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
âWell, no!â he said. âNot that we know of. But might we ask if you are? And how you got in here? Because this place happens to be ours!â
âYours!â exclaimed Robmore. âYour property?â
âWell, if buying it, paying for it, and taking a receipt and papers makes it so!â answered the man. âBought it this morningâ âand settled up for it, too, anyway.â
Robmore produced and handed over a professional card, and the faces of the two men fell as they read it. The elder looked up quickly.
âI hope thereâs nothing wrong?â he said anxiously. âDetectives, eh? Weâve laid out a nice bit on thisâ âsavings, too, andâ ââ
âI donât suppose thereâs anything wrong that way,â replied Robmore reassuringly. âBut thereâs something uncommonly wrong in other ways. Now look here, who are you two, and from whom did you buy this place?â
âMy nameâs Marshall, his is Wilkinson,â answered the leader. âWeâre just starting business for ourselves as electrical engineers. We advertised for a likely place hereabouts, and Mr. Andrews came to us about thisâ âsaid he and his partner, Mr. Basing, were leaving, and wanted to sell it, just as it stood. We came to look at it, and as itâs just the place we need to start with, we agreed to buy it. They said it was their own property, and to save law expenses we carried out the purchase between ourselves. And we paid over the purchase money this morning, and got the papers and the key.â
âWhat time was that?â asked Robmore.
âTen oâclock or thereabouts,â replied Marshall. âBy appointment, here.â
âDid ye see both menâ âBasing and Andrews?â
âBoth! In that little room to the right. We settled the businessâ âpaid them in cashâ âand settled all up. It was soon done, then they stood us a drink and a cigar, and we went.â
âStood you a drink, eh?â said Robmore suddenly. âWhere?â
âHere! Basing, he pulled out a big bottle of champagne and a cigar-box, and said weâd wet the bargain. Weâd a glass apiece, Wilkinson and me, then we left âem to finish the bottle: we were in a hurry. Butâ âis anything wrong?â
âWhat is wrong, my lad, is that the man you know as Andrews is lying dead upstairs!â replied Robmore. âPoisoned, most likely, by his partner. But, as I said just now, I donât suppose thereâs anything wrong about your buying the property, providing you can show a title to it; you say youâve got the necessary papers?â
Marshall clapped a hand on the pocket of his coat.
âGot âem all here, now,â he said. âButâ âdid you say Andrews was deadâ âpoisoned? Why, he was as alive as I am when we left the two of âem together. They were finishing the bottleâ ââ
âLook here,â interrupted Robmore. âWait awhile until we come backâ âweâve some important work close by. There are people of ours upstairsâ âtell them I said you were to wait a bit. Now, Mr. Hetherwick.â
Outside the yard and in the crowded street, Robmore turned to his companion with a cynical laugh.
âChampagneâ âto wet the bargain!â he said. âLeft them to finish it, eh? And no doubt what finished Ambrose was in that champagneâ âslipped in by Baseverie when his back was turned. Iâll tell you what it is, Mr. Hetherwick, that chapâs a thorough-paced âunâ âhe goes the whole hog! I only hope he wonât be too deep for Matherfield at Southampton! I shall be anxious till I hear.â
âIs it possible for him to escape Matherfield?â exclaimed Hetherwick. âHow can he? I look on him as being as good as in custody already! Heâs bound to call at the post office for that box.â
âIs he, though?â interrupted the detective, with another incredulous laugh. âIâm not so sure about that, Mr. Hetherwick. Baseverie is evidently an accomplished scoundrel, and full of all sorts of tricks! Iâll tell ye what Iâm wonderingâ âwill that parcel ever get to Southampton post office, where itâs to be called for?â
âWhatever do you mean?â demanded Hetherwick. âItâs in the post! Posted this morning.â
âNo doubt,â agreed Robmore dryly. âBy special delivery, eh? And when it gets to Southampton Station, itâs got to be taken to the head post office, hasnât it?â
âWell?â asked Hetherwick.
âThereâs many a slip twixt cup and lipâ âso the old saying goes,â replied Robmore. âThat parcel may slip. But isnât this the number your clerk mentioned?â
The door of Mrs. Mallettâs house looked more closely barred than everâ âif possible. And no answer came to several summonses by bell and knocker. But presently Robmore tried the handleâ âthe door opened at his touch.
âHallo!â he exclaimed. âOpen! Um! That seems a bit queer. Wellâ âinside!â
For the second time that afternoon, Hetherwick walked into a place that seemed to be wholly deserted.
XXVI WaterlooThe detective, walking a little in advance of his companion, stepped forward to a hall-table and knocked loudly on its polished surface. No answer came. He went further along, to the head of a railed stair which evidently communicated with a cellar kitchen; again he knocked, more loudly than before, on an adjacent panel, and again got no reply. And at that, turning back along the hall, he opened the door of the room which faced upon the street, and he and Hetherwick looked in. A musty-smelling, close-curtained room that, a sort of Sunday parlour, little used, cold and comfortless in its formality. But the room behind it, to which Robmore turned next, showed signs of recent occupancy and life. There was a fire in the grate, with an easy chair drawn near to it; on the table close by lay womenâs gearâ âa heap of linen, with needle and thread thrust in, a workbasket, scissors, thimble; it required no more than a glance to see that the owner of these innocent matters had laid them down suddenly, suddenly interrupted in her task.
âIâll tell you what it is, Mr. Hetherwick!â exclaimed Robmore abruptly. âThis house is empty! Empty of people, anyway.â
âSilent enough, to be sure,â agreed Hetherwick. âThe womanâ ââ
âYouâve frightened her by calling here,â said Robmore. âThen she slipped round to Pencove Street. And there she found
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