For a moment Brereton and the superintendent
looked at each other in silence. Then Bent got
up from his desk at the other side of the room, and
he and the little solicitor came towards them.
“Keep that to yourself, then,”
muttered Brereton. “We’ll talk of
it later. It may be of importance.”
“Well, there’s this much
to bear in mind,” whispered the superintendent,
drawing back a little with an eye on the others.
“Nothing of that sort was found on your client!
And he’d been out all night. That’s
worth considering from his standpoint,
Mr. Brereton.”
Brereton nodded his assent and turned
away with another warning glance. And presently
Pett and the superintendent went off, and Bent dropped
into his easy chair with a laugh.
“Queer sort of unexpected legacy!”
he said. “I wonder if the old man really
thought I should be interested in his scrap-book?”
“There may be a great deal that’s
interesting in it,” remarked Brereton, with
a glance at the book, which Bent had laid aside on
top of a book-case. “Take care of it.
Well, what did you think of Mr. Christopher Pett?”
“Cool hand, I should say,”
answered Bent. “But what did
you think of him?”
“Oh, I’ve met Mr. Christopher
Pett’s sort before,” said Brereton, drily.
“The Dodson & Fogg type of legal practitioner
is by no means extinct. I should much like to
know a good deal more about his various dealings with
Kitely. We shall see and hear more about them,
however later on. For the present
there are other matters.”
He changed the subject then to
something utterly apart from the murder and its mystery.
For the one topic which filled his own mind was also
the very one which he could not discuss with Bent.
Had Cotherstone, had Mallalieu anything to do with
Kitely’s death? That question was beginning
to engross all his attention: he thought more
about it than about his schemes for a successful defence
of Harborough, well knowing that his best way of proving
Harborough’s innocence lay in establishing another
man’s guilt.
“One would give a good deal,”
he said to himself, as he went to bed that night,
“if one could get a moment’s look into
Cotherstone’s mind or into Mallalieu’s
either! For I’ll swear that these two know
something possibly congratulating themselves
that it will never be known to anybody else!”
If Brereton could have looked into
the minds of either of the partners at this particular
juncture he would have found much opportunity for
thought and reflection, of a curious nature. For
both were keeping a double watch on the
course of events on one hand; on each other, on the
other hand. They watched the police-court proceedings
against Harborough and saw, with infinite relief,
that nothing transpired which seemed inimical to themselves.
They watched the proceedings at the inquest held on
Kitely; they, too, yielded nothing that could attract
attention in the way they dreaded. When several
days had gone by and the police investigations seemed
to have settled down into a concentrated purpose against
the suspected man, both Mallalieu and Cotherstone believed
themselves safe from discovery their joint
secret appeared to be well buried with the old detective.
But the secret was keenly and vividly alive in their
own hearts, and when Mallalieu faced the truth he knew
that he suspected Cotherstone, and when Cotherstone
put things squarely to himself he knew that he suspected
Mallalieu. And the two men got to eyeing each
other furtively, and to addressing each other curtly,
and when they happened to be alone there was a heavy
atmosphere of mutual dislike and suspicion between
them.
It was a strange psychological fact
that though these men had been partners for a period
covering the most important part of their lives, they
had next to nothing in common. They were excellent
partners in business matters; Mallalieu knew Cotherstone,
and Cotherstone knew Mallalieu in all things relating
to the making of money. But in taste, temperament,
character, understanding, they were as far apart as
the poles. This aloofness when tested further
by the recent discomposing events manifested itself
in a disinclination to confidence. Mallalieu,
whatever he thought, knew very well that he would never
say what he thought to Cotherstone; Cotherstone knew
precisely the same thing with regard to Mallalieu.
But this silence bred irritation, and as the days
went by the irritation became more than Cotherstone
could bear. He was a highly-strung, nervous man,
quick to feel and to appreciate, and the averted looks
and monosyllabic remarks and replies of a man into
whose company he could not avoid being thrown began
to sting him to something like madness. And one
day, left alone in the office with Mallalieu when
Stoner the clerk had gone to get his dinner, the irritation
became unbearable, and he turned on his partner in
a sudden white heat of ungovernable and impotent anger.
“Hang you!” he hissed
between his set teeth. “I believe you think
I did that job! And if you do, blast you, why
don’t you say so, and be done with it?”
Mallalieu, who was standing on the
hearth, warming his broad back at the fire, thrust
his hands deeply into his pockets and looked half-sneeringly
at his partner out of his screwed-up eyes.
“I should advise you to keep
yourself cool,” he said with affected quietness.
“There’s more than me’ll think a
good deal if you chance to let yourself out like that.”
“You do think it!” reiterated
Cotherstone passionately. “Damn it, d’ye
think I haven’t noticed it? Always looking
at me as if as if ”
“Now then, keep yourself calm,”
interrupted Mallalieu. “I can look at you
or at any other, in any way I like, can’t I?
There’s no need to distress yourself I
shan’t give aught away. If you took it in
your head to settle matters as they were
settled well, I shan’t say a word.
That is unless you understand?”
“Understand what?” screamed Cotherstone.
“Unless I’m obliged to,”
answered Mallalieu. “I should have to make
it clear that I’d naught to do with that particular
matter, d’ye see? Every man for himself’s
a sound principle. But I see no need.
I don’t believe there’ll be any need.
And it doesn’t matter the value of that pen that’s
shaking so in your hand to me if an innocent man suffers if
he’s innocent o’ that, he’s guilty
o’ something else. You’re safe with
me.”
Cotherstone flung the pen on the floor
and stamped on it. And Mallalieu laughed cynically
and walked slowly across to the door.
“You’re a fool, Cotherstone,”
he said. “Go on a bit more like that, and
you’ll let it all out to somebody ’at ’ll
not keep secrets as I can. Cool yourself, man,
cool yourself!”
“Hang you!” shouted Cotherstone.
“Mind I don’t let something out about
you! Where were you that night, I should like
to know? Or, rather, I do know! You’re
no safer than I am! And if I told what I do know ”
Mallalieu, with his hand on the latch,
turned and looked his partner in the face without
furtiveness, for once.
“And if you told aught that
you do, or fancy you know,” he said quietly,
“there’d be ruin in your home, you soft
fool! I thought you wanted things kept quiet
for your lass’s sake? Pshaw! you’re
taking leave o’ your senses!”
He walked out at that, and Cotherstone,
shaking with anger, relapsed into a chair and cursed
his fate. And after a time he recovered himself
and began to think, and his thoughts turned instinctively
to Lettie.
Mallalieu was right of
course, he was right! Anything that he, Cotherstone,
could say or do in the way of bringing up the things
that must be suppressed would ruin Lettie’s
chances. So, at any rate, it seemed to him.
For Cotherstone’s mind was essentially a worldly
one, and it was beyond him to believe that an ambitious
young man like Windle Bent would care to ally himself
with the daughter of an ex-convict. Bent would
have the best of excuses for breaking off all relations
with the Cotherstone family if the unpleasant truth
came out. No! whatever else he did,
he must keep his secret safe until Bent and Lettie
were safely married. That once accomplished,
Cotherstone cared little about the future: Bent
could not go back on his wife. And so Cotherstone
endeavoured to calm himself, so that he could scheme
and plot, and before night came he paid a visit to
his doctor, and when he went home that evening, he
had his plans laid.
Bent was with Lettie when Cotherstone
got home, and Cotherstone presently got the two of
them into a little snuggery which he kept sacred to
himself as a rule. He sat down in his easy chair,
and signed to them to sit near him.
“I’m glad I found you
together,” he said. “There’s
something I want to say. There’s no call
for you to be frightened, Lettie but what
I’ve got to say is serious. And I’ll
put it straight Bent’ll understand.
Now, you’d arranged to get married next spring six
months hence. I want you to change your minds,
and to let it be as soon as you can.”
He looked with a certain eager wistfulness
at Lettie, expecting to see her start with surprise.
But fond as he was of her, Cotherstone had so far
failed to grasp the later developments of his daughter’s
character. Lettie Cotherstone was not the sort
of young woman who allows herself to be surprised
by anything. She was remarkably level-headed,
cool of thought, well able to take care of herself
in every way, and fully alive to the possibilities
of her union with the rising young manufacturer.
And instead of showing any astonishment, she quietly
asked her father what he meant.
“I’ll tell you,”
answered Cotherstone, greatly relieved to find that
both seemed inclined to talk matters quietly over.
“It’s this I’ve not been
feeling as well as I ought to feel, lately. The
fact is, Bent, I’ve done too much in my time.
A man can work too hard, you know and it
tells on him in the end. So the doctor says, anyhow.”
“The doctor!” exclaimed
Lettie. “You haven’t been to him?”
“Seen him this afternoon,”
replied Cotherstone. “Don’t alarm
yourself. But that’s what he says naught
wrong, all sound, but it’s time I
rested. Rest and change complete change.
And I’ve made up my mind I’m
going to retire from business. Why not? I’m
a well-to-do man better off than most folks
’ud think. I shall tell Mallalieu tomorrow.
Yes I’m resolved on it. And
that done, I shall go and travel for a year or two I’ve
always wanted to go round the world. I’ll
go that for a start, anyway. And the
sooner the better, says the doctor. And ”
here he looked searchingly at his listeners “I’d
like to see you settled before I go. What?”
Lettie’s calm and judicial character
came out in the first words she spoke. She had
listened carefully to Cotherstone; now she turned to
Bent.
“Windle,” she said, as
quietly as if she were asking the most casual of questions,
“wouldn’t it upset all your arrangements
for next year? You see, father,” she went
on, turning to Cotherstone, “Windle had arranged
everything. He was going to have the whole of
the spring and summer away from business; we were
going on the Continent for six months. And that
would have to be entirely altered and ”
“We could alter it,” interrupted
Bent. He was watching Cotherstone closely, and
fancying that he saw a strained and eager look in his
face, he decided that Cotherstone was keeping something
back, and had not told them the full truth about his
health.
“It’s all a matter of
arrangement. I could arrange to go away during
the winter, Lettie.”
“But I don’t want to travel
in winter,” objected Lettie. “Besides I’ve
made all my arrangements about my gowns and things.”
“That can be arranged, too,”
said Bent. “The dressmaker can work overtime.”
“That’ll mean that everything
will be hurried and spoiled,” replied
Lettie. “Besides, I’ve arranged everything
with my bridesmaids. They can’t be expected
to ”
“We can do without bridesmaids,”
replied Bent, laying his hand on Lettie’s arm.
“If your father really feels that he’s
got to have the rest and the change he spoke of, and
wants us to be married first, why, then ”
“But there’s nothing to
prevent you having a rest and a change now, father,”
said Lettie. “Why not? I don’t
like my arrangements to be altered I had
planned everything out so carefully. When we did
fix on next spring, Windle, I had only just time as
it was!”
“Pooh!” said Bent.
“We could get married the day after tomorrow
if we wanted! Bridesmaids gowns all
that sort of tomfoolery, what does it matter?”
“It isn’t tomfoolery,”
retorted Lettie. “If I am to be married
I should like to be married properly.”
She got up, with a heightened colour
and a little toss of her head, and left the room,
and the two men looked at each other.
“Talk to her, my lad,”
said Cotherstone at last. “Of course, girls
think such a lot of of all the accompaniments,
eh?”
“Yes, yes it’ll
be all right,” replied Bent. He tapped Cotherstone’s
arm and gave him a searching look. “You’re
not keeping anything back about your health,
are you?” he asked.
Cotherstone glanced at the door and
sank his voice to a whisper.
“It’s my heart!”
he answered. “Over-strained much
over-strained, the doctor says. Rest and change imperative!
But not a word to Lettie, Bent. Talk
her round get it arranged. I shall
feel safer you understand?”
Bent was full of good nature, and
though he understood to the full it was
a natural thing, this anxiety of a father for his only
child. He promised to talk seriously to Lettie
at once about an early wedding. And that night
he told Brereton of what had happened, and asked him
if he knew how special licences can be got, and Brereton
informed him of all he knew on that point and
kept silence about one which to him was becoming deeply
and seriously important.