The distance between the gates of
Gleer Cottage and the porch wherein lay the body of
the dead keeper was by no means a short one, but at
the first sound of Dollops’s voice the two men
sped down the centre of the dark, mist-wrapped drive
and out into the lane, their electric pocket torches
sending two brilliant streams of light in front of
them. The sounds of scuffling feet and of wrangling
voices guided them along the broken, irregular line
of the crumbling brick wall which encircled the grounds
of the cottage, and following the lead of them, they
came presently upon an amazing picture.
Close to that identical spot where,
earlier in the night, Hammond had found the gap in
the wall, two figures struggled together: the
one, in a vain endeavour to free himself from the
clutches of his captor; the other intent on bringing
him to the ground, on which lay scattered all the
drawings and paraphernalia with which Dollops had evidently
been carrying out his master’s instructions.
The light of the torches revealed his prisoner to
be a sturdy, fair-haired young man, and a first glance
showed Cleek that he was arrayed in a fashionable light-weight
overcoat which, torn open in the struggle, showed him
also to be in immaculate evening dress. It hardly
needed Mr. Narkom’s startled exclamation, “Geoff!”
to tell the detective that this was indeed the son
and heir of Sir Philip Clavering, the young man whose
bitter threats against the dead man in the cottage
had been so swiftly carried out.
But the exclamation had a far-reaching
effect upon Dollops’s prisoner, for he ceased
struggling at once and faced round upon the superintendent
so that the full glare of the torches could fall upon
his features and leave not a shadow of doubt regarding
his identity.
“Hullo! Mr. Narkom!”
he exclaimed. “This is a stroke of
good luck and no mistake! Who and what is this
enterprising individual upon my back? I can’t
see his interesting face, for he pounced upon me in
the dark; but if I had known that his yells and cries
were likely to bring you upon the scene, I
certainly shouldn’t have gone to the length of
struggling and getting my clothes in this awful mess.”
Cleek made a mental tally of that
remark, and set alongside of it the circumstance that
Dollops, when he first called out, had most distinctly
mentioned Mr. Narkom by name. He said nothing,
however; merely removed the pressure of his thumb
from the controlling button of his torch, slipped
that useful article into his pocket, and busied himself
with picking up Dollops’s effects from the ground.
“Here you, whoever you are!
You keep your blessed thievin’ irons off them
things!” snapped Dollops, with a wink at the
superintendent. “I say, Mr. Narkom, sir,
don’t let that josser go carryin’ off my
drorin’s them’s for my gov’ner,
you know that. And, sir,” he went
on earnestly, “don’t you be took in by
none of the gammon of this ’ere person.
Actin’ suspicious and creepin’ along in
the dark he was when I ’opped up and copped
him, sir, and no matter if he is a party as
you’re acquainted with, sir ”
“He is,” interrupted the
superintendent curtly, not, however, without some
slight show of agitation at finding this particular
young man in the neighbourhood at this particular
time. “The gentleman is Mr. Geoffrey Clavering,
my friend Sir Philip Clavering’s son and heir.”
“Well, sir, I can’t ’elp
that,” began Dollops, but his words were interrupted
by the captive himself.
“I shouldn’t have blamed
you if you had failed to recognize me from the state
I’m in through the mistaken ardour of this enterprising
youth, Mr. Narkom,” he said. “He
appears not to have left one inch of my person unmarked
with his hands; and if you would oblige me by requesting
him to detach himself from me as expeditiously as
possible, I shall be unspeakably obliged.”
“Certainly, Geoff. Dollops, let the gentleman
go.”
“But, sir Mr. Narkom ”
“Stand back, I tell you!”
“But upon my sacred word of honour, sir ”
“You have heard what I said,
haven’t you? That’s enough,”
interrupted Narkom, sharply.
Dollops gave a swift glance at Monsieur
Georges de Lesparre’s face, then sullenly relinquished
his hold on his prisoner, and with a knowing wink
over his shoulder, busied himself with picking up his
scattered and muddied papers.
“A jolly cheeky young beggar
that, Mr. Narkom; I wonder you take his impertinences
so lightly,” said young Clavering, who seemed,
somehow, to have lost a little of his self-possession
now that it became evident the matter of his presence
must inevitably be the topic of conversation.
“I say, send him away, won’t you?
And if you would er send your
friend away, too, I’d be obliged. I’d
like to have a little conversation with you in private,
if you don’t mind.”
“Certainly, Geoff. Dollops, take yourself
off hot shot!”
“Me, sir? My hat! Where’ll I
go? Wot’ll I do, sir?”
“Go and continue what you were
told to do in the first place. Gather up your
traps, and be off about it.”
“Oh, yuss of course nuthink
easier than that after the way as the gent
‘ere has went gallopin’ all over ’em
with his muddy boots!” said Dollops with apparent
disgust. “Look at that for a sample of drorin’,
will yer?”
He slyly twitched the corner of his
eye round in Cleek’s direction, turned the mud-stained
paper so that he should see the footprint, and mumbling
and muttering shambled away in the direction of the
cottage and disappeared in the mist and darkness.
“I’m afraid, Geoff,”
went on Narkom as soon as Dollops had gone, “that
I can’t humour you to the extent of requesting
this gentleman, too, to leave us; but let me have
the pleasure of introducing him Monsieur
Georges de Lesparre, the famous French criminologist.
We are engaged together upon a very serious matter
to-night. In short, an exceptionally ghastly
murder has been committed since I left Clavering Close,
Geoff, and you will be horrified to hear ”
“Gently, gently, monsieur,”
softly interposed Cleek, who, while appearing to be
absorbed in acknowledging the introduction, had been
quietly taking in every detail relative to the young
man’s appearance and had decided offhand that
he liked him; that he was simply a handsome, straight-looking,
frank-faced, clear-eyed young fellow who, in the general
order of things, ought not to have one evil impulse
in him. “Shall one go into details that
may, possibly, be unnecessary?” he went on.
“Perhaps Mr. Clavering has already heard of the
crime, and it is that which is accountable for his
presence in this neighbourhood.”
In his heart he knew that there was
no such possibility, that there was not even the ghost
of a chance that news of the murder could so soon
have gotten abroad when even the local police had not
yet learned of it, and he threw out this “feeler”
hoping that young Clavering would rid himself of any
shadow of complicity by at once rejecting it.
To his disappointment, however, Geoff rose to it as
a trout to a fly; and his face, which had betrayed
a strong effort to repress an overwhelming agitation
from the instant Narkom made mention of the crime,
now lit with something like relief and thankfulness.
“Yes, that’s the case.
You have guessed it, monsieur,” he said gratefully,
a sound that seemed a curious blend of a sigh and a
sob getting into his voice despite an effort to keep
it level and emotionless. “I had gone to
bed that is, I mean to say I was getting
ready to go to bed but I knew I shouldn’t
be able to sleep, so I came down into the grounds
for a walk and a smoke. The open air always does
me good. All at once a motor came along with Mellish,
the police constable, in it. I stopped him, and
he told me of this awful thing. I nearly went
mad. To think what it means to my dear girl!
She hasn’t heard yet, of course ”
“No,” said Mr. Narkom.
“She will have to be told in the morning.
Poor girl, it will be a shock to her, but it means
a great obstacle removed from your path.”
“Yes,” agreed the young
man uneasily. “That’s what made me
so anxious to come here and find out for myself if
the murderer had been traced. You see I lost
my head a bit to-night,” he added half apologetically,
“and you never know what people will say, so
I was just coming cautiously along when that cheeky
young chap threw himself on me, mistaking me, I suppose,
for the assassin.”
He made an attempt to laugh, but even
to Mr. Narkom it was palpable that the young fellow
was making a desperate effort to cover up his agitation.
“You can’t, in the circumstances,
blame him for that, Geoff,” replied Narkom.
“Besides, it was a most indiscreet thing for
you you of all men to come here
to-night, especially after what happened at the Close.”
“You mean about my threatening De Louvisan?”
“Yes. At least twenty or
thirty persons heard that; and although after you
were calmer and the Austrian had left the house, you
excused yourself to your guests and were said to have
gone to your room for the night ”
“I did go to it!” rapped
in Geoff excitedly. “Purviss, my valet,
will prove that if there’s any question regarding
it. Simply because I didn’t have the heart
to indulge in any more dancing or tomfoolery of that
sort when my dear girl had been dragged away from
me as though I were a leper. Good God, Mr. Narkom!
you don’t believe I had anything to do
with this awful thing, do you?”
Cleek took the reins before Narkom
could utter so much as a single word.
“Of a certainty he does not,
monsieur. Who could on so slight a thing as the
mere hot-headed outburst of an excited young man?”
he said suavely, making, as was his way, a cunning
hazard that should at once prove or disprove a suspicion
that lay at the back of his head. “And to
base it upon no stronger circumstance than that you
afterward left the drawing-room and did not return!
Ridiculous! One might as well suspect Lady Clavering
herself when she, too, was obliged to retire and leave
her guests for the time, if merely absenting one’s
self is to be regarded as suspicious. It is what
you Anglais shall call ‘tommyrot,’ that,
eh?”
“Of course it is, monsieur er what’s-your-name of
course!” assented Geoff gratefully, rather liking
this suave and gentle Frenchman who seemed bent upon
coming to his rescue and showing him the way out whenever
matters took an awkward turn. “You’re
a jolly, sharp-sighted chap, you are, and you spot
the weak points in these affairs like a shot.
My stepmother doesn’t often suffer from headaches,
but just as it happens, she was so queer that she
had to lie down for about an hour; but her maid can
prove that she stopped in her room, just as Purviss
can vouch for it that I remained in mine.”
The curious one-sided smile moved
up Cleek’s left cheek, then vanished again.
“Quite so, quite so,”
he said blandly. “Besides, it is not with
Lady Clavering that we are concerned, but with the
owner of a jewel that we found on the spot a
little gold scent bangle that smelt of violets ”
“My God! Kathie’s!
She said she lost it!” cried Geoffrey through
his clenched teeth; then realizing what his words
meant, he turned on the two men fiercely.
“What do you mean? What
are you trying to infer? That she my
dear girl Good heavens! but if
you dare to bring her name into this horrible business,
I’ll throttle the pair of you! You shan’t
connect her with the abominable affair! By God,
you shan’t!”
“M’sieur is too quick
with his threats,” put in Cleek suavely.
“Would it not be as well to wait? Unfortunately,
we have only too much proof that a woman was concerned
in the murder, and ”
“But it was not Lady Katharine.
That I swear!” The young man’s voice shook
with emotion, and his strained eyes gazed from one
face to the other in heartbreaking intensity.
“You are absolutely sure that
you have no suspicion of the murderer’s identity?”
Cleek asked with a sharpness unusual to him. “No
reason to doubt any living soul?”
For just the merest fraction of a
second young Clavering appeared to hesitate.
“No,” he said curtly.
“No, I have not. I know no more about it
than a child. Mellish told me about the murder,
and it was only natural that I should come up here
to make inquiries.”
“But, yes, monsieur, of course,”
agreed Cleek softly. “There is, then, no
more to be said save good-bye. I fear me I shall
not have the pleasure of meeting you again, as I return
to Paris to-morrow. The case is one of the most
mysterious, and I leave it to your English detective,
Mr. George Headland. So it is adieu, monsieur,
and not au revoir.”
He held out his hand to the young
man, who grasped it in his own trembling one, and
then, with a sharp “good-night,” Geoff
Clavering turned and strode back in the direction
whence he had come.
“Hum-m-m!” said Cleek,
taking his chin between his thumb and forefinger and
rubbing it up and down. “A total denial!
And with enough decency to blush! Quite so!
Quite so!”
Mr. Narkom, knowing the signs and
being torn with eagerness for the father of that rash
boy, moved forward and laid a shaking hand upon his
sleeve.
“Cleek,” he said in a
whisper full of anxiety and excitement, “don’t
keep it back, dear chap. You’ve come to
some conclusion. Speak up, do, and tell me what
you make of it?”
“Make of it, Mr. Narkom?
Well, for one thing, I make of it that that young
man lied like a pickpocket and deliberately attempted
to throw dust in our eyes. He not only does
suspect some one and with good grounds,
too but he has been here before and in that
house to-night. In other words, his was the foot
that crushed that golden capsule. The scent of
the Huile Violette was upon the drawing paper,
the measure, the muffler, the cap every
blessed thing he trod on in his scuffle with Dollops!”
“Good God! Oh, his poor
father! Surely, surely, Cleek, you do not believe ”
“My dear Mr. Narkom, I never
suffer myself to ‘believe’ anything until
I have absolute proof of it. What I may think
is a different matter.”
“And you think of that boy what?”
“That he is either a hot-headed,
quixotic, loyal, lovable young ass, Mr. Narkom, or
he’s a remarkably dangerous and crafty criminal!
I’m put to it for the moment to decide which.
One thing is pretty certain, and that is that young
Geoffrey Clavering knows more of this crime than he
will admit, and that the woman he is shielding is
Lady Katharine Fordham, who was not only on the Common
but in Gleer Cottage itself with Master Geoffrey.”
“Good heavens! Cleek, how
do you know that?” cried Mr. Narkom, his voice
hoarse and shaken.
“Firstly, because his clothes
are all scented with that peculiar scent of violets,
and although I know from the dead keeper that another
woman, probably Lady Clavering, was on the Common,
he is certainly not shielding her; otherwise he would
not have admitted that she had absented herself from
her guests. No, I think you will find that both
the young people were out here to-night. Let’s
hear now what Dollops has to say.”
A minute later there sounded the familiar
cry of a night owl, which brought the boy himself
running up at full speed.
“Lor’ lumme, sir!”
he cried disgustedly, as a quick glance revealed the
absence of his former prisoner. “You never
went and let ’im go after me a-showin’
of you the footprint wot he’d left on my drorin’
paper! It’s just the same as one of ’em
in the lane wot you told me to measure, sir; measure
’em off yourself and see. And him a-playin’
off innercent and actin’ like he was a respectable
gent as was comin’ here unsuspectin’ and
got copped by mistake! He wasn’t, the bounder!
He was tryin’ to sneak away, that’s wot
he was a-doin’ of trying to
do a bunk before anybody dropped to where he was a-hidin’.”
“What’s that? Hiding? Did you
say hiding?”
“Yes, I did, Mr. Narkom, and
I’d a-told you of it at the time, only you wouldn’t
let me open me blessed mouth, but jist shuts me up
and orders me off prompt. Hidin’ in that
blessed ’oller tree there look!”
He flashed the light of his torch upon a tree which
stood about three or four yards distant. “In
that he was,” he went on, “and jist as
soon as the motor had went and the way was clear,
I sees him sneak out and make toward the Common; so
I ups and does a tiptoe run along this strip o’
grass, sir, so’s me feet wouldn’t make
no noise, and jist as he starts to do a bunk I does
a spring, and comes down on his blessed back like a
’awk on a guinea ’en.”
Narkom twitched up his chin and looked
at Cleek; and for a moment there was silence, a deep
significant silence, then Cleek spoke.
“How shall we sum him up by
the measure of these things, Mr. Narkom, as a hero
or as a scoundrel?” he said. “If he
is innocent, why was he hiding? And if not for
a criminal purpose, why did he come to this place
at all?”
“Heavens above, man, don’t
ask me!” returned Narkom irritably.
“It’s the most infernal riddle I ever
encountered. My head’s in a positive whirl.
But look here, old chap. Supposing he did have
a hand in the murder, how on earth could he have coaxed
De Louvisan to this house a man who had
cause to dread him, a man whose life he had threatened?”
“Perhaps he didn’t, Mr.
Narkom; perhaps somebody did the coaxing for him.
A woman is a clever lure, my friend, and we know that
one or two, perhaps three Oh,
well, let it go at that.”
A faint sound of an automobile horn
sounded its blare through the distance and darkness.
“Lennard is coming back with
the local authorities. I’d know the hooting
of that horn among a thousand, Mr. Narkom. And
with their coming, ‘Monsieur de Lesparre’
returns to his native kit bag. This way, Dollops look
sharp! Pick us up at the old railway arch as soon
as you can, Mr. Narkom. We’ll be on the
lookout for you. Now then, Dollops, my lad, step
lively!”
“Right you are, gov’ner.
So long, Mr. Narkom. We’re off as
the eggs said to the cook when she got a whiff of
’em.”
“Good-bye for a little time,”
said Cleek, reaching out and gripping the superintendent’s
hand. “At the arch, remember. It has
been child’s play up to this, Mr. Narkom.
Now the real work begins. And unless all signs
fail, it promises to be the case of my career.”
And so, like this, he stepped off
into the mist and darkness, and went his way to
the beginning of the chase; to the reading of the riddle;
to those things of Love and Mystery, of Faith and
Unfaith, of Sorrow and of Joy, whose trail lay under
the roof of Wuthering Grange and which walked as shadows
with Lady Katharine Fordham and Ailsa Lorne.