Before Mr. Narkom could ask any questions,
the sound of excited voices and hasty footsteps coming
up the drive and making toward the lonely house drove
all other thoughts from his head.
“Come along,” he whispered
to Cleek. “It’s Hammond and Petrie
returning from the keeper’s shelter on the Common.
I know their voices. And they have unearthed
something startling or they wouldn’t be talking
so excitedly.”
They had, indeed, as he learned when
he hurried out and intercepted them at the cottage
steps; for between them they were supporting a man
stripped of coat, waistcoat, and hat, and wearing bound
round his head a bloodstained handkerchief. His
bearded face was bruised and battered, his shirt and
trousers were covered with mud, and he was so weak
from loss of blood that it was next to impossible
for him to stand alone.
“Sir,” broke out Hammond,
as they came up with Mr. Narkom and paused with this
unexpected newcomer before him, “I don’t
know whether that French mounseer is a wizard or not,
but he copped the lay at the first guess, Mr. Narkom,
and foreigner or not I take off my blessed hat to
him. Here’s what we found when we got to
the shelter, sir this here party, knocked
senseless, tied up like a trussed fowl, and tucked
out of sight under the gorse bushes nigh the shelter.
Coat, cap, badge, and truncheon all gone, sir nicked
by that dare-devil who took us in so nicely down there
at the old railway arch. The murderer himself
he were, I’ll lay my life; for look here, sir,
here’s what he most brained this poor chap with a
hammer, sir look! And a hammer was
used, wasn’t it, to spike that dead man to the
wall? Had him, Mr. Narkom, had the rascal in
our very hands, that’s what we did, sir, and
then like a parcel of chuckleheads we went and let
him go.”
“It is a trick that has succeeded
with others besides yourselves,” said Cleek,
who had been bending over the injured man. He
looked up at Narkom significantly. “Monsieur,
I expect my assistant here any minute now. Would
it not be as well to report this shocking affair to
the local authorities?”
“Certainly, monsieur!”
agreed Narkom, who had forgotten that Dollops might
arrive now at any moment.
“What about this poor chap here,
sir?” interposed Petrie. “He’s
in a desperately bad way. Oughtn’t we to
take him with us, and turn him over to the hospital
folk?”
“Non that is, not
yet, my friend,” softly interposed Cleek.
“Your good superintendent and I will look after
him for a little time. There is a question or
two to ask. He will bear the strain of talking
now better than he might be able to do later.
Notify the hospital officials as you pass through
the town proper, and have an ambulance sent out.
That’s all. You may go.”
“Well, so help me,” began
the indignant Petrie, then discreetly shut up and
went. A moment later the limousine had whizzed
away into the mist and darkness with the three men,
and Cleek and Narkom were alone with the injured keeper.
“I expect that is Dollops in
his taxi,” whispered Cleek. “I thought
I heard the sound of a motor. That will obliterate
every track if you don’t stop him. Head
him off if you can, dear chap, and set him to work
directly you have dismissed the taxi. Tell Dollops
to measure and make a drawing of every footmark in
and about the place. Quickly, please, before
it is too late.”
Mr. Narkom hurried off and vanished
in the mist, leaving his ally alone with the dying
man, for that he was dying there could be no question.
A bullet had gone through his body;
a hammer had battered in the back of his head; he
was but partly conscious with frequent lapses
into complete insensibility and the marvel
was not that he occasionally uttered some wandering,
half-coherent sentences, but that he was able to speak
at all.
“My poor chap,” Cleek
said feelingly, as he administered a stimulant by
which the keeper’s flagging energies were whipped
up. “Try to speak try to answer
a question or two try for a woman’s
sake.”
“A woman’s?” he
mumbled feebly. “Aye, my poor wife
Gawd ’elp her her and the kiddies!
And me a-goin’ ‘ome, sir me
a-gettin’ of my death like this for jist a-doin’
of my duty doin’ of it honest and
true, sir, for king and country!”
“And both letting you face the
nightly peril of it unarmed!” said Cleek bitterly;
then, passionately: “Will you wake up, England?
Will you wake up and do justice by these men who give
their lives that you may sleep in peace, and who,
with a badge and a truncheon and two willing hands,
must fight your criminal classes and keep law and order
for you?”
“Aye some day, may
like some day, sir,” mumbled the dwindling
voice; then it trailed off and sank sobbingly away,
and Cleek had to administer more brandy to bolster
up his fading strength.
“A word,” he said eagerly,
the hammering of his heart getting into his voice
and making it unsteady. “Just one word,
but much depends upon it. Tell me now before
anybody comes: Who did it? Man or woman?”
“I dunno, sir I
didn’t see. The mist was thick. Whoever
it was, come at me from behind. But there was
two there must have been two one
as I heard a-runnin’ toward me when I challenged,
sir, and and got shot down like a dog;
and ’tother as come at me in the back when I
sang out ‘Murder’ and blew my whistle
for help. But men or women, whichever it may
a-been, I never see, sir, never. But one woman
was on the Common to-night. A lady, sir oh,
yes, a lady indeed.”
“A lady? Speak to me quickly my
friend is returning. What did that lady wear?
Was it a pink dress? Or couldn’t you see?”
“Oh, yes, I could see she
came near me she spoke in passing.
She gave me a bit of money, sir, and asked me not
to mention about her bein’ out there to-night
and me havin’ met her. But it wasn’t
a pink dress, sir; it was green all shiny
pale green satin with sparklin’ things on the
bosom and smellin’ like a field o’ voylits
on a mornin’ in May!”
The sense of unspeakable thankfulness
that Cleek experienced upon hearing that the dress
of this unknown “lady” was not pink, was
lost in a twinkling in one of utter and overwhelming
surprise at learning that it was green!
Pink, white, and green, here were three evening dresses
called into the snare of this night’s mystery;
and yet a third woman now involved. White
satin, that had been Lady Katharine Fordham’s
gown to-night; pink chiffon, that had been Ailsa Lorne’s.
Who then was the wearer of the pale green satin gown?
Here was the riddle of the night taking yet another
perplexing turn.
A clatter of hasty footsteps came
along the drive and up the steps to the veranda, and
Narkom, in a state of violent excitement, stood beside
him.
“All right,” he said,
answering Cleek’s inquiring glance. “I
headed the taxi off and set Dollops to work as you
suggested and a blessed good thing I did,
too, otherwise we might have lost valuable clues.”
“There were footsteps then?”
“Footsteps? Great Scott,
yes, heaps of them: the absolute continuation
of those which led me and my men to this house.
But the madness of the thing, the puzzle of the thing!
No man on earth can run away in two directions, yet
there the blessed things are, going down the road at
full tilt and coming back up it again still on a dead
run. Two lines of them, old chap, one going and
the other returning and both passing by the gate of
this house. By it, do you hear? by
it, and never once turning in; yet in the garden we
have found marks that correspond with them to the
fraction of a hair, and we know positively that the
fellow did come in here. It licks me,
Cleek it positively licks me. It’s
beyond all reason.”
“Yes,” admitted Cleek,
thinking of the green satin dress. “It is,
Mr. Narkom, it certainly is.”
“Dollops will bring the drawings
he’s making to you as soon as he has covered
all the ground,” resumed the superintendent almost
immediately. “Clever young dog that and
no mistake. But to return to our muttons, old
chap. Did you get anything out of this poor fellow?
Any clue to the party who assaulted him?”
“None. He doesn’t
know. For one thing, the mist prevented him seeing
his assailant, and for another, he was first shot
down by some one who was running toward him and answered
his challenge with a bullet, and then pounced upon
by somebody else who was behind him and floored him
with the hammer. I take it that the person who
was running and who fired the shot was advancing toward
him from this direction was, in fact, the
actual assassin and that having discharged
the pistol and caused this poor fellow to whistle
a call for assistance to the constable in Mulberry
Lane, he was put to it to get out of the box in which
he found himself by those two things. To escape
across the Common meant to be pursued by the constable
and driven across the track of one of the other keepers;
so he took the bold hazard of putting on this poor
chap’s coat, cap, and badge and playing at joining
in the hue and cry in the manner he did. Is that” turning
to the dying man “the truth of it?”
The keeper could only nod he
was now too far gone to make any verbal response,
and even the administering of another dose of brandy
failed to whip up his expiring strength.
“I’m afraid we shall never
get any more out of him, poor fellow,” said
Cleek feelingly. “He is lapsing into unconsciousness,
you see. Raise him a bit, make him a little more
comfortable if pos Quick!
Catch his head, Mr. Narkom! Don’t let it
strike the boards. Gone! a good true
servant of the public gone! And the blackguard
that killed him still at large!”
Then he gently folded the useless
hands and closed down the sightless eyes, and shaking
out the coat which Petrie had bundled into a pillow,
spread it over the dead man and was very, very still
for a little time.
“There’s a widow and
some little nippers, Mr. Narkom,” he said when
he at length rose to his feet. “Find them
out for me, will you? And if you can see your
way to offer a good substantial reward for the clearing
up of this case and the capture of the criminal, I’ll
pull it off and you may pay that reward to the mother
of this man’s children.”
“Cleek, my dear fellow!
How ridiculously quixotic. What on earth can you
be thinking about?”
“A woman, Mr. Narkom just
a woman and a few little nippers ... who
might take the wrong road as well, as somebody
I know of took it once if there wasn’t
a hand to help them or a friend to guide. That’s
all, dear friend, that’s all!”
Lifting his hat to that silent, covered
figure, he turned and walked away. But at the
foot of the steps leading down to the mist and darkness
of the drive he came to a halt; and there Narkom, following
almost instantly, joined him again.
“My dear fellow, of all the
impulsive, of all the amazing men,” he began;
but got no further, for Cleek’s upthrown hand
checked him.
“We won’t go into that,
Mr. Narkom,” he said. “We’ll
stick to the case, please. I’ve got something
to tell you that you haven’t heard as yet.
Something that that poor dead chap did manage to tell
me. A woman a lady was
out there on the Common to-night and paid him not to
disclose the fact.”
“Great Scott! My dear fellow,
you don’t surely mean to hint that by any possibility
that poor child, Lady Katharine Fordham ”
“No, I do not. The lady
in question was neither Lady Katharine Fordham, who,
you tell me, wore a white satin dress to-night, nor
yet Miss Ailsa Lorne, whose frock you say was of gauzy
pink. The lady in question wore, I understand,
a gown of very pale green satin with what I take to
have been several diamond ornaments upon the corsage;
furthermore, a delicate but very distinct odour of
violets clung about her.”
“Good Lord!”
“No wonder you are surprised,
Mr. Narkom. Ladies dressed in that fashion are
not, as a general thing, given to wandering about Wimbledon
Common either by night or by day, and the presence
of this particular one is curious, to say the least
of it. I am of the opinion, however, that she
was no stranger to the Common keeper, otherwise he
would have hurried her into the shelter the instant
she offered to bribe him, whistled up the constable
in Mulberry Lane, and given her in charge as a suspicious
character. Then there is another side to the affair
which we must not overlook. An entertainment
was in progress at Clavering Close to-night, and there
must have been quite a number of ladies present dressed
in gala attire. But if your exclamation means
that you have no recollection of seeing one who wore
a gown of pale green satin ”
“It doesn’t!” rapped
in Narkom excitedly. “It was the absurdity,
the madness, the the utter impossibility
of the thing. That she she of all
women ! What rot!”
“Oho!” said Cleek, with
a strong, rising inflection. “Then there
was such a gown in the rooms at Clavering Close
to-night, eh? And you do remember the lady that
wore it?”
“Remember her? There’s
nobody I should be likely to remember better.
It was Lady Clavering herself!”
“Whew-w! The hostess?”
“Yes. Sir Philip’s
wife young Geoff’s stepmother; one
of the sweetest, gentlest, most womanly women that
ever lived. And to suggest that she ... either
the fellow must have deliberately lied or his statement
was the delusion of a dying man. It couldn’t
have happened it simply couldn’t,
Cleek. Why, man, her ladyship was there at
the Close when I left. It was she
who put that jewel into my hand and asked me to leave
it at Wuthering Grange when ”
He stopped, biting his words off short
and laying a nervous grip on Cleek’s arm; and
Cleek, facing about abruptly, leaned forward into the
mist and darkness, listening.
For of a sudden, a babble of angry
voices, mingled with the sounds of a scuffle, had
risen from the road beyond the gates, and hard on the
heels of it there now rang forth sharply the shrill
tones of Dollops crying out at the top of his voice:
“None o’ yer larks, now!
Got yer! Gov’ner! Mr. Narkom!
This way! Come quick, will yer? I’ve
copped the bounder. Out here in the bushes under
this blessed wall!”