Before the solicitor and his companions
could seat themselves at the table whereat the former’s
preliminary explanation had been made, Mr. Wraythwaite
got up and motioned Avice to follow his example.
“Carfax,” he said, “there’s
no need for me to listen to all that you’ve
got to tell Mr. Brereton I know it already.
And I don’t think it will particularly interest
Miss Harborough at the moment she’ll
hear plenty about it later on. She and I will
leave you make your explanations and your
arrangements, and we’ll join you later on.”
He led the way to the door, beckoning
Avice to accompany him. But Avice paused and
turned to Brereton.
“You feel sure that it is all
right now about my father?” she said. “You
feel certain? If you do ”
“Yes absolutely,”
answered Brereton, who knew what her question meant.
“And we will let him know.”
“He knows!” exclaimed
Carfax. “That is, he knows that Mr. Wraythwaite
is here, and that everything’s all right.
Run away, my dear young lady, and be quite happy Mr.
Wraythwaite will tell you everything you want to know.
And now, my dear sir,” he continued, as he shut
the door on Wraythwaite and Avice and bustled back
to the table, “there are things that you want
to know, and that you are going to know from
me and from these two gentlemen. Mr. Stobb Mr.
Leykin. Both ex-Scotland Yard men, and now in
business for themselves as private inquiry agents.
Smart fellows though I say it to their
faces.”
“I gather from that that you
have been doing some private inquiry work, then?”
said Brereton. “In connexion with what,
now?”
“Let us proceed in order,”
answered Carfax, taking a seat at the head of the
table and putting his fingers together in a judicial
attitude. “I will open the case. When
Wraythwaite a fine fellow, who, between
ourselves, is going to do great things for Harborough
and his daughter when Wraythwaite, I say,
heard of what had happened down here, he was naturally
much upset. His first instinct was to rush to
Highmarket at once and tell everything. However,
instead of doing that, he very wisely came to me.
Having heard all that he had to tell, I advised him,
as it was absolutely certain that no harm could come
to Harborough in the end, to let matters rest for
the time being, until we had put the finishing touches
to his own affair. He, however, insisted on sending
you that money which was done: nothing
else would satisfy him. But now arose a deeply
interesting phase of the whole affair which
has been up to now kept secret between Wraythwaite,
myself, and Messrs. Stobb and Leykin there. To
it I now invite your attention.”
Mr. Carfax here pulled out a memorandum
book from his pocket, and having fitted on his spectacles
glanced at a page or two within it.
“Now,” he presently continued,
“Wraythwaite being naturally deeply interested
in the Kitely case, he procured the local newspapers Norcaster
and Highmarket papers, you know so that
he could read all about it. There was in those
papers a full report of the first proceedings before
the magistrates, and Wraythwaite was much struck by
your examination of the woman Miss Pett. In fact,
he was so much struck by your questions and her replies
that he brought the papers to me, and we read them
together. And, although we knew well enough that
we should eventually have no difficulty whatever in
proving an alibi in Harborough’s behalf,
we decided that in his interest we would make a few
guarded but strict inquiries into Miss Pett’s
antecedents.”
Brereton started. Miss Pett!
Ah! he had had ideas respecting Miss Pett
at the beginning of things, but other matters had cropped
up, and affairs had moved and developed so rapidly
that he had almost forgotten her.
“That makes you think,”
continued Carfax, with a smile. “Just so! and
what took place at that magistrates’ sitting
made Wraythwaite and myself think. And, as I
say, we employed Stobb and Leykin, men of great experience,
to just find out a little about Miss Pett.
Of course, Miss Pett herself had given us something
to go on. She had told you some particulars of
her career. She had been housekeeper to a Major
Stilman, at Kandahar Cottage, Woking. She had
occupied posts at two London hotels. So Stobb
went to Woking, and Leykin devoted himself to the
London part of the business.
“And I think, Stobb,”
concluded the solicitor, turning to one of the inquiry
agents, “I think you’d better tell Mr.
Brereton what you found out at Woking, and then Leykin
can tell us what he brought to light elsewhere.”
Stobb, a big, cheery-faced man, who
looked like a highly respectable publican, turned
to Brereton with a smile.
“It was a very easy job, sir,”
he said. “I found out all about the lady
and her connexion with Woking in a very few hours.
There are plenty of folk at Woking who remember Miss
Pett she gave you the mere facts of her
residence there correctly enough. But naturally she
didn’t tell you more than the mere facts, the
surface, as it were. Now, I got at everything.
Miss Pett was housekeeper at Woking to a Major Stilman,
a retired officer of an infantry regiment. All
the time she was with him some considerable
period he was more or less of an invalid,
and he was well known to suffer terribly from some
form of neuralgia. He got drugs to alleviate
the pain of that neuralgia from every chemist in the
place, one time or another. And one day, Major
Stilman was found dead in bed, with some of these
drugs by his bedside. Of course an inquest was
held, and, equally of course, the evidence of doctors
and chemists being what it was, a verdict of death
from misadventure overdose of the stuff,
you know was returned. Against Miss
Pett there appears to have been no suspicion in Woking
at that time and for the matter of that,”
concluded Mr. Stobb drily, “I don’t know
that there is now.”
“You have some yourself?” suggested Brereton.
“I went into things further,”
answered Mr. Stobb, with the ghost of a wink.
“I found out how things were left by
Stilman. Stilman had nothing but his pension,
and a capital sum of about two thousand pounds.
He left that two thousand, and the furniture of his
house, to Miss Pett. The will had been executed
about a twelvemonth before Stilman died. It was
proved as quickly as could be after his death, and
of course Miss Pett got her legacy. She sold
the furniture and left the neighbourhood.”
“What is your theory?” asked Brereton.
Mr. Stobb nodded across the table at Carfax.
“Not my business to say what
my theories are, Mr. Brereton,” he answered.
“All I had to do was to find out facts, and report
them to Mr. Carfax and Mr. Wraythwaite.”
“All the same,” said Brereton
quietly, “you think it quite possible that Miss
Pett, knowing that Stilman took these strong doses,
and having a pecuniary motive, gave him a still stronger
one? Come, now!”
Stobb smiled, rubbed his chin and
looked at Carfax. And Carfax pointed to Stobb’s
partner, a very quiet, observant man who had listened
with a sly expression on his face.
“Your turn, Leykin,” he
said. “Tell the result of your inquiries.”
Leykin was one of those men who possess
soft voices and slow speech. Invited to play
his part, he looked at Brereton as if he were half
apologizing for anything he had to say.
“Well,” he said, “of
course, sir, what Miss Pett told you about her posts
at two London hotels was quite right. She had
been storekeeper at one, and linen-keeper at another before
she went to Major Stilman. There was nothing
against her at either of those places. But of
course I wanted to know more about her than that.
Now she said in answer to you that before she went
to the first of those hotels she had lived at home
with her father, a Sussex farmer. So she had but
it was a long time before. She had spent ten
years in India between leaving home and going to the
Royal Belvedere. She went out to India as a nurse
in an officer’s family. And while she was
in India she was charged with strangling a fellow-servant a
Eurasian girl who had excited her jealousy.”
Brereton started again at that, and
he turned a sharp glance on Carfax, who nodded emphatically
and signed to Leykin to proceed.
“I have the report of that affair
in my pocket,” continued Leykin, more softly
and slowly than ever. “It’s worth
reading, Mr. Brereton, and perhaps you’ll amuse
yourself with it sometime. But I can give you
the gist of it in a few words. Pett was evidently
in love with her master’s orderly. He wasn’t
in love with her. She became madly jealous of
this Eurasian girl, who was under-nurse. The
Eurasian girl was found near the house one night with
a cord tightly twisted round her neck dead,
of course. There were no other signs of violence,
but some gold ornaments which the girl wore had disappeared.
Pett was tried and she was discharged,
for she set up an alibi of a sort
that wouldn’t have satisfied me,” remarked
Leykin in an aside. “But there was a queer
bit of evidence given which you may think of use now.
One of the witnesses said that Pett had been much
interested in reading some book about the methods
of the Thugs, and had talked in the servants’
quarters of how they strangled their victims with
shawls of the finest silk. Now this Eurasian
girl had been strangled with a silk handkerchief and
if that handkerchief could only have been traced to
Pett, she’d have been found guilty. But,
as I said, she was found not guilty and
she left her place at once and evidently returned
to England. That’s all, sir.”
“Stobb has a matter that might
be mentioned,” said Carfax, glancing at the
other inquiry agent.
“Well, it’s not much,
Mr. Brereton,” said Stobb. “It’s
merely that we’ve ascertained that Kitely had
left all he had to this woman, and that ”
“I know that,” interrupted
Brereton. “She made no concealment of it.
Or, rather, her nephew, acting for her, didn’t.”
“Just so,” remarked Stobb
drily. “But did you know that the nephew
had already proved the will, and sold the property?
No? well, he has! Not much time lost,
you see, after the old man’s death, sir.
In fact, it’s been done about as quickly as
it well could be done. And of course Miss Pett
will have received her legacy which means
that by this time she’ll have got all that Kitely
had to leave.”
Brereton turned to the solicitor,
who, during the recital of facts by the two inquiry
agents, had maintained his judicial attitude, as if
he were on the bench and listening to the opening
statements of counsel.
“Are you suggesting, all of
you that you think Miss Pett murdered Kitely?”
he asked. “I should like a direct answer
to that question.”
“My dear sir!” exclaimed
Carfax. “What does it look like? You’ve
heard the woman’s record! The probability
is that she did murder that Eurasian, girl that
she took advantage of Stilman’s use of drugs
to finish him off. She certainly benefited by
Stilman’s death and she’s without
doubt benefited by Kitely’s. I repeat what
does it look like?”
“What do you propose to do?” asked Brereton.
The inquiry agents glanced at each
other and then at Carfax. And Carfax slowly took
off his spectacles with a flourish, and looked more
judicial than ever as he answered the young barrister’s
question.
“I will tell you what I propose
to do,” he replied. “I propose to
take these two men over to Highmarket this evening
and to let them tell the Highmarket police all they
have just told you!”