Mrs. Jeffries & the Silent Knight Emily Brightwell (easy books to read in english .txt) đ
- Author: Emily Brightwell
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body. He fought back a wave of nausea and forced himself to
make a thorough examination.
The body was face down in the pond. The water was shallow enough that it only came up to his ears, so the inspector could see that the back of the head was horribly crushed.
The victim wore a dressing gown over his nightshirt and
had slippers on his feet. âIt must have been the blow to his
head that killed him.â
Goring snorted.
âDo you have something to add, Constable,â Barnes
snapped.
âNo, sir,â Goring replied.
âThen move off out of our way,â he ordered. He knelt
down on the other side of the corpse. âI think youâre right,
sir. I doubt anyone could survive a blow like this. But what
do you make of this?â He pointed to the manâs head. âHis
face is under water.â
Witherspoon nodded. âAnd the pond is completely
frozen over.â
âThat means whoever did this had to chip the ice to
shove Sir Georgeâs head into it.â He shook his head in disbelief. âWhy on earth would the killer go to the trouble to do that when he must have known Sir George was already
dead? This pond is frozen hard, chipping a hole in it
wouldnât have been that easy.â
Witherspoon shrugged. âPerhaps he didnât know his
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blow had been successful. Perhaps he wanted to make sure
his victim was dead.â
âThen why not whack him again, sir?â Barnes asked.
âSeems to me, drowning the man in a frozen pond is doing
it the hard way.â
C H A P T E R 2
ïżœïżœ ïżœïżœ
âThanks, mate.â Smythe paid the hansom driver and started
toward the end of the road.
âYouâve given me too much,â the cabbie called after him.
Smythe waved him off and quickened his pace. âYou earned
it, mate. The roads are still a mess, and you got me âere
lickety-split.â Heâd gotten to the cab stand on the Holland
Park Road and managed to grab one just as he saw the one
the inspector and Barnes had gotten into turn the corner.
Heâd told the driver to stay back but to follow the inspectorâs cab. The man had done a good job, and Smythe had rewarded him for his efforts. Even better, the cabbie hadnât asked any nosy questions. Besides, Smythe thought as he
slowed his pace and examined his surroundings, he had
plenty of money.
Smythe noted that there were two constables standing at
the drive of the house at the far end of the road. That must
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be the place. The constables were standing there, not doing
much of anything except staring down the road, but Smythe
didnât think theyâd spotted him.
He stopped and studied his surroundings. Blast, he
couldnât go any farther. It was too dangerous. This wasnât a
busy street in London where he could blend into a crowd
and pick up bits and pieces of information from the locals.
This was a road of big houses with lots of empty space between them and not near enough places for a bloke to hide.
There werenât even that many trees, and because it was winter, there was very little foliage about to cover him.
He ducked behind the trunk of an elm tree, standing
sideways because the trunk wasnât big enough to cloak him
completely. He had to think what to do. How to get close
enough to suss out what was what. He peeked out and saw
one of the constables heading his way. Blast a Spaniard, one
of them must have seen him!
Inspector Witherspoon forced himself to look closely at the
victimâs head again. Bile rose in his throat, but he fought it
back. He knew everyone expected him to examine everything where the murder had occurred and then come up with the killer based on âhis methods.â The truth was he
wasnât sure what he was supposed to be seeing and even
worse, he wasnât sure what his âmethodsâ were. They
seemed to vary from case to case. Except for this, leaving the
body where it was, undisturbed. But what a horrid mess of
blood, matted hair, and what was probably bit and pieces of
the poor manâs brain were supposed to tell him, he couldnât
fathom. He got to his feet.
Barnes rose as well and turned slowly in a circle, his gaze
locked onto the ground. It took a moment before Witherspoon realized what he was doing.
Mrs. Jeffries and the Silent Knight
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âHe wasnât killed here.â Barnes pointed to the area by
the victimâs feet. The inspector looked down at the ground
as well and saw the faint outlines of a trail that extended
from the tip of the slipper toe outward for a good two feet
before disappearing underneath a sea of footprints.
âAnd weâll likely not know exactly where the poor fellow
was murdered.â The constable shook his head in disgust.
âNot with all these footprints. Theyâre everywhere, sir. The
ground by the pond is so covered with them weâd never get
any useful evidence; theyâre all over the terrace. Good gracious, theyâre even over near the ruddy greenhouse.â He glared at the two constables who were standing on the other
side of the pond, but were close enough to hear them.
âWhat did you do,â he asked angrily, âinvite the whole
household out to have a good look? Why wasnât this area
roped off?â
Becker bit his lip, but Constable Goring didnât flinch. âIt
wasnât our fault, sir. By the time we got here, the damage
had been done. We kept people away as soon as we realized
it was murder.â
âRealized it was murder,â Barnes exclaimed. âYe Gods,
man, the poor fellowâs had his head bashed in and stuck in a
pond. Did you think it was suicide?â
Goring glared right back. âWhen the call came in, it just
said there was a body here. By the time we got here, the
whole household was outside and tramping around the
place.â
âBut no one had pulled Sir Georgeâs head out of the
pond?â Witherspoon asked. He kept his voice neutral, not
wanting to add more tension to the situation. He didnât
wish to undermine his constable, he quite understood what
Barnes was doing, but on the other hand, he didnât want the
local lads to feel bad. He was sure theyâd done their best.
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âThatâs odd, isnât it? Generally, family members would have
pulled him out, if for no other reason than to make sure heâs
actually dead.â
Goring turned his attention to the inspector.
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