The Charing Cross Mystery J. S. Fletcher (summer reading list TXT) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
Book online «The Charing Cross Mystery J. S. Fletcher (summer reading list TXT) đ». Author J. S. Fletcher
âThat print of a womanâs photograph which your grandfather had in his pocketbook,â he said, âand thatâs now in mine. Out of what paper did he cut it?â âa newspaper, evidently.â
âYes, but I donât know what paper,â answered Rhona. âAll I know is that it was a paper which he got by post, the morning that he left Sellithwaite. We were just leaving for the station when the post came. He put his letters and papersâ âthere were several thingsâ âin his overcoat pocket, and opened them in the train. It was somewhere on the way to London that he cut out that picture. He threw the paper awayâ âwith others. He had a habit of buying a lot of papers, and used to cut out paragraphs.â
âWellâ âI suppose it can be traced,â muttered Hetherwick, thinking aloud. He glanced at the evidences of Rhonaâs departure. âSo youâre going to live with your aunt?â he said.
âFor a timeâ âyes,â she answered.
âI hope youâll let me call?â suggested Hetherwick. âIâm awfully interested in this affair, and I may be able to tell you something about it.â
âWeâd be pleased,â she replied. âIâll give you the address. I donât intend to be idle thoughâ âunless you call in the evening, youâll probably find me out.â
âWhat are you thinking of doing?â he asked.
âI think of going in for secretarial work,â she answered. âAs a matter of fact, I had a training for that, in Sellithwaite. Typewriting, correspondence, accounts, French, Germanâ âIâm pretty well equipped.â
âDonât think me inquisitive,â said Hetherwick, suddenly. âI hope your grandfather hasnât forgotten you in his willâ âI heard heâd left one!â
âThank you,â replied Rhona. âHe hasnât. He left me everything. Iâve got about three hundred a yearâ ârather more. But thatâs no reason why I should sit down, and do nothing, is it?â
âGood!â said Hetherwick. âButâ âif that sealed packet could be found? What was worth a hundred thousand to him, would be worth a hundred thousand to his sole legatee. Worth finding!â
âI wonder if anything will be found?â she answered. âThe whole thingâs a mystery that Iâm not even on the edge of solving.â
âTime!â said Hetherwick. âAndâ âpatience.â
He went away presently, and strolled round to Brick Court, where Kenthwaite had his chambers.
âDoing anything?â he asked, as he walked in.
âNothing,â replied Kenthwaite. âGo ahead!â
Hetherwick sat down, and lighted his pipe.
âYou know Sellithwaite, donât you?â he asked when he had got his tobacco well going. âYour town, eh?â
âBorn and bred there, and engaged to a girl there,â replied Kenthwaite. âOught to! What about Sellithwaite?â
âWere you there ten years ago?â demanded Hetherwick.
âTen years ago? Noâ âexcept in the holidays. I was at school ten years ago. Why?â
âDo you remember any police case at Sellithwaite about that time in which a very handsome woman was concernedâ âprobably as defendant?â
âNo! But I was more interested in cricket than in crime, in those days. Are you thinking about the woman Hannaford spoke of in the train to the chap they canât come across?â
âI am! Seems to me thereâs more in that than the police think.â
âShouldnât wonder. Letâs see: Hannaford spoke of that woman asâ âwhat?â
âSaid sheâd been through his hands, ten years ago.â
âWell, thatâs easy! If she was through Hannafordâs hands, as Superintendent of Police, ten years ago, that would be at Sellithwaite. And thereâll be records, particulars, and so on at Sellithwaite.â
Hetherwick nodded, and smoked in silence for awhile.
âThink I shall go down there,â he said at last.
Kenthwaite stared, wonderingly.
âKeen as all that!â he exclaimed.
âQueer business!â said Hetherwick. âLike to solve it.â
âOh, well, itâs only a four hoursâ run from Kingâs Cross,â observed Kenthwaite. âInteresting town, too. Old as the hills and modern as they make âem. Excellent hotelâ âWhite Bear. And Iâll tell you what, my futureâs brother is a solicitor thereâ âMichael Hollis. Iâll give you a letter of introduction to him, and heâll show you round and give you any help you need.â
âGood man!â said Hetherwick. âWrite it!â
Kenthwaite sat down and wrote, and handed over the result.
âWhat do you want to find out, exactly?â he asked, as Hetherwick thanked him, and rose to go.
âAll about the woman, and why Hannaford cut her picture out of the paper,â answered Hetherwick. âWellâ âsee you when I get back.â
He went off to his own chambers, packed a bag, and drove to Kingâs Cross to catch the early afternoon train for the North. At half-past seven that evening he found himself in Sellithwaite, a grey, smoke-laden town set in the midst of bleak and rugged hills, where the folkâ âif the railway officials were anything to go byâ âspoke a dialect which, to Hetherwickâs southern ears, sounded like some barbaric language. But the White Bear, in which he was presently installed, yielded all the comforts and luxuries of a first-class hotel: the dining-room, into which Hetherwick turned as soon as he had booked his room, seemed to be thronged by a thoroughly cosmopolitan crowd of men; he heard most of the principal European languages being spokenâ âlater, he found that his fellow-guests were principally Continental business men, buyers, intent on replenishing exhausted stocks from the great warehouses and manufactories of Sellithwaite. All this was interesting, nor was he destined to spend the remainder of his evening in contemplating it from a solitary corner, for he had scarcely eaten his dinner when a hall-porter came to tell him that Mr. Hollis was asking for Mr. Hetherwick.
Hetherwick hastened into the lounge, and found a keen-faced, friendly-eyed man of forty or thereabouts stretching out a hand to him.
âKenthwaite wired me this afternoon that you were coming down, and asked me to look you up here,â he said. âIâd have asked you to dine with me, but Iâve been kept at my office until just now, and again, I live a good many miles out of town. But tomorrow nightâ ââ
âYouâre awfully good,â replied Hetherwick. âIâd no idea that Kenthwaite was wiring. He gave me a letter of introduction to you, but I suppose he thought I wanted to lose no time. And I donât, and I dare say you can tell
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