Collected works of j s f.., p.607
Collected Works of J S Fletcher, page 607
We carried the diamonds to Miss Ellingham, and thereupon arose all manner of speculations. But they did not concern me, and Keziah turned up her nose at them. We were only interested just then in Uncle Joseph Krevin. Nothing more was heard of him. His body was never recovered. Eventually, for legal purposes, his death was presumed. But dead though he was, and lying deep in Middlebourne Moorings, he caused us some trouble. For the old sinner left money behind him, and as we were next-of-kin we had to administer his estate, and the money came to us. Keziah would have none of it. We gave it, every penny, to the local charitable institutions — all but some twenty or thirty pounds. That Keziah ear-marked for a certain purpose. After all, she said, Uncle Joseph had not been really proved guilty of the crimes alleged against him, and he might be more or less or quite innocent of them; in her opinion that brown-faced Mandy Kann man, as she called him, was just as likely to have cut Getch’s throat as Krevin was, and if Krevin did shoot Mandy Kann it might have been in self-defence — who could say? And anyway, Uncle Joseph, when all was said and done, was a Krevin, and related by marriage to the Heckitts, and if he couldn’t be buried with his forefathers he could at any rate have a proper memorial monument amongst theirs in Middlebourne churchyard, where two or three score of Krevinses and Heckitts were already commemorated. So the monument rose, and Keziah, after a great deal of searching of Holy Scripture, made the mason carve on it a text, or, rather, the reference to a text — Isaiah lvii. 20. She said that it would do a lot of people a heap of good to turn to that text in their family Bibles, and to meditate on it.
Pepita and I were married in Middlebourne Church some five years later, when I had served my articles, passed my examinations, and become a duly admitted limb of the Law. All the folk of the neighbourhood came to see us married, and the churchyard was packed with well-wishers who stared so much at us — we were said to be a very good-looking couple, for Pepita was more charming than ever, and I had improved as I grew older — that we became shy, and scarcely knew which way to look. But you may be sure we did not turn our eyes on Uncle Joseph’s marble cenotaph: Pepita and I had known quite enough of Uncle Joseph Krevin in real life.
The Safety Pin (1924)
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I. THE THIRTEENTH CLIENT
CHAPTER II. WHAT ABOUT THE BED?
CHAPTER III. THE SAND PIT
CHAPTER IV. THE SAFETY PIN
CHAPTER V. THE PICTURE POSTCARD
CHAPTER VI. THE OPPORTUNE MOMENT
CHAPTER VII. THE CREVICED WALL
CHAPTER VIII. MISS PRETTY’S WAY
CHAPTER IX. BIRDS OF A FEATHER
CHAPTER X. TURN OF THE LADIES
CHAPTER XI. THE GOLD WATCH
CHAPTER XII. ARRESTED
CHAPTER XIII. STILL OPEN
CHAPTER XIV. WHICH GOLD MINE?
CHAPTER XV. THE UNCURTAINED WINDOW
CHAPTER XVI. DISCOVERIES AND AMBITIONS
CHAPTER XVII. THE WOOD AND THE ORCHARD
CHAPTER XVIII. GREEN EYES
CHAPTER XIX. THE MAN WHO GOT OUT
CHAPTER XX. COIL WITHIN COIL
CHAPTER XXI. BARTLETT’S HEARTHRUG
CHAPTER XXII. CHECKMATE
CHAPTER XXIII. MELLAPONT’S EXHIBIT
CHAPTER XXIV. THE ART OF ARRANGEMENT
CHAPTER XXV. THE GREEN BAY TREE
CHAPTER I. THE THIRTEENTH CLIENT
SHELMORE, THEN THREE-AND-TWENTY years old, had been in practice as a solicitor for precisely six months, and, probably because he had set up in his own native city of Southernstowe, the end of that period found him with exactly twelve clients on his roll. His line was the eminently safe one of conveyancing and the clients were profitable ones; he knew enough of his profession to know that his first half-year’s experience was satisfactory and promising. Another fledgling, lower down the street, a former fellow-articled-clerk, admitted at the same time as himself, who had gone in for police-court practice, was doubtless having livelier times, but not making so much substantial gain; his office, perhaps, was more crowded, but Shelmore preferred the dignified quiet of his own, wherein he and his clients talked of nothing less important than the transference or acquisition of real estate.
In a youthful fashion he was somewhat proud of that office. At the street door there was a beautiful, highly-polished brass plate, engraved in the very best of taste: Francis D. Shelmore, Solicitor; at the head of the stair leading up from it there was a smaller one, similarly inscribed, on an oak door; within that door, in the dark room liberally provided with all the proper show of papers, parchments, and japanned tin boxes, sat Shelmore’s one clerk, an astute, sharp-eyed, precocious youth named Simmons Hackdale; within an inner door, duly covered with green baize, sat Shelmore himself, in a private office very neatly and tastefully furnished and ornamented.
Whenever one of the twelve clients came, Shelmore was always busy, and the client was kept waiting a little, the time of waiting being adjusted by the clerk in accordance with his own estimate of the client’s value and importance. But, in plain truth, Shelmore had a lot of time on his hands, and it was a good deal to his credit that he spent some of it in improving his own knowledge of law, and some in giving a gratuitous course of legal education to his — unarticled — clerk. Shelmore, having been a bit of a precisian since boyhood, kept exact hours. He arrived at the office at exactly ten minutes to ten every morning; at ten minutes to five every afternoon he prepared to leave it. He was preparing to leave it now — a certain Wednesday afternoon in the last week of what had been an unusually fine September, He had tidied up his desk and put away his books and assumed his hat and overcoat; his umbrella, tightly rolled, stood ready to his hand; close by it lay the Times, neatly folded, to be carried home to his aunt. Miss Olivia Chauncey, with whom he lived, in an old-fashioned house in the oldest part of Southernstowe. He stood by the window, fitting on his gloves with meticulous precision; thus engaged, he looked out on the scene beneath and in front; he had gone through that performance every afternoon for six months; it would not have disconcerted him if he had been assured by some infallible prophet that he would go through it every afternoon for many and many a long year to come. It was all part of what he wished and liked — a well-ordered, calm, systematic life routine, in, which tomorrow should be as today.
Yet, at that very moment, had Shelmore but known it, things were stirring close by, which were not according to any routine of his, and were going to break in upon the regularity of his daily life. As he stood there, looking unemotionally out of the window, he saw something which, if it did not exactly excite him, at any rate interested him. The block in which his office was situate was a corner one. It commanded views of a good bit of the centre of the old city, and in particular a full prospect of the front of the ancient Chancellor Hotel. And what interested Shelmore was the sudden appearance of a girl at the entrance of the court-yard of the Chancellor — a girl, who, for a second or two stood on the curb, looking doubtfully and inquiringly around, as people look at unfamiliar things and scenes. She was a tallish girl; she was slim and willowy; he had a convinced idea that she was young and pretty; she was smartly dressed; she was a stranger. He wondered about her without knowing why he wondered: then, as he saw her look round again, hesitate, and suddenly cross the street in his direction, he formulated a theory.
“She’s in some perplexity,” mused Shelmore. “Wants to know something.”
The girl disappeared from view amongst the folk on the sidewalk, and Shelmore, the last finger of his gloves being adjusted, picked up the neatly rolled umbrella and the equally neatly folded Times, and prepared to quit the scene of his daily labour. But before he had opened the green baize door, he heard voices in the clerk’s room. He paused: the green baize door opened, and Simmons Hackdale’s sharp-eyed face appeared, and his hand held out a card.
“Young lady,” said Simmons, laconically. “Wants to consult you.”
Shelmore took the card mechanically and stared at the neat script. Of course this was the girl he had just seen from his window. And this that he was staring at would be her name — Miss Cynthia Pretty, St. Meliot’s, Camborne. Camborne! Why, Camborne was a good two or three hundred miles away, in Cornwall! What...he suddenly looked up, nodded at his clerk, and, drawing off his gloves and removing his hat, turned to his desk, as to a refuge. But being there again, his eyes went to the door...
He got a general impression of Miss Cynthia Pretty as Simmons Hackdale showed her in. She was tallish, and she was slim and willowy, as he had thought at first, and she was undeniably attractive. He was not sure whether her hair was gold — deep gold — or whether it weren’t a bit reddish; he was uncertain, too, about her eyes, whether they were blue or whether they were violet — anyway, the lot of her, put together, lighted up the office. And she was young — perhaps nineteen, perhaps twenty; he couldn’t tell; certainly she was very young. And suddenly he felt very young — and a little small — himself. For at sight of him, Miss Cynthia Pretty let out an involuntary exclamation.
“Oh!” she said, pausing between the door and the desk. “Are — are you the Mr. Shelmore whose name is on the door downstairs. You are? Oh! Well, you look so awfully young to be a solicitor. And it’s a solicitor I want.”
“Perhaps I’m older than I look,” answered Shelmore, recovering his wits. “And I assure you I’m very wise! Will you sit down and tell me—”
His client dropped into the easy chair to which he pointed, and let her hands fall together in her lap. She gave him another critical inspection.
“You look a bit clever,” she said. “And anyway, you’re a man and a lawyer, and that’s what I want. I’m in a mess, Mr. Shelmore! — at least, I don’t know what to do. As you see from my card, my name’s Pretty — Cynthia Pretty. I live near Camborne, in Cornwall. I’m half-proprietor of a famous tin mine there. The other half belongs to my partner, Mr. James Deane. Mr. Deane is also my guardian and trustee and all that sort of thing, under my father’s will, because, you see, I’m not yet of age — I’m only nineteen. I’m telling you this as a sort of preliminary to the really important business. Well, that’s just this — Mr. Deane and I have lately been travelling about. Not together — separately. He’s been in the North of England — he’s fond of old places, antiquities and so on. I’ve been staying with an old school friend at Bath. Mr. Deane and I arranged to meet here, at the Chancellor Hotel, Southernstowe, today — this afternoon, to be exact. We were to stay here a few days, to look round; then we were going on to Dover, and to the continent — Holland and Belgium, and perhaps Germany. Well, I got here, not half-an-hour ago, from Bath, with all my luggage, and drove straight to the Chancellor. They’d got a room booked for me right enough — Mr. Deane booked it when he arrived here on Monday — that’s the day before yesterday. But Mr. Deane himself isn’t there! — he’s clean disappeared!”
“Disappeared!” exclaimed Shelmore. “How? Why?”
“Don’t ask me,” replied his caller. “I don’t know! That’s what the girl clerk in the office, across there, says. The landlord wasn’t in, and I couldn’t get much out of her — she isn’t very brilliant or illuminating. But that’s what she says — that Mr. Deane came there on Monday, some time, and disappeared mysteriously during Monday night, and they’ve never seen him since. And — and I thought I’d better consult somebody at once, and so I came out and looked about for a solicitor, and I saw your name, and — well, that’s just where it is.”
“How old is Mr. Deane?” asked Shelmore.
“Sixty-three last June,” answered Miss Pretty. “Any reason why he should disappear?”
“Goodness, no! What reason should there be?”
“Not knowing him, I can’t say. Any financial reasons?”
“Mr Deane is a wealthy man. He and I, as partners, are both wealthy.”
“An domestic trouble now? Is Mr. Deane married?”
“He’s a widower. His wife died when I was a little girl.”
“Any sons or daughters?”
“He’s neither. I’ve hoard him say that he hasn’t a relative in the world.”
“A contented sort of man? No worries?”
“I should say, having known him all my life, that Mr. Deane hadn’t a care or a trouble. He’s a very sunny-natured, bright-tempered man.”
“And you can’t think of any reason whatever why he should disappear?”
“Not one! Not the ghost of a reason! I know he was looking forward awfully keenly to this tour on the continent; and, the last letter I had from him — here, in my bag — he promised faithfully to be waiting for me at the Chancellor today at four o’clock. He’s the sort of man who’s most punctilious about appointments. And I’m just certain, Mr. Shelmore — there’s something wrong.”
Shelmore picked up his hat.
“I’ll go across with you to the Chancellor, Miss Pretty,” he said, “I know Belling, the landlord — we’d better see him at once.”
“He was out when I was there,” remarked Miss Pretty. “And I don’t see what he can know about it any more than that Mr. Deane’s not there since Monday night.”
“Mr. Deane may have left a message with him of which the girl in the office knows nothing,” suggested Shelmore. “Anyway, Belling’s the man — and there he is just going in.”
He led his new client through the courtyard of the old hotel, and past the office to a private room, wherein the landlord, a cheery-faced, middle-aged man, was just taking off his hat and overcoat. He made Miss Pretty a polite bow and gave Shelmore a comprehending nod.
“I’ve just heard of Miss Pretty’s arrival and her enquiries about Mr. Deane,” he said, drawing chairs forward for his visitors. “I see you’ve not been long in seeking legal advice, miss! — but let’s hope there’s no need for that. Still, it’s a fact, Mr. Shelmore. I don’t know anything about Mr. Deane. He’s not here — and I don’t know where he is.”
“Just tell me what you do know,” replied Shelmore. “Miss Pretty is naturally anxious about him — she’s afraid something may have happened.”
“Well, sir, Mr. Deane looked to me the sort of man who could very well look after himself,” answered the landlord, as he took a seat opposite his callers. “But I’ll tell you everything I know. Mr. Deane arrived here, from London, I understood, on Monday afternoon, about four o’clock. He booked a room for himself — number seven. Then he booked a room for his ward. Miss Pretty, who, he said, would be here on Wednesday — number eleven. Here, of course, is Miss Pretty, and the room is all ready for her. But where’s her guardian? Well, all I can tell is this: Mr. Deane’s luggage was taken up to his room. He went up there himself, and had some tea sent up. He came down to dinner at seven o’clock, and dined in just the usual fashion. After dinner, he came to me in the bar-parlour and asked if there was any particular amusement in the place. I told him we’d just opened a new picture house, the first thing of its kind ever known in Southernstowe, and that it was well worth seeing. He said he’d go. He went. He came back about ten o’clock, or a little after. He asked me to join him in a drink. He had a whisky and soda in this very room — Mr. Deane sat in that very chair you’re in, Mr. Shelmore. We talked about the picture house, and the money there was in that industry nowadays. Then he observed that he’d seen a very handsome lady at the picture house, who occupied what, he said, was evidently a place of honour, and seemed to be some local celebrity. I told him that that would be Mrs. Champernowne, the Mayor of Southernstowe. He was much interested in that, he said that though he’d heard of ladies being mayors before, he’d never actually seen one in office. I told him that Mrs. Champernowne was a very smart, clever woman, proprietress of one of the biggest businesses in the city, that since her coming to Southernstowe twenty-odd years ago, she’s always taken a vast interest in civic affairs, and that this was her second year of office as chief magistrate. We talked a while about women’s share in politics and municipal life, and then about eleven o’clock, he said he’d get off to bed. We said good-night at the foot of the stairs — and that, Mr. Shelmore, was the very last I saw of him! Never seen, nor heard of him since!”
“But — your people?” suggested Shelmore.
“Ah, to be sure!” asserted Belling. “The chambermaid — she saw him last.”
“Under what circumstances?” enquired Shelmore.
“Well,” replied the landlord, “a few minutes — perhaps ten minutes or a quarter of an hour after he’d gone upstairs, he rang the bell for her, and asked for a glass of hot milk. She came down and got it for him; when she went back with it, Mr. Deane, according to what she told me next morning, was in his pyjamas and dressing gown, sitting in an easy chair and reading a book. He asked her to bring him some China tea and a dry biscuit at seven o’clock sharp next morning. She bade him good-night and went away, leaving him there sipping his hot milk, and reading his book-and there you are!”










