The Red House Mystery by A. A. Milne (best electronic book reader .TXT) đ
- Author: A. A. Milne
- Performer: 0486401294
Book online «The Red House Mystery by A. A. Milne (best electronic book reader .TXT) đ». Author A. A. Milne
âSeems a sound man,â whispered Antony to Bill. âDoesnât talk too much.â
Antony did not expect to learn much from the evidenceâhe knew the facts of the case so well by nowâbut he wondered if Inspector Birch had developed any new theories. If so, they would appear in he Coronerâs examination, for the Coroner would certainly have been coached by the police as to the important facts to be extracted from each witness. Bill was the first to be put through it.
âNow, about this letter, Mr. Beverley?â he was asked when his chief evidence was over. âDid you see it at all?â
âI didnât see the actual writing. I saw the back of it. Mark was holding it up when he told us about his brother.â
âYou donât know what was in it, then?â
Bill had a sudden shock. He had read the letter only that morning. He knew quite well what was in it. But it wouldnât do to admit this. And then, just as he was about to perjure himself, he remembered: Antony had heard Cayley telling the Inspector.
âI knew afterwards. I was told. But Mark didnât read it out at breakfast.â
âYou gathered, however, that it was an unwelcome letter?â
âOh, yes!â
âWould you say that Mark was frightened by it?â
âNot frightened. Sort of bitterâand resigned. Sort of âOh, Lord, here we are again!ââ
There was a titter here and there. The Coroner smiled, and tried to pretend that he hadnât.
âThank you, Mr. Beverley.â
The next witness was summoned by the name of Andrew Amos, and Antony looked up with interest, wondering who he was.
âHe lives at the inner lodge,â whispered Bill to him.
All that Amos had to say was that a stranger had passed by his lodge at a little before three that afternoon, and had spoken to him. He had seen the body and recognized it as the man.
âWhat did he say?â
ââIs this right for the Red House?â or something like that, sir.
âWhat did you say?â
âI said, âThis is the Red House. Who do you want to see?â He was a bit rough-looking, you know, sir, and I didnât know what he was doing there.â
âWell?â
âWell, sir, he said, âIs Mister Mark Ablett at home?â It doesnât sound much put like that, sir, but I didnât care about the way he said it. So I got in front of him like, and said, âWhat do you want, eh?â and he gave a sort of chuckle and said, âI want to see my dear brother Mark.â Well, then I took a closer look at him, and I see that pâraps he might be his brother, so I said, âIf youâll follow the drive, sir, youâll come to the house. Of course I canât say if Mr. Ablettâs at home.â And he gave a sort of nasty laugh again, and said, âFine place Mister Mark Ablettâs got here. Plenty of money to spend, eh?â Well, then I had another look at him, sir, because gentlemen donât talk like that, and if he was Mr. Ablettâs brotherâbut before I could make up my mind, he laughed and went on. Thatâs all I can tell you, sir.â
Andrew Amos stepped down and moved away to the back of the room, nor did Antony take his eyes off him until he was assured that Amos intended to remain there until the inquest was over.
âWhoâs Amos talking to now?â he whispered to Bill.
âParsons. One of the gardeners. Heâs at the outside lodge on the Stanton road. Theyâre all here to-day. Sort of holiday for em.
âI wonder if heâs giving evidence too,â thought Antony. He was. He followed Amos. He had been at work on the lawn in front of the house, and had seen Robert Ablett arrive. He didnât hear the shotânot to notice. He was a little hard of hearing. He had seen a gentleman arrive about five minutes after Mr. Robert.
âCan you see him in court now?â asked the Coroner. Parsons looked round slowly. Antony caught his eye and smiled.
âThatâs him,â said Parsons, pointing.
Everybody looked at Antony.
âThat was about five minutes afterwards?â
âAbout that, sir.â
âDid anybody come out of the house before this gentlemanâs arrival?â
âNo, sir. That is to say I didnât see âem.â
Stevens followed. She gave her evidence much as she had given it to the Inspector. Nothing new was brought out by her examination. Then came Elsie. As the reporters scribbled down what she had overheard, they added in brackets âSensationâ for the first time that afternoon.
âHow soon after you had heard this did the shot come?â asked the Coroner.
âAlmost at once, sir.â
âA minute?â
âI couldnât really say, sir. It was so quick.â
âWere you still in the hall?â
âOh, no, sir. I was just outside Mrs. Stevensâ room. The housekeeper, sir.â
âYou didnât think of going back to the hall to see what had happened?â
âOh, no, sir. I just went in to Mrs. Stevens, and she said, âOh, what was that?â frightened-like. And I said, âThat was in the house, Mrs. Stevens, that was.â Just like something going off, it was.â
âThank you,â said the Coroner.
There was another emotional disturbance in the room as Cayley went into the witness-box; not âSensationâ this time, but an eager and, as it seemed to Antony, sympathetic interest. Now they were getting to grips with the drama.
He gave his evidence carefully, unemotionallyâthe lies with the same slow deliberation as the truth. Antony watched him intently, wondering what it was about him which had this odd sort of attractiveness. For Antony, who knew that he was lying, and lying (as he believed) not for Markâs sake but his own, yet could not help sharing some of that general sympathy with him.
âWas Mark ever in possession of a revolver?â asked the Coroner.
âNot to my knowledge. I think I should have known if he had been.â
âYou were alone with him all that morning. Did he talk about this visit of Robertâs at all?â
âI didnât see very much of him in the morning. I was at work in my room, and outside, and so on. We lunched together and he talked of it then a little.â
âIn what terms?â
âWellââ he hesitated, and then went on. âI canât think of a better word than âpeevishly.â Occasionally he said, âWhat do you think he wants?â or âWhy couldnât he have stayed where he was?â or âI donât like the tone of his letter. Do you think he means trouble?â He talked rather in that kind of way.
âDid he express his surprise that his brother should be in England?â
âI think he was always afraid that he would turn up one day.â
âYes âŠ. You didnât hear any conversation between the brothers when they were in the office together?â
âNo. I happened to go into the library just after Mark had gone in, and I was there all the time.â
âWas the library door open?â
âOh, yes.â
âDid you see or hear the last witness at all?â
âNo.â
âIf anybody had come out of the office while you were in the library, would you have heard it?â
âI think so. Unless they had come out very quietly on purpose.â
âWould you call Mark a hasty-tempered man?â
Cayley considered this carefully before answering.
âHasty-tempered, yes,â he said. âBut not violent-tempered.â
âWas he fairly athletic? Active and quick?â
âActive and quick, yes. Not particularly strong.â
âYes âŠ. One question more. Was Mark in the habit of carrying any considerable sum of money about with him?â
âYes. He always had one 100 pound note on him, and perhaps ten or twenty pounds as well.â
âThank you, Mr. Cayley.â
Cayley went back heavily to his seat. âDamn it,â said Antony to himself, âwhy do I like the fellow?â
âAntony Gillingham!â
Again the eager interest of the room could be felt. Who was this stranger who had got mixed up in the business so mysteriously?
Antony smiled at Bill and stepped up to give his evidence.
He explained how he came to be staying at the âGeorgeâ at Waldheim, how he had heard that the Red House was in the neighbourhood, how he had walked over to see his friend Beverley, and had arrived just after the tragedy. Thinking it over afterwards he was fairly certain that he had heard the shot, but it had not made any impression on him at the time. He had come to the house from the Waldheim end and consequently had seen nothing of Robert Ablett, who had been a few minutes in front of him. From this point his evidence coincided with Cayleyâs.
âYou and the last witness reached the French windows together and found them shut?â
âYes.â
âYou pushed them in and came to the body. Of course you had no idea whose body it was?â
âNo.â
âDid Mr. Cayley say anything?â
âHe turned the body over, just so as to see the face, and when he saw it, he said, âThank God.ââ
Again the reporters wrote âSensation.â
âDid you understand what he meant by that?â
âI asked him who it was, and he said that it was Robert Ablett. Then he explained that he was afraid at first it was the cousin with whom he livedâMark.â
âYes. Did he seem upset?â
âVery much so at first. Less when he found that it wasnât Mark.â
There was a sudden snigger from a nervous gentleman in the crowd at the back of the room, and the Coroner put on his glasses and stared sternly in the direction from which it came. The nervous gentleman hastily decided that the time had come to do up his bootlace. The Coroner put down his glasses and continued.
âDid anybody come out of the house while you were coming up the drive?â
âNo.â
âThank you, Mr. Gillingham.â
He was followed by Inspector Birch. The Inspector, realizing that this was his afternoon, and that the eyes of the world were upon him, produced a plan of the house and explained the situation of the different rooms. The plan was then handed to the jury.
Inspector Birch, so he told the world, had arrived at the Red House at 4.42 p.m. on the afternoon in question. He had been received by Mr. Matthew Cayley, who had made a short statement to him, and he had then proceeded to examine the scene of the crime. The French windows had been forced from outside. The door leading into the hall was locked; he had searched the room thoroughly and had found no trace of a key. In
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