Scarhaven Keep J. S. Fletcher (early reader chapter books TXT) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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âWell, gentlemen,â he said, âwe have paid our visits, and I suppose I had better tell you at once that we are no wiser as to actual facts than we were when we left you earlier in the afternoon. The man Ewbank stands emphatically by his story; Mr. Marston Greyle says that he cannot remember any meeting with my brother in America, and that he certainly did not call on him here on Sunday; Mrs. Valentine Greyle has not met Bassett for a great many years. Nowâ âthere the matter stands. Of course, it cannot rest there. Further inquiries will have to be made. Mr. Petherton and I are going on to Norcaster this evening, and we shall have a very substantial reward offered to any person who can give any information about my brother. That may result in somethingâ âor in nothing. As to my brotherâs business arrangements, I will go fully into that matter with you, Mr. Stafford, at Norcaster, tomorrow. Now, Mr. Copplestone, will you have a word or two with me in private?â
Copplestone followed the old seaman into a quiet corner of the room, where Sir Cresswell turned on him with a smile.
âI take it,â he said, âthat you are a young gentleman of leisure, and that you can abide wherever you like, eh?â
âYes, you may take that as granted,â answered Copplestone, wondering what was coming.
âDoesnât much matter if you write your plays in Jermyn Street orâ âanywhere else, eh?â questioned Sir Cresswell with a humorous smile.
âPractically, no,â replied Copplestone.
Sir Cresswell tapped him on the shoulder.
âI want you to do me a favour,â he said. âI shall take it as a kindness if you will. I donât want to talk about certain ideas which Petherton and I have about this affair, yet, anywayâ ânot even to youâ âbut we have formed some ideas this afternoon. Now, do you think you could manage to stay where you are for a week or two?â
âHere?â exclaimed Copplestone.
âThis seems very comfortable,â said Sir Cresswell, looking round. âThe landlady is a nice, motherly person; she gave me a very well-cooked lunch; this is a quiet room in which to do your writing, eh?â
âOf course I can stay here,â answered Copplestone, who was a good deal bewildered. âButâ âmaynât I know whyâ âand in what capacity?â
âJust to keep your eyes and your ears open,â said Sir Cresswell. âDonât seem to make inquiriesâ âin fact, donât make any inquiryâ âdo nothing. I donât want you to do any private detective workâ ânot I! Just stop here a bitâ âamuse yourselfâ âwriteâ âreadâ âand watch things quietly. Andâ âdonât be crossâ âIâve an elderly manâs privilege, you knowâ âyouâll send your bills to me.â
âOh, thatâs all right, thanks!â said Copplestone, hurriedly. âIâm pretty well off as regards this worldâs goods.â
âSo I guessed when I found that you lived in the expensive atmosphere of Jermyn Street,â said Sir Cresswell, with a sly laugh. âBut all the same, youâll let me be paymaster here, you knowâ âthatâs only fair.â
âAll rightâ âcertainly, if you wish it,â agreed Copplestone. âBut look hereâ âwonât you trust me? I assure you Iâm to be trusted. You suspect somebody! Hadnât you better give me your confidence? I wonât tell a soulâ âand when I say that, I mean it literally. I wonât tell one single soul!â
Sir Cresswell waited a moment or two, looking quietly at Copplestone. Then he clapped a hand on the young manâs shoulder.
âAll right, my lad,â he said. âYes!â âwe do suspect somebody. Marston Greyle! Now you know it.â
âI expected that,â answered Copplestone. âAll right, sir. And my orders areâ âjust what you said.â
âJust what I said,â agreed Sir Cresswell. âCarry on at thatâ âeyes and ears open; no fuss; everything quiet, unobtrusive, silent. Meanwhileâ âPetherton will be at work. And I sayâ âif you want company, you knowâ âI think youâll find it across the bay there at Mrs. Greyleâsâ âeh?â
âI was there last night,â said Copplestone. âI liked both of them very much. You knew Mrs. Greyle once upon a time, I think; you and your brother?â
âWe did!â replied Sir Cresswell, with a sigh. âUm!â âthe fact is, both Bassett and I were in love with her at that time. She married another man instead. Thatâs all!â
He gave Copplestone a squeeze of the elbow, laughed, and went across to the solicitor, who was chatting to Stafford in one of the bow windows. Ten minutes later all three were off to Norcaster, and Copplestone was alone, ruminating over this sudden and extraordinary change in the hitherto even tenor of his life. Little more than twenty-four hours previously, all he had been concerned about was the production of his play by Bassett Oliverâ âhere he was now, mixed up in a drama of real life, with Bassett Oliver as its main figure, and the plot as yet unrevealed. And he himself was already committed to play in itâ âbut what part?
Now that the others had gone, Copplestone began to feel strangely alone. He had accepted Sir Cresswell Oliverâs commission readily, feeling genuinely interested in the affair, and being secretly conscious that he would be glad of the opportunity of further improving his acquaintance with Audrey Greyle. But now that he considered things quietly, he began to see that his position was a somewhat curious and possibly invidious one. He was to watchâ âand to seem not to watch. He was to listenâ âand appear not to listen. The task would be difficultâ âand perhaps unpleasant. For he was very certain that Marston Greyle would resent his presence in the village, and that Chatfield would be suspicious of it. What reason could he, an utter stranger, have for taking up his quarters at the Admiralâs Arms? The tourist season was over: autumn was well set in; with autumn, on that coast, came weather which would send most southerners flying homewards. Of course, these people would say that he was left there to peep and pryâ âand they would all know that the Squire was the object of suspicion. It was all very well, his telling Mrs. Wooler that being an idle man he had taken a fancy to Scarhaven, and would stay in her inn for a few weeks, but
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