“I will see Miss George now,”
assented Carrados. Parkinson retired and Greatorex
looked round from his chair. The morning “clearing-up”
was still in progress.
“Shall I go?” he inquired.
“Not unless the lady desires it. I don’t
know her at all.”
The secretary was not unobservant
and he had profited from his association with Mr Carrados.
Without more ado, he began to get his papers quietly
together.
The door opened and a girl of about
twenty came eagerly yet half timorously into the room.
Her eyes for a moment swept Carrados with an anxious
scrutiny. Then, with a slight shade of disappointment,
she noticed that they were not alone.
“I have come direct from Oakshire
to see you, Mr Carrados,” she announced, in
a quick, nervous voice that was evidently the outcome
of a desperate resolution to be brave and explicit.
“The matter is a dreadfully important one to
me and I should very much prefer to tell it to you
alone.”
There was no need for Carrados to
turn towards his secretary; that discriminating young
gentleman was already on his way. Miss George
flashed him a shy look of thanks and filled in the
moment with a timid survey of the room.
“Is it something that you think I can help you
with?”
“I had hoped so. I had
heard in a roundabout way of your wonderful power ought
I to tell you how does it matter?”
“Not in the least if it has
nothing to do with the case,” replied Carrados.
“When this dreadful thing happened
I instinctively thought of you. I felt sure that
I ought to come and get you to help me at once.
But I I have very little money, Mr Carrados,
only a few pounds, and I am not so childish as not
to know that very clever men require large fees.
Then when I got here my heart sank, for I saw at once
from your house and position that what seemed little
even to me would be ridiculous to you that
if you did help me it would be purely out of kindness
of heart and generosity.”
“Suppose you tell me what the
circumstances are,” suggested Carrados cautiously.
Then, to afford an opening, he added: “You
have recently gone into mourning, I see.”
“See!” exclaimed the girl
almost sharply. “Then you are not blind?”
“Oh yes,” he replied;
“only I use the familiar expression, partly from
custom, partly because it sounds unnecessarily pedantic
to say, ’I deduce from certain observations.’”
“I beg your pardon. I suppose
I was startled not so much by the expression as by
your knowledge. I ought to have been prepared.
But I am already wasting your time and I came so determined
to be business-like. I got a copy of the local
paper on the way, because I thought that the account
in it would be clearer to you than I could tell it.
Shall I read it?”
“Please; if that was your intention.”
“It is The Stinbridge Herald,”
explained the girl, taking a closely folded newspaper
from the handbag which she carried. “Stinbridge
is our nearest town about six miles from
Tilling Shaw, where we live. This is the account:
“’MYSTERIOUS
TRAGEDY AT TILLING
“’WELL-KNOWN AGRICULTURALIST
ATTEMPTS MURDER
AND COMMITS SUICIDE
“’The districts of Great
Tilling, Tilling Shaw and the immediate neighbourhood
were thrown into a state of unusual excitement
on Thursday last by the report of a tragedy in their
midst such as has rarely marked the annals of
our law-abiding country-side.
“’A Herald representative
was early on the scene, and his inquiries elucidated
the fact that it was only too true that in this
case rumour had not exaggerated the circumstances,
rather the reverse indeed.
“’On the afternoon of the
day in question, Mr Frank Whitmarsh, of High
Barn, presented himself at Barony, the residence of
his uncle, Mr William Whitmarsh, with the intention
of seeing him in reference to a dispute that
was pending between them. This is understood
to be connected with an alleged trespass in pursuit
of game, each relative claiming exclusive sporting
rights over a piece of water known as Hunstan
Mere.
“’On this occasion the
elder gentleman was not at home and Mr Frank
Whitmarsh, after waiting for some time, departed, leaving
a message to the effect that he would return,
and, according to one report, “have it
out with Uncle William,” later in the evening.
“’This resolution he unfortunately
kept. Returning about eight-forty-five P.M.
he found his uncle in and for some time the two
men remained together in the dining-room. What
actually passed between them has not yet transpired,
but it is said that for half-an-hour there had
been nothing to indicate to the other occupants
of the house that anything unusual was in progress
when suddenly two shots rang out in rapid succession.
Mrs Lawrence, the housekeeper at Barony, and a
servant were the soonest on the spot, and, conquering
the natural terror that for a moment held them
outside the now silent room, they summoned up
courage to throw open the door and to enter. The
first thing that met their eyes was the body of
Mr Frank Whitmarsh lying on the floor almost
at their feet. In their distressed state
it was immediately assumed by the horrified women
that he was dead, or at least seriously wounded, but
a closer examination revealed the fact that the
gentleman had experienced an almost miraculous
escape. At the time of the tragedy he was
wearing a large old-fashioned silver watch; and in
this the bullet intended for his heart was found, literally
embedded deep in the works. The second shot
had, however, effected its purpose, for at the
other side of the room, still seated at the table,
was Mr William Whitmarsh, already quite dead,
with a terrible wound in his head and the weapon, a
large-bore revolver of obsolete pattern, lying
at his feet.
“’Mr Frank Whitmarsh subsequently
explained that the shock of the attack, and the
dreadful appearance presented by his uncle when,
immediately afterwards, he turned his hand against
himself, must have caused him to faint.
“’Readers of The Herald
will join in our expression of sympathy for all
members of the Whitmarsh family, and in our congratulations
to Mr Frank Whitmarsh on his providential escape.
“’The inquest
is fixed for Monday and it is anticipated that
the funeral will take
place on the following day.’”
“That is all,” concluded Miss George.
“All that is in the paper,” amended Carrados.
“It is the same everywhere ’attempted
murder and suicide’ that is what
everyone accepts as a matter of course,” went
on the girl quickly. “How do they know
that my father tried to kill Frank, or that he killed
himself? How can they know, Mr Carrados?”
“Your father, Miss George?”
“Yes. My name is Madeline
Whitmarsh. At home everyone looks at me as if
I was an object of mingled pity and reproach.
I thought that they might know the name here, so I
gave the first that came into my head. I think
it is a street I was directed along. Besides,
I don’t want it to be known that I came to see
you in any case.”
“Why?”
Much of the girl’s conscious
nervousness had stiffened into an attitude of unconscious
hardness. Grief takes many forms, and whatever
she had been before, the tragic episode had left Miss
Whitmarsh a little hurt and cynical.
“You are a man living in a town
and can do as you like. I am a girl living in
the country and have therefore to do largely as my
neighbours like. For me to set up my opinion
against popular feeling would constitute no small
offence; to question its justice would be held to be
adding outrageous insult to enormous injury.”
“So far I am unable to go beyond
the newspaper account. On the face of it, your
father with what provocation of course I
do not know did attempt this Mr Frank Whitmarsh’s
life and then take his own. You imply another
version. What reason have you?”
“That is the terrible part of
it,” exclaimed the girl, with rising distress.
“It was that which made me so afraid of coming
to you, although I felt that I must, for I dreaded
that when you asked me for proofs and I could give
you none you would refuse to help me. We were
not even in time to hear him speak, and yet I know,
know with absolute conviction, that my father
would not have done this. There are things that
you cannot explain, Mr Carrados, and well,
there is an end of it.”
Her voice sank to an absent-minded whisper.
“Everyone will condemn him now
that he cannot defend himself, and yet he could not
even have had the revolver that was found at his feet.”
“What is that?” demanded
Carrados sharply. “Do you mean that?”
“Mean what?” she asked,
with the blankness of one who has lost the thread
of her own thoughts.
“What you said about the revolver that
your father could not have had it?”
“The revolver?” she repeated
half wearily; “oh yes. It was a heavy,
old-fashioned affair. It had been lying in a drawer
of his desk for more than ten years because once a
dog came into the orchard in broad daylight light
and worried half-a-dozen lambs before anyone could
do anything.”
“Yes, but why could he not have it on Thursday?”
“I noticed that it was gone.
After Frank had left in the afternoon I went into
the room where he had been waiting, to finish dusting.
The paper says the dining-room, but it was really
papa’s business-room and no one else used it.
Then when I was dusting the desk I saw that the revolver
was no longer there.”
“You had occasion to open the drawer?”
“It is really a very old bureau
and none of the drawers fit closely. Dust lies
on the ledges and you always have to open them a little
to dust properly. They were never kept locked.”
“Possibly your father had taken the revolver
with him.”
“No. I had seen it there
after he had gone. He rode to Stinbridge immediately
after lunch and did not return until nearly eight.
After he left I went to dust his room. It was
then that I saw it. I was doing the desk when
Frank knocked and interrupted me. That is how
I came to be there twice.”
“But you said that you had no
proof, Miss Whitmarsh,” Carrados reminded her,
with deep seriousness. “Do you not recognize
the importance the deadly importance that
this one shred of evidence may assume?”
“Does it?” she replied
simply. “I am afraid that I am rather dull
just now. All yesterday I was absolutely dazed;
I could not do the most ordinary things. I found
myself looking at the clock for minutes together,
yet absolutely incapable of grasping what time it was.
In the same way I know that it struck me as being
funny about the revolver but I always had to give
it up. It was as though everything was there but
things would not fit in.”
“You are sure, absolutely sure,
that you saw the revolver there after your father
had left, and missed it before he returned?”
“Oh yes,” said the girl
quickly; “I remember realizing how curious it
was at the time. Besides there is something else.
I so often had things to ask papa about when he was
out of the house that I got into the way of making
little notes to remind me later. This morning
I found on my dressing-table one that I had written
on Thursday afternoon.”
“About this weapon?”
“Yes; to ask him what could have become of it.”
Carrados made a further inquiry, and
this was Madeline Whitmarsh’s account of affairs
existing between the two branches of the family:
Until the time of William Whitmarsh,
father of the William Whitmarsh just deceased, the
properties of Barony and High Barn had formed one
estate, descending from a William senior to a William
junior down a moderately long line of yeomen Whitmarshes.
Through the influence of his second wife this William
senior divided the property, leaving Barony with its
four hundred acres of good land to William junior,
and High Barn, with which went three hundred acres
of poor land, to his other son, father of the Frank
implicated in the recent tragedy. But though
divided, the two farms still had one common link.
Beneath their growing corn and varied pasturage lay,
it was generally admitted, a seam of coal at a depth
and of a thickness that would render its working a
paying venture. Even in William the Divider’s
time, when the idea was new, money in plenty would
have been forthcoming, but he would have none of it,
and when he died his will contained a provision restraining
either son from mining or exploiting his land for
mineral without the consent and co-operation of the
other.
This restriction became a legacy of
hate. The brothers were only half-brothers and
William having suffered unforgettably at the hands
of his step-mother had old scores to pay off.
Quite comfortably prosperous on his own rich farm,
and quite satisfied with the excellent shooting and
the congenial life, he had not the slightest desire
to increase his wealth. He had the old dour,
peasant-like instinct to cling to the house and the
land of his forefathers. From this position no
argument moved him.
In the meanwhile, on the other side
of the new boundary fence, Frank senior was growing
poorer year by year. To his periodical entreaties
that William would agree to shafts being sunk on High
Barn he received an emphatic “Never in my time!”
The poor man argued, besought, threatened and swore;
the prosperous one shook his head and grinned.
Carrados did not need to hear the local saying:
“Half brothers: whole haters; like the
Whitmarshes,” to read the situation.
“Of course I do not really understand
the business part of it,” said Madeline, “and
many people blamed poor papa, especially when Uncle
Frank drank himself to death. But I know that
it was not mere obstinacy. He loved the undisturbed,
peaceful land just as it was, and his father had wished
it to remain the same. Collieries would bring
swarms of strange men into the neighbourhood, poachers
and trespassers, he said. The smoke and dust
would ruin the land for miles round and drive away
the game, and in the end, if the work did not turn
out profitable, we should all be much worse off than
before.”
“Does the restriction lapse
now; will Mr Frank junior be able to mine?”
“It will now lie with Frank
and my brother William, just as it did before with
their fathers. I should expect Willie to be quite
favourable. He is more modern.”
“You have not spoken of your brother.”
“I have two. Bob, the younger,
is in Mexico,” she explained; “and Willie
in Canada with an engineering firm. They did not
get on very well with papa and they went away.”
It did not require preternatural observation
to deduce that the late William Whitmarsh had been
“a little difficult.”
“When Uncle Frank died, less
than six months ago, Frank came back to High Barn
from South Africa. He had been away about two
years.”
“Possibly he did not get on well with his father?”
Madeline smiled sadly.
“I am afraid that no two Whitmarsh
men ever did get on well together,” she admitted.
“Your father and young Frank, for instance?”
“Their lands adjoin; there were
always quarrels and disputes,” she replied.
“Then Frank had his father’s grievance
over again.”
“He wished to mine?”
“Yes. He told me that he had had experience
of coal in Natal.”
“There was no absolute ostracism
between you then? You were to some extent friends?”
“Scarcely.” She appeared
to reflect. “Acquaintances.... We met
occasionally, of course, at people’s houses.”
“You did not visit High Barn?”
“Oh no.”
“But there was no particular reason why you
should not?”
“Why do you ask me that?”
she demanded quickly, and in a tone that was quite
incompatible with the simple inquiry. Then, recognizing
the fact, she added, with shamefaced penitence:
“I beg your pardon, Mr Carrados. I am afraid
that my nerves have gone to pieces since Thursday.
The most ordinary things affect me inexplicably.”
“That is a common experience
in such circumstances,” said Carrados reassuringly.
“Where were you at the time of the tragedy?”
“I was in my bedroom, which
is rather high up, changing. I had driven down
to the village, to give an order, and had just returned.
Mrs Lawrence told me that she had been afraid there
might be quarrelling, but no one would ever have dreamed
of this, and then came a loud shot and then, after
a few seconds, another not so loud, and we rushed to
the door she and Mary first and
everything was absolutely still.”
“A loud shot and then another not so loud?”
“Yes; I noticed that even at
the time. I happened to speak to Mrs Lawrence
of it afterwards and then she also remembered that
it had been like that.”
Afterwards Carrados often recalled
with grim pleasantry that the two absolutely vital
points in the fabric of circumstantial evidence that
was to exonerate her father and fasten the guilt upon
another had dropped from the girl’s lips utterly
by chance. But at the moment the facts themselves
monopolized his attention.
“You are not disappointed that
I can tell you so little?” she asked timidly.
“Scarcely,” he replied.
“A suicide who could not have had the weapon
he dies by, a victim who is miraculously preserved
by an opportune watch, and two shots from the same
pistol that differ materially in volume, all taken
together do not admit of disappointment.”
“I am very stupid,” she
said. “I do not seem able to follow things.
But you will come and clear my father’s name?”
“I will come,” he replied.
“Beyond that who shall prophesy?”
It had been arranged between them
that the girl should return at once, while Carrados
would travel down to Great Tilling late that same
afternoon and put up at the local fishing inn.
In the evening he would call at Barony, where Madeline
would accept him as a distant connexion of the family.
The arrangement was only for the benefit of the domestics
and any casual visitor who might be present, for there
was no possibility of a near relation being in attendance.
Nor was there any appreciable danger of either his
name or person being recognized in those parts, a
consideration that seemed to have some weight with
the girl, for, more than once, she entreated him not
to disclose to anyone his real business there until
he had arrived at a definite conclusion.
It was nine o’clock, but still
just light enough to distinguish the prominent features
of the landscape, when Carrados, accompanied by Parkinson,
reached Barony. The house, as described by the
man-servant, was a substantial grey stone building,
very plain, very square, very exposed to the four
winds. It had not even a porch to break the flat
surface, and here and there in the line of its three
solid storeys a window had been built up by some frugal,
tax-evading Whitmarsh of a hundred years ago.
“Sombre enough,” commented
Carrados, “but the connexion between environment
and crime is not yet capable of analysis. We get
murders in brand-new suburban villas and the virtues,
light-heartedness and good-fellowship, in moated granges.
What should you say about it, eh, Parkinson?”
“I should say it was damp, sir,”
observed Parkinson, with his wisest air.
Madeline Whitmarsh herself opened
the door. She took them down the long flagged
hall to the dining-room, a cheerful enough apartment
whatever its exterior might forebode.
“I am glad you have come now,
Mr Carrados,” she said hurriedly, when the door
was closed. “Sergeant Brewster is here from
Stinbridge police station to make some arrangements
for the inquest. It is to be held at the schools
here on Monday. He says that he must take the
revolver with him to produce. Do you want to
see it before he goes?”
“I should like to,” replied Carrados.
“Will you come into papa’s room then?
He is there.”
The sergeant was at the table, making
notes in his pocket-book, when they entered.
An old-fashioned revolver lay before him.
“This gentleman has come a long
way on hearing about poor papa,” said the girl.
“He would like to see the revolver before you
take it, Mr Brewster.”
“Good-evening, sir,” said
Brewster. “It’s a bad business that
brings us here.”
Carrados “looked” round
the room and returned the policeman’s greeting.
Madeline hesitated for a moment, and then, picking
up the weapon, put it into the blind man’s hand.
“A bit out of date, sir,”
remarked Brewster, with a nod. “But in good
order yet, I find.”
“An early French make, I should
say; one of Lefaucheux’s probably,” said
Carrados. “You have removed the cartridges?”
“Why, yes,” admitted the
sergeant, producing a matchbox from his pocket.
“They’re pin-fire, you see, and I’m
not too fond of carrying a thing like that loaded
in my pocket as I’m riding a young horse.”
“Quite so,” agreed Carrados,
fingering the cartridges. “I wonder if you
happened to mark the order of these in the chambers?”
“That was scarcely necessary,
sir. Two, together, had been fired; the other
four had not.”
“I once knew a case possibly
I read of it where a pack of cards lay on
the floor. It was a murder case and the guilt
or innocence of an accused man depended on the relative
positions of the fifty-first and fifty-second cards.”
“I think you must have read
of that, sir,” replied Brewster, endeavouring
to implicate first Miss Whitmarsh and then Parkinson
in his meaning smile. “However, this is
straightforward enough.”
“Then, of course, you have not
thought it worth while to look for anything else?”
“I have noted all the facts
that have any bearing on the case. Were you referring
to any particular point, sir?”
“I was only wondering,”
suggested Carrados, with apologetic mildness, “whether
you, or anyone, had happened to find a wad lying about
anywhere.”
The sergeant stroked his well-kept
moustache to hide the smile that insisted, however,
on escaping through his eyes.
“Scarcely, sir,” he replied,
with fine irony. “Bulleted revolver cartridges
contain no wad. You are thinking of a shot-gun,
sir.”
“Oh,” said Carrados, bending
over the spent cartridge he was examining, “that
settles it, of course.”
“I think so, sir,” assented
the sergeant, courteously but with a quiet enjoyment
of the situation. “Well, miss, I’ll
be getting back now. I think I have everything
I want.”
“You will excuse me a few minutes?”
said Miss Whitmarsh, and the two callers were left
alone.
“Parkinson,” said Carrados
softly, as the door closed, “look round on the
floor. There is no wad lying within sight?”
“No, sir.”
“Then take the lamp and look
behind things. But if you find one don’t
disturb it.”
For a minute strange and gigantic
shadows chased one another across the ceiling as Parkinson
moved the table-lamp to and fro behind the furniture.
The man to whom blazing sunlight and the deepest shade
were as one sat with his eyes fixed tranquilly on
the unseen wall before him.
“There is a little pellet of
paper here behind the couch, sir,” announced
Parkinson.
“Then put the lamp back.”
Together they drew the cumbrous old
piece of furniture from the wall and Carrados went
behind. On hands and knees, with his face almost
to the floor, he appeared to be studying even the
dust that lay there. Then with a light, unerring
touch he carefully picked up the thing that Parkinson
had found. Very gently he unrolled it, using his
long, delicate fingers so skilfully that even at the
end the particles of dust still clung here and there
to the surface of the paper.
“What do you make of it, Parkinson?”
Parkinson submitted it to the judgment of a single
sense.
“A cigarette-paper to all appearance,
sir. I can’t say it’s a kind that
I’ve had experience of. It doesn’t
seem to have any distinct watermark but there is a
half-inch of glossy paper along one edge.”
“Amber-tipped. Yes?”
“Another edge is a little uneven; it appears
to have been cut.”
“This edge opposite the mouthpiece. Yes,
yes.”
“Patches are blackened, and
little holes like pinpricks burned
through. In places it is scorched brown.”
“Anything else?”
“I hope there is nothing I have
failed to observe, sir,” said Parkinson, after
a pause.
Carrados’s reply was a strangely irrelevant
question.
“What is the ceiling made of?” he demanded.
“Oak boards, sir, with a heavy cross-beam.”
“Are there any plaster figures about the room?”
“No, sir.”
“Or anything at all that is whitewashed?”
“Nothing, sir.”
Carrados raised the scrap of tissue
paper to his nose again, and for the second time he
touched it with his tongue.
“Very interesting, Parkinson,”
he remarked, and Parkinson’s responsive “Yes,
sir” was a model of discreet acquiescence.
“I am sorry that I had to leave
you,” said Miss Whitmarsh, returning, “but
Mrs Lawrence is out and my father made a practice of
offering everyone refreshment.”
“Don’t mention it,”
said Carrados. “We have not been idle.
I came from London to pick up a scrap of paper, lying
on the floor of this room. Well, here it is.”
He rolled the tissue into a pellet again and held it
before her eyes.
“The wad!” she exclaimed
eagerly. “Oh, that proves that I was right?”
“Scarcely ‘proves,’ Miss Whitmarsh.”
“But it shows that one of the
shots was a blank charge, as you suggested this morning
might have been the case.”
“Hardly even that.”
“What then?” she demanded,
with her large dark eyes fixed in a curious fascination
on his inscrutable face.
“That behind the couch we have
found this scrap of powder-singed paper.”
There was a moment’s silence.
The girl turned away her head.
“I am afraid that I am a little
disappointed,” she murmured.
“Perhaps better now than later.
I wished to warn you that we must prove every inch
of ground. Does your cousin Frank smoke cigarettes?”
“I cannot say, Mr Carrados.
You see ... I knew so little of him.”
“Quite so; there was just the chance. And
your father?”
“He never did. He despised them.”
“That is all I need ask you
now. What time to-morrow shall I find you in,
Miss Whitmarsh? It is Sunday, you remember.”
“At any time. The curiosity
I inspire doesn’t tempt me to encounter my friends,
I can assure you,” she replied, her face hardening
at the recollection. “But ... Mr Carrados
“Yes?”
“The inquest is on Monday afternoon....
I had a sort of desperate faith that you would be
able to vindicate papa.”
“By the time of the inquest, you mean?”
“Yes. Otherwise
“The verdict of a coroner’s
jury means nothing, Miss Whitmarsh. It is the
merest formality.”
“It means a very great deal
to me. It haunts and oppresses me. If they
say if it goes out that papa
is guilty of the attempt of murder, and of suicide,
I shall never raise my head again.”
Carrados had no desire to prolong a futile discussion.
“Good-night,” he said, holding out his
hand.
“Good-night, Mr Carrados.”
She detained him a moment, her voice vibrant with
quiet feeling. “I already owe you more than
I can ever hope to express. Your wonderful kindness
“A strange case,” moralized
Carrados, as they walked out of the quadrangular yard
into the silent lane. “Instructive, but
I more than half wish I’d never heard of it.”
“The young lady seems grateful,
sir,” Parkinson ventured to suggest.
“The young lady is the case,
Parkinson,” replied his master rather grimly.
A few score yards farther on a swing
gate gave access to a field-path, cutting off the
corner that the high road made with the narrow lane.
This was their way, but instead of following the brown
line of trodden earth Carrados turned to the left
and indicated the line of buildings that formed the
back of one side of the quadrangle they had passed
through.
“We will investigate here,”
he said. “Can you see a way in?”
Most of the buildings opened on to
the yard, but at one end of the range Parkinson discovered
a door, secured only by a wooden latch. The place
beyond was impenetrably dark, but the sweet, dusty
smell of hay, and, from beyond, the occasional click
of a horse’s shoe on stone and the rattle of
a head-stall chain through the manger ring told them
that they were in the chaff-pen at the back of the
stable.
Carrados stretched out his hand and
touched the wall with a single finger.
“We need go no farther,”
he remarked, and as they resumed their way across
the field he took out a handkerchief to wipe the taste
of whitewash off his tongue.
Madeline had spoken of the gradual
decay of High Barn, but Carrados was hardly prepared
for the poverty-stricken desolation which Parkinson
described as they approached the homestead on the following
afternoon. He had purposely selected a way that
took them across many of young Whitmarsh’s ill-stocked
fields, fields in which sedge and charlock wrote an
indictment of neglected drains and half-hearted tillage.
On the land, the gates and hedges had been broken
and unkempt; the buildings, as they passed through
the farmyard, were empty and showed here and there
a skeletonry of bare rafters to the sky.
“Starved,” commented the
blind man, as he read the signs. “The thirsty
owner and the hungry land: they couldn’t
both be fed.”
Although it was afternoon the bolts
and locks of the front door had to be unfastened in
answer to their knock. When at last the door was
opened a shrivelled little old woman, rather wicked-looking
in a comic way, and rather begrimed, stood there.
“Mr Frank Whitmarsh?”
she replied to Carrados’s polite inquiry; “oh
yes, he lives here. Frank,” she called
down the passage, “you’re wanted.”
“What is it, mother?”
responded a man’s full, strong voice rather
lazily.
“Come and see!” and the
old creature ogled Carrados with her beady eyes as
though the situation constituted an excellent joke
between them.
There was the sound of a chair being
moved and at the end of the passage a tall man appeared
in his shirt sleeves.
“I am a stranger to you,”
explained Carrados, “but I am staying at the
Bridge Inn and I heard of your wonderful escape on
Thursday. I was so interested that I have taken
the liberty of coming across to congratulate you on
it.”
“Oh, come in, come in,”
said Whitmarsh. “Yes ... it was a sort of
miracle, wasn’t it?”
He led the way back into the room
he had come from, half kitchen, half parlour.
It at least had the virtue of an air of rude comfort,
and some of the pewter and china that ornamented its
mantelpiece and dresser would have rejoiced a collector’s
heart.
“You find us a bit rough,”
apologized the young man, with something of contempt
towards his surroundings. “We weren’t
expecting visitors.”
“And I was hesitating to come
because I thought that you would be surrounded by
your friends.”
This very ordinary remark seemed to
afford Mrs Whitmarsh unbounded entertainment and for
quite a number of seconds she was convulsed with silent
amusement at the idea.
“Shut up, mother,” said
her dutiful son. “Don’t take any notice
of her,” he remarked to his visitors, “she
often goes on like that. The fact is,”
he added, “we Whitmarshes aren’t popular
in these parts. Of course that doesn’t
trouble me; I’ve seen too much of things.
And, taken as a boiling, the Whitmarshes deserve it.”
“Ah, wait till you touch the
coal, my boy, then you’ll see,” put in
the old lady, with malicious triumph.
“I reckon we’ll show them
then, eh, mother?” he responded bumptiously.
“Perhaps you’ve heard of that, Mr ?”
“Carrados Wynn Carrados.
This is my man, Parkinson. I have to be attended
because my sight has failed me. Yes, I had heard
something about coal. Providence seems to be
on your side just now, Mr Whitmarsh. May I offer
you a cigarette?”
“Thanks, I don’t mind for once in a way.”
“They’re Turkish; quite innocuous, I believe.”
“Oh, it isn’t that.
I can smoke cutty with any man, I reckon, but the
paper affects my lips. I make my own and use a
sort of paper with an end that doesn’t stick.”
“The paper is certainly a drawback
sometimes,” agreed Carrados. “I’ve
found that. Might I try one of yours?”
They exchanged cigarettes and Whitmarsh
returned to the subject of the tragedy.
“This has made a bit of a stir,
I can tell you,” he remarked, with complacency.
“I am sure it would. Well,
it was the chief topic of conversation when I was
in London.”
“Is that a fact?” Avowedly
indifferent to the opinion of his neighbours, even
Whitmarsh was not proof against the pronouncement of
the metropolis. “What do they say about
it up there?”
“I should be inclined to think
that the interest centres round the explanation you
will give at the inquest of the cause of the quarrel.”
“There! What did I tell you?” exclaimed
Mrs Whitmarsh.
“Be quiet, mother. That’s
easily answered, Mr Carrados. There was a bit
of duck shooting that lay between our two places.
But perhaps you saw that in the papers?”
“Yes,” admitted Carrados,
“I saw that. Frankly, the reason seemed
inadequate to so deadly a climax.”
“What did I say?” demanded
the irrepressible dame. “They won’t
believe it.”
The young man cast a wrathful look
in his mother’s direction and turned again to
the visitor.
“That’s because you don’t
know Uncle William. Any reason was good enough
for him to quarrel over. Here, let me give you
an instance. When I went in on Thursday he was
smoking a pipe. Well, after a bit I took out
a cigarette and lit it. I’m damned if he
didn’t turn round and start on me for that.
How does that strike you for one of your own family,
Mr Carrados?”
“Unreasonable, I am bound to
admit. I am afraid that I should have been inclined
to argue the point. What did you do, Mr Whitmarsh?”
“I hadn’t gone there to
quarrel,” replied the young man, half sulky at
the recollection. “It was his house.
I threw it into the fireplace.”
“Very obliging,” said
Carrados. “But, if I may say so, it isn’t
so much a matter of speculation why he should shoot
you as why he should shoot himself.”
“The gentleman seems friendly.
Better ask his advice, Frank,” put in the old
woman in a penetrating whisper.
“Stow it, mother!” said
Whitmarsh sharply. “Are you crazy?
Her idea of a coroner’s inquest,” he explained
to Carrados, with easy contempt, “is that I
am being tried for murder. As a matter of fact,
Uncle William was a very passionate man, and, like
many of that kind, he frequently went beyond himself.
I don’t doubt that he was sure he’d killed
me, for he was a good shot and the force of the blow
sent me backwards. He was a very proud man too,
in a way wouldn’t stand correction
or any kind of authority, and when he realized what
he’d done and saw in a flash that he would be
tried and hanged for it, suicide seemed the easiest
way out of his difficulties, I suppose.”
“Yes; that sounds reasonable enough,”
admitted Carrados.
“Then you don’t think
there will be any trouble, sir?” insinuated Mrs
Whitmarsh anxiously.
Frank had already professed his indifference
to local opinion, but Carrados was conscious that
both of them hung rather breathlessly on to his reply.
“Why, no,” he declared
weightily. “I should see no reason for
anticipating any. Unless,” he added thoughtfully,
“some clever lawyer was instructed to insist
that there must be more in the dispute than appears
on the surface.”
“Oh, them lawyers, them lawyers!”
moaned the old lady in a panic. “They can
make you say anything.”
“They can’t make me say
anything.” A cunning look came into his
complacent face. “And, besides, who’s
going to engage a lawyer?”
“The family of the deceased
gentleman might wish to do so.”
“Both of the sons are abroad
and could not be back in time.”
“But is there not a daughter here? I understood
so.”
Whitmarsh gave a short, unpleasant
laugh and turned to look at his mother.
“Madeline won’t.
You may bet your bottom tikkie it’s the last
thing she would want.”
The little old creature gazed admiringly
at her big showy son and responded with an appreciative
grimace that made her look more humorously rat-like
than ever.
“He! he! Missie won’t,”
she tittered. “That would never do.
He! he!” Wink succeeded nod and meaning smile
until she relapsed into a state of quietness; and
Parkinson, who had been fascinated by her contortions,
was unable to decide whether she was still laughing
or had gone to sleep.
Carrados stayed a few more minutes
and before they left he asked to see the watch.
“A unique memento, Mr Whitmarsh,”
he remarked, examining it. “I should think
this would become a family heirloom.”
“It’s no good for anything
else,” said Whitmarsh practically. “A
famous time-keeper it was, too.”
“The fingers are both gone.”
“Yes; the glass was broken,
of course, and they must have caught in the cloth
of my pocket and ripped off.”
“They naturally would; it was
ten minutes past nine when the shot was fired.”
The young man thought and then nodded.
“About that,” he agreed.
“Nearer than ‘about,’
if your watch was correct. Very interesting, Mr
Whitmarsh. I am glad to have seen the watch that
saved your life.”
Instead of returning to the inn Carrados
directed Parkinson to take the road to Barony.
Madeline was at home, and from the sound of voices
it appeared that she had other visitors, but she came
out to Carrados at once, and at his request took him
into the empty dining-room while Parkinson stayed
in the hall.
“Yes?” she said eagerly.
“I have come to tell you that
I must throw up my brief,” he said. “There
is nothing more to be done and I return to town to-night.”
“Oh!” she stammered helplessly.
“I thought I thought
“Your cousin did not abstract
the revolver when he was here on Thursday, Miss Whitmarsh.
He did not at his leisure fire a bullet into his own
watch to make it appear, later in the day, as if he
had been attacked. He did not reload the cartridge
with a blank charge. He did not deliberately
shoot your father and then fire off the blank cartridge.
He was attacked and the newspaper version is
substantially correct. The whole fabric so delicately
suggested by inference and innuendo falls to pieces.”
“Then you desert me, Mr Carrados?”
she said, in a low, bitter voice.
“I have seen the watch the
watch that saved Whitmarsh’s life,” he
continued, unmoved. “It would save it again
if necessary. It indicates ten minutes past nine the
time to a minute at which it is agreed the shot was
fired. By what prescience was he to know at what
exact minute his opportunity would occur?”
“When I saw the watch on Thursday
night the fingers were not there.”
“They are not, but the shaft
remains. It is of an old-fashioned pattern and
it will only take the fingers in one position.
That position indicates ten minutes past nine.”
“Surely it would have been an
easy matter to have altered that afterwards?”
“In this case fate has been
curiously systematic, Miss Whitmarsh. The bullet
that shattered the works has so locked the action that
it will not move a fraction this way or that.”
“There is something more than
this something that I do not understand,”
she persisted. “I think I have a right to
know.”
“Since you insist, there is.
There is the wad of the blank cartridge that you fired
in the outbuilding.”
“Oh!” she exclaimed, in
the moment of startled undefence, “how do you how
can you
“You must leave the conjurer
his few tricks for effect. Of course you naturally
would fire it where the precious pellet could not get
lost the paper you steamed off the cigarette
that Whitmarsh threw into the empty fire-grate; and
of course the place must be some distance from the
house or even that slight report might occasion remark.”
“Yes,” she confessed,
in a sudden abandonment to weary indifference, “it
has been useless. I was a fool to set my cleverness
against yours. Now, I suppose, Mr Carrados, you
will have to hand me over to justice?
“Well; why don’t you say
something?” she demanded impatiently, as he
offered no comment.
“People frequently put me in
this embarrassing position,” he explained diffidently,
“and throw the responsibility on me. Now
a number of years ago a large and stately building
was set up in London and it was beautifully called
‘The Royal Palace of Justice.’ That
was its official name and that was what it was to
be; but very soon people got into the way of calling
it the Law Courts, and to-day, if you asked a Londoner
to direct you to the Palace of Justice he would undoubtedly
set you down as a religious maniac. You see my
difficulty?”
“It is very strange,”
she said, intent upon her own reflections, “but
I do not feel a bit ashamed to you of what I have
done. I do not even feel afraid to tell you all
about it, although of some of that I must certainly
be ashamed. Why is it?”
“Because I am blind?”
“Oh no,” she replied very positively.
Carrados smiled at her decision but
he did not seek to explain that when he could no longer
see the faces of men the power was gradually given
to him of looking into their hearts, to which some
in their turn strong, free spirits instinctively
responded.
“There is such a thing as friendship at first
sight,” he suggested.
“Why, yes; like quite old friends,”
she agreed. “It is a pity that I had no
very trusty friend, since my mother died when I was
quite little. Even my father has been it
is queer to think of it now well, almost
a stranger to me really.”
She looked at Carrados’s serene and kindly face
and smiled.
“It is a great relief to be
able to talk like this, without the necessity for
lying,” she remarked. “Did you know
that I was engaged?”
“No; you had not told me that.”
“Oh no, but you might have heard
of it. He is a clergyman whom I met last summer.
But, of course, that is all over now.”
“You have broken it off?”
“Circumstances have broken it
off. The daughter of a man who had the misfortune
to be murdered might just possibly be tolerated as
a vicar’s wife, but the daughter of a murderer
and suicide it is unthinkable! You
see, the requirements for the office are largely social,
Mr Carrados.”
“Possibly your vicar may have other views.”
“Oh, he isn’t a vicar
yet, but he is rather well-connected, so it is quite
assured. And he would be dreadfully torn if the
choice lay with him. As it is, he will perhaps
rather soon get over my absence. But, you see,
if we married he could never get over my presence;
it would always stand in the way of his preferment.
I worked very hard to make it possible, but it could
not be.”
“You were even prepared to send an innocent
man to the gallows?”
“I think so, at one time,”
she admitted frankly. “But I scarcely thought
it would come to that. There are so many well-meaning
people who always get up petitions.... No, as
I stand here looking at myself over there, I feel
that I couldn’t quite have hanged Frank, no matter
how much he deserved it.... You are very shocked,
Mr Carrados?”
“Well,” admitted Carrados,
with pleasant impartiality, “I have seen the
young man, but the penalty, even with a reprieve, still
seems to me a little severe.”
“Yet how do you know, even now,
that he is, as you say, an innocent man?”
“I don’t,” was the
prompt admission. “I only know, in this
astonishing case, that so far as my investigation
goes, he did not murder your father by the act of
his hand.”
“Not according to your Law Courts?”
she suggested. “But in the great Palace
of Justice?... Well, you shall judge.”
She left his side, crossed the room,
and stood by the square, ugly window, looking out,
but as blind as Carrados to the details of the somnolent
landscape.
“I met Frank for the first time
after I was at all grown-up about three years ago,
when I returned from boarding-school. I had not
seen him since I was a child, and I thought him very
tall and manly. It seemed a frightfully romantic
thing in the circumstances to meet him secretly of
course my thoughts flew to Romeo and Juliet. We
put impassioned letters for one another in a hollow
tree that stood on the boundary hedge. But presently
I found out gradually and incredulously
at first and then one night with a sudden terrible
certainty that my ideas of romance were
not his.... I had what is called, I believe, a
narrow escape. I was glad when he went abroad,
for it was only my self-conceit that had suffered.
I was never in love with him: only in love with
the idea of being in love with him.
“A few months ago Frank came
back to High Barn. I tried never to meet him
anywhere, but one day he overtook me in the lanes.
He said that he had thought a lot about me while he
was away, and would I marry him. I told him that
it was impossible in any case, and, besides, I was
engaged. He coolly replied that he knew.
I was dumbfounded and asked him what he meant.
“Then he took out a packet of
my letters that he had kept somewhere all the time.
He insisted on reading parts of them up and telling
me what this and that meant and what everyone would
say it proved. I was horrified at the construction
that seemed capable of being put on my foolish but
innocent gush. I called him a coward and a blackguard
and a mean cur and a sneaking cad and everything I
could think of in one long breath, until I found myself
faint and sick with excitement and the nameless growing
terror of it.
“He only laughed and told me
to think it over, and then walked on, throwing the
letters up into the air and catching them.
“It isn’t worth while
going into all the times he met and threatened me.
I was to marry him or he would expose me. He would
never allow me to marry anyone else. And then
finally he turned round and said that he didn’t
really want to marry me at all; he only wanted to force
father’s consent to start mining and this had
seemed the easiest way.”
“That is what is called blackmail,
Miss Whitmarsh; a word you don’t seem to have
applied to him. The punishment ranges up to penal
servitude for life in extreme cases.”
“Yes, that is what it really
was. He came on Thursday with the letters in
his pocket. That was his last threat when he could
not move me. I can guess what happened.
He read the letters and proposed a bargain. And
my father, who was a very passionate man, and very
proud in certain ways, shot him as he thought, and
then, in shame and in the madness of despair, took
his own life.... Now, Mr Carrados, you were to
be my judge.”
“I think,” said the blind
man, with a great pity in his voice, “that it
will be sufficient for you to come up for Judgment
when called upon.”
Three weeks later a registered letter
bearing the Liverpool postmark was delivered at The
Turrets. After he had read it Carrados put it
away in a special drawer of his desk, and once or
twice in after years, when his work seemed rather
barren, he took it out and read it. This is what
it contained:
“DEAR MR CARRADOS, Some
time after you had left me that Sunday afternoon,
a man came in the dark to the door and asked for me.
I did not see his face for he kept in the shade,
but his figure was not very unlike that of your
servant Parkinson. A packet was put into
my hands and he was gone without a word. From
this I imagine that perhaps you did not leave
quite as soon as you had intended.
“Thank you very much indeed for
the letters. I was glad to have the miserable
things, to drop them into the fire, and to see them
pass utterly out of my own and everybody else’s
life. I wonder who else in the world would
have done so much for a forlorn creature who
just flashed across a few days of his busy life?
and then I wonder who else could.
“But there is something else
for which I thank you now far, far more, and
that is for saving me from the blindness of my own
passionate folly. When I look back on the
abyss of meanness, treachery and guilt into which
I would have wilfully cast myself, and been condemned
to live in all my life, I can scarcely trust
myself to write.
“I will not say
that I do not suffer now. I think I shall for
many years to come,
but all the bitterness and I think all the
hardness have been drawn
out.
“You will see that I am writing
from Liverpool. I have taken a second-class
passage to Canada and we sail to-night. Willie,
who returned to Barony last week, has lent me
all the money I shall need until I find work.
Do not be apprehensive. It is not with the
vague uncertainty of an indifferent typist or a downtrodden
governess that I go, but as an efficient domestic
servant a capable cook, housemaid or
‘general,’ as need be. It sounds
rather incredible at first, does it not, but such things
happen, and I shall get on very well.
“Good-bye, Mr
Carrados; I shall remember you very often and
very gratefully.
“MADELINE
WHITMARSH.
“P.S. Yes,
there is friendship at first sight.”