Mr. Christopher Pett, warned by the
uplifted finger of his aunt, tip-toed into the living-room,
and setting down his small travelling bag on the table
proceeded to divest himself of a thick overcoat, a
warm muffler, woollen gloves, and a silk hat.
And Miss Pett, having closed the outer and inner doors,
came in and glanced inquiringly at him.
“Which way did you come, this time?” she
inquired.
“High Gill,” replied Christopher.
“Got an afternoon express that stopped there.
Jolly cold it was crossing those moors of yours, too,
I can tell you! I can do with a drop of
something. I say is there anything
afoot about here? anything going on?”
“Why?” asked Miss Pett,
producing the whisky and the lemons. “And
how do you mean?”
Christopher pulled an easy chair to
the fire and stretched his hands to the blaze.
“Up there, on the moor,”
he answered. “There’s fellows going
about with lights lanterns, I should say.
I didn’t see ’em close at hand there
were several of ’em crossing about like
fire-flies as if the chaps who carried
’em were searching for something.”
Miss Pett set the decanter and the
materials for toddy on the table at her nephew’s
side, and took a covered plate from the cupboard in
the corner.
“Them’s potted meat sandwiches,”
she said. “Very toothsome you’ll find
’em I didn’t prepare much, for
I knew you’d get your dinner on the train.
Yes, well, there is something afoot they
are searching. Not for something, though, but
for somebody. Mallalieu!”
Christopher, his mouth full of sandwiches,
and his hand laid on the decanter, lifted a face full
of new and alert interest.
“The Mayor!” he exclaimed.
“Quite so,” assented Miss
Pett. “Anthony Mallalieu, Esquire, Mayor
of Highmarket. They want him, does the police bad!”
Christopher still remained transfixed.
The decanter was already tilted in his hand, but he
tilted it no further; the sandwich hung bulging in
his cheek.
“Good Lord!” he said.
“Not for ” he paused,
nodding his head towards the front of the cottage
where the wood lay “ not for that?
They ain’t suspicioning him?”
“No, but for killing his clerk,
who’d found something out,” replied Miss
Pett. “The clerk was killed Sunday; they
took up Mallalieu and his partner today, and tried
’em, and Mallalieu slipped the police somehow,
after the case was adjourned, and escaped. And he’s
here!”
Christopher had begun to pour the
whisky into his glass. In his astonishment he
rattled the decanter against the rim.
“What!” he exclaimed. “Here?
In this cottage?”
“In there,” answered Miss
Pett. “In Kitely’s room. Safe
and sound. There’s no danger. He’ll
not wake. I mixed him a glass of toddy before
he went to bed, and neither earthquakes nor fire-alarms
’ull wake him before nine o’clock tomorrow
morning.”
“Whew!” said Christopher.
“Um! it’s a dangerous game it’s
harbouring, you know. However, they’d suspect
that he’d come here. Whatever made him
come here?”
“I made him come here,”
replied Miss Pett. “I caught him in the
wood outside there, as I was coming back from the
Town Hall, so I made him come in. It’ll
pay very well, Chris.”
Mr. Pett, who was lifting his glass
to his lips, arrested it in mid-air, winked over its
rim at his aunt, and smiled knowingly.
“You’re a good hand at
business, I must say, old lady!” he remarked
admiringly. “Of course, of course, if you’re
doing a bit of business out of it ”
“That’ll come tomorrow,”
said Miss Pett, seating herself at the table and glancing
at her nephew’s bag. “We’ll
do our own business tonight. Well, how have you
come on?”
Christopher munched and drank for
a minute or two. Then he nodded, with much satisfaction
in his manner.
“Very well,” he answered.
“I got what I consider a very good price.
Sold the whole lot to another Brixton property-owner,
got paid, and have brought you the money. All
of it ain’t even taken my costs, my
expenses, and my commission out of it yet.”
“How much did you sell for?” asked Miss
Pett.
Christopher pulled his bag to his
side and took a bundle of red-taped documents from
it.
“You ought to think yourself
jolly lucky,” he said, wagging his head admonitorily
at his aunt. “I see a lot of the state of
the property market, and I can assure you I did uncommonly
well for you. I shouldn’t have got what
I did if it had been sold by auction. But the
man I sold to was a bit keen, ’cause he’s
already got adjacent property, and he gave rather
more than he would ha’ done in other circumstances.
I got,” he continued, consulting the topmost
of his papers, “I got, in round figures, three
thousand four hundred to be exact, three
thousand four hundred, seventeen, five, eleven.”
“Where’s the money?” demanded Miss
Pett.
“It’s here,” answered
Christopher, tapping his breast. “In my
pocket-book. Notes, big and little so
that we can settle up.”
Miss Pett stretched out her hand.
“Hand it over!” she said.
Christopher gave his aunt a sidelong glance.
“Hadn’t we better reckon
up my costs and commission first?” he suggested.
“Here’s an account of the costs the
commission, of course, was to be settled between you
and me.”
“We’ll settle all that
when you’ve handed the money over,” said
Miss Pett. “I haven’t counted it
yet.”
There was a certain unwillingness
in Christopher Pett’s manner as he slowly produced
a stout pocket-book and took from it a thick wad of
bank-notes. He pushed this across to his aunt,
with a tiny heap of silver and copper.
“Well, I’m trusting to
you, you know,” he said a little doubtfully.
“Don’t forget that I’ve done well
for you.”
Miss Pett made no answer. She
had taken a pair of spectacles from her pocket, and
with these perched on the bridge of her sharp nose
she proceeded to count the notes, while her nephew
alternately sipped at his toddy and stroked his chin,
meanwhile eyeing his relative’s proceedings
with somewhat rueful looks.
“Three thousand, four hundred
and seventeen pounds, five shillings and elevenpence,”
and Miss Pett calmly. “And them costs, now,
and the expenses how much do they come
to, Chris?”
“Sixty-one, two, nine,”
answered Christopher, passing one of his papers across
the table with alacrity. “You’ll find
it quite right I did it as cheap as possible
for you.”
Miss Pett set her elbow on her heap
of bank-notes while she examined the statement.
That done, she looked over the tops of her spectacles
at the expectant Christopher.
“Well, about that commission,”
she said. “Of course, you know, Chris,
you oughtn’t to charge me what you’d charge
other folks. You ought to do it very reasonable
indeed for me. What were you thinking of, now?”
“I got the top price,”
remarked Christopher reflectively. “I got
you quite four hundred more than the market price.
How would how would five per cent. be,
now?”
Miss Pett threw up the gay turban
with a toss of surprise.
“Five per cent!” she ejaculated.
“Christopher Pett! whatever are you
talking about? Why, that ’ud be a hundred
and seventy pound! Eh, dear! nothing
of the sort it ’ud be as good as robbery.
I’m astonished at you.”
“Well, how much, then?”
growled Christopher. “Hang it all! don’t
be close with your own nephew.”
“I’ll give you a hundred
pounds to include the costs,” said
Miss Pett firmly. “Not a penny more but,”
she added, bending forward and nodding her head towards
that half of the cottage wherein Mallalieu slumbered
so heavily, “I’ll give you something to
boot an opportunity of feathering your
nest out of him!”
Christopher’s face, which had
clouded heavily, lightened somewhat at this, and he
too glanced at the door.
“Will it be worth it?”
he asked doubtfully. “What is there to be
got out of him if he’s flying from justice?
He’ll carry naught and he can’t
get at anything that he has, either.”
Miss Pett gave vent to a queer, dry
chuckle; the sound of her laughter always made her
nephew think of the clicking of machinery that badly
wanted oiling.
“He’s heaps o’ money
on him!” she whispered. “After he
dropped off tonight I went through his pockets.
We’ve only got to keep a tight hold on him to
get as much as ever we like! So put
your hundred in your pocket, and we’ll see about
the other affair tomorrow.”
“Oh, well, of course, in that
case!” said Christopher. He picked up the
banknote which his aunt pushed towards him and slipped
it into his purse. “We shall have to play
on his fears a bit, you know,” he remarked.
“I think we shall be equal to
it between us,” answered Miss Pett
drily. “Them big, flabby men’s easy
frightened.”
Mallalieu was certainly frightened
when he woke suddenly next morning to find Miss Pett
standing at the side of his bed. He glared at
her for one instant of wild alarm and started up on
his pillows. Miss Pett laid one of her claw-like
hands on his shoulder.
“Don’t alarm yourself,
mister,” she said. “All’s safe,
and here’s something that’ll do you good a
cup of nice hot coffee real Mocha, to which
the late Kitely was partial with a drop
o’rum in it. Drink it and you
shall have your breakfast in half an hour. It’s
past nine o’clock.”
“I must have slept very sound,”
said Mallalieu, following his gaoler’s orders.
“You say all’s safe? Naught heard
or seen?”
“All’s safe, all’s
serene,” replied Miss Pett. “And you’re
in luck’s way, for there’s my nephew Christopher
arrived from London, to help me about settling my
affairs and removing my effects from this place, and
he’s a lawyer and’ll give you good advice.”
Mallalieu growled a little. He
had seen Mr. Christopher Pett and he was inclined
to be doubtful of him.
“Is he to be trusted?”
he muttered. “I expect he’ll have
to be squared, too!”
“Not beyond reason,” replied
Miss Pett. “We’re not unreasonable
people, our family. He’s a very sensible
young man, is Christopher. The late Kitely had
a very strong opinion of his abilities.”
Mallalieu had no doubt of Mr. Christopher
Pett’s abilities in a certain direction after
he had exchanged a few questions and answers with that
young gentleman. For Christopher was shrewd, sharp,
practical and judicial.
“It’s a very dangerous
and you’ll excuse plain speaking under
the circumstances, sir very foolish thing
that you’ve done, Mr. Mallalieu,” he said,
as he and the prisoner sat closeted together in the
still shuttered and curtained parlour-bedroom.
“The mere fact of your making your escape, sir,
is what some would consider a proof of guilt it
is indeed! And of course my aunt and
myself, in my small way we’re running
great risks, Mr. Mallalieu we really are great
risks!”
“Now then, you’ll not
lose by me,” said Mallalieu. “I’m
not a man of straw.”
“All very well, sir,”
replied Christopher, “but even if you were a
millionaire and recompensed us on what I may term a
princely scale not that we shall expect
it, Mr. Mallalieu the risks would be extraordinary ahem!
I mean will be extraordinary. For you see, Mr.
Mallalieu, there’s two or three things that’s
dead certain. To start with, sir, it’s
absolutely impossible for you to get away from here
by yourself you can’t do it!”
“Why not?” growled Mallalieu.
“I can get away at nightfall.”
“No, sir,” affirmed Christopher
stoutly. “I saw the condition of the moors
last night. Patrolled, Mr. Mallalieu, patrolled!
By men with lights. That patrolling, sir, will
go on for many a night. Make up your mind, Mr.
Mallalieu, that if you set foot out of this house,
you’ll see the inside of Norcaster Gaol before
two hours is over!”
“What do you advise, then?”
demanded Mallalieu. “Here! I’m
fairly in for it, so I’ll tell you what my notion
was. If I can once get to a certain part of Norcaster,
I’m safe. I can get away to the Continent
from there.”
“Then, sir,” replied Christopher,
“the thing is to devise a plan by which you
can be conveyed to Norcaster without suspicion.
That’ll have to be arranged between me and my
aunt hence our risks on your behalf.”
“Your aunt said she’d a plan,” remarked
Mallalieu.
“Not quite matured, sir,”
said Christopher. “It needs a little reflection
and trimming, as it were. Now what I advise, Mr.
Mallalieu, is this you keep snug here,
with my aunt as sentinel she assures me
that even if the police don’t be frightened,
sir! did come here, she could hide you
quite safely before ever she opened the door to them.
As for me, I’ll go, casual-like, into the town,
and do a bit of quiet looking and listening.
I shall be able to find out how the land lies, sir and
when I return I’ll report to you, and the three
of us will put our heads together.”
Leaving the captive in charge of Miss
Pett, Christopher, having brushed his silk hat and
his overcoat and fitted on a pair of black kid gloves,
strolled solemnly into Highmarket. He was known
to a few people there, and he took good care to let
those of his acquaintance who met him hear that he
had come down to arrange his aunt’s affairs,
and to help in the removal of the household goods
bequeathed to her by the deceased Kitely. In
proof of this he called in at the furniture remover’s,
to get an estimate of the cost of removal to Norcaster
Docks thence, said Christopher, the furniture
could be taken by sea to London, where Miss Pett intended
to reside in future. At the furniture remover’s,
and in such other shops as he visited, and in the
bar-parlour of the Highmarket Arms, where he stayed
an hour or so, gossiping with the loungers, and sipping
a glass or two of dry sherry, Christopher picked up
a great deal of information. And at noon he returned
to the cottage, having learned that the police and
everybody in Highmarket firmly believed that Mallalieu
had got clear and clean away the night before, and
was already far beyond pursuit. The police theory
was that there had been collusion, and that immediately
on his escape he had been whirled off by some person
to whose identity there was as yet no clue.
But Christopher Pett told a very different
story to Mallalieu. The moors, he said, were
being patrolled night and day: it was believed
the fugitive was in hiding in one of the old quarries.
Every road and entrance to Norcaster, and to all the
adjacent towns and stations, was watched and guarded.
There was no hope for Mallalieu but in the kindness
and contrivance of the aunt and the nephew, and Mallalieu
recognized the inevitable and was obliged to yield
himself to their tender mercies.