<h2><SPAN name="chap13"></SPAN>Chapter XIII.<br/> Concerning Theodore Siddle</h2>
<p>Winter, being a cheerful cynic, had not erred when he appealed to that love of
mystery which, especially if it is spiced with a hint of harmless intrigue, is
innate in every feminine heart. Indeed, he was so assured of the success of his
somewhat dramatic move that as he walked to a rendezvous arranged with
Superintendent Fowler on the Knoleworth road he reviewed carefully certain
arguments meant to secure Doris’s assistance.</p>
<p>Passing <i>The Hollies</i>, he smiled at the notion that Furneaux would
undoubtedly have brought Grant to the conclave. It was just the sort of
difficult situation in which his colleague would have reveled. But the Chief
Inspector was more solid, more circumspect, even, singularly enough, more
sensitive to the probable comments of a crusty judge if counsel for the defense
contrived to elicit the facts.</p>
<p>“Anything fresh?” inquired the superintendent, when a smart car
drew up, and Winter entered.</p>
<p>Mr. Fowler was in plain clothes, and the blinds were half drawn. No one could
possibly recognize either of the occupants unless the car was halted, and the
inquisitor literally thrust his head inside. The motor was a private one,
borrowed for the occasion.</p>
<p>“Yes, a little,” said Winter, as the chauffeur put the engine in
gear. “Your man, Robinson, has been drawing Elkin, or Elkin drew
him—I am not quite sure which, but think it matterless either way.”</p>
<p>He sketched Robinson’s activities briefly, but in sufficient outline.</p>
<p>“A new figure has come on the screen—Siddle, the chemist,” he
added thoughtfully.</p>
<p>“Siddle!” Mr. Fowler was surprised. “Why, he is supposed to
be a model of the law-abiding citizen.”</p>
<p>“I don’t say he has lost his character in that respect,” said
Winter. “Still, he puzzles me. Elkin is a loud-mouthed fool. The verbal
bricks he hurls at Grant are generally half baked, and crumble into dust.
Hitherto, Siddle has tried to repress him, with a transparent honesty that
rather worried me. On Friday night, however, Siddle attacked Grant with
poisoned arrows. He did more damage in two minutes than Elkin could achieve in
as many months.”</p>
<p>“How?”</p>
<p>“He showed very clearly that Grant was guilty of gross bad taste in
inviting Mr. Martin and his daughter to dinner that evening. I’m inclined
to agree with him, if the story has been told fairly. But that is beside the
main issue. Siddle aroused the sleeping dogs of the village, and the pack is in
full cry again. Grant seems to have been popular here; he had almost recovered
from the blow of Miss Melhuish’s death by the straightforward speech he
made before the inquest. But Siddle threw him back into the mud by a few
skillful words. What is Siddle’s record? Is he a local man?”</p>
<p>“I think not. Robinson can tell us.”</p>
<p>“Robinson says he ‘believes’ Siddle is a widower. That
doesn’t argue long and close knowledge.”</p>
<p>“We must look into it. Robinson has been stationed here four years.
Siddle is not old, but he has been in business in Steynholme more years than
that. But—you’ll pardon me, I’m sure, Mr. Winter—may I
take it that you are really interested in the chemist’s history?”</p>
<p>The superintendent was perplexed, or he would not have adopted his professional
method of semi-apologetic questions with a man from the C.I.D.</p>
<p>“I hardly know what I’m interested in,” laughed Winter.
“Grant didn’t kill the lady. I shall be slow to credit Elkin with
being the scoundrel he looks. Siddle, and Tomlin, if you please, are regarded
as starters in the Doris Martin Matrimonial Stakes, and I don’t think
Tomlin could ever murder anything but the King’s English. It is
Siddle’s <i>volte face</i> that bothers me.”</p>
<p>“Um!” murmured Mr. Fowler. He was not an uneducated man, but
<i>volte face</i>, correctly pronounced, was unfamiliar in his ears.</p>
<p>“The change was so marked,” went on the detective. “I gather
that Siddle is a stickler for charity and fair dealing. He didn’t abandon
the role, of course. It was the sheer ingenuity of his method that caught my
attention. So I simply catalogue him for research.”</p>
<p>“Has Miss Martin promised to meet us?” inquired the other, feeling
that he was on the track of <i>volte face</i>.</p>
<p>“No. But there she is!” cried Winter. “She has just heard the
car. Tell your chauffeur to slow up. The road is empty otherwise. By the way,
you help her in. She might be a bit shy of me, and I don’t want a
second’s delay.”</p>
<p>Winter’s judgment was not at fault. Doris <i>was</i> feeling a trifle
uncertain, seeing that she was about to encounter a complete stranger.
Moreover, she had come a good half mile from the shop whence the cakes for tea
were to be procured at the back door, and as a favor. Her eyes were fixed on
the slowing car with a timid anxiety that betrayed no small degree of doubt as
to the outcome of this Sunday afternoon escapade. She was pale and nervous. At
that moment Doris wished herself safe at home again.</p>
<p>“One word,” broke in the superintendent hurriedly. “Why are
you so sure that Grant is innocent, Mr. Winter?”</p>
<p>“I’m sure of nothing with regard to this case. But I have great
faith in Furneaux’s flair for the true scent. It has never failed
yet.”</p>
<p>Mr. Fowler wished his companion would not use such uncommon words. However, he
got out, and took off his hat with a courteous sweep. Doris had to look twice
at him. Hitherto, she had always seen him in uniform. Winter smiled at the
unmistakable expression of relief in her face. She was almost self-possessed as
she took the seat by his side.</p>
<p>“Good day, Mr. Winter,” she said.</p>
<p>“Mr. Franklin, please. Better become used to my pseudonym.... Plenty of
room for your feet, Mr. Fowler? That’s it. Now we’re comfy. The
chauffeur will bring us back here in half an hour, Miss Martin. Will that suit
your convenience?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes. I am free till nearly four o’clock. We have a guest to
tea then.”</p>
<p>“I have a well-developed bump of curiosity these days. Who is it, may I
ask?”</p>
<p>“Mr. Siddle, the local chemist.”</p>
<p>“Indeed. An old friend, I suppose?”</p>
<p>“We have known him seven years, ever since he came to Steynholme.”</p>
<p>“Ah. He is not a native of the place?”</p>
<p>“No. He bought Mr. Benson’s business. He’s a Londoner, I
believe.”</p>
<p>“Is there—a Mrs. Siddle?”</p>
<p>“No. I—er—that is to say, gossip has it that he was married,
but his wife died.”</p>
<p>“He doesn’t speak of her? Is that it? One would have thought that
in a house where he is well known—”</p>
<p>“We don’t really know him well. No one does, I think.”</p>
<p>“You’ve invited him to tea, at any rate,” laughed Winter.</p>
<p>“No,” said Doris. “He invited himself. At least, so I
gathered from dad.”</p>
<p>“Ah, well. He feels lonely, no doubt, and wishes to chat about recent
strange events in Steynholme. And that brings me to the reason why I sought
this chat under such peculiar conditions. You realize my handicap, Miss Martin?
If I were seen talking to you, or even entering your house as apart from the
post office, people would begin to wonder. You follow that, don’t
you?”</p>
<p>Yes, Doris did follow it. What she did not follow was the veiled admiration in
Superintendent Fowler’s glance at the detective. Those few
inconsequential questions had shed a flood of light on Siddle’s past and
present, yet the informant was blissfully unaware of their real purport. And
the way was opened so deftly. The purchase of a chemist’s business would
almost certainly be negotiated through a local lawyer. Let him be found, and
Siddle’s pre-Steynholme days could be “looked into,” as the
police phrase has it. The superintendent had the rare merit of being candid
with himself. He had no previous experience of Scotland Yard men or methods,
and was inclined to be skeptical about Furneaux. But Winter’s prompt use
of a chance opening, and the restraint which cut off the investigation before
the girl could suspect any ulterior motive, displayed a technique which the
Sussex Constabulary had few opportunities of acquiring.</p>
<p>“Now, Miss Martin,” began Winter, “if ever you have the
misfortune to fall ill—touch wood, please—and call in a doctor,
you’ll tell him the facts, eh?”</p>
<p>“Why consult him at all, if I don’t?” she smiled.</p>
<p>“Exactly. To-day I’m somewhat in the position of a Harley-street
specialist, summoned to assist an eminent local practitioner in Dr. Fowler.
That’s a sort of gentle preliminary, leading up to the disagreeable duty
of putting some questions of a personal nature. What you may answer will not go
beyond ourselves. I promise you that. You will not be quoted, or requested to
prove your statements. Such a thing would be absurd. If I were really a doctor,
and you needed my advice, you might easily describe your symptoms all wrong. It
would be my business to listen, and deduce the truth, and I would never dream
of rating you for having misled me. You see my point?”</p>
<p>“Yes, but Mr. Win—Mr. Franklin, I know nothing whatever about the
murder.”</p>
<p>“I’m sure you don’t. It was a wicked trick of Fate that took
you to Mr. Grant’s garden last Monday night.”</p>
<p>“It was really an astronomical almanac,” retorted Doris, who now
felt a growing confidence in this nice-spoken official. “Sirius is a star
remarkable for its beautiful changing lights, and on Monday evening was at its
best. I think I ought to explain,” and she blushed delightfully,
“that the village gossip about Mr. Grant and me is entirely mistaken. We
are not—well, I had better use plain English—we are not lovers. My
father and I are just on close, friendly terms with Mr. Grant. I—my
position hardly warrants even that relationship with an author of some
distinction. But please set aside any notion of us as likely to become engaged.
For one thing, it is preposterous. For another, I shall not leave my
father.”</p>
<p>Poor Doris! She little guessed how accurately this skilled student of human
nature read the hidden thought behind that vehement protest. Even the note of
vague rebellion against social disabilities was pathetic yet illuminating. Of
course, he took her quite seriously.</p>
<p>“Let us keep to the hard road of fact,” he said. “What you
really mean is that Mr. Grant has never made love to you. But I must be candid,
young lady. There is no earthly reason why he shouldn’t, though I could
name offhand half a dozen why he should.... Well, well, I must not pay
compliments. My friend, Mr. Furneaux, can manage that with much greater
facility, being half a Frenchman. And now I’m going to say an unpleasant
thing. I ask your forgiveness in advance. Both Mr. Furneaux and I agree in the
opinion that your imaginary love affair is indissolubly bound up with the
mystery of Miss Melhuish’s death. In a word, I have brought you here
today to discuss your prospective marriage, and nothing else. That astonishes
you, eh? Well, it’s the truth, as I shall proceed to make clear.
There’s a Mr. Fred Elkin, for instance—”</p>
<p>Doris uttered a little laugh of dismay. Winter’s emphatic words had
astounded her, but the horse-dealer’s name acted as comic relief.</p>
<p>“I can’t bear the man,” she protested.</p>
<p>“I have no doubt. But you ought to know that he is loudly proclaiming his
determination to marry you before the year is out.”</p>
<p>The girl’s face reddened again, and her eyes sparkled.</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t marry him if he were a peer of the realm,” she
said indignantly.</p>
<p>“Quite so. But he is an avowed suitor. Now don’t be vexed. Has he
never declared his intentions to <i>you</i>?”</p>
<p>“He would never dare. I sing and act a little, at village concerts and
dramatic performances, and he has annoyed me at times by an officious pretense
that he was deputed by my father to see me home. I came here quite a little
girl, so people learnt to use my Christian name. I don’t object to it at
all. But I simply hate hearing it on Mr. Elkin’s lips.”</p>
<p>“Exit Fred!” said Winter solemnly. “Next!”</p>
<p>Doris, after a period of calm, was now profoundly uncomfortable. This kind of
prying was the last thing she had expected. She had come prepared to defend
Grant, but, beyond one exceedingly personal reference, the detective had
studiously shut him out of the conversation.</p>
<p>“What am I to say?” she cried. “Do you want a list of all the
young men who make sheep’s eyes at me?”</p>
<p>“No. I can get that from the Census Bureau. Come, now, Miss Martin.
<i>You</i> know. Has any man in the village led you to suspect, shall we put
it? that sometime or other, he might ask you to become his wife?”</p>
<p>Lo, and behold! Doris’s pretty eyes filled with tears. Superintendent
Fowler was so pleased at hearing Scotland Yard introducing a parenthetical
query into its sentences that he, sitting opposite, was taken aback when Winter
said in a fatherly way:</p>
<p>“I’ve been rather clumsy, I’m afraid. But it cannot be
helped. I must go blundering on. I’m groping in the dark, you know, but
it’s a thousand pities I shall have to tread on <i>your</i> toes.”</p>
<p>“It isn’t that,” sobbed Doris. “I hate to put my
thoughts into words. That’s all. There <i>is</i> a man whom
I’m—afraid of.”</p>
<p>“Siddle?”</p>
<p>She turned on Winter a face of sudden awe.</p>
<p>“How can you possibly guess?” she said wonderingly, and sheer
bewilderment dried her tears.</p>
<p>“My business is nine-tenths guesswork. At any rate, we are on firm ground
now. If you could please yourself, I suppose, Mr. Siddle would not come to tea
to-day!”</p>
<p>“He certainly would not,” declared the girl emphatically.</p>
<p>“You believe he is coming for a purpose?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Elkin—I must drag him in again for an instant—pretends that
the commotion aroused in the village by this murder would incline you favorably
to a proposal of marriage. Mr. Siddle may have discovered some virtue in the
theory.”</p>
<p>“Did Mr. Elkin really hint that I needed <i>him</i> as a shield?”</p>
<p>Doris was genuinely angry now. She little imagined that Winter was playing on
her emotions with a master hand.</p>
<p>“Don’t waste any wrath on Elkin,” he soothed her. “The
fellow isn’t worth it. But his crude idea might be developed more subtly
by an abler man.”</p>
<p>“I think it odd that Mr. Siddle should choose to-day, of all days, for a
visit,” she admitted.</p>
<p>Winter relapsed into silence for a while. The car was running through a
charming countryside, and a glimpse of the sea was obtainable from the crest of
each hill. Mr. Fowler was too circumspect to break in on the thread of his
coadjutor’s thoughts. The inquiry had taken a curious turn, and was
momentarily beyond his grasp.</p>
<p>“It’s singular, but it’s true,” said the detective
musingly when next he spoke, “that I am now going to ask you to act
differently than was in my mind when I sought this interview. I should vastly
like to be present when Siddle bares his heart to you this afternoon.</p>
<p>“I can invite you to tea.”</p>
<p>“Alas! that won’t serve our ends. But, if you feel you have a
purpose, you will be nerved to deal with him. Bring him out into that secluded
garden of yours—”</p>
<p>“The first thing he will suggest,” and Doris’s voice waxed
unconsciously bitter. “He knows that dad will be busy with the mails for
an hour after tea.”</p>
<p>“Good!”</p>
<p>“I think it bad, most disagreeable.”</p>
<p>“You won’t find the position so awkward if you are playing a part.
And that is what I want—a bit of clever acting. Lean on those railings,
and make Siddle believe that your heart is on Mr. Grant’s lawn. You know
the kind of thing I mean. Dreamy eyes, listless manner, inattention, with
smiling apologies. You will annoy Siddle, and a cautious man in a temper
becomes less cautious. Force him to avow his real thoughts. You will learn
something, trust me.”</p>
<p>“About what?”</p>
<p>There were no tears in Doris’s eyes. They were wide open in wonderment.</p>
<p>“About his attitude to this tragedy. Do this, and you will be giving Mr.
Grant the greatest possible help. He needs it. Next Wednesday, at the adjourned
inquest, he will be put on the rack. Ingerman will fee counsel to be
vindictive, merciless. Such men are to be hired. Their reputation is built up
on the slaughter of reputations. I want to understand Siddle before Wednesday.
By the way, what’s his other name?”</p>
<p>“Theodore.”</p>
<p>“Theodore Siddle. Unusual. Well, your half hour is nearly up. Will you do
what I ask?”</p>
<p>“I’ll try. May I put one question?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“You said you had something altogether different in view before we met.
What was it?”</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you—let me see—I’ll tell you on
Thursday.”</p>
<p>“Why not now?”</p>
<p>“Because it is the hardest thing in the world for a woman to be
single-minded, in the limited sense of concentration, I mean. Focus your wits
on Siddle to-day. I don’t suggest any plan. I leave that to your own
intelligence. Vex him, and let him talk.”</p>
<p>“Vex him!”</p>
<p>“Yes. What man won’t get mad if he notices that his best girl is
thinking about a rival.”</p>
<p>This time Doris did not blush. She was troubled and serious, very serious.</p>
<p>“I’ll do what I can,” she promised. “When shall I see
you again?”</p>
<p>“Soon. There’s no hurry. All this is preparatory for
Wednesday.”</p>
<p>“Am I to tell my father nothing?”</p>
<p>“Please yourself. Not at present. I recommend you.”</p>
<p>The car had stopped. It sped on when Doris alighted. She would be home with her
cakes at three o’clock, and Mr. Martin would never have noticed her
absence.</p>
<p>“A fine bit of work, if I may say so,” exclaimed Fowler
appreciatively. “But I am jiggered if I can imagine what you’re
driving at.”</p>
<p>Winter was cutting the end off a big cigar. He finished the operation to his
liking before answering earnestly:</p>
<p>“We stand or fall by the result of that girl’s efforts. Furneaux
thinks so, and I agree with him absolutely. After five days, where are we, Mr.
Fowler? In the dark, plus a brigand’s hat and hair. But there’s a
queer belief in some parts of England that a phosphorescent gleam shows at
night over a deep pool in which a dead body lies. That’s just how I feel
about Siddle. The man’s an enigma. What sort of place is Steynholme for a
chemist of his capacities? Dr. Foxton has the highest regard for him
professionally, and I’m told he doctors people for miles around. Yet he
lives the life of a recluse. An old woman comes by day to prepare his meals,
and tidy the house and shop. His sole relaxation is an hour of an evening in
the village inn, his visits there being uninterrupted since the murder. He was
there on the night of the murder, too. For the rest, he is alone, shut off from
the world. Without knowing it, he’s going to fall into deep waters
to-day, and he’ll emit sparks, or I’m a Chinaman.... I’ll
leave you here. Good-by! See you on Tuesday, after lunch.”</p>
<p>The superintendent drove on alone. He pondered the Steynholme affair in all its
bearings, but mostly did he weigh up Winter and Furneaux. At last, he sighed.</p>
<p>“London ways, and London books, and London detectives!” he
muttered. “We’re not up to date in Sussex. Now, if I could please
myself, I’d be hot-foot after Elkin. I see what Winter has in his mind,
but surely Elkin fills the bill, and Siddle doesn’t.... What was that
word—volt what!”</p>
<p>Doris was lucky. She met Mr. Siddle as she emerged from the back passage to the
cake-shop. Resolving instantly that if an unpleasant thing had to be done it
should at least be done well, she smiled brightly.</p>
<p>“See what you have driven me to—breaking the Sabbath,” she
cried, holding up the bag of cakes.</p>
<p>“Tea and bread-and-butter with you would be a feast for the gods,”
said Siddle.</p>
<p>“Now you’re adapting Omar Khayyam.”</p>
<p>“Who’s he?”</p>
<p>“A Persian poet of long ago.”</p>
<p>“I never read poetry. But, if your tastes lie that way, I’ll
accomplish some more adaptation.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, please. Cakes for you, Mr. Siddle; poets for giddy young things
like me.”</p>
<p>There was a sting in the words. Doris preened herself on having carried out the
detective’s instructions to the letter thus far.</p>
<p>Arrived in the house she found her father still in the garden, examining some
larvae under a microscope. He looked severe rather than studious. He might have
been an omnipotent being who had detected a malefactor in a criminal act. Was
Steynholme and its secret felon being regarded in that way by the providence
which, for some inscrutable purpose, permitted, yet would infallibly punish, a
dreadful murder? She was a girl of devout mind, and the notion was appalling in
its direct application to current events.</p>
<p>In the meantime the chemist, evidently taking a Sunday afternoon
constitutional, came on Winter, who was leaning on a wall of the bridge and
looking down stream—Grant’s house being on the left.</p>
<p>He would have passed, in his wonted unobtrusive way, but the detective hailed
him with a cheery “Good day, Mr. Siddle. Are you a fisherman?”</p>
<p>“No, Mr. Franklin, I’m not,” he answered.</p>
<p>“Well, now, I’m surprised. You are just the sort of man whom I
should expect to find attached to a rod and line—even watching a
float.”</p>
<p>“I tried once when I was younger, but I could neither impale a worm nor
extract a hook. My gorge rose against either practice. I am a vegetarian, for
the same reason. If it were not for this disturbing tragedy you would have
heard Hobbs, the butcher, rallying me about my rabbit-meat, as he calls my
food.”</p>
<p>“Well, well!” laughed Winter. “Your ideas and mine clash in
some respects. I look on a well-grilled steak as a gift from Heaven, and after
it, or before it—I don’t care which—let me have three hours
whipping a good trout stream. With the right cast of flies I could show a fine
bag from this very stretch of water.”</p>
<p>“Why not ask Mr. Grant’s permission? It would be interesting to
learn whether he will allow others to try their luck.”</p>
<p>Mr. Siddle strolled on. Winter bent over, keen to discern the gray-backed fish
which must be lurking in those clear depths and rippling shallows.</p>
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