Collected works of j s f.., p.243

Collected Works of J S Fletcher, page 243

 

Collected Works of J S Fletcher
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  “All!” assented Polke.

  “No!” said Neale. “Miss Fosdyke and I have brought you some news. Mr. Horbury must have crossed Ellersdeane Hollow on Saturday night. Look at this! — and I’ll tell you all about it.”

  The superintendent and the detective listened silently to Neale’s account of the meeting with Creasy, and Betty, watching Starmidge’s face, saw that he was quietly taking in all the points of importance.

  “Is this tin-man to be depended upon?” he asked, when Neale had finished. “Is he known?”

  “I know him,” answered Polke. “He’s come to this neighbourhood for many years. Yes — an honest chap enough — bit given to poaching, no doubt, but straight enough in all other ways — no complaint of him that I ever heard of. I should believe all he says about this.”

  “Then, as that’s undoubtedly Mr. Horbury’s pipe, and as this gentleman saw him smoking it at two o’clock on Saturday, and as Creasy picked it up underneath Ellersdeane Tower on Sunday evening,” said Starmidge, “there seems no doubt that Mr. Horbury went that way, and dropped it where it was found. But — I can’t think he was carrying Lord Ellersdeane’s jewels home!”

  “Why?” asked Neale.

  “Is it likely?” suggested Starmidge. “One’s got — always — to consider probability. Is it probable that a bank manager would put a hundred thousand pounds’ worth of jewels in his pocket, and walk across a lonely stretch of land at that time of night, just to hand them over to their owner? I think not — especially as he hadn’t been asked to do so. I think that if Mr. Horbury had been in a hurry to deliver up these jewels, he’d have driven out to Lord Ellersdeane’s place.”

  “Good!” muttered Polke. “That’s the more probable thing.”

  “Where are the jewels, then?” asked Neale.

  Starmidge glanced at Polke with one expression, at Betty and Neale with another.

  “They haven’t been searched for yet, have they?” he asked quietly. “They may be — somewhere about, you know.”

  “You mean to search for them?” exclaimed Betty.

  “I don’t know what I intend to do,” replied Starmidge, smiling. “I haven’t even thought. I shall have thought a lot by morning. But — the country’s being searched, isn’t it, for news of Mr. Horbury? — perhaps we’ll hear something. It’s a difficult thing for a well-known man to get clear away from a little place like this. No! — what I’d like to know — what I want to satisfy myself about is — did Mr. Horbury go away at all? Is there really anything missing from the bank? Are those jewels really missing? You see,” concluded Starmidge, looking round his circle of listeners, “there’s an awful lot to take into account.”

  At that moment Polke’s domestic servant tapped at the door and put her head inside the room.

  “If you please, Mr. Polke, there’s Mrs. Pratt, from the Station Hotel, would like a word with you,” she said.

  The superintendent hurried from the room — to return at once with a stout, middle-aged woman, who, as she entered, raised her veil and glanced half-suspiciously at Polke’s other visitors.

  “All friends here, Mrs. Pratt,” said the superintendent reassuringly. “You know young Mr. Neale well enough. This lady is Mr. Horbury’s niece — anxious to find him. That gentleman’s a friend of mine — you can say aught you like before him. Well, ma’am! — you think you can tell me something about this affair? What might it be, now?”

  Mrs. Pratt, taking the chair which Starmidge placed for her at the end of the table, nodded a general greeting to the company, and lifting her veil and untying her bonnet-strings, revealed a good-natured countenance.

  “Well, Mr. Polke,” she said, turning to the superintendent, “taking your word for it that we’re all friends — me being pretty sure, all the same, that this gentleman’s one of your own profession, which I don’t object to — I’ll tell you what it is I’ve come up for, special, as it were, and me not waiting until after closing-time to do it. But that town-crier’s been down our way, and hearing him making his call between our house and the station, and learning what it was all about, thinks I to myself, ‘I’d best go up and see the super and tell him what I know.’ And,” concluded Mrs. Pratt, beaming around her, “here I am!”

  “Ay — and what do you know, ma’am?” asked Polke. “Something, of course.”

  “Or I shouldn’t be here,” agreed Mrs. Pratt, smoothing out a fold of her gown. “Well — Saturday afternoon, the time being not so many minutes after the 5.30 got in, and therefore you might say at the outside twenty minutes to six, a strange gentleman walked across from the station to our hotel, which is, as you’re all well aware, exactly opposite. I happened to be in the bar-parlour window at the time, and I saw him crossing — saw, likewise, from the way he looked about him, and up at the town above us, that he’d never been in Scarnham before. And happen I’d best tell you what like he was, while the recollection’s fresh in my mind — a little gentleman he was, very well dressed in what you might call the professional style; dark clothes and so forth, and a silk top-hat; I should say about fifty years of age, with a fresh complexion and a biggish grey moustache and a nicely rolled umbrella — quite the little swell he was. He made for our door, and I went to the bar-window to attend to him. He wanted to know if he could get some food, and I said of course he could — we’d some uncommon nice chops in the house. So he ordered three chops and setterers — and then he asked if we’d a telephone in the house, and could he use it. And, of course, I told him we had, and showed him where it was — after which he wanted a local directory, and I gave him Scammond’s Guide. He turned that over a bit, and then, when he’d found what he wanted, he went to our telephone box — which, as you’re well aware, Mr. Polke, is in our front hall. And into it he popped.”

  Mrs. Pratt paused a moment, and gave her listeners a knowing look, as if she was now about to narrate the most important part of her story.

  “But what you mayn’t be aware of, Mr. Polke,” she continued, “is that our telephone box, which has glass panels in its upper parts, has at this present time one of these panels broken — our pot-man did it, carrying a plank through the hall. So that any one passing to and fro, as it were, when anybody’s using the telephone, can’t help hearing a word or two of what’s being said inside. Now, of course, I was passing in and out, giving orders for this gentleman’s chops, when he was in the box. And I heard a bit of what he said, though I didn’t, naturally, hear aught of what was said to him, nor who by. But it’s in consequence of what I did hear, and of what Tolson, the town-crier, has been shouting down our way tonight, that I come up here to see you.”

  “Much obliged to you, Mrs. Pratt,” said Polke. “Very glad to hear anything that may have to do with Mr. Horbury’s disappearance. Now, what did you hear?”

  “What I heard,” replied the landlady, “was this here — disjointed, as you would term it. First of all I hear the gentleman ask for ‘Town 23.’ Now, of course, you know whose number that there is, Mr. Polke.”

  “Chestermarke’s Bank,” said Neale, turning to Betty.

  “Chestermarke’s Bank it is, sir,” assented Mrs. Pratt. “Which you know very well, as also do I, having oft called it up. Very well — I didn’t hear no more just then, me going into the dining-room to see that our maid laid the table proper. But when I was going back to the bar, I heard more. ‘Along the river-side?’ says the gentleman, ‘Straight on from where I am — all right.’ Then after a minute, ‘At seven-thirty, then?’ he says. ‘All right — I’ll meet you.’ And after that he rings off — and he went into the dining-room, and in due course he had his chops, and some tart and cheese, and a pint of our bitter ale, and took his time, and perhaps about a quarter past seven he came to the bar and paid, and he took a drop of Scotch whisky. After which he says, ‘It’s very possible, landlady, that I may have to stop in the town all night — have you a nice room that you can let me?’ ‘Certainly, sir,’ says I. ‘We’ve very good rooms, and bathrooms, and every convenience — shall I show you one?’ ‘No,’ says he, ‘this seems a good house, and I’ll take your word for it — keep your best room for me, then.’ And after that he lighted a cigar and went out, saying he’d be back later, and he crossed the road and went down on the river-bank, and walked slowly along towards the bottom of the town. And Mr. Polke and company,” concluded Mrs. Pratt, solemnly turning from one listener to another, “that was the last I saw of him. For — he never came back!”

  “Never came back!” echoed Polke.

  “Not even the ghost of him!” said Mrs. Pratt. “I waited up myself till twelve, and then I decided that he’d changed his mind and was stopping with somebody he knew, which person, Mr. Polke, I took to be Mr. Horbury. Why? ‘Cause he’d rung up Chestermarke’s Bank — and who should he want at Chestermarke’s Bank at six o’clock of a Saturday evening but Mr. Horbury? There wouldn’t be nobody else there — as Mr. Neale’ll agree.”

  “You never heard of this gentleman being in the town on Sunday or today?” asked Polke.

  “Not a word!” replied Mrs. Pratt. “And never saw him go to the station, neither, to leave the town. Now, as you know, Mr. Polke, we’ve only two trains go away from here on Sundays, and there’s only four on any week-day, us being naught but a branch line, and as our bar-parlour window is exactly opposite the station, I see everybody that goes and comes — I always was one for looking out of window! And I’m sure that little gentleman didn’t go away neither yesterday nor today. And that’s all I know,” concluded Mrs. Pratt, rising, “and if it’s any use to you, you’re welcome, and hopeful I am that your poor uncle’ll be found, Miss, for a nicer gentleman I could never wish to meet!”

  Mrs. Pratt departed amidst expressions of gratitude and police admonitions to keep her news to herself for awhile, and Betty and Neale turned eagerly to the famous detective. But Starmidge appeared to have entered upon a period of silence, and made no further observation than that he would wait upon Miss Fosdyke in the morning, and presently the two young people followed Mrs. Pratt into the street and turned into the Market-Place. The last of the evening revellers were just coming out of the closing taverns, and to a group of them, Tolson, the town-crier, was dismally calling forth his announcement that one hundred pounds reward would be paid to any person who first gave news of having seen Mr. John Horbury on the previous Saturday evening or since. The clanging of his bell, and the strident notes of his cracked voice, sounded in the distance as Betty said good-night to Neale and turned sadly into the Scarnham Arms.

  CHAPTER IX

  NO FURTHER INFORMATION

  CHESTERMARKE’S CLERKS FOUND no difficulty in obtaining access to the bank when they presented themselves at its doors at nine o’clock next morning. Both partners were already there, and appeared to have been there for some time. And Joseph at once called Neale into the private parlour, and drew his attention to a large poster which lay on a side-table, its ink still wet from the printing press.

  “Let Patten put that up in one of the front windows, Neale,” he said. “It’s just come in — I gave the copy for it last night. Read it over — I think it’s satisfactory, eh?”

  Neale bent over the big, bold letters, and silently read the announcement: —

  “Messrs. Chestermarke, in view of certain unauthorized rumours, now circulating in the town and neighbourhood, respecting the disappearance of their late manager, Mr. John Horbury, take the earliest opportunity of announcing that all Customers’ Securities and Deposits in their hands are safe, and that business will be conducted in the usual way.”

  “That make things clear?” asked Joseph, closely watching his clerk. “To our clients, I mean?”

  “Quite clear, I should say,” replied Neale.

  “Then get it up at once, before opening hours, and save all the bother of questions,” commanded Joseph. “And if people do come asking questions — as some of them will! — tell them not to bother themselves — nor us. We don’t want to waste our time interviewing fools all the morning.”

  Neale took the poster and went out, with no further remark. And presently the junior clerk, with the aid of a few wafers, fixed the announcement in the window which looked out on the Market-Place, and people began to gather round and to read it, and, after the usual fashion of country-born folk, then went away to talk about it. In half an hour it was known in every shop and tavern parlour in Scarnham Market-Place that despite the town-crier’s announcement, and the wild rumours of the night before, Chestermarke’s Bank was all right, and Chestermarkes were already speaking of Horbury in the past tense — he was (wherever he might be) no longer the manager of that ancient concern; he was the late manager.

  At ten o’clock Superintendent Polke, bluff and cheery as usual, and Detective-Sergeant Starmidge, eyeing his new surroundings with appreciative curiosity, strolled round the corner from the police-station and approached the bank. Half a dozen loungers were gathered before the window, reading the poster; the two police officials joined them and also read — in silence. Then, with a look at each other, they turned into the door which Patten had just opened. Neale hurried to the counter to meet them.

  “Well, Mr. Neale,” said Polke, as if he had called on the most ordinary business, “we’ll just have a word with your principals, if they please. A mere interchange of views, you know: we shan’t keep ’em.”

  “They don’t want bothering,” whispered Neale, bending over the counter. “Shan’t I do instead?”

  “No, sir!” answered Polke. “Nothing but principals will do! Here, Starmidge, give Mr. Neale one of your official cards.”

  Neale took the card and disappeared into the parlour, where he laid it before Gabriel.

  “Mr. Polke is with him, sir,” he said. “They say they won’t detain you.”

  Gabriel tossed the card over to his nephew with a look of inquiry: Joseph sneered at it, and threw it into a waste-paper basket.

  “Tell them we don’t wish to see them,” he answered. “We — —”

  “Stop a bit!” interrupted Gabriel. “I think perhaps we’d better see them. We may as well see them, and have done with it. Bring them in, Neale.”

  Polke and Starmidge, presently entering, found themselves coldly greeted. Gabriel made the slightest inclination of his head, in response to Polke’s salutation and the detective’s bow: Joseph pointedly gave no heed to either.

  “Well?” demanded the senior partner.

  “We’ve just called, Mr. Chestermarke, to hear if you’ve anything to say to us about this matter of Mr. Horbury’s,” said Polke. “Of course, you know it’s been put in our hands.”

  “Not by us!” snapped Gabriel.

  “Quite so, sir, by Lord Ellersdeane, and by Mr. Horbury’s niece, Miss Fosdyke,” assented Polke. “The young lady, of course, is naturally anxious about her uncle’s safety, and Lord Ellersdeane is anxious about the Countess’s jewels. And we hear that securities of yours are missing.”

  “We haven’t told you so,” retorted Gabriel.

  “We haven’t even approached you,” remarked Joseph.

  “Just so!” agreed Polke. “But, under the circumstances — —”

  “We have nothing to say to you, superintendent,” interrupted Gabriel. “We can’t help anything that Lord Ellersdeane has done, nor anything that Miss Fosdyke likes to do. Lord Ellersdeane is not, and never has been, a customer of ours. Miss Fosdyke acts independently. If they call you in — as they seem to have done very thoroughly — it’s their look out. We haven’t! When we want your assistance, we’ll let you know. At present — we don’t.”

  He waved one of the white hands towards the door as he spoke, as if to command withdrawal. But Polke lingered.

  “You don’t propose to give the police any information, then, Mr. Chestermarke?” he asked quietly.

  “At present we don’t propose to give any information to anybody whom it doesn’t concern,” replied Gabriel. “As regards the mere surface facts of Mr. John Horbury’s disappearance, you know as much as we do.”

  “You don’t propose to join in any search for him or any attempt to discover his whereabouts, sir?” inquired Starmidge, speaking for the first time.

  Gabriel looked up from his paper, and slowly eyed his questioner.

  “What we propose to do is a matter for ourselves,” he answered coldly. “For no one else.”

  Starmidge bowed and turned away, and Polke, after hesitating a moment, said good-morning and followed him from the room. The two men nodded to Neale and went out into the Market-Place.

  “Well?” said Polke.

  “Queer couple!” remarked Starmidge.

  Polke jerked his thumb at the poster in the bank window.

  “Of course!” he said, “so long as they can satisfy their customers that all’s right so far as they’re concerned, we can’t get at what is missing that belongs to the Chestermarkes.”

  “There are ways of finding that out,” replied Starmidge quietly.

  “What ways, now?” asked Polke. “We can’t make ’em tell us their private affairs. Supposing Horbury has robbed them, they aren’t forced to tell us how much or how little he’s robbed ’em of!”

  “All in good time,” remarked the detective. “We’re only beginning. Let’s go and talk to this Miss Fosdyke a bit. She doesn’t mind what money she spends on this business, you say?”

  “Not if it costs her her last penny!” answered Polke.

  “All right,” said Starmidge. “Fosdyke’s Entire represents a lot of pennies. We’ll just have a word or two with her.”

  Betty, looking out of her window on the Market-Place, had seen the two men leave Chestermarke’s Bank, and was waiting eagerly for their coming. She listened intently to Polke’s account of the interview with the partners, and her cheeks glowed indignantly as he brought it to an end.

  “Shameful!” she exclaimed. “To make accusations against my uncle, and then to refuse to say what they are! But — can’t you make them say?”

 

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