Half way along the north side of the
main street of Highmarket an ancient stone gateway,
imposing enough to suggest that it was originally
the entrance to some castellated mansion or manor house,
gave access to a square yard, flanked about by equally
ancient buildings. What those buildings had been
used for in other days was not obvious to the casual
and careless observer, but to the least observant their
present use was obvious enough. Here were piles
of timber from Norway; there were stacks of slate
from Wales; here was marble from Aberdeen, and there
cement from Portland: the old chambers of the
grey buildings were filled to overflowing with all
the things that go towards making a house ironwork,
zinc, lead, tiles, great coils of piping, stores of
domestic appliances. And on a shining brass plate,
set into the wall, just within the gateway, were deeply
engraven the words: Mallalieu and Cotherstone,
Builders and Contractors.
Whoever had walked into Mallalieu
& Cotherstone’s yard one October afternoon a
few years ago would have seen Mallalieu and Cotherstone
in person. The two partners had come out of their
office and gone down the yard to inspect half a dozen
new carts, just finished, and now drawn up in all
the glory of fresh paint. Mallalieu had designed
those carts himself, and he was now pointing out their
advantages to Cotherstone, who was more concerned
with the book-keeping and letter-writing side of the
business than with its actual work. He was a big,
fleshy man, Mallalieu, midway between fifty and sixty,
of a large, solemn, well-satisfied countenance, small,
sly eyes, and an expression of steady watchfulness;
his attire was always of the eminently respectable
sort, his linen fresh and glossy; the thick gold chain
across his ample front, and the silk hat which he
invariably wore, gave him an unmistakable air of prosperity.
He stood now, the silk hat cocked a little to one side,
one hand under the tail of his broadcloth coat, a pudgy
finger of the other pointing to some new feature of
the mechanism of the new carts, and he looked the
personification of self-satisfaction and smug content.
“All done in one action, d’ye
see, Cotherstone?” he was saying. “One
pull at that pin releases the entire load. We’d
really ought to have a patent for that idea.”
Cotherstone went nearer the cart which
they were examining. He was a good deal of a
contrast to his partner a slightly built,
wiry man, nervous and quick of movement; although
he was Mallalieu’s junior he looked older, and
the thin hair at his temples was already whitening.
Mallalieu suggested solidity and almost bovine sleekness;
in Cotherstone, activity of speech and gesture was
marked well-nigh to an appearance of habitual anxiety.
He stepped about the cart with the quick action of
an inquisitive bird or animal examining something which
it has never seen before.
“Yes, yes, yes!” he answered.
“Yes, that’s a good idea. But if it’s
to be patented, you know, we ought to see to it at
once, before these carts go into use.”
“Why, there’s nobody in
Highmarket like to rob us,” observed Mallalieu,
good-humouredly. “You might consider about
getting what do they call it? provisional
protection? for it.”
“I’ll look it up,”
responded Cotherstone. “It’s worth
that, anyhow.”
“Do,” said Mallalieu.
He pulled out the big gold watch which hung from the
end of his cable chain and glanced at its jewelled
dial. “Dear me!” he exclaimed.
“Four o’clock I’ve a meeting
in the Mayor’s parlour at ten past. But
I’ll look in again before going home.”
He hurried away towards the entrance
gate, and Cotherstone, after ruminative inspection
of the new carts, glanced at some papers in his hand
and went over to a consignment of goods which required
checking. He was carefully ticking them off on
a list when a clerk came down the yard.
“Mr. Kitely called to pay his
rent, sir,” he announced. “He asked
to see you yourself.”
“Twenty-five six seven,”
counted Cotherstone. “Take him into the
private office, Stoner,” he answered. “I’ll
be there in a minute.”
He continued his checking until it
was finished, entered the figures on his list, and
went briskly back to the counting-house near the gateway.
There he bustled into a room kept sacred to himself
and Mallalieu, with a cheery greeting to his visitor an
elderly man who had recently rented from him a small
house on the outskirts of the town.
“Afternoon, Mr. Kitely,”
he said. “Glad to see you, sir always
glad to see anybody with a bit of money, eh?
Take a chair, sir I hope you’re satisfied
with the little place, Mr. Kitely?”
The visitor took the offered elbow-chair,
folded his hands on the top of his old-fashioned walking-cane,
and glanced at his landlord with a half-humorous,
half-quizzical expression. He was an elderly,
clean-shaven, grey-haired man, spare of figure, dressed
in rusty black; a wisp of white neckcloth at his throat
gave him something of a clerical appearance:
Cotherstone, who knew next to nothing about him, except
that he was able to pay his rent and taxes, had already
set him down as a retired verger of some cathedral.
“I should think you and Mr.
Mallalieu are in no need of a bit of money, Mr. Cotherstone,”
he said quietly. “Business seems to be good
with you, sir.”
“Oh, so-so,” replied Cotherstone,
off-handedly. “Naught to complain of, of
course. I’ll give you a receipt, Mr. Kitely,”
he went on, seating himself at his desk and taking
up a book of forms. “Let’s see twenty-five
pounds a year is six pound five a quarter there
you are, sir. Will you have a drop of whisky?”
Kitely laid a handful of gold and
silver on the desk, took the receipt, and nodded his
head, still watching Cotherstone with the same half-humorous
expression.
“Thank you,” he said. “I shouldn’t
mind.”
He watched Cotherstone produce a decanter
and glasses, watched him fetch fresh water from a
filter in the corner of the room, watched him mix the
drinks, and took his own with no more than a polite
nod of thanks. And Cotherstone, murmuring an
expression of good wishes, took a drink himself, and
sat down with his desk-chair turned towards his visitor.
“Aught you’d like doing
at the house, Mr. Kitely?” he asked.
“No,” answered Kitely, “no, I can’t
say that there is.”
There was something odd, almost taciturn,
in his manner, and Cotherstone glanced at him a little
wonderingly.
“And how do you like Highmarket,
now you’ve had a spell of it?” he inquired.
“Got settled down, I suppose, now?”
“It’s all that I expected,”
replied Kitely. “Quiet peaceful.
How do you like it?”
“Me!” exclaimed Cotherstone,
surprised. “Me? why, I’ve
had yes, five-and-twenty years of it!”
Kitely took another sip from his glass
and set it down. He gave Cotherstone a sharp
look.
“Yes,” he said, “yes five-and-twenty
years. You and your partner, both. Yes it’ll
be just about thirty years since I first saw you.
But you’ve forgotten.”
Cotherstone, who had been lounging
forward, warming his hands at the fire, suddenly sat
straight up in his chair. His face, always sharp
seemed to grow sharper as he turned to his visitor
with a questioning look.
“Since what?” he demanded.
“Since I first saw you and
Mr. Mallalieu,” replied Kitely. “As
I say, you’ve forgotten. But I
haven’t.”
Cotherstone sat staring at his tenant
for a full minute of speechlessness. Then he
slowly rose, walked over to the door, looked at it
to see that it was closed, and returning to the hearth,
fixed his eyes on Kitely.
“What do you mean?” he asked.
“Just what I say,” answered
Kitely, with a dry laugh. “It’s thirty
years since I first saw you and Mallalieu. That’s
all.”
“Where?” demanded Cotherstone.
Kitely motioned his landlord to sit
down. And Cotherstone sat down trembling.
His arm shook when Kitely laid a hand on it.
“Do you want to know where?”
he asked, bending close to Cotherstone. “I’ll
tell you. In the dock at Wilchester
Assizes. Eh?”
Cotherstone made no answer. He
had put the tips of his fingers together, and now
he was tapping the nails of one hand against the nails
of the other. And he stared and stared at the
face so close to his own as if it had been
the face of a man resurrected from the grave.
Within him there was a feeling of extraordinary physical
sickness; it was quickly followed by one of inertia,
just as extraordinary. He felt as if he had been
mesmerized; as if he could neither move nor speak.
And Kitely sat there, a hand on his victim’s
arm, his face sinister and purposeful, close to his.
“Fact!” he murmured.
“Absolute fact! I remember everything.
It’s come on me bit by bit, though. I thought
I knew you when I first came here then
I had a feeling that I knew Mallalieu. And in
time I remembered everything!
Of course, when I saw you both where I did
see you you weren’t Mallalieu & Cotherstone.
You were ”
Cotherstone suddenly made an effort,
and shook off the thin fingers which lay on his sleeve.
His pale face grew crimson, and the veins swelled
on his forehead.
“Confound you!” he said
in a low, concentrated voice. “Who are you?”
Kitely shook his head and smiled quietly.
“No need to grow warm,”
he answered. “Of course, it’s excusable
in you. Who am I? Well, if you really want
to know, I’ve been employed in the police line
for thirty-five years until lately.”
“A detective!” exclaimed Cotherstone.
“Not when I was present at Wilchester that
time,” replied Kitely. “But afterwards in
due course. Ah! do you know, I often
was curious as to what became of you both! But
I never dreamed of meeting you here.
Of course, you came up North after you’d done
your time? Changed your names, started a new
life and here you are! Clever!”
Cotherstone was recovering his wits.
He had got out of his chair by that time, and had
taken up a position on the hearthrug, his back to the
fire, his hands in his pockets, his eyes on his visitor.
He was thinking and for the moment he let
Kitely talk.
“Yes clever!”
continued Kitely in the same level, subdued tones,
“very clever indeed! I suppose you’d
carefully planted some of that money you got
hold of? Must have done, of course you’d
want money to start this business. Well, you’ve
done all this on the straight, anyhow. And you’ve
done well, too. Odd, isn’t it, that I should
come to live down here, right away in the far North
of England, and find you in such good circumstances,
too! Mr. Mallalieu, Mayor of Highmarket his
second term of office! Mr. Cotherstone, Borough
Treasurer of Highmarket now in his sixth
year of that important post! I say again you’ve
both done uncommonly well uncommonly!”
“Have you got any more to say?” asked
Cotherstone.
But Kitely evidently intended to say
what he had to say in his own fashion. He took
no notice of Cotherstone’s question, and presently,
as if he were amusing himself with reminiscences of
a long dead past, he spoke again, quietly and slowly.
“Yes,” he murmured, “uncommonly
well! And of course you’d have capital.
Put safely away, of course, while you were doing your
time. Let’s see it was a Building
Society that you defrauded, wasn’t it? Mallalieu
was treasurer, and you were secretary. Yes I
remember now. The amount was two thous ”
Cotherstone made a sudden exclamation
and a sharp movement both checked by an
equally sudden change of attitude and expression on
the part of the ex-detective. For Kitely sat
straight up and looked the junior partner squarely
in the face.
“Better not, Mr. Cotherstone!”
he said, with a grin that showed his yellow teeth.
“You can’t very well choke the life out
of me in your own office, can you? You couldn’t
hide my old carcase as easily as you and Mallalieu
hid those Building Society funds, you know. So be
calm! I’m a reasonable man and
getting an old man.”
He accompanied the last words with
a meaning smile, and Cotherstone took a turn or two
about the room, trying to steady himself. And
Kitely presently went on again, in the same monotonous
tones:
“Think it all out by
all means,” he said. “I don’t
suppose there’s a soul in all England but myself
knows your secret and Mallalieu’s.
It was sheer accident, of course, that I ever discovered
it. But I know! Just consider
what I do know. Consider, too, what you stand
to lose. There’s Mallalieu, so much respected
that he’s Mayor of this ancient borough for
the second time. There’s you so
much trusted that you’ve been Borough Treasurer
for years. You can’t afford to let me tell
the Highmarket folk that you two are ex-convicts!
Besides, in your case there’s another thing there’s
your daughter.”
Cotherstone groaned a deep,
unmistakable groan of sheer torture. But Kitely
went on remorselessly.
“Your daughter’s just
about to marry the most promising young man in the
place,” he said. “A young fellow with
a career before him. Do you think he’d
marry her if he knew that her father even
if it is thirty years ago had been convicted
of ”
“Look you here!” interrupted
Cotherstone, through set teeth. “I’ve
had enough! I’ve asked you once before
if you’d any more to say now I’ll
put it in another fashion. For I see what you’re
after and it’s blackmail! How
much do you want? Come on give it a
name!”
“Name nothing, till you’ve
told Mallalieu,” answered Kitely. “There’s
no hurry. You two can’t, and I shan’t,
run away. Time enough I’ve the
whip hand. Tell your partner, the Mayor, all
I’ve told you then you can put your
heads together, and see what you’re inclined
to do. An annuity, now? that would
suit me.”
“You haven’t mentioned
this to a soul?” asked Cotherstone anxiously.
“Bah!” sneered Kitely.
“D’ye think I’m a fool? Not
likely. Well now you know. I’ll
come in here again tomorrow afternoon. And you’ll
both be here, and ready with a proposal.”
He picked up his glass, leisurely
drank off its remaining contents, and without a word
of farewell opened the door and went quietly away.