The Mystery of a Hansom Cab by Fergus Hume (reading diary TXT) đ
- Author: Fergus Hume
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âDear me!â answered Brian, mechanically. âHow unfortunate!â He was not listening to Mrs. Sampsonâs remarks. He suddenly remembered an arrangement which Madge had made, and which up till now had slipped his memory.
âMrs. Sampson,â he said, turning round at the door, âI am going to bring Mr. Frettlby and his daughter to have a cup of afternoon tea here, so you might have some ready.â
âYou âave only to ask and to âave,â answered Mrs. Sampson, hospitably, with a gratified crackle of all her joints. âIâll make the tea, sir, anâ also some of my own perticler cakes, beinâ a special kind I âave, which my mother showed me. âow to make, âavinâ been taught by a lady as she nussed throâ the scarlet fever, thoâ beinâ of a weak constitootion, she died soon arter, beinâ in the âabit of contractinâ any disease she might chance on.â
Brian hurried off lest in her Poe-like appreciation of them, Mrs. Sampson should give vent to more charnel-house horrors.
At one period of her life, the little woman had been a nurse, and it was told of her that she had frightened one of her patients into convulsions during the night by narrating to her the history of all the corpses she had laid out. This ghoul-like tendency in the end proved fatal to her professional advancement.
As soon as Fitzgerald had gone, she went over to the window and watched him as he walked slowly down the streetâa tall, handsome man, of whom any woman would be proud.
âWhat an awful thing it are to think âeâll be a corpse some day,â she chirped cheerily to herself, âthoâ of course beinâ a great swell in âis own place, âeâll âave a nice airy vault, which âud be far more comfortable than a close, stuffy grave, even thoâ it âas a tombstone anâ viâlets over it. Ah, now! Who are you, impertinence?â she broke off, as a stout man in a light suit of clothes crossed the road and rang the bell, âa-pullinâ at the bell as if it were a pump âandle.â
As the gentleman at the door, who was none other than Mr. Gorby, did not hear her, he of course did not reply, so she hurried down the stairs, crackling with anger at the rough usage her bell had received.
Mr. Gorby had Been Brian go out, and deeming it a good opportunity for enquiry had lost no time in making a start.
âYou nearly tored the bell down,â said Mrs. Sampson, as she presented her thin body and wrinkled face to the view of the detective.
âIâm very sorry,â answered Gorby, meekly. âIâll knock next time.â
âOh, no you wonât,â said the landlady, tossing her head, âme not âavinâ a knocker, anâ your âand a-scratchinâ the paint off the door, which it ainât been done over six months by my sister-in-lawâs cousin, which âe is a painter, with a shop in Fitzroy, anâ a wonderful heye to colour.â
âDoes Mr. Fitzgerald live here?â asked Mr. Gorby, quietly.
âHe do,â replied Mrs. Sampson, âbut âeâs gone out, anâ wonât be back till the arternoon, which any messige âull be delivered to âim punctual on âis arrival.â
âIâm glad heâs not in,â said Mr. Gorby. âWould you allow me to have a few momentsâ conversation?â
âWhat is it?â asked the landlady, her curiosity being roused.
âIâll tell you when we get inside,â answered Mr. Gorby.
She looked at him with her sharp little eyes, and seeing nothing disreputable about him, led the way upstairs, crackling loudly the whole time. This so astonished Mr. Gorby that he cast about in his own mind for an explanation of the phenomenon.
âWants oiling about the jints,â was his conclusion, âbut I never heard anything like it, and she looks as if sheâd snap in two, sheâs that brittle.â
Mrs. Sampson took Gorby into Brianâs sitting-room, and having closed the door, sat down and prepared to hear what he had to say for himself.
âI âope it ainât bills,â she said. âMr. Fitzgerald âavinâ money in the bank, and everythinâ respectable like a gentleman as âe is, thoâ, to be sure, your bill might come down on him unbeknown, âe not âavinâ kept it in mind, which it ainât everybody as âave sich a good memory as my aunt on my motherâs side, she âavinâ been famous for âer dates like a âistory, not to speak of âer multiplication tables, and the numbers of peopleâs âouses.â
âItâs not bills,â answered Mr. Gorby, who, having vainly attempted to stem the shrill torrent of words, had given in, and waited mildly until she had finished; âI only want to know a few things about Mr. Fitzgeraldâs habits.â
âAnd what for?â asked Mrs. Sampson, indignantly. âAre you a noospaper a-putinâ in articles about people who donât want to see âemselves in print, which I knows your âabits, my late âusband âavinâ bin a printer on a paper which bust up, not âavinâ the money to pay wages, throâ which, there was doo to him the sum of one pound seven and sixpence halfpenny, which I, beinâ âis widder, ought to âave, not that I expects to see it on this side of the graveâoh, dear, no!â and she gave a shrill, elfish laugh.
Mr. Gorby, seeing that unless he took the bull by the horns, he would never be able to get what he wanted, grew desperate, and plunged in MEDIAS RES.
âI am an insurance agent,â he said, rapidly, so as to prevent any interruption, âand Mr. Fitzgerald desires to insure his life in our company. I, therefore, want to find out if he is a good life to insure; does he live temperately? keep early hours? and, in fact, all about him?â
âI shall be âappy to answer any enquiries which may be of use to you, sir,â replied Mrs. Sampson; âknowinâ as I do, âow good a insurance is to a family, should the âead of it be taken off unexpected, leavinâ a widder, which, as I know, Mr. Fitzgerald is a-goinâ to be married soon, anâ I âopes âeâll be âappy, thoâ throâ it I loses a lodger as âas allays paid regler, anâ beâaved like a gentleman.â
âSo he is a temperate man?â said Mr. Gorby, feeling his way cautiously.
âNot beinâ a blue ribbing all the same,â answered Mrs. Sampson; âand I never saw him the wuss for drink, âe being allays able to use his latch-key, and take âis boots off afore going to bed, which is no more than a woman ought to expect from a lodger, she âavinâ to do âer own washinâ.â
âAnd he keeps good hours?â
âAllays in afore the clock strikes twelve,â answered the landlady; âthoâ, to be sure, I uses it as a figger of speech, none of the clocks in the âouse strikinâ but one, which is beinâ mended, âavinâ broke through overwindinâ.â
âIs he always in before twelve?â asked Mr. Gorby, keenly disappointed at this answer.
Mrs. Sampson eyed him waggishly, and a smile crept over her wrinkled little face.
âYoung men, not beinâ old men,â she replied, cautiously, âand sinners not beinâ saints, itâs not nattral as latch-keys should be made for ornament instead of use, and Mr. Fitzgerald beinâ one of the âandsomest men in Melbourne, it ainât to be expected as âe should let âis latch-key git rusty, thoâ âavinâ a good moral character, âe uses it with moderation.â
âBut I suppose you are seldom awake when he comes in really late,â said the detective.
âNot as a rule,â assented Mrs. Sampson; âbeinâ a âeavy sleeper, and much disposed for bed, but I âave âeard âim come in arter twelve, the last time beinâ Thursday week.â
âAh!â Mr. Gorby drew a long breath, for Thursday week was the night upon which the murder was committed.
âBeinâ troubled with my âead,â said Mrs. Sampson, âthroâ âavinâ been out in the sun all day a-washinâ, I did not feel so partial to my bed that night as in general, so went down to the kitching with the intent of getting a linseed poultice to put at the back of my âead, it being calculated to remove pain, as was told to me, when a nuss, by a doctor in the horspital, âe now beinâ in business for hisself, at Geelong, with a large family, âavinâ married early. Just as I was leavinâ the kitching I âeard Mr. Fitzgerald a-cominâ in, and, turninâ round, looked at the clock, that âavinâ been my custom when my late âusband came in, in the early morninâ, I beinâ a-preparinâ âis meal.â
âAnd the time was?â asked Mr. Gorby, breathlessly.
âFive minutes to two oâclock,â replied Mrs. Sampson. Mr. Gorby thought for a moment.
âCab was hailed at one oâclockâstarted for St. Kilda at about ten minutes pastâreached Grammar School, say, at twenty-five minutes pastâFitzgerald talks five minutes to cabman, making it halfpastâsay, he waited ten minutes for other cab to turn up, makes it twenty minutes to twoâit would take another twenty minutes to get to East Melbourneâand five minutes to walk up hereâthat makes it five minutes past two instead of beforeâconfound it. âWas your clock in the kitchen right?ââ he asked, aloud.
âWell, I think so,â answered Mrs. Sampson. âIt does get a little slow sometimes, not âavinâ been cleaned for some time, which my nevy beinâ a watchmaker I allays âands it over to âim.â
âOf course it was slow on that night,â said Gorby, triumphantly.
âHe must have come in at five minutes past twoâwhich makes it right.â
âMakes what right?â asked the landlady, sharply. âAnd âow do you know my clock was ten minutes wrong?â
âOh, it was, was it?â asked Gorby, eagerly.
âIâm not denyinâ of it,â replied Mrs. Sampson; âclocks ainât allays to be relied on more than men anâ womenâbut it wonât be anythinâ agin âis insurance, will it, as in general âeâs in afore twelve?â
âOh, all that will be quite safe,â answered the detective, delighted with the information he had obtained. âIs this Mr. Fitzgeraldâs room?â
âYes, it is,â replied the landlady; âbut âe furnished it âimself, beinâ of a luxurus turn of mind, not but what âis taste is good, thoâ far be it from me to deny I âelped âim to select; but âavinâ another room of the same to let, any friends as you might âave in search of a âome âud be well looked arter, my references beinâ very âigh, anâ my cookinâ tastyâanâ ifââ
Here a ring at the front door bell called Mrs. Sampson away, so with a hurried word to Gorby she crackled downstairs. Left to himself, Mr. Gorby arose and looked round the room. It was excellently furnished, and the pictures were good. At one end of the room, by the window, there was a writing-table covered with papers.
âItâs no good looking for the papers he took out of Whyteâs pocket, I suppose,â said the detective to himself, as he turned over some letters, âas I donât know what they are, and I couldnât tell them if I saw them; but Iâd like to find that missing glove and the bottle that held the chloroformâunless heâs done away with them. There doesnât seem any sign of them here, so Iâll have a look in his bedroom.â
There was no time to lose, as Mrs. Sampson might return at any moment, so Mr. Gorby walked quickly into the bedroom, which opened off the sitting-room. The first thing that caught the detectiveâs eye was a large photograph, in a plush frame, of Madge Frettlby. It stood on the dressing-table, and was similar to that one which he had already seen in Whyteâs album. He took it up with a laugh.
âYouâre a pretty girl,â he said, apostrophising the picture, âbut you give your photograph to two
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