Cleek did not have to wait for his answer.
“Yes, certainly I will,”
said Geoff instantly. “If there’s
nothing more than that behind it, I’ll give
you my word of honour and go this moment if you want
me to do so.”
“And you will say nothing, absolutely
nothing, to any living soul about this about
me about anything that has happened here?”
Young Clavering gave his promise promptly;
and, with equal promptness, Cleek walked forward,
unlocked the handcuff, and set him free, leading him
back along the passage to the stone steps, and being
careful as they passed through the cell where the
murdered Common keeper’s clothing lay that no
ray from the torch should disclose his ghastly find.
At the foot of the stone staircase he came to a halt.
“Now go,” he said, “and
remember that I trust you. Come back when you
like to-morrow and make what explanation you please
regarding your absence. I’ve trusted you
with one or two secrets, and I will trust you with
another: there’s good proof, my lad, that
what you said about Lady Katharine Fordham being at
Gleer Cottage last night is the truth in spite of
her denial. She dropped the scent capsule from
her bracelet there, and I found it a few minutes before
my boy Dollops found you hiding in the hollow tree.
No, no, no! Don’t get excited. There’s
nothing in that discovery to prove the lady guilty
of any part in this abominable crime. Last night
I was inclined to think that that little golden globe
pointed toward her having been at least a confederate;
to-day I have changed my mind, and since I overheard
that conversation between you two, I have come to
the conclusion that it proves her absolutely innocent
of any complicity whatsoever.”
“But how, Mr. Barch?
I mean Cleek. You know that she was there; you
know that I, too, was there. It’s no use
denying that since you’re ‘Monsieur de
Lesparre’ as well as what you are. You heard
her deny her presence. You heard her say that
she did not show me into the room where De Louvisan’s
body was. But she did; as God hears me, she did,
though I’ll never believe her guilty” this
in a last wild effort to divert suspicion from her “whatever
I might have said, whatever you may have discovered
against her.”
“I have just said there is nothing
against her,” said Cleek, with one of his curious
smiles. “I have come to the conclusion that
she is not a criminal, but a martyr. I don’t
believe she has any more idea of who murdered De Louvisan,
or why, than has a child in its cradle. I know
you say that she showed you into the room where the
dead man’s body was; but I don’t believe,
my friend, that she was there. I don’t believe
she ever saw him again after she left Clavering Close,
and I do not believe that she had the slightest idea
that the man either living or dead was
in Gleer Cottage when she led you into it.”
“Then why did she lead me into
it? Why did she run away and leave me there with
his dead body? Where did she go? What did
she mean by saying what she did about showing me something
that would light the way back to the land of happiness?”
“I hope to be able to tell you
all that to-morrow, my friend,” replied Cleek.
“Indeed, I may be able to tell it this very night;
for if there is anything in the Loisette theory of
recurring events acting upon a weary brain and producing
similar results when No matter,
we shall know all about that later. In spite
of the fact that that scent capsule was dropped in
the room where the murder was committed, and dropped
before you were shown in there, as proved by the fact
that you crushed it beneath your feet and carried
the odour of it from the house with you, I do not
believe that Lady Katharine knew one word of De Louvisan’s
death until the news of it was carried to her this
morning. There! That’s the last ‘secret’
I am going to let you into for the present. Now,
then, off with you; and not a word to anybody before
to-morrow. But one last thing” this
as Geoffrey began to run up the steps toward the open
trapdoor “if you should happen by
any chance to catch a glimpse of Mr. Harry Raynor
while you are in town to-night, keep an eye on him see
whom he meets, see where he goes, and mind that he
does not see you.”
“Harry Raynor? I say” eagerly “do
you think it possible that that bounder ”
“No, I don’t! A worm
and a snake are two entirely different things.
That young gentleman never killed anything but time
and the respect of decent men in all the days of his
worthless life. He hasn’t the necessary
grit. But watch him if you run foul of him.
He may know something that is worth while finding
out; and, besides that, somebody or something called
him away very suddenly this afternoon before I could
get a chance to sound him on a most important subject.
He knows a person who is very likely to be somewhere
at the bottom of this case, that’s all.
Good-bye. And oh, stop a bit!
Just one more word: Happen to know anybody besides
Mr. Harry Raynor who is addicted to the use of black
cosmetic for the moustache?”
“Yes,” said Geoffrey,
pausing halfway up the staircase, and caught by the
artfulness of this apparently artless question.
“Know two other men. Why?”
“Oh, nothing in particular;
only that I’d like to borrow some. Who are
the two men in question?”
“Lord St. Ulmer, for one.”
“Lord St. Hum-m-m!
Just so! Just so! And the other; who’s
he?”
“Why, my dad. Used it for years, bless
his bully old heart!”
“Your Good-bye!”
said Cleek with a curious “snap” in his
voice; then he faced round suddenly and walked back
down the underground passage and left Geoff to go
his way.
But if he said nothing his thoughts
were busy; and this new move in the game, this new
fish in the net, troubled him a great deal. He
could not but remember that Sir Philip Clavering was
this young man’s adoring father; that he was
also Lady Clavering’s husband, who, as he had
just heard from her stepson, was an Austrian; that
the pseudo Count de Louvisan was also an Austrian,
and after his unexpected appearance at Clavering Close
last night Lady Clavering had had a sudden attack of
illness, had left her guests at supper and retired
to her own room, and afterward had gone out on the
Common and had bribed the keeper not to mention having
seen her.
Why did she go out? Of course
that was all nonsense about her being anxious over
Geoff; but, still why? To meet some
one? You never could be quite sure, quite safe,
in dealing with those Continental women. After
all, morality is merely a question of geography.
Suppose simply by way of argument, you
know, nothing more suppose the lady had
had a love affair years before Sir Philip Clavering
had met and married her? Suppose when De Louvisan
turned up she had recognized in him, and he had recognized
in her Quite so! Quite so!
De Louvisan, an adventurer pure and simple, would
be likely to make capital out of a hold obtained over
the wife of an English millionaire. It would be
imperative for her to see him at once and buy his
silence if she could. Of course! Of course!
Gleer Cottage was within easy reaching distance; Gleer
Cottage was known to be absolutely deserted; and if
one wanted to have a secret interview
And to carry the hypothesis further, suppose Sir Philip
Clavering, anxious over his wife’s condition,
should run up to her room to inquire about her, and,
finding her gone, should trace her movements, go out
after her, follow until he came to Gleer Cottage; and
as soon as she and De Louvisan had parted
Well, there you are! Then, too, Sir Philip Clavering
was addicted to the use of black cosmetic! And
the marks on the dead man’s shirt front were
Heigho! You never know! You never know!
But for the boy’s sake and for the sake of Narkom’s
fondness for both
His thoughts dropped off. He
had come again to the cell where the murdered keeper’s
clothes lay, just where he had flung them down when
the coming of Geoff and Lady Katharine had attracted
his attention and turned his interest in another direction.
Now he had time to turn to them again.
If, by any chance, it really had been
Sir Philip Clavering, how came these clothes buried
in the grounds of Wuthering Grange? Of course
the General’s “ruin” was famous
all over the district; and, naturally, if a man of
Sir Philip Clavering’s keen wits were the assassin,
he would take means to get the things hidden away
as expeditiously as possible, and as far away from
his own place as circumstances would permit. He
wouldn’t know, of course, that circumstances
would arise that would point to an occupant of Wuthering
Grange Lady Katharine being implicated
and any search of the place result, and he would be
quite free from wishing to lead the trail in that
direction. Of course, when he learned that he
had done so as learn everybody must in
a day or two he would do his best to get
rid of the things, and when that happened
Ah, well! poor devil, it would be the end of one rope
and the beginning of another.
It was an old, old trick of the assassin’s,
this burying things and then harking back to the spot
either to remove them or to see if they were safe;
and this assassin, whosoever he might prove to be,
would be sure to follow the universal precedent.
When he did ! Cleek bundled the
clothing back into the hole, took up the spade, shovelled
back the earth, and made the spot look as nearly as
possible as it had been when he stumbled upon it.
“A little bit of spy work for
Dollops,” was his unspoken thought. “He
can spend a few days down here very profitably, and
be ready to give the signal when the man comes.”
He put the spade back in the place
where he had found it, and, facing about, went up
the stone steps, and after replacing the movable slab,
made his way out of the ruin; for it was now time to
be about the task of dressing for dinner and what
promised to be an eventful evening.
Should he take Miss Lorne into his
confidence or not? Yes, he fancied that he would.
For one thing, she knew Lady Clavering and he did not,
and as it would be necessary for him to get out after
dark and prowl about the Common to learn if her ladyship
did or did not join in the search for the missing
Geoff Hullo! What the dickens
was that?
A very simple thing, indeed, when
he came to investigate it. By this time he had
come abreast of the house itself, and was moving along
under the shadow of the deepening twilight when the
circumstances which sent his thoughts off from the
plans he was mapping out occurred. It was nothing
more nor less than the fluttering down through the
still air of a soft flaky substance, which struck
him in the face and then dropped softly upon his sleeve a
small charred scrap of burnt paper. He looked
up, and saw that it had fallen from other charred scraps
that clung to the prickly branches of a huge monkey-puzzle
tree close to the angle where a recently added wing
joined the main structure of the house.
A window was above that tree, and
a chimney was above that window. Hum-m-m!
Second window from the angle Lord St. Ulmer’s
room. What was Lord St. Ulmer burning papers
for? What sort of papers had he that it was necessary
for him a supposed invalid to
get out of bed and destroy? And why in the world
should he choose this particular day to do it?
And a lot of paper, too, by George! judging from the
quantity of charred scraps clinging to that monkey-puzzle.
What an ass the man was to burn things when there
was no wind to carry off the ashes and when
He looked down and saw one or two half-burned discs
of paper, which had escaped entire destruction, lying
upon the gravel of the path.
He stooped and picked one up.
It was a circular white label, printed on one side
and gummed on the other, just the sort of label which
chemists and proprietors of patent ointments use to
affix to the lids of the round tin boxes containing
their wares. The thing was partly burnt away
until, from being originally a complete circle, it
was now merely a “half moon” of white
paper with charred fragments clinging to the fire-bitten
gap in it.
He turned the thing over and looked
at its printed side. Part of that printing had
been destroyed, but there was still enough of it to
show for what the label had been prepared.
Evidently Lord St. Ulmer had been
engaged in burning labels, unused labels, that had
been prepared for boxes containing a patent blacking
for boots, shoes, and leather goods generally.