The Charing Cross Mystery J. S. Fletcher (summer reading list TXT) š
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
Book online Ā«The Charing Cross Mystery J. S. Fletcher (summer reading list TXT) šĀ». Author J. S. Fletcher
āIt struck me that this might be the place where the two ladies were detained,ā remarked Hetherwick.
āWeāll soon see about that,ā declared Robmore. āCome upstairsā āweāll search the place from top to bottom. But stop, downstairs first.ā
He ran down the stair to the cellar kitchen, with Hetherwick at his heels. And at the door he laughed, pointing within.
āLook there!ā he exclaimed. āI told you youād interrupted things. See! thereās one tea-tray, laid out all ready for twoā ācups and saucers, teapot, bread and butter cut, cake. Thereās another for one. And thereās the kettle, singing away like a bird on a bough. Whatās that mean? The woman was going to carry up tea for two, somewhere; tāother tray was for herself. Well, you nipped that in the bud; sheāll have to get her tea somewhere. Butā āthe others? Come upstairs.ā
Going back to the hall, he led the way up the main staircase. There were two stories above the ground floor; on the first were rooms the doors of which, being opened, or being found open, revealed nothing but ordinary things: of these rooms there were three, opening off a main landing. But on the next floor there were only two rooms; one was unfurnished: at the door of the other, a few inches ajar, the detective immediately paused.
āLook you there, now, Mr. Hetherwick!ā he said, pointing here and there. āHereās recent work! Do you see that a strong bolt, more like a bar, has been fitted on the outside of this door, and the door itself fitted with a new patent lock, key outside? And, good Lord! a chain as well. Might be in a gaol! But whatās inside?ā
He pushed the door open and revealed a large room, fitted with two small beds, easy chairs, a table on which books, magazines, newspapers lay; on the table, too, was fancywork which, it was evident, had been as hastily laid aside as the sewing downstairs. Hetherwick bent over the things, but Robmore went to the one window.
āGaol, did I say?ā he exclaimed. āWhy, this is a gaol! Look here, Mr. Hetherwick!ā āwindow morticed inside and fitted with iron bars outside. Even if whoeverās been in here could have opened the window, and if thereād been no bars there, they couldnāt have done anything though, for thereās nothing but a high blank wall oppositeā āback of some factory or other, apparently. But whatās this?ā he added, opening a door that stood in a corner. āUm! small bathroom. And this,ā he continued, going to a square hatch set in the wall next to the staircase. āAh! trap big enough to hand things like small trays through, but not big enough for a grown person to squeeze through. Well, I shouldnāt wonder if youāre right, Mr. Hetherwickā āthis, probably, is where these ladies were locked up. Butā ātheyāre gone!ā
Hetherwick was looking round. Suddenly his eyes lighted on a familiar object. He stepped forward, and from a chair near one of the beds, picked up a handbag of green silk. He knew it well enough.
āThat settles it!ā he exclaimed. āThey have been here! This is Miss Hanā āI mean Miss Featherstoneās bagā āIāve seen her carry it often. These are her things in itā āpurse, card-case, so on. Sheās left it behind her.ā
āAye, just so!ā agreed Robmore. āAs I say, they all left in a hurry. I figure it out like this: the woman, who, of course, acted as sort of gaoler to these two unfortunate ladies, when she made that discovery round yonder, came back here, got her outdoor things, and cleared off. But before she went, sheād the decency to slip up here, undo that chain, slip the bolt back, and turn the key! Then, no doubt, she made tracks at express speed, leaving the ladies to do what they liked. And they, Mr. Hetherwick, having a bit oā common sense about āem, did what I should haā doneā āthey hooked it as quick as possible. Thatās that, sir!ā
Hetherwick thrust Rhonaās handbag into his pocket and made for the door.
āThen Iām off, Robmore,ā he said. āI must try to find out where theyāve gone. Iāve an idea probably theyād go to Penteneyās office. Iāll go there. Butā āyou?ā
āOh, Iām going back to Pencove Street,ā answered Robmore. āPlenty to do there. But off you go after the ladies, Mr. Hetherwick, thereās nothing you can do round here now. Iāll keep that clerk of yours a bit, and the Jew chapā āthey might come in. We shall have some nice revelations in the papers tomorrow, Iām thinking, especially if Matherfield has the luck he expects.ā
āWhat are you going to do about this house?ā asked Hetherwick as they went downstairs. āDo you think the woman will come back?ā
āBet your life she wonāt!ā answered Robmore. āNot she! I should think sheās halfway across Londonā ānorth, south, east or west, by this. House? Why, I shall just lock the front door and put the key in my pocket. We shall want to search this house narrowly.ā
Hetherwick bade him good day for the time being, and hurried off to Victoria Street, to fling himself into the first disengaged taxicab he encountered, and to bid its driver go as speedily as possible to Lincolnās Inn Fields. He was anxious about Rhonaā āand yet he felt that she was safe. And he was inquisitive, too; he wanted to hear her story, to find out what had happened behind the scenes. He felt sure of finding her at Penteneyās office; she and Madame Listorelle, once released from their prison, would naturally go there.
But the clerk whom he encountered as soon as he rushed into the outer office, damped his spirits at once by shaking his head.
āMr. Penteneyās not in, sir,ā he answered. āHe was in until not so long ago, but he got a telephone call and went out immediately
Comments (0)