The recollection of that stick plunged
Mallalieu into another of his ague-like fits of shaking
and trembling. There was little sleep for him
after that: he spent most of the night in thinking,
anticipating, and scheming. That stick would
almost certainly be found, and it would be found near
Stoner’s body. A casual passer-by would
not recognize it, a moorland shepherd would not recognize
it. But the Highmarket police, to whom it would
be handed, would know it at once to be the Mayor’s:
it was one which Mallalieu carried almost every day a
plain, very stout oak staff. And the police would
want to know how it came to be in that quarry.
Curse it! was ever anything so unfortunate! however
could he have so far lost his head as to forget it?
He was half tempted to rise in the middle of the night
and set out for the moors, to find it. But the
night was dark, and solitary as the moors and the quarry
where he dared not risk the taking of a lantern.
And so he racked his brains in the effort to think
of some means of explaining the presence of the stick.
He hit on a notion at last remembering suddenly
that Stoner had carried neither stick nor umbrella.
If the stick were found he would say that he had left
it at the office on the Saturday, and that the clerk
must have borrowed it. There was nothing unlikely
in that: it was a good reason, it would explain
why it came to be found near the body. Naturally,
the police would believe the word of the Mayor:
it would be a queer thing if they didn’t, in
Mallalieu’s opinion. And therewith he tried
to go to sleep, and made a miserable failure of it.
As he lay tossing and groaning in
his comfortable bed that night, Mallalieu thought
over many things. How had Stoner acquired his
information? Did anybody else know what Stoner
knew? After much reflection he decided that nobody
but Stoner did know. Further reckoning up of
matters gave him a theory as to how Stoner had got
to know. He saw it all according to
his own idea. Stoner had overheard the conversation
between old Kitely and Cotherstone in the private office,
of course! That was it he wondered
he had never thought of it before. Between the
partners’ private room and the outer office in
which Stoner sat, there was a little window in the
wall; it had been specially made so that papers could
be passed from one room to the other. And, of
course, on that afternoon it had probably been a little
way open, as it often was, and Stoner had heard what
passed between Cotherstone and his tenant. Being
a deep chap, Stoner had kept the secret to himself
until the reward was offered. Of course, his
idea was blackmail Mallalieu had no doubt
about that. No all things considered,
he did not believe that Stoner had shared his knowledge Stoner
would be too well convinced of its value to share
it with anybody. That conclusion comforted Mallalieu once
more he tried to sleep.
But his sleep was a poor thing that
night, and he felt tired and worn when, as usual,
he went early to the yard. He was there before
Cotherstone; when Cotherstone came, no more than a
curt nod was exchanged between them. They had
never spoken to each other except on business since
the angry scene of a few days before, and now Mallalieu,
after a glance at some letters which had come in the
previous evening, went off down the yard. He
stayed there an hour: when he re-entered the
office he looked with an affectation of surprise at
the clerk’s empty desk.
“Stoner not come?” he demanded curtly.
Cotherstone, who was turning over
the leaves of an account book, replied just as curtly.
“Not yet!”
Mallalieu fidgeted about for a while,
arranging some papers he had brought in from the yard.
Suddenly he uttered an exclamation of impatience,
and going to the door, called to a lad who was passing.
“Here, you!” he said.
“You know where Mr. Stoner lodges? Mrs.
Battley’s. Run round there, and see why
he hasn’t come to his work. It’s
an hour and a half past his time. Happen he’s
poorly run now, sharp!”
He went off down the yard again when
he had despatched this message; he came back to the
office ten minutes later, just as the messenger returned.
“Well?” he demanded, with
a side-glance to assure himself that Cotherstone was
at hand. “Where is he, like?”
“Please, sir, Mrs. Battley,
she says as how Mr. Stoner went away on Saturday afternoon,
sir,” answered the lad, “and he hasn’t
been home since. She thinks he went to Darlington,
sir, on a visit.”
Mallalieu turned into the office, growling.
“Must ha’ missed his train,”
he muttered as he put more papers on Stoner’s
desk. “Here happen you’ll
attend to these things they want booking
up.”
Cotherstone made no reply, and Mallalieu
presently left him and went home to get his breakfast.
And as he walked up the road to his house he wondered
why Stoner had gone to Darlington. Was it possible
that he had communicated what he knew to any of his
friends? If so
“Confound the suspense and the
uncertainty!” growled Mallalieu. “It
’ud wear the life out of a man. I’ve
a good mind to throw the whole thing up and clear
out! I could do it easy enough wi’ my means.
A clear track and no more o’ this
infernal anxiety.”
He reflected, as he made a poor show
of eating his breakfast, on the ease with which he
could get away from Highmarket and from England.
Being a particularly astute man of business, Mallalieu
had taken good care that all his eggs were not in
one basket. He had many baskets his
Highmarket basket was by no means the principal one.
Indeed all that Mallalieu possessed in Highmarket
was his share of the business and his private house.
As he had made his money he had invested it in easily
convertible, gilt-edged securities, which would be
realized at an hour’s notice in London or New
York, Paris or Vienna. It would be the easiest
thing in the world for him, as Mayor of Highmarket,
to leave the town on Corporation business, and within
a few hours to be where nobody could find him; within
a few more, to be out of the country. Lately,
he had often thought of going right away, to enjoy
himself for the rest of his life. He had made
one complete disappearance already; why not make another?
Before he went townwards again that morning, he was
beginning to give serious attention to the idea.
Meanwhile, however, there was the
business of the day to attend to, and Stoner’s
absence threw additional work on the two partners.
Then at twelve o’clock, Mallalieu had to go
over to the Town Hall to preside at a meeting of the
General Purposes Committee. That was just over,
and he was thinking of going home to his lunch when
the superintendent of police came into the committee-room
and drew him aside.
“I’ve bad news for you,
Mr. Mayor,” he announced in a whisper. “Your
clerk he hasn’t been at work this
morning, I suppose?”
“Well?” demanded Mallalieu,
nerving himself for what he felt to be coming.
“What about it?”
“He’s met with a bad accident,”
replied the superintendent. “In fact, sir,
he’s dead! A couple of men found his body
an hour or so ago in Hobwick Quarry, up on the moor,
and it’s been brought down to the mortuary.
You’d better come round, Mr. Mayor Mr.
Cotherstone’s there, now.”
Mallalieu followed without a word.
But once outside the Town Hall he turned to his companion.
“Have you made aught out of
it?” he asked. “He’s been away,
so his landlady says, since Saturday afternoon:
I sent round to inquire for him when he didn’t
turn up this morning. What do you know, like?”
“It looks as if it had been
an accident,” answered the superintendent.
“These men that found him noticed some broken
railings at top of the quarry. They looked down
and saw a body. So they made their way down and
found Stoner. It would seem as if he’d
leaned or sat on the railings and they’d given
way beneath him, and of course he’d pitched headlong
into the quarry. It’s fifty feet deep, Mr.
Mayor! That’s all one can think of.
But Dr. Rockcliffe’s with him now.”
Mallalieu made a mighty effort to
appear calm, as, with a grave and concerned face,
he followed his guide into the place where the doctor,
an official or two, and Cotherstone were grouped about
the dead man. He gave one glance at his partner
and Cotherstone gave one swift look at him and
there was something in Cotherstone’s look which
communicated a sudden sense of uneasy fear to Mallalieu:
it was a look of curious intelligence, almost a sort
of signal. And Mallalieu experienced a vague
feeling of dread as he turned to the doctor.
“A bad job a bad
job!” he muttered, shaking his head and glancing
sideways at the body. “D’ye make aught
out of it, doctor? Can you say how it came about?”
Dr. Rockcliffe pursed up his lips
and his face became inscrutable. He kept silence
for a moment when he spoke his voice was
unusually stern.
“The lad’s neck is broken,
and his spine’s fractured,” he said in
a low voice. “Either of those injuries
was enough to cause death. But look
at that!”
He pointed to a contusion which showed
itself with unmistakable plainness on the dead man’s
left temple, and again he screwed up his lips as if
in disgust at some deed present only to the imagination.
“That’s a blow!”
he said, more sternly than before. “A blow
from some blunt instrument! It was a savage blow,
too, dealt with tremendous force. It may may,
I say have killed this poor fellow on the
spot he may have been dead before ever
he fell down that quarry.”
It was only by an enormous effort
of will that Mallalieu prevented himself from yielding
to one of his shaking fits.
“But but mightn’t
he ha’ got that with striking his head against
them rocks as he fell?” he suggested. “It’s
a rocky place, that, and the rocks project, like,
so ”
“No!” said the doctor,
doggedly. “That’s no injury from any
rock or stone or projection. It’s the result
of a particularly fierce blow dealt with great force
by some blunt instrument a life preserver,
a club, a heavy stick. It’s no use arguing
it. That’s a certainty!”
Cotherstone, who had kept quietly
in the background, ventured a suggestion.
“Any signs of his having been robbed?”
he asked.
“No, sir,” replied the
superintendent promptly. “I’ve everything
that was on him. Not much, either. Watch
and chain, half a sovereign, some loose silver and
copper, his pipe and tobacco, a pocket-book with a
letter or two and such-like in it that’s
all. There’d been no robbery.”
“I suppose you took a look round?”
asked Cotherstone. “See anything that suggested
a struggle? Or footprints? Or aught of that
sort?”
The superintendent shook his head.
“Naught!” he answered.
“I looked carefully at the ground round those
broken railings. But it’s the sort of ground
that wouldn’t show footprints, you know covered
with that short, wiry mountain grass that shows nothing.”
“And nothing was found?”
asked Mallalieu. “No weapons, eh?”
For the life of him he could not resist
asking that his anxiety about the stick
was overmastering him. And when the superintendent
and the two policemen who had been with him up to
Hobwick Quarry had answered that they had found nothing
at all, he had hard work to repress a sigh of relief.
He presently went away hoping that the oak stick had
fallen into a crevice of the rocks or amongst the
brambles which grew out of them; there was a lot of
tangle-wood about that spot, and it was quite possible
that the stick, kicked violently away, had fallen where
it would never be discovered. And there
was yet a chance for him to make that possible discovery
impossible. Now that the body had been found,
he himself could visit the spot with safety, on the
pretext of curiosity. He could look round; if
he found the stick he could drop it into a safe fissure
of the rocks, or make away with it. It was a good
notion and instead of going home to lunch
Mallalieu turned into a private room of the Highmarket
Arms, ate a sandwich and drank a glass of ale, and
hurried off, alone, to the moors.
The news of this second mysterious
death flew round Highmarket and the neighbourhood
like wild-fire. Brereton heard of it during the
afternoon, and having some business in the town in
connexion with Harborough’s defence, he looked
in at the police-station and found the superintendent
in an unusually grave and glum mood.
“This sort of thing’s
getting beyond me, Mr. Brereton,” he said in
a whisper. “Whether it is that I’m
not used to such things thank God! we’ve
had little experience of violence in this place in
my time! or what it is, but I’ve
got it into my head that this poor young fellow’s
death’s connected in some way with Kitely’s
affair! I have indeed, sir! it’s
been bothering me all the afternoon. For all the
doctors there’s been several of ’em
in during the last two hours are absolutely
agreed that Stoner was felled, sir felled
by a savage blow, and they say he may ha’ been
dead before ever he fell over that quarry edge.
Mr. Brereton I misdoubt it’s another
murder!”
“Have you anything to go on?”
asked Brereton. “Had anybody any motive?
Was there any love affair jealousy, you
know anything of that sort?”
“No, I’m sure there wasn’t,”
replied the superintendent. “The whole town
and county’s ringing with the news, and I should
ha’ heard something by now. And it wasn’t
robbery not that he’d much on him,
poor fellow! There’s all he had,”
he went on, opening a drawer. “You can look
at ’em, if you like.”
He left the room just then, and Brereton,
disregarding the cheap watch and chain and the pigskin
purse with its light load, opened Stoner’s pocket-book.
There was not much in that, either a letter
or two, some receipted bills, a couple of much creased
copies of the reward bill, some cuttings from newspapers.
He turned from these to the pocket-book itself, and
on the last written page he found an entry which made
him start. For there again were the initials!
“ M. & C. fraud bldg.
soc. Wilchester Assizes 81 L2000 money
never recovered 2 yrs. K. près.”
Not much but Brereton hastily
copied that entry. And he had just written the
last word when the superintendent came back into the
room with a man who was in railway uniform.
“Come in here,” the superintendent
was saying. “You can tell me what it is
before this gentleman. Some news from High Gill
junction, Mr. Brereton,” he went on, “something
about Stoner. Well, my lad, what is it?”
“The station-master sent me
over on his bicycle,” replied the visitor.
“We heard over there this afternoon about Stoner’s
body being found, and that you were thinking he must
have fallen over into the quarry in the darkness.
And we know over yonder that that’s not likely.”
“Aye?” said the superintendent.
“Well, as a matter of fact, my lad, we weren’t
thinking that, but no doubt that rumour’s got
out. Now why do you railway folks know it isn’t
likely?”
“That’s what I’ve
come to tell,” answered the man, a sharp, intelligent-looking
fellow. “I’m ticket-collector over
there, as you know, sir. Now, young Stoner came
to the junction on Saturday afternoon and booked for
Darlington, and of course went to Darlington.
He came back yesterday afternoon Sunday by
the train that gets to our junction at 3.3. I
took his ticket. Instead of going out of the station
by the ordinary way, he got over the fence on the
down line side, saying to me that he’d take
a straight cut across the moor to Highmarket.
I saw him going Highmarket way for some distance.
And he’d be at Hobwick Quarry by 4.30 at the
latest long before darkness.”
“Just about sunset, as a matter
of fact,” remarked the superintendent.
“The sun sets about 4.18.”
“So he couldn’t have fallen
over in the darkness,” continued the ticket-collector.
“If all had gone well with him, he’d have
been down in Highmarket here by dusk.”
“I’m obliged to you,”
said the superintendent. “It’s worth
knowing, of course. Came from Darlington, eh?
Was he alone?”
“Quite alone, sir.”
“You didn’t see anybody
else going that way across the moors, did you?
Didn’t notice anybody following him?”
“No,” replied the ticket-collector
with decision. “Me and one of my mates
watched him a long way, and I’ll swear there
was no one near him till he was out of sight.
We didn’t watch him on purpose, neither.
When the down-train had gone, me and my mate sat down
to smoke our pipes, and from where we were we could
see right across the moors in this direction.
We saw Stoner now and then, you understand right
away to Chat Bank.”
“You didn’t notice any
suspicious characters come to your station that afternoon
or evening?” asked the superintendent.
The ticket-collector replied that
nothing of that sort had been seen, and he presently
went away. And Brereton, after an unimportant
word or two, went away too, certain by that time that
the death of Stoner had some sinister connexion with
the murder of Kitely.