<h3><SPAN name="Ch_XXVII" id="Ch_XXVII">Chapter XXVII</SPAN></h3>
<h2>Holden’s Story</h2>
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<p>The long-nosed ex-sergeant entered. His sallow face was browned
after his long journeys and exposure to the Italian sun in
midsummer. He was soiled and travel-stained.</p>
<p>“Excuse my appearance,” he said. “I have had
no time for even a wash since this morning. On board the boat I
thought it best to keep a constant watch on Capella and his
companions.”</p>
<p>“Who are they?” demanded Brett.</p>
<p>Mr. Holden looked at the barrister with an injured air.</p>
<p>“I am a man of few words, sir,” he said, “and
if you do not mind, I will tell my story in my own way.”</p>
<p>Winter was secretly delighted to hear the “Old
’Un,” as they called him in the Yard, take a rise out
of Brett in this manner.</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” exclaimed the barrister, “your few
words will come more easily if you wet your whistle.”</p>
<p>“Well, I must admit that Italian wine—”</p>
<p>“Is not equal to Scotch; or is it Irish?”</p>
<p>“Irish, sir, if you please.”</p>
<p>Mr. Holden’s utterance having been cleared of cinders, he
made a fresh start.</p>
<p>“As I was saying, gentlemen, I kept an observant eye on
Capella and his companions, and at the same time occupied myself in
the fashioning of certain little models with which to illustrate my
subsequent remarks.”</p>
<p>He produced a map of Naples, which he carefully smoothed out on
the table, pressing the creases with his fingers until Brett itched
to tweak his long nose.</p>
<p>The man was evidently a Belfast Irishman, and the barrister
forced himself to find amusement in speculating how such an
individual came to speak Italian fluently. Speculation on this
abstruse problem, however, yielded to keen interest in Mr.
Holden’s proceedings.</p>
<p>On the face of the map he located a number of small wooden
carvings, which were really very ingenious. They represented
churches, an hotel, a mansion, three ordinary houses, a rambling
building like a public institution, and a nondescript structure
difficult to classify.</p>
<p>“I find,” said Mr. Holden, when the
<em>mise-en-scène</em> was quite to his liking, “that
a good map, and a few realistic models of the principal buildings
dealt with in my discourse, give a lucidity and a coherence
otherwise foreign to the narrative.”</p>
<p>Even Winter became restive under this style of address. Brett
caught his eye, and moved by common impulse, they lessened the
whisky-mark in a decanter of Antiquary.</p>
<p>“Allow me to remark,” interpolated Brett,
“that your telegrams were admirably terse and to the
point.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, sir. Many eminent judges have complimented me
on my manner of giving evidence. And now to business. I arrived at
the railway station here” (touching the non-descript
building), “and took a room in the Villa Nuova here”
(he laid a finger on the mansion), “which, as you see, is
quite close to the Hotel de Londres here” (a flourish over
the hotel), “at which, as I expected, Mr. Capella took up his
abode. According to your instructions I obtained a competent
assistant, a native of Naples, and we both awaited Mr.
Capella’s arrival. He reached Naples at 10.30 a.m. the day
following my advent at night, and after breakfast drove straight to
the Reclusorio, or Asylum for the Poor, situated here” (he
indicated the institution), “close to the Botanical Gardens.
Mr. Capella arranged with the authorities to withdraw from the
poorhouse an elderly woman named Maria Bresciano. It subsequently
transpired that she was a nurse employed by a certain English
gentleman named Fraser Beechcroft, who became entangled with a
beautiful Italian girl named Margarita di Orvieto some twenty-eight
years ago.”</p>
<p>Mr. Holden paid not the remotest attention to the looks of
amazement exchanged between Brett and Winter. He merely paused to
take breath and peer benignantly at the map, following lines
thereon with the index finger of his right hand.</p>
<p>“It appears further,” he resumed, “that the
Englishman and the Signorina di Orvieto could not marry, on account
of some foolish religious scruples held by the young lady, but they
entertained a very violent passion for each other, met
clandestinely, and a female child was born, whose baptism is
registered, under the name of Margarita di Orvieto, in the church
of the village of La Scutillo here.” (He tapped a tiny spired
edifice on the edge of the map.)</p>
<p>“The two were living there in great secrecy, as they were
in fear of their lives, not alone from the young lady’s
relatives, but from her discarded lover, the Marchese di Capella,
father of the present Mr. Giovanni Capella, who has dropped his
title in England. The old woman, Maria Bresciano, attended the
signorina and her child, but unfortunately the mother died, and her
death is registered both by the civil authorities in the Minadoi
section here” (lifting a small house bodily off the map),
“and by the ecclesiastical here” (he touched another
spire).</p>
<p>“The affair created some stir in the Naples of that day,
but Beechcroft’s suffering, the calm daring with which, after
the girl’s death, he defied those who had vowed vengeance on
him, and the generally passionate nature of the attachment between
the two, created much public sympathy for him. Among others who
were attracted to him were a Mr. and Mrs. Somers, and their
daughter, then resident in Naples. Oddly enough, Beechcroft did not
content himself with securing efficient care for his child, but
brought the infant to the Hotel de Londres—you note the
coincidence—where it was nurtured under his personal
supervision.”</p>
<p>Brett drew a long breath. So this was Margaret’s secret
and Capella’s vengeance! He was aroused, as from a dream, by
Mr. Holden’s steady voice.</p>
<p>“Mr. Beechcroft always held that the Signorina di Orvieto
was his true wife in the eyes of Heaven, for their marriage was
only prevented by a most uncalled-for and unnatural threat of
incurring her father’s dying curse it she dared to wed a
Protestant. Eighteen months after her death he married Miss Somers
at the British Consulate, and revealed his real name and
rank—Sir Alan Hume-Frazer, baronet, of Beechcroft, near
Stowmarket, England. His lady adopted the infant girl as her own,
and local gossip had it that this was a part of the marriage
contract, whilst the ceremony took place at an early date to give
colour to the kindly pretence. The pair lived in a distant suburb,
at Donzelle here” (another church fixed the spot), “and
in twelve months a boy was born, birth registered locally and in
the British Consulate. After four more years’ residence in
Naples, Sir Alan and Lady Hume-Frazer left Italy with their two
children. Mr. Capella found two of their old servants, Giuseppe
Conti and Lola Rintesano, living in these small houses here and
here” (the remaining houses were lifted into prominence).</p>
<p>“Mr. Capella married Miss Margaret Hume-Frazer in Naples
last January, the marriage being properly registered. His estates
are situated in the South of Italy, and his father retired thither
permanently during the scandal that took place twenty-eight years
ago. Mr. Capella has brought with him the persons named as the
nurse and servants, together with certified copies of all the
documents cited. I also have certified copies of those documents, I
now produce them, together with a detailed statement of my
expenses. Mr. Capella is residing in a neighbouring
hotel.”</p>
<p>The methodical police-sergeant laid some neatly docketed folios
on the table near the map, and sat down for the first time since
entering the room.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, he had not uttered an unnecessary word.
Other men, describing similar complexities, would have given
particulars of their adventures, how this thing had been done, and
that person wheedled into confidences.</p>
<p>Mr. Holden rose superior to these considerations. His mission
was all-important, and he had certainly fulfilled it to the
letter.</p>
<p>“If ever a grateful country makes me a judge, Mr.
Holden,” said Brett, “I will add another to the
encomiums you have received from the Bench. Indeed, before this
affair ends, that pleasant task may be performed by an existing
judge, for I do not see now how we are going to keep out of the
law-courts. Do you, Winter?”</p>
<p>“Looks like a murder case plus a divorce,” commented
the detective.</p>
<p>“You are leaving out of count the biggest sensation,
namely, the title to the Beechcroft estates. Under her
father’s will, if it is very cleverly drawn, Mrs. Capella may
receive £1,000 per annum. She has not the remotest claim to
Beechcroft and its revenues or to her brother’s intestate
estate.”</p>
<p>Winter whistled.</p>
<p>“My eye!” he exclaimed. “What is Capella going
to get out of it?”</p>
<p>“Revenge! His is a legacy of hate, like most other
benefactions in the Hume-Frazer family. The next move rests with
him. I wonder what it will be!”</p>
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