Within a week of that night Brereton
was able to sum things up, to take stock, to put clearly
before himself the position of affairs as they related
to his mysterious client. They had by that time
come to a clear issue: a straight course lay
ahead with its ultimate stages veiled in obscurity.
Harborough had again been brought up before the Highmarket
magistrates, had stubbornly refused to give any definite
information about his exact doings on the night of
Kitely’s murder, and had been duly committed
for trial on the capital charge. On the same day
the coroner, after holding an inquest extending over
two sittings, had similarly committed him. There
was now nothing to do but to wait until the case came
on at Norcaster Assizes. Fortunately, the assizes
were fixed for the middle of the ensuing month:
Brereton accordingly had three weeks wherein to prepare
his defence or (which would be an eminently
satisfactory equivalent) to definitely fix the guilt
on some other person.
Christopher Pett, as legal adviser
to the murdered man, had felt it his duty to remain
in Highmarket until the police proceedings and the
coroner’s inquest were over. He had made
himself conspicuous at both police-court and coroner’s
court, putting himself forward wherever he could,
asking questions wherever opportunity offered.
Brereton’s dislike of him increased the more
he saw of him; he specially resented Pett’s
familiarity. But Pett was one of those persons
who know how to combine familiarity with politeness
and even servility; to watch or hear him talk to any
one whom he button-holed was to gain a notion of his
veneration for them. He might have been worshipping
Brereton when he buttoned-holed the young barrister
after Harborough had been finally committed to take
his trial.
“Ah, he’s a lucky man,
that, Mr. Brereton!” observed Pett, collaring
Brereton in a corridor outside the crowded court.
“Very fortunate man indeed, sir, to have you
take so much interest in him. Fancy you with
all your opportunities in town, Mr. Brereton! stopping
down here, just to defend that fellow out of what
shall we call it? pure and simple Quixotism!
Quixotism! I believe that’s the correct
term, Mr. Brereton. Oh, yes for the
man’s as good as done for. Not a cat’s
chance! He’ll swing, sir, will your client!”
“Your simile is not a good one,
Mr. Pett,” retorted Brereton. “Cats
are said to have nine lives.”
“Cat, rat, mouse, dog no
chance whatever, sir,” said Pett, cheerfully.
“I know what a country jury’ll say.
If I were a betting man, Mr. Brereton which
I ain’t, being a regular church attendant I’d
lay you ten to one the jury’ll never leave the
box, sir!”
“No I don’t
think they will when the right man is put
in the dock, Mr. Pett,” replied Brereton.
Pett drew back and looked the young
barrister in the face with an expression that was
half quizzical and half serious.
“You don’t mean to say
that you really believe this fellow to be innocent,
Mr. Brereton?” he exclaimed. “You! with
your knowledge of criminal proceedings! Oh, come
now, Mr. Brereton it’s very kind of
you, very Quixotic, as I call it, but ”
“You shall see,” said
Brereton and turned off. He had no mind to be
more than civil to Pett, and he frowned when Pett,
in his eagerness, laid a detaining hand on his gown.
“I’m not going to discuss it, Mr. Pett,”
he added, a little warmly. “I’ve
my own view of the case.”
“But, but, Mr. Brereton a
moment!” urged Pett. “Just between
ourselves as well, not as lawyers but as as
one gentleman to another. Do you think it possible
it was some other person? Do you now, really?”
“Didn’t your estimable
female relative, as you call her, say that I suggested
she might be the guilty person?” demanded Brereton,
maliciously. “Come, now, Mr. Pett!
You don’t know all that I know!”
Pett fell back, staring doubtfully
at Brereton’s curled lip, and wondering whether
to take him seriously or not. And Brereton laughed
and went off to reflect, five minutes later,
that this was no laughing matter for Harborough and
his daughter, and to plunge again into the maze of
thought out of which it was so difficult to drag anything
that seemed likely to be helpful.
He interviewed Harborough again before
he was taken back to Norcaster, and again he pressed
him to speak, and again Harborough gave him a point-blank
refusal.
“Not unless it comes to the
very worst, sir,” he said firmly, “and
only then if I see there’s no other way and
even then it would only be for my daughter’s
sake. But it won’t come to that! There’s
three weeks yet good and if
somebody can’t find out the truth in three weeks ”
“Man alive!” exclaimed
Brereton. “Your own common-sense ought to
tell you that in cases like this three years isn’t
enough to get at the truth! What can I do in
three weeks?”
“There’s not only you,
sir,” replied Harborough. “There’s
the police there’s the detectives there’s ”
“The police and the detectives
are all doing their best to fasten the crime on you!”
retorted Brereton. “Of course they are!
That’s their way. When they’ve safely
got one man, do you think they’re going to look
for another? If you won’t tell me what
you were doing, and where you were that night, well,
I’ll have to find out for myself.”
Harborough gave his counsel a peculiar
look which Brereton could not understand.
“Oh, well!” he said. “If you
found it out ”
He broke off at that, and would say
no more, and Brereton presently left him and walked
thoughtfully homeward, reflecting on the prisoner’s
last words.
“He admits there is something
to be found out,” he mused. “And by
that very admission he implies that it could be found
out. Now how? Egad! I’d
give something for even the least notion!”
Bent’s parlour-maid, opening
the door to Brereton, turned to a locked drawer in
the old-fashioned clothes-press which stood in Bent’s
hall, and took from it a registered letter.
“For you, sir,” she said,
handing it to Brereton. “Came by the noon
post, sir. The housekeeper signed for it.”
Brereton took the letter into the
smoking-room and looked at it with a sudden surmise
that it might have something to do with the matter
which was uppermost in his thoughts. He had had
no expectation of any registered letter, no idea of
anything that could cause any correspondent of his
to send him any communication by registered post.
There was no possibility of recognizing the handwriting
of the sender, for there was no handwriting to recognize:
the address was typewritten. And the postmark
was London.
Brereton carefully cut open the flap
of the envelope and drew out the enclosure a
square sheet of typewriting paper folded about a thin
wad of Bank of England notes. He detached these
at once and glanced quickly at them. There were
six of them: all new and crisp and
each was for a hundred and fifty pounds.
Brereton laid this money aside and
opened the letter. This, too, was typewritten:
a mere glance at its termination showed that it was
anonymous. He sat down at Bent’s desk and
carefully read it through.
There was no address: there was
nothing beyond the postmark on the envelope to show
where the letter came from; there was absolutely nothing
in the contents to give any clue to the sender.
But the wording was clear and plain.
“MR. GIFFORD BRERETON, Having
learnt from the newspapers that you are acting
as counsel for John Harborough, charged with the murder
of a man named Kitely at Highmarket, I send you
the enclosed L900 to be used in furthering Harborough’s
defence. You will use it precisely as you
think fit. You are not to spare it nor any endeavour
to prove Harborough’s innocence which
is known to the sender. Whenever further
funds are needed, all you need do is to insert
an advertisement in the personal column of The Times
newspaper in these words: Highmarket Exchequer
needs replenishing, with your initials added.
Allow me to suggest that you should at once offer
a reward of L500 to whoever gives information
which will lead to the capture and conviction of the
real murderer or murderers. If this offer
fails to bring information speedily, double it.
I repeat that no pains must be spared in this
matter, and that money to any amount is no object.
The sender of this letter will keep well informed
of the progress of events as narrated in the
newspapers, to which you will please to afford
all proper information.”
Brereton read this extraordinary communication
through three times; then he replaced letter and bank-notes
in the envelope, put the envelope in an inner pocket,
left the house, and walking across to the Northrop
villa, asked to see Avice Harborough.
Avice came to him in Mrs. Northrop’s
drawing-room, and Brereton glancing keenly at her
as she entered saw that she was looking worn and pale.
He put the letter into her hands with a mere word.
“Your father has a powerful friend somewhere,”
he said.
To his astonishment the girl showed
no very great surprise. She started a little
at the sight of the money; she flushed at one or two
expressions in the letter. But she read the letter
through without comment and handed it beck to him
with a look of inquiry.
“You don’t seem surprised!” said
Brereton.
“There has always been so much
mystery to me about my father that I’m not surprised,”
she replied. “No! I’m just
thankful! For this man whoever he
is says that my father’s innocence
is known to him. And that’s just
think what it means to me!”
“Why doesn’t he come forward
and prove it, then?” demanded Brereton.
Avice shook her head.
“He they want
it to be proved without that,” she answered.
“But don’t you think that if
all else fails the man who wrote this would come forward?
Oh, surely!”
Brereton stood silently looking at
her for a full minute. From the first time of
meeting with her he had felt strangely and strongly
attracted to his client’s daughter, and as he
looked at her now he began to realize that he was
perhaps more deeply interested in her than he knew.
“It’s all the most extraordinary
mystery this about your father that
ever I came across!” he exclaimed suddenly.
Then he looked still more closely at her. “You’ve
been worrying!” he said impetuously. “Don’t!
I beg you not to. I’ll move heaven and
earth because I, personally, am absolutely
convinced of your father’s innocence. And here’s
powerful help.”
“You’ll do what’s suggested here?”
she asked.
“Certainly! It’s
a capital idea,” he answered. “I’d
have done it myself if I’d been a rich man but
I’m not. Cheer up, now! we’re
getting on splendidly. Look here ask
Mrs. Northrop to let you come out with me. We’ll
go to the solicitor together and
see about that reward at once.”
As they presently walked down to the
town Brereton gave Avice another of his critical looks
of inspection.
“You’re feeling better,”
he said in his somewhat brusque fashion. “Is
it this bit of good news?”
“That and the sense
of doing something,” she answered. “If
I wasn’t looking well when you came in just
now, it was because this inaction is bad for me.
I want to do something! something to help.
If I could only be stirring moving about.
You understand?”
“Quite!” responded Brereton.
“And there is something you can do. I saw
you on a bicycle the other day. Why not give up
your teaching for a while, and scour the country round
about, trying to get hold of some news about your
father’s movements that night? That he won’t
tell us anything himself is no reason why we shouldn’t
find out something for ourselves. He must have
been somewhere someone must have seen him!
Why not begin some investigation? you know
the district. How does that strike you?”
“I should be only too thankful,”
she said. “And I’ll do it. The
Northrops are very kind they’ll understand,
and they’ll let me off. I’ll begin
at once tomorrow. I’ll hunt every
village between the sea and the hills!”
“Good!” said Brereton.
“Some work of that sort, and this reward ah,
we shall come out all right, you’ll see.”
“I don’t know what we
should have done if it hadn’t been for you!”
said Avice. “But we shan’t
forget. My father is a strange man, Mr. Brereton,
but he’s not the sort of man he’s believed
to be by these Highmarket people and he’s
grateful to you as you’ll see.”
“But I must do something to
merit his gratitude first, you know,” replied
Brereton. “Come! I’ve done
next to nothing as yet. But we’ll make
a fresh start with this reward if your father’s
solicitor approves.”
The solicitor did approve strongly.
And he opened his eyes to their widest extent when
he read the anonymous letter and saw the bank-notes.
“Your father,” he observed
to Avice, “is the most mysterious man I ever
heard of! The Kitely mystery, in my opinion, is
nothing to the Harborough mystery. Do you really
mean to tell me that you haven’t an idea of
what all this means?”
“Not an idea!” replied Avice. “Not
the ghost of one.”
“Well we’ll
get these posters and handbills out, anyway, Mr. Brereton,”
said the solicitor. “Five hundred pounds
is a good figure. Lord bless you! some
of these Highmarket folk would sell their mothers for
half that! The whole population will be turned
into amateur detectives. Now let’s draft
the exact wording, and then we’ll see the printer.”
Next day the bill-poster placarded
Highmarket with the reward bills, and distributed
them broadcast in shops and offices, and one of the
first persons to lay hands on one was Mallalieu &
Cotherstone’s clerk, Herbert Stoner.