For some moments after Kitely had
left him, Cotherstone stood vacantly staring at the
chair in which the blackmailer had sat. As yet
he could not realize things. He was only filled
with a queer, vague amazement about Kitely himself.
He began to look back on his relations with Kitely.
They were recent very recent, only of yesterday,
as you might say. Kitely had come to him, one
day about three months previously, told him that he
had come to these parts for a bit of a holiday, taken
a fancy to a cottage which he, Cotherstone, had to
let, and inquired its rent. He had mentioned,
casually, that he had just retired from business,
and wanted a quiet place wherein to spend the rest
of his days. He had taken the cottage, and given
his landlord satisfactory references as to his ability
to pay the rent and Cotherstone, always
a busy man, had thought no more about him. Certainly
he had never anticipated such an announcement as that
which Kitely had just made to him never
dreamed that Kitely had recognized him and Mallalieu
as men he had known thirty years ago.
It had been Cotherstone’s life-long
endeavour to forget all about the event of thirty
years ago, and to a large extent he had succeeded in
dulling his memory. But Kitely had brought it
all back and now everything was fresh to
him. His brows knitted and his face grew dark
as he thought of one thing in his past of which Kitely
had spoken so easily and glibly the dock.
He saw himself in that dock again and Mallalieu
standing by him. They were not called Mallalieu
and Cotherstone then, of course. He remembered
what their real names were he remembered,
too, that, until a few minutes before, he had certainly
not repeated them, even to himself, for many a long
year. Oh, yes he remembered everything he
saw it all again. The case had excited plenty
of attention in Wilchester at the time Wilchester,
that for thirty years had been so far away in thought
and in actual distance that it might have been some
place in the Antipodes. It was not a nice case even
now, looking back upon it from his present standpoint,
it made him blush to think of. Two better-class
young working-men, charged with embezzling the funds
of a building society to which they had acted as treasurer
and secretary! a bad case. The Court
had thought it a bad case, and the culprits had been
sentenced to two years’ imprisonment. And
now Cotherstone only remembered that imprisonment
as one remembers a particularly bad dream. Yes it
had been real.
His eyes, moody and brooding, suddenly
shifted their gaze from the easy chair to his own
hands they were shaking. Mechanically
he took up the whisky decanter from his desk, and
poured some of its contents into his glass the
rim of the glass tinkled against the neck of the decanter.
Yes that had been a shock, right enough,
he muttered to himself, and not all the whisky in
the world would drive it out of him. But a drink neat
and stiff would pull his nerves up to pitch,
and so he drank, once, twice, and sat down with the
glass in his hand to think still more.
That old Kitely was shrewd shrewd!
He had at once hit on a fact which those Wilchester
folk of thirty years ago had never suspected.
It had been said at the time that the two offenders
had lost the building society’s money in gambling
and speculation, and there had been grounds for such
a belief. But that was not so. Most of the
money had been skilfully and carefully put where the
two conspirators could lay hands on it as soon as
it was wanted, and when the term of imprisonment was
over they had nothing to do but take possession of
it for their own purposes. They had engineered
everything very well Cotherstone’s
essentially constructive mind, regarding their doings
from the vantage ground of thirty years’ difference,
acknowledged that they had been cute, crafty, and
cautious to an admirable degree of perfection.
Quietly and unobtrusively they had completely disappeared
from their own district in the extreme South of England,
when their punishment was over. They had let
it get abroad that they were going to another continent,
to retrieve the past and start a new life; it was even
known that they repaired to Liverpool, to take ship
for America. But in Liverpool they had shuffled
off everything of the past names, relations,
antecedents. There was no reason why any one should
watch them out of the country, but they had adopted
precautions against such watching. They separated,
disappeared, met again in the far North, in a sparsely-populated,
lonely country of hill and dale, led there by an advertisement
which they had seen in a local newspaper, met with
by sheer chance in a Liverpool hotel. There was
an old-established business to sell as a going concern,
in the dale town of Highmarket: the two ex-convicts
bought it. From that time they were Anthony Mallalieu
and Milford Cotherstone, and the past was dead.
During the thirty years in which that
past had been dead, Cotherstone had often heard men
remark that this world of ours is a very small one,
and he had secretly laughed at them. To him and
to his partner the world had been wide and big enough.
They were now four hundred miles away from the scene
of their crime. There was nothing whatever to
bring Wilchester people into that northern country,
nothing to take Highmarket folk anywhere near Wilchester.
Neither he nor Mallalieu ever went far afield London
they avoided with particular care, lest they should
meet any one there who had known them in the old days.
They had stopped at home, and minded their business,
year in and year out. Naturally, they had prospered.
They had speedily become known as hard-working young
men; then as good employers of labour; finally as
men of considerable standing in a town of which there
were only some five thousand inhabitants. They
had been invited to join in public matters Mallalieu
had gone into the Town Council first; Cotherstone had
followed him later. They had been as successful
in administering the affairs of the little town as
in conducting their own, and in time both had attained
high honours: Mallalieu was now wearing the mayoral
chain for the second time; Cotherstone, as Borough
Treasurer, had governed the financial matters of Highmarket
for several years. And as he sat there, staring
at the red embers of the office fire, he remembered
that there were no two men in the whole town who were
more trusted and respected than he and his partner his
partner in success ... and in crime.
But that was not all. Both men
had married within a few years of their coming to
Highmarket. They had married young women of good
standing in the neighbourhood; it was perhaps well,
reflected Cotherstone, that their wives were dead,
and that Mallalieu had never been blessed with children.
But Cotherstone had a daughter, of whom he was as fond
as he was proud; for her he had toiled and contrived,
always intending her to be a rich woman. He had
seen to it that she was well educated; he had even
allowed himself to be deprived of her company for two
years while she went to an expensive school, far away;
since she had grown up, he had surrounded her with
every comfort. And now, as Kitely had reminded
him, she was engaged to be married to the most promising
young man in Highmarket, Windle Bent, a rich manufacturer,
who had succeeded to and greatly developed a fine
business, who had already made his mark on the Town
Council, and was known to cherish Parliamentary ambitions.
Everybody knew that Bent had a big career before him;
he had all the necessary gifts; all the proper stuff
in him for such a career. He would succeed; he
would probably win a title for himself a
baronetcy, perhaps a peerage. This was just the
marriage which Cotherstone desired for Lettie; he
would die more than happy if he could once hear her
called Your Ladyship. And now here was this!
Cotherstone sat there a long time,
thinking, reflecting, reckoning up things. The
dusk had come; the darkness followed; he made no movement
towards the gas bracket. Nothing mattered but
his trouble. That must be dealt with. At
all costs, Kitely’s silence must be purchased aye,
even if it cost him and Mallalieu one-half of what
they had. And, of course, Mallalieu must be told at
once.
A tap of somebody’s knuckles
on the door of the private room roused him at last,
and he sprang up and seized a box of matches as he
bade the person without to enter. The clerk came
in, carrying a sheaf of papers, and Cotherstone bustled
to the gas.
“Dear me!” he exclaimed.
“I’ve dropped off into a nod over this
warm fire, Stoner. What’s that letters?”
“There’s all these letters
to sign, Mr. Cotherstone, and these three contracts
to go through,” answered the clerk. “And
there are those specifications to examine, as well.”
“Mr. Mallalieu’ll have
to see those,” said Cotherstone. He lighted
the gas above his desk, put the decanter and the glasses
aside, and took the letters. “I’ll
sign these, anyhow,” he said, “and then
you can post ’em as you go home. The other
papers’ll do tomorrow morning.”
The clerk stood slightly behind his
master as Cotherstone signed one letter after the
other, glancing quickly through each. He was a
young man of twenty-two or three, with quick, observant
manners, a keen eye, and a not handsome face, and
as he stood there the face was bent on Cotherstone
with a surmising look. Stoner had noticed his
employer’s thoughtful attitude, the gloom in
which Cotherstone sat, the decanter on the table,
the glass in Cotherstone’s hand, and he knew
that Cotherstone was telling a fib when he said he
had been asleep. He noticed, too, the six sovereigns
and the two or three silver coins lying on the desk,
and he wondered what had made his master so abstracted
that he had forgotten to pocket them. For he
knew Cotherstone well, and Cotherstone was so particular
about money that he never allowed even a penny to lie
out of place.
“There!” said Cotherstone,
handing back the batch of letters. “You’ll
be going now, I suppose. Put those in the post.
I’m not going just yet, so I’ll lock up
the office. Leave the outer door open Mr.
Mallalieu’s coming back.”
He pulled down the blinds of the private
room when Stoner had gone, and that done he fell to
walking up and down, awaiting his partner. And
presently Mallalieu came, smoking a cigar, and evidently
in as good humour as usual.
“Oh, you’re still here?”
he said as he entered. “I what’s
up?”
He had come to a sudden halt close
to his partner, and he now stood staring at him.
And Cotherstone, glancing past Mallalieu’s broad
shoulder at a mirror, saw that he himself had become
startlingly pale and haggard. He looked twenty
years older than he had looked when he shaved himself
that morning.
“Aren’t you well?” demanded Mallalieu.
“What is it?”
Cotherstone made no answer. He
walked past Mallalieu and looked into the outer office.
The clerk had gone, and the place was only half-lighted.
But Cotherstone closed the door with great care, and
when he went back to Mallalieu he sank his voice to
a whisper.
“Bad news!” he said. “Bad bad
news!”
“What about?” asked Mallalieu. “Private?
Business?”
Cotherstone put his lips almost close to Mallalieu’s
ear.
“That man Kitely my
new tenant,” he whispered. “He’s
met us you and me before!”
Mallalieu’s rosy cheeks paled, and he turned
sharply on his companion.
“Met us!” he exclaimed.
“Him! Where? when?”
Cotherstone got his lips still closer.
“Wilchester!” he answered. “Thirty
years ago. He knows!”
Mallalieu dropped into the nearest
chair: dropped as if he had been shot. His
face, full of colour from the keen air outside, became
as pale as his partner’s; his jaw fell, his
mouth opened; a strained look came into his small
eyes.
“Gad!” he muttered hoarsely. “You you
don’t say so!”
“It’s a fact,” answered
Cotherstone. “He knows everything.
He’s an ex-detective. He was there that
day.”
“Tracked us down?” asked Mallalieu.
“That it?”
“No,” said Cotherstone.
“Sheer chance pure accident.
Recognized us after he came here.
Aye after all these years! Thirty years!”
Mallalieu’s eyes, roving about
the room, fell on the decanter. He pulled himself
out of his chair, found a clean glass, and took a stiff
drink. And his partner, watching him, saw that
his hands, too, were shaking.
“That’s a facer!”
said Mallalieu. His voice had grown stronger,
and the colour came back to his cheeks. “A
real facer! As you say after thirty
years! It’s hard it’s blessed
hard! And what does he want? What’s
he going to do?”
“Wants to blackmail us, of course,”
replied Cotherstone, with a mirthless laugh.
“What else should he do? What could he do?
Why, he could tell all Highmarket who we are, and ”
“Aye, aye! but the
thing is here,” interrupted Mallalieu.
“Supposing we do square him? is
there any reliance to be placed on him then?
It ’ud only be the old game he’d
only want more.”
“He said an annuity,”
remarked Cotherstone, thoughtfully. “And
he added significantly, that he was getting an old
man.”
“How old?” demanded Mallalieu.
“Between sixty and seventy,”
said Cotherstone. “I’m under the impression
that he could be squared, could be satisfied.
He’ll have to be! We can’t let it
get out I can’t, any way. There’s
my daughter to think of.”
“D’ye think I’d
let it get out?” asked Mallalieu. “No! all
I’m thinking of is if we really can silence
him. I’ve heard of cases where a man’s
paid blackmail for years and years, and been no better
for it in the end.”
“Well he’s
coming here tomorrow afternoon some time,” said
Cotherstone. “We’d better see him together.
After all, a hundred a year a couple of
hundred a year ’ud be better than exposure.”
Mallalieu drank off his whisky and
pushed the glass aside.
“I’ll consider it,”
he remarked. “What’s certain sure
is that he’ll have to be quietened. I must
go I’ve an appointment. Are you
coming out?”
“Not yet,” replied Cotherstone.
“I’ve all these papers to go through.
Well, think it well over. He’s a man to
be feared.”
Mallalieu made no answer. He,
like Kitely, went off without a word of farewell,
and Cotherstone was once more left alone.