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
âGive me the exact ones, if you can,â interrupted Matherfield.
âI canâ âIâm not likely to forget them,â said Rhona. âHe saidâ ââWhatâ âyou defy me, knowing what I knowâ âknowing what I know!âââ
âââKnowing what I know!âââ muttered Matherfield. âKnowing what he knew! Um!â âand then?â
âThen Major Penteney just pointed to the door. âGet out, I tell you!â he said. âAnd look in the papers tonight. Be off!âââ
âââLook in the papers tonight,â eh?â said Matherfield. âUmâ âum! And then, I suppose, he went?â
âHe went without another word then,â assented Rhona. âMitchell escorted him out and saw him off. Major Penteney looked at me when heâd gone. âThere, Miss Featherstone,â he said, âyouâve seen one of the biggest scoundrels in Londonâ âor in Europe. Letâs hope youâll never see him again, that thatâs the end of him here. I think heâs had his lesson!â I made no answer, but I was jolly glad to see Baseverieâs car scooting away down the drive!â
Matherfield picked up the tankard of ale at his side and took a hearty pull at its contents. He set the tankard down again with an emphatic bang.
âI know what this job is!â he exclaimed triumphantly. âBlackmail!â
âJust so!â agreed Hetherwick. âIâve been thinking that for the last ten minutes. Baseverie has been endeavouring to blackmail Lady Riversreade. But thatâs not our affair, you know. What weâre after is the solving of the mystery surrounding Hannafordâs death. Andâ âdoes this look likely to fit in anywhere?â
âI should say it decidedly does look likely!â answered Matherfield. âIn my opinion itâs all of a piece; at least, itâs a piece out of a piece, one of many pieces, like a puzzle. The thing is to put these pieces together. And there are two things we can try to do at once. First, find out more about this man Baseverie; the other, get hold of more information about the lady in St. Maryâs Mansions.â
âWhat about approaching Lady Riversreade for informationâ âor Major Penteney?â suggested Hetherwick.
âYesâ âwhy donât you?â said Rhona, almost eagerly. âDo! Iâm a bit tired of being there as Miss Featherstone. I want to tell Lady Riversreade the truth, and all the whys and wherefores of it.â
But Matherfield shook his head. The time for that was not yet, he declared; let them wait awhile. And after more conversation he and Hetherwick returned to London.
XV RevelationsThe late afternoon edition of the evening papers were just out when Hetherwick and Matherfield reached Victoria. Matherfield snatched one up; a moment later he thrust it before Hetherwick, pointing to some big black capitals.
âGood God!â he exclaimed. âLook at that!â
Hetherwick looked, and gasped his astonishment at what he read.
Murder of Robert Hannaford.
Five Thousand Pounds Reward.
Hetherwick turned on his companion with a look that was both questioning and surprised.
âThis is probablyâ âno, certainly!â âwhat Penteney referred to when he told Baseverie to look in the newspapers!â he said. âThat was yesterday; it must have been in last nightâs papers, and this morningâs. I saw neither.â
âWait!â said Matherfield. He hurried back to the bookstall and returned with an armful of papers, turning the topmost over as he came. âItâs hereâ âand here!â he continued. âLetâs get a quiet corner somewhere and look this thing carefully over!â
âCome into a waiting-room, then,â said Hetherwick. âOdd!â he muttered, as they turned away. âWho should offer a rewardâ âlike that, too!â âwho isnât concerned in the case?â
âHow do we know who isnât concerned in the case?â exclaimed Matherfield. âSomebody evidently is!â âsomebody who can not only afford to offer five thousand pounds, but isnât afraid to spend no end in advertising. Look at thatâ âand thatâ âand that,â he went on, turning over his purchases rapidly. âItâs in every paper in London!â
âLetâs read it carefully,â said Hetherwick. He spread out one of the newspapers on the waiting-room table and muttered the wording of the advertisement while Matherfield looked over his shoulder. âMysterious, very!â he concluded. âWhatâs it mean?â
But Matherfield was rereading the advertisement.
Whereas Robert Hannaford, formerly Superintendent of Police at Sellithwaite, Yorkshire, died suddenly in an Underground Railway train, near Charing Cross (Embankment) Station about 1:15 a.m. on March 19th last, and expert medical investigation has proved that he was poisoned, and there is evidence to warrant the belief that the poison was administered by some person or persons with intent to cause his death, this is to give notice that the above-mentioned sum of Five Thousand Pounds will be paid to anyone first giving information which will lead to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons concerned in administering the said poison and that such information should be given to the undersigned, who will pay the said reward in accordance with the above-stated conditions.
Penteney, Blenkinsop & Penteney,
Solicitors.
April 22nd, 1920.
853, Lincolnâs Inn Fields,
London, WC
Matherfield pointed to the names of the signatories.
âPenteney,â he remarked. âThatâs the name of the man Miss Hannaford mentioned as having given Baseverie his dismissal.â
âOf courseâ âMajor Penteney,â said Hetherwick. âProbably a junior partner in the firm. I know their names, but not much about them.â
âI thought he was a soldier,â said Matherfield. âMajor, she called him.â
âVery likely a Territorial officer,â replied Hetherwick. âAnyway, itâs very plain what this is, Matherfield, considering all we know. This advertisement has been issued on behalf of Lady Riversreade. Penteney, Blenkinsop & Penteney are no doubt her solicitors. Butâ âwhy?â
âAye, why?â exclaimed Matherfield. âThatâs just what beats me! What interest has she in Hannafordâs murder? Why should she want to bring his murderer to justice? If his granddaughter had offered, say, a hundred pounds for information, I could understand itâ âsheâs his flesh and blood. But Lady Riversreade! Why, if sheâs really the woman who was once Mrs. Whittingham, youâd have thought sheâd have been rather glad that Hannaford was out of the way! And, after all, this maynât come from her.â
âIâm absolutely certain it does,â asserted Hetherwick. âPutting everything together, what other conclusion can we come to? It comes from Lady Riversreadeâ âand her adviserâ âMajor Penteney, and itâs something to do
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