Bent, taking his guest home to dinner
after the police-court proceedings, showed a strong
and encouraging curiosity. He, in common with
all the rest of the townsfolk who had contrived to
squeeze into the old court-house, had been immensely
interested in Brereton’s examination of Miss
Pett. Now he wanted to know what it meant, what
it signified, what was its true relation to the case?
“You don’t mean to say
that you suspect that queer old atomy of a woman!”
he exclaimed incredulously as they sat down to Bent’s
bachelor table. “And yet you
really looked as if you did and contrived
to throw something very like it into your voice, too!
Man, alive! half the Highmarket wiseacres’ll
be sitting down to their roast mutton at this minute
in the full belief that Miss Pett strangled her master!”
“Well, and why not?” asked
Brereton, coolly. “Surely, if you face facts,
there’s just as much reason to suspect Miss Pett
as there is to suspect Harborough. They’re
both as innocent as you are, in all probability.
Granted there’s some nasty evidence against Harborough,
there’s also the presumption founded
on words from her own lips that Miss Pett
expects to benefit by this old man’s death.
She’s a strong and wiry woman, and you tell
me Kitely was getting somewhat enfeebled she
might have killed him, you know. Murders, my
dear fellow, are committed by the most unlikely people,
and for curious reasons: they have been committed
by quite respectable females like Miss
Pett for nothing but a mere whim.”
“Do you really suspect her?”
demanded Bent. “That’s what I want
to know.”
“That’s what I shan’t
tell you,” replied Brereton, with a good-humoured
laugh. “All I shall tell you is that I believe
this murder to be either an exceedingly simple affair,
or a very intricate affair. Wait a little wait,
for instance, until Mr. Christopher Pett arrives with
that will. Then we shall advance a considerable
stage.”
“I’m sorry for Avice Harborough,
anyway,” remarked Bent, “and it’s
utterly beyond me to imagine why her father can’t
say where he was last night. I suppose there’d
be an end of the case if he’d prove where he
was, eh?”
“He’d have to account
for every minute between nine and ten o’clock,”
answered Brereton. “It would be no good,
for instance, if we proved to a jury that from say
ten o’clock until five o’clock next morning,
Harborough was at shall we say your county
town, Norcaster. You may say it would take Harborough
an hour to get from here to Norcaster, and an hour
to return, and that would account for his whereabouts
between nine and ten last night, and between five
and six this morning. That wouldn’t do because,
according to the evidence, Kitely left his house just
before nine o’clock, and he may have been killed
immediately. Supposing Harborough killed him
at nine o’clock precisely, Harborough would even
then be able to arrive in Norcaster by ten. What
we want to know, in order to fully establish Harborough’s
innocence is where was he, what was he
doing, from the moment he left his cottage last night
until say a quarter past nine, the latest moment at
which, according to what the doctor said, the murder
could have been committed?”
“Off on one of his poaching
expeditions, I suppose,” said Bent.
“No that’s
not at all likely,” answered Brereton. “There’s
some very strange mystery about that man, and I’ll
have to get at the truth of it in spite
of his determined reticence! Bent! I’m
going to see this thing right through! The Norcaster
Assizes will be on next month, and of course Harborough
will be brought up then. I shall stop in this
neighbourhood and work out the case it’ll
do me a lot of good in all sorts of ways experience work the
interest in it and the kudos I shall
win if I get my man off as I will!
So I shall unashamedly ask you to give me house-room
for that time.”
“Of course,” replied Bent.
“The house is yours only too glad,
old chap. But what a queer case it is! I’d
give something, you know, to know what you really
think about it.”
“I’ve not yet settled
in my own mind what I do think about it,” said
Brereton. “But I’ll suggest a few
things to you which you can think over at your leisure.
What motive could Harborough have had for killing
Kitely? There’s abundant testimony in the
town from his daughter, from neighbours,
from tradesmen that Harborough was never
short of money he’s always had more
money than most men in his position are supposed to
have. Do you think it likely that he’d have
killed Kitely for thirty pounds? Again does
anybody of sense believe that a man of Harborough’s
evident ability would have murdered his victim so clumsily
as to leave a direct clue behind him? Now turn
to another side. Is it not evident that if Miss
Pett wanted to murder Kitely she’d excellent
chances of not only doing so, but of directing suspicion
to another person? She knew her master’s
habits she knew the surroundings she
knew where Harborough kept that cord she
is the sort of person who could steal about as quietly
as a cat. If as may be established
by the will which her nephew has, and of which, in
spite of all she affirmed, or, rather, swore, she
may have accurate knowledge she benefits
by Kitely’s death, is there not motive there?
Clearly, Miss Pett is to be suspected!”
“Do you mean to tell me that
she’d kill old Kitely just to get possession
of the bit he had to leave?” asked Bent incredulously.
“Come, now, that’s a stiff
proposition.”
“Not to me,” replied Brereton.
“I’ve known of a case in which a young
wife carefully murdered an old husband because she
was so eager to get out of the dull life she led with
him that she couldn’t wait a year or two for
his natural decease; I’ve heard of a case in
which an elderly woman poisoned her twin-sister, so
that she could inherit her share of an estate and
go to live in style at Brighton. I don’t
want to do Miss Pett any injustice, but I say that
there are grounds for suspecting her and
they may be widened.”
“Then it comes to this,”
said Bent. “There are two people under
suspicion: Harborough’s suspected by the
police Miss Pett’s suspected by you.
And it may be, and probably is, the truth that both
are entirely innocent. In that case, who’s
the guilty person?”
“Ah, who indeed?” assented
Brereton, half carelessly. “That is a question.
But my duty is to prove that my client is not guilty.
And as you’re going to attend to your business
this afternoon, I’ll do a little attending to
mine by thinking things over.”
When Bent had gone away to the town,
Brereton lighted a cigar, stretched himself in an
easy chair in front of a warm fire in his host’s
smoking-room, and tried to think clearly. He had
said to Bent all that was in his mind about Harborough
and about Miss Pett but he had said nothing,
had been determined to say nothing, about a curious
thought, an unformed, vague suspicion which was there.
It was that as yet formless suspicion which occupied
all his mental powers now he put Harborough
and Miss Pett clean away from him.
And as he sat there, he asked himself
first of all why had this curious doubt
about two apparently highly-respectable men of this
little, out-of-the-world town come into his mind?
He traced it back to its first source Cotherstone.
Brereton was a close observer of men; it was his natural
instinct to observe, and he was always giving it a
further training and development. He had felt
certain as he sat at supper with him, the night before,
that Cotherstone had something in his thoughts which
was not of his guests, his daughter, or himself.
His whole behaviour suggested pre-occupation, occasional
absent-mindedness: once or twice he obviously
did not hear the remarks which were addressed to him.
He had certainly betrayed some curious sort of confusion
when Kitely’s name was mentioned. And he
had manifested great astonishment, been much upset,
when Garthwaite came in with the news of Kitely’s
death.
Now here came in what Brereton felt
to be the all-important, the critical point of this,
his first attempt to think things out. He was
not at all sure that Cotherstone’s astonishment
on hearing Garthwaite’s announcement was not
feigned, was not a piece of pure acting. Why?
He smiled cynically as he answered his own question.
The answer was Because when Cotherstone,
Garthwaite, Bent, and Brereton set out from Cotherstone’s
house to look at the dead man’s body, Cotherstone
led the way straight to it.
How did Cotherstone know exactly where,
in that half-mile of wooded hill-side, the murder
had been committed of which he had only heard five
minutes before? Yet, he led them all to within
a few yards of the dead man, until he suddenly checked
himself, thrust the lantern into Garthwaite’s
hands and said that of course he didn’t know
where the body was! Now might not that really
mean, when fully analyzed, that even if Cotherstone
did not kill Kitely himself during the full hour in
which he was absent from his house he knew that Kitely
had been killed, and where and possibly
by whom?
Anyway, here were certain facts and
they had to be reckoned with. Kitely was murdered
about a quarter-past nine o’clock. Cotherstone
was out of his house from ten minutes to nine o’clock
until five minutes to ten. He was clearly excited
when he returned: he was more excited when he
went with the rest of them up the wood. Was it
not probable that under the stress of that excitement
he forgot his presence of mind, and mechanically went
straight to the all-important spot?
So much for that. But there was
something more. Mallalieu was Cotherstone’s
partner. Mallalieu went to Northrop’s house
to play cards at ten o’clock. It might
be well to find out, quietly, what Mallalieu was doing
with himself up to ten o’clock. But the
main thing was what was Cotherstone doing
during that hour of absence? And had
Cotherstone any reason of his own, or shared
with his partner for wishing to get rid
of Kitely?
Brereton sat thinking all these things
over until he had finished his cigar; he then left
Bent’s house and strolled up into the woods of
the Shawl. He wanted to have a quiet look round
the scene of the murder. He had not been up there
since the previous evening; it now occurred to him
that it would be well to see how the place looked by
daylight. There was no difficulty about finding
the exact spot, even in those close coverts of fir
and pine; a thin line of inquisitive sightseers was
threading its way up the Shawl in front of him, each
of its units agog to see the place where a fellow-being
had been done to death.
But no one could get at the precise
scene of the murder. The police had roped a portion
of the coppice off from the rest, and two or three
constables in uniform were acting as guards over this
enclosed space, while a couple of men in plain clothes,
whom Brereton by that time knew to be detectives from
Norcaster, were inside it, evidently searching the
ground with great care. Round and about the fenced-in
portion stood townsfolk, young and old, talking, speculating,
keenly alive to the goings-on, hoping that the searchers
would find something just then, so that they themselves
could carry some sensational news back to the town
and their own comfortable tea-tables. Most of
them had been in or outside the Court House that morning
and recognized Brereton and made way for him as he
advanced to the ropes. One of the detectives
recognized him, too, and invited him to step inside.
“Found anything?” asked
Brereton, who was secretly wondering why the police
should be so foolish as to waste time in a search which
was almost certain to be non-productive.
“No, sir we’ve
been chiefly making out for certain where the actual
murder took place before the dead man was dragged behind
that rock,” answered the detective. “As
far as we can reckon from the disturbance of these
pine needles, the murderer must have sprung on Kitely
from behind that clump of gorse there where
it’s grown to such a height and then
dragged him here, away from that bit of a path.
No we’ve found nothing. But
I suppose you’ve heard of the find at Harborough’s
cottage?”
“No!” exclaimed Brereton,
startled out of his habitual composure. “What
find?”
“Some of our people made a search
there as soon as the police-court proceedings were
over,” replied the detective. “It
was the first chance they’d had of doing anything
systematically. They found the bank-notes which
Kitely got at the Bank yesterday evening, and a quantity
of letters and papers that we presume had been in
that empty pocket-book. They were all hidden
in a hole in the thatch of Harborough’s shed.”
“Where are they?” asked Brereton.
“Down at the police-station the
superintendent has them,” answered the detective.
“He’d show you them, sir, if you care to
go down.”
Brereton went off to the police-station
at once and was shown into the superintendent’s
office without delay. That official immediately
drew open a drawer of his desk and produced a packet
folded in brown paper.
“I suppose this is what you
want to see, Mr. Brereton,” he said. “I
guess you’ve heard about the discovery?
Shoved away in a rat-hole in the thatch of Harborough’s
shed these were, sir upon my honour, I don’t
know what to make of it! You’d have thought
that a man of Harborough’s sense and cleverness
would never have put these things there, where they
were certain to be found.”
“I don’t believe Harborough
did put them there,” said Brereton. “But
what are they?”
The superintendent motioned his visitor
to sit by him and then opened the papers out on his
desk.
“Not so much,” he answered.
“Three five-pound notes I’ve
proved that they’re those which poor Kitely
got at the bank yesterday. A number of letters chiefly
about old books, antiquarian matters, and so forth some
scraps of newspaper cuttings, of the same nature.
And this bit of a memorandum book, that fits that
empty pocket-book we found, with pencil entries in
it naught of any importance. Look ’em
over, if you like, Mr. Brereton. I make nothing
out of ’em.”
Brereton made nothing out either,
at first glance. The papers were just what the
superintendent described them to be, and he went rapidly
through them without finding anything particularly
worthy of notice. But to the little memorandum
book he gave more attention, especially to the recent
entries. And one of these, made within the last
three months, struck him as soon as he looked at it,
insignificant as it seemed to be. It was only
of one line, and the one line was only of a few initials,
an abbreviation or two, and a date: M. & C.
v. S. B. ci. And why this apparently
innocent entry struck Brereton was because he was still
thinking as an under-current to all this, of Mallalieu
and Cotherstone and M. and C. were certainly
the initials of those not too common names.