Instead of replying to the policeman
by word or movement, Mallalieu glanced at Cotherstone.
There was a curious suggestion in that glance which
Cotherstone did not like. He was already angry;
Mallalieu’s inquiring look made him still angrier.
“Like to come?” asked Mallalieu, laconically.
“No!” answered Cotherstone,
turning towards the office. “It’s
naught to me.”
He disappeared within doors, and Mallalieu
walked out of the yard into the High Street to
run against Bent and Brereton, who were hurrying in
the direction of the police-station, in company with
another constable.
“Ah!” said Mallalieu as
they met. “So you’ve heard, too, I
suppose? Heard that Harborough’s been taken,
I mean. Now, how was he taken?” he went
on, turning to the policeman who had summoned him.
“And when, and where? let’s
be knowing about it.”
“He wasn’t taken, your
Worship,” replied the man. “Leastways,
not in what you’d call the proper way.
He came back to his house half an hour or so ago when
it was just getting nicely light and two
of our men that were there told him what was going
on, and he appeared to come straight down with them.
He says he knows naught, your Worship.”
“That’s what you’d
expect,” remarked Mallalieu, drily. “He’d
be a fool if he said aught else.”
He put his thumbs in the armholes
of his waistcoat, and, followed by the others, strolled
into the police-station as if he were dropping in on
business of trifling importance. And there was
nothing to be seen there which betokened that a drama
of life and death was being constructed in that formal-looking
place of neutral-coloured walls, precise furniture,
and atmosphere of repression. Three or four men
stood near the superintendent’s desk; a policeman
was writing slowly and laboriously on a big sheet
of blue paper at a side-table, a woman was coaxing
a sluggish fire to burn.
“The whole thing’s ridiculous!”
said a man’s scornful voice. “It
shouldn’t take five seconds to see that.”
Brereton instinctively picked out
the speaker. That was Harborough, of course the
tall man who stood facing the others and looking at
them as if he wondered how they could be as foolish
as he evidently considered them to be. He looked
at this man with great curiosity. There was certainly
something noticeable about him, he decided. A
wiry, alert, keen-eyed man, with good, somewhat gipsy-like
features, much tanned by the weather, as if he were
perpetually exposed to sun and wind, rain and hail;
sharp of movement, evidently of more than ordinary
intelligence, and, in spite of his rough garments
and fur cap, having an indefinable air of gentility
and breeding about him. Brereton had already noticed
the pitch and inflection of his voice; now, as Harborough
touched his cap to the Mayor, he noticed that his
hands, though coarsened and weather-browned, were
well-shaped and delicate. Something about him,
something in his attitude, the glance of his eye, seemed
to indicate that he was the social superior of the
policemen, uniformed or plain-clothed, who were watching
him with speculative and slightly puzzled looks.
“Well, and what’s all
this, now?” said Mallalieu coming to a halt and
looking round. “What’s he got to say,
like?”
The superintendent looked at Harborough
and nodded. And Harborough took that nod at its
true meaning, and he spoke readily.
“This!” he said, turning
to the new-comers, and finally addressing himself
to Mallalieu. “And it’s what I’ve
already said to the superintendent here. I know
nothing about what’s happened to Kitely.
I know no more of his murder than you do not
so much, I should say for I know naught
at all beyond what I’ve been told. I left
my house at eight o’clock last night I’ve
been away all night I got back at six o’clock
this morning. As soon as I heard what was afoot,
I came straight here. I put it to you, Mr. Mayor if
I’d killed this old man, do you think I’d
have come back? Is it likely?”
“You might ha’ done, you
know,” answered Mallalieu. “There’s
no accounting for what folks will do in
such cases. But what else? Say
aught you like it’s all informal,
this.”
“Very well,” continued
Harborough. “They tell me the old man was
strangled by a piece of cord that was evidently cut
off one of my coils. Now, is there any man in
his common senses would believe that if I did that
job, I should leave such a bit of clear evidence behind
me? I’m not a fool!”
“You might ha’ been interrupted
before you could take that cord off his neck,”
suggested Mallalieu.
“Aye but you’d
have to reckon up the average chances of that!”
exclaimed Harborough, with a sharp glance at the bystanders.
“And the chances are in my favour. No,
sir! whoever did this job, cut that length
of cord off my coil, which anybody could get at, and
used it to throw suspicion on me! That’s
the truth and you’ll find it out some
day, whatever happens now.”
Mallalieu exchanged glances with the
superintendent and then faced Harborough squarely,
with an air of inviting confidence.
“Now, my lad!” he said,
almost coaxingly. “There’s a very
simple thing to do, and it’ll clear this up
as far as you’re concerned. Just answer
a plain question. Where ha’ you been all
night?”
A tense silence fell broken
by the crackling of the wood in the grate, which the
charwoman had at last succeeded in stirring into a
blaze, and by the rattling of the fire-irons which
she now arranged in the fender. Everybody was
watching the suspected man, and nobody as keenly as
Brereton. And Brereton saw that a deadlock was
at hand. A strange look of obstinacy and hardness
came into Harborough’s eyes, and he shook his
head.
“No!” he answered.
“I shan’t say! The truth’ll
come out in good time without that. It’s
not necessary for me to say. Where I was during
the night is my business nobody else’s.”
“You’ll not tell?” asked Mallalieu.
“I shan’t tell,” replied Harborough.
“You’re in danger, you know,” said
Mallalieu.
“In your opinion,” responded
Harborough, doggedly. “Not in mine!
There’s law in this country. You can arrest
me, if you like but you’ll have your
work set to prove that I killed yon old man. No,
sir! But ” here he paused,
and looking round him, laughed almost maliciously “ but
I’ll tell you what I’ll do,” he
went on. “I’ll tell you this, if it’ll
do you any good if I liked to say the word,
I could prove my innocence down to the ground!
There!”
“And you won’t say that word?” asked
Mallalieu.
“I shan’t! Why?
Because it’s not necessary. Why!”
demanded Harborough, laughing with an expresssion
of genuine contempt. “What is there against
me? Naught! As I say, there’s law in
this country there’s such a thing
as a jury. Do you believe that any jury would
convict a man on what you’ve got? It’s
utter nonsense!”
The constable who had come down from
the Shawl with Bent and Brereton had for some time
been endeavouring to catch the eye of the superintendent.
Succeeding in his attempts at last, he beckoned that
official into a quiet corner of the room, and turning
his back on the group near the fireplace, pulled something
out of his pocket. The two men bent over it,
and the constable began to talk in whispers.
Mallalieu meanwhile was eyeing Harborough
in his stealthy, steady fashion. He looked as
if he was reckoning him up.
“Well, my lad,” he observed
at last. “You’re making a mistake.
If you can’t or won’t tell what you’ve
been doing with yourself between eight last night
and six this morning, why, then ”
The superintendent came back, holding
something in his hand. He, too, looked at Harborough.
“Will you hold up your left
foot? turn the sole up,” he asked.
“Just to see something.”
Harborough complied, readily, but
with obvious scornful impatience. And when he
had shown the sole of the left foot, the superintendent
opened his hand and revealed a small crescent-shaped
bit of bright steel.
“That’s off the toe of
your boot, Harborough,” he said. “You
know it is! And it’s been picked up just
now, as it were where this affair happened.
You must have lost it there during the last few hours,
because it’s quite bright not a speck
of rust on it, you see. What do you say to that,
now?”
“Naught!” retorted Harborough,
defiantly. “It is mine, of course I
noticed it was working loose yesterday. And if
it was picked up in that wood, what then? I passed
through there last night on my way to where
I was going. God you don’t mean
to say you’d set a man’s life on bits
o’things like that!”
Mallalieu beckoned the superintendent
aside and talked with him. Almost at once he
himself turned away and left the room, and the superintendent
came back to the group by the fireplace.
“Well, there’s no help
for it, Harborough,” he said. “We
shall have to detain you and I shall have
to charge you, presently. It can’t be helped and
I hope you’ll be able to clear yourself.”
“I expected nothing else,”
replied Harborough. “I’m not blaming
you nor anybody. Mr. Bent,”
he continued, turning to where Bent and Brereton stood
a little apart. “I’d be obliged to
you if you’d do something for me. Go and
tell my daughter about this, if you please! You
see, I came straight down here I didn’t
go into my house when I got back. If you’d
just step up and tell her and bid her not
be afraid there’s naught to be afraid
of, as she’ll find as everybody’ll
find.”
“Certainly,” said Bent.
“I’ll go at once.” He tapped
Brereton on the arm, and led him out into the street.
“Well?” he asked, when they were outside.
“What do you think of that, now?”
“That man gives one all the
suggestion of innocence,” remarked Brereton,
thoughtfully, “and from a merely superficial
observation of him, I, personally, should say he is
innocent. But then, you know, I’ve known
the most hardened and crafty criminals assume an air
of innocence, and keep it up, to the very end.
However, we aren’t concerned about that just
now the critical point here, for Harborough,
at any rate, is the evidence against him.”
“And what do you think of that?” asked
Bent.
“There’s enough to warrant
his arrest,” answered Brereton, “and he’ll
be committed on it, and he’ll go for trial.
All that’s certain unless he’s
a sensible man, and tells what he was doing with himself
between eight and ten o’clock last night.”
“Ah, and why doesn’t he?”
said Bent. “He must have some good reason.
I wonder if his daughter can persuade him?”
“Isn’t that his daughter
coming towards us?” inquired Brereton.
Bent glanced along the road and saw
Avice Harborough at a little distance, hastening in
their direction and talking earnestly to a middle-aged
man who was evidently listening with grave concern
to what she said.
“Yes, that’s she,”
he replied, “and that’s Northrop with her the
man that Mallalieu was playing cards with last night.
She’s governess to Northrop’s two younger
children I expect she’s heard about
her father, and has been to get Northrop to come down
with her he’s a magistrate.”
Avice listened with ill-concealed
impatience while Bent delivered his message.
He twice repeated Harborough’s injunction that
she was not to be afraid, and her impatience increased.
“I’m not afraid,”
she answered. “That is, afraid of nothing
but my father’s obstinacy! I know him.
And I know that if he’s said he won’t
tell anything about his whereabouts last night, he
won’t! And if you want to help him as
you seem to do you must recognize that.”
“Wouldn’t he tell you?” suggested
Brereton.
The girl shook her head.
“Once or twice a year,”
she answered, “he goes away for a night, like
that, and I never know never have known where
he goes. There’s some mystery about it I
know there is. He won’t tell he’ll
let things go to the last, and even then he won’t
tell. You won’t be able to help him that
way there’s only one way you can help.”
“What way?” asked Bent.
“Find the murderer!” exclaimed
Avice with a quick flash of her eyes in Brereton’s
direction. “My father is as innocent as
I am find the man who did it and clear
him that way. Don’t wait for what these
police people do they’ll waste time
over my father. Do something! They’re
all on the wrong track let somebody get
on the right one!”
“She’s right!” said
Northrop, a shrewd-faced little man, who looked genuinely
disturbed. “You know what police are, Mr.
Bent if they get hold of one notion they’re
deaf to all others. While they’re concentrating
on Harborough, you know, the real man’ll be going
free laughing in his sleeve, very like.”
“But what are we
to do?” asked Bent. “What are we to
start on?”
“Find out about Kitely himself!”
exclaimed Avice. “Who knows anything about
him? He may have had enemies he may
have been tracked here. Find out if there was
any motive!” She paused and looked half appealingly,
half-searchingly at Brereton. “I heard you’re
a barrister a clever one,” she went
on, hesitating a little. “Can’t can’t
you suggest anything?”
“There’s something I’ll
suggest at once,” responded Brereton impulsively.
“Whatever else is done, your father’s got
to be defended. I’ll defend him to
the best of my ability if you’ll let
me and at no cost to him.”
“Well spoken, sir!” exclaimed
Northrop. “That’s the style!”
“But we must keep to legal etiquette,”
continued Brereton, smiling at the little man’s
enthusiasm. “You must go to a solicitor
and tell him to instruct me it’s
a mere form. Mr. Bent will take you to his solicitor,
and he’ll see me. Then I can appear in due
form when they bring your father before the magistrates.
Look here, Bent,” he went on, wishing to stop
any expression of gratitude from the girl, “you
take Miss Harborough to your solicitor if
he isn’t up, rouse him out. Tell him what
I propose to do, and make an appointment with him for
me. Now run along, both of you I want
to speak to this gentleman a minute.”
He took Northrop’s arm, turned
him in the direction of the Shawl, walked him a few
paces, and then asked him a direct question.
“Now, what do you know of this man Harborough?”
“He’s a queer chap a
mystery man, sir,” answered Northrop. “A
sort of jack-of-all-trades. He’s a better
sort you’d say, to hear him talk,
he’d been a gentleman. You can see what
his daughter is he educated her well.
He’s means of some sort apart from
what he earns. Yes, there’s some mystery
about that man, sir but I’ll never
believe he did this job. No, sir!”
“Then we must act on the daughter’s
suggestion and find out who did,” observed Brereton.
“There is as much mystery about that as about
Harborough.”
“All mystery, sir!” agreed
Northrop. “It’s odd I came
through them woods on the Shawl there about a quarter
to ten last night: I’d been across to the
other side to see a man of mine that’s poorly
in bed. Now, I never heard aught, never saw aught but
then, it’s true I was hurrying I’d
made an appointment for a hand at whist with the Mayor
at my house at ten o’clock, and I thought I
was late. I never heard a sound not
so much as a dead twig snap! But then, it would
ha’ been before that at some time.”
“Yes, at some time,” agreed
Brereton. “Well, I’ll see
you in court, no doubt.”
He turned back, and followed Bent
and Avice at a distance, watching them thoughtfully.
“At some time?” he mused.
“Um! Well, I’m now conversant with
the movements of two inhabitants of Highmarket at
a critical period of last night. Mallalieu didn’t
go to cards with Northrop until ten o’clock,
and at ten o’clock Cotherstone returned to his
house after being absent one hour.”