Ever since they had left the house
at the foot of the pine wood, Brereton had been conscious
of a curious psychological atmosphere, centring in
Cotherstone. It had grown stronger as events had
developed; it was still stronger now as they stood
outside the dead man’s cottage, the light from
the open door and the white-curtained window falling
on Cotherstone’s excited face. Cotherstone,
it seemed to Brereton, was unduly eager about something he
might almost be said to be elated. All of his
behaviour was odd. He had certainly been shocked
when Garthwaite burst in with the news but
this shock did not seem to be of the ordinary sort.
He had looked like fainting but when he
recovered himself his whole attitude (so, at any rate,
it had seemed to Brereton) had been that of a man
who has just undergone a great relief. To put
the whole thing into a narrow compass, it seemed as
if Cotherstone appeared to be positively pleased to
hear and to find beyond doubt that
Kitely was dead. And now, as he stood glancing
from one young man to the other, his eyes glittered
as if he were absolutely enjoying the affair:
he reminded Brereton of that type of theatre-goer
who will insist on pointing out stage effects as they
occur before his eyes, forcing his own appreciation
of them upon fellow-watchers whose eyes are as keen
as his own.
“A strong clue!” repeated
Cotherstone, and said it yet again. “A good
’un! And if it’s right, it’ll
clear matters up.”
“What is it?” asked Bent.
He, too, seemed to be conscious that there was something
odd about his prospective father-in-law, and he was
gazing speculatively at him as if in wonder.
“What sort of a clue?”
“It’s a wonder it didn’t
strike me and you, too at first,”
said Cotherstone, with a queer sound that was half
a chuckle. “But as long as it’s struck
somebody, eh? One’s as good as another.
You can’t think of what it is, now?”
“I don’t know what you’re
thinking about,” replied Bent, half impatiently.
Cotherstone gave vent to an unmistakable
chuckle at that, and he motioned them to follow him
into the cottage.
“Come and see for yourselves,
then,” he said. “You’ll spot
it. But, anyway Mr. Brereton, being
a stranger, can’t be expected to.”
The three men walked into the living-room
of the cottage a good-sized, open-raftered,
old-fashioned place, wherein burnt a bright fire, at
either side of which stood two comfortable armchairs.
Before one of these chairs, their toes pointing upwards
against the fender, were a pair of slippers; on a
table close by stood an old lead tobacco-box, flanked
by a church-warden pipe, a spirit decanter, a glass,
and a plate on which were set out sugar and lemon these
Brereton took to be indicative that Kitely, his evening
constitutional over, was in the habit of taking a
quiet pipe and a glass of something warm before going
to bed. And looking round still further he became
aware of an open door the door into which
Miss Pett had withdrawn and of a bed within
on which Kitely now lay, with Dr. Rockcliffe and the
police-sergeant bending over him. The other policemen
stood by the table in the living-room, and one of
them the man who had picked up the pocket-book whispered
audibly to Cotherstone as he and his companions entered.
“The doctor’s taking it
off him,” he said, with a meaning nod of his
head. “I’ll lay aught it’s as
I say, Mr. Cotherstone.”
“Looks like it,” agreed
Cotherstone, rubbing his hands. “It certainly
looks like it, George. Sharp of you to notice
it, though.”
Brereton took this conversation to
refer to the mysterious clue, and his suspicion was
confirmed a moment later. The doctor and the sergeant
came into the living-room, the doctor carrying something
in his hand which he laid down on the centre table
in full view of all of them. And Brereton saw
then that he had removed from the dead man’s
neck the length of grey cord with which he had been
strangled.
There was something exceedingly sinister
in the mere placing of that cord before the eyes of
these living men. It had wrought the death of
another man, who, an hour before, had been as full
of vigorous life as themselves; some man, equally
vigorous, had used it as the instrument of a foul
murder. Insignificant in itself, a mere piece
of strongly spun and twisted hemp, it was yet singularly
suggestive one man, at any rate, amongst
those who stood looking at it, was reminded by it that
the murderer who had used it must even now have the
fear of another and a stronger cord before him.
“Find who that cord belongs
to, and you may get at something,” suddenly
observed the doctor, glancing at the policemen.
“You say it’s a butcher’s cord?”
The man who had just whispered to Cotherstone nodded.
“It’s a pig-killer’s
cord, sir,” he answered. “It’s
what a pig-killer fastens the pig down with on
the cratch.”
“A cratch? what’s
that?” asked Brereton, who had gone close to
the table to examine the cord, and had seen that,
though slender, it was exceedingly strong, and of
closely wrought fibre. “Is it a sort of
hurdle?”
“That’s it, sir,”
assented the policeman. “It is a sort of
hurdle on four legs. They lay the
pig on it, don’t you see, and tie it down with
a cord of this sort this cord’s been
used for that it’s greasy with long
use.”
“And it has been cut off a longer
piece, of course,” said the doctor. “These
cords are of considerable length, aren’t they?”
“Good length, sir there’s
a regular coil, like,” said the man. He,
too, bent down and looked at the length before him.
“This has been cut off what you might call recent,”
he went on, pointing to one end.
“And cut off with a sharp knife, too.”
The police sergeant glanced at the
doctor as if asking advice on the subject of putting
his thoughts into words.
“Well?” said the doctor,
with a nod of assent. “Of course, you’ve
got something in your mind, sergeant?”
“Well, there is a man who kills
pigs, and has such cords as that, lives close by,
doctor,” he answered. “You know who
I mean the man they call Gentleman Jack.”
“You mean Harborough,”
said the doctor. “Well you’d
better ask him if he knows anything. Somebody
might have stolen one of his cords. But there
are other pig-killers in the town, of course.”
“Not on this side the town,
there aren’t,” remarked another policeman.
“What is plain,” continued
the doctor, looking at Cotherstone and the others,
“is that Kitely was strangled by this rope, and
that everything on him of any value was taken.
You’d better find out what he had, or was likely
to have, on him, sergeant. Ask the housekeeper.”
Miss Pett came from the inner room,
where she had already begun her preparations for laying
out the body. She was as calm as when Bent first
told her of what had occurred, and she stood at the
end of the table, the cord between her and her questioners,
and showed no emotion, no surprise at what had occurred.
“Can you tell aught about this,
ma’am?” asked the sergeant. “You
see your master’s met his death at somebody’s
hands, and there’s no doubt he’s been
robbed, too. Do you happen to know what he had
on him?”
The housekeeper, who had her arms
full of linen, set her burden down on a clothes-horse
in front of the fire before she replied. She seemed
to be thinking deeply, and when she turned round again,
it was to shake her queerly ornamented head.
“Well, I couldn’t say
exactly,” she answered. “But I shouldn’t
wonder if it was a good deal for such as
him, you know. He did carry money on him he
was never short of money ever since I knew him, and
sometimes he’d a fair amount in his pockets I
know, of course, because he’d pull it out, loose
gold, and silver, and copper, and I’ve seen him
take bank-notes out of his pocket-book. But he’d
be very like to have a good deal more than usual on
him tonight.”
“Why?” asked the sergeant.
“Because he’d been to
the bank this morning to draw his pension money,”
replied Miss Pett. “I don’t know how
much that would be, any more than I know where it
came from. He was a close man he’d
never tell anybody more than he liked, and he never
told me aught about that. But I do know it was
what you’d call a fair amount for
a man that lives in a cottage. He went to the
bank this noon he always went once a quarter and
he said this afternoon that he’d go and pay
his rent to Mr. Cotherstone there ”
“As he did,” muttered Cotherstone, “yes he
did that.”
“Well, he’d have all the
rest of his money on him,” continued the housekeeper.
“And he’d have what he had before, because
he’d other money coming in than that pension.
And I tell you he was the sort of man that carried
his money about him he was foolish that
way. And then he’d a very valuable watch
and chain he told me they were a presentation,
and cost nearly a hundred pounds. And of course,
he’d a pocket-book full of papers.”
“This pocket-book?” asked the sergeant.
“Aye, that’s it, right
enough,” assented Miss Pett. “But
he always had it bursting with bits of letters and
papers. You don’t mean to say you found
it empty? You did? very well then,
I’m no fool, and I say that if he’s been
murdered, there’s been some reason for it altogether
apart from robbing him of what money and things he
had on him! Whoever’s taken his papers
wanted ’em bad!”
“About his habits, now?”
said the sergeant, ignoring Miss Pett’s suggestion.
“Did he go walking on the Shawl every night?”
“Regular as clock-work,”
answered the housekeeper. “He used to read
and write a deal at night then he’d
side away all his books and papers, get his supper,
and go out for an hour, walking round and about.
Then he’d come in, put on his slippers there
they are, set down to warm for him smoke
one pipe, drink one glass of toddy there’s
the stuff for it and go to bed. He
was the regularest man I ever knew, in all he
did.”
“Was he out longer than usual
tonight?” asked Bent, who saw that the sergeant
had no more to ask. “You seemed to suggest
that, when we came.”
“Well, he was a bit longer,”
admitted Miss Pett. “Of course, he varied.
But an hour was about his time. Up and down and
about the hill-side he’d go in and
out of the coppices. I’ve warned him more
than once.”
“But why?” asked Brereton,
whose curiosity was impelling him to take a part in
this drama. “What reason had you for warning
him?”
Miss Pett turned and looked scrutinizingly
at her last questioner. She took a calm and close
observation of him and her curious face relaxed into
something like a smile.
“I can tell what you are, mister,”
she said. “A law gentleman! I’ve
seen your sort many a time. And you’re
a sharp ’un, too! Well you’re
young, but you’re old enough to have heard a
thing or two. Did you never hear that women have
got what men haven’t instinct?”
“Do you really tell me that
the only reason you had for warning him against going
out late at night was instinct?” asked
Brereton. “Come, now!”
“Mostly instinct, anyhow,”
she answered. “Women have a sort of feeling
about things that men haven’t leastways,
no men that I’ve ever met had it. But of
course, I’d more than that. Mr. Kitely,
now, he was a townsman a London man.
I’m a countrywoman. He didn’t understand you
couldn’t get him to understand that
it’s not safe to go walking in lonely places
in country districts like this late at night.
When I’d got to know his habits, I expostulated
with him more than once. I pointed out to him
that in spots like this, where there’s naught
nearer than them houses at the foot of the hill one
way, and Harborough’s cottage another way, and
both of ’em a good quarter of a mile off, and
where there’s all these coverts and coppices
and rocks, it was not safe for an elderly man who
sported a fine gold watch and chain to go wandering
about in the darkness. There’s always plenty
of bad characters in country places who’d knock
the King himself on the head for the sake of as much
as Mr. Kitely had on him, even if it was no more than
the chain which every Tom and Dick could see!
And it’s turned out just as I prophesied.
He’s come to it!”
“But you said just now that
he must have been murdered for something else than
his valuables,” said Brereton.
“I said that if his papers were
gone, somebody must have wanted them bad,” retorted
Miss Pett. “Anyway, what’s happened
is just what I felt might happen, and there he is dead.
And I should be obliged to some of you if you’d
send up a woman or two to help me lay him out, for
I can’t be expected to do everything by myself,
nor to stop in this cottage alone, neither!”
Leaving the doctor and a couple of
policemen to arrange matters with the housekeeper,
the sergeant went outside, followed by the others.
He turned to Cotherstone.
“I’m going down to Harborough’s
cottage, at the other end of the Shawl,” he
said. “I don’t expect to learn aught
much there yet but I can see
if he’s at home, anyway. If any of you gentlemen
like to come down ”
Bent laid a hand on Cotherstone’s
arm and turned him in the direction of his house.
“Brereton and I’ll go
with the sergeant,” he said. “You
must go home Lettie’ll be anxious
about things. Go down with him, Mr. Garthwaite you’ll
both hear more later.”
To Brereton’s great surprise,
Cotherstone made no objection to this summary dismissal.
He and Garthwaite went off in one direction; the others,
led by the observant policeman who had found the empty
pocket-book and recognized the peculiar properties
of the cord, turned away in another.
“Where’s this we’re
going now?” asked Brereton as he and Bent followed
their leaders through the trees and down the slopes
of the Shawl.
“To John Harborough’s
cottage at the other end of the hill,”
answered Bent. “He’s the man they
spoke of in there. He’s a queer character a
professional pig-killer, who has other trades as well.
He does a bit of rat-catching, and a bit of mole-catching and
a good deal of poaching. In fact, he’s
an odd person altogether, not only in character but
in appearance. And the curious thing is that
he’s got an exceedingly good-looking and accomplished
daughter, a really superior girl who’s been
well educated and earns her living as a governess in
the town. Queer pair they make if you ever see
them together!”
“Does she live with him?” asked Brereton.
“Oh yes, she lives with him!”
replied Bent. “And I believe that they’re
very devoted to each other, though everybody marvels
that such a man should have such a daughter.
There’s a mystery about that man odd
character that he is, he’s been well bred, and
the folk hereabouts call him Gentleman Jack.”
“Won’t all this give the
girl a fright?” suggested Brereton. “Wouldn’t
it be better if somebody went quietly to the man’s
cottage?”
But when they came to Harborough’s
cottage, at the far end of the Shawl, it was all in
darkness.
“Still, they aren’t gone
to bed,” suddenly observed the policeman who
had a faculty for seeing things. “There’s
a good fire burning in the kitchen grate, and they
wouldn’t leave that. Must be out, both of
’em.”
“Go in and knock quietly,” counselled
the sergeant.
He followed the policeman up the flagged
walk to the cottage door, and the other two presently
went after them. In the starlight Brereton looked
round at these new surroundings an old,
thatched cottage, set in a garden amongst trees and
shrubs, with a lean-to shed at one end of it, and
over everything an atmosphere of silence.
The silence was suddenly broken.
A quick, light step sounded on the flagged path behind
them, and the policemen turned their lamps in its
direction. And Brereton, looking sharply round,
became aware of the presence of a girl, who looked
at these visitors wonderingly out of a pair of beautiful
grey eyes.