It was the morning after the murder,
and five men were seated in the moat-house library.
One of them attracted instant attention by reason of
his overpowering personality. He was a giant in
stature and build, with a massive head, a large red
face from which a pair of little bloodshot eyes stared
out truculently, and a bull neck which was several
shades deeper in colour than his face. He was
Superintendent Merrington, a noted executive officer
of New Scotland Yard, whose handling of the most important
spy case tried in London during the war had brought
forth from a gracious sovereign the inevitable Order
of the British Empire. Merrington was known as
a detective in every capital in Europe, and because
of his wide knowledge of European criminals had more
than once acted as the bodyguard of Royalty on continental
tours, and had received from Royal hands the diamond
pin which now adorned the spotted silk tie encircling
his fat purple neck.
The famous detective’s outlook
on life was cynical and coarse. The cynicism
was the natural outcome of his profession; the coarseness
was his heritage by birth, as his sensual mouth, blubber
lips, thick nose, and bull-neck attested. It
was a strange freak of Fate which had made him the
guardian of the morals of society and the upholder
of law and order in a modern civilized community.
By temperament and disposition he belonged to the
full-blooded type of humanity which found its best
exemplars in the early Muscovite Czars, and, if
Fate had so willed it, would have revelled in similar
pursuits of vice, oppression, and torture. As
Fate had ironically made a police official of him,
he had to content himself with letting off the superfluous
steam of his tremendous temperament by oppressing
the criminal classes, and he had performed that duty
so thoroughly that before he became the travelling
companion of kings his name had been a terror to the
underworld of London, who feared and detested his
ferocity, his unscrupulous methods of dealing with
them, and his wide knowledge of their class.
He was a recognized hero of the British
public, which on one occasion had presented him with
a testimonial for his capture of a desperado who had
been terrorizing the East End of London. But Merrington
disdained such tokens of popular approval. He
regarded the public, which he was paid to protect,
as a pack of fools. For him, there were only two
classes of humanity fools and rogues.
The respectable portion of the population constituted
the former, and criminals the latter. He had the
lowest possible opinion of humanity as a whole, and
his favourite expression, in professional conversation,
was: “human nature being what it is....”
He was still a mighty force in Scotland Yard, although
he had passed his usefulness and reached the ornamental
stage of his career, rarely condescending to investigate
a case personally.
His present visit to the moat-house
was one of those rare occasions, and was due to the
action of Captain Stanhill, the Chief Constable of
Sussex, who was seated near him. Captain Stanhill
was a short stout man, with a round, fresh-coloured
face, and short sturdy legs and arms. He wore
a tweed coat of the kind known to tailors as “a
sporting lounge,” and his little legs were encased
in knickerbockers and leather gaiters, which were
spattered with mud, as though he had ridden some distance
that morning. He was a very different type from
Superintendent Merrington a gentleman by
birth and education, a churchman, and a county magnate.
He never did anything so dangerous as to think, but
accepted the traditions and rules of his race and class
as his safe guide through life. Like most Englishmen
of his station of life, he was endowed with just sufficient
intelligence to permit him to slide along his little
groove of life with some measure of satisfaction to
himself and pleasure to his neighbours. He was
a sound judge of cattle and horses, but of human nature
he knew nothing whatever, and his first act, on being
informed of the murder at the moat-house, was to ring
up Scotland Yard and request it to send down one of
its most trusted officials to investigate the circumstances.
In reply to this call for assistance, Superintendent
Merrington, not unmindful of the county standing and
influence of the Herediths, had decided to investigate
the case himself, and had brought with him two satellites a
finger-print expert who was at that moment paring
his own finger-nails with a pocket-knife as he stared
vacantly out of the library window, and an official
photographer, who was upstairs taking photographs in
the death chamber.
Seated near the finger-print expert
was a police official of middle-age, Inspector Weyling,
of the Sussex County Police. He was a saturnine
sort of man, with a hooked nose, a skin like parchment,
and a perfectly bald sugar-loaf head, surmounted at
the top by a wen as large as a duck-egg. His
deferential attitude and obsequious tone whenever Superintendent
Merrington chose to address a remark to him indicated
that he had a proper official respect for the rank
and standing of that gentleman. Inspector Weyling
was merely a police official. He had no personal
characteristics whatever, unless a hobby for breeding
Belgian rabbits, and a profound belief that Mr. Lloyd
George was the greatest statesman the world had ever
seen, could be said to constitute a temperament.
The fifth man was Detective Caldew,
who had just completed a narrative of the events of
the previous night for the benefit of his colleagues,
but more especially for Superintendent Merrington,
in whose hands lay the power of directing the investigations
of the crime. It was by no wish of Detective
Caldew that Superintendent Merrington had been brought
into the case. Caldew thought when the county
inspector arrived and found a Scotland Yard man at
work he would be only too glad to allow him to go
on with the case, and he anticipated no difficulty
in obtaining the consent of his official superiors
at Scotland Yard to continuing the investigations
he had commenced. But Inspector Weyling, when
notified of the crime by Sergeant Lumbe, had telephoned
to the Chief Constable for instructions. The
latter, distrustful of the ability of the county police
to bring such an atrocious murderer to Justice, had
begged the help of Scotland Yard, with the result
that Superintendent Merrington and his assistants
appeared at the moat-house in the early morning before
the astonished eyes of Caldew, who was taking a walk
in the moat-house garden after a night of fruitless
investigations.
In the arrival of Merrington, Caldew
saw all his fine hopes of promotion dashed to the
ground. He was by no means confident that Merrington
would permit him to take any further share in the
investigations, but he was quite certain that if he
did, and the murderer was captured through their joint
efforts, very little of the credit would fall to his
share when such a famous detective as Merrington was
connected with the case. Merrington would see
to that.
Caldew, in his narration of the facts
of the murder, laid emphasis on the mysterious nature
of the crime, in the hope that Merrington might deem
it wiser to return to London and leave him in charge
of the case, rather than risk a failure which would
greatly damage his own reputation. Merrington
listened to him gloomily. He fully realized the
difficult task ahead of the police, and his temper
was not improved in consequence.
“Apparently the murderer has
got clean away without leaving a trace behind him?”
he said.
“Yes.”
“No sign of any weapon?”
“No.”
“Anything taken?”
“No. Miss Heredith says
nothing was taken from the room, and nothing is missing
from the house.”
“The motive was not robbery then,” remarked
Captain Stanhill.
“It may have been,” responded
Merrington. “Caldew says the first intimation
of the crime was the murdered woman screaming.
The scream was followed in a few seconds by the revolver
shot. If she screamed when she saw the murderer
enter her room, he may well have feared interruption
and capture, and bolted without stealing anything.”
“Why did he murder her, then, in that case?”
asked Captain Stanhill.
“To prevent subsequent identification.
Many burglars proceed to murder for that reason.
I know plenty of old hands who would commit half a
dozen murders rather than face the prospect of five
years’ imprisonment. I do not say that
burglary was the motive in this case, but we must not
lose sight of the possibility.”
“It seems a strange case,”
murmured Inspector Weyling absently. He was thinking,
as he spoke, of his rabbits, and wondering whether
his wife would remember to give the lop-eared doe
with the litter a little milk in the course of the
morning.
“It’s a very sad case,”
said Captain Stanhill. “Poor young thing!”
The Chief Constable was a human being before he was
a police official, and his face showed plainly that
he was stricken with horror by the story of the crime.
“It’s a damned remarkable
case,” exclaimed Merrington, in his booming
voice. “I do not remember its parallel.
An English lady is murdered in her home, with a crowd
of people sitting at dinner in the room underneath,
and the murderer gets clean away, without leaving a
trace. No weapon, no finger-prints or footprints,
and no clue of any kind.”
Caldew had been hoping to get an opportunity
of telling Merrington privately about the missing
trinket, but he realized that he was not doing his
duty by delaying the explanation.
“There was something which might
have helped us as a clue,” he said. “Last
night, while I was examining Mrs. Heredith’s
bedroom, I saw a small trinket lying on the floor
near the bedside.”
“What sort of a trinket?” asked Merrington.
“A small bar brooch.”
“Where is it?”
“I do not know,” replied
Caldew awkwardly. “I left it where I saw
it, hidden in the carpet, thinking it possible that
the person who had lost it might return in search
of it, but while I was downstairs it disappeared.”
“It is rather strange,”
said Merrington thoughtfully. “I am not
inclined to think there is anything in it to help
us,” he added, after a moment’s consideration.
“Still, I will look into it later. Why did
you leave the trinket in the room, Caldew?”
“I thought it possible that
if the owner had anything to do with the crime he or
she might return for it,” said Caldew.
“So I left it where I found it, and watched
the room from the end of the passage.”
“A murderer doesn’t go
about wearing a cheap trinket, and, if he did, he
wouldn’t risk his neck coming back to look for
it. The brooch was more likely dropped by one
of the maidservants, who picked it up again.”
“Would a girl go into a room
where there was a dead body?”
“A country wench would.
English countrywomen have pretty strong nerves.
You ought to know that. But why did you leave
the room if you expected the owner of the trinket
to return in search of it?”
“I was called downstairs to
see Mr. Musard. An unused outside door which
is generally kept locked was discovered unlocked by
the butler before the murder was committed. As
the door opens on a staircase leading to the left
wing, Mr. Musard thought the butler’s discovery
had some bearing on the crime.”
“He thought the murderer may
have entered the house that way? Such a theory
would suggest that one of the servants is implicated.”
“Yes; but I do not agree with Mr. Musard.”
“What is your own opinion?”
“I think the key must have been
left in the door by one of the servants perhaps
some days ago. The fact that the butler locked
the door when he found it unfastened did not prevent
the murder being committed, or the murderer escaping
afterwards.”
“The murderer may have entered
by the door before the butler discovered that it had
been unlocked, and then concealed himself inside the
house awaiting an opportunity to commit the crime.”
“In that case, he would have
tried to escape the same way, but it is quite certain
that he did not do so. Mr. Musard says that the
staircase was the first place to be searched when
the guests rushed upstairs. If the murderer had
gone that way he would have found the door at the
bottom locked, and the key removed, and he must have
been caught before he could get back upstairs.”
“There’s something in
that,” said Merrington. “But how do
you account for the door being unlocked in the first
instance?”
“The servants know where the
key is kept. One of the maids may have taken
it to steal out of the house that way to keep an appointment
with a sweetheart, and forgotten all about it when
she returned. The back staircase and entrance
are never used by the members of the household, and
the key, which was inside the door, may have been there
for days without being noticed. Tufnell admits
that it was only by chance he tried the door yesterday.
He had not tried it for weeks before.”
“I’ll have a look at this
door later. And now, we had better get to work.
We have got to catch this murderer pretty quickly,
or the press and the public will be up in arms.
He’s had too long a start already. You
must make up your mind for considerable public indignation
about that, Caldew.”
“I do not see how I can be held
responsible for the murderer getting away,”
said Caldew, in an aggrieved tone. “He had
his start before I arrived. I did everything
that I could. I searched the house inside and
out, and Sergeant Lumbe has been scouring the country-side
since daybreak looking for suspicious characters.”
“I am not blaming you, Caldew,”
responded Merrington, but his voice suggested the
reverse of his words. “I am merely pointing
out to you the way the British public will look at
it. They will say, ’Here is a young wife
murdered in the bosom of her home and family, and the
murderer gets right away. What do we pay the
detective force for? To let murderers escape?’
Mark my words, if we don’t lay our hands on this
chap quickly, we’ll have the whole of the London
press howling at our heels like a pack of wolves.
Half a dozen special reporters travelled down in the
train with me and pestered me with questions all the
way. They are coming along here later for a statement
for the evening editions. But never mind the
journalists let us get to work without further
loss of time. Have you made a list of all the
guests who have been stopping in the house?”
“Not yet. Here is a sketch
plan of the moat-house interior and the grounds which
you may find useful.”
“Thanks. You had better
prepare a list of the guests before they leave.
They are sure to get away as fast as possible, and
we may want to interview some of them later on.
Now we had better have a look at the body.”
They went upstairs to the bedroom.
There they found a young man, with a freckled face
and a snub nose, packing up a photographic apparatus.
He was the photographer, and he had been taking photographs
of the dead body.
“Finished?” inquired Merrington.
“That’s right. Then you and Freeling
had better return to London by the next train you’ll
be wanted in that Putney case.”
The photographer and the finger-print
expert left the room together, and Merrington walked
across to the bed. He drew away the sheet which
covered the dead girl, and bent over the body, examining
it closely, but without touching it.
“The corpse has not been moved,
I suppose?” he remarked to Caldew, who was standing
beside him.
“Not since I arrived. But
she may not have been shot in that position.
She lived some minutes afterwards, and may have moved
slightly not much, I should say, for there
are no marks of bloodstains on any other part of the
bed.”
Merrington nodded. He was looking
at the bullet wound, which was plainly visible through
a burnt orifice in the rest-gown which the dead girl
was wearing. The wound was a circular punctured
hole in the left breast, less than the size of a sixpenny
piece.
“The wound has been washed,”
he observed. “Was that done by the police
surgeon?”
“The police surgeon has not
been here. The corpse was examined by the village
medical man, Dr. Holmes.”
“I should like to see him. Where is he
to be found?”
“He will be here in the course
of the morning. He is attending young Heredith,
who is suffering from the shock. The doctor fears
brain fever.”
“When he comes I want to see
him. It is idle speculating about the cause of
death in the absence of a doctor. Death in this
case appears to have been due to haemorrhage.
Apparently the murderer aimed at the heart and missed
it, and the shot went through the lungs. The shot
was fired at very close range too look
how the wrapper is burnt! Any sign of the bullet,
Caldew?”
“I found none.”
“Well, we shall have to wait for the doctor
to clear up these points.”
His trained eyes swept round the bedroom,
taking stock of every article in it. He next
carefully examined the door, and the lock on it.
“The door was open when the others came upstairs,
you said, Caldew?”
“Yes about half open.”
“That accounts for the scream
and the shot being heard so plainly downstairs.
It also suggests that the murderer fled very hurriedly,
leaving the door open behind him.”
“It seems to me more likely
that he escaped by the window, even if he did not
enter that way. Miss Heredith, who was the last
inmate of the household to see Mrs. Heredith alive,
thinks that the window was closed when she was in
the room before dinner.”
Merrington walked over to the window
and examined it, testing the lock and looking at the
sill.
“Does Miss Heredith say that
the window was locked, or merely closed, when she
was in the room?” he asked.
“She cannot say definitely.
She thinks it was closed because the air was heavy,
and she knew that Mrs. Heredith disliked having her
bedroom window open.”
Merrington shrugged his shoulders contemptuously.
“A woman’s fancies are
not much to build a theory upon,” he said.
“Have you any other reason for thinking that
the murderer may have escaped by this window?”
“Yes. After the shot was
fired the guests rushed upstairs immediately, and
the murderer would have run into them if he had attempted
to escape downstairs.”
“Is there no other means of
escape from the wing except by the staircase?”
“There is the back staircase
I told you of, at the end of the corridor. That
staircase is never used. The door is kept locked,
and the key hangs in a room downstairs. It was
the door at the bottom of this staircase which was
found unlocked by the butler yesterday evening.”
“I’ll have a look at it,
and then we’ll go downstairs. I want to
see this bedroom window from outside.”
They left the bedroom and proceeded
to the end of the corridor, where Caldew pointed out
the door at the top of the staircase. Merrington
opened it, and went down the stairs. He reappeared
after the lapse of a few minutes with dusty hands
and cobwebs on his clothes.
“The murderer didn’t get
in that way,” he said. “On the face
of it, it seems a plausible theory to suggest that
he entered by the locked door and hid himself somewhere
in this wing, and escaped after committing the murder
by jumping through the bedroom window. But it
is impossible to get over your point that if he had
entered by the door he would have tried to escape
by the same means, not knowing that the door had been
locked in the meantime. To do that he must have
traversed the corridor twice and gone down and up
these back stairs while the guests were coming up
the other stairs. He couldn’t have done
it in the time. He would have been caught cut
off before he could get back. Look at this steep
flight of stairs and the length of the corridor!
That disposes of the incident of the door. Whoever
unlocked it was not the murderer.”
Merrington retraced his steps along
the corridor. As he walked, his eyes roved restlessly
over the tapestry hangings and velvet curtains, and
took in the dark nooks and corners which abound in
old English country-houses.
“Plenty of places here where
a man might hide,” he muttered, in a dissatisfied
voice.
At the head of the front staircase
he paused, and looked over the balusters, as though
calculating the distance to the hall beneath.
Then he descended the stairs.
It still wanted half an hour to breakfast
time. There was no sign of anybody stirring downstairs
except a fresh-faced maidservant, who was dusting
the furniture in the great hall. She glanced nervously
at the groups of police officials, and then resumed
her dusting. Merrington strode across to her.
“What is your name, my dear?”
he asked, in his great voice.
“Milly Saker, sir.”
“Very well, Milly. I’ll
come and have a talk with you presently just
our two selves.”
The girl, far from looking delighted
at this prospect, backed away with a frightened face.
Merrington strode on through the open front door, and
turned towards the left wing.
It was a crisp autumn morning.
The early sunshine fell on the hectic flush of decay
in the foliage of the woods, but a thin wisp of vapour
still lingered across the moat-house garden and the
quiet fields beyond. Merrington kept on until
he reached the large windows of the dining-room, which
opened on to the terraced garden.
“That’s Mrs. Heredith’s
window,” he said, pointing up to it. “Her
bedroom is directly over the dining-room. If the
murderer escaped by the window he must have dropped
on to this gravel path.”
“It is a pretty stiff drop,”
said Captain Stanhill, measuring the distance with
his eye.
“Oh, I don’t know,”
replied Merrington. “He’d let himself
down eight feet with extended arms, and that would
leave a drop of only ten feet or thereabouts not
much for an athletic man. But if he dropped he
must have left footprints.”
“There are none. I have looked,”
said Caldew.
The information did not deter Merrington
from examining the path anew. He got down on
his hands and knees to scrutinize the gravel and the
grass plot more thoroughly.
“Nothing doing here either,”
he said as he scrambled to his feet. “There
are neither footprints nor marks such as one would
expect to find if a man had dropped out of the window.
What are you looking at, Weyling?”
In reply Inspector Weyling made his
first and only contribution towards the elucidation
of the crime.
“Could not the murderer have
climbed up to the bedroom by that creeper?”
he asked, pointing to a thin trail of Virginia creeper
which stretched up the wall almost as high as the
window.
Merrington tested the frail creeper
with his great hand. His sharp tug detached a
mass of the plant from the brickwork.
“Not likely,” he replied.
“It might bear the weight of a boy or a slender
girl, but not of a man. What do you think, Caldew?”
Caldew nodded without speaking.
Weyling’s remark had started a train of thought
in his mind, but he had no intention of revealing it
to a man who plainly did not intend to confer with
him on equal terms, or disclose his own theory of
the murder if he had formed one.
“Let us get inside again,”
said Merrington, in his masterful way.
He turned back towards the house,
and the others followed.