The Middle Temple Murder by J. S. Fletcher (ebook voice reader txt) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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âI remember the people who brought me up from the time I was three years old. And I have just a faint, shadowy recollection of some woman, a tall, dark woman, I think, before that.â
âMiss Baylis,â said Spargo to himself. âAll right, Breton,â he went on aloud. âIâm going to tell you the truth. Iâll tell it to you straight out and give you all the explanations afterwards. Your real name is not Breton at all. Your real name is Maitland, and youâre the only child of the man who was found murdered at the foot of Cardlestoneâs staircase!â
Spargo had been wondering how Breton would take this, and he gazed at him with some anxiety as he got out the last words. What would he do?âwhat would he say?âwhatââ
Breton sat down quietly at his desk and looked Spargo hard between the eyes.
âProve that to me, Spargo,â he said, in hard, matter-of-fact tones. âProve it to me, every word. Every word, Spargo!â
Spargo nodded.
âI willâevery word,â he answered. âItâs the right thing. Listen, then.â
It was a quarter to twelve, Spargo noticed, throwing a glance at the clock outside, as he began his story; it was past one when he brought it to an end. And all that time Breton listened with the keenest attention, only asking a question now and then; now and then making a brief note on a sheet of paper which he had drawn to him.
âThatâs all,â said Spargo at last.
âItâs plenty,â observed Breton laconically.
He sat staring at his notes for a moment; then he looked up at Spargo. âWhat do you really think?â he asked.
âAboutâwhat?â said Spargo.
âThis flight of Elphickâs and Cardlestoneâs.â
âI think, as I said, that they knew something which they think may be forced upon them. I never saw a man in a greater fright than that I saw Elphick in last night. And itâs evident that Cardlestone shares in that fright, or they wouldnât have gone off in this way together.â
âDo you think they know anything of the actual murder?â
Spargo shook his head.
âI donât know. Probably. They know something. Andâlook here!â
Spargo put his hand in his breast pocket and drew something out which he handed to Breton, who gazed at it curiously.
âWhatâs this?â he demanded. âStamps?â
âThat, from the description of Criedir, the stamp-dealer, is a sheet of those rare Australian stamps which Maitland had on himâcarried on him. I picked it up just now in Cardlestoneâs room, when you were looking into his bedroom.â
âBut that, after all, proves nothing. Those maynât be the identical stamps. And whether they are or notâââ
âWhat are the probabilities?â interrupted Spargo sharply. âI believe that those are the stamps which Maitlandâyour father!âhad on him, and I want to know how they came to be in Cardlestoneâs rooms. And I will know.â
Breton handed the stamps back.
âBut the general thing, Spargo?â he said. âIf they didnât murderâI canât realize the thing yet!âmy fatherâââ
âIf they didnât murder your father, they know who did!â exclaimed Spargo. âNow, then, itâs time for more action. Let Elphick and Cardlestone alone for the momentâtheyâll be tracked easily enough. I want to tackle something else for the moment. How do you get an authority from the Government to open a grave?â
âOrder from the Home Secretary, which will have to be obtained by showing the very strongest reasons why it should be made.â
âGood! Weâll give the reasons. I want to have a grave opened.â
âA grave opened! Whose grave?â
âThe grave of the man Chamberlayne at Market Milcaster,â replied Spargo.
Breton started.
âHis? In Heavenâs name, why?â he demanded.
Spargo laughed as he got up.
âBecause I believe itâs empty,â he answered. âBecause I believe that Chamberlayne is alive, and that his other name isâCardlestone!â
THE PENITENT WINDOW-CLEANER
That afternoon Spargo had another of his momentous interviews with his proprietor and his editor. The first result was that all three drove to the offices of the legal gentleman who catered for the Watchman when it wanted any law, and that things were put in shape for an immediate application to the Home Office for permission to open the Chamberlayne grave at Market Milcaster; the second was that on the following morning there appeared in the Watchman a notice which set half the mouths of London a-watering. That notice; penned by Spargo, ran as follows:â
âONE THOUSAND POUNDS REWARD.
âWHEREAS, on some date within the past twelve months, there was stolen, abstracted, or taken from the chambers in Fountain Court, Temple, occupied by Mr. Stephen Aylmore, M.P., under the name of Mr. Anderson, a walking-stick, or stout staff, of foreign make, and of curious workmanship, which stick was probably used in the murder of John Marbury, or Maitland, in Middle Temple Lane, on the night of June 21â22 last, and is now in the hands of the police:
âThis is to give notice that the Proprietor of the Watchman newspaper will pay the above-mentioned reward (ONE THOUSAND POUNDS STERLING) at once and in cash to whosoever will prove that he or she stole, abstracted, or took away the said stick from the said chambers, and will further give full information as to his or her disposal of the same, and the Proprietor of the Watchman moreover engages to treat any revelation affecting the said stick in the most strictly private and confidential manner, and to abstain from using it in any way detrimental to the informant, who should call at the Watchman office, and ask for Mr. Frank Spargo at any time between eleven and one oâclock midday, and seven and eleven oâclock in the evening.â
âAnd you really expect to get some information through that?â asked Breton, who came into Spargoâs room about noon on the day on which the promising announcement came out. âYou really do?â
âBefore today is out,â said Spargo confidently. âThere is more magic in a thousand-pound reward than you fancy, Breton. Iâll have the history of that stick before midnight.â
âHow are you to tell that you wonât be imposed upon?â suggested Breton. âAnybody can say that he or she stole the stick.â
âWhoever comes here with any tale of a stick will have to prove to me how he or she got the stick and what was done with the stick,â said Spargo. âI havenât the least doubt that that stick was stolen or taken away from Aylmoreâs rooms in Fountain Court, and that it got into the hands ofââ
âYes, of whom?â
âThatâs what I want to know in some fashion. Iâve an idea, already. But I can afford to wait for definite information. I know one thingâwhen I get that informationâas I shallâwe shall be a long way on the road towards establishing Aylmoreâs innocence.â
Breton made no remark upon this. He was looking at Spargo with a meditative expression.
âSpargo,â he said, suddenly, âdo you think youâll get that order for the opening of the grave at Market Milcaster?â
âI was talking to the solicitors over the âphone just now,â answered Spargo. âTheyâve every confidence about it. In fact, itâs possible it may be made this afternoon. In that case, the opening will be made early tomorrow morning.â
âShall you go?â asked Breton.
âCertainly. And you can go with me, if you like. Better keep in touch with us all day in case we hear. You ought to be thereâyouâre concerned.â
âI should like to goâI will go,â said Breton. âAnd if that grave proves to beâemptyâIâllâIâll tell you something.â
Spargo looked up with sharp instinct.
âYouâll tell me something? Something? What?â
âNever mindâwait until we see if that coffin contains a dead body or lead and sawdust. If thereâs no body thereâââ
At that moment one of the senior messenger boys came in and approached Spargo. His countenance, usually subdued to an official stolidity, showed signs of something very like excitement.
âThereâs a man downstairs asking for you, Mr. Spargo,â he said. âHeâs been hanging about a bit, sir,âseems very shy about coming up. He wonât say what he wants, and he wonât fill up a form, sir. Says all he wants is a word or two with you.â
âBring him up at once!â commanded Spargo. He turned to Breton when the boy had gone. âThere!â he said, laughing. âThis is the man about the stickâyou see if it isnât.â
âYouâre such a cock-sure chap, Spargo,â said Breton. âYouâre always going on a straight line.â
âTrying to, you mean,â retorted Spargo. âWell, stop here, and hear what this chap has to say: itâll no doubt be amusing.â
The messenger boy, deeply conscious that he was ushering into Spargoâs room an individual who might shortly carry away a thousand pounds of good Watchman money in his pocket, opened the door and introduced a shy and self-conscious young man, whose nervousness was painfully apparent to everybody and deeply felt by himself. He halted on the threshold, looking round the comfortably-furnished room, and at the two well-dressed young men which it framed as if he feared to enter on a scene of such grandeur.
âCome in, come in!â said Spargo, rising and pointing to an easy-chair at the side of his desk. âTake a seat. Youâve called about that reward, of course.â
The man in the chair eyed the two of them cautiously, and not without suspicion. He cleared his throat with a palpable effort.
âOf course,â he said. âItâs all on the strict private. Name of Edward Mollison, sir.â
âAnd where do you live, and what do you do?â asked Spargo.
âYou might put it down Rowton House, Whitechapel,â answered Edward Mollison. âLeastways, thatâs where I generally hang out when I can afford it. Andâwindow-cleaner. Leastways, I was window cleaning whenâwhenâââ
âWhen you came in contact with the stick weâve been advertising about,â suggested Spargo. âJust so. Well, Mollisonâwhat about the stick?â
Mollison looked round at the door, and then at the windows, and then at Breton.
âThere ainât no danger of me being got into trouble along of that stick?â he asked. ââCause if there is, I ainât a-going to say a wordâno, not for no thousand pounds! Me never having been in no trouble of any sort, guvânorâthough a poor man.â
âNot the slightest danger in the world, Mollison,â replied Spargo. âNot the least. All youâve got to do is to tell the truthâand prove that it is the truth. So it was you who took that queer-looking stick out of Mr. Aylmoreâs rooms in Fountain Court, was it?â
Mollison appeared to find this direct question soothing to his feelings. He smiled weakly.
âIt was certânly me as took it, sir,â he said. âNot that I meant to pinch itânot me! And, as you might say, I didnât take it, when allâs said and done. It wasâput on me.â
âPut on you, was it?â said Spargo. âThatâs interesting. And how was it put on you?â
Mollison grinned again and rubbed his chin.
âIt was this here way,â he answered. âYou see, I was working at that timeânear on to nine months since, it isâfor the Universal Daylight Window Cleaning Company, and I used to clean a many windows here and there in the Temple, and them windows at Mr. Aylmoreâsâonly I knew them as Mr. Andersonâsâamong âem. And I was there one morning, early it was, when the charwoman she says to me, âI wish youâd take these two or three hearthrugs,â she says, âand give âem a good beating,â she says. And me being always a ready one to oblige, âAll right!â I says, and takes âem. âHereâs something to wallop âem with,â she says, and pulls that there old stick out of a lot that was in a stand in a corner of the lobby. And thatâs how I came to handle it, sir.â
âI see,â said Spargo. âA good explanation. And when you had beaten the hearthrugsâwhat then?â
Mollison smiled his weak smile again.
âWell, sir, I looked at that there stick and I see it was something uncommon,â he answered. âAnd I thinksââWell, this Mr. Anderson, heâs got a bundle of sticks and walking canes up thereâheâll never miss this old thing,â I thinks. And so I left it in a corner when Iâd done beating the rugs, and when I went away with my things I took it with me.â
âYou took it with you?â said Spargo. âJust so. To keep as a curiosity, I suppose?â
Mollisonâs weak smile turned to one of cunning. He was obviously losing his nervousness; the sound of his own voice and the reception of his news was imparting confidence to him.
âNot half!â he answered. âYou see, guvânor, there was an old cove as I knew in the Temple there as is, or was, âcause I ainât been there since, a collector of antikities, like, and Iâd sold him a queer old thing, time and again. And, of course, I had him in my eye when I took the stick awayâsee?â
âI see. And you took the stick to him?â
âI took it there and then,â replied Mollison. âPitched him a tale, I did, about it having been brought
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