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
âAbout bringing anyone hereâ âno! He never said anything to me about it. But about a photograph, or rather about a print of oneâ âyes. I do know something about that.â
âWhat?â asked Hetherwick eagerly.
âWell, this,â she answered. âMy grandfather, who, as I dare say you know by this time, was for a good many years Superintendent of Police at Sellithwaite, had a habit of cutting things out of newspapersâ âparagraphs, accounts of criminal trials, and so on. He had several boxes full of such cuttings. When we were coming to town the other day I saw him cut a photograph out of some illustrated paper he was reading in the train, and put it away in his pocketbookâ âin a pocketbook, I ought to say, for he had two or three pocketbooks. This morning I was looking through various things which he had left lying about on his dressing-table upstairs, and in one of his pocketbooks I found the photograph which he cut out in the train. That must be the one you mentionâ âitâs of a very handsome, distinguished-looking woman.â
âIf I may see itâ ââ suggested Hetherwick.
Within a couple of minutes he had the cutting in his handâ âa scrap of paper, neatly snipped out of its surrounding letterpress, which was a print of a photograph of a woman of apparently thirty-five to forty years of age, evidently of high position, and certainly, as Rhona Hannaford had remarked, of handsome and distinguished features. But it was not at the photograph that Hetherwick gazed with eyes into which surmise and speculation were beginning to steal; after a mere glance at it, his attention fixed itself on some pencilled words on the margin at its sides:
Through my hands ten years ago!
âIs that your grandfatherâs writing?â he inquired suddenly.
âYes, thatâs his,â replied Rhona. âHe had a habit of pencilling notes and comments on his cuttingsâ âall sorts of remarks.â
âHe didnât mention this particular cutting to you when he cut it out?â
âNoâ âhe said nothing about it. I saw him cut it out, and heard him chuckle as he put it away, but he saidâ ânothing.â
âYou donât know who this lady is?â
âOh, no! You see, thereâs no name beneath it. I suppose there was in the paper, but he cut out nothing but the picture and the bit of margin. But from what heâs written there, I conclude that this is a portrait of some woman who had been in trouble with the police at some time or other.â
âObvious!â muttered Hetherwick. He sat silently inspecting the picture for a minute or two.
âLook here,â he said suddenly, âI want you to let me help in trying to get at the bottom of thisâ ânaturally you want to have it cleared up. And to begin with, let me have this cutting, and for the present donât tell anyoneâ âI mean the police or any inquirersâ âthat I have it. Iâd like to have a talk about it to Kenthwaite. You understand? As I was present at your grandfatherâs death, Iâd like to solve the mystery of it. If youâll leave this to meâ ââ
âOh, yes!â replied Rhona. âButâ âyou think there has been foul play?â âthat he didnât die a natural death?â âthat it wasnât just heart failure orâ ââ
The door of the little coffee-room was opened and Matherfield looked in. Seeing Hetherwick there, he beckoned him into the hall, closing the door again as the young barrister joined him. Hetherwick saw that he was full of news, and instantly thought of the man with the stained fingers.
âWell?â he said eagerly, âlaid your hands on that fellow?â
âOh, him?â âno!â answered Matherfield. âNot a word or sign of himâ âso far! But the doctors have finished their postmortem. And thereâs no doubt about their verdict. Poisoned!â
Matherfield sank his voice to a whisper as he spoke the last word. And Hetherwick, ready though he was for the news, started when he got itâ âthe definiteness of the announcement seemed like opening a window upon a vista of obscured and misty distances. He glanced at the door behind him.
âOf course, theyâll have to be told, in there,â said Matherfield, interpreting his thoughts. âBut the thingâs certain. Our surgeon suspected it from the first, and he got a Home Office specialist to help at the autopsyâ âthey say the man was poisoned by some drug or otherâ âI donât understand these thingsâ âthat had been administered to him two or three hours before he died, and that when it did work, worked with absolutely lightning-like effect.â
âYes,â muttered Hetherwick thoughtfully. âLightning-like effectâ âgood phrase. I can testify that it did that!â
Matherfield laid a hand on the door.
âWell,â he said, âIâd better tell these ladies. Thenâ âthere are things I want to know from the granddaughter. Iâve seen herâ âand her auntâ âbefore this morning. I found out that Hannaford brought up and educated this girl, and that she lived with him in Sellithwaite since she left school, so sheâll know more about him than anybody. And I want to learn all I can. Come in with me.â
III The Potential FortuneElder and younger woman alike took Matherfieldâs intimation quietly. Rhona made no remark. But Mrs. Keeley spoke impulsively.
âThere never was a more popular man than he wasâ âwith everybody!â she exclaimed. âWho should want to take his life?â
âThatâs just what weâve got to find out, maâam,â said Matherfield. âAnd I want to know as much as I canâ âI dare say Miss Hannaford can tell me a lot. Now, letâs see what we do know from what you told me this morning. Mr. Hannaford had been Superintendent of Police at Sellithwaite for some years. He had recently retired on his pension. He proposed to live in London, and you and he, Miss Hannaford, came to London to look for a suitable house, arrived three days ago, and put up at this hotel. Thatâs all correct? Very
Comments (0)