The day after the inquest, Sidney
Bolton’s body was buried in Gartley churchyard.
Owing to the nature of the death, and the publicity
given to the murder by the press, a great concourse
of people assembled to witness the interment, and
there was an impressive silence when the corpse was
committed to the grave. Afterwards, as was natural,
much discussion followed on the verdict at the inquest.
It was the common opinion that the jury could have
brought in no other verdict, considering the nature
of the evidence supplied; but many people declared
that Captain Hervey of The Diver should have been called.
If the deceased had enemies, said these wiseacres,
it was probable that he would have talked about them
to the skipper. But they forgot that the witnesses
called at the inquest, including the mother of the
dead man, had insisted that Bolton had no enemies,
so it is difficult to see what they expected Captain
Hervey to say.
After the funeral, the journals made
but few remarks about the mystery. Every now
and then it was hinted that a clue had been found,
and that the police would sooner or later track down
the criminal. But all this loose chatter came
to nothing, and as the days went by, the public in
London, at all events lost interest in the
case. The enterprising weekly paper that had
offered the furnished house and the life income to
the person who found the assassin received an intimation
from the Government that such a lottery could not
be allowed. The paper, therefore, returned to
Limericks, and the amateur detectives, like so many
Othellos, found their occupation gone. Then a
political crisis took place in the far East, and the
fickle public relegated the murder of Bolton to the
list of undiscovered crimes. Even the Scotland
Yard detectives, failing to find a clue, lost interest
in the matter, and it seemed as though the mystery
of Bolton’s death would not be solved until
the Day of Judgment.
In the village, however, people still
continued to be keenly interested, since Bolton was
one of themselves, and, moreover, Widow Anne kept up
a perpetual outcry about her murdered boy. She
had lost the small weekly sum which Sidney had allowed
her out of his wages, so the neighbors, the gentry
of the surrounding country, and the officers at the
Fort sent her ample washing to do. Widow Anne
in a few weeks had quite a large business, considering
the size of the village, and philosophically observed
to a neighbor that “It was an ill wind which
blew no one any good,” adding also that Sidney
was more good to her dead than alive. But even
in Gartley the villagers grew weary of discussing a
mystery which could never be solved, and so the case
became rarely talked about. In these days of
bustle and worry and competition, it is wonderful how
people forget even important events. If a blue
sun arose to lighten the world instead of a yellow
one, after nine days of wonder, man would settle down
quite comfortably to a cerulean existence. Such
is the wonderful adaptability of humanity.
Professor Braddock was less forgetful,
as he always bore in mind the loss of his mummy, and
constantly thought of schemes whereby he could trap
the assassin of his late secretary. Not that he
cared for the dead in any way, save from a strictly
business point of view, but the capture of the criminal
meant the restitution of the mummy, and as
Braddock told everyone with whom he came in contact he
was determined to regain possession of his treasure.
He went himself to the Sailor’s Rest, and drove
the landlord and his servants wild by asking tart questions
and storming when a satisfactory answer could not
be supplied. Quass was glad when he saw the plump
back of the cross little man, who so pertinaciously
followed what everyone else had abandoned.
“Life was too short,”
grumbled Quass, “to be bothered in that way.”
The wooing of Archie and Lucy went
on smoothly, and the Professor showed no sign of wishing
to break the engagement. But Hope, as he confided
to Lucy, was somewhat worried, as his pauper uncle,
on an insufficient borrowed capital, had begun to
speculate in South African mines, and it was probable
that he would lose all his money. In that case
Hope fancied he would be once more called upon to
make good the avuncular loss, and so the marriage
would have to be postponed. But it so happened
that the pauper uncle made some lucky speculative
shots and acquired money, which he promptly reinvested
in new mines of the wildcat description. Still,
for the moment all was well, and the lovers had a few
halcyon days of peace and happiness.
Then came a bolt from the blue in
the person of Captain Hervey, who called a fortnight
after the funeral to see the Professor. The skipper
was a tall, slim man, lean as a fasting friar, and
hard as nails, with closely clipped red hair, mustache
of the same aggressive hue, and an American goatee.
He spoke with a Yankee accent, and in a truculent
manner, sufficiently annoying to the fiery Professor.
When he met Braddock in the museum, the two became
enemies at the first glance, and because both were
bad-tempered and obstinate, took an instant dislike
to one another. Like did not draw to like in
this instance.
“What do you want to see me
about?” asked Braddock crossly. He had
been summoned by Cockatoo from the perusal of a new
papyrus to see his visitor, and consequently was not
in the best of tempers.
“I’ve jes’ blew
in fur a trifle of chin-music,” replied Hervey
with an emphatic U.S.A. accent.
“I’m busy: get out,” was the
uncomplimentary reply.
Hervey took a chair and, stretching
his lengthy legs, produced a black cheroot, as long
and lean as himself.
“If you were in the States,
Professor, I’d draw a bead on you for that style
of lingo. I’m not taking any. See!”
and he lighted up.
“You’re the captain of ’The Diver’?”
“That’s so; I was, that
is. Now, I’ve shifted to a dandy wind-jammer
of sorts that can run rings round the old barky.
I surmise I’m off for the South Seas, pearl-fishing,
in three months. I’ll take that Kanaka along
with me, if y’like, Professor,” and he
cast a side glance at Cockatoo, who was squatting
on his hams as usual, polishing a blue enameled jar
from a Theban tomb.
“I require the services of the
man,” said Braddock stiffly. “As to
you, sir: you’ve been paid for your business
in connection with Bolton’s passage and the
shipment of my mummy, so there is no more to be said.”
“Heaps more! heaps, you bet,”
remarked the man of the sea placidly, and controlling
a temper which in less civilized parts would have led
him to wipe the floor with the plump scientist.
“My owners were paid fur that racket: not
me. No, sir. So I’ve paddled into this
port to see if I can rake in a few dollars on my own.”
“I’ve no dollars to give you in
charity, that is.”
“Huh! An’ who asked charity, you
bald-headed jelly-bag?”
Braddock grew scarlet with fury.
“If you speak to me like that, you ruffian,
I’ll throw you out.”
“What? you?”
“Yes, me,” and the Professor stood on
tip-toe, like the bantam he was.
“You make me smile, and likewise
tired,” murmured Hervey, admiring the little
man’s pluck. “See here, Professor,
touching that mummy?”
“My mummy: my green mummy.
What about it?” Braddock rose to the fly thrown
by this skilful angler.
“That’s so. What
will you shell out if I pass along that corpse?”
“Ah!” The Professor again
stood on tip-toe, gasping and purple in the face.
He almost squeaked in the extremity of his anger.
“I knew it.”
“Knew what?” demanded the skipper, genuinely
surprised.
“I knew that you had stolen
my mummy. Yes, you needn’t deny it.
Bolton, like the silly fool he was, told you how valuable
the mummy was, and you strangled the poor devil to
get my property.”
“Go slow,” said the captain,
in no wise perturbed by this accusation. “I
would have you remember that at the inquest it was
stated that the window was locked and the door was
open. How then could I waltz into that blamed
hotel and arrange for a funeral? ’Sides,
I guess shooting is mor’n my line than garrotting.
I leave that to the East Coast Yellow-Stomachs.”
Braddock sat down and wiped his face.
He saw plainly enough that he had not a leg to stand
on, as Hervey was plainly innocent.
“’Sides,” went on
the skipper, chewing his cheroot, “I guess if
I’d wanted that old corpse of yours, I’d
have yanked Bolton overside, and set down the accident
to bad weather. Better fur me to loot the case
aboard than to make a fool of myself ashore. No,
sir, H.H. don’t run ’is own perticler
private circus in that blamed way.”
“H.H. Who the devil is H.H.?”
“Me, you bet. Hiram Hervey,
citizen of the U.S.A. Nantucket neighborhood
for home life. And see, don’t you get m’hair
riz, or I’ll scalp.”
“You can’t scalp me,”
chuckled Braddock, passing his hand over a very bald
head. “See here, what do you want?”
“Name a price and I’ll
float round to get back your verdant corpse.”
“I thought you were going to the South Seas?”
“In three months, pearl-fishing.
Lots of time, I reckon, to run this old circus I want
you to finance.”
“Have you any suspicions?”
“No, ’sept I don’t believe in that
window business.”
“What do you mean?” Braddock sat upright.
“Well,” drawled the Yankee,
“y’see, I interviewed the gal as told that
perticler lie in court.”
“Eliza Flight. Was it a lie she told?”
“Well, not exactly. The
window was snibbed, but that was done after the chap
who sent your pal to Kingdom Come had got out.”
“Do you mean to say that the
window was locked from the outside?” asked Braddock,
and then, when Hervey nodded, he exclaimed “Impossible!”
“Narry an impossibility, you
bet. The chap who engineered the circus was all-fired
smart. The snib was an old one, and he yanked
a piece of string round it, and passed the string
through the crack between the upper and lower sash
of the window. When outside he pulled, and the
snib slid into place. But he left the string
on the ground outside. I picked it up nex’
day and guessed the racket he’d been on.
I tried the same business and brought off the deal.”
“It sounds wonderful and yet
impossible,” cried Braddock, rubbing his bald
head and walking excitedly to and fro. “See
here, I’ll come along with you and see how it’s
done.”
“You bet you won’t, unless
you shell out. See here” Hervey
leaned forward “from that window
business it’s plain that no one inside the shanty
corpsed your pal. The chap as did it entered and
left by the window, and made tracks with that old
corp you want. Now you pass along five hundred
pounds that’s English currency, I
reckon and I’ll smell round for the
robber.”
“And where do you think I can
obtain five hundred pounds?” asked the Professor
very dryly.
“Well, I guess if that blamed
corpse is worth it, you’ll be willing to trade.
Y’don’t live in this shanty for nothing.”
“My good friend, I have enough
to live on, and obtain this house at a small rent
on account of its isolation. But I can no more
find the sum of five hundred pounds than fly.”
Hervey rose and straightened his legs.
“Then I guess I’d best be getting back
to Pierside.”
“One moment, sir. Did anything
happen on the voyage? did Bolton say anything
likely to lead you to suppose that he was in danger
of being robbed and murdered?”
“No,” said the skipper
musingly, and pulling his goatee. “He told
me that he had secured the old corpse, and was bringing
it home to you. I didn’t talk much to Bolton;
he wasn’t my style.”
“Have you any idea who killed him?”
“No, I ain’t.”
“Then how do you propose to find the criminal
who has the mummy?”
“You give me five hundred pounds and see,”
said Hervey coolly.
“I haven’t got the money.”
“Then I reckon you don’t
get the corpse. So long,” and the skipper
strolled towards the door. Braddock followed him.
“You have a clue?”
“No, I’ve got nothing;
not even that five hundred pounds you make such a
fuss over. It’s a wasted day with H.H.,
I surmise. Wait!” He scribbled on a card
and flung it across the room. “That’s
my Pierside address if you should change your blamed
mind.”
The Professor picked up the card.
“The Sailor’s Rest! What, are you
stopping there?” Then, when Hervey nodded, he
cried violently, “Why, I believe you have a
clue, and stop at the hotel to follow it up.”
“Maybe I do and maybe I don’t,”
retorted the captain, opening the door with a jerk;
“anyhow, I don’t hunt for that corpse without
the dollars.”
When Hiram Hervey departed, the Professor
raged up and down the room so violently that Cockatoo
was cowed by his anger. Apparently this American
skipper knew of something which might lead to the discovery
of the assassin and incidentally to the restoration
of the green mummy to its rightful owner. But
he would not make a move unless he was paid five hundred
pounds, and Braddock did not know where to procure
that amount. Having long since made himself acquainted
with Hope’s financial condition, he knew well
that there was no chance of getting a second check
in that quarter. Of course there was Random, whom
he had heard casually had returned from his yachting
cruise, and was now back again at the Fort. But
Random was in love with Lucy, and would probably only
give or lend the money on condition that the Professor
helped him with his wooing. In that case, since
Lucy was engaged to Hope, there would be some difficulty
in altering present conditions. But having arrived
at this point of his somewhat angry meditations, Braddock
sent Cockatoo with a message to his step-daughter,
saying that he wished to see her.
“I’ll see if she really
loves Hope,” thought the Professor, rubbing his
plump hands. “If she doesn’t, there
may be a chance of her throwing him over to become
Lady Random. Then I can get the money. And
indeed,” soliloquized the Professor virtuously,
“I must point out to her that it is wrong of
her to make a poor marriage, when she can gain a wealthy
husband. I will only be doing my duty by my dear
dead wife, by preventing her wedding poverty.
But girls are so obstinate, and Lucy is a thorough
girl.”
His amiable anxiety on behalf of Miss
Kendal was only cut short by the entrance of the young
lady herself. Professor Braddock then showed his
hand too plainly by evincing a strong wish to conciliate
her in every way. He procured her a seat:
he asked after her health: he told her that she
was growing prettier every day, and in all ways behaved
so unlike his usual self, that Lucy became alarmed
and thought that he had been drinking.
“Why have you sent for me?”
she asked, anxious to come to the point.
“Aha!” Braddock put his
venerable head on one side like a roguish bird and
smiled in an infantine manner. “I have good
news for you.”
“About the mummy?” she demanded innocently.
“No, about flesh and blood,
which you prefer. Sir Frank Random has arrived
back at the Fort. There!”
“I know that,” was Miss
Kendal’s unexpected reply. “His yacht
came to Pierside on the same afternoon as The Diver
arrived.”
“Oh, indeed!” said the
Professor, struck by the coincidence, and with a stare.
“How do you know?”
“Archie met Sir Frank the other
day, and learned as much.”
“What?” Braddock struck
a tragic attitude. “Do you mean to say that
those two young men speak to one another?”
“Yes. Why not? They are friends.”
“Oh!” Braddock became
roguish again. “I fancied they were lovers
of a certain young lady who is in this room.”
By this time Lucy was beginning to
guess what her step-father was aiming at, and grew
correspondingly angry.
“Archie is my sole lover now,”
she remarked stiffly. “Sir Frank knows
that we are engaged and is quite ready to be the friend
of us both.”
“And he calls that love.
Idiot!” cried the Professor, much disgusted.
“But I would point out to you, Lucy and
I do so because of my deep affection for you, dear
child that Sir Frank is wealthy.”
“So is Archie in my love.”
“Nonsense! nonsense! That is mere foolish
romance, He has no money.”
“You should not say that.
Archie had money to the extent of one thousand pounds,
which he gave you.”
“One thousand pounds: a
mere nothing. Consider, Lucy, that if you marry
Random you will have a title.”
Miss Kendal, whose patience was getting
exhausted, stamped a very neat boot.
“I don’t know why you talk in this way,
father.”
“I wish to see you happy.”
“Then your wish is granted:
you do see me happy. But I won’t be happy
long if you keep bothering me to marry a man I don’t
care two straws about. I am going to be Mrs.
Hope, so there.”
“My dear child,” said
the Professor, who always became paternal when most
obstinate, “I have reason to believe that the
green mummy can be discovered and poor Sidney’s
death avenged if a reward of five hundred pounds is
offered. If Hope can give me that money ”
“He will not: I shall not
allow him to. He has lost too much already.”
“In that case I must apply to Sir Frank Random.”
“Well, apply,” she snapped,
being decidedly angry; “it’s none of my
business. I don’t want to hear anything
about it.”
“It is your business, miss,”
cried Braddock, growing angry in his turn and becoming
very pink; “you know that only by getting you
to marry Random can I procure the money.”
“Oh!” said Lucy coldly.
“So this is why you sent for me. Now, father,
I have had enough of this. You gave your consent
to Archie being engaged to me in exchange for one
thousand pounds. As I love him I shall abide
by the word you gave. If I had not loved him I
should have refused to marry him. You understand?”
“I understand that I have a
very obstinate girl to deal with. You shall marry
as I choose.”
“I shall do nothing of the sort.
You have no right to dictate my choice of a husband.”
“No right, when I am your father?”
“You are not my father:
merely my step-father merely a relation
by marriage. I am of age. I can do as I
like, and intend to.”
“But, Lucy,” implored
Braddock, changing his tune, “think.”
“I have thought. I marry Archie.”
“But he is poor and Random is rich.”
“I don’t care. I love Archie and
I don’t love Frank.”
“Would you have me lose the mummy for ever?”
“Yes, I would, if my misery
is to be the price of its restoration. Why should
I sell myself to a man I care nothing about, just because
you want a musty, fusty old corpse? Now I am
going.” Lucy walked to the door. “I
shan’t listen to another word. And if you
bother me again, I shall marry Archie at once and
leave the house.”
“I can make you leave it in
any case, you ungrateful girl,” bellowed Braddock,
who was purple with rage, never having a very good
temper at the best of times. “Look what
I have done for you!”
Miss Kendal could have pointed out
that her step-father had done nothing save attend
to himself. But she disdained such an argument,
and without another word opened the door and walked
out. Almost immediately afterwards Cockatoo entered,
much to the relief of the Professor, who relieved
his feelings by kicking the unfortunate Kanaka.
Then he sat down again to consider ways and means
of obtaining the necessary mummy and still more necessary
money.