The Charing Cross Mystery J. S. Fletcher (summer reading list TXT) đ
- Author: J. S. Fletcher
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âI canât tell you much,â answered Rhona. âHe was out most of the day, and generally by himself. I was only out with him twiceâ âonce when we went to do some shopping, another time when we called on Mr. Kenthwaite at his rooms in the Temple. I understood he was looking for a houseâ âseeing house agents and so on. He was out morning, afternoon and evening.â
âDid he never tell you anything about where heâd been, or whom heâd seen?â
âNo. He was the sort of man who keeps things to himself. I have no idea where he went nor whom he saw.â
âDidnât say anything about where he was going last night?â
âNo. He only said that he was going out and that I should find him here when I got back from the theatre, to which I was going with Mrs. Keeley. We got back here soon after eleven. But he hadnât come inâ âas you know.â
âYou never heard him speak of having enemies?â
âI should think he hadnât an enemy in the world! He was a very kind man and very popular, even with the people he had to deal with as a police-superintendent.â
âAnd I suppose heâd no financial worriesâ âanything of that sort? Nor any other troublesâ ânothing to bother him?â
âI donât think heâd a care in the world,â said Rhona confidently. âHe was looking forward with real zest to settling down in London. And as to financial worries, heâd none. He was well off.â
âAlways a saving, careful man,â remarked Mrs. Keeley. âOh, yes, quite well offâ âapart from his pension.â
Matherfield glanced at Hetherwick, who had listened carefully to all that was asked and answered. Something in the glance seemed to invite him to take a hand.
âThis occurs to me,â said Hetherwick. He turned to Rhona. âApart from this house-hunting, do you know whether your grandfather had any business affair in hand in London? What Iâm thinking of is thisâ âfrom what I saw of him in the train, he appeared to be an active, energetic man, not the sort of man who, because heâd retired, would sit down in absolute idleness. Do you know of anything that he thought of undertakingâ âany business he thought of joining?â
Rhona considered this question for a while.
âNot any business,â she replied at last. âBut there is something that may have to do with what you suggest. My grandfather had a hobby. He experimented in his spare time.â
âWhat in?â asked Hetherwick. Then he suddenly remembered the stained fingers that he had noticed on the hands of both men the night before. âWas it chemicals?â he added quickly.
âYes, in chemicals,â she answered with a look of surprise. âHow did you know that?â
âI noticed that his hands and fingers were stained,â replied Hetherwick. âSo were those of the man he was with. Wellâ âbut this something?â
âHe had a little laboratory in our garden at Sellithwaite,â she continued. âHe spent all his spare time in itâ âheâd done that for years. Lately, I know, heâd been trying to invent or discover somethingâ âI donât know what. But just before we left Sellithwaite, he told me that heâd solved the problem, and when he was sorting out and packing up his papers he showed me a sealed envelope in which he said were the particulars of his big discoveryâ âhe said there was a potential fortune in it and that he should die a rich man. I saw him put that envelope in a pocketbook which he always carried with him.â
âThat would be the pocketbook I examined last night,â said Matherfield. âThere was no sealed envelope, nor one of which any seal had been broken, in that. There was nothing but letters, receipts and unimportant papers.â
âIt is not in his other pocketbooks,â declared Rhona. âI went through all his things myself very early this morningâ âthrough everything that he had here. I know that he had that envelope yesterdayâ âhe pulled out some things from his pocket when we were lunching with Mr. Kenthwaite in a restaurant in Fleet Street, and I saw the envelope. It was a stout, square envelope, across the front of which he had drawn two thick red lines, and it was heavily sealed with black sealing-wax at the back.â
âThat was yesterday, you say?â asked Matherfield sharply. âYesterday noon? Just so! Then as he had it yesterday at noon, and as it wasnât in his pockets last night and is not among his effects in this house, itâs very clear that between, say, two oâclock yesterday and midnight he parted with it. Now then, to whom? Thatâs a thing weâve just got to find out! But youâre sure he wasnât joking when he told you that this discovery, or invention, or whatever it was, was worth a potential fortune?â
âOn the contrary, he was very serious,â replied Rhona. âUnusually serious for him. He wouldnât tell me what it was, nor give me any particularsâ âall he said was that heâd solved a problem and hit on a discovery that heâd worked over for years, and that the secret was in that envelope and worth no end of money. I asked him what he meant by no end of money and he said: âWell, at any rate, a hundred thousand poundsâ âin time.âââ
The two men exchanged glances; silence fell on the whole group.
âOh!â said Matherfield at last. âA secret worth a hundred thousand poundsâ âin time. This will have to be looked intoâ ânarrowly. What do you think, Mr. Hetherwick?â
âYes,â answered Hetherwick. âYouâve no idea, of course, as to whether your grandfather had done anything about putting this discovery on the marketâ âor made any arrangement about selling it? No! Well, can you tell me this: What sort of house did your grandfather want to rent here in London? I mean, do you know what rent he was prepared to pay?â
âI can answer that,â remarked Mrs. Keeley. âHe told me he wanted a good houseâ âa real good oneâ âin a convenient suburb, and he was willing to go
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