“AS A TALE THAT WAS TOLD”
“My God!” It was Ross
Duggan who spoke. “Just to think of it!
Just to think! That my father ”
“Don’t forget he’s
dead, Ross, and beyond all chance of your remonstrating
with him, and that the dead cannot speak up for themselves!”
cried Maud Duggan, in a wrung voice. “Don’t
say anything you will be sorry for, I beg of you!
Mr. Cleek, this has come as something in the nature
of a shock to my brother and me, and and
it’s going to take some time to let this part
of your story sink in. It seems dreadful that
one’s own father....”
“And yet there are many who
have done worse far worse,” threw
in Cleek, with uplifted hand, as she paused and looked
at him out of anguished eyes. “Youth must
learn to forgive, Miss Duggan. That is a lesson
which both you and your brother have got to learn,
and don’t forget, will you, in the learning,
that this thing took place more than seventeen years
ago before your father was married to his
present wife. Raking up dead ashes is a poor
sort of game, and an unprofitable one. I would
never have spoken only that therein lay the motive
of James Tavish’s crime, and for seventeen long
years he has worked for it. The unutterable patience
of the man! the appalling sense of revenge! For
at the end of that time his bitterness to the man
who had wronged his sister was even greater than when
the thing itself took place. How long has he been
in your father’s employ?”
“Twelve years.”
“And I take it he was well known locally before
that?”
“The family was certainly an
old local one, Mr. Cleek, and, in fact, I have heard
the story go that they were descendants of the original
Peasant Girl on her mother’s side.”
“Oho! Well, that may or
may not be. Vendettas are not only carried
out in southern climes, Miss Duggan. I’ve
learned that lesson to my cost many times since I
took up this profession. And the Scotch temperament
is a dour one, and not forgiving. A grudge is
a grudge, even if it lasts through several centuries and
who knows but that this belief lent colour to his
hatred of your father? At any rate, whether it
is true or not, James Tavish killed Sir Andrew because
he was the betrayer of his sister and took
seventeen years to bring his vengeance to full maturity.
Gad! what a character to bear! It makes one’s
blood run cold!... Constables, I think you may
remove your prisoner now to the nearest lock-up.
We’ve done with him for the present, thanks.”
So saying, he waved his hand toward
the door, opened it, and waited until the little cavalcade
had taken its dismissal; meanwhile those within the
room of that house of discord sat silent as dead people,
thinking back over the doings of seventeen years ago,
and of a dead man who had betrayed an innocent woman.
It was an unpleasant thought at best. They were
glad when Cleek came back into the room, closed the
door, and took his seat among them again. His
pleasant voice dispelled the repellent weavings of
their own brains.
“And now,” said he, “to
continue with our story. It is nearly done, but
there are points which I know each one of you would
like to have cleared up before I take my leave.
What’s that, Lady Paula? How did I come
to suspect your brother in the first place? Ah,
that involves a long story with which I will not bore
you, for you have had enough already of this distressing
affair, I’m sure. Only this: That I
happened to go up into your boudoir yesterday, when
you were making your way up the Great Free Road” he
paused a moment as she coloured, and gave a significant
smile. “You see, I know more than I tell,
eh? Well, I discovered a note screwed up on the
floor, and signed ‘A. M.’ Antoni
Matei, we now know it was. Once I suspected Captain
Macdonald simply because the footprints
outside of the window of the library were made by
his hunting-boots discovered afterward by
my man, mud-caked and hidden in some shrubs near Tavish’s
cottage. Which leads me, Miss Duggan, to that
very particular point of the size of the gentleman’s
boots. You remember? I won’t call that
incident to your mind further. Only you
were a little mistaken, that’s all. But
let that pass. Every woman acts upon the dictates
of her own heart, and if those dictates are a trifle
mistaken yes, that was how I found out,
Lady Paula. After seeing Captain Macdonald’s
handwriting I knew that he had not written
that note. A further investigation upon the part
of my lad Dollops and myself last night led to the
elucidation of who it was who had written it.
Your brother himself disclosed his relation to you
last night, after we had our talk in the village lock-up.
After that, the thing was as easy as A B C.
“I beg your pardon, Miss Duggan?
And where exactly did Captain Macdonald come in!
Why, when one meets a man running agitatedly away from
the particular part of the Castle where the crime
had taken place and just after it one
is inclined to be a little suspicious of that man.
It is only natural. Though, thank Heaven, my
suspicions were soon quieted, after I discovered that
your gallant Captain had really come into the grounds with
your having left the gate ajar for him so that Rhea’s
bell would not sound to meet you
clandestinely, as he had been forbidden the house.
Love will always find a way, you know. Only, it
was unfortunate at the time that he should have chosen
that night of all others to have come to meet you.
You knew of the crime, then, Captain? Or what
was it that sent you pelting away so hard from the
house that held your affianced bride?”
“Simply because I had heard
a woman’s scream, had seen the lights all over
the Castle switch up, and did not want my meeting with
Maud to be discovered lest a more certain
means should be taken to keep us apart ever afterward,”
returned the Captain, a trifle heatedly. “And
I must confess that I was a bit nonplussed and and
angered when you mistook me for a murderer
and held me under suspicion.”
“For which you might readily
give your apology, as a better mannered man has already
done,” apostrophized Cleek inwardly. “Still,
we can’t help a man’s nature, and he seems
a likely enough chap, as men go. And she loves
him. And it’s no affair of mine as to how
he behaves himself so long as he was not
the guilty party.” Then, aloud, “I
see. Well, Miss Duggan will explain to you how
your hunting-boots came to be here, and to lead to
your being suspected along with the other. Just
ask her afterward eh, Miss Duggan?
And love her still more for her womanly sentiment,
if I may be permitted to tender any advice.
“I think that is really all.
Only, I should like just a word with Sir Ross and
Cyril alone, if I may be granted the favour? And
then I must be going. Mr. Narkom and I have other
affairs to attend to in this neighbourhood which are
very pressing and will want a lot of careful handling
to bring home to their proper destination....
Thanks very much.”
He got to his feet instantly as the
women arose, followed by Captain Macdonald, and quietly
left the room. Only Sir Ross, Cyril, and Mr.
Narkom remained. As the door closed behind them,
Ross Duggan spoke up.
“What is it that you wish to
say, Mr. Cleek?” he said quietly. “I’ll
be glad if you will go easy with Cyril. He’s
not a bad boy, you know. Only a trifle misguided,
and I shall make it my duty in future to keep a sharper
eye upon him. The boy has had no other companions
but his books of adventure and his own imagination.”
“And a very unfortunate mess
those two things have made of him,” returned
Cleek quietly, crossing over and laying a hand along
Cyril’s shoulder. “School, and boarding-school,
is the best place for him, my friend, and good
healthy companionship with others of his own age.
It’s just the devil of that reading which made
him act as he did. I found him out, late last
night in company with his uncle, doing some very nefarious
work on the hillside below here.”
“What?”
“Gently, gently, my friend.
Don’t forget, will you, that Cyril has not been
given the same chances as other boys. And his
is an active brain. The work in question was
illicit whisky-stills in fact, the very
thing for which I originally came down here, Mr. Narkom.
James Tavish and Antoni Matei and Cyril have
all had a hand in it. And the still itself, you
will find, if you go down to your own dungeon, Sir
Ross, to where the Peasant Girl is supposed to have
her haunts o’ nights.”
“Cinnamon! Cleek!”
“Yes and, by James!
Mr. Narkom. And that’s the actual truth,
too. I discovered it first of all. A little
looking on the part of Dollops and me brought the
thing to light, through a susceptible maid-servant
at present in your employ, Sir Ross. She fell
for my Cockney lad’s ’ginger ‘air.’
And he made use of his opportunity. And it was
then even as late as last night that
my suspicions were finally pinned upon James Tavish
as the murderer of your father. For I saw him,
in company with the Dago, wearing your tweed coat,
which I noted hanging on a hook in the passage earlier
in the day, and had even seen you wearing during the
morning, before you changed into that dark suit yesterday
afternoon and if it hadn’t been for
me that same tweed coat might have led you into
some rather unfortunate feminine revelations from
one of the ladies who are at present in your house.
But let that pass.... Mr. Narkom, we must go.
There’s a gang to be rounded up, and unfortunately,
through a foolish woman, some inkling of our presence
here has become known, and it will take us all our
time to trace the rest of the participants in this
pleasant affair before they have had time to show nothing
more than a very clean pair of heels for our benefit.
We must be making tracks. Sir Ross, take an older
fellow’s advice and fight for that boy’s
rights to go to a decent English school. I’ve
no doubt that the house will be divided now, since
these revelations have been made. One could hardly
go on living with a woman for a stepmother who who
had even contemplated such things, although she did
it for the benefit of her own boy. But fight
for him. And get him away from unfortunate
influence if you can. Or you’ll be losing
for the Empire an otherwise good little citizen.
There’s no doubt about the presence of the uncle
now with that whisky-still business on
hand, and that’s what brought the two men together,
no doubt. But get this boy clear of it all.
Try a public school where his moral outlook
will be as well cared for as his physical, and get
him there quick.
“Good-bye, Cyril shake
hands, won’t you? And you might write a
line to me now and then, to let me know how you’re
getting on. I’d have had a boy of your
age myself, no doubt, if if I hadn’t
made a fool of myself earlier in life, and I’ve
got to make up for it now. But it makes me rather
soft for youngsters. Good-bye, Sir Ross, and good
luck. Clear out of this ill-fated inheritance
for a time, until things blow over. You’ll
find there’ll be a different aspect of affairs
when you come back with your vision cleared.
Mr. Narkom, come along. At least we’ve beaten
the Coroner at his own business, and that’s
always a feather in a policeman’s cap, eh, old
friend?”
And, so speaking, he passed out of
that house of discord, which, however, he was to visit
later, many times, as friend and confidant of the
new owner of it, out into the clear sunshine of an
early noon, and the paths that lay ahead.