Had the three young men waiting in
that hall not been so familiar with him by reason
of daily and hourly acquaintance, the least observant
amongst them would surely have paused in whatever task
he was busied with, if Mr. Gabriel Chestermarke had
crossed his path for the first time. The senior
partner of Chestermarke’s Bank was a noticeable
person. Wallington Neale, who possessed some
small gift of imagination, always felt that his principal
suggested something more than was accounted for by
his mere presence. He was a little, broadly built
man, somewhat inclined to stoutness, who carried himself
in very upright fashion, and habitually wore the look
of a man engaged in operations of serious and far-reaching
importance, further heightened by an air of reserve
and a trick of sparingness in speech. But more
noticeable than anything else in Mr. Gabriel Chestermarke
was his head, a member of his body which was much
out of proportion to the rest of it. It was a
very big, well-shaped head, on which, out of doors,
invariably rested the latest-styled and glossiest
of silk hats no man had ever seen Gabriel
Chestermarke in any other form of head-gear, unless
it was in a railway carriage, there he condescended
to assume a checked cap. Underneath the brim of
the silk hat looked out a countenance as remarkable
as the head of which it was a part. A broad,
smooth forehead, a pair of large, deep-set eyes, the
pupils of which were black as sloes, a prominent, slightly
hooked nose, a firm, thin-lipped mouth, a square,
resolute jaw these features were thrown
into prominence by the extraordinary pallor of Mr.
Chestermarke’s face, and the dark shade of the
hair which framed it. That black hair, those
black eyes, burning always with a strange, slumbering
fire, the colourless cheeks, the vigorous set of the
lips, these made an effect on all who came in contact
with the banker which was of a not wholly comfortable
nature. It was as if you were talking to a statue
rather than to a fellow-creature.
Mr. Chestermarke stepped quietly from
his brougham and walked up the steps. He was
one of those men who are never taken aback and never
show surprise, and as his eyes ran over the three
young men, there was no sign from him that he saw
anything out of the common. But he turned to
Neale, as senior clerk, with one word.
“Well?”
Neale glanced uncomfortably at the
house door. “Mr. Horbury is not at home,”
he answered. “He has the keys.”
Mr. Chestermarke made no reply.
His hand went to his waistcoat pocket, his feet moved
lower down the hall to a side-door sacred to the partners.
He produced a key, opened the door, and motioned the
clerks to enter. Once within, he turned into
the partners’ room. Five minutes passed
before his voice was heard.
“Neale!”
Neale hurried in and found the banker
standing on the hearth-rug, beneath the portrait of
a former Chestermarke, founder of the bank in a bygone
age. He was suddenly struck by the curious resemblance
between that dead Chestermarke and the living one,
and he wondered that he had never seen it before.
But Mr. Chestermarke gave him no time for speculation.
“Where is Mr. Horbury?” he asked.
Neale told all he knew: the banker
listened in his usual fashion, keeping his eyes steadily
fixed on his informant. When Neale had finished,
Mr. Chestermarke shook his head.
“If Horbury had meant to come
into town by the 8.30 train and had missed it,”
he remarked, “he would have wired or telephoned
by this. Telephoned, of course: there are
telephones at every station on that branch line.
Very well, let things go on.”
Neale went out and set his fellow-clerks
to the usual routine. Patten went for the letters.
Neale carried them into the partners’ room.
At ten o’clock the street door was opened.
A customer or two began to drop in. The business
of the day had begun. It went on just as it would
have gone on if Mr. Horbury had been away on holiday.
And at half-past ten in walked the junior partner,
Mr. Joseph Chestermarke.
Mr. Joseph was the exact opposite
of his uncle. He was so much his opposite that
it was difficult to believe, seeing them together,
that they were related to each other. Mr. Joseph
Chestermarke, a man of apparently thirty years of
age, was tall and loose of figure, easy of demeanour,
and a little untidy in his dress. He wore a not
over well-fitting tweed suit, a slouch hat, a flannel
shirt. His brown beard usually needed trimming;
he affected loose, flowing neckties, more suited to
an artist than to a banker. His face was amiable
in expression, a little weak, a little speculative.
All these characteristics came out most strongly when
he and his uncle were seen in company: nothing
could be more in contrast to the precise severity of
Gabriel than the somewhat slovenly carelessness of
Joseph. Joseph, indeed, was the last man in the
world that any one would ever have expected to see
in charge and direction of a bank, and there were people
in Scarnham who said that he was no more than a lay-figure,
and that Gabriel Chestermarke did all the business.
The junior partner passed through
the outer room, nodding affably to the clerks and
went into the private parlour. Several minutes
elapsed: then a bell rang. Neale answered
it, and Shirley and Patten glanced at each other and
shook their heads: already they scented an odour
of suspicion and uncertainty.
“What’s up?” whispered
Patten, leaning forward over his desk to Shirley,
who stood between it and the counter. “Something
wrong?”
“Something that Gabriel doesn’t
like, anyhow,” muttered Shirley. “Did
you see his eyes when Neale said that Horbury wasn’t
here? If Horbury doesn’t turn up by this
next train ah!”
“Think he’s sloped?”
asked Patten, already seething with boyish desire
of excitement. “Done a bunk with the money?”
But Shirley shook his head at the
closed door through which Neale had vanished.
“They’re carpeting Neale
about it, anyhow,” he answered. “Gabriel’ll
want to know the whys and wherefores, you bet.
But Neale won’t tell us anything he’s
too thick with Horbury.”
Neale, entering the partners’
room, found them in characteristic attitudes.
The senior partner sat at his desk, stern, upright,
his eyes burning a little more fiercely than usual:
the junior, his slouch hat still on his head, his
hands thrust in his pockets, lounged against the mantelpiece,
staring at his uncle.
“Now, Neale,” said Gabriel
Chestermarke. “What do you know about this?
Have you any idea where Mr. Horbury is?”
“None,” replied Neale. “None
whatever!”
“When did you see him last?”
demanded Gabriel. “You often see him out
of bank hours, I know.”
“I last saw him here at two
o’clock on Saturday,” replied Neale.
“I have not seen him since.”
“And you never heard him mention
that he was thinking of going away for the week-end?”
asked Gabriel.
“No!” replied Neale.
He made his answer tersely and definitely,
having an idea that the senior partner looked at him
as if he thought that something was being kept back.
And Gabriel, after a moment’s pause, shifted
some of the papers on his desk, with an impatient
movement.
“Ask Mr. Horbury’s housekeeper
to step in here for a few minutes,” he said.
Neale went out by the private door,
and presently returned with Mrs. Carswell.
By that time Joseph had lounged over
to his own desk and seated himself, and when the housekeeper
came in he tilted his chair back and sat idly swaying
in it while he watched her and his uncle. But
Gabriel, waving Mrs. Carswell to a seat, remained
upright as ever, and as he turned to the housekeeper,
he motioned Neale to stay in the room.
“Just tell us all you know about
Mr. Horbury’s movements on Saturday afternoon
and evening, Mrs. Carswell,” he said. “This
is a most extraordinary business altogether, and I
want to account for it. You say he went out just
about dusk.”
Mrs. Carswell repeated the story which
she had told to Neale. The two partners listened;
Gabriel keenly attentive; Joseph as if he were no
more than mildly interested.
“Odd!” remarked Gabriel,
when the story had come to an end. “Most
strange! Very well thank you, Mrs.
Carswell. Neale,” he added, when the housekeeper
had gone away, “Mr. Horbury always carried the
more important keys on him, didn’t he?”
“Always,” responded Neale.
“Very good! Let things
go on,” said Gabriel. “But don’t
come bothering me or Mr. Joseph Chestermarke unless
you’re obliged to. Of course, Mr. Horbury
may come in by the next train. That’ll do,
Neale.”
Neale went back to the outer room.
Things went on, but the missing manager did not come
in by the 10.45, and nothing had been heard or seen
of him at noon, when Patten went to get his dinner.
Nor had anything been seen or heard at one o’clock,
when Patten came back, and it became Shirley and Neale’s
turn to go out. And thereupon arose a difficulty.
In the ordinary course the two elder clerks would
have left for an hour and the manager would have been
on duty until they returned. But now the manager
was not there.
“You go,” said Neale to
Shirley. “I’ll wait. Perhaps
Mr. Joseph will come out.”
Shirley went but neither
of the partners emerged from the private room.
As a rule they both went across to the Scarnham Arms
Hotel at half-past one for lunch a private
room had been kept for them at that old-world hostelry
from time immemorial but now they remained
within their parlour, apparently interned from their
usual business world. And Neale had a very good
idea of what they were doing. The bank’s
strong room was entered from that parlour Gabriel
and Joseph were examining and checking its contents.
The knowledge distressed Neale beyond measure, and
it was only by a resolute effort that he could give
his mind to his duties.
Two o’clock had gone, and Shirley
had come back, before the bell rang again. Neale
went into the private room and knew at once that something
had happened. Gabriel stood by his desk, which
was loaded with papers and documents; Joseph leaned
against a sideboard, whereon was a decanter of sherry
and a box of biscuits; he had a glass of wine in one
hand, and a half-nibbled biscuit in the other.
The smell of the sherry fine old brown
stuff, which the clerks were permitted to taste now
and then, on such occasions as the partners’
birthdays filled the room.
“Neale,” said Gabriel,
“have you been out to lunch? No? Take
a glass of wine and eat a biscuit we shall
all have to put off our lunches for an hour or so.”
Neale obeyed more because
he was under order than because he was hungry.
He was too much bothered, too full of vague fears,
to think of his midday dinner. He took the glass
which Joseph handed to him, and picked a couple of
biscuits out of the box. And at the first sip
Gabriel spoke again.
“Neale!” he said.
“You’ve been here five years, so one can
speak confidentially. There’s something
wrong seriously wrong. Securities are
missing. Securities representing a
lot!”
Neale’s face flushed as if he
himself had been charged with abstracting those securities.
His hand shook as he set down his glass, and he looked
helplessly from one partner to another. Joseph
merely shook his head, and poured out another glass
of sherry for himself: Gabriel shook his head,
too, but with a different expression.
“We don’t know exactly
how things are,” he continued. “But
there’s the fact on a superficial
examination. And Horbury! Of all
men in the world, Horbury!”
“I can’t believe it, Mr.
Chestermarke!” exclaimed Neale. “Surely,
sir, there’s some mistake!”
Joseph brushed crumbs of biscuit off
his beard and wagged his head.
“No mistake!” he said
softly. “None! The thing is what’s
best to do? Because he’d have
laid his plans. It’ll all have been thought
out carefully.”
“I’m afraid so,”
assented Gabriel. “That’s the worst
of it. Everything points to premeditation.
And when a man has been so fully trusted ”
A knock at the door prefaced the introduction
of Shirley’s head. He glanced into the
room with an obvious desire to see what was going on,
but somehow contrived to fix his eyes on the senior
partner.
“Lord Ellersdeane, sir,” he announced.
“Can he see you?”
The two partners looked at each other
in evident surprise; then Gabriel moved to the door
and bowed solemnly to some person outside.
“Will your lordship come in?” he said
politely.
Lord Ellersdeane, a big, bustling,
country-squire type of man, came into the room, nodding
cheerily to its occupants.
“Sorry to disturb you, Mr. Chestermarke,”
he said. “I understand Horbury isn’t
at home, but of course you’ll do just as well.
The Countess and I only got back from abroad night
before last. She wants her jewels, so I’ll
take ’em with me, if you please.”
Gabriel Chestermarke, who was drawing
forward a chair, took his hand off it and stared at
his visitor.
“The Countess’s jewels!”
he said. “Does your lordship mean ”
“Deposited them with Horbury,
you know, some weeks ago when we went abroad,”
replied Lord Ellersdeane. “Safe keeping,
you know said he’d lock ’em
up.”
Gabriel turned slowly to Joseph.
But Joseph shook his head and Neale, glancing
from one partner to the other, felt himself turning
sick with apprehension.