Scarhaven Keep J. S. Fletcher (early reader chapter books TXT) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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Mr. Dennie put away his snuffbox and drumming on the table with his fingers looked out of his eye corners at Copplestone who still stood with his back to the rest, staring out of the window.
âAnd what,â said Mr. Dennie, softly, âwhatâ âer, does our good friend Mr. Copplestone say?â
Copplestone turned swiftly, and gave Audrey a quick glance.
âI say,â he answered in a sharp, businesslike fashion, âthat Gilling, whoâs stopping at the inn, you know, is walking up and down outside here, evidently looking out for me, and very anxious to see me, and with your permission, Mrs. Greyle, Iâd like to have him in. Now that things have got to this pitch, Iâd better tell you somethingâ âI donât see any good in concealing it longer. Gilling isnât an invalid curate at all!â âheâs a private detective. Sir Cresswell Oliver and Petherton, the solicitor, sent him down here to watch Greyleâ âthe Squire, you knowâ âthatâs Gillingâs job. They suspect Greyleâ âhave suspected him from the very firstâ âbut of what I donât know. Notâ ânot of this, I think. Anyway, they do suspect him, and Gillingâs had his eye on him ever since he came here. And Iâd like to fetch Gilling in here, and Iâd like him to know all that Mr. Dennieâs told us. Because, donât you see, Sir Cresswell and Petherton ought to know all that, immediately, and Gillingâs their man.â
Audreyâs brows had been gathering in lines of dismay and perplexity all the time Copplestone was talking, but her mother showed no signs of anything but complete composure, crowned by something very like satisfaction, and she nodded a ready acquiescence in Copplestoneâs proposal.
âBy all means!â she responded. âBring Mr. Gilling in at once.â
Copplestone hurried out into the garden and signalled to the pseudocurate, who came hurrying across from the quay. One glance at him showed Copplestone that something had happened.
âGad!â âI thought I should never attract your attention!â said Gilling hastily. âBeen making eyes at you for ten minutes. I sayâ âGreyleâs off!â
âOff!â exclaimed Copplestone. âHow do you meanâ âoff?â
âLeft Scarhaven, anyhowâ âfor London,â replied Gilling. âAn hour ago I happened to be at the station, buying a paper, when he drove upâ âluggage and man with him, so I knew he was off for some time. And I took good care to dodge round by the booking office when the man took the tickets. Kingâs Cross. So thatâs all right, for the time being.â
âHow do you meanâ âall right?â asked Copplestone. âI thought you were to keep him in sight?â
âAll right,â repeated Gilling. âI have more eyes than these, my boy! Iâve a particularly smart partner in Londonâ âname of Swallowâ âand he and I have a cipher code. So soon as the gentleman had left, I repaired to the nearest post office and wired a code message to Swallow. Swallow will meet that train when it strikes Kingâs Cross. And it doesnât matter if Greyle hides himself in one of the spikes on top of the Monument or inside the lion house at the Zooâ âSwallow will be there! No man ever got away from Swallowâ âonce Swallow had set eyes on him.â
Copplestone looked, listened, and laughed.
âProfessional pride!â he said. âAll right. I want you to come in here with meâ âto Mrs. Greyleâs. Somethingâs happened here, too. And of such a serious nature that Iâve taken the liberty of telling them who and what you really are. Youâll forgive me when you hear what it is that weâve learnt here this morning.â
Gilling had looked rather doubtful at Copplestoneâs announcement, but he immediately turned towards the cottage.
âOh, well!â he said good-naturedly. âIâm sure you wouldnât have told if you hadnât felt there was good reason. What is this fresh news?â âsomething aboutâ âhim?â
âVery much about him,â answered Copplestone. âCome in.â
He himself, at Mrs. Greyleâs request, gave Gilling a brief account of Mr. Dennieâs revelations, the old actor supplementing it with a shrewd remark or two. And then all four turned to Gilling as to an expert in these matters.
âQueer!â observed Gilling. âDecidedly queer! There may be some explanation, you know: Iâve known stranger things than that turn out to be perfectly straight and plain when they were gone into. Butâ âputting all the facts togetherâ âI donât think thereâs much doubt that thereâs something considerably wrong in this case. I should like to repeat it to my principalsâ âI must go up to town in any event this afternoon. Better let me have all those documents, Mr. Dennieâ âIâll give you a proper receipt for them. Thereâs something very valuable in them, anyhow.â
âWhat?â asked Copplestone.
âThe address in St. Louis from which that Marston Greyle wrote to Bassett Oliver.â replied Gilling. âWe can communicate with that addressâ âat once. We may learn something there. But,â he went on, turning to Mrs. Greyle, âI want to learn something hereâ âand now. I want to know where and under what circumstances the Squire came to Scarhaven. You were here then, of course, Mrs. Greyle? You can tell me?â
âHe came very quietly,â replied Mrs. Greyle. âNobody in Scarhavenâ âunless it was Peter Chatfieldâ âknew of his coming. In fact, nobody in these parts, at any rateâ âknew he was in England. The family solicitors in London may have known. But nothing was ever said or written to me, though my daughter, failing this man, is the next in succession.â
âI do wish youâd leave all that out, mother!â exclaimed Audrey. âI donât like it.â
âWhether you like it or not, itâs the fact,â said Mrs. Greyle imperturbably, âand it canât be left out. Well, as I say, no one knew the Squire had come to England, until one day Chatfield calmly walked down the quay with him, introducing him right and left. He brought him here.â
âAh!â said Gilling. âThatâs interesting. Now I wonder if you found out if he was well up in the family history?â
âNot then, but afterwards,â answered Mrs. Greyle. âHe is particularly well up in the Greyle recordsâ âsuspiciously well up.â
âWhy suspiciously?â asked
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