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
âIt ought to be looked into,â muttered Matherfield. âTheyâve never approached us on the matter. Itâs a purely voluntary offer on their part. Theyâve left the police clean out.â
âWell, I make a suggestion,â said Hetherwick. âI think you and I had better call at Penteneyâs tomorrow morning. We can tell them somethingâ âperhaps theyâll tell us something. Anyway, itâs a foolish thing to divide forces; weâd far better unite in a common effort.â
âUm!â replied Matherfield doubtfully. âBut these lawyer chapsâ âtheyâve generally got something up their sleevesâ âsome card that they want to play at their own moment. However, we can try âem.â
âMeet me at the southeast corner of Lincolnâs Inn Fields at half-past ten tomorrow morning,â said Hetherwick. âPenteneyâs offices are close by. Weâll go togetherâ âand ask them straight out what this advertisement means.â
âAll rightâ âbut if they wonât tell?â suggested Matherfield.
âThen, in that case, weâll introduce Lady Riversreadeâs name, and ask them if Lady Riversreade of Riversreade Court and Mrs. Whittingham, formerly of Sellithwaite, are one and the same person,â replied Hetherwick. âCome! I think we can show them that we already know a good deal.â
âWe have certainly a card or two to play,â admitted Matherfield. âAll right, Mr. Hetherwick! Tomorrow morning, then, as you suggest.â
He was waiting at the appointed place when Hetherwick hurried up next morning. Hetherwick immediately turned him down the lower side of the Fields.
âIâve found out something about these people weâre going to see,â he said. âMy clerk, Mapperley, told me a bit; heâs a sort of walking encyclopaedia. Old, highly respectable firm this. Penteney, senior, is retired; the firm is now really Blenkinsop & Penteney, junior. And Penteney, junior, is the Major Penteney who takes such an interest in Lady Riversreadeâs Homeâ âand in Lady Riversreade. As I suggested last night, he was a Territorial officerâ âso now heâs back at his own job. Now then, Matherfield, letâs arrange our plan of campaign. You, of course, have your official credentialsâ âIâm a deeply interested person, the man who chanced to witness Hannafordâs death. I think youâd better be spokesman.â
âWell, youâll come in when wanted?â suggested Matherfield. âYouâre better used to lawyers than I am, being one yourself.â
âI fear my acquaintance with solicitors is, so far, extremely limited, Matherfield,â replied Hetherwick with a laugh. âI have seen a brief!â âbut only occasionally. However, here we are at 853, and a solid and sombre old house it is.â
The two callers had to wait for some time before any apparent notice was taken of their cards by the persons to whom they had been sent in. Matherfield was beginning to chafe when, at last, an elderly clerk conducted them up to an inner room wherein one cold-eyed, immobile-faced man sat at a desk, while another, scarcely less stern in appearance, in whom Hetherwick immediately recognised the Major Penteney pointed out by Rhona, stood, hands in pockets, on the hearthrug. Each stared silently at the two callers; the man at the desk pointed to chairs on either side of his fortress. He looked at Matherfield.
âYes?â he asked.
âMr. Blenkinsop, I presume?â began Matherfield, with a polite bow to the desk. âAnd Mr. Penteney?â with another to the hearthrug.
âJust so,â agreed Blenkinsop. âPrecisely! Yes?â
âYou have my card, gentlemen, and so you know who I am,â continued Matherfield. âThe policeâ ââ
âA moment,â interrupted Blenkinsop. He picked up Hetherwickâs card and glanced from it to its presenter. âMr. Guy Hetherwick,â he remarked. âDoes Mr. Hetherwick also call on behalf of the police? Because,â he added, with a dry smile, âI think Iâve seen Mr. Hetherwick in wig and gown.â
âI am the man who was present at Robert Hannafordâs death,â said Hetherwick. âIf you are conversant with the caseâ ââ
âQuite!â âevery detail!â said Blenkinsop.
âThen you know what I saw, and what evidence I gave at the inquest,â continued Hetherwick. âI have followed up the case ever sinceâ âand thatâs why I am here.â
âNot as amicus curiae, then?â remarked Blenkinsop with a still dryer smile. âYouâre not a disinterested adviser. I see! And Mr. Matherfieldâ âwhy is he here?â
âI was saying, Mr. Blenkinsop, that the police have seen the advertisement signed by your firm, offering five thousand pounds rewardâ âet cetera,â answered Matherfield. âNow, I have this Hannaford case in hand, and I can assure you Iâve done a lot of work at it. So, in his way, has Mr. Hetherwick. Weâre convinced that Hannaford was murdered by poison, and that whoever poisoned him also poisoned the man Granett at the same time. Now, as either you or some personâ âa client, I supposeâ âbehind you is so much concerned in bringing Hannafordâs murderer to justice as to offer a big sum for necessary information, we think you must know a great deal, and I suggest to you, gentlemen, that you ought to place your knowledge at our disposal. I hope my suggestion is welcome, gentlemen.â
Blenkinsop drummed the blotting-pad before him with the tips of his fingers, and his face became more inscrutable than ever. As for Penteney, he maintained the same attitude which he had preserved ever since the visitors entered the room, lounging against the mantelpiece, hands in pockets, and his eyes alternately fixed on either Hetherwick or Matherfield. There was a brief silence; at last Blenkinsop spoke abruptly.
âI donât think we have anything to say,â he said. âWhat we have to say has been said already in the advertisement. We shall pay the offered reward to the person who gives satisfactory information. I donât think that interferes with the police work.â
âThat doesnât help me much, Mr. Blenkinsop,â protested Matherfield. âYou, or your client, must know more than that! There must be good reasons why your client should offer such a big sum as reward. I think we ought to knowâ âmore.â
âI am not prepared to tell you more,â answered Blenkinsop. âExcept that if we get the information which we think we shall get, we shall not be slow to hand it over to the police authorities.â
âThat might be too late,â urged Matherfield. âThis is an intricate caseâ âthere are a good many wheels within wheels.â Then, interpreting a glance which he had just
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