The Lodger by Marie Belloc Lowndes (english novels to improve english .TXT) đ
- Author: Marie Belloc Lowndes
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Perhaps Ellen was right after all. It didnât do for one to be always thinking of dreadful subjects, of murders and such-like. It made one go dottyâthatâs what it did.
And just as he was telling himself that, there came to the door a loud knock, the peculiar rat-tat-tat of a telegraph boy. But before he had time to get across the room, let alone to the front door, Ellen had rushed through the room, clad only in a petticoat and shawl.
âIâll go,â she cried breathlessly. âIâll go, Bunting; donât you trouble.â
He stared at her, surprised, and followed her into the hall.
She put out a hand, and hiding herself behind the door, took the telegram from the invisible boy. âYou neednât wait,â she said. âIf thereâs an answer weâll send it out ourselves.â Then she tore the envelope openââOh!â she said with a gasp of relief. âItâs only from Joe Chandler, to say he canât go over to fetch Daisy this morning. Then youâll have to go.â
She walked back into their sitting-room. âThere!â she said. âThere it is, Bunting. You just read it.â
âAm on duty this morning. Cannot fetch Miss Daisy as arranged.â Chandler.â
âI wonder why heâs on duty?â said Bunting slowly, uncomfortably. âI thought Joeâs hours was as regular as clockworkâthat nothing could make any difference to them. However, there it is. I suppose itâll do all right if I start about eleven oâclock? It may have left off snowing by then. I donât feel like going out again just now. Iâm pretty tired this morning.â
âYou start about twelve,â said his wife quickly.
âThatâll give plenty of time.â
The morning went on quietly, uneventfully. Bunting received a letter from Old Aunt saying Daisy must come back next Monday, a little under a week from now. Mr. Sleuth slept soundly, or, at any rate, he made no sign of being awake; and though Mrs. Bunting often, stopped to listen, while she was doing her room, there came no sounds at all from overhead.
Scarcely aware that it was so, both Bunting and his wife felt more cheerful than they had done for a long time. They had quite a pleasant little chat when Mrs. Bunting came and sat down for a bit, before going down to prepare Mr. Sleuthâs breakfast.
âDaisy will be surprised to see youânot to say disappointed!â she observed, and she could not help laughing a little to herself at the thought. And when, at eleven, Bunting got up to go, she made him stay on a little longer. âThereâs no such great hurry as that,â she said good-temperedly. âItâll do quite well if youâre there by half-past twelve. Iâll get dinner ready myself. Daisy neednât help with that. I expect Margaret has worked her pretty hard.â
But at last there came the moment when Bunting had to start, and his wife went with him to the front door. It was still snowing, less heavily, but still snowing. There were very few people coming and going, and only just a few cabs and carts dragging cautiously along through the slush.
Mrs. Bunting was still in the kitchen when there came a ring and a knock at the doorâa now very familiar ring and knock. âJoe thinks Daisyâs home again by now!â she said, smiling to herself.
Before the door was well open, she heard Chandlerâs voice. âDonât be scared this time, Mrs. Bunting!â But though not exactly scared, she did give a gasp of surprise. For there stood Joe, made up to represent a public-house loafer; and he looked the part to perfection, with his hair combed down raggedly over his forehead, his seedy-looking, ill-fitting, dirty clothes, and greenish-black pot hat.
âI havenât a minute,â he said a little breathlessly. âBut I thought Iâd just run in to know if Miss Daisy was safe home again. You got my telegram all right? I couldnât send no other kind of message.â
âSheâs not back yet. Her father hasnât been gone long after her.â Then, struck by a look in his eyes, âJoe, whatâs the matter?â she asked quickly.
There came a thrill of suspense in her voice, her face grew drawn, while what little colour there was in it receded, leaving it very pale.
âWell,â he said. âWell, Mrs. Bunting, Iâve no business to say anything about itâbut I will tell you!â
He walked in and shut the door of the sitting-room carefully behind him. âThereâs been another of âem!â he whispered. âBut this time no one is to know anything about itânot for the present, I mean,â he corrected himself hastily. âThe Yard thinks weâve got a clueâ and a good clue, too, this time.â
âBut whereâand how?â faltered Mrs. Bunting.
âWell, âtwas just a bit of luck being able to keep it dark for the presentââhe still spoke in that stifled, hoarse whisper. âThe poor soul was found dead on a bench on Primrose Hill. And just by chance âtwas one of our fellows saw the body first. He was on his way home, over Hampstead way. He knew where heâd be able to get an ambulance quick, and he made a very clever, secret job of it. I âspect heâll get promotion for that!â
âWhat about the clue?â asked Mrs. Bunting, with dry lips. âYou said there was a clue?â
âWell, I donât rightly understand about the clue myself. All I knows is itâs got something to do with a public-house, âThe Hammer and Tongs,â which isnât far off there. They feels sure The Avenger was in the bar just on closing-time.â
And then Mrs. Bunting sat down. She felt better now. It was natural the police should suspect a public-house loafer. âThen thatâs why you wasnât able to go and fetch Daisy, I suppose?â
He nodded. âMumâs the word, Mrs. Bunting! Itâll all be in the last editions of the evening newspapersâit canât be kepâ out. Thereâd be too much of a row if âtwas!â
âAre you going off to that public-house now?â she asked.
âYes, I am. Iâve got a awkâard jobâto try and worm something out of the barmaid.â
âSomething out of the barmaid?â repeated Mrs. Bunting nervously. âWhy, whatever for?â
He came and stood close to her. âThey think âtwas a gentleman,â he whispered.
âA gentleman?â
Mrs. Bunting stared at Chandler with a scared expression. âWhatever makes them think such a silly thing as that?â
âWell, just before closing-time a very peculiar-looking gent, with a leather bag in his hand, went into the bar and asked for a glass of milk. And what dâyou think he did? Paid for it with a sovereign! He wouldnât take no changeâjust made the girl a present of it! Thatâs why the young woman what served him seems quite unwilling to give him away. She wonât tell now what he was like. She doesnât know what heâs wanted for, and we donât want her to know just yet. Thatâs one reason why nothingâs being said public about it. But there! I really must be going now. My timeâll be up at three oâclock. I thought of coming in on the way back, and asking you for a cup oâ tea, Mrs. Bunting.â
âDo,â she said. âDo, Joe. Youâll be welcome,â but there was no welcome in her tired voice.
She let him go alone to the door, and then she went down to her kitchen, and began cooking Mr. Sleuthâs breakfast.
The lodger would be sure to ring soon; and then any minute Bunting and Daisy might be home, and theyâd want something, too. Margaret always had breakfast even when âthe familyâ were away, unnaturally early.
As she bustled about Mrs. Bunting tried to empty her mind of all thought. But it is very difficult to do that when one is in a state of torturing uncertainty. She had not dared to ask Chandler what they supposed that man who had gone into the public-house was really like. It was fortunate, indeed, that the lodger and that inquisitive young chap had never met face to face.
At last Mr. Sleuthâs bell rangâa quiet little tinkle. But when she went up with his breakfast the lodger was not in his sitting-room.
Supposing him to be still in his bedroom, Mrs. Bunting put the cloth on the table, and then she heard the sound of his footsteps coming down the stairs, and her quick ears detected the slight whirring sound which showed that the gas-stove was alight. Mr. Sleuth had already lit the stove; that meant that he would carry out some elaborate experiment this afternoon.
âStill snowing?â he said doubtfully. âHow very, very quiet and still London is when under snow, Mrs. Bunting. I have never known it quite as quiet as this morning. Not a sound, outside or in. A very pleasant change from the shouting which sometimes goes on in the Marylebone Road.â
âYes,â she said dully. âItâs awful quiet to-dayâtoo quiet to my thinking. âTainât natural-like.â
The outside gate swung to, making a noisy clatter in the still air.
âIs that someone coming in here?â asked Mr. Sleuth, drawing a quick, hissing breath. âPerhaps you will oblige me by going to the window and telling me who it is, Mrs. Bunting?â
And his landlady obeyed him.
âItâs only Bunting, sirâBunting and his daughter.â
âOh! Is that all?â
Mr. Sleuth hurried after her, and she shrank back a little. She had never been quite so near to the lodger before, save on that first day when she had been showing him her rooms.
Side by side they stood, looking out of the window. And, as if aware that someone was standing there, Daisy turned her bright face up towards the window and smiled at her stepmother, and at the lodger, whose face she could only dimly discern.
âA very sweet-looking young girl,â said Mr. Sleuth thoughtfully. And then he quoted a little bit of poetry, and this took Mrs. Bunting very much aback.
âWordsworth,â he murmured dreamily. âA poet too little read nowadays, Mrs. Bunting; but one with a beautiful feeling for nature, for youth, for innocence.â
âIndeed, sir?â Mrs. Bunting stepped back a little. âYour breakfast will be getting cold, sir, if you donât have it now.â
He went back to the table, obediently, and sat down as a child rebuked might have done.
And then his landlady left him.
âWell?â said Bunting cheerily. âEverything went off quite all right. And Daisyâs a lucky girlâthat she is! Her Aunt Margaret gave her five shillings.â
But Daisy did not look as pleased as her father thought she ought to do.
âI hope nothingâs happened to Mr. Chandler,â she said a little disconsolately. âThe very last words he said to me last night was that heâd be there at ten oâclock. I got quite fidgety as the time went on and he didnât come.â
âHeâs been here,â said Mrs. Bunting slowly.
âBeen here?â cried her husband. âThen why on earth didnât he go and fetch Daisy, if heâd time to come here?â
âHe was on the way to his job,â his wife answered. âYou run along, child, downstairs. Now that you are here you can make yourself useful.â
And Daisy reluctantly obeyed. She wondered what it was her stepmother didnât want her to hear.
âIâve something to tell you, Bunting.â
âYes?â He looked across uneasily. âYes, Ellen?â
âThereâs been another oâ those murders. But the police donât want anyone to know about itânot yet. Thatâs why Joe couldnât go over and fetch Daisy. Theyâre all on duty again.â
Bunting put out his hand and clutched hold of the edge of the mantelpiece.
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