<h2><SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN>Chapter VI.<br/> Scotland Yard Takes a Hand</h2>
<p>It was a singular greeting, to say the least, and the person who uttered it was
quite as remarkable as his queer method of expressing himself seemed to
indicate.</p>
<p>Grant, though in a fume of hot anger, had the good sense to choke back the
first impetuous reprimand trembling on his lips. In fact, wrath quickly
subsided into blank incredulity. He saw before him, not the conventional
detective who might be described as a superior Robinson—not even the
sinewy, sharp-eyed, and well-spoken type of man whom he had once heard giving
evidence in a famous jewel-robbery case—but rather one whom he would have
expected to meet in the bar of a certain well-known restaurant in Maiden Lane,
a corner of old London where literally all the world’s a stage, and all
the men and women merely players.</p>
<p>During his theatrical experiences he had come across scores of such men, dapper
little fellows, wizened of face yet curiously youthful in manner; but they,
each and all, were labeled “low comedian.” Certainly, a rare
intelligence gleamed from this man’s eyes, but that is an attribute not
often lacking in humorists who command high salaries because of their facility
in laughter-making. This man, too, had the wide, thin-lipped, mobile mouth of
the actor. His ivory-white, wrinkled forehead and cheeks, the bluish tint on
jaws and chin, his voice, his perky air, the very tilt of his straw hat, were
eloquent of the footlights. Even his opening words, bizarre and cheerfully
impertinent, smacked of “comic relief.”</p>
<p>“I figure prominently in this particular ‘piece,’”
snapped Grant. “May I ask your name, sir?”</p>
<p>“A wise precaution with suspicious characters,” rejoined the other,
smiling. Grant was suddenly reminded of a Japanese grinning at a joke, but he
bent over a card which the stranger had whisked out of a waistcoat pocket. He
read:</p>
<p><b>Mr. Charles F. Furneaux</b>,</p>
<p><i>Criminal Investigation Department</i>,</p>
<p><b>New Scotland Yard, S.W</b>.</p>
<p>He could not control himself. He gazed at Mr. Charles F. Furneaux with a
surprise that was not altogether flattering.</p>
<p>“Did the Commissioner of Police send <i>you</i> in response to my
telegram?” he said.</p>
<p>“That is what lawyers call a leading question,” came the prompt
retort. “And I hate lawyers. They darken understanding, and set honest
men at loggerheads.”</p>
<p>“But it happens to be very much to the point at this moment.”</p>
<p>“Well, Mr. Grant, if you really press for an answer, it is
‘Yes’ and ‘No.’ The Commissioner received a certain
telegram, but he may have acted on other grounds. Even Commissioners can be
creatures of impulse, or expediency, just as the situation demands.</p>
<p>“You are here, at any rate.”</p>
<p>“That is what legal jargon terms an admitted fact.”</p>
<p>“Then you had better begin by assuming that I am no villain.”</p>
<p>“It is assumed. It couldn’t well be otherwise after the excellent
character you have been given by this young lady.”</p>
<p>“She, at least, will speak well of me, I do believe,” said Grant,
with a strange bitterness, for his heart was sore because of the seeming
defection of his friend, the postmaster. “What I actually had in mind was
the stupidity of the local policeman, who is convinced that I am both a
criminal and a fool.”</p>
<p>“The two are often synonymous,” said Furneaux dryly. “But I
acquitted you on both counts, Mr. Grant, on hearing, and even seeing, how you
spent Monday evening.”</p>
<p>Grant, who had cooled down considerably, found a hint of badinage in this
comment.</p>
<p>“You have evidently been told that Miss Martin and I were star-gazing in
the garden of my house,” he said. “It happens to be true.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes. There was a very fine cluster of small stars in Canis Major,
south of Sirius, that night.”</p>
<p>“You know something about the constellations, then?” was the
astonished query.</p>
<p>“Enough for the purposes of Scotland Yard,” smirked Furneaux, who
had checked P. C. Robinson’s one-sided story by referring to
Whitaker’s Almanack. “It may relieve your mind if I tell you that I
have never seen a real live astronomer in the dock. Venus and Mars are often in
trouble, but their devoted observers seldom, if ever.”</p>
<p>Grant warmed to this strange species of detective, though, if pressed for an
instant decision, he would vastly have preferred that one of more orthodox
style had been intrusted with an inquiry so vital to his own happiness and good
repute. Eager, however, to pour forth his worries into any official ear, he
brought back the talk to a definite channel.</p>
<p>“Will you come to my place?” he asked. “I have much to say.
Let me assure you now, in Miss Martin’s presence, that she is no more
concerned in this ghastly business than any other young lady in the
village.”</p>
<p>“But she is interested. And <i>you</i> are. And I am. Why not discuss
matters here, for the present, I mean? We have a glorious view of your house
and grounds. We can see without being seen. None can overhear. I advise both of
you to go thoroughly into this matter here and now.”</p>
<p>Furneaux spoke emphatically. Even Doris put in a timid plea.</p>
<p>“Perhaps that would be the best thing to do,” she said. “Mr.
Furneaux has been most sympathetic. I am sure he understands things already in
a way that is quite wonderful to me.”</p>
<p>The very sound of her voice was comforting. Grant might have argued with the
detective, but could not resist Doris. Without further demur he went through
the whole story, giving precise details of events on the Monday night. Then the
recital widened out into a history of his relations with Adelaide Melhuish. He
omitted nothing. Doris gasped when she heard Superintendent Fowler’s
version of the view a coroner’s jury might take of her presence in the
garden of <i>The Hollies</i> at a late hour. But Grant did not spare her. He
reasoned that she ought to be prepared for an ordeal which could not be
avoided. He was governed by the astute belief that his very outspokenness in
this respect would weaken the inferences which the police might otherwise draw
from it.</p>
<p>Furneaux uttered never a word. He was a first-rate listener, though his
behavior was most undetective-like, since he hardly looked at Grant or the
girl, but seemed to devote his attention almost exclusively to the scenic
panorama in front.</p>
<p>However, when Grant came to the somewhat strenuous passage-at-arms of the
previous night between Ingerman and himself, the little man broke in at once.</p>
<p>“Isidor G. Ingerman?” he cried. “Is he a tall, lanky,
cadaverous, rather crooked person, with black hair turning gray, and an
absurdly melodious voice?”</p>
<p>“You have described him without an unnecessary word,” said Grant.</p>
<p>Furneaux clicked his tongue in a peculiar fashion.</p>
<p>“Go on!” he said. “It’s a regular romance—quite
in your line, Mr. Grant, of course, but none the less enthralling because, as
you so happily phrased Miss Martin’s lesson in astronomy, it happens to
be true.”</p>
<p>Grant was scrupulously fair to Ingerman. He admitted the
“financier’s” adroitness of speech, and made clear the fact
that if the visit had the levying of blackmail for its object such a possible
outcome was only hinted at vaguely. Being a novelist, one whose temperament
sought for sunshine rather than gloom in life, he wound up in lighter vein. The
ruse which tricked P. C. Robinson into a breathless scamper of nearly a mile
on a hot day in June was described with gusto. Doris, who knew the village
constable well, laughed outright, while Furneaux cackled shrilly. None who
might be watching the little group in that delightful garden, with its scent of
old-world flowers and drone of bees, could have guessed that a grewsome tragedy
formed their major theme.</p>
<p>The girl was the first to realize that even harmless merriment was in ill
accord with the presence of death, for the body of Adelaide Melhuish lay within
forty yards of the place where they stood.</p>
<p>“May I leave you now?” she inquired. “Father may be wanting
help in the office.”</p>
<p>“I shan’t detain you more than a few seconds,” said Furneaux
briskly. “On Monday evening you two young people parted at half past ten.
How do you fix the time?”</p>
<p>Doris answered without hesitation:</p>
<p>“The large window of Mr. Grant’s study was open, and we both heard
a clock in the hall chime the half-hour. I said, ‘Goodness me, is that
half past ten?’ and started for home at once. Mr. Grant came with me as
far as the bridge. When I reached my room, in exactly five minutes after
leaving <i>The Hollies</i>, I stood at the open window—that
window”—and she pointed to a dormer casement above the
sitting-room—“and looked out. It was a particularly fine night,
mild, but not very clear, as a slight mist often rises from the river after a
hot day in summer. I may have been there about ten minutes, no longer, when I
saw the study window of <i>The Hollies</i> thrown open, and Mr. Grant’s
figure was silhouetted by the lamp behind him. He seemed to be listening for
something, so I, who must have heard any unusual sound, listened too. There was
nothing. I could hear the ripple of the river beneath the bridge, so everything
was very still. After a minute, or two, perhaps—no longer—Mr. Grant
went in, and closed the window. Then I went to bed.”</p>
<p>“Did Mr. Grant draw any blind or curtains?”</p>
<p>“There are muslin curtains attached to each side of the window. One
cannot see into the room from a distance.”</p>
<p>Furneaux measured an imaginary line drawn from Doris’s bedroom to the
edge of the cliff, and prolonged it.</p>
<p>“Nor can you see the river or foot of the lawn from your room,” he
commented.</p>
<p>“No. In winter I can just make out the edge of the lawn. When the trees
are in leaf, all the lower part is hidden.”</p>
<p>“You had actually retired to rest about eleven, I suppose?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“So if Mr. Grant came out again you would not know?” Doris blushed
furiously, but her reply was unfaltering.</p>
<p>“I would have known during the next half-hour, at least,” she said.
“An inclined mirror hangs in my room. I use it sometimes for adjusting a
hat. The square of light from Mr. Grant’s room is reflected in it, and
any sudden increase in the illumination caused by opening the window or pulling
the curtains aside would certainly have caught my eye.”</p>
<p>“You have an unshakable witness in Miss Martin,” said Furneaux,
stabbing a finger at Grant. “Now, I’ll hurry off. You and I, Mr.
Grant, meet at Philippi, otherwise known as the crowner’s quest.”</p>
<p>Any benevolent intent he may have had in leaving these young people together
was, however, frustrated by Doris, whose composure seemed to have fled since
her statement about the mirror. She resolutely accompanied the detective, and
Grant had to follow. All three passed into the post office, Doris using the
private door. Mr. Martin looked up from his desk when they appeared, and
requested his daughter to check a bundle of postal orders. The pretext was
painfully obvious, but Grant was not so wishful now to clear up matters with
Doris’s father, as the girl herself might be trusted to pass on an
accurate account of the affair from beginning to end.</p>
<p>He was about to reach the street quick on Furneaux’s heels when the
little man turned suddenly.</p>
<p>“By the way, don’t you want a shilling’s worth of
stamps?” he said.</p>
<p>Grant smiled comprehension, and went back to the counter, where Doris herself
served him. She did not try to avoid his glance, but rather met it with a
baffling serenity oddly at variance with her momentary loss of self-possession
in the garden.</p>
<p>When he entered the street the detective had vanished.</p>
<p>He walked down the hill at a rapid pace, disregarding the eyes peeping at him
through open doorways, over narrow window-curtains, and covertly staring when
people passed in the roadway. The sensitive side of his temperament shrank from
this thinly-veiled hostility. He was by way of being popular in Steynholme, yet
not a soul spoke to him. Before he reached the bridge, the other side of him,
the man of action, of cool resource in an emergency, rose in rebellion against
the league of silly clodhoppers. Back he strode to the post office and dashed
off a telegram. It ran:</p>
<p>“Walter Hart, Savage Club, Adelphi, London. Come here and help to lay a
ghost.”</p>
<p>He signed it in full, name and address. Doris was gone, but her father received
it, and read the text in a bewildered way.</p>
<p>“I find myself deserted by my Steynholme friends so I am trying to import
one stanch one,” said Grant, almost vindictively.</p>
<p>Martin murmured the cost, and Grant stormed out again. This time, passing the
Hare and Hounds, he looked at door and windows. He caught a face scowling at
him over a brown wire blind bearing the words “Wines and Spirits”
on it in letters of dull gold. It was a commonplace type of face,
small-featured, ginger-moustached, and crowned by a billy-cock hat set at a
rakish angle. Its most marked characteristic was the positive hatred which
glowed in the sharp, pale-blue eyes. Grant wondered who this highly censorious
young man might be. At any rate, he meant to ascertain whether or not the
critic was susceptible of satire at his own expense. He walked up to the
window, elevated his eyebrows at the frowning person within, pretended to read
the words on the screen, looked again at the man inside, and shook his head
gravely in the manner of one who has accurately determined cause and effect.</p>
<p>Fred Elkin was quick-witted enough to appreciate Grant’s unspoken
comment. He was also unmannerly enough to put out his tongue. Then Grant
laughed, and turned on his heel.</p>
<p>Mr. Siddle, quietly observant of recent comings and goings, was standing at the
door of the shop, and missed no item of this dumb show. He raised both hands in
silent condemnation of Elkin’s childishness, whereupon the horse-dealer
jerked a thumb toward Grant’s retreating figure, and went through a rapid
pantomime of the hanging process. His crony disapproved again, and went in.
Now, both those men were on the jury panel, so, to all appearance, Grant would
be judged by at least one deadly enemy, whose animosity might or might not be
fairly balanced by the chemist’s impartial mind.</p>
<p>The tenant of <i>The Hollies</i> actually dreaded the loneliness of his
dwelling now, though it was that very quality which had drawn him to Steynholme
a year earlier. Work or reading was equally out of the question that day. He
sought the industrious Bates, who was trenching celery in the kitchen garden.</p>
<p>“Have ’ee made out owt about un, sir?” inquired that hardy
individual, pausing to spit on the handle of his spade.</p>
<p>“No,” said Grant. “The thing is a greater mystery than
ever.”</p>
<p>“I’m thinkin’ her mun ha’ bin killed by a loony,”
announced Bates.</p>
<p>“Something of the kind, no doubt. But why are the little less dangerous
loonies of Steynholme united in the belief that I am the guilty one?”</p>
<p>“Ax me another,” growled Bates.</p>
<p>“Who is spreading this rumor? Robinson?”</p>
<p>“’E dussen’t, sir. ’E looks fierce, but
’e’ll ’old ’is tongue. T’super will see to
that.”</p>
<p>“Someone is talking. That is quite certain.”</p>
<p>“There’s a chap in the ’Are an’ ’Ounds—kem
’ere last night.”</p>
<p>“Ingerman?”</p>
<p>“Ay, sir, that’s the name. ’E’s makin’ a song of
it, I hear.”</p>
<p>“Anybody else?”</p>
<p>“Fred Elkin is gassin’ about. Do ’ee know un? Breeds
’osses at Mount Farm, a mile that-a-way,” and Bates pointed to the
west.</p>
<p>Grant hazarded a guess, and described the face of condemnation seen at the inn.
Bates nodded.</p>
<p>“That’s un,” he said. Then he drove the spade into the rich
loam. “They do say,” he added, apparently as an after-thought,
“as Fred Elkin is mighty sweet on Doris, but her’ll ’ave nowt
to do wi’ un.”</p>
<p>Grant whistled softly. This explanation threw light on a dark place.</p>
<p>“The plot thickens,” he said. “Mr. Elkin becomes more
interesting than he looks. Are there other disappointed swains in the
offing?”</p>
<p>“What’s that, sir?”</p>
<p>“Has Miss Martin any other suitors?”</p>
<p>“Lots of ’em ’ud be after her like wasps round a plum-tree if
she’d give ’em ’alf a chance. But <i>you</i> put a stopper on
’em.”</p>
<p>Bates was blunt of speech, though a philosopher withal.</p>
<p>“Elkin is my only serious rival, then?” laughed Grant, passing off
as a joke a thrust which was shrewder than the gardener knew.</p>
<p>“’E ’as plenty of brass, but I reckon nowt on
’im,” was the contemptuous answer.</p>
<p>“Well, he is not a likely person to kill a woman he had never before
seen. Miss Martin will marry whom she chooses, no doubt. The present problem is
to find out who murdered Miss Melhuish. Now, had <i>I</i> been the victim you
would be thinking hard, Bates.”</p>
<p>“I tell ’ee, sir, it wur a loony.”</p>
<p>Nor was Bates to be moved from that opinion. He held to it, through thick and
thin, for many days.</p>
<p>Grant wandered into the front garden. His eyes rose involuntarily to the
distant post office, and he noticed at once that the dormer window was closed.
Yet Doris shared his own love of fresh air, and that window had always been
open till that very hour. Somehow, this simple thing seemed to shut him out of
her life. He walked to the river, and gazed at the spot where the body was
drawn ashore. In the absence of rain the water ran clear as gin, and the marks
made by the feet of Adelaide Melhuish’s murderer were still perceptible.
If only those misshapen blotches could reveal their secret! If only some
Heaven-sent ray of intuition would enable him to put the police on the track of
the criminal! Theoretically, a novelist and essayist should be a first-rate
detective, yet, brought face to face with an actual felony, here was one who
perforce remained blind and dumb.</p>
<p>Yet he was not blameworthy for failing to solve a mystery which was rapidly
establishing a record for bewildering elements. Wherein he did err most
lamentably was in his reading of a woman’s heart.</p>
<p>No answering telegram came from his friend in London. The day wore slowly till
it was time to attend the inquest. He found a crowd gathered in front of the
Hare and Hounds. Superintendent Fowler was there, and quite a number of
policemen, whose presence was explained when a buzz of excitement heralded
Grant’s arrival. He decided not to stand this sort of persecution a
moment longer.</p>
<p>Before the superintendent could interfere, he leaped on to a set of stone
mounting-steps which stood opposite the door. Instantly, seeing that he was
about to speak, the angry murmuring of the mob was hushed. He looked into a
hundred stolid faces, and stretched out his right hand.</p>
<p>“I cannot help feeling,” he said, in slow, incisive accents which
carried far, “that a set of peculiar circumstances has led you Steynholme
folk to suspect me of being responsible, in some way, for the death of the lady
whose body was found in the river near my house. Now, I want to tell you that I
am not only an innocent but a much-maligned man. The law of the land will
establish both facts in due season. But I want to warn some of you, too, I
shall not trouble to issue writs for libel. If any blackguard among you dares
to insult me openly, I shall smash his face.”</p>
<p>He knew when to stop. Superintendent Fowler’s nudge was not called for,
as the orator simply met the scrutiny of all those eyes without another word.</p>
<p>Curiously enough, the sense of justice is inherent in every haphazard gathering
of the public. Grant’s soldierly bearing, his calm defiance of hostile
opinion, the outspoken threat which he so plainly meant, won instant favor.
Someone shouted, “Hear, hear!” and the crowd applauded. From that
moment he had little to complain of in the attitude of the community as a
whole. There were subtle and dangerous enemies to be fought and conquered, but
Steynholme looked on, keen to learn of any new sensation, of course, but
placidly content that the final verdict should be left in the hands of the
authorities.</p>
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