That the nocturnal visitor would prove
to be Lady Clavering Cleek had not the smallest shadow
of a doubt, although he marvelled much at her temerity
in venturing into the grounds of the Grange after that
experience at the wall door so short a time previously,
and he therefore remained as breathless and as still
as the shadows surrounding him, and waited the coming
of events. Not, however, without some slight feeling
of disappointment at the thought that, intricate and
puzzling as this case had been, it now promised to
be solved in such a tame and paltry manner; for if
the newcomer should prove to be Lady Clavering, as,
naturally, he had every reason for supposing, the affair
would resolve itself into simply playing the part
of eavesdropper at her interview with the General,
and then making capital of the information thus obtained.
The intruder was advancing with extreme
caution, but lacking his own peculiar gift of soundless
stepping and noiseless movement, did not succeed in
passing between hedge and coppice without the betraying
rustle of disturbed leaves; and it was out of this
circumstance the mischief which followed was formed.
The shrubbery where Ailsa was waiting
lay but a rope’s cast distant from the spot
where Cleek now crouched; and as if the ill-luck which
had balked him once before to-night was intent upon
flooring him at all quarters, he had no sooner grasped
the unwelcome fact made manifest by the
clearer sound of the approaching body as it came into
closer range that the steps were advancing
in a direct line with that shrubbery than a thin,
eager whisper pierced the stillness.
It was the voice of Miss Lorne, saying
cautiously, yet distinctly:
“Goodness gracious! Why,
Purviss! You don’t mean to tell me it’s
you?”
Purviss! Not Lady Clavering,
but Geoff Clavering’s old valet, Purviss?
Here was a facer to be sure. Well, well, you never
can tell which way a cat will jump, and that’s
a fact.
Purviss, eh? So he, too, was
in the know, was he? Of course he must be, to
be playing the rôle of Mercury and carrying messages
between them in this secret manner. Cleek decided
to have a look at Mr. Purviss, and a word or two as
well, by George! For now, of course, he would
make no attempt to go near that window.
The thought had no sooner presented
itself to him than he acted upon it. With the
speed of a hound, but with no more noise than a moving
shadow, he left his hiding-place, skirted the house,
got round to the front of it, crawled up the steps,
then, rising suddenly, appeared to come out of the
doorway and down the steps whistling, as he descended
to the gardens and moved leisurely along in the direction
of the shrubbery.
When he was within a foot of it he
suddenly stopped, pulled out his cigarette case, struck
a match as if for the purpose of smoking, and by the
aid of that light saw standing within a yard of him
Miss Ailsa Lorne in close conversation with a mild-mannered,
mild-faced elderly person, upon whom the word “valet”
was clearly written.
“Hullo, Miss Lorne, enjoying
an evening ramble, too? May I be allowed to join
you?”
“With pleasure, Mr. Barch,”
said Ailsa. Then she motioned toward the valet,
who had stepped meekly back.
“Purviss has just come over
from Lady Clavering to inquire for Mr. Geoffrey ”
“Ah, yes,” said Cleek,
smiling to himself unnoticed in the dark. “He
left this afternoon, did he not? You have evidently
just missed Sir Philip, who was himself here.”
“Yes,” added Ailsa, “I
was just telling him, but it seems he has a message
for General Raynor from Lady Clavering ”
“I thought as much,” said
Cleek to himself triumphantly, though aloud he remarked,
calmly enough: “Ah! but the General has
gone to bed. I heard him say that he was not
to be disturbed, but if you care to give any message
or letter, I’ll go and knock him up.”
“Oh, no, there’s no need
to do that, sir,” replied Purviss hurriedly.
“It’s only a request for a gardening book
if I happened to see General Raynor; of no importance
at all, sir.”
“I quite understand,”
said Cleek, the smile on his face hidden in the screening
darkness.
“As for Mr. Geoffrey,”
put in Ailsa kindly, “he is quite safe.
He went up to town on an errand for Lady Katharine ”
“Thank you, Miss,” returned
Purviss respectfully. “That will be a relief
to her ladyship to know that. She was very anxious.
Good-night, Miss! Good-night, sir!” With
a deferential salute, the man turned and disappeared
swiftly into the night.
“You see now,” said Ailsa,
“that I was right, that Geoff’s absence
would create such a panic at the Close that they would
scour the place for news of him. First his father,
and now Purviss. I thought you would be satisfied
as to the truth of his mission directly I spoke.”
“Yes,” said Cleek quietly,
“but he did not come here to seek Geoff Clavering.
That was a lie. He came for the purpose of having
an interview with some one else, and for the second
time this night, Miss Lorne, you have unfortunately
prevented me from hearing something which might have
cleared this mystery up without any further search
on my part. You remember how I rushed past you
at the time when Dollops had set me on the track of
the lady in pink? She came and she had an interview,
or, at least, she had the beginning of an interview,
with the man she was there to see. What’s
that? No, she was not Margot. She was Lady
Clavering. Sh-h-h! Quiet! Quiet!
Yes, she was Lady Clavering. And she had just
accused the man she came to meet of having murdered
De Louvisan, when your approach startled the pair
of them and made them separate hurriedly. Miss
Lorne, can you stand a shock? Good! Then
hold your nerves under tight control. The man
Lady Clavering met at the wall door to-night was the
master of this house, General Raynor!”
She all but collapsed when she heard that.
“General Raynor?” she
breathed in a horrified voice. “General
Raynor? And Lady Clavering? Oh, but why,
but how? Dear Mr. Cleek, it it is like
some horrible dream! What possible connection
could there be between those two people of all others?”
“I don’t know. I
have a suspicion it is my business to have
that, you know but I want something stronger.
I shall have it soon. My work here in this house
is pretty well finished, I fancy. Maybe to-morrow,
maybe the next day, but this week certain, I shall
be off to Malta. I am going to hunt up a man’s
army record there.”
“The General’s?”
“Yes. His and well,
possibly, some one’s else. When I come back
I promise you that I will have the solution to this
riddle in my hands. What’s that? Oh,
yes, Margot is in it.”
“Then why then how can Lady Clavering ”
“Lady Clavering, it appears,
knows Margot. So does the General, evidently,
for she mentioned her name to him.”
“Dear heaven! And you say
that she accused him of the murder? Accused him?
How could she?”
“She was there at
Gleer Cottage last night. She
went there to meet him. But she was not, however,
the first to direct my suspicions against the General.
That was done hours before and by a totally different
person.”
“Whom?”
“His son,” said Cleek,
and forthwith told her of that memorable interview
with Harry Raynor after dinner, and of the typewritten
letter he had abstracted from the young wastrel’s
coat pocket. “Miss Lorne, I waste no sympathy
upon that worm,” he went on. “From
the top of his empty head to the toe of his worthless
foot there’s not one ounce of manhood in him.
But he spoke the truth! His father did type that
forged letter and for the purpose he declared.”
“To get him out of the neighbourhood for the
night?”
“Yes. And but for the mere
accident of the fellow’s having discovered that
the typist girl was out of England, he would have succeeded
without having to resort to other means.”
“How do you know that the General
typed the letter?” asked Miss Lorne.
“I didn’t in the beginning,”
returned Cleek. “I did know, however, that
it had been typed by somebody in this house; for I
stole the letter, then tricked Hamer into getting
me an unused sheet of the typing paper that was left
over from the manuscript of the General’s book.
A glance at the watermark showed them to be identical;
in other words, that the letter had been typed upon
one of those left-over sheets. Well, that was
one thing; the other was that the General, having failed
to get his son out of the way for to-night by that
means, took steps to accomplish it by drugging him.”
“Drugging him?”
“Yes. Earlier in the day
Purviss had brought him a note from Lady Clavering,
and it was imperative that he should go out to-night
to meet her in secret. He didn’t want his
son prowling about, and he didn’t want me prowling
about, either. Still less did he want you prowling
about, or that his wife should know of his leaving
the house after she had gone to bed. To make
sure of having no such risk to run, he put a sleeping
draught into every drop of spirit or liqueur that was
served in this house to-night. What he had not
reckoned upon, however, was the fact that neither
you nor I tasted either. But at this moment his
son lies drugged and unconscious in the dining-room,
and it would be a safe hazard to stake one’s
life that his wife is lying unconscious in bed.”
“But but are you sure
there is no mistake?”
“No, Miss Lorne, there is no
mistake. It was the General who did the drugging.
I found the paper in which the sleeping draught had
come from the chemist’s in the waste basket
in the library; and when I wanted to clench the belief
and make it absolutely positive, I tricked the General
into confessing that he stood in need of a stimulant
after the stress of the night, then invited him to
join me in one from the decanters in the dining-room.
He knew what was in that liqueur and he
declined. I knew then that there was no mistake
about his being the hand that had done the drugging,
just as I had known previously that he was the man
Lady Clavering had met at the wall door.
“When I rushed past you that
time and raced through these grounds, I had no more
idea than a child unborn who the man I was pursuing
would prove to be. He might have been Harry Raynor;
he might have been Lord St. Ulmer. I even said
to myself that he might be any male member of this
household from the General down; and my one idea was
to get to the house and to find which man was missing.
I found no one absent! St. Ulmer was in his bedroom;
Harry Raynor was sleeping over the table in the dining-room;
and as I came clattering down the stairs the General
stepped out of the library to inquire into the cause
of the disturbance. To all intents and purposes
he had been in there reading the whole evening long.
But it was a significant fact that as he opened the
door and came out, I was able to see past him into
the room and to discern that the curtains drawn over
the swinging window were bellying inward, showing
that the opening of the door had started a current
of air which could be created only by the window behind
them being likewise open.
“That gave me the first suspicion
of a clue. I looked at the man himself for further
evidence to back it up and, in the first glance, found
it. There was black soil on the toes of his house
shoes and a smudge of green wall-moss on his shirt
cuff! I knew then just what he had done, and
how I had failed to overhaul him in that hot race.
He had simply ducked down out of sight, lain still
in the bushes and allowed me to run past him.
For me there was, of course, no other means of entering
the house but by the door; for him there was the library
window! He waited to give me time to get into
the house, then rose, ran across the intervening space
and back into the library by means of that window,
and had had just about sufficient time to get there
when I came rushing down the stairs. You will
remember, will you not, that I spoke of those two
things: the spot of black and smudge of green?
You know now to what I alluded.”
“It is wonderful and yes,
it is horrible also!” she said with a faint
shudder. “What a day of horror this has
been! I think the shadow of it will weigh upon
me forever.”
“Not if I can help it,”
said Cleek very gently, very tenderly. “And
I count very, very much indeed, Miss Lorne, upon the
possibility of making you bless it before the whole
twenty-four hours of it have been rounded out.
Don’t you remember what I said to you about my
hopes for the clearing of all shadows from the path
of Geoff Clavering and Lady Katharine, about the theory
of Loisette?”
“Loisette? That is the
great French scientist, is it not? The first man
who actually did establish a standard rule for the
training of the memory and schools for the teaching
of his system all over the world?”
“Yes, that is the man.
His principle is somewhat akin to that of the principle
of homoeopathy. ‘Like cures like,’
says the homoeopathist. ‘Like produces
like,’ says Loisette, ’and the similarity
of events acting upon the human mind may, by suggestion,
produce similar results,’ Well, last night Lady
Katharine Fordham went through an experience which
no living woman is ever likely to forget: the
knowledge that hope of happiness is over, and that
the man she loves is lost to her beyond all possible
recall. This evening, in the ruin over there,
she went through an exactly similar experience, and
after some few hours of hope, was thrust rudely back
into the absolute certainty that a barrier as high
as heaven itself had come between Geoff Clavering
and her. I stake my hopes upon that, Miss Lorne.
I look for Loisette to be vindicated. I look
for last night to be repeated in all particulars,
and I am so hopeful of it that I have sent for Geoff
Clavering to come here and be a witness to it.”
“Sent for Geoff Clavering to come here here?”
“Yes. At twelve o’clock
he will be waiting for me at the lodge gates; and
if all goes as I hope and believe that it will go ah,
well, it will be a blessed time for him, for her,
for you! As for myself but that doesn’t
matter. I shall have but one more thing to accomplish
under the roof of this house, and then if the trail
leads elsewhere, I’ll be off to Malta as fast
as steam can take me.”
“And that one thing, Mr. Cleek? May I ask
what it is?”
“Yes, certainly. It is
to discover Lord St. Ulmer’s part in this elusive
business, and then to be absolutely certain of getting
at the man who killed the Count de Louvisan, and at
the reason for the crime.”
“The reason? The man?”
repeated Ailsa in utter bewilderment. “I
thought you said just now that you were satisfied
regarding that? Why, then, should you speak as
if there were a possibility of Lord St. Ulmer being
concerned in the murder if you are seemingly so sure
that General Raynor did it?”
“General Raynor? Good heavens
above, Miss Lorne, get that idea out of your mind!
Why, General Raynor is no more guilty of the murder
of De Louvisan than you are!”