Although Stoner hailed from Darlington,
he had no folk of his own left there they
were all dead and gone. Accordingly he put himself
up at a cheap hotel, and when he had taken what its
proprietors called a meat tea, he strolled out and
made for that part of the town in which his friend
Myler had set up housekeeping in a small establishment
wherein there was just room for a couple of people
to turn round. Its accommodation, indeed, was
severely taxed just then, for Myler’s father
and mother-in-law had come to visit him and their daughter,
and when Stoner walked in on the scene and added a
fifth the tiny parlour was filled to its full extent.
“Who’d ha’ thought
of seeing you, Stoner!” exclaimed Myler joyously,
when he had welcomed his old chum, and had introduced
him to the family circle. “And what brings
you here, anyway? Business?”
“Just a bit of business,”
answered Stoner. “Nothing much, though only
a call to make, later on. I’m stopping
the night, though.”
“Wish we could ha’ put
you up here, old sport!” said Myler, ruefully.
“But we don’t live in a castle, yet.
All full here! unless you’d like a
shakedown on the kitchen table, or in the wood-shed.
Or you can try the bath, if you like.”
Amidst the laughter which succeeded
this pleasantry, Stoner said that he wouldn’t
trouble the domestic peace so far he’d
already booked his room. And while Myler who,
commercial-traveller like, cultivated a reputation
for wit indulged in further jokes, Stoner
stealthily inspected the father-in-law. What
a fortunate coincidence! he said to himself; what
a lucky stroke! There he was, wanting badly to
find out something about Wilchester and
here, elbow to elbow with him, was a Wilchester man!
And an elderly Wilchester man, too one who
doubtless remembered all about Wilchester for many
a long year. That was another piece of luck,
for Stoner was quite certain that if Cotherstone had
ever had any connexion with Wilchester it must have
been a long, long time ago: he knew, from information
acquired, that Cotherstone had been a fixture in Highmarket
for thirty years.
He glanced at Myler’s father-in-law
again as Myler, remarking that when old friends meet,
the flowing bowl must flow, produced a bottle of whisky
from a brand-new chiffonier, and entreated his bride
to fetch what he poetically described as the crystal
goblets and the sparkling stream. The father-in-law
was a little apple-faced old gentleman with bright
eyes and a ready smile, who evidently considered his
son-in-law a born wit, and was ready to laugh at all
his sallies. A man of good memory, that, decided
Stoner, and wondered how he could diplomaticaly lead
Mr. Pursey to talk about the town he came from.
But Mr. Pursey was shortly to talk about Wilchester
to some purpose and with no drawing-out
from Stoner or anybody.
“Well,” remarked Myler,
having supplied his guests with spirituous refreshment,
and taken a pull at his own glass. “I’m
glad to see you, Stoner, and so’s the missis,
and here’s hoping you’ll come again as
often as the frog went to the water. You’ve
been having high old times in that back-of-beyond
town of yours, haven’t you? Battles, murders,
sudden deaths! who’d ha’ thought
a slow old hill-country town like Highmarket could
have produced so much excitement! What’s
happened to that chap they collared? I
haven’t had time to look at the papers this
last day or two been too busy.”
“Committed for trial,”
answered Stoner. “He’ll come up at
Norcaster Assizes next month.”
“Do they think he did it?”
asked Myler. “Is it a sure thing?”
Before Stoner could reply Mr. Pursey
entered the arena. His face displayed the pleased
expression of the man who has special information.
“It’s an odd thing, now,
David,” he said in a high, piping voice, “a
very odd thing, that this should happen when I come
up into these parts almost as foreign to
me as the Fiji Islands might be. Yes, sir,”
he went on, turning to Stoner, “it’s very
odd! I knew that man Kitely.”
Stoner could have jumped from his
seat, but he restrained himself, and contrived to
show no more than a polite interest.
“Oh, indeed, sir?” he
said. “The poor man that was murdered?
You knew him?”
“I remember him very well indeed,”
assented Mr. Pursey. “Yes, although I only
met him once, I’ve a very complete recollection
of the man. I spent a very pleasant evening with
him and one or two more of his profession better
sort of police and detectives, you know at
a friend’s of mine, who was one of our Wilchester
police officials oh, it’s yes it
must be thirty years since. They’d come
from London, of course, on some criminal business.
Deary me! the tales them fellows could
tell!”
“Thirty years is a long time,
sir,” observed Stoner politely.
“Aye, but I remember it quite
well,” said Mr. Pursey, with a confident nod.
“I know it was thirty years ago, ’cause
it was the Wilchester Assizes at which the Mallows
& Chidforth case was tried. Yes thirty
years. Eighteen hundred and eighty-one was the
year. Mallows & Chidforth aye!”
“Famous case that, sir?”
asked Stoner. He was almost bursting with excitement
by that time, and he took a big gulp of whisky and
water to calm himself. “Something special,
sir? Murder, eh?”
“No fraud, embezzlement,
defalcation I forget what the proper legal
term ’ud be,” replied Mr. Pursey.
“But it was a bad case a real bad
’un. We’d a working men’s building
society in Wilchester in those days it’s
there now for that matter, but under another name and
there were two better-class young workmen, smart fellows,
that acted one as secretary and t’other as treasurer
to it. They’d full control, those two had,
and they were trusted, aye, as if they’d been
the Bank of England! And all of a sudden, something
came out, and it was found that these two, Mallows,
treasurer, Chidforth, secretary, had made away with
two thousand pounds of the society’s money.
Two thousand pounds!”
“Two thousand pounds?”
exclaimed Stoner, whose thoughts went like lightning
to the half-sheet of foolscap. “You don’t
say!”
“Yes well, it might
ha’ been a pound or two more or less,”
said the old man, “but two thousand was what
they called it. And of course Mallows and Chidforth
were prosecuted and they got two years.
Oh, yes, we remember that case very well indeed in
Wilchester, don’t we, Maria?”
“And good reason!” agreed
Mrs. Pursey warmly. “There were a lot of
poor people nearly ruined by them bad young men.”
“There were!” affirmed
Mr. Pursey. “Yes oh, yes!
Aye I’ve often wondered what became
of ’em Mallows and Chidforth, I mean.
For from the time they got out of prison they’ve
never been heard of in our parts. Not a word! they
disappeared completely. Some say, of course, that
they had that money safely planted, and went to it.
I don’t know. But off they went.”
“Pooh!” said Myler.
“That’s an easy one. Went off to some
colony or other, of course. Common occurrence,
father-in-law. Bert, old sport, what say if we
rise on our pins and have a hundred at billiards at
the Stag and Hunter good table there.”
Stoner followed his friend out of
the little house, and once outside took him by the
arm.
“Confound the billards,
Dave, old man!” he said, almost trembling with
suppressed excitement. “Look here! d’you
know a real quiet corner in the Stag where we can
have an hour’s serious consultation. You
do? then come on, and I’ll tell you
the most wonderful story you ever heard since your
ears were opened!”
Myler, immediately impressed, led
the way into a small and vacant parlour in the rear
of a neighbouring hostelry, ordered refreshments,
bade the girl who brought them to leave him and his
friend alone, and took the liberty of locking the
door on their privacy. And that done he showed
himself such a perfect listener that he never opened
his lips until Stoner had set forth everything before
him in detail. Now and then he nodded, now and
then his sharp eyes dilated, now and then he clapped
his hands. And in the end he smote Stoner on the
shoulder.
“Stoner, old sport!” he
exclaimed. “It’s a sure thing!
Gad, I never heard a clearer. That five hundred
is yours aye, as dead certain as that my
nose is mine! It’s it’s what
they call inductive reasoning. The initials M.
and C. Mallows and Chidforth Mallalieu
and Cotherstone the two thousand pounds the
fact that Kitely was at Wilchester Assizes in 1881 that
he became Cotherstone’s tenant thirty years
after oh, I see it all, and so will a judge
and jury! Stoner, one, or both of ’em killed
that old chap to silence him!”
“That’s my notion,”
assented Stoner, who was highly pleased with himself,
and by that time convinced that his own powers, rather
than a combination of lucky circumstances, had brought
the desired result about. “Of course, I’ve
worked it out to that. And the thing now is what’s
the best line to take? What would you suggest,
Dave?”
Myler brought all his business acumen
to bear on the problem presented to him.
“What sort of chap is this Tallington?”
he asked at last, pointing to the name at the foot
of the reward handbill.
“Most respectable solicitor
in Highmarket,” answered Stoner, promptly.
“Word good?” asked Myler.
“Good as gold,” affirmed Stoner.
“Then if it was me,” said
Myler, “I should make a summary of what I knew,
on paper carefully and I should
get a private interview with this Tallington and tell
him all. Man! you’re
safe of that five hundred! For there’s
no doubt, Stoner, on the evidence, no doubt whatever!”
Stoner sat silently reflecting things
for a while. Then he gave his friend a sly, somewhat
nervous look. Although he and Myler had been
bosom friends since they were breeched, Stoner was
not quite certain as to what Myler would say to what
he, Stoner, was just then thinking of.
“Look here,” he said suddenly.
“There’s this about it. It’s
all jolly well, but a fellow’s got to think
for himself, Dave, old man. Now it doesn’t
matter a twopenny cuss to me about old Kitely I
don’t care if he was scragged twice over I’ve
no doubt he deserved it. But it’ll matter
a lot to M. & C. if they’re found out. I
can touch that five hundred easy as winking but you
take my meaning? I daresay M. & C. ’ud
run to five thousand if I kept my tongue still.
What?”
But Stoner knew at once that Myler
disapproved. The commercial traveller’s
homely face grew grave, and he shook his head with
an unmistakable gesture.
“No, Stoner,” he said.
“None o’ that! Play straight, my lad!
No hush-money transactions. Keep to the law,
Stoner, keep to the law! Besides, there’s
others than you can find all this out. What you
want to do is to get in first. See Tallington
as soon as you get back.”
“I daresay you’re right,”
admitted Stoner. “But I know
M. & C, and I know they’d give aye,
half of what they’re worth and that’s
a lot! to have this kept dark.”
That thought was with him whenever
he woke in the night, and as he strolled round Darlington
next morning, it was still with him when, after an
early dinner, he set off homeward by an early afternoon
train which carried him to High Gill junction; whence
he had to walk five miles across the moors and hills
to Highmarket. And he was still pondering it
weightily when, in one of the loneliest parts of the
solitudes which he was crossing, he turning the corner
of a little pine wood, and came face to face with
Mallalieu.