Crewe made a careful inspection of
the house and the grounds. He took measurements
of the impressions left on the sill of the window which
had been forced and also of the foot-prints immediately
beneath the window. He had a long conversation
with Hill and questioned him regarding his movements
on the night of the murder. He also asked about
the other servants who were at Dellmere, and probed
for information about Sir Horace’s domestic
life and his friends. As he was talking to Hill,
Police-Constable Flack came up to them with a card
in his hand. Hill looked at the card and exclaimed:
“Mr. Holymead? What does he want?”
“He asked if Miss Fewbanks was at home.”
Hill took the card in to Miss Fewbanks,
and on coming out went to the front door and escorted
Mr. Holymead to his young mistress. Crewe, as
was his habit, looked closely at Holymead. The
eminent K.C. was a tall man, nearly six feet in height,
with a large, resolute, strongly-marked face which,
when framed in a wig, was suggestive of the dignity
and severity of the law. In years he was about
fifty, and in his figure there was a suggestion of
that rotundity which overtakes the man who has given
up physical exercise. He was correctly, if sombrely,
dressed in dark clothes, and he wore a black tie probably
as a symbol of mourning for his friend. His gloves
were a delicate grey.
Crewe sought out Hill again and questioned
him closely about the relations which had existed
between Sir Horace Fewbanks and Mr. Holymead, whose
enormous practice brought him in an income three times
as large as the dead judge’s, and kept him constantly
before the public. Hill was able to supply the
detective with some interesting information regarding
the visitor, and, in contrast to his manner when previously
questioned at random by Crewe, concerning his young
mistress’s habits, seemed willing, if not actually
anxious, to talk. He had heard from Sir Horace’s
housekeeper that his late master and Mr. Holymead had
been law students together, and after they were called
to the Bar they used to spend their holidays together
as long as they were single.
When they were married their wives
became friends. Mrs. Holymead had died fourteen
years ago, but Mrs. Fewbanks Sir Horace
had not been a baronet while his wife was alive had
lived some years longer. Mr. Holymead had married
again. His second wife was a very beautiful young
lady, if he might make so bold as to say so, who had
come from America. The butler added deprecatingly
that he had been told that both Sir Horace and Mr.
Holymead had paid her some attention, and that she
could have had either of them. She was different
to English ladies, he added. She had more to
say for herself, and laughed and talked with the gentlemen
just as if she was one of themselves. Hill mentioned
that she had been out to see Miss Fewbanks the previous
day, but that Miss Fewbanks had not come up from Dellmere
then, so she had seen Inspector Chippenfield instead.
While Crewe and the butler were talking
a boy of about fourteen, with the shrewd face of a
London arab, approached them with an air of mystery.
He came down the hall with long cautious strides,
and halted at each step as if he were stalking a band
of Indians in a forest.
“Well, Joe, what is it?”
asked Crewe, as he came to a halt in front of them.
“If you don’t want me
for half an hour, sir, I’d like to take a run
up the street. There is a real good picture house
just been opened.” The boy spoke eagerly,
with his bright eyes fixed on Crewe.
“I may want you any minute,
Joe,” replied Crewe. “Don’t
go away.”
The boy nodded his head, and turned
away. As he went down the hall again to the front
door he gave an imitation of a man walking with extended
arms across a plank spanning a chasm.
“Picture mad,” commented Crewe, as he
watched him.
“I didn’t quite understand you, sir,”
replied the butler.
“Spends all his spare time in
cinemas,” said Crewe, “and when he is not
there he is acting picture dramas. His ambition
in life is to be a cinema actor.”
Crewe engaged Police-Constable Flack
in conversation while waiting for Mr. Holymead to
take his departure. Flack had so little professional
pride that he was pleased at meeting a gentleman who
usurped the functions of a detective without having
had any police training, and who could beat the best
of the Scotland Yard men like shelling peas, as he
confided to his wife that night. He was especially
flattered at the interest Crewe seemed to display
in his long connection with the police force, and
also in his private affairs. The constable was
explaining with parental vanity the precocious cleverness
of his youngest child, a girl of two, when Holymead
made his appearance, and he became aware that Mr.
Crewe’s interest in children was at an end.
“Look at that man,” said
Crewe, in a sharp imperative tone to the police-constable,
as the K.C. was walking down the path of the Italian
garden to the plantation. “You saw him come
in?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Do you see any difference?”
“No, sir; he’s the same man,” said
Flack, with stolid certainty.
“Anything about him that is different?”
continued Crewe.
Police-Constable Flack looked at Crewe
in some bewilderment. He was not a deductive
expert, and, as he told his wife afterwards, he did
not know what the detective was “driving at.”
He took another long look at Holymead, who was then
within a few yards of the plantation on his way to
the gates, and remarked, in a hesitating tone, as though
to justify his failure:
“Well, you see, sir, when he
was coming in it was the front view I saw, now I can
only see his back.”
But before he had finished speaking
Crewe had left him and was following the K.C.
Holymead had gone into the house without a walking-stick,
and had reappeared carrying one on his arm. Crewe
admired the cool audacity which had prompted Holymead
to go into a house where a murder had been committed
to recover his stick under the very eyes of the police,
and he immediately formed the conclusion that the
K.C. had come to the house to recover the stick for
some urgent reason possibly not unconnected with the
crime. And it was apparent that Holymead was a
shrewd judge of human nature, Crewe reflected, for
he calculated that the rareness of the quality of
observation, even in those who, like Flack, were supposed
to keep their eyes open, would permit him to do so
unnoticed.
As Crewe went down the path he beckoned
to the boy Joe, who at the moment was acting the part
of a comic dentist binding a recalcitrant patient to
a chair, using an immense old-fashioned straight-backed
chair which stood in the hall, for his stage setting.
Joe overtook his master as he entered the ornamental
plantation in front of the house, and Crewe quickly
whispered his instructions, as the retreating figure
of the K.C. threaded the wood towards the gates.
“When I catch up level with
him, Joe, you are to run into him accidentally from
behind, and knock his stick off his arm, so that it
falls near me. I will pick it up and return it
to him. I must handle the stick you
understand? Do not wait to see how he takes it
when you bump into him get off round the
corner at once and wait for me.”
Crewe quickened his pace to overtake
the man in front of him. He gave no glance backward
at the boy, for he knew his instructions would be carried
out faithfully and intelligently. He allowed Holymead
to reach the big open gates, and turn from the gravelled
carriage drive into the private street. Then
he hurried after him and drew level with Holymead.
As he did so there was a sound of running footsteps
from behind, and then a shout. Joe had cleverly
tripped and fallen heavily between the two men, bringing
down Holymead in his fall. The K.C.’s stick
flew off his arm and bounded half a dozen yards away.
Crewe stepped forward quickly, secured the stick,
glanced quickly at the monogram engraved on it, and
held it out to Holymead, who was brushing the dust
off his clothes with vexatious remarks about the clumsiness
and impudence of street boys. For a moment he
seemed to hesitate about taking the stick.
“I believe this is yours,” said Crewe
politely.
“Ah yes. Thank you,” said
the K.C., giving him a keen suspicious glance.