Scarhaven Keep J. S. Fletcher (early reader chapter books TXT) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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âThat night!â exclaimed Gilling, âthe night he came here?â
âVery same night,â assented Mrs. Salmon. âBrought in here about two in the afternoon and died just before midnightâ âsoon after Miss Chatfield came in from the theatre. Went very suddenly at the end.â
âWere you present?â asked Copplestone.
âI wasnât. Nobody was with him but Mr. Chatfieldâ âMiss Chatfield was getting her supper down here,â replied Mrs. Salmon. âAnd I was busy elsewhere.â
âWas there an inquest then?â inquired Gilling.
âOh, no!â said Mrs. Salmon, shaking her head. âOh, no!â âthere was no need for thatâ âthe doctor, ye see, had been seeing him all day. Oh, noâ âthe cause of death was evident enough, in a way of speaking. Heart.â
âDid they bury him here, then?â asked Gilling.
âTwo days after,â replied Mrs. Salmon. âKept everything very quiet, they did. I donât believe Miss Chatfield told any of the theatre peopleâ âshe went to her work just the same, of course. The old gentleman saw to everythingâ âfuneral and all. Iâll say this for themâ âthey gave me no unnecessary trouble, but still, thereâs trouble that is necessary when youâve death in a house and a funeral at the door, and they ought to have given me something for what I did. But they didnât, so I considered it very mean. Mr. Chatfield, he stayed two days after the funeral, and when he left he just said that his daughter would settle up with me. But when she came to pay she added nothing to my bill, and she walked out remarking that if her father hadnât given me anything extra she was sure she shouldnât. Shabby!â
âVery shabby!â agreed Gilling. âWell, you wonât find my clients quite so mean, maâam. But just a wordâ âdonât mention this matter to anybody until you hear from me. And as I like to give some earnest of payment hereâs a banknote which you can slip into your purseâ âon account, you understand. Now, just a question or two: Did you hear the young manâs name?â
The landlady, whose spirits rose visibly on receipt of the banknote, appeared to reflect on hearing this question, and she shook her head as if surprised at her own inability to answer it satisfactorily.
âWell, now,â she said, âit may seem a queer thing to say, but I donât recollect that I ever did! You see, I didnât see much of him after he once got here. I was never in his room with them, and they didnât mention his nameâ âthat I can rememberâ âwhen they spoke about him before me. I understood he was a relativeâ âcousin or something of that sort.â
âDidnât you see any name on the coffin?â asked Gilling.
âI didnât,â replied Mrs. Salmon. âYou see, the undertaker fetched him away when him and his men brought the coffinâ âthe next day. He took charge of the coffin for the second night, and the funeral took place from there. But Iâll tell you whatâ âthe undertakerâll know the name, and of course the doctor does. Theyâre both close by.â
Gilling took names and addresses and once more pledging the landlady to secrecy, led Copplestone away.
âThatâs the end of another chapter,â he said when they were clear of that place. âWe know now that Marston Greyle died thereâ âin that very house, Copplestone!â âand that Peter Chatfield was with him. Thatâs fact!â
âAnd itâs fact, too, that the daughter knows,â observed Copplestone in a low voice.
âFact, too, that Addie Chatfield was in it,â agreed Gilling. âWellâ âbut what happened next? However, before we go on to that, there are three things to do in the morning. We must see this Dr. Valdey, and the undertakerâ âand Marston Greyleâs grave.â
âAnd then?â asked Copplestone.
âStiff, big question,â sighed Gilling. âGo back to town and report, I thinkâ âand find out if Swallow has discovered anything. And egad!â âthereâs a lot to discover! For you see weâre already certain that at the stage at which weâve arrived a conspiracy beganâ âconspiracy between Chatfield, his daughter, and the man whoâs been passing himself off as Marston Greyle. Now, who is the man? Where did they get hold of him? Is he some relation of theirs? All thatâs got to be found out. Of course, their object is very clear, Marston Greyle, the real Simon Pure, was dead on their hands. His legal successor was his cousin, Miss Audrey. Chatfield knew that when Miss Audrey came into power his own reign as steward of Scarhaven would be brief. And soâ âbut the thing is so plain that one neednât waste breath on it. And I tell you whatâs plain too, Copplestoneâ âMiss Audrey Greyle is the lady of Scarhaven! Good luck to her! Youâll no doubt be glad to communicate the glad tidings!â
Copplestone made no answer. He was utterly confounded by the recent revelations and was wondering what the mother and daughter in the little cottage so far away in the grey north would say when all these things were told them.
âLetâs make dead certain of everything,â he said after a long pause. âDonât letâs leave any loophole.â
âOh, weâll leave nothingâ âhere at any rate,â replied Gilling, confidently. âBut youâll find in the morning that we already know almost everything.â
In this he was right. The doctorâs story was a plain one. The young man was very ill indeed when brought to him, and though he did not anticipate so early or sudden an end, he was not surprised when death
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