Neale dropped into a chair and lifted
a despairing countenance to his downright questioner.
“I don’t know!” he said. “I
know nothing!”
“That is beyond what I’ve already
been told?” suggested the girl.
“Beyond what you’ve been
told exactly,” replied Neale.
“I’m literally bewildered. I’ve
been going about all day as if as if I were
dreaming, or having a nightmare, or something.
I don’t understand it at all. I saw Mr.
Horbury, of course, on Saturday he was all
right when I left him at the bank. He said nothing
that suggested anything unusual. The whole thing
is a real facer! To me anyhow.”
Betty Fosdyke devoted a whole minute
to taking a good look at her companion: Neale,
on his part, made a somewhat shyer examination of her.
He remembered her as a long-legged little girl who
had no great promise of good looks: he was not
quite sure that she had grown into good looks now.
But she was an eminently bright and vivacious young
woman, strong, healthy, vigorous, with fine eyes and
teeth and hair, and a colour that betokened an intimate
acquaintance with outdoor life. And already, in
the conversation at the bank, and in Polke’s
report of his interview with him, he had learnt that
she had developed certain characteristics which he
faintly remembered in her as a child, when she had
insisted on having her own way amongst other children.
“You’ve grown into quite
a handsome young man, Wallie!” she observed
suddenly, with a frank laugh. “I shouldn’t
have thought you would, somehow. Am I changed?”
“I should say not
in character,” answered Neale shyly. “I
remember you always wanted to be top dog!”
“It’s my fate!”
she said, with a sigh. “I’ve such
a lot of people and things to look after one
has to be top dog, whether one wants to or not.
But this affair what’s to be done?”
“I understand from Polke that
you’ve already done everything,” replied
Neale.
“I’ve given him orders
to spare neither trouble nor expense,” she asserted.
“He’s to send for the very best detective
they can give him from headquarters in London, and
search is to be made. Because now,
Wallie, tell me truthfully you don’t
believe for one moment that my uncle has run away
with things?”
“Not for one second!”
asserted Neale stoutly. “Never did!”
“Then there’s
foul play!” exclaimed Betty. “And
I’ll spend my last penny to get at the bottom
of it! Here I am, and here I stick, until I’ve
found my uncle, or discovered what’s happened
to him. And listen do you think those
two men across there are to be trusted?”
Neale shook his head as if in appeal to her.
“I’m their clerk, you
know,” he replied. “I hate being there
at all, but I am there. I believe they’re
men of absolute probity as regards business matters personally,
I’m not very fond of either.”
“Fond!” she exclaimed.
“My dear boy! Joseph is a slimy sneak,
and Gabriel is a bloodless sphinx I hate
both of them!”
Neale laughed and gave her a look of comprehension.
“You haven’t changed,
Betty,” he said. “I’m to call
you Betty, though you are grown up?”
“Since it’s the only name
I possess, I suppose you are,” she answered.
“But now what can we do you
and I? After all, we’re the nearest people
my uncle has in this town. Do let’s do something!
I’m not the sort to sit talking I
want action! Can’t you suggest something
we can do?”
“There’s one thing,”
replied Neale, after a moment’s thought.
“Lord Ellersdeane suggested that possibly Mr.
Horbury, hearing that the Ellersdeanes had got home
on Saturday, put the jewels in his pocket and started
out to Ellersdeane with them. I know the exact
path he’d have taken in that case, and I thought
of following it this evening one might
come across something, or hear something, you know.”
“Take me with you, as soon as
we’ve had dinner,” she said. “It’ll
be a beginning. I mean to turn this neighbourhood
upside down for news you’ll see.
Some person or persons must have seen my uncle on
Saturday night! a man can’t disappear
like that. It’s impossible!”
“Um! but men do disappear,”
remarked Neale. “What I’m hoping is
that there’ll eventually and quickly be
some explanation of this disappearance, and that Mr.
Horbury hasn’t met with shall I put
it plainly?”
“You’d better put anything
plainly to me,” she answered. “I don’t
understand other methods.”
“It’s possible he may
have been murdered, you know,” said Neale quietly.
Betty got up from her chair and went
over to the window to look out on the Market-Place.
She stood there some time in silence.
“It shall be a bad job for any
man who murdered him if that is so,” she said
at last. “I was very fond of my uncle.”
“So was I,” said Neale.
“But I say no past tenses yet!
Aren’t we a bit previous? He may be all
right.”
“Ring the bell and let’s
hurry up that dinner,” she commanded. “I
didn’t make it clear that we want it as early
as possible. I want to get out, and to see where
he went I want to do something active!”
But Miss Betty Fosdyke was obliged
to adapt herself to the somewhat leisurely procedure
of highly respectable country-town hotels, whose cooks
will not be hurried, and it was already dusk, and the
moonlight was beginning to throw shadows of gable
and spire over the old Market-Place, when she and
Neale set out on their walk.
“All the better,” said
Neale. “This is just about the time that
he went out on Saturday night, and under very similar
conditions. Now we’ll take the precise
path that he’d have taken if he was on his way
to Ellersdeane.”
He led his companion to a corner of
the Market-Place, and down a narrow alley which terminated
on an expanse of open ground at the side of the river.
There he made her pause and look round.
“Now if we’re going to
do the thing properly,” he said, “just
attend, and take notice of what I point out.
The town, as you see, stands on this ridge above us.
Here we are at the foot of the gardens and orchards
which slope down from the backs of the houses on this
side of the Market-Place. There is the gate of
the bank-house orchard. According to Mrs. Carswell,
Mr. Horbury came out of that gate on Saturday night.
What did he do then? He could have turned to
the left, along this river bank, or to the right,
also along the river bank. But, if he meant to
walk out to Ellersdeane which he would
reach in well under an hour he would cross
this foot-bridge and enter those woods. That’s
what we’ve got to do.”
He led his companion across a narrow
bridge, over a strip of sward at the other side of
the river, and into a grove of fir which presently
deepened and thickened as it spread up a gently shelving
hillside. The lights of the town behind them
disappeared; the gloom increased; presently they were
alternately crossing patches of moonlight and plunging
into expanses of blackness. And Betty, after stumbling
over one or two of the half-exposed roots which lay
across the rough path, slipped a hand into Neale’s
arm.
“You’ll have to play guide,
Wallie, unless you wish me to break my neck,”
she laughed. “My town eyes aren’t
accustomed to these depths of gloom and solitude.
And now,” she went on, as Neale led her confidently
forward through the wood, “let’s talk some
business. I want to know about those two the
Chestermarkes. For I’ve an uneasy feeling
that there’s more in this affair than’s
on the surface, and I want to know all about the people
I’m dealing with. Just remember beyond
the mere fact of their existence and having seen them
once or twice, years ago, I don’t know anything
about them. What sort of men are they as
individuals?”
“Queer!” replied Neale.
“They’re both queer. I don’t
know much about them. Nobody does. They’re
all right as business men, much respected and all
that, you know. But as private individuals they’re
decidedly odd. They’re both old bachelors,
at least Gabriel’s an old one, and Joseph is
a youngish one. They live sort of hermit lives,
as far as one can make out. Gabriel lives at
the old house which I’ll show you when we get
out of this wood you’ll see the roofs,
anyhow, in this moonlight. Joseph lives in another
old house, but in the town, at the end of Cornmarket.
What they do with themselves at home, Heaven knows!
They don’t go into such society as there is;
they take no part in the town’s affairs.
There’s a very good club here for men of their
class they don’t belong to it.
You, can’t get either of ’em to attend
a meeting they keep aloof from everything.
But they both go up to London a great deal they’re
always going. But they never go together when
Gabriel’s away, Joseph’s at home; when
Joseph’s off, Gabriel’s on show. There’s
always one Mr. Chestermarke to be found at the bank.
All the same, Mr. Horbury was the man who did all
the business with customers in the ordinary way.
So far as I know banking,” concluded Neale,
“I should say he was trusted and confided in
more than most bank managers are.”
“Did they seem very much astonished
when they found he’d gone?” asked Betty.
“Did it seem a great shock, a real surprise?”
“The cleverest man living couldn’t
tell what either Gabriel or Joseph Chestermarke thinks
about anything,” answered Neale. “You
know what Gabriel’s face is like a
stone image! And Joseph always looks as if he
was sneering at you, a sort of soft, smiling sneer.
No, I couldn’t say they showed surprise, and
I don’t know what they’ve found out they’re
the closest, most reserved men about their own affairs
that you could imagine!”
“But they say some
of their securities are missing,” remarked Betty.
“They’ll have to let the exact details
be known, won’t they?”
“Depends on them,”
replied Neale. “They’ll only do what
they like. And they don’t love you for
coming on the scene, I assure you!”
“But I’m here, nevertheless!”
said Betty. “And here I stop! Wallie,
haven’t you got even a bit of a theory about
all this!”
“Can’t say that I have!”
confessed Neale woefully. “I’m not
a very brilliant hand at thinking. The only thing
I can think of is that Mr. Horbury, knowing Lord Ellersdeane
had got home on Saturday, thought he’d hand
back those jewels as soon as possible, and set off
in the evening with that intention possibly
to be robbed and murdered on the way. Sounds
horrible but honestly I can’t think
of any other theory.”
Betty involuntarily shivered and glanced
about her at the dark cavernous spaces of the wood,
which had now thickened into dense masses of oak and
beech. She took a firmer grip of Neale’s
arm.
“And he’d come through
here!” she exclaimed. “How dangerous! with
those things in his pocket!”
“Oh, but he’d think nothing
of it!” answered Neale. “He was used
to walking at night he knew every yard
of this neighbourhood. Besides, he’d know
very well that nobody would know what he had on him.
What I’d like to know is supposing
my theory’s right, and that he was taking these
jewels to Ellersdeane, how did anybody get to know
that he had them? For the Chestermarkes didn’t
know they’d been given to him, and I didn’t nobody
at the bank knew.”
A sudden turn in the path brought
them to the edge of the wood, and they emerged on
a broad plateau of rough grass, from beneath which
a wide expanse of landscape stretched away, bathed
just then in floods of moonlight. Neale paused
and waved his stick towards the shadowy distances
and over the low levels which lay between.
“Ellersdeane Hollow!” he said.
Betty paused too, looking silently
around. She saw an undulating, broken stretch
of country, half-heath, half-covert, covering a square
mile or so of land, houseless, solitary. In its
midst rose a curiously shaped eminence or promontory,
at the highest point of which some ruin or other lifted
gaunt, shapeless walls against the moonlit sky.
Far down beneath it, in a depression amongst the heath-clad
undulations, a fire glowed red in the gloom.
And on the further side of this solitude, amidst groves
and plantations, the moonlight shone on the roofs and
gables of half-hidden houses. Over everything
hung a deep silence.
“A wild and lonely scene!” she said.
Neale raised his stick again and began to point.
“All this in front of us is
called Ellersdeane Hollow,” he remarked.
“It’s not just one depression, you see it’s
a tract of unenclosed land. It’s dangerous
to cross, except by the paths it’s
honeycombed all over with disused lead-mines some
of the old shafts are a tremendous depth. All
the same, you see, there’s some tinker chap,
or some gipsies, camped out down there and got a fire.
That old ruin, up on the crag there, is called Ellersdeane
Tower one of Lord Ellersdeane’s ancestors
built it for an observatory this path’ll
lead us right beneath it.”
“Is this the path he would have
taken if he’d gone to Ellersdeane on Saturday
night?” asked Betty.
“Precisely straight
ahead, past the Tower,” answered Neale.
“And there is Ellersdeane itself, right away
in the distance, amongst its trees. There! where
the moonlight catches it. Now let your eye follow
that far line of wood, over the tops of the trees
about Ellersdeane village do you see where
the moonlight shines on another high roof? That’s
Gabriel Chestermarke’s place the
Warren.”
“So he and Lord Ellersdeane
are neighbours!” remarked Betty.
“Neighbours at a distance of
a mile and who do no more than nod to each
other,” answered Neale. “Lord Ellersdeane
and Mr. Horbury were what you might call friends,
but I don’t believe his lordship ever spoke ten
words with either of the Chestermarkes until this morning.
I tell you the Chestermarkes are regular hermits! when
they’re at home or about Scarnham, anyhow.
Now let’s go as far as the Tower you
can see all over the country from that point.”
Betty followed her guide down a narrow
path which led in and out through the undulations
of the Hollow until it reached the foot of the promontory
on which stood the old ruin that made such a prominent
landmark. Seen at close quarters Ellersdeane Tower
was a place of much greater size and proportion than
it had appeared from the edge of the wood, and the
path to its base was steep and rocky. And here
the loneliness in which she and Neale had so far walked
came to an end on the edge of the promontory,
outlined against the moonlit sky, two men stood, talking
in low tones.