At that time Stoner had been in the
employment of Mallalieu and Cotherstone for some five
or six years. He was then twenty-seven years
of age. He was a young man of some ability sharp,
alert, quick at figures, good at correspondence, punctual,
willing: he could run the business in the absence
of its owners. The two partners appreciated Stoner,
and they had gradually increased his salary until it
reached the sum of two pounds twelve shillings and
sixpence per week. In their opinion a young single
man ought to have done very well on that: Mallalieu
and Cotherstone had both done very well on less when
they were clerks in that long vanished past of which
they did not care to think. But Stoner was a
young man of tastes. He liked to dress well.
He liked to play cards and billiards. He liked
to take a drink or two at the Highmarket taverns of
an evening, and to be able to give his favourite barmaids
boxes of chocolate or pairs of gloves now and
then judiciously. And he found his
salary not at all too great, and he was always on
the look-out for a chance of increasing it.
Stoner emerged from Mallalieu & Cotherstone’s
office at his usual hour of half-past five on the
afternoon of the day on which the reward bills were
put out. It was his practice to drop in at the
Grey Mare Inn every evening on his way to his supper,
there to drink a half-pint of bitter ale and hear
the news of the day from various cronies who were to
be met with in the bar-parlour. As he crossed
the street on this errand on this particular evening,
Postick, the local bill-poster, came hurrying out of
the printer’s shop with a bundle of handbills
under his arm, and as he sped past Stoner, thrust
a couple of them into the clerk’s hand.
“Here y’are, Mr. Stoner!”
he said without stopping. “Something for
you to set your wits to work on. Five hundred
reward for a bit o’ brain work!”
Stoner, who thought Postick was chaffing
him, was about to throw the handbills, still damp
from the press, into the gutter which he was stepping
over. But in the light of an adjacent lamp he
caught sight of the word Murder in big staring
capitals at the top of them. Beneath it he caught
further sight of familiar names and at that
he folded up the bills, went into the Grey Mare, sat
down in a quiet corner, and read carefully through
the announcement. It was a very simple one, and
plainly worded. Five hundred pounds would be paid
by Mr. Tallington, solicitor, of Highmarket, to any
person or persons who would afford information which
would lead to the arrest and conviction of the murderer
or murderers of the deceased Kitely.
No one was in the bar-parlour of the
Grey Mare when Stoner first entered it, but by the
time he had re-read the handbill, two or three men
of the town had come in, and he saw that each carried
a copy. One of them, a small tradesman whose
shop was in the centre of the Market Square, leaned
against the bar and read the terms of the reward aloud.
“And whose money might that
be?” he asked, half-sneeringly. “Who’s
throwing brass round in that free-handed fashion?
I should want to know if the money’s safe before
I wasted my time in trying to get it.”
“Money’ll be all right,”
observed one of the speaker’s companions.
“There’s Lawyer Tallington’s name
at the foot o’ that bill. He wouldn’t
put his name to no offer o’ that sort if he hadn’t
the brass in hand.”
“Whose money is it, then?”
demanded the first speaker. “It’s
not a Government reward. They say that Kitely
had no relatives, so it can’t be them.
And it can’t be that old housekeeper of his,
because they say she’s satisfied enough that
Jack Harborough’s the man, and they’ve
got him. Queer do altogether, I call it!”
“It’s done in Harborough’s
interest,” said a third man. “Either
that, or there’s something very deep in it.
Somebody’s not satisfied and somebody’s
going to have a flutter with his brass over it.”
He turned and glanced at Stoner, who had come to the
bar for his customary half-pint of ale. “Your
folks aught to do with this?” he asked.
“Kitely was Mr. Cotherstone’s tenant,
of course.”
Stoner laughed scornfully as he picked up his tankard.
“Yes, I don’t think!”
he sneered. “Catch either of my governors
wasting five hundred pence, or five pence, in that
way! Not likely!”
“Well, there’s Tallington’s
name to back it,” said one of the men. “We
all know Tallington. What he says, he does.
The money’ll be there if it’s
earned.”
Then they all looked at each other
silently, surmise and speculation in the eyes of each.
“Tell you what!” suddenly
observed the little tradesman, as if struck with a
clever idea. “It might be young Bent!
Five hundred pound is naught to him. This here
young London barrister that’s defending Harborough
is stopping with Bent they’re old
schoolmates. Happen he’s persuaded Bent
to do the handsome: they say that this barrister
chap’s right down convinced that Harborough’s
innocent. It must be Bent’s brass!”
“What’s Popsie say?”
asked one of the younger members of the party, winking
at the barmaid, who, having supplied her customers’
needs, was leaning over a copy of the handbill which
somebody had laid on the bar. “Whose brass
can it be, Popsie?”
The barmaid stood up, seized a glass
and a cloth, and began to polish the glass with vigor.
“What’s Popsie say?”
she repeated. “Why, what she says is that
you’re a lot of donkeys for wasting your time
in wondering whose brass it is. What does it
matter whose brass it is, so long as it’s safe?
What you want to do is to try and earn it. You
don’t pick up five hundred pounds every day!”
“She’s right!” said
some man of the group. “But how
does anybody start on to them games?”
“There’ll be plenty o’
starters, for all that, my lads!” observed the
little tradesman. “Never you fear!
There’ll be candidates.”
Stoner drank off his ale and went
away. Usually, being given to gossip, he stopped
chatting with anybody he chanced to meet until it was
close upon his supper-time. But the last remark
sent him off. For Stoner meant to be a starter,
and he had no desire that anybody should get away in
front of him.
The lodging in which Stoner kept his
bachelor state was a quiet and eminently respectable
one. He had two small rooms, a parlour and a
bedchamber, in the house of a widow with whom he had
lodged ever since his first coming to Highmarket,
nearly six years before. In the tiny parlour
he kept a few books and a writing-desk, and on those
evenings which he did not spend in playing cards or
billiards, he did a little intellectual work in the
way of improving his knowledge of French, commercial
arithmetic, and business correspondence. And that
night, his supper being eaten, and the door closed
upon his landlady, he lighted his pipe, sat down to
his desk, unlocked one of its drawers, and from an
old file-box drew out some papers. One of these,
a half-sheet of ruled foolscap, he laid in front of
him, the rest he put back. And then, propping
his chin on his folded hands, Stoner gave that half-sheet
a long, speculative inspection.
If anybody had looked over Stoner’s
shoulder they would have seen him gazing at a mass
of figures. The half-sheet of foolscap was covered
with figures: the figuring extended to the reverse
side. And what a looker-on might not
have known, but what Stoner knew very well the
figures were all of Cotherstone’s making clear,
plain, well-formed figures. And amongst them,
and on the margins of the half-sheet, and scrawled
here and there, as if purposelessly and carelessly,
was one word in Cotherstone’s handwriting, repeated
over and over again. That word was Wilchester.
Stoner knew how that half-sheet of
foolscap had come into his possession. It was
a half-sheet which he had found on Cotherstone’s
desk when he went into the partners’ private
room to tidy things up on the morning after the murder
of Kitely. It lay there, carelessly tossed aside
amongst other papers of clearer meaning, and Stoner,
after one glance at it, had carefully folded it, placed
it in his pocket, taken it home, and locked it up,
to be inspected at leisure.
He had had his reasons, of course,
for this abstraction of a paper which rightfully belonged
to Cotherstone. Those reasons were a little difficult
to explain to himself in one way; easy enough to explain,
in another. As regards the difficulty, Stoner
had somehow or other got a vague idea, that evening
of the murder, that something was wrong with Cotherstone.
He had noticed, or thought he noticed, a queer look
on old Kitely’s face when the ex-detective left
the private room it was a look of quiet
satisfaction, or triumph, or malice; any way, said
Stoner, it was something. Then there was the
fact of Cotherstone’s curious abstraction when
he, Stoner, entered and found his employer sitting
in the darkness, long after Kitely had gone Cotherstone
had said he was asleep, but Stoner knew that to be
a fib. Altogether, Stoner had gained a vague
feeling, a curious intuition, that there was something
queer, not unconnected with the visit of Cotherstone’s
new tenant, and when he heard, next morning, of what
had befallen Kitely, all his suspicions were renewed.
So much for the difficult reasons
which had made him appropriate the half-sheet of foolscap.
But there was a reason which was not difficult.
It lay in the presence of that word Wilchester.
If not of the finest degree of intellect, Stoner was
far from being a fool, and it had not taken him very
long to explain to himself why Cotherstone had scribbled
the name of that far-off south-country town all over
that sheet of paper, aimlessly, apparently without
reason, amidst his figurings. It was uppermost
in his thoughts at the time and as he
sat there, pen in hand, he had written it down, half-unconsciously,
over and over again.... There it was Wilchester Wilchester Wilchester.
The reiteration had a peculiar interest
for Stoner. He had never heard Cotherstone nor
Mallalieu mention Wilchester at any time since his
first coming into their office. The firm had
no dealings with any firm at Wilchester. Stoner,
who dealt with all the Mallalieu & Cotherstone correspondence,
knew that during his five and a half years’ clerkship,
he had never addressed a single letter to any one at
Wilchester, never received a single letter bearing
the Wilchester post-mark. Wilchester was four
hundred miles away, far off in the south; ninety-nine
out of every hundred persons in Highmarket had never
heard the name of Wilchester. But Stoner had quite
apart from the history books, and the geography books,
and map of England. Stoner himself was a Darlington
man. He had a close friend, a bosom friend, at
Darlington, named Myler David Myler.
Now David Myler was a commercial traveller a
smart fellow of Stoner’s age. He was in
the service of a Darlington firm of agricultural implement
makers, and his particular round lay in the market-towns
of the south and south-west of England. He spent
a considerable part of the year in those districts,
and Wilchester was one of his principal headquarters:
Stoner had many a dozen letters of Myler’s,
which Myler had written to him from Wilchester.
And only a year before all this, Myler had brought
home a bride in the person of a Wilchester girl, the
daughter of a Wilchester tradesman.
So the name of Wilchester was familiar
enough to Stoner. And now he wanted to know what what what
made it so familiar to Cotherstone that Cotherstone
absent-mindedly scribbled it all over a half-sheet
of foolscap paper?
But the figures? Had they any
connexion with the word? This was the question
which Stoner put to himself when he sat down that night
in his parlour to seriously consider if he had any
chance of winning that five hundred pounds reward.
He looked at the figures again more carefully.
The truth was that until that evening he had never
given much attention to those figures: it was
the word Wilchester that had fascinated him.
But now, summoning all his by no means small arithmetical
knowledge to his aid, Stoner concentrated himself
on an effort to discover what those figures meant.
That they were a calculation of some sort he had always
known now he wanted to know of what.
The solution of the problem came to
him all of a sudden as the solution of
arithmetical problems often does come. He saw
the whole thing quite plainly and wondered that he
had not seen it at a first glance. The figures
represented nothing whatever but three plain and common
sums in compound arithmetic. Cotherstone,
for some reason of his own, had taken the sum of two
thousand pounds as a foundation, and had calculated
(1st) what thirty years’ interest on that sum
at three and a half per cent. would come to; and (2nd)
what thirty years’ interest at five per cent.
would come to; and (3rd) what the compound interest
on two thousand pounds would come to capital
and compound interest in the same period.
The last reckoning the compound interest
one had been crossed over and out with
vigorous dashes of the pen, as if the calculator had
been appalled on discovering what an original sum
of two thousand pounds, left at compound interest
for thirty years, would be transformed into in that
time.
All this was so much Greek to Stoner.
But he knew there was something in it something
behind those figures. They might refer to some
Corporation financial business Cotherstone
being Borough Treasurer. But they might
not. And why were they mixed up with Wilchester?
For once in a way, Stoner took no
walk abroad that night. Usually, even when he
stopped in of an evening, he had a brief stroll to
the Grey Mare and back last thing before going to
bed. But on this occasion he forgot all about
the Grey Mare, and Popsie the barmaid did not come
into his mind for even a second. He sat at home,
his feet on the fender, his eyes fixed on the dying
coals in the grate. He thought thought
so hard that he forgot that his pipe had gone out.
The fire had gone out, too, when he finally rose and
retired. And he went on thinking for a long time
after his head had sought his pillow.
“Well, it’s Saturday tomorrow,
anyway!” he mused at last. “Which
is lucky.”
Next day being Saturday
and half-holiday Stoner attired himself
in his best garments, and, in the middle of the afternoon,
took train for Darlington.