Scarhaven Keep J. S. Fletcher (early reader chapter books TXT) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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But there the signature wasâ âPeter Chatfield. Peter Chatfield!â âthey both knew that they were entering on a new stage of their quest; that the fact that Chatfield had travelled to Falmouth to meet the new owner of Scarhaven meant muchâ âpossibly meant everything.
âOh!â said Gilling, as steadily as possible. âThat gentleman came to meet the other, did he? Just so. Now what sort of man was he?â
âBig, fleshy manâ âelderlyâ âvery solemn in manner and appearance,â answered the landlord. âI remember him well. Came in about five oâclock in the afternoon of the 4th just after the London train arrivedâ âand booked a room. He told me he expected to meet a gentleman from New York, and was very fidgety about fixing it up to go off in the tender to the Araconda when she came into the Bay. However, I found out for him that she wouldnât be in until next evening, so of course he settled down to wait. Very quiet, reserved old fellowâ ânever said much.â
âDid he go off on the tender next night?â asked Gilling.
âHe didâ âand came back with this other gentleman and his baggageâ âthis Mr. Greyle,â answered the landlord. âMr. Chatfield had booked a room for Mr. Greyle.â
âAnd what sort of man was Mr. Greyle?â inquired Gilling. âThatâs really the important thing. Youâve an exceptionally good memoryâ âI can see that. Tell us all you can recollect about him.â
âI can recollect plenty,â replied the landlord, shaking his head. âAs for his looksâ âa tallish, slightly-built young fellow, between, I should say, twenty-five and twenty-eight. Stooped a good bit. Very dark hair and eyesâ âeyes a good deal sunken in his face. Very paleâ âgood-lookingâ âgood features. But illâ âmy sakes! He was ill!â
âIll!â exclaimed Gilling, with a glance at Copplestone. âReally ill!â
âHe was that ill,â said the landlord, âthat me and my wife never expected to see him get up that next morning. We wanted them to have a doctor but Mr. Greyle himself said that it was nothing, but that he had some heart trouble and that the voyage had made it worse. He said that if he took some medicine which he had with him, and a drop of hot brandy and water, and got a good nightâs sleep heâd be all right. And next morning he seemed better, and he got up to breakfastâ âbut my wife said to me that if sheâd seen death on a manâs face it was on his! Sheâs a bit of a persuasive tongue, has my wife, and when she heard that these two gentlemen were thinking of going a long journeyâ âright away to the far north, it was, I believeâ âshe got âem to go and see the doctor first, for she felt that Mr. Greyle wasnât fit for the exertion.â
âDid they go?â asked Gilling.
âThey did! I talked, myself, to the old gentleman,â replied the landlord. âAnd I showed them the way to our own doctorâ âDr. Tretheway. And as a result of what he said to them, I heard them decide to break up their journey into stages, as you might term it. They left here for Bristol that afternoonâ âto stay the night there.â
âYouâre sure of that?â âBristol?â asked Gilling.
âOught to be,â replied the landlord, with laconic assurance. âI went to the station with them and saw them off. They booked to Bristolâ âanywayâ âfirst class.â
Gilling looked at his companion.
âI think weâd better see this Dr. Tretheway,â he remarked.
Dr. Tretheway, an elderly man of grave manners and benevolent aspect, remembered the visit of Mr. Marston Greyle well enough when he had turned up its date in his case book. He also remembered the visitorâs companion, Mr. Chatfield, who seemed unusually anxious and concerned about Mr. Greyleâs health.
âAnd as to that,â continued Dr. Tretheway, âI learnt from Mr. Greyle that he had been seriously indisposed for some months before setting out for England. The voyage had been rather a rough one; he had suffered much from seasickness, and, in his state of health, that was unfortunate for him. I made a careful examination of him, and I came to the conclusion that he was suffering from a form of myocarditis which was rapidly assuming a very serious complexion. I earnestly advised him to take as much rest as possible, to avoid all unnecessary fatigue and all excitement, and I strongly deprecated his travelling in one journey to the north, whither I learnt he was bound. On my advice, he and Mr. Chatfield decided to break that journey at Bristol, at Birmingham, and at Leeds. By so doing, you see, they would only have a short journey each day, and Mr. Greyle would be able to rest for a long time at a stretch. Butâ âI formed my own conclusions.â
âAnd they wereâ âwhat?â asked Gilling.
âThat he would not live long,â said the doctor. âFinding that he was going to the neighbourhood of Norcaster, where there is a most excellent school of medicine, I advised him to get the best specialist he could from there, and to put himself under his treatment. But my impression was that he had already reached a very, very serious stage.â
âYou think he was then likely to die suddenly?â suggested Gilling.
âIt was quite possible. I should not have been surprised to hear of his death,â answered Dr. Tretheway. âHe was, in short, very ill indeed.â
âYou never heard anything?â inquired Gilling.
âNothing at allâ âthough I often wondered. Of course,â said the doctor with a smile, âthey were only chance visitorsâ âI often have transatlantic passengers drop inâ âand they forget that a physician would sometimes like to know how a case submitted to him in
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