The Charing Cross Mystery J. S. Fletcher (summer reading list TXT) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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Hetherwick took him in as quickly as he had taken in his surroundings. His head lay quietly against the padding of the chair, a little inclined to his left shoulder: the face was fully visible. It wasâ âto Hetherwickâ âthe face of a stranger; in all his and Matherfieldâs investigations it had not been described to them. Yet he was certain that he was looking on the man known to them by repute as Ambrose. Disguised, of courseâ âhe had shaved off the dark beard and moustache of which they had heard, and he could see at once that the loss of them had made a remarkable difference in his appearance. But nothing could disguise his height and general build. This, without doubt, was the man Matherfield and he had hunted for, the man who had met Hannaford at Victoria, who had disappeared from his flat in the Adelphiâ âthe man who was associated with Baseverie, and whoâ â
âDead as a doornail!â muttered Robmore, bending close to the still figure. âAndâ âheâs been dead a good bit, too!â âsome hours, anyway. Stiff! Do ye know him, Mr. Hetherwick?â
Hetherwick said what he thought. Robmore pointed to the things on the bed.
âLooks as if heâd been taken with a seizure just as he was about to set off somewhere,â he remarked. âWell, if this is the Dr. Ambrose weâve been seekingâ âbut letâs see if heâs got anything on him to prove his identity.â
While the rest of the men stood by watching, he put his hand into the dead manâs inside breast pocketâ âhe was wearing a smart, brand-new grey tweed suit, Hetherwick, later on, remembered how its newness struck him as being incongruously out of place, somehowâ âand drew out a pocketbook. Touching Hetherwickâs elbow and motioning him to follow him, he went over to the window, leaving the others still staring wonderingly at the dead man.
âThis is a queer business, Mr. Hetherwick,â he whispered as they drew apart. âYou think this is the Dr. Ambrose we were after?â
âSure of it!â answered Hetherwick. âHeâs shaved off his beard and moustache, and thatâs no doubt made a big difference in his appearance, but you may depend on it, this is the man! But whatâs caused his sudden death?â
Then a keen, vivid recollection flashed up in him, and he turned sharply, glancing at the rigid figure in the background.
âWhat is it?â asked Robmore curiously. âSomething strikes you?â
Hetherwick pointed to the dead manâs attitude.
âThatâsâ âthatâs just how Hannaford looked when he died in the railway carriage!â he whispered. âAfter the first signsâ âyou knowâ âhe laid back andâ âdied. Just like thatâ âas if heâd dropped quietly asleep. Canâ âcan it be thatâ ââ
âI know what youâre thinking,â muttered Robmore. âPoisoned! Wellâ âwhat aboutâ âehâ âthe other man?â
âBaseverie!â exclaimed Hetherwick.
âWhy not?â âto rid himself of an accomplice! Butâ âthis pocketbook,â said Robmore. âLetâs see whatâs in it. Doesnât seem to be anything very much, by the thinness.â
From one flap of the pocketbook he drew out a wad of carefully-folded bank notes, and rapidly turned them over.
âHundred and fifty pounds there,â he remarked. âAnd whatâs this paperâ âa draft on a New York bank for two hundred. New York, eh? So thatâs where he was bound? And this,â he went on, turning out the other flap. âAh! see this, Mr. Hetherwick? Heâd got his passage booked by the Maratic, sailing tonight. Um! And Matherfieldâs gone to Southampton, after Baseverie. Iâm beginning to see a bit into this, I think.â
âWhat do you see?â asked Hetherwick.
âWell, it looks to me as if Baseverie had gone ahead to collect that box containing the jewels, and that Ambrose was to follow later, join him there, when Baseverie had secured the loot, and that they were then to be off with their harvest! Butâ âdo you notice thisâ âthe name under which the passage is booked? Not Ambroseâ âCharles Andrews, Esquire. Andrews! And Baseverie is Basing. Basing and Andrews. Now I wonder if they carried on business here under these names?â
âThatâs an unimportant detail,â said Hetherwick. âThe important thing, surely, isâ âthat! How did that man come by his death?â
âWell, but I donât think that is very importantâ âjust now,â replied Robmore. âAfter all, he is dead, and whether he died as the result of a sudden seizure, or whether Baseverie cleverly poisoned him before he left, is a question weâll have to settle later. But Iâll tell you what, Mr. Hetherwickâ âIâll lay anything he didnât poison himself! Look roundâ âthere isnât a sign of anything heâs been drinking out of. No, sirâ âthe other manâs done this. And if Matherfield has the luck to lay hands on him tonightâ âah! But now, what was this your clerk, Mapperley, told us as we came along about the Little Smith Street landlady coming here this afternoon?â
âShe was followed here by Goldmark,â replied Hetherwick. âGoldmark saw her admit herself by a key which she took from her pocket. She stayed inside a few minutes, came out looking much upset, and hurried away to her own house.â
âAnd now you and Iâll just hurry after her,â said Robmore. âAfter all, sheâs living, and weâll make her find her tongue. Of course, she came in here expecting to find this man, and to tell him somebody was on the lookout. Andâ âshe found him dead! Come round there with me, Mr. Hetherwick, at once.â
He turned to the other detective and the constable, and after giving them some whispered instructions, left the room, Hetherwick, after a word or two with Mapperley, following him. But before they had reached the outer door, they heard steps in the yard, and suddenly two men appeared in the doorway.
If Hetherwick and his companion looked questioningly at these two men, they, on their part, looked questioningly at Robmore and Hetherwick. They were youngish menâ âHetherwick set them down as respectably-dressed artisans. That they were surprised to find anyone confronting them at the door whereat all four now stood, was evident; their surprise, indeed, was so great that they came to a sudden halt, staring silently. But Robmore spoke. âWanting somebody?â he asked sharply.
The two
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