The Stowmarket Mystery by Louis Tracy (beginner reading books for adults .txt) đ
- Author: Louis Tracy
- Performer: -
Book online «The Stowmarket Mystery by Louis Tracy (beginner reading books for adults .txt) đ». Author Louis Tracy
âSurely you had some motive for your remark?â questioned David. âThe only remaining relative is Mrs. Capella.â
âThere againâhow do you define the word ârelative.â I suppose, Mr. Brett, you are fairly well posted in the history of our house?â
âYes.â
âWell, has it never struck you that there was something queer about the manner of my Uncle Alanâs marriageâMargaretâs father, I mean?â
âPerhaps. What do you know about it?â
âNothing definite. When I was a mid-shipman on board the Northumberland I have a lively recollection of a fiendish row between a man named Somers and another officer who passed some chaffing remark about my respected uncleâs goings on in Italy. The officer in question had forgotten, or never knew, that Sir Alan married Somersâs sisterâthey were Bristol people, I thinkâbut he stuck to it that Sir Alan had an Italian wife. He had seen her.â
Brett was driving, Frazer sitting by his side, and David leaning over the rail from the back seat. Had a bombshell dropped in their midst the two others could not have been more startled than by Robertâs chance observation.
âGood Heavens!â cried Hume, âwhy has Capella gone to Italy?â
âThat question may soon be answered,â said Brett.
âWas that one of the other reasons you hinted at in the library when telling us why you did not volunteer evidence at the trial?â he asked Robert.
âIt was. The cat is out of the bag now. I did not know where the affair might end, so I held my tongue. It also accounts for my unwillingness to meet Capella. I am very fond of Margaret. She is straight as a die, and I would not do anything to cause her suffering. In a word, I let sleeping dogs lie. If you can manage your matrimonial affairs without all this fuss, Davie, I should advise you to do the same.â
âWhat are you hinting at? What new mystery is this?â cried Hume.
âLet us keep to solid fact for the present,â interposed the barrister. âI wish I had met you sooner, Mr. Frazer. I would be nearing Naples now, instead of entering Stowmarket Have you any further information?â
âNone whatever. Even what I have told you is the recollection of a boy who did not understand what the row was about. Where does it lead us, anyhow? What is known about Capella?â
âVery little. Unless I am much mistaken, he will soon tell us a good deal himself. I am beginning to credit him with the possession of more brains and powers of malice than I was at first inclined to admit. He is a dangerous customer.â
âLook here,â exclaimed Robert angrily. âIf that wretched little Italian annoys Margaret in any way I will crack his dollâs head.â
They reached the hotel, where a room was obtained for Frazer, and David undertook to equip him out of his portmanteau. Brett left the cousins to arrange matters, and hurried to his sitting-room, where a number of telegrams awaited him.
Those from Hume he barely glanced at. David could tell his own story.
There were three from Winter. The first, despatched at 1.10 p.m., read:
âCapella and valet left by club train. Nothing doing Japanese.â
The second was timed 4.30 p.m.:
âJap, accompanied by tall, fat man, left home 2.45. They separated Piccadilly Circus. Followed Japâ(âOh, Winter!â groaned Brett)âand saw him enter British Museum. Four oâclock he met fat man again outside Tottenham Court Road Tube Station. They drove west in hansom. Heard address given. Am wiring before going same place.â
This telegram had been handed in at an Oxford Street office.
The third, 7.30., p.m.:
âNothing important. All quiet. Wiring before your local office closes.â
The facetious Winter had signed these messages âSnow.â
Brett promptly wrote a telegram to the detectiveâs private address:
âYour signature should have been âFrost.â If that fat man turns up again follow him. Call on Jap and endeavour to see his wife. You may be sadder but wiser. Meet me Victoria Street, 5 p.m. to-day.â
He called a waiter and gave instructions that this message should be sent off early next morning. Then he lit a cigar to soothe his disappointment.
âI cannot emulate the House of Commons bird,â he mused, âor at this moment I would be close to Jiroâs flat in Kensington, and at the same time crossing Lombardy in an express. What an ass Winter is, to be sure, whenever a subtle stroke requires an ingenious guard. Jiro dresses his wife in male attire and sends her on an errand he dare not perform himself. The fact that they depart together from their residence is diplomatic in itself. If they are followed, the watcher is sure to shadow Jiro and leave his unknown friend. Just imagine Winter dodging Jiro around the Rosetta Stone or the Phoebus Apollo, whilst the woman is visiting some one or some place of infinite value to our search. It is positively maddening.â
Perhaps, in his heart, Brett felt that Winter was not so greatly to blame. The sudden appearance on the scene of a portly and respectable stranger was disconcerting, but could hardly serve as an excuse for leaving Jiroâs trail at the point of bifurcation.
Moreover, it is difficult to suspect stout people of criminal tendencies. Winter had the best of negative evidence that they are not adapted for âtreasons, spoils, and stratagems.â Even a convicted rogue, if corpulent, demands sympathy.
But Brett was very sore. He stamped about the room and kicked unoffending chairs out of the way. His unfailing instinct told him that a rare opportunity had been lost. It was well for Winter that he was beyond reach of the barristerâs tongue. A valid defence would have availed him naught.
David entered.
âI just seized an opportunityââ he commenced eagerly, but Brett levelled his cigar at him as if it were a revolver.
âYou want to tell me,â he cried, âthat before you were two hours in Portsmouth you ascertained Frazerâs address from an old friend. You caught the next train for London, went to his lodgings, encountered a nagging landlady, and found that your cousin had taken his overcoat to the pawnbrokerâs to raise money for his fair to Stowmarket You drove frantically to Liverpool Street, interviewed a smart platform inspector, and he told youââ
âThat all I had to do was to ask Brett, and he would not only give me a detailed history of my own actions, but produce the very man he sent me in search of,â interrupted David, laughing. Nothing the barrister said or did could astonish him now.
âWhat has upset you?â he went on. âI hope I made no mistakes.â
âNone. Your conduct has been irreproachable. But you erred greatly in the choice of your parents. There are far too many Hume-Frazers in existence.â
âPlease tell me what is the matter?â
âRead those.â Brett tossed the detectiveâs telegrams across the table.
Hume puzzled over them.
âI think we ought to know who that fat man was,â he said.
âWe do know. She is a fat woman, the ex-barmaid from Ipswich. Next time, they will send out the youthful Jiro in a perambulator.â
âBut why are you so furious about it?â demanded Hume. âWas it so important to ascertain what she did during that hour and a quarter?â
âImportant! It is the only real clue given us since âRabbit Jackâ saw a man like you standing motionless in the avenue.â
Chapter XVIII Further ComplicationsReturn to Table of Contents
Brett devoted half an hour to Frazerâs business affairs next morning. David was present, and the result of the conclave is shown by the following excerpt from a letter the barrister sent by them to Mrs. Capella, incidentally excusing his personal attendance at the Hall:
âIn my opinion, your cousin David and you should guarantee the payment of the land-tax on Mr. Frazerâs estateâÂŁ650 per annumâfor five years. You should give him a reasonable sum to rehabilitate his wardrobe and pay the few small debts he has contracted, besides allowing him a weekly stipend to enable him to live properly for another year. I will place him in touch with sound financial people, who will exploit his estate if they think the prospects are good, and you can co-operate in the scheme, if you are so advised by your solicitors, with whom the financiers I recommend will carry weight. Failing support in England, Mr. Frazer says he can make his own way in the Argentine if helped in the manner I suggest.â
He explained to the two young men that his movements that day would be uncertain. If the ladies still adhered to their resolve to proceed to London forthwith, the whole party would stay at the same hotel. In that event they should send a telegram to his Victoria Street chambers, and he would dine with them. Otherwise they must advise him of their whereabouts.
Left to himself, he curled up in an arm-chair, knotting legs and arms in the most uncomfortable manner, and rendering it necessary to crane his neck before he could remove a cigar from his lips.
In such posture, alternated with rapid walking about the room, he could think best.
The waiter, not knowing that the barrister had remained in the hotel, came in to see what trifles might be strewed about table or mantelpiece in the shape of loose âsmokesâ or broken hundreds of cigarettes.
Like most people, his eyes could only observe the expected, the normal. No one was standing or sitting in the usual wayâtherefore the room was empty.
A box of Brettâs Turkish cigarettes was lying temptingly open. He advanced.
âTouch those, and I slay you,â snapped Brett. âYour miserable life is not worth one of them.â
The man jumped as if he had been fired at. The barrister, coiled up like a boa-constrictor, glared at him in mock fury.
âI beg pardon, sir,â he blurted out, âI didnât know you was in.â
âEvidently. A more expert scoundrel would have stolen them under my very nose. You are a bungler.â
âI really wasnât goinâ to take any, sirâjust put them away, that is all.â
âIn that packet,â said Brett, âthere are eighty-seven cigarettes. I count them, because each one is an epoch. I donât count the cigars in the sideboard.â
âI prefer cigars,â grinned the waiter.
âSo I see. You have two of the landlordâs best âsixpencesâ in the left pocket of your waistcoat at this moment.â
âWell, if you ainât a fair scorcher,â the man gasped.
âWhat, you rascal, would you call me names?â
Brett writhed convulsively, and the waiter backed towards the door.
âNo, sir, I was callinâ no names. We donât get too many perksâwe waiters donât, sir. I was out of bed until one oâclock and up again at six. Thatâs wot I call hard work, sir.â
âIt is outrageous. Take five cigars.â
âThank you kindly, sir.â
âWhat kept you up till one oâclock?â
âGossip, sirâjust silly gossip. All about Mrs. Capella, anâ Beechcroft, anâ I donât know wotâ
âIndeed, and who was so interested in these topics as to spoil your beauty sleep?â
âThe new gentleman, who is so like Mr. David.â
âHow very interesting,â said the barrister, who certainly did not expect this revelation.
âIt seemed to be interesting to âim, sir. You see, the âouse is pretty full, and when you brought âim âere last night, sir, the bookkeeper gevâ âim the room next to mine. Last thing, I fetched the gentleman a Scotch anâ soda anâ a cigar. âE said âe couldnât sleep, and âe was lookinâ at a fotygraf. I caught a squint at it, anâ I sez, âBeg parding, sir, but ainât that Mrs. CapellaâMiss Margaret as used to be?â That started âim.â
âYou surprise me.â
âAnd the gentleman surprised me,â confided the waiter, whose greatest conversational effects were produced by quickly adapting remarks made to him. âPârâaps you are not aware, sir, that the ladyâs Eye-talian âusbinâ ainât no good?â
âI have heard something of the sort.â
âThen youâve heard something right, sir. They do say as âow âe beats her.â
âThe scoundrel!â
âScoundrel! You should âave seen No. 18 last night when I tole âim that. My conscience! âE went on awful, âe did. âE seemed to be mad about Mrs. Capella.â
âHe is her cousin.â
âCousin! That wonât wash,
Comments (0)