
+“The men who found the body testified to the hour: a quarter past
+midnight. As Fiske had seen the unfortunate girl alive a little before
+twelve, she must have been murdered or had committed suicide between
+midnight and a quarter past. But there was something more to come.
+
+“How strange and dramatic it all was!” continued the man in the
+corner, with a bland smile, altogether out of keeping with the
+poignancy of his narrative; “all these people in that crowded court
+trying to reconstruct the last chapter of that bright young matron’s
+life and then—but I must not anticipate.
+
+“One more witness was to be heard—one whom the police, with a totally
+unconscious sense of what is dramatic, had reserved for the last. This
+was Dr. Earnshaw, one of the staff of the Convalescent Home. His
+evidence was very short, but of deeply momentous import. He explained
+that he had consulting rooms in Weymouth Street, but resided in
+Westbourne Square. On Sunday, 1st November, he had been dining out in
+Maida Vale, and returning home a little before midnight saw a woman
+standing close by the steps of the foot-bridge in the Blomfield Road.
+
+“‘I had been coming down Formosa Street and had not specially taken
+notice of her, when just as I reached the corner of Blomfield Road she
+was joined by a man in evening dress and high hat. Then I crossed the
+road, and recognised both Miss Elliott and——’
+
+“The young doctor paused, almost as if hesitating before the enormity
+of what he was about to say, whilst the excitement in court became
+almost painful.
+
+“‘And——?’ urged the coroner.
+
+“‘And Dr. Stapylton,’ said Dr. Earnshaw at last, almost under his
+breath.
+
+“‘You are quite sure?’ asked the coroner.
+
+“‘Absolutely positive. I spoke to them both, and they spoke to me.’
+
+“‘What did you say?’
+
+“‘Oh, the usual, “Hello, Stapylton,” to which he replied, “Hello!” I
+then said “Good-night” to them both, and Miss Elliott also said
+“Good-night.” I saw her face more clearly then, and thought that she
+looked very tearful and unhappy, and Stapylton looked ill-tempered. I
+wondered why they had chosen that unhallowed spot for a midnight
+walk.’
+
+“‘And you say the hour was——?’ asked the coroner.
+
+“‘Ten minutes to twelve. I looked at my watch as I crossed the
+foot-bridge, and had heard a quarter to twelve strike five minutes
+before.’
+
+“Then it was that the coroner adjourned the inquest. Dr. Stapylton’s
+attendance had become absolutely imperative. According to Dr.
+Earnshaw’s testimony, he had been with deceased certainly a quarter of
+an hour before she met her terrible death. Fiske had seen them
+together ten minutes later; she was then crying bitterly. There was as
+yet no actual charge against the fashionable and rich doctor, but
+already the ghostly bird of suspicion had touched him with its ugly
+wing.”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+“As for the next day,” continued the man in the corner after a slight
+pause, “I can assure you that there was not a square foot of standing
+room in the coroner’s court for the adjourned inquest. It was timed
+for eleven a.m., and at six o’clock on that cold winter’s morning the
+pavement outside the court was already crowded. As for me, I always
+manage to get a front seat, and I did on that occasion, too. I fancy
+that I was the first among the general public to note Dr. Stapylton as
+he entered the room accompanied by his solicitor, and by Dr. Kinnaird,
+with whom he was chatting very cheerfully and pleasantly.
+
+“Mind you, I am a great admirer of the medical profession, and I think
+a clever and successful doctor usually has a most delightful air about
+him—the consciousness of great and good work done—with profit to
+himself—which is quite unique and quite admirable.
+
+“Dr. Stapylton had that air even to a greater extent than his
+colleague, and from the affectionate way in which Dr. Kinnaird finally
+shook him by the hand, it was quite clear that the respected chief of
+the Convalescent Home, at any rate, refused to harbour any suspicion
+of the integrity of its Treasurer.
+
+“Well, I must not weary you by dwelling on the unimportant details of
+this momentous inquest. Constable Fiske, who was asked to identify the
+gentleman in evening dress whom he had seen with the deceased at a few
+minutes before twelve, failed to recognise Dr. Stapylton very
+positively: pressed very closely, he finally refused to swear either
+way. Against that, Dr. Earnshaw repeated clearly and categorically,
+looking his colleague straight in the face the while, the damnatory
+evidence he had given the day before.
+
+“‘I saw Dr. Stapylton, I spoke to him, and he spoke to me,’ he
+repeated most emphatically.
+
+“Every one in that court was watching Dr. Stapylton’s face, which wore
+an air of supreme nonchalance, even of contempt, but certainly neither
+of guilt nor of fear.
+
+“Of course, by that time _I_ had fully made up my mind as to where the
+hitch lay in this extraordinary mystery; but no one else had, and
+every one held their breath as Dr. Stapylton quietly stepped into the
+box, and after a few preliminary questions the coroner asked him very
+abruptly:
+
+“‘You were in the company of the deceased a few minutes before she
+died, Dr. Stapylton?’
+
+“‘Pardon me,’ replied the latter quietly, ‘I last saw Miss Elliott
+alive on Saturday afternoon, just before I went home from my work.’
+
+“This calm reply, delivered without a tremor, positively made every
+one gasp. For the moment coroner and jury were alike staggered.
+
+“‘But we have two witnesses here who saw you in the company of the
+deceased within a few minutes of twelve o’clock on the Sunday night!’
+the coroner managed to gasp out at last.
+
+“‘Pardon me,’ again interposed the doctor, ‘these witnesses were
+mistaken.’
+
+“‘Mistaken!’
+
+“I think every one would have shouted out the word in boundless
+astonishment had they dared to do so.
+
+“‘Dr. Earnshaw was mistaken,’ reiterated Dr. Stapylton quietly. ‘He
+neither saw me nor did he speak to me.’
+
+“‘You can substantiate that, of course?’ queried the coroner.
+
+“‘Pardon me,’ once more said the doctor, with utmost calm, ‘it is
+surely Dr. Earnshaw who should substantiate _his_ statement.’
+
+“‘There is Constable Fiske’s corroborative evidence for that,’
+retorted the coroner, somewhat nettled.
+
+“‘Hardly, I think. You see, the constable states that he saw a
+gentleman in evening dress, etc., talking to the deceased at a minute
+or two before twelve o’clock, and that when he heard the clock of St.
+Mary Magdalen chime the hour of midnight he was just walking away from
+the foot-bridge. Now, just as that very church clock was chiming that
+hour, I was stepping into a cab at the corner of Harrow Road, not a
+hundred yards _in front_ of Constable Fiske.’
+
+“‘You swear to that?’ queried the coroner in amazement.
+
+“‘I can easily prove it,’ said Dr. Stapylton. ‘The cabman who drove me
+from there to my club is here and can corroborate my statement.’
+
+“And amidst boundless excitement, John Smith, a hansom cab-driver,
+stated that he was hailed in the Harrow Road by the last witness, who
+told him to drive to the Royal Clinical Club, in Mardon Street. Just
+as he started off, St. Mary Magdalen’s church, close by, struck the
+hour of midnight.
+
+“At that very moment, if you remember, Constable Fiske had just
+crossed the foot-bridge, and was walking towards the Harrow Road, and
+he was quite sure (for he was closely questioned afterwards) that no
+one overtook him from behind. Now there would be no way of getting
+from one side of the canal to the other at this point except over that
+foot-bridge; the nearest bridge is fully two hundred yards further
+down the Blomfield Road. The girl was alive a minute _before_ the
+constable crossed the foot-bridge, and it would have been absolutely
+impossible for any one to have murdered a girl, placed the knife in
+her hand, run a couple of hundred yards to the next bridge and another
+three hundred to the corner of Harrow Road, all in the space of three
+minutes.
+
+“This _alibi_, therefore, absolutely cleared Dr. Stapylton from any
+suspicion of having murdered Miss Elliott. And yet, looking on that
+man as he sat there, calm, cool and contemptuous, no one could have
+had the slightest doubt but that he was lying—lying when he said he
+had not seen Miss Elliott that evening; lying when he denied Dr.
+Earnshaw’s statement; lying when he professed himself ignorant of the
+poor girl’s fate.
+
+“Dr. Earnshaw repeated his statement with the same emphasis, but it
+was one man’s word against another’s, and as Dr. Stapylton was so
+glaringly innocent of the actual murder, there seemed no valid reason
+at all why he should have denied having seen her that night, and the
+point was allowed to drop. As for Nurse Dawson’s story of his alleged
+quarrel with Miss Elliott on the Saturday night, Dr. Stapylton again
+had a simple and logical explanation.
+
+“‘People who listen at keyholes,’ he said quietly, ‘are apt to hear
+only fragments of conversation, and often mistake ordinary loud voices
+for quarrels. As a matter of fact, Miss Elliott and I were discussing
+the dismissal of certain nurses from the Home, whom she deemed
+incompetent. Nurse Dawson was among that number. She desired their
+immediate dismissal, and I tried to pacify her. That was the subject
+of my conversation with the deceased lady. I can swear to every word
+of it.’”
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+The man in the corner had long ceased speaking, and was placing
+quietly before me a number of photographs. One by one I saw the series
+of faces which had been watched so eagerly in the coroner’s court that
+memorable afternoon by an excited crowd.
+
+“So the fate of poor Miss Elliott has remained wrapt in mystery?” I
+said thoughtfully at last.
+
+“To every one,” rejoined the funny creature, “except to me.”
+
+“Ah! What is your theory, then?”
+
+“A simple one, dear lady: so simple that it really amazes me, that no
+one, not even you, my faithful pupil, ever thought of it.”
+
+“It may be so simple that it becomes idiotic,” I retorted with lofty
+disdain.
+
+“Well, that may be. Shall I at any rate try to make it clear.”
+
+“If you like.”
+
+“For this I think the best way would be, if you were to follow me
+through what transpired before the inquest. But first tell me, what do
+you think of Dr. Earnshaw’s statement?”
+
+“Well,” I replied, “a good many people thought that it was he who
+murdered Miss Elliott, and that his story of meeting Dr. Stapylton
+with her was a lie from beginning to end.”
+
+“Impossible!” he retorted, making an elaborate knot in his bit of
+string. “Dr. Earnshaw’s friends, with whom he had been dining that
+night, swore that he was _not_ in evening dress, nor wore a high hat.
+And on that point—the evening dress, and the hat—Constable Fiske was
+most positive.”
+
+“Then Dr. Earnshaw was mistaken, and it was not Dr. Stapylton he met.”
+
+“Impossible!” he shrieked, whilst another knot went to join its
+fellows. “He spoke to Dr. Stapylton, and Dr. Stapylton spoke to him.”
+
+“Very well, then,” I argued; “why should Dr. Stapylton tell a lie
+about it? He had such a conclusive _alibi_ that there could be no
+object in his making a false statement about that.”
+
+“No object!” shrieked the excited creature. “Why, don’t you _see_ that
+he had to tell the lie in order to set police, coroner and jury by the
+ears, because he did not wish it to be even remotely hinted at, that
+the man whom Dr. Earnshaw saw with Miss Elliott, and the man whom
+Constable Fiske saw with her ten minutes later, were _two different
+persons_.”
+
+“Two different persons!” I ejaculated.
+
+“Ay! two confederates in this villany. No one has ever attempted to
+deny the truth of the shaky finances of the Home; no one has really
+denied that Miss Elliott suspected certain defalcations and was trying
+to force the hands of the Honorary Treasurer towards a full enquiry.
+That the Honorary Treasurer knew where all the money went to was
+pretty clear all along—his magnificent house in Hamilton Terrace fully
+testifies to that. That the President of the institution was a party
+to these defalcations and largely profited by them I for one am
+equally convinced.”
+
+“Dr. Kinnaird?” I ejaculated in amazement.
+
+“Ay, Dr. Kinnaird. Do you mean to tell me that he alone among the
+entire staff of that Home was ignorant of those defalcations?
+Impossible! And if he knew of them, and did neither inquire into them
+nor attempt to stop them, then he _must_ have been a party to them. Do
+you admit that?”
+
+“Yes, I admit that,” I replied.
+
+“Very well, then. The rest is quite simple. Those two men, unworthy to
+bear the noble appellation of doctor, must for years have quietly
+stolen the money subscribed by the benevolent for the Home, and
+converted it to their own use: then, they suddenly find themselves
+face to face with immediate discovery in the shape of a young girl
+determined to unmask the systematic frauds of the past few years. That
+meant exposure, disgrace, ruin for them both, and they determine to be
+rid of her.
+
+“Under the pretence of an evening walk, her so-called lover entices
+her to a lonely and suitable spot; his confederate is close by, hidden
+in the shadows, ready to give him assistance if the girl struggles and
+screams. But suddenly Dr. Earnshaw appears. He recognises Stapylton
+and challenges him. For a moment the villains are nonplussed, then
+Kinnaird—the cleverer of the two—steps forward, greets the two lovers
+unconcernedly, and after two minutes’ conversation casually reminds
+Stapylton of an appointment the latter is presumed to have at a club
+in St. James’ Street.
+
+“The latter understands and takes the hint, and takes a quick farewell
+of the girl, leaving her in his friend’s charge, then as fast as he
+can, goes off, presently takes a cab, leaving his friend to do the
+deed, whilst the _alibi_ he can prove, coupled with Dr. Earnshaw’s
+statement, was sure to bewilder and mislead the police and the public.
+
+“Thus it was that though Dr. Earnshaw saw and recognised Dr.
+Stapylton, Constable Fiske saw Dr. Kinnaird, whom he did _not_
+recognise, on whom no suspicion had fallen, and whose name had never
+been coupled with that of Miss Elliott. When Constable Fiske had
+turned his back, Kinnaird murdered the girl and went off quietly,
+whilst Dr. Stapylton, on whom all suspicions were bound to fasten
+sooner or later, was able to prove the most perfect _alibi_ ever
+concocted.
+
+“One day I feel certain that the frauds at the Home will be
+discovered, and then who knows what else may see the light?
+
+“Think of it all quietly when I am gone, and to-morrow when we meet
+tell me whether if _I_ am wrong what is _your_ explanation of this
+extraordinary mystery.”
+
+Before I could reply he had gone, and I was left wondering, gazing at
+the photographs of two good-looking, highly respectable and respected
+men, whom an animated scarecrow had just boldly accused of committing
+one of the most dastardly crimes ever recorded in our annals.
+
+
+
+II. The Hocussing of Cigarette
+
+Chapter I
+
+Quite by chance I found myself one morning sitting before a
+marble-topped table in the A.B.C. shop. I really wondered for the
+moment what had brought me there, and felt cross with myself for being
+there at all. Having sampled my tea and roll, I soon buried myself in
+the capacious folds of my _Daily Telegraph_.
+
+“A glass of milk and a cheesecake, please,” said a well-known voice.
+
+The next moment I was staring into the corner, straight at a pair of
+mild, watery blue eyes, hidden behind great bone-rimmed spectacles,
+and at ten long bony fingers, round which a piece of string was
+provokingly intertwined.
+
+There he was as usual, wearing—for it was chilly—a huge tweed ulster,
+of a pattern too lofty to be described. Smiling, bland, apologetic,
+and fidgety, he sat before me as the living embodiment of the reason
+why I had come to the A.B.C. shop that morning.
+
+“How do you do?” I said with as much dignity as I could command.
+
+“I see that you are interested in Cigarette,” he remarked, pointing to
+a special column in the _Daily Telegraph_.
+
+“She is quite herself again,” I said.
+
+“Yes, but you don’t know who tried to poison her and succeeded in
+making her very ill. You don’t know whether the man Palk had anything
+to do with it, whether he was bribed, or whether it was Mrs. Keeson or
+the groom Cockram who told a lie, or why——?”
+
+“No,” I admitted reluctantly; “I don’t know any of these things.”
+
+He was fidgeting nervously in the corner, wriggling about like an
+animated scarecrow. Then suddenly a bland smile illuminated his entire
+face. His long bony finger had caught the end of the bit of string,
+and there he was at it again, just as I had seen him a year ago,
+worrying and fidgeting, making knot upon knot, and untying them again,
+whilst his blue eyes peered at me over the top of his gigantic
+spectacles.
+
+“I would like to know what your theory is about the whole thing,” I
+was compelled to say at last; for the case had interested me deeply,
+and, after all, I had come to the A.B.C. shop for the sole purpose of
+discussing the adventures of Cigarette with him.
+
+“Oh, my theories are not worth considering,” he said meekly. “The
+police would not give me five shillings for any one of them. They
+always prefer a mystery to any logical conclusion, if it is arrived at
+by an outsider. But you may be more lucky. The owner of Cigarette did
+offer £100 reward for the elucidation of the mystery. The noble Earl
+must have backed Cigarette for all he was worth. Malicious tongues go
+even so far as to say that he is practically a ruined man now, and
+that the beautiful Lady Agnes is only too glad to find herself the
+wife of Harold Keeson, the son of the well-known trainer.
+
+“If you ever go to Newmarket,” continued the man in the corner, after
+a slight pause, during which he had been absorbed in unravelling one
+of his most complicated knots, “any one will point out the Keesons’
+house to you. It is called Manor House, and stands in the midst of
+beautiful gardens. Mr. Keeson himself is a man of about fifty, and, as
+a matter of fact, is of very good family, the Keesons having owned
+property in the Midlands for the past eight hundred years. Of this
+fact he is, it appears, extremely proud. His father, however, was a
+notorious spendthrift, who squandered his property, and died in the
+nick of time, leaving his son absolutely penniless and proud as
+Lucifer.
+
+“Fate, however, has been kind to George Keeson. His knowledge of
+horses and of all matters connected with the turf stood him in good
+stead; hard work and perseverance did the rest. Now, at fifty years of
+age, he is a very rich man, and practically at the head of a
+profession, which if not exactly that of a gentleman, is, at any rate,
+highly remunerative.
+
+“He owns Manor House, and lived there with his young wife and his only
+son and heir, Harold.
+
+“It was Mr. Keeson who had trained Cigarette for the Earl of
+Okehampton, and who, of course, had charge of her during her
+apprenticeship, before she was destined to win a fortune for her
+owner, her trainer, and those favoured few who had got wind of her
+capabilities. For Cigarette was to be kept a dark horse—not an easy
+matter in these days, when the neighbourhood of every racecourse
+abounds with rascals who eke out a precarious livelihood by various
+methods more or less shady, of which the gleaning of early information
+is perhaps the least disreputable.
+
+“Fortunately for Mr. Keeson, however, he had in the groom, Cockram, a
+trusted and valued servant, who had been in his employ for over ten
+years. To say that Cockram took a special pride in Cigarette would be
+but to put it mildly. He positively loved the mare, and I don’t think
+that any one ever doubted that his interest in her welfare was every
+bit as keen as that of the Earl of Okehampton or of Mr. Keeson.
+
+“It was to Cockram, therefore, that Mr. Keeson entrusted the care of
+Cigarette. She was lodged in the private stables adjoining the Manor
+House, and during the few days immediately preceding the ‘Coronation
+Stakes’ the groom practically never left her side, either night or
+day. He slept in the loosebox with her, and ate all his meals in her
+company; nor was any one allowed to come within measurable distance of
+the living treasure, save Mr. Keeson or the Earl of Okehampton
+himself.
+
+“And yet, in spite of all these precautions, in spite of every care
+that human ingenuity could devise, on the very morning of the race
+Cigarette was seized with every symptom of poisoning, and although, as
+you say, she is quite herself again now, she was far too ill to fulfil
+her engagement, and, if rumour speaks correctly, completed thereby the
+ruin of the Earl of Okehampton.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+The man in the corner looked at me through his bone-rimmed spectacles,
+and his mild blue eyes gazed pleasantly into mine.
+
+“You may well imagine,” he continued, after a while, “what a
+thunderbolt such a catastrophe means to those whose hopes of a fortune
+rested upon the fitness of the bay mare. Mr. Keeson lost his temper
+for an instant, they say—but for one instant only. When he was hastily
+summoned at six o’clock in the morning to Cigarette’s stables, and saw
+her lying on the straw, rigid and with glassy eyes, he raised his
+heavy riding-whip over the head of Cockram. Some assert that he
+actually struck him, and that the groom was too wretched and too dazed
+to resent either words or blows. After a good deal of hesitation he
+reluctantly admitted that for the first time since Cigarette had been
+in his charge he had slept long and heavily.
+
+“‘I am such a light sleeper, you know, sir,’ he said in a tear-choked
+voice. ‘Usually I could hear every noise the mare made if she stirred
+at all. But there—last night I cannot say _what_ happened. I remember
+that I felt rather drowsy after my supper, and must have dropped off
+to sleep very quickly. Once during the night I woke up; the mare was
+all right then.’
+
+“The man paused, and seemed to be searching for something in his
+mind—the recollection of a dream, perhaps. But the veterinary surgeon,
+who was present at the time, having also been hastily summoned to the
+stables, took up the glass which had contained the beer for Cockram’s
+supper. He sniffed it, and then tasted it, and said quietly:
+
+“‘No wonder you slept heavily, my man. This beer was drugged: it
+contained opium.’
+
+“‘Drugged!’ ejaculated Cockram, who, on hearing this fact, which in
+every way exonerated him from blame, seemed more hopelessly wretched
+than he had been before.
+
+“It appears that every night Cockram’s supper was brought out to him
+in the stables by one of the servants from the Manor House. On this
+particular night Mrs. Keeson’s maid, a young girl named Alice Image,
+had brought him a glass of beer and some bread and cheese on a tray at
+about eleven o’clock.
+
+“Closely questioned by Mr. Keeson, the girl emphatically denied all
+knowledge of any drug in the beer. She had often taken the supper-tray
+across to Cockram, who was her sweetheart, she said. It was usually
+placed ready for her in the hall, and when she had finished attending
+upon her mistress’s night toilet she went over to the stables with it.
+She had certainly never touched the beer, and the tray had stood in
+its accustomed place on the hall table looking just the same as usual.
+‘As if I’d go and poison my Cockram!’ she said in the midst of a
+deluge of tears.
+
+“All these somewhat scanty facts crept into the evening papers that
+same day. That an outrage of a peculiarly daring and cunning character
+had been perpetrated was not for a moment in doubt. So much money had
+been at stake, so many people would be half ruined by it, that even
+the non-racing public at once took the keenest interest in the case.
+All the papers admitted, of course, that for the moment the affair
+seemed peculiarly mysterious, yet all commented upon one fact, which
+they suggested should prove an important clue: this fact was Cockram’s
+strange attitude.
+
+“At first he had been dazed—probably owing to the after-effects of the
+drug; he had also seemed too wretched even to resent Mr. Keeson’s very
+natural outburst of wrath. But then, when the presence of the drug in
+his beer was detected, which proved _him_ at any rate, to have been
+guiltless in the matter, his answers, according to all accounts,
+became somewhat confused; and all Mr. Keeson and the ‘vet.,’ who were
+present, got out of him after that, was a perpetual ejaculation:
+‘What’s to be done? What’s to be done?’
+
+“Two days later the sporting papers were the first to announce, with
+much glee, that, thanks to the untiring energy of the Scotland Yard
+authorities, daylight seemed at last to have been brought to bear upon
+the mystery which surrounded the dastardly outrage on the Earl of
+Okehampton’s mare, Cigarette, and that an important arrest in
+connection with it had already been effected.
+
+“It appears that a man named Charles Palk, seemingly of no address,
+had all along been suspected of having at least a hand in the outrage.
+He was believed to be a bookmaker’s tout, and was a man upon whom the
+police had long since kept a watchful eye. Palk had been seen loafing
+round the Manor House for the past week, and had been warned off the
+grounds once or twice by the grooms.
+
+“It now transpired that on the day preceding the outrage he had hung
+about the neighbourhood of the Manor House the whole afternoon, trying
+to get into conversation with the stable-boys, or even with Mr.
+Keeson’s indoor servants. No one, however, would have anything to do
+with him, as Mr. Keeson’s orders in those respects were very strict:
+he had often threatened any one of his _employés_ with instant
+dismissal if he found him in company with one of these touts.
+
+“Detective Twiss, however, who was in charge of the case, obtained the
+information that Alice Image, the maid, had been seen on more than one
+occasion talking to Palk, and that on the very day before the
+Coronation Stakes she had been seen in his company. Closely questioned
+by the detective, Alice Image at first denied her intercourse with the
+tout, but finally was forced to admit that she had held conversation
+with him once or twice.
+
+“She was fond of putting a bit now and again upon a horse, but
+Cockram, she added, was such a muff that he never would give her a
+tip, for he did not approve of betting for young women. Palk had
+always been very civil and nice-spoken she further explained.
+Moreover, he came from Buckinghamshire, her own part of the country,
+where she was born; anyway, she had never had cause to regret having
+entrusted a half-sovereign or so of her wages to him.
+
+“All these explanations delivered by Alice Image, with the flow of
+tears peculiar to her kind, were not considered satisfactory, and the
+next day she and Charles Palk were both arrested on the charge of
+being concerned in the poisoning of the Earl of Okehampton’s mare
+Cigarette, with intent to do her grievous bodily harm.”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+“These sort of cases,” continued the man in the corner after a slight
+pause, during which his nervous fingers toyed incessantly with that
+eternal bit of string—“these sort of cases always create a great deal
+of attention amongst the public, the majority of whom in this country
+have very strong sporting proclivities. It was small wonder,
+therefore, when Alice Image and Charles Palk were brought before the
+local magistrates, that the court was crowded to overflowing, both
+with Pressmen and with the general public.
+
+“I had all along been very much interested in the case, so I went down
+to Newmarket, and, in spite of the huge crowd, managed to get a good
+seat, whence I could command a full view of the chief personages
+concerned in this thrilling sporting drama.
+
+“Firstly, there was the Earl of Okehampton—good-looking, but for an
+unmistakable air of the broken-down sporting man about his whole
+person; the trainer, Mr. Keeson—a lean, clean-shaven man, with a fine,
+proud carriage, and a general air of ancient lineage and the ‘Domesday
+Booke’ about him; Mrs. Keeson—a pale, nervous-looking creature, who
+seemed very much out of place in this sporting set; and, finally, the
+accused—Alice Image, dissolved in tears, and Charles Palk,
+over-dressed, defiant, horsey, and unsympathetic.
+
+“There was also Cockram, the groom. My short-sighted eyes had fastened
+on him the moment I entered the court. A more wretched, miserable,
+bewildered expression I have never seen on any man’s face.
+
+“Both Alice Image and Charles Palk flatly denied the charge. Alice
+declared, amid a renewed deluge of tears, that she was engaged to be
+married to Cockram, that she ‘no more would have hurt him or the
+pretty creature he was in charge of, for anything.’ How could she? As
+for Palk—conscious, no doubt, of his own evil reputation—he merely
+contented himself with shrugging his shoulders and various denials,
+usually accompanied with emphatic language.
+
+“As neither of the accused attempted to deny that they had been
+together the day before the outrage, there was no occasion to call
+witnesses to further prove that fact. Both, however, asserted
+emphatically that their conversation was entirely confined to the
+subject of Alice’s proposed flutters on the favourite for the next
+day’s race.
+
+“Thus the only really important witness was the groom Cockram. Once
+again his attitude as a witness caused a great deal of surprise, and
+gradually, as he gave his evidence in a peculiarly halting and nervous
+manner, that surprise was changed into suspicion.
+
+“Questioned by the magistrate, he tried his hardest to exonerate Alice
+from all blame; and yet when asked whether he had cause to suspect any
+one else he became more confused than ever, said, ‘No,’ emphatically
+first, then, ‘Yes,’ and finally looked round the court appealingly,
+like some poor animal at bay. That the man was hiding something, that
+he was, in point of fact, lying, was apparent to every one. He had
+drunk the beer, he said, unsuspectingly, on that fatal night; he had
+then dropped off to sleep almost immediately, and never woke until
+about six a.m., when a glance at the mare at once told him that there
+was something very wrong.
+
+“However, whether Cockram was lying or not—whether he suspected any
+one else or was merely trying to shield his sweetheart, there was, in
+the opinion of the magistrate, quite sufficient evidence to prove that
+Alice Image, at any rate, had a hand in the hocussing of Cigarette,
+since it was she who had brought the drugged beer to Cockram. Beyond
+that there was not sufficient evidence to show either that she was a
+tool in the hands of Palk, or that they both were merely instruments
+in the hands of some third person.
+
+“Anyway, the magistrate—it was Major Laverton, J.P., a great personal
+friend of the Earl of Okehampton, and a remarkably clever and acute
+man—tried his hardest to induce Alice to confess. He questioned the
+poor girl so closely and so rigorously that gradually she lost what
+little self-control she had, and every one in the court blamed Major
+Laverton not a little, for he was gradually getting the poor girl into
+a state of hysterics.
+
+“As for me, I inwardly commended the learned J.P., for already I had
+guessed what he was driving at, and was not the least astonished when
+the dramatic incident occurred which rendered this case so memorable.
+
+“Alice Image, namely, now thoroughly unnerved, harassed with the
+Major’s questions, suddenly turned to where Cockram was sitting, and,
+with a hysterical cry, she stretched out both her arms towards him.
+
+“‘Joe! my Joe!’ she cried; ‘you know I didn’t do it! Can’t you do
+anything to help me?’
+
+“It was pathetic in the extreme: every one in the court felt deeply
+moved. As for Cockram, a sudden change came over him. I am accustomed
+to read the faces of my fellow men, and in that rough countenance I
+saw then emerging, in response to the girl’s appeal, a quick and firm
+resolution.
+
+“‘Ay, and I will, Alice!’ he said, jumping to his feet. ‘I have tried
+to do my duty. If the gentlemen will hear me I will say all I know.’
+
+“Needless to say ‘the gentlemen’ were only too ready to hear him. Like
+a man who, having made up his mind, is now resolved to act upon it,
+the groom Cockram began his story.
+
+“‘I told your worship that, having drunk the beer that night, I
+dropped off to sleep very fast and very heavy-like. How long I’d been
+asleep I couldn’t say, when suddenly something seemed not exactly to
+wake me, but to dispel my dreams, so to speak. I opened my eyes, and
+at first I couldn’t see anything, as the gas in the stable was turned
+on very low; but I put out my hand to feel the mare’s fetlocks, just
+by way of telling her that I was there all right enough, and looking
+after her—bless her! At that moment, your worship, I noticed that the
+stable-door was open, and that some one—I couldn’t see who it was—was
+goin’ out of it. “Who goes there!” says I, for I still felt very
+sleepy and dull, when, to my astonishment, who should reply to me
+but——’
+
+“The man paused, and once more over his rough, honest face came the
+old look of perplexity and misery.
+
+“‘But——?’ queried the magistrate, whose nerves were obviously as much
+on tension as those of every one else in that court.
+
+“‘Speak, Joe—won’t you?’ appealed Alice Image pathetically.
+
+“‘But the mistress—Mrs. Keeson, sir,’ came from the groom in an almost
+inaudible whisper. ‘You know, ma’am,’ he added, while the gathering
+tears choked his voice, ‘I wouldn’t ’ave spoke. But she’s my
+sweetheart, ma’am; and I couldn’t bear that the shame should rest on
+her.’
+
+“There was a moment’s deadly silence in that crowded court. Every
+one’s eyes wandered towards the pale face of Mrs. Keeson, which,
+however, though almost livid in colour, expressed nothing but the most
+boundless astonishment. As for Mr. Keeson, surprise, incredulity, then
+furious wrath at the slander, could be seen chasing one another upon
+his handsome face.
+
+“‘What lie is this?’ burst involuntarily from his lips, as his fingers
+closed more tightly upon the heavy riding-whip which he was holding.
+
+“‘Silence, please!’ said the Major with authority. ‘Now, Cockram, go
+on. You say Mrs. Keeson spoke to you. What did she say?’
+
+“‘She seemed rather upset, sir,’ continued Cockram, still looking with
+humble apology across at his mistress, ‘for she only stammered
+something about: “Oh, it’s nothing, Cockram. I only wanted to speak to
+my son—er—to Mr. Harold—I——”’
+
+“‘Harold?’ thundered Mr. Keeson, who was fast losing his temper.
+
+“‘I must ask you, Mr. Keeson, to be silent,’ said the Major. ‘Go on,
+Cockram.’
+
+“And Cockram continued his narrative:
+
+“‘“Mr. Harold, ma’am?” I said. “What should ’e be doing ’ere in the
+stables at this time of night?” “Oh, nothing,” says she to me, “I
+thought I saw him come in here. I must have been mistaken. Never mind,
+Cockram; it’s all right. Good-night.”
+
+“‘I said good-night too, and then fell to wondering what Mr. ’Arold
+could have wanted prowling round the stables at this hour of the
+night. Just then the clock of St. Saviour’s struck four o’clock, and
+while I was still wondering I fell asleep again, and never awoke till
+six, when the mare was as sick as she could be. And that’s the whole
+truth, gentlemen; and I would never have spoke—for Mr. and Mrs. Keeson
+have always been good to me, and I’d have done anything to save them
+the disgrace—but Alice is goin’ to be my wife, and I couldn’t bear any
+shame to rest upon ’er.’
+
+“When Cockram had finished speaking you might have heard a pin drop as
+Major Laverton asked Mrs. Keeson to step into the witness-box. She
+looked fragile and pale but otherwise quite self-possessed, as she
+quietly kissed the book and said in a very firm tone of voice:
+
+“‘I can only say in reply to the extraordinary story which this man
+has just told that the drug in the beer must have given him peculiarly
+vivid dreams. At the hour he names I was in bed fast asleep, as my
+husband can testify; and the whole of Cockram’s narrative is a
+fabrication from beginning to end. I may add that I am more than
+willing to forgive him. No doubt his brain was clouded by the opiate;
+and now he is beside himself owing to Alice Image’s predicament. As
+for my son Harold, he was absent from home that night; he was spending
+it with some bachelor friends at the “Stag and Mantle” hotel in
+Newmarket.’
+
+“‘Yes! By the way,’ said the magistrate, ‘where is Mr. Harold Keeson?
+I have no doubt that he will be able to give a very good account of
+himself on that memorable night.’
+
+“‘My son is abroad, your worship,’ said Mrs. Keeson, while a shade of
+a still more livid hue passed over her face.
+
+“‘Abroad, is he?’ said the magistrate cheerfully. ‘Well, that settles
+the point satisfactorily for him—doesn’t it? When did he go?’
+
+“‘Last Thursday, your worship,’ replied Mrs. Keeson.
+
+“Then there was silence again in the court, for that last Thursday was
+the day of the ‘Coronation Stakes’—the day immediately following the
+memorable night on which the mare Cigarette had been poisoned by an
+unknown hand.”
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+“I doubt whether in all the annals of criminal procedure there ever
+occurred a more dramatic moment than that when so strange a ray of
+daylight was shed on the mysterious outrage on Cigarette. The
+magistrate, having dismissed Mrs. Keeson, hardly dared to look across
+at the trainer, who was a personal friend of his, and who had just
+received such a cruel blow through this terrible charge against his
+only son—for at that moment I doubt if there were two people in that
+court who did not think that Mrs. Keeson had just sworn a false oath,
+and that both she and her son had been in the stables that night—for
+what purpose only they and their own conscience could tell.
+
+“Alice Image and Charles Palk were both discharged; and it is greatly
+to the credit of Cockram that in the midst of his joy in seeing his
+sweetheart safe he still remained very gloomy and upset. As for Mr.
+Keeson, he must have suffered terribly at all this mud cast at his
+only son. He had been wounded in what he worshipped more than anything
+else in the world—his family honour. What was the use of money and the
+old estates if such a stain rested upon his name?
+
+“As for Mrs. Keeson, public sympathy was very much overshadowed with
+contempt for her stupidity. Had she only held her tongue when Cockram
+challenged her, suspicion would never have fastened upon Harold. The
+fact that she had lied in the witness-box in order to try and remedy
+her blunder was also very severely commented upon. The young man had
+gone abroad on that memorable Thursday accompanied by two of his
+bachelor friends. They had gone on a fishing expedition to Norway, and
+were not expected home for three weeks. As they meant to move from
+place to place they had left no address: letters and telegrams were
+therefore useless.
+
+“During those three weeks pending Harold Keeson’s return certain facts
+leaked out which did not tend to improve his case. It appears that he
+had long been in love with Lady Agnes Stourcliffe, the daughter of the
+Earl of Okehampton. Some people asserted that the young people were
+actually—though secretly—engaged. The Earl, however, seems all along
+to have objected to the marriage of his daughter with the son of a
+trainer, and on more than one occasion had remarked that he had not
+sunk quite so low yet as to allow so preposterous a _mésalliance_. Mr.
+Keeson, whose family pride was at least equal to that of the Earl, had
+naturally very much resented this attitude, and had often begged his
+son to give up his pretensions, since they were manifestly so
+unwelcome.
+
+“Harold Keeson, however, was deeply in love; and Lady Agnes stuck to
+him with womanly constancy and devotion. Unfortunately a climax was
+reached some days before the disastrous events at Newmarket. The Earl
+of Okehampton suddenly took up a very firm stand on the subject of
+Harold Keeson’s courtship of his daughter. Some hot words were
+exchanged between the two men, ending in an open breach, the Earl
+positively forbidding the young man ever to enter his house again.
+
+“Harold was terribly unhappy at this turn of events. Pride forbade him
+to take an unfair advantage of a young girl’s devotion, and, acting on
+the advice of his parents, he started for his tour in Norway,
+ostensibly in order to try and forget the fair Lady Agnes. This
+unhappy love-affair, ending in an open and bitter quarrel between
+himself and the owner of Cigarette, did—as I said before—the young
+man’s case no good. At the instance of the Earl of Okehampton, who
+determined to prosecute him, he was arrested on landing at Harwich.
+
+“Well,” continued the man in the corner, “the next events must be
+still fresh in your mind. When Harold Keeson appeared in the dock,
+charged with such meanness as to wreak his private grievance upon a
+dumb animal, public sympathy at once veered round in his favour. He
+looked so handsome, so frank and honest, that at once one felt
+convinced that _his_ hand, at any rate, could never have done such a
+dastardly thing.
+
+“Mr. Keeson, who was a rich man, moreover, had enlisted the services
+of Sir Arthur Inglewood, who had, in the short time at his disposal,
+collected all the most important evidence on behalf of his client.
+
+“The two young men who had been travelling in Norway with Harold
+Keeson had been present with him on the memorable night at a bachelor
+party given by a mutual friend at the ‘Stag and Mantle.’ Both
+testified that the party had played bridge until the small hours of
+the morning, that between two rubbers—the rooms being very hot—they
+had all strolled out to smoke a cigar in the streets. Just as they
+were about to re-enter the hotel two church clocks—one of which was
+St. Saviour’s—chimed out the hour—four o’clock.
+
+“Four o’clock was the hour when Cockram said that he had spoken to
+Mrs. Keeson. Harold had not left the party at the ‘Stag and Mantle’
+since ten o’clock, which was an hour before Alice Image took the
+drugged beer to the groom. The whole edifice of the prosecution thus
+crumbled together like a house of cards, and Harold Keeson was
+discharged, without the slightest suspicion clinging to him.
+
+“Six months later he married Lady Agnes Stourcliffe. The Earl, now a
+completely ruined man, offered no further opposition to the union of
+his daughter with a man who, at any rate, could keep her in comfort
+and luxury; for though both Mr. Keeson and his son lost heavily
+through Cigarette’s illness, yet the trainer was sufficiently rich to
+offer his son and his bride a very beautiful home.”
+
+The man in the corner called to the waitress, and paid for his glass
+of milk and cheesecake, whilst I remained absorbed in thought, gazing
+at the _Daily Telegraph_, which, in its “London Day by Day,” had this
+very morning announced that Mr. and Lady Agnes Keeson had returned to
+town from “The Rookery,” Newmarket.
+
+
+
+Chapter V
+
+“But who poisoned Cigarette?” I asked after a while; “and why?”
+
+“Ah, who did, I wonder?” he replied with exasperating mildness.
+
+“Surely you have a theory,” I suggested.
+
+“Ah, but my theories are not worth considering. The police would take
+no notice of them.”
+
+“Why did Mrs. Keeson go to the stables that night? Did she go?” I
+asked.
+
+“Cockram swears she did.”
+
+“She swears she didn’t. If she did why should she have asked for her
+son? Surely she did not wish to incriminate her son in order to save
+herself?”
+
+“No,” he replied; “women don’t save themselves usually at the expense
+of their children, and women don’t usually ‘hocus’ a horse. It is not
+a female crime at all—is it?”
+
+The aggravating creature was getting terribly sarcastic; and I began
+to fear that he was not going to speak, after all. He was looking
+dejectedly all around him. I had one or two parcels by me. I undid a
+piece of string from one of them, and handed it to him with the most
+perfectly indifferent air I could command.
+
+“I wonder if it was Cockram who told a lie?” I then said
+unconcernedly.
+
+But already he had seized on that bit of string, and, nervously now,
+his long fingers began fashioning a series of complicated knots.
+
+“Let us take things from the beginning,” he said at last. “The
+beginning of the mystery was the contradictory statements made by the
+groom Cockram and Mrs. Keeson respectively. Let us take, first of all,
+the question of the groom. The matter is simple enough: either he saw
+Mrs. Keeson or he did not. If he did not see her then he must have
+told a lie, either unintentionally or by design—unintentionally if he
+was mistaken; but this could not very well be since he asserted that
+Mrs. Keeson spoke to him, and even mentioned her son, Mr. Harold
+Keeson. Therefore, if Cockram did not see Mrs. Keeson he told a lie by
+design for some purpose of his own. You follow me?”
+
+“Yes,” I replied; “I have thought all that out for myself already.”
+
+“Very well. Now, could there be some even remotely plausible motive
+why Cockram should have told that deliberate lie?”
+
+“To save his sweetheart, Alice Image,” I said.
+
+“But you forget that his sweetheart was not accused at first, and
+that, from the very beginning, Cockram’s manner, when questioned on
+the subject of the events of that night was strange and contradictory
+in the extreme.”
+
+“He may have known from the first that Alice Image was guilty,” I
+argued.
+
+“In that case he would have merely asserted that he had seen and heard
+nothing during the night, or if he wished to lie about it, he would
+have said that it was Palk, the tout, who sneaked into the stables,
+rather than incriminate his mistress, who had been good and kind to
+him for years.”
+
+“He may have wished to be revenged on Mrs. Keeson for some reason
+which has not yet transpired.”
+
+“How? By making a statement which, if untrue, could be so easily
+disproved by Mr. Keeson himself, who, as a matter of fact, could
+easily assert that his wife did not leave her bedroom that night; or
+by incriminating Mr. Harold Keeson, who could prove an _alibi_? Not
+much of a revenge there, you must admit. No, no; the more you reflect
+seriously upon these possibilities the deeper will become your
+conviction that Cockram did not lie either accidentally or on purpose;
+that he did see Mrs. Keeson at that hour at the stable-door; that she
+did speak to him; and that it was she who told the lie in open court.”
+
+“But,” I asked, feeling more bewildered than before, “why should Mrs.
+Keeson have gone to the stables and asked for her son when she must
+have known that he was not there, but that her inquiry would make it,
+to say the least, extremely unpleasant for him?”
+
+“Why?” he shrieked excitedly, jumping up like a veritable
+jack-in-the-box. “Ah, if you would only learn to reflect you might in
+time become a fairly able journalist. Why did Mrs. Keeson momentarily
+incriminate her son?—for it was only a momentary incrimination. Think,
+think! A woman does not incriminate her child to save herself; but she
+might do it to save some one else—some one who was dearer to her than
+that child.”
+
+“Nonsense!” I protested.
+
+“Nonsense, is it?” he replied. “You have only to think of the
+characters of the chief personages who figured in the drama—of the
+trainer Keeson, with his hasty temper and his inordinate family pride.
+Was it likely when the half-ruined Earl of Okehampton talked of
+_mésalliance_, and forbade the marriage of his daughter with his
+trainer’s son that the latter would not resent that insult with
+terrible bitterness? and, resenting it, not think of some means of
+being even with the noble Earl? Can you not imagine the proud man
+boiling with indignation on hearing his son’s tale of how Lord
+Okehampton had forbidden him the house? Can you not hear him saying to
+himself:
+
+“‘Well, by —— the trainer’s son _shall_ marry the Earl’s daughter!’
+
+“And the scheme—simple and effectual—whereby the ruin of the arrogant
+nobleman would be made so complete that he would be only too willing
+to allow his daughter to marry any one who would give her a good home
+and him a helping hand?”
+
+“But,” I objected, “why should Mr. Keeson take the trouble to drug the
+groom and sneak out to the stables at dead of night when he had access
+to the mare at all hours of the day?”
+
+“Why?” shrieked the animated scarecrow. “Why? Because Keeson was just
+one of those clever criminals, with a sufficiency of brains to throw
+police and public alike off the scent. Cockram, remember, spent every
+moment of the day and night with the mare. Therefore, if he had been
+in full possession of his senses and could positively swear that no
+one had had access to Cigarette but his master and himself, suspicion
+was bound to fasten, sooner or later, on Keeson. But Keeson was a bit
+of a genius in the criminal line. Seemingly, he could have had no
+motive for drugging the groom, yet he added that last artistic touch
+to his clever crime, and thus threw a final bucketful of sand in the
+eyes of the police.”
+
+“Even then,” I argued, “Cockram might just have woke up—might just
+have caught Keeson in the act.”
+
+“Exactly. And that is, no doubt, what Mrs. Keeson feared.
+
+“She was a brave woman, if ever there was one. Can you not picture
+her, knowing her husband’s violent temper, his indomitable pride, and
+guessing that he would find some means of being revenged on the Earl
+of Okehampton. Can you not imagine her watching her husband and
+gradually guessing, realising what he had in his mind when, in the
+middle of the night, she saw him steal out of bed and out of the
+house? Can you not see her following him stealthily—afraid of him,
+perhaps—not daring to interfere—terrified above all things of the
+consequences of his crime, of the risks of Cockram waking up, of the
+exposure, the disgrace?
+
+“Then the final tableau:—Keeson having accomplished his purpose, goes
+back towards the house, and she—perhaps with a vague hope that she
+might yet save the mare by taking away the poison which Keeson had
+prepared—in her turn goes to the stables. But this time the groom is
+half awake, and challenges her. Then her instinct—that unerring
+instinct which always prompts a really good woman when the loved one
+is in danger—suggests to Mrs. Keeson the clever subterfuge of
+pretending that she had seen her son entering the stables.
+
+“She asks for him, _knowing well that she could do him no harm_ since
+he could so easily prove an _alibi_, but thereby throwing a veritable
+cloud of dust in the eyes of the keenest enquirer, and casting over
+the hocussing of Cigarette so thick a mantle of mystery that
+suspicion, groping blindly round, could never fasten tightly on any
+one.
+
+“Think of it all,” he added as, gathering up his hat and umbrella, he
+prepared to go, “and remember at the same time that it was Mr. Keeson
+alone who could disprove that his wife never left her room that night,
+that he did not do this, that he guessed what she had done and why she
+had done it, and I think that you will admit that not one link is
+missing in the chain of evidence which I have had the privilege of
+laying before you.”
+
+Before I could reply he had gone, and I saw his strange scarecrow-like
+figure disappearing through the glass door. Then I had a good think on
+the subject of the hocussing of Cigarette, and I was reluctantly bound
+to admit that once again the man in the corner had found the only
+possible solution to the mystery.
+
+
+
+III. The Tragedy in Dartmoor Terrace
+
+Chapter I
+
+“It is not by any means the Law and Police Courts that form the only
+interesting reading in the daily papers,” said the man in the corner
+airily, as he munched his eternal bit of cheesecake and sipped his
+glass of milk, like a frowsy old tom-cat.
+
+“You don’t agree with me,” he added, for I offered no comment to his
+obvious remark.
+
+“No?” I answered. “I suppose you were thinking——”
+
+“Of the tragic death of Mrs. Yule, for instance,” he replied eagerly.
+“Beyond the inquest, and its very unsatisfactory verdict, very few
+circumstances connected with that interesting case ever got into the
+papers at all.”
+
+“I forget what the verdict actually was,” I said, eager, too, on my
+side to hear him talk about that mysterious tragedy, which, as a
+matter of fact, had puzzled a good many people.
+
+“Oh, it was as vague and as wordy as the English language would allow.
+The jury found that ‘Mrs. Yule had died through falling downstairs, in
+consequence of a fainting attack, but _how_ she came to fall is not
+clearly shown.’
+
+“What had happened was this: Mrs. Yule was a rich and eccentric old
+lady, who lived very quietly in a small house in Kensington; No. 9
+Dartmoor Terrace is, I believe, the correct address.
+
+“She had no expensive tastes, for she lived, as I said before, very
+simply and quietly in a small Kensington house, with two female
+servants—a cook and a housemaid—and a young fellow whom she had
+adopted as her son.
+
+“The story of this adoption is, of course, the pivot round which all
+the circumstances of the mysterious tragedy revolved. Mrs. Yule,
+namely, had an only son, William, to whom she was passionately
+attached, but, like many a fond mother, she had the desire of mapping
+out that son’s future entirely according to her own ideas. William
+Yule, on the other hand, had his own views with regard to his own
+happiness, and one fine day went so far as to marry the girl of his
+choice, and that in direct opposition to his mother’s wishes.
+
+“Mrs. Yule’s chagrin and horror at what she called her son’s base
+ingratitude knew no bounds; at first it was even thought that she
+would never get over it.
+
+“‘He has gone in direct opposition to my fondest wishes, and chose a
+wife whom I could never accept as a daughter; he shall have none of
+the property which has enriched me, and which I know he covets.’
+
+“At first her friends imagined that she meant to leave all her money
+to charitable institutions; but oh! dear me, no! Mrs. Yule was one of
+those women who never did anything that other people expected her to.
+Within three years of her son’s marriage she had filled up the place
+which he had vacated, both in her house and in her heart. She had
+adopted a son, preferring, as she said, that her money should benefit
+an individual rather than an institution.
+
+“Her choice had fallen upon the only son of a poor man—an
+ex-soldier—who used to come twice a week to Dartmoor Terrace to tidy
+up the small garden at the back: he was very respectable and very
+honest—was born in the same part of England as Mrs. Yule, and had an
+only son whose name happened to be William; he rejoiced in the surname
+of Bloggs.
+
+“‘It suits me in every way,’ explained Mrs. Yule to old Mr. Statham,
+her friend and solicitor. ‘You see, I am used to the name of William,
+and the boy is nice-looking and has done very well at the Board
+School. Moreover, old Bloggs will die within a year or two, and
+William will be left without any encumbrances.’
+
+“Herein Mrs. Yule’s prophecy proved to be correct. Old Bloggs did die
+very soon, and his son was duly adopted by the rich and eccentric old
+lady, sent to a good school, and finally given a berth in the Union
+Bank.
+
+“I saw young Bloggs—it is not a euphonious name, is it?—at that
+memorable inquest later on. He was very young and unassuming, and used
+to keep very much out of the way of Mrs. Yule’s friends, who, mind
+you, strongly disapproved of his presence in the rich old widow’s
+house, to the detriment of the only legitimate son and heir.
+
+“What happened within the intimate and close circle of 9, Dartmoor
+Terrace, during the next three years of course nobody can tell.
+Certain it is that by the time young Bloggs was nearing his
+twenty-first birthday, he had become the very apple of his adopted
+mother’s eye.
+
+“During those three years Mr. Statham and other old friends had worked
+hard in the interests of William Yule. Every one felt that the latter
+was being very badly treated indeed. He had studied painting in his
+younger days, and now had set up a small studio in Hampstead, and was
+making perhaps a couple of hundred or so a year, and that, with much
+difficulty, whilst the gardener’s son had supplanted him in his
+mother’s affections, and, worse still, in his mother’s purse.
+
+“The old lady was more obdurate than ever. In deference to the strong
+feelings of her friends she had agreed to see her son occasionally,
+and William Yule would call upon his mother from time to time—in the
+middle of the day when Bloggs was out of the way at the Bank—stay to
+tea, and part from her in frigid, though otherwise amicable, terms.
+
+“‘I have no ill-feeling against my son,’ the old lady would say, ‘but
+when he married against my wishes, he became a stranger to me—that is
+all—a stranger, however, whose pleasant acquaintanceship I am pleased
+to keep up.’
+
+“That the old lady meant to carry her eccentricities in this respect
+to the bitter end, became all the more evident when she sent for her
+old friend and lawyer, Mr. Statham, and explained to him that she
+wished to make over to young Bloggs the whole of her property by deed
+of gift, during her lifetime—on condition that on his twenty-first
+birthday he legally took up the name of Yule.
+
+“Mr. Statham subsequently made public, as you know, the whole of this
+interview which he had with Mrs. Yule.
+
+“‘I tried to dissuade her, of course,’ he said, ‘for I thought it so
+terribly unfair on William Yule and his children. Moreover, I had
+always hoped that when Mrs. Yule grew older and more feeble she would
+surely relent towards her only son. But she was terribly obstinate.’
+
+“‘It is because I may become weak in my dotage,’ she said, ‘that I
+want to make the whole thing absolutely final—I don’t want to relent.
+I wish that William should suffer, where I think he will suffer most,
+for he was always over fond of money. If I make a will in favour of
+Bloggs, who knows I might repent it, and alter it at the eleventh
+hour? One is apt to become maudlin when one is dying, and has people
+weeping all round one. No!—I want the whole thing to be absolutely
+irrevocable; and I shall present the deed of gift to young Bloggs on
+his twenty-first birthday. I can always make it a condition that he
+keeps me in moderate comfort to the end of my days. He is too big a
+fool to be really ungrateful, and after all I don’t think I should
+very much mind ending my life in the workhouse.’
+
+“‘What could I do?’ added Mr. Statham. ‘If I had refused to draw up
+that iniquitous deed of gift, she only would have employed some other
+lawyer to do it for her. As it is, I secured an annuity of £500 a year
+for the old lady, in consideration of a gift worth some £30,000 made
+over absolutely to Mr. William Bloggs.’
+
+“The deed was drawn up,” continued the man in the corner, “there is no
+doubt of that. Mr. Statham saw to it. The old lady even insisted on
+having two more legal opinions upon it, lest there should be the
+slightest flaw that might render the deed invalid. Moreover, she
+caused herself to be examined by two specialists in order that they
+might testify that she was absolutely sound in mind, and in full
+possession of all her faculties.
+
+“When the deed was all that the law could wish, Mr. Statham handed it
+over to Mrs. Yule, who wished to keep it by her until 3rd April—young
+Bloggs’ twenty-first birthday—on which day she meant to surprise him
+with it.
+
+“Mr. Statham handed over the deed to Mrs. Yule on 14th February, and
+on 28th March—that is to say, six days before Bloggs’ majority—the old
+lady was found dead at the foot of the stairs in Dartmoor Terrace,
+whilst her desk was found to have been broken open, and the deed of
+gift had disappeared.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+“From the very first the public took a very great interest in the sad
+death of Mrs. Yule. The old lady’s eccentricities were pretty well
+known throughout all her neighbourhood, at any rate. Then, she had a
+large circle of friends, who all took sides, either for the disowned
+son or for the old lady’s rigid and staunch principles of filial
+obedience.
+
+“Directly, therefore, that the papers mentioned the sudden death of
+Mrs. Yule, tongues began to wag, and, whilst some asserted ‘Accident,’
+others had already begun to whisper ‘Murder.’
+
+“For the moment nothing definite was known. Mr. Bloggs had sent for
+Mr. Statham, and the most persevering and most inquisitive persons of
+both sexes could glean no information from the cautious old lawyer.
+
+“The inquest was to be held on the following day, and perforce
+curiosity had to be bridled until then. But you may imagine how that
+coroner’s court at Kensington was packed on that day. I, of course,
+was at my usual place—well to the front—for I was already keenly
+interested in the tragedy, and knew that a palpitating mystery lurked
+behind the old lady’s death.
+
+“Annie, the housemaid at Dartmoor Terrace, was the first, and I may
+say the only really important witness during that interesting inquest.
+The story she told amounted to this: Mrs. Yule, it appears, was very
+religious, and, in spite of her advancing years and decided weakness
+of the heart, was in the habit of going to early morning service every
+day of her life at six o’clock. She would get up before any one else
+in the house, and winter or summer, rain, snow, or fine, she would
+walk round to St. Matthias’ Church, coming home at about a quarter to
+seven, just when her servants were getting up.
+
+“On this sad morning (28th March) Annie explained that she got up as
+usual and went downstairs (the servants slept at the top of the house)
+at seven o’clock. She noticed nothing wrong, her mistress’s bedroom
+door was open as usual, Annie merely remarking to herself that the
+mistress was later than usual from church that morning. Then suddenly,
+in the hall at the foot of the stairs, she caught sight of Mrs. Yule
+lying head downwards, her head on the mat, motionless.
+
+“‘I ran downstairs as quickly as I could,’ continued Annie, ‘and I
+suppose I must ’ave screamed, for cook came out of ’er room upstairs,
+and Mr. Bloggs, too, shouted down to know what was the matter. At
+first we thought Mrs. Yule was unconscious-like. Me and Mr. Bloggs
+carried ’er to ’er room, and then Mr. Bloggs ran for the doctor.’
+
+“The rest of Annie’s story,” continued the man in the corner, “was
+drowned in a deluge of tears. As for the doctor, he could add but
+little to what the public had already known and guessed. Mrs. Yule
+undoubtedly suffered from a weak heart, although she had never been
+known to faint. In this instance, however, she undoubtedly must have
+turned giddy, as she was about to go downstairs, and fallen headlong.
+She was of course very much injured, the doctor explained, but she
+actually died of heart failure, brought on by the shock of the fall.
+She must have been on her way to church, for her prayer book was found
+on the floor close by her, also a candle—which she must have carried,
+as it was a dark morning—had rolled along and extinguished itself as
+it rolled. From these facts, therefore, it was gathered that the poor
+old lady came by this tragic death at about six o’clock, the hour at
+which she regularly started out for morning service. Both the servants
+and also Mr. Bloggs slept at the top of the house, and it is a known
+fact that sleep in most cases is always heaviest in the early morning
+hours; there was, therefore, nothing strange in the fact that no one
+heard either the fall or a scream, if Mrs. Yule uttered one, which is
+doubtful.
+
+“So far, you see,” continued the man in the corner, after a slight
+pause, “there did not appear to be anything very out of the way or
+mysterious about Mrs. Yule’s tragic death. But the public expected
+interesting developments, and I must say their expectations were more
+than fully realised.
+
+“Jane, the cook, was the first witness to give the public an inkling
+of the sensations to come.
+
+“She deposed that on Thursday, the 27th, she was alone in the kitchen
+in the evening after dinner, as it was the housemaid’s evening out,
+when, at about nine o’clock, there was a ring at the bell.
+
+“‘I went to answer the door,’ said Jane, ‘and there was a lady, all
+dressed in black, as far as I could see—as the ’all gas always did
+burn very badly—still, I think she was dressed dark, and she ’ad on a
+big ’at and a veil with spots. She says to me: “Mrs. Yule lives ’ere?”
+I says, “She do, ’m,” though I don’t think she was quite the lady, so
+I don’t know why I said ’m, but——’
+
+“‘Yes, yes!’ here interrupted the coroner somewhat impatiently, ‘it
+doesn’t matter what you said. Tell us what happened.’
+
+“‘Yes, sir,’ continued Jane, quite undisturbed, ‘as I was saying, I
+asked the lady her name, and she says: “Tell Mrs. Yule I would wish to
+speak with her,” then as she saw me ’esitating, for I didn’t like
+leaving her all alone in the ’all, she said, “Tell Mrs. Yule that Mrs.
+William Yule wishes to speak with ’er.”’
+
+“Jane paused to take breath, for she talked fast and volubly, and all
+eyes were turned to a corner of the room, where William Yule, dressed
+in the careless fashion affected by artists, sat watching and
+listening eagerly to everything that was going on. At the mention of
+his wife’s name he shrugged his shoulders, and I thought for the
+moment that he would jump up and say something; but he evidently
+thought better of it, and remained as before, silent and quietly
+watching.
+
+“‘You showed the lady upstairs?’ asked the coroner, after an instant’s
+most dramatic pause.
+
+“‘Yes, sir,’ replied Jane; ‘but I went to ask the mistress first. Mrs.
+Yule was sitting in the drawing-room, reading. She says to me, “Show
+the lady up at once; and, Jane,” she says, “ask Mr. Bloggs to kindly
+come to the drawing-room.” I showed the lady up, and I told Mr.
+Bloggs, who was smoking in the library, and ’e went to the
+drawing-room.
+
+“‘When Annie come in,’ continued Jane with increased volubility, ‘I
+told ’er ’oo ’ad come, and she and me was very astonished, because we
+’ad often seen Mr. William Yule come to see ’is mother, but we ’ad
+never seen ’is wife. “Did you see what she was like cook?” says Annie
+to me. “No,” I says, “the ’all gas was burnin’ that badly, and she ’ad
+a veil on.” Then Annie ups and says, “I must go up, cook,” she says,
+“for my things is all wet. I never did see such rain in all my life. I
+tell you my boots and petticoats is all soaked through.” Then up she
+runs, and I thought then that per’aps she meant to see if she couldn’t
+’ear anything that was goin’ on upstairs. Presently she come down——’
+
+“But at this point Jane’s flow of eloquence received an unexpected
+check. The coroner preferred to hear from Annie herself whatever the
+latter may have overheard, and Jane, very wrathful and indignant, had
+to stand aside, while Annie, who was then recalled, completed the
+story.
+
+“‘I don’t know what made me stop on the landing,’ she explained
+timidly, ‘and I’m sure I didn’t mean to listen. I was going upstairs
+to change my things, and put on my cap and apron, in case the mistress
+wanted anything.
+
+“‘Then, I don’t think I ever ’eard Mrs. Yule’s voice so loud and
+angry.’
+
+“‘You stopped to listen?’ asked the coroner.
+
+“‘I couldn’t help it, sir. Mrs. Yule was shouting at the top of ’er
+voice. “Out of my house,” she says; “I never wish to see you or your
+precious husband inside my doors again.”’
+
+“‘You are quite sure that you heard those very words?’ asked the
+coroner earnestly.
+
+“‘I’ll take my Bible oath on every one of them, sir,’ said Annie
+emphatically. ‘Then I could ’ear some one crying and moaning: “Oh!
+what have I done? Oh! what have I done?” I didn’t like to stand on the
+landing then, for fear some one should come out, so I ran upstairs,
+and put on my cap and apron, for I was all in a tremble, what with
+what I’d heard, and the storm outside, which was coming down terrible.
+
+“‘When I went down again, I ’ardly durst stand on the landing, but the
+door of the drawing-room was ajar, and I ’eard Mr. Bloggs say: “Surely
+you will not turn a human being, much less a woman, out on a night
+like this?” And the mistress said, still speaking very angrily: “Very
+well, you may sleep here; but remember, I don’t wish to see your face
+again. I go to church at six and come home again at seven; mind you
+are out of the house before then. There are plenty of trains after
+seven o’clock.”’
+
+“After that,” continued the man in the corner, “Mrs. Yule rang for the
+housemaid and gave orders that the spare-room should be got ready, and
+that the visitor should have some tea and toast brought to her in the
+morning as soon as Annie was up.
+
+“But Annie was rather late on that eventful morning of the 28th. She
+did not go downstairs till seven o’clock. When she did, she found her
+mistress lying dead at the foot of the stairs. It was not until after
+the doctor had been and gone that both the servants suddenly
+recollected the guest in the spare room. Annie knocked at her door,
+and, receiving no answer, she walked in; the bed had not been slept
+in, and the spare room was empty.
+
+“‘There, now!’ was the housemaid’s decisive comment, ‘me and cook did
+’ear some one cross the ’all, and the front door bang about an hour
+after every one else was in bed.’
+
+“Presumably, therefore, Mrs. William Yule had braved the elements and
+left the house at about midnight, leaving no trace behind her, save
+perhaps the broken lock of the desk that had held the deed of gift in
+favour of young Bloggs.”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+“Some say there’s a Providence that watches over us,” said the man in
+the corner, when he had looked at me keenly, and had assured himself
+that I was really interested in his narrative, “others use the less
+poetic and more direct formula, that ‘the devil takes care of his
+own.’ The impression of the general public during this interesting
+coroner’s inquest was that the devil was taking special care of his
+own—(‘his own’ being in this instance represented by Mrs. William
+Yule, who, by the way, was not present).
+
+“What the Evil One had done for her was this: He caused the hall gas
+to burn so badly on that eventful Thursday night, 27th March, that
+Jane, the cook, had not been able to see Mrs. William Yule at all
+distinctly. He, moreover, decreed that when Annie went into the
+drawing-room later on to take her mistress’s orders, with regard to
+the spare room, Mrs. William was apparently dissolved in tears, for
+she only presented the back of her head to the inquisitive glances of
+the young housemaid.
+
+“After that the two servants went to bed, and heard some one cross the
+hall and leave the house about an hour or so later; but neither of
+them could swear positively that they would recognise the mysterious
+visitor if they set eyes on her again.
+
+“Throughout all these proceedings, however, you may be sure that Mr.
+William Yule did not remain a passive spectator. In fact I, who
+watched him, could see quite clearly that he had the greatest possible
+difficulty in controlling himself. Mind you, I knew by then exactly
+where the hitch lay, and I could, and will presently, tell you exactly
+all that occurred on Thursday evening, 27th March, at No. 9, Dartmoor
+Terrace, just as if I had spent that memorable night there myself; and
+I can assure you that it gave me great pleasure to watch the faces of
+the two men most interested in the verdict of this coroner’s jury.
+
+“Every one’s sympathy had by now entirely veered round to young
+Bloggs, who for years had been brought up to expect a fortune, and had
+then, at the last moment, been defrauded of it, through what looked
+already much like a crime. The deed of gift had, of course, not been
+what the lawyers call ‘completed.’ It had rested in Mrs. Yule’s desk,
+and had never been ‘delivered’ by the donor to the donee, or even to
+another person on his behalf.
+
+“Young Bloggs, therefore, saw himself suddenly destined to live his
+life as penniless as he had been when he was still the old gardener’s
+son.
+
+“No doubt the public felt that what lurked mostly in his mind was a
+desire for revenge, and I think everyone forgave him when he gave his
+evidence with a distinct tone of animosity against the woman who had
+apparently succeeded in robbing him of a fortune.
+
+“He had only met Mrs. William Yule once before, he explained, but he
+was ready to swear that it was she who called that night. As for the
+original motive of the quarrel between the two ladies, young Bloggs
+was inclined to think that it was mostly on the question of money.
+
+“‘Mrs. William,’ continued the young man, ‘made certain peremptory
+demands on Mrs. Yule, which the old lady bitterly resented.’
+
+“But here there was an awful and sudden interruption. William Yule,
+now quite beside himself with rage, had with one bound reached the
+witness-box, and struck young Bloggs a violent blow in the face.
+
+“‘Liar and cheat!’ he roared, ‘take that!’
+
+“And he prepared to deal the young man another even more vigorous
+blow, when he was overpowered and seized by the constables. Young
+Bloggs had become positively livid; his face looked grey and ashen,
+except there, where his powerful assailant’s fist had left a deep
+purple mark.
+
+“‘You have done your wife’s cause no good,’ remarked the coroner
+drily, as William Yule, sullen and defiant, was forcibly dragged back
+to his place. ‘I shall adjourn the inquest until Monday, and will
+expect Mrs. Yule to be present and to explain exactly what happened
+after her quarrel with the deceased, and why she left the house so
+suddenly and mysteriously that night.’
+
+“William Yule tried an explanation even then. His wife had never left
+the studio in Sheriff Road, West Hampstead, the whole of that Thursday
+evening. It was a fearfully stormy night, and she never went outside
+the door. But the Yules kept no servant at the cheap little rooms; a
+charwoman used to come in every morning only for an hour or two, to do
+the rough work; there was no one, therefore, except the husband
+himself to prove Mrs. William Yule’s _alibi_.
+
+“At the adjourned inquest, on the Monday, Mrs. William Yule duly
+appeared; she was a young, delicate-looking woman, with a patient and
+suffering face, that had not an atom of determination or vice in it.
+
+“Her evidence was very simple; she merely swore solemnly that she had
+spent the whole evening indoors, she had never been to 9, Dartmoor
+Terrace, in her life, and, as a matter of fact, would never have dared
+to call on her irreconcilable mother-in-law. Neither she nor her
+husband were specially in want of money either.
+
+“‘My husband had just sold a picture at the Water Colour Institute,’
+she explained, ‘we were not hard up; and certainly I should never have
+attempted to make the slightest demand on Mrs. Yule.’
+
+“There the matter had to rest with regard to the theft of the
+document, for that was no business of the coroner’s or of the jury.
+According to medical evidence the old lady’s death had been due to a
+very natural and possible accident—a sudden feeling of giddiness—and
+the verdict had to be in accordance with this.
+
+“There was no real proof against Mrs. William Yule—only one man’s
+word, that of young Bloggs; and it would no doubt always have been
+felt that his evidence might not be wholly unbiased. He was therefore
+well advised not to prosecute. The world was quite content to believe
+that the Yules had planned and executed the theft, but he never would
+have got a conviction against Mrs. William Yule just on his own
+evidence.”
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+“Then William Yule and his wife were left in full possession of their
+fortune?” I asked eagerly.
+
+“Yes, they were,” he replied; “but they had to go and travel abroad
+for a while, feeling was so high against them. The deed of course, not
+having been ‘delivered,’ could not be upheld in a court of law; that
+was the opinion of several eminent counsel whom Mr. Statham, with a
+lofty sense of justice, consulted on behalf of young Bloggs.”
+
+“And young Bloggs was left penniless?”
+
+“No,” said the man in the corner, as, with a weird and satisfied
+smile, he pulled a piece of string out of his pocket; “the friends of
+the late Mrs. Yule subscribed the sum of £1,000 for him, for they all
+thought he had been so terribly badly treated, and Mr. Statham has
+taken him in his office as articled pupil. No! no! young Bloggs has
+not done so badly either——”
+
+“What seems strange to me,” I remarked “is that for all she knew, Mrs.
+William Yule might have committed only a silly and purposeless theft.
+If Mrs. Yule had not died suddenly and accidentally the next morning,
+she would, no doubt, have executed a fresh deed of gift, and all would
+have been _in statu quo_.”
+
+“Exactly,” he replied drily, whilst his fingers fidgeted nervously
+with his bit of string.
+
+“Of course,” I suggested, for I felt that the funny creature wanted
+to be drawn out; “she may have reckoned on the old lady’s weak
+heart, and the shock to her generally, but it was, after all, very
+problematical.”
+
+“Very,” he said, “and surely you are not still under the impression
+that Mrs. Yule’s death was purely the result of an accident?”
+
+“What else could it be?” I urged.
+
+“The result of a slight push from the top of the stairs,” he remarked
+placidly, whilst a complicated knot went to join a row of its fellows.
+
+“But Mrs. William Yule had left the house before midnight—or, at any
+rate, some one had. Do you think she had an accomplice?”
+
+“I think,” he said excitedly, “that the mysterious visitor who left
+the house that night had an instigator whose name was William Bloggs.”
+
+“I don’t understand,” I gasped in amazement.
+
+“Point No. 1,” he shrieked, while the row of knots followed each other
+in rapid succession, “young Bloggs swore a lie when he swore that it
+was Mrs. William Yule who called at Dartmoor Terrace that night.”
+
+“What makes you say that,” I retorted.
+
+“One very simple fact,” he replied, “so simple that it was, of course,
+overlooked. Do you remember that one of the things which Annie
+overheard was old Mrs. Yule’s irate words, ‘Very well, you may sleep
+here; but, remember, I do not wish to see your face again. You can
+leave my house before I return from church; you can get plenty of
+trains after seven o’clock.’ Now what do you make of that?” he added
+triumphantly.
+
+“Nothing in particular,” I rejoined; “it was an awfully wet night,
+and——”
+
+“And High Street, Kensington Station, within two minutes’ walk of
+Dartmoor Terrace, with plenty of trains to West Hampstead, and Sheriff
+Road within two minutes of this latter station,” he shrieked, getting
+more and more excited, “and the hour only about ten o’clock, when
+there _are_ plenty of trains from one part of London to another? Old
+Mrs. Yule, with her irascible temper and obstinate ways, would have
+said: ‘There’s the station, not two minutes’ walk, get out of my
+house, and don’t ever let me see your face again,’ wouldn’t she now?”
+
+“It certainly seems more likely.”
+
+“Of course it does. She only allowed the woman to stay because the
+woman had either a very long way to go to get a train, or perhaps had
+missed her last train—a connection on a branch line presumably—and
+could not possibly get home at all that night.”
+
+“Yes, that sounds logical,” I admitted.
+
+“Point No. 2,” he shrieked, “young Bloggs having told a lie, had some
+object in telling it. That was my starting point; from there I worked
+steadily until I had reconstructed the events of that Thursday
+night—nay, more, until I knew something more about young Bloggs’
+immediate future, in order that I might then imagine his past.
+
+“And this is what I found.
+
+“After the tragic death of Mrs. Yule, young Bloggs went abroad at the
+expense of some kind friends, and came home with a wife, whom he is
+supposed to have met and married in Switzerland. From that point
+everything became clear to me. Young Bloggs had told a lie when he
+swore that it was Mrs. William Yule; therefore it was somebody who
+either represented herself as such, or who believed herself to be Mrs.
+William Yule.
+
+“The first supposition,” continued the funny creature, “I soon
+dismissed as impossible; young Bloggs knew Mrs. William Yule by
+sight—and since he had lied, he had done so deliberately. Therefore to
+my mind the lady who called herself Mrs. William Yule did so because
+she believed that she had a right to that name; that she had married a
+man, who, for purposes of his own, had chosen to call himself by that
+name. From this point to that of guessing who that man was was simple
+enough.”
+
+“Do you mean young Bloggs himself?” I asked in amazement.
+
+“And whom else?” he replied. “Isn’t that sort of thing done every day?
+Bloggs was a hideous name, and Yule was eventually to be his own. With
+William Yule’s example before him, he must have known that it would be
+dangerous to broach the marriage question at all before the old lady,
+and probably only meant to wait for a favourable opportunity of doing
+so. But after a while the young wife would naturally become troubled
+and anxious, and like most women under the same circumstances, would
+become jealous and inquisitive as well.
+
+“She soon found out where he lived, and no doubt called there,
+thinking that old Mrs. Yule was her husband’s own fond mother.
+
+“You can picture the rest. Mrs. Yule, furious at having been deceived,
+herself destroys the deed of gift which she meant to present to her
+adopted son, and from that hour young Bloggs sees himself penniless.
+
+“The false Mrs. Yule left the house, and young Bloggs waited for his
+opportunity on the dark landing of a small London house. One push and
+the deed was done. With her weak heart, Mrs. Yule was sure to die of
+the shock, if not of the fall.
+
+“Before that, already the desk had been broken open and every
+appearance of a theft given to it. After the tragedy, then, young
+Bloggs retired quietly to his room. The whole thing looked so like an
+accident that, even had the servants heard the fall at once, there
+would still have been time enough for the young villain to sneak into
+his room, and then to reappear at his door as if he, too, had been
+just awakened by the noise.
+
+“The result turned out just as he had expected. The William Yules have
+been and still are suspected of the theft; and young Bloggs is a hero
+of romance with whom every one is in sympathy.”
+
+
+
+IV. Who Stole the Black Diamonds?
+
+Chapter I
+
+“Do you know who that is?” said the man in the corner, as he pushed a
+small packet of photos across the table.
+
+The picture on the top represented an entrancingly beautiful woman,
+with bare arms and neck, and a profusion of pearl and diamond
+ornaments about her head and throat.
+
+“Surely this is the Queen of——?”
+
+“Hush!” he broke in abruptly, with mock dismay; “you must mention no
+names.”
+
+“Why not?” I asked, laughing, for he looked so droll in his distress.
+
+“Look closely at the photo,” he replied, “and at the necklace and
+tiara that the lady is wearing.”
+
+“Yes,” I said. “Well?”
+
+“Do you mean to say you don’t recognise them?”
+
+I looked at the picture more closely, and then there suddenly came
+back to my mind that mysterious story of the Black Diamonds, which had
+not only bewildered the police of Europe, but also some of its
+diplomats.
+
+“Ah! I see you do recognise the jewels!” said the funny creature,
+after a while. “No wonder! for their design is unique, and photographs
+of that necklace and tiara were circulated practically throughout the
+world.
+
+“Of course I am not going to mention names, for you know very well who
+the royal heroes of this mysterious adventure were. For the purposes
+of my narrative, suppose I call them the King and Queen of ‘Bohemia.’
+
+“The value of the stones was said to be fabulous, and it was only
+natural when the King of ‘Bohemia’ found himself somewhat in want of
+money—a want which has made itself felt before now with even the most
+powerful European monarchs—that he should decide to sell the precious
+trinkets, worth a small kingdom in themselves. In order to be in
+closer touch with the most likely customers, their Majesties of
+‘Bohemia’ came over to England during the season of 1902—a season
+memorable alike for its deep sorrow and its great joy.
+
+“After the sad postponement of the Coronation festivities, they rented
+Eton Chase, a beautiful mansion just outside Chislehurst, for the
+summer months. There they entertained right royally, for the Queen was
+very gracious and the King a real sportsman—there also the rumour
+first got about that His Majesty had decided to sell the world-famous
+_parure_ of Black Diamonds.
+
+“Needless to say, they were not long in the market: quite a host of
+American millionaires had already coveted them for their wives, and
+brisk and sensational offers were made to His Majesty’s business man
+both by letter and telegram.
+
+“At last, however, Mr. Wilson, the multi-millionaire, was understood
+to have made an offer, for the necklace and tiara, of £500,000, which
+had been accepted.
+
+“But a very few days later, that is to say, on the Sunday and Monday,
+6th and 7th July, there appeared in the papers the short but deeply
+sensational announcement that a burglary had occurred at Eton Chase,
+Chislehurst, the mansion inhabited by Their Majesties the King and
+Queen of ‘Bohemia’; and that among the objects stolen was the famous
+_parure_ of Black Diamonds, for which a bid of half a million sterling
+had just been made and accepted.
+
+“The burglary had been one of the most daring and most mysterious ones
+ever brought under the notice of the police authorities. The mansion
+was full of guests at the time, among whom were many diplomatic
+notabilities, and also Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, the future owners of the
+gems; there were also a very large staff of servants. The burglary
+must have occurred between the hours of 10 and 11.30 p.m., though the
+precise moment could not be ascertained.
+
+“The house itself stands in the midst of a large garden, and has deep
+French windows opening out upon a terrace at the back. There are
+ornamental iron balconies to the windows of the upper floors, and it
+was to one of these, situated immediately above the dining-room, that
+a rope-ladder was found to be attached.
+
+“The burglar must have chosen a moment when the guests were dispersed
+in the smoking, billiard, and drawing-rooms; the servants were having
+their own meal, and the dining-room was deserted. He must have swung
+his rope-ladder, and entered Her Majesty’s own bedroom by the window
+which—as the night was very warm—had been left open. The jewels were
+locked up in a small iron box, which stood upon the dressing-table,
+and the burglar took the box bodily away with him, and then, no doubt,
+returned the way he came.
+
+“The wonderful point in this daring attempt was the fact that most of
+the windows on the ground floor were slightly open that night, that
+the rooms themselves were filled with guests, and that the dining-room
+was not empty for more than a few minutes at a time, as the servants
+were still busy clearing away after dinner.
+
+“At nine o’clock some of the younger guests had strolled out on to the
+terrace, and the last of these returned to the drawing-room at ten
+o’clock; at half-past eleven one of the servants caught sight of the
+rope-ladder in front of one of the dining-room windows, and the alarm
+was given.
+
+“All traces of the burglar, however, and of his princely booty had
+completely disappeared.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+“Not only did this daring burglary cause a great deal of excitement,”
+continued the man in the corner, “but it also roused a good deal of
+sympathy in the public mind for the King and Queen of ‘Bohemia’ who
+thus found their hope of raising half a million sterling suddenly
+dashed to the ground. The loss to them would, of course, be
+irreparable.
+
+“Matters, were, however, practically at a standstill, all enquiries
+from enterprising journalists only eliciting the vague information
+that the police ‘held a clue.’ We all know what that means. Then all
+at once a wonderful rumour got about.
+
+“Goodness only knows how these rumours originate—sometimes solely in
+the imagination of the man in the street. In this instance certainly,
+that worthy gentleman had a very sensational theory. It was namely
+rumoured all over London that the clue which the police held pointed
+to no less a person than Mr. Wilson himself.
+
+“What had happened was this: Minute enquiries on the part of the most
+able detectives of Scotland Yard had brought to light the fact that
+the burglary at Eton Chase must have occurred precisely between ten
+minutes and a quarter past eleven; at every other moment of the entire
+evening somebody or other had observed either the terrace or the
+dining-room windows.
+
+“I told you that until ten o’clock some of Their Majesties’ guests
+were walking up and down the terrace; between ten and half-past
+servants were clearing away in the dining-room, and here it was
+positively ascertained beyond any doubt that no burglar could have
+slung a rope-ladder and climbed up it immediately outside those
+windows, for one or other of the six servants engaged in clearing away
+the dinner must of necessity have caught sight of him.
+
+“At half-past ten John Lucas, the head gardener, was walking through
+the gardens with a dog at his heels, and did not get back to the lodge
+until just upon eleven. He certainly did not go as far as the terrace,
+and as that side of the house was in shadow he could not say
+positively whether the ladder was there or not, but he certainly did
+assert most emphatically that there was no burglar about the _grounds_
+then, for the dog was a good watch-dog and would have barked if any
+stranger was about. Lucas took the dog in with him and gave him a bit
+of supper, and only fastened him to his kennel outside at a
+quarter-past eleven.
+
+“Surmising, therefore, that at half-past ten, when John Lucas started
+on his round, the deed was not yet done, that quarter of an hour would
+give the burglar the only possible opportunity of entering the
+premises _from the outside_, without being barked at by the dog. Now,
+during most of that same quarter of an hour, His Majesty the King of
+‘Bohemia’ himself had retired into a small library with his private
+secretary, in order to glance through certain despatches which had
+arrived earlier in the evening.
+
+“The window of this library was immediately next to the one outside
+which the ladder was found, and both the secretary and His Majesty
+himself think that they would have seen something or heard a noise if
+the rope-ladder had been slung while they were in the room. They both,
+however, returned to the drawing-room at ten minutes past eleven.
+
+“And here,” continued the man in the corner, rubbing his long, bony
+fingers together, “arose the neatest little complication I have ever
+come across in a case of this kind. His Majesty had, it appears,
+privately made up his mind to accept Mr. Wilson’s bid, but the
+transaction had not yet been completed. Mr. Wilson and his wife came
+down to stay at Eton Chase on 29th June, and directly they arrived
+many of those present noticed that Mr. Wilson was obviously repenting
+of his bargain. This impression had deepened day by day, Mrs. Wilson
+herself often throwing out covert hints about ‘fictitious value’ and
+‘fancy prices for merely notorious trinkets.’ In fact, it became
+obvious that the Wilsons were really seeking a loophole for evading
+the conclusion of the bargain.
+
+“On the memorable evening of the 5th July, Mrs. Wilson had been forced
+to retire to her room early in the evening, owing, she said, to a bad
+headache; her room was in the west wing of the Chase, and opened out
+on the same corridor as the apartments of Her Majesty the Queen. At
+half-past eleven Mrs. Wilson rang for her maid—Mary Pritchard, who, on
+entering her mistress’s room, met Mr. Wilson just coming out of it,
+and the girl heard him say: ‘Oh, don’t worry! I’ll have the whole
+reset when we get back.’
+
+“The detectives, on the other hand, had obtained information that two
+or three days previously Mr. Wilson had sustained a very severe loss
+on the ’Change, and that he had subsequently remarked to two or three
+business friends that the Black Diamonds had become a luxury which he
+had no right to afford.
+
+“Be this as it may, certain it is that within a week of the notorious
+burglary the rumour was current in every club in London that James S.
+Wilson, the reputed American millionaire, having found himself unable
+to complete the purchase of the Black Diamonds, had found this other
+very much less legitimate means of gaining possession of the gems.
+
+“You must admit that the case looked black enough against him—all
+circumstantial, of course, for there was absolutely nothing to prove
+that he had the jewels in his possession; in fact no trace of them
+whatever had been found, but the public argued that Mr. Wilson would
+lie low with them for a while, and then have them reset when he
+returned to America.
+
+“Of course, ugly rumours of that description don’t become general
+about a man without his getting some inkling of them. Mr. Wilson very
+soon found his position in London absolutely intolerable: his friends
+ignored him at the club, ladies ceased to call upon his wife, and one
+fine day he was openly cut by Lord Barnsdale, an M.F.H., in the
+hunting field.
+
+“Then Mr. Wilson thought it high time to take action. He placed the
+whole matter in the hands of an able if not very scrupulous solicitor
+who promised within a given time to find him a defendant with plenty
+of means, against whom he could bring a sensational libel suit, with
+thundering damages.
+
+“The solicitor was as good as his word. He bribed some of the waiters
+at the Carlton, and so laid his snares that within six months, Lord
+and Lady Barnsdale had been overheard to say in public what everybody
+now thought in private, namely, that Mr. James S. Wilson, finding
+himself unable to purchase the celebrated Black Diamonds, had thought
+it more profitable to steal them.
+
+“Two days later Mr. James S. Wilson entered an action in the High
+Courts for slander against Lord and Lady Barnsdale, claiming damages
+to the tune of £50,000.”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+“Still the mystery of the lost jewels was no nearer to its solution.
+Their Majesties the King and Queen of ‘Bohemia,’ had left England soon
+after the disastrous event which deprived them of what amounted to a
+small fortune.
+
+“It was expected that the sensational slander case would come on in
+the autumn, or rather more than sixteen months after the mysterious
+disappearance of the Black Diamonds.
+
+“This last season was not a very brilliant one, if you remember; the
+wet weather, I believe, had quite a good deal to do with the fact;
+nevertheless London, that great world centre, was, as usual, full of
+distinguished visitors, among whom Mrs. Vanderdellen, who arrived the
+second week in July, was perhaps the most interesting.
+
+“Her enormous wealth spread a positive halo round her, it being
+generally asserted that she was the richest woman in the world. Add to
+this that she was young, strikingly handsome, and a widow, and you
+will easily understand what a _furore_ her appearance during this
+London season caused in all high social circles.
+
+“Though she was still in slight mourning for her husband, she was
+asked everywhere, went everywhere, and was courted and admired by
+everybody, including some of the highest in the land; her dresses and
+jewellery were the talk of the ladies’ papers, her style and charm the
+gossip of all the clubs. And no doubt that, although the July evening
+Court promised to be very brilliant, every one thought that it would
+be doubly so, since Mrs. Vanderdellen had been honoured with an
+invitation, and would presumably be present.
+
+“I like to picture to myself that scene at Buckingham Palace,”
+continued the man in the corner, as his fingers toyed lovingly with a
+beautiful and brand-new bit of string. “Of course, I was not present
+actually, but I can see it all before me; the lights, the crowds, the
+pretty women, the glistening diamonds; then, in the midst of the
+chatter, a sudden silence fell as ‘Mrs. Vanderdellen’ was announced.
+
+“All women turned to look at the beautiful American as she entered,
+because her dress—on this her first appearance at the English
+Court—was sure to be a vision of style and beauty. But for once nobody
+noticed the dress from Felix, nobody even gave a glance at the
+exquisitely lovely face of the wearer. Every one’s eyes had fastened
+on one thing only, and every one’s lips framed but one exclamation,
+and that an ‘Oh!’ half of amazement and half of awe.
+
+“For round her neck and upon her head Mrs. Vanderdellen was wearing a
+gorgeously magnificent _parure_ composed of black diamonds.”
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+“I don’t know how the case of Wilson _v._ Barnsdale was settled, for
+it never came into court. There were many people in London who owed
+the Wilsons an apology, and it is to be hoped that these were tendered
+in full.
+
+“As for Mrs. Vanderdellen, she seemed quite unaware why her appearance
+at Their Majesties’ Court had caused quite so much sensation. No one,
+of course, broached the subject of the diamonds to her, and she no
+doubt attributed those significant ‘Oh’s’ to her own dazzling beauty.
+
+“The next day, however, Detective Marsh, of Scotland Yard, had a very
+difficult task before him. He had to go and ask a beautiful, rich, and
+refined woman how she happened to be in possession of stolen
+jewellery.
+
+“Luckily for Marsh, however, he had to deal with a woman who was also
+charming, and who met his polite enquiry with an equally pleasant
+reply:
+
+“‘My husband gave me the Black Diamonds,’ she said, ‘a year ago on his
+return from Europe. I had them set in Vienna last Spring, and wore
+them for the first time last night. Will you please tell me the reason
+of this strange enquiry?’
+
+“‘Your husband?’ echoed Marsh, ignoring her question, ‘Mr.
+Vanderdellen?’
+
+“‘Oh, yes,’ she replied sweetly, ‘I dare say you have never heard of
+him. His name is very well known in America, where they call him the
+“Petrol King.” One of his hobbies was the collection of gems, which he
+was very fond of seeing me wear, and he gave me some magnificent
+jewels. The Black Diamonds certainly are very handsome. May I now
+request you to tell me,’ she repeated, with a certain assumption of
+hauteur, ‘the reason of all these enquiries?’
+
+“‘The reason is simple enough, madam,’ replied the detective abruptly,
+‘those diamonds were the property of Her Majesty the Queen of
+“Bohemia,” and were stolen from Their Majesties’ residence, Eton
+Chase, Chislehurst, on the 5th of July last year.’
+
+“‘Stolen!’ she repeated, aghast and obviously incredulous.
+
+“‘Yes, stolen,’ said old Marsh. ‘I don’t wish to distress you
+unnecessarily, Madam, but you will see how imperative it is that you
+should place me in immediate communication with Mr. Vanderdellen, as
+an explanation from him has become necessary.’
+
+“‘Unfortunately, that is impossible,’ said Mrs. Vanderdellen, who
+seemed under the spell of a strong emotion.
+
+“‘Impossible?’
+
+“‘Mr. Vanderdellen has been dead just over a year. He died three days
+after his return to New York, and the Black Diamonds were the last
+present he ever made me.’
+
+“There was a pause after that. Marsh—experienced detective though he
+was—was literally at his wits’ ends what to do. He said afterwards
+that Mrs. Vanderdellen, though very young and frivolous outwardly,
+seemed at the same time an exceedingly shrewd, farseeing business
+woman. To begin with, she absolutely refused to have the matter hushed
+up, and to return the jewels until their rightful ownership had been
+properly proved.
+
+“‘It would be tantamount,’ she said, ‘to admitting that my husband had
+come by them unlawfully.’
+
+“At the same time she offered the princely reward of £10,000 to any
+one who found the true solution of the mystery; for, mind you, the
+late Mr. Vanderdellen sailed from Havre for New York on July the 8th,
+1902, that is to say, three clear days after the theft of the diamonds
+from Eton Chase, and he presented his wife with the loose gems
+immediately on his arrival in New York. Three days after that he died.
+
+“It was difficult to suppose that Mr. Vanderdellen purchased those
+diamonds not knowing that they must have been stolen, since, directly
+after the burglary the English police telegraphed to all their
+Continental colleagues, and within four-and-twenty hours a description
+of the stolen jewels was circulated throughout Europe.
+
+“It was, to say the least of it, very strange that an experienced
+business man and shrewd collector like Mr. Vanderdellen should have
+purchased such priceless gems without making some enquiries as to
+their history, more especially as they must have been offered to him
+in a more or less ‘hole-in-the-corner’ way.
+
+“Still, Mrs. Vanderdellen stuck to her guns, and refused to give up
+the jewels pending certain enquiries she wished to make. She declared
+that she wished to be sued for the diamonds in open court, charged
+with wilfully detaining stolen goods if necessary, for the more
+publicity was given to the whole affair the better she would like it,
+so firmly did she believe in her husband’s innocence.
+
+“The matter was indeed brought to the High Courts, and the sensational
+action brought against Mrs. Vanderdellen by the representative of His
+Majesty the King of ‘Bohemia’ for the recovery of the Black Diamonds
+is, no doubt, still fresh in your memory.
+
+“No one was allowed to know what witnesses Mrs. Vanderdellen would
+bring forward in her defence. She had engaged the services of Sir
+Arthur Inglewood, and of some of the most eminent counsel at the Bar.
+The court was packed with the most fashionable crowd ever seen inside
+the Law Courts; and both days that the action lasted Mrs. Vanderdellen
+appeared in exquisite gowns and ideal hats.
+
+“The evidence for the Royal plaintiff was simple enough. It all went
+to prove that the very day after the burglary not a jeweller,
+pawnbroker, or diamond merchant throughout the whole of Europe could
+have failed to know that a unique _parure_ of black diamonds had been
+stolen, and would probably be offered for sale. The Black Diamonds in
+themselves, and out of their setting, were absolutely unique, and if
+the late Mr. Vanderdellen purchased them in Paris from some private
+individual, he must at least have very strongly suspected that they
+were stolen.
+
+“Throughout the whole of that first day Mrs. Vanderdellen sat in
+court, absolutely calm and placid. She listened to the evidence, made
+little notes, and chatted with two or three American friends—elderly
+men—who were with her.
+
+“Then came the turn of the defence.
+
+“Everybody had expected something sensational, and listened more
+eagerly than ever as the name of Mr. Albert V. B. Sedley was called.
+He was a tall, elderly man, the regular angular type of the American,
+with his nasal twang and reposeful manner.
+
+“His story was brief and simple. He was a great friend of the late Mr.
+Vanderdellen, and had gone on a European tour with him in the early
+spring of 1902. They were together in Vienna in the month of March,
+staying at the Hotel Imperial, when one day Vanderdellen came to his
+room with a remarkable story.
+
+“‘He told me,’ continued Mr. Albert V. B. Sedley, ‘that he had just
+purchased some very beautiful diamonds, which he meant to present to
+his wife on his return to New York. He would not tell me where he
+bought them, nor would he show them to me, but he spoke about the
+beauty and rarity of the stones, which were that rarest of all things,
+beautiful black diamonds.
+
+“‘As the whole story sounded to me a little bit queer and mysterious,
+I gave him a word of caution, but he was quite confident as to the
+integrity of the vendor of the jewels, since the latter had made a
+somewhat curious bargain. Vanderdellen was to have the diamonds in his
+keeping for three months without paying any money, merely giving a
+formal receipt for them; then, if after three months he was quite
+satisfied with his bargain, and there had been no suspicion or rumour
+of any kind that the diamonds were stolen, then only was the money,
+£500,000, to be paid.
+
+“‘Vanderdellen thought this very fair and above-board, and so it
+sounded to me. The only thing I didn’t like about it all was that the
+vendor had given what I thought was a false name and no address; the
+money was to be paid over to him in French notes when the three months
+had expired, at an hotel in Paris, where Vanderdellen would be staying
+at the time, and where he would call for it.
+
+“‘I heard nothing more about the mysterious diamonds and their still
+more mysterious vendor,’ continued Mr. Sedley, amidst intense
+excitement, ‘for Vanderdellen and I soon parted company after that, he
+going one way and I another. But at the beginning of July I met him in
+Paris, and on the 4th I dined with him at the Elysee Palace Hotel,
+where he was staying.
+
+“‘Mr. Cornelius R. Shee was there too, and Vanderdellen related to him
+during dinner the history of his mysterious purchase of the Black
+Diamonds, adding that the vendor had called upon him that very day as
+arranged, and that he (Vanderdellen) had had no hesitation in handing
+him over the agreed price of £500,000, which he thought a very low
+one. Both Mr. Shee and I agreed that the whole thing must have been
+clear and above-board, for jewels of such fabulous value could not
+have been stolen since last spring without the hue and cry being in
+every paper in Europe.
+
+“‘It is my opinion, therefore,’ said Mr. Albert V. B. Sedley, at the
+conclusion of this remarkable evidence, ‘that Mr. Vanderdellen bought
+those diamonds in perfect good faith. He would never have wittingly
+subjected his wife to the indignity of being seen in public with
+stolen jewels round her neck. If after 5th July he did happen to hear
+that a _parure_ of black diamonds had been stolen in England at the
+date, he could not possibly think that there could be the slightest
+connection between these and those he had purchased more than three
+months ago.’
+
+“And, amidst indescribable excitement, Mr. Albert V. B. Sedley stepped
+back into his place.
+
+“That he had spoken the truth from beginning to end no one could doubt
+for a single moment. His own social position, wealth, and important
+commercial reputation placed him above any suspicion of committing
+perjury, even for the sake of a dead friend. Moreover, the story told
+by Vanderdellen at the dinner in Paris was corroborated by Mr.
+Cornelius R. Shee in every point.
+
+“But there! a dead man’s words are _not_ evidence in a court of law.
+Unfortunately, Mr. Vanderdellen had not shown the diamonds to his
+friends at the time. He had certainly drawn enormous sums of money
+from his bank about the end of June and beginning of July, amounting
+in all to just over a million sterling; and there was nothing to prove
+which special day he had paid away a sum of £500,000, whether _before_
+or _after_ the burglary at Eton Chase.
+
+“He had made extensive purchases in Paris of pictures, furniture, and
+other works of art, all of priceless value, for the decoration of his
+new palace in Fifth Avenue, and no diary of private expenditure was
+produced in court. Mrs. Vanderdellen herself had said that after her
+husband’s death, as all his affairs were in perfect order, she had
+destroyed his personal and private diaries.
+
+“Thus the counsel for the plaintiff was able to demolish the whole
+edifice of the defence bit by bit, for it rested on but very ephemeral
+foundations: a story related by a dead man.
+
+“Judgment was entered for the plaintiff, although every one’s
+sympathy, including that of judge and of jury, was entirely for the
+defendant, who had so nobly determined to vindicate her husband’s
+reputation.
+
+“But Mrs. Vanderdellen proved to the last that she was no ordinary and
+everyday woman. She had kept one final sensation up her sleeve. Two
+days after she had legally been made to give up the Black Diamonds,
+she offered to purchase them back for £500,000. Her bid was accepted,
+and during last autumn, on the occasion of the last Royal visit to
+London and the consequent grand society functions, no one was more
+admired, more _fêted_ and envied, than beautiful Mrs. Vanderdellen as
+she entered a drawing-room exquisitely gowned, and adorned with the
+_parure_ of which an Empress might have been proud.”
+
+The man in the corner had paused, and was idly tapping his fingers on
+the marble-topped table of the A.B.C. shop.
+
+“It was a curious story, wasn’t it?” said the funny creature, after a
+while. “More like a romance than a reality.”
+
+“It is absolutely bewildering,” I said.
+
+“What is your theory?” he asked.
+
+“What about?” I retorted.
+
+“Well, there are so many points, aren’t there, of which only one is
+quite clear, namely, that the _parure_ of Black Diamonds disappeared
+from Eton Chase, Chislehurst, on 5th July, 1902, and that the next
+time they were seen they were on the neck and head of Mrs.
+Vanderdellen, the widow of one of the richest men of modern times,
+whilst the story of how her husband came by them was, to all intents
+and purposes, _legally_ disbelieved.”
+
+“Then,” I argued, “the only logical conclusions to arrive at in all
+this is that the Black Diamonds, owned by His Majesty the King of
+‘Bohemia,’ were not unique, and that Mr. Vanderdellen bought some
+duplicate ones.”
+
+“If you knew anything about diamonds,” he said irritably, “you would
+also know that your statement is an absurdity. There are no such
+things as ‘duplicate’ diamonds.”
+
+“Then what _is_ the only logical conclusion to arrive at?” I retorted,
+for he had given up playing with the photos and was twisting and
+twining that bit of string as if his brain was contained inside it and
+he feared it might escape.
+
+“Well, to me,” he said, “the only logical conclusion of the affair is
+that the Black Diamonds which Mrs. Vanderdellen wore were the only and
+original ones belonging to the Crown of ‘Bohemia.’”
+
+“Then you think that a man in Mr. Vanderdellen’s position would have
+been fool enough to buy gems worth £500,000 at the very moment when
+there was a hue and cry for them all over Europe?”
+
+“No, I don’t,” he replied quietly.
+
+“But then——” I began.
+
+“No?” he repeated once again, as his long fingers completed knot
+number one in that eternal piece of string. “The Black Diamonds which
+Mrs. Vanderdellen wore were bought by her husband in all good faith
+from the mysterious vendor in Vienna, in March, 1902.”
+
+“Impossible!” I retorted. “Her Majesty the Queen of ‘Bohemia’ wore
+them regularly during the months of May and June, and they were stolen
+from Eton Chase on July the 5th.”
+
+“Her Majesty the Queen of ‘Bohemia’ wore a _parure_ of Black Diamonds
+during those months, and those certainly were stolen on July the 5th,”
+he said excitedly; “but what was there to prove that _those_ were the
+genuine stones?”
+
+“Why!——” I ejaculated.
+
+“Point No. 2,” he said, jumping about like a monkey on a stick;
+“although Mr. Wilson was acknowledged to be innocent of the theft of
+the diamonds, isn’t it strange that no one has ever been proved guilty
+of it?”
+
+“But I don’t understand——”
+
+“Yet it is simple as daylight. I maintain that His Majesty the King
+of ‘Bohemia’ being short, very short, of money, decided to sell
+the celebrated Black Diamonds; to avoid all risks the stones are
+taken out of their settings, and a trusted and secret emissary is
+then deputed to find a possible purchaser; his choice falls on the
+multi-millionaire Vanderdellen, who is travelling in Europe, is
+a noted collector of rare jewellery, and has a beautiful young
+wife—three attributes, you see, which make him a very likely
+purchaser.
+
+“The emissary then seeks him out, and offers him the diamonds for
+sale. Mr. Vanderdellen at first hesitates, wondering how such valuable
+gems had come in the vendor’s possession, but the bargain suggested by
+the latter—the three months during which the gems are to be held on
+trust by the purchaser—seems so fair and above-board, that Mr.
+Vanderdellen’s objections fall to the ground; he accepts the bargain,
+and three months later completes the purchase.”
+
+“But I don’t understand,” I repeated again, more bewildered than
+before. “You say the King of ‘Bohemia’ sold the loose gems originally
+to Mr. Vanderdellen; then, what about the _parure_ worn by the Queen
+and offered for sale to Mr. and Mrs. Wilson? What about the theft at
+Eton Chase?”
+
+“Point No. 3,” he shrieked excitedly, as another series of complicated
+knots went to join its fellows. “I told you that the King of ‘Bohemia’
+was _very_ short of money, every one knows _that_. He sells the Black
+Diamonds to Mr. Vanderdellen, but before he does it, he causes
+duplicates of them to be made, but this time in exquisite, beautiful,
+perfect Parisian imitation, and has these mounted into the original
+settings by some trusted man who, you may be sure, was well paid to
+hold his tongue. Then it is given out that the _parure_ is for sale; a
+purchaser is found, and a few days later the false diamonds are
+stolen.”
+
+“By whom?”
+
+“By the King of ‘Bohemia’s’ valued and trusted friend, who has helped
+in the little piece of villainy throughout; it is he who drops a
+rope-ladder through Her Majesty’s bedroom window on to the terrace
+below, and then hands the imitation _parure_ to his Royal master, who
+sees to its complete destruction and disappearance. Then there is a
+hue and cry for the _real_ stones, and after a year or so they are
+found on the person of a lady, who is legally forced to give them up.
+And thus His Majesty the King of ‘Bohemia’ got one solid million for
+the Black Diamonds, instead of half that sum, for if Mrs. Vanderdellen
+had not purchased the jewels, some one else would have done so.”
+
+And he was gone, leaving me to gaze at the pictures of three lovely
+women, and wondering if indeed it was the Royal lady herself who could
+best solve the mystery of who stole the Black Diamonds.
+
+
+
+V. The Murder of Miss Pebmarsh
+
+Chapter I
+
+“You must admit,” said the man in the corner to me one day, as I
+folded up and put aside my _Daily Telegraph_, which I had been reading
+with great care, “that it would be difficult to find a more
+interesting plot, or more thrilling situations, than occurred during
+the case of Miss Pamela Pebmarsh. As for downright cold-blooded
+villainy, commend me to some of the actors in that real drama.
+
+“The facts were simple enough; Miss Lucy Ann Pebmarsh was an old maid
+who lived with her young niece Pamela and an elderly servant in one of
+the small, newly-built houses not far from the railway station at
+Boreham Wood. The fact that she kept a servant at all, and that the
+little house always looked very spick and span, was taken by the
+neighbours to mean that Miss Pebmarsh was a lady of means; but she
+kept very much to herself, seldom went to church, and never attended
+any of the mothers’ meetings, parochial teas, and other social
+gatherings for which that popular neighbourhood has long been famous.
+
+“Very little, therefore, was known of the Pebmarsh household, save
+that the old lady had seen better days, that she had taken her niece
+to live with her recently, and that the latter had had a somewhat
+checkered career before she had found her present haven of refuge;
+some more venturesome gossips went so far as to hint—but only just
+above a whisper—that Miss Pamela Pebmarsh had been on the stage.
+
+“Certain it is that that young lady seemed to chafe very much under
+the restraint imposed upon her by her aunt, who seldom allowed her out
+of her sight, and evidently kept her very short of money, for, in
+spite of Miss Pamela’s obvious love of fine clothes, she had latterly
+been constrained to wear the plainest of frocks and most unbecoming of
+hats.
+
+“All very commonplace and uninteresting, you see, until that memorable
+Wednesday in October, after which the little house in Boreham Wood
+became a nine days’ wonder throughout newspaper-reading England.
+
+“On that day Miss Pebmarsh’s servant, Jemima Gadd, went over to Luton
+to see a sick sister; she was not expected back until the next
+morning. On that same afternoon Miss Pamela—strangely enough—seems
+also to have elected to go up to town, leaving her aunt all alone in
+the house, and not returning home until the late train, which reaches
+Boreham Wood a few minutes before one.
+
+“It was about five minutes past one that the neighbours in the quiet
+little street were roused from their slumbers by most frantic and
+agonised shrieks. The next moment Miss Pamela was seen to rush out of
+her aunt’s house and then to hammer violently at the door of one of
+her neighbours, still uttering piercing shrieks. You may imagine what
+a commotion such a scene at midnight would cause in a place like
+Boreham Wood. Heads were thrust out of the windows; one or two
+neighbours in hastily-donned miscellaneous attire came running out;
+and very soon the news spread round like wild-fire that Miss Pamela on
+coming home had found her aunt lying dead in the sitting-room.
+
+“Mr. Miller, the local greengrocer, was the first to pluck up
+sufficient courage to effect an entrance into the house. Miss Pamela
+dared not follow him; she had become quite hysterical, and was
+shrieking at the top of her voice that her aunt had been murdered. The
+sight that greeted Mr. Miller and those who had been venturesome
+enough to follow him, was certainly calculated to unhinge any young
+girl’s mind.
+
+“In the small bow-window of the sitting-room stood a writing-table,
+with drawers open and papers scattered all over and around it; in a
+chair in front of it, half sitting and half lying across the table,
+face downwards, and with arms outstretched, was the dead body of Miss
+Pebmarsh. There was sufficient indications to show to the most casual
+observer that, undoubtedly, the unfortunate lady had been murdered.
+
+“One of the neighbours, who possessed a bicycle, had in the meantime
+had the good sense to ride over to the police station. Very soon two
+constables were on the spot; they quickly cleared the room of
+gossiping neighbours, and then endeavoured to obtain from Miss Pamela
+some lucid information as to the terrible event.
+
+“At first she seemed quite unable to answer coherently the many
+questions which were being put to her; however, with infinite patience
+and wonderful kindness, Sergeant Evans at last managed to obtain from
+her the following statement.
+
+“‘I had had an invitation to go to the theatre this evening; it was an
+old invitation, and my aunt had said long ago that I might accept it.
+When Jemima Gadd wanted to go to Luton, I didn’t see why I should give
+up the theatre and offend my friend, just because of her. My aunt and
+I had some words about it, but I went. . . . I came back by the last
+train, and walked straight home from the station. I had taken the
+latch-key with me, and went straight into the sitting-room; the lamp
+was alight, and—and——’
+
+“The rest was chaos in the poor girl’s mind; she was only conscious of
+having seen something awful and terrible, and of having rushed out
+screaming for help. Sergeant Evans asked her no further questions
+then; a kind neighbour had offered to take charge of Pamela for the
+night, and took her away with her, the constable remaining in charge
+of the body and the house until the arrival of higher authorities.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+“Although, as you may well suppose,” continued the man in the corner,
+after a pause, “the excitement was intense at Boreham Wood, it had not
+as yet reached the general newspaper-reading public. As the tragic
+event had occurred at one o’clock in the morning, the papers the
+following day only contained a brief announcement that an old lady had
+been found murdered at Boreham Wood under somewhat mysterious
+circumstances. Later on, the evening editions added that the police
+were extremely reticent, but that it was generally understood that
+they held an important clue.
+
+“The following day had been fixed for the inquest, and I went down
+myself in the morning, for somehow I felt that this case was going to
+be an interesting one. A murder which at first seems absolutely
+purposeless always, in my experience, reveals, sooner or later, an
+interesting trait in human nature.
+
+“As soon as I arrived at Boreham Wood, I found that the murder of Miss
+Pebmarsh and the forthcoming inquest seemed to be the sole subjects of
+gossip and conversation. After I had been in the place half an hour
+the news began to spread like wild-fire that the murderer had been
+arrested; five minutes later the name of the murderer was on
+everybody’s lips.
+
+“It was that of the murdered woman’s niece, Miss Pamela Pebmarsh.
+
+“‘Oh, oh!’ I said to myself, ‘my instincts have not deceived me: this
+case is indeed going to be interesting.’
+
+“It was about two o’clock in the afternoon when I at last managed to
+find my way to the little police station, where the inquest was to be
+held. There was scarcely standing room, I can tell you, and I had some
+difficulty in getting a front place from which I could see the
+principal actors in this village drama.
+
+“Pamela Pebmarsh was there in the custody of two constables—she, a
+young girl scarcely five-and-twenty, stood there accused of having
+murdered, in a peculiarly brutal way, an old lady of seventy, her
+relative who had befriended her and given her a home.”
+
+The man in the corner paused for a moment, and from the capacious
+pocket of his magnificent ulster he drew two or three small photos,
+which he placed before me.
+
+“This is Miss Pamela Pebmarsh,” he said, pointing to one of these;
+“tall and good-looking, in spite of the shabby bit of mourning with
+which she had contrived to deck herself. Of course, this photo does
+not give you an idea of what she looked like that day at the inquest.
+Her face then was almost ashen in colour; her large eyes were staring
+before her with a look of horror and of fear; and her hands were
+twitching incessantly, with spasmodic and painful nervousness.
+
+“It was pretty clear that public feeling went dead against her from
+the very first. A murmur of disapproval greeted her appearance, to
+which she seemed to reply with a look of defiance. I could hear many
+uncharitable remarks spoken all round me; Boreham Wood found it
+evidently hard to forgive Miss Pamela her good looks and her unavowed
+past.
+
+“The medical evidence was brief and simple. Miss Pebmarsh had been
+stabbed in the back with some sharp instrument, the blade of which had
+pierced the left lung. She had evidently been sitting in the chair in
+front of her writing-table when the murderer had caught her unawares.
+Death had ensued within the next few seconds.
+
+“The medical officer was very closely questioned upon this point by
+the coroner; it was evident that the latter had something very serious
+in his mind, to which the doctor’s replies would give confirmation.
+
+“‘In your opinion,’ he asked, ‘would it have been possible for Miss
+Pebmarsh to do anything after she was stabbed. Could she have moved,
+for instance?’
+
+“‘Slightly, perhaps,’ replied the doctor; ‘but she did not attempt to
+rise from her chair.’
+
+“‘No; but could she have tried to reach the hand-bell, for instance,
+which was on the table, or—the pen and ink—and written a word or two?’
+
+“‘Well, yes,’ said the doctor thoughtfully; ‘she might have done that,
+if pen and ink, or the hand-bell, were _very_ close to her hand. I
+doubt, though, if she could have written anything very clearly, but
+still it is impossible to say quite definitely—anyhow, it could only
+have been a matter of a few seconds.’
+
+“Delightfully vague, you see,” continued the man in the corner, “as
+these learned gentlemen’s evidence usually is.
+
+“Sergeant Evans then repeated the story which Pamela Pebmarsh had
+originally told him, and from which she had never departed in any
+detail. She had gone to the theatre, leaving her aunt all alone in the
+house; she had arrived home at one o’clock by the late Wednesday night
+train, and had gone straight into the sitting-room, where she had
+found her aunt dead before her writing-table.
+
+“That she travelled up to London in the afternoon was easily proved;
+the station-master and the porters had seen her go. Unfortunately for
+her _alibi_, however, those late ‘theatre’ trains on that line are
+always very crowded; the night had been dark and foggy, and no one at
+or near the station could swear positively to having seen her arrive
+home again by the train she named.
+
+“There was one thing more; although the importance of it had been
+firmly impressed upon Pamela Pebmarsh, she absolutely refused to name
+the friends with whom she had been to the theatre that night, and who,
+presumably, might have helped her to prove at what hour she left
+London for home.
+
+“Whilst all this was going on, I was watching Pamela’s face intently.
+That the girl was frightened—nay more, terrified—there could be no
+doubt; the twitching of her hands, her eyes dilated with terror, spoke
+of some awful secret which she dare not reveal, but which she felt was
+being gradually brought to light. Was that secret the secret of a
+crime—a crime so horrible, so gruesome, that surely so young a girl
+would be incapable of committing?
+
+“So far, however, what struck every one mostly during this inquest was
+the seeming purposelessness of this cruel murder. The old lady, as far
+as could be ascertained, had no money to leave, so why should Pamela
+Pebmarsh have deliberately murdered the aunt who provided her, at any
+rate, with the comforts of a home? But the police, assisted by one of
+the most able detectives on the staff, had not effected so sensational
+an arrest without due cause; they had a formidable array of witnesses
+to prove their case up to the hilt. One of these was Jemima Gadd, the
+late Miss Pebmarsh’s servant.
+
+“She came forward attired in deep black, and wearing a monumental
+crape bonnet crowned with a quantity of glistening black beads. With
+her face the colour of yellow wax, and her thin lips pinched tightly
+together, she stood as the very personification of puritanism and
+uncharitableness.
+
+“She did not look once towards Pamela, who gazed at her like some
+wretched bird caught in a net, which sees the meshes tightening round
+it more and more.
+
+“Replying to the coroner, Jemima Gadd explained that on the Wednesday
+morning she had had a letter from her sister at Luton, asking her to
+come over and see her some day.
+
+“‘As there was plenty of cold meat in the ’ouse,’ she said, ‘I asked
+the mistress if she could spare me until the next day, and she said
+yes, she could. Miss Pamela and she could manage quite well.’
+
+“‘She said nothing about her niece going out, too, on the same day?’
+asked the coroner.
+
+“‘No,’ replied Jemima acidly, ‘she did not. And later on, at
+breakfast, Miss Pebmarsh said to Miss Pamela before me: “Pamela,” she
+says, “Jemima is going to Luton, and won’t be back until to-morrow.
+You and I will be alone in the ’ouse until then.”’
+
+“‘And what did the accused say?’
+
+“‘She says, “All right, aunt.”’
+
+“‘Nothing more?’
+
+“‘No, nothing more.’
+
+“‘There was no question, then, of the accused going out also, and
+leaving Miss Pebmarsh all alone in the house?’
+
+“‘None at all,’ said Jemima emphatically. ‘If there ’ad been I’d ’ave
+’eard of it. I needn’t ’ave gone that day. Any day would ’ave done for
+me.’
+
+“She closed her thin lips with a snap, and darted a vicious look at
+Pamela. There was obviously some old animosity lurking beneath that
+gigantic crape monument on the top of Jemima’s wax-coloured head.
+
+“‘You know nothing, then, about any disagreement between the deceased
+and the accused on the subject of her going to the theatre that day?’
+asked the coroner, after a while.
+
+“‘No, not about _that_,’ said Jemima curtly, ‘but there was plenty of
+disagreements between those two, I can tell you.’
+
+“‘Ah! what about?’
+
+“‘Money, mostly. Miss Pamela was over-fond of fine clothes, but Miss
+Pebmarsh, who was giving ’er a ’ome and daily bread, ’adn’t much money
+to spare for fallalery. Miss Pebmarsh ’ad a small pension from a lady
+of the haristocracy, but it wasn’t much—a pound a week it was. Miss
+Pebmarsh might ’ave ’ad a lot more if she’d wanted to.’
+
+“‘Oh?’ queried the coroner, ‘how was that?’
+
+“‘Well, you see, that fine lady ’ad not always been as good as she
+ought to be. She’d been Miss Pamela’s friend when they were both on
+the stage together, and pretty goings on, I can tell you, those two
+were up to, and——’
+
+“‘That’ll do,’ interrupted the coroner sternly. ‘Confine yourself,
+please, to telling the jury about the pension Miss Pebmarsh had from a
+lady.’
+
+“‘I was speaking about that,’ said Jemima, with another snap of her
+thin lips. ‘Miss Pebmarsh knew a thing or two about this fine lady,
+and she had some letters which she often told me that fine lady would
+not care for her ’usband or her fine friends to read. Miss Pamela got
+to know about these letters, and she worried her poor aunt to death,
+for she wanted to get those letters and sell them to the fine lady for
+’undreds of pounds. I ’ave ’eard ’er ask for those letters times and
+again, but Miss Pebmarsh wouldn’t give them to ’er, and they were
+locked up in the writing-table drawer, and Miss Pamela wanted those
+letters, for she wanted to get ’undreds of pounds from the fine lady,
+and my poor mistress was murdered for those letters—and she was
+murdered by that wicked girl ’oo eat her bread and ’oo would ’ave
+starved but for ’er. And so I tell you, and I don’t care ’oo ’ears me
+say it.’
+
+“No one had attempted to interrupt Jemima Gadd as she delivered
+herself of this extraordinary tale, which so suddenly threw an
+unexpected and lurid light upon the mystery of poor Miss Pebmarsh’s
+death.
+
+“That the tale was a true one, no one doubted for a single instant.
+One look at the face of the accused was sufficient to prove it beyond
+question. Pamela Pebmarsh had become absolutely livid; she tottered
+almost as if she would fall, and the constable had to support her
+until a chair was brought forward for her.
+
+“As for Jemima Gadd, she remained absolutely impassive. Having given
+her evidence, she stepped aside automatically like a yellow waxen
+image, which had been wound up and had now run down. There was silence
+for a while. Pamela Pebmarsh, more dead than alive, was sipping a
+glass of brandy and water, which alone prevented her from falling in a
+dead faint.
+
+“Detective Inspector Robinson now stepped forward. All the spectators
+there could read on his face the consciousness that his evidence would
+be of the most supreme import.
+
+“‘I was telegraphed for from the Yard,’ he said, in reply to the
+coroner, ‘and came down here by the first train on the Thursday
+morning. Beyond the short medical examination the body had not been
+touched; as the constables know, we don’t like things interfered with
+in cases of this kind. When I went up to look at deceased, the first
+thing I saw was a piece of paper just under her right hand. Sergeant
+Evans had seen it before, and pointed it out to me. Deceased had a pen
+in her hand, and the ink-bottle was close by. This is the paper I
+found, sir.’
+
+“And amidst a deadly silence, during which nothing could be heard but
+the scarcely-perceptible rustle of the paper, the inspector handed a
+small note across to the coroner. The latter glanced at it for a
+moment, and his face became very grave and solemn as he turned towards
+the jury.
+
+“‘Gentlemen of the jury,’ he said, ‘these are the contents of the
+paper which the inspector found under the hand of the deceased.’
+
+“He paused once more before he began to read, whilst we all in that
+crowded court held our breath to listen:
+
+“‘_I am dying. My murderess is my niece, Pam_——’
+
+“‘That is all, gentlemen,’ added the coroner, as he folded up the
+note. ‘Death overtook the unfortunate woman in the very act of writing
+down the name of her murderess.’
+
+“Then there was a wild and agonised shriek of horror. Pamela Pebmarsh,
+with hair dishevelled and eyes in which the light of madness had begun
+to gleam, threw up her hands, and without a groan, fell down senseless
+upon the floor.”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+“Yes,” said the man in the corner with a chuckle, “there was enough
+evidence there to hang twenty people, let alone that one fool of a
+girl who had run her neck so madly into a noose. I don’t suppose that
+any one left the court that day with the slightest doubt in their
+minds as to what the verdict would be; for the coroner had adjourned
+the inquest, much to the annoyance of the jury, who had fully made up
+their minds and had their verdict pat on the tips of their tongues:
+‘Wilful murder against Pamela Pebmarsh.’
+
+“But this was a case which to the last kept up its reputation for
+surprises. By the next morning rumour had got about that ‘the lady of
+the aristocracy’ referred to by Jemima Gadd, and who was supposed to
+have paid a regular pension to Miss Pebmarsh, was none other than Lady
+de Chavasse.
+
+“When the name was first mentioned every one—especially the fair
+sex—shrugged their shoulders, and said: ‘Of course what else _could_
+one expect?’
+
+“As a matter of fact, Lady de Chavasse, _née_ Birdie Fay, was one of
+the most fashionable women in society; she was at the head of a dozen
+benevolent institutions, was a generous patron of hospitals, and her
+house was one of the most exclusive houses in London. True, she had
+been on the stage in her younger days, and when Sir Percival de
+Chavasse married her, his own relations looked somewhat askance at the
+showy, handsome girl who had so daringly entered the ancient country
+family.
+
+“Sir Percival himself was an extraordinarily proud man—proud of his
+lineage, of his social status, of the honour of his name. His very
+pride had forced his relations, had forced society to accept his
+beautiful young wife, and to Lady de Chavasse’s credit be it said, not
+one breath of scandal as to her past life had ever become public
+gossip. No one could assert that they _knew_ anything derogatory to
+Birdie Fay before she became the proud baronet’s wife. As a matter of
+fact, all society asserted that Sir Percival would never have married
+her and introduced her to his own family circle if there had been any
+gossip about her.
+
+“Now suddenly the name of Lady de Chavasse was on everybody’s tongue.
+People at first spoke it under their breath, for every one felt great
+sympathy with her. She was so rich, and entertained so lavishly. She
+was very charming, too; most fascinating in her ways; deferential to
+her austere mother-in-law; not a little afraid of her proud husband;
+very careful lest by word or look she betrayed her early connection
+with the stage before him.
+
+“On the following day, however, we had further surprises in store for
+us. Pamela Pebmarsh, advised by a shrewd and clear-headed solicitor,
+had at last made up her mind to view her danger a little more coolly,
+and to speak rather more of the truth than she had done hitherto.
+
+“Still looking very haggard, but perhaps a little less scared, she now
+made a statement which, when it was fully substantiated, as she stated
+it could be, would go far towards clearing her of the terrible
+imputation against her. Her story was this: On the memorable day in
+question, she did go up to town, intending to go to the theatre. At
+the station she purchased an evening paper, which she began to read.
+This paper in its fashionable columns contained an announcement which
+arrested her attention; this was that Sir Percival and Lady de
+Chavasse had returned to their flat in town at 51, Marsden Mansions,
+Belgravia, from ‘The Chase,’ Melton Mowbray.
+
+“‘De Chavasse,’ continued Pamela, ‘was the name of the lady who paid
+my aunt the small pension on which she lived. I knew her years ago,
+when she was on the stage, and I suddenly thought I would like to go
+and see her, just to have a chat over old times. Instead of going to
+the theatre I went and had some dinner at Slater’s, in Piccadilly, and
+then I thought I would take my chance, and go and see if Lady de
+Chavasse was at home. I got to 51, Marsden Mansions, about eight
+o’clock, and was fortunate enough to see Lady de Chavasse at once. She
+kept me talking some considerable time; so much, in fact, that I
+missed the 11 from St. Pancras. I only left Marsden Mansions at a
+quarter to eleven, and had to wait at St. Pancras until twenty minutes
+past midnight.’
+
+“This was all reasonable and clear enough, and as her legal adviser
+had subpœnaed Lady de Chavasse as a witness, Pamela Pebmarsh seemed to
+have found an excellent way out of her terrible difficulties, the only
+question being whether Lady de Chavasse’s testimony alone would, in
+view of her being Pamela’s friend, be sufficient to weigh against the
+terrible overwhelming evidence of Miss Pebmarsh’s dying accusation.
+
+“But Lady de Chavasse settled this doubtful point in the way least
+expected by any one. Exquisitely dressed, golden-haired, and brilliant
+complexioned, she looked strangely out of place in this fusty little
+village court, amidst the local dames in their plain gowns and
+antiquated bonnets. She was, moreover, extremely self-possessed, and
+only cast a short, very haughty, look at the unfortunate girl whose
+life probably hung upon that fashionable woman’s word.
+
+“‘Yes,’ she said sweetly, in reply to the coroner, ‘she was the wife
+of Sir Percival de Chavasse, and resided at 51, Marsden Mansions,
+Belgravia.’
+
+“‘The accused, I understand, has been known to you for some time?’
+continued the coroner.
+
+“‘Pardon me,’ rejoined Lady de Chavasse, speaking in a beautiful
+modulated voice, ‘I did know this young—hem—person, years ago, when I
+was on the stage, but, of course, I had not seen her for years.’
+
+“‘She called on you on Wednesday last at about nine o’clock?’
+
+“‘Yes, she did, for the purpose of levying blackmail upon me.’
+
+“There was no mistaking the look of profound aversion and contempt
+which the fashionable lady now threw upon the poor girl before her.
+
+“‘She had some preposterous story about some letters which she alleged
+would be compromising to my reputation,’ continued Lady de Chavasse
+quietly. ‘These she had the kindness to offer me for sale for a
+hundred pounds. At first her impudence staggered me, as, of course, I
+had no knowledge of any such letters. She threatened to take them to
+my husband, however, and I then—rather foolishly, perhaps—suggested
+that she should bring them to me first. I forget how the conversation
+went on, but she left me with the understanding that she would get the
+letters from her aunt, Miss Pebmarsh, who, by the way, had been my
+governess when I was a child, and to whom I paid a small pension in
+consideration of her having been left absolutely without means.’
+
+“And Lady de Chavasse, conscious of her own disinterested benevolence,
+pressed a highly-scented bit of cambric to her delicate nose.
+
+“‘Then the accused did spend the evening with you on that Wednesday?’
+asked the coroner, while a great sigh of relief seemed to come from
+poor Pamela’s breast.
+
+“‘Pardon me,’ said Lady de Chavasse, ‘she spent a little time with me.
+She came about nine o’clock.’
+
+“‘Yes. And when did she leave?’
+
+“‘I really couldn’t tell you—about ten o’clock, I think.’
+
+“‘You are not sure?’ persisted the coroner. ‘Think, Lady de Chavasse,’
+he added earnestly, ‘try to think—the life of a fellow-creature may,
+perhaps, depend upon your memory.’
+
+“‘I am indeed sorry,’ she replied in the same musical voice. ‘I could
+not swear without being positive, could I? And I am not quite
+positive.’
+
+“‘But your servants?’
+
+“‘They were at the back of the flat—the girl let herself out.’
+
+“‘But your husband?’
+
+“‘Oh! when he saw me engaged with the girl, he went out to his club,
+and was not yet home when she left.’
+
+“‘Birdie! Birdie! won’t you try and remember?’ here came in an
+agonised cry from the unfortunate girl, who thus saw her last hope
+vanish before her eyes.
+
+“But Lady de Chavasse only lifted a little higher a pair of very
+prettily-arched eyebrows, and having finished her evidence she stepped
+on one side and presently left the court, leaving behind her a faint
+aroma of violet sachet powder, and taking away with her, perhaps, the
+last hope of an innocent fellow-creature.”
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+“But Pamela Pebmarsh?” I asked after a while, for he had paused and
+was gazing attentively at the photograph of a very beautiful and
+exquisitely-gowned woman.
+
+“Ah, yes, Pamela Pebmarsh,” he said with a smile. “There was yet
+another act in that palpitating drama of her life—one act—the
+_dénouement_ as unexpected as it was thrilling. Salvation came where
+it was least expected—from Jemima Gadd, who seemed to have made up her
+mind that Pamela had killed her aunt, and yet who was the first to
+prove her innocence.
+
+“She had been shown the few words which the murdered woman was alleged
+to have written after she had been stabbed. Jemima, not a very good
+scholar, found it difficult to decipher the words herself.
+
+“‘Ah, well, poor dear,’ she said after a while, with a deep sigh, ‘’er
+’andwriting was always peculiar, seein’ as ’ow she wrote always with
+’er left ’and.’
+
+“‘_Her left hand!!!_’ gasped the coroner, while public and jury alike,
+hardly liking to credit their ears, hung upon the woman’s thin lips,
+amazed, aghast, puzzled.
+
+“‘Why, yes!’ said Jemima placidly. ‘Didn’t you know she ’ad a bad
+accident to ’er right ’and when she was a child, and never could ’old
+anything in it? ’Er fingers were like paralysed; the ink-pot was
+always on the left of ’er writing-table. Oh! she couldn’t write with
+’er right ’and at all.’
+
+“Then a strange revulsion of feeling came over every one there.
+
+“Stabbed in the back, with her lung pierced through and through, how
+could she have done, dying, what she never did in life?
+
+“Impossible!
+
+“The murderer, whoever it was, had placed pen and paper to her hand,
+and had written on it the cruel words which were intended to delude
+justice and to send an innocent fellow-creature—a young girl not
+five-and-twenty—to an unjust and ignominious death. But, fortunately
+for that innocent girl, the cowardly miscreant had ignored the fact
+that Miss Pebmarsh’s right hand had been paralysed for years.
+
+“The inquest was adjourned for a week,” continued the man in the
+corner, “which enabled Pamela’s solicitor to obtain further evidence
+of her innocence. Fortunately for her he was enabled to find two
+witnesses who had seen her in an omnibus going towards St. Pancras at
+about 11.15 p.m., and a passenger on the 12.25 train, who had
+travelled down with her as far as Hendon. Thus, when the inquest was
+resumed, Pamela Pebmarsh left the court without a stain upon her
+character.
+
+“But the murder of Miss Pebmarsh has remained a mystery to this day—as
+has also the secret history of the compromising letters. Did they
+exist or not? is a question the interested spectators at that
+memorable inquest have often asked themselves. Certain it is that
+failing Pamela Pebmarsh, who might have wanted them for purpose of
+blackmail, no one else could be interested in them except Lady de
+Chavasse.”
+
+“Lady de Chavasse!” I ejaculated in surprise. “Surely you are not
+going to pretend that that elegant lady went down to Boreham Wood in
+the middle of the night in order to murder Miss Pebmarsh, and then to
+lay the crime at another woman’s door?”
+
+“I only pretend what’s logic,” replied the man in the corner, with
+inimitable conceit; “and in Pamela Pebmarsh’s own statement, she was
+with Lady de Chavasse at 51, Marsden Mansions, until eleven o’clock,
+and there is no train from St. Pancras to Boreham Wood between eleven
+and twenty-five minutes past midnight. Pamela’s _alibi_ becomes that
+of Lady de Chavasse, and is quite conclusive. Besides, that elegant
+lady was not one to do that sort of work for herself.”
+
+“What do you mean?” I asked.
+
+“Do you mean to say you never thought of the real solution of this
+mystery?” he retorted sarcastically.
+
+“I confess——” I began a little irritably.
+
+“Confess that I have not yet taught you to think logically, and to
+look at the beginning of things.”
+
+“What do you call the beginning of this case, then?”
+
+“Why! the compromising letters, of course.”
+
+“But——” I argued.
+
+“Wait a minute!” he shrieked excitedly, whilst with frantic haste he
+began fidgeting, fidgeting again at that eternal bit of string. “These
+did exist, otherwise why did Lady de Chavasse parley with Pamela
+Pebmarsh? Why did she not order her out of the house then and there,
+if she had nothing to fear from her?”
+
+“I admit that,” I said.
+
+“Very well; then, as she was too fine, too delicate to commit the
+villainous murder of which she afterwards accused poor Miss Pamela,
+who was there sufficiently interested in those letters to try and gain
+possession of them for her?”
+
+“Who, indeed?” I queried, still puzzled, still not understanding.
+
+“Ay! who but her husband,” shrieked the funny creature, as with a
+sharp snap he broke his beloved string in two.
+
+“Her husband!” I gasped.
+
+“Why not? He had plenty of time, plenty of pluck. In a flat it is easy
+enough to overhear conversations that take place in the next room—he
+was in the house at the time, remember, for Lady de Chavasse said
+herself that he went out afterwards. No doubt he overheard
+everything—the compromising letters, and Pamela’s attempt at levying
+blackmail. What the effect of such a discovery must have been upon the
+proud man I leave you to imagine—his wife’s social position ruined, a
+stain upon his ancient name, his relations pointing the finger of
+scorn at his folly.
+
+“Can’t you picture him, hearing the two women’s talk in the next room,
+and then resolving at all costs to possess himself of those
+compromising letters? He had just time to catch the 10 train to
+Boreham Wood.
+
+“Mind you, I don’t suppose that he went down there with any evil
+intent. Most likely he only meant to buy those letters from Miss
+Pebmarsh. What happened, however, nobody can say but the murderer
+himself.
+
+“Who knows? But the deed done, imagine the horror of a refined
+aristocratic man, face to face with such a crime as that.
+
+“Was it this terror, or merely rage at the girl who had been the
+original cause of all this, that prompted him to commit the final
+villany of writing out a false accusation and placing it under the
+dead woman’s hand? Who can tell?
+
+“Then, the deed done, and the _mise-en-scène_ complete, he is able to
+catch the last train—11.23—back to town. A man travelling alone would
+pass practically unperceived.
+
+“Pamela’s innocence was proved, and the murder of Miss Pebmarsh has
+remained a mystery, but if you will reflect on my conclusions, you
+will admit that no one else—_no one else_—could have committed that
+murder, for no one else had a greater interest in the destruction of
+those letters.”
+
+
+
+VI. The Lisson Grove Mystery
+
+Chapter I
+
+The man in the corner ordered another glass of milk, and timidly asked
+for a second cheese-cake at the same time.
+
+“I am going down to Marylebone Police Court, to see those people
+brought up before the ‘Beak,’” he remarked.
+
+“What people?” I queried.
+
+“What people!” he exclaimed, in the greatest excitement. “You don’t
+mean to say that you have not studied the Lisson Grove Mystery?”
+
+I had to confess that my knowledge on that subject was of the most
+superficial character.
+
+“One of the most interesting cases that has cropped up in recent
+years,” he said, with an indescribable look of reproach.
+
+“Perhaps. I did not study it in the papers because I preferred to hear
+_you_ tell me all about it,” I said.
+
+“Oh, if that’s it,” he replied, as he settled himself down in his
+corner like a great bird after the rain, “then you showed more sense
+than lady journalists usually possess. I can, of course, give you a
+far clearer account than the newspapers have done; as for the
+police—well! I never saw such a muddle as they are making of this
+case.”
+
+“I daresay it is a peculiarly difficult one,” I retorted, for I am
+ever a champion of that hard-working department.
+
+“H’m!” he said, “so, so—it is a tragedy in a prologue and three acts.
+I am going down this afternoon to see the curtain fall for the third
+time on what, if I mistake not, will prove a good burlesque; but it
+all began dramatically enough. It was last Saturday, 21st November,
+that two boys, playing in the little spinney just outside Wembley Park
+Station, came across three large parcels done up in American cloth.
+
+“With the curiosity natural to their age, they at once proceeded to
+undo these parcels, and what they found so upset the little beggars
+that they ran howling through the spinney and the polo ground,
+straight as a dart to Wembley Park Station. Half frantic with
+excitement, they told their tale to one of the porters off duty, who
+walked back to the spinney with them. The three parcels, in point of
+fact, contained the remains of a dismembered human body. The porter
+sent one of the boys for the local police, and the remains were duly
+conveyed to the mortuary, where they were kept for identification.
+
+“Three days later—that is to say, on Tuesday, 24th November—Miss
+Amelia Dyke, residing at Lisson Grove Crescent, returned from
+Edinburgh, where she had spent three or four days with a friend. She
+drove up from St. Pancras in a cab, and carried her small box up
+herself to the door of the flat, at which she knocked loudly and
+repeatedly—so loudly and so persistently, in fact, that the
+inhabitants of the neighbouring flats came out on to their respective
+landings to see what the noise was about.
+
+“Miss Amelia Dyke was getting anxious. Her father, she said, must be
+seriously ill, or else why did he not come and open the door to her.
+Her anxiety, however, reached its culminating point when Mr. and Mrs.
+Pitt, who reside in the flat immediately beneath that occupied by the
+Dykes, came forward with the alarming statement that, as a matter of
+fact, they had themselves been wondering if anything were wrong with
+old Mr. Dyke, as they had not heard any sound overhead for the last
+few days.
+
+“Miss Amelia, now absolutely terrified, begged one of the neighbours
+to fetch either the police or a locksmith, or both. Mr. Pitt ran out
+at once, both police and locksmith were brought upon the scene, the
+door was forcibly opened, and amidst indescribable excitement
+Constable Turner, followed by Miss Dyke, who was faint and trembling
+with apprehension, effected an entrance into the flat.
+
+“Everything in it was tidy and neat to a degree, all the fires were
+laid, the beds made, the floors were clean and washed, the brasses
+polished, only a slight, very slight layer of dust lay over
+everything, dust that could not have accumulated for more than a few
+days. The flat consisted of four rooms and a bathroom; in not one of
+them was there the faintest trace of old Mr. Dyke.
+
+“In order to fully comprehend the consternation which all the
+neighbours felt at this discovery,” continued the man in the corner,
+“you must understand that old Mr. Dyke was a helpless cripple; he had
+been a mining engineer in his young days, and a terrible blasting
+accident deprived him, at the age of forty, of both legs. They had
+been amputated just above the knee, and the unfortunate man—then a
+widower with one little girl—had spent the remainder of his life on
+crutches. He had a small—a very small pension, which, as soon as his
+daughter Amelia was grown up, had enabled him to live in comparative
+comfort in the small flat in Lisson Grove Crescent.
+
+“His misfortune, however, had left him terribly sensitive; he never
+could bear the looks of compassion thrown upon him, whenever he
+ventured out on his crutches, and even the kindliest sympathy was
+positive torture to him. Gradually, therefore, as he got on in life,
+he took to staying more and more at home, and after a while gave up
+going out altogether. By the time he was sixty-five years old and Miss
+Amelia a fine young woman of seven-and-twenty, old Dyke had not been
+outside the door of his flat for at least five years.
+
+“And yet, when Constable Turner, aided by the locksmith, entered the
+flat on that memorable 24th November, there was not a trace anywhere
+of the old man.
+
+“Miss Amelia was in the last stages of despair, and at first she
+seemed far too upset and hysterical to give the police any coherent
+and definite information. At last, however, from amid the chaos of
+tears and of ejaculations, Constable Turner gathered the following
+facts:
+
+“Miss Amelia had some great friends in Edinburgh, whom she had long
+wished to visit, her father’s crippled condition making this extremely
+difficult. A fortnight ago however, in response to a very urgent
+invitation, she at last decided to accept it, but in order to leave
+her father altogether comfortable, she advertised in the local paper
+for a respectable woman who would come to the flat every day and see
+to all the work, cook his dinner, make the bed, and so on.
+
+“She had several applications in reply to this advertisement, and
+ultimately selected a very worthy-looking elderly person, who, for
+seven shillings a week, undertook to come daily from seven in the
+morning until about six in the afternoon, to see to all Mr. Dyke’s
+comforts.
+
+“Miss Amelia was very favourably impressed with this person’s
+respectable and motherly appearance, and she left for Edinburgh by the
+5.15 a.m. train on the morning of Thursday, 19th November, feeling
+confident that her father would be well looked after. She certainly
+had not heard from the old man while she was away, but she had not
+expected to hear unless, indeed, something had been wrong.
+
+“Miss Amelia was quite sure that something dreadful had happened to
+her father, as he could not possibly have walked downstairs and out of
+the house alone; certainly his crutches were nowhere to be found, but
+this only helped to deepen the mystery of the old man’s disappearance.
+
+“The constable, having got thus far with his notes, thought it best to
+refer the whole matter at this stage to higher authority. He got from
+Miss Amelia the name and address of the charwoman, and then went back
+to the station.
+
+“There, the very first news that greeted him was that the medical
+officer of the district had just sent round to the various police
+stations his report on the human remains found in Wembley Park the
+previous Saturday. They had proved to be the dismembered body of an
+old man between sixty and seventy years of age, the immediate cause of
+whose death had undoubtedly been a violent blow on the back of the
+head with a heavy instrument, which had shattered the cranium. Expert
+examination further revealed the fact that deceased had had in early
+life both legs removed by a surgical operation just above the knee.
+
+“That was the end of the prologue in the Lisson Grove tragedy,”
+continued the man in the corner, after a slight and dramatic pause,
+“as far as the public was concerned. When the curtain was subsequently
+raised upon the first act, the situation had been considerably
+changed.
+
+“The remains had been positively identified as those of old Mr. Dyke,
+and a charge of wilful murder had been brought against Alfred Wyatt,
+of no occupation, residing in Warlock Road, Lisson Grove, and against
+Amelia Dyke for complicity in the crime. They are the two people whom
+I am going to see this afternoon brought before the Beak at the
+Marylebone Police Court.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+“Two very important bits of evidence, I must tell you, had come to
+light, on the first day of the inquest, and had decided the police to
+make this double arrest.
+
+“In the first place, according to one or two of the neighbours, who
+happened to know something of the Dyke household, Miss Amelia had kept
+company for some time with a young man named Alfred Wyatt; he was an
+electrical engineer, resided in the neighbourhood, and was some years
+younger than Miss Dyke. As he was known not to be very steady, it was
+generally supposed that the old man did not altogether approve of his
+daughter’s engagement.
+
+“Mrs. Pitt, residing in the flat immediately below the one occupied by
+the Dykes, had stated, moreover, that on Wednesday the 18th, at about
+midday, she heard very loud and angry voices proceeding from above;
+Miss Amelia’s shrill tones being specially audible. Shortly afterwards
+she saw Wyatt go out of the house; but the quarrel continued for some
+little time without him, for the neighbours could still hear Miss
+Amelia’s high-pitched voice, speaking very excitedly and volubly.
+
+“‘An hour later,’ further explained Mrs. Pitt, ‘I met Miss Dyke on the
+stairs; she seemed very flushed and looked as if she had been crying.
+I suppose she saw that I noticed this, for she stopped and said to me:
+
+“‘“All this fuss, you know, Mrs. Pitt, because Alfred asked me to go
+for a drive with him this afternoon, but I am going all the same.”
+
+“‘Later in the afternoon—it must have been quite half-past four, for
+it was getting dark—young Wyatt drove up in a motor-car, and presently
+I heard Miss Dyke’s voice on the stairs saying very pleasantly and
+cheerfully: “All right, daddy, we shan’t be long.” Then Mr. Dyke must
+have said something, which I didn’t hear, for she added. “Oh, that’s
+all right; I am well wrapped up, and we have plenty of rugs.”’
+
+“Mrs. Pitt then went to her window and saw Wyatt and Amelia Dyke start
+off in a motor. She concluded that the old man had been mollified, for
+both Amelia and Wyatt waved their hands affectionately up towards the
+window. They returned from their drive about six o’clock; Wyatt saw
+Amelia to the door, and then went off again. The next day Miss Dyke
+went to Scotland.
+
+“As you see,” continued the man in the corner, “Alfred Wyatt had
+become a very important personality in this case; he was Amelia’s
+sweetheart, and it was strange—to say the least of it—that she had
+never as yet even mentioned his name. Therefore, when she was recalled
+in order to give further evidence, you may be sure that she was pretty
+sharply questioned on the subject of Alfred Wyatt.
+
+“In her evidence before the coroner, she adhered fairly closely to her
+original statement:
+
+“‘I did not mention Mr. Wyatt’s name,’ she explained, ‘because I did
+not think it was of any importance; if he knew anything about my dead
+father’s mysterious fate he would have come forward at once, of
+course, and helped me to find out who the cowardly murderer was who
+could attack a poor, crippled old man. Mr. Wyatt was devoted to my
+father, and it is perfectly ridiculous to say that daddy objected to
+my engagement; on the contrary, he gave us his full consent, and we
+were going to be married directly after the New Year, and continue to
+live with father in the flat.’
+
+“‘But,’ questioned the coroner, who had not by any means departed from
+his severity, ‘what about this quarrel which the last witness
+overheard on the subject of your going out driving with Mr. Wyatt?’
+
+“‘Oh, that was nothing,’ replied Miss Dyke very quietly. ‘Daddy only
+objected because he thought that it was rather too late to start at
+four o’clock, and that I should be cold. When he saw that we had
+plenty of rugs he was quite pleased for me to go.’
+
+“‘Isn’t it rather astonishing, then,’ asked the coroner, ‘seeing that
+Mr. Wyatt was on such good terms with your father, that he did not go
+to see him while you were away?’
+
+“‘Not at all,’ she replied unconcernedly; ‘Alfred went down to
+Edinburgh on the Thursday evening. He couldn’t travel with me in the
+morning, for he had some business to see to in town that day; but he
+joined me at my friends’ house on the Friday morning, having travelled
+all night.’
+
+“‘Ah!’ remarked the coroner drily, ‘then he had not seen your father
+since you left.’
+
+“‘Oh, yes,’ said Miss Amelia; ‘he called round to see dad during the
+day, and found him looking well and cheerful.’
+
+“Miss Amelia Dyke, as she gave this evidence, seemed absolutely
+unconscious of saying anything that might in any way incriminate her
+lover. She is a handsome, though somewhat coarse-looking woman, nearer
+thirty, I should say, than she would care to own. I was present at the
+inquest, mind you, for that case had too many mysteries about it from
+the first for it to have eluded my observation, and I watched her
+closely throughout. Her voice struck me as fine and rich, with—in this
+instance, also—a shade of coarseness in it; certainly, it was very far
+from being high-pitched, as Mrs. Pitt had described it.
+
+“When she had finished her evidence she went back to her seat, looking
+neither flustered nor uncomfortable, although many looks of contempt
+and even of suspicion were darted at her from every corner of the
+crowded court.
+
+“Nor did she lose her composure in the slightest degree when Mr.
+Parlett, clerk to Messrs. Snow and Patterson, solicitors, of Bedford
+Row, in his turn came forward and gave evidence; only while the little
+man spoke her full red lips curled and parted with a look of complete
+contempt.
+
+“Mr. Parlett’s story was indeed a remarkable one, inasmuch as it
+suddenly seemed to tear asunder the veil of mystery which so far had
+surrounded the murder of old Dyke by supplying it with a motive—a
+strong motive too: the eternal greed of gain.
+
+“In June last, namely, it appears that Messrs. Snow and Patterson
+received intimation from a firm of Melbourne solicitors that a man of
+the name of Dyke had died there recently, leaving a legacy of £4,000
+to his only brother James Arthur Dyke, a mining engineer, who in 1890
+was residing at Lisson Grove Crescent. The Melbourne solicitors in
+their communication asked for Messrs. Snow and Patterson’s kind
+assistance in helping them to find the legatee.
+
+“The search was easy enough, since James Arthur Dyke, mining engineer,
+had never ceased to reside at Lisson Grove Crescent. Armed, therefore,
+with full instructions from their Melbourne correspondent, Messrs.
+Snow and Patterson communicated with Dyke, and after a little
+preliminary correspondence, the sum of £4,000 in Bank of Australia
+notes and various securities were handed over by Mr. Parlett to the
+old cripple.
+
+“The money and securities were—so Mr. Parlett understood—subsequently
+deposited by Mr. Dyke at the Portland Road Branch of the London and
+South Western Bank; as the old man apparently died intestate, the
+whole of the £4,000 would naturally devolve upon his only daughter and
+natural legatee.
+
+“Mind you, all through the proceedings the public had instinctively
+felt that money was somewhere at the bottom of this gruesome and
+mysterious crime. There is not much object in murdering an old cripple
+except for purposes of gain, but now Mr. Parlett’s evidence had indeed
+furnished a damning motive for the appalling murder.
+
+“What more likely than that Alfred Wyatt, wanting to finger that
+£4,000, had done away with the old man? And if Amelia Dyke did not
+turn away from him in horror, after such a cowardly crime, then she
+must have known of it and had perhaps connived in it.
+
+“As for Nicholson, the charwoman, her evidence had certainly done more
+to puzzle everybody all round than any other detail in this strange
+and mysterious crime.
+
+“She deposed that on Friday, 13th November, in answer to an
+advertisement in the _Marylebone Star_, she had called on Miss Dyke at
+Lisson Grove, when it was arranged that she should do a week’s work at
+the flat, beginning Thursday, the 19th, from seven in the morning
+until six in the afternoon. She was to keep the place clean, get Mr.
+Dyke—who, she understood was an invalid—all his meals, and make
+herself generally useful to him.
+
+“Accordingly, Nicholson turned up on the Thursday morning. She let
+herself into the flat, as Miss Dyke had entrusted the latch-key to
+her, and went on with the work. Mr. Dyke was in bed, and she got him
+all his meals that day. She thought she was giving him satisfaction,
+and was very astonished when, at six o’clock, having cleared away his
+tea, he told her that he would not require her again. He gave her no
+explanation, asked her for the latch-key, and gave her her full week’s
+money—seven shillings in full. Nicholson then put on her bonnet, and
+went away.
+
+“Now,” continued the man in the corner, leaning excitedly forward, and
+marking each sentence he uttered with an exquisitely complicated knot
+in his bit of string, “an hour later, another neighbour, Mrs. Marsh,
+who lived on the same floor as the Dykes, on starting to go out, met
+Alfred Wyatt on the landing. He took off his hat to her, and then
+knocked at the door of the Dykes’ flat.
+
+“When she came home at eight o’clock, she again passed him on the
+stairs; he was then going out. She stopped to ask him how Mr. Dyke
+was, and Wyatt replied: ‘Oh, fairly well, but he misses his daughter,
+you know.’
+
+“Mrs. Marsh, now closely questioned, said that she thought Wyatt was
+carrying a large parcel under his arm, but she could not distinguish
+the shape of the parcel as the angle of the stairs, where she met him,
+was very dark. She stated, though, that he was running down the stairs
+very fast.
+
+“It was on all that evidence that the police felt justified in
+arresting Alfred Wyatt for the murder of James Arthur Dyke, and Amelia
+Dyke for connivance in the crime. And now this very morning, those two
+young people have been brought before the magistrate, and at this
+moment evidence—circumstantial, mind you, but positively damning—is
+being heaped upon them by the prosecution. The police did their work
+quickly. The very evening after the first day of the inquest, the
+warrant was out for their arrest.”
+
+He looked at a huge silver watch which he always carried in his
+waistcoat pocket.
+
+“I don’t want to miss the defence,” he said, “for I know that it will
+be sensational. But I did not want to hear the police and medical
+evidence all over again. You’ll excuse me, won’t you? I shall be back
+here for five o’clock tea. I know you will be glad to hear all about
+it.”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+When I returned to the A.B.C shop for my tea at five minutes past
+five, there he sat in his accustomed corner, with a cup of tea before
+him, another placed opposite to him, presumably for me, and a long
+piece of string between his bony fingers.
+
+“What will you have with your tea?” he asked politely, the moment I
+was seated.
+
+“A roll and butter and the end of the story,” I replied.
+
+“Oh, the story has no end,” he said with a chuckle; “at least, not for
+the public. As for me, why, I never met a more simple ‘mystery.’
+Perhaps that is why the police were so completely at sea.”
+
+“Well, and what happened?” I queried, with some impatience.
+
+“Why, the usual thing,” he said, as he once more began to fidget
+nervously with his bit of string. “The prisoners had pleaded not
+guilty, and the evidence for the prosecution was gone into in full.
+Mr. Parlett repeated his story of the £4,000 legacy, and all the
+neighbours had some story or other to tell about Alfred Wyatt, who,
+according to them, was altogether a most undesirable young man.
+
+“I heard the fag end of Mrs. Marsh’s evidence. When I reached the
+court she was repeating the story she had already told to the police.
+
+“Some one else in the house had also heard Wyatt running
+helter-skelter downstairs at eight o’clock on the Thursday evening;
+this was a point, though a small one, in favour of the accused. A man
+cannot run downstairs when he is carrying the whole weight of a dead
+body, and the theory of the prosecution was that Wyatt had murdered
+old Dyke on that Thursday evening, got into his motor-car somewhere,
+scorched down to Wembley with the dismembered body of his victim,
+deposited it in the spinney where it was subsequently found, and
+finally had driven back to town, stabled his motor car, and reached
+King’s Cross in time for the 11.30 night express to Edinburgh. He
+would have time for all that, remember, for he would have three hours
+and a half to do it in.
+
+“Besides which the prosecution had unearthed one more witness, who was
+able to add another tiny link to the already damning chain of evidence
+built up against the accused.
+
+“Wilfred Poad, namely, manager of a large cycle and motor-car depôt in
+Euston Road, stated that on Thursday afternoon, 19th November, at
+about half-past six o’clock, Alfred Wyatt, with whom he had had some
+business dealings before, had hired a small car from him, with the
+understanding that he need not bring it back until after 11 p.m. This
+was agreed to, Poad keeping the place open until just before eleven,
+when Wyatt drove up in the car, paid for the hire of it, and then
+walked away from the shop in the direction of the Great Northern
+terminus.
+
+“That was pretty strong against the male prisoner, wasn’t it? For,
+mind you, Wyatt had given no satisfactory account whatever of his time
+between 8 p.m., when Mrs. Marsh had met him going out of Lisson Grove
+Crescent, and 11 p.m. when he brought back the car to the Euston Road
+shop. ‘He had been driving about aimlessly,’ so he said. Now, one
+doesn’t go out motoring for hours on a cold, drizzly night in November
+for no purpose whatever.
+
+“As for the female prisoner, the charge against her was merely one of
+complicity.
+
+“This closed the case for the prosecution,” continued the funny
+creature, with one of his inimitable chuckles, “leaving but one tiny
+point obscure, and that was, the murdered man’s strange conduct in
+dismissing the woman Nicholson.
+
+“Yes, the case was strong enough, and yet there stood both prisoners
+in the dock with that sublime air of indifference and contempt which
+only complete innocence or hardened guilt could give.
+
+“Then when the prosecution had had their say, Alfred Wyatt chose to
+enter the witness-box and make a statement in his own defence.
+Quietly, and as if he were making the most casual observation, he
+said:
+
+“‘I am not guilty of the murder of Mr. Dyke, and in proof of this I
+solemnly assert that on Thursday, 19th November, the day I am supposed
+to have committed the crime, the old man was still alive at half-past
+ten o’clock in the evening.’
+
+“He paused a moment, like a born actor, watching the effect he had
+produced. I tell you, it was astounding.
+
+“‘I have three separate and independent witnesses here,’ continued
+Wyatt, with the same deliberate calm, ‘who heard and saw Mr. Dyke as
+late as half-past ten that night. Now, I understand that the
+dismembered body of the old man was found close to Wembley Park. How
+could I, between half-past ten and eleven o’clock, have killed Dyke,
+cut him up, cleaned and put the flat all tidy, carried the body to the
+car, driven on to Wembley, hidden the corpse in the spinney, and be
+back in Euston Road, all in the space of half-an-hour? I am absolutely
+innocent of this crime, and fortunately, it is easy for me now to
+prove my innocence.’
+
+“Alfred Wyatt had made no idle boast. Mrs. Marsh had seen him running
+downstairs at 8 p.m. An hour after that, the Pitts in the flat beneath
+heard the old man moving about overhead.
+
+“‘Just as usual,’ observed Mrs. Pitt. ‘He always went to bed about
+nine, and we could always hear him most distinctly.’
+
+“John Pitt, the husband, corroborated this statement: the old man’s
+movements were quite unmistakable because of his crutches.
+
+“Henry Ogden, on the other hand, who lived in the house facing the
+block of flats, saw the light in Dyke’s window that evening, and the
+old man’s silhouette upon the blind from time to time. The light was
+put out at half-past ten. This statement again was corroborated by
+Mrs. Ogden, who also had noticed the silhouette and the light being
+extinguished at half-past ten.
+
+“But this was not all; both Mr. and Mrs. Ogden had seen old Dyke at
+his window, sitting in his accustomed armchair, between half-past
+eight and nine o’clock. He was gesticulating, and apparently talking
+to some one else in the room whom they could not see.
+
+“Alfred Wyatt, therefore was quite right when he said that he would
+have no difficulty in proving his innocence. The man whom he was
+supposed to have murdered was, according to the testimony, alive at
+six o’clock; according to Mr. and Mrs. Ogden he was alive and sitting
+in his window until nine; again, he was heard to move about until ten
+o’clock by both the Pitts, and at half-past ten only was the light put
+out in his flat. Obviously, therefore, as his dead body was found
+twelve miles away, Wyatt, who was out of the Crescent at eight, and in
+Euston Road at eleven, could not have done the deed.
+
+“He was discharged, of course; the magistrate adding a very severe
+remark on the subject of ‘carelessly collected evidence.’ As for Miss
+Amelia, she sailed out of the court like a queen after her coronation,
+for with Wyatt’s discharge the case against her naturally collapsed.
+As for me, I walked out too, with an elated feeling at the thought
+that the intelligence of the British race had not yet sunk so low as
+our friends on the Continent would have us believe.”
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+“But then, who murdered the old man?” I asked, for I confess the
+matter was puzzling me in an irritating kind of way.
+
+“Ah! who indeed?” he rejoined sarcastically, while an artistic knot
+went to join its fellows along that never-ending bit of string.
+
+“I wish you’d tell me what’s in your mind,” I said, feeling peculiarly
+irritated with him just at that moment.
+
+“What’s in my mind?” he replied, with a shrug of his thin shoulders.
+“Oh, only a certain degree of admiration!”
+
+“Admiration at what?”
+
+“At a pair of exceedingly clever criminals.”
+
+“Then you do think that Wyatt murdered Dyke?”
+
+“I don’t think—I am sure.”
+
+“But when did they do it?”
+
+“Ah, that’s more to the point. Personally, I should say between them
+on Wednesday morning, 18th November.”
+
+“The day they went for that motor-car ride?” I gasped.
+
+“And carried away the old man’s remains beneath a multiplicity of
+rugs,” he added.
+
+“But he was _alive_ long after that!” I urged. “The woman Nicholson——”
+
+“The woman Nicholson saw and spoke to a man in bed, whom she
+_supposed_ was old Mr. Dyke. Among the many questions put to her by
+those clever detectives, no one thought, of course, of asking her to
+describe the old man. But even if she had done so Wyatt was far too
+great an artist in crime not to have contrived a make-up which,
+described by a witness who had never before seen Dyke, would easily
+pass as a description of the old man himself.”
+
+“Impossible!” I said, struck in spite of myself by the simplicity of
+his logic.
+
+“Impossible, you say?” he shrieked excitedly. “Why, I call that crime
+a masterpiece from beginning to end; a display of ingenuity which,
+fortunately, the criminal classes seldom possess, or where would
+society be? Here was a crime committed, where everything was most
+beautifully stage-managed, nothing left unforeseen. Shall I
+reconstruct it for you?”
+
+“Do!” I said, handing across the table to him a brand new, beautiful
+bit of string, on which his talon-like fingers fastened as upon a
+prey.
+
+“Very well,” he said, marking each point with a scientific knot. “Here
+it is, scene by scene: There was Alfred Wyatt and Amelia Dyke—a pair
+of blackguards, eager to obtain that £4,000 which only the old man’s
+death could secure for them. They decide upon killing him, and: Scene
+1—Miss Amelia makes _her_ arrangements. She advertises for a
+charwoman, and engages one, who is to be a very useful witness
+presently.
+
+“Scene 2.—The murder, brutal, horrible, on the person of an old
+cripple, whilst his own daughter stands by, and the dismembering of
+the body.
+
+“Scene 3.—The ride in the motor-car—after dark, remember, and with
+plenty of rugs, beneath which the gruesome burden is concealed. The
+scene is accompanied by the comedy of Miss Dyke speaking to her
+father, and waving her hand affectionately at him from below. I tell
+you, that woman must have had some nerve!
+
+“Then, Scene 4.—The arrival at Wembley, and the hiding of the remains.
+
+“Scene 5.—Amelia goes to Edinburgh by the 5.15 a.m. train, and thus
+secures her own _alibi_. After that, the comedy begins in earnest. The
+impersonation of the dead man by Wyatt during the whole of that
+memorable Thursday. Mind you, that was not very difficult; it only
+needed the brain to invent, and the nerve to carry it through. The
+charwoman had never seen old Dyke before; she only knew that he was an
+invalid. What more natural than that she should accept as her new
+master the man who lay in bed all day, and only spoke a few words to
+her? A very slight make-up of hair and beard would complete the
+illusion.
+
+“Then, at six o’clock, the woman gone, Wyatt steals out of the house,
+bespeaks the motor-car, leaves it in the street in a convenient spot,
+and is back in time to be seen by Mrs. Marsh at seven.
+
+“The rest is simplicity itself. The silhouette at the window was easy
+enough to arrange; the sound of a man walking on crutches is easily
+imitated with a couple of umbrellas—the actual crutches were, no
+doubt, burned directly after the murder. Lastly, the putting out of
+the light at half-past ten was the crowning stroke of genius.
+
+“One little thing might have upset the whole wonderful plan, but that
+one thing only; and that was if the body had been found _before_ the
+great comedy scene of Thursday had been fully played. But that spinney
+near Wembley was well chosen. People don’t go wandering under trees
+and in woods on cold November days, and the remains were not found
+until the Saturday.
+
+“Ah, it was cleverly stage-managed, and no mistake. I couldn’t have
+done it better myself. Won’t you have another cup of tea? No? Don’t
+look so upset. The world does not contain many such clever criminals
+as Alfred Wyatt and Amelia Dyke.”
+
+
+
+VII. The Tremarn Case
+
+Chapter I
+
+“Well, it certainly is most amazing!” I said that day, when I had
+finished reading about it all in the _Daily Telegraph_.
+
+“Yet the most natural thing in the world,” retorted the man in the
+corner, as soon as he had ordered his lunch. “Crime invariably begets
+crime. No sooner is a murder, theft, or fraud committed in a novel or
+striking way, than this method is aped—probably within the next few
+days—by some other less imaginative scoundrel.
+
+“Take this case, for instance,” he continued, as he slowly began
+sipping his glass of milk, “which seems to amaze you so much. It was
+less than a year ago, was it not? that in Paris a man was found dead
+in a cab, stabbed in a most peculiar way—right through the neck from
+ear to ear—with, presumably, a long, sharp instrument of the type of
+an Italian stiletto.
+
+“No one in England took much count of the crime, beyond a contemptuous
+shrug of the shoulders at the want of safety of the Paris streets, and
+the incapacity of the French detectives, who not only never discovered
+the murderer, who had managed to slip out of the cab unperceived, but
+who did not even succeed in establishing the identity of the victim.
+
+“But this case,” he added, pointing once more to my daily paper,
+“strikes nearer home. Less than a year has passed, and last week, in
+the very midst of our much vaunted London streets, a crime of a
+similar nature has been committed. I do not know if your paper gives
+full details, but this is what happened: Last Monday evening two
+gentlemen, both in evening dress and wearing opera hats, hailed a
+hansom in Shaftesbury Avenue. It was about a quarter past eleven, and
+the night, if you remember, was a typical November one—dark, drizzly,
+and foggy. The various theatres in the immediate neighbourhood were
+disgorging a continuous stream of people after the evening
+performance.
+
+“The cabman did not take special notice of his fares. They jumped in
+very quickly, and one of them, through the little trap above, gave him
+an address in Cromwell Road. He drove there as quickly as the fog
+would permit him, and pulled up at the number given. One of the
+gentlemen then handed him a very liberal fare—again through the little
+trap—and told him to drive his friend on to Westminster Chambers,
+Victoria Street.
+
+“Cabby noticed that the ‘swell,’ when he got out of the hansom,
+stopped for a moment to say a few words to his friend, who had
+remained inside; then he crossed over the road and walked quickly in
+the direction of the Natural History Museum.
+
+“When the cabman pulled up at Westminster Chambers, he waited for the
+second fare to get out; the latter seemingly making no movement that
+way, cabby looked down at him through the trap.
+
+“‘I thought ’e was asleep,’ he explained to the police later on. ‘’E
+was leaning back in ’is corner, and ’is ’ead was turned towards the
+window. I gets down and calls to ’im, but ’e don’t move. Then I gets
+on to the step and give ’im a shake. . . . There!—I’ll say no
+more. . . . We was near a lamp-post, the mare took a step forward, and
+the light fell full on the gent’s face. ’E was dead and no mistake. I
+saw the wound just underneath ’is ear, and “Murder!” I says to myself
+at once.’
+
+“Cabby lost no time in whistling for the nearest point policeman, then
+he called the night porter of the Westminster Chambers. The latter
+looked at the murdered man, and declared that he knew nothing of him;
+certainly he was not a tenant of the Chambers.
+
+“By the time a couple of policemen arrived upon the scene, quite a
+crowd had gathered around the cab, in spite of the lateness of the
+hour and the darkness of the night. The matter was such an important
+one that one of the constables thought it best at once to jump into
+the hansom beside the murdered man and to order the cabman to drive to
+the nearest police station.
+
+“There the cause of death was soon ascertained; the victim of this
+daring outrage had been stabbed through the neck from ear to ear with
+a long, sharp instrument, in shape like an antique stiletto, which, I
+may tell you, was subsequently found under the cushions of the hansom.
+The murderer must have watched his opportunity, when his victim’s head
+was turned away from him, and then dealt the blow, just below the left
+ear, with amazing swiftness and precision.
+
+“Of course the papers were full of it the next day; this was such a
+lovely opportunity for driving home a moral lesson, of how one crime
+engenders another, and how—but for that murder in Paris a year ago—we
+should not now have to deplore a crime committed in the very centre of
+fashionable London, the detection of which seems likely to completely
+baffle the police.
+
+“Plenty more in that strain, of course, from which the reading public
+quickly jumped to the conclusion that the police held absolutely no
+clue as to the identity of the daring and mysterious miscreant.
+
+“A most usual and natural thing had happened; cabby could only give a
+very vague description of his other ‘fare,’ of the ‘swell’ who had got
+out at Cromwell Road, and been lost to sight after having committed so
+dastardly and so daring a crime.
+
+“This was scarcely to be wondered at, for the night had been very
+foggy, and the murderer had been careful to pull his opera hat well
+over his face; thus hiding the whole of his forehead and eyes;
+moreover, he had always taken the additional precaution of only
+communicating with the cabman through the little trap-door.
+
+“All cabby had seen of him was a clean-shaven chin. As to the murdered
+man, it was not until about noon, when the early editions of the
+evening papers came out with a fuller account of the crime and a
+description of the victim, that his identity was at last established.
+
+“Then the news spread like wildfire, and the evening papers came out
+with some of the most sensational headlines it had ever been their
+good fortune to print. The man who had been so mysteriously murdered
+in the cab was none other than Mr. Philip Le Cheminant, the nephew and
+heir-presumptive of the Earl of Tremarn.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+“In order fully to realise the interest created by this extraordinary
+news, you must be acquainted with the various details of that
+remarkable case, popularly known as the ‘Tremarn Peerage Case,’”
+continued the man in the corner, as he placidly munched his
+cheese-cake. “I do not know if you followed it in its earlier stages,
+when its many details—which read like a romance—were first made
+public.”
+
+I looked so interested and so eager that he did not wait for my reply.
+
+“I must try and put it all clearly before you,” he said; “I was
+interested in it all from the beginning, and from the numerous wild
+stories afloat I have sifted only what was undeniably true. Some
+points of the case are still in dispute, and will, perhaps, now for
+ever remain a mystery. But I must take you back some five-and-twenty
+years. The Hon. Arthur Le Cheminant, second son of the late Earl of
+Tremarn, was then travelling round the world for health and pleasure.
+
+“In the course of his wanderings he touched at Martinique, one of the
+French West Indian islands, which was devastated by volcanic eruptions
+about two years ago. There he met and fell in love with a beautiful
+half-caste girl named Lucie Legrand, who had French blood in her
+veins, and was a Christian, but who, otherwise, was only partially
+civilised, and not at all educated.
+
+“How it all came about it is difficult to conjecture, but one thing is
+absolutely certain, and that is that the Hon. Arthur le Cheminant the
+son of one of our English Peers, married this half-caste girl at the
+parish church of St. Pierre, in Martinique, according to the forms
+prescribed by French laws, both parties being of the same religion.
+
+“I suppose now no one will ever know whether that marriage was
+absolutely and undisputably a legal one—but, in view of subsequent
+events, we must presume that it was. The Hon. Arthur, however, in any
+case, behaved like a young scoundrel. He only spent a very little time
+with his wife, quickly tired of her, and within two years of his
+marriage callously abandoned her and his child, then a boy about a
+year old.
+
+“He lodged a sum of £2,000 in the local bank in the name of Mme. Le
+Cheminant, the interest of which was to be paid to her regularly for
+the maintenance of herself and child, then he calmly sailed for
+England, with the intention never to return. This intention fate
+itself helped him to carry out, for he died very shortly afterwards,
+taking the secret of his incongruous marriage with him to his grave.
+
+“Mme. Le Cheminant, as she was called out there, seems to have
+accepted her own fate with perfect equanimity. She had never known
+anything about her husband’s social position in his own country, and
+he had left her what, in Martinique amongst the coloured population,
+was considered a very fair competence for herself and child.
+
+“The grandson of an English earl was taught to read and write by the
+worthy _curé_ of St. Pierre, and during the whole of her life, Lucie
+never once tried to find out who her husband was, and what had become
+of him.
+
+“But here the dramatic scene comes in this strange story,” continued
+the man in the corner, with growing excitement; “two years ago St.
+Pierre, if you remember, was completely destroyed by volcanic
+eruptions. Nearly the entire population perished, and every house and
+building was in ruins. Among those who fell a victim to the awful
+catastrophe was Mme. Le Cheminant, otherwise the Hon. Mrs. Arthur Le
+Cheminant, whilst amongst those who managed to escape and ultimately
+found refuge in the English colony of St. Vincent, was her son,
+Philip.
+
+“Well, you can easily guess what happened, can’t you? In that
+English-speaking colony the name of Le Cheminant was, of course, well
+known, and Philip had not been in St. Vincent many weeks, before he
+learned that his father was none other than a younger brother of the
+present Earl of Tremarn, and that he himself—seeing that the present
+peer was over fifty and still unmarried—was heir-presumptive to the
+title and estates.
+
+“You know the rest. Within two or three months of the memorable St.
+Pierre catastrophe Philip Le Cheminant had written to his uncle, Lord
+Tremarn, demanding his rights. Then he took passage on board a French
+liner, and crossed over to Havre _en route_ for Paris and London.
+
+“He and his mother—both brought up as French subjects—had, mind you,
+all the respect which French people have for their papers of
+identification; and when the house in which they had lived for twenty
+years was tumbling about the young man’s ears, when his mother had
+already perished in the flames, he made a final and successful effort
+to rescue the papers which proved him to be a French citizen, the son
+of Lucie Legrand by her lawful marriage with Arthur Le Cheminant at
+the church of the Immaculate Conception of St. Pierre.
+
+“What happened immediately afterwards it is difficult to conjecture.
+Certain it is, however, that over here the newspapers soon were full
+of vague allusions about the newly-found heir to the Earldom of
+Tremarn, and within a few weeks the whole of the story of the secret
+marriage at St. Pierre was in everybody’s mouth.
+
+“It created an immense sensation; the Hon. Arthur Le Cheminant had
+lived a few years in England after his return from abroad and no one,
+not even his brother, seemed to have had the slightest inkling of his
+marriage.
+
+“The late Lord Tremarn, you must remember, had three sons, the eldest
+of whom is the present peer, the second was the romantic Arthur, and
+the third, the Hon. Reginald, who also died some years ago, leaving
+four sons, the eldest of whom, Harold, was just twenty-three, and had
+always been styled heir-presumptive to the earldom.
+
+“Lord Tremarn had brought up these four nephews of his, who had lost
+both father and mother, just as if they had been his own children, and
+his affection for them, and notably for the eldest boy, was a very
+beautiful trait in his otherwise unattractive character.
+
+“The news of the existence and claim of this unknown nephew must have
+come upon Lord Tremarn as a thunderbolt. His attitude, however, was
+one of uncompromising incredulity. He refused to believe the story of
+the marriage, called the whole tale a tissue of falsehoods, and
+denounced the claimant as a barefaced and impudent impostor.
+
+“Two or three months more went by; the public were eagerly awaiting
+the arrival of this semi-exotic claimant to an English peerage, and
+sensations, surpassing those of the Tichborne case, were looked
+forward to with palpitating interest.
+
+“But in the romances of real life, it is always the unexpected that
+happens. The claimant did arrive in London about a year ago. He was
+alone, friendless, and moneyless, since the £2,000 lay buried
+somewhere beneath the ruins of the St. Pierre bank. However, he called
+upon a well-known London solicitor, who advanced him some money and
+took charge of all the papers relating to his claim.
+
+“Philip Le Cheminant then seems to have made up his mind to make a
+personal appeal to his uncle, trusting apparently in the old adage
+that ‘blood is thicker than water.’
+
+“As was only to be expected, Lord Tremarn flatly refused to see the
+claimant, whom he was still denouncing as an impostor. It was by
+stealth, and by bribing the servants at the Grosvenor Square mansion
+that the young man at last obtained an interview with his uncle.
+
+“Last New Year’s Day he gave James Tovey, Lord Tremarn’s butler, a
+five-pound note, to introduce him, surreptitiously, into his master’s
+study. There uncle and nephew at last met face to face.
+
+“What happened at that interview nobody knows; was the cry of blood
+and of justice so convincing that Lord Tremarn dare not resist it?
+Perhaps.
+
+“Anyway, from that moment the new heir-presumptive was installed
+within his rights. After a single interview with Philip Le Cheminant’s
+solicitor, Lord Tremarn openly acknowledged the claimant to be his
+brother Arthur’s only son, and therefore his own nephew and heir.
+
+“Nay, more, every one noticed that the proud, bad-tempered old man was
+as wax in the hands of this newly-found nephew. He seemed even to have
+withdrawn his affection from the four other young nephews, whom
+hitherto he had brought up as his own children, and bestowed it all
+upon his brother Arthur’s son—some people said in compensation for all
+the wrong that had been done to the boy in the past.
+
+“But the scandal around his dead brother’s name had wounded the old
+man’s pride very deeply, and from this he never recovered. He shut
+himself away from all his friends, living alone with his newly-found
+nephew in his gloomy house in Grosvenor Square. The other boys, the
+eldest of whom, Harold, was just twenty-three, decided very soon to
+leave a house where they were no longer welcome. They had a small
+private fortune of their own, from their father and mother; the
+youngest boy was still at college, two others had made a start in
+their respective professions.
+
+“Harold had been brought up as an idle young man about town, and on
+him the sudden change of fortune fell most heavily. He was undecided
+what to do in the future, but, in the meanwhile, partly from a spirit
+of independence, and partly from a desire to keep a home for his
+younger brothers, he took and furnished a small flat, which, it is
+interesting to note, is just off Exhibition Road, not far from the
+Natural History Museum in Kensington.
+
+“This was less than a year ago. Ten months later the newly-found heir
+to the peerage of Tremarn was found murdered in a hansom cab, and
+Harold Le Cheminant is once more the future Earl.”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+“The papers, as you know, talked of nothing else but the mysterious
+murder in the hansom cab. Every one’s sympathy went out at once to
+Lord Tremarn, who, on hearing the terrible news, had completely broken
+down, and was now lying on a bed of sickness, from which they say he
+may never recover.
+
+“From the first there had been many rumours of the terrible enmity
+which existed between Harold Le Cheminant and the man who had so
+easily captured Lord Tremarn’s heart, as well as the foremost place in
+the Grosvenor Square household.
+
+“The servants in the great and gloomy mansion told the detectives in
+charge of the case many stories of terrible rows which occurred at
+first between the cousins. And now every one’s eyes were already
+turned with suspicion on the one man who could most benefit by the
+death of Philip Le Cheminant.
+
+“However careful and reticent the police may be, details in connection
+with so interesting a case have a wonderful way of leaking out.
+Already one other most important fact had found its way into the
+papers. It appears that in their endeavours to reconstruct the last
+day spent by the murdered man the detectives had come upon most
+important evidence.
+
+“It was Thomas Sawyer, hall porter of the Junior Grosvenor Club, who
+first told the following interesting story. He stated that deceased
+was a member of the club, and had dined there on the evening preceding
+his death.
+
+“‘Mr. Le Cheminant was just coming downstairs after his dinner,’
+explained Thomas Sawyer to the detectives, ‘when a stranger comes into
+the hall of the club; Mr. Le Cheminant saw him as soon as I did, and
+appeared very astonished. “What do you want?” he says rather sharply.
+“A word with you,” replies the stranger. Mr. Le Cheminant seemed to
+hesitate for a moment. He lights a cigar, whilst the stranger stands
+there glaring at him with a look in his eye I certainly didn’t like.
+
+“‘Mind you,’ added Thomas Sawyer, ‘the stranger was a gentleman, in
+evening dress, and all that. Presently Mr. Le Cheminant says to him:
+“This way, then,” and takes him along into one of the club rooms. Half
+an hour later the stranger comes out again. He looked flushed and
+excited. Soon after Mr. Le Cheminant comes out too; but he was quite
+calm and smoking a cigar. He asks for a cab, and tells the driver to
+take him to the Lyric Theatre.’
+
+“This was all that the hall-porter had to say, but his evidence was
+corroborated by one of the waiters of the club who saw Mr. Le
+Cheminant and the stranger subsequently enter the dining-room, which
+was quite deserted at the time.
+
+“‘They ’adn’t been in the room a minute,’ said the waiter, ‘when I
+’eard loud voices, as if they was quarrelling frightful. I couldn’t
+’ear what they said, though I tried, but they were shouting so, and
+drowning each other’s voices. Presently there’s a ring at my bell, and
+I goes into the room. Mr. Le Cheminant was sitting beside one of the
+tables, quietly lighting a cigar. “Show this—er—gentleman out of the
+club,” ’e says to me. The stranger looked as if ’e would strike ’im.
+“You’ll pay for this,” ’e says, then ’e picks up ’is ’at, and dashes
+out of the club helter-skelter. “One is always pestered by these
+beggars,” says Mr. Le Cheminant to me, as ’e stalks out of the room.’
+
+“Later on it was arranged that both Thomas Sawyer and the waiter
+should catch sight of Harold Le Cheminant, as he went out of his house
+in Exhibition Road. Neither of them had the slightest hesitation in
+recognising in him the stranger who had called at the club that night.
+
+“Now that they held this definite clue, the detectives continued their
+work with a will. They made enquiries at the Lyric Theatre, but there
+they only obtained very vague testimony; one point, however, was of
+great value, the commissionaire outside one of the neighbouring
+theatres stated that, some time after the performance had begun he
+noticed a gentleman in evening dress walking rapidly past him.
+
+“He seemed strangely excited, for as he went by he muttered quite
+audibly to himself; ‘I can stand it no longer, it must be he or I.’
+Then he disappeared in the fog, walking away towards Shaftesbury
+Avenue. Unfortunately the commissionaire, just like the cabman, was
+not prepared to swear to the identity of this man, whom he had only
+seen momentarily through the fog.
+
+“But add to all this testimony the very strong motive there was for
+the crime, and you will not wonder that within twenty-four hours of
+the murder, the strongest suspicions had already fastened on Harold Le
+Cheminant, and it was generally understood that, even before the
+inquest, the police already had in readiness a warrant for his arrest
+on the capital charge.”
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+“It would be difficult, I think, for any one who was not present at
+that memorable inquest to have the least idea of the sensation which
+its varied and dramatic incidents caused among the crowd of spectators
+there.
+
+“At first the proceedings were of the usual kind. The medical officer
+gave his testimony as to the cause of death; for this was, of course,
+not in dispute. The stiletto was produced; it was of an antique and
+foreign pattern, probably of Eastern or else Spanish origin. In
+England, it could only have been purchased at some _bric-à-brac_ shop.
+
+“Then it was the turn of the servants at Grosvenor Square, of the
+cabman, and of the commissionaire. Lord Tremarn’s evidence, which he
+had sworn to on his sickbed, was also read. It added nothing to the
+known facts of the case, for he had last seen his favourite nephew
+alive in the course of the afternoon preceding the latter’s tragic
+end.
+
+“After that the _employés_ of the Junior Grosvenor Club retold their
+story, and they were the first to strike the note of sensation which
+was afterwards raised to its highest possible pitch.
+
+“Both of them, namely, were asked each in their turn to look round the
+court and see if they could recognise the stranger who had called at
+the club that memorable evening. Without the slightest hesitation,
+both the hall-porter and the waiter pointed to Harold Le Cheminant,
+who sat with his solicitor in the body of the court.
+
+“But already an inkling of what was to come had gradually spread
+through that crowded court—instinctively every one felt that behind
+the apparent simplicity of this tragic case there lurked another
+mystery more strange even than that murder in the hansom cab.
+
+“Evidence was being taken as to the previous history of the deceased,
+his first appearance in London, his relationship with his uncle, and
+subsequently his enmity with his cousin Harold. At this point a man
+was brought forward as a witness, who it was understood had
+communicated with the police at the very last moment, offering to make
+a statement which he thought would throw considerable light upon the
+mysterious affair.
+
+“He was a man of about fifty years of age, who looked like a very
+seedy, superannuated clerk of some insurance office.
+
+“He gave his name as Charles Collins, and said that he resided in
+Caxton Road, Clapham.
+
+“In a perfectly level tone of voice, he then explained that some three
+years ago, his son William, who had always been idle and
+good-for-nothing, had suddenly disappeared from home.
+
+“‘We heard nothing of him for over two years,’ continued Charles
+Collins, in that same cheerless and even voice which spoke of a
+monotonous existence of ceaseless, patient grind, ‘but some few weeks
+ago my daughter went up to the West End to see about an engagement—she
+plays dance music at parties sometimes—when, in Regent Street, she
+came face to face with her brother William. He was no longer wretched,
+as we all are,’ added the old man pathetically, ‘he was dressed like a
+swell, and when his sister spoke to him, he pretended not to know her.
+But she’s a sharp girl, and guessed at once that there was something
+strange there which William wished to hide. She followed him from a
+distance, and never lost sight of him that day, until she saw him
+about six o’clock in the evening go into one of the fine houses in
+Grosvenor Square. Then she came home and told her mother and me all
+about it.’
+
+“I can assure you,” continued the man in the corner, “that you might
+have heard a pin drop in that crowded court whilst the old man spoke.
+That he was stating the truth no one doubted for a moment. The very
+fact that he was brought forward as a witness showed that his story
+had been proved, at any rate, to the satisfaction of the police.
+
+“The Collinses seem to have been very simple, good-natured people. It
+never struck any of them to interfere with William, who appeared, in
+their own words, to have ‘bettered himself.’ They concluded that he
+had obtained some sort of position in a rich family, and was now
+ashamed of his poor relations at Clapham.
+
+“Then one morning they read in the papers the story of the mysterious
+murder in the hansom cab, together with a description of the victim,
+who had not yet been identified. ‘William,’ they said with one accord.
+Michael Collins, one of the younger sons, went up to London to view
+the murdered man at the mortuary. There was no doubt whatever that it
+was William, and yet all the papers persisted in saying that the
+deceased was the heir to some grand peerage.
+
+“‘So I wrote to the police,’ concluded Charles Collins, ‘and my wife
+and children were all allowed to view the body, and we are all
+prepared to swear that it is that of my son, William Collins, who was
+no more heir to a peerage than your worship.’
+
+“And mopping his forehead, with a large coloured handkerchief, the old
+man stepped down from the box.
+
+“Well, you may imagine what this bombshell was in the midst of that
+coroner’s court. Everyone looked at his neighbour wondering if this
+was real life, or some romantic play being acted on a stage. Amidst
+indescribable excitement, various other members of the Collins’ family
+corroborated the old man’s testimony, as did also one or two friends
+from Clapham. All those who had been allowed to view the body of the
+murdered man pronounced it without hesitation to be that of William
+Collins, who had disappeared from home three years ago.
+
+“You see, it was like a repetition of the Tichborne case, only with
+this strange difference: This claimant was dead, but all his papers
+were in perfect order, the certificate of marriage between Lucie
+Legrand and Arthur Le Cheminant at Martinique, as well as the birth
+and baptismal certificate of Philip Le Cheminant, their son. Yet there
+were all those simple, honest folk swearing that the deceased had been
+born in Clapham, and the mother, surely, could not have been mistaken.
+
+“That is where the difference with the other noteworthy case came in,
+for in this instance as far as the general public is concerned the
+actual identity of the murdered man will always remain a matter of
+doubt—Philip Le Cheminant or William Collins took that part of his
+secret, at any rate, with him to his grave.”
+
+
+
+Chapter V
+
+“But the murder?” I asked eagerly, for the man in the corner had
+paused, intent upon the manufacture of innumerable knots in a long
+piece of string.
+
+“Ah, yes, the murder, of course,” he replied with a chuckle, “the
+second mystery in this extraordinary case. Well, of course, whatever
+the identity of the deceased really was, there was no doubt in the
+minds of the police that Harold Le Cheminant had murdered him. To him,
+at any rate, the Collins family were unknown; he only knew the man who
+had supplanted him in his uncle’s affections, and snatched a rich
+inheritance away from him. The charge brought against him at the
+Westminster Court was also one of the greatest sensations of this
+truly remarkable case.
+
+“It looked, indeed, as if the unfortunate young man had committed a
+crime which was as appalling as it was useless. Instead of murdering
+the impostor—if impostor he was—how much more simple it would have
+been to have tried to unmask him. But, strange to say, this he never
+seems to have done, at any rate as far as the public knew.
+
+“But here again mystery stepped in. When brought before the
+magistrate, Harold Le Cheminant was able to refute the terrible charge
+brought against him by the simple means of a complete _alibi_. After
+the stormy episode at the Junior Grosvenor Club he had gone to his own
+club in Pall Mall, and fortunately for him, did not leave it until
+twenty minutes past eleven, some few minutes _after_ the two men in
+evening dress got into the hansom in Shaftesbury Avenue.
+
+“But for this lucky fact, for which he had one or two witnesses, it
+might have fared ill with him, for feeling unduly excited, he walked
+all the way home afterwards; and had he left his club earlier, he
+might have found it difficult to account for his time. As it was, he
+was, of course, discharged.
+
+“But one more strange fact came out during the course of the
+magisterial investigation, and that was that Harold Le Cheminant, on
+the very day preceding the murder, had booked a passage for St.
+Vincent. He admitted in court that he meant to conduct certain
+investigations there, with regard to the identity of the supposed heir
+to the Tremarn peerage.
+
+“And thus the curtain came down on the last act of that extraordinary
+drama, leaving two great mysteries unsolved: the real identity of the
+murdered man, and that of the man who killed him. Some people still
+persist in thinking it was Harold Le Cheminant. Well, we may easily
+dismiss _that_ supposition. Harold had decided to investigate the
+matter for himself; he was on his way to St. Vincent.
+
+“Surely common-sense would assert that, having gone so far, he would
+assure himself first, whether the man was an impostor or not, before
+he resorted to crime, in order to rid himself of him. Moreover, the
+witnesses who saw him leave his own club at twenty minutes past eleven
+were quite independent and very emphatic.
+
+“Another theory is that the Collins’ gang tried to blackmail Philip Le
+Cheminant or William Collins whichever we like to call him—and that it
+was one of them who murdered him out of spite, when he refused to
+submit to the blackmailing process.
+
+“Against that theory, however, there are two unanswerable
+arguments—firstly, the weapon used, which certainly was not one that
+would commend itself to the average British middle-class man on murder
+intent—a razor or knife would be more in his line; secondly, there is
+no doubt whatever that the murderer wore evening dress and an opera
+hat, a costume not likely to have been worn by any member of the
+Collins’ family, or their friends. We may, therefore, dismiss that
+theory also with equal certainty.”
+
+And he surveyed placidly the row of fine knots in his bit of string.
+
+“But then, according to you, who was the man in evening dress, and who
+but Harold Le Cheminant had any interest in getting rid of the
+claimant?” I asked at last.
+
+“Who, indeed?” he replied with a chuckle “who but the man who was as
+wax in the hands of that impostor.”
+
+“Whom do you mean?” I gasped.
+
+“Let us take things from the beginning,” he said, with ever-growing
+excitement, “and take the one thing which is absolutely beyond
+dispute, and that is the authenticity of the _papers_—the marriage
+certificate of Lucie Legrand, etc.—as against the authenticity of the
+_man_. Let us admit that the real Philip Le Cheminant was a refugee at
+St. Vincent, that he found out about his parentage and determined to
+go to England. He writes to his uncle, then sails for Europe, lands at
+Havre, and arrives in Paris.”
+
+“Why, Paris?” I asked.
+
+“Because you, like the police and like the public, have persistently
+shut your eyes to an event which, to my mind has bearing upon the
+whole of this mysterious case, and that is the original murder
+committed in Paris a year ago, also in a cab, also with a
+stiletto—which that time was _not_ found—in fact, in the self-same
+manner as this murder a week ago.
+
+“Well, that crime was never brought home to its perpetrator any more
+than this one will be. But my contention is, that the man who
+committed that murder a year ago, repeated this crime last week—that
+the man who was murdered in Paris was the real Philip Le Cheminant,
+whilst the man who was murdered in London was some friend to whom he
+had confided his story, and probably his papers, and who then hit upon
+the bold plan of assuming the personality of the Martinique creole,
+heir to an English peerage.”
+
+“But what in the world makes you imagine such a preposterous thing?” I
+gasped.
+
+“One tiny unanswerable fact,” he replied quietly. “William Collins,
+the impostor, when he came to London, called upon a solicitor, and
+deposited with him the valuable papers, _after that_ he obtained his
+interview with Lord Tremarn. Then mark what happens. Without any
+question, immediately after that interview, and, therefore, without
+even having seen the papers of identification, Lord Tremarn accepts
+the claimant as his newly-found nephew.
+
+“And why?
+
+“Only because that claimant has a tremendous hold over the Earl, which
+makes the old man as wax in his hands, and it is only logical to
+conclude that that hold was none other than that Lord Tremarn had met
+his real nephew in Paris, and had killed him, sooner than to see him
+supplant his beloved heir, Harold.
+
+“I followed up the subsequent history of that Paris crime, and found
+that the Paris police had never established the identity of the
+murdered man. Being a stranger, and moneyless, he had apparently
+lodged in one of those innumerable ill-famed little hotels that abound
+in Paris, the proprietors of which have very good cause to shun the
+police, and therefore would not even venture so far as to go and
+identify the body when it lay in the Morgue.
+
+“But William Collins knew who the murdered man was; no doubt he lodged
+at the same hotel, and could lay his hands on the all-important
+papers. I imagine that the two young men originally met in St.
+Vincent, or perhaps on board ship. He assumed the personality of the
+deceased, crossed over to England, and confronted Lord Tremarn with
+the threat to bring the murder home to him if he ventured to dispute
+his claim.
+
+“Think of it all, and you will see that I am right. When Lord Tremarn
+first heard from his brother Arthur’s son, he went to Paris in order
+to assure himself of the validity of his claim. Seeing that there was
+no doubt of that, he assumed a friendly attitude towards the young
+man, and one evening took him out for a drive in a cab and murdered
+him on the way.
+
+“Then came Nemesis in the shape of William Collins, whom he dared not
+denounce, lest his crime be brought home to him. How could he come
+forward and say: ‘I know that this man is an impostor, as I happened
+to have murdered my nephew myself’?
+
+“No; he preferred to temporise, and bide his time until, perhaps,
+chance would give him his opportunity. It took a year in coming. The
+yoke had become too heavy. ‘It must be he or I!’ he said to himself
+that very night. Apparently he was on the best of terms with his
+tormentor, but in his heart of hearts he had always meant to be even
+with him at the last.
+
+“Everything favoured him; the foggy night, even the dispute between
+Harold and the impostor at the club. Can you not picture him meeting
+William Collins outside the theatre, hearing from him the story of the
+quarrel, and then saying, ‘Come with me to Harold’s; I’ll soon make
+the young jackanapes apologise to you’?
+
+“Mind you, a year had passed by since the original crime. William
+Collins, no doubt, never thought he had anything to fear from the old
+man. He got into the cab with him, and thus this remarkable story has
+closed, and Harold Le Cheminant is once more heir to the Earldom of
+Tremarn.
+
+“Think it all over, and bear in mind that Lord Tremarn _never_ made
+the slightest attempt to prove the rights or wrongs of the impostor’s
+claim. On this base your own conclusions, and then see if they do not
+inevitably lead you to admit mine as the only possible solution of
+this double mystery.”
+
+He was gone, leaving me bewildered and amazed, staring at my _Daily
+Telegraph_, where, side by side with a long recapitulation of the
+mysterious claimant of the Earldom there was the following brief
+announcement:
+
+“We regret to say that the condition of Lord Tremarn is decidedly
+worse to-day, and that but little hope is entertained of his recovery.
+Mr. Harold Le Cheminant has been his uncle’s constant and devoted
+companion during the noble Earl’s illness.”
+
+
+
+VIII. The Fate of the _Artemis_
+
+Chapter I
+
+“Well, I’m ——!” was my inelegant mental comment upon the news in that
+morning’s paper.
+
+“So are most people,” rejoined the man in the corner, with that eerie
+way he had of reading my thoughts. “The _Artemis_ has come home,
+having safely delivered her dangerous cargo, and Captain Jutland’s
+explanations only serve to deepen the mystery.”
+
+“Then you admit there is one in this case?” I said.
+
+“Only to the public. Not to me. But I do admit that the puzzle is a
+hard one. Do you remember the earlier details of the case? It was
+towards the end of 1903. Negotiations between Russia and Japan were
+just reaching a point of uncomfortable tension, and the man in the
+street guessed that war in the Far East was imminent.
+
+“Messrs. Mills and Co. had just completed an order for a number of
+their celebrated quick-firing guns for the Russian Government, and
+these—according to the terms of the contract—were to be delivered at
+Port Arthur on or about 1st February, 1904. Effectively, then, on 1st
+December last, the _Artemis_, under the command of Captain Jutland,
+sailed from Goole, with her valuable cargo on board, and with orders
+to proceed along as fast as possible, in view of the probable outbreak
+of hostilities.
+
+“Less than two hours after she had started, Messrs. Mills received
+intimation from the highest official quarters, that in all probability
+before the _Artemis_ could reach Port Arthur, and in view of coming
+eventualities, the submarine mines would have been laid at the
+entrance to the harbour. A secret plan of the port was therefore sent
+to the firm for Captain Jutland’s use, showing the only way through
+which he could possibly hope to navigate the _Artemis_ safely into the
+harbour, and without which she would inevitably come in contact with
+one of those terrible engines of wholesale destruction, which have
+since worked such awful havoc in this war.
+
+“But _there_ was the trouble. This official intimation, together with
+the plan, reached Messrs. Mills just two hours too late; it is a way
+peculiar to many official intimations. Fortunately, however, the
+_Artemis_ was to touch at Portsmouth on private business of the
+firm’s, and, therefore, it only meant finding a trustworthy messenger
+to meet Captain Jutland there, and to hand him over that all-important
+plan.
+
+“Of course, there was no time to be lost, but, above all, some one of
+extreme trustworthiness must be found for so important a mission. You
+must remember that the great European Power in question is beset by
+many foes in the shape of her own disaffected children, who desire her
+downfall even more keenly than does her Asiatic opponent. Also in
+times like these, when every method is fair which gives one adversary
+an advantage over the other, we must remember that our plucky little
+allies of the Far East are past masters in that art which is politely
+known as secret intelligence.
+
+“All this, you see, made it an absolute necessity to keep the mission
+to Captain Jutland a profound secret. I need not impress upon you the
+fact, I think, that it is not expedient for the plans of an important
+harbour to fall under prying eyes.
+
+“Finally, the choice fell on Captain Markham, R.N.R., lately of the
+mercantile marine, and at the time in the employ of our own Secret
+Intelligence Department, to which he has rendered frequent and
+valuable services. This choice was determined also mainly through the
+fact that Captain Markham’s wife had relatives living in Portsmouth,
+and that, therefore, his journey thither could easily be supposed to
+have an unofficial and quite ordinary character—especially if he took
+his wife with him, which he did.
+
+“Captain and Mrs. Markham left Waterloo for Portsmouth at ten minutes
+past twelve on Wednesday, 2nd December, the secret plan lying safely
+concealed at the bottom of Mrs. Markham’s jewel-case.
+
+“As the _Artemis_ would not touch at Portsmouth until the following
+morning, Captain Markham thought it best not to spend the night at an
+hotel, but to go into rooms; his choice fell on a place, highly
+recommended by his wife’s relations, and which was situated in a quiet
+street on the Southsea side of the town. There he and his wife stayed
+the night, pending the arrival of the _Artemis_.
+
+“But at twelve o’clock on the following morning the police were
+hastily called in by Mrs. Bowden, the landlady of 49, Gastle Street,
+where the Markhams had been staying. Captain Markham had been found
+lying half-insensible, gagged and bound, on the floor of the
+sitting-room, his hands and feet tightly pinioned, and a woollen
+comforter wound closely round his mouth and neck; whilst Mrs.
+Markham’s jewel-case, containing valuable jewellery and the secret
+plans of Port Arthur, had disappeared.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+“Mind you,” continued the man in the corner, after he had assured
+himself of my undivided attention, “all these details were unknown to
+the public at first. I have merely co-ordinated them, and told them to
+you in the actual sequence in which they occurred, so that you may be
+able to understand the subsequent events.
+
+“At the time—that is to say, on 3rd December, 1903—the evening papers
+only contained an account of what was then called ‘the mysterious
+outrage at Gastle Street, Portsmouth.’ A private gentleman was
+presumably assaulted and robbed in broad daylight, and inside a highly
+respectable house in a busy part of the city.
+
+“Mrs. Bowden, the landlady, was, as you may imagine, most excited and
+indignant. Her house and herself had been grossly insulted by this
+abominable outrage, and she did her level best to throw what light she
+could on this mysterious occurrence.
+
+“The story she told the police was indeed extraordinary, and as she
+repeated it to all her friends, and subsequently to one or two
+journalists, it roused public excitement to its highest pitch.
+
+“What she related at great length to the detective in charge of the
+case, was briefly this:
+
+“Captain and Mrs. Markham, it appears, arrived at 49, Gastle Street,
+on Wednesday afternoon, 2nd December, and Mrs. Bowden accommodated
+them with a sitting-room and bedroom, both on the ground floor. In the
+evening Mrs. Markham went out to dine with her brother, a Mr. Paulton,
+who is a well-known Portsmouth resident, but Captain Markham stayed in
+and had dinner alone in his sitting-room.
+
+“According to Mrs. Bowden’s version of the story, at about nine
+o’clock a stranger called to see Captain Markham. This stranger was
+obviously a foreigner, for he spoke broken English. Unfortunately, the
+hall at 49, Gastle Street, was very dark, and, moreover, the foreigner
+was attired in a magnificent fur coat, the collar of which hid the
+lower part of his face. All Mrs. Bowden could see of him was that he
+was very tall, and wore gold-rimmed spectacles.
+
+“‘He was so very peremptory in his manner,’ continued Mrs. Bowden,
+‘that I had to show him in at once. The Captain seemed surprised to
+see him—in fact, he looked decidedly annoyed, I might say; but just as
+I was closing the door I heard the stranger laugh, and say quite
+pleasantly: “You gave me the slip, my friend, but you see I have found
+you out all right.”’
+
+“Mrs. Bowden, after the manner of her class, seems to have made
+vigorous efforts to hear what went on in the sitting-room after that,”
+continued the man in the corner, “but she was not successful. Later
+on, however, the Captain rang and ordered whiskies and sodas. Both
+gentlemen were then sitting by the fire, looking quite friendly.
+
+“‘I took a look round the room,’ explained the worthy landlady, ‘and
+took particular notice that the jewel-case was on the table, with the
+lid open. Captain Markham, as soon he saw me, closed it very quickly.’
+
+“The stranger seems to have gone away at about half-past ten, and
+subsequently again Mrs. Markham came home accompanied by her brother,
+Mr. Paulton. The next morning she went out at a quarter past eleven
+o’clock, and about half an hour later the mysterious stranger called
+again.
+
+“This time he pushed his way straight into the sitting-room; but the
+very next moment he uttered a cry of intense horror and astonishment,
+and rushed back into the hall, gesticulating wildly, and shrieking: ‘A
+robbery!—a murder!—I go for the police!’ And before Mrs. Bowden could
+stop him, or even could realise what had occurred, he had dashed out
+of the house.
+
+“‘I called to Meggie,’ continued Mrs. Bowden, ‘I was so frightened, I
+didn’t dare go into the parlour alone. But she was more frightened
+than I was, and we stood trembling in the hall waiting for the police.
+At last I began to have my suspicions, and I got Meggie to run out
+into the street and see if she could bring in a policeman.’
+
+“When the police at last arrived upon the scene, they pushed open the
+sitting-room door, and there found Captain Markham in a most helpless
+condition, his hands tied behind his back, and himself half-choked by
+the scarf over his mouth. As soon as he recovered his breath, he
+explained that he had no idea who his assailant was; he was standing
+with his back to the door, when he was suddenly dealt a blow on the
+head from behind, and he remembered nothing more.
+
+“In the meantime Mrs. Markham had come home, and of course was
+horrified beyond measure at the outrage which had been committed. She
+declared that her jewel-case was in the sitting-room when she went out
+in the morning—a fact confirmed by Captain Markham himself.
+
+“But here, at once, the police were seriously puzzled. Mrs. Bowden, of
+course, told her story of the foreigner—a story which was corroborated
+by her daughter, Meggie. Captain Markham, pressed by the police, and
+by his wife, admitted that a friend had visited him the evening
+before.
+
+“‘He is an old friend I met years ago abroad, who happened to be in
+Portsmouth yesterday, and quite accidentally caught sight of me as I
+drove up to this door, and naturally came in to see me,’ was the
+Captain’s somewhat lame explanation.
+
+“Nothing more was to be got out of him that day; he was still feeling
+very bewildered he said, and certainly he looked very ill. Mrs.
+Markham then put the whole matter in the hands of the police.
+
+“Captain Markham had given a description of ‘the old friend he had met
+years ago abroad.’ This description vaguely coincided with that given
+by Mrs. Bowden of the mysterious foreigner. But the Captain’s replies
+to the cross-questionings of the detectives in charge of the case were
+always singularly reticent and lame. ‘I had lost sight of him for
+nearly twenty years,’ he explained, ‘and do not know what his present
+abode and occupation might be. When I knew him years ago, he was a man
+of independent means, without a fixed abode, and a great traveller. I
+believe that he is a German by nationality, but I don’t think that I
+ever knew this as a fact. His name was Johann Schmidt.’
+
+“I may as well tell you here, at once, that the mysterious foreigner
+managed to make good his escape. He was traced as far as the South
+Western Railway Station, where he was seen to rush through the
+barrier, just in time to catch the express up to town. At Waterloo he
+was lost sight of in the crowd.
+
+“The police were keenly on the alert; no trace of the missing jewels
+had as yet been found. Then it was that, gradually, the story of the
+secret plan of Port Arthur reached the ears of the general public. Who
+first told it, and to whom, it is difficult to conjecture, but you
+know what a way things of that sort have of leaking out.
+
+“The secret of Captain Markham’s mission had of necessity been known
+to several people, and a secret shared by many soon ceases to be one
+at all; anyway, within a week of the so-called ‘Portsmouth outrage,’
+it began to be loudly whispered that the robbery of Mrs. Markham’s
+jewels was only a mask that covered the deliberate theft of the plans
+of Port Arthur.
+
+“And then the inevitable happened. Already Captain Markham’s strange
+attitude had been severely commented upon, and now the public, backed
+by the crowd of amateur detectives who read penny novelettes and form
+conclusions of their own, had made up its mind that Captain Markham
+was a party to the theft—that he was either the tool or the accomplice
+of the mysterious foreigner and that, in fact, he had been either
+bribed or terrorised into giving up the plan of Port Arthur to an
+enemy of the Russian government. The crime was all the more heinous as
+by this act of treachery a British ship, manned by a British crew, had
+been sent to certain destruction.
+
+“What rendered the whole case doubly mysterious was that Messrs. Mills
+and Co. seemed to take the matter with complete indifference. They
+refused to be interviewed, or to give any information about the
+_Artemis_ at all, and seemed callously willing to await events.
+
+“The public was furious; the newspapers stormed; every one felt that
+the _Artemis_ should be stopped at any cost at her next port of call,
+and not allowed to continue her perilous journey.
+
+“And yet the days went by; the public read with horror at Lloyds’ that
+the _Artemis_ had called at Malta, at Port Said, at Aden, and was now
+well on her way to the Far East. Feeling ran so high throughout
+England, that, if the mysterious stranger had been discovered by the
+police, no protection from them would have saved him from being
+lynched.
+
+“As for Captain Markham, public opinion reserved its final judgment. A
+cloud hung over him, of that there was no doubt; many said openly that
+he had sold the secret plans of Port Arthur, either to the Japanese or
+to the Nihilists, either through fear or intimidation, if not through
+greed.
+
+“Then the inevitable climax came: A certain Mr. Carleton constituted
+himself the spokesman of the general public; he met Captain Markham
+one day at one of the clubs in London. There were hot words between
+them. Mr. Carleton did not mince matters; he openly accused Captain
+Markham of that which public opinion had already whispered, and
+finally, completely losing his temper, he struck the Captain in the
+face, calling him every opprobrious name he could think of.
+
+“But for the timely interference of friends, there would have been
+murder committed then and there; as it was, Captain Markham was
+induced by his own friends to bring a criminal charge of slander and
+of assault against Mr. Carleton, as the only means of making the whole
+story public, and possibly vindicating his character.”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+“A criminal action for slander and assault is always an interesting
+one,” continued the man in the corner, after a while, “as it always
+argues an unusual amount of personal animosity on the part of the
+plaintiff.
+
+“In this case, of course, public interest was roused to its highest
+pitch. Practically, though Captain Markham was the prosecutor, he
+would stand before his fellow-citizens after this action either as an
+innocent man, or as one of the most dastardly scoundrels this nation
+has ever known.
+
+“The case for the Captain was briefly stated by his counsel. For the
+defence Sir Arthur Inglewood, on behalf of Mr. Carleton, pleaded
+justification. With wonderful eloquence Sir Arthur related the whole
+story of the secret plan of Port Arthur confided to the honour of
+Captain Markham, and which involved the safety of the British ship and
+the lives of a whole British crew.
+
+“The first witnesses called for the defence were Mrs. Bowden and her
+daughter, Meggie. Both related the story I have already told you. When
+they came to the point of having seen the jewel-case _open_ on the
+table during that interview between Captain Markham and the mysterious
+stranger, there was a regular murmur of indignation throughout the
+whole crowd, so much so, that the judge threatened to clear the court,
+for Sir Arthur argued this to be a proof that Captain Markham had been
+a willing accomplice in the theft of the secret plans, and had merely
+played the comedy of being assaulted, bound, and gagged.
+
+“But there was more to come.
+
+“It appears that on the morning of 2nd December—that is to say, before
+going to Portsmouth—Captain Markham, directly after breakfast, and
+while his wife was up in her own room, received a message which seemed
+greatly to disturb him. It was Jane Mason, the parlour-maid at the
+Markhams’ town house, who told the story.
+
+“A letter bearing no stamp had been dropped into the letter-box, she
+had taken it to her master, who, on reading it, became greatly
+agitated; he tore up the letter, stuffed it into his pocket and
+presently took up his hat and rushed out of the house.
+
+“‘When the master was gone,’ continued Jane, ‘I found a scrap of
+paper, which had fallen out of his pocket.’
+
+“This scrap of paper Jane Mason had carefully put away. She was a
+shrewd girl, and scented some mystery. It was now produced in court,
+and the few fragmentary words were read out by Sir Arthur Inglewood,
+amidst boundless excitement:
+
+“‘....if you lend a hand........Port Arthur safely.......hold my
+tongue....’
+
+“And at the end there were four letters in large capitals, ‘STOW.’
+
+“In view of all the evidence taken, there was momentous significance
+to be attached to those few words, of which only the last four letters
+seemed mysterious, but these probably were part of the confederate’s
+signature, who had—no one doubted it now—some hold upon Captain
+Markham, and had by a process of blackmail induced him to send the
+_Artemis_ to her doom.
+
+“After that, according to a statement made by the head clerk of
+Messrs. Mills and Co., Captain Markham came round to the office
+begging that some one else should be sent to meet Captain Jutland at
+Portsmouth. ‘This,’ explained the head clerk, who had been subpœnaed
+for the defence, ‘was quite impossible at this eleventh hour, and, in
+the absence of the heads of the firm, I had on Mr. Mills’ behalf to
+hold Captain Markham to his promise.’
+
+“This closed the case for the defence, and in view of the lateness of
+the hour, counsels’ speeches were reserved for the following day.
+There was not a doubt in anybody’s mind that Captain Markham was
+guilty, and but for the presence of a large body of police, I assure
+you he would have been torn to pieces by the crowd.”
+
+The man in the corner paused in his narrative and blinked at me over
+his bone-rimmed spectacles, like some lean and frowzy tom-cat, eager
+for a fight.
+
+“Well?” I said eagerly.
+
+“Well, surely you remember what happened the following day?” he
+replied, with a dry chuckle. “Personally, I don’t think that there
+ever was quite so much sensation in any English court of law.
+
+“It was crowded, of course, when counsel for the plaintiff rose to
+speak. He made, however, only a short statement, briefly and to the
+point; but this statement caused every one to look at his neighbour,
+wondering if he were awake or dreaming.
+
+“Counsel began by saying that Messrs. Mills and Co., in view of the
+obvious conspiracy that had existed against the _Artemis_, had
+decided, in conjunction with Captain Markham himself, to say nothing
+about the safety of the ship until she was in port; but now counsel
+had much pleasure in informing the court and public that the _Artemis_
+had safely arrived at Port Arthur, had landed her guns, and was on her
+way home again by now. A cablegram _via_ St. Petersburg had been
+received by Messrs. Mills and Co., from Captain Jutland that very
+morning.
+
+“That cablegram was read by counsel in court, and was received with
+loud and prolonged cheering which could not be suppressed.
+
+“With heroic fortitude—explained counsel—Captain Markham had borne the
+gross suspicions against his integrity, only hoping that news of the
+safety of the _Artemis_ would reach England in time to allow him to
+vindicate his character. But until Captain Jutland was safe in port,
+he had sworn to hold his tongue and to bear insult and violence,
+sooner than once more jeopardise the safety of the British ship by
+openly avowing that she carried the plans of the important port with
+her.
+
+“Well, you know the rest. The parties, at the suggestion of the judge,
+arranged the case amicably, and, Captain Markham being fully
+satisfied, Mr. Carleton was nominally ordered to come up for trial
+when called upon.
+
+“Captain Markham was the hero of the hour; but presently, after the
+first excitement had subsided, sensible people began to ponder. Every
+one, of course, appreciated the fact that Messrs. Mills and Co.,
+prompted by the highest authorities, had insisted on not jeopardising
+the safety of the _Artemis_ by shouting on the housetops that she was
+carrying the plans of Port Arthur on board. Hostilities in the Far
+East were on the point of breaking out, and I need not insist, I
+think, on the obvious fact that silence in such matters and at such a
+time was absolutely imperative.
+
+“But what sensible people wanted to know was, what part had Captain
+Markham played in all this?
+
+“In the evening of that memorable 2nd December, he was sitting
+amicably by the fire with the mysterious stranger, who was evidently
+blackmailing him, and with the jewel-case, which contained the plans
+of Port Arthur, open between them. What, then, had caused Captain
+Markham to change his attitude? What dispelled the fear of the
+stranger? Was he really assaulted? Was the jewel-case really stolen?
+
+“Captain Jutland, of the _Artemis_, has explained that he was only on
+shore for one hour at Portsmouth on the memorable morning of 3rd
+December, namely, between 10.30 and 11.30 a.m. On landing at the Hard
+from his gig, he was met by a gentleman, whom he did not know, and
+who, without a word of comment, handed him some papers, which proved
+to be plans of Port Arthur.
+
+“Now, at that very hour Captain Markham was lying helpless in his
+bedroom, and the question now is, who abstracted the plans from the
+jewel-case, and then mysteriously handed them to Captain Jutland? Why
+was it not done openly? Why?—why? and, above all, by whom?——”
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+“Indeed, why?” I retorted, for he had paused, and was peering at me
+through his bone-rimmed spectacles. “You must have a theory,” I added,
+as I quietly handed him a beautiful bit of string across the table.
+
+“Of course, I have a theory,” he replied placidly; “nay, more, the
+only explanation of those mysterious events. But for this I must refer
+you to the scrap of paper found by Jane Mason, and containing the four
+fragmentary sentences which have puzzled every one, and which Captain
+Markham always refused to explain.
+
+“Do you remember,” he went on, as he began feverishly to construct
+knot upon knot on that piece of string, “the wreck of the _Ridstow_
+some twenty years ago? She was a pleasure boat belonging to Mr. Eyres,
+the great millionaire financier, and was supposed to have been wrecked
+in the South Seas, with nearly all hands. Five of her crew, however,
+were picked up by H.M.S. _Pomona_, on a bit of rocky island to which
+they had managed to swim.
+
+“I looked up the files of the newspapers relating to the rescue of
+these five shipwrecked mariners, who told a most pitiable tale of the
+loss of the yacht and their subsequent escape to, and sufferings on
+the island. Fire had broken out in the hull of the _Ridstow_, and all
+her crew were drowned, with the exception of three sailors, a Russian
+friend, or rather secretary, of Mr. Eyres, and a young petty officer
+named Markham.
+
+“You see, the letters stow had given me the clue. Clearly Markham, on
+receiving the message on the morning of 2nd December, was frightened,
+and when we analyse the fragments of that message and try to
+reconstruct the missing fragments, do we not get something like this:
+
+“‘If _you lend a hand_ in allowing the _Artemis_ to reach _Port Arthur
+safely_, and to land her cargo there, I will no longer _hold my
+tongue_ about the events which occurred on board the _Ridstow_.’
+
+“Clearly the mysterious stranger had a great hold over Captain
+Markham, for every scrap of evidence, if you think it over, points to
+his having been _frightened_. Did he not beg the clerk to find some
+one else to meet Captain Jutland in Portsmouth? He did not wish _to
+lend a hand_ in allowing the _Artemis_ to reach _Port Arthur safely_.
+
+“We must, therefore, take it that on board the _Ridstow_ some such
+tragedy was enacted as, alas! is not of unfrequent occurrence. The
+tragedy of a mutiny, a wholesale murder, the robbery of the rich
+financier, the burning of the yacht. Markham, then barely twenty, was
+no doubt an unwilling, perhaps passive, accomplice; one can trace the
+hand of a cunning, daring Russian in the whole of this mysterious
+tragedy.
+
+“Since then, Markham, through twenty years’ faithful service of his
+country, had tried to redeem the passive crime of his early years. But
+then came the crisis: The cunning leader of that bygone tragedy no
+doubt kept a strong hand over his weaker accomplices.
+
+“What happened to the other three we do not know, but we have seen how
+terrified Markham is of him, how he dare not resist him, and when the
+mysterious Russian—some Nihilist, no doubt, at war with his own
+Government—wishes to deal his country a terrible blow by possessing
+himself of the plan of her most important harbour, so that he might
+sell it to her enemies, Markham dare not say him nay.
+
+“But mark what happens. Captain Markham terrorised, confronted with a
+past crime, threatened with exposure, is as wax in the hands of his
+unscrupulous tormentor. But beside him there is the saving presence of
+his wife.”
+
+“His wife?” I gasped.
+
+“Yes, the woman! Did you think this was a crime without the inevitable
+woman! I sought her, and found her in Captain Markham’s wife. To save
+her husband both from falling a victim to his implacable accomplice,
+and from committing another even more heinous crime, she suggests the
+comedy which was so cleverly enacted in the morning of 3rd December.
+
+“When the landlady and her daughter saw the jewel-case open on the
+table the evening before, Markham was playing the first act of the
+comedy invented by his wife. She had the plan safely in her own
+keeping by then. He pretended to agree to the Russian’s demands, but
+showed him that he had not then the plan in his possession, promising,
+however, to deliver it up on the morrow.
+
+“Then in the morning, Mrs. Markham helps to gag and strap her husband
+down; he pretends to lie unconscious, and she goes out carrying the
+jewel-case. Her brother, Mr. Paulton, of course helps them both;
+without him it would have been more difficult; as it is, he takes
+charge of the jewel-case, abstracts the plan and papers, and finally
+meets Captain Jutland at the Hard, and hands him over the plan of Port
+Arthur.
+
+“Thus through the wits of a clever and devoted woman, not only are the
+_Artemis_ and her British crew saved, but Captain Markham is
+effectually rid of the blackmailer, who otherwise would have poisoned
+his life, and probably out of revenge at being foiled, have ruined his
+victim altogether.
+
+“To my mind, that was the neatest thing in the whole plan. The general
+public believed that Captain Markham (who obviously at the instigation
+of his wife had confided in Messrs. Mills and Co.) held his tongue as
+to the safety of the _Artemis_ merely out of heroism, in order not to
+run her into any further danger. Now, I maintain that this was the
+masterstroke of that clever woman’s plan.
+
+“By holding his tongue, by letting the public fear for the safety of
+the British crew and British ship, public feeling was stirred to such
+a pitch of excitement that the Russian now would never _dare_ show
+himself. Not only—by denouncing Captain Markham now—would he never be
+even listened to for a moment, but, if he came forward at all, if he
+even showed himself, he would stand before the British public
+self-convicted as the man who had tried through the criminal process
+of blackmail to terrorise an Englishman into sending a British ship
+and thirty British sailors to certain annihilation.
+
+“No; I think we may take it for granted that the Russian will not dare
+to show his face in England again.”
+
+And the funny creature was gone before I could say another word.
+
+
+
+IX. The Disappearance of Count Collini
+
+Chapter I
+
+He was very argumentative that morning; whatever I said he invariably
+contradicted flatly and at once, and we both had finally succeeded in
+losing our temper.
+
+The man in the corner was riding one of his favourite hobby-horses.
+
+“It is _impossible_ for any person to completely disappear in a
+civilised country,” he said emphatically, “provided that person has
+either friends or enemies of means and substance, who are interested
+in finding his or her whereabouts.”
+
+“Impossible is a sweeping word,” I rejoined.
+
+“None too big for the argument,” he concluded, as he surveyed with
+evident pride and pleasure a gigantic and complicated knot which his
+bony fingers had just fashioned.
+
+“I think that, nevertheless, you should not use it,” I said placidly.
+“It is not _impossible_, though it may be very difficult to disappear
+without leaving the slightest clue or trace behind you.”
+
+“Prove it,” he said, with a snap of his thin lips.
+
+“I can, quite easily.”
+
+“Now I know what is going on in your mind,” said the uncanny creature,
+“you are thinking of that case last autumn.”
+
+“Well, I was,” I admitted. “And you cannot deny that Count Collini has
+disappeared as effectually as if the sea had swallowed him up—many
+people think it did.”
+
+“Many idiots, you mean,” he rejoined dryly. “Yes, I knew you would
+quote that case. It certainly was a curious one; all the more so,
+perhaps, as there was no inquest, no sensational police court
+proceedings, nothing dramatic, in fact, save that strange and
+wonderful disappearance.
+
+“I don’t know if you call to mind the whole plot of that weird drama.
+There was Thomas Checkfield, a retired biscuit baker of Reading, who
+died leaving a comfortable fortune, mostly invested in freehold
+property, and amounting to about £80,000, to his only child, Alice.
+
+“At the time of her father’s death, Alice Checkfield was just
+eighteen, and at school in Switzerland, where she had spent most of
+her life. Old Checkfield had been a widower ever since the birth of
+his daughter, and seems to have led a very lonely and eccentric life;
+leaving the girl at school abroad for years, only going very
+occasionally to see her, and seemingly having but little affection for
+her.
+
+“The girl herself had not been home in England since she was eight
+years old, and even when old Checkfield was dying he would not allow
+the girl to be apprised of his impending death, and to be brought home
+to a house of loneliness and mourning.
+
+“‘What’s the good of upsetting a young girl, not eighteen,’ he said to
+his friend, Mr. Turnour, ‘by letting her see all the sad paraphernalia
+of death? She hasn’t seen much of her old father anyway, and will soon
+get over her loss, with young company round her, to help her bear up.’
+
+“But though Thomas Checkfield cared little enough for his daughter,
+when he died he left his entire fortune to her, amounting altogether
+to £80,000; and he appointed his friend, Reginald Turnour, to be her
+trustee and guardian until her marriage or until she should attain her
+majority.
+
+“It was generally understood that the words ‘until her marriage’ were
+put in because it had all along been arranged that Alice should marry
+Hubert Turnour, Reginald’s younger brother.
+
+“Hubert was old Checkfield’s godson, and if the old man had any
+affection for anybody it certainly was for Hubert. The latter had been
+a great deal in his godfather’s house, when he and Alice were both
+small children, and had called each other ‘hubby’ and ‘wifey’ in play,
+when they were still in the nursery. Later on, whenever old Checkfield
+went abroad to see his daughter, he always took Hubert with him, and a
+boy and girl flirtation sprang up between the two young people; a
+flirtation which had old Checkfield’s complete approval, and no doubt
+he looked upon their marriage as a _fait accompli_, merely desiring
+the elder Mr. Turnour to administer the girl’s fortune until then.
+
+“Hubert Turnour, at the time of the subsequent tragedy, was a
+good-looking young fellow, and by profession what is vaguely known as
+a ‘commission agent.’ He lived in London, where he had an office in a
+huge block of buildings close to Cannon Street Station.
+
+“There is no doubt that at the time of old Checkfield’s death, Alice
+looked upon herself as the young man’s _fiancée_. When the girl
+reached her nineteenth year, it was at last decided that she should
+leave school and come to England. The question as to what should be
+done with her until her majority, or until she married Hubert, was a
+great puzzle to Mr. Turnour. He was a bachelor, who lived in
+comfortable furnished rooms in Reading, and he did not at all relish
+the idea of starting housekeeping for the sake of his young ward, whom
+he had not seen since she was out of the nursery, and whom he looked
+upon as an intolerable nuisance.
+
+“Fortunately for him this vexed question was most satisfactorily and
+unexpectedly settled by Alice herself. She wrote to her guardian, from
+Geneva, that a Mrs. Brackenbury, the mother of her dearest
+schoolfellow had asked her to come and live with them, at any rate for
+a time, as this would be a more becoming arrangement than that of a
+young girl sharing a bachelor’s establishment.
+
+“Mr. Turnour seems to have hesitated for some time: he was a
+conscientious sort of man, who took his duties of guardianship very
+seriously. What ultimately decided him, however, was that his brother
+Hubert added the weight of his eloquent letters of appeal to those of
+Alice herself. Hubert naturally was delighted at the idea of having
+his rich _fiancée_ under his eye in London, and after a good deal of
+correspondence, Mr. Turnour finally gave his consent, and Alice
+Checkfield duly arrived from Switzerland in order to make a prolonged
+stay in Mrs. Brackenbury’s house.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+“All seems to have gone on happily and smoothly for a time in Mrs.
+Brackenbury’s pretty house in Kensington,” continued the man in the
+corner. “Hubert Turnour was a constant visitor there, and the two
+young people seem to have had all the freedom of an engaged couple.
+
+“Alice Checkfield was in no sense of the word an attractive girl; she
+was not good-looking, and no effort on Mrs. Brackenbury’s part could
+succeed in making her look stylish. Still, Hubert Turnour seemed quite
+satisfied, and the girl herself ready enough at first to continue the
+boy and girl flirtation as of old.
+
+“Soon, however, as time went on, things began to change. Now that
+Alice had become mistress of a comfortable fortune, there were plenty
+of people ready to persuade her that a ‘commission agent,’ with but
+vague business prospects, was not half good enough for her, and that
+her £80,000 entitled her to more ambitious matrimonial hopes. Needless
+to say that in these counsels Mrs. Brackenbury was very much to the
+fore.
+
+“She lived in Kensington, and had social ambitions, foremost among
+which was to see her daughter’s bosom friend married to, at least, a
+baronet, if not a peer.
+
+“A young girl’s head is quickly turned. Within six months of her stay
+in London, Alice was giving Hubert Turnour the cold shoulder, and the
+young man had soon realised that she was trying to get out of her
+engagement.
+
+“Scarcely had Alice reached her twentieth birthday, than she gave her
+erstwhile _fiancé_ his formal _congé_.
+
+“At first Hubert seems to have taken his discomfiture very much to
+heart. £80,000 were not likely to come his way again in a hurry.
+According to Mrs. Brackenbury’s servants, there were one or two
+violent scenes between him and Alice, until finally Mrs. Brackenbury
+herself was forced to ask the young man to discontinue his visits.
+
+“It was soon after that that Alice Checkfield first met Count Collini
+at one of the brilliant subscription dances given by the Italian
+colony in London, the winter before last. Mrs. Brackenbury was charmed
+with him, Alice Checkfield was enchanted! The Count, having danced
+with Alice half the evening, was allowed to pay his respects at the
+house in Kensington.
+
+“He seemed to be extremely well off, for he was staying at the
+Carlton, and, after one or two calls on Mrs. Brackenbury, he began
+taking the ladies to theatres and concerts, always presenting them
+with the choicest and most expensive flowers, and paying them various
+other equally costly attentions.
+
+“Mrs. and Miss Brackenbury welcomed the Count with open arms
+(figuratively speaking). Alice was shy, but apparently over head and
+ears in love at first sight.
+
+“At first Mrs. Brackenbury did her best to keep this new
+acquaintanceship a secret from Hubert Turnour. I suppose that the old
+matchmaker feared another unpleasant scene. But the inevitable soon
+happened. Hubert, contrite, perhaps still hopeful, called at the house
+one day, when the Count was there, and, according to the story
+subsequently told by Miss Brackenbury herself, there was a violent
+scene between him and Alice. As soon as the fascinating foreigner had
+gone, Hubert reproached his _fiancée_ for her fickleness in no
+measured language, and there was a good deal of evidence to prove that
+he then and there swore to be even with the man who had supplanted him
+in her affections. There was nothing to do then but for Mrs.
+Brackenbury to ‘burn her boats.’ She peremptorily ordered Hubert out
+of her house, and admitted that Count Collini was a suitor, favoured
+by herself, for the hand of Alice Checkfield.
+
+“You see, I am bound to give you all these details of the situation,”
+continued the man in the corner, with his bland smile, “so that you
+may better form a judgment as to the subsequent fate of Count Collini.
+From the description which Mrs. Brackenbury herself subsequently gave
+to the police, the Count was then in the prime of life; of a dark
+olive complexion, dark eyes, extremely black hair and moustache. He
+had a very slight limp, owing to an accident he had had in early
+youth, which made his walk and general carriage unusual and distinctly
+noticeable. His was certainly not a personality that could pass
+unperceived in a crowd.
+
+“Hubert Turnour, furious and heartsick, wrote letter after letter to
+his brother, to ask him to interfere on his behalf; this Mr. Turnour
+did, to the best of his ability, but he had to deal with an ambitious
+matchmaker and with a girl in love, and it is small wonder that he
+signally failed. Alice Checkfield by now had become deeply enamoured
+of her Count, his gallantries flattered her vanity, his title and the
+accounts he gave of his riches and his estates in Italy fascinated
+her, and she declared that she would marry him, either with or without
+her guardian’s consent, either at once, or as soon as she had attained
+her majority, and was mistress of herself and of her fortune.
+
+“Mr. Turnour did all he could to prevent this absurd marriage. Being a
+sensible, middle-class Britisher, he had no respect for foreign
+titles, and little belief in foreign wealth. He wrote the most urgent
+letters to Alice, warning her against a man whom he firmly believed to
+be an impostor; finally, he flatly refused to give his consent to the
+marriage.
+
+“Thus a few months went by. The Count had been away in Italy all
+through the winter and spring, and returned to London for the season,
+apparently more enamoured with the Reading biscuit baker’s daughter
+than ever. Alice Checkfield was then within nine months of her
+twenty-first birthday, and determined to marry the Count. She openly
+defied her guardian.
+
+“‘Nothing,’ she wrote to him, ‘would ever induce me to marry Hubert.’
+
+“I suppose it was this which finally induced Mr. Turnour to give up
+all opposition to the marriage. Seeing that his brother’s chances were
+absolutely _nil_, and that Alice was within nine months of her
+majority, he no doubt thought all further argument useless, and with
+great reluctance finally gave his consent.
+
+“The marriage, owing to the difference of religion, was to be
+performed before a registrar, and was finally fixed to take place on
+22nd October, 1903, which was just a week after Alice’s twenty-first
+birthday.
+
+“Of course the question of Alice’s fortune immediately cropped up: she
+desired her money in cash, as her husband was taking her over to live
+in Italy, where she desired to make all further investments. She,
+therefore, asked Mr. Turnour to dispose of her freehold property for
+her. There again Mr. Turnour hesitated, and argued, but once he had
+given his consent to the marriage, all opposition was useless, more
+especially as Mrs. Brackenbury’s solicitors had drawn up a very
+satisfactory marriage settlement, which the Count himself had
+suggested, by which Alice was to retain sole use and control of her
+own private fortune.
+
+“The marriage was then duly performed before a registrar on that 22nd
+of October, and Alice Checkfield could henceforth style herself
+Countess Collini. The young couple were to start for Italy almost
+directly, but meant to spend a day or two at Dover quietly together.
+There were, however, one or two tiresome legal formalities to go
+through. Mr. Turnour had, by Alice’s desire, handed over the sum of
+£80,000 in notes to her solicitor, Mr. R. W. Stanford. Mr. Stanford
+had gone down to Reading two days before the marriage, had received
+the money from Mr. Turnour, and then called upon the new Countess, and
+formally handed her over her fortune in Bank of England notes.
+
+“Then it was necessary, in view of immediate and future arrangements,
+to change the English money into foreign, which the Count and his
+young wife did themselves that afternoon.
+
+“At 5 o’clock p.m. they started for Dover, accompanied by Mrs.
+Brackenbury, who desired to see the last of her young friend, prior to
+the latter’s departure for abroad. The Count had engaged a magnificent
+suite of rooms at the Lord Warden Hotel, and thither the party
+proceeded.
+
+“So far, you see,” added the man in the corner, “the story is of the
+utmost simplicity. You might even call it commonplace. A foreign
+Count, an ambitious matchmaker, and a credulous girl; these form the
+ingredients of many a domestic drama, that culminates at the police
+courts. But at this point this particular drama becomes more
+complicated, and, if you remember, ends in one of the strangest
+mysteries that has ever baffled the detective forces on both sides of
+the Channel.”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+The man in the corner paused in his narrative. I could see that he was
+coming to the palpitating part of the story, for his fingers fidgeted
+incessantly with that bit of string.
+
+“Hubert Turnour, as you may imagine,” he continued after a while, “did
+not take his final discomfiture very quietly. He was a very
+violent-tempered young man, and it was certainly enough to make any
+one cross. According to Mrs. Brackenbury’s servants he used most
+threatening language in reference to Count Collini; and on one
+occasion was with difficulty prevented from personally assaulting the
+Count in the hall of Mrs. Brackenbury’s pretty Kensington house.
+
+“Count Collini finally had to threaten Hubert Turnour with the police
+court: this seemed to have calmed the young man’s nerves somewhat, for
+he kept quite quiet after that, ceased to call on Mrs. Brackenbury,
+and subsequently sent the future Countess a wedding present.
+
+“When the Count and Countess Collini, accompanied by Mrs. Brackenbury,
+arrived at the Lord Warden, Alice found a letter awaiting her there.
+It was from Hubert Turnour. In it he begged for forgiveness for all
+the annoyance he had caused her, hoped that she would always look upon
+him as a friend, and finally expressed a strong desire to see her once
+more before her departure for abroad, saying that he would be in Dover
+either this same day or the next, and would give himself the pleasure
+of calling upon her and her husband.
+
+“Effectively at about eight o’clock, when the wedding party was just
+sitting down to dinner, Hubert Turnour was announced. Every one was
+most cordial to him, agreeing to let bygones be bygones: the Count,
+especially, was most genial and pleasant towards his former rival, and
+insisted upon his staying and dining with them.
+
+“Later on in the evening, Hubert Turnour took an affectionate leave of
+the ladies, Count Collini offering to walk back with him to the Grand
+Hotel, where he was staying. The two men went out together, and—well!
+you know the rest!—for that was the last the young Countess Collini
+ever saw of her husband. He disappeared as effectually, as completely,
+as if the sea had swallowed him up.
+
+“‘And so it had,’ say the public,” continued the man in the corner,
+after a slight pause, “that delicious, short-sighted, irresponsible
+public is wondering, to this day, why Hubert Turnour was not hung for
+the murder of that Count Collini.”
+
+“Well! and why wasn’t he?” I retorted.
+
+“For the very simple reason,” he replied, “that in this country you
+cannot hang a man for murder unless there is proof positive that a
+murder has been committed. Now, there was absolutely no proof that the
+Count was murdered at all. What happened was this: the Countess
+Collini and Mrs. Brackenbury became anxious as time went on and the
+Count did not return. One o’clock, then two in the morning, and their
+anxiety became positive alarm. At last, as Alice was verging on
+hysterics, Mrs. Brackenbury, in spite of the lateness of the hour,
+went round to the police station.
+
+“It was, of course, too late to do anything in the middle of the
+night; the constable on duty tried to reassure the unfortunate lady,
+and promised to send word round to the Lord Warden at the earliest
+possible opportunity in the morning.
+
+“Mrs. Brackenbury went back with a heavy heart. No doubt Mr. Turnour’s
+sensible letters from Reading recurred to her mind. She had already
+ascertained from the distracted bride that the Count had taken the
+strange precaution to keep in his own pocket-book the £80,000, now
+converted into French and Italian banknotes, and Mrs. Brackenbury
+feared not so much that he had met with some accident, but that he had
+absconded with the whole of his girl-wife’s fortune.
+
+“The next morning brought but scanty news. No one answering to the
+Count’s description had met with an accident during the night, or been
+conveyed to a hospital, and no one answering his description had
+crossed over to Calais or Ostend by the night boats. Moreover, Hubert
+Turnour, who presumably had last been in Count Collini’s company, had
+left Dover for town by the boat train at 1.50 a.m.
+
+“Then the search began in earnest after the missing man, and primarily
+Hubert Turnour was subjected to the closest and most searching
+cross-examination, by one of the most able men on our detective staff,
+Inspector Macpherson.
+
+“Hubert Turnour’s story was briefly this: He had strolled about on the
+parade with Count Collini for a while. It was a very blustery night,
+the wind blowing a regular gale, and the sea was rolling gigantic
+waves, which looked magnificent, as there was brilliant moonlight.
+‘Soon after ten o’clock,’ he continued, ‘the Count and I went back to
+the Grand Hotel, and we had whiskies and sodas up in my room, and a
+bit of a chat until past eleven o’clock. Then he said good-night and
+went off.’
+
+“‘You saw him down to the hall, of course?’ asked the detective.
+
+“‘No, I did not,’ replied Hubert Turnour. ‘I had a few letters to
+write, and meant to catch the 1.50 a.m. back to town.’
+
+“‘How long were you in Dover altogether?’ asked Macpherson carelessly.
+
+“‘Only a few hours. I came down in the afternoon.’
+
+“‘Strange, is it not, that you should have taken a room with a private
+sitting-room at an expensive hotel, just for those few hours?’
+
+“‘Not at all. I originally meant to stay longer. And my expenses are
+nobody’s business, I take it,’ replied Hubert Turnour, with some show
+of temper. ‘Anyway,’ he added impatiently, after a while, ‘if you
+choose to disbelieve me, you can make inquiries at the hotel, and
+ascertain if I have told the truth.’
+
+“Undoubtedly he had spoken the truth; at any rate, to that extent.
+Inquiries at the Grand Hotel went to prove that he had arrived there
+in the early part of the afternoon, had engaged a couple of rooms, and
+then gone out. Soon after ten o’clock in the evening he came in,
+accompanied by a gentleman, whose description, as given by three
+witnesses, _employés_ of the hotel, who saw him, corresponded exactly
+with that of the Count.
+
+“Together the two gentlemen went up to Mr. Hubert Turnour’s rooms, and
+at half-past ten they ordered whisky to be taken up to them. But at
+this point all trace of Count Collini had completely vanished. The
+passengers arriving by the 10.49 boat train, and who had elected to
+spend the night in Dover, owing to the gale, had crowded up and filled
+the hall.
+
+“No one saw Count Collini leave the Grand Hotel. But Mr. Hubert
+Turnour came down into the hall at about half-past eleven. He said he
+would be leaving by the 1.50 a.m. boat train for town, but would walk
+round to the station as he only had a small bag with him. He paid his
+account, then waited in the coffee-room until it was time to go.
+
+“And there the matter has remained. Mrs. Brackenbury has spent half
+her own fortune in trying to trace the missing man. She has remained
+perfectly convinced that he slipped across the Channel, taking Alice
+Checkfield’s money with him. But, as you know, at all ports of call on
+the South Coast, detectives are perpetually on the watch. The Count
+was a man of peculiar appearance, and there is no doubt that no one
+answering to his description crossed over to France or Belgium that
+night. By the following morning the detectives on both sides of the
+Channel were on the alert. There is no disguise that would have held
+good. If the Count had tried to cross over, he would have been spotted
+either on board or on landing; and we may take it as an absolute and
+positive certainty that he did not cross the Channel.
+
+“He remained in England, but in that case, where is he? You would be
+the first to admit that, with the whole of our detective staff at his
+heels, it seems incredible that a man of the Count’s singular
+appearance could hide himself so completely as to baffle detection.
+Moreover, the question at once arises, that if he did not cross over
+to France or Belgium, what in the world did he do with the money? What
+was the use of disappearing and living the life of a hunted beast
+hiding for his life, with £80,000 worth of foreign money, which was
+practically useless to him?
+
+“Now, I told you from the first,” concluded the man in the corner,
+with a dry chuckle, “that this strange episode contained no
+sensational incident, nor dramatic inquest or criminal procedure.
+Merely the complete, total disappearance, one may almost call it
+extinction, of a striking-looking man, in the midst of our vaunted
+civilisation, and in spite of the untiring energy and constant watch
+of a whole staff of able men.”
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+“Very well, then,” I retorted in triumph, “that proves that Hubert
+Turnour murdered Count Collini out of revenge, not for greed of money,
+and probably threw the body of his victim, together with the foreign
+banknotes, into the sea.”
+
+“But where? When? How?” he asked, smiling good-humouredly at me over
+his great bone-rimmed spectacles.
+
+“Ah! that I don’t know.”
+
+“No, I thought not,” he rejoined placidly. “You had, I think,
+forgotten one incident, namely, that Hubert Turnour, accompanied by
+the Count, was in the former’s room at the Grand Hotel drinking whisky
+at half-past ten o’clock. You must admit that, even though the hall of
+the hotel was very crowded later on, a man would nevertheless find it
+somewhat difficult to convey the body of his murdered enemy through a
+whole concourse of people.”
+
+“He did not murder the Count in the hotel,” I argued. “The two men
+walked out again, when the hall was crowded, and they passed
+unnoticed. Hubert Turnour led the Count to a lonely part of the
+cliffs, then threw him into the sea.”
+
+“The nearest point at which the cliffs might be called ‘lonely’ for
+purposes of a murder, is at least twenty minutes’ walk from the Grand
+Hotel,” he said, with a smile, “always supposing that the Count walked
+quickly and willingly to such a lonely spot at eleven o’clock at
+night, and with a man who had already, more than once, threatened his
+life. Mr. Hubert Turnour, remember, was seen in the hall of the hotel
+at half-past eleven, after which hour he only left the hotel to go to
+the station after 1 o’clock a.m.
+
+“The hall was crowded by the passengers from the boat train a little
+after eleven. There was no time between that and half-past to lead
+even a willing enemy to the slaughter, throw him into the sea, and
+come back again, all in the space of five-and-twenty minutes.”
+
+“Then what is your explanation of that extraordinary disappearance?” I
+retorted, beginning to feel very cross about it all.
+
+“A simple one,” he rejoined quietly, as he once more began to fidget
+with his bit of string. “A very simple one indeed; namely, that Count
+Collini, at the present moment, is living comfortably in England,
+calmly awaiting a favourable opportunity of changing his foreign money
+back into English notes.”
+
+“But you say yourself that that is impossible, as the most able
+detectives in England are on the watch for him.”
+
+“They are on the watch for a certain Count Collini,” he said drily,
+“who might disguise himself, perhaps, but whose hidden identity would
+sooner or later be discovered by one of these intelligent human
+bloodhounds.”
+
+“Yes? Well?” I asked.
+
+“Well, that Count Collini never existed. It was _his_ personality that
+was the disguise. Now it is thrown off. The Count is not dead, he is
+not hiding, but has merely ceased to exist. There is no fear that he
+will ever come to life again. Mr. Turnour senior will see to that.”
+
+“Mr. Turnour!” I ejaculated.
+
+“Why, yes,” he rejoined excitedly; “do you mean to tell me you never
+saw through it all? The money lying in his hands; his brother about to
+wed the rich heiress; then Mrs. Brackenbury’s matrimonial ambitions,
+Alice Checkfield’s coldness to Hubert Turnour, the golden prize
+slipping away right out of the family for ever. Then the scheme was
+evolved by those two scoundrels, who deserve to be called geniuses in
+their criminal way. It could not be managed, except by collaboration,
+but as it was, the scheme was perfect in conception, and easy of
+execution.
+
+“Remember that disguise _previous_ to a crime is always fairly safe
+from detection, for then it has no suspicion to contend against, it
+merely deceives those who have no cause to be otherwise _but_
+deceived. Mrs. Brackenbury lived in London, Reginald Turnour in
+Reading; they did not know each other personally, nor did they know
+each other’s friends, of course; whilst Alice Checkfield had not seen
+her guardian since she was quite a child.
+
+“Then the disguise was so perfect. I went down to Reading, some little
+time ago, and Reginald Turnour was pointed out to me: he is a
+Scotchman, with very light, sandy hair. That face clean shaved, made
+swarthy, the hair, eyebrows, and lashes dyed a jet black, would render
+him absolutely unrecognisable. Add to this the fact that a foreign
+accent completely changes the voice, and that the slight limp was a
+masterstroke of genius to hide the general carriage.
+
+“Then the winter came round; it was, perhaps, important that Mr.
+Turnour should not be absent too long from Reading, for fear of
+exciting suspicion there; and the scoundrel played his part with
+marvellous skill. Can’t you see him yourself leaving the Carlton
+Hotel, ostensibly going abroad, driving to Charing Cross, but only
+booking to Cannon Street.
+
+“Then getting out at that crowded station and slipping round to his
+brother’s office in one of those huge blocks of buildings where there
+is perpetual coming and going, and where any individual would easily
+pass unperceived.
+
+“There, with the aid of a little soap and water, Mr. Turnour resumed
+his Scotch appearance, went on to Reading, and spent winter and spring
+there, only returning to London to make a formal proposal, as Count
+Collini, for Alice Checkfield’s hand. Hubert Turnour’s office was
+undoubtedly the place where he changed his identity, from that of the
+British middle-class man, to the interesting personality of the
+Italian nobleman.
+
+“He had, of course, to repeat the journey to Reading a day or two
+before his wedding, in order to hand over his ward’s fortune to Mrs.
+Brackenbury’s solicitor. Then there were the supposed rows between
+Hubert Turnour and his rival; the letters of warning from the
+guardian, for which Hubert no doubt journeyed down to Reading, in
+order to post them there: all this was dust thrown into the eyes of
+two credulous ladies.
+
+“After that came the wedding, the meeting with Hubert Turnour, who,
+you see, was obliged to take a room in one of the big hotels, wherein,
+with more soap and water, the Italian Count could finally disappear.
+When the hall of the hotel was crowded, the sandy-haired Scotchman
+slipped out of it quite quietly: he was not remarkable, and no one
+specially noticed him. Since then the hue and cry has been after a
+dark Italian, who limps, and speaks broken English; and it has never
+struck any one that such a person never existed.
+
+“Mr. Turnour is fairly safe by now; and we may take it for granted
+that he will not seek the acquaintanceship of the Brackenburys, whilst
+Alice Checkfield is no longer his ward. He will wait a year or two
+longer perhaps, then he and Hubert will begin quietly to re-convert
+their foreign money into English notes—they will take frequent little
+trips abroad, and gradually change the money at the various _bureaux
+de change_, on the Continent.
+
+“Think of it all—it is so simple—not even dramatic, only the work of a
+genius from first to last, worthy of a better cause, perhaps, but
+undoubtedly worthy of success.”
+
+He was gone, leaving me quite bewildered. Yet the disappearance had
+always puzzled me, and now I felt that that animated scarecrow had
+found the true explanation of it after all.
+
+
+
+X. The Ayrsham Mystery
+
+Chapter I
+
+“I have never had a great opinion of our detective force here in
+England,” said the man in the corner, in his funny, gentle, apologetic
+manner, “but the way that department mismanaged the affair at Ayrsham
+simply passes comprehension.”
+
+“Indeed?” I said, with all the quiet dignity I could command. “It is a
+pity they did not consult you in the matter, wasn’t it?”
+
+“It is a pity,” he retorted with aggravating meekness, “that they do
+not use a little common sense. The case resembles that of Columbus’
+egg, and is every bit as simple.
+
+“It was one evening last October, wasn’t it? that two labourers,
+walking home from Ayrsham village, turned down a lane, which, it
+appears, is a short cut to the block of cottages some distance off,
+where they lodged.
+
+“The night was very dark, and there was a nasty drizzle in the air. In
+the picturesque vernacular of the two labourers, ‘You couldn’t see
+your ’and before your eyes.’ Suddenly they stumbled over the body of a
+man lying right across the path.
+
+“‘At first we thought ’e was drunk,’ explained one of them
+subsequently, ‘but when we took a look at ’im, we soon saw there was
+something very wrong. Me and my mate turned ’im over, and “foul play”
+we both says at once. Then we see that it was Old Man Newton. Poor
+chap, ’e was dead, and no mistake.’
+
+“Old Man Newton, as he was universally called by his large circle of
+acquaintances, was very well known throughout the entire
+neighbourhood, most particularly at every inn and public bar for some
+miles around.
+
+“He also kept a local sweet-stuff shop at Ayrsham. No wonder that the
+men were horrified at finding him in such a terrible condition; even
+in their uneducated minds there could be no doubt that the old man had
+been murdered, for his skull had been literally shattered by a fearful
+blow, dealt him from behind by some powerful assailant.
+
+“Whilst the labourers were cogitating as to what they had better do
+next, they heard footsteps also turning into the lane, and the next
+moment Samuel Holder, a well-known inhabitant of Ayrsham, arrived upon
+the scene.
+
+“‘Hello! is that you, Mat Newton?’ shouted Samuel, as he came near.
+
+“‘Ay! ’tis Old Man Newton, right enough,’ replied one of the
+labourers, ‘but ’e won’t answer you no more.’
+
+“Samuel Holder seemed absolutely horrified when he saw the body of Old
+Man Newton; he uttered various ejaculations, which the two labourers,
+however, did not take special notice of at the time.
+
+“Then the three men held a brief consultation together, with the
+result that one of them ran back to Ayrsham village to fetch the local
+police, whilst the two others remained in the lane to guard the body.
+
+“The mystery—for it seemed one from the first—created a great deal of
+sensation in Ayrsham and all round the neighbourhood, and much
+sympathy was felt for, and shown to Mary Newton, the murdered man’s
+only child, a young girl about two-or-three-and-twenty, who, moreover,
+was in ill-health.
+
+“True, Old Man Newton was not a satisfactory protector for a young
+girl. He was very much addicted to drink; he neglected the little bit
+of local business he had; and, moreover, had recently shamefully
+ill-treated his daughter, the neighbours testifying to the many and
+loud quarrels that occurred in the small back parlour behind the
+sweet-stuff shop.
+
+“A case of murder—the moment an element of mystery hovers around
+it—immediately excites the attention of the newspaper-reading public,
+who is always seeking for new sensations.
+
+“Very soon the history of Old Man Newton and of his daughter found its
+way into the London and provincial dailies, and the Ayrsham murder
+became a topic of all-absorbing interest.
+
+“It appears that Old Man Newton was at one time a highly respectable
+local tradesman, always in a very small way, as there is not much
+business doing at Ayrsham. It is a poor and straggling village,
+although its railway station is an important junction on the Midland
+system.
+
+“There is some very good shooting in the neighbourhood, and about four
+or five years ago some of it, together with ‘The Limes,’ a pretty
+house just outside the village, was rented for the autumn by Mr.
+Ledbury and his brother.
+
+“You know the firm of Ledbury and Co., do you not; the great small
+arms manufacturers? The elder Mr. Ledbury was the recipient of
+Birthday honours last year, and is the present Lord Walterton; his
+younger brother, Mervin, was in those days, and is still, a handsome
+young fellow in the Hussars.
+
+“At the time—I mean about five years ago—Mary Newton was the local
+beauty of Ayrsham; she did a little dressmaking in her odd moments,
+but it appears that she spent most of her time in flirting. She was
+nominally engaged to be married to Samuel Holder, a young carpenter,
+but there was a good deal of scandal talked about her, for she was
+thought to be very fast; village gossip coupled her name with that of
+several young men in the neighbourhood, who were known to have paid
+the village beauty marked attention, and among these admirers of Mary
+Newton during the autumn of which I am speaking, young Mr. Mervin
+Ledbury figured conspicuously.
+
+“Be that as it may, certain it is that Mary Newton had a very bad
+reputation among the scandalmongers of Ayrsham, and though everybody
+was shocked, no one was astonished when one fine day in the winter
+following she suddenly left her father and her home, and went no one
+knew whither. She left, it appears, a very pathetic letter behind,
+begging for her father’s forgiveness, and that of Samuel Holder, whom
+she was jilting, but she was going to marry a gentleman above them all
+in station, and was going to be a real lady; then only would she
+return home.
+
+“A very unusual village tragedy, as you see. Four years went by, and
+Mary Newton did not return home. As time went by and with it no news
+of his daughter, Old Man Newton took her disappearance very much to
+heart. He began to neglect his business, and then his house, which
+became dirty and ill-kept by an occasional charwoman who would do a
+bit of promiscuous tidying for him from time to time. He was
+ill-tempered, sullen, and morose, and very soon became hopelessly
+addicted to drink.
+
+“Then suddenly, as unexpectedly as she had gone, Mary Newton returned
+to her home one fine day, after an absence of four years. What had
+become of her in the interim, no one in the village ever knew; she was
+generally supposed to have earned a living by dressmaking, until her
+failing health had driven her well nigh to starvation, and then back
+to the home and her father she had so heedlessly left.
+
+“Needless to say that all the talk of her ‘marriage with a gentleman
+above her in station’ was entirely at an end. As for Old Man Newton,
+he seems after his daughter’s return to have become more sullen and
+morose than ever, and the neighbours now busied themselves with talk
+of the fearful rows which frequently occurred in the back parlour of
+the little sweet-stuff shop.
+
+“Father and daughter seemed to be leading a veritable cat-and-dog life
+together. Old Man Newton was hardly ever sober, and at the village
+inns he threw out weird and strange hints about ‘breach of promise
+actions with £5,000 damages, which his daughter would get, if only he
+knew where to lay hands upon the scoundrel.’
+
+“He also made vague and wholly useless enquiries about young Mervin
+Ledbury, but in a sleepy, out-of-the-way village like Ayrsham, no one
+knows anything about what goes on beyond a narrow five-mile radius at
+most. ‘The Limes’ and the shooting were let to different tenants year
+after year, and neither Lord Walterton nor Mr. Mervin Ledbury had ever
+rented them again.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+“That was the past history of Old Newton,” continued the man in the
+corner, after a brief pause, “that is to say, of the man who on a dark
+night last October was found murdered in a lonely lane, not far from
+Ayrsham. The public, as you may well imagine, took a very keen
+interest in the case from the outset: the story of Mary Newton, of the
+threatened breach of promise, of the £5,000 damages, roused masses of
+conjecture to which no one has yet dared to give definite shape.
+
+“One name, however, had already been whispered significantly, that of
+Mr. Mervin Ledbury, the young Hussar, one of Mary Newton’s admirers at
+the very time she left home in order, as she said, to be married to
+some one above her in station.
+
+“Many thinking people, too, wanted to know what Samuel Holder, Mary’s
+jilted _fiancé_, was doing close to the scene of the murder that
+night, and how he came to make the remark: ‘Hello! Is that you, Mat
+Newton?’ when the Old Man lived nearly half-a-mile away, and really
+had no cause for being in that particular lane, at that hour of the
+night in the drizzling rain.
+
+“The inquest, which, for want of other accommodation, was held at the
+local police station, was, as you may imagine, very largely attended.
+
+“I had read a brief statement of the case in the London papers, and
+had hurried down to Ayrsham Junction, as I scented a mystery, and knew
+I should enjoy myself.
+
+“When I got there, the room was already packed, and the medical
+evidence was being gone through.
+
+“Old Man Newton, it appears, had been knocked on the head by a
+heavily-loaded cane, which was found in the ditch close to the
+murdered man’s body.
+
+“The cane was produced in court; it was as stout as an old-fashioned
+club, and of terrific weight. The man who wielded it must have been
+very powerful, for he had only dealt one blow, but that blow had
+cracked the old man’s skull. The cane was undoubtedly of foreign make,
+for it had a solid silver ferrule at one end, which was not English
+hall-marked.
+
+“In the opinion of the medical expert, death was the result of the
+blow, and must have been almost instantaneous.
+
+“The labourers who first came across the body of the murdered man then
+repeated their story; they had nothing new to add, and their evidence
+was of no importance. But after that there was some stir in the court.
+Samuel Holder had been called and sworn to tell the whole truth, and
+nothing but the truth.
+
+“He was a youngish, heavily-built man of about five-and-thirty, with a
+nervous, not altogether prepossessing expression of face. Pressed by
+the coroner, he gave us a few details of Old Man Newton’s earlier
+history, such as I have already told you.
+
+“‘Old Mat,’ he explained, with some hesitation, ‘was for ever wanting
+to find out who the gentleman was who had promised marriage to Mary
+four years ago. But Mary was that obstinate, and wouldn’t tell him,
+and this exasperated the old man terribly, so that they had many rows
+on the subject.’
+
+“‘I suppose,’ said the coroner tentatively, ‘that you never knew who
+that gentleman was?’
+
+“Samuel Holder seemed to hesitate for a moment. His manner became even
+more nervous than before; he shifted his position from one foot to the
+other; finally, he said:
+
+“‘I don’t know as I ought to say, but——’
+
+“‘I am quite sure that you must tell us everything you know which
+might throw light upon this extraordinary and terrible murder,’
+retorted the coroner sternly.
+
+“‘Well,’ replied Samuel Holder, whilst great beads of perspiration
+stood out upon his forehead, ‘Mary never would give up the letters she
+had had from him, and she would not hear anything about a breach of
+promise case and £5,000 damages; but old Mat ’e often says to me, says
+’e, “It’s young Mr. Ledbury,” ’e says, “she’s told me that once. I got
+it out of ’er, and if I only knew where to find ’im——”’
+
+“‘You are quite sure of this?’ asked the coroner, for Holder had
+paused, and seemed quite horrified at the enormity of what he had
+said.
+
+“‘Yes—yes—your worship—your honour——’ stammered Holder. ‘’E’s told me
+’twas young Mr. Ledbury times out of count, and——’
+
+“But Samuel Holder here completely broke down; he seemed unable to
+speak, his lips twitched convulsively, and the coroner, fearing that
+the man would faint, had him conveyed into the next room to recover
+himself, whilst another witness was brought forward.
+
+“This was Michael Pitkin, landlord of the Fernhead Arms, at Ayrsham,
+who had been on very intimate terms with old Newton during the four
+years which elapsed after Mary’s disappearance. He had a very curious
+story to tell, which aroused public excitement to its highest pitch.
+
+“It appears that to him also the old man had often confided the fact
+that it was Mr. Ledbury who had promised to marry Mary, and then had
+shamefully left her stranded and moneyless in London.
+
+“‘But, of course,’ added the jovial and pleasant-looking landlord of
+the Fernhead Arms, ‘the likes of us down here didn’t know what became
+of Mr. Ledbury after he left “The Limes,” until one day I reads in the
+local paper that Sir John Fernhead’s daughter is going to be married
+to Captain Mervin Ledbury. Of course, your honour and me, and all of
+us know Sir John, our squire, down at Fernhead Towers, and I says to
+old Mat: “It strikes me,” I says, “that you’ve got your man.” Sure
+enough it was the same Mr. Ledbury who rented “The Limes” years ago,
+who was engaged to the young lady up at the Towers, and last week
+there was grand doings there—lords and ladies and lots of quality
+staying there, and also the Captain.’
+
+“‘Well?’ asked the coroner eagerly, whilst every one held their
+breath, wondering what was to come.
+
+“‘Well,’ continued Michael Pitkin, ‘Old Man Newton went down to the
+Towers one day. ’E was determined to see young Mr. Ledbury, and went.
+What ’appened I don’t know, for old Mat wouldn’t tell me, but he came
+back mighty furious from ’is visit, and swore ’e would ruin the young
+man and make no end of a scandal, and he would bring the law agin’ ’im
+and get £5,000 damages.’
+
+“This story, embellished, of course, by many details, was the gist of
+what the worthy landlord of the Fernhead Arms had to say, but you may
+imagine how every one’s excitement and curiosity was aroused; in the
+meanwhile Samuel Holder was getting over his nervousness, and was more
+ready to give a clear account of what happened on the fatal night
+itself.
+
+“‘It was about nine o’clock,’ he explained, in answer to the coroner,
+‘and I was hurrying back to Ayrsham, through the fields; it was dark
+and raining, and I was about to strike across the hedge into the lane
+when I heard voices—a woman’s, then a man’s. Of course, I could see
+nothing, and the man spoke in a whisper, but I had recognised Mary’s
+voice quite plainly. She kept on saying: “’Tisn’t my fault!” she says,
+“it’s father’s, ’e has made up ’is mind. I held out as long as I
+could, but ’e worried me, and now ’e’s got your letters, and it’s too
+late.”’
+
+“Samuel Holder again paused a moment, then continued:
+
+“‘They talked together for a long time: Mary seemed very upset and the
+man very angry. Presently ’e says to ’er: “Well, tell your father to
+come out here and speak to me for a moment. I’ll see what I can do.”
+Mary seemed to ’esitate for a time, then she went away, and the man
+waited there in the drizzling rain, with me the other side of the
+’edge watchin’ ’im. I waited for a long time, for I wanted to know
+what was going to ’appen; then time went on. I thought perhaps that
+old Mat was at the Fernhead Arms, and that Mary couldn’t find ’im, so
+I went back to Ayrsham by the fields, ’oping to find the old man. The
+stranger didn’t budge. ’E seemed inclined to wait—so I left ’im
+there—and—and—that’s all. I went to the Fernhead Arms, saw old Mat
+wasn’t there—then I went back to the lane—and—Old Man Newton was dead,
+and the stranger was gone.’
+
+“There was a moment or two of dead silence in the court when Samuel
+Holder had given his evidence, then the coroner asked quietly:
+
+“‘You do not know who the stranger was?’
+
+“‘Well, I couldn’t be sure, your honour,’ replied Samuel nervously,
+‘it was pitch dark. I wouldn’t like to swear a fellow-creature’s life
+and character away.’
+
+“‘No, no, quite so,’ rejoined the coroner; ‘but do you happen to know
+what time it was when all this occurred?’
+
+“‘Oh yes, your honour,’ said Samuel decisively, ‘as I walked away from
+the Fernhead Arms I ’eard Ayrsham church clock strike ten o’clock.’
+
+“‘Ah! that’s always something,’ said the coroner, with a sigh of
+satisfaction. ‘Call Mary Newton, please.’”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+“You may imagine,” continued the man in the corner, after a slight
+pause, “with what palpitating interest we all watched the pathetic
+little figure, clad in deep black, who now stepped forward to give
+evidence.
+
+“It was difficult to imagine that Mary Newton could ever have been
+pretty; trouble had obviously wrought sad havoc with her good looks;
+she was now a wizened little thing, with dark rings under her eyes,
+and a pale, anæmic complexion. She stood perfectly listlessly before
+the coroner, waiting to be questioned, but otherwise not seeming to
+take the slightest interest in the proceedings. In an even, toneless
+voice she told her name, age, and status, then waited for further
+questions.
+
+“‘Your father went out a little before ten o’clock on Tuesday night
+last, did he not?’ asked the coroner very kindly.
+
+“‘Yes, sir, he did,’ replied Mary quietly.
+
+“‘You had brought him a message from a gentleman whom you had met in
+the lane, and who wished to speak with your father?’
+
+“‘No, sir,’ replied Mary, in the same even and toneless voice; ‘I
+brought no message to father, and he went out on his own.’
+
+“‘But the gentleman you met in the lane?’ insisted the coroner with
+some impatience.
+
+“‘I didn’t meet any one in the lane, sir. I never went out of the
+house that Tuesday night, it rained so.’
+
+“‘But the last witness, Samuel Holder, heard you talking in the lane
+at nine o’clock.’
+
+“‘Samuel Holder was mistaken,’ she replied imperturbably; ‘I wasn’t
+out of the house the whole of that night.’
+
+“It would be useless for me,” continued the man in the corner, “to
+attempt to convey to you the intense feeling of excitement which
+pervaded that crowded court, as that wizened little figure stood there
+for over half-an-hour, quietly and obstinately parrying the most rigid
+cross-examination.
+
+“That she was lying—lying to shield the very man who perhaps had
+murdered her father—no one doubted for a single instant. Yet there she
+stood, sullen, apathetic, and defiant, flatly denying Samuel Holder’s
+story from end to end, strictly adhering and swearing to her first
+statement, that her father went out ‘on his own,’ that she did not
+know where he was going to, and that she herself had never left the
+house that fatal Tuesday night.
+
+“It did not seem to occur to her that by these statements she was
+hopelessly incriminating Samuel Holder, whom she was thus openly
+accusing of deliberate lies; on the contrary, many noticed a distinct
+touch of bitter animosity in the young girl against her former
+sweetheart, which was singularly emphasised when the coroner asked her
+whether she approved of the idea of a breach of promise action being
+brought against Mr. Ledbury.
+
+“‘No,’ she said; ‘all that talk about damages and breach of promise
+was between father and Sam Holder, because Sam had told father that he
+wouldn’t mind marrying me if I had £5,000 of my own.’
+
+“It would be impossible to render the tone of hatred and contempt with
+which the young girl uttered these words. One seemed to live through
+the whole tragedy of the past few months—the girl, pestered by the
+greed of her father, yet refusing obstinately to aid in causing a
+scandal, perhaps disgrace, to the man whom she had once loved and
+trusted.
+
+“As nothing more could be got out of her, and as circumstances now
+seemed to demand it, the coroner adjourned the inquest. The police, as
+you may well imagine, wanted to make certain enquiries. Mind you, Mary
+Newton flatly refused to mention Mr. Ledbury’s name; she was
+questioned and cross-questioned, yet her answer uniformly was:
+
+“‘I don’t know what you’re talking about. The person I was going to
+marry four years ago has gone out of my life—I have never seen him
+since. I saw no one on that Tuesday night.’
+
+“Against that, when she was asked to swear that it was _not_ Mr.—now
+Captain—Ledbury who had promised her marriage she flatly refused to do
+so.
+
+“Of course, there was not a soul there who had not made up his or her
+mind that Captain Ledbury _had_ met Mary Newton in the lane, and had
+heard from her that all his love letters to her were now in her
+father’s hands, and that the old man meant to use these in order to
+extort money from him.
+
+“Fearing the exposure and disgrace of so sensational a breach of
+promise action, and not having the money with which to meet Mat
+Newton’s preposterous demands, he probably lost control over himself,
+and in a moment of impulse and mad rage had silenced the old man for
+ever.
+
+“I assure you that at the adjourned inquest everybody expected to see
+Captain Ledbury in the custody of two constables. The police in the
+interim had been extremely reticent, and no fresh details of the
+extraordinary case had found its way into the papers, but fresh
+details of a sensational character were fully expected, and I can
+assure you the public were not disappointed.
+
+“It is no use my telling you all the proceedings of that second most
+memorable day; I will try and confine myself to the most important
+points of this interesting mystery.
+
+“I must tell you that the story told by the landlord of the Fernhead
+Arms was fully corroborated by several witnesses, all of whom
+testified to the fact that the old man came back from his visit to
+Fernhead Towers in a terrible fury, swearing to bring disgrace upon
+the scoundrel who had ruined his daughter.
+
+“What occurred during that visit was explained by Edward Sanders, the
+butler at The Towers. According to the testimony of this witness,
+there was a large house-party staying with Sir John Fernhead to
+celebrate the engagement of his daughter; the party naturally included
+Captain Mervin Ledbury, his brother, Lord Walterton, with the latter’s
+newly-married young wife, also many neighbours and friends.
+
+“At about six o’clock on Monday evening, it appears, a
+disreputable-looking old man, whom Edward Sanders did not know, but
+who gave the name of Newton, rang at the front door bell of The Towers
+and demanded to see Mr. Ledbury. Sanders naturally refused to admit
+him, but the old man was so persistent, and used such strange
+language, that the butler, after much hesitation, decided to apprise
+Captain Ledbury of his extraordinary visitor.
+
+“Captain Ledbury, on hearing that Old Man Newton wished to speak to
+him, much to Sanders’ astonishment, came downstairs and elected to
+interview his extraordinary visitor in the dining-room, which was then
+deserted. Sanders showed the old man in, and waited in the hall. Very
+soon, however, he heard loud and angry voices, and the next moment
+Captain Ledbury threw open the dining-room door, and said:
+
+“‘This man is mad or drunk; show him out, Sanders.’
+
+“And without another word the Captain walked upstairs, leaving Sanders
+the pleasant task of ‘showing the old man out.’ That this was done
+very speedily and pretty roughly we may infer from Old Man Newton’s
+subsequent fury, and the threats he uttered even while he was being
+‘shown out.’
+
+“Now you see, do you not?” continued the man in the corner, “that this
+evidence seemed to add another link to the chain which was
+incriminating young Mr. Ledbury in this terrible charge of murdering
+Old Man Newton.
+
+“The young man himself was now with his regiment stationed at York. It
+appears that the house-party at Fernhead Towers was breaking up on the
+very day of Old Man Newton’s strange visit thither. Lord and Lady
+Walterton left for town on the Tuesday morning, and Captain Ledbury
+went up to York on that very same fatal night.
+
+“You must know that the small local station of Fernhead is quite close
+to The Towers. Captain Ledbury took the late local train there for
+Ayrsham Junction after dinner that night, arriving at the latter place
+at 9.15, with the intention of picking up the Midland express to the
+north at 10.15 p.m. later on.
+
+“The police had ascertained that Captain Ledbury had got out of the
+local train at Ayrsham Junction at 9.15, and aimlessly strolled out of
+the station. Against that, it was definitely proved by several
+witnesses that the young man did catch the Midland express at 10.15
+p.m., and travelled up north by it.
+
+“Now, there was the hitch, do you see?” added the funny creature
+excitedly. “Samuel Holder overheard a conversation in the fatal lane
+between Mary Newton and the stranger, whom everybody by now believed
+to be Captain Ledbury. Good! That was between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m., and,
+as it happened, the young man does seem to have unaccountably strolled
+about in the neighbourhood whilst waiting for his train; but remember
+that when Sam Holder left the stranger waiting in the lane, and went
+back towards Ayrsham in order to try and find Old Man Newton, he
+distinctly heard Ayrsham church clock striking ten.
+
+“Now, the lane where the murder occurred is two-and-a-half miles from
+Ayrsham Junction station, therefore it could not have been Captain
+Ledbury who was there lying in wait for the old man, as he could not
+possibly have had his interview with old Mat, quarrelled with him and
+murdered him, and then caught his train two-and-a-half miles further
+on, all in the space of fifteen minutes.
+
+“Thus, even before the final verdict of ‘Wilful murder against some
+person or persons unknown,’ the case against Captain Mervin Ledbury
+had completely fallen to the ground. He must also have succeeded in
+convincing Sir John Fernhead of his innocence, as I see by the papers
+that Miss Fernhead has since become Mrs. Ledbury.
+
+“But the result has been that the Ayrsham tragedy has remained an
+impenetrable mystery.
+
+“‘Who killed Old Man Newton? and why?’ is a question which many
+people, including our clever criminal investigation department, have
+asked themselves many a time.
+
+“It was not a case of vulgar assault and robbery, as the old man was
+not worth robbing, and the few coppers he possessed were found intact
+in his waistcoat pocket.
+
+“Many people assert that Samuel Holder quarrelled with the old man and
+murdered him, but there are three reasons why that theory is bound to
+fall to the ground. Firstly, the total absence of any motive. Samuel
+Holder could have no possible object in killing the old man, but
+still, we’ll waive that; people do quarrel—especially if they are
+confederates, as these two undoubtedly were—and quarrels do sometimes
+end fatally. Secondly, the weapon which caused the old man’s death—a
+heavily-leaded cane of foreign make, with solid silver ferrule.
+
+“Now, I ask you, where in the world could a village carpenter pick up
+an instrument of that sort? Moreover no one ever saw such a thing in
+Sam Holder’s hands or in his house. When he walked to the Fernhead
+Arms in order to try and find the old man, he had nothing of the sort
+in his hand, and in spite of the most strenuous efforts on the part of
+the police, the history of that cane was never traced.
+
+“Then, there is a third reason why obviously Sam Holder was not guilty
+of the murder, though that reason is a moral one; I am referring to
+Mary Newton’s attitude at the inquest. She lied, of that there could
+not be a shadow of doubt; she was determined to shield her former
+lover, and incriminated Sam Holder only because she wished to save
+another man.
+
+“Obviously, old Newton went out on that dark, wet night in order to
+meet someone in the lane, that someone could not have been Sam Holder,
+whom he met anywhere and everywhere, and every day in his own house.
+
+“There! you see that Sam Holder was obviously innocent, that Captain
+Ledbury could not have committed the murder, that surely Mary Newton
+did not kill her own father, and that in such a case, common sense
+should have come to the rescue, and not have left this case, what it
+now is, a tragic and impenetrable mystery.”
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+“But,” I said at last, for indeed I was deeply mystified, “what does
+common sense argue?—the case seems to be absolutely hopeless.”
+
+He surveyed his beloved bit of string for a moment, and his mild blue
+eyes blinked at me over his bone-rimmed spectacles.
+
+“Common sense,” he said at last, with his most apologetic manner,
+“tells me that Ayrsham village is a remote little place, where a daily
+paper is unknown, and where no one reads the fashionable intelligence
+or knows anything about Birthday honours.”
+
+“What _do_ you mean?” I gasped in amazement.
+
+“Simply this, that no one at Ayrsham village, certainly not Mary
+Newton herself, had realised that one of the Mr. Ledburys, whom all
+had known at ‘The Limes’ four years ago, had since become Lord
+Walterton.”
+
+“Lord Walterton!” I ejaculated, wholly incredulously.
+
+“Why, yes!” he replied quietly. “Do you mean to say you never thought
+of that? that it never occurred to you that Mary Newton may have
+admitted to her father that Mr. Ledbury had been the man who had so
+wickedly wronged her, but that she, in her remote little village, had
+also no idea that the Mr. Ledbury she meant was recently made, and is
+now styled, Lord Walterton?
+
+“Old Man Newton, who knew of the gossip which had coupled his
+daughter’s name, years ago, with the younger Mr. Ledbury, naturally
+took it for granted that she was referring to him. Moreover, we may
+take it from the girl’s subsequent attitude that she did all she could
+to shield the man whom she had once loved; women, you know, have that
+sort of little way with them.
+
+“Old Newton, fully convinced that young Ledbury was the man he wanted,
+went up to The Towers and had the stormy interview, which no doubt
+greatly puzzled the young Hussar. He undoubtedly spoke of it to his
+brother, Lord Walterton, who, newly married and of high social
+position, would necessarily dread a scandal as much as anybody.
+
+“Lord Walterton went up to town with his young wife the following
+morning. Ayrsham is only forty minutes from London. He came down in
+the evening, met Mary in the lane, asked to see her father, and killed
+him in a moment of passion, when he found that the old man’s demands
+were preposterously unreasonable. Moreover, Englishmen in all grades
+of society have an innate horror of being bullied or blackmailed; the
+murder probably was not premeditated, but the outcome of rage at being
+browbeaten by the old man.
+
+“You see, the police did not use their common sense over so simple a
+matter. They naturally made no enquiries as to Lord Walterton’s
+movements, who seemingly had absolutely nothing to do with the case.
+If they had, I feel convinced that they would have found that his
+lordship would have had some difficulty in satisfying everybody as to
+his whereabouts on that particular Tuesday night.
+
+“Think of it, it is so simple—the only possible solution of that
+strange and unaccountable mystery.”
+
+
+
+XI. The Affair at the Novelty Theatre
+
+Chapter I
+
+“Talking of mysteries,” said the man in the corner, rather
+irrelevantly, for he had not opened his mouth since he sat down and
+ordered his lunch, “talking of mysteries, it is always a puzzle to me
+how few thefts are committed in the dressing-rooms of fashionable
+actresses during a performance.”
+
+“There have been one or two,” I suggested, “but nothing of any value
+was stolen.”
+
+“Yet you remember that affair at the Novelty Theatre a year or two
+ago, don’t you?” he added. “It created a great deal of sensation at
+the time. You see, Miss Phyllis Morgan was, and still is, a very
+fashionable and popular actress, and her pearls are quite amongst the
+wonders of the world. She herself valued them at £10,000, and several
+experts who remember the pearls quite concur with that valuation.
+
+“During the period of her short tenancy of the Novelty Theatre last
+season, she entrusted those beautiful pearls to Mr. Kidd, the
+well-known Bond Street jeweller, to be re-strung. There were seven
+rows of perfectly matched pearls, held together by a small diamond
+clasp of ‘art-nouveau’ design.
+
+“Kidd and Co. are, as you know, a very eminent and old established
+firm of jewellers. Mr. Thomas Kidd, its present sole representative,
+was some time president of the London Chamber of Commerce, and a man
+whose integrity has always been held to be above suspicion. His
+clerks, salesmen, and book-keeper had all been in his employ for
+years, and most of the work was executed on the premises.
+
+“In the case of Miss Phyllis Morgan’s valuable pearls they were
+re-strung and re-set in the back shop by Mr. Kidd’s most valued and
+most trusted workman, a man named James Rumford, who is justly
+considered to be one of the cleverest craftsmen here in England.
+
+“When the pearls were ready, Mr. Kidd himself took them down to the
+theatre, and delivered them into Miss Morgan’s own hands.
+
+“It appears that the worthy jeweller was extremely fond of the
+theatre; but, like so many persons in affluent circumstances, he was
+also very fond of getting a free seat when he could.
+
+“All along he had made up his mind to take the pearls down to the
+Novelty Theatre one night, and to see Miss Morgan for a moment before
+the performance; she would then, he hoped, place a stall at his
+disposal.
+
+“His previsions were correct. Miss Morgan received the pearls, and Mr.
+Kidd was on that celebrated night accommodated with a seat in the
+stalls.
+
+“I don’t know if you remember all the circumstances connected with
+that case, but, to make my point clear, I must remind you of one or
+two of the most salient details.
+
+“In the drama in which Miss Phyllis Morgan was acting at the time,
+there is a brilliant masked ball scene which is the crux of the whole
+play; it occurs in the second act, and Miss Phyllis Morgan, as the
+hapless heroine, dressed in the shabbiest of clothes, appears in the
+midst of a gay and giddy throng; she apostrophises all and sundry
+there, including the villain, and has a magnificent scene which always
+brings down the house, and nightly adds to her histrionic laurels.
+
+“For this scene a large number of supers are engaged, and in order to
+further swell the crowd, practically all the available stage hands
+have to ‘walk on’ dressed in various coloured dominoes, and all
+wearing masks.
+
+“You have, of course, heard the name of Mr. Howard Dennis in
+connection with this extraordinary mystery. He is what is usually
+called ‘a young man about town,’ and was one of Miss Phyllis Morgan’s
+most favoured admirers. As a matter of fact, he was generally
+understood to be the popular actress’s _fiancé_, and as such, had of
+course the _entrée_ of the Novelty Theatre.
+
+“Like many another idle young man about town, Mr. Howard Dennis was
+stage-mad, and one of his greatest delights was to don nightly a mask
+and a blue domino, and to ‘walk on’ in the second act, not so much in
+order to gratify his love for the stage, as to watch Miss Phyllis
+Morgan in her great scene, and to be present, close by her, when she
+received her usual salvo of enthusiastic applause from a delighted
+public.
+
+“On this eventful night—it was on 20th July last—the second act was in
+full swing; the supers, the stage hands, and all the principals were
+on the scene, the back of the stage was practically deserted. The
+beautiful pearls, fresh from the hands of Mr. Kidd, were in Miss
+Morgan’s dressing-room, as she meant to wear them in the last act.
+
+“Of course, since that memorable affair, many people have talked of
+the foolhardiness of leaving such valuable jewellery in the sole
+charge of a young girl—Miss Morgan’s dresser—who acted with
+unpardonable folly and carelessness, but you must remember that this
+part of the theatre is only accessible through the stage door, where
+sits enthroned that uncorruptible dragon, the stage door-keeper.
+
+“No one can get at it from the front, and the dressing-rooms for the
+supers and lesser members of the company are on the opposite side of
+the stage to that reserved for Miss Morgan and one or two of the
+principals.
+
+“It was just a quarter to ten, and the curtain was about to be rung
+down, when George Finch, the stage door-keeper, rushed excitedly into
+the wings; he was terribly upset, and was wildly clutching his coat,
+beneath which he evidently held something concealed.
+
+“In response to the rapidly-whispered queries of the one or two stage
+hands that stood about, Finch only shook his head excitedly. He seemed
+scarcely able to control his impatience, during the close of the act,
+and the subsequent prolonged applause.
+
+“When at last Miss Morgan, flushed with her triumph, came off the
+stage, Finch made a sudden rush for her.
+
+“‘Oh, Madam!’ he gasped excitedly, ‘it might have been such an awful
+misfortune! The rascal! I nearly got him through! but he
+escaped—fortunately it is safe—— I have got it——!’
+
+“It was some time before Miss Morgan understood what in the world the
+otherwise sober stage door-keeper was driving at. Every one who heard
+him certainly thought that he had been drinking. But the next moment
+from under his coat he pulled out, with another ejaculation of
+excitement, the magnificent pearl necklace which Miss Morgan had
+thought safely put away in her dressing-room.
+
+“‘What in the world does all this mean?’ asked Mr. Howard Dennis, who,
+as usual, was escorting his _fiancée_. ‘Finch, what are you doing with
+Madam’s necklace?’
+
+“Miss Phyllis Morgan herself was too bewildered to question Finch; she
+gazed at him, then at her necklace, in speechless astonishment.
+
+“‘Well, you see, Madam, it was this way,’ Finch managed to explain at
+last, as with awestruck reverence he finally deposited the precious
+necklace in the actress’s hands. ‘As you know, Madam, it is a very hot
+night. I had seen every one into the theatre and counted in the
+supers; there was nothing much for me to do, and I got rather tired
+and very thirsty. I see’d a man loafing close to the door, and I ask
+him to fetch me a pint of beer from round the corner, and I give him
+some coppers; I had noticed him loafing round before, and it was so
+hot I didn’t think I was doin’ no harm.’
+
+“‘No, no,’ said Miss Morgan impatiently. ‘Well!’
+
+“‘Well,’ continued Finch, ‘the man, he brought me the beer, and I had
+some of it—and—and—afterwards, I don’t quite know how it happened—it
+was the heat, perhaps—but—I was sitting in my box, and I suppose I
+must have dropped asleep. I just remember hearing the ring up for the
+second act, and the call-boy calling you, Madam, then there’s a sort
+of a blank in my mind. All of a sudden I seemed to wake with the
+feeling that there was something wrong somehow. In a moment I jumped
+up, and I tell you I was wide awake then, and I saw a man sneaking
+down the passage, past my box, towards the door. I challenged him, and
+he tried to dart past me, but I was too quick for him, and got him by
+the tails of his coat, for I saw at once that he was carrying
+something, and I had recognised the loafer who brought me the beer. I
+shouted for help, but there’s never anybody about in this back street,
+and the loafer, he struggled like old Harry, and sure enough he
+managed to get free from me and away before I could stop him, but in
+his fright the rascal dropped his booty, for which Heaven be praised!
+and it was your pearls, Madam. Oh, my! but I did have a tussle,’
+concluded the worthy door-keeper, mopping his forehead, ‘and I do
+hope, Madam, the scoundrel didn’t take nothing else.’
+
+“That was the story,” continued the man in the corner, “which George
+Finch had to tell, and which he subsequently repeated without the
+slightest deviation. Miss Phyllis Morgan, with the light-heartedness
+peculiar to ladies of her profession, took the matter very quietly;
+all she said at the time was that she had nothing else of value in her
+dressing-room, but that Miss Knight—the dresser—deserved a scolding
+for leaving the room unprotected.
+
+“‘All’s well that ends well,’ she said gaily, as she finally went into
+her dressing-room, carrying the pearls in her hand.
+
+“It appears that the moment she opened the door, she found Miss Knight
+sitting in the room, in a deluge of tears. The girl had overheard
+George Finch telling his story, and was terribly upset at her own
+carelessness.
+
+“In answer to Miss Morgan’s questions, she admitted that she had gone
+into the wings, and lingered there to watch the great actress’s
+beautiful performance. She thought no one could possibly get to the
+dressing-room, as nearly all hands were on the stage at the time, and
+of course George Finch was guarding the door.
+
+“However, as there really had been no harm done, beyond a wholesome
+fright to everybody concerned, Miss Morgan readily forgave the girl
+and proceeded with her change of attire for the next act. Incidentally
+she noticed a bunch of roses, which were placed on her dressing-table,
+and asked Knight who had put them there.
+
+“‘Mr. Dennis brought them,’ replied the girl.
+
+“Miss Morgan looked pleased, blushed, and dismissing the whole matter
+from her mind, she proceeded with her toilette for the next act, in
+which, the hapless heroine having come into her own again, she was
+able to wear her beautiful pearls around her neck.
+
+“George Finch, however, took some time to recover himself; his
+indignation was only equalled by his volubility. When his excitement
+had somewhat subsided, he took the precaution of saving the few drops
+of beer which had remained at the bottom of the mug, brought to him by
+the loafer. This was subsequently shown to a chemist in the
+neighbourhood, who, without a moment’s hesitation, pronounced the beer
+to contain an appreciable quantity of chloral.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+“The whole matter, as you may imagine, did not affect Miss Morgan’s
+spirits that night,” continued the man in the corner, after a slight
+pause.
+
+“‘All’s well that ends well,’ she had said gaily, since almost by a
+miracle, her pearls were once more safely round her neck.
+
+“But the next day brought the rude awakening. Something had indeed
+happened which made the affair at the Novelty Theatre, what it has
+ever since remained, a curious and unexplainable mystery.
+
+“The following morning Miss Phyllis Morgan decided that it was
+foolhardy to leave valuable property about in her dressing-room, when
+for stage purposes, imitation jewellery did just as well. She
+therefore determined to place her pearls in the bank until the
+termination of her London season.
+
+“The moment, however, that, in broad daylight, she once more handled
+the necklace, she instinctively felt that there was something wrong
+with it. She examined it eagerly and closely, and, hardly daring to
+face her sudden terrible suspicions, she rushed round to the nearest
+jeweller, and begged him to examine the pearls.
+
+“The examination did not take many moments: the jeweller at once
+pronounced the pearls to be false. There could be no doubt about it;
+the necklace was a perfect imitation of the original, even the clasp
+was an exact copy. Half-hysterical with rage and anxiety, Miss Morgan
+at once drove to Bond Street, and asked to see Mr. Kidd.
+
+“Well, you may easily imagine the stormy interview that took place.
+Miss Phyllis Morgan, in no measured language, boldly accused Mr.
+Thomas Kidd, late president of the London Chamber of Commerce, of
+having substituted false pearls for her own priceless ones.
+
+“The worthy jeweller, at first completely taken by surprise, examined
+the necklace, and was horrified to see that Miss Morgan’s statements
+were, alas! too true. Mr. Kidd was indeed in a terribly awkward
+position.
+
+“The evening before, after business hours, he had taken the necklace
+home with him. Before starting for the theatre, he had examined it to
+see that it was quite in order. He had then, with his own hands, and
+in the presence of his wife, placed it in its case, and driven
+straight to the Novelty, where he finally gave it over to Miss Morgan
+herself.
+
+“To all this he swore most positively; moreover, all his _employés_
+and workmen could swear that they had last seen the necklace just
+after closing time at the shop, when Mr. Kidd walked off towards
+Piccadilly, with the precious article in the inner pocket of his coat.
+
+“One point certainly was curious, and undoubtedly helped to deepen the
+mystery which to this day clings to the affair at the Novelty Theatre.
+
+“When Mr. Kidd handed the packet containing the necklace to Miss
+Morgan, she was too busy to open it at once. She only spoke to Mr.
+Kidd through her dressing-room door, and never opened the packet till
+nearly an hour later, after she had dressed ready for the second act;
+the packet at that time had been untouched, and was wrapped up just as
+she had had it from Mr. Kidd’s own hands. She undid the packet, and
+handled the pearls; certainly, by the artificial light she could see
+nothing wrong with the necklace.
+
+“Poor Mr. Kidd was nearly distracted with the horror of his position.
+Thirty years of an honest reputation suddenly tarnished with this
+awful suspicion—for he realised at once that Miss Morgan refused to
+believe his statements; in fact, she openly said that she would—unless
+immediate compensation was made to her—place the matter at once in the
+hands of the police.
+
+“From the stormy interview in Bond Street, the irate actress drove at
+once to Scotland Yard; but the old-established firm of Kidd and Co.
+was not destined to remain under any cloud that threatened its
+integrity.
+
+“Mr. Kidd at once called upon his solicitor, with the result that an
+offer was made to Miss Morgan, whereby the jeweller would deposit the
+full value of the original necklace, _i.e._, £10,000, in the hands of
+Messrs. Bentley and Co., bankers, that sum to be held by them for a
+whole year, at the end of which time, if the perpetrator of the fraud
+had not been discovered, the money was to be handed over to Miss
+Morgan in its entirety.
+
+“Nothing could have been more fair, more equitable, or more just, but
+at the same time nothing could have been more mysterious.
+
+“As Mr. Kidd swore that he had placed the real pearls in Miss Morgan’s
+hands, and was ready to back his oath by the sum of £10,000, no more
+suspicion could possibly attach to him. When the announcement of his
+generous offer appeared in the papers, the entire public approved and
+exonerated him, and then turned to wonder who the perpetrator of the
+daring fraud had been.
+
+“How came a valueless necklace in exact imitation of the original one
+to be in Miss Morgan’s dressing-room? Where were the real pearls?
+Clearly the loafer who had drugged the stage door-keeper, and sneaked
+into the theatre to steal a necklace, was not aware that he was
+risking several years’ hard labour for the sake of a worthless trifle.
+He had been one of the many dupes of this extraordinary adventure.
+
+“Macpherson, one of the most able men on the detective staff, had,
+indeed, his work cut out. The police were extremely reticent, but, in
+spite of this, one or two facts gradually found their way into the
+papers, and aroused public interest and curiosity to its highest
+pitch.
+
+“What had transpired was this:
+
+“Clara Knight, the dresser, had been very rigorously cross-questioned,
+and, from her many statements, the following seemed quite positive.
+
+“After the curtain had rung up for the second act, and Miss Morgan had
+left her dressing-room, Knight had waited about for some time, and had
+even, it appears, handled and admired the necklace. Then,
+unfortunately, she was seized with the burning desire of seeing the
+famous scene from the wings. She thought that the place was quite
+safe, and that George Finch was as usual at his post.
+
+“‘I was going along the short passage that leads to the wings,’ she
+exclaimed to the detectives, ‘when I became aware of some one moving
+some distance behind me. I turned and saw a blue domino about to enter
+Miss Morgan’s dressing-room.
+
+“‘I thought nothing of that,’ continued the girl, ‘as we all know that
+Mr. Dennis is engaged to Miss Morgan. He is very fond of “walking on”
+in the ball-room scene, and he always wears a blue domino when he
+does; so I was not at all alarmed. He had his mask on as usual, and he
+was carrying a bunch of roses. When he saw me at the other end of the
+passage, he waved his hand to me and pointed to the flowers. I nodded
+to him, and then he went into the room.’
+
+“These statements, as you may imagine, created a great deal of
+sensation; so much so, in fact, that Mr. Kidd, with his £10,000 and
+his reputation in mind, moved heaven and earth to bring about the
+prosecution of Mr. Dennis for theft and fraud.
+
+“The papers were full of it, for Mr. Howard Dennis was well known in
+fashionable London Society. His answer to these curious statements was
+looked forward to eagerly; when it came it satisfied no one and
+puzzled everybody.
+
+“‘Miss Knight was mistaken,’ he said most emphatically, ‘I did not
+bring any roses for Miss Morgan that night. It was not I that she saw
+in a blue domino by the door, as I was on the stage before the curtain
+was rung up for the second act, and never left it until the close.’
+
+“This part of Howard Dennis’ statement was a little difficult to
+substantiate. No one on the stage could swear positively whether he
+was ‘on’ early in the act or not, although, mind you, Macpherson had
+ascertained that in the whole crowd of supers on the stage, he was the
+only one who wore a blue domino.
+
+“Mr. Kidd was very active in the matter, but Miss Morgan flatly
+refused to believe in her _fiancé’s_ guilt. The worthy jeweller
+maintained that Mr. Howard Dennis was the only person who knew the
+celebrated pearls and their quaint clasp well enough to have a
+facsimile made of them, and that when Miss Knight saw him enter the
+dressing-room, he actually substituted the false necklace for the real
+one; whilst the loafer who drugged George Finch’s beer was—as every
+one supposed—only a dupe.
+
+“Things had reached a very acute and painful stage, when one more
+detail found its way into the papers, which, whilst entirely clearing
+Mr. Howard Dennis’ character, has helped to make the whole affair a
+hopeless mystery.
+
+“Whilst questioning George Finch, Macpherson had ascertained that the
+stage door-keeper had seen Mr. Dennis enter the theatre some time
+before the beginning of the celebrated second act. He stopped to speak
+to George Finch for a moment or two, and the latter could swear
+positively that Mr. Dennis was not carrying any roses then.
+
+“On the other hand a flower-girl, who was selling roses in the
+neighbourhood of the Novelty Theatre late that memorable night,
+remembers selling some roses to a shabbily-dressed man, who looked
+like a labourer out of work. When Mr. Dennis was pointed out to her
+she swore positively that it was not he.
+
+“‘The man looked like a labourer,’ she explained. ‘I took particular
+note of him, as I remember thinking that he didn’t look much as if he
+could afford to buy roses.’
+
+“Now you see,” concluded the man in the corner excitedly, “where the
+hitch lies. There is absolutely no doubt, judging from the evidence of
+George Finch and of the flower-girl, that the loafer had provided
+himself with the roses, and had somehow or other managed to get hold
+of a blue domino, for the purpose of committing the theft. His giving
+drugged beer to Finch, moreover, proved his guilt beyond a doubt.
+
+“But here the mystery becomes hopeless,” he added with a chuckle, “for
+the loafer dropped the booty which he had stolen—that booty was the
+false necklace, and it has remained an impenetrable mystery to this
+day as to who made the substitution and when.
+
+“A whole year has elapsed since then, but the real necklace has never
+been traced or found; so Mr. Kidd has paid, with absolute quixotic
+chivalry, the sum of £10,000 to Miss Morgan, and thus he has
+completely cleared the firm of Kidd and Co. of any suspicion as to its
+integrity.”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+“But then, what in the world is the explanation of it all?” I asked
+bewildered, as the funny creature paused in his narrative and seemed
+absorbed in the contemplation of a beautiful knot he had just
+completed in his bit of string.
+
+“The explanation is so simple,” he replied, “for it is obvious, is it
+not, that only four people could possibly have committed the fraud?”
+
+“Who are they?” I asked.
+
+“Well,” he said, whilst his bony fingers began to fidget with that
+eternal piece of string, “there is, of course, old Mr. Kidd; but as
+the worthy jeweller has paid £10,000 to prove that he did not steal
+the real necklace and substitute a false one in its stead, we must
+assume that he was guiltless. Then, secondly, there is Mr. Howard
+Dennis.”
+
+“Well, yes,” I said, “what about him?”
+
+“There were several points in his favour,” he rejoined, marking each
+point with a fresh and most complicated knot; “it was not he who
+bought the roses, therefore it was not he who, clad in a blue domino,
+entered Miss Morgan’s dressing-room directly after Knight left it.
+
+“And mark the force of this point,” he added excitedly.
+
+“Just before the curtain rang up for the second act, Miss Morgan had
+been in her room, and had then undone the packet, which, in her own
+words, was just as she had received it from Mr. Kidd’s hands.
+
+“After that Miss Knight remained in charge, and a mere ten seconds
+after she left the room she saw the blue domino carrying the roses at
+the door.
+
+“The flower-girl’s story and that of George Finch have proved that the
+blue domino could not have been Mr. Dennis, but it was the loafer who
+evidently stole the false necklace.
+
+“If you bear all this in mind you will realise that there was no time
+in those ten seconds for Mr. Dennis to have made the substitution
+_before_ the theft was committed. It stands to reason that he could
+not have done it afterwards.
+
+“Then, again, many people suspected Miss Knight, the dresser, but this
+supposition we may easily dismiss. An uneducated, stupid girl, not
+three-and-twenty, could not possibly have planned so clever a
+substitution. An imitation necklace of that particular calibre and
+made to order would cost far more money than a poor theatrical dresser
+could ever afford; let alone the risks of ordering such an ornament to
+be made.
+
+“No,” said the funny creature, with comic emphasis, “there is but one
+theory possible, which is my own.”
+
+“And that is?” I asked eagerly.
+
+“The workman, Rumford, of course,” he responded triumphantly. “Why! it
+jumps to the eyes, as our French friends would tell us. Who, other
+than he, could have the opportunity of making an exact copy of the
+necklace which had been entrusted to his firm?
+
+“Being in the trade he could easily obtain the false stones without
+exciting any undue suspicion; being a skilled craftsman, he could
+easily make the clasp, and string the pearls in exact imitation of the
+original; he could do this secretly in his own home and without the
+slightest risk.
+
+“Then the plan, though extremely simple, was very cleverly thought
+out. Disguised as the loafer——”
+
+“The loafer!” I exclaimed.
+
+“Why, yes! the loafer,” he replied quietly, “disguised as the loafer,
+he hung round the stage door of the Novelty after business hours,
+until he had collected the bits of gossip and information he wanted;
+thus he learnt that Mr. Howard Dennis was Miss Morgan’s accredited
+_fiancé_; that he, like everybody else who was available, ‘walked on’
+in the second act; and that during that time the back of the stage was
+practically deserted.
+
+“No doubt he knew all along that Mr. Kidd meant to take the pearls
+down to the theatre himself that night, and it was quite easy to
+ascertain that Miss Morgan—as the hapless heroine—wore no jewellery in
+the second act, and that Mr. Howard Dennis invariably wore a blue
+domino.
+
+“Some people might incline to the belief that Miss Knight was a paid
+accomplice, that she left the dressing-room unprotected on purpose,
+and that her story of the blue domino and the roses was pre-arranged
+between herself and Rumford, but that is not my opinion.
+
+“I think that the scoundrel was far too clever to need any accomplice,
+and too shrewd to put himself thereby at the mercy of a girl like
+Knight.
+
+“Rumford, I find, is a married man: this to me explains the blue
+domino, which the police were never able to trace to any business
+place, where it might have been bought or hired. Like the necklace
+itself, it was ‘home-made.’
+
+“Having got his properties and his plans ready, Rumford then set to
+work. You must remember that a stage door-keeper is never above
+accepting a glass of beer from a friendly acquaintance; and, no doubt,
+if George Finch had not asked the loafer to bring him a glass, the
+latter would have offered him one. To drug the beer was simple enough;
+then Rumford went to buy the roses, and, I should say, met his wife
+somewhere round the corner, who handed him the blue domino and the
+mask; all this was done in order to completely puzzle the police
+subsequently, and also in order to throw suspicion, if possible, upon
+young Dennis.
+
+“As soon as the drug took effect upon George Finch, Rumford slipped
+into the theatre. To slip a mask and domino on and off is, as you
+know, a matter of a few seconds. Probably his intention had been—if he
+found Knight in the room—to knock her down if she attempted to raise
+an alarm; but here fortune favoured him. Knight saw him from a
+distance, and mistook him easily for Mr. Dennis.
+
+“After the theft of the real necklace, Rumford sneaked out of the
+theatre. And here you see how clever was the scoundrel’s plan: if he
+had merely substituted one necklace for another there would have been
+no doubt whatever that the loafer—whoever he was—was the culprit—the
+drugged beer would have been quite sufficient proof for that. The hue
+and cry would have been after the loafer, and, who knows? there might
+have been some one or something which might have identified that
+loafer with himself.
+
+“He must have bought the shabby clothes somewhere, he certainly bought
+the roses from a flower-girl; anyhow, there were a hundred and one
+little risks and contingencies which might have brought the theft home
+to him.
+
+“But mark what happens: he steals the real necklace, and keeps the
+false one in his hand, intending to drop it sooner or later, and thus
+sent the police entirely on the wrong scent. As the loafer, he was
+supposed to have stolen the false necklace, then dropped it whilst
+struggling with George Finch. The result is that no one has troubled
+about the loafer; no one thought that he had anything to do with the
+substitution, which was the main point at issue, and no very great
+effort has ever been made to find that mysterious loafer.
+
+“It never occurred to any one that the fraud and the theft were
+committed by one and the same person, and that that person could be
+none other than James Rumford.”
+
+
+
+XII. The Tragedy of Barnsdale Manor
+
+Chapter I
+
+“We have heard so much about the evils of Bridge,” said the man in the
+corner that afternoon, “but I doubt whether that fashionable game has
+ever been responsible for a more terrible tragedy than the one at
+Barnsdale Manor.”
+
+“You think, then,” I asked, for I saw he was waiting to be drawn out,
+“you think that the high play at Bridge did have something to do with
+that awful murder?”
+
+“Most people think that much, I fancy,” he replied, “although no one
+has arrived any nearer to the solution of the mystery which surrounds
+the tragic death of Mme. Quesnard at Barnsdale Manor on the 23rd
+September last.
+
+“On that fateful occasion, you must remember that the house party at
+the Manor included a number of sporting and fashionable friends of
+Lord and Lady Barnsdale, among whom Sir Gilbert Culworth was the only
+one whose name was actually mentioned during the hearing of this
+extraordinary case.
+
+“It seems to have been a very gay house party indeed. In the daytime
+Lord Barnsdale took some of his guests to shoot and fish, whilst a few
+devotees remained at home in order to indulge their passion for the
+modern craze of Bridge. It was generally understood that Lord
+Barnsdale did not altogether approve of quite so much gambling. He was
+not by any means well off; and although he was very much in love with
+his beautiful wife, he could ill afford to pay her losses at cards.
+
+“This was the reason, no doubt, that Bridge at Barnsdale Manor was
+only indulged in whilst the host himself was out shooting or fishing;
+in the evenings there was music or billiards, but never any cards.
+
+“One of the most interesting personalities in the Barnsdale _ménage_
+was undoubtedly Madame Nathalie Quesnard, a sister of Lord Barnsdale’s
+mother, who, if you remember, was a Mademoiselle de la Trémouille.
+This Mme. Quesnard was extremely wealthy, the widow of a French West
+Indian planter, who had made millions in Martinique.
+
+“She was very fond of her nephew, to whom, as she had no children or
+other relatives of her own, she intended to leave the bulk of her vast
+fortune. Pending her death, which was not likely to occur for some
+time, as she was not more than fifty, she took up her abode at
+Barnsdale Manor, together with her companion and amanuensis, a poor
+girl named Alice Holt.
+
+“Mme. Quesnard was seemingly an amiable old lady; the only unpleasant
+trait in her character being her intense dislike of her nephew’s
+beautiful and fashionable young wife. The old Frenchwoman, who, with
+all her wealth, had the unbounded and innate thriftiness peculiar to
+her nation, looked with perfect horror on Lady Barnsdale’s
+extravagances, and above all on her fondness for gambling; and
+subsequently several of the servants at the Manor testified to the
+amount of mischief the old lady strove to make between her nephew and
+his young wife.
+
+“Mme. Quesnard’s dislike for Lady Barnsdale seems, moreover, to have
+been shared by her dependent and companion, the girl Alice Holt.
+Between them, these two ladies seem to have cordially hated the
+brilliant and much-admired mistress of Barnsdale Manor.
+
+“Such were the chief inmates of the Manor last September, at the time
+the tragedy occurred. On that memorable night Alice Holt, who occupied
+a bedroom immediately above that of Mme. Quesnard, was awakened in the
+middle of the night by a persistent noise, which undoubtedly came from
+her mistress’s room. The walls and floorings at the old Manor are very
+thick, and the sound was a very confused one, although the girl was
+quite sure that she could hear Mme. Quesnard’s shrill voice raised as
+if in anger.
+
+“She tried to listen for a time, and presently she heard a sound as if
+some piece of furniture had been knocked over, then nothing more.
+Somehow the sudden silence seemed to have frightened the girl more
+than the noise had done. Trembling with nervousness she waited for
+some few minutes, then, unable to bear the suspense any longer, she
+got out of bed, slipped on her shoes and dressing-gown, and determined
+to run downstairs to see if anything were amiss.
+
+“To her horror she found on trying her door that it had been locked on
+the outside. Quite convinced now that something must indeed be very
+wrong, she started screaming and banging against the door, determined
+to arouse the household, which she, of course, quickly succeeded in
+doing.
+
+“The first to emerge from his room was Lord Barnsdale. He at once
+realised that the shrieks proceeded from Alice Holt’s room. He ran
+upstairs helter-skelter, and as the key had been left in the door, he
+soon released the unfortunate girl, who by now was quite hysterical
+with anxiety for her mistress.
+
+“Altogether, I take it, some six or seven minutes must have elapsed
+from the time when Alice Holt was first alarmed by the sudden silence
+following the noise in Mme. Quesnard’s room until she was released by
+Lord Barnsdale.
+
+“As quickly and as coherently as she could, she blurted forth all her
+fears about her mistress. I can imagine how picturesque the old Manor
+House must have looked then, with everybody, ladies and gentlemen, and
+servants, crowding into the hall, arrayed in various _négligé_ attire,
+asking hurried questions, getting in each other’s way, and all only
+dimly to be seen by the light of candles, carried by some of the more
+sensible ones in this motley crowd.
+
+“However, in the meanwhile, Lord Barnsdale had managed to understand
+Alice Holt. He ran downstairs again and knocked at his aunt’s door; he
+received no reply—he tried the handle, but the door was locked from
+the inside.
+
+“Genuinely frightened now, he forced open the door, and then recoiled
+in horror.
+
+“The window was wide open, and a brilliant moonlight streamed into the
+room, weirdly illumining Mme. Quesnard’s inanimate body, which lay
+full length upon the ground. Hastily begging the ladies not to follow
+him, Lord Barnsdale quickly went forward and bent over his aunt’s
+body.
+
+“There was no doubt that she was dead. An ugly wound at the back of
+her head, some red marks round her throat, all testified to the fact
+that the poor old lady had been assaulted and murdered. Lord Barnsdale
+at once sent for the nearest doctor, whilst he and Miss Holt lifted
+the unfortunate lady back to bed.
+
+“The messenger who had gone for the doctor was at the same time
+instructed to deliver a note, hastily scribbled by Lord Barnsdale, at
+the local police station.
+
+“That a hideous crime had been committed, with burglary for its
+object, no one could be in doubt for a moment. Lord Barnsdale and two
+or three of his guests had already thrown a glance into the next room,
+a little boudoir, which Mme. Quesnard used as a sitting-room. There
+the heavy oak bureau bore silent testimony to the motive of this
+dastardly outrage. Mme. Quesnard, with the unfortunate and foolhardy
+habit peculiar to all French people, kept a very large quantity of
+loose and ready money by her. That habit, mind you, is the chief
+reason why burglary is so rife and so profitable all over France.
+
+“In this case the old lady’s national characteristic was evidently the
+chief cause of her tragic fate; the drawer of the bureau had been
+forced open, and no one could doubt for a moment that a large sum of
+money had been abstracted from it.
+
+“The burglar had then obviously made good his escape through the
+window, which he could do quite easily, as Mme. Quesnard’s apartments
+were on the ground floor. She suffered from shortness of breath, it
+appears, and had a horror of stairs; she was, moreover, not the least
+bit nervous, and her windows were usually barred and shuttered.
+
+“One very curious fact, however, at once struck all those present,
+even before the arrival of the detectives, and that was, that the old
+lady was partially dressed when she was found lying on the ground. She
+had slipped on an elaborate dressing-gown, had smoothed her hair, and
+put on her slippers. In fact, it was evident that she had in some
+measure prepared herself for the reception of the burglar.
+
+“Throughout these hasty and amateurish observations conducted by Lord
+Barnsdale and two of his male guests, Alice Holt had remained seated
+beside her late employer’s bedside sobbing bitterly. In spite of Lord
+Barnsdale’s entreaties she refused to move; and wildly waved aside any
+attempt at consolation offered to her by one or two of the older
+female servants who were present.
+
+“It was only when everybody at last made up their minds to return to
+their rooms, that some one mentioned Lady Barnsdale’s name. She had
+been taken ill and faint the evening before, and had not been well all
+night. Jane Barlow, her maid, expressed the hope that her ladyship was
+none the worse for this awful commotion, and must be wondering what it
+all meant.
+
+“At this, suddenly, Alice Holt jumped up, like a madwoman.
+
+“‘What it all means?’ she shrieked, whilst every one looked at her in
+speechless horror, ‘it means that that woman has murdered my mistress,
+and robbed her. I know it—I know it—I know it!’
+
+“And once more sinking beside the bed, she covered her dead mistress’s
+hand with kisses, and sobbed and wailed as if her heart would break.”
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+“You may well imagine the awful commotion the girl’s wild outburst had
+created in the old Manor House. Lady Barnsdale had been taken ill the
+previous evening, and, of course, no one had breathed a word of it to
+her, but equally, of course, it was freely talked about at Barnsdale
+Manor, in the neighbourhood, and even so far as in the London clubs.
+
+“Lord and Lady Barnsdale were very well known in London society, and
+Lord Barnsdale’s adoration for his beautiful wife was quite notorious.
+
+“Alice Holt, after her frantic outburst, had not breathed another
+word. Silent and sullen she went up to her room, packed her things,
+and left the house, where, of course, it became impossible that she
+should stay another day. She refused Lord Barnsdale’s generous offer
+of money and help, and only stayed long enough to see the detectives
+and reply to the questions they thought fit to put to her.
+
+“The whole neighbourhood was in a fever of excitement; many gossips
+would have it that the evidence against Lady Barnsdale was conclusive,
+and that a warrant for her arrest had already been applied for.
+
+“What had transpired was this:
+
+“It appears that the day preceding the tragedy, Bridge was, as usual,
+being played for, I believe, guinea points. Lord Barnsdale was out
+shooting all day, and though the guests at the Manor were very loyal
+to their hostess, and refused to make any positive statements, there
+seems to be no doubt that Lady Barnsdale lost a very large sum of
+money to Sir Gilbert Culworth.
+
+“Be that as it may, nothing further could be gleaned by enterprising
+reporters fresh from town; the police were more than usually reticent,
+and every one eagerly awaited the opening of the inquest, when
+sensational developments were expected in this mysterious case.
+
+“It was held on September the 25th, in the servants’ hall of Barnsdale
+Manor, and you may be sure that the large room was crowded to its
+utmost capacity. Lord Barnsdale was, of course, present, so was Sir
+Gilbert Culworth, but it was understood that Lady Barnsdale was still
+suffering from nervous prostration, and was unable to be present.
+
+“When I arrived there, and gradually made my way to the front rank,
+the doctor who had been originally summoned to the murdered lady’s
+bedside was giving his evidence.
+
+“He gave it as his opinion that the fractured skull from which Mme.
+Quesnard died was caused through her hitting the back of her head
+against the corner of the marble-topped washstand, in the immediate
+proximity of which she lay outstretched, when Lord Barnsdale first
+forced open the door. The stains on the marble had confirmed him in
+that opinion. Mme. Quesnard, he thought, must have fallen, owing to an
+onslaught made upon her by the burglar; the marks round the old lady’s
+throat testified to this, although these were not the cause of death.
+
+“After this there was a good deal of police evidence, with regard to
+the subsequent movements of the unknown miscreant. He had undoubtedly
+broken open the drawer of the bureau in the adjoining boudoir, the
+door of communication between this and Mme. Quesnard’s bedroom being
+always kept open, and it was presumed that he had made a considerable
+haul both in gold and notes. He had then locked the bedroom door on
+the inside and made good his escape through the window.
+
+“Immediately beneath this window, the flower-bed, muddy with the
+recent rain, bore the imprint of having been hastily trampled upon;
+but all actual footmarks had been carefully obliterated. Beyond this,
+all round the house, the garden paths are asphalted, and the burglar
+had evidently taken the precaution to keep to these asphalted paths,
+or else to cross the garden by the lawns.
+
+“You must understand,” continued the man in the corner, after a slight
+pause, “that throughout all this preliminary evidence, everything went
+to prove that the crime had been committed by an inmate of the house,
+or at any rate by some one well acquainted with its usages and its
+_ménages_. Alice Holt, whose room was immediately above that of Mme.
+Quesnard, and who was, therefore, most likely to hear the noise of the
+conflict and to run to her mistress’s assistance, had been first of
+all locked up in her room. It had, therefore, become quite evident
+that the miscreant had commenced operations from inside the house, and
+had entered Mme. Quesnard’s room by the door, and not by the window,
+as had been at first supposed.
+
+“But,” added the funny creature excitedly, “as the old lady had,
+according to evidence, locked her door that night, it became more and
+more clear, as the case progressed, that she must of her own accord
+have admitted the person who subsequently caused her tragic death.
+This was, of course, confirmed by the fact that she was partially
+dressed when she was subsequently found dead.
+
+“Strangely enough, with the exception of Alice Holt, no one else had
+heard any noise during the night. But, as I remarked before, the walls
+of these old houses are very thick, and no one else slept on the
+ground floor.
+
+“Another fact which in the early part of the inquest went to prove
+that the outrage was committed by some one familiar with the house,
+was that Ben, the watch-dog, had not raised any alarm. His kennel was
+quite close to Mme. Quesnard’s windows, and he had not even barked.
+
+“I doubt if the law would take official cognisance of the dumb
+testimony of a dog; nevertheless, Ben’s evidence was in this case
+quite worthy of consideration.
+
+“You may imagine how gradually, as these facts were unfolded,
+excitement grew to fever pitch, and when at last Alice Holt was
+called, every one literally held their breath, eagerly waiting to hear
+what was coming.
+
+“She is a tall, handsome-looking girl, with fine eyes and a rich
+voice. Dressed in deep black she certainly looked an imposing figure
+as she stood there, repeating the story of how she was awakened in the
+night, by the sound of her mistress’s angry voice, of the noise and
+sudden silence, and also of her terror, when she found that she had
+been locked up in her room.
+
+“But obviously the girl had more to tell, and was only waiting for the
+coroner’s direct question.
+
+“‘Will you tell the jury the reason why you made such an extraordinary
+and unwarrantable accusation against Lady Barnsdale?’ he asked her at
+last, amid breathless silence in the crowded room.
+
+“Every one instinctively looked across the room to where Lord
+Barnsdale sat between his friend Sir Gilbert Culworth and his lawyer,
+Sir Arthur Inglewood, who had evidently come down from London in order
+to watch the case on his client’s behalf. Alice Holt, too, looked
+across at Lord Barnsdale for a moment. He seemed attentive and
+interested, but otherwise quite calm and impassive.
+
+“I, who watched the girl, saw a look of pity cross her face as she
+gazed at him, and I think, when we bear in mind that the distinguished
+English gentleman and the poor paid companion had known each other
+years ago, when they were girl and boy together in old Mme. Quesnard’s
+French home, we may make a pretty shrewd guess why Alice Holt hated
+the beautiful Lady Barnsdale.
+
+“‘It was about six o’clock in the afternoon,’ she began at last, in
+the same quiet tone of voice, ‘I was sitting sewing in Madame’s
+boudoir, when Lady Barnsdale came into the bedroom. She did not see
+me, I know, for she began at once talking volubly to Madame about a
+serious loss she had just sustained at Bridge; several hundred pounds,
+she said.’
+
+“‘Well?’ queried the coroner, for the girl had paused, almost as if
+she regretted what she had already said. She certainly threw an
+appealing look at Lord Barnsdale, who, however, seemed to take no
+notice of her.
+
+“‘Well,’ she continued with sudden resolution, ‘Madame was very angry
+at this; she declared that Lady Barnsdale deserved a severe lesson;
+her extravagances were a positive scandal. “Not a penny will I give
+you to pay your gambling debts,” said Madame; “and, moreover, I shall
+make it my business to inform my nephew of your goings-on whilst he is
+absent.”
+
+“‘Lady Barnsdale was in a wild state of excitement. She begged and
+implored Madame to say nothing to Lord Barnsdale about it, and did her
+very best to try to induce her to help her out of her difficulties,
+just this once more. But Madame was obdurate. Thereupon Lady Barnsdale
+turned on her like a fury, called her every opprobrious name under the
+sun, and finally flounced out of the room, banging the door behind
+her.
+
+“‘Madame was very much upset after this,’ continued Alice Holt, ‘and I
+was not a bit astonished when directly after dinner she rang for me,
+and asked to be put to bed. It was then nine o’clock.
+
+“‘That is the last I saw of poor Madame alive.
+
+“‘She was very excited then, and told me that she was quite frightened
+of Lady Barnsdale—a gambler, she said, was as likely as not to become
+a thief, if opportunity arose. I offered to sleep on the sofa in the
+next room, for the old lady seemed quite nervous, a thing I have never
+known her to be. But she was too proud to own to nervousness, and she
+dismissed me finally, saying that she would lock her door, for once: a
+thing she scarcely ever did.’
+
+“It was a curious story, to say the least of it, which Alice Holt thus
+told to an excited public. Cross-examined by the coroner, she never
+departed from a single point of it, her calm and presence of mind
+being only equalled throughout this trying ordeal by that of Lord
+Barnsdale, who sat seemingly unmoved whilst these terrible
+insinuations were made against his wife.
+
+“But there was more to come. Sir Gilbert Culworth had been called; in
+the interest of justice, and in accordance with his duty as a citizen,
+he was forced to stand up and, all unwillingly, to add another tiny
+link to the chain of evidence that implicated his friend’s wife in
+this most terrible crime.
+
+“Right loyally he tried to shield her in every possible way, but
+cross-questioned by the coroner, harassed nearly out of his senses, he
+was forced to admit two facts—namely, that Lady Barnsdale had lost
+nearly £800 at Bridge the day before the murder, and that she had paid
+her debt to himself in full, on the following morning, in gold and
+notes.
+
+“He had been forced, much against his will, to show the notes to the
+police; unfortunately for the justice of the case, however, the
+numbers of these could not be directly traceable as having been in
+Mme. Quesnard’s possession at the time of her death. No diaries or
+books of accounts of any kind were found. Like most French people, she
+arranged all her money affairs herself, receiving her vast dividends
+in foreign money, and converting this into English notes and gold, as
+occasion demanded, at the nearest money-changer’s that happened to be
+handy.
+
+“She had, like a great many foreigners, a holy horror of banks. She
+would have mistrusted the Bank of England itself; as for solicitors,
+she held them in perfect abhorrence. She only went once to one in her
+life, and that was in order to make a will leaving everything she
+possessed unconditionally to her beloved nephew, Lord Barnsdale.
+
+“But in spite of this difficulty about the notes, you see for
+yourself, do you not, how terribly strong was the circumstantial
+evidence against Lady Barnsdale? Her losses at cards, her appeal to
+Mme. Quesnard, the latter’s refusal to help her, and finally the
+payment in full of the debt to Sir Gilbert Culworth on the following
+morning.
+
+“There was only one thing that spoke for her, and that was the very
+horror of the crime itself. It was practically impossible to conceive
+that a woman of Lady Barnsdale’s refinement and education should have
+sprung upon an elderly woman, like some navvy’s wife by the docks, and
+then that she should have had the presence of mind to jump out of the
+window, to obliterate her footmarks in the flower-bed, and, in fact,
+to have given the crime the look of a clever burglary.
+
+“Still, we all know that money difficulties will debase the noblest of
+us, that greed will madden the sanest and most refined. When the
+inquest was adjourned, I can assure you that no one had any doubt
+whatever that within twenty-four hours Lady Barnsdale would be
+arrested on the capital charge.”
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+“But the detectives in charge of the case had reckoned without Sir
+Arthur Inglewood, the great lawyer, who was watching the proceedings
+on behalf of his aristocratic clients,” said the man in the corner,
+when he had assured himself of my undivided attention.
+
+“The adjourned inquest brought with it, I assure you, its full quota
+of sensation. Again Lord Barnsdale was present, calm, haughty, and
+impassive, whilst Lady Barnsdale was still too ill to attend. But she
+had made a statement upon oath, in which, whilst flatly denying that
+her interview with the deceased at 6 p.m. had been of an acrimonious
+character as alleged by Alice Holt, she swore most positively that all
+through the night she had been ill, and had not left her room after
+11.30 p.m.
+
+“The first witness called after this affidavit had been read was Jane
+Barlow, Lady Barnsdale’s maid.
+
+“The girl deposed that on that memorable evening preceding the murder,
+she went up to her mistress’s room at about 11.30 in order to get
+everything ready for the night. As a rule, of course, there was nobody
+about in the bedroom at that hour, but on this occasion when Jane
+Barlow entered the room, which she did without knocking, she saw her
+mistress sitting by her desk.
+
+“‘Her ladyship looked up when I came in,’ continued Jane Barlow, ‘and
+seemed very cross with me for not knocking at the door. I apologised,
+then began to get the room tidy; as I did so I could see that my lady
+was busy counting a lot of money. There were lots of sovereigns and
+banknotes. My lady put some together in an envelope and addressed it,
+then she got up from her desk and went to lock up the remainder of the
+money in her jewel safe.’
+
+“‘And this was at what time?’ asked the coroner.
+
+“‘At about half-past eleven, I think, sir,’ repeated the girl.
+
+“‘Well,’ said the coroner, ‘did you notice anything else?’
+
+“‘Yes,’ replied Jane, ‘whilst my lady was at her safe, I saw the
+envelope in which she had put the money lying on the desk. I couldn’t
+help looking at it, for I knew it was ever so full of banknotes, and I
+saw that my lady had addressed it to Sir Gilbert Culworth.’
+
+“At this point Sir Arthur Inglewood jumped to his feet and handed
+something over to the coroner; it was evidently an envelope which had
+been torn open. The coroner looked at it very intently, then suddenly
+asked Jane Barlow if she had happened to notice anything about the
+envelope which was lying on her ladyship’s desk that evening.
+
+“‘Oh, yes, sir!’ she replied unhesitatingly, ‘I noticed my lady had
+made a splotch, right on top of the C in Sir Gilbert Culworth’s name.’
+
+“‘This, then, is the envelope,’ was the coroner’s quiet comment, as he
+handed the paper across to the girl.
+
+“‘Yes, there’s the splotch,’ she replied, ‘I’d know it anywhere.’
+
+“So you see,” continued the man in the corner, with a chuckle, “that
+the chain of circumstantial evidence against Lady Barnsdale was
+getting somewhat entangled. It was indeed fortunate for her that Sir
+Gilbert Culworth had not destroyed the envelope in which she had
+handed him over the money on the following day.
+
+“Alice Holt, as you know, heard the conflict and raised the alarm much
+later in the night, when everybody was already in bed, whilst long
+before that Lady Barnsdale was apparently in possession of the money
+with which she could pay back her debt.
+
+“Thus the motive for the crime, so far as she was concerned, was
+entirely done away with. Directly after the episode witnessed by Jane
+Barlow, Lady Barnsdale had a sort of nervous collapse, and went to bed
+feeling very ill. Lord Barnsdale was terribly concerned about her; he
+and the maid remained alternately by her bedside for an hour or two;
+finally Lord Barnsdale went to sleep in his dressing-room, whilst Jane
+also finally retired to rest.
+
+“Ill as Lady Barnsdale undoubtedly was then, it was absolutely
+preposterous to conceive that she could after that have planned and
+carried out so monstrous a crime, without any motive whatever. To have
+locked Alice Holt’s door, then gone downstairs, forced her way into
+the old lady’s room, struggled with her, to have jumped out of the
+window, and run back into the house by the garden, might have been the
+work of a determined woman, driven mad by the desire for money, but
+became absolutely out of the question in the case of a woman suffering
+from nervous collapse, and having apparently no motive for the crime.
+
+“Of course Sir Arthur Inglewood made the most of the fact that no mud
+was found on any shoes or dress belonging to Lady Barnsdale. The
+flower-bed was very soft with the heavy rain of the day before, and
+Lady Barnsdale could not possibly have jumped even from a ground-floor
+window and trampled on the flower-bed without staining her skirts.
+
+“Then there was another point which the clever lawyer brought to the
+coroner’s notice. As Alice Holt had stated in her sworn evidence that
+Mme. Quesnard had owned to being frightened of Lady Barnsdale that
+night, was it likely that she would _of her own accord_ have opened
+the door to her in the middle of the night, without at least calling
+for assistance?
+
+“Thus the matter has remained a strange and unaccountable puzzle. It
+has always been called the ‘Barnsdale Mystery’ for that very reason.
+Every one, somehow, has always felt that Lady Barnsdale did have
+something to do with that terrible tragedy. Her husband has taken her
+abroad, and they have let Barnsdale Manor; it almost seems as if the
+ghost of the old Frenchwoman had driven them forth from their own
+country.
+
+“As for Alice Holt, she maintains to this day that Lady Barnsdale was
+the culprit, and I understand that she has not yet given up all hope
+of collecting a sufficiency of evidence to have the beautiful and
+fashionable woman of society arraigned for this hideous murder.”
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+“Will she succeed, do you think?” I asked at last.
+
+“Succeed? Of course she won’t,” he retorted excitedly. “Lady Barnsdale
+never committed that murder; no woman, except, perhaps, an East-end
+factory hand, could have done it at all.”
+
+“But then——” I urged.
+
+“Why, then,” he replied, with a chuckle, “the only logical conclusion
+is that the robbery and the murder were not committed by the same
+person, nor at the same hour of the night; moreover, I contend that
+there was no premeditated murder, but that the old lady died from the
+result of a pure accident.”
+
+“But how?” I gasped.
+
+“This is my version of the story,” he said excitedly, as his long bony
+fingers started fidgeting, fidgeting with that eternal bit of string.
+“Lady Barnsdale, pressed for money, made an appeal to Mme. Quesnard,
+which the latter refused, as we know. Then there was an acrimonious
+dispute between the two ladies, after which came the dinner hour, then
+Madame, feeling ill and upset, went up to bed at nine o’clock.
+
+“Now my contention is that undoubtedly the robbery had been committed
+before that, between the dispute and Madame’s bedtime.”
+
+“By whom?”
+
+“By Lady Barnsdale, of course, who, as the mistress of the house,
+could come and go from room to room without exciting any comment, who,
+moreover, at 6 p.m. was hard pressed for money, and who but a few
+hours later was handling a mass of gold and banknotes.
+
+“But the strain of committing even an ordinary theft is very great
+upon a refined woman’s organisation. Lady Barnsdale has a nervous
+breakdown. Well! what is the most likely thing to happen? Why! that
+she should confess everything to her husband, who worships her, and no
+doubt express her repentance at what she had done.
+
+“Then imagine Lord Barnsdale’s horror! The old lady had not discovered
+the theft before going to bed. That was only natural, since she was
+feeling unwell, and was not likely to sit up at night counting her
+money; the lock of the bureau drawer having been tampered with, would
+perhaps not attract her attention at night.
+
+“But in the morning, the very first thing, she would discover
+everything, at once suspect the worst, and who knows, make a scandal,
+talk of it before Alice Holt, Lady Barnsdale’s arch enemy, and all
+before restitution could be made.
+
+“No, no, that restitution must be made at once! not a minute must be
+lost, since any moment might bring forth discovery, and perhaps an
+awful catastrophe.
+
+“I take it that Mme. Quesnard and her nephew were on very intimate
+terms. He hoped to arouse no one by going to his aunt’s room, but in
+order to make quite sure that Alice Holt, hearing a noise in her
+mistress’s room, should not surreptitiously come down, and perhaps
+play eavesdropper at the momentous interview, he turned the key of the
+girl’s door as he went past, and locked her in.
+
+“Then he knocked at his aunt’s door (gently, of course, for old people
+are light sleepers), and called her by name. Mme. Quesnard,
+recognising her nephew’s voice, slipped on her dressing-gown, smoothed
+her hair, and let him in.
+
+“Exactly what took place at the interview it is, of course, impossible
+for any human being to say. Here even I can but conjecture,” he added,
+with inimitable conceit, “but we can only imagine that, having heard
+Lord Barnsdale’s confession of his wife’s folly, the old lady, who as
+a Frenchwoman was of quick temper and unbridled tongue, would indulge
+in not very elegant rhetoric on the subject of the woman she had
+always disliked.
+
+“Lord Barnsdale would, of course, defend his wife, and the old lady,
+with feminine obstinacy, would continue the attack. Then some
+insulting epithet, a word only perhaps, roused the devoted husband’s
+towering indignation—the meekest man on earth becomes a mad bull when
+he really loves, and the woman he loves is insulted.
+
+“I maintain that the old lady’s death was really due to a pure
+accident; that Lord Barnsdale gripped her by the throat, in a moment
+of mad anger, at some hideous insult hurled at his wife; of that I am
+as convinced as if I had witnessed the whole scene. Then the old lady
+fell, hit her head against the marble, and Lord Barnsdale realised
+that he was alone at night in his aunt’s room, and that he had killed
+her.
+
+“What would anyone do under the circumstances?” he added excitedly.
+“Why, of course, collect his senses and try to save himself from what
+might prove to be consequences of the most awful kind. This Lord
+Barnsdale thought he could best do by giving the accident, which
+looked so like murder, the appearance of a burglary.
+
+“The lock of the desk in the next room had already been forced open;
+he now locked the door on the inside, threw open the shutter and the
+window, jumped out as any burglar would have done; and, being careful
+to obliterate his own footmarks, he crept back into the house and
+thence into his own room, without alarming the watch-dog, who
+naturally knew his own master. He was, of course, just in time before
+Alice Holt succeeded in rousing the household with her screams.
+
+“And thus you see,” he added, “there are no such things as mysteries.
+The police call them so, so do the public, but every crime has its
+perpetrator, and every puzzle its solution. My experience is that the
+simplest solution is invariably the right one.”
+
+
+The End
+
+
+
+Transcriber’s Notes
+
+This transcription follows the text of the original 1909 publication.
+However, the following alterations have been made to correct what are
+believed to be unambiguous errors in the text:
+
+ * “interwined” has been changed to “intertwined” (I., Ch. I).
+ * “Chiselhurst” has been changed to “Chislehurst” (IV., Ch. IV).
+ * “Vandervellen” has been changed to “Vanderdellen” (IV., Ch. IV).
+ * “had affected” has been changed to “had effected” (V., Ch. II).
+ * “glanced at if” has been changed to “glanced at it” (V., Ch. II).
+ * “incoherent and definite” has been changed to
+ “coherent and definite” (VI., Ch. I).
+ * “Wembly” has been changed to “Wembley” (VI., Ch. I).
+ * “immedate” has been changed to “immediate” (VI., Ch. I).
+ * “Athur” has been changed to “Arthur” (VII., Ch. II).
+ * “cetain” has been changed to “certain” (VIII., Ch. II).
+ * “signficance” has been changed to “significance” (VIII., Ch. III).
+ * “Mr. Carlton” has been changed to “Mr. Carleton” (VIII., Ch. III).
+
+Additionally, several occurrences of incorrectly matched quotation
+marks have been repaired. All other ostensible inconsistencies have
+been left unchanged from the original.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75461 ***
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75461 ***</div>
+
+<figure>
+ <img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Book cover">
+</figure>
+
+<div class="section" id="titlepage">
+
+<h1>The Case of Miss Elliott</h1>
+<p class="authorprefix">by</p>
+<p class="author">Baroness Orczy</p>
+
+<p class="publisher">London: Greening & Co., Ltd.</p>
+<p class="publisher">1909</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="section" id="contents">
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table class="toc">
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">I.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch01-1">The Case of Miss Elliott</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">II.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch02-1">The Hocussing of Cigarette</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">III.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch03-1">The Tragedy in Dartmoor Terrace</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">IV.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch04-1">Who Stole the Black Diamonds?</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">V.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch05-1">The Murder of Miss Pebmarsh</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">VI.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch06-1">The Lisson Grove Mystery</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">VII.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch07-1">The Tremarn Case</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">VIII.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch08-1">The Fate of the <i>Artemis</i></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">IX.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch09-1">The Disappearance of Count Collini</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">X.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch10-1">The Ayrsham Mystery</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">XI.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch11-1">The Affair at the Novelty Theatre</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="n">XII.</td>
+ <td class="t"><a href="#ch12-1">The Tragedy of Barnsdale Manor</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="section" id="frontispiece">
+
+<figure>
+ <img src="images/front.jpg" alt="A horse-drawn hansom cab
+ at night-time. In the shadowy interior of the cab sits a man in
+ evening dress, leaning against the side of the cab as if dozing.
+ Another man stands beside the cab, tentatively reaching in.">
+ <figcaption>
+ “ ’E was dead and no mistake.”
+ —<a href="#front-src"><i>The Tremarn Case</i>.</a>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch01-1">
+
+<h2>I. <br> The Case of Miss Elliott</h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>The man in the corner was watching me
+over the top of his great bone-rimmed
+spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” he asked, after a little while.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” I repeated with some acerbity.
+I had been wondering for the last ten minutes
+how many more knots he would manage to
+make in that same bit of string, before he
+actually started undoing them again.</p>
+
+<p>“Do I fidget you?” he asked apologetically,
+whilst his long bony fingers buried
+themselves, string, knots, and all, into the
+capacious pockets of his magnificent tweed
+ulster.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, that is another awful tragedy,”
+he said quietly, after a while. “Lady
+doctors are having a pretty bad time of it
+just now.”</p>
+
+<p>This was only his usual habit of speaking
+in response to my thoughts. There was no
+doubt that at the present moment my mind
+was filled with that extraordinary mystery
+which was setting all Scotland Yard by the
+ears, and had completely thrown into the
+shade the sad story of Miss Hickman’s tragic
+fate.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Daily Telegraph</i> had printed two
+columns headed “Murder or Suicide?” on
+the subject of the mysterious death of Miss
+Elliott, matron of the Convalescent Home,
+in Suffolk Avenue—and I must confess that
+a more profound and bewildering mystery
+had never been set before our able detective
+department.</p>
+
+<p>“It has puzzled them this time, and no
+mistake,” said the man in the corner, with
+one of his most gruesome chuckles, “but I
+daresay the public is quite satisfied that
+there is no solution to be found, since the
+police have found none.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can you find one?” I retorted with
+withering sarcasm.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, my solution would only be sneered
+at,” he replied. “It is far too simple—and
+yet how logical! There was Miss Elliott, a
+good-looking, youngish, lady-like woman,
+fully qualified in the medical profession and
+in charge of the Convalescent Home in
+Suffolk Avenue, which is a private institution
+largely patronised by the benevolent.</p>
+
+<p>“For some time, already, there had
+appeared vague comments and rumours in
+various papers, that the extensive charitable
+contributions did not all go towards the
+up-keep of the Home. But, as is usual in
+institutions of that sort, the public was not
+allowed to know anything very definite, and
+contributions continued to flow in, whilst
+the Honorary Treasurer of the great
+Convalescent Home kept up his beautiful house
+in Hamilton Terrace, in a style which would
+not have shamed a peer of the realm.</p>
+
+<p>“That is how matters stood, when on
+2nd November last the morning papers
+contained the brief announcement that at a
+quarter past midnight two workmen walking
+along Blomfield Road, Maida Vale, suddenly
+came across the body of a young lady, lying
+on her face, close to the wooden steps of the
+narrow foot-bridge which at this point crosses
+the canal.</p>
+
+<p>“This part of Maida Vale is, as you know,
+very lonely at all times, but at night it is
+usually quite deserted. Blomfield Road, with
+its row of small houses and bits of front
+gardens, faces the canal, and beyond the
+foot-bridge is continued in a series of small
+riverside wharves, which is practically
+unknown ground to the average Londoner.
+The foot-bridge itself, with steps at right
+angles and high wooden parapet, would offer
+excellent shelter at all hours of the night for
+any nefarious deed.</p>
+
+<p>“It was within its shadows that the men
+had found the body, and to their credit be
+it said, they behaved like good and dutiful
+citizens—one of them went off in search of
+the police, whilst the other remained beside
+the corpse.</p>
+
+<p>“From papers and books found upon her
+person, it was soon ascertained that the
+deceased was Miss Elliott, the young matron
+of the Suffolk Avenue Convalescent Home;
+and as she was very popular in her profession
+and had a great many friends, the terrible
+tragedy caused a sensation, all the more
+acute as very quickly the rumour gained
+ground that the unfortunate young woman
+had taken her own life in a most gruesome
+and mysterious manner.</p>
+
+<p>“Preliminary medical and police investigation
+had revealed the fact that Miss Elliott
+had died through a deep and scientifically-administered
+gash in the throat, whilst the
+surgical knife with which the deadly wound
+was inflicted still lay tightly grasped in her
+clenched hand.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch01-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>The man in the corner, ever conscious of
+any effect he produced upon my excited
+imagination, had paused for a while, giving
+me time, as it were, to co-ordinate in my
+mind the few simple facts he had put before
+me. I had no wish to make a remark,
+knowing of old that my one chance of getting
+the whole of his interesting argument was
+to offer neither comment nor contradiction.</p>
+
+<p>“When a young, good-looking woman in
+the heyday of her success in an interesting
+profession,” he began at last, “is alleged to
+have committed suicide, the outside public
+immediately want to know the reason why
+she did such a thing, and a kind of
+freemasonic, amateur detective work goes on,
+which generally brings a few important truths
+to light. Thus, in the case of Miss Elliott,
+certain facts had begun to leak out, even
+before the inquest, with its many sensational
+developments. Rumours concerning the
+internal administration, or rather
+maladministration of the Home began to take more
+definite form.</p>
+
+<p>“That its finances had been in a very
+shaky condition for some time was known
+to all those who were interested in its welfare.
+What was not so universally known was that
+few hospitals had had more munificent
+donations and subscriptions showered upon them
+in recent years, and yet it was openly spoken
+of by all the nurses that Miss Elliott had on
+more than one occasion petitioned for actual
+necessities for the patients—necessities which
+were denied to her on the plea of necessary
+economy.</p>
+
+<p>“The Convalescent Home was, as sometimes
+happens in institutions of this sort,
+under the control of a committee of benevolent
+and fashionable people who understood
+nothing about business, and less still about
+the management of a hospital. Dr. Kinnaird,
+President of the institution, was a young,
+eminently successful consultant; he had
+recently married the daughter of a peer, who
+had boundless ambitions for herself and her
+husband.</p>
+
+<p>“Dr. Kinnaird, by adding the prestige
+of his name to the Home, no doubt felt that
+he had done enough for its welfare. Against
+that, Dr. Stapylton, Honorary Secretary and
+Treasurer of the Home, threw himself heart
+and soul into the work connected with it,
+and gave a great deal of his time to it. All
+subscriptions and donations went, of course,
+through his hands, the benevolent and
+fashionable committee being only too willing
+to shift all their financial responsibilities on
+to his willing shoulders. He was a very
+popular man in society—a bachelor with a
+magnificent house in Hamilton Terrace, where
+he entertained the more eminent and
+fashionable clique in his own profession.</p>
+
+<p>“It was the evening papers, however,
+which contained the most sensational development
+of this tragic case. It appears that on
+the Saturday afternoon Mary Dawson, one
+of the nurses in the Home was going to the
+house surgeon’s office with a message from
+the head nurse, when her attention was
+suddenly arrested in one of the passages by
+the sound of loud voices proceeding from one
+of the rooms. She paused to listen for a
+moment and at once recognised the voices
+of Miss Elliott and of Dr. Stapylton, the
+Honorary Treasurer and Chairman of
+Committee.</p>
+
+<p>“The subject of conversation was evidently
+that of the eternal question of finance.
+Miss Elliott spoke very indignantly, and
+Nurse Dawson caught the words:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Surely you must agree with me that
+Dr. Kinnaird ought to be informed at
+once.’</p>
+
+<p>“Dr. Stapylton’s voice in reply seems to
+have been at first bitingly sarcastic, then
+threatening. Dawson heard nothing more
+after that, and went on to deliver her message.
+On her way back she stopped in the passage
+again, and tried to listen. This time it seemed
+to her as if she could hear the sound of some
+one crying bitterly, and Dr. Stapylton’s
+voice speaking very gently.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You may be right, Nellie,’ he was
+saying. ‘At any rate, wait a few days
+before telling Kinnaird. You know what he
+is—he’ll make a frightful fuss and——’</p>
+
+<p>“Whereupon Miss Elliott interrupted him.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘It isn’t fair to Dr. Kinnaird to keep
+him in ignorance any longer. Whoever the
+thief may be it is your duty or mine to expose
+him, and if necessary bring him to justice.’</p>
+
+<p>“There was a good deal of discussion at
+the time, if you remember, as to whether
+Nurse Dawson had overheard and repeated
+this speech accurately: whether, in point of
+fact, Miss Elliott had used the words ‘<em>or</em>
+mine’ or ‘<em>and</em> mine.’ You see the neat
+little point, don’t you?” continued the man
+in the corner. “The little word ‘and’
+would imply that she considered herself at
+one with Dr. Stapylton in the matter, but
+‘or’ would mean that she was resolved to
+act alone if he refused to join her in
+unmasking the thief.</p>
+
+<p>“All these facts, as I remarked before, had
+leaked out, as such facts have a way of doing.
+No wonder, therefore, that on the day fixed for
+the inquest the coroner’s court was filled to
+overflowing, both with the public—ever eager
+for new sensations—and with the many
+friends of the deceased lady, among whom
+young medical students of both sexes and
+nurses in uniform were most conspicuous.</p>
+
+<p>“I was there early, and therefore had a
+good seat, from which I could comfortably
+watch the various actors in the drama about
+to be performed. People who seemed to be
+in the know pointed out various personages
+to one another, and it was a matter of note
+that, in spite of professional engagements,
+the members of the staff of the Convalescent
+Home were present in full force and stayed on
+almost the whole time. The personages who
+chiefly arrested my attention were, firstly,
+Dr. Kinnaird, a good-looking Irishman of
+about forty, and President of the institution;
+also Dr. Earnshaw, a rising young consultant,
+with boundless belief in himself written all
+over his pleasant rubicund countenance.</p>
+
+<p>“The expert medical evidence was once
+again thoroughly gone into. There was
+absolutely no doubt that Miss Elliott had
+died from having her throat cut with the
+surgical knife which was found grasped in
+her right hand. There was absolutely no
+signs of a personal struggle in the immediate
+vicinity of the body, and rigid examination
+proved that there was no other mark of
+violence upon the body; there was nothing
+therefore, to prove that the poor girl had
+not committed suicide in a moment of mental
+aberration or of great personal grief.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, it was strange that she should
+have chosen this curious mode of taking her
+own life. She had access to all kinds of
+poisons, amongst which her medical knowledge
+could prompt her to choose the least painful
+and most efficacious ones. Therefore, to
+have walked out on a Sunday night to a
+wretched and unfrequented spot and there
+committed suicide in that grim fashion
+seemed almost the work of a mad woman.
+And yet the evidence of her family and
+friends all tended to prove that Miss Elliott
+was a peculiarly sane, large-minded, and
+happy individual.</p>
+
+<p>“However, the suicide theory was at this
+stage of the proceedings taken as being
+absolutely established, and when
+Police-Constable Fiske came forward to give his
+evidence no one in the court was prepared
+for a statement which suddenly revealed
+this case to be as mysterious as it was tragic.</p>
+
+<p>“Fiske’s story was this: Close upon
+midnight on that memorable Sunday night he
+was walking down Blomfield Road along the
+side of the canal and towards the foot-bridge,
+when he overtook a lady and gentleman
+who were walking in the same direction
+as himself. He turned to look at them, and
+noticed that the gentleman was in evening
+dress and wore a high hat, and that the lady
+was crying.</p>
+
+<p>“Blomfield Road is at best very badly
+lighted, especially on the side next to the
+canal, where there are no lamps at all. Fiske,
+however, was prepared to swear positively
+that the lady was the deceased. As for the
+gentleman, he might know him again or he
+might not.</p>
+
+<p>“Fiske then crossed the foot-bridge, and
+walked on towards the Harrow Road. As he
+did so, he heard St. Mary Magdalen’s church
+clock chime the hour of midnight. It was a
+quarter of an hour after that, that the body
+of the unfortunate girl was found, and
+clasping in her hand the knife with which
+that awful deed had been done. By whom?
+Was it really by her own self? But if so,
+why did not that man in evening dress who
+had last seen her alive come forward and
+throw some light upon this fast thickening
+veil of mystery?</p>
+
+<p>“It was Mr. James Elliott, brother of the
+deceased, however, who first mentioned a
+name then in open court, which has ever since
+in the minds of every one been associated with
+Miss Elliott’s tragic fate.</p>
+
+<p>“He was speaking in answer to a question
+of the coroner’s anent his sister’s disposition
+and recent frame of mind.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘She was always extremely cheerful,’ he
+said, ‘but recently had been peculiarly bright
+and happy. I understood from her that this
+was because she believed that a man for
+whom she had a great regard was also very
+much attached to her, and meant to ask her
+to be his wife.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘And do you know who this man was?’
+asked the coroner.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Oh, yes,’ replied Mr. Elliott, ‘it was
+Dr. Stapylton.’</p>
+
+<p>“Every one had expected that name of
+course, for every one remembered Nurse
+Dawson’s story, yet when it came, there crept
+over all those present an undescribable feeling
+that something terrible was impending.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Is Dr. Stapylton here?’</p>
+
+<p>“But Dr. Stapylton had sent in an excuse.
+A professional case of the utmost urgency
+had kept him at a patient’s bedside. But
+Dr. Kinnaird, the President of the institution,
+came forward.</p>
+
+<p>“Questioned by the coroner, Dr. Kinnaird,
+however, who evidently had a great regard
+for his colleague, repudiated any idea that
+the funds of the institution had ever been
+tampered with by the Treasurer.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘The very suggestion of such a thing,’
+he said, ‘was an outrage upon one of the
+most brilliant men in the profession.’</p>
+
+<p>“He further added that, although he knew
+that Dr. Stapylton thought very highly of
+Miss Elliott, he did not think that there was
+any actual engagement, and most decidedly
+he (Dr. Kinnaird) had heard nothing of any
+disagreement between them.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Then did Dr. Stapylton never tell you
+that Miss Elliott had often chafed under the
+extraordinary economy practised in the
+richly-endowed Home?’ asked the coroner again.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘No,’ replied Dr. Kinnaird.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Was not that rather strange reticence?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Certainly not. I am only the Honorary
+President of the institution—Stapylton has
+chief control of its finances.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Ah!’ remarked the coroner blandly.</p>
+
+<p>“However, it was clearly no business of
+his at this moment to enter into the financial
+affairs of the Home. His duty at this point
+was to try and find out if Dr. Stapylton and
+the man in evening dress were one and the
+same person.</p>
+
+<p>“The men who found the body testified to
+the hour: a quarter past midnight. As
+Fiske had seen the unfortunate girl alive a
+little before twelve, she must have been
+murdered or had committed suicide between
+midnight and a quarter past. But there
+was something more to come.</p>
+
+<p>“How strange and dramatic it all was!”
+continued the man in the corner, with a
+bland smile, altogether out of keeping with
+the poignancy of his narrative; “all these
+people in that crowded court trying to
+reconstruct the last chapter of that bright young
+matron’s life and then—but I must not
+anticipate.</p>
+
+<p>“One more witness was to be heard—one
+whom the police, with a totally unconscious
+sense of what is dramatic, had reserved for
+the last. This was Dr. Earnshaw, one of the
+staff of the Convalescent Home. His evidence
+was very short, but of deeply momentous
+import. He explained that he had consulting
+rooms in Weymouth Street, but resided in
+Westbourne Square. On Sunday, 1st November,
+he had been dining out in Maida Vale,
+and returning home a little before midnight
+saw a woman standing close by the steps of
+the foot-bridge in the Blomfield Road.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I had been coming down Formosa
+Street and had not specially taken notice of
+her, when just as I reached the corner of
+Blomfield Road she was joined by a man in
+evening dress and high hat. Then I crossed
+the road, and recognised both Miss Elliott
+and——’</p>
+
+<p>“The young doctor paused, almost as if
+hesitating before the enormity of what he
+was about to say, whilst the excitement in
+court became almost painful.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘And——?’ urged the coroner.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘And Dr. Stapylton,’ said Dr. Earnshaw
+at last, almost under his breath.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You are quite sure?’ asked the
+coroner.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Absolutely positive. I spoke to them
+both, and they spoke to me.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘What did you say?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Oh, the usual, “Hello, Stapylton,” to
+which he replied, “Hello!” I then said
+“Good-night” to them both, and Miss Elliott
+also said “Good-night.” I saw her face
+more clearly then, and thought that she
+looked very tearful and unhappy, and
+Stapylton looked ill-tempered. I wondered
+why they had chosen that unhallowed spot
+for a midnight walk.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘And you say the hour was——?’ asked
+the coroner.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Ten minutes to twelve. I looked at
+my watch as I crossed the foot-bridge, and
+had heard a quarter to twelve strike five
+minutes before.’</p>
+
+<p>“Then it was that the coroner adjourned
+the inquest. Dr. Stapylton’s attendance had
+become absolutely imperative. According to
+Dr. Earnshaw’s testimony, he had been with
+deceased certainly a quarter of an hour before
+she met her terrible death. Fiske had seen
+them together ten minutes later; she was
+then crying bitterly. There was as yet no
+actual charge against the fashionable and
+rich doctor, but already the ghostly bird of
+suspicion had touched him with its ugly
+wing.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch01-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>“As for the next day,” continued the man
+in the corner after a slight pause, “I can
+assure you that there was not a square foot of
+standing room in the coroner’s court for the
+adjourned inquest. It was timed for eleven
+a.m., and at six o’clock on that cold winter’s
+morning the pavement outside the court was
+already crowded. As for me, I always
+manage to get a front seat, and I did on that
+occasion, too. I fancy that I was the first
+among the general public to note Dr. Stapylton
+as he entered the room accompanied by his
+solicitor, and by Dr. Kinnaird, with whom
+he was chatting very cheerfully and pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>“Mind you, I am a great admirer of the
+medical profession, and I think a clever and
+successful doctor usually has a most delightful
+air about him—the consciousness of great
+and good work done—with profit to himself—which
+is quite unique and quite admirable.</p>
+
+<p>“Dr. Stapylton had that air even to a
+greater extent than his colleague, and from
+the affectionate way in which Dr. Kinnaird
+finally shook him by the hand, it was quite
+clear that the respected chief of the
+Convalescent Home, at any rate, refused to
+harbour any suspicion of the integrity of its
+Treasurer.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I must not weary you by dwelling
+on the unimportant details of this momentous
+inquest. Constable Fiske, who was asked to
+identify the gentleman in evening dress
+whom he had seen with the deceased at a few
+minutes before twelve, failed to recognise
+Dr. Stapylton very positively: pressed very
+closely, he finally refused to swear either
+way. Against that, Dr. Earnshaw repeated
+clearly and categorically, looking his colleague
+straight in the face the while, the damnatory
+evidence he had given the day before.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I saw Dr. Stapylton, I spoke to him, and
+he spoke to me,’ he repeated most
+emphatically.</p>
+
+<p>“Every one in that court was watching
+Dr. Stapylton’s face, which wore an air of
+supreme nonchalance, even of contempt, but
+certainly neither of guilt nor of fear.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, by that time <em>I</em> had fully made
+up my mind as to where the hitch lay in
+this extraordinary mystery; but no one else
+had, and every one held their breath as Dr.
+Stapylton quietly stepped into the box, and
+after a few preliminary questions the coroner
+asked him very abruptly:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You were in the company of the deceased
+a few minutes before she died, Dr.
+Stapylton?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Pardon me,’ replied the latter quietly,
+‘I last saw Miss Elliott alive on Saturday
+afternoon, just before I went home from my
+work.’</p>
+
+<p>“This calm reply, delivered without a
+tremor, positively made every one gasp. For
+the moment coroner and jury were alike
+staggered.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘But we have two witnesses here who
+saw you in the company of the deceased
+within a few minutes of twelve o’clock on the
+Sunday night!’ the coroner managed to
+gasp out at last.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Pardon me,’ again interposed the doctor,
+‘these witnesses were mistaken.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Mistaken!’</p>
+
+<p>“I think every one would have shouted
+out the word in boundless astonishment had
+they dared to do so.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Dr. Earnshaw was mistaken,’ reiterated
+Dr. Stapylton quietly. ‘He neither saw me
+nor did he speak to me.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You can substantiate that, of course?’
+queried the coroner.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Pardon me,’ once more said the doctor,
+with utmost calm, ‘it is surely Dr. Earnshaw
+who should substantiate <em>his</em> statement.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘There is Constable Fiske’s corroborative
+evidence for that,’ retorted the coroner,
+somewhat nettled.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Hardly, I think. You see, the constable
+states that he saw a gentleman in evening
+dress, etc., talking to the deceased at a
+minute or two before twelve o’clock, and that
+when he heard the clock of St. Mary Magdalen
+chime the hour of midnight he was just
+walking away from the foot-bridge. Now,
+just as that very church clock was chiming
+that hour, I was stepping into a cab at the
+corner of Harrow Road, not a hundred yards
+<em>in front</em> of Constable Fiske.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You swear to that?’ queried the
+coroner in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I can easily prove it,’ said Dr. Stapylton.
+‘The cabman who drove me from there to
+my club is here and can corroborate my
+statement.’</p>
+
+<p>“And amidst boundless excitement, John
+Smith, a hansom cab-driver, stated that he
+was hailed in the Harrow Road by the last
+witness, who told him to drive to the Royal
+Clinical Club, in Mardon Street. Just as he
+started off, St. Mary Magdalen’s church, close
+by, struck the hour of midnight.</p>
+
+<p>“At that very moment, if you remember,
+Constable Fiske had just crossed the
+foot-bridge, and was walking towards the Harrow
+Road, and he was quite sure (for he was
+closely questioned afterwards) that no one
+overtook him from behind. Now there would
+be no way of getting from one side of the
+canal to the other at this point except over
+that foot-bridge; the nearest bridge is fully
+two hundred yards further down the Blomfield
+Road. The girl was alive a minute <em>before</em>
+the constable crossed the foot-bridge, and it
+would have been absolutely impossible for
+any one to have murdered a girl, placed the
+knife in her hand, run a couple of hundred
+yards to the next bridge and another three
+hundred to the corner of Harrow Road, all
+in the space of three minutes.</p>
+
+<p>“This <i>alibi</i>, therefore, absolutely cleared
+Dr. Stapylton from any suspicion of having
+murdered Miss Elliott. And yet, looking
+on that man as he sat there, calm, cool and
+contemptuous, no one could have had the
+slightest doubt but that he was lying—lying
+when he said he had not seen Miss
+Elliott that evening; lying when he denied
+Dr. Earnshaw’s statement; lying when he
+professed himself ignorant of the poor girl’s
+fate.</p>
+
+<p>“Dr. Earnshaw repeated his statement
+with the same emphasis, but it was one
+man’s word against another’s, and as Dr.
+Stapylton was so glaringly innocent of the
+actual murder, there seemed no valid reason
+at all why he should have denied having seen
+her that night, and the point was allowed to
+drop. As for Nurse Dawson’s story of his
+alleged quarrel with Miss Elliott on the
+Saturday night, Dr. Stapylton again had a
+simple and logical explanation.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘People who listen at keyholes,’ he said
+quietly, ‘are apt to hear only fragments of
+conversation, and often mistake ordinary
+loud voices for quarrels. As a matter of
+fact, Miss Elliott and I were discussing the
+dismissal of certain nurses from the Home,
+whom she deemed incompetent. Nurse
+Dawson was among that number. She desired
+their immediate dismissal, and I tried to
+pacify her. That was the subject of my
+conversation with the deceased lady. I can
+swear to every word of it.’ ”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch01-4">
+
+<h3>Chapter IV</h3>
+
+<p>The man in the corner had long ceased
+speaking, and was placing quietly before me
+a number of photographs. One by one I
+saw the series of faces which had been watched
+so eagerly in the coroner’s court that
+memorable afternoon by an excited crowd.</p>
+
+<p>“So the fate of poor Miss Elliott has
+remained wrapt in mystery?” I said
+thoughtfully at last.</p>
+
+<p>“To every one,” rejoined the funny
+creature, “except to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! What is your theory, then?”</p>
+
+<p>“A simple one, dear lady: so simple that
+it really amazes me, that no one, not even
+you, my faithful pupil, ever thought of it.”</p>
+
+<p>“It may be so simple that it becomes
+idiotic,” I retorted with lofty disdain.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, that may be. Shall I at any rate
+try to make it clear.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you like.”</p>
+
+<p>“For this I think the best way would be,
+if you were to follow me through what
+transpired before the inquest. But first tell
+me, what do you think of Dr. Earnshaw’s
+statement?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” I replied, “a good many people
+thought that it was he who murdered Miss
+Elliott, and that his story of meeting Dr.
+Stapylton with her was a lie from beginning
+to end.”</p>
+
+<p>“Impossible!” he retorted, making an
+elaborate knot in his bit of string. “Dr.
+Earnshaw’s friends, with whom he had been
+dining that night, swore that he was <em>not</em> in
+evening dress, nor wore a high hat. And on
+that point—the evening dress, and the
+hat—Constable Fiske was most positive.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then Dr. Earnshaw was mistaken, and
+it was not Dr. Stapylton he met.”</p>
+
+<p>“Impossible!” he shrieked, whilst another
+knot went to join its fellows. “He spoke to
+Dr. Stapylton, and Dr. Stapylton spoke to
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well, then,” I argued; “why should
+Dr. Stapylton tell a lie about it? He had
+such a conclusive <i>alibi</i> that there could be
+no object in his making a false statement
+about that.”</p>
+
+<p>“No object!” shrieked the excited
+creature. “Why, don’t you <em>see</em> that he had
+to tell the lie in order to set police, coroner
+and jury by the ears, because he did not
+wish it to be even remotely hinted at, that
+the man whom Dr. Earnshaw saw with Miss
+Elliott, and the man whom Constable Fiske
+saw with her ten minutes later, were <em>two
+different persons</em>.”</p>
+
+<p>“Two different persons!” I ejaculated.</p>
+
+<p>“Ay! two confederates in this villany.
+No one has ever attempted to deny the truth
+of the shaky finances of the Home; no one
+has really denied that Miss Elliott suspected
+certain defalcations and was trying to force
+the hands of the Honorary Treasurer towards
+a full enquiry. That the Honorary Treasurer
+knew where all the money went to was
+pretty clear all along—his magnificent house
+in Hamilton Terrace fully testifies to that.
+That the President of the institution was a
+party to these defalcations and largely
+profited by them I for one am equally
+convinced.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dr. Kinnaird?” I ejaculated in
+amazement.</p>
+
+<p>“Ay, Dr. Kinnaird. Do you mean to tell
+me that he alone among the entire staff of
+that Home was ignorant of those defalcations?
+Impossible! And if he knew of them, and
+did neither inquire into them nor attempt to
+stop them, then he <em>must</em> have been a party to
+them. Do you admit that?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I admit that,” I replied.</p>
+
+<p>“Very well, then. The rest is quite simple.
+Those two men, unworthy to bear the noble
+appellation of doctor, must for years have
+quietly stolen the money subscribed by the
+benevolent for the Home, and converted it
+to their own use: then, they suddenly find
+themselves face to face with immediate
+discovery in the shape of a young girl
+determined to unmask the systematic frauds of
+the past few years. That meant exposure,
+disgrace, ruin for them both, and they
+determine to be rid of her.</p>
+
+<p>“Under the pretence of an evening walk,
+her so-called lover entices her to a lonely and
+suitable spot; his confederate is close by,
+hidden in the shadows, ready to give him
+assistance if the girl struggles and screams.
+But suddenly Dr. Earnshaw appears. He
+recognises Stapylton and challenges him.
+For a moment the villains are nonplussed,
+then Kinnaird—the cleverer of the
+two—steps forward, greets the two lovers
+unconcernedly, and after two minutes’ conversation
+casually reminds Stapylton of an appointment
+the latter is presumed to have at a
+club in St. James’ Street.</p>
+
+<p>“The latter understands and takes the
+hint, and takes a quick farewell of the girl,
+leaving her in his friend’s charge, then as
+fast as he can, goes off, presently takes a
+cab, leaving his friend to do the deed, whilst
+the <i>alibi</i> he can prove, coupled with Dr.
+Earnshaw’s statement, was sure to bewilder
+and mislead the police and the public.</p>
+
+<p>“Thus it was that though Dr. Earnshaw
+saw and recognised Dr. Stapylton, Constable
+Fiske saw Dr. Kinnaird, whom he did <em>not</em>
+recognise, on whom no suspicion had fallen,
+and whose name had never been coupled
+with that of Miss Elliott. When Constable
+Fiske had turned his back, Kinnaird murdered
+the girl and went off quietly, whilst
+Dr. Stapylton, on whom all suspicions were
+bound to fasten sooner or later, was able to
+prove the most perfect <i>alibi</i> ever concocted.</p>
+
+<p>“One day I feel certain that the frauds
+at the Home will be discovered, and then
+who knows what else may see the light?</p>
+
+<p>“Think of it all quietly when I am gone,
+and to-morrow when we meet tell me whether
+if <em>I</em> am wrong what is <em>your</em> explanation of
+this extraordinary mystery.”</p>
+
+<p>Before I could reply he had gone, and I
+was left wondering, gazing at the photographs
+of two good-looking, highly respectable and
+respected men, whom an animated scarecrow
+had just boldly accused of committing
+one of the most dastardly crimes ever recorded
+in our annals.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch02-1">
+
+<h2>II. <br> The Hocussing of Cigarette</h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>Quite by chance I found myself one morning
+sitting before a marble-topped table in the
+A.B.C. shop. I really wondered for the
+moment what had brought me there, and
+felt cross with myself for being there at all.
+Having sampled my tea and roll, I soon
+buried myself in the capacious folds of my
+<i>Daily Telegraph</i>.</p>
+
+<p>“A glass of milk and a cheesecake, please,”
+said a well-known voice.</p>
+
+<p>The next moment I was staring into the
+corner, straight at a pair of mild, watery
+blue eyes, hidden behind great bone-rimmed
+spectacles, and at ten long bony fingers,
+round which a piece of string was provokingly
+intertwined.</p>
+
+<p>There he was as usual, wearing—for it
+was chilly—a huge tweed ulster, of a pattern
+too lofty to be described. Smiling, bland,
+apologetic, and fidgety, he sat before me as
+the living embodiment of the reason why I
+had come to the A.B.C. shop that morning.</p>
+
+<p>“How do you do?” I said with as much
+dignity as I could command.</p>
+
+<p>“I see that you are interested in Cigarette,”
+he remarked, pointing to a special column in
+the <i>Daily Telegraph</i>.</p>
+
+<p>“She is quite herself again,” I said.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but you don’t know who tried to
+poison her and succeeded in making her very
+ill. You don’t know whether the man Palk
+had anything to do with it, whether he was
+bribed, or whether it was Mrs. Keeson or the
+groom Cockram who told a lie, or why——?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” I admitted reluctantly; “I don’t
+know any of these things.”</p>
+
+<p>He was fidgeting nervously in the corner,
+wriggling about like an animated scarecrow.
+Then suddenly a bland smile illuminated his
+entire face. His long bony finger had caught
+the end of the bit of string, and there he was
+at it again, just as I had seen him a year ago,
+worrying and fidgeting, making knot upon
+knot, and untying them again, whilst his blue
+eyes peered at me over the top of his gigantic
+spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>“I would like to know what your theory
+is about the whole thing,” I was compelled
+to say at last; for the case had interested
+me deeply, and, after all, I had come to the
+A.B.C. shop for the sole purpose of discussing
+the adventures of Cigarette with him.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, my theories are not worth considering,”
+he said meekly. “The police would
+not give me five shillings for any one of
+them. They always prefer a mystery to any
+logical conclusion, if it is arrived at by an
+outsider. But you may be more lucky. The
+owner of Cigarette did offer £100 reward for
+the elucidation of the mystery. The noble
+Earl must have backed Cigarette for all he
+was worth. Malicious tongues go even so
+far as to say that he is practically a ruined
+man now, and that the beautiful Lady Agnes
+is only too glad to find herself the wife of
+Harold Keeson, the son of the well-known
+trainer.</p>
+
+<p>“If you ever go to Newmarket,” continued
+the man in the corner, after a slight pause,
+during which he had been absorbed in
+unravelling one of his most complicated knots,
+“any one will point out the Keesons’ house
+to you. It is called Manor House, and
+stands in the midst of beautiful gardens.
+Mr. Keeson himself is a man of about fifty,
+and, as a matter of fact, is of very good
+family, the Keesons having owned property
+in the Midlands for the past eight hundred
+years. Of this fact he is, it appears, extremely
+proud. His father, however, was a notorious
+spendthrift, who squandered his property,
+and died in the nick of time, leaving his
+son absolutely penniless and proud as Lucifer.</p>
+
+<p>“Fate, however, has been kind to George
+Keeson. His knowledge of horses and of all
+matters connected with the turf stood him
+in good stead; hard work and perseverance
+did the rest. Now, at fifty years of age, he
+is a very rich man, and practically at the
+head of a profession, which if not exactly
+that of a gentleman, is, at any rate, highly
+remunerative.</p>
+
+<p>“He owns Manor House, and lived there
+with his young wife and his only son and
+heir, Harold.</p>
+
+<p>“It was Mr. Keeson who had trained
+Cigarette for the Earl of Okehampton, and
+who, of course, had charge of her during her
+apprenticeship, before she was destined to
+win a fortune for her owner, her trainer, and
+those favoured few who had got wind of her
+capabilities. For Cigarette was to be kept
+a dark horse—not an easy matter in these
+days, when the neighbourhood of every
+racecourse abounds with rascals who eke
+out a precarious livelihood by various methods
+more or less shady, of which the gleaning of
+early information is perhaps the least
+disreputable.</p>
+
+<p>“Fortunately for Mr. Keeson, however, he
+had in the groom, Cockram, a trusted and
+valued servant, who had been in his employ
+for over ten years. To say that Cockram
+took a special pride in Cigarette would be
+but to put it mildly. He positively loved
+the mare, and I don’t think that any one ever
+doubted that his interest in her welfare was
+every bit as keen as that of the Earl of
+Okehampton or of Mr. Keeson.</p>
+
+<p>“It was to Cockram, therefore, that Mr.
+Keeson entrusted the care of Cigarette. She
+was lodged in the private stables adjoining
+the Manor House, and during the few days
+immediately preceding the ‘Coronation
+Stakes’ the groom practically never left her
+side, either night or day. He slept in the
+loosebox with her, and ate all his meals in
+her company; nor was any one allowed to
+come within measurable distance of the living
+treasure, save Mr. Keeson or the Earl of
+Okehampton himself.</p>
+
+<p>“And yet, in spite of all these precautions,
+in spite of every care that human ingenuity
+could devise, on the very morning of the
+race Cigarette was seized with every symptom
+of poisoning, and although, as you say, she
+is quite herself again now, she was far too
+ill to fulfil her engagement, and, if rumour
+speaks correctly, completed thereby the ruin
+of the Earl of Okehampton.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch02-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>The man in the corner looked at me through
+his bone-rimmed spectacles, and his mild blue
+eyes gazed pleasantly into mine.</p>
+
+<p>“You may well imagine,” he continued,
+after a while, “what a thunderbolt such a
+catastrophe means to those whose hopes of a
+fortune rested upon the fitness of the bay
+mare. Mr. Keeson lost his temper for an
+instant, they say—but for one instant
+only. When he was hastily summoned
+at six o’clock in the morning to Cigarette’s
+stables, and saw her lying on the straw, rigid
+and with glassy eyes, he raised his heavy
+riding-whip over the head of Cockram.
+Some assert that he actually struck him, and
+that the groom was too wretched and too
+dazed to resent either words or blows. After
+a good deal of hesitation he reluctantly
+admitted that for the first time since Cigarette
+had been in his charge he had slept long and
+heavily.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I am such a light sleeper, you know, sir,’
+he said in a tear-choked voice. ‘Usually I
+could hear every noise the mare made if she
+stirred at all. But there—last night I
+cannot say <em>what</em> happened. I remember that
+I felt rather drowsy after my supper, and
+must have dropped off to sleep very quickly.
+Once during the night I woke up; the mare
+was all right then.’</p>
+
+<p>“The man paused, and seemed to be
+searching for something in his mind—the
+recollection of a dream, perhaps. But the
+veterinary surgeon, who was present at the
+time, having also been hastily summoned
+to the stables, took up the glass which had
+contained the beer for Cockram’s supper.
+He sniffed it, and then tasted it, and said
+quietly:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘No wonder you slept heavily, my man.
+This beer was drugged: it contained opium.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Drugged!’ ejaculated Cockram, who,
+on hearing this fact, which in every way
+exonerated him from blame, seemed more
+hopelessly wretched than he had been before.</p>
+
+<p>“It appears that every night Cockram’s
+supper was brought out to him in the stables
+by one of the servants from the Manor House.
+On this particular night Mrs. Keeson’s maid,
+a young girl named Alice Image, had brought
+him a glass of beer and some bread and
+cheese on a tray at about eleven o’clock.</p>
+
+<p>“Closely questioned by Mr. Keeson, the
+girl emphatically denied all knowledge of
+any drug in the beer. She had often taken
+the supper-tray across to Cockram, who was
+her sweetheart, she said. It was usually
+placed ready for her in the hall, and when
+she had finished attending upon her mistress’s
+night toilet she went over to the stables with
+it. She had certainly never touched the
+beer, and the tray had stood in its accustomed
+place on the hall table looking just the same
+as usual. ‘As if I’d go and poison my
+Cockram!’ she said in the midst of a deluge
+of tears.</p>
+
+<p>“All these somewhat scanty facts crept
+into the evening papers that same day.
+That an outrage of a peculiarly daring and
+cunning character had been perpetrated was
+not for a moment in doubt. So much money
+had been at stake, so many people would be
+half ruined by it, that even the non-racing
+public at once took the keenest interest in
+the case. All the papers admitted, of course,
+that for the moment the affair seemed
+peculiarly mysterious, yet all commented upon
+one fact, which they suggested should prove
+an important clue: this fact was Cockram’s
+strange attitude.</p>
+
+<p>“At first he had been dazed—probably
+owing to the after-effects of the drug; he
+had also seemed too wretched even to resent
+Mr. Keeson’s very natural outburst of wrath.
+But then, when the presence of the drug in
+his beer was detected, which proved <em>him</em>
+at any rate, to have been guiltless in the
+matter, his answers, according to all accounts,
+became somewhat confused; and all Mr.
+Keeson and the ‘vet.,’ who were present,
+got out of him after that, was a perpetual
+ejaculation: ‘What’s to be done? What’s
+to be done?’</p>
+
+<p>“Two days later the sporting papers were
+the first to announce, with much glee, that,
+thanks to the untiring energy of the Scotland
+Yard authorities, daylight seemed at last
+to have been brought to bear upon the
+mystery which surrounded the dastardly
+outrage on the Earl of Okehampton’s mare,
+Cigarette, and that an important arrest in
+connection with it had already been effected.</p>
+
+<p>“It appears that a man named Charles
+Palk, seemingly of no address, had all along
+been suspected of having at least a hand in
+the outrage. He was believed to be a
+bookmaker’s tout, and was a man upon whom
+the police had long since kept a watchful eye.
+Palk had been seen loafing round the Manor
+House for the past week, and had been
+warned off the grounds once or twice by the
+grooms.</p>
+
+<p>“It now transpired that on the day
+preceding the outrage he had hung about the
+neighbourhood of the Manor House the
+whole afternoon, trying to get into
+conversation with the stable-boys, or even with
+Mr. Keeson’s indoor servants. No one,
+however, would have anything to do with him,
+as Mr. Keeson’s orders in those respects were
+very strict: he had often threatened any
+one of his <i>employés</i> with instant dismissal
+if he found him in company with one of
+these touts.</p>
+
+<p>“Detective Twiss, however, who was in
+charge of the case, obtained the information
+that Alice Image, the maid, had been seen
+on more than one occasion talking to Palk,
+and that on the very day before the Coronation
+Stakes she had been seen in his company.
+Closely questioned by the detective, Alice
+Image at first denied her intercourse with
+the tout, but finally was forced to admit
+that she had held conversation with him
+once or twice.</p>
+
+<p>“She was fond of putting a bit now and
+again upon a horse, but Cockram, she added,
+was such a muff that he never would give
+her a tip, for he did not approve of betting
+for young women. Palk had always been
+very civil and nice-spoken she further
+explained. Moreover, he came from Buckinghamshire,
+her own part of the country, where
+she was born; anyway, she had never had
+cause to regret having entrusted a
+half-sovereign or so of her wages to him.</p>
+
+<p>“All these explanations delivered by Alice
+Image, with the flow of tears peculiar to her
+kind, were not considered satisfactory, and
+the next day she and Charles Palk were both
+arrested on the charge of being concerned in
+the poisoning of the Earl of Okehampton’s
+mare Cigarette, with intent to do her grievous
+bodily harm.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch02-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>“These sort of cases,” continued the man in
+the corner after a slight pause, during which
+his nervous fingers toyed incessantly with
+that eternal bit of string—“these sort of
+cases always create a great deal of attention
+amongst the public, the majority of whom
+in this country have very strong sporting
+proclivities. It was small wonder, therefore,
+when Alice Image and Charles Palk were
+brought before the local magistrates, that
+the court was crowded to overflowing, both
+with Pressmen and with the general public.</p>
+
+<p>“I had all along been very much interested
+in the case, so I went down to Newmarket,
+and, in spite of the huge crowd, managed to
+get a good seat, whence I could command a
+full view of the chief personages concerned in
+this thrilling sporting drama.</p>
+
+<p>“Firstly, there was the Earl of
+Okehampton—good-looking, but for an unmistakable air
+of the broken-down sporting man about his
+whole person; the trainer, Mr. Keeson—a
+lean, clean-shaven man, with a fine, proud
+carriage, and a general air of ancient lineage
+and the ‘Domesday Booke’ about him; Mrs.
+Keeson—a pale, nervous-looking creature,
+who seemed very much out of place in this
+sporting set; and, finally, the accused—Alice
+Image, dissolved in tears, and Charles
+Palk, over-dressed, defiant, horsey, and
+unsympathetic.</p>
+
+<p>“There was also Cockram, the groom. My
+short-sighted eyes had fastened on him the
+moment I entered the court. A more
+wretched, miserable, bewildered expression I
+have never seen on any man’s face.</p>
+
+<p>“Both Alice Image and Charles Palk flatly
+denied the charge. Alice declared, amid a
+renewed deluge of tears, that she was engaged
+to be married to Cockram, that she ‘no more
+would have hurt him or the pretty creature
+he was in charge of, for anything.’ How
+could she? As for Palk—conscious, no doubt,
+of his own evil reputation—he merely
+contented himself with shrugging his shoulders
+and various denials, usually accompanied
+with emphatic language.</p>
+
+<p>“As neither of the accused attempted to
+deny that they had been together the day
+before the outrage, there was no occasion to
+call witnesses to further prove that fact.
+Both, however, asserted emphatically that
+their conversation was entirely confined to
+the subject of Alice’s proposed flutters on
+the favourite for the next day’s race.</p>
+
+<p>“Thus the only really important witness
+was the groom Cockram. Once again his
+attitude as a witness caused a great deal
+of surprise, and gradually, as he gave his
+evidence in a peculiarly halting and nervous
+manner, that surprise was changed into
+suspicion.</p>
+
+<p>“Questioned by the magistrate, he tried
+his hardest to exonerate Alice from all blame;
+and yet when asked whether he had cause to
+suspect any one else he became more
+confused than ever, said, ‘No,’ emphatically
+first, then, ‘Yes,’ and finally looked round
+the court appealingly, like some poor animal
+at bay. That the man was hiding something,
+that he was, in point of fact, lying, was
+apparent to every one. He had drunk the
+beer, he said, unsuspectingly, on that fatal
+night; he had then dropped off to sleep
+almost immediately, and never woke until
+about six a.m., when a glance at the mare
+at once told him that there was something
+very wrong.</p>
+
+<p>“However, whether Cockram was lying
+or not—whether he suspected any one else
+or was merely trying to shield his sweetheart,
+there was, in the opinion of the magistrate,
+quite sufficient evidence to prove that
+Alice Image, at any rate, had a hand in the
+hocussing of Cigarette, since it was she who
+had brought the drugged beer to Cockram.
+Beyond that there was not sufficient evidence
+to show either that she was a tool in the
+hands of Palk, or that they both were merely
+instruments in the hands of some third
+person.</p>
+
+<p>“Anyway, the magistrate—it was Major
+Laverton, J.P., a great personal friend of
+the Earl of Okehampton, and a remarkably
+clever and acute man—tried his hardest to
+induce Alice to confess. He questioned the
+poor girl so closely and so rigorously that
+gradually she lost what little self-control she
+had, and every one in the court blamed
+Major Laverton not a little, for he was
+gradually getting the poor girl into a state
+of hysterics.</p>
+
+<p>“As for me, I inwardly commended the
+learned J.P., for already I had guessed what
+he was driving at, and was not the least
+astonished when the dramatic incident
+occurred which rendered this case so
+memorable.</p>
+
+<p>“Alice Image, namely, now thoroughly
+unnerved, harassed with the Major’s
+questions, suddenly turned to where Cockram
+was sitting, and, with a hysterical cry, she
+stretched out both her arms towards him.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Joe! my Joe!’ she cried; ‘you know
+I didn’t do it! Can’t you do anything to
+help me?’</p>
+
+<p>“It was pathetic in the extreme: every
+one in the court felt deeply moved. As for
+Cockram, a sudden change came over him.
+I am accustomed to read the faces of my
+fellow men, and in that rough countenance
+I saw then emerging, in response to the
+girl’s appeal, a quick and firm resolution.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Ay, and I will, Alice!’ he said, jumping
+to his feet. ‘I have tried to do my duty.
+If the gentlemen will hear me I will say all
+I know.’</p>
+
+<p>“Needless to say ‘the gentlemen’ were
+only too ready to hear him. Like a man
+who, having made up his mind, is now
+resolved to act upon it, the groom Cockram
+began his story.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I told your worship that, having drunk
+the beer that night, I dropped off to sleep
+very fast and very heavy-like. How long
+I’d been asleep I couldn’t say, when suddenly
+something seemed not exactly to wake me,
+but to dispel my dreams, so to speak. I
+opened my eyes, and at first I couldn’t see
+anything, as the gas in the stable was turned
+on very low; but I put out my hand to feel
+the mare’s fetlocks, just by way of telling her
+that I was there all right enough, and looking
+after her—bless her! At that moment, your
+worship, I noticed that the stable-door was
+open, and that some one—I couldn’t see who
+it was—was goin’ out of it. “Who goes
+there!” says I, for I still felt very sleepy
+and dull, when, to my astonishment, who
+should reply to me but——’</p>
+
+<p>“The man paused, and once more over
+his rough, honest face came the old look of
+perplexity and misery.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘But——?’ queried the magistrate,
+whose nerves were obviously as much on
+tension as those of every one else in that
+court.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Speak, Joe—won’t you?’ appealed
+Alice Image pathetically.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘But the mistress—Mrs. Keeson, sir,’
+came from the groom in an almost inaudible
+whisper. ‘You know, ma’am,’ he added,
+while the gathering tears choked his voice,
+‘I wouldn’t ’ave spoke. But she’s my
+sweetheart, ma’am; and I couldn’t bear that the
+shame should rest on her.’</p>
+
+<p>“There was a moment’s deadly silence in
+that crowded court. Every one’s eyes wandered
+towards the pale face of Mrs. Keeson,
+which, however, though almost livid in colour,
+expressed nothing but the most boundless
+astonishment. As for Mr. Keeson, surprise,
+incredulity, then furious wrath at the slander,
+could be seen chasing one another upon his
+handsome face.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘What lie is this?’ burst involuntarily
+from his lips, as his fingers closed more
+tightly upon the heavy riding-whip which
+he was holding.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Silence, please!’ said the Major with
+authority. ‘Now, Cockram, go on. You
+say Mrs. Keeson spoke to you. What did
+she say?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘She seemed rather upset, sir,’ continued
+Cockram, still looking with humble apology
+across at his mistress, ‘for she only
+stammered something about: “Oh, it’s nothing,
+Cockram. I only wanted to speak to my
+son—er—to Mr. Harold—I——” ’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Harold?’ thundered Mr. Keeson, who
+was fast losing his temper.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I must ask you, Mr. Keeson, to be
+silent,’ said the Major. ‘Go on, Cockram.’</p>
+
+<p>“And Cockram continued his narrative:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘ “Mr. Harold, ma’am?” I said.
+“What should ’e be doing ’ere in the stables
+at this time of night?” “Oh, nothing,”
+says she to me, “I thought I saw him come
+in here. I must have been mistaken. Never
+mind, Cockram; it’s all right. Good-night.”</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I said good-night too, and then fell
+to wondering what Mr. ’Arold could have
+wanted prowling round the stables at this
+hour of the night. Just then the clock of
+St. Saviour’s struck four o’clock, and while
+I was still wondering I fell asleep again, and
+never awoke till six, when the mare was
+as sick as she could be. And that’s the whole
+truth, gentlemen; and I would never have
+spoke—for Mr. and Mrs. Keeson have always
+been good to me, and I’d have done anything
+to save them the disgrace—but Alice is goin’
+to be my wife, and I couldn’t bear any shame
+to rest upon ’er.’</p>
+
+<p>“When Cockram had finished speaking
+you might have heard a pin drop as Major
+Laverton asked Mrs. Keeson to step into
+the witness-box. She looked fragile and
+pale but otherwise quite self-possessed, as
+she quietly kissed the book and said in a
+very firm tone of voice:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I can only say in reply to the extraordinary
+story which this man has just told
+that the drug in the beer must have given
+him peculiarly vivid dreams. At the hour
+he names I was in bed fast asleep, as my
+husband can testify; and the whole of
+Cockram’s narrative is a fabrication from
+beginning to end. I may add that I am
+more than willing to forgive him. No doubt
+his brain was clouded by the opiate; and
+now he is beside himself owing to Alice
+Image’s predicament. As for my son Harold,
+he was absent from home that night; he
+was spending it with some bachelor friends
+at the “Stag and Mantle” hotel in
+Newmarket.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes! By the way,’ said the magistrate,
+‘where is Mr. Harold Keeson? I have
+no doubt that he will be able to give a very
+good account of himself on that memorable
+night.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘My son is abroad, your worship,’ said
+Mrs. Keeson, while a shade of a still more
+livid hue passed over her face.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Abroad, is he?’ said the magistrate
+cheerfully. ‘Well, that settles the point
+satisfactorily for him—doesn’t it? When
+did he go?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Last Thursday, your worship,’ replied
+Mrs. Keeson.</p>
+
+<p>“Then there was silence again in the
+court, for that last Thursday was the day
+of the ‘Coronation Stakes’—the day
+immediately following the memorable night on
+which the mare Cigarette had been poisoned
+by an unknown hand.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch02-4">
+
+<h3>Chapter IV</h3>
+
+<p>“I doubt whether in all the annals of criminal
+procedure there ever occurred a more dramatic
+moment than that when so strange a ray of
+daylight was shed on the mysterious outrage
+on Cigarette. The magistrate, having
+dismissed Mrs. Keeson, hardly dared to look
+across at the trainer, who was a personal
+friend of his, and who had just received such
+a cruel blow through this terrible charge
+against his only son—for at that moment
+I doubt if there were two people in that
+court who did not think that Mrs. Keeson
+had just sworn a false oath, and that
+both she and her son had been in the
+stables that night—for what purpose only
+they and their own conscience could tell.</p>
+
+<p>“Alice Image and Charles Palk were both
+discharged; and it is greatly to the credit
+of Cockram that in the midst of his joy in
+seeing his sweetheart safe he still remained
+very gloomy and upset. As for Mr. Keeson,
+he must have suffered terribly at all this
+mud cast at his only son. He had been
+wounded in what he worshipped more than
+anything else in the world—his family honour.
+What was the use of money and the old
+estates if such a stain rested upon his name?</p>
+
+<p>“As for Mrs. Keeson, public sympathy
+was very much overshadowed with contempt
+for her stupidity. Had she only held her
+tongue when Cockram challenged her,
+suspicion would never have fastened upon
+Harold. The fact that she had lied in the
+witness-box in order to try and remedy her
+blunder was also very severely commented
+upon. The young man had gone abroad
+on that memorable Thursday accompanied
+by two of his bachelor friends. They had
+gone on a fishing expedition to Norway, and
+were not expected home for three weeks.
+As they meant to move from place to place
+they had left no address: letters and
+telegrams were therefore useless.</p>
+
+<p>“During those three weeks pending Harold
+Keeson’s return certain facts leaked out
+which did not tend to improve his case. It
+appears that he had long been in love with
+Lady Agnes Stourcliffe, the daughter of the
+Earl of Okehampton. Some people asserted
+that the young people were actually—though
+secretly—engaged. The Earl, however, seems
+all along to have objected to the marriage
+of his daughter with the son of a trainer, and
+on more than one occasion had remarked
+that he had not sunk quite so low yet as to
+allow so preposterous a <i>mésalliance</i>. Mr.
+Keeson, whose family pride was at least
+equal to that of the Earl, had naturally very
+much resented this attitude, and had often
+begged his son to give up his pretensions,
+since they were manifestly so unwelcome.</p>
+
+<p>“Harold Keeson, however, was deeply in
+love; and Lady Agnes stuck to him with
+womanly constancy and devotion.
+Unfortunately a climax was reached some days
+before the disastrous events at Newmarket.
+The Earl of Okehampton suddenly took up
+a very firm stand on the subject of Harold
+Keeson’s courtship of his daughter. Some
+hot words were exchanged between the two
+men, ending in an open breach, the Earl
+positively forbidding the young man ever
+to enter his house again.</p>
+
+<p>“Harold was terribly unhappy at this
+turn of events. Pride forbade him to take
+an unfair advantage of a young girl’s
+devotion, and, acting on the advice of his
+parents, he started for his tour in Norway,
+ostensibly in order to try and forget the
+fair Lady Agnes. This unhappy love-affair,
+ending in an open and bitter quarrel between
+himself and the owner of Cigarette, did—as
+I said before—the young man’s case no
+good. At the instance of the Earl of
+Okehampton, who determined to prosecute him,
+he was arrested on landing at Harwich.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” continued the man in the corner,
+“the next events must be still fresh in your
+mind. When Harold Keeson appeared in
+the dock, charged with such meanness as
+to wreak his private grievance upon a dumb
+animal, public sympathy at once veered
+round in his favour. He looked so handsome,
+so frank and honest, that at once one felt
+convinced that <em>his</em> hand, at any rate, could
+never have done such a dastardly thing.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Keeson, who was a rich man, moreover,
+had enlisted the services of Sir Arthur
+Inglewood, who had, in the short time at
+his disposal, collected all the most important
+evidence on behalf of his client.</p>
+
+<p>“The two young men who had been
+travelling in Norway with Harold Keeson
+had been present with him on the memorable
+night at a bachelor party given by a mutual
+friend at the ‘Stag and Mantle.’ Both
+testified that the party had played bridge
+until the small hours of the morning, that
+between two rubbers—the rooms being very
+hot—they had all strolled out to smoke a
+cigar in the streets. Just as they were about
+to re-enter the hotel two church clocks—one
+of which was St. Saviour’s—chimed out
+the hour—four o’clock.</p>
+
+<p>“Four o’clock was the hour when Cockram
+said that he had spoken to Mrs. Keeson.
+Harold had not left the party at the ‘Stag
+and Mantle’ since ten o’clock, which was
+an hour before Alice Image took the drugged
+beer to the groom. The whole edifice of
+the prosecution thus crumbled together like
+a house of cards, and Harold Keeson was
+discharged, without the slightest suspicion
+clinging to him.</p>
+
+<p>“Six months later he married Lady Agnes
+Stourcliffe. The Earl, now a completely
+ruined man, offered no further opposition to
+the union of his daughter with a man who,
+at any rate, could keep her in comfort and
+luxury; for though both Mr. Keeson and
+his son lost heavily through Cigarette’s illness,
+yet the trainer was sufficiently rich to offer
+his son and his bride a very beautiful home.”</p>
+
+<p>The man in the corner called to the waitress,
+and paid for his glass of milk and cheesecake,
+whilst I remained absorbed in thought, gazing
+at the <i>Daily Telegraph</i>, which, in its “London
+Day by Day,” had this very morning
+announced that Mr. and Lady Agnes Keeson
+had returned to town from “The Rookery,”
+Newmarket.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch02-5">
+
+<h3>Chapter V</h3>
+
+<p>“But who poisoned Cigarette?” I asked
+after a while; “and why?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, who did, I wonder?” he replied
+with exasperating mildness.</p>
+
+<p>“Surely you have a theory,” I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, but my theories are not worth
+considering. The police would take no notice
+of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why did Mrs. Keeson go to the stables
+that night? Did she go?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Cockram swears she did.”</p>
+
+<p>“She swears she didn’t. If she did why
+should she have asked for her son? Surely
+she did not wish to incriminate her son in
+order to save herself?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he replied; “women don’t save
+themselves usually at the expense of their
+children, and women don’t usually ‘hocus’
+a horse. It is not a female crime at
+all—is it?”</p>
+
+<p>The aggravating creature was getting
+terribly sarcastic; and I began to fear that
+he was not going to speak, after all. He
+was looking dejectedly all around him. I
+had one or two parcels by me. I undid a
+piece of string from one of them, and handed
+it to him with the most perfectly indifferent
+air I could command.</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder if it was Cockram who told
+a lie?” I then said unconcernedly.</p>
+
+<p>But already he had seized on that bit of
+string, and, nervously now, his long fingers
+began fashioning a series of complicated knots.</p>
+
+<p>“Let us take things from the beginning,”
+he said at last. “The beginning of the
+mystery was the contradictory statements
+made by the groom Cockram and Mrs. Keeson
+respectively. Let us take, first of all, the
+question of the groom. The matter is simple
+enough: either he saw Mrs. Keeson or he
+did not. If he did not see her then he must
+have told a lie, either unintentionally or by
+design—unintentionally if he was mistaken;
+but this could not very well be since he
+asserted that Mrs. Keeson spoke to him, and
+even mentioned her son, Mr. Harold Keeson.
+Therefore, if Cockram did not see Mrs. Keeson
+he told a lie by design for some purpose of
+his own. You follow me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” I replied; “I have thought all
+that out for myself already.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well. Now, could there be some
+even remotely plausible motive why Cockram
+should have told that deliberate lie?”</p>
+
+<p>“To save his sweetheart, Alice Image,”
+I said.</p>
+
+<p>“But you forget that his sweetheart was
+not accused at first, and that, from the
+very beginning, Cockram’s manner, when
+questioned on the subject of the events of
+that night was strange and contradictory in
+the extreme.”</p>
+
+<p>“He may have known from the first that
+Alice Image was guilty,” I argued.</p>
+
+<p>“In that case he would have merely
+asserted that he had seen and heard nothing
+during the night, or if he wished to lie about
+it, he would have said that it was Palk,
+the tout, who sneaked into the stables,
+rather than incriminate his mistress, who
+had been good and kind to him for years.”</p>
+
+<p>“He may have wished to be revenged on
+Mrs. Keeson for some reason which has not
+yet transpired.”</p>
+
+<p>“How? By making a statement which,
+if untrue, could be so easily disproved by
+Mr. Keeson himself, who, as a matter of
+fact, could easily assert that his wife did
+not leave her bedroom that night; or by
+incriminating Mr. Harold Keeson, who could
+prove an <i>alibi</i>? Not much of a revenge
+there, you must admit. No, no; the more
+you reflect seriously upon these possibilities
+the deeper will become your conviction that
+Cockram did not lie either accidentally or
+on purpose; that he did see Mrs. Keeson
+at that hour at the stable-door; that she
+did speak to him; and that it was she who
+told the lie in open court.”</p>
+
+<p>“But,” I asked, feeling more bewildered
+than before, “why should Mrs. Keeson have
+gone to the stables and asked for her son
+when she must have known that he was not
+there, but that her inquiry would make it,
+to say the least, extremely unpleasant for
+him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?” he shrieked excitedly, jumping
+up like a veritable jack-in-the-box. “Ah,
+if you would only learn to reflect you might
+in time become a fairly able journalist.
+Why did Mrs. Keeson momentarily
+incriminate her son?—for it was only a
+momentary incrimination. Think, think! A
+woman does not incriminate her child to
+save herself; but she might do it to save
+some one else—some one who was dearer
+to her than that child.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nonsense!” I protested.</p>
+
+<p>“Nonsense, is it?” he replied. “You
+have only to think of the characters of the
+chief personages who figured in the drama—of
+the trainer Keeson, with his hasty temper
+and his inordinate family pride. Was it
+likely when the half-ruined Earl of
+Okehampton talked of <i>mésalliance</i>, and forbade
+the marriage of his daughter with his trainer’s
+son that the latter would not resent that
+insult with terrible bitterness? and, resenting
+it, not think of some means of being even
+with the noble Earl? Can you not imagine
+the proud man boiling with indignation on
+hearing his son’s tale of how Lord Okehampton
+had forbidden him the house? Can you
+not hear him saying to himself:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well, by —— the trainer’s son <em>shall</em>
+marry the Earl’s daughter!’</p>
+
+<p>“And the scheme—simple and effectual—whereby
+the ruin of the arrogant nobleman
+would be made so complete that he would
+be only too willing to allow his daughter to
+marry any one who would give her a good
+home and him a helping hand?”</p>
+
+<p>“But,” I objected, “why should Mr.
+Keeson take the trouble to drug the groom
+and sneak out to the stables at dead of
+night when he had access to the mare at all
+hours of the day?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?” shrieked the animated scarecrow.
+“Why? Because Keeson was just
+one of those clever criminals, with a
+sufficiency of brains to throw police and public
+alike off the scent. Cockram, remember,
+spent every moment of the day and night
+with the mare. Therefore, if he had been
+in full possession of his senses and could
+positively swear that no one had had access
+to Cigarette but his master and himself,
+suspicion was bound to fasten, sooner or
+later, on Keeson. But Keeson was a bit of a
+genius in the criminal line. Seemingly, he
+could have had no motive for drugging the
+groom, yet he added that last artistic touch
+to his clever crime, and thus threw a final
+bucketful of sand in the eyes of the police.”</p>
+
+<p>“Even then,” I argued, “Cockram might
+just have woke up—might just have caught
+Keeson in the act.”</p>
+
+<p>“Exactly. And that is, no doubt, what
+Mrs. Keeson feared.</p>
+
+<p>“She was a brave woman, if ever there
+was one. Can you not picture her, knowing
+her husband’s violent temper, his indomitable
+pride, and guessing that he would find some
+means of being revenged on the Earl of
+Okehampton. Can you not imagine her
+watching her husband and gradually guessing,
+realising what he had in his mind when, in
+the middle of the night, she saw him steal
+out of bed and out of the house? Can you
+not see her following him stealthily—afraid
+of him, perhaps—not daring to interfere—terrified
+above all things of the consequences
+of his crime, of the risks of Cockram waking
+up, of the exposure, the disgrace?</p>
+
+<p>“Then the final tableau:—Keeson having
+accomplished his purpose, goes back towards
+the house, and she—perhaps with a vague
+hope that she might yet save the mare by
+taking away the poison which Keeson had
+prepared—in her turn goes to the stables.
+But this time the groom is half awake, and
+challenges her. Then her instinct—that
+unerring instinct which always prompts a really
+good woman when the loved one is in
+danger—suggests to Mrs. Keeson the clever
+subterfuge of pretending that she had seen her
+son entering the stables.</p>
+
+<p>“She asks for him, <em>knowing well that she
+could do him no harm</em> since he could so easily
+prove an <i>alibi</i>, but thereby throwing a
+veritable cloud of dust in the eyes of the
+keenest enquirer, and casting over the hocussing
+of Cigarette so thick a mantle of mystery
+that suspicion, groping blindly round, could
+never fasten tightly on any one.</p>
+
+<p>“Think of it all,” he added as, gathering
+up his hat and umbrella, he prepared to go,
+“and remember at the same time that it
+was Mr. Keeson alone who could disprove
+that his wife never left her room that night,
+that he did not do this, that he guessed what
+she had done and why she had done it, and
+I think that you will admit that not one
+link is missing in the chain of evidence which
+I have had the privilege of laying before
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>Before I could reply he had gone, and I
+saw his strange scarecrow-like figure
+disappearing through the glass door. Then I
+had a good think on the subject of the
+hocussing of Cigarette, and I was reluctantly
+bound to admit that once again the man
+in the corner had found the only possible
+solution to the mystery.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch03-1">
+
+<h2>III. <br> The Tragedy in Dartmoor Terrace</h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>“It is not by any means the Law and
+Police Courts that form the only interesting
+reading in the daily papers,” said the man
+in the corner airily, as he munched his
+eternal bit of cheesecake and sipped his
+glass of milk, like a frowsy old tom-cat.</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t agree with me,” he added,
+for I offered no comment to his obvious
+remark.</p>
+
+<p>“No?” I answered. “I suppose you
+were thinking——”</p>
+
+<p>“Of the tragic death of Mrs. Yule, for
+instance,” he replied eagerly. “Beyond
+the inquest, and its very unsatisfactory
+verdict, very few circumstances connected
+with that interesting case ever got into
+the papers at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“I forget what the verdict actually
+was,” I said, eager, too, on my side to
+hear him talk about that mysterious
+tragedy, which, as a matter of fact, had
+puzzled a good many people.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, it was as vague and as wordy as
+the English language would allow. The jury
+found that ‘Mrs. Yule had died through
+falling downstairs, in consequence of a fainting
+attack, but <em>how</em> she came to fall is not
+clearly shown.’</p>
+
+<p>“What had happened was this: Mrs.
+Yule was a rich and eccentric old lady, who
+lived very quietly in a small house in
+Kensington; No. 9 Dartmoor Terrace is, I
+believe, the correct address.</p>
+
+<p>“She had no expensive tastes, for she
+lived, as I said before, very simply and
+quietly in a small Kensington house, with
+two female servants—a cook and a
+housemaid—and a young fellow whom she had
+adopted as her son.</p>
+
+<p>“The story of this adoption is, of course,
+the pivot round which all the circumstances
+of the mysterious tragedy revolved. Mrs.
+Yule, namely, had an only son, William, to
+whom she was passionately attached, but,
+like many a fond mother, she had the desire
+of mapping out that son’s future entirely
+according to her own ideas. William Yule,
+on the other hand, had his own views with
+regard to his own happiness, and one fine
+day went so far as to marry the girl of his
+choice, and that in direct opposition to his
+mother’s wishes.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Yule’s chagrin and horror at what
+she called her son’s base ingratitude knew
+no bounds; at first it was even thought that
+she would never get over it.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘He has gone in direct opposition to
+my fondest wishes, and chose a wife whom
+I could never accept as a daughter; he shall
+have none of the property which has enriched
+me, and which I know he covets.’</p>
+
+<p>“At first her friends imagined that she
+meant to leave all her money to charitable
+institutions; but oh! dear me, no! Mrs.
+Yule was one of those women who never did
+anything that other people expected her to.
+Within three years of her son’s marriage
+she had filled up the place which he had
+vacated, both in her house and in her heart.
+She had adopted a son, preferring, as she
+said, that her money should benefit an
+individual rather than an institution.</p>
+
+<p>“Her choice had fallen upon the only son
+of a poor man—an ex-soldier—who used
+to come twice a week to Dartmoor Terrace
+to tidy up the small garden at the back:
+he was very respectable and very honest—was
+born in the same part of England as
+Mrs. Yule, and had an only son whose name
+happened to be William; he rejoiced in the
+surname of Bloggs.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘It suits me in every way,’ explained
+Mrs. Yule to old Mr. Statham, her friend
+and solicitor. ‘You see, I am used to the
+name of William, and the boy is nice-looking
+and has done very well at the Board School.
+Moreover, old Bloggs will die within a year
+or two, and William will be left without
+any encumbrances.’</p>
+
+<p>“Herein Mrs. Yule’s prophecy proved to
+be correct. Old Bloggs did die very soon,
+and his son was duly adopted by the rich
+and eccentric old lady, sent to a good school,
+and finally given a berth in the Union Bank.</p>
+
+<p>“I saw young Bloggs—it is not a
+euphonious name, is it?—at that memorable
+inquest later on. He was very young and
+unassuming, and used to keep very much
+out of the way of Mrs. Yule’s friends, who,
+mind you, strongly disapproved of his
+presence in the rich old widow’s house, to
+the detriment of the only legitimate son and
+heir.</p>
+
+<p>“What happened within the intimate and
+close circle of 9, Dartmoor Terrace, during
+the next three years of course nobody can
+tell. Certain it is that by the time young
+Bloggs was nearing his twenty-first birthday,
+he had become the very apple of his adopted
+mother’s eye.</p>
+
+<p>“During those three years Mr. Statham
+and other old friends had worked hard in
+the interests of William Yule. Every one
+felt that the latter was being very badly
+treated indeed. He had studied painting in
+his younger days, and now had set up a
+small studio in Hampstead, and was making
+perhaps a couple of hundred or so a year,
+and that, with much difficulty, whilst the
+gardener’s son had supplanted him in his
+mother’s affections, and, worse still, in his
+mother’s purse.</p>
+
+<p>“The old lady was more obdurate than
+ever. In deference to the strong feelings of
+her friends she had agreed to see her son
+occasionally, and William Yule would call
+upon his mother from time to time—in the
+middle of the day when Bloggs was out of
+the way at the Bank—stay to tea, and part
+from her in frigid, though otherwise amicable,
+terms.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I have no ill-feeling against my son,’
+the old lady would say, ‘but when he married
+against my wishes, he became a stranger
+to me—that is all—a stranger, however,
+whose pleasant acquaintanceship I am pleased
+to keep up.’</p>
+
+<p>“That the old lady meant to carry her
+eccentricities in this respect to the bitter
+end, became all the more evident when she
+sent for her old friend and lawyer, Mr.
+Statham, and explained to him that she
+wished to make over to young Bloggs the
+whole of her property by deed of gift, during
+her lifetime—on condition that on his
+twenty-first birthday he legally took up the name
+of Yule.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Statham subsequently made public,
+as you know, the whole of this interview
+which he had with Mrs. Yule.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I tried to dissuade her, of course,’ he
+said, ‘for I thought it so terribly unfair on
+William Yule and his children. Moreover,
+I had always hoped that when Mrs. Yule
+grew older and more feeble she would surely
+relent towards her only son. But she was
+terribly obstinate.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘It is because I may become weak in
+my dotage,’ she said, ‘that I want to make
+the whole thing absolutely final—I don’t
+want to relent. I wish that William should
+suffer, where I think he will suffer most,
+for he was always over fond of money. If
+I make a will in favour of Bloggs, who knows
+I might repent it, and alter it at the eleventh
+hour? One is apt to become maudlin when
+one is dying, and has people weeping all
+round one. No!—I want the whole thing
+to be absolutely irrevocable; and I shall
+present the deed of gift to young Bloggs
+on his twenty-first birthday. I can always
+make it a condition that he keeps me in
+moderate comfort to the end of my days.
+He is too big a fool to be really ungrateful,
+and after all I don’t think I should very
+much mind ending my life in the workhouse.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘What could I do?’ added Mr. Statham.
+‘If I had refused to draw up that iniquitous
+deed of gift, she only would have employed
+some other lawyer to do it for her. As it is,
+I secured an annuity of £500 a year for the
+old lady, in consideration of a gift worth
+some £30,000 made over absolutely to Mr.
+William Bloggs.’</p>
+
+<p>“The deed was drawn up,” continued the
+man in the corner, “there is no doubt of
+that. Mr. Statham saw to it. The old lady
+even insisted on having two more legal
+opinions upon it, lest there should be the
+slightest flaw that might render the deed
+invalid. Moreover, she caused herself to be
+examined by two specialists in order that
+they might testify that she was absolutely
+sound in mind, and in full possession of all
+her faculties.</p>
+
+<p>“When the deed was all that the law
+could wish, Mr. Statham handed it over to
+Mrs. Yule, who wished to keep it by her
+until 3rd April—young Bloggs’ twenty-first
+birthday—on which day she meant to
+surprise him with it.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Statham handed over the deed to
+Mrs. Yule on 14th February, and on
+28th March—that is to say, six days before
+Bloggs’ majority—the old lady was found
+dead at the foot of the stairs in Dartmoor
+Terrace, whilst her desk was found to
+have been broken open, and the deed of
+gift had disappeared.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch03-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>“From the very first the public took a very
+great interest in the sad death of Mrs. Yule.
+The old lady’s eccentricities were pretty well
+known throughout all her neighbourhood,
+at any rate. Then, she had a large circle of
+friends, who all took sides, either for the
+disowned son or for the old lady’s rigid and
+staunch principles of filial obedience.</p>
+
+<p>“Directly, therefore, that the papers
+mentioned the sudden death of Mrs. Yule,
+tongues began to wag, and, whilst some
+asserted ‘Accident,’ others had already begun
+to whisper ‘Murder.’</p>
+
+<p>“For the moment nothing definite was
+known. Mr. Bloggs had sent for Mr. Statham,
+and the most persevering and most inquisitive
+persons of both sexes could glean no
+information from the cautious old lawyer.</p>
+
+<p>“The inquest was to be held on the following
+day, and perforce curiosity had to be
+bridled until then. But you may imagine
+how that coroner’s court at Kensington was
+packed on that day. I, of course, was at
+my usual place—well to the front—for I
+was already keenly interested in the tragedy,
+and knew that a palpitating mystery lurked
+behind the old lady’s death.</p>
+
+<p>“Annie, the housemaid at Dartmoor
+Terrace, was the first, and I may say the
+only really important witness during that
+interesting inquest. The story she told
+amounted to this: Mrs. Yule, it appears,
+was very religious, and, in spite of her
+advancing years and decided weakness of
+the heart, was in the habit of going to early
+morning service every day of her life at
+six o’clock. She would get up before any
+one else in the house, and winter or summer,
+rain, snow, or fine, she would walk round to
+St. Matthias’ Church, coming home at about
+a quarter to seven, just when her servants
+were getting up.</p>
+
+<p>“On this sad morning (28th March) Annie
+explained that she got up as usual and went
+downstairs (the servants slept at the top of
+the house) at seven o’clock. She noticed
+nothing wrong, her mistress’s bedroom door
+was open as usual, Annie merely remarking
+to herself that the mistress was later than
+usual from church that morning. Then suddenly,
+in the hall at the foot of the stairs,
+she caught sight of Mrs. Yule lying head
+downwards, her head on the mat, motionless.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I ran downstairs as quickly as I could,’
+continued Annie, ‘and I suppose I must
+’ave screamed, for cook came out of ’er
+room upstairs, and Mr. Bloggs, too, shouted
+down to know what was the matter. At
+first we thought Mrs. Yule was unconscious-like.
+Me and Mr. Bloggs carried ’er to ’er
+room, and then Mr. Bloggs ran for the
+doctor.’</p>
+
+<p>“The rest of Annie’s story,” continued
+the man in the corner, “was drowned in a
+deluge of tears. As for the doctor, he could
+add but little to what the public had already
+known and guessed. Mrs. Yule undoubtedly
+suffered from a weak heart, although she
+had never been known to faint. In this
+instance, however, she undoubtedly must
+have turned giddy, as she was about to go
+downstairs, and fallen headlong. She was
+of course very much injured, the doctor
+explained, but she actually died of heart
+failure, brought on by the shock of the fall.
+She must have been on her way to church,
+for her prayer book was found on the floor
+close by her, also a candle—which she must
+have carried, as it was a dark morning—had
+rolled along and extinguished itself as
+it rolled. From these facts, therefore, it was
+gathered that the poor old lady came by
+this tragic death at about six o’clock, the
+hour at which she regularly started out for
+morning service. Both the servants and also
+Mr. Bloggs slept at the top of the house,
+and it is a known fact that sleep in most
+cases is always heaviest in the early morning
+hours; there was, therefore, nothing strange
+in the fact that no one heard either the fall
+or a scream, if Mrs. Yule uttered one, which
+is doubtful.</p>
+
+<p>“So far, you see,” continued the man in
+the corner, after a slight pause, “there did
+not appear to be anything very out of the
+way or mysterious about Mrs. Yule’s tragic
+death. But the public expected interesting
+developments, and I must say their
+expectations were more than fully realised.</p>
+
+<p>“Jane, the cook, was the first witness to
+give the public an inkling of the sensations
+to come.</p>
+
+<p>“She deposed that on Thursday, the 27th,
+she was alone in the kitchen in the evening
+after dinner, as it was the housemaid’s
+evening out, when, at about nine o’clock,
+there was a ring at the bell.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I went to answer the door,’ said Jane,
+‘and there was a lady, all dressed in black,
+as far as I could see—as the ’all gas always
+did burn very badly—still, I think she was
+dressed dark, and she ’ad on a big ’at and a
+veil with spots. She says to me: “Mrs.
+Yule lives ’ere?” I says, “She do, ’m,”
+though I don’t think she was quite the lady,
+so I don’t know why I said ’m, but——’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes, yes!’ here interrupted the coroner
+somewhat impatiently, ‘it doesn’t matter
+what you said. Tell us what happened.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes, sir,’ continued Jane, quite
+undisturbed, ‘as I was saying, I asked the lady
+her name, and she says: “Tell Mrs. Yule I
+would wish to speak with her,” then as she
+saw me ’esitating, for I didn’t like leaving
+her all alone in the ’all, she said, “Tell Mrs.
+Yule that Mrs. William Yule wishes to speak
+with ’er.” ’</p>
+
+<p>“Jane paused to take breath, for she
+talked fast and volubly, and all eyes were
+turned to a corner of the room, where William
+Yule, dressed in the careless fashion affected
+by artists, sat watching and listening eagerly
+to everything that was going on. At the
+mention of his wife’s name he shrugged his
+shoulders, and I thought for the moment
+that he would jump up and say something;
+but he evidently thought better of it,
+and remained as before, silent and quietly
+watching.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You showed the lady upstairs?’ asked
+the coroner, after an instant’s most dramatic
+pause.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes, sir,’ replied Jane; ‘but I went
+to ask the mistress first. Mrs. Yule was
+sitting in the drawing-room, reading. She
+says to me, “Show the lady up at once;
+and, Jane,” she says, “ask Mr. Bloggs to
+kindly come to the drawing-room.” I showed
+the lady up, and I told Mr. Bloggs, who was
+smoking in the library, and ’e went to the
+drawing-room.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘When Annie come in,’ continued Jane
+with increased volubility, ‘I told ’er ’oo ’ad
+come, and she and me was very astonished,
+because we ’ad often seen Mr. William Yule
+come to see ’is mother, but we ’ad never
+seen ’is wife. “Did you see what she was
+like cook?” says Annie to me. “No,” I
+says, “the ’all gas was burnin’ that badly,
+and she ’ad a veil on.” Then Annie ups and
+says, “I must go up, cook,” she says, “for
+my things is all wet. I never did see such
+rain in all my life. I tell you my boots and
+petticoats is all soaked through.” Then
+up she runs, and I thought then that per’aps
+she meant to see if she couldn’t ’ear anything
+that was goin’ on upstairs. Presently she
+come down——’</p>
+
+<p>“But at this point Jane’s flow of eloquence
+received an unexpected check. The coroner
+preferred to hear from Annie herself
+whatever the latter may have overheard, and
+Jane, very wrathful and indignant, had to
+stand aside, while Annie, who was then
+recalled, completed the story.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I don’t know what made me stop on
+the landing,’ she explained timidly, ‘and I’m
+sure I didn’t mean to listen. I was going
+upstairs to change my things, and put on
+my cap and apron, in case the mistress
+wanted anything.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Then, I don’t think I ever ’eard Mrs.
+Yule’s voice so loud and angry.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You stopped to listen?’ asked the
+coroner.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I couldn’t help it, sir. Mrs. Yule was
+shouting at the top of ’er voice. “Out of
+my house,” she says; “I never wish to see
+you or your precious husband inside my
+doors again.” ’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You are quite sure that you heard
+those very words?’ asked the coroner
+earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I’ll take my Bible oath on every one of
+them, sir,’ said Annie emphatically. ‘Then
+I could ’ear some one crying and moaning:
+“Oh! what have I done? Oh! what have
+I done?” I didn’t like to stand on the
+landing then, for fear some one should come
+out, so I ran upstairs, and put on my cap
+and apron, for I was all in a tremble, what
+with what I’d heard, and the storm outside,
+which was coming down terrible.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘When I went down again, I ’ardly durst
+stand on the landing, but the door of the
+drawing-room was ajar, and I ’eard Mr. Bloggs
+say: “Surely you will not turn a human
+being, much less a woman, out on a night
+like this?” And the mistress said, still
+speaking very angrily: “Very well, you
+may sleep here; but remember, I don’t
+wish to see your face again. I go to church
+at six and come home again at seven; mind
+you are out of the house before then. There
+are plenty of trains after seven o’clock.” ’</p>
+
+<p>“After that,” continued the man in the
+corner, “Mrs. Yule rang for the housemaid
+and gave orders that the spare-room should
+be got ready, and that the visitor should
+have some tea and toast brought to her in
+the morning as soon as Annie was up.</p>
+
+<p>“But Annie was rather late on that
+eventful morning of the 28th. She did not
+go downstairs till seven o’clock. When she
+did, she found her mistress lying dead at the
+foot of the stairs. It was not until after the
+doctor had been and gone that both the
+servants suddenly recollected the guest in
+the spare room. Annie knocked at her door,
+and, receiving no answer, she walked in; the
+bed had not been slept in, and the spare
+room was empty.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘There, now!’ was the housemaid’s
+decisive comment, ‘me and cook did ’ear
+some one cross the ’all, and the front door
+bang about an hour after every one else was
+in bed.’</p>
+
+<p>“Presumably, therefore, Mrs. William Yule
+had braved the elements and left the house
+at about midnight, leaving no trace behind
+her, save perhaps the broken lock of the
+desk that had held the deed of gift in favour
+of young Bloggs.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch03-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>“Some say there’s a Providence that watches
+over us,” said the man in the corner, when
+he had looked at me keenly, and had assured
+himself that I was really interested in his
+narrative, “others use the less poetic and
+more direct formula, that ‘the devil takes
+care of his own.’ The impression of the
+general public during this interesting coroner’s
+inquest was that the devil was taking special
+care of his own—(‘his own’ being in this
+instance represented by Mrs. William Yule,
+who, by the way, was not present).</p>
+
+<p>“What the Evil One had done for her was
+this: He caused the hall gas to burn so
+badly on that eventful Thursday night, 27th
+March, that Jane, the cook, had not been
+able to see Mrs. William Yule at all distinctly.
+He, moreover, decreed that when Annie
+went into the drawing-room later on to take
+her mistress’s orders, with regard to the
+spare room, Mrs. William was apparently
+dissolved in tears, for she only presented
+the back of her head to the inquisitive glances
+of the young housemaid.</p>
+
+<p>“After that the two servants went to bed,
+and heard some one cross the hall and leave
+the house about an hour or so later; but
+neither of them could swear positively that
+they would recognise the mysterious visitor
+if they set eyes on her again.</p>
+
+<p>“Throughout all these proceedings, however,
+you may be sure that Mr. William Yule
+did not remain a passive spectator. In fact
+I, who watched him, could see quite clearly
+that he had the greatest possible difficulty in
+controlling himself. Mind you, I knew by
+then exactly where the hitch lay, and I
+could, and will presently, tell you exactly all
+that occurred on Thursday evening, 27th
+March, at No. 9, Dartmoor Terrace, just as
+if I had spent that memorable night there
+myself; and I can assure you that it gave
+me great pleasure to watch the faces of the
+two men most interested in the verdict of
+this coroner’s jury.</p>
+
+<p>“Every one’s sympathy had by now
+entirely veered round to young Bloggs, who
+for years had been brought up to expect a
+fortune, and had then, at the last moment,
+been defrauded of it, through what looked
+already much like a crime. The deed of gift
+had, of course, not been what the lawyers
+call ‘completed.’ It had rested in Mrs.
+Yule’s desk, and had never been ‘delivered’
+by the donor to the donee, or even to another
+person on his behalf.</p>
+
+<p>“Young Bloggs, therefore, saw himself
+suddenly destined to live his life as penniless
+as he had been when he was still the old
+gardener’s son.</p>
+
+<p>“No doubt the public felt that what
+lurked mostly in his mind was a desire for
+revenge, and I think everyone forgave him
+when he gave his evidence with a distinct
+tone of animosity against the woman who
+had apparently succeeded in robbing him of
+a fortune.</p>
+
+<p>“He had only met Mrs. William Yule once
+before, he explained, but he was ready to
+swear that it was she who called that night.
+As for the original motive of the quarrel
+between the two ladies, young Bloggs was
+inclined to think that it was mostly on the
+question of money.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Mrs. William,’ continued the young
+man, ‘made certain peremptory demands on
+Mrs. Yule, which the old lady bitterly
+resented.’</p>
+
+<p>“But here there was an awful and sudden
+interruption. William Yule, now quite beside
+himself with rage, had with one bound reached
+the witness-box, and struck young Bloggs
+a violent blow in the face.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Liar and cheat!’ he roared, ‘take
+that!’</p>
+
+<p>“And he prepared to deal the young man
+another even more vigorous blow, when he
+was overpowered and seized by the constables.
+Young Bloggs had become positively
+livid; his face looked grey and ashen, except
+there, where his powerful assailant’s fist
+had left a deep purple mark.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You have done your wife’s cause no
+good,’ remarked the coroner drily, as William
+Yule, sullen and defiant, was forcibly dragged
+back to his place. ‘I shall adjourn the
+inquest until Monday, and will expect Mrs.
+Yule to be present and to explain exactly
+what happened after her quarrel with the
+deceased, and why she left the house so
+suddenly and mysteriously that night.’</p>
+
+<p>“William Yule tried an explanation even
+then. His wife had never left the studio in
+Sheriff Road, West Hampstead, the whole of
+that Thursday evening. It was a fearfully
+stormy night, and she never went outside
+the door. But the Yules kept no servant at
+the cheap little rooms; a charwoman used
+to come in every morning only for an hour
+or two, to do the rough work; there was no
+one, therefore, except the husband himself
+to prove Mrs. William Yule’s <i>alibi</i>.</p>
+
+<p>“At the adjourned inquest, on the Monday,
+Mrs. William Yule duly appeared; she was a
+young, delicate-looking woman, with a patient
+and suffering face, that had not an atom of
+determination or vice in it.</p>
+
+<p>“Her evidence was very simple; she
+merely swore solemnly that she had spent
+the whole evening indoors, she had never been
+to 9, Dartmoor Terrace, in her life, and, as a
+matter of fact, would never have dared to
+call on her irreconcilable mother-in-law.
+Neither she nor her husband were specially
+in want of money either.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘My husband had just sold a picture at
+the Water Colour Institute,’ she explained,
+‘we were not hard up; and certainly I
+should never have attempted to make the
+slightest demand on Mrs. Yule.’</p>
+
+<p>“There the matter had to rest with regard
+to the theft of the document, for that was
+no business of the coroner’s or of the jury.
+According to medical evidence the old lady’s
+death had been due to a very natural and
+possible accident—a sudden feeling of
+giddiness—and the verdict had to be in accordance
+with this.</p>
+
+<p>“There was no real proof against Mrs.
+William Yule—only one man’s word, that of
+young Bloggs; and it would no doubt always
+have been felt that his evidence might not be
+wholly unbiased. He was therefore well
+advised not to prosecute. The world was
+quite content to believe that the Yules had
+planned and executed the theft, but he
+never would have got a conviction against
+Mrs. William Yule just on his own evidence.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch03-4">
+
+<h3>Chapter IV</h3>
+
+<p>“Then William Yule and his wife were left
+in full possession of their fortune?” I asked
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, they were,” he replied; “but they
+had to go and travel abroad for a while,
+feeling was so high against them. The deed
+of course, not having been ‘delivered,’ could
+not be upheld in a court of law; that was
+the opinion of several eminent counsel whom
+Mr. Statham, with a lofty sense of justice,
+consulted on behalf of young Bloggs.”</p>
+
+<p>“And young Bloggs was left penniless?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the man in the corner, as,
+with a weird and satisfied smile, he pulled
+a piece of string out of his pocket; “the
+friends of the late Mrs. Yule subscribed the
+sum of £1,000 for him, for they all thought
+he had been so terribly badly treated, and
+Mr. Statham has taken him in his office as
+articled pupil. No! no! young Bloggs has
+not done so badly either——”</p>
+
+<p>“What seems strange to me,” I remarked
+“is that for all she knew, Mrs. William Yule
+might have committed only a silly and
+purposeless theft. If Mrs. Yule had not
+died suddenly and accidentally the next
+morning, she would, no doubt, have executed
+a fresh deed of gift, and all would have been
+<i>in statu quo</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>“Exactly,” he replied drily, whilst his
+fingers fidgeted nervously with his bit of
+string.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course,” I suggested, for I felt that
+the funny creature wanted to be drawn out;
+“she may have reckoned on the old lady’s
+weak heart, and the shock to her generally,
+but it was, after all, very problematical.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very,” he said, “and surely you are not
+still under the impression that Mrs. Yule’s
+death was purely the result of an accident?”</p>
+
+<p>“What else could it be?” I urged.</p>
+
+<p>“The result of a slight push from the top
+of the stairs,” he remarked placidly, whilst
+a complicated knot went to join a row of its
+fellows.</p>
+
+<p>“But Mrs. William Yule had left the house
+before midnight—or, at any rate, some one
+had. Do you think she had an accomplice?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think,” he said excitedly, “that the
+mysterious visitor who left the house that
+night had an instigator whose name was
+William Bloggs.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t understand,” I gasped in
+amazement.</p>
+
+<p>“Point No. 1,” he shrieked, while the row
+of knots followed each other in rapid
+succession, “young Bloggs swore a lie when he
+swore that it was Mrs. William Yule who
+called at Dartmoor Terrace that night.”</p>
+
+<p>“What makes you say that,” I retorted.</p>
+
+<p>“One very simple fact,” he replied, “so
+simple that it was, of course, overlooked.
+Do you remember that one of the things
+which Annie overheard was old Mrs. Yule’s
+irate words, ‘Very well, you may sleep here;
+but, remember, I do not wish to see your
+face again. You can leave my house before
+I return from church; you can get plenty
+of trains after seven o’clock.’ Now what
+do you make of that?” he added
+triumphantly.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing in particular,” I rejoined; “it
+was an awfully wet night, and——”</p>
+
+<p>“And High Street, Kensington Station,
+within two minutes’ walk of Dartmoor
+Terrace, with plenty of trains to West
+Hampstead, and Sheriff Road within two minutes
+of this latter station,” he shrieked, getting
+more and more excited, “and the hour only
+about ten o’clock, when there <em>are</em> plenty of
+trains from one part of London to another?
+Old Mrs. Yule, with her irascible temper
+and obstinate ways, would have said:
+‘There’s the station, not two minutes’ walk,
+get out of my house, and don’t ever let me
+see your face again,’ wouldn’t she now?”</p>
+
+<p>“It certainly seems more likely.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course it does. She only allowed the
+woman to stay because the woman had either
+a very long way to go to get a train, or
+perhaps had missed her last train—a
+connection on a branch line presumably—and
+could not possibly get home at all that night.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, that sounds logical,” I admitted.</p>
+
+<p>“Point No. 2,” he shrieked, “young Bloggs
+having told a lie, had some object in telling it.
+That was my starting point; from there I
+worked steadily until I had reconstructed
+the events of that Thursday night—nay,
+more, until I knew something more about
+young Bloggs’ immediate future, in order
+that I might then imagine his past.</p>
+
+<p>“And this is what I found.</p>
+
+<p>“After the tragic death of Mrs. Yule,
+young Bloggs went abroad at the expense of
+some kind friends, and came home with a
+wife, whom he is supposed to have met and
+married in Switzerland. From that point
+everything became clear to me. Young
+Bloggs had told a lie when he swore that it
+was Mrs. William Yule; therefore it was
+somebody who either represented herself as
+such, or who believed herself to be Mrs.
+William Yule.</p>
+
+<p>“The first supposition,” continued the
+funny creature, “I soon dismissed as
+impossible; young Bloggs knew Mrs. William
+Yule by sight—and since he had lied, he had
+done so deliberately. Therefore to my mind
+the lady who called herself Mrs. William
+Yule did so because she believed that she
+had a right to that name; that she had
+married a man, who, for purposes of his
+own, had chosen to call himself by that
+name. From this point to that of guessing
+who that man was was simple enough.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean young Bloggs himself?”
+I asked in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>“And whom else?” he replied. “Isn’t
+that sort of thing done every day? Bloggs
+was a hideous name, and Yule was eventually
+to be his own. With William Yule’s example
+before him, he must have known that it
+would be dangerous to broach the marriage
+question at all before the old lady, and
+probably only meant to wait for a favourable
+opportunity of doing so. But after a while
+the young wife would naturally become
+troubled and anxious, and like most women
+under the same circumstances, would become
+jealous and inquisitive as well.</p>
+
+<p>“She soon found out where he lived, and
+no doubt called there, thinking that old
+Mrs. Yule was her husband’s own fond
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>“You can picture the rest. Mrs. Yule,
+furious at having been deceived, herself
+destroys the deed of gift which she meant
+to present to her adopted son, and from
+that hour young Bloggs sees himself penniless.</p>
+
+<p>“The false Mrs. Yule left the house, and
+young Bloggs waited for his opportunity on
+the dark landing of a small London house.
+One push and the deed was done. With her
+weak heart, Mrs. Yule was sure to die of
+the shock, if not of the fall.</p>
+
+<p>“Before that, already the desk had been
+broken open and every appearance of a
+theft given to it. After the tragedy, then,
+young Bloggs retired quietly to his room.
+The whole thing looked so like an accident
+that, even had the servants heard the fall
+at once, there would still have been time
+enough for the young villain to sneak into
+his room, and then to reappear at his door
+as if he, too, had been just awakened by the
+noise.</p>
+
+<p>“The result turned out just as he had
+expected. The William Yules have been
+and still are suspected of the theft; and
+young Bloggs is a hero of romance with
+whom every one is in sympathy.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch04-1">
+
+<h2>IV. <br> Who Stole the Black Diamonds?</h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>“Do you know who that is?” said the
+man in the corner, as he pushed a small
+packet of photos across the table.</p>
+
+<p>The picture on the top represented an
+entrancingly beautiful woman, with bare
+arms and neck, and a profusion of pearl and
+diamond ornaments about her head and
+throat.</p>
+
+<p>“Surely this is the Queen of——?”</p>
+
+<p>“Hush!” he broke in abruptly, with mock
+dismay; “you must mention no names.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?” I asked, laughing, for he
+looked so droll in his distress.</p>
+
+<p>“Look closely at the photo,” he replied,
+“and at the necklace and tiara that the
+lady is wearing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” I said. “Well?”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean to say you don’t recognise
+them?”</p>
+
+<p>I looked at the picture more closely, and
+then there suddenly came back to my mind
+that mysterious story of the Black Diamonds,
+which had not only bewildered the police of
+Europe, but also some of its diplomats.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! I see you do recognise the jewels!”
+said the funny creature, after a while. “No
+wonder! for their design is unique, and
+photographs of that necklace and tiara were
+circulated practically throughout the world.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course I am not going to mention
+names, for you know very well who the royal
+heroes of this mysterious adventure were.
+For the purposes of my narrative, suppose I
+call them the King and Queen of ‘Bohemia.’</p>
+
+<p>“The value of the stones was said to be
+fabulous, and it was only natural when the
+King of ‘Bohemia’ found himself somewhat
+in want of money—a want which has made
+itself felt before now with even the most
+powerful European monarchs—that he should
+decide to sell the precious trinkets, worth a
+small kingdom in themselves. In order to
+be in closer touch with the most likely
+customers, their Majesties of ‘Bohemia’
+came over to England during the season of
+1902—a season memorable alike for its deep
+sorrow and its great joy.</p>
+
+<p>“After the sad postponement of the Coronation
+festivities, they rented Eton Chase,
+a beautiful mansion just outside Chislehurst,
+for the summer months. There they
+entertained right royally, for the Queen was
+very gracious and the King a real
+sportsman—there also the rumour first got about
+that His Majesty had decided to sell the
+world-famous <i>parure</i> of Black Diamonds.</p>
+
+<p>“Needless to say, they were not long in
+the market: quite a host of American
+millionaires had already coveted them for
+their wives, and brisk and sensational offers
+were made to His Majesty’s business man
+both by letter and telegram.</p>
+
+<p>“At last, however, Mr. Wilson, the
+multi-millionaire, was understood to have made an
+offer, for the necklace and tiara, of £500,000,
+which had been accepted.</p>
+
+<p>“But a very few days later, that is to say,
+on the Sunday and Monday, 6th and 7th
+July, there appeared in the papers the short
+but deeply sensational announcement that a
+burglary had occurred at Eton Chase,
+Chislehurst, the mansion inhabited by Their
+Majesties the King and Queen of ‘Bohemia’;
+and that among the objects stolen was the
+famous <i>parure</i> of Black Diamonds, for which
+a bid of half a million sterling had just been
+made and accepted.</p>
+
+<p>“The burglary had been one of the most
+daring and most mysterious ones ever brought
+under the notice of the police authorities.
+The mansion was full of guests at the time,
+among whom were many diplomatic notabilities,
+and also Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, the
+future owners of the gems; there were also
+a very large staff of servants. The burglary
+must have occurred between the hours of 10
+and 11.30 p.m., though the precise moment
+could not be ascertained.</p>
+
+<p>“The house itself stands in the midst of a
+large garden, and has deep French windows
+opening out upon a terrace at the back.
+There are ornamental iron balconies to the
+windows of the upper floors, and it was to
+one of these, situated immediately above
+the dining-room, that a rope-ladder was
+found to be attached.</p>
+
+<p>“The burglar must have chosen a moment
+when the guests were dispersed in the smoking,
+billiard, and drawing-rooms; the servants
+were having their own meal, and the
+dining-room was deserted. He must have swung
+his rope-ladder, and entered Her Majesty’s
+own bedroom by the window which—as the
+night was very warm—had been left open.
+The jewels were locked up in a small iron
+box, which stood upon the dressing-table,
+and the burglar took the box bodily away
+with him, and then, no doubt, returned the
+way he came.</p>
+
+<p>“The wonderful point in this daring
+attempt was the fact that most of the windows
+on the ground floor were slightly open that
+night, that the rooms themselves were filled
+with guests, and that the dining-room was
+not empty for more than a few minutes at a
+time, as the servants were still busy clearing
+away after dinner.</p>
+
+<p>“At nine o’clock some of the younger
+guests had strolled out on to the terrace, and
+the last of these returned to the drawing-room
+at ten o’clock; at half-past eleven one
+of the servants caught sight of the
+rope-ladder in front of one of the dining-room
+windows, and the alarm was given.</p>
+
+<p>“All traces of the burglar, however, and
+of his princely booty had completely
+disappeared.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch04-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>“Not only did this daring burglary cause a
+great deal of excitement,” continued the
+man in the corner, “but it also roused a
+good deal of sympathy in the public mind
+for the King and Queen of ‘Bohemia’ who
+thus found their hope of raising half a million
+sterling suddenly dashed to the ground. The
+loss to them would, of course, be irreparable.</p>
+
+<p>“Matters, were, however, practically at a
+standstill, all enquiries from enterprising
+journalists only eliciting the vague information
+that the police ‘held a clue.’ We all
+know what that means. Then all at once
+a wonderful rumour got about.</p>
+
+<p>“Goodness only knows how these rumours
+originate—sometimes solely in the imagination
+of the man in the street. In this instance
+certainly, that worthy gentleman had a very
+sensational theory. It was namely rumoured
+all over London that the clue which the
+police held pointed to no less a person than
+Mr. Wilson himself.</p>
+
+<p>“What had happened was this: Minute
+enquiries on the part of the most able
+detectives of Scotland Yard had brought to light
+the fact that the burglary at Eton Chase
+must have occurred precisely between ten
+minutes and a quarter past eleven; at
+every other moment of the entire evening
+somebody or other had observed either the
+terrace or the dining-room windows.</p>
+
+<p>“I told you that until ten o’clock some
+of Their Majesties’ guests were walking up
+and down the terrace; between ten and
+half-past servants were clearing away in the
+dining-room, and here it was positively
+ascertained beyond any doubt that no burglar
+could have slung a rope-ladder and climbed
+up it immediately outside those windows,
+for one or other of the six servants engaged
+in clearing away the dinner must of necessity
+have caught sight of him.</p>
+
+<p>“At half-past ten John Lucas, the head
+gardener, was walking through the gardens
+with a dog at his heels, and did not get back
+to the lodge until just upon eleven. He
+certainly did not go as far as the terrace,
+and as that side of the house was in shadow
+he could not say positively whether the
+ladder was there or not, but he certainly did
+assert most emphatically that there was no
+burglar about the <em>grounds</em> then, for the dog
+was a good watch-dog and would have barked
+if any stranger was about. Lucas took the
+dog in with him and gave him a bit of supper,
+and only fastened him to his kennel outside
+at a quarter-past eleven.</p>
+
+<p>“Surmising, therefore, that at half-past ten,
+when John Lucas started on his round, the
+deed was not yet done, that quarter of an
+hour would give the burglar the only possible
+opportunity of entering the premises <em>from
+the outside</em>, without being barked at by the
+dog. Now, during most of that same quarter
+of an hour, His Majesty the King of
+‘Bohemia’ himself had retired into a small
+library with his private secretary, in order
+to glance through certain despatches which
+had arrived earlier in the evening.</p>
+
+<p>“The window of this library was immediately
+next to the one outside which the
+ladder was found, and both the secretary and
+His Majesty himself think that they would
+have seen something or heard a noise if the
+rope-ladder had been slung while they were
+in the room. They both, however, returned
+to the drawing-room at ten minutes past
+eleven.</p>
+
+<p>“And here,” continued the man in the
+corner, rubbing his long, bony fingers together,
+“arose the neatest little complication
+I have ever come across in a case of this
+kind. His Majesty had, it appears, privately
+made up his mind to accept Mr. Wilson’s
+bid, but the transaction had not yet been
+completed. Mr. Wilson and his wife came
+down to stay at Eton Chase on 29th June,
+and directly they arrived many of those
+present noticed that Mr. Wilson was obviously
+repenting of his bargain. This impression
+had deepened day by day, Mrs. Wilson herself
+often throwing out covert hints about
+‘fictitious value’ and ‘fancy prices for
+merely notorious trinkets.’ In fact, it became
+obvious that the Wilsons were really seeking
+a loophole for evading the conclusion of the
+bargain.</p>
+
+<p>“On the memorable evening of the 5th
+July, Mrs. Wilson had been forced to retire
+to her room early in the evening, owing, she
+said, to a bad headache; her room was in
+the west wing of the Chase, and opened out
+on the same corridor as the apartments of Her
+Majesty the Queen. At half-past eleven Mrs.
+Wilson rang for her maid—Mary Pritchard,
+who, on entering her mistress’s room, met
+Mr. Wilson just coming out of it, and the girl
+heard him say: ‘Oh, don’t worry! I’ll have
+the whole reset when we get back.’</p>
+
+<p>“The detectives, on the other hand, had
+obtained information that two or three days
+previously Mr. Wilson had sustained a very
+severe loss on the ’Change, and that he had
+subsequently remarked to two or three
+business friends that the Black Diamonds
+had become a luxury which he had no right
+to afford.</p>
+
+<p>“Be this as it may, certain it is that within
+a week of the notorious burglary the rumour
+was current in every club in London that
+James S. Wilson, the reputed American
+millionaire, having found himself unable to
+complete the purchase of the Black Diamonds,
+had found this other very much less legitimate
+means of gaining possession of the gems.</p>
+
+<p>“You must admit that the case looked
+black enough against him—all circumstantial,
+of course, for there was absolutely nothing
+to prove that he had the jewels in his
+possession; in fact no trace of them whatever had
+been found, but the public argued that Mr.
+Wilson would lie low with them for a while,
+and then have them reset when he returned
+to America.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, ugly rumours of that
+description don’t become general about a man
+without his getting some inkling of them.
+Mr. Wilson very soon found his position in
+London absolutely intolerable: his friends
+ignored him at the club, ladies ceased to
+call upon his wife, and one fine day he was
+openly cut by Lord Barnsdale, an M.F.H.,
+in the hunting field.</p>
+
+<p>“Then Mr. Wilson thought it high time
+to take action. He placed the whole matter
+in the hands of an able if not very scrupulous
+solicitor who promised within a given time
+to find him a defendant with plenty of means,
+against whom he could bring a sensational
+libel suit, with thundering damages.</p>
+
+<p>“The solicitor was as good as his word.
+He bribed some of the waiters at the Carlton,
+and so laid his snares that within six months,
+Lord and Lady Barnsdale had been overheard
+to say in public what everybody now
+thought in private, namely, that Mr. James
+S. Wilson, finding himself unable to purchase
+the celebrated Black Diamonds, had thought
+it more profitable to steal them.</p>
+
+<p>“Two days later Mr. James S. Wilson
+entered an action in the High Courts for
+slander against Lord and Lady Barnsdale,
+claiming damages to the tune of £50,000.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch04-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>“Still the mystery of the lost jewels was no
+nearer to its solution. Their Majesties the
+King and Queen of ‘Bohemia,’ had left
+England soon after the disastrous event
+which deprived them of what amounted to
+a small fortune.</p>
+
+<p>“It was expected that the sensational
+slander case would come on in the autumn,
+or rather more than sixteen months after
+the mysterious disappearance of the Black
+Diamonds.</p>
+
+<p>“This last season was not a very brilliant
+one, if you remember; the wet weather, I
+believe, had quite a good deal to do with
+the fact; nevertheless London, that great
+world centre, was, as usual, full of
+distinguished visitors, among whom Mrs.
+Vanderdellen, who arrived the second week in July,
+was perhaps the most interesting.</p>
+
+<p>“Her enormous wealth spread a positive
+halo round her, it being generally asserted
+that she was the richest woman in the world.
+Add to this that she was young, strikingly
+handsome, and a widow, and you will easily
+understand what a <i>furore</i> her appearance
+during this London season caused in all
+high social circles.</p>
+
+<p>“Though she was still in slight mourning
+for her husband, she was asked everywhere,
+went everywhere, and was courted and
+admired by everybody, including some of the
+highest in the land; her dresses and jewellery
+were the talk of the ladies’ papers, her style
+and charm the gossip of all the clubs. And
+no doubt that, although the July evening
+Court promised to be very brilliant, every one
+thought that it would be doubly so, since
+Mrs. Vanderdellen had been honoured with an
+invitation, and would presumably be present.</p>
+
+<p>“I like to picture to myself that scene at
+Buckingham Palace,” continued the man
+in the corner, as his fingers toyed lovingly
+with a beautiful and brand-new bit of string.
+“Of course, I was not present actually, but
+I can see it all before me; the lights, the
+crowds, the pretty women, the glistening
+diamonds; then, in the midst of the chatter,
+a sudden silence fell as ‘Mrs. Vanderdellen’
+was announced.</p>
+
+<p>“All women turned to look at the beautiful
+American as she entered, because her dress—on
+this her first appearance at the English
+Court—was sure to be a vision of style and
+beauty. But for once nobody noticed the
+dress from Felix, nobody even gave a glance
+at the exquisitely lovely face of the wearer.
+Every one’s eyes had fastened on one thing
+only, and every one’s lips framed but one
+exclamation, and that an ‘Oh!’ half of
+amazement and half of awe.</p>
+
+<p>“For round her neck and upon her head Mrs.
+Vanderdellen was wearing a gorgeously
+magnificent <i>parure</i> composed of black diamonds.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch04-4">
+
+<h3>Chapter IV</h3>
+
+<p>“I don’t know how the case of Wilson <i>v.</i>
+Barnsdale was settled, for it never came into
+court. There were many people in London
+who owed the Wilsons an apology, and it is
+to be hoped that these were tendered in full.</p>
+
+<p>“As for Mrs. Vanderdellen, she seemed
+quite unaware why her appearance at Their
+Majesties’ Court had caused quite so much
+sensation. No one, of course, broached the
+subject of the diamonds to her, and she no
+doubt attributed those significant ‘Oh’s’
+to her own dazzling beauty.</p>
+
+<p>“The next day, however, Detective Marsh,
+of Scotland Yard, had a very difficult task
+before him. He had to go and ask a beautiful,
+rich, and refined woman how she happened
+to be in possession of stolen jewellery.</p>
+
+<p>“Luckily for Marsh, however, he had to
+deal with a woman who was also charming,
+and who met his polite enquiry with an
+equally pleasant reply:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘My husband gave me the Black
+Diamonds,’ she said, ‘a year ago on his
+return from Europe. I had them set in
+Vienna last Spring, and wore them for the
+first time last night. Will you please tell me
+the reason of this strange enquiry?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Your husband?’ echoed Marsh, ignoring
+her question, ‘Mr. Vanderdellen?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Oh, yes,’ she replied sweetly, ‘I dare
+say you have never heard of him. His name
+is very well known in America, where they
+call him the “Petrol King.” One of his
+hobbies was the collection of gems, which he
+was very fond of seeing me wear, and he
+gave me some magnificent jewels. The Black
+Diamonds certainly are very handsome. May
+I now request you to tell me,’ she repeated,
+with a certain assumption of hauteur, ‘the
+reason of all these enquiries?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘The reason is simple enough, madam,’
+replied the detective abruptly, ‘those
+diamonds were the property of Her Majesty
+the Queen of “Bohemia,” and were stolen
+from Their Majesties’ residence, Eton Chase,
+Chislehurst, on the 5th of July last year.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Stolen!’ she repeated, aghast and
+obviously incredulous.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes, stolen,’ said old Marsh. ‘I don’t
+wish to distress you unnecessarily, Madam,
+but you will see how imperative it is that
+you should place me in immediate communication
+with Mr. Vanderdellen, as an explanation
+from him has become necessary.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Unfortunately, that is impossible,’ said
+Mrs. Vanderdellen, who seemed under the
+spell of a strong emotion.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Impossible?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Mr. Vanderdellen has been dead just
+over a year. He died three days after his
+return to New York, and the Black Diamonds
+were the last present he ever made me.’</p>
+
+<p>“There was a pause after that.
+Marsh—experienced detective though he was—was
+literally at his wits’ ends what to do. He
+said afterwards that Mrs. Vanderdellen,
+though very young and frivolous outwardly,
+seemed at the same time an exceedingly
+shrewd, farseeing business woman. To begin
+with, she absolutely refused to have the
+matter hushed up, and to return the jewels
+until their rightful ownership had been
+properly proved.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘It would be tantamount,’ she said,
+‘to admitting that my husband had come by
+them unlawfully.’</p>
+
+<p>“At the same time she offered the princely
+reward of £10,000 to any one who found the
+true solution of the mystery; for, mind you,
+the late Mr. Vanderdellen sailed from Havre
+for New York on July the 8th, 1902, that is
+to say, three clear days after the theft of
+the diamonds from Eton Chase, and he
+presented his wife with the loose gems
+immediately on his arrival in New York. Three
+days after that he died.</p>
+
+<p>“It was difficult to suppose that Mr.
+Vanderdellen purchased those diamonds not
+knowing that they must have been stolen,
+since, directly after the burglary the English
+police telegraphed to all their Continental
+colleagues, and within four-and-twenty hours
+a description of the stolen jewels was
+circulated throughout Europe.</p>
+
+<p>“It was, to say the least of it, very strange
+that an experienced business man and shrewd
+collector like Mr. Vanderdellen should have
+purchased such priceless gems without making
+some enquiries as to their history, more
+especially as they must have been offered to
+him in a more or less ‘hole-in-the-corner’
+way.</p>
+
+<p>“Still, Mrs. Vanderdellen stuck to her
+guns, and refused to give up the jewels
+pending certain enquiries she wished to make.
+She declared that she wished to be sued for
+the diamonds in open court, charged with
+wilfully detaining stolen goods if necessary,
+for the more publicity was given to the whole
+affair the better she would like it, so firmly
+did she believe in her husband’s innocence.</p>
+
+<p>“The matter was indeed brought to the
+High Courts, and the sensational action
+brought against Mrs. Vanderdellen by the
+representative of His Majesty the King of
+‘Bohemia’ for the recovery of the Black
+Diamonds is, no doubt, still fresh in your
+memory.</p>
+
+<p>“No one was allowed to know what witnesses
+Mrs. Vanderdellen would bring forward
+in her defence. She had engaged the services
+of Sir Arthur Inglewood, and of some of the
+most eminent counsel at the Bar. The court
+was packed with the most fashionable crowd
+ever seen inside the Law Courts; and both
+days that the action lasted Mrs. Vanderdellen
+appeared in exquisite gowns and ideal hats.</p>
+
+<p>“The evidence for the Royal plaintiff was
+simple enough. It all went to prove that
+the very day after the burglary not a jeweller,
+pawnbroker, or diamond merchant throughout
+the whole of Europe could have failed
+to know that a unique <i>parure</i> of black
+diamonds had been stolen, and would
+probably be offered for sale. The Black
+Diamonds in themselves, and out of their
+setting, were absolutely unique, and if the
+late Mr. Vanderdellen purchased them in
+Paris from some private individual, he must
+at least have very strongly suspected that
+they were stolen.</p>
+
+<p>“Throughout the whole of that first day
+Mrs. Vanderdellen sat in court, absolutely
+calm and placid. She listened to the evidence,
+made little notes, and chatted with two or
+three American friends—elderly men—who
+were with her.</p>
+
+<p>“Then came the turn of the defence.</p>
+
+<p>“Everybody had expected something sensational,
+and listened more eagerly than ever
+as the name of Mr. Albert V. B. Sedley
+was called. He was a tall, elderly man,
+the regular angular type of the American,
+with his nasal twang and reposeful manner.</p>
+
+<p>“His story was brief and simple. He
+was a great friend of the late Mr.
+Vanderdellen, and had gone on a European tour
+with him in the early spring of 1902. They
+were together in Vienna in the month of
+March, staying at the Hotel Imperial, when
+one day Vanderdellen came to his room with
+a remarkable story.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘He told me,’ continued Mr. Albert V. B.
+Sedley, ‘that he had just purchased some
+very beautiful diamonds, which he meant
+to present to his wife on his return to New
+York. He would not tell me where he
+bought them, nor would he show them to
+me, but he spoke about the beauty and
+rarity of the stones, which were that rarest
+of all things, beautiful black diamonds.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘As the whole story sounded to me a
+little bit queer and mysterious, I gave him
+a word of caution, but he was quite confident
+as to the integrity of the vendor of the
+jewels, since the latter had made a somewhat
+curious bargain. Vanderdellen was to have
+the diamonds in his keeping for three months
+without paying any money, merely giving a
+formal receipt for them; then, if after three
+months he was quite satisfied with his
+bargain, and there had been no suspicion or
+rumour of any kind that the diamonds were
+stolen, then only was the money, £500,000,
+to be paid.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Vanderdellen thought this very fair and
+above-board, and so it sounded to me. The
+only thing I didn’t like about it all was that
+the vendor had given what I thought was a
+false name and no address; the money was
+to be paid over to him in French notes when
+the three months had expired, at an hotel
+in Paris, where Vanderdellen would be staying
+at the time, and where he would call for it.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I heard nothing more about the mysterious
+diamonds and their still more mysterious
+vendor,’ continued Mr. Sedley, amidst
+intense excitement, ‘for Vanderdellen and I
+soon parted company after that, he going
+one way and I another. But at the beginning
+of July I met him in Paris, and on the 4th
+I dined with him at the Elysee Palace Hotel,
+where he was staying.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Mr. Cornelius R. Shee was there too,
+and Vanderdellen related to him during
+dinner the history of his mysterious purchase
+of the Black Diamonds, adding that the
+vendor had called upon him that very day
+as arranged, and that he (Vanderdellen) had
+had no hesitation in handing him over the
+agreed price of £500,000, which he thought
+a very low one. Both Mr. Shee and I agreed
+that the whole thing must have been clear
+and above-board, for jewels of such fabulous
+value could not have been stolen since last
+spring without the hue and cry being in
+every paper in Europe.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘It is my opinion, therefore,’ said Mr.
+Albert V. B. Sedley, at the conclusion of
+this remarkable evidence, ‘that Mr.
+Vanderdellen bought those diamonds in perfect
+good faith. He would never have wittingly
+subjected his wife to the indignity of being
+seen in public with stolen jewels round her
+neck. If after 5th July he did happen to
+hear that a <i>parure</i> of black diamonds had
+been stolen in England at the date, he could
+not possibly think that there could be the
+slightest connection between these and those
+he had purchased more than three months ago.’</p>
+
+<p>“And, amidst indescribable excitement,
+Mr. Albert V. B. Sedley stepped back into
+his place.</p>
+
+<p>“That he had spoken the truth from
+beginning to end no one could doubt for a
+single moment. His own social position,
+wealth, and important commercial reputation
+placed him above any suspicion of committing
+perjury, even for the sake of a dead
+friend. Moreover, the story told by Vanderdellen
+at the dinner in Paris was corroborated
+by Mr. Cornelius R. Shee in every point.</p>
+
+<p>“But there! a dead man’s words are <em>not</em>
+evidence in a court of law. Unfortunately,
+Mr. Vanderdellen had not shown the diamonds
+to his friends at the time. He had certainly
+drawn enormous sums of money from his
+bank about the end of June and beginning
+of July, amounting in all to just over a
+million sterling; and there was nothing to
+prove which special day he had paid away
+a sum of £500,000, whether <em>before</em> or <em>after</em>
+the burglary at Eton Chase.</p>
+
+<p>“He had made extensive purchases in
+Paris of pictures, furniture, and other works
+of art, all of priceless value, for the
+decoration of his new palace in Fifth Avenue, and
+no diary of private expenditure was produced
+in court. Mrs. Vanderdellen herself had said
+that after her husband’s death, as all his
+affairs were in perfect order, she had destroyed
+his personal and private diaries.</p>
+
+<p>“Thus the counsel for the plaintiff was
+able to demolish the whole edifice of the
+defence bit by bit, for it rested on but very
+ephemeral foundations: a story related by
+a dead man.</p>
+
+<p>“Judgment was entered for the plaintiff,
+although every one’s sympathy, including
+that of judge and of jury, was entirely for the
+defendant, who had so nobly determined
+to vindicate her husband’s reputation.</p>
+
+<p>“But Mrs. Vanderdellen proved to the
+last that she was no ordinary and everyday
+woman. She had kept one final sensation
+up her sleeve. Two days after she had
+legally been made to give up the Black
+Diamonds, she offered to purchase them back
+for £500,000. Her bid was accepted, and
+during last autumn, on the occasion of the
+last Royal visit to London and the consequent
+grand society functions, no one was
+more admired, more <i>fêted</i> and envied, than
+beautiful Mrs. Vanderdellen as she entered
+a drawing-room exquisitely gowned, and
+adorned with the <i>parure</i> of which an Empress
+might have been proud.”</p>
+
+<p>The man in the corner had paused, and
+was idly tapping his fingers on the
+marble-topped table of the A.B.C. shop.</p>
+
+<p>“It was a curious story, wasn’t it?” said
+the funny creature, after a while. “More
+like a romance than a reality.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is absolutely bewildering,” I said.</p>
+
+<p>“What is your theory?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“What about?” I retorted.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, there are so many points, aren’t
+there, of which only one is quite clear,
+namely, that the <i>parure</i> of Black Diamonds
+disappeared from Eton Chase, Chislehurst,
+on 5th July, 1902, and that the next time
+they were seen they were on the neck and
+head of Mrs. Vanderdellen, the widow of
+one of the richest men of modern times,
+whilst the story of how her husband came
+by them was, to all intents and purposes,
+<em>legally</em> disbelieved.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” I argued, “the only logical
+conclusions to arrive at in all this is that the
+Black Diamonds, owned by His Majesty the
+King of ‘Bohemia,’ were not unique, and
+that Mr. Vanderdellen bought some duplicate
+ones.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you knew anything about diamonds,”
+he said irritably, “you would also know
+that your statement is an absurdity. There
+are no such things as ‘duplicate’ diamonds.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then what <em>is</em> the only logical conclusion
+to arrive at?” I retorted, for he had given
+up playing with the photos and was twisting
+and twining that bit of string as if his brain
+was contained inside it and he feared it
+might escape.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, to me,” he said, “the only logical
+conclusion of the affair is that the Black
+Diamonds which Mrs. Vanderdellen wore
+were the only and original ones belonging
+to the Crown of ‘Bohemia.’ ”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you think that a man in Mr.
+Vanderdellen’s position would have been fool
+enough to buy gems worth £500,000 at the
+very moment when there was a hue and cry
+for them all over Europe?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I don’t,” he replied quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“But then——” I began.</p>
+
+<p>“No?” he repeated once again, as his
+long fingers completed knot number one in
+that eternal piece of string. “The Black
+Diamonds which Mrs. Vanderdellen wore
+were bought by her husband in all good faith
+from the mysterious vendor in Vienna, in
+March, 1902.”</p>
+
+<p>“Impossible!” I retorted. “Her Majesty
+the Queen of ‘Bohemia’ wore them regularly
+during the months of May and June, and
+they were stolen from Eton Chase on July
+the 5th.”</p>
+
+<p>“Her Majesty the Queen of ‘Bohemia’
+wore a <i>parure</i> of Black Diamonds during
+those months, and those certainly were stolen
+on July the 5th,” he said excitedly; “but
+what was there to prove that <em>those</em> were
+the genuine stones?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why!——” I ejaculated.</p>
+
+<p>“Point No. 2,” he said, jumping about
+like a monkey on a stick; “although Mr.
+Wilson was acknowledged to be innocent of
+the theft of the diamonds, isn’t it strange
+that no one has ever been proved guilty of
+it?”</p>
+
+<p>“But I don’t understand——”</p>
+
+<p>“Yet it is simple as daylight. I maintain
+that His Majesty the King of ‘Bohemia’
+being short, very short, of money, decided
+to sell the celebrated Black Diamonds; to
+avoid all risks the stones are taken out of
+their settings, and a trusted and secret
+emissary is then deputed to find a possible
+purchaser; his choice falls on the
+multi-millionaire Vanderdellen, who is travelling
+in Europe, is a noted collector of rare
+jewellery, and has a beautiful young wife—three
+attributes, you see, which make him a very
+likely purchaser.</p>
+
+<p>“The emissary then seeks him out, and
+offers him the diamonds for sale. Mr.
+Vanderdellen at first hesitates, wondering how
+such valuable gems had come in the vendor’s
+possession, but the bargain suggested by
+the latter—the three months during which
+the gems are to be held on trust by the
+purchaser—seems so fair and above-board,
+that Mr. Vanderdellen’s objections fall to
+the ground; he accepts the bargain, and
+three months later completes the purchase.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I don’t understand,” I repeated
+again, more bewildered than before. “You
+say the King of ‘Bohemia’ sold the loose
+gems originally to Mr. Vanderdellen; then,
+what about the <i>parure</i> worn by the Queen
+and offered for sale to Mr. and Mrs. Wilson?
+What about the theft at Eton Chase?”</p>
+
+<p>“Point No. 3,” he shrieked excitedly, as
+another series of complicated knots went to
+join its fellows. “I told you that the King
+of ‘Bohemia’ was <em>very</em> short of money,
+every one knows <em>that</em>. He sells the Black
+Diamonds to Mr. Vanderdellen, but before
+he does it, he causes duplicates of them to
+be made, but this time in exquisite, beautiful,
+perfect Parisian imitation, and has these
+mounted into the original settings by some
+trusted man who, you may be sure, was
+well paid to hold his tongue. Then it is
+given out that the <i>parure</i> is for sale; a
+purchaser is found, and a few days later the
+false diamonds are stolen.”</p>
+
+<p>“By whom?”</p>
+
+<p>“By the King of ‘Bohemia’s’ valued
+and trusted friend, who has helped in the
+little piece of villainy throughout; it is he
+who drops a rope-ladder through Her Majesty’s
+bedroom window on to the terrace below,
+and then hands the imitation <i>parure</i> to his
+Royal master, who sees to its complete
+destruction and disappearance. Then there
+is a hue and cry for the <em>real</em> stones, and after
+a year or so they are found on the person
+of a lady, who is legally forced to give them
+up. And thus His Majesty the King of
+‘Bohemia’ got one solid million for the
+Black Diamonds, instead of half that sum,
+for if Mrs. Vanderdellen had not purchased
+the jewels, some one else would have done
+so.”</p>
+
+<p>And he was gone, leaving me to gaze at
+the pictures of three lovely women, and
+wondering if indeed it was the Royal lady
+herself who could best solve the mystery of
+who stole the Black Diamonds.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch05-1">
+
+<h2>V. <br> The Murder of Miss Pebmarsh</h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>“You must admit,” said the man in the
+corner to me one day, as I folded up and
+put aside my <i>Daily Telegraph</i>, which I had
+been reading with great care, “that it would
+be difficult to find a more interesting plot,
+or more thrilling situations, than occurred
+during the case of Miss Pamela Pebmarsh.
+As for downright cold-blooded villainy,
+commend me to some of the actors in that real
+drama.</p>
+
+<p>“The facts were simple enough; Miss
+Lucy Ann Pebmarsh was an old maid who
+lived with her young niece Pamela and an
+elderly servant in one of the small, newly-built
+houses not far from the railway station
+at Boreham Wood. The fact that she kept
+a servant at all, and that the little house
+always looked very spick and span, was
+taken by the neighbours to mean that Miss
+Pebmarsh was a lady of means; but she
+kept very much to herself, seldom went to
+church, and never attended any of the
+mothers’ meetings, parochial teas, and other
+social gatherings for which that popular
+neighbourhood has long been famous.</p>
+
+<p>“Very little, therefore, was known of the
+Pebmarsh household, save that the old lady
+had seen better days, that she had taken her
+niece to live with her recently, and that the
+latter had had a somewhat checkered career
+before she had found her present haven of
+refuge; some more venturesome gossips went
+so far as to hint—but only just above a
+whisper—that Miss Pamela Pebmarsh had
+been on the stage.</p>
+
+<p>“Certain it is that that young lady seemed
+to chafe very much under the restraint
+imposed upon her by her aunt, who seldom
+allowed her out of her sight, and evidently
+kept her very short of money, for, in spite
+of Miss Pamela’s obvious love of fine clothes,
+she had latterly been constrained to wear
+the plainest of frocks and most unbecoming
+of hats.</p>
+
+<p>“All very commonplace and uninteresting,
+you see, until that memorable Wednesday
+in October, after which the little house in
+Boreham Wood became a nine days’ wonder
+throughout newspaper-reading England.</p>
+
+<p>“On that day Miss Pebmarsh’s servant,
+Jemima Gadd, went over to Luton to see
+a sick sister; she was not expected back
+until the next morning. On that same
+afternoon Miss Pamela—strangely enough—seems
+also to have elected to go up to town, leaving
+her aunt all alone in the house, and not
+returning home until the late train, which
+reaches Boreham Wood a few minutes before
+one.</p>
+
+<p>“It was about five minutes past one that
+the neighbours in the quiet little street were
+roused from their slumbers by most frantic
+and agonised shrieks. The next moment
+Miss Pamela was seen to rush out of her
+aunt’s house and then to hammer violently
+at the door of one of her neighbours, still
+uttering piercing shrieks. You may imagine
+what a commotion such a scene at midnight
+would cause in a place like Boreham Wood.
+Heads were thrust out of the windows; one
+or two neighbours in hastily-donned
+miscellaneous attire came running out; and
+very soon the news spread round like
+wild-fire that Miss Pamela on coming home had
+found her aunt lying dead in the
+sitting-room.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Miller, the local greengrocer, was the
+first to pluck up sufficient courage to effect
+an entrance into the house. Miss Pamela
+dared not follow him; she had become quite
+hysterical, and was shrieking at the top of
+her voice that her aunt had been murdered.
+The sight that greeted Mr. Miller and those
+who had been venturesome enough to follow
+him, was certainly calculated to unhinge any
+young girl’s mind.</p>
+
+<p>“In the small bow-window of the sitting-room
+stood a writing-table, with drawers
+open and papers scattered all over and around
+it; in a chair in front of it, half sitting and
+half lying across the table, face downwards,
+and with arms outstretched, was the dead
+body of Miss Pebmarsh. There was sufficient
+indications to show to the most casual
+observer that, undoubtedly, the unfortunate
+lady had been murdered.</p>
+
+<p>“One of the neighbours, who possessed
+a bicycle, had in the meantime had the good
+sense to ride over to the police station.
+Very soon two constables were on the spot;
+they quickly cleared the room of gossiping
+neighbours, and then endeavoured to obtain
+from Miss Pamela some lucid information
+as to the terrible event.</p>
+
+<p>“At first she seemed quite unable to
+answer coherently the many questions which
+were being put to her; however, with infinite
+patience and wonderful kindness, Sergeant
+Evans at last managed to obtain from her the
+following statement.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I had had an invitation to go to the
+theatre this evening; it was an old
+invitation, and my aunt had said long ago that
+I might accept it. When Jemima Gadd
+wanted to go to Luton, I didn’t see why I
+should give up the theatre and offend my
+friend, just because of her. My aunt and I
+had some words about it, but I went. . . .
+I came back by the last train, and walked
+straight home from the station. I had taken
+the latch-key with me, and went straight
+into the sitting-room; the lamp was alight,
+and—and——’</p>
+
+<p>“The rest was chaos in the poor girl’s
+mind; she was only conscious of having
+seen something awful and terrible, and of
+having rushed out screaming for help.
+Sergeant Evans asked her no further questions
+then; a kind neighbour had offered to take
+charge of Pamela for the night, and took
+her away with her, the constable remaining
+in charge of the body and the house until
+the arrival of higher authorities.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch05-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>“Although, as you may well suppose,”
+continued the man in the corner, after a
+pause, “the excitement was intense at
+Boreham Wood, it had not as yet reached the
+general newspaper-reading public. As the
+tragic event had occurred at one o’clock in
+the morning, the papers the following day
+only contained a brief announcement that
+an old lady had been found murdered at
+Boreham Wood under somewhat mysterious
+circumstances. Later on, the evening editions
+added that the police were extremely reticent,
+but that it was generally understood that
+they held an important clue.</p>
+
+<p>“The following day had been fixed for
+the inquest, and I went down myself in the
+morning, for somehow I felt that this case
+was going to be an interesting one. A
+murder which at first seems absolutely
+purposeless always, in my experience, reveals,
+sooner or later, an interesting trait in human
+nature.</p>
+
+<p>“As soon as I arrived at Boreham Wood,
+I found that the murder of Miss Pebmarsh
+and the forthcoming inquest seemed to be
+the sole subjects of gossip and conversation.
+After I had been in the place half an hour
+the news began to spread like wild-fire that
+the murderer had been arrested; five minutes
+later the name of the murderer was on
+everybody’s lips.</p>
+
+<p>“It was that of the murdered woman’s
+niece, Miss Pamela Pebmarsh.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Oh, oh!’ I said to myself, ‘my instincts
+have not deceived me: this case is indeed
+going to be interesting.’</p>
+
+<p>“It was about two o’clock in the afternoon
+when I at last managed to find my way
+to the little police station, where the inquest
+was to be held. There was scarcely standing
+room, I can tell you, and I had some difficulty
+in getting a front place from which I could
+see the principal actors in this village drama.</p>
+
+<p>“Pamela Pebmarsh was there in the custody
+of two constables—she, a young girl
+scarcely five-and-twenty, stood there accused
+of having murdered, in a peculiarly brutal
+way, an old lady of seventy, her relative
+who had befriended her and given her a
+home.”</p>
+
+<p>The man in the corner paused for a moment,
+and from the capacious pocket of his
+magnificent ulster he drew two or three small
+photos, which he placed before me.</p>
+
+<p>“This is Miss Pamela Pebmarsh,” he said,
+pointing to one of these; “tall and good-looking,
+in spite of the shabby bit of mourning
+with which she had contrived to deck herself.
+Of course, this photo does not give you an
+idea of what she looked like that day at
+the inquest. Her face then was almost ashen
+in colour; her large eyes were staring before
+her with a look of horror and of fear; and
+her hands were twitching incessantly, with
+spasmodic and painful nervousness.</p>
+
+<p>“It was pretty clear that public feeling
+went dead against her from the very first.
+A murmur of disapproval greeted her
+appearance, to which she seemed to reply with a
+look of defiance. I could hear many
+uncharitable remarks spoken all round me;
+Boreham Wood found it evidently hard to
+forgive Miss Pamela her good looks and her
+unavowed past.</p>
+
+<p>“The medical evidence was brief and
+simple. Miss Pebmarsh had been stabbed
+in the back with some sharp instrument,
+the blade of which had pierced the left lung.
+She had evidently been sitting in the chair
+in front of her writing-table when the
+murderer had caught her unawares. Death had
+ensued within the next few seconds.</p>
+
+<p>“The medical officer was very closely
+questioned upon this point by the coroner; it
+was evident that the latter had something
+very serious in his mind, to which the doctor’s
+replies would give confirmation.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘In your opinion,’ he asked, ‘would it
+have been possible for Miss Pebmarsh to
+do anything after she was stabbed. Could
+she have moved, for instance?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Slightly, perhaps,’ replied the doctor;
+‘but she did not attempt to rise from her
+chair.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘No; but could she have tried to reach
+the hand-bell, for instance, which was on the
+table, or—the pen and ink—and written a
+word or two?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well, yes,’ said the doctor thoughtfully;
+‘she might have done that, if pen and
+ink, or the hand-bell, were <em>very</em> close to her
+hand. I doubt, though, if she could have
+written anything very clearly, but still it is
+impossible to say quite definitely—anyhow,
+it could only have been a matter of a few
+seconds.’</p>
+
+<p>“Delightfully vague, you see,” continued
+the man in the corner, “as these learned
+gentlemen’s evidence usually is.</p>
+
+<p>“Sergeant Evans then repeated the story
+which Pamela Pebmarsh had originally told
+him, and from which she had never departed
+in any detail. She had gone to the theatre,
+leaving her aunt all alone in the house;
+she had arrived home at one o’clock by the
+late Wednesday night train, and had gone
+straight into the sitting-room, where she had
+found her aunt dead before her writing-table.</p>
+
+<p>“That she travelled up to London in the
+afternoon was easily proved; the
+station-master and the porters had seen her go.
+Unfortunately for her <i>alibi</i>, however, those
+late ‘theatre’ trains on that line are always
+very crowded; the night had been dark and
+foggy, and no one at or near the station
+could swear positively to having seen her
+arrive home again by the train she named.</p>
+
+<p>“There was one thing more; although
+the importance of it had been firmly
+impressed upon Pamela Pebmarsh, she absolutely
+refused to name the friends with whom
+she had been to the theatre that night, and
+who, presumably, might have helped her to
+prove at what hour she left London for
+home.</p>
+
+<p>“Whilst all this was going on, I was
+watching Pamela’s face intently. That the
+girl was frightened—nay more, terrified—there
+could be no doubt; the twitching of
+her hands, her eyes dilated with terror, spoke
+of some awful secret which she dare not
+reveal, but which she felt was being gradually
+brought to light. Was that secret the secret
+of a crime—a crime so horrible, so gruesome,
+that surely so young a girl would be incapable
+of committing?</p>
+
+<p>“So far, however, what struck every one
+mostly during this inquest was the seeming
+purposelessness of this cruel murder. The
+old lady, as far as could be ascertained, had
+no money to leave, so why should Pamela
+Pebmarsh have deliberately murdered the
+aunt who provided her, at any rate, with
+the comforts of a home? But the police,
+assisted by one of the most able detectives
+on the staff, had not effected so sensational
+an arrest without due cause; they had a
+formidable array of witnesses to prove their
+case up to the hilt. One of these was Jemima
+Gadd, the late Miss Pebmarsh’s servant.</p>
+
+<p>“She came forward attired in deep black,
+and wearing a monumental crape bonnet
+crowned with a quantity of glistening black
+beads. With her face the colour of yellow
+wax, and her thin lips pinched tightly together,
+she stood as the very personification of
+puritanism and uncharitableness.</p>
+
+<p>“She did not look once towards Pamela,
+who gazed at her like some wretched bird
+caught in a net, which sees the meshes
+tightening round it more and more.</p>
+
+<p>“Replying to the coroner, Jemima Gadd
+explained that on the Wednesday morning
+she had had a letter from her sister at Luton,
+asking her to come over and see her some day.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘As there was plenty of cold meat in the
+’ouse,’ she said, ‘I asked the mistress if she
+could spare me until the next day, and she
+said yes, she could. Miss Pamela and she
+could manage quite well.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘She said nothing about her niece going
+out, too, on the same day?’ asked the
+coroner.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘No,’ replied Jemima acidly, ‘she did
+not. And later on, at breakfast, Miss
+Pebmarsh said to Miss Pamela before me:
+“Pamela,” she says, “Jemima is going to
+Luton, and won’t be back until to-morrow.
+You and I will be alone in the ’ouse until
+then.” ’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘And what did the accused say?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘She says, “All right, aunt.” ’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Nothing more?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘No, nothing more.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘There was no question, then, of the
+accused going out also, and leaving Miss
+Pebmarsh all alone in the house?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘None at all,’ said Jemima emphatically.
+‘If there ’ad been I’d ’ave ’eard of it. I
+needn’t ’ave gone that day. Any day would
+’ave done for me.’</p>
+
+<p>“She closed her thin lips with a snap,
+and darted a vicious look at Pamela. There
+was obviously some old animosity lurking
+beneath that gigantic crape monument on
+the top of Jemima’s wax-coloured head.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You know nothing, then, about any
+disagreement between the deceased and the
+accused on the subject of her going to the
+theatre that day?’ asked the coroner, after
+a while.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘No, not about <em>that</em>,’ said Jemima curtly,
+‘but there was plenty of disagreements
+between those two, I can tell you.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Ah! what about?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Money, mostly. Miss Pamela was over-fond
+of fine clothes, but Miss Pebmarsh,
+who was giving ’er a ’ome and daily bread,
+’adn’t much money to spare for fallalery.
+Miss Pebmarsh ’ad a small pension from a
+lady of the haristocracy, but it wasn’t
+much—a pound a week it was. Miss Pebmarsh
+might ’ave ’ad a lot more if she’d wanted to.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Oh?’ queried the coroner, ‘how was
+that?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well, you see, that fine lady ’ad not
+always been as good as she ought to be.
+She’d been Miss Pamela’s friend when they
+were both on the stage together, and pretty
+goings on, I can tell you, those two were
+up to, and——’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘That’ll do,’ interrupted the coroner
+sternly. ‘Confine yourself, please, to telling
+the jury about the pension Miss Pebmarsh
+had from a lady.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I was speaking about that,’ said
+Jemima, with another snap of her thin lips.
+‘Miss Pebmarsh knew a thing or two about
+this fine lady, and she had some letters which
+she often told me that fine lady would not
+care for her ’usband or her fine friends to
+read. Miss Pamela got to know about these
+letters, and she worried her poor aunt to
+death, for she wanted to get those letters
+and sell them to the fine lady for ’undreds
+of pounds. I ’ave ’eard ’er ask for those
+letters times and again, but Miss Pebmarsh
+wouldn’t give them to ’er, and they were
+locked up in the writing-table drawer, and
+Miss Pamela wanted those letters, for she
+wanted to get ’undreds of pounds from the
+fine lady, and my poor mistress was murdered
+for those letters—and she was murdered by
+that wicked girl ’oo eat her bread and ’oo
+would ’ave starved but for ’er. And so I
+tell you, and I don’t care ’oo ’ears me say it.’</p>
+
+<p>“No one had attempted to interrupt
+Jemima Gadd as she delivered herself of
+this extraordinary tale, which so suddenly
+threw an unexpected and lurid light upon
+the mystery of poor Miss Pebmarsh’s death.</p>
+
+<p>“That the tale was a true one, no one
+doubted for a single instant. One look at
+the face of the accused was sufficient to
+prove it beyond question. Pamela Pebmarsh
+had become absolutely livid; she tottered
+almost as if she would fall, and the constable
+had to support her until a chair was brought
+forward for her.</p>
+
+<p>“As for Jemima Gadd, she remained
+absolutely impassive. Having given her
+evidence, she stepped aside automatically
+like a yellow waxen image, which had been
+wound up and had now run down. There
+was silence for a while. Pamela Pebmarsh,
+more dead than alive, was sipping a glass
+of brandy and water, which alone prevented
+her from falling in a dead faint.</p>
+
+<p>“Detective Inspector Robinson now
+stepped forward. All the spectators there
+could read on his face the consciousness that
+his evidence would be of the most supreme
+import.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I was telegraphed for from the Yard,’
+he said, in reply to the coroner, ‘and came
+down here by the first train on the Thursday
+morning. Beyond the short medical
+examination the body had not been touched; as
+the constables know, we don’t like things
+interfered with in cases of this kind. When
+I went up to look at deceased, the first thing
+I saw was a piece of paper just under her
+right hand. Sergeant Evans had seen it
+before, and pointed it out to me. Deceased
+had a pen in her hand, and the ink-bottle
+was close by. This is the paper I found, sir.’</p>
+
+<p>“And amidst a deadly silence, during
+which nothing could be heard but the
+scarcely-perceptible rustle of the paper, the inspector
+handed a small note across to the coroner.
+The latter glanced at it for a moment, and his
+face became very grave and solemn as he
+turned towards the jury.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Gentlemen of the jury,’ he said, ‘these
+are the contents of the paper which the
+inspector found under the hand of the
+deceased.’</p>
+
+<p>“He paused once more before he began to
+read, whilst we all in that crowded court held
+our breath to listen:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘<em>I am dying. My murderess is my niece,
+Pam</em>——’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘That is all, gentlemen,’ added the
+coroner, as he folded up the note. ‘Death
+overtook the unfortunate woman in the
+very act of writing down the name of her
+murderess.’</p>
+
+<p>“Then there was a wild and agonised
+shriek of horror. Pamela Pebmarsh, with
+hair dishevelled and eyes in which the light
+of madness had begun to gleam, threw up
+her hands, and without a groan, fell down
+senseless upon the floor.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch05-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said the man in the corner with a
+chuckle, “there was enough evidence there
+to hang twenty people, let alone that one
+fool of a girl who had run her neck so madly
+into a noose. I don’t suppose that any one
+left the court that day with the slightest
+doubt in their minds as to what the verdict
+would be; for the coroner had adjourned
+the inquest, much to the annoyance of the
+jury, who had fully made up their minds
+and had their verdict pat on the tips of their
+tongues: ‘Wilful murder against Pamela
+Pebmarsh.’</p>
+
+<p>“But this was a case which to the last
+kept up its reputation for surprises. By
+the next morning rumour had got about
+that ‘the lady of the aristocracy’ referred
+to by Jemima Gadd, and who was supposed
+to have paid a regular pension to Miss
+Pebmarsh, was none other than Lady de Chavasse.</p>
+
+<p>“When the name was first mentioned
+every one—especially the fair sex—shrugged
+their shoulders, and said: ‘Of course what
+else <em>could</em> one expect?’</p>
+
+<p>“As a matter of fact, Lady de Chavasse,
+<i>née</i> Birdie Fay, was one of the most fashionable
+women in society; she was at the head of a
+dozen benevolent institutions, was a generous
+patron of hospitals, and her house was one
+of the most exclusive houses in London.
+True, she had been on the stage in her younger
+days, and when Sir Percival de Chavasse
+married her, his own relations looked
+somewhat askance at the showy, handsome girl
+who had so daringly entered the ancient
+country family.</p>
+
+<p>“Sir Percival himself was an extraordinarily
+proud man—proud of his lineage, of his
+social status, of the honour of his name.
+His very pride had forced his relations, had
+forced society to accept his beautiful young
+wife, and to Lady de Chavasse’s credit be
+it said, not one breath of scandal as to her
+past life had ever become public gossip. No
+one could assert that they <em>knew</em> anything
+derogatory to Birdie Fay before she became
+the proud baronet’s wife. As a matter of
+fact, all society asserted that Sir Percival
+would never have married her and introduced
+her to his own family circle if there had been
+any gossip about her.</p>
+
+<p>“Now suddenly the name of Lady de
+Chavasse was on everybody’s tongue. People
+at first spoke it under their breath, for every
+one felt great sympathy with her. She was
+so rich, and entertained so lavishly. She
+was very charming, too; most fascinating
+in her ways; deferential to her austere
+mother-in-law; not a little afraid of her
+proud husband; very careful lest by word
+or look she betrayed her early connection
+with the stage before him.</p>
+
+<p>“On the following day, however, we had
+further surprises in store for us. Pamela
+Pebmarsh, advised by a shrewd and clear-headed
+solicitor, had at last made up her
+mind to view her danger a little more coolly,
+and to speak rather more of the truth than
+she had done hitherto.</p>
+
+<p>“Still looking very haggard, but perhaps a
+little less scared, she now made a statement
+which, when it was fully substantiated, as
+she stated it could be, would go far towards
+clearing her of the terrible imputation against
+her. Her story was this: On the memorable
+day in question, she did go up to town,
+intending to go to the theatre. At the
+station she purchased an evening paper,
+which she began to read. This paper in its
+fashionable columns contained an announcement
+which arrested her attention; this
+was that Sir Percival and Lady de Chavasse
+had returned to their flat in town at 51,
+Marsden Mansions, Belgravia, from ‘The
+Chase,’ Melton Mowbray.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘De Chavasse,’ continued Pamela, ‘was
+the name of the lady who paid my aunt the
+small pension on which she lived. I knew
+her years ago, when she was on the stage, and
+I suddenly thought I would like to go and
+see her, just to have a chat over old times.
+Instead of going to the theatre I went and
+had some dinner at Slater’s, in Piccadilly,
+and then I thought I would take my chance,
+and go and see if Lady de Chavasse was at
+home. I got to 51, Marsden Mansions, about
+eight o’clock, and was fortunate enough to
+see Lady de Chavasse at once. She kept
+me talking some considerable time; so much,
+in fact, that I missed the 11 from St. Pancras.
+I only left Marsden Mansions at a quarter to
+eleven, and had to wait at St. Pancras until
+twenty minutes past midnight.’</p>
+
+<p>“This was all reasonable and clear enough,
+and as her legal adviser had subpœnaed
+Lady de Chavasse as a witness, Pamela
+Pebmarsh seemed to have found an excellent
+way out of her terrible difficulties, the only
+question being whether Lady de Chavasse’s
+testimony alone would, in view of her being
+Pamela’s friend, be sufficient to weigh against
+the terrible overwhelming evidence of Miss
+Pebmarsh’s dying accusation.</p>
+
+<p>“But Lady de Chavasse settled this doubtful
+point in the way least expected by any
+one. Exquisitely dressed, golden-haired, and
+brilliant complexioned, she looked strangely
+out of place in this fusty little village court,
+amidst the local dames in their plain gowns
+and antiquated bonnets. She was, moreover,
+extremely self-possessed, and only cast a
+short, very haughty, look at the unfortunate
+girl whose life probably hung upon that
+fashionable woman’s word.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes,’ she said sweetly, in reply to the
+coroner, ‘she was the wife of Sir Percival de
+Chavasse, and resided at 51, Marsden
+Mansions, Belgravia.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘The accused, I understand, has been
+known to you for some time?’ continued
+the coroner.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Pardon me,’ rejoined Lady de Chavasse,
+speaking in a beautiful modulated voice,
+‘I did know this young—hem—person, years
+ago, when I was on the stage, but, of course,
+I had not seen her for years.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘She called on you on Wednesday last
+at about nine o’clock?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes, she did, for the purpose of levying
+blackmail upon me.’</p>
+
+<p>“There was no mistaking the look of
+profound aversion and contempt which the
+fashionable lady now threw upon the poor
+girl before her.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘She had some preposterous story about
+some letters which she alleged would be
+compromising to my reputation,’ continued Lady
+de Chavasse quietly. ‘These she had the
+kindness to offer me for sale for a hundred
+pounds. At first her impudence staggered
+me, as, of course, I had no knowledge of any
+such letters. She threatened to take them
+to my husband, however, and I then—rather
+foolishly, perhaps—suggested that she should
+bring them to me first. I forget how the
+conversation went on, but she left me with
+the understanding that she would get the
+letters from her aunt, Miss Pebmarsh, who,
+by the way, had been my governess when
+I was a child, and to whom I paid a small
+pension in consideration of her having been
+left absolutely without means.’</p>
+
+<p>“And Lady de Chavasse, conscious of her own
+disinterested benevolence, pressed a
+highly-scented bit of cambric to her delicate nose.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Then the accused did spend the evening
+with you on that Wednesday?’ asked the
+coroner, while a great sigh of relief seemed to
+come from poor Pamela’s breast.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Pardon me,’ said Lady de Chavasse,
+‘she spent a little time with me. She came
+about nine o’clock.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes. And when did she leave?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I really couldn’t tell you—about ten
+o’clock, I think.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You are not sure?’ persisted the
+coroner. ‘Think, Lady de Chavasse,’ he
+added earnestly, ‘try to think—the life of a
+fellow-creature may, perhaps, depend upon
+your memory.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I am indeed sorry,’ she replied in the
+same musical voice. ‘I could not swear
+without being positive, could I? And I
+am not quite positive.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘But your servants?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘They were at the back of the
+flat—the girl let herself out.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘But your husband?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Oh! when he saw me engaged with the
+girl, he went out to his club, and was not yet
+home when she left.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Birdie! Birdie! won’t you try and
+remember?’ here came in an agonised cry
+from the unfortunate girl, who thus saw
+her last hope vanish before her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“But Lady de Chavasse only lifted a little
+higher a pair of very prettily-arched
+eyebrows, and having finished her evidence she
+stepped on one side and presently left the
+court, leaving behind her a faint aroma of
+violet sachet powder, and taking away with
+her, perhaps, the last hope of an innocent
+fellow-creature.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch05-4">
+
+<h3>Chapter IV</h3>
+
+<p>“But Pamela Pebmarsh?” I asked after a
+while, for he had paused and was gazing
+attentively at the photograph of a very
+beautiful and exquisitely-gowned woman.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, yes, Pamela Pebmarsh,” he said
+with a smile. “There was yet another act
+in that palpitating drama of her life—one
+act—the <i>dénouement</i> as unexpected as it was
+thrilling. Salvation came where it was least
+expected—from Jemima Gadd, who seemed
+to have made up her mind that Pamela had
+killed her aunt, and yet who was the first to
+prove her innocence.</p>
+
+<p>“She had been shown the few words which
+the murdered woman was alleged to have
+written after she had been stabbed. Jemima,
+not a very good scholar, found it difficult to
+decipher the words herself.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Ah, well, poor dear,’ she said after a
+while, with a deep sigh, ‘ ’er ’andwriting was
+always peculiar, seein’ as ’ow she wrote
+always with ’er left ’and.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘<em>Her left hand!!!</em>’ gasped the coroner,
+while public and jury alike, hardly liking
+to credit their ears, hung upon the woman’s
+thin lips, amazed, aghast, puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Why, yes!’ said Jemima placidly.
+‘Didn’t you know she ’ad a bad accident to
+’er right ’and when she was a child, and
+never could ’old anything in it? ’Er fingers
+were like paralysed; the ink-pot was always
+on the left of ’er writing-table. Oh! she
+couldn’t write with ’er right ’and at all.’</p>
+
+<p>“Then a strange revulsion of feeling came
+over every one there.</p>
+
+<p>“Stabbed in the back, with her lung
+pierced through and through, how could she
+have done, dying, what she never did in life?</p>
+
+<p>“Impossible!</p>
+
+<p>“The murderer, whoever it was, had
+placed pen and paper to her hand, and had
+written on it the cruel words which were
+intended to delude justice and to send an
+innocent fellow-creature—a young girl not
+five-and-twenty—to an unjust and
+ignominious death. But, fortunately for that
+innocent girl, the cowardly miscreant had
+ignored the fact that Miss Pebmarsh’s right
+hand had been paralysed for years.</p>
+
+<p>“The inquest was adjourned for a week,”
+continued the man in the corner, “which
+enabled Pamela’s solicitor to obtain further
+evidence of her innocence. Fortunately for
+her he was enabled to find two witnesses who
+had seen her in an omnibus going towards St.
+Pancras at about 11.15 p.m., and a passenger
+on the 12.25 train, who had travelled down
+with her as far as Hendon. Thus, when the
+inquest was resumed, Pamela Pebmarsh left the
+court without a stain upon her character.</p>
+
+<p>“But the murder of Miss Pebmarsh has
+remained a mystery to this day—as has
+also the secret history of the compromising
+letters. Did they exist or not? is a question
+the interested spectators at that memorable
+inquest have often asked themselves. Certain
+it is that failing Pamela Pebmarsh, who
+might have wanted them for purpose of
+blackmail, no one else could be interested in
+them except Lady de Chavasse.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lady de Chavasse!” I ejaculated in
+surprise. “Surely you are not going to
+pretend that that elegant lady went down
+to Boreham Wood in the middle of the
+night in order to murder Miss Pebmarsh,
+and then to lay the crime at another woman’s
+door?”</p>
+
+<p>“I only pretend what’s logic,” replied the
+man in the corner, with inimitable conceit;
+“and in Pamela Pebmarsh’s own statement,
+she was with Lady de Chavasse at 51, Marsden
+Mansions, until eleven o’clock, and there is
+no train from St. Pancras to Boreham Wood
+between eleven and twenty-five minutes past
+midnight. Pamela’s <i>alibi</i> becomes that of
+Lady de Chavasse, and is quite conclusive.
+Besides, that elegant lady was not one to do
+that sort of work for herself.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean to say you never thought
+of the real solution of this mystery?” he
+retorted sarcastically.</p>
+
+<p>“I confess——” I began a little irritably.</p>
+
+<p>“Confess that I have not yet taught you
+to think logically, and to look at the beginning
+of things.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you call the beginning of this
+case, then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why! the compromising letters, of
+course.”</p>
+
+<p>“But——” I argued.</p>
+
+<p>“Wait a minute!” he shrieked excitedly,
+whilst with frantic haste he began fidgeting,
+fidgeting again at that eternal bit of string.
+“These did exist, otherwise why did Lady
+de Chavasse parley with Pamela Pebmarsh?
+Why did she not order her out of the house
+then and there, if she had nothing to fear
+from her?”</p>
+
+<p>“I admit that,” I said.</p>
+
+<p>“Very well; then, as she was too fine, too
+delicate to commit the villainous murder of
+which she afterwards accused poor Miss
+Pamela, who was there sufficiently interested
+in those letters to try and gain possession of
+them for her?”</p>
+
+<p>“Who, indeed?” I queried, still puzzled,
+still not understanding.</p>
+
+<p>“Ay! who but her husband,” shrieked
+the funny creature, as with a sharp snap he
+broke his beloved string in two.</p>
+
+<p>“Her husband!” I gasped.</p>
+
+<p>“Why not? He had plenty of time,
+plenty of pluck. In a flat it is easy enough
+to overhear conversations that take place in
+the next room—he was in the house at the
+time, remember, for Lady de Chavasse said
+herself that he went out afterwards. No
+doubt he overheard everything—the
+compromising letters, and Pamela’s attempt at
+levying blackmail. What the effect of such
+a discovery must have been upon the proud
+man I leave you to imagine—his wife’s social
+position ruined, a stain upon his ancient
+name, his relations pointing the finger of
+scorn at his folly.</p>
+
+<p>“Can’t you picture him, hearing the two
+women’s talk in the next room, and then
+resolving at all costs to possess himself of
+those compromising letters? He had just
+time to catch the 10 train to Boreham Wood.</p>
+
+<p>“Mind you, I don’t suppose that he went
+down there with any evil intent. Most likely
+he only meant to buy those letters from
+Miss Pebmarsh. What happened, however,
+nobody can say but the murderer himself.</p>
+
+<p>“Who knows? But the deed done,
+imagine the horror of a refined aristocratic
+man, face to face with such a crime as that.</p>
+
+<p>“Was it this terror, or merely rage at the
+girl who had been the original cause of all
+this, that prompted him to commit the final
+villany of writing out a false accusation and
+placing it under the dead woman’s hand?
+Who can tell?</p>
+
+<p>“Then, the deed done, and the <i>mise-en-scène</i>
+complete, he is able to catch the last
+train—11.23—back to town. A man travelling
+alone would pass practically unperceived.</p>
+
+<p>“Pamela’s innocence was proved, and the
+murder of Miss Pebmarsh has remained a
+mystery, but if you will reflect on my
+conclusions, you will admit that no one
+else—<em>no one else</em>—could have committed that
+murder, for no one else had a greater interest
+in the destruction of those letters.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch06-1">
+
+<h2>VI. <br> The Lisson Grove Mystery</h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>The man in the corner ordered another glass
+of milk, and timidly asked for a second
+cheese-cake at the same time.</p>
+
+<p>“I am going down to Marylebone Police
+Court, to see those people brought up before
+the ‘Beak,’ ” he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>“What people?” I queried.</p>
+
+<p>“What people!” he exclaimed, in the
+greatest excitement. “You don’t mean to
+say that you have not studied the Lisson
+Grove Mystery?”</p>
+
+<p>I had to confess that my knowledge on that
+subject was of the most superficial character.</p>
+
+<p>“One of the most interesting cases that
+has cropped up in recent years,” he said,
+with an indescribable look of reproach.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps. I did not study it in the papers
+because I preferred to hear <em>you</em> tell me all
+about it,” I said.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, if that’s it,” he replied, as he settled
+himself down in his corner like a great bird
+after the rain, “then you showed more
+sense than lady journalists usually possess.
+I can, of course, give you a far clearer
+account than the newspapers have done;
+as for the police—well! I never saw such
+a muddle as they are making of this case.”</p>
+
+<p>“I daresay it is a peculiarly difficult one,”
+I retorted, for I am ever a champion of that
+hard-working department.</p>
+
+<p>“H’m!” he said, “so, so—it is a tragedy
+in a prologue and three acts. I am going
+down this afternoon to see the curtain fall
+for the third time on what, if I mistake not,
+will prove a good burlesque; but it all began
+dramatically enough. It was last Saturday,
+21st November, that two boys, playing in the
+little spinney just outside Wembley Park
+Station, came across three large parcels done
+up in American cloth.</p>
+
+<p>“With the curiosity natural to their age,
+they at once proceeded to undo these parcels,
+and what they found so upset the little
+beggars that they ran howling through the
+spinney and the polo ground, straight as a
+dart to Wembley Park Station. Half frantic
+with excitement, they told their tale to one
+of the porters off duty, who walked back to
+the spinney with them. The three parcels,
+in point of fact, contained the remains of a
+dismembered human body. The porter sent
+one of the boys for the local police, and the
+remains were duly conveyed to the mortuary,
+where they were kept for identification.</p>
+
+<p>“Three days later—that is to say, on
+Tuesday, 24th November—Miss Amelia Dyke,
+residing at Lisson Grove Crescent, returned
+from Edinburgh, where she had spent three
+or four days with a friend. She drove up
+from St. Pancras in a cab, and carried her
+small box up herself to the door of the flat,
+at which she knocked loudly and repeatedly—so
+loudly and so persistently, in fact, that
+the inhabitants of the neighbouring flats
+came out on to their respective landings to
+see what the noise was about.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Amelia Dyke was getting anxious.
+Her father, she said, must be seriously ill, or
+else why did he not come and open the door
+to her. Her anxiety, however, reached its
+culminating point when Mr. and Mrs. Pitt,
+who reside in the flat immediately beneath
+that occupied by the Dykes, came forward
+with the alarming statement that, as a matter
+of fact, they had themselves been wondering
+if anything were wrong with old Mr. Dyke,
+as they had not heard any sound overhead
+for the last few days.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Amelia, now absolutely terrified,
+begged one of the neighbours to fetch either
+the police or a locksmith, or both. Mr. Pitt
+ran out at once, both police and locksmith
+were brought upon the scene, the door was
+forcibly opened, and amidst indescribable
+excitement Constable Turner, followed by
+Miss Dyke, who was faint and trembling with
+apprehension, effected an entrance into the
+flat.</p>
+
+<p>“Everything in it was tidy and neat to a
+degree, all the fires were laid, the beds made,
+the floors were clean and washed, the brasses
+polished, only a slight, very slight layer of
+dust lay over everything, dust that could
+not have accumulated for more than a few
+days. The flat consisted of four rooms and
+a bathroom; in not one of them was there
+the faintest trace of old Mr. Dyke.</p>
+
+<p>“In order to fully comprehend the
+consternation which all the neighbours felt at
+this discovery,” continued the man in the
+corner, “you must understand that old Mr.
+Dyke was a helpless cripple; he had been a
+mining engineer in his young days, and a
+terrible blasting accident deprived him, at
+the age of forty, of both legs. They had
+been amputated just above the knee, and the
+unfortunate man—then a widower with one
+little girl—had spent the remainder of his
+life on crutches. He had a small—a very
+small pension, which, as soon as his daughter
+Amelia was grown up, had enabled him to
+live in comparative comfort in the small flat
+in Lisson Grove Crescent.</p>
+
+<p>“His misfortune, however, had left him
+terribly sensitive; he never could bear the
+looks of compassion thrown upon him,
+whenever he ventured out on his crutches, and
+even the kindliest sympathy was positive
+torture to him. Gradually, therefore, as he
+got on in life, he took to staying more and
+more at home, and after a while gave up
+going out altogether. By the time he was
+sixty-five years old and Miss Amelia a fine
+young woman of seven-and-twenty, old Dyke
+had not been outside the door of his flat for
+at least five years.</p>
+
+<p>“And yet, when Constable Turner, aided
+by the locksmith, entered the flat on that
+memorable 24th November, there was not a
+trace anywhere of the old man.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Amelia was in the last stages of
+despair, and at first she seemed far too upset
+and hysterical to give the police any
+coherent and definite information. At last,
+however, from amid the chaos of tears and
+of ejaculations, Constable Turner gathered
+the following facts:</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Amelia had some great friends in
+Edinburgh, whom she had long wished to
+visit, her father’s crippled condition making
+this extremely difficult. A fortnight ago
+however, in response to a very urgent invitation,
+she at last decided to accept it, but in
+order to leave her father altogether comfortable,
+she advertised in the local paper for
+a respectable woman who would come to the
+flat every day and see to all the work, cook
+his dinner, make the bed, and so on.</p>
+
+<p>“She had several applications in reply to
+this advertisement, and ultimately selected a
+very worthy-looking elderly person, who, for
+seven shillings a week, undertook to come
+daily from seven in the morning until about
+six in the afternoon, to see to all Mr. Dyke’s
+comforts.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Amelia was very favourably impressed
+with this person’s respectable and
+motherly appearance, and she left for
+Edinburgh by the 5.15 a.m. train on the morning
+of Thursday, 19th November, feeling confident
+that her father would be well looked after.
+She certainly had not heard from the old man
+while she was away, but she had not expected
+to hear unless, indeed, something had been
+wrong.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Amelia was quite sure that something
+dreadful had happened to her father,
+as he could not possibly have walked downstairs
+and out of the house alone; certainly
+his crutches were nowhere to be found, but
+this only helped to deepen the mystery of the
+old man’s disappearance.</p>
+
+<p>“The constable, having got thus far with
+his notes, thought it best to refer the whole
+matter at this stage to higher authority.
+He got from Miss Amelia the name and
+address of the charwoman, and then went
+back to the station.</p>
+
+<p>“There, the very first news that greeted
+him was that the medical officer of the
+district had just sent round to the various
+police stations his report on the human
+remains found in Wembley Park the previous
+Saturday. They had proved to be the
+dismembered body of an old man between sixty
+and seventy years of age, the immediate
+cause of whose death had undoubtedly been
+a violent blow on the back of the head with
+a heavy instrument, which had shattered
+the cranium. Expert examination further
+revealed the fact that deceased had had in
+early life both legs removed by a surgical
+operation just above the knee.</p>
+
+<p>“That was the end of the prologue in the
+Lisson Grove tragedy,” continued the man
+in the corner, after a slight and dramatic
+pause, “as far as the public was concerned.
+When the curtain was subsequently raised
+upon the first act, the situation had been
+considerably changed.</p>
+
+<p>“The remains had been positively identified
+as those of old Mr. Dyke, and a charge of
+wilful murder had been brought against
+Alfred Wyatt, of no occupation, residing in
+Warlock Road, Lisson Grove, and against
+Amelia Dyke for complicity in the crime.
+They are the two people whom I am going to
+see this afternoon brought before the Beak
+at the Marylebone Police Court.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch06-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>“Two very important bits of evidence, I
+must tell you, had come to light, on the first
+day of the inquest, and had decided the
+police to make this double arrest.</p>
+
+<p>“In the first place, according to one or
+two of the neighbours, who happened to
+know something of the Dyke household,
+Miss Amelia had kept company for some time
+with a young man named Alfred Wyatt; he
+was an electrical engineer, resided in the
+neighbourhood, and was some years younger
+than Miss Dyke. As he was known not to
+be very steady, it was generally supposed
+that the old man did not altogether approve
+of his daughter’s engagement.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Pitt, residing in the flat immediately
+below the one occupied by the Dykes, had
+stated, moreover, that on Wednesday the 18th,
+at about midday, she heard very loud and
+angry voices proceeding from above; Miss
+Amelia’s shrill tones being specially audible.
+Shortly afterwards she saw Wyatt go out of
+the house; but the quarrel continued for
+some little time without him, for the
+neighbours could still hear Miss Amelia’s
+high-pitched voice, speaking very excitedly and
+volubly.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘An hour later,’ further explained Mrs.
+Pitt, ‘I met Miss Dyke on the stairs; she
+seemed very flushed and looked as if she
+had been crying. I suppose she saw that I
+noticed this, for she stopped and said to me:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘ “All this fuss, you know, Mrs. Pitt,
+because Alfred asked me to go for a drive
+with him this afternoon, but I am going all
+the same.”</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Later in the afternoon—it must have
+been quite half-past four, for it was getting
+dark—young Wyatt drove up in a motor-car,
+and presently I heard Miss Dyke’s voice on
+the stairs saying very pleasantly and cheerfully:
+“All right, daddy, we shan’t be long.”
+Then Mr. Dyke must have said something,
+which I didn’t hear, for she added. “Oh,
+that’s all right; I am well wrapped up, and
+we have plenty of rugs.” ’</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Pitt then went to her window and
+saw Wyatt and Amelia Dyke start off in a
+motor. She concluded that the old man had
+been mollified, for both Amelia and Wyatt
+waved their hands affectionately up towards
+the window. They returned from their drive
+about six o’clock; Wyatt saw Amelia to
+the door, and then went off again. The
+next day Miss Dyke went to Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>“As you see,” continued the man in the
+corner, “Alfred Wyatt had become a very
+important personality in this case; he was
+Amelia’s sweetheart, and it was strange—to
+say the least of it—that she had never as yet
+even mentioned his name. Therefore, when
+she was recalled in order to give further
+evidence, you may be sure that she was
+pretty sharply questioned on the subject
+of Alfred Wyatt.</p>
+
+<p>“In her evidence before the coroner, she
+adhered fairly closely to her original
+statement:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I did not mention Mr. Wyatt’s name,’
+she explained, ‘because I did not think it
+was of any importance; if he knew anything
+about my dead father’s mysterious fate he
+would have come forward at once, of course,
+and helped me to find out who the cowardly
+murderer was who could attack a poor,
+crippled old man. Mr. Wyatt was devoted
+to my father, and it is perfectly ridiculous
+to say that daddy objected to my engagement;
+on the contrary, he gave us his full
+consent, and we were going to be married
+directly after the New Year, and continue
+to live with father in the flat.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘But,’ questioned the coroner, who had
+not by any means departed from his severity,
+‘what about this quarrel which the last
+witness overheard on the subject of your
+going out driving with Mr. Wyatt?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Oh, that was nothing,’ replied Miss Dyke
+very quietly. ‘Daddy only objected because
+he thought that it was rather too late
+to start at four o’clock, and that I should be
+cold. When he saw that we had plenty of
+rugs he was quite pleased for me to go.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Isn’t it rather astonishing, then,’ asked
+the coroner, ‘seeing that Mr. Wyatt was on
+such good terms with your father, that he
+did not go to see him while you were
+away?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Not at all,’ she replied unconcernedly;
+‘Alfred went down to Edinburgh on the
+Thursday evening. He couldn’t travel with
+me in the morning, for he had some business
+to see to in town that day; but he joined
+me at my friends’ house on the Friday
+morning, having travelled all night.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Ah!’ remarked the coroner drily, ‘then
+he had not seen your father since you
+left.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Oh, yes,’ said Miss Amelia; ‘he called
+round to see dad during the day, and found
+him looking well and cheerful.’</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Amelia Dyke, as she gave this
+evidence, seemed absolutely unconscious of
+saying anything that might in any way
+incriminate her lover. She is a handsome,
+though somewhat coarse-looking woman,
+nearer thirty, I should say, than she would
+care to own. I was present at the inquest,
+mind you, for that case had too many
+mysteries about it from the first for it to have
+eluded my observation, and I watched her
+closely throughout. Her voice struck me
+as fine and rich, with—in this instance, also—a
+shade of coarseness in it; certainly, it was
+very far from being high-pitched, as Mrs.
+Pitt had described it.</p>
+
+<p>“When she had finished her evidence she
+went back to her seat, looking neither flustered
+nor uncomfortable, although many looks of
+contempt and even of suspicion were darted
+at her from every corner of the crowded
+court.</p>
+
+<p>“Nor did she lose her composure in the
+slightest degree when Mr. Parlett, clerk to
+Messrs. Snow and Patterson, solicitors, of
+Bedford Row, in his turn came forward and
+gave evidence; only while the little man
+spoke her full red lips curled and parted with
+a look of complete contempt.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Parlett’s story was indeed a remarkable
+one, inasmuch as it suddenly seemed to
+tear asunder the veil of mystery which so
+far had surrounded the murder of old Dyke
+by supplying it with a motive—a strong
+motive too: the eternal greed of gain.</p>
+
+<p>“In June last, namely, it appears that
+Messrs. Snow and Patterson received intimation
+from a firm of Melbourne solicitors that
+a man of the name of Dyke had died there
+recently, leaving a legacy of £4,000 to his
+only brother James Arthur Dyke, a mining
+engineer, who in 1890 was residing at Lisson
+Grove Crescent. The Melbourne solicitors
+in their communication asked for Messrs.
+Snow and Patterson’s kind assistance in
+helping them to find the legatee.</p>
+
+<p>“The search was easy enough, since James
+Arthur Dyke, mining engineer, had never
+ceased to reside at Lisson Grove Crescent.
+Armed, therefore, with full instructions from
+their Melbourne correspondent, Messrs. Snow
+and Patterson communicated with Dyke,
+and after a little preliminary correspondence,
+the sum of £4,000 in Bank of Australia notes
+and various securities were handed over by
+Mr. Parlett to the old cripple.</p>
+
+<p>“The money and securities were—so Mr.
+Parlett understood—subsequently deposited
+by Mr. Dyke at the Portland Road Branch
+of the London and South Western Bank; as
+the old man apparently died intestate, the
+whole of the £4,000 would naturally devolve
+upon his only daughter and natural legatee.</p>
+
+<p>“Mind you, all through the proceedings the
+public had instinctively felt that money was
+somewhere at the bottom of this gruesome
+and mysterious crime. There is not much
+object in murdering an old cripple except for
+purposes of gain, but now Mr. Parlett’s
+evidence had indeed furnished a damning
+motive for the appalling murder.</p>
+
+<p>“What more likely than that Alfred Wyatt,
+wanting to finger that £4,000, had done
+away with the old man? And if Amelia
+Dyke did not turn away from him in horror,
+after such a cowardly crime, then she must
+have known of it and had perhaps connived
+in it.</p>
+
+<p>“As for Nicholson, the charwoman, her
+evidence had certainly done more to puzzle
+everybody all round than any other detail
+in this strange and mysterious crime.</p>
+
+<p>“She deposed that on Friday, 13th
+November, in answer to an advertisement in
+the <i>Marylebone Star</i>, she had called on Miss
+Dyke at Lisson Grove, when it was arranged
+that she should do a week’s work at the
+flat, beginning Thursday, the 19th, from
+seven in the morning until six in the
+afternoon. She was to keep the place clean, get
+Mr. Dyke—who, she understood was an
+invalid—all his meals, and make herself
+generally useful to him.</p>
+
+<p>“Accordingly, Nicholson turned up on
+the Thursday morning. She let herself into
+the flat, as Miss Dyke had entrusted the
+latch-key to her, and went on with the work.
+Mr. Dyke was in bed, and she got him all
+his meals that day. She thought she was
+giving him satisfaction, and was very
+astonished when, at six o’clock, having cleared
+away his tea, he told her that he would not
+require her again. He gave her no explanation,
+asked her for the latch-key, and gave
+her her full week’s money—seven shillings
+in full. Nicholson then put on her bonnet,
+and went away.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” continued the man in the corner,
+leaning excitedly forward, and marking each
+sentence he uttered with an exquisitely
+complicated knot in his bit of string, “an
+hour later, another neighbour, Mrs. Marsh,
+who lived on the same floor as the Dykes, on
+starting to go out, met Alfred Wyatt on the
+landing. He took off his hat to her, and
+then knocked at the door of the Dykes’ flat.</p>
+
+<p>“When she came home at eight o’clock,
+she again passed him on the stairs; he was
+then going out. She stopped to ask him
+how Mr. Dyke was, and Wyatt replied:
+‘Oh, fairly well, but he misses his daughter,
+you know.’</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Marsh, now closely questioned, said
+that she thought Wyatt was carrying a large
+parcel under his arm, but she could not
+distinguish the shape of the parcel as the
+angle of the stairs, where she met him, was
+very dark. She stated, though, that he was
+running down the stairs very fast.</p>
+
+<p>“It was on all that evidence that the
+police felt justified in arresting Alfred Wyatt
+for the murder of James Arthur Dyke,
+and Amelia Dyke for connivance in the
+crime. And now this very morning, those
+two young people have been brought before
+the magistrate, and at this moment
+evidence—circumstantial, mind you, but positively
+damning—is being heaped upon them by the
+prosecution. The police did their work
+quickly. The very evening after the first
+day of the inquest, the warrant was out for
+their arrest.”</p>
+
+<p>He looked at a huge silver watch which
+he always carried in his waistcoat pocket.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t want to miss the defence,” he
+said, “for I know that it will be sensational.
+But I did not want to hear the police and
+medical evidence all over again. You’ll
+excuse me, won’t you? I shall be back
+here for five o’clock tea. I know you will be
+glad to hear all about it.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch06-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>When I returned to the A.B.C shop for my
+tea at five minutes past five, there he sat in
+his accustomed corner, with a cup of tea before
+him, another placed opposite to him,
+presumably for me, and a long piece of string
+between his bony fingers.</p>
+
+<p>“What will you have with your tea?”
+he asked politely, the moment I was seated.</p>
+
+<p>“A roll and butter and the end of the
+story,” I replied.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, the story has no end,” he said with
+a chuckle; “at least, not for the public.
+As for me, why, I never met a more simple
+‘mystery.’ Perhaps that is why the police
+were so completely at sea.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, and what happened?” I queried,
+with some impatience.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, the usual thing,” he said, as he
+once more began to fidget nervously with his
+bit of string. “The prisoners had pleaded
+not guilty, and the evidence for the
+prosecution was gone into in full. Mr. Parlett
+repeated his story of the £4,000 legacy, and
+all the neighbours had some story or other to
+tell about Alfred Wyatt, who, according to
+them, was altogether a most undesirable
+young man.</p>
+
+<p>“I heard the fag end of Mrs. Marsh’s
+evidence. When I reached the court she was
+repeating the story she had already told to
+the police.</p>
+
+<p>“Some one else in the house had also
+heard Wyatt running helter-skelter
+downstairs at eight o’clock on the Thursday
+evening; this was a point, though a small one,
+in favour of the accused. A man cannot run
+downstairs when he is carrying the whole
+weight of a dead body, and the theory of the
+prosecution was that Wyatt had murdered
+old Dyke on that Thursday evening, got into
+his motor-car somewhere, scorched down to
+Wembley with the dismembered body of his
+victim, deposited it in the spinney where it
+was subsequently found, and finally had
+driven back to town, stabled his motor car,
+and reached King’s Cross in time for the
+11.30 night express to Edinburgh. He would
+have time for all that, remember, for he
+would have three hours and a half to do it in.</p>
+
+<p>“Besides which the prosecution had
+unearthed one more witness, who was able to
+add another tiny link to the already damning
+chain of evidence built up against the accused.</p>
+
+<p>“Wilfred Poad, namely, manager of a large
+cycle and motor-car depôt in Euston Road,
+stated that on Thursday afternoon, 19th
+November, at about half-past six o’clock,
+Alfred Wyatt, with whom he had had some
+business dealings before, had hired a small
+car from him, with the understanding that
+he need not bring it back until after 11 p.m.
+This was agreed to, Poad keeping the place
+open until just before eleven, when Wyatt
+drove up in the car, paid for the hire of it,
+and then walked away from the shop in the
+direction of the Great Northern terminus.</p>
+
+<p>“That was pretty strong against the male
+prisoner, wasn’t it? For, mind you, Wyatt
+had given no satisfactory account whatever
+of his time between 8 p.m., when Mrs. Marsh
+had met him going out of Lisson Grove
+Crescent, and 11 p.m. when he brought back
+the car to the Euston Road shop. ‘He had
+been driving about aimlessly,’ so he said.
+Now, one doesn’t go out motoring for hours
+on a cold, drizzly night in November for no
+purpose whatever.</p>
+
+<p>“As for the female prisoner, the charge
+against her was merely one of complicity.</p>
+
+<p>“This closed the case for the prosecution,”
+continued the funny creature, with one of
+his inimitable chuckles, “leaving but one
+tiny point obscure, and that was, the
+murdered man’s strange conduct in dismissing
+the woman Nicholson.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, the case was strong enough, and
+yet there stood both prisoners in the dock
+with that sublime air of indifference and
+contempt which only complete innocence or
+hardened guilt could give.</p>
+
+<p>“Then when the prosecution had had their
+say, Alfred Wyatt chose to enter the witness-box
+and make a statement in his own defence.
+Quietly, and as if he were making the most
+casual observation, he said:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I am not guilty of the murder of Mr.
+Dyke, and in proof of this I solemnly assert
+that on Thursday, 19th November, the day
+I am supposed to have committed the crime,
+the old man was still alive at half-past ten
+o’clock in the evening.’</p>
+
+<p>“He paused a moment, like a born actor,
+watching the effect he had produced. I tell
+you, it was astounding.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I have three separate and independent
+witnesses here,’ continued Wyatt, with the
+same deliberate calm, ‘who heard and saw
+Mr. Dyke as late as half-past ten that night.
+Now, I understand that the dismembered
+body of the old man was found close to
+Wembley Park. How could I, between half-past
+ten and eleven o’clock, have killed Dyke,
+cut him up, cleaned and put the flat all tidy,
+carried the body to the car, driven on to
+Wembley, hidden the corpse in the spinney,
+and be back in Euston Road, all in the space
+of half-an-hour? I am absolutely innocent
+of this crime, and fortunately, it is easy for
+me now to prove my innocence.’</p>
+
+<p>“Alfred Wyatt had made no idle boast.
+Mrs. Marsh had seen him running downstairs
+at 8 p.m. An hour after that, the Pitts in
+the flat beneath heard the old man moving
+about overhead.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Just as usual,’ observed Mrs. Pitt.
+‘He always went to bed about nine, and we
+could always hear him most distinctly.’</p>
+
+<p>“John Pitt, the husband, corroborated this
+statement: the old man’s movements were
+quite unmistakable because of his crutches.</p>
+
+<p>“Henry Ogden, on the other hand, who
+lived in the house facing the block of flats,
+saw the light in Dyke’s window that evening,
+and the old man’s silhouette upon the blind
+from time to time. The light was put out
+at half-past ten. This statement again was
+corroborated by Mrs. Ogden, who also had
+noticed the silhouette and the light being
+extinguished at half-past ten.</p>
+
+<p>“But this was not all; both Mr. and Mrs.
+Ogden had seen old Dyke at his window,
+sitting in his accustomed armchair, between
+half-past eight and nine o’clock. He was
+gesticulating, and apparently talking to some
+one else in the room whom they could not
+see.</p>
+
+<p>“Alfred Wyatt, therefore was quite right
+when he said that he would have no difficulty
+in proving his innocence. The man whom
+he was supposed to have murdered was,
+according to the testimony, alive at six
+o’clock; according to Mr. and Mrs. Ogden
+he was alive and sitting in his window until
+nine; again, he was heard to move about
+until ten o’clock by both the Pitts, and at
+half-past ten only was the light put out in
+his flat. Obviously, therefore, as his dead
+body was found twelve miles away, Wyatt,
+who was out of the Crescent at eight, and in
+Euston Road at eleven, could not have done
+the deed.</p>
+
+<p>“He was discharged, of course; the
+magistrate adding a very severe remark on
+the subject of ‘carelessly collected evidence.’
+As for Miss Amelia, she sailed out of the
+court like a queen after her coronation, for
+with Wyatt’s discharge the case against
+her naturally collapsed. As for me, I walked
+out too, with an elated feeling at the thought
+that the intelligence of the British race had
+not yet sunk so low as our friends on the
+Continent would have us believe.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch06-4">
+
+<h3>Chapter IV</h3>
+
+<p>“But then, who murdered the old man?” I
+asked, for I confess the matter was puzzling
+me in an irritating kind of way.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! who indeed?” he rejoined sarcastically,
+while an artistic knot went to join its
+fellows along that never-ending bit of string.</p>
+
+<p>“I wish you’d tell me what’s in your mind,”
+I said, feeling peculiarly irritated with him
+just at that moment.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s in my mind?” he replied, with
+a shrug of his thin shoulders. “Oh, only
+a certain degree of admiration!”</p>
+
+<p>“Admiration at what?”</p>
+
+<p>“At a pair of exceedingly clever criminals.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you do think that Wyatt murdered
+Dyke?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think—I am sure.”</p>
+
+<p>“But when did they do it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, that’s more to the point. Personally,
+I should say between them on Wednesday
+morning, 18th November.”</p>
+
+<p>“The day they went for that motor-car
+ride?” I gasped.</p>
+
+<p>“And carried away the old man’s remains
+beneath a multiplicity of rugs,” he added.</p>
+
+<p>“But he was <em>alive</em> long after that!” I
+urged. “The woman Nicholson——”</p>
+
+<p>“The woman Nicholson saw and spoke to
+a man in bed, whom she <em>supposed</em> was old
+Mr. Dyke. Among the many questions put
+to her by those clever detectives, no one
+thought, of course, of asking her to describe
+the old man. But even if she had done so
+Wyatt was far too great an artist in crime
+not to have contrived a make-up which,
+described by a witness who had never before
+seen Dyke, would easily pass as a description
+of the old man himself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Impossible!” I said, struck in spite of
+myself by the simplicity of his logic.</p>
+
+<p>“Impossible, you say?” he shrieked
+excitedly. “Why, I call that crime a
+masterpiece from beginning to end; a display of
+ingenuity which, fortunately, the criminal
+classes seldom possess, or where would society
+be? Here was a crime committed, where
+everything was most beautifully stage-managed,
+nothing left unforeseen. Shall I
+reconstruct it for you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Do!” I said, handing across the table
+to him a brand new, beautiful bit of string,
+on which his talon-like fingers fastened as
+upon a prey.</p>
+
+<p>“Very well,” he said, marking each point
+with a scientific knot. “Here it is, scene
+by scene: There was Alfred Wyatt and
+Amelia Dyke—a pair of blackguards, eager
+to obtain that £4,000 which only the old
+man’s death could secure for them. They
+decide upon killing him, and: Scene
+1—Miss Amelia makes <em>her</em> arrangements. She
+advertises for a charwoman, and engages one,
+who is to be a very useful witness presently.</p>
+
+<p>“Scene 2.—The murder, brutal, horrible,
+on the person of an old cripple, whilst his
+own daughter stands by, and the
+dismembering of the body.</p>
+
+<p>“Scene 3.—The ride in the motor-car—after
+dark, remember, and with plenty of
+rugs, beneath which the gruesome burden
+is concealed. The scene is accompanied by
+the comedy of Miss Dyke speaking to her
+father, and waving her hand affectionately at
+him from below. I tell you, that woman
+must have had some nerve!</p>
+
+<p>“Then, Scene 4.—The arrival at Wembley,
+and the hiding of the remains.</p>
+
+<p>“Scene 5.—Amelia goes to Edinburgh by
+the 5.15 a.m. train, and thus secures her
+own <i>alibi</i>. After that, the comedy begins
+in earnest. The impersonation of the dead
+man by Wyatt during the whole of that
+memorable Thursday. Mind you, that was
+not very difficult; it only needed the brain
+to invent, and the nerve to carry it through.
+The charwoman had never seen old Dyke
+before; she only knew that he was an
+invalid. What more natural than that she
+should accept as her new master the man
+who lay in bed all day, and only spoke a
+few words to her? A very slight make-up
+of hair and beard would complete the
+illusion.</p>
+
+<p>“Then, at six o’clock, the woman gone,
+Wyatt steals out of the house, bespeaks the
+motor-car, leaves it in the street in a
+convenient spot, and is back in time to be seen
+by Mrs. Marsh at seven.</p>
+
+<p>“The rest is simplicity itself. The
+silhouette at the window was easy enough to
+arrange; the sound of a man walking on
+crutches is easily imitated with a couple of
+umbrellas—the actual crutches were, no doubt,
+burned directly after the murder. Lastly,
+the putting out of the light at half-past ten
+was the crowning stroke of genius.</p>
+
+<p>“One little thing might have upset the
+whole wonderful plan, but that one thing
+only; and that was if the body had been
+found <em>before</em> the great comedy scene of
+Thursday had been fully played. But that
+spinney near Wembley was well chosen.
+People don’t go wandering under trees and
+in woods on cold November days, and the
+remains were not found until the Saturday.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, it was cleverly stage-managed, and
+no mistake. I couldn’t have done it better
+myself. Won’t you have another cup of
+tea? No? Don’t look so upset. The world
+does not contain many such clever criminals
+as Alfred Wyatt and Amelia Dyke.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch07-1">
+
+<h2>VII. <br> The Tremarn Case</h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>“Well, it certainly is most amazing!” I
+said that day, when I had finished reading
+about it all in the <i>Daily Telegraph</i>.</p>
+
+<p>“Yet the most natural thing in the world,”
+retorted the man in the corner, as soon as
+he had ordered his lunch. “Crime invariably
+begets crime. No sooner is a murder, theft,
+or fraud committed in a novel or striking
+way, than this method is aped—probably
+within the next few days—by some other
+less imaginative scoundrel.</p>
+
+<p>“Take this case, for instance,” he continued,
+as he slowly began sipping his glass
+of milk, “which seems to amaze you so
+much. It was less than a year ago, was it
+not? that in Paris a man was found dead
+in a cab, stabbed in a most peculiar way—right
+through the neck from ear to ear—with,
+presumably, a long, sharp instrument of
+the type of an Italian stiletto.</p>
+
+<p>“No one in England took much count of
+the crime, beyond a contemptuous shrug of
+the shoulders at the want of safety of the
+Paris streets, and the incapacity of the French
+detectives, who not only never discovered
+the murderer, who had managed to slip out
+of the cab unperceived, but who did not
+even succeed in establishing the identity of
+the victim.</p>
+
+<p>“But this case,” he added, pointing once
+more to my daily paper, “strikes nearer
+home. Less than a year has passed, and
+last week, in the very midst of our much
+vaunted London streets, a crime of a similar
+nature has been committed. I do not know
+if your paper gives full details, but this is
+what happened: Last Monday evening two
+gentlemen, both in evening dress and wearing
+opera hats, hailed a hansom in Shaftesbury
+Avenue. It was about a quarter past eleven,
+and the night, if you remember, was a typical
+November one—dark, drizzly, and foggy.
+The various theatres in the immediate
+neighbourhood were disgorging a continuous stream
+of people after the evening performance.</p>
+
+<p>“The cabman did not take special notice
+of his fares. They jumped in very quickly,
+and one of them, through the little trap
+above, gave him an address in Cromwell
+Road. He drove there as quickly as the fog
+would permit him, and pulled up at the
+number given. One of the gentlemen then
+handed him a very liberal fare—again through
+the little trap—and told him to drive his
+friend on to Westminster Chambers, Victoria
+Street.</p>
+
+<p>“Cabby noticed that the ‘swell,’ when he
+got out of the hansom, stopped for a moment
+to say a few words to his friend, who had
+remained inside; then he crossed over the
+road and walked quickly in the direction of
+the Natural History Museum.</p>
+
+<p>“When the cabman pulled up at Westminster
+Chambers, he waited for the second
+fare to get out; the latter seemingly making
+no movement that way, cabby looked down
+at him through the trap.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I thought ’e was asleep,’ he explained
+to the police later on. ‘ ’E was leaning back
+in ’is corner, and ’is ’ead was turned towards
+the window. I gets down and calls to ’im,
+but ’e don’t move. Then I gets on to the
+step and give ’im a shake. . . .
+There!—I’ll say no more. . . . We was near a
+lamp-post, the mare took a step forward,
+and the light fell full on the gent’s face.
+<span id="front-src">’E was dead and no mistake.</span> I saw the
+wound just underneath ’is ear, and
+“Murder!” I says to myself at once.’</p>
+
+<p>“Cabby lost no time in whistling for the
+nearest point policeman, then he called the
+night porter of the Westminster Chambers.
+The latter looked at the murdered man, and
+declared that he knew nothing of him;
+certainly he was not a tenant of the Chambers.</p>
+
+<p>“By the time a couple of policemen arrived
+upon the scene, quite a crowd had gathered
+around the cab, in spite of the lateness of
+the hour and the darkness of the night.
+The matter was such an important one that
+one of the constables thought it best at once
+to jump into the hansom beside the murdered
+man and to order the cabman to drive to
+the nearest police station.</p>
+
+<p>“There the cause of death was soon
+ascertained; the victim of this daring outrage
+had been stabbed through the neck from
+ear to ear with a long, sharp instrument,
+in shape like an antique stiletto, which, I
+may tell you, was subsequently found under
+the cushions of the hansom. The murderer
+must have watched his opportunity, when
+his victim’s head was turned away from him,
+and then dealt the blow, just below the left
+ear, with amazing swiftness and precision.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course the papers were full of it the
+next day; this was such a lovely opportunity
+for driving home a moral lesson, of how one
+crime engenders another, and how—but for
+that murder in Paris a year ago—we should
+not now have to deplore a crime committed
+in the very centre of fashionable London, the
+detection of which seems likely to completely
+baffle the police.</p>
+
+<p>“Plenty more in that strain, of course,
+from which the reading public quickly jumped
+to the conclusion that the police held absolutely
+no clue as to the identity of the daring
+and mysterious miscreant.</p>
+
+<p>“A most usual and natural thing had
+happened; cabby could only give a very vague
+description of his other ‘fare,’ of the ‘swell’
+who had got out at Cromwell Road, and
+been lost to sight after having committed
+so dastardly and so daring a crime.</p>
+
+<p>“This was scarcely to be wondered at, for
+the night had been very foggy, and the
+murderer had been careful to pull his opera
+hat well over his face; thus hiding the whole
+of his forehead and eyes; moreover, he had
+always taken the additional precaution of
+only communicating with the cabman through
+the little trap-door.</p>
+
+<p>“All cabby had seen of him was a
+clean-shaven chin. As to the murdered man, it
+was not until about noon, when the early
+editions of the evening papers came out with
+a fuller account of the crime and a description
+of the victim, that his identity was at last
+established.</p>
+
+<p>“Then the news spread like wildfire, and
+the evening papers came out with some
+of the most sensational headlines it had ever
+been their good fortune to print. The man
+who had been so mysteriously murdered in
+the cab was none other than Mr. Philip Le
+Cheminant, the nephew and heir-presumptive
+of the Earl of Tremarn.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch07-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>“In order fully to realise the interest created
+by this extraordinary news, you must be
+acquainted with the various details of that
+remarkable case, popularly known as the
+‘Tremarn Peerage Case,’ ” continued the
+man in the corner, as he placidly munched
+his cheese-cake. “I do not know if you
+followed it in its earlier stages, when its
+many details—which read like a
+romance—were first made public.”</p>
+
+<p>I looked so interested and so eager that he
+did not wait for my reply.</p>
+
+<p>“I must try and put it all clearly before
+you,” he said; “I was interested in it all
+from the beginning, and from the numerous
+wild stories afloat I have sifted only what
+was undeniably true. Some points of the
+case are still in dispute, and will, perhaps,
+now for ever remain a mystery. But I must
+take you back some five-and-twenty years.
+The Hon. Arthur Le Cheminant, second son
+of the late Earl of Tremarn, was then
+travelling round the world for health and
+pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>“In the course of his wanderings he touched
+at Martinique, one of the French West Indian
+islands, which was devastated by volcanic
+eruptions about two years ago. There he
+met and fell in love with a beautiful half-caste
+girl named Lucie Legrand, who had French
+blood in her veins, and was a Christian, but
+who, otherwise, was only partially civilised,
+and not at all educated.</p>
+
+<p>“How it all came about it is difficult to
+conjecture, but one thing is absolutely certain,
+and that is that the Hon. Arthur le Cheminant
+the son of one of our English Peers, married
+this half-caste girl at the parish church of
+St. Pierre, in Martinique, according to the
+forms prescribed by French laws, both
+parties being of the same religion.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose now no one will ever know
+whether that marriage was absolutely and
+undisputably a legal one—but, in view of
+subsequent events, we must presume that
+it was. The Hon. Arthur, however, in any
+case, behaved like a young scoundrel. He
+only spent a very little time with his wife,
+quickly tired of her, and within two years of
+his marriage callously abandoned her and
+his child, then a boy about a year old.</p>
+
+<p>“He lodged a sum of £2,000 in the local
+bank in the name of Mme. Le Cheminant, the
+interest of which was to be paid to her
+regularly for the maintenance of herself and
+child, then he calmly sailed for England, with
+the intention never to return. This intention
+fate itself helped him to carry out, for he
+died very shortly afterwards, taking the
+secret of his incongruous marriage with him
+to his grave.</p>
+
+<p>“Mme. Le Cheminant, as she was called
+out there, seems to have accepted her own
+fate with perfect equanimity. She had never
+known anything about her husband’s social
+position in his own country, and he had left
+her what, in Martinique amongst the coloured
+population, was considered a very fair
+competence for herself and child.</p>
+
+<p>“The grandson of an English earl was
+taught to read and write by the worthy <i>curé</i>
+of St. Pierre, and during the whole of her
+life, Lucie never once tried to find out who
+her husband was, and what had become of
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“But here the dramatic scene comes in
+this strange story,” continued the man in
+the corner, with growing excitement; “two
+years ago St. Pierre, if you remember, was
+completely destroyed by volcanic eruptions.
+Nearly the entire population perished, and
+every house and building was in ruins.
+Among those who fell a victim to the awful
+catastrophe was Mme. Le Cheminant,
+otherwise the Hon. Mrs. Arthur Le Cheminant,
+whilst amongst those who managed to escape
+and ultimately found refuge in the English
+colony of St. Vincent, was her son, Philip.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you can easily guess what happened,
+can’t you? In that English-speaking colony
+the name of Le Cheminant was, of course,
+well known, and Philip had not been in St.
+Vincent many weeks, before he learned that
+his father was none other than a younger
+brother of the present Earl of Tremarn, and
+that he himself—seeing that the present peer
+was over fifty and still unmarried—was
+heir-presumptive to the title and estates.</p>
+
+<p>“You know the rest. Within two or three
+months of the memorable St. Pierre
+catastrophe Philip Le Cheminant had written to
+his uncle, Lord Tremarn, demanding his rights.
+Then he took passage on board a French
+liner, and crossed over to Havre <i>en route</i> for
+Paris and London.</p>
+
+<p>“He and his mother—both brought up as
+French subjects—had, mind you, all the
+respect which French people have for their
+papers of identification; and when the house
+in which they had lived for twenty years
+was tumbling about the young man’s ears,
+when his mother had already perished in the
+flames, he made a final and successful effort to
+rescue the papers which proved him to be
+a French citizen, the son of Lucie Legrand
+by her lawful marriage with Arthur Le
+Cheminant at the church of the Immaculate
+Conception of St. Pierre.</p>
+
+<p>“What happened immediately afterwards
+it is difficult to conjecture. Certain it is,
+however, that over here the newspapers soon
+were full of vague allusions about the
+newly-found heir to the Earldom of Tremarn, and
+within a few weeks the whole of the story of
+the secret marriage at St. Pierre was in
+everybody’s mouth.</p>
+
+<p>“It created an immense sensation; the
+Hon. Arthur Le Cheminant had lived a few
+years in England after his return from abroad
+and no one, not even his brother, seemed
+to have had the slightest inkling of his
+marriage.</p>
+
+<p>“The late Lord Tremarn, you must remember,
+had three sons, the eldest of whom is the
+present peer, the second was the romantic
+Arthur, and the third, the Hon. Reginald,
+who also died some years ago, leaving four
+sons, the eldest of whom, Harold, was just
+twenty-three, and had always been styled
+heir-presumptive to the earldom.</p>
+
+<p>“Lord Tremarn had brought up these four
+nephews of his, who had lost both father and
+mother, just as if they had been his own
+children, and his affection for them, and
+notably for the eldest boy, was a very beautiful
+trait in his otherwise unattractive character.</p>
+
+<p>“The news of the existence and claim of
+this unknown nephew must have come upon
+Lord Tremarn as a thunderbolt. His attitude,
+however, was one of uncompromising
+incredulity. He refused to believe the story
+of the marriage, called the whole tale a tissue
+of falsehoods, and denounced the claimant
+as a barefaced and impudent impostor.</p>
+
+<p>“Two or three months more went by;
+the public were eagerly awaiting the arrival
+of this semi-exotic claimant to an English
+peerage, and sensations, surpassing those of
+the Tichborne case, were looked forward to
+with palpitating interest.</p>
+
+<p>“But in the romances of real life, it is
+always the unexpected that happens. The
+claimant did arrive in London about a year
+ago. He was alone, friendless, and moneyless,
+since the £2,000 lay buried somewhere
+beneath the ruins of the St. Pierre bank.
+However, he called upon a well-known London
+solicitor, who advanced him some money
+and took charge of all the papers relating to
+his claim.</p>
+
+<p>“Philip Le Cheminant then seems to have
+made up his mind to make a personal appeal
+to his uncle, trusting apparently in the old
+adage that ‘blood is thicker than water.’</p>
+
+<p>“As was only to be expected, Lord Tremarn
+flatly refused to see the claimant, whom he
+was still denouncing as an impostor. It was
+by stealth, and by bribing the servants at
+the Grosvenor Square mansion that the
+young man at last obtained an interview with
+his uncle.</p>
+
+<p>“Last New Year’s Day he gave James
+Tovey, Lord Tremarn’s butler, a five-pound
+note, to introduce him, surreptitiously, into
+his master’s study. There uncle and nephew
+at last met face to face.</p>
+
+<p>“What happened at that interview nobody
+knows; was the cry of blood and of
+justice so convincing that Lord Tremarn
+dare not resist it? Perhaps.</p>
+
+<p>“Anyway, from that moment the new
+heir-presumptive was installed within his
+rights. After a single interview with Philip
+Le Cheminant’s solicitor, Lord Tremarn
+openly acknowledged the claimant to be his
+brother Arthur’s only son, and therefore his
+own nephew and heir.</p>
+
+<p>“Nay, more, every one noticed that the
+proud, bad-tempered old man was as wax
+in the hands of this newly-found nephew.
+He seemed even to have withdrawn his
+affection from the four other young nephews,
+whom hitherto he had brought up as his
+own children, and bestowed it all upon his
+brother Arthur’s son—some people said in
+compensation for all the wrong that had
+been done to the boy in the past.</p>
+
+<p>“But the scandal around his dead brother’s
+name had wounded the old man’s pride very
+deeply, and from this he never recovered.
+He shut himself away from all his friends,
+living alone with his newly-found nephew
+in his gloomy house in Grosvenor Square.
+The other boys, the eldest of whom, Harold,
+was just twenty-three, decided very soon to
+leave a house where they were no longer
+welcome. They had a small private fortune
+of their own, from their father and mother;
+the youngest boy was still at college, two
+others had made a start in their respective
+professions.</p>
+
+<p>“Harold had been brought up as an idle
+young man about town, and on him the
+sudden change of fortune fell most heavily.
+He was undecided what to do in the future,
+but, in the meanwhile, partly from a spirit of
+independence, and partly from a desire to
+keep a home for his younger brothers, he
+took and furnished a small flat, which, it is
+interesting to note, is just off Exhibition Road,
+not far from the Natural History Museum in
+Kensington.</p>
+
+<p>“This was less than a year ago. Ten
+months later the newly-found heir to the
+peerage of Tremarn was found murdered in a
+hansom cab, and Harold Le Cheminant is
+once more the future Earl.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch07-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>“The papers, as you know, talked of nothing
+else but the mysterious murder in the hansom
+cab. Every one’s sympathy went out at
+once to Lord Tremarn, who, on hearing the
+terrible news, had completely broken down,
+and was now lying on a bed of sickness, from
+which they say he may never recover.</p>
+
+<p>“From the first there had been many
+rumours of the terrible enmity which existed
+between Harold Le Cheminant and the man
+who had so easily captured Lord Tremarn’s
+heart, as well as the foremost place in the
+Grosvenor Square household.</p>
+
+<p>“The servants in the great and gloomy
+mansion told the detectives in charge of the
+case many stories of terrible rows which
+occurred at first between the cousins. And
+now every one’s eyes were already turned
+with suspicion on the one man who could
+most benefit by the death of Philip Le
+Cheminant.</p>
+
+<p>“However careful and reticent the police
+may be, details in connection with so
+interesting a case have a wonderful way of
+leaking out. Already one other most
+important fact had found its way into the
+papers. It appears that in their endeavours
+to reconstruct the last day spent by the
+murdered man the detectives had come upon
+most important evidence.</p>
+
+<p>“It was Thomas Sawyer, hall porter of the
+Junior Grosvenor Club, who first told the
+following interesting story. He stated that
+deceased was a member of the club, and had
+dined there on the evening preceding his
+death.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Mr. Le Cheminant was just coming
+downstairs after his dinner,’ explained
+Thomas Sawyer to the detectives, ‘when a
+stranger comes into the hall of the club;
+Mr. Le Cheminant saw him as soon as I did,
+and appeared very astonished. “What do
+you want?” he says rather sharply. “A
+word with you,” replies the stranger. Mr.
+Le Cheminant seemed to hesitate for a
+moment. He lights a cigar, whilst the
+stranger stands there glaring at him with a
+look in his eye I certainly didn’t like.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Mind you,’ added Thomas Sawyer, ‘the
+stranger was a gentleman, in evening dress,
+and all that. Presently Mr. Le Cheminant
+says to him: “This way, then,” and takes
+him along into one of the club rooms. Half
+an hour later the stranger comes out again.
+He looked flushed and excited. Soon after
+Mr. Le Cheminant comes out too; but he
+was quite calm and smoking a cigar. He
+asks for a cab, and tells the driver to take him
+to the Lyric Theatre.’</p>
+
+<p>“This was all that the hall-porter had to
+say, but his evidence was corroborated by one
+of the waiters of the club who saw Mr. Le
+Cheminant and the stranger subsequently
+enter the dining-room, which was quite
+deserted at the time.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘They ’adn’t been in the room a minute,’
+said the waiter, ‘when I ’eard loud voices, as
+if they was quarrelling frightful. I couldn’t
+’ear what they said, though I tried, but they
+were shouting so, and drowning each other’s
+voices. Presently there’s a ring at my bell,
+and I goes into the room. Mr. Le Cheminant
+was sitting beside one of the tables, quietly
+lighting a cigar. “Show this—er—gentleman
+out of the club,” ’e says to me. The stranger
+looked as if ’e would strike ’im. “You’ll
+pay for this,” ’e says, then ’e picks up ’is ’at,
+and dashes out of the club helter-skelter.
+“One is always pestered by these beggars,”
+says Mr. Le Cheminant to me, as ’e stalks out
+of the room.’</p>
+
+<p>“Later on it was arranged that both
+Thomas Sawyer and the waiter should catch
+sight of Harold Le Cheminant, as he went
+out of his house in Exhibition Road. Neither
+of them had the slightest hesitation in
+recognising in him the stranger who had called at
+the club that night.</p>
+
+<p>“Now that they held this definite clue,
+the detectives continued their work with a
+will. They made enquiries at the Lyric
+Theatre, but there they only obtained very
+vague testimony; one point, however, was
+of great value, the commissionaire outside
+one of the neighbouring theatres stated that,
+some time after the performance had begun
+he noticed a gentleman in evening dress
+walking rapidly past him.</p>
+
+<p>“He seemed strangely excited, for as he
+went by he muttered quite audibly to himself;
+‘I can stand it no longer, it must be he or I.’
+Then he disappeared in the fog, walking away
+towards Shaftesbury Avenue. Unfortunately
+the commissionaire, just like the cabman,
+was not prepared to swear to the identity
+of this man, whom he had only seen
+momentarily through the fog.</p>
+
+<p>“But add to all this testimony the very
+strong motive there was for the crime, and
+you will not wonder that within twenty-four
+hours of the murder, the strongest suspicions
+had already fastened on Harold Le Cheminant,
+and it was generally understood that,
+even before the inquest, the police already
+had in readiness a warrant for his arrest on
+the capital charge.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch07-4">
+
+<h3>Chapter IV</h3>
+
+<p>“It would be difficult, I think, for any one
+who was not present at that memorable
+inquest to have the least idea of the sensation
+which its varied and dramatic incidents
+caused among the crowd of spectators there.</p>
+
+<p>“At first the proceedings were of the
+usual kind. The medical officer gave his
+testimony as to the cause of death; for
+this was, of course, not in dispute. The
+stiletto was produced; it was of an antique
+and foreign pattern, probably of Eastern
+or else Spanish origin. In England, it could
+only have been purchased at some <i>bric-à-brac</i>
+shop.</p>
+
+<p>“Then it was the turn of the servants at
+Grosvenor Square, of the cabman, and of
+the commissionaire. Lord Tremarn’s
+evidence, which he had sworn to on his
+sickbed, was also read. It added nothing to the
+known facts of the case, for he had last
+seen his favourite nephew alive in the course
+of the afternoon preceding the latter’s tragic
+end.</p>
+
+<p>“After that the <i>employés</i> of the Junior
+Grosvenor Club retold their story, and they
+were the first to strike the note of sensation
+which was afterwards raised to its highest
+possible pitch.</p>
+
+<p>“Both of them, namely, were asked each
+in their turn to look round the court and see
+if they could recognise the stranger who had
+called at the club that memorable evening.
+Without the slightest hesitation, both the
+hall-porter and the waiter pointed to Harold
+Le Cheminant, who sat with his solicitor in
+the body of the court.</p>
+
+<p>“But already an inkling of what was to
+come had gradually spread through that
+crowded court—instinctively every one felt
+that behind the apparent simplicity of this
+tragic case there lurked another mystery
+more strange even than that murder in the
+hansom cab.</p>
+
+<p>“Evidence was being taken as to the
+previous history of the deceased, his first
+appearance in London, his relationship with
+his uncle, and subsequently his enmity with
+his cousin Harold. At this point a man was
+brought forward as a witness, who it was
+understood had communicated with the police
+at the very last moment, offering to make
+a statement which he thought would throw
+considerable light upon the mysterious affair.</p>
+
+<p>“He was a man of about fifty years of age,
+who looked like a very seedy, superannuated
+clerk of some insurance office.</p>
+
+<p>“He gave his name as Charles Collins, and
+said that he resided in Caxton Road, Clapham.</p>
+
+<p>“In a perfectly level tone of voice, he then
+explained that some three years ago, his
+son William, who had always been idle and
+good-for-nothing, had suddenly disappeared
+from home.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘We heard nothing of him for over two
+years,’ continued Charles Collins, in that
+same cheerless and even voice which spoke
+of a monotonous existence of ceaseless, patient
+grind, ‘but some few weeks ago my daughter
+went up to the West End to see about an
+engagement—she plays dance music at parties
+sometimes—when, in Regent Street, she came
+face to face with her brother William. He
+was no longer wretched, as we all are,’ added
+the old man pathetically, ‘he was dressed
+like a swell, and when his sister spoke to
+him, he pretended not to know her. But
+she’s a sharp girl, and guessed at once that
+there was something strange there which
+William wished to hide. She followed him
+from a distance, and never lost sight of him
+that day, until she saw him about six o’clock
+in the evening go into one of the fine houses
+in Grosvenor Square. Then she came home
+and told her mother and me all about it.’</p>
+
+<p>“I can assure you,” continued the man in
+the corner, “that you might have heard a
+pin drop in that crowded court whilst the
+old man spoke. That he was stating the
+truth no one doubted for a moment. The
+very fact that he was brought forward as a
+witness showed that his story had been
+proved, at any rate, to the satisfaction of
+the police.</p>
+
+<p>“The Collinses seem to have been very
+simple, good-natured people. It never struck
+any of them to interfere with William, who
+appeared, in their own words, to have
+‘bettered himself.’ They concluded that he
+had obtained some sort of position in a rich
+family, and was now ashamed of his poor
+relations at Clapham.</p>
+
+<p>“Then one morning they read in the
+papers the story of the mysterious murder
+in the hansom cab, together with a description
+of the victim, who had not yet been identified.
+‘William,’ they said with one accord.
+Michael Collins, one of the younger sons,
+went up to London to view the murdered
+man at the mortuary. There was no doubt
+whatever that it was William, and yet all the
+papers persisted in saying that the deceased
+was the heir to some grand peerage.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘So I wrote to the police,’ concluded
+Charles Collins, ‘and my wife and children
+were all allowed to view the body, and we
+are all prepared to swear that it is that of
+my son, William Collins, who was no more
+heir to a peerage than your worship.’</p>
+
+<p>“And mopping his forehead, with a large
+coloured handkerchief, the old man stepped
+down from the box.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you may imagine what this bombshell
+was in the midst of that coroner’s
+court. Everyone looked at his neighbour
+wondering if this was real life, or some
+romantic play being acted on a stage. Amidst
+indescribable excitement, various other
+members of the Collins’ family corroborated
+the old man’s testimony, as did also one or
+two friends from Clapham. All those who
+had been allowed to view the body of the
+murdered man pronounced it without hesitation
+to be that of William Collins, who had
+disappeared from home three years ago.</p>
+
+<p>“You see, it was like a repetition of the
+Tichborne case, only with this strange
+difference: This claimant was dead, but all his
+papers were in perfect order, the certificate
+of marriage between Lucie Legrand and
+Arthur Le Cheminant at Martinique, as well
+as the birth and baptismal certificate of
+Philip Le Cheminant, their son. Yet there
+were all those simple, honest folk swearing
+that the deceased had been born in Clapham,
+and the mother, surely, could not have been
+mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>“That is where the difference with the other
+noteworthy case came in, for in this instance
+as far as the general public is concerned
+the actual identity of the murdered man
+will always remain a matter of doubt—Philip
+Le Cheminant or William Collins took
+that part of his secret, at any rate, with him
+to his grave.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch07-5">
+
+<h3>Chapter V</h3>
+
+<p>“But the murder?” I asked eagerly, for
+the man in the corner had paused, intent
+upon the manufacture of innumerable knots
+in a long piece of string.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, yes, the murder, of course,” he replied
+with a chuckle, “the second mystery in this
+extraordinary case. Well, of course, whatever
+the identity of the deceased really was,
+there was no doubt in the minds of the
+police that Harold Le Cheminant had murdered
+him. To him, at any rate, the Collins
+family were unknown; he only knew the
+man who had supplanted him in his uncle’s
+affections, and snatched a rich inheritance
+away from him. The charge brought against
+him at the Westminster Court was also one
+of the greatest sensations of this truly
+remarkable case.</p>
+
+<p>“It looked, indeed, as if the unfortunate
+young man had committed a crime which
+was as appalling as it was useless. Instead
+of murdering the impostor—if impostor he
+was—how much more simple it would have
+been to have tried to unmask him. But,
+strange to say, this he never seems to have
+done, at any rate as far as the public knew.</p>
+
+<p>“But here again mystery stepped in.
+When brought before the magistrate, Harold
+Le Cheminant was able to refute the terrible
+charge brought against him by the simple
+means of a complete <i>alibi</i>. After the stormy
+episode at the Junior Grosvenor Club he
+had gone to his own club in Pall Mall, and
+fortunately for him, did not leave it until
+twenty minutes past eleven, some few
+minutes <em>after</em> the two men in evening
+dress got into the hansom in Shaftesbury
+Avenue.</p>
+
+<p>“But for this lucky fact, for which he had
+one or two witnesses, it might have fared ill
+with him, for feeling unduly excited, he
+walked all the way home afterwards; and
+had he left his club earlier, he might have
+found it difficult to account for his time.
+As it was, he was, of course, discharged.</p>
+
+<p>“But one more strange fact came out
+during the course of the magisterial investigation,
+and that was that Harold Le Cheminant,
+on the very day preceding the murder, had
+booked a passage for St. Vincent. He
+admitted in court that he meant to conduct
+certain investigations there, with regard to
+the identity of the supposed heir to the
+Tremarn peerage.</p>
+
+<p>“And thus the curtain came down on the
+last act of that extraordinary drama, leaving
+two great mysteries unsolved: the real
+identity of the murdered man, and that of
+the man who killed him. Some people still
+persist in thinking it was Harold Le Cheminant.
+Well, we may easily dismiss <em>that</em> supposition.
+Harold had decided to investigate
+the matter for himself; he was on his way
+to St. Vincent.</p>
+
+<p>“Surely common-sense would assert that,
+having gone so far, he would assure himself
+first, whether the man was an impostor or
+not, before he resorted to crime, in order
+to rid himself of him. Moreover, the
+witnesses who saw him leave his own club at
+twenty minutes past eleven were quite
+independent and very emphatic.</p>
+
+<p>“Another theory is that the Collins’ gang
+tried to blackmail Philip Le Cheminant or
+William Collins whichever we like to call
+him—and that it was one of them who
+murdered him out of spite, when he refused
+to submit to the blackmailing process.</p>
+
+<p>“Against that theory, however, there are
+two unanswerable arguments—firstly, the
+weapon used, which certainly was not one
+that would commend itself to the average
+British middle-class man on murder intent—a
+razor or knife would be more in his line;
+secondly, there is no doubt whatever that
+the murderer wore evening dress and an
+opera hat, a costume not likely to have been
+worn by any member of the Collins’ family,
+or their friends. We may, therefore, dismiss
+that theory also with equal certainty.”</p>
+
+<p>And he surveyed placidly the row of fine
+knots in his bit of string.</p>
+
+<p>“But then, according to you, who was the
+man in evening dress, and who but Harold
+Le Cheminant had any interest in getting
+rid of the claimant?” I asked at last.</p>
+
+<p>“Who, indeed?” he replied with a chuckle
+“who but the man who was as wax in the
+hands of that impostor.”</p>
+
+<p>“Whom do you mean?” I gasped.</p>
+
+<p>“Let us take things from the beginning,”
+he said, with ever-growing excitement, “and
+take the one thing which is absolutely beyond
+dispute, and that is the authenticity of the
+<em>papers</em>—the marriage certificate of Lucie
+Legrand, etc.—as against the authenticity of
+the <em>man</em>. Let us admit that the real Philip
+Le Cheminant was a refugee at St. Vincent,
+that he found out about his parentage and
+determined to go to England. He writes
+to his uncle, then sails for Europe, lands at
+Havre, and arrives in Paris.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Paris?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Because you, like the police and like the
+public, have persistently shut your eyes to
+an event which, to my mind has bearing upon
+the whole of this mysterious case, and that
+is the original murder committed in Paris
+a year ago, also in a cab, also with a
+stiletto—which that time was <em>not</em> found—in fact, in
+the self-same manner as this murder a week
+ago.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, that crime was never brought
+home to its perpetrator any more than this
+one will be. But my contention is, that the
+man who committed that murder a year ago,
+repeated this crime last week—that the man
+who was murdered in Paris was the real
+Philip Le Cheminant, whilst the man who
+was murdered in London was some friend
+to whom he had confided his story, and
+probably his papers, and who then hit upon
+the bold plan of assuming the personality
+of the Martinique creole, heir to an English
+peerage.”</p>
+
+<p>“But what in the world makes you imagine
+such a preposterous thing?” I gasped.</p>
+
+<p>“One tiny unanswerable fact,” he replied
+quietly. “William Collins, the impostor,
+when he came to London, called upon a
+solicitor, and deposited with him the valuable
+papers, <em>after that</em> he obtained his interview
+with Lord Tremarn. Then mark what
+happens. Without any question, immediately
+after that interview, and, therefore, without
+even having seen the papers of identification,
+Lord Tremarn accepts the claimant as his
+newly-found nephew.</p>
+
+<p>“And why?</p>
+
+<p>“Only because that claimant has a tremendous
+hold over the Earl, which makes the
+old man as wax in his hands, and it is only
+logical to conclude that that hold was none
+other than that Lord Tremarn had met his
+real nephew in Paris, and had killed him,
+sooner than to see him supplant his beloved
+heir, Harold.</p>
+
+<p>“I followed up the subsequent history of
+that Paris crime, and found that the Paris
+police had never established the identity of
+the murdered man. Being a stranger, and
+moneyless, he had apparently lodged in one
+of those innumerable ill-famed little hotels
+that abound in Paris, the proprietors of which
+have very good cause to shun the police,
+and therefore would not even venture so far
+as to go and identify the body when it lay
+in the Morgue.</p>
+
+<p>“But William Collins knew who the
+murdered man was; no doubt he lodged at
+the same hotel, and could lay his hands on
+the all-important papers. I imagine that
+the two young men originally met in St.
+Vincent, or perhaps on board ship. He
+assumed the personality of the deceased,
+crossed over to England, and confronted
+Lord Tremarn with the threat to bring the
+murder home to him if he ventured to dispute
+his claim.</p>
+
+<p>“Think of it all, and you will see that I
+am right. When Lord Tremarn first heard
+from his brother Arthur’s son, he went to
+Paris in order to assure himself of the validity
+of his claim. Seeing that there was no
+doubt of that, he assumed a friendly attitude
+towards the young man, and one evening
+took him out for a drive in a cab and
+murdered him on the way.</p>
+
+<p>“Then came Nemesis in the shape of
+William Collins, whom he dared not denounce,
+lest his crime be brought home to him.
+How could he come forward and say: ‘I
+know that this man is an impostor, as I
+happened to have murdered my nephew
+myself’?</p>
+
+<p>“No; he preferred to temporise, and bide
+his time until, perhaps, chance would give
+him his opportunity. It took a year in coming.
+The yoke had become too heavy. ‘It must
+be he or I!’ he said to himself that very
+night. Apparently he was on the best of
+terms with his tormentor, but in his heart
+of hearts he had always meant to be even
+with him at the last.</p>
+
+<p>“Everything favoured him; the foggy
+night, even the dispute between Harold and
+the impostor at the club. Can you not
+picture him meeting William Collins outside
+the theatre, hearing from him the story of
+the quarrel, and then saying, ‘Come with
+me to Harold’s; I’ll soon make the young
+jackanapes apologise to you’?</p>
+
+<p>“Mind you, a year had passed by since the
+original crime. William Collins, no doubt,
+never thought he had anything to fear from
+the old man. He got into the cab with him,
+and thus this remarkable story has closed, and
+Harold Le Cheminant is once more heir to
+the Earldom of Tremarn.</p>
+
+<p>“Think it all over, and bear in mind that
+Lord Tremarn <em>never</em> made the slightest
+attempt to prove the rights or wrongs of
+the impostor’s claim. On this base your
+own conclusions, and then see if they do not
+inevitably lead you to admit mine as the
+only possible solution of this double mystery.”</p>
+
+<p>He was gone, leaving me bewildered and
+amazed, staring at my <i>Daily Telegraph</i>,
+where, side by side with a long recapitulation
+of the mysterious claimant of the Earldom
+there was the following brief
+announcement:</p>
+
+<p>“We regret to say that the condition of
+Lord Tremarn is decidedly worse to-day,
+and that but little hope is entertained of his
+recovery. Mr. Harold Le Cheminant has
+been his uncle’s constant and devoted
+companion during the noble Earl’s illness.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch08-1">
+
+<h2>VIII. <br> The Fate of the <i>Artemis</i></h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>“Well, I’m ——!” was my inelegant mental
+comment upon the news in that morning’s
+paper.</p>
+
+<p>“So are most people,” rejoined the man
+in the corner, with that eerie way he had
+of reading my thoughts. “The <i>Artemis</i> has
+come home, having safely delivered her
+dangerous cargo, and Captain Jutland’s
+explanations only serve to deepen the mystery.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you admit there is one in this case?”
+I said.</p>
+
+<p>“Only to the public. Not to me. But I
+do admit that the puzzle is a hard one. Do
+you remember the earlier details of the case?
+It was towards the end of 1903. Negotiations
+between Russia and Japan were just
+reaching a point of uncomfortable tension,
+and the man in the street guessed that war
+in the Far East was imminent.</p>
+
+<p>“Messrs. Mills and Co. had just completed
+an order for a number of their celebrated
+quick-firing guns for the Russian Government,
+and these—according to the terms of the
+contract—were to be delivered at Port Arthur
+on or about 1st February, 1904. Effectively,
+then, on 1st December last, the <i>Artemis</i>, under
+the command of Captain Jutland, sailed
+from Goole, with her valuable cargo on board,
+and with orders to proceed along as fast as
+possible, in view of the probable outbreak
+of hostilities.</p>
+
+<p>“Less than two hours after she had started,
+Messrs. Mills received intimation from the
+highest official quarters, that in all probability
+before the <i>Artemis</i> could reach Port Arthur,
+and in view of coming eventualities, the
+submarine mines would have been laid at
+the entrance to the harbour. A secret plan
+of the port was therefore sent to the firm
+for Captain Jutland’s use, showing the only
+way through which he could possibly hope
+to navigate the <i>Artemis</i> safely into the
+harbour, and without which she would
+inevitably come in contact with one of those
+terrible engines of wholesale destruction,
+which have since worked such awful havoc
+in this war.</p>
+
+<p>“But <em>there</em> was the trouble. This official
+intimation, together with the plan, reached
+Messrs. Mills just two hours too late; it is a
+way peculiar to many official intimations.
+Fortunately, however, the <i>Artemis</i> was to
+touch at Portsmouth on private business of
+the firm’s, and, therefore, it only meant
+finding a trustworthy messenger to meet
+Captain Jutland there, and to hand him
+over that all-important plan.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, there was no time to be lost,
+but, above all, some one of extreme
+trustworthiness must be found for so important a
+mission. You must remember that the great
+European Power in question is beset by
+many foes in the shape of her own disaffected
+children, who desire her downfall even more
+keenly than does her Asiatic opponent. Also
+in times like these, when every method is
+fair which gives one adversary an advantage
+over the other, we must remember that
+our plucky little allies of the Far East are
+past masters in that art which is politely
+known as secret intelligence.</p>
+
+<p>“All this, you see, made it an absolute
+necessity to keep the mission to Captain
+Jutland a profound secret. I need not impress
+upon you the fact, I think, that it is not
+expedient for the plans of an important
+harbour to fall under prying eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Finally, the choice fell on Captain Markham,
+R.N.R., lately of the mercantile marine,
+and at the time in the employ of our own
+Secret Intelligence Department, to which he
+has rendered frequent and valuable services.
+This choice was determined also mainly
+through the fact that Captain Markham’s
+wife had relatives living in Portsmouth, and
+that, therefore, his journey thither could
+easily be supposed to have an unofficial and
+quite ordinary character—especially if he
+took his wife with him, which he did.</p>
+
+<p>“Captain and Mrs. Markham left Waterloo
+for Portsmouth at ten minutes past twelve
+on Wednesday, 2nd December, the secret
+plan lying safely concealed at the bottom
+of Mrs. Markham’s jewel-case.</p>
+
+<p>“As the <i>Artemis</i> would not touch at
+Portsmouth until the following morning,
+Captain Markham thought it best not to
+spend the night at an hotel, but to go into
+rooms; his choice fell on a place, highly
+recommended by his wife’s relations, and
+which was situated in a quiet street on the
+Southsea side of the town. There he and his
+wife stayed the night, pending the arrival of
+the <i>Artemis</i>.</p>
+
+<p>“But at twelve o’clock on the following
+morning the police were hastily called in by
+Mrs. Bowden, the landlady of 49, Gastle
+Street, where the Markhams had been staying.
+Captain Markham had been found lying
+half-insensible, gagged and bound, on the
+floor of the sitting-room, his hands and feet
+tightly pinioned, and a woollen comforter
+wound closely round his mouth and neck;
+whilst Mrs. Markham’s jewel-case, containing
+valuable jewellery and the secret plans of
+Port Arthur, had disappeared.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch08-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>“Mind you,” continued the man in the
+corner, after he had assured himself of my
+undivided attention, “all these details were
+unknown to the public at first. I have
+merely co-ordinated them, and told them
+to you in the actual sequence in which they
+occurred, so that you may be able to
+understand the subsequent events.</p>
+
+<p>“At the time—that is to say, on 3rd
+December, 1903—the evening papers only
+contained an account of what was then called
+‘the mysterious outrage at Gastle Street,
+Portsmouth.’ A private gentleman was
+presumably assaulted and robbed in broad
+daylight, and inside a highly respectable
+house in a busy part of the city.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Bowden, the landlady, was, as
+you may imagine, most excited and indignant.
+Her house and herself had been grossly
+insulted by this abominable outrage, and
+she did her level best to throw what light she
+could on this mysterious occurrence.</p>
+
+<p>“The story she told the police was indeed
+extraordinary, and as she repeated it to all
+her friends, and subsequently to one or two
+journalists, it roused public excitement to
+its highest pitch.</p>
+
+<p>“What she related at great length to the
+detective in charge of the case, was briefly
+this:</p>
+
+<p>“Captain and Mrs. Markham, it appears,
+arrived at 49, Gastle Street, on Wednesday
+afternoon, 2nd December, and Mrs. Bowden
+accommodated them with a sitting-room and
+bedroom, both on the ground floor. In the
+evening Mrs. Markham went out to dine
+with her brother, a Mr. Paulton, who is a
+well-known Portsmouth resident, but Captain
+Markham stayed in and had dinner alone in
+his sitting-room.</p>
+
+<p>“According to Mrs. Bowden’s version of
+the story, at about nine o’clock a stranger
+called to see Captain Markham. This
+stranger was obviously a foreigner, for he
+spoke broken English. Unfortunately, the
+hall at 49, Gastle Street, was very dark, and,
+moreover, the foreigner was attired in a
+magnificent fur coat, the collar of which hid
+the lower part of his face. All Mrs. Bowden
+could see of him was that he was very tall,
+and wore gold-rimmed spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘He was so very peremptory in his
+manner,’ continued Mrs. Bowden, ‘that I
+had to show him in at once. The Captain
+seemed surprised to see him—in fact, he
+looked decidedly annoyed, I might say;
+but just as I was closing the door I heard
+the stranger laugh, and say quite pleasantly:
+“You gave me the slip, my friend, but you
+see I have found you out all right.” ’</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Bowden, after the manner of her
+class, seems to have made vigorous efforts
+to hear what went on in the sitting-room
+after that,” continued the man in the corner,
+“but she was not successful. Later on,
+however, the Captain rang and ordered
+whiskies and sodas. Both gentlemen were
+then sitting by the fire, looking quite
+friendly.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I took a look round the room,’ explained
+the worthy landlady, ‘and took particular
+notice that the jewel-case was on the table,
+with the lid open. Captain Markham, as
+soon he saw me, closed it very quickly.’</p>
+
+<p>“The stranger seems to have gone away
+at about half-past ten, and subsequently again
+Mrs. Markham came home accompanied by
+her brother, Mr. Paulton. The next morning
+she went out at a quarter past eleven o’clock,
+and about half an hour later the mysterious
+stranger called again.</p>
+
+<p>“This time he pushed his way straight into
+the sitting-room; but the very next moment
+he uttered a cry of intense horror and astonishment,
+and rushed back into the hall, gesticulating
+wildly, and shrieking: ‘A robbery!—a
+murder!—I go for the police!’ And before
+Mrs. Bowden could stop him, or even could
+realise what had occurred, he had dashed out
+of the house.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I called to Meggie,’ continued Mrs.
+Bowden, ‘I was so frightened, I didn’t dare
+go into the parlour alone. But she was more
+frightened than I was, and we stood trembling
+in the hall waiting for the police. At last
+I began to have my suspicions, and I got
+Meggie to run out into the street and see if
+she could bring in a policeman.’</p>
+
+<p>“When the police at last arrived upon
+the scene, they pushed open the sitting-room
+door, and there found Captain Markham in
+a most helpless condition, his hands tied
+behind his back, and himself half-choked by
+the scarf over his mouth. As soon as he
+recovered his breath, he explained that he
+had no idea who his assailant was; he was
+standing with his back to the door, when he
+was suddenly dealt a blow on the head from
+behind, and he remembered nothing more.</p>
+
+<p>“In the meantime Mrs. Markham had
+come home, and of course was horrified beyond
+measure at the outrage which had been
+committed. She declared that her jewel-case
+was in the sitting-room when she went out in
+the morning—a fact confirmed by Captain
+Markham himself.</p>
+
+<p>“But here, at once, the police were seriously
+puzzled. Mrs. Bowden, of course, told her
+story of the foreigner—a story which was
+corroborated by her daughter, Meggie. Captain
+Markham, pressed by the police, and by
+his wife, admitted that a friend had visited
+him the evening before.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘He is an old friend I met years ago
+abroad, who happened to be in Portsmouth
+yesterday, and quite accidentally caught
+sight of me as I drove up to this door, and
+naturally came in to see me,’ was the Captain’s
+somewhat lame explanation.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing more was to be got out of him
+that day; he was still feeling very bewildered
+he said, and certainly he looked very ill.
+Mrs. Markham then put the whole matter in
+the hands of the police.</p>
+
+<p>“Captain Markham had given a description
+of ‘the old friend he had met years ago
+abroad.’ This description vaguely coincided
+with that given by Mrs. Bowden of the
+mysterious foreigner. But the Captain’s
+replies to the cross-questionings of the
+detectives in charge of the case were always
+singularly reticent and lame. ‘I had lost
+sight of him for nearly twenty years,’ he
+explained, ‘and do not know what his present
+abode and occupation might be. When I
+knew him years ago, he was a man of
+independent means, without a fixed abode, and a
+great traveller. I believe that he is a German
+by nationality, but I don’t think that I ever
+knew this as a fact. His name was Johann
+Schmidt.’</p>
+
+<p>“I may as well tell you here, at once, that
+the mysterious foreigner managed to make
+good his escape. He was traced as far as
+the South Western Railway Station, where he
+was seen to rush through the barrier, just in
+time to catch the express up to town. At
+Waterloo he was lost sight of in the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>“The police were keenly on the alert;
+no trace of the missing jewels had as yet
+been found. Then it was that, gradually,
+the story of the secret plan of Port Arthur
+reached the ears of the general public. Who
+first told it, and to whom, it is difficult to
+conjecture, but you know what a way things
+of that sort have of leaking out.</p>
+
+<p>“The secret of Captain Markham’s mission
+had of necessity been known to several people,
+and a secret shared by many soon ceases to be
+one at all; anyway, within a week of the
+so-called ‘Portsmouth outrage,’ it began to
+be loudly whispered that the robbery of Mrs.
+Markham’s jewels was only a mask that
+covered the deliberate theft of the plans of
+Port Arthur.</p>
+
+<p>“And then the inevitable happened.
+Already Captain Markham’s strange attitude
+had been severely commented upon, and now
+the public, backed by the crowd of amateur
+detectives who read penny novelettes and form
+conclusions of their own, had made up its mind
+that Captain Markham was a party to the
+theft—that he was either the tool or the
+accomplice of the mysterious foreigner and
+that, in fact, he had been either bribed or
+terrorised into giving up the plan of Port
+Arthur to an enemy of the Russian government.
+The crime was all the more heinous
+as by this act of treachery a British ship,
+manned by a British crew, had been sent to
+certain destruction.</p>
+
+<p>“What rendered the whole case doubly
+mysterious was that Messrs. Mills and Co.
+seemed to take the matter with complete
+indifference. They refused to be interviewed,
+or to give any information about the <i>Artemis</i>
+at all, and seemed callously willing to await
+events.</p>
+
+<p>“The public was furious; the newspapers
+stormed; every one felt that the <i>Artemis</i>
+should be stopped at any cost at her next
+port of call, and not allowed to continue her
+perilous journey.</p>
+
+<p>“And yet the days went by; the public
+read with horror at Lloyds’ that the <i>Artemis</i>
+had called at Malta, at Port Said, at Aden,
+and was now well on her way to the Far East.
+Feeling ran so high throughout England, that,
+if the mysterious stranger had been discovered
+by the police, no protection from them would
+have saved him from being lynched.</p>
+
+<p>“As for Captain Markham, public opinion
+reserved its final judgment. A cloud hung
+over him, of that there was no doubt; many
+said openly that he had sold the secret plans
+of Port Arthur, either to the Japanese or to
+the Nihilists, either through fear or
+intimidation, if not through greed.</p>
+
+<p>“Then the inevitable climax came: A
+certain Mr. Carleton constituted himself the
+spokesman of the general public; he met
+Captain Markham one day at one of the clubs
+in London. There were hot words between
+them. Mr. Carleton did not mince matters;
+he openly accused Captain Markham of that
+which public opinion had already whispered,
+and finally, completely losing his temper, he
+struck the Captain in the face, calling him
+every opprobrious name he could think of.</p>
+
+<p>“But for the timely interference of friends,
+there would have been murder committed
+then and there; as it was, Captain Markham
+was induced by his own friends to bring
+a criminal charge of slander and of assault
+against Mr. Carleton, as the only means of
+making the whole story public, and possibly
+vindicating his character.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch08-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>“A criminal action for slander and assault
+is always an interesting one,” continued the
+man in the corner, after a while, “as it
+always argues an unusual amount of personal
+animosity on the part of the plaintiff.</p>
+
+<p>“In this case, of course, public interest
+was roused to its highest pitch. Practically,
+though Captain Markham was the prosecutor,
+he would stand before his fellow-citizens after
+this action either as an innocent man, or as
+one of the most dastardly scoundrels this
+nation has ever known.</p>
+
+<p>“The case for the Captain was briefly
+stated by his counsel. For the defence Sir
+Arthur Inglewood, on behalf of Mr. Carleton,
+pleaded justification. With wonderful
+eloquence Sir Arthur related the whole story of
+the secret plan of Port Arthur confided to
+the honour of Captain Markham, and which
+involved the safety of the British ship and
+the lives of a whole British crew.</p>
+
+<p>“The first witnesses called for the defence
+were Mrs. Bowden and her daughter, Meggie.
+Both related the story I have already told
+you. When they came to the point of
+having seen the jewel-case <em>open</em> on the table
+during that interview between Captain
+Markham and the mysterious stranger, there
+was a regular murmur of indignation throughout
+the whole crowd, so much so, that the
+judge threatened to clear the court, for
+Sir Arthur argued this to be a proof that
+Captain Markham had been a willing accomplice
+in the theft of the secret plans, and
+had merely played the comedy of being
+assaulted, bound, and gagged.</p>
+
+<p>“But there was more to come.</p>
+
+<p>“It appears that on the morning of 2nd
+December—that is to say, before going to
+Portsmouth—Captain Markham, directly after
+breakfast, and while his wife was up in her
+own room, received a message which seemed
+greatly to disturb him. It was Jane Mason,
+the parlour-maid at the Markhams’ town
+house, who told the story.</p>
+
+<p>“A letter bearing no stamp had been
+dropped into the letter-box, she had taken
+it to her master, who, on reading it, became
+greatly agitated; he tore up the letter,
+stuffed it into his pocket and presently
+took up his hat and rushed out of the house.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘When the master was gone,’ continued
+Jane, ‘I found a scrap of paper, which had
+fallen out of his pocket.’</p>
+
+<p>“This scrap of paper Jane Mason had
+carefully put away. She was a shrewd girl,
+and scented some mystery. It was now
+produced in court, and the few fragmentary
+words were read out by Sir Arthur Inglewood,
+amidst boundless excitement:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘....if you lend a hand........Port
+Arthur safely.......hold my tongue....’</p>
+
+<p>“And at the end there were four letters in
+large capitals, ‘STOW.’</p>
+
+<p>“In view of all the evidence taken, there
+was momentous significance to be attached
+to those few words, of which only the last
+four letters seemed mysterious, but these
+probably were part of the confederate’s
+signature, who had—no one doubted it
+now—some hold upon Captain Markham, and had
+by a process of blackmail induced him to
+send the <i>Artemis</i> to her doom.</p>
+
+<p>“After that, according to a statement
+made by the head clerk of Messrs. Mills and Co.,
+Captain Markham came round to the office
+begging that some one else should be sent to
+meet Captain Jutland at Portsmouth. ‘This,’
+explained the head clerk, who had been
+subpœnaed for the defence, ‘was quite
+impossible at this eleventh hour, and, in the
+absence of the heads of the firm, I had on
+Mr. Mills’ behalf to hold Captain Markham
+to his promise.’</p>
+
+<p>“This closed the case for the defence, and
+in view of the lateness of the hour, counsels’
+speeches were reserved for the following day.
+There was not a doubt in anybody’s mind
+that Captain Markham was guilty, and but
+for the presence of a large body of police, I
+assure you he would have been torn to pieces
+by the crowd.”</p>
+
+<p>The man in the corner paused in his
+narrative and blinked at me over his bone-rimmed
+spectacles, like some lean and frowzy
+tom-cat, eager for a fight.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” I said eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, surely you remember what happened
+the following day?” he replied, with a dry
+chuckle. “Personally, I don’t think that
+there ever was quite so much sensation in
+any English court of law.</p>
+
+<p>“It was crowded, of course, when counsel
+for the plaintiff rose to speak. He made,
+however, only a short statement, briefly and
+to the point; but this statement caused
+every one to look at his neighbour, wondering
+if he were awake or dreaming.</p>
+
+<p>“Counsel began by saying that Messrs.
+Mills and Co., in view of the obvious
+conspiracy that had existed against the <i>Artemis</i>,
+had decided, in conjunction with Captain
+Markham himself, to say nothing about the
+safety of the ship until she was in port;
+but now counsel had much pleasure in informing
+the court and public that the <i>Artemis</i>
+had safely arrived at Port Arthur, had landed
+her guns, and was on her way home again by
+now. A cablegram <i>via</i> St. Petersburg had
+been received by Messrs. Mills and Co., from
+Captain Jutland that very morning.</p>
+
+<p>“That cablegram was read by counsel in
+court, and was received with loud and prolonged
+cheering which could not be suppressed.</p>
+
+<p>“With heroic fortitude—explained
+counsel—Captain Markham had borne the gross
+suspicions against his integrity, only hoping
+that news of the safety of the <i>Artemis</i> would
+reach England in time to allow him to vindicate
+his character. But until Captain Jutland
+was safe in port, he had sworn to hold his
+tongue and to bear insult and violence, sooner
+than once more jeopardise the safety of the
+British ship by openly avowing that she
+carried the plans of the important port with
+her.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you know the rest. The parties,
+at the suggestion of the judge, arranged the
+case amicably, and, Captain Markham being
+fully satisfied, Mr. Carleton was nominally
+ordered to come up for trial when called upon.</p>
+
+<p>“Captain Markham was the hero of the
+hour; but presently, after the first excitement
+had subsided, sensible people began to ponder.
+Every one, of course, appreciated the fact
+that Messrs. Mills and Co., prompted by the
+highest authorities, had insisted on not
+jeopardising the safety of the <i>Artemis</i> by
+shouting on the housetops that she was
+carrying the plans of Port Arthur on board.
+Hostilities in the Far East were on the point
+of breaking out, and I need not insist, I
+think, on the obvious fact that silence in such
+matters and at such a time was absolutely
+imperative.</p>
+
+<p>“But what sensible people wanted to
+know was, what part had Captain Markham
+played in all this?</p>
+
+<p>“In the evening of that memorable 2nd
+December, he was sitting amicably by the
+fire with the mysterious stranger, who was
+evidently blackmailing him, and with the
+jewel-case, which contained the plans of
+Port Arthur, open between them. What,
+then, had caused Captain Markham to change
+his attitude? What dispelled the fear of
+the stranger? Was he really assaulted?
+Was the jewel-case really stolen?</p>
+
+<p>“Captain Jutland, of the <i>Artemis</i>, has
+explained that he was only on shore for one
+hour at Portsmouth on the memorable
+morning of 3rd December, namely, between
+10.30 and 11.30 a.m. On landing at the
+Hard from his gig, he was met by a gentleman,
+whom he did not know, and who, without a
+word of comment, handed him some papers,
+which proved to be plans of Port Arthur.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, at that very hour Captain Markham
+was lying helpless in his bedroom, and the
+question now is, who abstracted the plans
+from the jewel-case, and then mysteriously
+handed them to Captain Jutland? Why
+was it not done openly? Why?—why?
+and, above all, by whom?——”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch08-4">
+
+<h3>Chapter IV</h3>
+
+<p>“Indeed, why?” I retorted, for he had
+paused, and was peering at me through his
+bone-rimmed spectacles. “You must have
+a theory,” I added, as I quietly handed him
+a beautiful bit of string across the table.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, I have a theory,” he replied
+placidly; “nay, more, the only explanation of
+those mysterious events. But for this I
+must refer you to the scrap of paper found by
+Jane Mason, and containing the four
+fragmentary sentences which have puzzled every
+one, and which Captain Markham always
+refused to explain.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you remember,” he went on, as he
+began feverishly to construct knot upon knot
+on that piece of string, “the wreck of the
+<i>Ridstow</i> some twenty years ago? She was a
+pleasure boat belonging to Mr. Eyres, the
+great millionaire financier, and was supposed
+to have been wrecked in the South Seas,
+with nearly all hands. Five of her crew,
+however, were picked up by H.M.S. <i>Pomona</i>,
+on a bit of rocky island to which they had
+managed to swim.</p>
+
+<p>“I looked up the files of the newspapers
+relating to the rescue of these five shipwrecked
+mariners, who told a most pitiable tale of the
+loss of the yacht and their subsequent escape
+to, and sufferings on the island. Fire had
+broken out in the hull of the <i>Ridstow</i>, and all
+her crew were drowned, with the exception of
+three sailors, a Russian friend, or rather
+secretary, of Mr. Eyres, and a young petty
+officer named Markham.</p>
+
+<p>“You see, the letters <span class="sc">stow</span> had given me
+the clue. Clearly Markham, on receiving the
+message on the morning of 2nd December,
+was frightened, and when we analyse the
+fragments of that message and try to
+reconstruct the missing fragments, do we not get
+something like this:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘If <em>you lend a hand</em> in allowing the <i>Artemis</i>
+to reach <em>Port Arthur safely</em>, and to land her
+cargo there, I will no longer <em>hold my tongue</em>
+about the events which occurred on board
+the <i>Rid<span class="sc">stow</span></i>.’</p>
+
+<p>“Clearly the mysterious stranger had a
+great hold over Captain Markham, for every
+scrap of evidence, if you think it over, points
+to his having been <em>frightened</em>. Did he not
+beg the clerk to find some one else to meet
+Captain Jutland in Portsmouth? He did
+not wish <em>to lend a hand</em> in allowing the <i>Artemis</i>
+to reach <em>Port Arthur safely</em>.</p>
+
+<p>“We must, therefore, take it that on board
+the <i>Ridstow</i> some such tragedy was enacted
+as, alas! is not of unfrequent occurrence.
+The tragedy of a mutiny, a wholesale murder,
+the robbery of the rich financier, the burning
+of the yacht. Markham, then barely twenty,
+was no doubt an unwilling, perhaps passive,
+accomplice; one can trace the hand of a
+cunning, daring Russian in the whole of this
+mysterious tragedy.</p>
+
+<p>“Since then, Markham, through twenty
+years’ faithful service of his country, had
+tried to redeem the passive crime of his early
+years. But then came the crisis: The
+cunning leader of that bygone tragedy no
+doubt kept a strong hand over his weaker
+accomplices.</p>
+
+<p>“What happened to the other three we
+do not know, but we have seen how terrified
+Markham is of him, how he dare not resist
+him, and when the mysterious Russian—some
+Nihilist, no doubt, at war with his
+own Government—wishes to deal his country
+a terrible blow by possessing himself of the
+plan of her most important harbour, so that
+he might sell it to her enemies, Markham dare
+not say him nay.</p>
+
+<p>“But mark what happens. Captain Markham
+terrorised, confronted with a past crime,
+threatened with exposure, is as wax in the
+hands of his unscrupulous tormentor. But
+beside him there is the saving presence of
+his wife.”</p>
+
+<p>“His wife?” I gasped.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, the woman! Did you think this
+was a crime without the inevitable woman!
+I sought her, and found her in Captain
+Markham’s wife. To save her husband both
+from falling a victim to his implacable
+accomplice, and from committing another even
+more heinous crime, she suggests the comedy
+which was so cleverly enacted in the morning
+of 3rd December.</p>
+
+<p>“When the landlady and her daughter saw
+the jewel-case open on the table the evening
+before, Markham was playing the first act of
+the comedy invented by his wife. She had
+the plan safely in her own keeping by then.
+He pretended to agree to the Russian’s
+demands, but showed him that he had not
+then the plan in his possession, promising,
+however, to deliver it up on the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>“Then in the morning, Mrs. Markham
+helps to gag and strap her husband down;
+he pretends to lie unconscious, and she goes
+out carrying the jewel-case. Her brother,
+Mr. Paulton, of course helps them both;
+without him it would have been more difficult;
+as it is, he takes charge of the jewel-case,
+abstracts the plan and papers, and finally
+meets Captain Jutland at the Hard, and hands
+him over the plan of Port Arthur.</p>
+
+<p>“Thus through the wits of a clever and
+devoted woman, not only are the <i>Artemis</i>
+and her British crew saved, but Captain
+Markham is effectually rid of the blackmailer,
+who otherwise would have poisoned his life,
+and probably out of revenge at being foiled,
+have ruined his victim altogether.</p>
+
+<p>“To my mind, that was the neatest thing
+in the whole plan. The general public
+believed that Captain Markham (who
+obviously at the instigation of his wife had
+confided in Messrs. Mills and Co.) held his
+tongue as to the safety of the <i>Artemis</i> merely
+out of heroism, in order not to run her into
+any further danger. Now, I maintain that
+this was the masterstroke of that clever
+woman’s plan.</p>
+
+<p>“By holding his tongue, by letting the
+public fear for the safety of the British crew
+and British ship, public feeling was stirred
+to such a pitch of excitement that the Russian
+now would never <em>dare</em> show himself. Not
+only—by denouncing Captain Markham
+now—would he never be even listened to for a
+moment, but, if he came forward at all, if he
+even showed himself, he would stand before
+the British public self-convicted as the man
+who had tried through the criminal process
+of blackmail to terrorise an Englishman into
+sending a British ship and thirty British
+sailors to certain annihilation.</p>
+
+<p>“No; I think we may take it for granted
+that the Russian will not dare to show his
+face in England again.”</p>
+
+<p>And the funny creature was gone before I
+could say another word.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch09-1">
+
+<h2>IX. <br> The Disappearance of Count Collini</h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>He was very argumentative that morning;
+whatever I said he invariably contradicted
+flatly and at once, and we both had finally
+succeeded in losing our temper.</p>
+
+<p>The man in the corner was riding one of
+his favourite hobby-horses.</p>
+
+<p>“It is <em>impossible</em> for any person to
+completely disappear in a civilised country,”
+he said emphatically, “provided that person
+has either friends or enemies of means and
+substance, who are interested in finding his
+or her whereabouts.”</p>
+
+<p>“Impossible is a sweeping word,” I rejoined.</p>
+
+<p>“None too big for the argument,” he
+concluded, as he surveyed with evident pride
+and pleasure a gigantic and complicated knot
+which his bony fingers had just fashioned.</p>
+
+<p>“I think that, nevertheless, you should
+not use it,” I said placidly. “It is not
+<em>impossible</em>, though it may be very difficult to
+disappear without leaving the slightest clue
+or trace behind you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Prove it,” he said, with a snap of his thin
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>“I can, quite easily.”</p>
+
+<p>“Now I know what is going on in your
+mind,” said the uncanny creature, “you are
+thinking of that case last autumn.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I was,” I admitted. “And you
+cannot deny that Count Collini has
+disappeared as effectually as if the sea had
+swallowed him up—many people think it did.”</p>
+
+<p>“Many idiots, you mean,” he rejoined
+dryly. “Yes, I knew you would quote that
+case. It certainly was a curious one; all
+the more so, perhaps, as there was no inquest,
+no sensational police court proceedings,
+nothing dramatic, in fact, save that strange
+and wonderful disappearance.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know if you call to mind the whole
+plot of that weird drama. There was Thomas
+Checkfield, a retired biscuit baker of Reading,
+who died leaving a comfortable fortune,
+mostly invested in freehold property, and
+amounting to about £80,000, to his only child,
+Alice.</p>
+
+<p>“At the time of her father’s death, Alice
+Checkfield was just eighteen, and at school
+in Switzerland, where she had spent most of
+her life. Old Checkfield had been a widower
+ever since the birth of his daughter, and
+seems to have led a very lonely and eccentric
+life; leaving the girl at school abroad for
+years, only going very occasionally to see
+her, and seemingly having but little affection
+for her.</p>
+
+<p>“The girl herself had not been home in
+England since she was eight years old, and
+even when old Checkfield was dying he would
+not allow the girl to be apprised of his
+impending death, and to be brought home to
+a house of loneliness and mourning.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘What’s the good of upsetting a young
+girl, not eighteen,’ he said to his friend, Mr.
+Turnour, ‘by letting her see all the sad
+paraphernalia of death? She hasn’t seen
+much of her old father anyway, and will soon
+get over her loss, with young company round
+her, to help her bear up.’</p>
+
+<p>“But though Thomas Checkfield cared
+little enough for his daughter, when he died
+he left his entire fortune to her, amounting
+altogether to £80,000; and he appointed
+his friend, Reginald Turnour, to be her trustee
+and guardian until her marriage or until she
+should attain her majority.</p>
+
+<p>“It was generally understood that the words
+‘until her marriage’ were put in because
+it had all along been arranged that Alice
+should marry Hubert Turnour, Reginald’s
+younger brother.</p>
+
+<p>“Hubert was old Checkfield’s godson, and
+if the old man had any affection for anybody
+it certainly was for Hubert. The latter had
+been a great deal in his godfather’s house,
+when he and Alice were both small children,
+and had called each other ‘hubby’ and
+‘wifey’ in play, when they were still in the
+nursery. Later on, whenever old Checkfield
+went abroad to see his daughter, he always
+took Hubert with him, and a boy and girl
+flirtation sprang up between the two young
+people; a flirtation which had old
+Checkfield’s complete approval, and no doubt he
+looked upon their marriage as a <i>fait accompli</i>,
+merely desiring the elder Mr. Turnour to
+administer the girl’s fortune until then.</p>
+
+<p>“Hubert Turnour, at the time of the
+subsequent tragedy, was a good-looking young
+fellow, and by profession what is vaguely
+known as a ‘commission agent.’ He lived in
+London, where he had an office in a huge
+block of buildings close to Cannon Street
+Station.</p>
+
+<p>“There is no doubt that at the time of old
+Checkfield’s death, Alice looked upon herself
+as the young man’s <i>fiancée</i>. When the girl
+reached her nineteenth year, it was at last
+decided that she should leave school and
+come to England. The question as to what
+should be done with her until her majority,
+or until she married Hubert, was a great
+puzzle to Mr. Turnour. He was a bachelor,
+who lived in comfortable furnished rooms in
+Reading, and he did not at all relish the
+idea of starting housekeeping for the sake of
+his young ward, whom he had not seen since
+she was out of the nursery, and whom he
+looked upon as an intolerable nuisance.</p>
+
+<p>“Fortunately for him this vexed question
+was most satisfactorily and unexpectedly
+settled by Alice herself. She wrote to her
+guardian, from Geneva, that a Mrs. Brackenbury,
+the mother of her dearest schoolfellow
+had asked her to come and live with them,
+at any rate for a time, as this would be a
+more becoming arrangement than that of a
+young girl sharing a bachelor’s establishment.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Turnour seems to have hesitated
+for some time: he was a conscientious sort
+of man, who took his duties of guardianship
+very seriously. What ultimately decided him,
+however, was that his brother Hubert added
+the weight of his eloquent letters of appeal to
+those of Alice herself. Hubert naturally was
+delighted at the idea of having his rich
+<i>fiancée</i> under his eye in London, and after a
+good deal of correspondence, Mr. Turnour
+finally gave his consent, and Alice Checkfield
+duly arrived from Switzerland in order to
+make a prolonged stay in Mrs. Brackenbury’s
+house.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch09-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>“All seems to have gone on happily and
+smoothly for a time in Mrs. Brackenbury’s
+pretty house in Kensington,” continued the
+man in the corner. “Hubert Turnour was a
+constant visitor there, and the two young
+people seem to have had all the freedom of
+an engaged couple.</p>
+
+<p>“Alice Checkfield was in no sense of the
+word an attractive girl; she was not
+good-looking, and no effort on Mrs. Brackenbury’s
+part could succeed in making her look stylish.
+Still, Hubert Turnour seemed quite satisfied,
+and the girl herself ready enough at first to
+continue the boy and girl flirtation as of old.</p>
+
+<p>“Soon, however, as time went on, things
+began to change. Now that Alice had become
+mistress of a comfortable fortune, there were
+plenty of people ready to persuade her that a
+‘commission agent,’ with but vague business
+prospects, was not half good enough for her,
+and that her £80,000 entitled her to more
+ambitious matrimonial hopes. Needless to
+say that in these counsels Mrs. Brackenbury
+was very much to the fore.</p>
+
+<p>“She lived in Kensington, and had social
+ambitions, foremost among which was to see
+her daughter’s bosom friend married to, at
+least, a baronet, if not a peer.</p>
+
+<p>“A young girl’s head is quickly turned.
+Within six months of her stay in London,
+Alice was giving Hubert Turnour the cold
+shoulder, and the young man had soon
+realised that she was trying to get out of her
+engagement.</p>
+
+<p>“Scarcely had Alice reached her twentieth
+birthday, than she gave her erstwhile <i>fiancé</i>
+his formal <i>congé</i>.</p>
+
+<p>“At first Hubert seems to have taken
+his discomfiture very much to heart. £80,000
+were not likely to come his way again in a
+hurry. According to Mrs. Brackenbury’s
+servants, there were one or two violent scenes
+between him and Alice, until finally Mrs.
+Brackenbury herself was forced to ask the
+young man to discontinue his visits.</p>
+
+<p>“It was soon after that that Alice Checkfield
+first met Count Collini at one of the
+brilliant subscription dances given by the
+Italian colony in London, the winter before
+last. Mrs. Brackenbury was charmed with
+him, Alice Checkfield was enchanted! The
+Count, having danced with Alice half the
+evening, was allowed to pay his respects at
+the house in Kensington.</p>
+
+<p>“He seemed to be extremely well off, for
+he was staying at the Carlton, and, after
+one or two calls on Mrs. Brackenbury, he
+began taking the ladies to theatres and
+concerts, always presenting them with the
+choicest and most expensive flowers, and
+paying them various other equally costly
+attentions.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. and Miss Brackenbury welcomed
+the Count with open arms (figuratively
+speaking). Alice was shy, but apparently over
+head and ears in love at first sight.</p>
+
+<p>“At first Mrs. Brackenbury did her best
+to keep this new acquaintanceship a secret
+from Hubert Turnour. I suppose that the
+old matchmaker feared another unpleasant
+scene. But the inevitable soon happened.
+Hubert, contrite, perhaps still hopeful, called
+at the house one day, when the Count was
+there, and, according to the story
+subsequently told by Miss Brackenbury herself,
+there was a violent scene between him and
+Alice. As soon as the fascinating foreigner
+had gone, Hubert reproached his <i>fiancée</i> for
+her fickleness in no measured language, and
+there was a good deal of evidence to prove
+that he then and there swore to be even with
+the man who had supplanted him in her
+affections. There was nothing to do then but
+for Mrs. Brackenbury to ‘burn her boats.’
+She peremptorily ordered Hubert out of
+her house, and admitted that Count Collini
+was a suitor, favoured by herself, for the hand
+of Alice Checkfield.</p>
+
+<p>“You see, I am bound to give you all these
+details of the situation,” continued the man
+in the corner, with his bland smile, “so that
+you may better form a judgment as to the
+subsequent fate of Count Collini. From the
+description which Mrs. Brackenbury herself
+subsequently gave to the police, the Count
+was then in the prime of life; of a dark olive
+complexion, dark eyes, extremely black hair
+and moustache. He had a very slight limp,
+owing to an accident he had had in early
+youth, which made his walk and general
+carriage unusual and distinctly noticeable.
+His was certainly not a personality that
+could pass unperceived in a crowd.</p>
+
+<p>“Hubert Turnour, furious and heartsick,
+wrote letter after letter to his brother, to ask
+him to interfere on his behalf; this Mr.
+Turnour did, to the best of his ability, but
+he had to deal with an ambitious matchmaker
+and with a girl in love, and it is small
+wonder that he signally failed. Alice
+Checkfield by now had become deeply enamoured
+of her Count, his gallantries flattered her
+vanity, his title and the accounts he gave of
+his riches and his estates in Italy fascinated
+her, and she declared that she would marry
+him, either with or without her guardian’s
+consent, either at once, or as soon as she had
+attained her majority, and was mistress of
+herself and of her fortune.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Turnour did all he could to prevent
+this absurd marriage. Being a sensible,
+middle-class Britisher, he had no respect for
+foreign titles, and little belief in foreign
+wealth. He wrote the most urgent letters to
+Alice, warning her against a man whom he
+firmly believed to be an impostor; finally,
+he flatly refused to give his consent to the
+marriage.</p>
+
+<p>“Thus a few months went by. The Count
+had been away in Italy all through the winter
+and spring, and returned to London for the
+season, apparently more enamoured with the
+Reading biscuit baker’s daughter than ever.
+Alice Checkfield was then within nine months
+of her twenty-first birthday, and determined
+to marry the Count. She openly defied her
+guardian.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Nothing,’ she wrote to him, ‘would
+ever induce me to marry Hubert.’</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose it was this which finally induced
+Mr. Turnour to give up all opposition to the
+marriage. Seeing that his brother’s chances
+were absolutely <i>nil</i>, and that Alice was within
+nine months of her majority, he no doubt
+thought all further argument useless, and
+with great reluctance finally gave his consent.</p>
+
+<p>“The marriage, owing to the difference
+of religion, was to be performed before a
+registrar, and was finally fixed to take place
+on 22nd October, 1903, which was just a
+week after Alice’s twenty-first birthday.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course the question of Alice’s fortune
+immediately cropped up: she desired her
+money in cash, as her husband was taking
+her over to live in Italy, where she desired
+to make all further investments. She,
+therefore, asked Mr. Turnour to dispose of her
+freehold property for her. There again Mr.
+Turnour hesitated, and argued, but once he
+had given his consent to the marriage, all
+opposition was useless, more especially as
+Mrs. Brackenbury’s solicitors had drawn up
+a very satisfactory marriage settlement, which
+the Count himself had suggested, by which
+Alice was to retain sole use and control of her
+own private fortune.</p>
+
+<p>“The marriage was then duly performed
+before a registrar on that 22nd of October,
+and Alice Checkfield could henceforth style
+herself Countess Collini. The young couple
+were to start for Italy almost directly, but
+meant to spend a day or two at Dover quietly
+together. There were, however, one or two
+tiresome legal formalities to go through. Mr.
+Turnour had, by Alice’s desire, handed over
+the sum of £80,000 in notes to her solicitor,
+Mr. R. W. Stanford. Mr. Stanford had gone
+down to Reading two days before the
+marriage, had received the money from Mr.
+Turnour, and then called upon the new
+Countess, and formally handed her over her
+fortune in Bank of England notes.</p>
+
+<p>“Then it was necessary, in view of
+immediate and future arrangements, to change
+the English money into foreign, which the
+Count and his young wife did themselves
+that afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>“At 5 o’clock p.m. they started for Dover,
+accompanied by Mrs. Brackenbury, who
+desired to see the last of her young friend,
+prior to the latter’s departure for abroad.
+The Count had engaged a magnificent suite
+of rooms at the Lord Warden Hotel, and
+thither the party proceeded.</p>
+
+<p>“So far, you see,” added the man in the
+corner, “the story is of the utmost simplicity.
+You might even call it commonplace. A
+foreign Count, an ambitious matchmaker,
+and a credulous girl; these form the
+ingredients of many a domestic drama, that
+culminates at the police courts. But at this
+point this particular drama becomes more
+complicated, and, if you remember, ends in
+one of the strangest mysteries that has ever
+baffled the detective forces on both sides of
+the Channel.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch09-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>The man in the corner paused in his narrative.
+I could see that he was coming to the palpitating
+part of the story, for his fingers fidgeted
+incessantly with that bit of string.</p>
+
+<p>“Hubert Turnour, as you may imagine,”
+he continued after a while, “did not take
+his final discomfiture very quietly. He was
+a very violent-tempered young man, and it
+was certainly enough to make any one cross.
+According to Mrs. Brackenbury’s servants
+he used most threatening language in reference
+to Count Collini; and on one occasion was
+with difficulty prevented from personally
+assaulting the Count in the hall of Mrs.
+Brackenbury’s pretty Kensington house.</p>
+
+<p>“Count Collini finally had to threaten
+Hubert Turnour with the police court: this
+seemed to have calmed the young man’s
+nerves somewhat, for he kept quite quiet
+after that, ceased to call on Mrs. Brackenbury,
+and subsequently sent the future Countess a
+wedding present.</p>
+
+<p>“When the Count and Countess Collini,
+accompanied by Mrs. Brackenbury, arrived
+at the Lord Warden, Alice found a letter
+awaiting her there. It was from Hubert
+Turnour. In it he begged for forgiveness
+for all the annoyance he had caused her,
+hoped that she would always look upon him
+as a friend, and finally expressed a strong
+desire to see her once more before her
+departure for abroad, saying that he would be
+in Dover either this same day or the next,
+and would give himself the pleasure of calling
+upon her and her husband.</p>
+
+<p>“Effectively at about eight o’clock, when
+the wedding party was just sitting down to
+dinner, Hubert Turnour was announced.
+Every one was most cordial to him, agreeing
+to let bygones be bygones: the Count,
+especially, was most genial and pleasant
+towards his former rival, and insisted upon
+his staying and dining with them.</p>
+
+<p>“Later on in the evening, Hubert Turnour
+took an affectionate leave of the ladies,
+Count Collini offering to walk back with him
+to the Grand Hotel, where he was staying.
+The two men went out together, and—well!
+you know the rest!—for that was the last
+the young Countess Collini ever saw of her
+husband. He disappeared as effectually,
+as completely, as if the sea had swallowed
+him up.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘And so it had,’ say the public,” continued
+the man in the corner, after a slight
+pause, “that delicious, short-sighted,
+irresponsible public is wondering, to this day,
+why Hubert Turnour was not hung for the
+murder of that Count Collini.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well! and why wasn’t he?” I retorted.</p>
+
+<p>“For the very simple reason,” he replied,
+“that in this country you cannot hang a man
+for murder unless there is proof positive
+that a murder has been committed. Now,
+there was absolutely no proof that the Count
+was murdered at all. What happened was
+this: the Countess Collini and Mrs. Brackenbury
+became anxious as time went on and the
+Count did not return. One o’clock, then two
+in the morning, and their anxiety became
+positive alarm. At last, as Alice was verging
+on hysterics, Mrs. Brackenbury, in spite of
+the lateness of the hour, went round to the
+police station.</p>
+
+<p>“It was, of course, too late to do anything
+in the middle of the night; the constable
+on duty tried to reassure the unfortunate
+lady, and promised to send word round to
+the Lord Warden at the earliest possible
+opportunity in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Brackenbury went back with a
+heavy heart. No doubt Mr. Turnour’s
+sensible letters from Reading recurred to her
+mind. She had already ascertained from
+the distracted bride that the Count had
+taken the strange precaution to keep in his
+own pocket-book the £80,000, now converted
+into French and Italian banknotes, and Mrs.
+Brackenbury feared not so much that he
+had met with some accident, but that he
+had absconded with the whole of his
+girl-wife’s fortune.</p>
+
+<p>“The next morning brought but scanty
+news. No one answering to the Count’s
+description had met with an accident during
+the night, or been conveyed to a hospital,
+and no one answering his description had
+crossed over to Calais or Ostend by the night
+boats. Moreover, Hubert Turnour, who
+presumably had last been in Count Collini’s
+company, had left Dover for town by the
+boat train at 1.50 a.m.</p>
+
+<p>“Then the search began in earnest after
+the missing man, and primarily Hubert
+Turnour was subjected to the closest and
+most searching cross-examination, by one of
+the most able men on our detective staff,
+Inspector Macpherson.</p>
+
+<p>“Hubert Turnour’s story was briefly this:
+He had strolled about on the parade with
+Count Collini for a while. It was a very
+blustery night, the wind blowing a regular
+gale, and the sea was rolling gigantic waves,
+which looked magnificent, as there was
+brilliant moonlight. ‘Soon after ten o’clock,’
+he continued, ‘the Count and I went back
+to the Grand Hotel, and we had whiskies
+and sodas up in my room, and a bit of a
+chat until past eleven o’clock. Then he said
+good-night and went off.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You saw him down to the hall, of
+course?’ asked the detective.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘No, I did not,’ replied Hubert Turnour.
+‘I had a few letters to write, and meant
+to catch the 1.50 a.m. back to town.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘How long were you in Dover
+altogether?’ asked Macpherson carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Only a few hours. I came down in the
+afternoon.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Strange, is it not, that you should have
+taken a room with a private sitting-room
+at an expensive hotel, just for those few
+hours?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Not at all. I originally meant to stay
+longer. And my expenses are nobody’s
+business, I take it,’ replied Hubert Turnour,
+with some show of temper. ‘Anyway,’ he
+added impatiently, after a while, ‘if you
+choose to disbelieve me, you can make
+inquiries at the hotel, and ascertain if I have
+told the truth.’</p>
+
+<p>“Undoubtedly he had spoken the truth;
+at any rate, to that extent. Inquiries at the
+Grand Hotel went to prove that he had
+arrived there in the early part of the
+afternoon, had engaged a couple of rooms, and
+then gone out. Soon after ten o’clock in
+the evening he came in, accompanied by a
+gentleman, whose description, as given by
+three witnesses, <i>employés</i> of the hotel, who
+saw him, corresponded exactly with that of
+the Count.</p>
+
+<p>“Together the two gentlemen went up to
+Mr. Hubert Turnour’s rooms, and at half-past
+ten they ordered whisky to be taken
+up to them. But at this point all trace of
+Count Collini had completely vanished. The
+passengers arriving by the 10.49 boat train,
+and who had elected to spend the night in
+Dover, owing to the gale, had crowded up
+and filled the hall.</p>
+
+<p>“No one saw Count Collini leave the
+Grand Hotel. But Mr. Hubert Turnour came
+down into the hall at about half-past eleven.
+He said he would be leaving by the 1.50 a.m.
+boat train for town, but would walk round
+to the station as he only had a small bag with
+him. He paid his account, then waited in
+the coffee-room until it was time to go.</p>
+
+<p>“And there the matter has remained.
+Mrs. Brackenbury has spent half her own
+fortune in trying to trace the missing man.
+She has remained perfectly convinced that
+he slipped across the Channel, taking Alice
+Checkfield’s money with him. But, as you
+know, at all ports of call on the South Coast,
+detectives are perpetually on the watch.
+The Count was a man of peculiar appearance,
+and there is no doubt that no one
+answering to his description crossed over to
+France or Belgium that night. By the
+following morning the detectives on both sides
+of the Channel were on the alert. There is
+no disguise that would have held good. If
+the Count had tried to cross over, he would
+have been spotted either on board or on
+landing; and we may take it as an absolute
+and positive certainty that he did not cross
+the Channel.</p>
+
+<p>“He remained in England, but in that
+case, where is he? You would be the first
+to admit that, with the whole of our detective
+staff at his heels, it seems incredible that a
+man of the Count’s singular appearance could
+hide himself so completely as to baffle
+detection. Moreover, the question at once
+arises, that if he did not cross over to France
+or Belgium, what in the world did he do
+with the money? What was the use of
+disappearing and living the life of a hunted
+beast hiding for his life, with £80,000 worth
+of foreign money, which was practically
+useless to him?</p>
+
+<p>“Now, I told you from the first,”
+concluded the man in the corner, with a dry
+chuckle, “that this strange episode contained
+no sensational incident, nor dramatic inquest
+or criminal procedure. Merely the complete,
+total disappearance, one may almost call it
+extinction, of a striking-looking man, in the
+midst of our vaunted civilisation, and in spite
+of the untiring energy and constant watch of
+a whole staff of able men.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch09-4">
+
+<h3>Chapter IV</h3>
+
+<p>“Very well, then,” I retorted in triumph,
+“that proves that Hubert Turnour murdered
+Count Collini out of revenge, not for greed
+of money, and probably threw the body of
+his victim, together with the foreign
+banknotes, into the sea.”</p>
+
+<p>“But where? When? How?” he asked,
+smiling good-humouredly at me over his
+great bone-rimmed spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah! that I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I thought not,” he rejoined placidly.
+“You had, I think, forgotten one incident,
+namely, that Hubert Turnour, accompanied
+by the Count, was in the former’s room at
+the Grand Hotel drinking whisky at half-past
+ten o’clock. You must admit that, even
+though the hall of the hotel was very crowded
+later on, a man would nevertheless find it
+somewhat difficult to convey the body of
+his murdered enemy through a whole
+concourse of people.”</p>
+
+<p>“He did not murder the Count in the
+hotel,” I argued. “The two men walked
+out again, when the hall was crowded, and
+they passed unnoticed. Hubert Turnour led
+the Count to a lonely part of the cliffs, then
+threw him into the sea.”</p>
+
+<p>“The nearest point at which the cliffs
+might be called ‘lonely’ for purposes of a
+murder, is at least twenty minutes’ walk
+from the Grand Hotel,” he said, with a smile,
+“always supposing that the Count walked
+quickly and willingly to such a lonely spot
+at eleven o’clock at night, and with a man
+who had already, more than once, threatened
+his life. Mr. Hubert Turnour, remember,
+was seen in the hall of the hotel at half-past
+eleven, after which hour he only left the hotel
+to go to the station after 1 o’clock a.m.</p>
+
+<p>“The hall was crowded by the passengers
+from the boat train a little after eleven.
+There was no time between that and half-past
+to lead even a willing enemy to the
+slaughter, throw him into the sea, and come
+back again, all in the space of five-and-twenty
+minutes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then what is your explanation of that
+extraordinary disappearance?” I retorted,
+beginning to feel very cross about it all.</p>
+
+<p>“A simple one,” he rejoined quietly, as
+he once more began to fidget with his bit of
+string. “A very simple one indeed; namely,
+that Count Collini, at the present moment,
+is living comfortably in England, calmly
+awaiting a favourable opportunity of changing
+his foreign money back into English notes.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you say yourself that that is
+impossible, as the most able detectives in
+England are on the watch for him.”</p>
+
+<p>“They are on the watch for a certain
+Count Collini,” he said drily, “who might
+disguise himself, perhaps, but whose hidden
+identity would sooner or later be discovered
+by one of these intelligent human
+bloodhounds.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes? Well?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, that Count Collini never existed.
+It was <em>his</em> personality that was the disguise.
+Now it is thrown off. The Count is not dead,
+he is not hiding, but has merely ceased to
+exist. There is no fear that he will ever
+come to life again. Mr. Turnour senior will
+see to that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Turnour!” I ejaculated.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, yes,” he rejoined excitedly; “do
+you mean to tell me you never saw through
+it all? The money lying in his hands; his
+brother about to wed the rich heiress; then
+Mrs. Brackenbury’s matrimonial ambitions,
+Alice Checkfield’s coldness to Hubert Turnour,
+the golden prize slipping away right out of
+the family for ever. Then the scheme was
+evolved by those two scoundrels, who deserve
+to be called geniuses in their criminal way.
+It could not be managed, except by
+collaboration, but as it was, the scheme was
+perfect in conception, and easy of execution.</p>
+
+<p>“Remember that disguise <em>previous</em> to a
+crime is always fairly safe from detection,
+for then it has no suspicion to contend against,
+it merely deceives those who have no cause
+to be otherwise <em>but</em> deceived. Mrs. Brackenbury
+lived in London, Reginald Turnour in
+Reading; they did not know each other
+personally, nor did they know each other’s
+friends, of course; whilst Alice Checkfield
+had not seen her guardian since she was
+quite a child.</p>
+
+<p>“Then the disguise was so perfect. I
+went down to Reading, some little time ago,
+and Reginald Turnour was pointed out to me:
+he is a Scotchman, with very light, sandy
+hair. That face clean shaved, made swarthy,
+the hair, eyebrows, and lashes dyed a jet
+black, would render him absolutely unrecognisable.
+Add to this the fact that a foreign
+accent completely changes the voice, and
+that the slight limp was a masterstroke of
+genius to hide the general carriage.</p>
+
+<p>“Then the winter came round; it was,
+perhaps, important that Mr. Turnour should
+not be absent too long from Reading, for
+fear of exciting suspicion there; and the
+scoundrel played his part with marvellous
+skill. Can’t you see him yourself leaving
+the Carlton Hotel, ostensibly going abroad,
+driving to Charing Cross, but only booking
+to Cannon Street.</p>
+
+<p>“Then getting out at that crowded station
+and slipping round to his brother’s office
+in one of those huge blocks of buildings
+where there is perpetual coming and going,
+and where any individual would easily pass
+unperceived.</p>
+
+<p>“There, with the aid of a little soap and
+water, Mr. Turnour resumed his Scotch
+appearance, went on to Reading, and spent
+winter and spring there, only returning to
+London to make a formal proposal, as Count
+Collini, for Alice Checkfield’s hand. Hubert
+Turnour’s office was undoubtedly the place
+where he changed his identity, from that of
+the British middle-class man, to the
+interesting personality of the Italian nobleman.</p>
+
+<p>“He had, of course, to repeat the journey
+to Reading a day or two before his wedding,
+in order to hand over his ward’s fortune to
+Mrs. Brackenbury’s solicitor. Then there
+were the supposed rows between Hubert
+Turnour and his rival; the letters of warning
+from the guardian, for which Hubert no
+doubt journeyed down to Reading, in order
+to post them there: all this was dust thrown
+into the eyes of two credulous ladies.</p>
+
+<p>“After that came the wedding, the meeting
+with Hubert Turnour, who, you see, was
+obliged to take a room in one of the big
+hotels, wherein, with more soap and water,
+the Italian Count could finally disappear.
+When the hall of the hotel was crowded, the
+sandy-haired Scotchman slipped out of it
+quite quietly: he was not remarkable, and
+no one specially noticed him. Since then
+the hue and cry has been after a dark Italian,
+who limps, and speaks broken English; and
+it has never struck any one that such a person
+never existed.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Turnour is fairly safe by now; and
+we may take it for granted that he will not
+seek the acquaintanceship of the Brackenburys,
+whilst Alice Checkfield is no longer
+his ward. He will wait a year or two longer
+perhaps, then he and Hubert will begin
+quietly to re-convert their foreign money into
+English notes—they will take frequent little
+trips abroad, and gradually change the money
+at the various <i>bureaux de change</i>, on the
+Continent.</p>
+
+<p>“Think of it all—it is so simple—not even
+dramatic, only the work of a genius from
+first to last, worthy of a better cause, perhaps,
+but undoubtedly worthy of success.”</p>
+
+<p>He was gone, leaving me quite bewildered.
+Yet the disappearance had always puzzled
+me, and now I felt that that animated
+scarecrow had found the true explanation of it
+after all.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch10-1">
+
+<h2>X. <br> The Ayrsham Mystery</h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>“I have never had a great opinion of our
+detective force here in England,” said the
+man in the corner, in his funny, gentle,
+apologetic manner, “but the way that
+department mismanaged the affair at Ayrsham
+simply passes comprehension.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed?” I said, with all the quiet
+dignity I could command. “It is a pity
+they did not consult you in the matter,
+wasn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is a pity,” he retorted with aggravating
+meekness, “that they do not use a little
+common sense. The case resembles that of
+Columbus’ egg, and is every bit as simple.</p>
+
+<p>“It was one evening last October, wasn’t
+it? that two labourers, walking home from
+Ayrsham village, turned down a lane, which,
+it appears, is a short cut to the block of
+cottages some distance off, where they lodged.</p>
+
+<p>“The night was very dark, and there was
+a nasty drizzle in the air. In the picturesque
+vernacular of the two labourers, ‘You couldn’t
+see your ’and before your eyes.’ Suddenly
+they stumbled over the body of a man lying
+right across the path.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘At first we thought ’e was drunk,’
+explained one of them subsequently, ‘but
+when we took a look at ’im, we soon saw
+there was something very wrong. Me and
+my mate turned ’im over, and “foul play”
+we both says at once. Then we see that it
+was Old Man Newton. Poor chap, ’e was
+dead, and no mistake.’</p>
+
+<p>“Old Man Newton, as he was universally
+called by his large circle of acquaintances,
+was very well known throughout the entire
+neighbourhood, most particularly at every
+inn and public bar for some miles around.</p>
+
+<p>“He also kept a local sweet-stuff shop at
+Ayrsham. No wonder that the men were
+horrified at finding him in such a terrible
+condition; even in their uneducated minds
+there could be no doubt that the old man
+had been murdered, for his skull had been
+literally shattered by a fearful blow, dealt
+him from behind by some powerful assailant.</p>
+
+<p>“Whilst the labourers were cogitating as
+to what they had better do next, they heard
+footsteps also turning into the lane, and the
+next moment Samuel Holder, a well-known
+inhabitant of Ayrsham, arrived upon the
+scene.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Hello! is that you, Mat Newton?’
+shouted Samuel, as he came near.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Ay! ’tis Old Man Newton, right
+enough,’ replied one of the labourers, ‘but
+’e won’t answer you no more.’</p>
+
+<p>“Samuel Holder seemed absolutely horrified
+when he saw the body of Old Man Newton;
+he uttered various ejaculations, which
+the two labourers, however, did not take
+special notice of at the time.</p>
+
+<p>“Then the three men held a brief consultation
+together, with the result that one
+of them ran back to Ayrsham village to fetch
+the local police, whilst the two others
+remained in the lane to guard the body.</p>
+
+<p>“The mystery—for it seemed one from
+the first—created a great deal of sensation
+in Ayrsham and all round the neighbourhood,
+and much sympathy was felt for, and shown
+to Mary Newton, the murdered man’s only
+child, a young girl about two-or-three-and-twenty,
+who, moreover, was in ill-health.</p>
+
+<p>“True, Old Man Newton was not a satisfactory
+protector for a young girl. He was
+very much addicted to drink; he neglected
+the little bit of local business he had; and,
+moreover, had recently shamefully ill-treated
+his daughter, the neighbours testifying to
+the many and loud quarrels that occurred
+in the small back parlour behind the
+sweet-stuff shop.</p>
+
+<p>“A case of murder—the moment an
+element of mystery hovers around it—immediately
+excites the attention of the newspaper-reading
+public, who is always seeking
+for new sensations.</p>
+
+<p>“Very soon the history of Old Man Newton
+and of his daughter found its way into the
+London and provincial dailies, and the
+Ayrsham murder became a topic of
+all-absorbing interest.</p>
+
+<p>“It appears that Old Man Newton was
+at one time a highly respectable local
+tradesman, always in a very small way, as there
+is not much business doing at Ayrsham. It
+is a poor and straggling village, although
+its railway station is an important junction
+on the Midland system.</p>
+
+<p>“There is some very good shooting in the
+neighbourhood, and about four or five years
+ago some of it, together with ‘The Limes,’
+a pretty house just outside the village, was
+rented for the autumn by Mr. Ledbury and
+his brother.</p>
+
+<p>“You know the firm of Ledbury and Co.,
+do you not; the great small arms
+manufacturers? The elder Mr. Ledbury was the
+recipient of Birthday honours last year, and
+is the present Lord Walterton; his younger
+brother, Mervin, was in those days, and is
+still, a handsome young fellow in the Hussars.</p>
+
+<p>“At the time—I mean about five years
+ago—Mary Newton was the local beauty of
+Ayrsham; she did a little dressmaking in
+her odd moments, but it appears that she
+spent most of her time in flirting. She was
+nominally engaged to be married to Samuel
+Holder, a young carpenter, but there was
+a good deal of scandal talked about her,
+for she was thought to be very fast; village
+gossip coupled her name with that of several
+young men in the neighbourhood, who were
+known to have paid the village beauty
+marked attention, and among these admirers
+of Mary Newton during the autumn of which
+I am speaking, young Mr. Mervin Ledbury
+figured conspicuously.</p>
+
+<p>“Be that as it may, certain it is that
+Mary Newton had a very bad reputation
+among the scandalmongers of Ayrsham, and
+though everybody was shocked, no one was
+astonished when one fine day in the winter
+following she suddenly left her father and
+her home, and went no one knew whither.
+She left, it appears, a very pathetic letter
+behind, begging for her father’s forgiveness,
+and that of Samuel Holder, whom she was
+jilting, but she was going to marry a gentleman
+above them all in station, and was going
+to be a real lady; then only would she
+return home.</p>
+
+<p>“A very unusual village tragedy, as you see.
+Four years went by, and Mary Newton did
+not return home. As time went by and
+with it no news of his daughter, Old Man
+Newton took her disappearance very much
+to heart. He began to neglect his business,
+and then his house, which became dirty and
+ill-kept by an occasional charwoman who
+would do a bit of promiscuous tidying for
+him from time to time. He was ill-tempered,
+sullen, and morose, and very soon became
+hopelessly addicted to drink.</p>
+
+<p>“Then suddenly, as unexpectedly as she
+had gone, Mary Newton returned to her
+home one fine day, after an absence of four
+years. What had become of her in the
+interim, no one in the village ever knew;
+she was generally supposed to have earned a
+living by dressmaking, until her failing health
+had driven her well nigh to starvation, and
+then back to the home and her father she
+had so heedlessly left.</p>
+
+<p>“Needless to say that all the talk of her
+‘marriage with a gentleman above her in
+station’ was entirely at an end. As for
+Old Man Newton, he seems after his daughter’s
+return to have become more sullen and
+morose than ever, and the neighbours now
+busied themselves with talk of the fearful
+rows which frequently occurred in the back
+parlour of the little sweet-stuff shop.</p>
+
+<p>“Father and daughter seemed to be leading
+a veritable cat-and-dog life together. Old
+Man Newton was hardly ever sober, and at
+the village inns he threw out weird and
+strange hints about ‘breach of promise actions
+with £5,000 damages, which his daughter
+would get, if only he knew where to lay
+hands upon the scoundrel.’</p>
+
+<p>“He also made vague and wholly useless
+enquiries about young Mervin Ledbury, but
+in a sleepy, out-of-the-way village like
+Ayrsham, no one knows anything about what
+goes on beyond a narrow five-mile radius at
+most. ‘The Limes’ and the shooting were
+let to different tenants year after year, and
+neither Lord Walterton nor Mr. Mervin
+Ledbury had ever rented them again.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch10-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>“That was the past history of Old Newton,”
+continued the man in the corner, after a
+brief pause, “that is to say, of the man who
+on a dark night last October was found
+murdered in a lonely lane, not far from
+Ayrsham. The public, as you may well
+imagine, took a very keen interest in the
+case from the outset: the story of Mary
+Newton, of the threatened breach of promise,
+of the £5,000 damages, roused masses of
+conjecture to which no one has yet dared
+to give definite shape.</p>
+
+<p>“One name, however, had already been
+whispered significantly, that of Mr. Mervin
+Ledbury, the young Hussar, one of Mary
+Newton’s admirers at the very time she left
+home in order, as she said, to be married
+to some one above her in station.</p>
+
+<p>“Many thinking people, too, wanted to
+know what Samuel Holder, Mary’s jilted
+<i>fiancé</i>, was doing close to the scene of the
+murder that night, and how he came to
+make the remark: ‘Hello! Is that you,
+Mat Newton?’ when the Old Man lived
+nearly half-a-mile away, and really had no
+cause for being in that particular lane, at
+that hour of the night in the drizzling rain.</p>
+
+<p>“The inquest, which, for want of other
+accommodation, was held at the local police
+station, was, as you may imagine, very
+largely attended.</p>
+
+<p>“I had read a brief statement of the case
+in the London papers, and had hurried down
+to Ayrsham Junction, as I scented a mystery,
+and knew I should enjoy myself.</p>
+
+<p>“When I got there, the room was already
+packed, and the medical evidence was being
+gone through.</p>
+
+<p>“Old Man Newton, it appears, had been
+knocked on the head by a heavily-loaded
+cane, which was found in the ditch close to
+the murdered man’s body.</p>
+
+<p>“The cane was produced in court; it
+was as stout as an old-fashioned club, and
+of terrific weight. The man who wielded it
+must have been very powerful, for he had
+only dealt one blow, but that blow had
+cracked the old man’s skull. The cane was
+undoubtedly of foreign make, for it had a
+solid silver ferrule at one end, which was not
+English hall-marked.</p>
+
+<p>“In the opinion of the medical expert,
+death was the result of the blow, and must
+have been almost instantaneous.</p>
+
+<p>“The labourers who first came across the
+body of the murdered man then repeated
+their story; they had nothing new to add,
+and their evidence was of no importance.
+But after that there was some stir in the court.
+Samuel Holder had been called and sworn
+to tell the whole truth, and nothing but the
+truth.</p>
+
+<p>“He was a youngish, heavily-built man of
+about five-and-thirty, with a nervous, not
+altogether prepossessing expression of face.
+Pressed by the coroner, he gave us a few
+details of Old Man Newton’s earlier history,
+such as I have already told you.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Old Mat,’ he explained, with some
+hesitation, ‘was for ever wanting to find
+out who the gentleman was who had promised
+marriage to Mary four years ago. But Mary
+was that obstinate, and wouldn’t tell him,
+and this exasperated the old man terribly,
+so that they had many rows on the subject.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I suppose,’ said the coroner tentatively,
+‘that you never knew who that gentleman
+was?’</p>
+
+<p>“Samuel Holder seemed to hesitate for a
+moment. His manner became even more
+nervous than before; he shifted his position
+from one foot to the other; finally, he
+said:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I don’t know as I ought to say, but——’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I am quite sure that you must tell us
+everything you know which might throw
+light upon this extraordinary and terrible
+murder,’ retorted the coroner sternly.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well,’ replied Samuel Holder, whilst
+great beads of perspiration stood out upon
+his forehead, ‘Mary never would give up
+the letters she had had from him, and she
+would not hear anything about a breach
+of promise case and £5,000 damages; but
+old Mat ’e often says to me, says ’e, “It’s
+young Mr. Ledbury,” ’e says, “she’s told
+me that once. I got it out of ’er, and if I
+only knew where to find ’im——” ’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You are quite sure of this?’ asked the
+coroner, for Holder had paused, and seemed
+quite horrified at the enormity of what he had
+said.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes—yes—your worship—your honour——’
+stammered Holder. ‘ ’E’s told me
+’twas young Mr. Ledbury times out of
+count, and——’</p>
+
+<p>“But Samuel Holder here completely broke
+down; he seemed unable to speak, his lips
+twitched convulsively, and the coroner,
+fearing that the man would faint, had him
+conveyed into the next room to recover himself,
+whilst another witness was brought forward.</p>
+
+<p>“This was Michael Pitkin, landlord of the
+Fernhead Arms, at Ayrsham, who had been
+on very intimate terms with old Newton
+during the four years which elapsed after
+Mary’s disappearance. He had a very curious
+story to tell, which aroused public
+excitement to its highest pitch.</p>
+
+<p>“It appears that to him also the old man
+had often confided the fact that it was Mr.
+Ledbury who had promised to marry Mary,
+and then had shamefully left her stranded
+and moneyless in London.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘But, of course,’ added the jovial and
+pleasant-looking landlord of the Fernhead
+Arms, ‘the likes of us down here didn’t know
+what became of Mr. Ledbury after he left
+“The Limes,” until one day I reads in the
+local paper that Sir John Fernhead’s daughter
+is going to be married to Captain Mervin
+Ledbury. Of course, your honour and me,
+and all of us know Sir John, our squire,
+down at Fernhead Towers, and I says to
+old Mat: “It strikes me,” I says, “that
+you’ve got your man.” Sure enough it was
+the same Mr. Ledbury who rented “The
+Limes” years ago, who was engaged to the
+young lady up at the Towers, and last week
+there was grand doings there—lords and
+ladies and lots of quality staying there, and
+also the Captain.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well?’ asked the coroner eagerly, whilst
+every one held their breath, wondering what
+was to come.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well,’ continued Michael Pitkin, ‘Old
+Man Newton went down to the Towers one
+day. ’E was determined to see young Mr.
+Ledbury, and went. What ’appened I don’t
+know, for old Mat wouldn’t tell me, but he
+came back mighty furious from ’is visit, and
+swore ’e would ruin the young man and make
+no end of a scandal, and he would bring the
+law agin’ ’im and get £5,000 damages.’</p>
+
+<p>“This story, embellished, of course, by
+many details, was the gist of what the worthy
+landlord of the Fernhead Arms had to say,
+but you may imagine how every one’s
+excitement and curiosity was aroused; in the
+meanwhile Samuel Holder was getting over
+his nervousness, and was more ready to give
+a clear account of what happened on the
+fatal night itself.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘It was about nine o’clock,’ he explained,
+in answer to the coroner, ‘and I was hurrying
+back to Ayrsham, through the fields; it
+was dark and raining, and I was about to
+strike across the hedge into the lane when
+I heard voices—a woman’s, then a man’s.
+Of course, I could see nothing, and the man
+spoke in a whisper, but I had recognised
+Mary’s voice quite plainly. She kept on
+saying: “ ’Tisn’t my fault!” she says, “it’s
+father’s, ’e has made up ’is mind. I held
+out as long as I could, but ’e worried me,
+and now ’e’s got your letters, and it’s too
+late.” ’</p>
+
+<p>“Samuel Holder again paused a moment,
+then continued:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘They talked together for a long time:
+Mary seemed very upset and the man very
+angry. Presently ’e says to ’er: “Well,
+tell your father to come out here and speak
+to me for a moment. I’ll see what I can do.”
+Mary seemed to ’esitate for a time, then she
+went away, and the man waited there in the
+drizzling rain, with me the other side of the
+’edge watchin’ ’im. I waited for a long time,
+for I wanted to know what was going to
+’appen; then time went on. I thought
+perhaps that old Mat was at the Fernhead
+Arms, and that Mary couldn’t find ’im, so
+I went back to Ayrsham by the fields, ’oping
+to find the old man. The stranger didn’t
+budge. ’E seemed inclined to wait—so I
+left ’im there—and—and—that’s all. I went
+to the Fernhead Arms, saw old Mat wasn’t
+there—then I went back to the lane—and—Old
+Man Newton was dead, and the stranger
+was gone.’</p>
+
+<p>“There was a moment or two of dead
+silence in the court when Samuel Holder had
+given his evidence, then the coroner asked
+quietly:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You do not know who the stranger
+was?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well, I couldn’t be sure, your honour,’
+replied Samuel nervously, ‘it was pitch dark.
+I wouldn’t like to swear a fellow-creature’s
+life and character away.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘No, no, quite so,’ rejoined the coroner;
+‘but do you happen to know what time it
+was when all this occurred?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Oh yes, your honour,’ said Samuel
+decisively, ‘as I walked away from the
+Fernhead Arms I ’eard Ayrsham church
+clock strike ten o’clock.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Ah! that’s always something,’ said the
+coroner, with a sigh of satisfaction. ‘Call
+Mary Newton, please.’ ”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch10-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>“You may imagine,” continued the man in
+the corner, after a slight pause, “with what
+palpitating interest we all watched the
+pathetic little figure, clad in deep black,
+who now stepped forward to give evidence.</p>
+
+<p>“It was difficult to imagine that Mary
+Newton could ever have been pretty; trouble
+had obviously wrought sad havoc with her
+good looks; she was now a wizened little
+thing, with dark rings under her eyes, and
+a pale, anæmic complexion. She stood
+perfectly listlessly before the coroner, waiting
+to be questioned, but otherwise not seeming
+to take the slightest interest in the
+proceedings. In an even, toneless voice she
+told her name, age, and status, then waited
+for further questions.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Your father went out a little before
+ten o’clock on Tuesday night last, did he
+not?’ asked the coroner very kindly.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes, sir, he did,’ replied Mary quietly.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘You had brought him a message from
+a gentleman whom you had met in the lane,
+and who wished to speak with your father?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘No, sir,’ replied Mary, in the same even
+and toneless voice; ‘I brought no message
+to father, and he went out on his own.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘But the gentleman you met in the
+lane?’ insisted the coroner with some
+impatience.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I didn’t meet any one in the lane, sir.
+I never went out of the house that Tuesday
+night, it rained so.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘But the last witness, Samuel Holder,
+heard you talking in the lane at nine o’clock.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Samuel Holder was mistaken,’ she
+replied imperturbably; ‘I wasn’t out of the
+house the whole of that night.’</p>
+
+<p>“It would be useless for me,” continued
+the man in the corner, “to attempt to
+convey to you the intense feeling of
+excitement which pervaded that crowded court,
+as that wizened little figure stood there for
+over half-an-hour, quietly and obstinately
+parrying the most rigid cross-examination.</p>
+
+<p>“That she was lying—lying to shield the
+very man who perhaps had murdered her
+father—no one doubted for a single instant.
+Yet there she stood, sullen, apathetic, and
+defiant, flatly denying Samuel Holder’s story
+from end to end, strictly adhering and swearing
+to her first statement, that her father
+went out ‘on his own,’ that she did not
+know where he was going to, and that she
+herself had never left the house that fatal
+Tuesday night.</p>
+
+<p>“It did not seem to occur to her that by these
+statements she was hopelessly incriminating
+Samuel Holder, whom she was thus openly
+accusing of deliberate lies; on the contrary,
+many noticed a distinct touch of bitter
+animosity in the young girl against her
+former sweetheart, which was singularly
+emphasised when the coroner asked her whether
+she approved of the idea of a breach of
+promise action being brought against Mr.
+Ledbury.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘No,’ she said; ‘all that talk about
+damages and breach of promise was between
+father and Sam Holder, because Sam had
+told father that he wouldn’t mind marrying
+me if I had £5,000 of my own.’</p>
+
+<p>“It would be impossible to render the
+tone of hatred and contempt with which the
+young girl uttered these words. One seemed
+to live through the whole tragedy of the past
+few months—the girl, pestered by the greed
+of her father, yet refusing obstinately to
+aid in causing a scandal, perhaps disgrace,
+to the man whom she had once loved and
+trusted.</p>
+
+<p>“As nothing more could be got out of her,
+and as circumstances now seemed to demand
+it, the coroner adjourned the inquest. The
+police, as you may well imagine, wanted to
+make certain enquiries. Mind you, Mary
+Newton flatly refused to mention Mr.
+Ledbury’s name; she was questioned and
+cross-questioned, yet her answer uniformly
+was:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about.
+The person I was going to marry four years
+ago has gone out of my life—I have never
+seen him since. I saw no one on that
+Tuesday night.’</p>
+
+<p>“Against that, when she was asked to
+swear that it was <em>not</em> Mr.—now Captain—Ledbury
+who had promised her marriage she
+flatly refused to do so.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, there was not a soul there
+who had not made up his or her mind that
+Captain Ledbury <em>had</em> met Mary Newton in
+the lane, and had heard from her that all
+his love letters to her were now in her father’s
+hands, and that the old man meant to
+use these in order to extort money from
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“Fearing the exposure and disgrace of so
+sensational a breach of promise action, and
+not having the money with which to meet
+Mat Newton’s preposterous demands, he
+probably lost control over himself, and in a
+moment of impulse and mad rage had silenced
+the old man for ever.</p>
+
+<p>“I assure you that at the adjourned
+inquest everybody expected to see Captain
+Ledbury in the custody of two constables.
+The police in the interim had been extremely
+reticent, and no fresh details of the
+extraordinary case had found its way into the
+papers, but fresh details of a sensational
+character were fully expected, and I can
+assure you the public were not disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>“It is no use my telling you all the
+proceedings of that second most memorable
+day; I will try and confine myself to the
+most important points of this interesting
+mystery.</p>
+
+<p>“I must tell you that the story told by
+the landlord of the Fernhead Arms was fully
+corroborated by several witnesses, all of
+whom testified to the fact that the old man
+came back from his visit to Fernhead Towers
+in a terrible fury, swearing to bring disgrace
+upon the scoundrel who had ruined his
+daughter.</p>
+
+<p>“What occurred during that visit was
+explained by Edward Sanders, the butler at
+The Towers. According to the testimony
+of this witness, there was a large house-party
+staying with Sir John Fernhead to celebrate
+the engagement of his daughter; the party
+naturally included Captain Mervin Ledbury,
+his brother, Lord Walterton, with the latter’s
+newly-married young wife, also many
+neighbours and friends.</p>
+
+<p>“At about six o’clock on Monday evening,
+it appears, a disreputable-looking old man,
+whom Edward Sanders did not know, but
+who gave the name of Newton, rang at the
+front door bell of The Towers and demanded
+to see Mr. Ledbury. Sanders naturally
+refused to admit him, but the old man was
+so persistent, and used such strange language,
+that the butler, after much hesitation, decided
+to apprise Captain Ledbury of his
+extraordinary visitor.</p>
+
+<p>“Captain Ledbury, on hearing that Old
+Man Newton wished to speak to him, much
+to Sanders’ astonishment, came downstairs
+and elected to interview his extraordinary
+visitor in the dining-room, which was then
+deserted. Sanders showed the old man in,
+and waited in the hall. Very soon, however,
+he heard loud and angry voices, and the next
+moment Captain Ledbury threw open the
+dining-room door, and said:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘This man is mad or drunk; show him
+out, Sanders.’</p>
+
+<p>“And without another word the Captain
+walked upstairs, leaving Sanders the pleasant
+task of ‘showing the old man out.’ That
+this was done very speedily and pretty
+roughly we may infer from Old Man
+Newton’s subsequent fury, and the threats
+he uttered even while he was being ‘shown
+out.’</p>
+
+<p>“Now you see, do you not?” continued
+the man in the corner, “that this evidence
+seemed to add another link to the chain
+which was incriminating young Mr. Ledbury
+in this terrible charge of murdering Old Man
+Newton.</p>
+
+<p>“The young man himself was now with
+his regiment stationed at York. It appears
+that the house-party at Fernhead Towers
+was breaking up on the very day of Old Man
+Newton’s strange visit thither. Lord and
+Lady Walterton left for town on the Tuesday
+morning, and Captain Ledbury went up to
+York on that very same fatal night.</p>
+
+<p>“You must know that the small local
+station of Fernhead is quite close to The
+Towers. Captain Ledbury took the late
+local train there for Ayrsham Junction after
+dinner that night, arriving at the latter place
+at 9.15, with the intention of picking up the
+Midland express to the north at 10.15 p.m.
+later on.</p>
+
+<p>“The police had ascertained that Captain
+Ledbury had got out of the local train at
+Ayrsham Junction at 9.15, and aimlessly
+strolled out of the station. Against that, it
+was definitely proved by several witnesses
+that the young man did catch the Midland
+express at 10.15 p.m., and travelled up north
+by it.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, there was the hitch, do you see?”
+added the funny creature excitedly. “Samuel
+Holder overheard a conversation in the fatal
+lane between Mary Newton and the stranger,
+whom everybody by now believed to be
+Captain Ledbury. Good! That was between
+9 p.m. and 10 p.m., and, as it happened, the
+young man does seem to have unaccountably
+strolled about in the neighbourhood whilst
+waiting for his train; but remember that
+when Sam Holder left the stranger waiting
+in the lane, and went back towards Ayrsham
+in order to try and find Old Man Newton,
+he distinctly heard Ayrsham church clock
+striking ten.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, the lane where the murder occurred
+is two-and-a-half miles from Ayrsham
+Junction station, therefore it could not have
+been Captain Ledbury who was there lying
+in wait for the old man, as he could not
+possibly have had his interview with old
+Mat, quarrelled with him and murdered him,
+and then caught his train two-and-a-half
+miles further on, all in the space of fifteen
+minutes.</p>
+
+<p>“Thus, even before the final verdict of
+‘Wilful murder against some person or persons
+unknown,’ the case against Captain Mervin
+Ledbury had completely fallen to the ground.
+He must also have succeeded in convincing
+Sir John Fernhead of his innocence, as I see
+by the papers that Miss Fernhead has since
+become Mrs. Ledbury.</p>
+
+<p>“But the result has been that the Ayrsham
+tragedy has remained an impenetrable
+mystery.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Who killed Old Man Newton? and
+why?’ is a question which many people,
+including our clever criminal investigation
+department, have asked themselves many a
+time.</p>
+
+<p>“It was not a case of vulgar assault and
+robbery, as the old man was not worth
+robbing, and the few coppers he possessed
+were found intact in his waistcoat pocket.</p>
+
+<p>“Many people assert that Samuel Holder
+quarrelled with the old man and murdered
+him, but there are three reasons why that
+theory is bound to fall to the ground. Firstly,
+the total absence of any motive. Samuel
+Holder could have no possible object in
+killing the old man, but still, we’ll waive that;
+people do quarrel—especially if they are
+confederates, as these two undoubtedly
+were—and quarrels do sometimes end fatally.
+Secondly, the weapon which caused the old
+man’s death—a heavily-leaded cane of foreign
+make, with solid silver ferrule.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, I ask you, where in the world
+could a village carpenter pick up an
+instrument of that sort? Moreover no one ever
+saw such a thing in Sam Holder’s hands or
+in his house. When he walked to the Fernhead
+Arms in order to try and find the old
+man, he had nothing of the sort in his hand,
+and in spite of the most strenuous efforts
+on the part of the police, the history of that
+cane was never traced.</p>
+
+<p>“Then, there is a third reason why
+obviously Sam Holder was not guilty of the
+murder, though that reason is a moral one;
+I am referring to Mary Newton’s attitude
+at the inquest. She lied, of that there could
+not be a shadow of doubt; she was determined
+to shield her former lover, and
+incriminated Sam Holder only because she
+wished to save another man.</p>
+
+<p>“Obviously, old Newton went out on that
+dark, wet night in order to meet someone
+in the lane, that someone could not have
+been Sam Holder, whom he met anywhere
+and everywhere, and every day in his own
+house.</p>
+
+<p>“There! you see that Sam Holder was
+obviously innocent, that Captain Ledbury
+could not have committed the murder, that
+surely Mary Newton did not kill her own
+father, and that in such a case, common
+sense should have come to the rescue, and
+not have left this case, what it now is, a
+tragic and impenetrable mystery.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch10-4">
+
+<h3>Chapter IV</h3>
+
+<p>“But,” I said at last, for indeed I was
+deeply mystified, “what does common sense
+argue?—the case seems to be absolutely
+hopeless.”</p>
+
+<p>He surveyed his beloved bit of string for
+a moment, and his mild blue eyes blinked at
+me over his bone-rimmed spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>“Common sense,” he said at last, with his
+most apologetic manner, “tells me that
+Ayrsham village is a remote little place,
+where a daily paper is unknown, and where
+no one reads the fashionable intelligence or
+knows anything about Birthday honours.”</p>
+
+<p>“What <em>do</em> you mean?” I gasped in
+amazement.</p>
+
+<p>“Simply this, that no one at Ayrsham
+village, certainly not Mary Newton herself,
+had realised that one of the Mr. Ledburys,
+whom all had known at ‘The Limes’ four
+years ago, had since become Lord Walterton.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lord Walterton!” I ejaculated, wholly
+incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, yes!” he replied quietly. “Do
+you mean to say you never thought of that?
+that it never occurred to you that Mary
+Newton may have admitted to her father
+that Mr. Ledbury had been the man who
+had so wickedly wronged her, but that she,
+in her remote little village, had also no idea
+that the Mr. Ledbury she meant was recently
+made, and is now styled, Lord Walterton?</p>
+
+<p>“Old Man Newton, who knew of the
+gossip which had coupled his daughter’s
+name, years ago, with the younger Mr. Ledbury,
+naturally took it for granted that she
+was referring to him. Moreover, we may
+take it from the girl’s subsequent attitude
+that she did all she could to shield the man
+whom she had once loved; women, you
+know, have that sort of little way with them.</p>
+
+<p>“Old Newton, fully convinced that young
+Ledbury was the man he wanted, went up
+to The Towers and had the stormy interview,
+which no doubt greatly puzzled the
+young Hussar. He undoubtedly spoke of it
+to his brother, Lord Walterton, who, newly
+married and of high social position, would
+necessarily dread a scandal as much as
+anybody.</p>
+
+<p>“Lord Walterton went up to town with
+his young wife the following morning.
+Ayrsham is only forty minutes from London.
+He came down in the evening, met Mary in
+the lane, asked to see her father, and killed
+him in a moment of passion, when he found
+that the old man’s demands were preposterously
+unreasonable. Moreover, Englishmen
+in all grades of society have an innate
+horror of being bullied or blackmailed; the
+murder probably was not premeditated, but
+the outcome of rage at being browbeaten by
+the old man.</p>
+
+<p>“You see, the police did not use their
+common sense over so simple a matter. They
+naturally made no enquiries as to Lord
+Walterton’s movements, who seemingly had
+absolutely nothing to do with the case.
+If they had, I feel convinced that they
+would have found that his lordship would
+have had some difficulty in satisfying everybody
+as to his whereabouts on that particular
+Tuesday night.</p>
+
+<p>“Think of it, it is so simple—the only
+possible solution of that strange and
+unaccountable mystery.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch11-1">
+
+<h2>XI. <br> The Affair at the Novelty Theatre</h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>“Talking of mysteries,” said the man in the
+corner, rather irrelevantly, for he had not
+opened his mouth since he sat down and
+ordered his lunch, “talking of mysteries, it
+is always a puzzle to me how few thefts are
+committed in the dressing-rooms of
+fashionable actresses during a performance.”</p>
+
+<p>“There have been one or two,” I suggested,
+“but nothing of any value was stolen.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yet you remember that affair at the
+Novelty Theatre a year or two ago, don’t
+you?” he added. “It created a great deal
+of sensation at the time. You see, Miss
+Phyllis Morgan was, and still is, a very
+fashionable and popular actress, and her
+pearls are quite amongst the wonders of the
+world. She herself valued them at £10,000,
+and several experts who remember the pearls
+quite concur with that valuation.</p>
+
+<p>“During the period of her short tenancy
+of the Novelty Theatre last season, she
+entrusted those beautiful pearls to Mr. Kidd,
+the well-known Bond Street jeweller, to be
+re-strung. There were seven rows of perfectly
+matched pearls, held together by a small
+diamond clasp of ‘art-nouveau’ design.</p>
+
+<p>“Kidd and Co. are, as you know, a very
+eminent and old established firm of jewellers.
+Mr. Thomas Kidd, its present sole
+representative, was some time president of the
+London Chamber of Commerce, and a man
+whose integrity has always been held to be
+above suspicion. His clerks, salesmen, and
+book-keeper had all been in his employ for
+years, and most of the work was executed
+on the premises.</p>
+
+<p>“In the case of Miss Phyllis Morgan’s
+valuable pearls they were re-strung and re-set
+in the back shop by Mr. Kidd’s most valued
+and most trusted workman, a man named
+James Rumford, who is justly considered to
+be one of the cleverest craftsmen here in
+England.</p>
+
+<p>“When the pearls were ready, Mr. Kidd
+himself took them down to the theatre, and
+delivered them into Miss Morgan’s own
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>“It appears that the worthy jeweller was
+extremely fond of the theatre; but, like so
+many persons in affluent circumstances, he
+was also very fond of getting a free seat when
+he could.</p>
+
+<p>“All along he had made up his mind to
+take the pearls down to the Novelty Theatre
+one night, and to see Miss Morgan for a
+moment before the performance; she would
+then, he hoped, place a stall at his disposal.</p>
+
+<p>“His previsions were correct. Miss Morgan
+received the pearls, and Mr. Kidd was on
+that celebrated night accommodated with a
+seat in the stalls.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know if you remember all the
+circumstances connected with that case, but,
+to make my point clear, I must remind you
+of one or two of the most salient details.</p>
+
+<p>“In the drama in which Miss Phyllis Morgan
+was acting at the time, there is a brilliant
+masked ball scene which is the crux of the
+whole play; it occurs in the second act,
+and Miss Phyllis Morgan, as the hapless
+heroine, dressed in the shabbiest of clothes,
+appears in the midst of a gay and giddy
+throng; she apostrophises all and sundry
+there, including the villain, and has a
+magnificent scene which always brings down the
+house, and nightly adds to her histrionic
+laurels.</p>
+
+<p>“For this scene a large number of supers
+are engaged, and in order to further swell
+the crowd, practically all the available stage
+hands have to ‘walk on’ dressed in various
+coloured dominoes, and all wearing masks.</p>
+
+<p>“You have, of course, heard the name
+of Mr. Howard Dennis in connection with
+this extraordinary mystery. He is what is
+usually called ‘a young man about town,’
+and was one of Miss Phyllis Morgan’s most
+favoured admirers. As a matter of fact, he
+was generally understood to be the popular
+actress’s <i>fiancé</i>, and as such, had of course
+the <i>entrée</i> of the Novelty Theatre.</p>
+
+<p>“Like many another idle young man
+about town, Mr. Howard Dennis was stage-mad,
+and one of his greatest delights was
+to don nightly a mask and a blue domino,
+and to ‘walk on’ in the second act, not so
+much in order to gratify his love for the
+stage, as to watch Miss Phyllis Morgan in
+her great scene, and to be present, close by
+her, when she received her usual salvo of
+enthusiastic applause from a delighted public.</p>
+
+<p>“On this eventful night—it was on 20th
+July last—the second act was in full swing;
+the supers, the stage hands, and all the
+principals were on the scene, the back of
+the stage was practically deserted. The
+beautiful pearls, fresh from the hands of
+Mr. Kidd, were in Miss Morgan’s dressing-room,
+as she meant to wear them in the last
+act.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, since that memorable affair,
+many people have talked of the foolhardiness
+of leaving such valuable jewellery in the sole
+charge of a young girl—Miss Morgan’s
+dresser—who acted with unpardonable folly and
+carelessness, but you must remember that
+this part of the theatre is only accessible
+through the stage door, where sits enthroned
+that uncorruptible dragon, the stage
+door-keeper.</p>
+
+<p>“No one can get at it from the front, and
+the dressing-rooms for the supers and lesser
+members of the company are on the opposite
+side of the stage to that reserved for Miss
+Morgan and one or two of the principals.</p>
+
+<p>“It was just a quarter to ten, and the
+curtain was about to be rung down, when
+George Finch, the stage door-keeper, rushed
+excitedly into the wings; he was terribly
+upset, and was wildly clutching his coat,
+beneath which he evidently held something
+concealed.</p>
+
+<p>“In response to the rapidly-whispered
+queries of the one or two stage hands that
+stood about, Finch only shook his head
+excitedly. He seemed scarcely able to control
+his impatience, during the close of the
+act, and the subsequent prolonged applause.</p>
+
+<p>“When at last Miss Morgan, flushed with
+her triumph, came off the stage, Finch made
+a sudden rush for her.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Oh, Madam!’ he gasped excitedly, ‘it
+might have been such an awful misfortune!
+The rascal! I nearly got him through!
+but he escaped—fortunately it is safe—— I
+have got it——!’</p>
+
+<p>“It was some time before Miss Morgan
+understood what in the world the otherwise
+sober stage door-keeper was driving at.
+Every one who heard him certainly thought
+that he had been drinking. But the next
+moment from under his coat he pulled out,
+with another ejaculation of excitement, the
+magnificent pearl necklace which Miss Morgan
+had thought safely put away in her
+dressing-room.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘What in the world does all this mean?’
+asked Mr. Howard Dennis, who, as usual,
+was escorting his <i>fiancée</i>. ‘Finch, what are
+you doing with Madam’s necklace?’</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Phyllis Morgan herself was too
+bewildered to question Finch; she gazed at
+him, then at her necklace, in speechless
+astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well, you see, Madam, it was this way,’
+Finch managed to explain at last, as with
+awestruck reverence he finally deposited the
+precious necklace in the actress’s hands.
+‘As you know, Madam, it is a very hot night.
+I had seen every one into the theatre and
+counted in the supers; there was nothing
+much for me to do, and I got rather tired
+and very thirsty. I see’d a man loafing close
+to the door, and I ask him to fetch me a
+pint of beer from round the corner, and I
+give him some coppers; I had noticed him
+loafing round before, and it was so hot I
+didn’t think I was doin’ no harm.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘No, no,’ said Miss Morgan impatiently.
+‘Well!’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well,’ continued Finch, ‘the man, he
+brought me the beer, and I had some of
+it—and—and—afterwards, I don’t quite know
+how it happened—it was the heat, perhaps—but—I
+was sitting in my box, and I suppose
+I must have dropped asleep. I just remember
+hearing the ring up for the second act, and
+the call-boy calling you, Madam, then there’s
+a sort of a blank in my mind. All of a
+sudden I seemed to wake with the feeling
+that there was something wrong somehow.
+In a moment I jumped up, and I tell you I
+was wide awake then, and I saw a man
+sneaking down the passage, past my box,
+towards the door. I challenged him, and he
+tried to dart past me, but I was too quick
+for him, and got him by the tails of his
+coat, for I saw at once that he was carrying
+something, and I had recognised the loafer
+who brought me the beer. I shouted for
+help, but there’s never anybody about in
+this back street, and the loafer, he struggled
+like old Harry, and sure enough he managed
+to get free from me and away before I could
+stop him, but in his fright the rascal dropped
+his booty, for which Heaven be praised!
+and it was your pearls, Madam. Oh, my!
+but I did have a tussle,’ concluded the worthy
+door-keeper, mopping his forehead, ‘and I
+do hope, Madam, the scoundrel didn’t take
+nothing else.’</p>
+
+<p>“That was the story,” continued the man
+in the corner, “which George Finch had to
+tell, and which he subsequently repeated
+without the slightest deviation. Miss Phyllis
+Morgan, with the light-heartedness peculiar
+to ladies of her profession, took the matter
+very quietly; all she said at the time was
+that she had nothing else of value in her
+dressing-room, but that Miss Knight—the
+dresser—deserved a scolding for leaving the
+room unprotected.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘All’s well that ends well,’ she said gaily,
+as she finally went into her dressing-room,
+carrying the pearls in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>“It appears that the moment she opened
+the door, she found Miss Knight sitting in
+the room, in a deluge of tears. The girl had
+overheard George Finch telling his story, and
+was terribly upset at her own carelessness.</p>
+
+<p>“In answer to Miss Morgan’s questions,
+she admitted that she had gone into the
+wings, and lingered there to watch the great
+actress’s beautiful performance. She thought
+no one could possibly get to the dressing-room,
+as nearly all hands were on the stage
+at the time, and of course George Finch was
+guarding the door.</p>
+
+<p>“However, as there really had been no
+harm done, beyond a wholesome fright to
+everybody concerned, Miss Morgan readily
+forgave the girl and proceeded with her
+change of attire for the next act. Incidentally
+she noticed a bunch of roses, which were
+placed on her dressing-table, and asked
+Knight who had put them there.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Mr. Dennis brought them,’ replied the
+girl.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Morgan looked pleased, blushed,
+and dismissing the whole matter from her
+mind, she proceeded with her toilette for
+the next act, in which, the hapless heroine
+having come into her own again, she was
+able to wear her beautiful pearls around her
+neck.</p>
+
+<p>“George Finch, however, took some time
+to recover himself; his indignation was only
+equalled by his volubility. When his
+excitement had somewhat subsided, he took the
+precaution of saving the few drops of beer
+which had remained at the bottom of the
+mug, brought to him by the loafer. This
+was subsequently shown to a chemist in the
+neighbourhood, who, without a moment’s
+hesitation, pronounced the beer to contain
+an appreciable quantity of chloral.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch11-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>“The whole matter, as you may imagine,
+did not affect Miss Morgan’s spirits that
+night,” continued the man in the corner,
+after a slight pause.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘All’s well that ends well,’ she had said
+gaily, since almost by a miracle, her pearls
+were once more safely round her neck.</p>
+
+<p>“But the next day brought the rude
+awakening. Something had indeed happened
+which made the affair at the Novelty
+Theatre, what it has ever since remained,
+a curious and unexplainable mystery.</p>
+
+<p>“The following morning Miss Phyllis Morgan
+decided that it was foolhardy to leave
+valuable property about in her dressing-room,
+when for stage purposes, imitation
+jewellery did just as well. She therefore
+determined to place her pearls in the bank
+until the termination of her London season.</p>
+
+<p>“The moment, however, that, in broad
+daylight, she once more handled the necklace,
+she instinctively felt that there was
+something wrong with it. She examined it
+eagerly and closely, and, hardly daring to
+face her sudden terrible suspicions, she rushed
+round to the nearest jeweller, and begged
+him to examine the pearls.</p>
+
+<p>“The examination did not take many
+moments: the jeweller at once pronounced
+the pearls to be false. There could be no
+doubt about it; the necklace was a perfect
+imitation of the original, even the clasp
+was an exact copy. Half-hysterical with
+rage and anxiety, Miss Morgan at once
+drove to Bond Street, and asked to see
+Mr. Kidd.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you may easily imagine the stormy
+interview that took place. Miss Phyllis
+Morgan, in no measured language, boldly accused
+Mr. Thomas Kidd, late president of the
+London Chamber of Commerce, of having
+substituted false pearls for her own priceless
+ones.</p>
+
+<p>“The worthy jeweller, at first completely
+taken by surprise, examined the necklace,
+and was horrified to see that Miss Morgan’s
+statements were, alas! too true. Mr. Kidd
+was indeed in a terribly awkward
+position.</p>
+
+<p>“The evening before, after business hours,
+he had taken the necklace home with him.
+Before starting for the theatre, he had
+examined it to see that it was quite in order.
+He had then, with his own hands, and in the
+presence of his wife, placed it in its case,
+and driven straight to the Novelty, where
+he finally gave it over to Miss Morgan
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>“To all this he swore most positively;
+moreover, all his <i>employés</i> and workmen
+could swear that they had last seen the
+necklace just after closing time at the shop,
+when Mr. Kidd walked off towards Piccadilly,
+with the precious article in the inner
+pocket of his coat.</p>
+
+<p>“One point certainly was curious, and
+undoubtedly helped to deepen the mystery
+which to this day clings to the affair at the
+Novelty Theatre.</p>
+
+<p>“When Mr. Kidd handed the packet containing
+the necklace to Miss Morgan, she was
+too busy to open it at once. She only spoke
+to Mr. Kidd through her dressing-room door,
+and never opened the packet till nearly an
+hour later, after she had dressed ready for
+the second act; the packet at that time had
+been untouched, and was wrapped up just
+as she had had it from Mr. Kidd’s own
+hands. She undid the packet, and handled
+the pearls; certainly, by the artificial light
+she could see nothing wrong with the
+necklace.</p>
+
+<p>“Poor Mr. Kidd was nearly distracted with
+the horror of his position. Thirty years of
+an honest reputation suddenly tarnished with
+this awful suspicion—for he realised at once
+that Miss Morgan refused to believe his
+statements; in fact, she openly said that
+she would—unless immediate compensation
+was made to her—place the matter at once
+in the hands of the police.</p>
+
+<p>“From the stormy interview in Bond
+Street, the irate actress drove at once to
+Scotland Yard; but the old-established
+firm of Kidd and Co. was not destined to
+remain under any cloud that threatened its
+integrity.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Kidd at once called upon his solicitor,
+with the result that an offer was made to
+Miss Morgan, whereby the jeweller would
+deposit the full value of the original necklace,
+<i>i.e.</i>, £10,000, in the hands of Messrs.
+Bentley and Co., bankers, that sum to be
+held by them for a whole year, at the end
+of which time, if the perpetrator of the
+fraud had not been discovered, the money
+was to be handed over to Miss Morgan in
+its entirety.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing could have been more fair,
+more equitable, or more just, but at the same
+time nothing could have been more
+mysterious.</p>
+
+<p>“As Mr. Kidd swore that he had placed
+the real pearls in Miss Morgan’s hands, and
+was ready to back his oath by the sum of
+£10,000, no more suspicion could possibly
+attach to him. When the announcement of
+his generous offer appeared in the papers,
+the entire public approved and exonerated
+him, and then turned to wonder who the
+perpetrator of the daring fraud had been.</p>
+
+<p>“How came a valueless necklace in exact
+imitation of the original one to be in Miss
+Morgan’s dressing-room? Where were the
+real pearls? Clearly the loafer who had
+drugged the stage door-keeper, and sneaked
+into the theatre to steal a necklace, was not
+aware that he was risking several years’
+hard labour for the sake of a worthless trifle.
+He had been one of the many dupes of this
+extraordinary adventure.</p>
+
+<p>“Macpherson, one of the most able men
+on the detective staff, had, indeed, his work
+cut out. The police were extremely reticent,
+but, in spite of this, one or two facts gradually
+found their way into the papers, and aroused
+public interest and curiosity to its highest
+pitch.</p>
+
+<p>“What had transpired was this:</p>
+
+<p>“Clara Knight, the dresser, had been very
+rigorously cross-questioned, and, from her
+many statements, the following seemed quite
+positive.</p>
+
+<p>“After the curtain had rung up for the
+second act, and Miss Morgan had left her
+dressing-room, Knight had waited about for
+some time, and had even, it appears, handled
+and admired the necklace. Then,
+unfortunately, she was seized with the burning
+desire of seeing the famous scene from the
+wings. She thought that the place was
+quite safe, and that George Finch was as
+usual at his post.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I was going along the short passage
+that leads to the wings,’ she exclaimed to the
+detectives, ‘when I became aware of some
+one moving some distance behind me. I
+turned and saw a blue domino about to enter
+Miss Morgan’s dressing-room.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘I thought nothing of that,’ continued
+the girl, ‘as we all know that Mr. Dennis
+is engaged to Miss Morgan. He is very fond
+of “walking on” in the ball-room scene,
+and he always wears a blue domino when
+he does; so I was not at all alarmed. He
+had his mask on as usual, and he was
+carrying a bunch of roses. When he saw me at
+the other end of the passage, he waved his
+hand to me and pointed to the flowers. I
+nodded to him, and then he went into the
+room.’</p>
+
+<p>“These statements, as you may imagine,
+created a great deal of sensation; so much
+so, in fact, that Mr. Kidd, with his £10,000
+and his reputation in mind, moved heaven
+and earth to bring about the prosecution of
+Mr. Dennis for theft and fraud.</p>
+
+<p>“The papers were full of it, for Mr. Howard
+Dennis was well known in fashionable London
+Society. His answer to these curious
+statements was looked forward to eagerly; when
+it came it satisfied no one and puzzled
+everybody.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Miss Knight was mistaken,’ he said
+most emphatically, ‘I did not bring any
+roses for Miss Morgan that night. It was
+not I that she saw in a blue domino by the
+door, as I was on the stage before the curtain
+was rung up for the second act, and never
+left it until the close.’</p>
+
+<p>“This part of Howard Dennis’ statement
+was a little difficult to substantiate. No one
+on the stage could swear positively whether
+he was ‘on’ early in the act or not, although,
+mind you, Macpherson had ascertained that
+in the whole crowd of supers on the stage,
+he was the only one who wore a blue
+domino.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Kidd was very active in the matter,
+but Miss Morgan flatly refused to believe in
+her <i>fiancé’s</i> guilt. The worthy jeweller
+maintained that Mr. Howard Dennis was the only
+person who knew the celebrated pearls and
+their quaint clasp well enough to have a
+facsimile made of them, and that when Miss
+Knight saw him enter the dressing-room, he
+actually substituted the false necklace for
+the real one; whilst the loafer who drugged
+George Finch’s beer was—as every one
+supposed—only a dupe.</p>
+
+<p>“Things had reached a very acute and
+painful stage, when one more detail found
+its way into the papers, which, whilst entirely
+clearing Mr. Howard Dennis’ character, has
+helped to make the whole affair a hopeless
+mystery.</p>
+
+<p>“Whilst questioning George Finch, Macpherson
+had ascertained that the stage door-keeper
+had seen Mr. Dennis enter the theatre
+some time before the beginning of the
+celebrated second act. He stopped to speak to
+George Finch for a moment or two, and the
+latter could swear positively that Mr. Dennis
+was not carrying any roses then.</p>
+
+<p>“On the other hand a flower-girl, who
+was selling roses in the neighbourhood of the
+Novelty Theatre late that memorable night,
+remembers selling some roses to a shabbily-dressed
+man, who looked like a labourer out
+of work. When Mr. Dennis was pointed
+out to her she swore positively that it was
+not he.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘The man looked like a labourer,’ she
+explained. ‘I took particular note of him,
+as I remember thinking that he didn’t
+look much as if he could afford to buy
+roses.’</p>
+
+<p>“Now you see,” concluded the man in
+the corner excitedly, “where the hitch lies.
+There is absolutely no doubt, judging from
+the evidence of George Finch and of the
+flower-girl, that the loafer had provided
+himself with the roses, and had somehow or other
+managed to get hold of a blue domino, for
+the purpose of committing the theft. His
+giving drugged beer to Finch, moreover,
+proved his guilt beyond a doubt.</p>
+
+<p>“But here the mystery becomes hopeless,”
+he added with a chuckle, “for the loafer
+dropped the booty which he had stolen—that
+booty was the false necklace, and it has
+remained an impenetrable mystery to this
+day as to who made the substitution and
+when.</p>
+
+<p>“A whole year has elapsed since then, but
+the real necklace has never been traced or
+found; so Mr. Kidd has paid, with absolute
+quixotic chivalry, the sum of £10,000 to Miss
+Morgan, and thus he has completely cleared
+the firm of Kidd and Co. of any suspicion
+as to its integrity.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch11-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>“But then, what in the world is the explanation
+of it all?” I asked bewildered, as the
+funny creature paused in his narrative and
+seemed absorbed in the contemplation of a
+beautiful knot he had just completed in his
+bit of string.</p>
+
+<p>“The explanation is so simple,” he replied,
+“for it is obvious, is it not, that only four
+people could possibly have committed the
+fraud?”</p>
+
+<p>“Who are they?” I asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” he said, whilst his bony fingers
+began to fidget with that eternal piece of
+string, “there is, of course, old Mr. Kidd;
+but as the worthy jeweller has paid £10,000
+to prove that he did not steal the real necklace
+and substitute a false one in its stead,
+we must assume that he was guiltless. Then,
+secondly, there is Mr. Howard Dennis.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, yes,” I said, “what about him?”</p>
+
+<p>“There were several points in his favour,”
+he rejoined, marking each point with a fresh
+and most complicated knot; “it was not
+he who bought the roses, therefore it was
+not he who, clad in a blue domino, entered
+Miss Morgan’s dressing-room directly after
+Knight left it.</p>
+
+<p>“And mark the force of this point,” he
+added excitedly.</p>
+
+<p>“Just before the curtain rang up for the
+second act, Miss Morgan had been in her
+room, and had then undone the packet,
+which, in her own words, was just as she
+had received it from Mr. Kidd’s hands.</p>
+
+<p>“After that Miss Knight remained in
+charge, and a mere ten seconds after she left
+the room she saw the blue domino carrying
+the roses at the door.</p>
+
+<p>“The flower-girl’s story and that of George
+Finch have proved that the blue domino
+could not have been Mr. Dennis, but it was
+the loafer who evidently stole the false
+necklace.</p>
+
+<p>“If you bear all this in mind you will
+realise that there was no time in those ten
+seconds for Mr. Dennis to have made the
+substitution <em>before</em> the theft was committed.
+It stands to reason that he could not have
+done it afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>“Then, again, many people suspected Miss
+Knight, the dresser, but this supposition we
+may easily dismiss. An uneducated, stupid
+girl, not three-and-twenty, could not possibly
+have planned so clever a substitution. An
+imitation necklace of that particular calibre
+and made to order would cost far more money
+than a poor theatrical dresser could ever
+afford; let alone the risks of ordering such
+an ornament to be made.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said the funny creature, with comic
+emphasis, “there is but one theory possible,
+which is my own.”</p>
+
+<p>“And that is?” I asked eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>“The workman, Rumford, of course,” he
+responded triumphantly. “Why! it jumps
+to the eyes, as our French friends would tell
+us. Who, other than he, could have the
+opportunity of making an exact copy of the
+necklace which had been entrusted to his firm?</p>
+
+<p>“Being in the trade he could easily obtain
+the false stones without exciting any undue
+suspicion; being a skilled craftsman, he
+could easily make the clasp, and string the
+pearls in exact imitation of the original; he
+could do this secretly in his own home and
+without the slightest risk.</p>
+
+<p>“Then the plan, though extremely simple,
+was very cleverly thought out. Disguised
+as the loafer——”</p>
+
+<p>“The loafer!” I exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, yes! the loafer,” he replied quietly,
+“disguised as the loafer, he hung round the
+stage door of the Novelty after business
+hours, until he had collected the bits of gossip
+and information he wanted; thus he learnt
+that Mr. Howard Dennis was Miss Morgan’s
+accredited <i>fiancé</i>; that he, like everybody
+else who was available, ‘walked on’ in the
+second act; and that during that time the
+back of the stage was practically deserted.</p>
+
+<p>“No doubt he knew all along that Mr. Kidd
+meant to take the pearls down to the theatre
+himself that night, and it was quite easy to
+ascertain that Miss Morgan—as the hapless
+heroine—wore no jewellery in the second act,
+and that Mr. Howard Dennis invariably wore
+a blue domino.</p>
+
+<p>“Some people might incline to the belief
+that Miss Knight was a paid accomplice,
+that she left the dressing-room unprotected
+on purpose, and that her story of the blue
+domino and the roses was pre-arranged
+between herself and Rumford, but that is
+not my opinion.</p>
+
+<p>“I think that the scoundrel was far too
+clever to need any accomplice, and too
+shrewd to put himself thereby at the mercy
+of a girl like Knight.</p>
+
+<p>“Rumford, I find, is a married man: this
+to me explains the blue domino, which the
+police were never able to trace to any business
+place, where it might have been bought or
+hired. Like the necklace itself, it was
+‘home-made.’</p>
+
+<p>“Having got his properties and his plans
+ready, Rumford then set to work. You
+must remember that a stage door-keeper is
+never above accepting a glass of beer from
+a friendly acquaintance; and, no doubt, if
+George Finch had not asked the loafer to
+bring him a glass, the latter would have
+offered him one. To drug the beer was
+simple enough; then Rumford went to buy
+the roses, and, I should say, met his wife
+somewhere round the corner, who handed
+him the blue domino and the mask; all this
+was done in order to completely puzzle the
+police subsequently, and also in order to
+throw suspicion, if possible, upon young
+Dennis.</p>
+
+<p>“As soon as the drug took effect upon
+George Finch, Rumford slipped into the
+theatre. To slip a mask and domino on and
+off is, as you know, a matter of a few seconds.
+Probably his intention had been—if he found
+Knight in the room—to knock her down if
+she attempted to raise an alarm; but here
+fortune favoured him. Knight saw him from
+a distance, and mistook him easily for Mr.
+Dennis.</p>
+
+<p>“After the theft of the real necklace,
+Rumford sneaked out of the theatre. And
+here you see how clever was the scoundrel’s
+plan: if he had merely substituted one
+necklace for another there would have been
+no doubt whatever that the loafer—whoever
+he was—was the culprit—the drugged beer
+would have been quite sufficient proof for
+that. The hue and cry would have been
+after the loafer, and, who knows? there might
+have been some one or something which
+might have identified that loafer with
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>“He must have bought the shabby clothes
+somewhere, he certainly bought the roses
+from a flower-girl; anyhow, there were a
+hundred and one little risks and contingencies
+which might have brought the theft home to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“But mark what happens: he steals the
+real necklace, and keeps the false one in his
+hand, intending to drop it sooner or later,
+and thus sent the police entirely on the wrong
+scent. As the loafer, he was supposed to
+have stolen the false necklace, then dropped
+it whilst struggling with George Finch. The
+result is that no one has troubled about the
+loafer; no one thought that he had anything
+to do with the substitution, which was the
+main point at issue, and no very great effort
+has ever been made to find that mysterious
+loafer.</p>
+
+<p>“It never occurred to any one that the
+fraud and the theft were committed by one
+and the same person, and that that person
+could be none other than James Rumford.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch12-1">
+
+<h2>XII. <br> The Tragedy of Barnsdale Manor</h2>
+
+<h3>Chapter I</h3>
+
+<p>“We have heard so much about the evils of
+Bridge,” said the man in the corner that
+afternoon, “but I doubt whether that
+fashionable game has ever been responsible for a
+more terrible tragedy than the one at
+Barnsdale Manor.”</p>
+
+<p>“You think, then,” I asked, for I saw he
+was waiting to be drawn out, “you think
+that the high play at Bridge did have
+something to do with that awful murder?”</p>
+
+<p>“Most people think that much, I fancy,”
+he replied, “although no one has arrived
+any nearer to the solution of the mystery
+which surrounds the tragic death of Mme.
+Quesnard at Barnsdale Manor on the 23rd
+September last.</p>
+
+<p>“On that fateful occasion, you must
+remember that the house party at the Manor
+included a number of sporting and fashionable
+friends of Lord and Lady Barnsdale,
+among whom Sir Gilbert Culworth was the
+only one whose name was actually mentioned
+during the hearing of this extraordinary
+case.</p>
+
+<p>“It seems to have been a very gay house
+party indeed. In the daytime Lord Barnsdale
+took some of his guests to shoot and
+fish, whilst a few devotees remained at home
+in order to indulge their passion for the
+modern craze of Bridge. It was generally
+understood that Lord Barnsdale did not
+altogether approve of quite so much
+gambling. He was not by any means well off;
+and although he was very much in love with
+his beautiful wife, he could ill afford to pay
+her losses at cards.</p>
+
+<p>“This was the reason, no doubt, that
+Bridge at Barnsdale Manor was only indulged
+in whilst the host himself was out shooting
+or fishing; in the evenings there was music
+or billiards, but never any cards.</p>
+
+<p>“One of the most interesting personalities
+in the Barnsdale <i>ménage</i> was undoubtedly
+Madame Nathalie Quesnard, a sister of Lord
+Barnsdale’s mother, who, if you remember,
+was a Mademoiselle de la Trémouille. This
+Mme. Quesnard was extremely wealthy,
+the widow of a French West Indian
+planter, who had made millions in
+Martinique.</p>
+
+<p>“She was very fond of her nephew, to
+whom, as she had no children or other
+relatives of her own, she intended to leave
+the bulk of her vast fortune. Pending her
+death, which was not likely to occur for
+some time, as she was not more than fifty,
+she took up her abode at Barnsdale Manor,
+together with her companion and amanuensis,
+a poor girl named Alice Holt.</p>
+
+<p>“Mme. Quesnard was seemingly an amiable
+old lady; the only unpleasant trait in her
+character being her intense dislike of her
+nephew’s beautiful and fashionable young
+wife. The old Frenchwoman, who, with all
+her wealth, had the unbounded and innate
+thriftiness peculiar to her nation, looked with
+perfect horror on Lady Barnsdale’s
+extravagances, and above all on her fondness for
+gambling; and subsequently several of the
+servants at the Manor testified to the amount
+of mischief the old lady strove to make
+between her nephew and his young
+wife.</p>
+
+<p>“Mme. Quesnard’s dislike for Lady Barnsdale
+seems, moreover, to have been shared
+by her dependent and companion, the girl
+Alice Holt. Between them, these two ladies
+seem to have cordially hated the brilliant
+and much-admired mistress of Barnsdale
+Manor.</p>
+
+<p>“Such were the chief inmates of the Manor
+last September, at the time the tragedy
+occurred. On that memorable night Alice
+Holt, who occupied a bedroom immediately
+above that of Mme. Quesnard, was awakened
+in the middle of the night by a persistent
+noise, which undoubtedly came from her
+mistress’s room. The walls and floorings at
+the old Manor are very thick, and the sound
+was a very confused one, although the girl
+was quite sure that she could hear Mme.
+Quesnard’s shrill voice raised as if in
+anger.</p>
+
+<p>“She tried to listen for a time, and
+presently she heard a sound as if some piece
+of furniture had been knocked over, then
+nothing more. Somehow the sudden silence
+seemed to have frightened the girl more
+than the noise had done. Trembling with
+nervousness she waited for some few minutes,
+then, unable to bear the suspense any
+longer, she got out of bed, slipped on her
+shoes and dressing-gown, and determined
+to run downstairs to see if anything were
+amiss.</p>
+
+<p>“To her horror she found on trying her
+door that it had been locked on the outside.
+Quite convinced now that something must
+indeed be very wrong, she started screaming
+and banging against the door, determined
+to arouse the household, which she, of course,
+quickly succeeded in doing.</p>
+
+<p>“The first to emerge from his room was
+Lord Barnsdale. He at once realised that
+the shrieks proceeded from Alice Holt’s
+room. He ran upstairs helter-skelter, and
+as the key had been left in the door, he soon
+released the unfortunate girl, who by now
+was quite hysterical with anxiety for her
+mistress.</p>
+
+<p>“Altogether, I take it, some six or seven
+minutes must have elapsed from the time
+when Alice Holt was first alarmed by the
+sudden silence following the noise in Mme.
+Quesnard’s room until she was released by
+Lord Barnsdale.</p>
+
+<p>“As quickly and as coherently as she
+could, she blurted forth all her fears about
+her mistress. I can imagine how picturesque
+the old Manor House must have looked then,
+with everybody, ladies and gentlemen, and
+servants, crowding into the hall, arrayed
+in various <i>négligé</i> attire, asking hurried
+questions, getting in each other’s way, and
+all only dimly to be seen by the light of
+candles, carried by some of the more sensible
+ones in this motley crowd.</p>
+
+<p>“However, in the meanwhile, Lord Barnsdale
+had managed to understand Alice Holt.
+He ran downstairs again and knocked at
+his aunt’s door; he received no reply—he
+tried the handle, but the door was locked
+from the inside.</p>
+
+<p>“Genuinely frightened now, he forced open
+the door, and then recoiled in horror.</p>
+
+<p>“The window was wide open, and a
+brilliant moonlight streamed into the room,
+weirdly illumining Mme. Quesnard’s inanimate
+body, which lay full length upon the
+ground. Hastily begging the ladies not to
+follow him, Lord Barnsdale quickly went
+forward and bent over his aunt’s body.</p>
+
+<p>“There was no doubt that she was dead.
+An ugly wound at the back of her head,
+some red marks round her throat, all testified
+to the fact that the poor old lady had been
+assaulted and murdered. Lord Barnsdale at
+once sent for the nearest doctor, whilst he
+and Miss Holt lifted the unfortunate lady
+back to bed.</p>
+
+<p>“The messenger who had gone for the
+doctor was at the same time instructed to
+deliver a note, hastily scribbled by Lord
+Barnsdale, at the local police station.</p>
+
+<p>“That a hideous crime had been committed,
+with burglary for its object, no one could be
+in doubt for a moment. Lord Barnsdale
+and two or three of his guests had already
+thrown a glance into the next room, a little
+boudoir, which Mme. Quesnard used as a
+sitting-room. There the heavy oak bureau
+bore silent testimony to the motive of this
+dastardly outrage. Mme. Quesnard, with
+the unfortunate and foolhardy habit peculiar
+to all French people, kept a very large
+quantity of loose and ready money by her.
+That habit, mind you, is the chief reason
+why burglary is so rife and so profitable
+all over France.</p>
+
+<p>“In this case the old lady’s national
+characteristic was evidently the chief cause
+of her tragic fate; the drawer of the bureau
+had been forced open, and no one could
+doubt for a moment that a large sum of
+money had been abstracted from it.</p>
+
+<p>“The burglar had then obviously made
+good his escape through the window, which
+he could do quite easily, as Mme. Quesnard’s
+apartments were on the ground floor. She
+suffered from shortness of breath, it appears,
+and had a horror of stairs; she was,
+moreover, not the least bit nervous, and her
+windows were usually barred and shuttered.</p>
+
+<p>“One very curious fact, however, at once
+struck all those present, even before the
+arrival of the detectives, and that was, that
+the old lady was partially dressed when she
+was found lying on the ground. She had
+slipped on an elaborate dressing-gown, had
+smoothed her hair, and put on her slippers.
+In fact, it was evident that she had in some
+measure prepared herself for the reception
+of the burglar.</p>
+
+<p>“Throughout these hasty and amateurish
+observations conducted by Lord Barnsdale
+and two of his male guests, Alice Holt had
+remained seated beside her late employer’s
+bedside sobbing bitterly. In spite of Lord
+Barnsdale’s entreaties she refused to move;
+and wildly waved aside any attempt at
+consolation offered to her by one or two of the
+older female servants who were present.</p>
+
+<p>“It was only when everybody at last
+made up their minds to return to their
+rooms, that some one mentioned Lady
+Barnsdale’s name. She had been taken ill and
+faint the evening before, and had not been
+well all night. Jane Barlow, her maid,
+expressed the hope that her ladyship was
+none the worse for this awful commotion,
+and must be wondering what it all meant.</p>
+
+<p>“At this, suddenly, Alice Holt jumped up,
+like a madwoman.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘What it all means?’ she shrieked,
+whilst every one looked at her in speechless
+horror, ‘it means that that woman has
+murdered my mistress, and robbed her. I
+know it—I know it—I know it!’</p>
+
+<p>“And once more sinking beside the bed,
+she covered her dead mistress’s hand with
+kisses, and sobbed and wailed as if her
+heart would break.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch12-2">
+
+<h3>Chapter II</h3>
+
+<p>“You may well imagine the awful commotion
+the girl’s wild outburst had created
+in the old Manor House. Lady Barnsdale
+had been taken ill the previous evening, and,
+of course, no one had breathed a word of it
+to her, but equally, of course, it was freely
+talked about at Barnsdale Manor, in the
+neighbourhood, and even so far as in the
+London clubs.</p>
+
+<p>“Lord and Lady Barnsdale were very
+well known in London society, and Lord
+Barnsdale’s adoration for his beautiful wife
+was quite notorious.</p>
+
+<p>“Alice Holt, after her frantic outburst,
+had not breathed another word. Silent and
+sullen she went up to her room, packed her
+things, and left the house, where, of course,
+it became impossible that she should stay
+another day. She refused Lord Barnsdale’s
+generous offer of money and help, and only
+stayed long enough to see the detectives and
+reply to the questions they thought fit to
+put to her.</p>
+
+<p>“The whole neighbourhood was in a fever
+of excitement; many gossips would have it
+that the evidence against Lady Barnsdale
+was conclusive, and that a warrant for her
+arrest had already been applied for.</p>
+
+<p>“What had transpired was this:</p>
+
+<p>“It appears that the day preceding the
+tragedy, Bridge was, as usual, being played
+for, I believe, guinea points. Lord Barnsdale
+was out shooting all day, and though
+the guests at the Manor were very loyal to
+their hostess, and refused to make any
+positive statements, there seems to be no
+doubt that Lady Barnsdale lost a very large
+sum of money to Sir Gilbert Culworth.</p>
+
+<p>“Be that as it may, nothing further could
+be gleaned by enterprising reporters fresh
+from town; the police were more than
+usually reticent, and every one eagerly
+awaited the opening of the inquest, when
+sensational developments were expected in
+this mysterious case.</p>
+
+<p>“It was held on September the 25th, in
+the servants’ hall of Barnsdale Manor, and
+you may be sure that the large room was
+crowded to its utmost capacity. Lord
+Barnsdale was, of course, present, so was Sir
+Gilbert Culworth, but it was understood that
+Lady Barnsdale was still suffering from
+nervous prostration, and was unable to be
+present.</p>
+
+<p>“When I arrived there, and gradually
+made my way to the front rank, the doctor
+who had been originally summoned to the
+murdered lady’s bedside was giving his
+evidence.</p>
+
+<p>“He gave it as his opinion that the
+fractured skull from which Mme. Quesnard died
+was caused through her hitting the back of
+her head against the corner of the
+marble-topped washstand, in the immediate
+proximity of which she lay outstretched,
+when Lord Barnsdale first forced open the
+door. The stains on the marble had confirmed
+him in that opinion. Mme. Quesnard,
+he thought, must have fallen, owing to an
+onslaught made upon her by the burglar;
+the marks round the old lady’s throat
+testified to this, although these were not the
+cause of death.</p>
+
+<p>“After this there was a good deal of
+police evidence, with regard to the subsequent
+movements of the unknown miscreant. He
+had undoubtedly broken open the drawer of
+the bureau in the adjoining boudoir, the
+door of communication between this and
+Mme. Quesnard’s bedroom being always kept
+open, and it was presumed that he had made
+a considerable haul both in gold and notes.
+He had then locked the bedroom door on
+the inside and made good his escape through
+the window.</p>
+
+<p>“Immediately beneath this window, the
+flower-bed, muddy with the recent rain, bore
+the imprint of having been hastily trampled
+upon; but all actual footmarks had been
+carefully obliterated. Beyond this, all round
+the house, the garden paths are asphalted,
+and the burglar had evidently taken the
+precaution to keep to these asphalted paths,
+or else to cross the garden by the lawns.</p>
+
+<p>“You must understand,” continued the
+man in the corner, after a slight pause, “that
+throughout all this preliminary evidence,
+everything went to prove that the crime had
+been committed by an inmate of the house,
+or at any rate by some one well acquainted
+with its usages and its <i>ménages</i>. Alice Holt,
+whose room was immediately above that of
+Mme. Quesnard, and who was, therefore,
+most likely to hear the noise of the conflict
+and to run to her mistress’s assistance, had
+been first of all locked up in her room. It
+had, therefore, become quite evident that
+the miscreant had commenced operations
+from inside the house, and had entered
+Mme. Quesnard’s room by the door, and
+not by the window, as had been at first
+supposed.</p>
+
+<p>“But,” added the funny creature excitedly,
+“as the old lady had, according to evidence,
+locked her door that night, it became more
+and more clear, as the case progressed, that
+she must of her own accord have admitted
+the person who subsequently caused her
+tragic death. This was, of course, confirmed
+by the fact that she was partially dressed
+when she was subsequently found dead.</p>
+
+<p>“Strangely enough, with the exception of
+Alice Holt, no one else had heard any noise
+during the night. But, as I remarked before,
+the walls of these old houses are very
+thick, and no one else slept on the ground
+floor.</p>
+
+<p>“Another fact which in the early part
+of the inquest went to prove that the outrage
+was committed by some one familiar with
+the house, was that Ben, the watch-dog, had
+not raised any alarm. His kennel was quite
+close to Mme. Quesnard’s windows, and he
+had not even barked.</p>
+
+<p>“I doubt if the law would take official
+cognisance of the dumb testimony of a dog;
+nevertheless, Ben’s evidence was in this case
+quite worthy of consideration.</p>
+
+<p>“You may imagine how gradually, as
+these facts were unfolded, excitement grew
+to fever pitch, and when at last Alice Holt
+was called, every one literally held their
+breath, eagerly waiting to hear what was
+coming.</p>
+
+<p>“She is a tall, handsome-looking girl,
+with fine eyes and a rich voice. Dressed in
+deep black she certainly looked an imposing
+figure as she stood there, repeating the story
+of how she was awakened in the night, by
+the sound of her mistress’s angry voice, of
+the noise and sudden silence, and also of
+her terror, when she found that she had
+been locked up in her room.</p>
+
+<p>“But obviously the girl had more to tell,
+and was only waiting for the coroner’s direct
+question.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Will you tell the jury the reason why
+you made such an extraordinary and unwarrantable
+accusation against Lady Barnsdale?’
+he asked her at last, amid breathless silence
+in the crowded room.</p>
+
+<p>“Every one instinctively looked across
+the room to where Lord Barnsdale sat between
+his friend Sir Gilbert Culworth and his lawyer,
+Sir Arthur Inglewood, who had evidently
+come down from London in order to watch
+the case on his client’s behalf. Alice Holt,
+too, looked across at Lord Barnsdale for a
+moment. He seemed attentive and
+interested, but otherwise quite calm and
+impassive.</p>
+
+<p>“I, who watched the girl, saw a look of
+pity cross her face as she gazed at him, and
+I think, when we bear in mind that the
+distinguished English gentleman and the poor
+paid companion had known each other years
+ago, when they were girl and boy together
+in old Mme. Quesnard’s French home, we
+may make a pretty shrewd guess why Alice
+Holt hated the beautiful Lady Barnsdale.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘It was about six o’clock in the afternoon,’
+she began at last, in the same quiet
+tone of voice, ‘I was sitting sewing in
+Madame’s boudoir, when Lady Barnsdale
+came into the bedroom. She did not see me,
+I know, for she began at once talking volubly
+to Madame about a serious loss she had just
+sustained at Bridge; several hundred pounds,
+she said.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well?’ queried the coroner, for the
+girl had paused, almost as if she regretted
+what she had already said. She certainly
+threw an appealing look at Lord Barnsdale,
+who, however, seemed to take no notice of
+her.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well,’ she continued with sudden
+resolution, ‘Madame was very angry at this;
+she declared that Lady Barnsdale deserved
+a severe lesson; her extravagances were a
+positive scandal. “Not a penny will I give
+you to pay your gambling debts,” said
+Madame; “and, moreover, I shall make
+it my business to inform my nephew of your
+goings-on whilst he is absent.”</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Lady Barnsdale was in a wild state
+of excitement. She begged and implored
+Madame to say nothing to Lord Barnsdale
+about it, and did her very best to try to
+induce her to help her out of her difficulties,
+just this once more. But Madame was
+obdurate. Thereupon Lady Barnsdale turned
+on her like a fury, called her every
+opprobrious name under the sun, and finally
+flounced out of the room, banging the door
+behind her.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Madame was very much upset after
+this,’ continued Alice Holt, ‘and I was not
+a bit astonished when directly after dinner
+she rang for me, and asked to be put to
+bed. It was then nine o’clock.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘That is the last I saw of poor Madame
+alive.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘She was very excited then, and told
+me that she was quite frightened of Lady
+Barnsdale—a gambler, she said, was as likely
+as not to become a thief, if opportunity arose.
+I offered to sleep on the sofa in the next
+room, for the old lady seemed quite nervous,
+a thing I have never known her to be. But
+she was too proud to own to nervousness,
+and she dismissed me finally, saying that
+she would lock her door, for once: a thing
+she scarcely ever did.’</p>
+
+<p>“It was a curious story, to say the least
+of it, which Alice Holt thus told to an excited
+public. Cross-examined by the coroner, she
+never departed from a single point of it, her
+calm and presence of mind being only equalled
+throughout this trying ordeal by that of
+Lord Barnsdale, who sat seemingly unmoved
+whilst these terrible insinuations were made
+against his wife.</p>
+
+<p>“But there was more to come. Sir
+Gilbert Culworth had been called; in the
+interest of justice, and in accordance with
+his duty as a citizen, he was forced to stand
+up and, all unwillingly, to add another tiny
+link to the chain of evidence that implicated
+his friend’s wife in this most terrible crime.</p>
+
+<p>“Right loyally he tried to shield her in
+every possible way, but cross-questioned by
+the coroner, harassed nearly out of his senses,
+he was forced to admit two facts—namely,
+that Lady Barnsdale had lost nearly £800
+at Bridge the day before the murder, and
+that she had paid her debt to himself in full,
+on the following morning, in gold and notes.</p>
+
+<p>“He had been forced, much against his
+will, to show the notes to the police;
+unfortunately for the justice of the case, however,
+the numbers of these could not be directly
+traceable as having been in Mme. Quesnard’s
+possession at the time of her death. No
+diaries or books of accounts of any kind were
+found. Like most French people, she
+arranged all her money affairs herself, receiving
+her vast dividends in foreign money, and
+converting this into English notes and gold,
+as occasion demanded, at the nearest
+money-changer’s that happened to be handy.</p>
+
+<p>“She had, like a great many foreigners,
+a holy horror of banks. She would have
+mistrusted the Bank of England itself; as
+for solicitors, she held them in perfect
+abhorrence. She only went once to one in her
+life, and that was in order to make a will
+leaving everything she possessed
+unconditionally to her beloved nephew, Lord
+Barnsdale.</p>
+
+<p>“But in spite of this difficulty about the
+notes, you see for yourself, do you not,
+how terribly strong was the circumstantial
+evidence against Lady Barnsdale? Her losses
+at cards, her appeal to Mme. Quesnard, the
+latter’s refusal to help her, and finally the
+payment in full of the debt to Sir Gilbert
+Culworth on the following morning.</p>
+
+<p>“There was only one thing that spoke
+for her, and that was the very horror of the
+crime itself. It was practically impossible
+to conceive that a woman of Lady Barnsdale’s
+refinement and education should have
+sprung upon an elderly woman, like some
+navvy’s wife by the docks, and then that
+she should have had the presence of mind
+to jump out of the window, to obliterate
+her footmarks in the flower-bed, and, in fact,
+to have given the crime the look of a clever
+burglary.</p>
+
+<p>“Still, we all know that money difficulties
+will debase the noblest of us, that greed will
+madden the sanest and most refined. When
+the inquest was adjourned, I can assure you
+that no one had any doubt whatever that
+within twenty-four hours Lady Barnsdale
+would be arrested on the capital charge.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch12-3">
+
+<h3>Chapter III</h3>
+
+<p>“But the detectives in charge of the case
+had reckoned without Sir Arthur Inglewood,
+the great lawyer, who was watching the proceedings
+on behalf of his aristocratic clients,”
+said the man in the corner, when he had
+assured himself of my undivided attention.</p>
+
+<p>“The adjourned inquest brought with it,
+I assure you, its full quota of sensation.
+Again Lord Barnsdale was present, calm,
+haughty, and impassive, whilst Lady Barnsdale
+was still too ill to attend. But she
+had made a statement upon oath, in which,
+whilst flatly denying that her interview
+with the deceased at 6 p.m. had been
+of an acrimonious character as alleged by
+Alice Holt, she swore most positively that
+all through the night she had been ill, and
+had not left her room after 11.30 p.m.</p>
+
+<p>“The first witness called after this affidavit
+had been read was Jane Barlow, Lady
+Barnsdale’s maid.</p>
+
+<p>“The girl deposed that on that memorable
+evening preceding the murder, she went up
+to her mistress’s room at about 11.30 in
+order to get everything ready for the night.
+As a rule, of course, there was nobody about
+in the bedroom at that hour, but on this
+occasion when Jane Barlow entered the
+room, which she did without knocking, she
+saw her mistress sitting by her desk.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Her ladyship looked up when I came
+in,’ continued Jane Barlow, ‘and seemed very
+cross with me for not knocking at the door.
+I apologised, then began to get the room
+tidy; as I did so I could see that my lady
+was busy counting a lot of money. There
+were lots of sovereigns and banknotes. My
+lady put some together in an envelope and
+addressed it, then she got up from her desk
+and went to lock up the remainder of the
+money in her jewel safe.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘And this was at what time?’ asked the
+coroner.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘At about half-past eleven, I think, sir,’
+repeated the girl.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Well,’ said the coroner, ‘did you notice
+anything else?’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes,’ replied Jane, ‘whilst my lady
+was at her safe, I saw the envelope in which
+she had put the money lying on the desk.
+I couldn’t help looking at it, for I knew it
+was ever so full of banknotes, and I saw
+that my lady had addressed it to Sir Gilbert
+Culworth.’</p>
+
+<p>“At this point Sir Arthur Inglewood
+jumped to his feet and handed something
+over to the coroner; it was evidently an
+envelope which had been torn open. The
+coroner looked at it very intently, then
+suddenly asked Jane Barlow if she had
+happened to notice anything about the
+envelope which was lying on her ladyship’s
+desk that evening.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Oh, yes, sir!’ she replied unhesitatingly,
+‘I noticed my lady had made a splotch,
+right on top of the C in Sir Gilbert Culworth’s
+name.’</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘This, then, is the envelope,’ was the
+coroner’s quiet comment, as he handed the
+paper across to the girl.</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘Yes, there’s the splotch,’ she replied,
+‘I’d know it anywhere.’</p>
+
+<p>“So you see,” continued the man in the
+corner, with a chuckle, “that the chain of
+circumstantial evidence against Lady Barnsdale
+was getting somewhat entangled. It
+was indeed fortunate for her that Sir Gilbert
+Culworth had not destroyed the envelope in
+which she had handed him over the money
+on the following day.</p>
+
+<p>“Alice Holt, as you know, heard the conflict
+and raised the alarm much later in the
+night, when everybody was already in bed,
+whilst long before that Lady Barnsdale was
+apparently in possession of the money with
+which she could pay back her debt.</p>
+
+<p>“Thus the motive for the crime, so far
+as she was concerned, was entirely done away
+with. Directly after the episode witnessed
+by Jane Barlow, Lady Barnsdale had a sort
+of nervous collapse, and went to bed feeling
+very ill. Lord Barnsdale was terribly
+concerned about her; he and the maid remained
+alternately by her bedside for an hour or
+two; finally Lord Barnsdale went to sleep
+in his dressing-room, whilst Jane also finally
+retired to rest.</p>
+
+<p>“Ill as Lady Barnsdale undoubtedly was
+then, it was absolutely preposterous to
+conceive that she could after that have planned
+and carried out so monstrous a crime, without
+any motive whatever. To have locked Alice
+Holt’s door, then gone downstairs, forced
+her way into the old lady’s room, struggled
+with her, to have jumped out of the window,
+and run back into the house by the garden,
+might have been the work of a determined
+woman, driven mad by the desire for money,
+but became absolutely out of the question
+in the case of a woman suffering from nervous
+collapse, and having apparently no motive
+for the crime.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course Sir Arthur Inglewood made
+the most of the fact that no mud was found
+on any shoes or dress belonging to Lady
+Barnsdale. The flower-bed was very soft
+with the heavy rain of the day before, and
+Lady Barnsdale could not possibly have
+jumped even from a ground-floor window
+and trampled on the flower-bed without
+staining her skirts.</p>
+
+<p>“Then there was another point which
+the clever lawyer brought to the coroner’s
+notice. As Alice Holt had stated in her
+sworn evidence that Mme. Quesnard had
+owned to being frightened of Lady Barnsdale
+that night, was it likely that she would <em>of
+her own accord</em> have opened the door to her
+in the middle of the night, without at least
+calling for assistance?</p>
+
+<p>“Thus the matter has remained a strange
+and unaccountable puzzle. It has always
+been called the ‘Barnsdale Mystery’ for that
+very reason. Every one, somehow, has
+always felt that Lady Barnsdale did have
+something to do with that terrible tragedy.
+Her husband has taken her abroad, and they
+have let Barnsdale Manor; it almost seems
+as if the ghost of the old Frenchwoman had
+driven them forth from their own country.</p>
+
+<p>“As for Alice Holt, she maintains to this
+day that Lady Barnsdale was the culprit,
+and I understand that she has not yet given
+up all hope of collecting a sufficiency of
+evidence to have the beautiful and fashionable
+woman of society arraigned for this
+hideous murder.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter" id="ch12-4">
+
+<h3>Chapter IV</h3>
+
+<p>“Will she succeed, do you think?” I asked
+at last.</p>
+
+<p>“Succeed? Of course she won’t,” he
+retorted excitedly. “Lady Barnsdale never
+committed that murder; no woman, except,
+perhaps, an East-end factory hand, could
+have done it at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“But then——” I urged.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, then,” he replied, with a chuckle,
+“the only logical conclusion is that the robbery
+and the murder were not committed by the
+same person, nor at the same hour of the
+night; moreover, I contend that there was
+no premeditated murder, but that the old
+lady died from the result of a pure accident.”</p>
+
+<p>“But how?” I gasped.</p>
+
+<p>“This is my version of the story,” he said
+excitedly, as his long bony fingers started
+fidgeting, fidgeting with that eternal bit of
+string. “Lady Barnsdale, pressed for money,
+made an appeal to Mme. Quesnard, which the
+latter refused, as we know. Then there was
+an acrimonious dispute between the two
+ladies, after which came the dinner hour,
+then Madame, feeling ill and upset, went up
+to bed at nine o’clock.</p>
+
+<p>“Now my contention is that undoubtedly
+the robbery had been committed before that,
+between the dispute and Madame’s
+bedtime.”</p>
+
+<p>“By whom?”</p>
+
+<p>“By Lady Barnsdale, of course, who,
+as the mistress of the house, could come and
+go from room to room without exciting any
+comment, who, moreover, at 6 p.m. was hard
+pressed for money, and who but a few
+hours later was handling a mass of gold and
+banknotes.</p>
+
+<p>“But the strain of committing even an
+ordinary theft is very great upon a refined
+woman’s organisation. Lady Barnsdale has
+a nervous breakdown. Well! what is the
+most likely thing to happen? Why! that
+she should confess everything to her husband,
+who worships her, and no doubt express her
+repentance at what she had done.</p>
+
+<p>“Then imagine Lord Barnsdale’s horror!
+The old lady had not discovered the theft
+before going to bed. That was only natural,
+since she was feeling unwell, and was not
+likely to sit up at night counting her money;
+the lock of the bureau drawer having been
+tampered with, would perhaps not attract
+her attention at night.</p>
+
+<p>“But in the morning, the very first thing,
+she would discover everything, at once suspect
+the worst, and who knows, make a scandal,
+talk of it before Alice Holt, Lady Barnsdale’s
+arch enemy, and all before restitution could
+be made.</p>
+
+<p>“No, no, that restitution must be made at
+once! not a minute must be lost, since any
+moment might bring forth discovery, and
+perhaps an awful catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p>“I take it that Mme. Quesnard and her
+nephew were on very intimate terms. He
+hoped to arouse no one by going to his aunt’s
+room, but in order to make quite sure that
+Alice Holt, hearing a noise in her mistress’s
+room, should not surreptitiously come down,
+and perhaps play eavesdropper at the
+momentous interview, he turned the key of
+the girl’s door as he went past, and locked
+her in.</p>
+
+<p>“Then he knocked at his aunt’s door
+(gently, of course, for old people are light
+sleepers), and called her by name. Mme.
+Quesnard, recognising her nephew’s voice,
+slipped on her dressing-gown, smoothed her
+hair, and let him in.</p>
+
+<p>“Exactly what took place at the interview
+it is, of course, impossible for any human
+being to say. Here even I can but conjecture,”
+he added, with inimitable conceit,
+“but we can only imagine that, having heard
+Lord Barnsdale’s confession of his wife’s
+folly, the old lady, who as a Frenchwoman
+was of quick temper and unbridled tongue,
+would indulge in not very elegant rhetoric on
+the subject of the woman she had always
+disliked.</p>
+
+<p>“Lord Barnsdale would, of course, defend
+his wife, and the old lady, with feminine
+obstinacy, would continue the attack. Then
+some insulting epithet, a word only perhaps,
+roused the devoted husband’s towering
+indignation—the meekest man on earth becomes
+a mad bull when he really loves, and the
+woman he loves is insulted.</p>
+
+<p>“I maintain that the old lady’s death was
+really due to a pure accident; that Lord
+Barnsdale gripped her by the throat, in a
+moment of mad anger, at some hideous insult
+hurled at his wife; of that I am as convinced
+as if I had witnessed the whole scene. Then
+the old lady fell, hit her head against the
+marble, and Lord Barnsdale realised that he
+was alone at night in his aunt’s room, and
+that he had killed her.</p>
+
+<p>“What would anyone do under the
+circumstances?” he added excitedly. “Why, of
+course, collect his senses and try to save
+himself from what might prove to be consequences
+of the most awful kind. This Lord Barnsdale
+thought he could best do by giving the
+accident, which looked so like murder, the
+appearance of a burglary.</p>
+
+<p>“The lock of the desk in the next room
+had already been forced open; he now
+locked the door on the inside, threw open the
+shutter and the window, jumped out as any
+burglar would have done; and, being careful
+to obliterate his own footmarks, he crept
+back into the house and thence into his own
+room, without alarming the watch-dog, who
+naturally knew his own master. He was, of
+course, just in time before Alice Holt
+succeeded in rousing the household with her
+screams.</p>
+
+<p>“And thus you see,” he added, “there are
+no such things as mysteries. The police call
+them so, so do the public, but every crime
+has its perpetrator, and every puzzle its
+solution. My experience is that the simplest
+solution is invariably the right one.”</p>
+
+<p class="finis">The End</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="section" id="transcriber">
+
+<h2>Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
+
+<p>This transcription follows the text of the original 1909
+publication. However, the following alterations have been made to
+correct what are believed to be unambiguous errors in the text:</p>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>“interwined” has been changed to “intertwined” (I., Ch. I).</li>
+ <li>“Chiselhurst” has been changed to “Chislehurst” (IV., Ch. IV).</li>
+ <li>“Vandervellen” has been changed to “Vanderdellen” (IV., Ch. IV).</li>
+ <li>“had affected” has been changed to “had effected” (V., Ch. II).</li>
+ <li>“glanced at if” has been changed to “glanced at it” (V., Ch. II).</li>
+ <li>“incoherent and definite” has been changed to “coherent and definite”
+ (VI., Ch. I).</li>
+ <li>“Wembly” has been changed to “Wembley” (VI., Ch. I).</li>
+ <li>“immedate” has been changed to “immediate” (VI., Ch. I).</li>
+ <li>“Athur” has been changed to “Arthur” (VII., Ch. II).</li>
+ <li>“cetain” has been changed to “certain” (VIII., Ch. II).</li>
+ <li>“signficance” has been changed to “significance” (VIII., Ch. III).</li>
+ <li>“Mr. Carlton” has been changed to “Mr. Carleton” (VIII., Ch. III).</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>Additionally, several occurrences of incorrectly matched quotation
+marks have been repaired. All other ostensible inconsistencies have
+been left unchanged from the original.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75461 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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