The Charing Cross Mystery J. S. Fletcher (summer reading list TXT) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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In spite of their evidently habitual practice of self-control, the two solicitors could not repress signs of astonishment. Blenkinsopâs face fell; Penteney started out of his lounging attitude and stood upright. And for the first time he spoke.
âWhat do you know about Lady Riversreade?â he demanded.
âA good deal, sir, but not so much as I intend to know,â answered Matherfield firmly. âBut I do know thisâ âthat Hannaford, just previous to his sudden death, was in possession of a portrait of Lady Riversreade, and believed her to be identical with a certain Mrs. Whittingham who was through his hands on a charge of fraud, ten years ago, at Sellithwaite, in Yorkshire. I, too, believe that this Mrs. Whittingham is now Lady Riversreade, and I may tell you that Iâm in full possession of all the facts relating to the Sellithwaite affairâ âan affair of obtaining a diamond necklace, worth about four thousand pounds, by means of a worthless cheque, andâ ââ
Blenkinsop suddenly rose from his chair, holding up a hand.
âA moment, if you please!â he said. âPenteney,â he continued, turning to his partner, âa word with you in your room.â
Matherfield glanced triumphantly after the retreating pair, and laughed when a door had closed on them.
âThatâs got âem, Mr. Hetherwick!â he exclaimed. âThey see that we know more than they reckoned for. In some way or other, it strikes me, this advertisement is a piece of bluff!â
âBluff!â said Hetherwick. âWhat do you mean?â
âWhat I say,â answered Matherfield. âBluff! Done to prevent somebody from bringing up that old Sellithwaite affair. Lay you a thousand to one it is. Youâll see these two lawyers will be more communicative when they come back. Now they shall talkâ âand weâll listen!â
âIf you have to do any more talking, Matherfield,â said Hetherwick, âkeep Miss Hannafordâs name out of it. Sheâs in a rather awkward position. She went there, of course, to find out what she could, and the resultâs been that sheâs taken a fancy to Lady Riversreade, got a genuine interest in the work there, and wants to stop. Bit of a bother, all that, and itâll need some straightening out. Anyway, keep her name out of it here.â
âAs I say, sir, when these chaps come back to us, theyâll do the talking!â answered Matherfield, with a chuckle. âYouâll see! If you want to keep Miss Hannafordâs name out, so do they want to keep Lady Riversreadeâs name outâ âI know the signs!â
Blenkinsop and Penteney suddenly came back and seated themselves, Blenkinsop at his desk and Penteney close by. And Blenkinsop immediately turned to his callers. His manner had changed; he looked now like a man who is anxious to get a settlement of a difficult question.
âWe have decided to talk freely to you,â he said at once. âThat means, to tell you everything we know about this matter. You, Mr. Matherfield, as representing the police, will, of course, treat our communication confidentially. I neednât ask you, Mr. Hetherwick, to regard all thatâs said here, asâ âyou know! Now, to begin withâ âjust get one fact, an absolutely irrefutable fact, into your minds at once. Lady Riversreade is not the woman who was known as Mrs. Whittingham at Sellithwaite ten years ago, nor did Hannaford believe that she was either!â
âWhat?â exclaimed Matherfield. âButâ ââ he turned to Hetherwick. âYou hear that?â he went on. âWhy, we knowâ ââ
âLet Mr. Blenkinsop go on,â said Hetherwick quietly. âHeâs explaining, I think.â
âJust so,â agreed Blenkinsop. âAnd Iâm beginning by endeavouring to clear away a few mistaken ideas from your minds. Lady Riversreade is not Mrs. Whittingham. Hannaford did not think she was Mrs. Whittingham. It was not Lady Riversreadeâs portrait that Hannaford cut out of the paper.â
Hetherwick could not repress a start at that.
âWhose was it, then?â he demanded. âFor I certainly believed it was!â
Blenkinsop stooped and drew out a drawer from his desk. From a bundle of documents he produced a newspaper, carefully folded and labelled. Opening this, he laid it before the two visitors, pointing to a picture marked with blue pencil. And Hetherwick at once saw that here was a duplicate of the portrait in his own pocketbook. But there was this important differenceâ âwhile Hannaford had cut away the lettering under his picture, it was there in the one which Blenkinsop exhibited. He started again as he read itâ ââMadame Anita Listorelle.â
âThatâs the picture which Hannaford cut out of the paper,â said Blenkinsop. âIt is not that of Lady Riversreade.â
âThen itâs that of a woman whoâs her double!â exclaimed Matherfield. âIâll lay anything that if you asked a hundred men whoâve seen Lady Riversreade if thatâs her picture, theyâd swear it is!â
âI see,â said Hetherwick, disregarding his companionâs outburst, âthat this purports to be a portrait of a Madame Listorelle, who is described in the accompanying letterpress as a famous connoisseur of precious stones. Now, in relation to what weâre discussing, may I ask a plain question? Who is Madame Listorelle?â
Blenkinsop smiledâ âoracularly.
âMadame Listorelle,â he replied, âis the twin sister of Lady Riversreade!â
XVI Still MoreBlenkinsopâs sudden announcement, not altogether unexpected by Hetherwick as a result of the last few minutesâ proceedings, seemed to strike Matherfield with all the force of a lightning-like illumination. His mouth opened; his eyes widened; he turned on Hetherwick as if, having been lost for a while in a baffling maze, he had suddenly seen a way pointed out to him.
âOh, thatâs it, is it?â he exclaimed. âA twin sister, eh? Thenâ âbut go on, Mr. Blenkinsop; Iâm beginning to see things.â
âThe matter is doubtless puzzlingâ âto outsiders,â responded Blenkinsop. âTo clear it up, I shall have to go into some family history. Lady Riversreade and Madame Listorelle are, I repeat, twin sisters. They are the daughters of a man who in his time was captain of various merchant shipsâ âthe old sailing shipsâ âand who knocked about the world a
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