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+Project Gutenberg's Chronicles of Martin Hewitt, by Arthur Morrison
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Chronicles of Martin Hewitt
+
+Author: Arthur Morrison
+
+Release Date: October 22, 2011 [EBook #37820]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRONICLES OF MARTIN HEWITT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by Cornell University Digital Collections)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Appletons' Town and Country Library
+ No. 191
+
+
+
+
+ CHRONICLES OF MARTIN HEWITT
+
+
+ BY
+
+ ARTHUR MORRISON
+ AUTHOR OF TALES OF MEAN STREETS, ETC.
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
+ 1896
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1895, 1896,
+ BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ THE IVY COTTAGE MYSTERY 1
+
+ THE NICOBAR BULLION CASE 42
+
+ THE HOLFORD WILL CASE 94
+
+ THE CASE OF THE MISSING HAND 138
+
+ THE CASE OF LAKER, ABSCONDED 187
+
+ THE CASE OF THE LOST FOREIGNER 228
+
+
+
+
+CHRONICLES OF MARTIN HEWITT.
+
+
+
+
+THE IVY COTTAGE MYSTERY.
+
+
+I had been working double tides for a month: at night on my morning
+paper, as usual; and in the morning on an evening paper as _locum
+tenens_ for another man who was taking a holiday. This was an exhausting
+plan of work, although it only actually involved some six hours'
+attendance a day, or less, at the two offices. I turned up at the
+headquarters of my own paper at ten in the evening, and by the time I
+had seen the editor, selected a subject, written my leader, corrected
+the slips, chatted, smoked, and so on, and cleared off, it was very
+usually one o'clock. This meant bed at two, or even three, after supper
+at the club.
+
+This was all very well at ordinary periods, when any time in the morning
+would do for rising, but when I had to be up again soon after seven, and
+round at the evening paper office by eight, I naturally felt a little
+worn and disgusted with things by midday, after a sharp couple of
+hours' leaderette scribbling and paragraphing, with attendant sundries.
+
+But the strain was over, and on the first day of comparative comfort I
+indulged in a midday breakfast and the first undisgusted glance at a
+morning paper for a month. I felt rather interested in an inquest, begun
+the day before, on the body of a man whom I had known very slightly
+before I took to living in chambers.
+
+His name was Gavin Kingscote, and he was an artist of a casual and
+desultory sort, having, I believe, some small private means of his own.
+As a matter of fact, he had boarded in the same house in which I had
+lodged myself for a while, but as I was at the time a late homer and a
+fairly early riser, taking no regular board in the house, we never
+became much acquainted. He had since, I understood, made some judicious
+Stock Exchange speculations, and had set up house in Finchley.
+
+Now the news was that he had been found one morning murdered in his
+smoking-room, while the room itself, with others, was in a state of
+confusion. His pockets had been rifled, and his watch and chain were
+gone, with one or two other small articles of value. On the night of the
+tragedy a friend had sat smoking with him in the room where the murder
+took place, and he had been the last person to see Mr. Kingscote alive.
+A jobbing gardener, who kept the garden in order by casual work from
+time to time, had been arrested in consequence of footprints exactly
+corresponding with his boots, having been found on the garden beds near
+the French window of the smoking-room.
+
+I finished my breakfast and my paper, and Mrs. Clayton, the housekeeper,
+came to clear my table. She was sister of my late landlady of the house
+where Kingscote had lodged, and it was by this connection that I had
+found my chambers. I had not seen the housekeeper since the crime was
+first reported, so I now said:
+
+"This is shocking news of Mr. Kingscote, Mrs. Clayton. Did you know him
+yourself?"
+
+She had apparently only been waiting for some such remark to burst out
+with whatever information she possessed.
+
+"Yes, sir," she exclaimed: "shocking indeed. Pore young feller! I see
+him often when I was at my sister's, and he was always a nice, quiet
+gentleman, so different from some. My sister, she's awful cut up, sir, I
+assure you. And what d'you think 'appened, sir, only last Tuesday? You
+remember Mr. Kingscote's room where he painted the woodwork so beautiful
+with gold flowers, and blue, and pink? He used to tell my sister she'd
+always have something to remember him by. Well, two young fellers,
+gentlemen I can't call them, come and took that room (it being to let),
+and went and scratched off all the paint in mere wicked mischief, and
+then chopped up all the panels into sticks and bits! Nice sort o'
+gentlemen them! And then they bolted in the morning, being afraid, I
+s'pose, of being made to pay after treating a pore widder's property
+like that. That was only Tuesday, and the very next day the pore young
+gentleman himself's dead, murdered in his own 'ouse, and him going to be
+married an' all! Dear, dear! I remember once he said----"
+
+Mrs. Clayton was a good soul, but once she began to talk some one else
+had to stop her. I let her run on for a reasonable time, and then rose
+and prepared to go out. I remembered very well the panels that had been
+so mischievously destroyed. They made the room the show-room of the
+house, which was an old one. They were indeed less than half finished
+when I came away, and Mrs. Lamb, the landlady, had shown them to me one
+day when Kingscote was out. All the walls of the room were panelled and
+painted white, and Kingscote had put upon them an eccentric but charming
+decoration, obviously suggested by some of the work of Mr. Whistler.
+Tendrils, flowers, and butterflies in a quaint convention wandered
+thinly from panel to panel, giving the otherwise rather uninteresting
+room an unwonted atmosphere of richness and elegance. The lamentable
+jackasses who had destroyed this had certainly selected the best feature
+of the room whereon to inflict their senseless mischief.
+
+I strolled idly downstairs, with no particular plan for the afternoon in
+my mind, and looked in at Hewitt's offices. Hewitt was reading a note,
+and after a little chat he informed me that it had been left an hour
+ago, in his absence, by the brother of the man I had just been speaking
+of.
+
+"He isn't quite satisfied," Hewitt said, "with the way the police are
+investigating the case, and asks me to run down to Finchley and look
+round. Yesterday I should have refused, because I have five cases in
+progress already, but to-day I find that circumstances have given me a
+day or two. Didn't you say you knew the man?"
+
+"Scarcely more than by sight. He was a boarder in the house at Chelsea
+where I stayed before I started chambers."
+
+"Ah, well; I think I shall look into the thing. Do you feel particularly
+interested in the case? I mean, if you've nothing better to do, would
+you come with me?"
+
+"I shall be very glad," I said. "I was in some doubt what to do with
+myself. Shall you start at once?"
+
+"I think so. Kerrett, just call a cab. By the way, Brett, which paper
+has the fullest report of the inquest yesterday? I'll run over it as we
+go down."
+
+As I had only seen one paper that morning, I could not answer Hewitt's
+question. So we bought various papers as we went along in the cab, and I
+found the reports while Martin Hewitt studied them. Summarised, this was
+the evidence given--
+
+_Sarah Dodson_, general servant, deposed that she had been in service at
+Ivy Cottage, the residence of the deceased, for five months, the only
+other regular servant being the housekeeper and cook. On the evening of
+the previous Tuesday both servants retired a little before eleven,
+leaving Mr. Kingscote with a friend in the smoking or sitting room. She
+never saw her master again alive. On coming downstairs the following
+morning and going to open the smoking-room windows, she was horrified to
+discover the body of Mr. Kingscote lying on the floor of the room with
+blood about the head. She at once raised an alarm, and, on the
+instructions of the housekeeper, fetched a doctor, and gave information
+to the police. In answer to questions, witness stated she had heard no
+noise of any sort during the night, nor had anything suspicious
+occurred.
+
+_Hannah Carr_, housekeeper and cook, deposed that she had been in the
+late Mr. Kingscote's service since he had first taken Ivy Cottage--a
+period of rather more than a year. She had last seen the deceased alive
+on the evening of the previous Tuesday, at half-past ten, when she
+knocked at the door of the smoking-room, where Mr. Kingscote was sitting
+with a friend, to ask if he would require anything more. Nothing was
+required, so witness shortly after went to bed. In the morning she was
+called by the previous witness, who had just gone downstairs, and found
+the body of deceased lying as described. Deceased's watch and chain were
+gone, as also was a ring he usually wore, and his pockets appeared to
+have been turned out. All the ground floor of the house was in
+confusion, and a bureau, a writing-table, and various drawers were
+open--a bunch of keys usually carried by deceased being left hanging at
+one keyhole. Deceased had drawn some money from the bank on the Tuesday,
+for current expenses; how much she did not know. She had not heard or
+seen anything suspicious during the night. Besides Dodson and herself,
+there were no regular servants; there was a charwoman, who came
+occasionally, and a jobbing gardener, living near, who was called in as
+required.
+
+_Mr. James Vidler_, surgeon, had been called by the first witness
+between seven and eight on Wednesday morning. He found the deceased
+lying on his face on the floor of the smoking-room, his feet being about
+eighteen inches from the window, and his head lying in the direction of
+the fireplace. He found three large contused wounds on the head, any one
+of which would probably have caused death. The wounds had all been
+inflicted, apparently, with the same blunt instrument--probably a club
+or life preserver, or other similar weapon. They could not have been
+done with the poker. Death was due to concussion of the brain, and
+deceased had probably been dead seven or eight hours when witness saw
+him. He had since examined the body more closely, but found no marks at
+all indicative of a struggle having taken place; indeed, from the
+position of the wounds and their severity, he should judge that the
+deceased had been attacked unawares from behind, and had died at once.
+The body appeared to be perfectly healthy.
+
+Then there was police evidence, which showed that all the doors and
+windows were found shut and completely fastened, except the front door,
+which, although shut, was not bolted. There were shutters behind the
+French windows in the smoking-room, and these were found fastened. No
+money was found in the bureau, nor in any of the opened drawers, so that
+if any had been there, it had been stolen. The pockets were entirely
+empty, except for a small pair of nail scissors, and there was no watch
+upon the body, nor a ring. Certain footprints were found on the garden
+beds, which had led the police to take certain steps. No footprints
+were to be seen on the garden path, which was hard gravel.
+
+_Mr. Alexander Campbell_, stockbroker, stated that he had known deceased
+for some few years, and had done business for him. He and Mr. Kingscote
+frequently called on one another, and on Tuesday evening they dined
+together at Ivy Cottage. They sat smoking and chatting till nearly
+twelve o'clock, when Mr. Kingscote himself let him out, the servants
+having gone to bed. Here the witness proceeded rather excitedly: "That
+is all I know of this horrible business, and I can say nothing else.
+What the police mean by following and watching me----"
+
+_The Coroner_: "Pray be calm, Mr. Campbell. The police must do what
+seems best to them in a case of this sort. I am sure you would not have
+them neglect any means of getting at the truth."
+
+_Witness_: "Certainly not. But if they suspect me, why don't they say
+so? It is intolerable that I should be----"
+
+_The Coroner_: "Order, order, Mr. Campbell. You are here to give
+evidence."
+
+The witness then, in answer to questions, stated that the French windows
+of the smoking-room had been left open during the evening, the weather
+being very warm. He could not recollect whether or not deceased closed
+them before he left, but he certainly did not close the shutters.
+Witness saw nobody near the house when he left.
+
+_Mr. Douglas Kingscote_, architect, said deceased was his brother. He
+had not seen him for some months, living as he did in another part of
+the country. He believed his brother was fairly well off, and he knew
+that he had made a good amount by speculation in the last year or two.
+Knew of no person who would be likely to owe his brother a grudge, and
+could suggest no motive for the crime except ordinary robbery. His
+brother was to have been married in a few weeks. Questioned further on
+this point, witness said that the marriage was to have taken place a
+year ago, and it was with that view that Ivy Cottage, deceased's
+residence, was taken. The lady, however, sustained a domestic
+bereavement, and afterwards went abroad with her family: she was,
+witness believed, shortly expected back to England.
+
+_William Bates_, jobbing gardener, who was brought up in custody, was
+cautioned, but elected to give evidence. Witness, who appeared to be
+much agitated, admitted having been in the garden of Ivy Cottage at four
+in the morning, but said that he had only gone to attend to certain
+plants, and knew absolutely nothing of the murder. He however admitted
+that he had no order for work beyond what he had done the day before.
+Being further pressed, witness made various contradictory statements,
+and finally said that he had gone to take certain plants away.
+
+The inquest was then adjourned.
+
+This was the case as it stood--apparently not a case presenting any very
+striking feature, although there seemed to me to be doubtful
+peculiarities in many parts of it. I asked Hewitt what he thought.
+
+"Quite impossible to think anything, my boy, just yet; wait till we see
+the place. There are any number of possibilities. Kingscote's friend,
+Campbell, may have come in again, you know, by way of the window--or he
+may not. Campbell may have owed him money or something--or he may not.
+The anticipated wedding may have something to do with it--or, again,
+_that_ may not. There is no limit to the possibilities, as far as we can
+see from this report--a mere dry husk of the affair. When we get closer
+we shall examine the possibilities by the light of more detailed
+information. One _probability_ is that the wretched gardener is
+innocent. It seems to me that his was only a comparatively blameless
+manoeuvre not unheard of at other times in his trade. He came at four
+in the morning to steal away the flowers he had planted the day before,
+and felt rather bashful when questioned on the point. Why should he
+trample on the beds, else? I wonder if the police thought to examine the
+beds for traces of rooting up, or questioned the housekeeper as to any
+plants being missing? But we shall see."
+
+We chatted at random as the train drew near Finchley, and I mentioned
+_inter alia_ the wanton piece of destruction perpetrated at Kingscote's
+late lodgings. Hewitt was interested.
+
+"That was curious," he said, "very curious. Was anything else damaged?
+Furniture and so forth?"
+
+"I don't know. Mrs. Clayton said nothing of it, and I didn't ask her.
+But it was quite bad enough as it was. The decoration was really good,
+and I can't conceive a meaner piece of tomfoolery than such an attack on
+a decent woman's property."
+
+Then Hewitt talked of other cases of similar stupid damage by creatures
+inspired by a defective sense of humour, or mere love of mischief. He
+had several curious and sometimes funny anecdotes of such affairs at
+museums and picture exhibitions, where the damage had been so great as
+to induce the authorities to call him in to discover the offender. The
+work was not always easy, chiefly from the mere absence of intelligible
+motive; nor, indeed, always successful. One of the anecdotes related to
+a case of malicious damage to a picture--the outcome of blind artistic
+jealousy--a case which had been hushed up by a large expenditure in
+compensation. It would considerably startle most people, could it be
+printed here, with the actual names of the parties concerned.
+
+Ivy Cottage, Finchley, was a compact little house, standing in a compact
+little square of garden, little more than a third of an acre, or perhaps
+no more at all. The front door was but a dozen yards or so back from the
+road, but the intervening space was well treed and shrubbed. Mr. Douglas
+Kingscote had not yet returned from town, but the housekeeper, an
+intelligent, matronly woman, who knew of his intention to call in Martin
+Hewitt, was ready to show us the house.
+
+"_First_," Hewitt said, when we stood in the smoking-room, "I observe
+that somebody has shut the drawers and the bureau. That is unfortunate.
+Also, the floor has been washed and the carpet taken up, which is much
+worse. That, I suppose, was because the police had finished their
+examination, but it doesn't help me to make one at all. Has
+_anything_--anything _at all_--been left as it was on Tuesday morning?"
+
+"Well, sir, you see everything was in such a muddle," the housekeeper
+began, "and when the police had done----"
+
+"Just so. I know. You 'set it to rights,' eh? Oh, that setting to
+rights! It has lost me a fortune at one time and another. As to the
+other rooms, now, have they been set to rights?"
+
+"Such as was disturbed have been put right, sir, of course."
+
+"Which were disturbed? Let me see them. But wait a moment."
+
+He opened the French windows, and closely examined the catch and bolts.
+He knelt and inspected the holes whereinto the bolts fell, and then
+glanced casually at the folding shutters. He opened a drawer or two, and
+tried the working of the locks with the keys the housekeeper carried.
+They were, the housekeeper explained, Mr. Kingscote's own keys. All
+through the lower floors Hewitt examined some things attentively and
+closely, and others with scarcely a glance, on a system unaccountable to
+me. Presently, he asked to be shown Mr. Kingscote's bedroom, which had
+not been disturbed, "set to rights," or slept in since the crime. Here,
+the housekeeper said, all drawers were kept unlocked but two--one in the
+wardrobe and one in the dressing-table, which Mr. Kingscote had always
+been careful to keep locked. Hewitt immediately pulled both drawers open
+without difficulty. Within, in addition to a few odds and ends, were
+papers. All the contents of these drawers had been turned over
+confusedly, while those of the unlocked drawers were in perfect order.
+
+"The police," Hewitt remarked, "may not have observed these matters.
+Any more than such an ordinary thing as _this_," he added, picking up a
+bent nail lying at the edge of a rug.
+
+The housekeeper doubtless took the remark as a reference to the entire
+unimportance of a bent nail, but I noticed that Hewitt dropped the
+article quietly into his pocket.
+
+We came away. At the front gate we met Mr. Douglas Kingscote, who had
+just returned from town. He introduced himself, and expressed surprise
+at our promptitude both of coming and going.
+
+"You can't have got anything like a clue in this short time, Mr.
+Hewitt?" he asked.
+
+"Well, no," Hewitt replied, with a certain dryness, "perhaps not. But I
+doubt whether a month's visit would have helped me to get anything very
+striking out of a washed floor and a houseful of carefully cleaned-up
+and 'set-to-rights' rooms. Candidly, I don't think you can reasonably
+expect much of me. The police have a much better chance--they had the
+scene of the crime to examine. I have seen just such a few rooms as any
+one might see in the first well-furnished house he might enter. The
+trail of the housemaid has overlaid all the others."
+
+"I'm very sorry for that; the fact was, I expected rather more of the
+police; and, indeed, I wasn't here in time entirely to prevent the
+clearing up. But still, I thought your well-known powers----"
+
+"My dear sir, my 'well-known powers' are nothing but common sense
+assiduously applied and made quick by habit. That won't enable me to see
+the invisible."
+
+"But can't we have the rooms put back into something of the state they
+were in? The cook will remember----"
+
+"No, no. That would be worse and worse; that would only be the
+housemaid's trail in turn overlaid by the cook's. You must leave things
+with me for a little, I think."
+
+"Then you don't give the case up?" Mr. Kingscote asked anxiously.
+
+"Oh, no! I don't give it up just yet. Do you know anything of your
+brother's private papers--as they were before his death?"
+
+"I never knew anything till after that. I have gone over them, but they
+are all very ordinary letters. Do you suspect a theft of papers?"
+
+Martin Hewitt, with his hands on his stick behind him, looked sharply at
+the other, and shook his head. "No," he said, "I can't quite say that."
+
+We bade Mr. Douglas Kingscote good-day, and walked towards the station.
+"Great nuisance, that setting to rights," Hewitt observed, on the way.
+"If the place had been left alone, the job might have been settled one
+way or another by this time. As it is, we shall have to run over to your
+old lodgings."
+
+"My old lodgings?" I repeated, amazed. "Why my old lodgings?"
+
+Hewitt turned to me with a chuckle and a wide smile. "Because we can't
+see the broken panel-work anywhere else," he said. "Let's see--Chelsea,
+isn't it?"
+
+"Yes, Chelsea. But why--you don't suppose the people who defaced the
+panels also murdered the man who painted them?"
+
+"Well," Hewitt replied, with another smile, "that would be carrying a
+practical joke rather far, wouldn't it? Even for the ordinary picture
+damager."
+
+"You mean you _don't_ think they did it, then? But what _do_ you mean?"
+
+"My dear fellow, I don't mean anything but what I say. Come now, this is
+rather an interesting case despite appearances, and it _has_ interested
+me: so much, in fact, that I really think I forgot to offer Mr. Douglas
+Kingscote my condolence on his bereavement. You see a problem is a
+problem, whether of theft, assassination, intrigue, or anything else,
+and I only think of it as one. The work very often makes me forget
+merely human sympathies. Now, you have often been good enough to express
+a very flattering interest in my work, and you shall have an opportunity
+of exercising your own common sense in the way I am always having to
+exercise mine. You shall see all my evidence (if I'm lucky enough to get
+any) as I collect it, and you shall make your own inferences. That will
+be a little exercise for you; the sort of exercise I should give a pupil
+if I had one. But I will give you what information I have, and you shall
+start fairly from this moment. You know the inquest evidence, such as it
+was, and you saw everything I did in Ivy Cottage?"
+
+"Yes; I think so. But I'm not much the wiser."
+
+"Very well. Now I will tell you. What does the whole case look like? How
+would you class the crime?"
+
+"I suppose as the police do. An ordinary case of murder with the object
+of robbery."
+
+"It is _not_ an ordinary case. If it were, I shouldn't know as much as I
+do, little as that is; the ordinary cases are always difficult. The
+assailant did not come to commit a burglary, although he was a skilled
+burglar, or one of them was, if more than one were concerned. The affair
+has, I think, nothing to do with the expected wedding, nor had Mr.
+Campbell anything to do in it--at any rate, personally--nor the
+gardener. The criminal (or one of them) was known personally to the dead
+man, and was well-dressed: he (or again one of them, and I think there
+were two) even had a chat with Mr. Kingscote before the murder took
+place. He came to ask for something which Mr. Kingscote was unwilling to
+part with,--perhaps hadn't got. It was not a bulky thing. Now you have
+all my materials before you."
+
+"But all this doesn't look like the result of the blind spite that would
+ruin a man's work first and attack him bodily afterwards."
+
+"Spite isn't always blind, and there are other blind things besides
+spite; people with good eyes in their heads are blind sometimes, even
+detectives."
+
+"But where did you get all this information? What makes you suppose that
+this was a burglar who didn't want to burgle, and a well-dressed man,
+and so on?"
+
+Hewitt chuckled and smiled again.
+
+"I saw it--saw it, my boy, that's all," he said. "But here comes the
+train."
+
+On the way back to town, after I had rather minutely described
+Kingscote's work on the boarding-house panels, Hewitt asked me for the
+names and professions of such fellow lodgers in that house as I might
+remember. "When did you leave yourself?" he ended.
+
+"Three years ago, or rather more. I can remember Kingscote himself;
+Turner, a medical student--James Turner, I think; Harvey Challitt,
+diamond merchant's articled pupil--he was a bad egg entirely, he's doing
+five years for forgery now; by the bye he had the room we are going to
+see till he was marched off, and Kingscote took it--a year before I
+left; there was Norton--don't know what he was; 'something in the City,'
+I think; and Carter Paget, in the Admiralty Office. I don't remember any
+more at this moment; there were pretty frequent changes. But you can get
+it all from Mrs. Lamb, of course."
+
+"Of course; and Mrs. Lamb's exact address is--what?"
+
+I gave him the address, and the conversation became disjointed. At
+Farringdon station, where we alighted, Hewitt called two hansoms.
+Preparing to enter one, he motioned me to the other, saying, "You get
+straight away to Mrs. Lamb's at once. She may be going to burn that
+splintered wood, or to set things to rights, after the manner of her
+kind, and you can stop her. I must make one or two small inquiries, but
+I shall be there half an hour after you."
+
+"Shall I tell her our object?"
+
+"Only that I may be able to catch her mischievous lodgers--nothing else
+yet." He jumped into the hansom and was gone.
+
+I found Mrs. Lamb still in a state of indignant perturbation over the
+trick served her four days before. Fortunately, she had left everything
+in the panelled room exactly as she had found it, with an idea of the
+being better able to demand or enforce reparation should her lodgers
+return. "The room's theirs, you see, sir," she said, "till the end of
+the week, since they paid in advance, and they may come back and offer
+to make amends, although I doubt it. As pleasant-spoken a young chap as
+you might wish, he seemed, him as come to take the rooms. 'My cousin,'
+says he, 'is rather an invalid, havin' only just got over congestion of
+the lungs, and he won't be in London till this evening late. He's comin'
+up from Birmingham,' he ses, 'and I hope he won't catch a fresh cold on
+the way, although of course we've got him muffled up plenty.' He took
+the rooms, sir, like a gentleman, and mentioned several gentlemen's
+names I knew well, as had lodged here before; and then he put down on
+that there very table, sir."--Mrs. Lamb indicated the exact spot with
+her hand, as though that made the whole thing much more wonderful--"he
+put down on that very table a week's rent in advance, and ses, 'That's
+always the best sort of reference, Mrs. Lamb, I think,' as kind-mannered
+as anything--and never 'aggled about the amount nor nothing. He only had
+a little black bag, but he said his cousin had all the luggage coming
+in the train, and as there was so much p'r'aps they wouldn't get it here
+till next day. Then he went out and came in with his cousin at eleven
+that night--Sarah let 'em in her own self--and in the morning they was
+gone--and this!" Poor Mrs. Lamb, plaintively indignant, stretched her
+arm towards the wrecked panels.
+
+"If the gentleman as you say is comin' on, sir," she pursued, "can do
+anything to find 'em, I'll prosecute 'em, that I will, if it costs me
+ten pound. I spoke to the constable on the beat, but he only looked like
+a fool, and said if I knew where they were I might charge 'em with
+wilful damage, or county court 'em. Of course I know I can do that if I
+knew where they were, but how can I find 'em? Mr. Jones he said his name
+was; but how many Joneses is there in London, sir?"
+
+I couldn't imagine any answer to a question like this, but I condoled
+with Mrs. Lamb as well as I could. She afterwards went on to express
+herself much as her sister had done with regard to Kingscote's death,
+only as the destruction of her panels loomed larger in her mind, she
+dwelt primarily on that. "It might almost seem," she said, "that
+somebody had a deadly spite on the pore young gentleman, and went
+breakin' up his paintin' one night, and murderin' him the next!"
+
+I examined the broken panels with some care, having half a notion to
+attempt to deduce something from them myself, if possible. But I could
+deduce nothing. The beading had been taken out, and the panels, which
+were thick in the centre but bevelled at the edges, had been removed and
+split up literally into thin firewood, which lay in a tumbled heap on
+the hearth and about the floor. Every panel in the room had been treated
+in the same way, and the result was a pretty large heap of sticks, with
+nothing whatever about them to distinguish them from other sticks,
+except the paint on one face, which I observed in many cases had been
+scratched and scraped away. The rug was drawn half across the hearth,
+and had evidently been used to deaden the sound of chopping. But
+mischief--wanton and stupid mischief--was all I could deduce from it
+all.
+
+Mr. Jones's cousin, it seemed, only Sarah had seen, as she admitted him
+in the evening, and then he was so heavily muffled that she could not
+distinguish his features, and would never be able to identify him. But
+as for the other one, Mrs. Lamb was ready to swear to him anywhere.
+
+Hewitt was long in coming, and internal symptoms of the approach of
+dinner-time (we had had no lunch) had made themselves felt before a
+sharp ring at the door-bell foretold his arrival. "I have had to wait
+for answers to a telegram," he said in explanation, "but at any rate I
+have the information I wanted. And these are the mysterious panels, are
+they?"
+
+Mrs. Lamb's true opinion of Martin Hewitt's behaviour as it proceeded
+would have been amusing to know. She watched in amazement the antics of
+a man who purposed finding out who had been splitting sticks by dint of
+picking up each separate stick and staring at it. In the end he
+collected a small handful of sticks by themselves and handed them to me,
+saying, "Just put these together on the table, Brett, and see what you
+make of them."
+
+I turned the pieces painted side up, and fitted them together into a
+complete panel, joining up the painted design accurately. "It is an
+entire panel," I said.
+
+"Good. Now look at the sticks a little more closely, and tell me if you
+notice anything peculiar about them--any particular in which they differ
+from all the others."
+
+I looked. "Two adjoining sticks," I said, "have each a small
+semi-circular cavity stuffed with what seems to be putty. Put together
+it would mean a small circular hole, perhaps a knot-hole, half an inch
+or so in diameter, in the panel, filled in with putty, or whatever it
+is."
+
+"A _knot-hole_?" Hewitt asked, with particular emphasis.
+
+"Well, no, not a knot-hole, of course, because that would go right
+through, and this doesn't. It is probably less than half an inch deep
+from the front surface."
+
+"Anything else? Look at the whole appearance of the wood itself. Colour,
+for instance."
+
+"It is certainly darker than the rest."
+
+"So it is." He took the two pieces carrying the puttied hole, threw the
+rest on the heap, and addressed the landlady. "The Mr. Harvey Challitt
+who occupied this room before Mr. Kingscote, and who got into trouble
+for forgery, was the Mr. Harvey Challitt who was himself robbed of
+diamonds a few months before on a staircase, wasn't he?"
+
+"Yes, sir," Mrs. Lamb replied in some bewilderment. "He certainly was
+that, on his own office stairs, chloroformed."
+
+"Just so, and when they marched him away because of the forgery, Mr.
+Kingscote changed into his rooms?"
+
+"Yes, and very glad I was. It was bad enough to have the disgrace
+brought into the house, without the trouble of trying to get people to
+take his very rooms, and I thought----"
+
+"Yes, yes, very awkward, very awkward!" Hewitt interrupted rather
+impatiently. "The man who took the rooms on Monday, now--you'd never
+seen him before, had you?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Then is _that_ anything like him?" Hewitt held a cabinet photograph
+before her.
+
+"Why--why--law, yes, that's _him_!"
+
+Hewitt dropped the photograph back into his breast pocket with a
+contented "Um," and picked up his hat. "I think we may soon be able to
+find that young gentleman for you, Mrs. Lamb. He is not a very
+respectable young gentleman, and perhaps you are well rid of him, even
+as it is. Come, Brett," he added, "the day hasn't been wasted, after
+all."
+
+We made towards the nearest telegraph office. On the way I said, "That
+puttied-up hole in the piece of wood seems to have influenced you. Is it
+an important link?"
+
+"Well--yes," Hewitt answered, "it is. But all those other pieces are
+important, too."
+
+"But why?"
+
+"Because there are no holes in them." He looked quizzically at my
+wondering face, and laughed aloud. "Come," he said, "I won't puzzle you
+much longer. Here is the post-office. I'll send my wire, and then we'll
+go and dine at Luzatti's."
+
+He sent his telegram, and we cabbed it to Luzatti's. Among actors,
+journalists, and others who know town and like a good dinner, Luzatti's
+is well known. We went upstairs for the sake of quietness, and took a
+table standing alone in a recess just inside the door. We ordered our
+dinner, and then Hewitt began:
+
+"Now tell me what _your_ conclusion is in this matter of the Ivy Cottage
+murder."
+
+"Mine? I haven't one. I'm sorry I'm so very dull, but I really haven't."
+
+"Come, I'll give you a point. Here is the newspaper account (torn
+sacrilegiously from my scrap-book for your benefit) of the robbery
+perpetrated on Harvey Challitt a few months before his forgery. Read
+it."
+
+"Oh, but I remember the circumstances very well. He was carrying two
+packets of diamonds belonging to his firm downstairs to the office of
+another firm of diamond merchants on the ground-floor. It was a quiet
+time in the day, and half-way down he was seized on a dark landing, made
+insensible by chloroform, and robbed of the diamonds--five or six
+thousand pounds' worth altogether, of stones of various smallish
+individual values up to thirty pounds or so. He lay unconscious on the
+landing till one of the partners, noticing that he had been rather long
+gone, followed and found him. That's all, I think."
+
+"Yes, that's all. Well, what do you make of it?"
+
+"I'm afraid I don't quite see the connection with this case."
+
+"Well, then, I'll give you another point. The telegram I've just sent
+releases information to the police, in consequence of which they will
+probably apprehend Harvey Challitt and his confederate, Henry Gillard,
+_alias_ Jones, for the murder of Gavin Kingscote. Now, then."
+
+"Challitt! But he's in gaol already."
+
+"Tut, tut, consider. Five years' penal was his dose, although for the
+first offence, because the forgery was of an extremely dangerous sort.
+You left Chelsea over three years ago yourself, and you told me that his
+difficulty occurred a year before. That makes four years, at least. Good
+conduct in prison brings a man out of a five years' sentence in that
+time or a little less, and, as a matter of fact, Challitt was released
+rather more than a week ago."
+
+"Still, I'm afraid I don't see what you are driving at."
+
+"Whose story is this about the diamond robbery from Harvey Challitt?"
+
+"His own."
+
+"Exactly. His own. Does his subsequent record make him look like a
+person whose stories are to be accepted without doubt or question?"
+
+"Why, no. I think I see--no, I don't. You mean he stole them himself?
+I've a sort of dim perception of your drift now, but still I can't fix
+it. The whole thing's too complicated."
+
+"It is a little complicated for a first effort, I admit, so I will tell
+you. This is the story. Harvey Challitt is an artful young man, and
+decides on a theft of his firm's diamonds. He first prepares a
+hiding-place somewhere near the stairs of his office, and when the
+opportunity arrives he puts the stones away, spills his chloroform, and
+makes a smell--possibly sniffs some, and actually goes off on the
+stairs, and the whole thing's done. He is carried into the office--the
+diamonds are gone. He tells of the attack on the stairs, as we have
+heard, and he is believed. At a suitable opportunity he takes his
+plunder from the hiding-place, and goes home to his lodgings. What is he
+to do with those diamonds? He can't sell them yet, because the robbery
+is publicly notorious, and all the regular jewel buyers know him.
+
+"Being a criminal novice, he doesn't know any regular receiver of stolen
+goods, and if he did would prefer to wait and get full value by an
+ordinary sale. There will always be a danger of detection so long as the
+stones are not securely hidden, so he proceeds to hide them. He knows
+that if any suspicion were aroused his rooms would be searched in every
+likely place, so he looks for an unlikely place. Of course, he thinks of
+taking out a panel and hiding them behind that. But the idea is so
+obvious that it won't do; the police would certainly take those panels
+out to look behind them. Therefore he determines to hide them _in_ the
+panels. See here--he took the two pieces of wood with the filled hole
+from his tail pocket and opened his penknife--the putty near the surface
+is softer than that near the bottom of the hole; two different lots of
+putty, differently mixed, perhaps, have been used, therefore,
+presumably, at different times."
+
+"But to return to Challitt. He makes holes with a centre-bit in
+different places on the panels, and in each hole he places a diamond,
+embedding it carefully in putty. He smooths the surface carefully flush
+with the wood, and then very carefully paints the place over, shading
+off the paint at the edges so as to leave no signs of a patch. He
+doesn't do the whole job at once, creating a noise and a smell of paint,
+but keeps on steadily, a few holes at a time, till in a little while the
+whole wainscoting is set with hidden diamonds, and every panel is
+apparently sound and whole."
+
+"But, then--there was only one such hole in the whole lot."
+
+"Just so, and that very circumstance tells us the whole truth. Let me
+tell the story first--I'll explain the clue after. The diamonds lie
+hidden for a few months--he grows impatient. He wants the money, and he
+can't see a way of getting it. At last he determines to make a bolt and
+go abroad to sell his plunder. He knows he will want money for
+expenses, and that he may not be able to get rid of his diamonds at
+once. He also expects that his suddenly going abroad while the robbery
+is still in people's minds will bring suspicion on him in any case, so,
+in for a penny in for a pound, he commits a bold forgery, which, had it
+been successful, would have put him in funds and enabled him to leave
+the country with the stones. But the forgery is detected, and he is
+haled to prison, leaving the diamonds in their wainscot setting.
+
+"Now we come to Gavin Kingscote. He must have been a shrewd fellow--the
+sort of man that good detectives are made of. Also he must have been
+pretty unscrupulous. He had his suspicions about the genuineness of the
+diamond robbery, and kept his eyes open. What indications he had to
+guide him we don't know, but living in the same house a sharp fellow on
+the look-out would probably see enough. At any rate, they led him to the
+belief that the diamonds were in the thief's rooms, but not among his
+movables, or they would have been found after the arrest. Here was his
+chance. Challitt was out of the way for years, and there was plenty of
+time to take the house to pieces if it were necessary. So he changed
+into Challitt's rooms.
+
+"How long it took him to find the stones we shall never know. He
+probably tried many other places first, and, I expect, found the
+diamonds at last by pricking over the panels with a needle. Then came
+the problem of getting them out without attracting attention. He decided
+not to trust to the needle, which might possibly leave a stone or two
+undiscovered, but to split up each panel carefully into splinters so as
+to leave no part unexamined. Therefore he took measurements, and had a
+number of panels made by a joiner of the exact size and pattern of those
+in the room, and announced to his landlady his intention of painting her
+panels with a pretty design. This to account for the wet paint, and even
+for the fact of a panel being out of the wall, should she chance to
+bounce into the room at an awkward moment. All very clever, eh?"
+
+"Very."
+
+"Ah, he was a smart man, no doubt. Well, he went to work, taking out a
+panel, substituting a new one, painting it over, and chopping up the old
+one on the quiet, getting rid of the splinters out of doors when the
+booty had been extracted. The decoration progressed and the little heap
+of diamonds grew. Finally, he came to the last panel, but found that he
+had used all his new panels and hadn't one left for a substitute. It
+must have been at some time when it was difficult to get hold of the
+joiner--Bank Holiday, perhaps, or Sunday, and he was impatient. So he
+scraped the paint off, and went carefully over every part of the
+surface--experience had taught him by this that all the holes were of
+the same sort--and found one diamond. He took it out, refilled the hole
+with putty, painted the old panel and put it back. _These_ are pieces of
+that old panel--the only old one of the lot.
+
+"Nine men out of ten would have got out of the house as soon as possible
+after the thing was done, but he was a cool hand and stayed. That made
+the whole thing look a deal more genuine than if he had unaccountably
+cleared out as soon as he had got his room nicely decorated. I expect
+the original capital for those Stock Exchange operations we heard of
+came out of those diamonds. He stayed as long as suited him, and left
+when he set up housekeeping with a view to his wedding. The rest of the
+story is pretty plain. You guess it, of course?"
+
+"Yes," I said, "I think I can guess the rest, in a general sort of
+way--except as to one or two points."
+
+"It's all plain--perfectly. See here! Challitt, in gaol, determines to
+get those diamonds when he comes out. To do that without being suspected
+it will be necessary to hire the room. But he knows that he won't be
+able to do that himself, because the landlady, of course, knows him, and
+won't have an ex-convict in the house. There is no help for it; he must
+have a confederate, and share the spoil. So he makes the acquaintance
+of another convict, who seems a likely man for the job, and whose
+sentence expires about the same time as his own. When they come out, he
+arranges the matter with this confederate, who is a well-mannered (and
+pretty well-known) housebreaker, and the latter calls at Mrs. Lamb's
+house to look for rooms. The very room itself happens to be to let, and
+of course it is taken, and Challitt (who is the invalid cousin) comes in
+at night muffled and unrecognisable.
+
+"The decoration on the panel does not alarm them, because, of course,
+they suppose it to have been done on the old panels and over the old
+paint. Challitt tries the spots where diamonds were left--there are
+none--there is no putty even. Perhaps, think they, the panels have been
+shifted and interchanged in the painting, so they set to work and split
+them all up as we have seen, getting more desperate as they go on.
+Finally they realize that they are done, and clear out, leaving Mrs.
+Lamb to mourn over their mischief.
+
+"They know that Kingscote is the man who has forestalled them, because
+Gillard (or Jones), in his chat with the landlady, has heard all about
+him and his painting of the panels. So the next night they set off for
+Finchley. They get into Kingscote's garden and watch him let Campbell
+out. While he is gone, Challitt quietly steps through the French window
+into the smoking-room, and waits for him, Gillard remaining outside.
+
+"Kingscote returns, and Challitt accuses him of taking the stones.
+Kingscote is contemptuous--doesn't care for Challitt, because he knows
+he is powerless, being the original thief himself; besides, knows there
+is no evidence, since the diamonds are sold and dispersed long ago.
+Challitt offers to divide the plunder with him--Kingscote laughs and
+tells him to go; probably threatens to throw him out, Challitt being the
+smaller man. Gillard, at the open window, hears this, steps in behind,
+and quietly knocks him on the head. The rest follows as a matter of
+course. They fasten the window and shutters, to exclude observation;
+turn over all the drawers, etc., in case the jewels are there; go to the
+best bedroom and try there, and so on. Failing (and possibly being
+disturbed after a few hours' search by the noise of the acquisitive
+gardener), Gillard, with the instinct of an old thief, determines they
+shan't go away with nothing, so empties Kingscote's pockets and takes
+his watch and chain and so on. They go out by the front door and shut it
+after them. _Voilà tout._"
+
+I was filled with wonder at the prompt ingenuity of the man who in these
+few hours of hurried inquiry could piece together so accurately all the
+materials of an intricate and mysterious affair such as this; but more,
+I wondered where and how he had collected those materials.
+
+"There is no doubt, Hewitt," I said, "that the accurate and minute
+application of what you are pleased to call your common sense has become
+something very like an instinct with you. What did you deduce from? You
+told me your conclusions from the examination of Ivy Cottage, but not
+how you arrived at them."
+
+"They didn't leave me much material downstairs, did they? But in the
+bedroom, the two drawers which the thieves found locked were
+ransacked--opened probably with keys taken from the dead man. On the
+floor I saw a bent French nail; here it is. You see, it is twice bent at
+right angles, near the head and near the point, and there is the faint
+mark of the pliers that were used to bend it. It is a very usual
+burglars' tool, and handy in experienced hands to open ordinary drawer
+locks. Therefore, I knew that a professional burglar had been at work.
+He had probably fiddled at the drawers with the nail first, and then had
+thrown it down to try the dead man's keys.
+
+"But I knew this professional burglar didn't come for a burglary, from
+several indications. There was no attempt to take plate, the first thing
+a burglar looks for. Valuable clocks were left on mantelpieces, and
+other things that usually go in an ordinary burglary were not
+disturbed. Notably, it was to be observed that no doors or windows were
+broken, or had been forcibly opened; therefore, it was plain that the
+thieves had come in by the French window of the smoking-room, the only
+entrance left open at the last thing. _Therefore_, they came in, or one
+did, knowing that Mr. Kingscote was up, and being quite
+willing--presumably anxious--to see him. Ordinary burglars would have
+waited till he had retired, and then could have got through the closed
+French window as easily almost as if it were open, notwithstanding the
+thin wooden shutters, which would never stop a burglar for more than
+five minutes. Being anxious to see him, they--or again, _one_ of
+them--presumably knew him. That they had come to _get_ something was
+plain, from the ransacking. As, in the end, they _did_ steal his money,
+and watch, but did _not_ take larger valuables, it was plain that they
+had no bag with them--which proves not only that they had not come to
+burgle, for every burglar takes his bag, but that the thing they came to
+get was not bulky. Still, they could easily have removed plate or clocks
+by rolling them up in a table-cover or other wrapper, but such a bundle,
+carried by well-dressed men, would attract attention--therefore it was
+probable that they were well dressed. Do I make it clear?"
+
+"Quite--nothing seems simpler now it is explained--that's the way with
+difficult puzzles."
+
+"There was nothing more to be got at the house. I had already in my mind
+the curious coincidence that the panels at Chelsea had been broken the
+very night before that of the murder, and determined to look at them in
+any case. I got from you the name of the man who had lived in the
+panelled room before Kingscote, and at once remembered it (although I
+said nothing about it) as that of the young man who had been
+chloroformed for his employer's diamonds. I keep things of that sort in
+my mind, you see--and, indeed, in my scrap-book. You told me yourself
+about his imprisonment, and there I was with what seemed now a hopeful
+case getting into a promising shape.
+
+"You went on to prevent any setting to rights at Chelsea, and I made
+enquiries as to Challitt. I found he had been released only a few days
+before all this trouble arose, and I also found the name of another man
+who was released from the same establishment only a few days earlier. I
+knew this man (Gillard) well, and knew that nobody was a more likely
+rascal for such a crime as that at Finchley. On my way to Chelsea I
+called at my office, gave my clerk certain instructions, and looked up
+my scrap-book. I found the newspaper account of the chloroform business,
+and also a photograph of Gillard--I keep as many of these things as I
+can collect. What I did at Chelsea you know. I saw that one panel was of
+old wood and the rest new. I saw the hole in the old panel, and I asked
+one or two questions. The case was complete."
+
+We proceeded with our dinner. Presently I said: "It all rests with the
+police now, of course?"
+
+"Of course. I should think it very probable that Challitt and Gillard
+will be caught. Gillard, at any rate, is pretty well known. It will be
+rather hard on the surviving Kingscote, after engaging me, to have his
+dead brother's diamond transactions publicly exposed as a result, won't
+it? But it can't be helped. _Fiat justitia_, of course."
+
+"How will the police feel over this?" I asked. "You've rather cut them
+out, eh?"
+
+"Oh, the police are all right. They had not the information I had, you
+see; they knew nothing of the panel business. If Mrs. Lamb had gone to
+Scotland Yard instead of to the policeman on the beat, perhaps I should
+never have been sent for."
+
+The same quality that caused Martin Hewitt to rank as mere
+"common-sense" his extraordinary power of almost instinctive deduction,
+kept his respect for the abilities of the police at perhaps a higher
+level than some might have considered justified.
+
+We sat some little while over our dessert, talking as we sat, when
+there occurred one of those curious conjunctions of circumstances that
+we notice again and again in ordinary life, and forget as often, unless
+the importance of the occasion fixes the matter in the memory. A young
+man had entered the dining-room, and had taken his seat at a corner
+table near the back window. He had been sitting there for some little
+time before I particularly observed him. At last he happened to turn his
+thin, pale face in my direction, and our eyes met. It was Challitt--the
+man we had been talking of!
+
+I sprang to my feet in some excitement.
+
+"That's the man!" I cried. "Challitt!"
+
+Hewitt rose at my words, and at first attempted to pull me back.
+Challitt, in guilty terror, saw that we were between him and the door,
+and turning, leaped upon the sill of the open window, and dropped out.
+There was a fearful crash of broken glass below, and everybody rushed to
+the window.
+
+Hewitt drew me through the door, and we ran downstairs. "Pity you let
+out like that," he said, as he went. "If you'd kept quiet we could have
+sent out for the police with no trouble. Never mind--can't help it."
+
+Below, Challitt was lying in a broken heap in the midst of a crowd of
+waiters. He had crashed through a thick glass skylight and fallen, back
+downward, across the back of a lounge. He was taken away on a stretcher
+unconscious, and, in fact, died in a week in hospital from injuries to
+the spine.
+
+During his periods of consciousness he made a detailed statement,
+bearing out the conclusions of Martin Hewitt with the most surprising
+exactness, down to the smallest particulars. He and Gillard had parted
+immediately after the crime, judging it safer not to be seen together.
+He had, he affirmed, endured agonies of fear and remorse in the few days
+since the fatal night at Finchley, and had even once or twice thought of
+giving himself up. When I so excitedly pointed him out, he knew at once
+that the game was up, and took the one desperate chance of escape that
+offered. But to the end he persistently denied that he had himself
+committed the murder, or had even thought of it till he saw it
+accomplished. That had been wholly the work of Gillard, who, listening
+at the window and perceiving the drift of the conversation, suddenly
+beat down Kingscote from behind with a life-preserver. And so Harvey
+Challitt ended his life at the age of twenty-six.
+
+Gillard was never taken. He doubtless left the country, and has probably
+since that time become "known to the police" under another name abroad.
+Perhaps he has even been hanged, and if he has been, there was no
+miscarriage of justice, no matter what the charge against him may have
+been.
+
+
+
+
+THE _NICOBAR_ BULLION CASE.
+
+
+I.
+
+The whole voyage was an unpleasant one, and Captain Mackrie, of the
+Anglo-Malay Company's steamship _Nicobar_, had at last some excuse for
+the ill-temper that had made him notorious and unpopular in the
+company's marine staff. Although the fourth and fifth mates in the
+seclusion of their berth ventured deeper in their search for motives,
+and opined that the "old man" had made a deal less out of this voyage
+than usual, the company having lately taken to providing its own stores;
+so that "makings" were gone clean and "cumshaw" (which means commission
+in the trading lingo of the China seas) had shrunk small indeed. In
+confirmation they adduced the uncommonly long face of the steward (the
+only man in the ship satisfied with the skipper), whom the new
+regulations hit with the same blow. But indeed the steward's dolor might
+well be credited to the short passenger list, and the unpromising aspect
+of the few passengers in the eyes of a man accustomed to gauge one's
+tip-yielding capacity a month in advance. For the steward it was
+altogether the wrong time of year, the wrong sort of voyage, and
+certainly the wrong sort of passengers. So that doubtless the
+confidential talk of the fourth and fifth officers was mere youthful
+scandal. At any rate, the captain had prospect of a good deal in private
+trade home, for he had been taking curiosities and Japanese oddments
+aboard (plainly for sale in London) in a way that a third steward would
+have been ashamed of, and which, for a captain, was a scandal and an
+ignominy; and he had taken pains to insure well for the lot. These
+things the fourth and fifth mates often spoke of, and more than once
+made a winking allusion to, in the presence of the third mate and the
+chief engineer, who laughed and winked too, and sometimes said as much
+to the second mate, who winked without laughing; for of such is the
+tittle-tattle of shipboard.
+
+The _Nicobar_ was bound home with few passengers, as I have said, a
+small general cargo, and gold bullion to the value of £200,000--the
+bullion to be landed at Plymouth, as usual. The presence of this bullion
+was a source of much conspicuous worry on the part of the second
+officer, who had charge of the bullion-room. For this was his first
+voyage on his promotion from third officer, and the charge of £200,000
+worth of gold bars was a thing he had not been accustomed to. The placid
+first officer pointed out to him that this wasn't the first shipment of
+bullion the world had ever known, by a long way, nor the largest. Also
+that every usual precaution was taken, and the keys were in the
+captain's cabin; so that he might reasonably be as easy in his mind as
+the few thousand other second officers who had had charge of hatches and
+special cargo since the world began. But this did not comfort Brasyer.
+He fidgeted about when off watch, considering and puzzling out the
+various means by which the bullion-room might be got at, and fidgeted
+more when on watch, lest somebody might be at that moment putting into
+practice the ingenious dodges he had thought of. And he didn't keep his
+fears and speculations to himself. He bothered the first officer with
+them, and when the first officer escaped he explained the whole thing at
+length to the third officer.
+
+"Can't think what the company's about," he said on one such occasion to
+the first mate, "calling a tin-pot bunker like that a bullion-room."
+
+"Skittles!" responded the first mate, and went on smoking.
+
+"Oh, that's all very well for you who aren't responsible," Brasyer went
+on, "but I'm pretty sure something will happen some day; if not on this
+voyage on some other. Talk about a strong room! Why, what's it made of?"
+
+"Three-eighths boiler plate."
+
+"Yes, three-eighths boiler plate--about as good as a sixpenny tin money
+box. Why, I'd get through that with my grandmother's scissors!"
+
+"All right; borrow 'em and get through. _I_ would if I had a
+grandmother."
+
+"There it is down below there out of sight and hearing, nice and handy
+for anybody who likes to put in a quiet hour at plate cutting from the
+coal bunker next door--always empty, because it's only a seven-ton
+bunker, not worth trimming. And the other side's against the steward's
+pantry. What's to prevent a man shipping as steward, getting quietly
+through while he's supposed to be bucketing about among his slops and
+his crockery, and strolling away with the plunder at the next port? And
+then there's the carpenter. _He's_ always messing about somewhere below,
+with a bag full of tools. Nothing easier than for him to make a job in a
+quiet corner, and get through the plates."
+
+"But then what's he to do with the stuff when he's got it? You can't
+take gold ashore by the hundredweight in your boots."
+
+"Do with it. Why, dump it, of course. Dump it overboard in a quiet port
+and mark the spot. Come to that, he could desert clean at Port
+Said--what easier place?--and take all he wanted. You know what Port
+Said's like. Then there are the firemen--oh, _anybody_ can do it!" And
+Brasyer moved off to take another peep under the hatchway.
+
+The door of the bullion-room was fastened by one central patent lock and
+two padlocks, one above and one below the other lock. A day or two after
+the conversation recorded above, Brasyer was carefully examining and
+trying the lower of the padlocks with a key, when a voice immediately
+behind him asked sharply, "Well, sir, and what are you up to with that
+padlock?"
+
+Brasyer started violently and looked round. It was Captain Mackrie.
+
+"There's--that is--I'm afraid these are the same sort of padlocks as
+those in the carpenter's stores," the second mate replied, in a hurry of
+explanation. "I--I was just trying, that's all; I'm afraid the keys
+fit."
+
+"Just you let the carpenter take care of his own stores, will you, Mr.
+Brasyer? There's a Chubb's lock there as well as the padlocks, and the
+key of that's in my cabin, and I'll take care doesn't go out of it
+without my knowledge. So perhaps you'd best leave off experiments till
+you're asked to make 'em, for your own sake. That's enough now," the
+captain added, as Brasyer appeared to be ready to reply; and he turned
+on his heel and made for the steward's quarters.
+
+Brasyer stared after him ragefully. "Wonder what _you_ want down here,"
+he muttered under his breath. "Seems to me one doesn't often see a
+skipper as thick with the steward as that." And he turned off growling
+towards the deck above.
+
+"Hanged if I like that steward's pantry stuck against the side of the
+bullion-room," he said later in the day to the first officer. "And what
+does a steward want with a lot of boiler-maker's tools aboard? You know
+he's got them."
+
+"In the name of the prophet, rats!" answered the first mate, who was of
+a less fussy disposition. "What a fatiguing creature you are, Brasyer!
+Don't you know the man's a boiler-maker by regular trade, and has only
+taken to stewardship for the last year or two? That sort of man doesn't
+like parting with his tools, and as he's a widower, with no home ashore,
+of course he has to carry all his traps aboard. Do shut up, and take
+your proper rest like a Christian. Here, I'll give you a cigar; it's all
+right--Burman; stick it in your mouth, and keep your jaw tight on it."
+
+But there was no soothing the second officer. Still he prowled about the
+after orlop deck, and talked at large of his anxiety for the contents of
+the bullion-room. Once again, a few days later, as he approached the
+iron door, he was startled by the appearance of the captain coming, this
+time, _from_ the steward's pantry. He fancied he had heard tapping,
+Brasyer explained, and had come to investigate. But the captain turned
+him back with even less ceremony than before, swearing he would give
+charge of the bullion-room to another officer if Brasyer persisted in
+his eccentricities. On the first deck the second officer was met by the
+carpenter, a quiet, sleek, soft-spoken man, who asked him for the
+padlock and key he had borrowed from the stores during the week. But
+Brasyer put him off, promising to send it back later. And the carpenter
+trotted away to a job he happened to have, singularly enough, in the
+hold, just under the after orlop deck, and below the floor of the
+bullion-room.
+
+As I have said, the voyage was in no way a pleasant one. Everywhere the
+weather was at its worst, and scarce was Gibraltar passed before the
+Lascars were shivering in their cotton trousers, and the Seedee boys
+were buttoning tight such old tweed jackets as they might muster from
+their scanty kits. It was January. In the Bay the weather was
+tremendous, and the _Nicobar_ banged and shook and pitched distractedly
+across in a howling world of thunderous green sea, washed within and
+without, above and below. Then, in the Chops, as night fell, something
+went, and there was no more steerage-way, nor, indeed, anything else but
+an aimless wallowing. The screw had broken.
+
+The high sea had abated in some degree, but it was still bad. Such sail
+as the steamer carried, inadequate enough, was set, and shift was made
+somehow to worry along to Plymouth--or to Falmouth if occasion better
+served--by that means. And so the _Nicobar_ beat across the Channel on a
+rather better, though anything but smooth, sea, in a black night, made
+thicker by a storm of sleet, which turned gradually to snow as the hours
+advanced.
+
+The ship laboured slowly ahead, through a universal blackness that
+seemed to stifle. Nothing but a black void above, below, and around, and
+the sound of wind and sea; so that one coming before a deck-light was
+startled by the quiet advent of the large snowflakes that came like
+moths as it seemed from nowhere. At four bells--two in the morning--a
+foggy light appeared away on the starboard bow--it was the Eddystone
+light--and an hour or two later, the exact whereabouts of the ship being
+a thing of much uncertainty, it was judged best to lay her to till
+daylight. No order had yet been given, however, when suddenly there were
+dim lights over the port quarter, with a more solid blackness beneath
+them. Then a shout and a thunderous crash, and the whole ship shuddered,
+and in ten seconds had belched up every living soul from below. The
+_Nicobar's_ voyage was over--it was a collision.
+
+The stranger backed off into the dark, and the two vessels drifted
+apart, though not till some from the _Nicobar_ had jumped aboard the
+other. Captain Mackrie's presence of mind was wonderful, and never for a
+moment did he lose absolute command of every soul on board. The ship had
+already begun to settle down by the stern and list to port. Life-belts
+were served out promptly. Fortunately there were but two women among the
+passengers, and no children. The boats were lowered without a mishap,
+and presently two strange boats came as near as they dare from the ship
+(a large coasting steamer, it afterwards appeared) that had cut into the
+_Nicobar_. The last of the passengers were being got off safely, when
+Brasyer, running anxiously to the captain, said:--
+
+"Can't do anything with that bullion, can we, sir? Perhaps a box or
+two----"
+
+"Oh, damn the bullion!" shouted Captain Mackrie. "Look after the boat,
+sir, and get the passengers off. The insurance companies can find the
+bullion for themselves."
+
+But Brasyer had vanished at the skipper's first sentence. The skipper
+turned aside to the steward as the crew and engine-room staff made for
+the remaining boats, and the two spoke quietly together. Presently the
+steward turned away as if to execute an order, and the skipper continued
+in a louder tone:--
+
+"They're the likeliest stuff, and we can but drop 'em, at worst. But be
+slippy--she won't last ten minutes."
+
+She lasted nearly a quarter of an hour. By that time, however, everybody
+was clear of her, and the captain in the last boat was only just near
+enough to see the last of her lights as she went down.
+
+
+II.
+
+The day broke in a sulky grey, and there lay the _Nicobar_, in ten
+fathoms, not a mile from the shore, her topmasts forlornly visible above
+the boisterous water. The sea was rough all that day, but the snow had
+ceased, and during the night the weather calmed considerably. Next day
+Lloyd's agent was steaming about in a launch from Plymouth, and soon a
+salvage company's tug came up and lay to by the emerging masts. There
+was every chance of raising the ship as far as could be seen, and a
+diver went down from the salvage tug to measure the breach made in the
+_Nicobar's_ side, in order that the necessary oak planking or sheeting
+might be got ready for covering the hole, preparatory to pumping and
+raising. This was done in a very short time, and the necessary telegrams
+having been sent, the tug remained in its place through the night, and
+prepared for the sending down of several divers on the morrow to get
+out the bullion as a commencement.
+
+Just at this time Martin Hewitt happened to be engaged on a case of some
+importance and delicacy on behalf of Lloyd's Committee, and was staying
+for a few days at Plymouth. He heard the story of the wreck, of course,
+and speaking casually with Lloyd's agent as to the salvage work just
+beginning, he was told the name of the salvage company's representative
+on the tug, Mr. Percy Merrick--a name he immediately recognised as that
+of an old acquaintance of his own. So that on the day when the divers
+were at work in the bullion-room of the sunken _Nicobar_, Hewitt gave
+himself a holiday, and went aboard the tug about noon.
+
+Here he found Merrick, a big, pleasant man of thirty-eight or so. He was
+very glad to see Hewitt, but was a great deal puzzled as to the results
+of the morning's work on the wreck. Two cases of gold bars were missing.
+
+"There was £200,000 worth of bullion on board," he said, "that's plain
+and certain. It was packed in forty cases, each of £5,000 value. But now
+there are only thirty-eight cases! Two are gone clearly. I wonder what's
+happened?"
+
+"I suppose your men don't know anything about it?" asked Hewitt.
+
+"No, they're all right. You see, it's impossible for them to bring
+anything up without its being observed, especially as they have to be
+unscrewed from their diving-dresses here on deck. Besides, bless you, I
+was down with them."
+
+"Oh! Do you dive yourself, then?"
+
+"Well, I put the dress on sometimes, you know, for any such special
+occasion as this. I went down this morning. There was no difficulty in
+getting about on the vessel below, and I found the keys of the
+bullion-room just where the captain said I would, in his cabin. But the
+locks were useless, of course, after being a couple of days in salt
+water. So we just burgled the door with crowbars, and then we saw that
+we might have done it a bit more easily from outside. For that
+coasting-steamer cut clean into the bunker next the bullion-room, and
+ripped open the sheet of boiler-plate dividing them."
+
+"The two missing cases couldn't have dropped out that way, of course?"
+
+"Oh, no. We looked, of course, but it would have been impossible. The
+vessel has a list the other way--to starboard--and the piled cases
+didn't reach as high as the torn part. Well, as I said, we burgled the
+door, and there they were, thirty-eight sealed bullion cases, neither
+more nor less, and they're down below in the after-cabin at this moment.
+Come and see."
+
+Thirty-eight they were; pine cases bound with hoop-iron and sealed at
+every joint, each case about eighteen inches by a foot, and six inches
+deep. They were corded together, two and two, apparently for convenience
+of transport.
+
+"Did you cord them like this yourself?" asked Hewitt.
+
+"No, that's how we found 'em. We just hooked 'em on a block and tackle,
+the pair at a time, and they hauled 'em up here aboard the tug."
+
+"What have you done about the missing two--anything?"
+
+"Wired off to headquarters, of course, at once. And I've sent for
+Captain Mackrie--he's still in the neighbourhood, I believe--and
+Brasyer, the second officer, who had charge of the bullion-room. They
+may possibly know something. Anyway, _one_ thing's plain. There were
+forty cases at the beginning of the voyage, and now there are only
+thirty-eight."
+
+There was a pause; and then Merrick added, "By the bye, Hewitt, this is
+rather your line, isn't it? You ought to look up these two cases."
+
+Hewitt laughed. "All right," he said; "I'll begin this minute if you'll
+commission me."
+
+"Well," Merrick replied slowly, "of course I can't do that without
+authority from headquarters. But if you've nothing to do for an hour or
+so there is no harm in putting on your considering cap, is there?
+Although, of course, there's nothing to go upon as yet. But you might
+listen to what Mackrie and Brasyer have to say. Of course I don't know,
+but as it's a £10,000 question probably it might pay you, and if you
+_do_ see your way to anything I'd wire and get you commissioned at
+once."
+
+There was a tap at the door and Captain Mackrie entered. "Mr. Merrick?"
+he said interrogatively, looking from one to another.
+
+"That's myself, sir," answered Merrick.
+
+"I'm Captain Mackrie, of the _Nicobar_. You sent for me, I believe.
+Something wrong with the bullion I'm told, isn't it?"
+
+Merrick explained matters fully. "I thought perhaps you might be able to
+help us, Captain Mackrie. Perhaps I have been wrongly informed as to the
+number of cases that should have been there?"
+
+"No; there were forty right enough. I think though--perhaps I might be
+able to give you a sort of hint."--and Captain Mackrie looked hard at
+Hewitt.
+
+"This is Mr. Hewitt, Captain Mackrie," Merrick interposed. "You may
+speak as freely as you please before him. In fact, he's sort of working
+on the business, so to speak."
+
+"Well," Mackrie said, "if that's so, speaking between ourselves, I
+should advise you to turn your attention to Brasyer. He was my second
+officer, you know, and had charge of the stuff."
+
+"Do you mean," Hewitt asked, "that Mr. Brasyer might give us some useful
+information?"
+
+Mackrie gave an ugly grin. "Very likely he might," he said, "if he were
+fool enough. But I don't think you'd get much out of him direct. I meant
+you might watch him."
+
+"What, do you suppose he was concerned in any way with the disappearance
+of this gold?"
+
+"I should think--speaking, as I said before, in confidence and between
+ourselves--that it's very likely indeed. I didn't like his manner all
+through the voyage."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Well, he was so eternally cracking on about his responsibility, and
+pretending to suspect the stokers and the carpenter, and one person and
+another, of trying to get at the bullion cases--that that alone was
+almost enough to make one suspicious. He protested so much, you see. He
+was so conscientious and diligent himself, and all the rest of it, and
+everybody else was such a desperate thief, and he was so sure there
+would be some of that bullion missing some day that--that--well, I don't
+know if I express his manner clearly, but I tell you I didn't like it a
+bit. But there was something more than that. He was eternally smelling
+about the place, and peeping in at the steward's pantry--which adjoins
+the bullion-room on one side, you know--and nosing about in the bunker
+on the other side. And once I actually caught him fitting keys to the
+padlocks--keys he'd borrowed from the carpenter's stores. And every time
+his excuse was that he fancied he heard somebody else trying to get in
+to the gold, or something of that sort; every time I caught him below on
+the orlop deck that was his excuse--happened to have heard something or
+suspected something or somebody every time. Whether or not I succeed in
+conveying my impressions to you, gentlemen, I can assure you that I
+regarded his whole manner and actions as very suspicious throughout the
+voyage, and I made up my mind I wouldn't forget it if by chance anything
+_did_ turn out wrong. Well, it has, and now I've told you what I've
+observed. It's for you to see if it will lead you anywhere."
+
+"Just so," Hewitt answered. "But let me fully understand, Captain
+Mackrie. You say that Mr. Brasyer had charge of the bullion-room, but
+that he was trying keys on it from the carpenter's stores. Where were
+the legitimate keys then?"
+
+"In my cabin. They were only handed out when I knew what they were
+wanted for. There was a Chubb's lock between the two padlocks, but a
+duplicate wouldn't have been hard for Brasyer to get. He could easily
+have taken a wax impression of my key when he used it at the port where
+we took the bullion aboard."
+
+"Well, and suppose he had taken these boxes, where do you think he would
+keep them?"
+
+Mackrie shrugged his shoulders and smiled. "Impossible to say," he
+replied. "He might have hidden 'em somewhere on board, though I don't
+think that's likely. He'd have had a deuce of a job to land them at
+Plymouth, and would have had to leave them somewhere while he came on to
+London. Bullion is always landed at Plymouth, you know, and if any were
+found to be missing, then the ship would be overhauled at once, every
+inch of her; so that he'd have to get his plunder ashore somehow before
+the rest of the gold was unloaded--almost impossible. Of course, if he's
+done that it's somewhere below there now, but that isn't likely. He'd be
+much more likely to have 'dumped' it--dropped it overboard at some
+well-known spot in a foreign port, where he could go later on and get
+it. So that you've a deal of scope for search, you see. Anywhere under
+water from here to Yokohama;" and Captain Mackrie laughed.
+
+Soon afterward he left, and as he was leaving a man knocked at the cabin
+door and looked in to say that Mr. Brasyer was on board. "You'll be able
+to have a go at him now," said the captain. "Good-day."
+
+"There's the steward of the _Nicobar_ there too, sir," said the man
+after the captain had gone, "and the carpenter."
+
+"Very well, we'll see Mr. Brasyer first," said Merrick, and the man
+vanished. "It seems to have got about a bit," Merrick went on to Hewitt.
+"I only sent for Brasyer, but as these others have come, perhaps they've
+got something to tell us."
+
+Brasyer made his appearance, overflowing with information. He required
+little assurance to encourage him to speak openly before Hewitt, and he
+said again all he had so often said before on board the _Nicobar_. The
+bullion-room was a mere tin box, the whole thing was as easy to get at
+as anything could be, he didn't wonder in the least at the loss--he had
+prophesied it all along.
+
+The men whose movements should be carefully watched, he said, were the
+captain and the steward. "Nobody ever heard of a captain and a steward
+being so thick together before," he said. "The steward's pantry was next
+against the bullion-room, you know, with nothing but that wretched bit
+of three-eighths boiler plate between. You wouldn't often expect to find
+the captain down in the steward's pantry, would you, thick as they might
+be. Well, that's where I used to find him, time and again. And the
+steward kept boiler-makers' tools there! That I can swear to. And he's
+been a boiler-maker, so that, likely as not, he could open a joint
+somewhere and patch it up again neatly so that it wouldn't be noticed.
+He was always messing about down there in his pantry, and once I
+distinctly heard knocking there, and when I went down to see, whom
+should I meet? Why, the skipper, coming away from the place himself, and
+he bullyragged me for being there and sent me on deck. But before that
+he bullyragged me because I had found out that there were other keys
+knocking about the place that fitted the padlocks on the bullion-room
+door. Why should he slang and threaten me for looking after these things
+and keeping my eye on the bullion-room, as was my duty? But that was the
+very thing that he didn't like. It was enough for him to see me anxious
+about the gold to make him furious. Of course his character for meanness
+and greed is known all through the company's service--he'll do anything
+to make a bit."
+
+"But have you any positive idea as to what has become of the gold?"
+
+"Well," Brasyer replied, with a rather knowing air, "I don't think
+they've dumped it."
+
+"Do you mean you think it's still in the vessel--hidden somewhere?"
+
+"No, I don't. I believe the captain and the steward took it ashore, one
+case each, when we came off in the boats."
+
+"But wouldn't that be noticed?"
+
+"It needn't be, on a black night like that. You see, the parcels are not
+so big--look at them, a foot by a foot and a half by six inches or so,
+roughly. Easily slipped under a big coat or covered up with anything. Of
+course they're a bit heavy--eighty or ninety pounds apiece
+altogether--but that's not much for a strong man to carry--especially in
+such a handy parcel, on a black night, with no end of confusion on. Now
+you just look here--I'll tell you something. The skipper went ashore
+last in a boat that was sent out by the coasting steamer that ran into
+us. That ship's put into dock for repairs and her crew are mostly having
+an easy time ashore. Now I haven't been asleep this last day or two, and
+I had a sort of notion there might be some game of this sort on, because
+when I left the ship that night I thought we might save a little at
+least of the stuff, but the skipper wouldn't let me go near the
+bullion-room, and that seemed odd. So I got hold of one of the boat's
+crew that fetched the skipper ashore, and questioned him quietly--pumped
+him, you know--and he assures me that the skipper _did_ have a rather
+small, heavy sort of parcel with him. What do you think of that? Of
+course, in the circumstances, the man couldn't remember any very
+distinct particulars, but he thought it was a sort of square wooden case
+about the size I've mentioned. But there's something more." Brasyer
+lifted his fore-finger and then brought it down on the table before
+him--"something more. I've made inquiries at the railway station and I
+find that two heavy parcels were sent off yesterday to London--deal
+boxes wrapped in brown paper, of just about the right size. And the
+paper got torn before the things were sent off, and the clerk could see
+that the boxes inside were fastened with hoop-iron--like those!" and the
+second officer pointed triumphantly to the boxes piled at one side of
+the cabin.
+
+"Well done!" said Hewitt. "You're quite a smart detective. Did you find
+out who brought the parcels, and who they were addressed to?"
+
+"No, I couldn't get quite as far as that. Of course the clerk didn't
+know the names of the senders, and not knowing me, wouldn't tell me
+exactly where the parcels were going. But I got quite chummy with him
+after a bit, and I'm going to meet him presently--he has the afternoon
+off, and we're going for a stroll. I'll find something more, I'll bet
+you!"
+
+"Certainly," replied Hewitt, "find all you can--it may be very
+important. If you get any valuable information you'll let us know at
+once, of course. Anything else, now?"
+
+"No, I don't think so; but I think what I've told you is pretty well
+enough for the present, eh? I'll let you know some more soon."
+
+Brasyer went, and Norton, the steward of the old ship, was brought into
+the cabin. He was a sharp-eyed, rather cadaverous-looking man, and he
+spoke with sepulchral hollowness. He had heard, he said, that there was
+something wrong with the chests of bullion, and came on board to give
+any information he could. It wasn't much, he went on to say, but the
+smallest thing might help. If he might speak strictly confidentially he
+would suggest that observation be kept on Wickens, the carpenter. He
+(Norton) didn't want to be uncharitable, but his pantry happened to be
+next the bullion-room, and he had heard Wickens at work for a very long
+time just below--on the under side of the floor of the bullion-room, it
+seemed to him, although, of course, he _might_ have been mistaken.
+Still, it was very odd that the carpenter always seemed to have a job
+just at that spot. More, it had been said--and he (Norton) believed it
+to be true--that Wickens, the carpenter, had in his possession, and kept
+among his stores, keys that fitted the padlocks on the bullion-room
+door. That, it seemed to him, was a very suspicious circumstance. He
+didn't know anything more definite, but offered his ideas for what they
+were worth, and if his suspicions proved unfounded nobody would be more
+pleased than himself. But--but--and the steward shook his head
+doubtfully.
+
+"Thank you, Mr. Norton," said Merrick, with a twinkle in his eye; "we
+won't forget what you say. Of course, if the stuff is found in
+consequence of any of your information, you won't lose by it."
+
+The steward said he hoped not, and he wouldn't fail to keep his eye on
+the carpenter. He had noticed Wickens was in the tug, and he trusted
+that if they were going to question him they would do it cautiously, so
+as not to put him on his guard. Merrick promised they would.
+
+"By the bye, Mr. Norton," asked Hewitt, "supposing your suspicions to be
+justified, what do you suppose the carpenter would do with the bullion?"
+
+"Well, sir," replied Norton, "I don't think he'd keep it on the ship.
+He'd probably dump it somewhere."
+
+The steward left, and Merrick lay back in his chair and guffawed aloud.
+"This grows farcical," he said, "simply farcical. What a happy family
+they must have been aboard the _Nicobar_! And now here's the captain
+watching the second officer, and the second officer watching the captain
+and the steward, and the steward watching the carpenter! It's immense.
+And now we're going to see the carpenter. Wonder whom _he_ suspects?"
+
+Hewitt said nothing, but his eyes twinkled with intense merriment, and
+presently the carpenter was brought into the cabin.
+
+"Good-day to you, gentlemen," said the carpenter in a soft and
+deferential voice, looking from one to the other. "Might I 'ave the
+honour of addressin' the salvage gentlemen?"
+
+"That's right," Merrick answered, motioning him to a seat. "This is the
+salvage shop, Mr. Wickens. What can we do for you?"
+
+The carpenter coughed gently behind his hand. "I took the liberty of
+comin', gentlemen, consekins o' 'earin' as there was some bullion
+missin'. P'raps I'm wrong."
+
+"Not at all. We haven't found as much as we expected, and I suppose by
+this time nearly everybody knows it. There are two cases wanting. You
+can't tell us where they are, I suppose?"
+
+"Well, sir, as to that--no. I fear I can't exactly go as far as that.
+But if I am able to give vallable information as may lead to recovery of
+same, I presoom I may without offence look for some reasonable small
+recognition of my services?"
+
+"Oh, yes," answered Merrick, "that'll be all right, I promise you. The
+company will do the handsome thing, of course, and no doubt so will the
+underwriters."
+
+"Presoomin' I may take that as a promise--among gentlemen"--this with an
+emphasis--"I'm willing to tell something."
+
+"It's a promise, at any rate as far as the company's concerned,"
+returned Merrick. "I'll see it's made worth your while--of course,
+providing it leads to anything."
+
+"Purvidin' that, sir, o' course. Well, gentlemen, my story ain't a long
+one. All I've to say was what I 'eard on board, just before she went
+down. The passengers was off, and the crew was gettin' into the other
+boats when the skipper turns to the steward an' speaks to him
+quiet-like, not observin', gentlemen, as I was agin 'is elbow, so for to
+say. ''Ere, Norton,' 'e sez, or words to that effeck, 'why shouldn't we
+try gettin' them things ashore with us--you know, the cases--eh? I've a
+notion we're pretty close inshore,' 'e sez, 'and there's nothink of a
+sea now. You take one, anyway, and I'll try the other,' 'e says, 'but
+don't make a flourish.' Then he sez, louder, 'cos o' the steward goin'
+off, 'They're the likeliest stuff, and at worst we can but drop 'em. But
+look sharp,' 'e says. So then I gets into the nearest boat, and that's
+all I 'eard."
+
+"That was all?" asked Hewitt, watching the man's face sharply.
+
+"All?" the carpenter answered with some surprise. "Yes, that was all;
+but I think it's pretty well enough, don't you? It's plain enough what
+was meant--him and the steward was to take two cases, one apiece, on the
+quiet, and they was the likeliest stuff aboard, as he said himself. And
+now there's two cases o' bullion missin'. Ain't that enough?"
+
+The carpenter was not satisfied till an exact note had been made of the
+captain's words. Then after Merrick's promise on behalf of the company
+had been renewed, Wickens took himself off.
+
+"Well," said Merrick, grinning across the table at Hewitt, "this is a
+queer go, isn't it? What that man says makes the skipper's case look
+pretty fishy, doesn't it? What he says, and what Brasyer says, taken
+together, makes a pretty strong case--I should say makes the thing a
+certainty. But what a business! It's likely to be a bit serious for some
+one, but it's a rare joke in a way. Wonder if Brasyer will find out
+anything more? Pity the skipper and steward didn't agree as to whom they
+should pretend to suspect. _That's_ a mistake on their part."
+
+"Not at all," Hewitt replied. "_If_ they are conspiring, and know what
+they're about, they will avoid seeming to be both in a tale. The bullion
+is in bars, I understand?"
+
+"Yes, five bars in each case; weight, I believe, sixteen pounds to a
+bar."
+
+"Let me see," Hewitt went on, as he looked at his watch; "it is now
+nearly two o'clock. I must think over these things if I am to do
+anything in the case. In the meantime, if it could be managed, I should
+like enormously to have a turn under water in a diving-dress. I have
+always had a curiosity to see under the sea. Could it be managed now?"
+
+"Well," Merrick responded, "there's not much fun in it, I can assure
+you; and it's none the pleasanter in this weather. You'd better have a
+try later in the year if you really want to--unless you think you can
+learn anything about this business by smelling about on the _Nicobar_
+down below?"
+
+Hewitt raised his eyebrows and pursed his lips.
+
+"I _might_ spot something," he said; "one never knows. And if I do
+anything in a case I always make it a rule to see and hear everything
+that can possibly be seen or heard, important or not. Clues lie where
+least expected. But beyond that, probably I may never have another
+chance of a little experience in a diving-dress. So if it can be managed
+I'd be glad."
+
+"Very well, you shall go, if you say so. And since it's your first
+venture, I'll come down with you myself. The men are all ashore, I
+think, or most of them. Come along."
+
+Hewitt was put in woollens and then in india-rubbers. A leaden-soled
+boot of twenty pounds' weight was strapped on each foot, and weights
+were hung on his back and chest.
+
+"That's the dress that Gullen usually has," Merrick remarked. "He's a
+very smart fellow; we usually send him first to make measurements and
+so on. An excellent man, but a bit too fond of the diver's lotion."
+
+"What's that?" asked Hewitt.
+
+"Oh, you shall try some if you like, afterwards. It's a bit too heavy
+for me; rum and gin mixed, I think."
+
+A red nightcap was placed on Martin Hewitt's head, and after that a
+copper helmet, secured by a short turn in the segmental screw joint at
+the neck. In the end he felt a vast difficulty in moving at all. Merrick
+had been meantime invested with a similar rig-out, and then each was
+provided with a communication cord and an incandescent electric lamp.
+Finally, the front window was screwed on each helmet, and all was ready.
+
+Merrick went first over the ladder at the side, and Hewitt with much
+difficulty followed. As the water closed over his head, his sensations
+altered considerably. There was less weight to carry; his arms in
+particular felt light, though slow in motion. Down, down they went
+slowly, and all round about it was fairly light, but once on the sunken
+vessel and among the lower decks, the electric lamps were necessary
+enough. Once or twice Merrick spoke, laying his helmet against Hewitt's
+for the purpose, and instructing him to keep his air-pipe, life-line,
+and lamp connection from fouling something at every step. Here and
+there shadowy swimming shapes came out of the gloom, attracted by their
+lamps, to dart into obscurity again with a twist of the tail. The fishes
+were exploring the _Nicobar_. The hatchway of the lower deck was open,
+and down this they passed to the orlop deck. A little way along this
+they came to a door standing open, with a broken lock hanging to it. It
+was the door of the bullion-room, which had been forced by the divers in
+the morning.
+
+Merrick indicated by signs how the cases had been found piled on the
+floor. One of the sides of the room of thin steel was torn and thrust in
+the length of its whole upper half, and when they backed out of the room
+and passed the open door they stood in the great breach made by the bow
+of the strange coasting vessel. Steel, iron, wood, and everything stood
+in rents and splinters, and through the great gap they looked out into
+the immeasurable ocean. Hewitt put up his hand and felt the edge of the
+bullion-room partition where it had been torn. It was just such a tear
+as might have been made in cardboard.
+
+They regained the upper deck, and Hewitt, placing his helmet against his
+companion's, told him that he meant to have a short walk on the ocean
+bed. He took to the ladder again, where it lay over the side, and
+Merrick followed him.
+
+The bottom was of that tough, slimy sort of clay-rock that is found in
+many places about our coasts, and was dotted here and there with lumps
+of harder rock and clumps of curious weed. The two divers turned at the
+bottom of the ladder, walked a few steps, and looked up at the great
+hole in the _Nicobar's_ side. Seen from here it was a fearful chasm,
+laying open hold, orlop, and lower deck.
+
+Hewitt turned away, and began walking about. Once or twice he stood and
+looked thoughtfully at the ground he stood on, which was fairly flat. He
+turned over with his foot a whitish, clean-looking stone about as large
+as a loaf. Then he wandered on slowly, once or twice stopping to examine
+the rock beneath him, and presently stooped to look at another stone
+nearly as large as the other, weedy on one side only, standing on the
+edge of a cavity in the claystone. He pushed the stone into the hole,
+which it filled, and then he stood up.
+
+Merrick put his helmet against Hewitt's, and shouted--
+
+"Satisfied now? Seen enough of the bottom?"
+
+"In a moment!" Hewitt shouted back; and he straightway began striding
+out in the direction of the ship. Arrived at the bows, he turned back to
+the point he started from, striding off again from there to the white
+stone he had kicked over, and from there to the vessel's side again.
+Merrick watched him in intense amazement, and hurried, as well as he
+might, after the light of Hewitt's lamp. Arrived for the second time at
+the bows of the ship, Hewitt turned and made his way along the side to
+the ladder, and forthwith ascended, followed by Merrick. There was no
+halt at the deck this time, and the two made there way up and up into
+the lighter water above, and so to the world of air.
+
+On the tug, as the men were unscrewing them from there waterproof
+prisons, Merrick asked Hewitt--
+
+"Will you try the 'lotion' now?"
+
+"No," Hewitt replied, "I won't go quite so far as that. But I _will_
+have a little whisky, if you've any in the cabin. And give me a pencil
+and a piece of paper."
+
+These things were brought, and on the paper Martin Hewitt immediately
+wrote a few figures and kept it in his hand.
+
+"I might easily forget those figures," he observed.
+
+Merrick wondered, but said nothing.
+
+Once more comfortably in the cabin, and clad in his usual garments,
+Hewitt asked if Merrick could produce a chart of the parts thereabout.
+
+"Here you are," was the reply, "coast and all. Big enough, isn't it?
+I've already marked the position of the wreck on it in pencil. She lies
+pointing north by east as nearly exact as anything."
+
+"As you've begun it," said Hewitt, "I shall take the liberty of making a
+few more pencil marks on this." And with that he spread out the crumpled
+note of figures, and began much ciphering and measuring. Presently he
+marked certain points on a spare piece of paper, and drew through them
+two lines forming an angle. This angle he transferred to the chart, and,
+placing a ruler over one leg of the angle, lengthened it out till it met
+the coast-line.
+
+"There we are," he said musingly. "And the nearest village to that is
+Lostella--indeed, the only coast village in that neighbourhood." He
+rose. "Bring me the sharpest-eyed person on board," he said; "that is,
+if he were here all day yesterday."
+
+"But what's up? What's all this mathematical business over? Going to
+find that bullion by rule of three?"
+
+Hewitt laughed. "Yes, perhaps," he said, "but where's your sharp
+look-out? I want somebody who can tell me everything that was visible
+from the deck of this tug all day yesterday."
+
+"Well, really I believe the very sharpest chap is the boy. He's most
+annoyingly observant sometimes. I'll send for him."
+
+He came--a bright, snub-nosed, impudent-looking young ruffian.
+
+"See here, my boy," said Merrick, "polish up your wits and tell this
+gentleman what he asks."
+
+"Yesterday," said Hewitt, "no doubt you saw various pieces of wreckage
+floating about?"
+
+"Yessir."
+
+"What were they?"
+
+"Hatch-gratings mostly--nothin' much else. There's some knockin' about
+now."
+
+"I saw them. Now, remember. Did you see a hatch-grating floating
+yesterday that was different from the others? A painted one, for
+instance--those out there now are not painted, you know."
+
+"Yessir, I see a little white 'un painted, bobbin' about away beyond the
+foremast of the _Nicobar_."
+
+"You're sure of that?"
+
+"Certain sure, sir--it was the only painted thing floatin'. And to-day
+it's washed away somewheres."
+
+"So I noticed. You're a smart lad. Here's a shilling for you--keep your
+eyes open and perhaps you'll find a good many more shillings before
+you're an old man. That's all."
+
+The boy disappeared, and Hewitt turned to Merrick and said, "I think you
+may as well send that wire you spoke of. If I get the commission I think
+I may recover that bullion. It may take some little time, or, on the
+other hand, it may not. If you'll write the telegram at once, I'll go in
+the same boat as the messenger. I'm going to take a walk down to
+Lostella now--it's only two or three miles along the coast, but it will
+soon be getting dark."
+
+"But what sort of a clue have you got? I didn't----"
+
+"Never mind," replied Hewitt, with a chuckle. "Officially, you know,
+I've no right to a clue just yet--I'm not commissioned. When I am I'll
+tell you everything."
+
+Hewitt was scarcely ashore when he was seized by the excited Brasyer.
+"Here you are," he said. "I was coming aboard the tug again. I've got
+more news. You remember I said I was going out with that railway clerk
+this afternoon, and meant pumping him? Well, I've done it and rushed
+away--don't know what he'll think's up. As we were going along we saw
+Norton, the steward, on the other side of the way, and the clerk
+recognised him as one of the men who brought the cases to be sent off;
+the other was the skipper, I've no doubt, from his description. I played
+him artfully, you know, and then he let out that both the cases were
+addressed to Mackrie at his address in London! He looked up the entry,
+he said, after I left when I first questioned him, feeling curious.
+That's about enough, I think, eh? I'm off to London now--I believe
+Mackrie's going to-night. I'll have him! Keep it dark!" And the zealous
+second officer dashed off without waiting for a reply. Hewitt looked
+after him with an amused smile, and turned off towards Lostella.
+
+
+III.
+
+It was about eleven the next morning when Merrick received the following
+note, brought by a boatman:--
+
+ "DEAR MERRICK,--Am I commissioned? If not, don't trouble, but if
+ I am, be just outside Lostella, at the turning before you come to
+ the Smack Inn, at two o'clock. Bring with you a light cart, a
+ policeman--or two perhaps will be better--and a man with a spade.
+ There will probably be a little cabbage-digging. Are you fond of
+ the sport?--Yours, MARTIN HEWITT.
+
+ "P.S.--_Keep all your men aboard_; bring the spade artist from the
+ town."
+
+Merrick was off in a boat at once. His principals had replied to his
+telegram after Hewitt's departure the day before, giving him a free hand
+to do whatever seemed best. With some little difficulty he got the
+policemen, and with none at all he got a light cart and a jobbing man
+with a spade. Together they drove off to the meeting-place.
+
+It was before the time, but Martin Hewitt was there, waiting. "You're
+quick," he said, "but the sooner the better. I gave you the earliest
+appointment I thought you could keep, considering what you had to do."
+
+"Have you got the stuff, then?" Merrick asked anxiously.
+
+"No, not exactly yet. But I've got this," and Hewitt held up the point
+of his walking-stick. Protruding half an inch or so from it was the
+sharp end of a small gimlet, and in the groove thereof was a little
+white wood, such as commonly remains after a gimlet has been used.
+
+"Why, what's that?"
+
+"Never mind. Let us move along--I'll walk. I think we're about at the
+end of the job--it's been a fairly lucky one, and quite simple. But I'll
+explain after."
+
+Just beyond the Smack Inn, Hewitt halted the cart, and all got down.
+They looped the horse's reins round a hedge-stake and proceeded the
+small remaining distance on foot, with the policemen behind, to avoid a
+premature scare. They turned up a lane behind a few small and rather
+dirty cottages facing the sea, each with its patch of kitchen garden
+behind. Hewitt led the way to the second garden, pushed open the small
+wicket gate and walked boldly in, followed by the others.
+
+Cabbages covered most of the patch, and seemed pretty healthy in their
+situation, with the exception of half a dozen--singularly enough, all
+together in a group. These were drooping, yellow, and wilted, and
+towards these Hewitt straightway walked. "Dig up those wilted cabbages,"
+he said to the jobbing man. "They're really useless now. You'll probably
+find something else six inches down or so."
+
+The man struck his spade into the soft earth, wherein it stopped
+suddenly with a thud. But at this moment a gaunt, slatternly woman, with
+a black eye, a handkerchief over her head, and her skirt pinned up in
+front, observing the invasion from the back door of the cottage, rushed
+out like a maniac and attacked the party valiantly with a broom. She
+upset the jobbing man over his spade, knocked off one policeman's
+helmet, lunged into the other's face with her broom, and was making her
+second attempt to hit Hewitt (who had dodged), when Merrick caught her
+firmly by the elbows from behind, pressed them together, and held her.
+She screamed, and people came from other cottages and looked on. "Peter!
+Peter!" the woman screamed, "come 'ee, come'ee here! Davey! They're
+come!"
+
+A grimy child came to the cottage door, and seeing the woman thus held,
+and strangers in the garden, set up a piteous howl. Meantime the digger
+had uncovered two wooden boxes, each eighteen inches long or so, bound
+with hoop-iron and sealed. One had been torn partly open at the top, and
+the broken wood roughly replaced. When this was lifted, bars of yellow
+metal were visible within.
+
+The woman still screamed vehemently, and struggled. The grimy child
+retreated, and then there appeared at the door, staggering hazily and
+rubbing his eyes, a shaggy, unkempt man, in shirt and trousers. He
+looked stupidly at the scene before him, and his jaw dropped.
+
+"Take that man," cried Hewitt. "He's one!" And the policeman promptly
+took him, so that he had handcuffs on his wrists before he had collected
+his faculties sufficiently to begin swearing.
+
+Hewitt and the other policeman entered the cottage. In the lower two
+rooms there was nobody. They climbed the few narrow stairs, and in the
+front room above they found another man, younger, and fast asleep. "He's
+the other," said Hewitt. "Take _him_." And this one was handcuffed
+before he woke.
+
+Then the recovered gold was put into the cart, and with the help of the
+village constable, who brought his own handcuffs for the benefit and
+adornment of the lady with the broom, such a procession marched out of
+Lostella as had never been dreamed of by the oldest inhabitant in his
+worst nightmare, nor recorded in the whole history of Cornwall.
+
+"Now," said Hewitt, turning to Merrick, "we must have that fellow of
+yours--what's his name--Gullen, isn't it? The one that went down to
+measure the hole in the ship. You've kept him aboard, of course?"
+
+"What, Gullen?" exclaimed Merrick. "Gullen? Well, as a matter of fact he
+went ashore last night and hasn't come back. But you don't mean to
+say----"
+
+"I _do_," replied Hewitt. "And now you've lost him."
+
+
+IV.
+
+"But tell me all about it now we've a little time to ourselves," asked
+Merrick an hour or two later, as they sat and smoked in the after-cabin
+of the salvage tug. "We've got the stuff, thanks to you, but I don't in
+the least see how _they_ got it, nor how you found it out."
+
+"Well, there didn't seem to be a great deal either way in the tales told
+by the men from the _Nicobar_. They cancelled one another out, so to
+speak, though it seemed likely that there might be something in them in
+one or two respects. Brasyer, I could see, tried to prove too much. If
+the captain and the steward were conspiring to rob the bullion-room, why
+should the steward trouble to cut through the boiler-plate walls when
+the captain kept the keys in his cabin? And if the captain had been
+stealing the bullion, why should he stop at two cases when he had all
+the voyage to operate in and forty cases to help himself to? Of course
+the evidence of the carpenter gave some colour to the theory, but I
+think I can imagine a very reasonable explanation of that.
+
+"You told me, of course, that you were down with the men yourself when
+they opened the bullion-room door and got out the cases, so that there
+could be no suspicion of _them_. But at the same time you told me that
+the breach in the _Nicobar's_ side had laid open the bullion-room
+partition, and that you might more easily have got the cases out that
+way. You told me, of course, that the cases couldn't have _fallen_ out
+that way because of the list of the vessel, the position of the rent in
+the boiler-plate, and so on. But I reflected that the day before a diver
+had been down alone--in fact, that his business had been with the very
+hole that extended partly to the bullion-room: he had to measure it.
+That diver might easily have got at the cases through the breach. But
+then, as you told me, a diver can't bring things up from below
+unobserved. This diver would know this, and might therefore hide the
+booty below. So that I made up my mind to have a look under water before
+I jumped to any conclusion.
+
+"I didn't think it likely that he had hidden the cases, mind you.
+Because he would have had to dive again to get them, and would have
+been just as awkwardly placed in fetching them to the light of day then
+as ever. Besides, he couldn't come diving here again in the company's
+dress without some explanation. So what more likely than that he would
+make some ingenious arrangement with an accomplice, whereby he might
+make the gold in some way accessible to him?
+
+"We went under water. I kept my eyes open, and observed, among other
+things, that the vessel was one of those well-kept 'swell' ones on which
+all the hatch gratings and so on are in plain oak or teak, kept
+holystoned. This (with the other things) I put by in my mind in case it
+should be useful. When we went over the side and looked at the great
+gap, I saw that it would have been quite easy to get at the broken
+bullion-room partition from outside."
+
+"Yes," remarked Merrick, "it would be no trouble at all. The ladder goes
+down just by the side of the breach, and any one descending by that
+might just step off at one side on to the jagged plating at the level of
+the after orlop, and reach over into the bullion safe."
+
+"Just so. Well, next I turned my attention to the sea-bed, which I was
+extremely pleased to see was of soft, slimy claystone. I walked about a
+little, getting farther and farther away from the vessel as I went,
+till I came across that clean stone which I turned over with my foot. Do
+you remember?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, that was noticeable. It was the only clean, bare stone to be
+seen. Every other was covered with a green growth, and to most clumps of
+weed clung. The obvious explanation of this was that the stone was a
+new-comer--lately brought from dry land--from the shingle on the
+sea-shore, probably, since it was washed so clean. Such a stone could
+not have come a mile out to sea by itself. Somebody had brought it in a
+boat and thrown it over, and whoever did it didn't take all that trouble
+for nothing. Then its shape told a tale; it was something of the form,
+rather exaggerated, of a loaf--the sort that is called a 'cottage'--the
+most convenient possible shape for attaching to a line and lowering. But
+the line had gone, so somebody must have been down there to detach it.
+Also it wasn't unreasonable to suppose that there might have been a hook
+on the end of that line. This, then, was a theory. Your man had gone
+down alone to take his measurement, had stepped into the broken side, as
+you have explained he could, reached into the bullion-room, and lifted
+the two cases. Probably he unfastened the cord, and brought them out one
+at a time for convenience in carrying. Then he carried the cases, one
+at a time, as I have said, over to that white stone which lay there sunk
+with the hook and line attached by previous arrangement with some
+confederate. He detached the rope from the stone--it was probably fixed
+by an attached piece of cord, tightened round the stone with what you
+call a timber-hitch, easily loosened--replaced the cord round the two
+cases, passed the hook under the cord, and left it to be pulled up from
+above. But then it could not have been pulled up there in broad
+daylight, under your very noses. The confederates would wait till night.
+That meant that the other end of the rope was attached to some floating
+object, so that it might be readily recovered. The whole arrangement was
+set one night to be carried away the next."
+
+"But why didn't Gullen take more than two cases?"
+
+"He couldn't afford to waste the time, in the first place. Each case
+removed meant another journey to and from the vessel, and you were
+waiting above for his measurements. Then he was probably doubtful as to
+weight. Too much at once wouldn't easily be drawn up, and might upset a
+small boat.
+
+"Well, so much for the white stone. But there was more; close by the
+stone I noticed (although I think you didn't) a mark in the claystone.
+It was a triangular depression or pit, sharp at the bottom--just the
+hole that would be made by the sharp impact of the square corner of a
+heavy box, if shod with iron, as the bullion cases are. This was one
+important thing. It seemed to indicate that the boxes had not been
+lifted directly up from the sea-bed, but had been dragged sideways--at
+all events at first--so that a sharp corner had turned over and dug into
+the claystone! I walked a little farther and found more
+indications--slight scratches, small stones displaced, and so on, that
+convinced me of this, and also pointed out the direction in which the
+cases had been dragged. I followed the direction, and presently arrived
+at another stone, rather smaller than the clean one. The cases had
+evidently caught against this, and it had been displaced by their
+momentum, and perhaps by a possible wrench from above. The green growth
+covered the part which had been exposed to the water, and the rest of
+the stone fitted the hole beside it, from which it had been pulled.
+Clearly these things were done recently, or the sea would have wiped out
+all the traces in the soft claystone. The rest of what I did under water
+of course you understood."
+
+"I suppose so: you took the bearings of the two stones in relation to
+the ship by pacing the distances."
+
+"That is so. I kept the figures in my head till I could make a note of
+them, as you saw, on paper. The rest was mere calculation. What I judged
+had happened was this. Gullen had arranged with somebody, identity
+unknown, but certainly somebody with a boat at his disposal, to lay the
+line, and take it up the following night. Now anything larger than a
+rowing boat could not have got up quite so close to you in the night
+(although your tug was at the other end of the wreck) without a risk of
+being seen. _But_ no rowing boat could have _dragged_ those cases
+forcibly along the bottom; they would act as an anchor to it. Therefore
+this was what had happened. The thieves had come in a large boat--a
+fishing smack, lugger, or something of that sort--with a small boat in
+tow. The sailing boat had lain to at a convenient distance, _in the
+direction in which it was afterwards to go_, so as to save time if
+observed, and a man had put off quietly in the small boat to pick up the
+float, whatever it was. There must have been a lot of slack line on this
+for the purpose, as also for the purpose of allowing the float to drift
+about fairly freely, and not attract attention by remaining in one
+place. The man pulled off to the sailing boat, and took the float and
+line aboard. Then the sailing boat swung off in the direction of home,
+and the line was hauled in with the plunder at the end of it."
+
+"One would think you had seen it all--or done it," Merrick remarked,
+with a laugh.
+
+"Nothing else could have happened, you see. That chain of events is the
+only one that will explain the circumstances. A rapid grasp of the whole
+circumstances and a perfect appreciation of each is more than half the
+battle in such work as this. Well, you know I got the exact bearings of
+the wreck on the chart, worked out from that the lay of the two stones
+with the scratch marks between, and then it was obvious that a straight
+line drawn through these and carried ahead would indicate,
+approximately, at any rate, the direction the thieves' vessel had taken.
+The line fell on the coast close by the village of Lostella--indeed that
+was the only village for some few miles either way. The indication was
+not certain, but it was likely, and the only one available, therefore it
+must be followed up."
+
+"And what about the painted hatch? How did you guess that?"
+
+"Well, I saw there were hatch-gratings belonging to the _Nicobar_
+floating about, and it seemed probable that the thieves would use for a
+float something similar to the other wreckage in the vicinity, so as not
+to attract attention. Nothing would be more likely than a hatch-grating.
+But then, in small vessels, such as fishing-luggers and so on, fittings
+are almost always painted--they can't afford to be such holystoning
+swells as those on the _Nicobar_. So I judged the grating might be
+painted, and this would possibly have been noticed by some sharp person.
+I made the shot, and hit. The boy remembered the white grating, which
+had gone--'washed away,' as he thought. That was useful to me, as you
+shall see.
+
+"I made off toward Lostella. The tide was low and it was getting dusk
+when I arrived. A number of boats and smacks were lying anchored on the
+beach, but there were few people to be seen. I began looking out for
+smacks with white-painted fittings in them. There are not so many of
+these among fishing vessels--brown or red is more likely, or sheer
+colourless dirt over paint unrecognisable. There were only two that I
+saw last night. The first _might_ have been the one I wanted, but there
+was nothing to show it. The second _was_ the one. She was half-decked
+and had a small white-painted hatch. I shifted the hatch and found a
+long line, attached to the grating at one end and carrying a hook at the
+other! They had neglected to unfasten their apparatus--perhaps had an
+idea that there might be a chance of using it again in a few days. I
+went to the transom and read the inscription, '_Rebecca_. Peter and
+David Garthew, Lostella.' Then my business was to find the Garthews.
+
+"I wandered about the village for some little time, and presently got
+hold of a boy. I made a simple excuse for asking about the
+Garthews--wanted to go for a sail to-morrow. The boy, with many grins,
+confided to me that both of the Garthews were 'on the booze.' I should
+find them at the Smack Inn, where they had been all day, drunk as
+fiddlers. This seemed a likely sort of thing after the haul they had
+made. I went to the Smack Inn, determined to claim old friendship with
+the Garthews, although I didn't know Peter from David. There they
+were--one sleepy drunk, and the other loving and crying drunk. I got as
+friendly as possible with them under the circumstances, and at closing
+time stood another gallon of beer and carried it home for them, while
+they carried each other. I took care to have a good look round in the
+cottage. I even helped Peter's 'old woman'--the lady with the broom--to
+carry them up to bed. But nowhere could I see anything that looked like
+a bullion-case or a hiding-place for one. So I came away, determined to
+renew my acquaintance in the morning, and to carry it on as long as
+might be necessary; also to look at the garden in the daylight for signs
+of burying. With that view I fixed that little gimlet in my
+walking-stick, as you saw.
+
+"This morning I was at Lostella before ten, and took a look at the
+Garthews' cabbages. It seemed odd that half a dozen, all in a clump
+together, looked withered and limp, as though they had been dug up
+hastily, the roots broken, perhaps, and then replanted. And altogether
+these particular cabbages had a dissipated, leaning-different-ways look,
+as though _they_ had been on the loose with the Garthews. So, seeing a
+grubby child near the back door of the cottage, I went towards him,
+walking rather unsteadily, so as, if I were observed, to favour the
+delusion that I was not yet quite got over last night's diversions.
+'Hullo, my b-boy,' I said, 'hullo, li'l b-boy, look here,' and I plunged
+my hand into my trousers' pocket and brought it out full of small
+change. Then, making a great business of selecting him a penny, I
+managed to spill it all over the dissipated cabbages. It was easy then,
+in stooping to pick up the change, to lean heavily on my stick and drive
+it through the loose earth. As I had expected, there was a box below. So
+I gouged away with my walking-stick while I collected my coppers, and
+finally swaggered off, after a few civil words with the 'old woman,'
+carrying with me evident proof that it was white wood recently buried
+there. The rest you saw for yourself. I think you and I may congratulate
+each other on having dodged that broom. It hit all the others."
+
+"What I'm wild about," said Merrick, "is having let that scoundrel
+Gullen get off. He's an artful chap, without a doubt. He saw us go over
+the side, you know, and after you had gone he came into the cabin for
+some instructions. Your pencil notes and the chart were on the table,
+and no doubt he put two and two together (which was more than I could,
+not knowing what had happened), and concluded to make himself safe for a
+bit. He had no leave that night--he just pulled away on the quiet. Why
+didn't you give me the tip to keep him?"
+
+"That wouldn't have done. In the first place, there was no legal
+evidence to warrant his arrest, and ordering him to keep aboard would
+have aroused his suspicions. I didn't know at the time how many days, or
+weeks, it would take me to find the bullion, if I ever found it, and in
+that time Gullen might have communicated in some way with his
+accomplices, and so spoilt the whole thing. Yes, certainly he seems to
+have been fairly smart in his way. He knew he would probably be sent
+down first, as usual, alone to make measurements, and conceived his plan
+and made his arrangements forthwith."
+
+"But now what I want to know is what about all those _Nicobar_ people
+watching and suspecting one another? More especially what about the
+cases the captain and the steward are said to have fetched ashore?"
+
+Hewitt laughed. "Well," he said, "as to that, the presence of the
+bullion seems to have bred all sorts of mutual suspicion on board the
+ship. Brasyer was over-fussy, and his continual chatter started it
+probably, so that it spread like an infection. As to the captain and the
+steward, of course I don't know anything but that their rescued cases
+were not bullion cases. Probably they were doing a little private
+trading--it's generally the case when captain and steward seem unduly
+friendly for their relative positions--and perhaps the cases contained
+something specially valuable: vases or bronzes from Japan, for instance;
+possibly the most valuable things of the size they had aboard. Then, if
+they had insured their things, Captain Mackrie (who has the reputation
+of a sharp and not very scrupulous man) might possibly think it rather a
+stroke of business to get the goods and the insurance money too, which
+would lead him to keep his parcels as quiet as possible. But that's as
+it may be."
+
+The case was much as Hewitt had surmised. The zealous Brasyer, posting
+to London in hot haste after Mackrie, spent some days in watching him.
+At last the captain and the steward with their two boxes took a cab and
+went to Bond Street, with Brasyer in another cab behind them. The two
+entered a shop, the window of which was set out with rare curiosities
+and much old silver and gold. Brasyer could restrain himself no longer.
+He grabbed a passing policeman, and rushed with him into the shop.
+There they found the captain and the steward with two small packing
+cases opened before them, trying to sell--a couple of very
+ancient-looking Japanese bronze figures, of that curious old workmanship
+and varied colour of metal that in genuine examples mean nowadays high
+money value.
+
+Brasyer vanished: there was too much chaff for him to live through in
+the British mercantile marine after this adventure. The fact was, the
+steward had come across the bargain, but had not sufficient spare cash
+to buy, so he called in the aid of the captain, and they speculated in
+the bronzes as partners. There was much anxious inspection of the prizes
+on the way home, and much discussion as to the proper price to ask.
+Finally, it was said, they got three hundred pounds for the pair.
+
+Now and again Hewitt meets Merrick still. Sometimes Merrick says, "Now,
+I wonder after all whether or not some of those _Nicobar_ men who were
+continually dodging suspiciously about that bullion-room _did_ mean
+having a dash at the gold if there were a chance?" And Hewitt replies,
+"I wonder."
+
+
+
+
+THE HOLFORD WILL CASE.
+
+
+At one time, in common, perhaps, with most people, I took a sort of
+languid, amateur interest in questions of psychology, and was impelled
+there-by to plunge into the pages of the many curious and rather
+abstruse books which attempt to deal with phenomena of mind, soul and
+sense. Three things of the real nature of which, I am convinced, no man
+will ever learn more than we know at present--which is nothing.
+
+From these I strayed into the many volumes of _Transactions_ of the
+Psychical Research Society, with an occasional by-excursion into mental
+telepathy and theosophy; the last, a thing whereof my Philistine
+intelligence obstinately refused to make head or tail.
+
+It was while these things were occupying part of my attention that I
+chanced to ask Hewitt whether, in the course of his divers odd and
+out-of-the-way experiences, he had met with any such weird adventures as
+were detailed in such profusion in the books of "authenticated" spooks,
+doppelgangers, poltergeists, clairvoyance, and so forth.
+
+"Well," Hewitt answered, with reflection, "I haven't been such a
+wallower in the uncanny as some of the worthy people who talk at large
+in those books of yours, and, as a matter of fact, my little adventures,
+curious as some of them may seem, have been on the whole of the most
+solid and matter-of-fact description. One or two things have happened
+that perhaps your 'psychical' people might be interested in, but they've
+mostly been found to be capable of a disappointingly simple explanation.
+One case of some genuine psychological interest, however, I have had;
+although there's nothing even in that which isn't a matter of well-known
+scientific possibility." And he proceeded to tell me the story that I
+have set down here, as well as I can, from recollection.
+
+I think I have already said, in another place, that Hewitt's
+professional start as a private investigator dated from his connection
+with the famous will case of Bartley _v._ Bartley and others, in which
+his then principals, Messrs. Crellan, Hunt & Crellan, chiefly through
+his exertions established their extremely high reputation as solicitors.
+It was ten years or so after this case that Mr. Crellan senior--the head
+of the firm--retired into private life, and by an odd chance Hewitt's
+first meeting with him after that event was occasioned by another will
+difficulty.
+
+These were the terms of the telegram that brought Hewitt again into
+personal relations with his old principal:--
+
+"_Can you run down at once on a matter of private business? I will be at
+Guildford to meet eleven thirty-five from Waterloo. If later or
+prevented please wire. Crellan._"
+
+The day and the state of Hewitt's engagements suited, and there was full
+half an hour to catch the train. Taking, therefore, the small
+travelling-bag that always stood ready packed in case of any sudden
+excursion that presented the possibility of a night from home, he got
+early to Waterloo, and by half-past twelve was alighting at Guildford
+Station. Mr. Crellan, a hale, white-haired old gentleman, wearing
+gold-rimmed spectacles, was waiting with a covered carriage.
+
+"How d'ye do, Mr. Hewitt, how d'ye do?" the old gentleman exclaimed as
+soon as they met, grasping Hewitt's hand, and hurrying him toward the
+carriage. "I'm glad you've come, very glad. It isn't raining, and you
+might have preferred something more open, but I brought the brougham
+because I want to talk privately. I've been vegetating to such an extent
+for the last few years down here that any little occurrence out of the
+ordinary excites me, and I'm sure I couldn't have kept quiet till we had
+got indoors. It's been bad enough, keeping the thing to myself,
+already."
+
+The door shut, and the brougham started. Mr. Crellan laid his hand on
+Hewitt's knee, "I hope," he said, "I haven't dragged you away from any
+important business?"
+
+"No," Hewitt replied, "you have chosen a most excellent time. Indeed, I
+did think of making a small holiday to-day, but your telegram----"
+
+"Yes, yes. Do you know, I was almost ashamed of having sent it after it
+had gone. Because, after all, the matter is, probably, really a very
+simple sort of affair that you can't possibly help me in. A few years
+ago I should have thought nothing of it, nothing at all. But as I have
+told you, I've got into such a dull, vegetable state of mind since I
+retired and have nothing to do that a little thing upsets me, and I
+haven't mental energy enough to make up my mind to go to dinner
+sometimes. But you're an old friend, and I'm sure you'll forgive my
+dragging you all down here on a matter that will, perhaps, seem
+ridiculously simple to you, a man in the thick of active business. If I
+hadn't known you so well I wouldn't have had the impudence to bother
+you. But never mind all that. I'll tell you.
+
+"Do you ever remember my speaking of an intimate friend, a Mr. Holford?
+No. Well, it's a long time ago, and perhaps I never happened to mention
+him. He was a most excellent man--old fellow, like me, you know; two or
+three years older, as a matter of fact. We were chums many years ago; in
+fact, we lodged in the same house when I was an articled clerk and he
+was a student at Guy's. He retired from the medical profession early,
+having come into a fortune, and came down here to live at the house
+we're going to; as a matter of fact, Wedbury Hall.
+
+"When I retired I came down and took up my quarters not far off, and we
+were a very excellent pair of old chums till last Monday--the day before
+yesterday--when my poor old friend died. He was pretty well in
+years--seventy-three--and a man can't live for ever. But I assure you it
+has upset me terribly, made a greater fool of me than ever, in fact,
+just when I ought to have my wits about me.
+
+"The reason I particularly want my wits just now, and the reason I have
+requisitioned yours, is this: that I can't find poor old Holford's will.
+I drew it up for him years ago, and by it I was appointed his sole
+executor. I am perfectly convinced that he cannot have destroyed it,
+because he told me everything concerning his affairs. I have always been
+his only adviser, in fact, and I'm sure he would have consulted me as
+to any change in his testamentary intentions before he made it.
+Moreover, there are reasons why I know he could not have wished to die
+intestate."
+
+"Which are----?" queried Hewitt as Mr. Crellan paused in his statement.
+
+"Which are these: Holford was a widower, with no children of his own.
+His wife, who has been dead nearly fifteen years now, was a most
+excellent woman, a model wife, and would have been a model mother if she
+had been one at all. As it was she adopted a little girl, a poor little
+soul who was left an orphan at two years of age. The child's father, an
+unsuccessful man of business of the name of Garth, maddened by a sudden
+and ruinous loss, committed suicide, and his wife died of the shock
+occasioned by the calamity.
+
+"The child, as I have said, was taken by Mrs. Holford and made a
+daughter of, and my old friend's daughter she has been ever since,
+practically speaking. The poor old fellow couldn't possibly have been
+more attached to a daughter of his own, and on her part she couldn't
+possibly have been a better daughter than she was. She stuck by him
+night and day during his last illness, until she became rather ill
+herself, although of course there was a regular nurse always in
+attendance.
+
+"Now, in his will, Mr. Holford bequeathed rather more than half of his
+very large property to this Miss Garth; that is to say, as residuary
+legatee, her interest in the will came to about that. The rest was
+distributed in various ways. Holford had largely spent the leisure of
+his retirement in scientific pursuits. So there were a few legacies to
+learned societies; all his servants were remembered; he left me a
+certain number of his books; and there was a very fair sum of money for
+his nephew, Mr. Cranley Mellis, the only near relation of Mr. Holford's
+still living. So that you see what the loss of this will may mean. Miss
+Garth, who was to have taken the greater part of her adoptive father's
+property, will not have one shilling's worth of claim on the estate and
+will be turned out into the world without a cent. One or two very old
+servants will be very awkwardly placed, too, with nothing to live on,
+and very little prospect of doing more work."
+
+"Everything will go to this nephew," said Hewitt, "of course?"
+
+"Of course. That is unless I attempt to prove a rough copy of the will
+which I may possibly have by me. But even if I have such a thing and
+find it, long and costly litigation would be called for, and the result
+would probably be all against us."
+
+"You say you feel sure Mr. Holford did not destroy the will himself?"
+
+"I am quite sure he would never have done so without telling me of it;
+indeed, I am sure he would have consulted me first. Moreover, it can
+never have been his intention to leave Miss Garth utterly unprovided
+for; it would be the same thing as disinheriting his only daughter."
+
+"Did you see him frequently?"
+
+"There's scarcely been a day when I haven't seen him since I have lived
+down here. During his illness--it lasted a month--I saw him every day."
+
+"And he said nothing of destroying his will?"
+
+"Nothing at all. On the contrary, soon after his first seizure--indeed,
+on the first visit at which I found him in bed--he said, after telling
+me how he felt, 'Everything's as I want it, you know, in case I go
+under.' That seemed to me to mean his will was still as he desired it to
+be."
+
+"Well, yes, it would seem so. But counsel on the other side (supposing
+there were another side) might quite as plausibly argue that he meant to
+die intestate, and had destroyed his will so that everything should be
+as he wanted it, in that sense. But what do you want me to do--find the
+will?"
+
+"Certainly, if you can. It seemed to me that you, with your clever head,
+might be able to form a better judgment than I as to what has happened
+and who is responsible for it. Because if the will _has_ been taken
+away, some one has taken it."
+
+"It seems probable. Have you told any one of your difficulty?"
+
+"Not a soul. I came over as soon as I could after Mr. Holford's death,
+and Miss Garth gave me all the keys, because, as executor, the case
+being a peculiar one, I wished to see that all was in order, and, as you
+know, the estate is legally vested in the executor from the death of the
+testator, so that I was responsible for everything; although, of course,
+if there is no will I'm not executor. But I thought it best to keep the
+difficulty to myself till I saw you."
+
+"Quite right. Is this Wedbury Hall?"
+
+The brougham had passed a lodge gate, and approached, by a wide drive, a
+fine old red brick mansion carrying the heavy stone dressings and
+copings distinctive of early eighteenth century domestic architecture.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Crellan, "this is the place. We will go straight to the
+study, I think, and then I can explain details."
+
+The study told the tale of the late Mr. Holford's habits and interests.
+It was half a library, half a scientific laboratory--pathological
+curiosities in spirits, a retort or two, test tubes on the
+writing-table, and a fossilized lizard mounted in a case, balanced the
+many shelves and cases of books disposed about the walls. In a recess
+between two book-cases stood a heavy, old-fashioned mahogany bureau.
+
+"Now it was in that bureau," Mr. Crellan explained, indicating it with
+his finger, "that Mr. Holford kept every document that was in the
+smallest degree important or valuable. I have seen him at it a hundred
+times, and he always maintained it was as secure as any iron safe. That
+may not have been altogether the fact, but the bureau is certainly a
+tremendously heavy and strong one. Feel it."
+
+Hewitt took down the front and pulled out a drawer that Mr. Crellan
+unlocked for the purpose.
+
+"Solid Spanish mahogany an inch thick," was his verdict, "heavy, hard,
+and seasoned; not the sort of thing you can buy nowadays. Locks, Chubb's
+patent, early pattern, but not easily to be picked by anything short of
+a blast of gunpowder. If there are no marks on this bureau it hasn't
+been tampered with."
+
+"Well," Mr. Crellan pursued, "as I say, _that_ was where Mr. Holford
+kept his will. I have often seen it when we have been here together, and
+this was the drawer, the top on the right, that he kept it in. The will
+was a mere single sheet of foolscap, and was kept, folded of course, in
+a blue envelope."
+
+"When did you yourself last actually see the will?"
+
+"I saw it in my friend's hand two days before he took to his bed. He
+merely lifted it in his hand to get at something else in the drawer,
+replaced it, and locked the drawer again."
+
+"Of course there are other drawers, bureaux, and so on, about the place.
+You have examined them carefully, I take it?"
+
+"I've turned out ever possible receptacle for that will in the house, I
+positively assure you, and there isn't a trace of it."
+
+"You've thought of secret drawers, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes. There are two in the bureau which I always knew of. Here they
+are." Mr. Crellan pressed his thumb against a partition of the
+pigeon-holes at the back of the bureau and a strip of mahogany flew out
+from below, revealing two shallow drawers with small ivory catches in
+lieu of knobs. "Nothing there at all. And this other, as I have said,
+was the drawer where the will was kept. The other papers kept in the
+same drawer are here as usual."
+
+"Did anybody else know where Mr. Holford kept his will?"
+
+"Everybody in the house, I should think. He was a frank, above-board
+sort of man. His adopted daughter knew, and the butler knew, and there
+was absolutely no reason why all the other servants shouldn't know;
+probably they did."
+
+"First," said Hewitt, "we will make quite sure there are no more secret
+drawers about this bureau. Lock the door in case anybody comes."
+
+Hewitt took out every drawer of the bureau, and examined every part of
+each before he laid it aside. Then he produced a small pair of silver
+callipers and an ivory pocket-rule and went over every inch of the heavy
+framework, measuring, comparing, tapping, adding, and subtracting
+dimensions. In the end he rose to his feet satisfied. "There is most
+certainly nothing concealed there," he said.
+
+The drawers were put back, and Mr. Crellan suggested lunch. At Hewitt's
+suggestion it was brought to the study.
+
+"So far," Hewitt said, "we arrive at this: either Mr. Holford has
+destroyed his will, or he has most effectually concealed it, or somebody
+has stolen it. The first of these possibilities you don't favour."
+
+"I don't believe it is a possibility for a moment. I have told you why;
+and I knew Holford so well, you know. For the same reasons I am sure he
+never concealed it."
+
+"Very well, then. Somebody has stolen it. The question is, who?"
+
+"That is so."
+
+"It seems to me that every one in this house had a direct and personal
+interest in preserving that will. The servants have all something left
+them, you say, and without the will that goes, of course. Miss Garth
+has the greatest possible interest in the will. The only person I have
+heard of as yet who would benefit by its loss or destruction would be
+the nephew, Mr. Mellis. There are no other relatives, you say, who would
+benefit by intestacy?"
+
+"Not one."
+
+"Well, what do you think yourself, now? Have you any suspicions?"
+
+Mr. Crellan shrugged his shoulders. "I've no more right to suspicions
+than you have, I suppose," he said. "Of course, if there are to be
+suspicions they can only point one way. Mr. Mellis is the only person
+who can gain by the disappearance of this will."
+
+"Just so, Now, what do you know of him?"
+
+"I don't know much of the young man," Mr. Crellan said slowly. "I must
+say I never particularly took to him. He is rather a clever fellow, I
+believe. He was called to the bar some time ago, and afterwards studied
+medicine, I believe, with the idea of priming himself for a practice in
+medical jurisprudence. He took a good deal of interest in my old
+friend's researches, I am told--at any rate he _said_ he did; he may
+have been thinking of his uncle's fortune. But they had a small tiff on
+some medical question. I don't know exactly what it was, but Mr. Holford
+objected to something--a method of research or something of that
+kind--as being dangerous and unprofessional. There was no actual
+rupture between them, you understand, but Mellis's visits slacked off,
+and there was a coolness."
+
+"Where is Mr. Mellis now?"
+
+"In London, I believe."
+
+"Has he been in this house between the day you last saw the will in that
+drawer and yesterday, when you failed to find it?"
+
+"Only once. He came to see his uncle two days before his death--last
+Saturday, in fact. He didn't stay long."
+
+"Did you see him?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What did he do?"
+
+"Merely came into the room for a few minutes--visitors weren't allowed
+to stay long--spoke a little to his uncle, and went back to town."
+
+"Did he do nothing else, or see anybody else?"
+
+"Miss Garth went out of the room with him as he left, and I should think
+they talked for a little before he went away, to judge by the time she
+was gone; but I don't know."
+
+"You are sure he went then?"
+
+"I saw him in the drive as I looked from the window."
+
+"Miss Garth, you say, has kept all the keys since the beginning of Mr.
+Holford's illness?"
+
+"Yes, until she gave them up to me yesterday. Indeed, the nurse, who is
+rather a peppery customer, and was jealous of Miss Garth's presence in
+the sick room all along, made several difficulties about having to go to
+her for everything."
+
+"And there is no doubt of the bureau having been kept locked all the
+time?"
+
+"None at all. I have asked Miss Garth that--and, indeed, a good many
+other things--without saying why I wanted the information."
+
+"How are Mr. Mellis and Miss Garth affected toward one another--are they
+friendly?"
+
+"Oh, yes. Indeed, some while ago I rather fancied that Mellis was
+disposed to pay serious addresses in that quarter. He may have had a
+fancy that way, or he may have been attracted by the young lady's
+expectations. At any rate, nothing definite seems to have come of it as
+yet. But I must say--between ourselves, of course--I have more than once
+noticed a decided air of agitation, shyness perhaps, in Miss Garth when
+Mr. Mellis has been present. But, at any rate, that scarcely matters.
+She is twenty-four years of age now, and can do as she likes. Although,
+if I had anything to say in the matter--well, never mind."
+
+"You, I take it, have known Miss Garth a long time?"
+
+"Bless you, yes. Danced her on my knee twenty years ago. I've been her
+'Uncle Leonard' all her life."
+
+"Well, I think we must at least let Miss Garth know of the loss of the
+will. Perhaps, when they have cleared away these plates, she will come
+here for a few minutes."
+
+"I'll go and ask her," Mr. Crellan answered, and having rung the bell,
+proceeded to find Miss Garth.
+
+Presently he returned with the lady. She was a slight, very pale young
+woman; no doubt rather pretty in ordinary, but now not looking her best.
+She was evidently worn and nervous from anxiety and want of sleep, and
+her eyes were sadly inflamed. As the wind slammed a loose casement
+behind her she started nervously, and placed her hand to her head.
+
+"Sit down at once, my dear," Mr. Crellan said; "sit down. This is Mr.
+Martin Hewitt, whom I have taken the liberty of inviting down here to
+help me in a very important matter. The fact is, my dear," Mr. Crellan
+added gravely, "I can't find your poor father's will."
+
+Miss Garth was not surprised. "I thought so," she said mildly, "when you
+asked me about the bureau yesterday."
+
+"Of course I need not say, my dear, what a serious thing it may be for
+you if that will cannot be found. So I hope you'll try and tell Mr.
+Hewitt here anything he wants to know as well as you can, without
+forgetting a single thing. I'm pretty sure that he will find it for us
+if it is to be found."
+
+"I understand, Miss Garth," Hewitt asked, "that the keys of that bureau
+never left your possession during the whole time of Mr. Holford's last
+illness, and that the bureau was kept locked?"
+
+"Yes, that is so."
+
+"Did you ever have occasion to go to the bureau yourself?"
+
+"No, I have not touched it."
+
+"Then you can answer for it, I presume, that the bureau was never
+unlocked by _any one_ from the time Mr. Holford placed the keys in your
+hands till you gave them to Mr. Crellan?"
+
+"Yes, I am sure of that."
+
+"Very good. Now is there any place on the whole premises that you can
+suggest where this will may possibly be hidden?"
+
+"There is no place that Mr. Crellan doesn't know of, I'm sure."
+
+"It is an old house, I observe," Hewitt pursued. "Do you know of any
+place of concealment in the structure--any secret doors, I mean, you
+know, or sliding panels, or hollow door frames, and so forth?"
+
+Miss Garth shook her head. "There is not a single place of the sort you
+speak of in the whole building, so far as I know," she said, "and I
+have lived here almost all my life."
+
+"You knew the purport of Mr. Holford's will, I take it, and understand
+what its loss may mean to yourself?"
+
+"Perfectly."
+
+"Now I must ask you to consider carefully. Take your mind back to two or
+three days before Mr. Holford's illness began, and tell me if you can
+remember any single fact, occurrence, word, or hint from that day to
+this in any way bearing on the will or anything connected with it?"
+
+Miss Garth shook her head thoughtfully. "I can't remember the thing
+being mentioned by anybody, except perhaps by the nurse, who is rather a
+touchy sort of woman, and once or twice took it upon herself to hint
+that my recent anxiety was chiefly about my poor father's money. And
+that once, when I had done some small thing for him, my father--I have
+always called him father, you know--said that he wouldn't forget it, or
+that I should be rewarded, or something of that sort. Nothing else that
+I can remember in the remotest degree concerned the will."
+
+"Mr. Mellis said nothing about it, then?"
+
+Miss Garth changed colour slightly, but answered, "No, I only saw him to
+the door."
+
+"Thank you, Miss Garth, I won't trouble you any further just now. But
+if you _can_ remember anything more in the course of the next few hours
+it may turn out to be of great service."
+
+Miss Garth bowed and withdrew. Mr. Crellan shut the door behind her and
+returned to Hewitt. "_That_ doesn't carry us much further," he said.
+"The more certain it seems that the will cannot have been got at, the
+more difficult our position is from a legal point of view. What shall we
+do now?"
+
+"Is the nurse still about the place?"
+
+"Yes, I believe so."
+
+"Then I'll speak to her."
+
+The nurse came in response to Mr. Crellan's summons: a sharp-featured,
+pragmatical woman of forty-five. She took the seat offered her, and
+waited for Hewitt's questions.
+
+"You were in attendance on Mr. Holford, I believe, Mrs. Turton, since
+the beginning of his last illness?"
+
+"Since October 24th."
+
+"Were you present when Mr. Mellis came to see his uncle last Saturday?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Can you tell me what took place?"
+
+"As to what the gentleman said to Mr. Holford," the nurse replied,
+bridling slightly, "of course I don't know anything, it not being my
+business and not intended for my ears. Mr. Crellan was there, and knows
+as much as I do, and so does Miss Garth. I only know that Mr. Mellis
+stayed for a few minutes and then went out of the room with Miss Garth."
+
+"How long was Miss Garth gone?"
+
+"I don't know, ten minutes or a quarter of an hour, perhaps."
+
+"Now Mrs. Turton, I want you to tell me in confidence--it is very
+important--whether you, at any time, heard Mr. Holford during his
+illness say anything of his wishes as to how his property was to be left
+in case of his death?"
+
+The nurse started and looked keenly from Hewitt to Mr. Crellan and back
+again.
+
+"Is it the will you mean?" she asked sharply.
+
+"Yes. Did he mention it?"
+
+"You mean you can't find the will, isn't that it?"
+
+"Well, suppose it is, what then?"
+
+"Suppose won't do," the nurse answered shortly; "I _do_ know something
+about the will, and I believe you can't find it."
+
+"I'm sure, Mrs. Turton, that if you know anything about the will you
+will tell Mr. Crellan in the interests of right and justice."
+
+"And who's to protect me against the spite of those I shall offend if I
+tell you?"
+
+Mr. Crellan interposed.
+
+"Whatever you tell us, Mrs. Turton," he said, "will be held in the
+strictest confidence, and the source of our information shall not be
+divulged. For that I give you my word of honour. And, I need scarcely
+add, I will see that you come to no harm by anything you may say."
+
+"Then the will _is_ lost. I may understand that?"
+
+Hewitt's features were impassive and impenetrable. But in Mr. Crellan's
+disturbed face the nurse saw a plain answer in the affirmative.
+
+"Yes," she said, "I see that's the trouble. Well, I know who took it."
+
+"Then who was it?"
+
+"_Miss Garth!_"
+
+"Miss Garth! Nonsense!" cried Mr. Crellan, starting upright. "Nonsense!"
+
+"It may be nonsense," the nurse replied slowly, with a monotonous
+emphasis on each word. "It may be nonsense, but it's a fact. I saw her
+take it."
+
+Mr. Crellan simply gasped. Hewitt drew his chair a little nearer.
+
+"If you saw her take it," he said gently, closely watching the woman's
+face the while, "then, of course, there's no doubt."
+
+"I tell you I saw her take it," the nurse repeated. "What was in it,
+and what her game was in taking it, I don't know. But it was in that
+bureau, wasn't it?"
+
+"Yes--probably."
+
+"In the right hand top drawer?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"A white paper in a blue envelope?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then I saw her take it, as I said before. She unlocked that drawer
+before my eyes, took it out, and locked the drawer again."
+
+Mr. Crellan turned blankly to Hewitt, but Hewitt kept his eyes on the
+nurse's face.
+
+"When did this occur?" he asked, "and how?"
+
+"It was on Saturday night, rather late. Everybody was in bed but Miss
+Garth and myself, and she had been down to the dining-room for
+something. Mr. Holford was asleep, so as I wanted to re-fill the
+water-bottle, I took it up and went. As I was passing the door of this
+room that we are in now, I heard a noise, and looked in at the door,
+which was open. There was a candle on the table which had been left
+there earlier in the evening. Miss Garth was opening the top right hand
+drawer of _that_ bureau"--Mrs. Turton stabbed her finger spitefully
+toward the piece of furniture, as though she owed it a personal
+grudge--"and I saw her take out a blue foolscap envelope, and as the
+flap was open, I could see the enclosed paper was white. She shut the
+drawer, locked it, and came out of the room with the envelope in her
+hand."
+
+"And what did you do?"
+
+"I hurried on, and she came away without seeing me, and went in the
+opposite direction--toward the small staircase."
+
+"Perhaps," Mr. Crellan ventured at a blurt, "perhaps she was walking in
+her sleep?"
+
+"That she wasn't!" the nurse replied, "for she came back to Mr.
+Holford's room almost as soon as I returned there, and asked some
+questions about the medicine--which was nothing new, for I must say she
+was very fond of interfering in things that were part of my business."
+
+"That is quite certain, I suppose," Hewitt remarked--"that she could not
+have been asleep?"
+
+"Quite certain. She talked for about a quarter of an hour, and wanted to
+kiss Mr. Holford, which might have wakened him, before she went to bed.
+In fact, I may say we had a disagreement."
+
+Hewitt did not take his steady gaze from the nurse's face for some
+seconds after she had finished speaking. Then he only said, "Thank you,
+Mrs. Turton. I need scarcely assure you, after what Mr. Crellan has
+said, that your confidence shall not be betrayed. I think that is all,
+unless you have more to tell us."
+
+Mrs. Turton bowed and rose. "There is nothing more," she said, and left
+the room.
+
+As soon as she had gone, "Is Mrs. Turton at all interested in the will,"
+Hewitt asked.
+
+"No, there is nothing for her. She is a new-comer, you see. Perhaps,"
+Mr. Crellan went on, struck by an idea, "she may be jealous, or
+something. She seems a spiteful woman--and really, I can't believe her
+story for a moment."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Well, you see, it's absurd. Why should Miss Garth go to all this secret
+trouble to do herself an injury--to make a beggar of herself? And
+besides, she's not in the habit of telling barefaced lies. She
+distinctly assured us, you remember, that she had never been to the
+bureau for any purpose whatever."
+
+"But the nurse has an honest character, hasn't she?"
+
+"Yes, her character is excellent. Indeed, from all accounts, she is a
+very excellent woman, except for a desire to govern everybody, and a
+habit of spite if she is thwarted. But, of course, that sort of thing
+sometimes leads people rather far."
+
+"So it does," Hewitt replied. "But consider now. Is it not possible that
+Miss Garth, completely infatuated with Mr. Mellis, thinks she is doing
+a noble thing for him by destroying the will and giving up her whole
+claim to his uncle's property? Devoted women do just such things, you
+know."
+
+Mr. Crellan stared, bent his head to his hand, and considered. "So they
+do, so they do," he said. "Insane foolery. Really, it's the sort of
+thing I can imagine her doing--she's honour and generosity itself. But
+then those lies," he resumed, sitting up and slapping his leg; "I can't
+believe she'd tell such tremendous lies as that for anybody. And with
+such a calm face, too--I'm sure she couldn't."
+
+"Well, that's as it may be. You can scarcely set a limit to the lengths
+a woman will go on behalf of a man she loves. I suppose, by the bye,
+Miss Garth is not exactly what you would call a 'strong-minded' woman?"
+
+"No, she's not that. She'd never get on in the world by herself. She's a
+good little soul, but nervous--very; and her month of anxiety, grief,
+and want of sleep seems to have broken her up."
+
+"Mr. Mellis knows of the death, I suppose?"
+
+"I telegraphed to him at his chambers in London the first thing
+yesterday--Tuesday--morning, as soon as the telegraph office was open.
+He came here (as I've forgotten to tell you as yet) the first thing
+this morning--before I was over here myself, in fact. He had been
+staying not far off--at Ockham, I think--and the telegram had been sent
+on. He saw Miss Garth, but couldn't stay, having to get back to London.
+I met him going away as I came, about eleven o'clock. Of course I said
+nothing about the fact that I couldn't find the will, but he will
+probably be down again soon, and may ask questions."
+
+"Yes," Hewitt replied. "And speaking of that matter, you can no doubt
+talk with Miss Garth on very intimate and familiar terms?"
+
+"Oh yes--yes; I've told you what old friends we are."
+
+"I wish you could manage, at some favourable opportunity to-day, to
+speak to her alone, and without referring to the will in any way, get to
+know, as circumspectly and delicately as you can, how she stands in
+regard to Mr. Mellis. Whether he is an accepted lover, or likely to be
+one, you know. Whatever answer you may get, you may judge, I expect, by
+her manner how things really are."
+
+"Very good--I'll seize the first chance. Meanwhile what to do?"
+
+"Nothing, I'm afraid, except perhaps to examine other pieces of
+furniture as closely as we have examined this bureau."
+
+Other bureaux, desks, tables, and chests were examined fruitlessly. It
+was not until after dinner that Mr. Crellan saw a favourable opportunity
+of sounding Miss Garth as he had promised. Half an hour later he came to
+Hewitt in the study, more puzzled than ever.
+
+"There's no engagement between them," he reported, "secret or open, nor
+ever has been. It seems, from what I can make out, going to work as
+diplomatically as possible, that Mellis _did_ propose to her, or
+something very near it, a time ago, and was point-blank refused.
+Altogether, Miss Garth's sentiment for him appears to be rather dislike
+than otherwise."
+
+"That rather knocks a hole in the theory of self-sacrifice, doesn't it?"
+Hewitt remarked. "I shall have to think over this, and sleep on it. It's
+possible that it may be necessary to-morrow for you to tax Miss Garth,
+point-blank, with having taken away the will. Still, I hope not."
+
+"I hope not, too," Mr. Crellan said, rather dubious as to the result of
+such an experiment. "She has been quite upset enough already. And, by
+the bye, she didn't seem any the better or more composed after Mellis'
+visit this morning."
+
+"Still, _then_ the will was gone."
+
+"Yes."
+
+And so Hewitt and Mr. Crellan talked on late into the evening, turning
+over every apparent possibility and finding reason in none. The
+household went to bed at ten, and, soon after, Miss Garth came to bid
+Mr. Crellan good-night. It had been settled that both Martin Hewitt and
+Mr. Crellan should stay the night at Wedbury Hall.
+
+Soon all was still, and the ticking of the tall clock in the hall below
+could be heard as distinctly as though it were in the study, while the
+rain without dropped from eaves and sills in regular splashes. Twelve
+o'clock struck, and Mr. Crellan was about to suggest retirement, when
+the sound of a light footstep startled Hewitt's alert ear. He raised his
+hand to enjoin silence, and stepped to the door of the room, Mr. Crellan
+following him.
+
+There was a light over the staircase, seven or eight yards away, and
+down the stairs came Miss Garth in dressing gown and slippers; she
+turned at the landing and vanished in a passage leading to the right.
+
+"Where does that lead to?" Hewitt whispered hurriedly.
+
+"Toward the small staircase--other end of house," Mr. Crellan replied in
+the same tones.
+
+"Come quietly," said Hewitt, and stepped lightly after Miss Garth, Mr.
+Crellan at his heels.
+
+She was nearing the opposite end of the passage, walking at a fair pace
+and looking neither to right nor left. There was another light over the
+smaller staircase at the end. Without hesitation Miss Garth turned down
+the stairs till about half down the flight, and then stopped and pressed
+her hand against the oak wainscot.
+
+Immediately the vertical piece of framing against which she had placed
+her hand turned on central pivots top and bottom, revealing a small
+recess, three feet high and little more than six inches wide. Miss Garth
+stooped and felt about at the bottom of this recess for several seconds.
+Then with every sign of extreme agitation and horror she withdrew her
+hand empty, and sank on the stairs. Her head rolled from side to side on
+her shoulders, and beads of perspiration stood on her forehead. Hewitt
+with difficulty restrained Mr. Crellan from going to her assistance.
+
+Presently, with a sort of shuddering sigh, Miss Garth rose, and after
+standing irresolute for a moment, descended the flight of stairs to the
+bottom. There she stopped again, and pressing her hand to her forehead,
+turned and began to re-ascend the stairs.
+
+Hewitt touched his companion's arm, and the two hastily but noiselessly
+made their way back along the passage to the study. Miss Garth left the
+open framing as it was, reached the top of the landing, and without
+stopping proceeded along the passage and turned up the main staircase,
+while Hewitt and Mr. Crellan still watched her from the study door.
+
+At the top of the flight she turned to the right, and up three or four
+more steps toward her own room. There she stopped, and leaned
+thoughtfully on the handrail.
+
+"Go up," whispered Hewitt to Mr. Crellan, "as though you were going to
+bed. Appear surprised to see her; ask if she isn't well, and, if you
+can, manage to repeat that question of mine about secret hiding-places
+in the house."
+
+Mr. Crellan nodded and started quickly up the stairs. Half-way up he
+turned his head, and, as he went on, "Why, Nelly, my dear," he said,
+"what's the matter? Aren't you well?"
+
+Mr. Crellan acted his part well, and waiting below, Hewitt heard this
+dialogue:
+
+"No, uncle, I don't feel very well, but it's nothing. I think my room
+seems close. I can scarcely breathe."
+
+"Oh, it isn't close to-night. You'll be catching cold, my dear. Go and
+have a good sleep; you mustn't worry that wise little head of yours, you
+know. Mr. Hewitt and I have been making quite a night of it, but I'm off
+to bed now."
+
+"I hope they've made you both quite comfortable, uncle?"
+
+"Oh, yes; capital, capital. We've been talking over business, and, no
+doubt, we shall put that matter all in order soon. By the bye, I suppose
+since you saw Mr. Hewitt you haven't happened to remember anything more
+to tell him?"
+
+"No."
+
+"You still can't remember any hiding-places or panels, or that sort of
+thing in the wainscot or anywhere?"
+
+"No, I'm sure I don't know of any, and I don't believe for a moment that
+any exist."
+
+"Quite sure of that, I suppose?"
+
+"Oh yes."
+
+"All right. Now go to bed. You'll catch _such_ a cold in these draughty
+landings. Come, I won't move a step till I see your door shut behind
+you. Good-night."
+
+"Good-night, uncle."
+
+Mr. Crellan came downstairs again with a face of blank puzzlement.
+
+"I wouldn't have believed it," he assured Martin Hewitt; "positively I
+wouldn't have believed she'd have told such a lie, and with such
+confidence, too. There's something deep and horrible here, I'm afraid.
+What does it mean?"
+
+"We'll talk of that afterwards," Hewitt replied. "Come now and take a
+look at that recess."
+
+They went, quietly still, to the small staircase, and there, with a
+candle, closely examined the recess. It was a mere box, three feet high,
+a foot or a little more deep, and six or seven inches wide. The piece of
+oak framing, pivoted to the stair at the bottom and to a horizontal
+piece of framing at the top, stood edge forward, dividing the opening
+down the centre. There was nothing whatever in the recess.
+
+Hewitt ascertained that there was no catch, the plank simply remaining
+shut by virtue of fitting tightly, so that nothing but pressure on the
+proper part was requisite to open it. He had closed the plank and turned
+to speak to Mr. Crellan, when another interruption occurred.
+
+On each floor the two staircases were joined by passages, and the
+ground-floor passage, from the foot of the flight they were on, led to
+the entrance hall. Distinct amid the loud clicking of the hall clock,
+Hewitt now heard a sound, as of a person's foot shifting on a stone
+step.
+
+Mr. Crellan heard it too, and each glanced at the other. Then Hewitt,
+shading the candle with his hand, led the way to the hall. There they
+listened for several seconds--almost an hour--it seemed--and then the
+noise was repeated. There was no doubt of it. It was at the other side
+of the front door.
+
+In answer to Hewitt's hurried whispers, Mr. Crellan assured him that
+there was no window from which, in the dark, a view could be got of a
+person standing outside the door. Also that any other way out would be
+equally noisy, and would entail the circuit of the house. The front door
+was fastened by three heavy bolts, an immense old-fashioned lock, and a
+bar. It would take nearly a minute to open at least, even if everything
+went easily. But, as there was no other way, Hewitt determined to try
+it. Handing the candle to his companion, he first lifted the bar,
+conceiving that it might be done with the least noise. It went easily,
+and, handling it carefully, Hewitt let it hang from its rivet without a
+sound. Just then, glancing at Mr. Crellan, he saw that he was forgetting
+to shade the candle, whose rays extended through the fanlight above the
+door, and probably through the wide crack under it. But it was too late.
+At the same moment the light was evidently perceived from outside; there
+was a hurried jump from the steps, and for an instant a sound of running
+on gravel. Hewitt tore back the bolts, flung the door open, and dashed
+out into the darkness, leaving Mr. Crellan on the doorstep with the
+candle.
+
+Hewitt was gone, perhaps, five or ten minutes, although to Mr.
+Crellan--standing there at the open door in a state of high nervous
+tension, and with no notion of what was happening or what it all
+meant--the time seemed an eternity. When at last Hewitt reached the door
+again, "What was it?" asked Mr. Crellan, much agitated. "Did you see?
+Have you caught them?"
+
+Hewitt shook his head.
+
+"I hadn't a chance," he said. "The wall is low over there, and there's a
+plantation of trees at the other side. But I think--yes, I begin to
+think--that I may possibly be able to see my way through this business
+in a little while. See this?"
+
+On the top step in the sheltered porch there remained the wet prints of
+two feet. Hewitt took a letter from his pocket, opened it out, spread it
+carefully over the more perfect of the two marks, pressed it lightly and
+lifted it. Then, when the door was shut, he produced his pocket
+scissors, and with great care cut away the paper round the wet part,
+leaving a piece, of course, the shape of a boot sole.
+
+"Come," said Hewitt, "we may get at something after all. Don't ask me to
+tell you anything now; I don't know anything, as a matter of fact. I
+hope this is the end of the night's entertainment, but I'm afraid the
+case is rather an unpleasant business. There is nothing for us to do now
+but to go to bed, I think. I suppose there's a handy man kept about the
+place?"
+
+"Yes, he's gardener and carpenter and carpet-beater, and so on."
+
+"Good! Where's his sanctum? Where does he keep his shovels and carpet
+sticks?"
+
+"In the shed by the coach house, I believe. I think it's generally
+unlocked."
+
+"Very good. We've earned a night's rest, and now we'll have it."
+
+The next morning, after breakfast, Hewitt took Mr. Crellan into the
+study.
+
+"Can you manage," he said, "to send Miss Garth out for a walk this
+morning--with somebody?"
+
+"I can send her out for a ride with the groom--unless she thinks it
+wouldn't be the thing to go riding so soon after her bereavement."
+
+"Never mind, that will do. Send her at once, and see that she goes. Call
+it doctor's orders; say she must go for her health's sake--anything."
+
+Mr. Crellan departed, used his influence, and in half an hour Miss Garth
+had gone.
+
+"I was up pretty early this morning," Hewitt remarked on Mr. Crellan's
+return to the study, "and, among other things, I sent a telegram to
+London. Unless my eyes deceive me, a boy with a peaked cap--a telegraph
+boy, in fact--is coming up the drive this moment. Yes, he is. It is
+probably my answer."
+
+In a few minutes a telegram was brought in. Hewitt read it and then
+asked,--
+
+"Your friend Mr. Mellis, I understand, was going straight to town
+yesterday morning?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Read that, then."
+
+Mr. Crellan took the telegram and read:
+
+"_Mellis did not sleep at chambers last night. Been out of town for some
+days past. Kerrett._"
+
+Mr. Crellan looked up.
+
+"Who's Kerrett?" he asked.
+
+"Lad in my office; sharp fellow. You see, Mellis didn't go to town after
+all. As a matter of fact, I believe he was nearer this place than we
+thought. You said he had a disagreement with his uncle because of
+scientific practices which the old gentleman considered 'dangerous and
+unprofessional,' I think?"
+
+"Yes, that was the case."
+
+"Ah, then the key to all the mystery of the will is in this room."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"There." Hewitt pointed to the book-cases. "Read Bernheim's _Suggestive
+Therapeutics_, and one or two books of Heidenhain's and Björnström's and
+you'll see the thing more clearly than you can without them; but that
+would be rather a long sort of job, so----but why, who's this? Somebody
+coming up the drive in a fly, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes," Mr. Crellan replied, looking out of the window. Presently he
+added, "It's Cranley Mellis."
+
+"Ah," said Hewitt, "he won't trouble us for a little. I'll bet you a
+penny cake he goes first by himself to the small staircase and tries
+that secret recess. If you get a little way along the passage you will
+be able to see him; but that will scarcely matter--I can see you don't
+guess now what I am driving at."
+
+"I don't in the least."
+
+"I told you the names of the books in which you could read the matter
+up; but that would be too long for the present purpose. The thing is
+fairly well summarised, I see, in that encyclopædia there in the corner.
+I have put a marker in volume seven. Do you mind opening it at that
+place and seeing for yourself?"
+
+Mr. Crellan, doubtful and bewildered, reached the volume. It opened
+readily, and in the place where it opened lay a blue foolscap envelope.
+The old gentleman took the envelope, drew from it a white paper, stared
+first at the paper, then at Hewitt, then at the paper again, let the
+volume slide from his lap, and gasped,--
+
+"Why--why--it's the will!"
+
+"Ah, so I thought," said Hewitt, catching the book as it fell. "But
+don't lose this place in the encyclopædia. Read the name of the article.
+What is it?"
+
+Mr. Crellan looked absent-mindedly at the title, holding the will before
+him all the time. Then, mechanically, he read aloud the word,
+"_Hypnotism_."
+
+"Hypnotism it is," Hewitt answered. "A dangerous and terrible power in
+the hands of an unscrupulous man."
+
+"But--but how? I don't understand it. This--this is the real will, I
+suppose?"
+
+"Look at it; you know best."
+
+Mr. Crellan looked.
+
+"Yes," he said, "this certainly is the will. But where did it come from?
+It hasn't been in this book all the time, has it?"
+
+"No. Didn't I tell you I put it there myself as a marker? But come,
+you'll understand my explanation better if I first read you a few lines
+from this article. See here now:--
+
+'Although hypnotism has power for good when properly used by medical
+men, it is an exceedingly dangerous weapon in the hands of the unskilful
+or unscrupulous. Crimes have been committed by persons who have been
+hypnotised. Just as a person when hypnotised is rendered extremely
+impressionable, and therefore capable of receiving beneficial
+suggestions, so he is nearly as liable to receive suggestions for evil;
+and it is quite possible for an hypnotic subject, while under hypnotic
+influence, to be impressed with the belief that he is to commit some act
+after the influence is removed, and that act he is safe to commit,
+acting at the time as an automaton. Suggestions may be thus made of
+which the subject, in his subsequent uninfluenced moments, has no idea,
+but which he will proceed to carry out automatically at the time
+appointed. In the case of a complete state of hypnotism the subject has
+subsequently no recollection whatever of what has happened. Persons
+whose will or nerve power has been weakened by fear or other similar
+causes can be hypnotised without consent on their part.'"
+
+"There now, what do you make of that?"
+
+"Why, do you mean that Miss Garth has been hypnotised by--by--Cranley
+Mellis?"
+
+"I think that is the case; indeed, I am pretty sure of it. Notice, on
+the occasion of each of his last two visits, he was alone with Miss
+Garth for some little time. On the evening following each of those
+visits she does something which she afterwards knows nothing
+about--something connected with the disappearance of this will, the only
+thing standing between Mr. Mellis and the whole of his uncle's property.
+Who could have been in a weaker nervous state than Miss Garth has been
+lately? Remember, too, on the visit of last Saturday, while Miss Garth
+says she only showed Mellis to the door, both you and the nurse speak of
+their being gone some little time. Miss Garth must have forgotten what
+took place then, when Mellis hypnotised her, and impressed on her the
+suggestion that she should take Mr. Holford's will that night, long
+after he--Mellis--had gone, and when he could not be suspected of
+knowing anything of it. Further, that she should, at that time when her
+movements would be less likely to be observed, secrete that will in a
+place of hiding known only to himself."
+
+"Dear, dear, what a rascal! Do you really think he did that?"
+
+"Not only that, but I believe he came here yesterday morning while you
+were out to get the will from the recess. The recess, by the bye, I
+expect he discovered by accident on one of his visits (he has been here
+pretty often, I suppose, altogether), and kept the secret in case it
+might be useful. Yesterday, not finding the will there, he hypnotised
+Miss Garth once again, and conveyed the suggestion that, at midnight
+last night, she should take the will from wherever she had put it and
+pass it to him under the front door."
+
+"What, do you mean it was he you chased across the grounds last night?"
+
+"That is a thing I am pretty certain of. If we had Mr. Mellis's boot
+here we could make sure by comparing it with the piece of paper I cut
+out, as you will remember, in the entrance hall. As we have the will,
+though, that will scarcely be necessary. What he will do now, I expect,
+will be to go to the recess again on the vague chance of the will being
+there now, after all, assuming that his second dose of mesmerism has
+somehow miscarried. If Miss Garth were here he might try his tricks
+again, and that is why I got you to send her out."
+
+"And where did you find the will?"
+
+"Now you come to practical details. You will remember that I asked about
+the handyman's tool-house? Well, I paid it a visit at six o'clock this
+morning, and found therein some very excellent carpenter's tools in a
+chest. I took a selection of them to the small staircase, and took out
+the tread of a stair--the one that the pivoted framing-plank rested on."
+
+"And you found the will there?"
+
+"The will, as I rather expected when I examined the recess last night,
+had slipped down a rather wide crack at the end of the stair timber,
+which, you know, formed, so to speak, the floor of the recess. The fact
+was, the stair-tread didn't quite reach as far as the back of the
+recess. The opening wasn't very distinct to see, but I soon felt it with
+my fingers. When Miss Garth, in her hypnotic condition on Saturday
+night, dropped the will into the recess, it shot straight to the back
+corner and fell down the slit. That was why Mellis found it empty, and
+why Miss Garth also found it empty on returning there last night under
+hypnotic influence. You observed her terrible state of nervous agitation
+when she failed to carry out the command that haunted her. It was
+frightful. Something like what happens to a suddenly awakened
+somnambulist, perhaps. Anyway, that is all over. I found the will under
+the end of the stair-tread, and here it is. If you will come to the
+small staircase now you shall see where the paper slipped out of sight.
+Perhaps we shall meet Mr. Mellis."
+
+"He's a scoundrel," said Mr. Crellan. "It's a pity we can't punish him."
+
+"That's impossible, of course. Where's your proof? And if you had any
+I'm not sure that a hypnotist is responsible at law for what his subject
+does. Even if he were, moving a will from one part of the house to
+another is scarcely a legal crime. The explanation I have given you
+accounts entirely for the disturbed manner of Miss Garth in the presence
+of Mellis. She merely felt an indefinite sense of his power over her.
+Indeed, there is all the possibility that, finding her an easy subject,
+he had already practised his influence by way of experiment. A
+hypnotist, as you will see in the books, has always an easier task with
+a person he has hypnotised before."
+
+As Hewitt had guessed, in the corridor they met Mr. Mellis. He was a
+thin, dark man of about thirty-five, with large, bony features, and a
+slight stoop. Mr. Crellan glared at him ferociously.
+
+"Well, sir, and what do you want?" he asked.
+
+Mr. Mellis looked surprised. "Really, that's a very extraordinary
+remark, Mr. Crellan," he said. "This is my late uncle's house. I might,
+with at least as much reason, ask you what you want."
+
+"I'm here, sir, as Mr. Holford's executor."
+
+"Appointed by will?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And is the will in existence?"
+
+"Well--the fact is--we couldn't find it----"
+
+"Then, what do you mean, sir, by calling yourself an executor with no
+will to warrant you?" interrupted Mellis. "Get out of this house. If
+there's no will, I administrate."
+
+"But there _is_ a will," roared Mr. Crellan, shaking it in his face.
+"There is a will. I didn't say we hadn't found it yet, did I? There _is_
+a will, and here it is in spite of all your diabolical tricks, with your
+scoundrelly hypnotism and secret holes, and the rest of it! Get out of
+this place, sir, or I'll have you thrown out of the window!"
+
+Mr. Mellis shrugged his shoulders with an appearance of perfect
+indifference. "If you've a will appointing you executor it's all right,
+I suppose, although I shall take care to hold you responsible for any
+irregularities. As I don't in the least understand your conduct, unless
+it is due to drink, I'll leave you." And with that he went.
+
+Mr. Crellan boiled with indignation for a minute, and then turning to
+Hewitt, "I say, I hope it's all right," he said, "connecting him with
+all this queer business?"
+
+"We shall soon see," replied Hewitt, "if you'll come and look at the
+pivoted plank."
+
+They went to the small staircase, and Hewitt once again opened the
+recess. Within lay a blue foolscap envelope, which Hewitt picked up.
+"See," he said, "it is torn at the corner. He has been here and opened
+it. It's a fresh envelope, and I left it for him this morning, with the
+corner gummed down a little so that he would have to tear it in opening.
+This is what was inside," Hewitt added, and laughed aloud as he drew
+forth a rather crumpled piece of white paper. "It was only a childish
+trick after all," he concluded, "but I always liked a small practical
+joke on occasion." He held out the crumpled paper, on which was
+inscribed in large capital letters the single word--"SOLD."
+
+
+
+
+THE CASE OF THE MISSING HAND.
+
+
+I think I have recorded in another place Hewitt's frequent aphorism that
+"there is nothing in this world that is at all possible that has not
+happened or is not happening in London." But there are many strange
+happenings in this matter-of-fact country and in these matter-of-fact
+times that occur far enough from London. Fantastic crimes, savage
+revenges, mediæval superstitions, horrible cruelty, though less in
+sight, have been no more extinguished by the advent of the nineteenth
+century than have the ancient races who practised them in the dark ages.
+Some of the races have become civilized, and some of the savageries are
+heard of no more. But there are survivals in both cases. I say these
+things having in my mind a particular case that came under the personal
+notice of both Hewitt and myself--an affair that brought one up standing
+with a gasp and a doubt of one's era.
+
+My good uncle, the Colonel, was not in the habit of gathering large
+house parties at his place at Ratherby, partly because the place was
+not a great one, and partly because the Colonel's gout was. But there
+was an excellent bit of shooting for two or three guns, and even when he
+was unable to leave the house himself, my uncle was always pleased if
+some good friend were enjoying a good day's sport in his territory. As
+to myself, the good old soul was in a perpetual state of offence because
+I visited him so seldom, though whenever my scant holidays fell in a
+convenient time of the year I was never insensible to the attractions of
+the Ratherby stubble. More than once had I sat by the old gentleman when
+his foot was exceptionally troublesome, amusing him with accounts of
+some of the doings of Martin Hewitt, and more than once had my uncle
+expressed his desire to meet Hewitt himself, and commissioned me with an
+invitation to be presented to Hewitt at the first likely opportunity,
+for a joint excursion to Ratherby. At length I persuaded Hewitt to take
+a fortnight's rest, coincident with a little vacation of my own, and we
+got down to Ratherby within a few days past September the 1st, and
+before a gun had been fired at the Colonel's bit of shooting. The
+Colonel himself we found confined to the house with his foot on the
+familiar rest, and though ourselves were the only guests, we managed to
+do pretty well together. It was during this short holiday that the case
+I have mentioned arose.
+
+When first I began to record some of the more interesting of Hewitt's
+operations, I think I explained that such cases as I myself had not
+witnessed I should set down in impersonal narrative form, without
+intruding myself. The present case, so far as Hewitt's work was
+concerned, I saw, but there were circumstances which led up to it that
+we only fully learned afterwards. These circumstances, however, I shall
+put in their proper place--at the beginning.
+
+The Fosters were a fairly old Ratherby family, of whom Mr. John Foster
+had died by an accident at the age of about forty, leaving a wife twelve
+years younger than himself and three children, two boys and one girl,
+who was the youngest. The boys grew up strong, healthy, out-of-door
+young ruffians, with all the tastes of sportsmen, and all the qualities,
+good and bad, natural to lads of fairly well-disposed character allowed
+a great deal too much of their own way from the beginning.
+
+Their only real bad quality was an unfortunate knack of bearing malice,
+and a certain savage vindictiveness towards such persons as they chose
+to consider their enemies. With the louts of the village they were at
+unceasing war, and, indeed, once got into serious trouble for peppering
+the butcher's son (who certainly was a great blackguard) with
+sparrow-shot. At the usual time they went to Oxford together, and were
+fraternally sent down together in their second year, after enjoying a
+spell of rustication in their first. The offence was never specifically
+mentioned about Ratherby, but was rumoured of as something particularly
+outrageous.
+
+It was at this time, sixteen years or thereabout after the death of
+their father, that Henry and Robert Foster first saw and disliked Mr.
+Jonas Sneathy, a director of penny banks and small insurance offices. He
+visited Ranworth (the Fosters' home) a great deal more than the brothers
+thought necessary, and, indeed, it was not for lack of rudeness on their
+part that Mr. Sneathy failed to understand, as far as they were
+concerned, his room was preferred to his company.
+
+But their mother welcomed him, and in the end it was announced that Mrs.
+Foster was to marry again, and that after that her name would be Mrs.
+Sneathy.
+
+Hereupon there were violent scenes at Ranworth. Henry and Robert Foster
+denounced their prospective father-in-law as a fortune-hunter, a
+snuffler, a hypocrite. They did not stop at broad hints as to the
+honesty of his penny banks and insurance offices, and the house
+straightway became a house of bitter strife. The marriage took place,
+and it was not long before Mr. Sneathy's real character became generally
+obvious. For months he was a model, if somewhat sanctimonious husband,
+and his influence over his wife was complete. Then he discovered that
+her property had been strictly secured by her first husband's will, and
+that, willing as she might be, she was unable to raise money for her new
+husband's benefit, and was quite powerless to pass to him any of her
+property by deed of gift. Hereupon the man's nature showed itself.
+Foolish woman as Mrs. Sneathy might be, she was a loving, indeed, an
+infatuated wife; but Sneathy repaid her devotion by vulgar derision,
+never hesitating to state plainly that he had married her for his own
+profit, and that he considered himself swindled in the result. More, he
+even proceeded to blows and other practical brutality of a sort only
+devisable by a mean and ugly nature. This treatment, at first secret,
+became open, and in the midst of it Mr. Sneathy's penny banks and
+insurance offices came to a grievous smash all at once, and everybody
+wondered how Mr. Sneathy kept out of gaol.
+
+Keep out of gaol he did, however, for he had taken care to remain on the
+safe side of the law, though some of his co-directors learnt the taste
+of penal servitude. But he was beggared, and lived, as it were, a mere
+pensioner in his wife's house. Here his brutality increased to a
+frightful extent, till his wife, already broken in health in
+consequence, went in constant fear of her life, and Miss Foster passed
+a life of weeping misery. All her friends' entreaties, however, could
+not persuade Mrs. Sneathy to obtain a legal separation from her husband.
+She clung to him with the excuse--for it was no more--that she hoped to
+win him to kindness by submission, and with a pathetic infatuation that
+seemed to increase as her bodily strength diminished.
+
+Henry and Robert, as may be supposed, were anything but silent in these
+circumstances. Indeed, they broke out violently again and again, and
+more than once went near permanently injuring their worthy
+father-in-law. Once especially, when Sneathy, absolutely without
+provocation, made a motion to strike his wife in their presence, there
+was a fearful scene. The two sprang at him like wild beasts, knocked him
+down and dragged him to the balcony with the intention of throwing him
+out of the window. But Mrs. Sneathy impeded them, hysterically imploring
+them to desist.
+
+"If you lift your hand to my mother," roared Henry, gripping Sneathy by
+the throat till his fat face turned blue, and banging his head against
+the wall, "if you lift your hand to my mother again I'll chop it off--I
+will! I'll chop it off and drive it down your throat!"
+
+"We'll do worse," said Robert, white and frantic with passion, "we'll
+hang you--hang you to the door! You're a proved liar and thief, and
+you're worse than a common murderer. I'd hang you to the front door for
+twopence!"
+
+For a few days Sneathy was comparatively quiet, cowed by their violence.
+Then he took to venting redoubled spite on his unfortunate wife, always
+in the absence of her sons, well aware that she would never inform them.
+On their part, finding him apparently better behaved in consequence of
+their attack, they thought to maintain his wholesome terror, and
+scarcely passed him without a menace, taking a fiendish delight in
+repeating the threats they had used during the scene, by way of keeping
+it present to his mind.
+
+"Take care of your hands, sir," they would say. "Keep them to yourself,
+or, by George, we'll take 'em off with a billhook!"
+
+But his revenge for all this Sneathy took unobserved on their mother.
+Truly a miserable household.
+
+Soon, however, the brothers left home, and went to London by way of
+looking for a profession. Henry began a belated study of medicine, and
+Robert made a pretence of reading for the bar. Indeed, their departure
+was as much as anything a consequence of the earnest entreaty of their
+sister, who saw that their presence at home was an exasperation to
+Sneathy, and aggravated her mother's secret sufferings. They went,
+therefore; but at Ranworth things became worse.
+
+Little was allowed to be known outside the house, but it was broadly
+said that Mr. Sneathy's behaviour had now become outrageous beyond
+description. Servants left faster than new ones could be found, and gave
+their late employer the character of a raving maniac. Once, indeed, he
+committed himself in the village, attacking with his walking-stick an
+inoffensive tradesman who had accidentally brushed against him, and
+immediately running home. This assault had to be compounded for by a
+payment of fifty pounds. And then Henry and Robert Foster received a
+most urgent letter from their sister requesting their immediate presence
+at home.
+
+They went at once, of course, and the servants' account of what occurred
+was this. When the brothers arrived Mr. Sneathy had just left the house.
+The brothers were shut up with their mother and sister for about a
+quarter of an hour, and then left them and came out to the stable yard
+together. The coachman (he was a new man, who had only arrived the day
+before) overheard a little of their talk as they stood by the door.
+
+Mr. Henry said that "the thing must be done, and at once. There are two
+of us, so that it ought to be easy enough." And afterwards Mr. Robert
+said, "You'll know best how to go about it, as a doctor." After which
+Mr. Henry came towards the coachman and asked in what direction Mr.
+Sneathy had gone. The coachman replied that it was in the direction of
+Ratherby Wood, by the winding footpath that led through it. But as he
+spoke he distinctly with the corner of his eye saw the other brother
+take a halter from a hook by the stable door and put it into his coat
+pocket.
+
+So far for the earlier events, whereof I learned later bit by bit. It
+was on the day of the arrival of the brothers Foster at their old home,
+and, indeed, little more than two hours after the incident last set
+down, that news of Mr. Sneathy came to Colonel Brett's place, where
+Hewitt and I were sitting and chatting with the Colonel. The news was
+that Mr. Sneathy had committed suicide--had been found hanging, in fact,
+to a tree in Ratherby Wood, just by the side of the footpath.
+
+Hewitt and I had of course at this time never heard of Sneathy, and the
+Colonel told us what little he knew. He had never spoken to the man, he
+said--indeed, nobody in the place outside Ranworth would have anything
+to do with him. "He's certainly been an unholy scoundrel over those poor
+people's banks," said my uncle, "and if what they say's true, he's been
+about as bad as possible to his wretched wife. He must have been pretty
+miserable, too, with all his scoundrelism, for he was a completely
+ruined man, without a chance of retrieving his position, and detested by
+everybody. Indeed, some of his recent doings, if what I have heard is to
+be relied on, have been very much those of a madman. So that, on the
+whole, I'm not much surprised. Suicide's about the only crime, I
+suppose, that he has never experimented with till now, and, indeed, it's
+rather a service to the world at large--his only service, I expect."
+
+The Colonel sent a man to make further inquiries, and presently this man
+returned with the news that now it was said that Mr. Sneathy had not
+committed suicide, but had been murdered. And hard on the man's heels
+came Mr. Hardwick, a neighbour of my uncle's and a fellow J. P. He had
+had the case reported to him, it seemed, as soon as the body had been
+found, and had at once gone to the spot. He had found the body
+hanging--_and with the right hand cut off_.
+
+"It's a murder, Brett," he said, "without doubt--a most horrible case of
+murder and mutilation. The hand is cut off and taken away, but whether
+the atrocity was committed before or after the hanging of course I can't
+say. But the missing hand makes it plainly a case of murder, and not
+suicide. I've come to consult you about issuing a warrant, for I think
+there's no doubt as to the identity of the murderers."
+
+"That's a good job," said the Colonel, "else we should have had some
+work for Mr. Martin Hewitt here, which wouldn't be fair, as he's taking
+a rest. Whom do you think of having arrested?"
+
+"The two young Fosters. It's plain as it can be--and a most revolting
+crime too, bad as Sneathy may have been. They came down from London
+to-day and went out deliberately to it, it's clear. They were heard
+talking of it, asked as to the direction in which he had gone, and
+followed him--and with a rope."
+
+"Isn't that rather an unusual form of murder--hanging?" Hewitt remarked.
+
+"Perhaps it is," Mr. Hardwick replied; "but it's the case here plain
+enough. It seems, in fact, that they had a way of threatening to hang
+him and even to cut off his hand if he used it to strike their mother.
+So that they appear to have carried out what might have seemed mere idle
+threats in a diabolically savage way. Of course they _may_ have
+strangled him first and hanged him after, by way of carrying out their
+threat and venting their spite on the mutilated body. But that they did
+it is plain enough for me. I've spent an hour or two over it, and feel I
+am certainly more than justified in ordering their apprehension. Indeed,
+they were with him at the time, as I have found by their tracks on the
+footpath through the wood."
+
+The Colonel turned to Martin Hewitt. "Mr. Hardwick, you must know," he
+said, "is by way of being an amateur in your particular line--and a very
+good amateur, too, I should say, judging by a case or two I have known
+in this county."
+
+Hewitt bowed, and laughingly expressed a fear lest Mr. Hardwick should
+come to London and supplant him altogether. "This seems a curious case,"
+he added. "If you don't mind, I think I should like to take a glance at
+the tracks and whatever other traces there may be, just by way of
+keeping my hand in."
+
+"Certainly," Mr. Hardwick replied, brightening. "I should of all things
+like to have Mr. Hewitt's opinions on the observations I have made--just
+for my own gratification. As to his opinion--there can be no room for
+doubt; the thing is plain."
+
+With many promises not to be late for dinner, we left my uncle and
+walked with Mr. Hardwick in the direction of Ratherby Wood. It was an
+unfrequented part, he told us, and by particular care he had managed, he
+hoped, to prevent the rumour spreading to the village yet, so that we
+might hope to find the trails not yet overlaid. It was a man of his own,
+he said, who, making a short cut through the wood, had come upon the
+body hanging, and had run immediately to inform him. With this man he
+had gone back, cut down the body, and made his observations. He had
+followed the trail backward to Ranworth, and there had found the new
+coachman, who had once been in his own service. From him he had learned
+the doings of the brothers Foster as they left the place, and from him
+he had ascertained that they had not then returned. Then, leaving his
+man by the body, he had come straight to my uncle's.
+
+Presently we came on the footpath leading from Ranworth across the field
+to Ratherby Wood. It was a mere trail of bare earth worn by successive
+feet amid the grass. It was damp, and we all stooped and examined the
+footmarks that were to be seen on it. They all pointed one way--towards
+the wood in the distance.
+
+"Fortunately it's not a greatly frequented path," Mr. Hardwick said.
+"You see, there are the marks of three pairs of feet only, and as first
+Sneathy and then both of the brothers came this way, these footmarks
+must be theirs. Which are Sneathy's is plain--they are these large flat
+ones. If you notice, they are all distinctly visible in the centre of
+the track, showing plainly that they belong to the man who walked alone,
+which was Sneathy. Of the others, the marks of the _outside_ feet--the
+left on the left side and the right on the right--are often not
+visible. Clearly they belong to two men walking side by side, and more
+often than not treading, with their outer feet, on the grass at the
+side. And where these happen to drop on the same spot as the marks in
+the middle they cover them. Plainly they are the footmarks of Henry and
+Robert Foster, made as they followed Sneathy. Don't you agree with me
+Mr. Hewitt?"
+
+"Oh yes, that's very plain. You have a better pair of eyes than most
+people, Mr. Hardwick, and a good idea of using them, too. We will go
+into the wood now. As a matter of fact I can pretty clearly distinguish
+most of the other footmarks--those on the grass; but that's a matter of
+much training."
+
+We followed the footpath, keeping on the grass at its side, in case it
+should be desirable to refer again to the foot-tracks. For some little
+distance into the wood the tracks continued as before, those of the
+brothers overlaying those of Sneathy. Then there was a difference. The
+path here was broader and muddy, because of the proximity of trees, and
+suddenly the outer footprints separated, and no more overlay the larger
+ones in the centre, but proceeded at an equal distance on either side of
+them.
+
+"See there," cried Mr. Hardwick, pointing triumphantly to the spot,
+"this is where they overtook him, and walked on either side. The body
+was found only a little farther on--you could see the place now if the
+path didn't zigzag about so."
+
+Hewitt said nothing, but stooped and examined the tracks at the sides
+with great care and evident thought, spanning the distances between them
+comparatively with his arms. Then he rose and stepped lightly from one
+mark to another, taking care not to tread on the mark itself. "Very
+good," he said shortly on finishing his examination. "We'll go on."
+
+We went on, and presently came to the place where the body lay. Here
+the ground sloped from the left down towards the right, and a tiny
+streamlet, a mere trickle of a foot or two wide, ran across the path.
+In rainy seasons it was probably wider, for all the earth and clay had
+been washed away for some feet on each side, leaving flat, bare and very
+coarse gravel, on which the trail was lost. Just beyond this, and to the
+left, the body lay on a grassy knoll under the limb of a tree, from
+which still depended a part of the cut rope. It was not a pleasant
+sight. The man was a soft, fleshy creature, probably rather under than
+over the medium height, and he lay there, with his stretched neck and
+protruding tongue, a revolting object. His right arm lay by his side,
+and the stump of the wrist was clotted with black blood. Mr. Hardwick's
+man was still in charge, seemingly little pleased with his job, and a
+few yards off stood a couple of countrymen looking on.
+
+Hewitt asked from which direction these men had come, and having
+ascertained and noticed their footmarks, he asked them to stay exactly
+where they were, to avoid confusing such other tracks as might be seen.
+Then he addressed himself to his examination. "_First_," he said,
+glancing up at the branch, that was scarce a yard above his head, "this
+rope has been here for some time."
+
+"Yes," Mr. Hardwick replied, "it's an old swing rope. Some children used
+it in the summer, but it got partly cut away, and the odd couple of
+yards has been hanging since."
+
+"Ah," said Hewitt, "then if the Fosters did this they were saved some
+trouble by the chance, and were able to take their halter back with
+them--and so avoid _one_ chance of detection." He very closely
+scrutinised the top of a tree stump, probably the relic of a tree that
+had been cut down long before, and then addressed himself to the body.
+
+"When you cut it down," he said, "did it fall in a heap?"
+
+"No, my man eased it down to some extent."
+
+"Not on to its face?"
+
+"Oh no. On to its back, just as it is now." Mr. Hardwick saw that Hewitt
+was looking at muddy marks on each of the corpse's knees, to one of
+which a small leaf clung, and at one or two other marks of the same
+sort on the fore part of the dress. "That seems to show pretty plainly,"
+he said, "that he must have struggled with them and was thrown forward,
+doesn't it?"
+
+Hewitt did not reply, but gingerly lifted the right arm by its sleeve.
+"Is either of the brothers Foster left-handed?" he asked.
+
+"No, I think not. Here, Bennett, you have seen plenty of their
+doings--cricket, shooting, and so on--do you remember if either is
+left-handed?"
+
+"Nayther, sir," Mr. Hardwick's man answered. "Both on 'em's
+right-handed."
+
+Hewitt lifted the lapel of the coat and attentively regarded a small
+rent in it. The dead man's hat lay near, and after a few glances at
+that, Hewitt dropped it and turned his attention to the hair. This was
+coarse and dark and long, and brushed straight back with no parting.
+
+"This doesn't look very symmetrical, does it?" Hewitt remarked, pointing
+to the locks over the right ear. They were shorter just there than on
+the other side, and apparently very clumsily cut, whereas in every other
+part the hair appeared to be rather well and carefully trimmed. Mr.
+Hardwick said nothing, but fidgeted a little, as though he considered
+that valuable time was being wasted over irrelevant trivialities.
+
+Presently, however, he spoke. "There's very little to be learned from
+the body, is there?" he said. "I think I'm quite justified in ordering
+their arrest, eh?--indeed, I've wasted too much time already."
+
+Hewitt was groping about among some bushes behind the tree from which
+the corpse had been taken. When he answered, he said, "I don't think I
+should do anything of the sort just now, Mr. Hardwick. As a matter of
+fact, I _fancy_"--this word with an emphasis--"that the brothers Foster
+may not have seen this man Sneathy at all to-day."
+
+"Not seen him? Why, my dear sir, there's no question of it. It's
+certain, absolutely. The evidence is positive. The fact of the threats
+and of the body being found treated so is pretty well enough, I should
+think. But that's nothing--look at those footmarks. They've walked along
+with him, one each side, without a possible doubt; plainly they were the
+last people with him, in any case. And you don't mean to ask anybody to
+believe that the dead man, even if he hanged himself, cut off his own
+hand first. Even if you do, where's the hand? And even putting aside all
+these considerations, each a complete case in itself, the Fosters _must_
+at least have seen the body as they came past, and yet nothing has been
+heard of them yet. Why didn't they spread the alarm? They went straight
+away in the opposite direction from home--there are their footmarks,
+which you've not seen yet, beyond the gravel."
+
+Hewitt stepped over to where the patch of clean gravel ceased, at the
+opposite side to that from which we had approached the brook, and there,
+sure enough, were the now familiar footmarks of the brothers leading
+away from the scene of Sneathy's end. "Yes," Hewitt said, "I see them.
+Of course, Mr. Hardwick, you'll do what seems right in your own eyes,
+and in any case not much harm will be done by the arrest beyond a
+terrible fright for that unfortunate family. Nevertheless, if you care
+for my impression, it is, as I have said, that the Fosters have not seen
+Sneathy to-day."
+
+"But what about the hand?"
+
+"As to that I have a conjecture, but as yet it is only a conjecture, and
+if I told it you would probably call it absurd--certainly you'd
+disregard it, and perhaps quite excusably. The case is a complicated
+one, and, if there is anything at all in my conjecture, one of the most
+remarkable I have ever had to do with. It interests me intensely, and I
+shall devote a little time now to following up the theory I have formed.
+You have, I suppose, already communicated with the police?"
+
+"I wired to Shopperton at once, as soon as I heard of the matter. It's a
+twelve miles drive, but I wonder the police have not arrived yet. They
+can't be long; I don't know where the village constable has got to, but
+in any case _he_ wouldn't be much good. But as to your idea that the
+Fosters can't be suspected--well, nobody could respect your opinion, Mr.
+Hewitt, more than myself, but really, just think. The notion's
+impossible--fiftyfold impossible. As soon as the police arrive I shall
+have that trail followed and the Fosters apprehended. I should be a fool
+if I didn't."
+
+"Very well, Mr. Hardwick," Hewitt replied; "you'll do what you consider
+your duty, of course, and quite properly, though I _would_ recommend you
+to take another glance at those three trails in the path. I shall take a
+look in this direction." And he turned up by the side of the streamlet,
+keeping on the gravel at its side.
+
+I followed. We climbed the rising ground, and presently, among the
+trees, came to the place where the little rill emerged from the broken
+ground in the highest part of the wood. Here the clean ground ceased,
+and there was a large patch of wet clayey earth. Several marks left by
+the feet of cattle were there, and one or two human footmarks. Two of
+these (a pair), the newest and the most distinct, Hewitt studied
+carefully, and measured each direction.
+
+"Notice these marks," he said. "They may be of importance or they may
+not--that we shall see. Fortunately they are very distinctive--the right
+boot is a badly worn one, and a small tag of leather, where the soul is
+damaged, is doubled over and trodden into the soft earth. Nothing could
+be luckier. Clearly they are the most recent footsteps in this
+direction--from the main road, which lies right ahead, through the rest
+of the wood."
+
+"Then you think somebody else has been on the scene of the tragedy,
+beside the victim and the brothers?" I said.
+
+"Yes, I do. But hark; there is a vehicle in the road. Can you see
+between the trees? Yes, it is the police cart. We shall be able to
+report its arrival to Mr. Hardwick as we go down."
+
+We turned and walked rapidly down the incline to where we had come from.
+Mr. Hardwick and his man were still there, and another rustic had
+arrived to gape. We told Mr. Hardwick that he might expect the police
+presently, and proceeded along the gravel skirting the stream, toward
+the lower part of the wood.
+
+Here Hewitt proceeded very cautiously, keeping a sharp look-out on
+either side for footprints on the neighbouring soft ground. There were
+none, however, for the gravel margin of the stream made a sort of
+footpath of itself, and the trees and undergrowth were close and thick
+on each side. At the bottom we emerged from the wood on a small piece
+of open ground skirting a lane, and here, just by the side of the lane,
+where the stream fell into a trench, Hewitt suddenly pounced on another
+footmark. He was unusually excited.
+
+"See," he said, "here it is--the right foot with its broken leather, and
+the corresponding left foot on the damp edge of the lane itself. He--the
+man with the broken shoe--has walked on the hard gravel all the way down
+from the source of the stream, and his is the only trail unaccounted for
+near the body. Come, Brett, we've an adventure on foot. Do you care to
+let your uncle's dinner go by the board, and follow?"
+
+"Can't we go back and tell him?"
+
+"No--there's no time to lose; we must follow up this man--or at least I
+must. You go or stay, of course, as you think best."
+
+I hesitated a moment, picturing to myself the excellent Colonel as he
+would appear after waiting dinner an hour or two for us, but decided to
+go. "At any rate," I said, "if the way lies along the roads we shall
+probably meet somebody going in the direction of Ratherby who will take
+a message. But what is your theory? I don't understand at all. I must
+say everything Hardwick said seemed to me to be beyond question. There
+were the tracks to prove that the three had walked together to the
+spot, and that the brothers had gone on alone; and every other
+circumstance pointed the same way. Then, what possible motive could
+anybody else about here have for such a crime? Unless, indeed, it were
+one of the people defrauded by Sneathy's late companies."
+
+"The motive," said Hewitt, "is, I fancy, a most extraordinary--indeed, a
+weird one. A thing as of centuries ago. Ask me no questions--I think you
+will be a little surprised before very long. But come, we must move."
+And we mended our pace along the lane.
+
+The lane, by the bye, was hard and firm, with scarcely a spot where a
+track might be left, except in places at the sides; and at these places
+Hewitt never gave a glance. At the end the lane turned into a by-road,
+and at the turning Hewitt stopped and scrutinised the ground closely.
+There was nothing like a recognisable footmark to be seen; but almost
+immediately Hewitt turned off to the right, and we continued our brisk
+march without a glance at the road.
+
+"How did you judge which way to turn then?" I asked.
+
+"Didn't you see?" replied Hewitt; "I'll show you at the next turning."
+
+Half a mile farther on the road forked, and here Hewitt stooped and
+pointed silently to a couple of small twigs, placed crosswise, with the
+longer twig of the two pointing down the branch of the road to the left.
+We took the branch to the left, and went on.
+
+"Our man's making a mistake," Hewitt observed. "He leaves his friends'
+messages lying about for his enemies to read."
+
+We hurried forward with scarcely a word. I was almost too bewildered by
+what Hewitt had said and done to formulate anything like a reasonable
+guess as to what our expedition tended, or even to make an effective
+inquiry--though, after what Hewitt had said, I knew that would be
+useless. Who was this mysterious man with the broken shoe? what had he
+to do with the murder of Sneathy? what did the mutilation mean? and who
+were his friends who left him signs and messages by means of crossed
+twigs?
+
+We met a man, by whom I sent a short note to my uncle, and soon after we
+turned into a main road. Here again, at the corner, was the curious
+message of twigs. A cart-wheel had passed over and crushed them, but it
+had not so far displaced them as to cause any doubt that the direction
+to take was to the right. At an inn a little farther along we entered,
+and Hewitt bought a pint of Irish whisky and a flat bottle to hold it
+in, as well as a loaf of bread and some cheese, which we carried away
+wrapped in paper.
+
+"This will have to do for our dinner," Hewitt said as we emerged.
+
+"But we're not going to drink a pint of common whisky between us?" I
+asked in some astonishment.
+
+"Never mind," Hewitt answered with a smile. "Perhaps we'll find somebody
+to help us--somebody not so fastidious as yourself as to quality."
+
+Now we hurried--hurried more than ever, for it was beginning to get
+dusk, and Hewitt feared a difficulty in finding and reading the twig
+signs in the dark. Two more turnings we made, each with its silent
+direction--the crossed twigs. To me there was something almost weird and
+creepy in this curious hunt for the invisible and incomprehensible,
+guided faithfully and persistently at every turn by this now
+unmistakable signal. After the second turning we broke into a trot along
+a long, winding lane, but presently Hewitt's hand fell on my shoulder,
+and we stopped. He pointed ahead, where some large object, round a bend
+of the hedge was illuminated as though by a light from below.
+
+"We will walk now," Hewitt said. "Remember that we are on a walking
+tour, and have come along here entirely by accident."
+
+We proceeded at a swinging walk, Hewitt whistling gaily. Soon we turned
+the bend, and saw that the large object was a travelling van drawn up
+with two others on a space of grass by the side of the lane. It was a
+gipsy encampment, the caravan having apparently only lately stopped, for
+a man was still engaged in tugging at the rope of a tent that stood near
+the vans. Two or three sullen-looking ruffians lay about a fire which
+burned in the space left in the middle of the encampment. A woman stood
+at the door of one van with a large kettle in her hand, and at the foot
+of the steps below her a more pleasant-looking old man sat on an
+inverted pail. Hewitt swung towards the fire from the road, and with an
+indescribable mixture of slouch, bow, and smile addressed the company
+generally with "_Kooshto bock, pals!_"[1]
+
+ [1] "Good luck, brothers!"
+
+The men on the ground took no notice, but continued to stare doggedly
+before them. The man working at the tent looked round quickly for a
+moment, and the old man on the bucket looked up and nodded.
+
+Quick to see the most likely friend, Hewitt at once went up to the old
+man, extending his hand, "_Sarshin, daddo?_" he said; "_Dell mandy
+tooty's varst._"[2]
+
+ [2] "How do you do, father? Give me your hand."
+
+The old man smiled and shook hands, though without speaking. Then
+Hewitt proceeded, producing the flat bottle of whisky, "_Tatty for
+pawny, chals. Dell mandy the pawny, and lell posh the tatty._"[3]
+
+ [3] "Spirits for water, lads. Give me the water and take your share of
+ the spirits."
+
+The whisky did it. We were Romany ryes in twenty minutes or less, and
+had already been taking tea with the gipsies for half the time. The two
+or three we had found about the fire were still reserved, but these, I
+found, were only half-gipsies, and understood very little Romany. One or
+two others, however, including the old man, were of purer breed, and
+talked freely, as did one of the women. They were Lees, they said, and
+expected to be on Wirksby racecourse in three days' time. We, too, were
+_pirimengroes_, or travellers, Hewitt explained, and might look to see
+them on the course.
+
+Then he fell to telling gipsy stories, and they to telling others back,
+to my intense mystification. Hewitt explained afterwards that they were
+mostly stories of poaching, with now and again a horse-coping anecdote
+thrown in. Since then I have learned enough of Romany to take my part in
+such a conversation, but at the time a word or two here and there was
+all I could understand. In all this talk the man we had first noticed
+stretching the tent-rope took very little interest, but lay, with his
+head away from the fire, smoking his pipe. He was a much darker man
+than any other present--had, in fact, the appearance of a man of even a
+swarthier race than that of the others about us.
+
+Presently, in the middle of a long and, of course, to me unintelligible
+story by the old man, I caught Hewitt's eye. He lifted one eyebrow
+almost imperceptibly, and glanced for a single moment at his
+walking-stick. Then I saw that it was pointed toward the feet of the
+very dark man, who had not yet spoken. One leg was thrown over the
+others as he lay, with the soles of his shoes presented toward the fire,
+and in its glare I saw--that the right sole was worn and broken, and
+that a small triangular tag of leather was doubled over beneath in just
+the place we knew of from the prints in Ratherby Wood.
+
+I could not take my eyes off that man with his broken shoe. There lay
+the secret, the whole mystery of the fantastic crime in Ratherby Wood
+centred in that shabby ruffian. What was it?
+
+But Hewitt went on, talking and joking furiously. The men who were not
+speaking mostly smoked gloomily, but whenever one spoke, he became
+animated and lively. I had attempted once or twice to join in, though my
+efforts were not particularly successful, except in inducing one man to
+offer me tobacco from his box--tobacco that almost made me giddy in the
+smell. He tried some of mine in exchange, and though he praised it with
+native politeness, and smoked the pipe through, I could see that my
+Hignett mixture was poor stuff in his estimation, compared with the
+awful tobacco in his own box.
+
+Presently the man with the broken shoe got up, slouched over to his
+tent, and disappeared. Then said Hewitt (I translate):
+
+"You're not all Lees here, I see?"
+
+"Yes, _pal_, all Lees."
+
+"But _he's_ not a Lee?" and Hewitt jerked his head towards the tent.
+
+"Why not a Lee, _pal_? We be Lees, and he is with us. Thus he is a Lee."
+
+"Oh yes, of course. But I know he is from over the _pawny_. Come, I'll
+guess the _tem_[4] he comes from--it's from Roumania, eh? Perhaps the
+Wallachian part?"
+
+ [4] Country.
+
+The men looked at one another, and then the old Lee said:
+
+"You're right, pal. You're cleverer than we took you for. That is what
+they calls his _tem_. He is a petulengro,[5]and he comes with us to shoe
+the _gries_[6] and mend the _vardoes_.[7] But he is with us, and so he
+is a Lee."
+
+ [5] Smith.
+
+ [6] Horses.
+
+ [7] Vans.
+
+The talk and the smoke went on, and presently the man with the broken
+shoe returned, and lay down again. Then, when the whisky had all gone,
+and Hewitt, with some excuse that I did not understand, had begged a
+piece of cord from one of the men, we left in a chorus of _kooshto
+rardies_.[8]
+
+ [8] Good-night.
+
+By this time it was nearly ten o'clock. We walked briskly till we came
+back again to the inn where we had bought the whisky. Here Hewitt, after
+some little trouble, succeeded in hiring a village cart, and while the
+driver was harnessing the horse, cut a couple of short sticks from the
+hedge. These, being each divided into two, made four short, stout pieces
+of something less than six inches long apiece. Then Hewitt joined them
+together in pairs, each pair being connected from centre to centre by
+about nine or ten inches of the cord he had brought from the gipsies'
+camp. These done, he handed one pair to me. "Handcuffs," he explained,
+"and no bad ones either. See--you use them so." And he passed the cord
+round my wrist, gripping the two handles, and giving them a slight twist
+that sufficiently convinced me of the excruciating pain that might be
+inflicted by a vigorous turn, and the utter helplessness of a prisoner
+thus secured in the hands of captors prepared to use their instruments.
+
+"Whom are these for?" I asked. "The man with the broken shoe?"
+
+Hewitt nodded.
+
+"Yes," he said. "I expect we shall find him out alone about midnight.
+You know how to use these now."
+
+It was fully eleven before the cart was ready and we started. A quarter
+of a mile or so from the gipsy encampment Hewitt stopped the cart and
+gave the driver instructions to wait. We got through the hedge, and made
+our way on the soft ground behind it in the direction of the vans and
+the tent.
+
+"Roll up your handkerchief," Hewitt whispered, "into a tight pad. The
+moment I grab him, ram it into his mouth--_well_ in, mind, so that it
+doesn't easily fall out. Probably he will be stooping--that will make it
+easier; we can pull him suddenly backward. Now be quiet."
+
+We kept on till nothing but the hedge divided us from the space whereon
+stood the encampment. It was now nearer twelve o'clock than eleven, but
+the time we waited seemed endless. But time is not eternity after all,
+and at last we heard a move in the tent. A minute after, the man we
+sought was standing before us. He made straight for a gap in the hedge
+which we had passed on our way, and we crouched low and waited. He
+emerged on our side of the hedge with his back towards us, and began
+walking, as we had walked, behind the hedge, but in the opposite
+direction. We followed.
+
+He carried something in his hand that looked like a large bundle of
+sticks and twigs, and he appeared to be as anxious to be secret as we
+ourselves. From time to time he stopped and listened; fortunately there
+was no moon, or in turning about, as he did once or twice, he would
+probably have observed us. The field sloped downward just before us, and
+there was another hedge at right angles, leading down to a slight
+hollow. To this hollow the man made his way, and in the shade of the new
+hedge we followed. Presently he stopped suddenly, stooped, and deposited
+his bundle on the ground before him. Crouching before it, he produced
+matches from his pocket, struck one, and in a moment had a fire of twigs
+and small branches, that sent up a heavy white smoke. What all this
+portended I could not imagine, but a sense of the weirdness of the whole
+adventure came upon me unchecked. The horrible corpse in the wood, with
+its severed wrist, Hewitt's enigmatical forebodings, the mysterious
+tracking of the man with the broken shoe, the scene round the gipsies'
+fire, and now the strange behaviour of this man, whose connection with
+the tragedy was so intimate and yet so inexplicable--all these things
+contributed to make up a tale of but a few hours' duration, but of an
+inscrutable impressiveness that I began to feel in my nerves.
+
+The man bent a thin stick double, and using it as a pair of tongs, held
+some indistinguishable object over the flames before him. Excited as I
+was, I could not help noticing that he bent and held the stick with his
+left hand. We crept stealthily nearer, and as I stood scarcely three
+yards behind him and looked over his shoulder, the form of the object
+stood out clear and black against the dull red of the flame. It was a
+_human hand_.
+
+I suppose I may have somehow betrayed my amazement and horror to my
+companion's sharp eyes, for suddenly I felt his hand tightly grip my arm
+just above the elbow. I turned, and found his face close by mine and his
+finger raised warningly. Then I saw him produce his wrist-grip and make
+a motion with his palm toward his mouth, which I understood to be
+intended to remind me of the gag. We stepped forward.
+
+The man turned his horrible cookery over and over above the crackling
+sticks, as though to smoke and dry it in every part. I saw Hewitt's hand
+reach out toward him, and in a flash we had pulled him back over his
+heels and I had driven the gag between his teeth as he opened his mouth.
+We seized his wrists in the cords at once, and I shall never forget the
+man's look of ghastly, frantic terror as he lay on the ground. When I
+knew more I understood the reason of this.
+
+Hewitt took both wristholds in one hand and drove the gag entirely into
+the man's mouth, so that he almost choked. A piece of sacking lay near
+the fire, and by Hewitt's request I dropped that awful hand from the
+wooden twigs upon it and rolled it up in a parcel--it was, no doubt,
+what the sacking had been brought for. Then we lifted the man to his
+feet and hurried him in the direction of the cart. The whole capture
+could not have occupied thirty seconds, and as I stumbled over the rough
+field at the man's left elbow I could only think of the thing as one
+thinks of a dream that one knows all the time _is_ a dream.
+
+But presently the man, who had been walking quietly, though gasping,
+sniffing and choking because of the tightly rolled handkerchief in his
+mouth--presently he made a sudden dive, thinking doubtless to get his
+wrists free by surprise. But Hewitt was alert, and gave them a twist
+that made him roll his head with a dismal, stifled yell, and with the
+opening of his mouth, by some chance the gag fell away. Immediately the
+man roared aloud for help.
+
+"Quick," said Hewitt, "drag him along--they'll hear in the vans. Bring
+the hand!"
+
+I seized the fallen handkerchief and crammed it over the man's mouth as
+well as I might, and together we made as much of a trot as we could,
+dragging the man between us, while Hewitt checked any reluctance on his
+part by a timely wrench of the wristholds. It was a hard two hundred and
+fifty yards to the lane even for us--for the gipsy it must have been a
+bad minute and a half indeed. Once more as we went over the uneven
+ground he managed to get out a shout, and we thought we heard a distinct
+reply from somewhere in the direction of the encampment.
+
+We pulled him over a stile in a tangle; and dragged and pushed him
+through a small hedge-gap all in a heap. Here we were but a short
+distance from the cart, and into that we flung him without wasting time
+or tenderness, to the intense consternation of the driver, who, I
+believe, very nearly set up a cry for help on his own account. Once in
+the cart, however, I seized the reins and the whip myself and, leaving
+Hewitt to take care of the prisoner, put the turn-out along toward
+Ratherby at as near ten miles an hour as it could go.
+
+We made first for Mr. Hardwick's, but he, we found, was with my uncle,
+so we followed him. The arrest of the Fosters had been effected, we
+learned, not very long after we had left the wood, as they returned by
+another route to Ranworth. We brought our prisoner into the Colonel's
+library, where he and Mr. Hardwick were sitting.
+
+"I'm not quite sure what we can charge him with unless it's anatomical
+robbery," Hewitt remarked, "but here's the criminal."
+
+The man only looked down, with a sulkily impenetrable countenance.
+Hewitt spoke to him once or twice, and at last he said, in a strange
+accent, something that sounded like "_kekin jin-navvy._"
+
+"_Keck jin?_"[9] asked Hewitt, in the loud, clear tone one instinctively
+adopts in talking to a foreigner, "_Keckeno jinny?_"
+
+ [9] "Not understand?"
+
+The man understood and shook his head, but not another word would he say
+or another question answer.
+
+"He's a foreign gipsy," Hewitt explained, "just as I thought--a
+Wallachian, in fact. Theirs is an older and purer dialect than that of
+the English gipsies, and only some of the root-words are alike. But I
+think we can make him explain to-morrow that the Fosters at least had
+nothing to do with, at any rate, cutting off Sneathy's hand. Here it is,
+I think." And he gingerly lifted the folds of sacking from the ghastly
+object as it lay on the table, and then covered it up again.
+
+"But what--what does it all mean?" Mr. Hardwick said in bewildered
+astonishment. "Do you mean this man was an accomplice?"
+
+"Not at all--the case was one of suicide, as I think you'll agree, when
+I've explained. This man simply found the body hanging and stole the
+hand."
+
+"But what in the world for?"
+
+"For the HAND OF GLORY. Eh?" He turned to the gipsy and pointed to the
+hand on the table: "_Yag-varst_,[10] eh?"
+
+ [10] Fire-hand.
+
+There was a quick gleam of intelligence in the man's eye, but he said
+nothing. As for myself I was more than astounded. Could it be possible
+that the old superstition of the Hand of Glory remained alive in a
+practical shape at this day?
+
+"You know the superstition, of course," Hewitt said. "It did exist in
+this country in the last century, when there were plenty of dead men
+hanging at cross-roads, and so on. On the Continent, in some places, it
+has survived later. Among the Wallachian gipsies it has always been a
+great article of belief, and the superstition is quite active still. The
+belief is that the right hand of a hanged man, cut off and dried over
+the smoke of certain wood and herbs, and then provided with wicks at
+each finger made of the dead man's hair, becomes, when lighted at each
+wick (the wicks are greased, of course), a charm, whereby a thief may
+walk without hinderance where he pleases in a strange house, push open
+all doors and take what he likes. Nobody can stop him, for everybody the
+Hand of Glory approaches is made helpless, and can neither move nor
+speak. You may remember there was some talk of 'thieves' candles' in
+connection with the horrible series of Whitechapel murders not long ago.
+That is only one form of the cult of the Hand of Glory."
+
+"Yes," my uncle said, "I remember reading so. There is a story about it
+in the Ingoldsby Legends, too, I believe."
+
+"There is--it is called 'The Hand of Glory,' in fact. You remember the
+spell, 'Open lock to the dead man's knock,' and so on. But I think you'd
+better have the constable up and get this man into safe quarters for the
+night. He should be searched, of course. I expect they will find on him
+the hair I noticed to have been cut from Sneathy's head."
+
+The village constable arrived with his iron handcuffs in substitution
+for those of cord which had so sorely vexed the wrists of our prisoner,
+and marched him away to the little lock-up on the green.
+
+Then my uncle and Mr. Hardwick turned on Martin Hewitt with doubts and
+many questions:
+
+"Why do you call it suicide?" Mr. Hardwick asked. "It is plain the
+Fosters were with him at the time from the tracks. Do you mean to say
+that they stood there and watched Sneathy hang himself without
+interfering?"
+
+"No, I don't," Hewitt replied, lighting a cigar. "I think I told you
+that they never saw Sneathy."
+
+"Yes, you did, and of course that's what they said themselves when they
+were arrested. But the thing's impossible. Look at the tracks!"
+
+"The tracks are exactly what revealed to me that it was _not_
+impossible," Hewitt returned. "I'll tell you how the case unfolded
+itself to me from the beginning. As to the information you gathered from
+the Ranworth coachman, to begin with. The conversation between the
+Fosters which he overheard might well mean something less serious than
+murder. What did they say? They had been sent for in a hurry and had
+just had a short consultation with their mother and sister. Henry said
+that 'the thing must be done at once'; also that as there were two of
+them it should be easy. Robert said that Henry, as a doctor, would know
+best what to do.
+
+"Now you, Colonel Brett, had been saying--before we learned these things
+from Mr. Hardwick--that Sneathy's behaviour of late had become so bad as
+to seem that of a madman. Then there was the story of his sudden attack
+on a tradesman in the village, and equally sudden running away--exactly
+the sort of impulsive, wild thing that madmen do. Why then might it not
+be reasonable to suppose that Sneathy _had_ become mad--more especially
+considering all the circumstances of the case, his commercial ruin and
+disgrace and his horrible life with his wife and her family?--had become
+suddenly much worse and quite uncontrollable, so that the two wretched
+women left alone with him were driven to send in haste for Henry and
+Robert to help them? That would account for all.
+
+"The brothers arrive just after Sneathy had gone out. They are told in a
+hurried interview how affairs stand, and it is decided that Sneathy must
+be at once secured and confined in an asylum before something serious
+happens. He has just gone out--something terrible may be happening at
+this moment. The brothers determine to follow at once and secure him
+wherever he may be. Then the meaning of their conversation is plain. The
+thing that 'must be done, and at once,' is the capture of Sneathy and
+his confinement in an asylum. Henry, as a doctor, would 'know what to
+do' in regard to the necessary formalities. And they took a halter in
+case a struggle should ensue and it were found necessary to bind him.
+Very likely, wasn't it?"
+
+"Well, yes," Mr. Hardwick replied, "it certainly is. It never struck me
+in that light at all."
+
+"That was because you believed, to begin with, that a murder had been
+committed, and looked at the preliminary circumstances which you learned
+after in the light of your conviction. But now, to come to my actual
+observations. I saw the footmarks across the fields, and agreed with you
+(it was indeed obvious) that Sneathy had gone that way first, and that
+the brothers had followed, walking over his tracks. This state of the
+tracks continued until well into the wood, when suddenly the tracks of
+the brothers opened out and proceeded on each side of Sneathy's. The
+simple inference would seem to be, of course, the one you made--that the
+Fosters had here overtaken Sneathy, and walked one at each side of him.
+
+"But of this I felt by no means certain. Another very simple explanation
+was available, which might chance to be the true one. It was just at the
+spot where the brothers' tracks separated that the path became suddenly
+much muddier, because of the closer overhanging of the trees at the
+spot. The path was, as was to be expected, wettest in the middle. It
+would be the most natural thing in the world for two well-dressed young
+men, on arriving here, to separate so as to walk one on each side of the
+mud in the middle.
+
+"On the other hand, a man in Sneathy's state (assuming him, for the
+moment, to be mad and contemplating suicide) would walk straight along
+the centre of the path, taking no note of mud or anything else. I
+examined all the tracks very carefully, and my theory was confirmed. The
+feet of the brothers had everywhere alighted in the driest spots, and
+the steps were of irregular lengths--which meant, of course, that they
+were picking their way; while Sneathy's footmarks had never turned aside
+even for the dirtiest puddle. Here, then, were the rudiments of a
+theory.
+
+"At the watercourse, of course, the footmarks ceased, because of the
+hard gravel. The body lay on a knoll at the left--a knoll covered with
+grass. On this the signs of footmarks were almost undiscoverable,
+although I am often able to discover tracks in grass that are invisible
+to others. Here, however, it was almost useless to spend much time in
+examination, for you and your man had been there, and what slight marks
+there might be would be indistinguishable one from another.
+
+"Under the branch from which the man had hung there was an old tree
+stump, with a flat top, where the tree had been sawn off. I examined
+this, and it became fairly apparent that Sneathy had stood on it when
+the rope was about his neck--his muddy footprint was plain to see; the
+mud was not smeared about, you see, as it probably would have been if
+he had been stood there forcibly and pushed off. It was a simple, clear
+footprint--another hint at suicide.
+
+"But then arose the objection that you mentioned yourself. Plainly the
+brothers Foster were following Sneathy, and came this way. Therefore, if
+he hanged himself before they arrived, it would seem that they must have
+come across the body. But now I examined the body itself. There was mud
+on the knees, and clinging to one knee was a small leaf. It was a leaf
+corresponding to those on the bush behind the tree, and it was not a
+dead leaf, so must have been just detached.
+
+"After my examination of the body I went to the bush, and there, in the
+thick of it, were, for me, sufficiently distinct knee-marks, in one of
+which the knee had crushed a spray of the bush against the ground, and
+from that spray a leaf was missing. Behind the knee-marks were the
+indentations of boot-toes in the soft, bare earth under the bush, and
+thus the thing was plain. The poor lunatic had come in sight of the
+dangling rope, and the temptation to suicide was irresistible. To people
+in a deranged state of mind the mere sight of the means of
+self-destruction is often a temptation impossible to withstand. But at
+that moment he must have heard the steps--probably the voices--of the
+brothers behind him on the winding path. He immediately hid in the bush
+till they had passed. It is probable that seeing who the men were, and
+conjecturing that they were following him--thinking also, perhaps, of
+things that had occurred between them and himself--his inclination to
+self-destruction became completely ungovernable, with the result that
+you saw.
+
+"But before I inspected the bush I noticed one or two more things about
+the body. You remember I inquired if either of the brothers Foster was
+left-handed, and was assured that neither was. But clearly the hand had
+been cut off by a left-handed man, with a large, sharply pointed knife.
+For well away to the _right_ of where the wrist had hung the knife-point
+had made a tiny triangular rent in the coat, so that the hand must have
+been held in the mutilator's right hand, while he used the knife with
+his left--clearly a left-handed man.
+
+"But most important of all about the body was the jagged hair over the
+right ear. Everywhere else the hair was well cut and orderly--here it
+seemed as though a good piece had been, so to speak, _sawn_ off. What
+could anybody want with a dead man's right hand and certain locks of his
+hair? Then it struck me suddenly--the man was hanged; it was the Hand of
+Glory!
+
+"Then you will remember I went, at your request, to see the footprints
+of the Fosters on the part of the path _past_ the watercourse. Here
+again it was muddy in the middle, and the two brothers had walked as far
+apart as before, although nobody had walked between them. A final proof,
+if one were needed, of my theory as to the three lines of footprints.
+
+"Now I was to consider how to get at the man who had taken his hand. He
+should be punished for the mutilation, but beyond that he would be
+required as a witness. Now all the foot-tracks in the vicinity had been
+accounted for. There were those of the brothers and of Sneathy, which we
+have been speaking of; those of the rustics looking on, which, however,
+stopped a little way off, and did not interfere with our sphere of
+observation; those of your man, who had cut straight through the wood
+when he first saw the body, and had come back the same way with you; and
+our own, which we had been careful to keep away from the others.
+Consequently there was _no_ track of the man who had cut off the hand;
+therefore it was certain that he must have come along the hard gravel by
+the watercourse, for that was the only possible path which would not
+tell the tale. Indeed, it seemed quite a likely path through the wood
+for a passenger to take, coming from the high ground by the Shopperton
+road.
+
+"Brett and I left you and traversed the watercourse, both up and down.
+We found a footprint at the top, left lately by a man with a broken
+shoe. Right down to the bottom of the watercourse where it emerged from
+the wood there was no sign on either side of this man having left the
+gravel. (Where the body was, as you will remember, he would simply have
+stepped off the gravel on to the grass, which I thought it useless to
+examine, as I have explained.) But at the bottom, by the lane, the
+footprint appeared again.
+
+"This then was the direction in which I was to search for a left-handed
+man with a broken-soled shoe, probably a gipsy--and most probably a
+foreign gipsy--because a foreign gipsy would be the most likely still to
+hold the belief in the Hand of Glory. I conjectured the man to be a
+straggler from a band of gipsies--one who probably had got behind the
+caravan and had made a short cut across the wood after it; so at the end
+of the lane I looked for a _patrin_. This is a sign that gipsies leave
+to guide stragglers following up. Sometimes it is a heap of dead leaves,
+sometimes a few stones, sometimes a mark on the ground, but more usually
+a couple of twigs crossed, with the longer twig pointing the road.
+
+"Guided by these _patrins_ we came in the end on the gipsy camp just as
+it was settling down for the night. We made ourselves agreeable (as
+Brett will probably describe to you better than I can), we left them,
+and after they had got to sleep we came back and watched for the
+gentleman who is now in the lock-up. He would, of course, seize the
+first opportunity of treating his ghastly trophy in the prescribed way,
+and I guessed he would choose midnight, for that is the time the
+superstition teaches that the hand should be prepared. We made a few
+small preparations, collared him, and now you've got him. And I should
+think the sooner you let the brothers Foster go the better."
+
+"But why didn't you tell me all the conclusions you had arrived at at
+the time?" asked Mr. Hardwick.
+
+"Well, really," Hewitt replied, with a quiet smile, "you were so
+positive, and some of the traces I relied on were so small, that it
+would probably have meant a long argument and a loss of time. But more
+than that, confess, if I had told you bluntly that Sneathy's hand had
+been taken away to make a mediæval charm to enable a thief to pass
+through a locked door and steal plate calmly under the owner's nose,
+what _would_ you have said?"
+
+"Well, well, perhaps I _should_ have been a little sceptical.
+Appearances combined so completely to point to the Fosters as murderers
+that any other explanation almost would have seemed unlikely to me, and
+_that_--well no, I confess, I shouldn't have believed in it. But it is a
+startling thing to find such superstitions alive now-a-days."
+
+"Yes, perhaps it is. Yet we find survivals of the sort very frequently.
+The Wallachians, however, are horribly superstitious still--the gipsies
+among them are, of course, worse. Don't you remember the case reported a
+few months ago, in which a child was drowned as a sacrifice in Wallachia
+in order to bring rain? And that was not done by gipsies either. Even in
+England, as late as 1865, a poor paralysed Frenchman was killed by being
+'swum' for witchcraft--that was in Essex. And less atrocious cases of
+belief in wizardry occur again and again even now."
+
+Then Mr. Hardwick and my uncle fell into a discussion as to how the
+gipsy in the lock-up could be legally punished. Mr. Hardwick thought it
+should be treated as a theft of a portion of a dead body, but my uncle
+fancied there was a penalty for mutilation of a dead body _per se_,
+though he could not point to the statute. As it happened, however, they
+were saved the trouble of arriving at a decision, for in the morning he
+was discovered to have escaped. He had been left, of course, with free
+hands, and had occupied the night in wrenching out the bars at the top
+of the back wall of the little prison-shed (it had stood on the green
+for a hundred and fifty years) and climbing out. He was not found again,
+and a month or two later the Foster family left the district entirely.
+
+
+
+
+THE CASE OF LAKER, ABSCONDED.
+
+
+There were several of the larger London banks and insurance offices from
+which Hewitt held a sort of general retainer as detective adviser, in
+fulfilment of which he was regularly consulted as to the measures to be
+taken in different cases of fraud, forgery, theft, and so forth, which
+it might be the misfortune of the particular firms to encounter. The
+more important and intricate of these cases were placed in his hands
+entirely, with separate commissions, in the usual way. One of the most
+important companies of the sort was the General Guarantee Society, an
+insurance corporation which, among other risks, took those of the
+integrity of secretaries, clerks, and cashiers. In the case of a
+cash-box elopement on the part of any person guaranteed by the society,
+the directors were naturally anxious for a speedy capture of the
+culprit, and more especially of the booty, before too much of it was
+spent, in order to lighten the claim upon their funds, and in work of
+this sort Hewitt was at times engaged, either in general advice and
+direction, or in the actual pursuit of the plunder and the plunderer.
+
+Arriving at his office a little later than usual one morning, Hewitt
+found an urgent message awaiting him from the General Guarantee Society,
+requesting his attention to a robbery which had taken place on the
+previous day. He had gleaned some hint of the case from the morning
+paper, wherein appeared a short paragraph, which ran thus:--
+
+ SERIOUS BANK ROBBERY.--In the course of yesterday a clerk employed
+ by Messrs. Liddle, Neal & Liddle, the well-known bankers,
+ disappeared, having in his possession a large sum of money, the
+ property of his employers--a sum reported to be rather over
+ £15,000. It would seem that he had been entrusted to collect the
+ money in his capacity of "walk-clerk" from various other banks and
+ trading concerns during the morning, but failed to return at the
+ usual time. A large number of the notes which he received had been
+ cashed at the Bank of England before suspicion was aroused. We
+ understand that Detective-Inspector Plummer, of Scotland Yard,
+ has the case in hand.
+
+The clerk, whose name was Charles William Laker, had, it appeared from
+the message, been guaranteed in the usual way by the General Guarantee
+Society, and Hewitt's presence at the office was at once desired, in
+order that steps might quickly be taken for the man's apprehension, and
+in the recovery, at any rate, of as much of the booty as possible.
+
+A smart hansom brought Hewitt to Threadneedle Street in a bare quarter
+of an hour, and there a few minutes' talk with the manager, Mr. Lyster,
+put him in possession of the main facts of the case, which appeared to
+be simple. Charles William Laker was twenty-five years of age, and had
+been in the employ of Messrs. Liddle, Neal & Liddle for something more
+than seven years--since he left school, in fact--and until the previous
+day there had been nothing in his conduct to complain of. His duties as
+walk-clerk consisted in making a certain round, beginning at about
+half-past ten each morning. There were a certain number of the more
+important banks between which and Messrs. Liddle, Neal & Liddle there
+were daily transactions, and a few smaller semi-private banks and
+merchant firms acting as financial agents, with whom there was business
+intercourse of less importance and regularity; and each of these, as
+necessary, he visited in turn, collecting cash due on bills and other
+instruments of a like nature. He carried a wallet, fastened securely to
+his person by a chain, and this wallet contained the bills and the cash.
+Usually at the end of his round, when all his bills had been converted
+into cash, the wallet held very large sums. His work and
+responsibilities, in fine, were those common to walk-clerks in all
+banks.
+
+On the day of the robbery he had started out as usual--possibly a little
+earlier than was customary--and the bills and other securities in his
+possession represented considerably more than £15,000. It had been
+ascertained that he had called in the usual way at each establishment on
+the round, and had transacted his business at the last place by about a
+quarter-past one, being then, without doubt, in possession of cash to
+the full value of the bills negotiated. After that, Mr. Lyster said,
+yesterday's report was that nothing more had been heard of him. But this
+morning there had been a message to the effect that he had been traced
+out of the country--to Calais, at least, it was thought. The directors
+of the society wished Hewitt to take the case in hand personally and at
+once, with a view of recovering what was possible from the plunder by
+way of salvage; also, of course, of finding Laker, for it is an
+important moral gain to guarantee societies, as an example, if a thief
+is caught and punished. Therefore Hewitt and Mr. Lyster, as soon as
+might be, made for Messrs. Liddle, Neal & Liddle's, that the
+investigation might be begun.
+
+The bank premises were quite near--in Leadenhall Street. Having arrived
+there, Hewitt and Mr. Lyster made their way to the firm's private
+rooms. As they were passing an outer waiting-room, Hewitt noticed two
+women. One, the elder, in widow's weeds, was sitting with her head bowed
+in her hand over a small writing-table. Her face was not visible, but
+her whole attitude was that of a person overcome with unbearable grief;
+and she sobbed quietly. The other was a young woman of twenty-two or
+twenty-three. Her thick black veil revealed no more than that her
+features were small and regular, and that her face was pale and drawn.
+She stood with a hand on the elder woman's shoulder, and she quickly
+turned her head away as the two men entered.
+
+Mr. Neal, one of the partners, received them in his own room.
+"Good-morning, Mr. Hewitt," he said, when Mr. Lyster had introduced the
+detective. "This is a serious business--very. I think I am sorrier for
+Laker himself than for anybody else, ourselves included--or, at any
+rate, I am sorrier for his mother. She is waiting now to see Mr. Liddle,
+as soon as he arrives--Mr. Liddle has known the family for a long time.
+Miss Shaw is with her, too, poor girl. She is a governess, or something
+of that sort, and I believe she and Laker were engaged to be married.
+It's all very sad."
+
+"Inspector Plummer, I understand," Hewitt remarked, "has the affair in
+hand, on behalf of the police?"
+
+"Yes," Mr. Neal replied; "in fact, he's here now, going through the
+contents of Laker's desk, and so forth; he thinks it possible Laker may
+have had accomplices. Will you see him?"
+
+"Presently. Inspector Plummer and I are old friends. We met last, I
+think, in the case of the Stanway cameo, some months ago. But, first,
+will you tell me how long Laker has been a walk-clerk?"
+
+"Barely four months, although he has been with us altogether seven
+years. He was promoted to the walk soon after the beginning of the
+year."
+
+"Do you know anything of his habits--what he used to do in his spare
+time, and so forth?"
+
+"Not a great deal. He went in for boating, I believe, though I have
+heard it whispered that he had one or two more expensive
+tastes--expensive, that is, for a young man in his position," Mr. Neal
+explained, with a dignified wave of the hand that he peculiarly
+affected. He was a stout old gentleman, and the gesture suited him.
+
+"You have had no reason to suspect him of dishonesty before, I take it?"
+
+"Oh, no. He made a wrong return once, I believe, that went for some time
+undetected, but it turned out, after all, to be a clerical error--a mere
+clerical error."
+
+"Do you know anything of his associates out of the office?"
+
+"No, how should I? I believe Inspector Plummer has been making inquiries
+as to that, however, of the other clerks. Here he is, by the bye, I
+expect. Come in!"
+
+It was Plummer who had knocked, and he came in at Mr. Neal's call. He
+was a middle-sized, small-eyed, impenetrable-looking man, as yet of no
+great reputation in the force. Some of my readers may remember his
+connection with that case, so long a public mystery, that I have
+elsewhere fully set forth and explained under the title of "The Stanway
+Cameo Mystery." Plummer carried his billy-cock hat in one hand and a few
+papers in the other. He gave Hewitt good-morning, placed his hat on a
+chair, and spread the papers on the table.
+
+"There's not a great deal here," he said, "but one thing's plain--Laker
+had been betting. See here, and here, and here"--he took a few letters
+from the bundle in his hand--"two letters from a bookmaker about
+settling--wonder he trusted a clerk--several telegrams from tipsters,
+and a letter from some friend--only signed by initials--asking Laker to
+put a sovereign on a horse for the friend 'with his own.' I'll keep
+these, I think. It may be worth while to see that friend, if we can find
+him. Ah, we often find it's betting, don't we, Mr. Hewitt? Meanwhile,
+there's no news from France yet."
+
+"You are sure that is where he is gone?" asked Hewitt.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you what we've done as yet. First, of course, I went
+round to all the banks. There was nothing to be got from that. The
+cashiers all knew him by sight, and one was a personal friend of his. He
+had called as usual, said nothing in particular, cashed his bills in the
+ordinary way, and finished up at the Eastern Consolidated Bank at about
+a quarter-past one. So far there was nothing whatever. But I had started
+two or three men meanwhile making inquiries at the railway stations, and
+so on. I had scarcely left the Eastern Consolidated when one of them
+came after me with news. He had tried Palmer's Tourist Office, although
+that seemed an unlikely place, and there struck the track."
+
+"Had he been there?"
+
+"Not only had he been there, but he had taken a tourist ticket for
+France. It was quite a smart move, in a way. You see it was the sort of
+ticket that lets you do pretty well what you like; you have the choice
+of two or three different routes to begin with, and you can break your
+journey where you please, and make all sorts of variations. So that a
+man with a ticket like that, and a few hours' start, could twist about
+on some remote branch route, and strike off in another direction
+altogether, with a new ticket, from some out-of-the-way place, while we
+were carefully sorting out and inquiring along the different routes he
+_might_ have taken. Not half a bad move for a new hand; but he made one
+bad mistake, as new hands always do--as old hands do, in fact, very
+often. He was fool enough to give his own name, C. Laker! Although that
+didn't matter much, as the description was enough to fix him. There he
+was, wallet and all, just as he had come from the Eastern Consolidated
+Bank. He went straight from there to Palmer's, by the bye, and probably
+in a cab. We judge that by the time. He left the Eastern Consolidated at
+a quarter-past one, and was at Palmer's by twenty-five-past--ten
+minutes. The clerk at Palmer's remembered the time because he was
+anxious to get out to his lunch, and kept looking at the clock,
+expecting another clerk in to relieve him. Laker didn't take much in the
+way of luggage, I fancy. We inquired carefully at the stations, and got
+the porters to remember the passengers for whom they had been carrying
+luggage, but none appeared to have had any dealings with our man. That,
+of course, is as one would expect. He'd take as little as possible with
+him, and buy what he wanted on the way, or when he'd reached his
+hiding-place. Of course, I wired to Calais (it was a Dover to Calais
+route ticket) and sent a couple of smart men off by the 8.15 mail from
+Charing Cross. I expect we shall hear from them in the course of the
+day. I am being kept in London in view of something expected at
+headquarters, or I should have been off myself."
+
+"That is all, then, up to the present? Have you anything else in view?"
+
+"That's all I've absolutely ascertained at present. As for what I'm
+going to do"--a slight smile curled Plummer's lip--"well, I shall see.
+I've a thing or two in my mind."
+
+Hewitt smiled slightly himself; he recognised Plummer's touch of
+professional jealousy. "Very well," he said, rising, "I'll make an
+inquiry or two for myself at once. Perhaps, Mr. Neal, you'll allow one
+of your clerks to show me the banks, in their regular order, at which
+Laker called yesterday. I think I'll begin at the beginning."
+
+Mr. Neal offered to place at Hewitt's disposal anything or anybody the
+bank contained, and the conference broke up. As Hewitt, with the clerk,
+came through the rooms separating Mr. Neal's sanctum from the outer
+office, he fancied he saw the two veiled women leaving by a side door.
+
+The first bank was quite close to Liddle, Neal & Liddle's. There the
+cashier who had dealt with Laker the day before remembered nothing in
+particular about the interview. Many other walk-clerks had called
+during the morning, as they did every morning, and the only
+circumstances of the visit that he could say anything definite about
+were those recorded in figures in the books. He did not know Laker's
+name till Plummer had mentioned it in making inquiries on the previous
+afternoon. As far as he could remember, Laker behaved much as usual,
+though really he did not notice much; he looked chiefly at the bills. He
+described Laker in a way that corresponded with the photograph that
+Hewitt had borrowed from the bank; a young man with a brown moustache
+and ordinary-looking, fairly regular face, dressing much as other clerks
+dressed--tall hat, black cutaway coat, and so on. The numbers of the
+notes handed over had already been given to Inspector Plummer, and these
+Hewitt did not trouble about.
+
+The next bank was in Cornhill, and here the cashier was a personal
+friend of Laker's--at any rate, an acquaintance--and he remembered a
+little more. Laker's manner had been quite as usual, he said; certainly
+he did not seem preoccupied or excited in his manner. He spoke for a
+moment or two--of being on the river on Sunday, and so on--and left in
+his usual way.
+
+"Can you remember _everything_ he said?" Hewitt asked. "If you can tell
+me, I should like to know exactly what he did and said to the smallest
+particular."
+
+"Well, he saw me a little distance off--I was behind there, at one of
+the desks--and raised his hand to me, and said, 'How d'ye do?' I came
+across and took his bills, and dealt with them in the usual way. He had
+a new umbrella lying on the counter--rather a handsome umbrella--and I
+made a remark about the handle. He took it up to show me, and told me it
+was a present he had just received from a friend. It was a gorse-root
+handle, with two silver bands, one with his monogram C.W.L. I said it
+was a very nice handle, and asked him whether it was fine in his
+district on Sunday. He said he had been up the river, and it was very
+fine there. And I think that was all."
+
+"Thank you. Now about this umbrella. Did he carry it rolled? Can you
+describe it in detail?"
+
+"Well, I've told you about the handle, and the rest was much as usual, I
+think; it wasn't rolled--just flapping loosely, you know. It was rather
+an odd-shaped handle, though. I'll try and sketch it, if you like, as
+well as I can remember." He did so, and Hewitt saw in the result rough
+indications of a gnarled crook, with one silver band near the end, and
+another, with the monogram, a few inches down the handle. Hewitt put the
+sketch in his pocket, and bade the cashier good-day.
+
+At the next bank the story was the same as at the first--there was
+nothing remembered but the usual routine. Hewitt and the clerk turned
+down a narrow paved court, and through into Lombard Street for the next
+visit. The bank--that of Buller, Clayton, Ladds & Co.--was just at the
+corner at the end of the court, and the imposing stone entrance-porch
+was being made larger and more imposing still, the way being almost
+blocked by ladders and scaffold-poles. Here there was only the usual
+tale, and so on through the whole walk. The cashiers knew Laker only by
+sight, and that not always very distinctly. The calls of walk-clerks
+were such matters of routine that little note was taken of the persons
+of the clerks themselves, who were called by the names of their firms,
+if they were called by any names at all. Laker had behaved much as
+usual, so far as the cashiers could remember, and when finally the
+Eastern Consolidated was left behind, nothing more had been learnt than
+the chat about Laker's new umbrella.
+
+Hewitt had taken leave of Mr. Neal's clerk, and was stepping into a
+hansom, when he noticed a veiled woman in widow's weeds hailing another
+hansom a little way behind. He recognised the figure again, and said to
+the driver, "Drive fast to Palmer's Tourist Office, but keep your eye on
+that cab behind, and tell me presently if it is following us."
+
+The cabman drove off, and after passing one or two turnings, opened the
+lid above Hewitt's head, and said, "That there other keb _is_
+a-follerin' us, sir, an' keepin' about even distance all along."
+
+"All right; that's what I wanted to know. Palmer's now."
+
+At Palmer's the clerk who had attended to Laker remembered him very
+well, and described him. He also remembered the wallet, and _thought_ he
+remembered the umbrella--was practically sure of it, in fact, upon
+reflection. He had no record of the name given, but remembered it
+distinctly to be Laker. As a matter of fact, names were never asked in
+such a transaction, but in this case Laker appeared to be ignorant of
+the usual procedure, as well as in a great hurry, and asked for the
+ticket and gave his name all in one breath, probably assuming that the
+name would be required.
+
+Hewitt got back to his cab, and started for Charing Cross. The cabman
+once more lifted the lid and informed him that the hansom with the
+veiled woman in it was again following, having waited while Hewitt had
+visited Palmer's. At Charing Cross Hewitt discharged his cab and walked
+straight to the lost property office. The man in charge knew him very
+well, for his business had carried him there frequently before.
+
+"I fancy an umbrella was lost in the station yesterday," Hewitt said.
+"It was a new umbrella, silk, with a gnarled gorse-root handle and two
+silver bands, something like this sketch. There was a monogram on the
+lower band--'C. W. L.' were the letters. Has it been brought here?"
+
+"There was two or three yesterday," the man said; "let's see." He took
+the sketch and retired to a corner of his room. "Oh, yes--here it is, I
+think; isn't this it? Do you claim it?"
+
+"Well, not exactly that, but I think I'll take a look at it, if you'll
+let me. By the way, I see it's rolled up. Was it found like that?"
+
+"No; the chap rolled it up what found it--porter he was. It's a fad of
+his, rolling up umbrellas close and neat, and he's rather proud of it.
+He often looks as though he'd like to take a man's umbrella away and
+roll it up for him when it's a bit clumsy done. Rum fad, eh?"
+
+"Yes; everybody has his little fad, though. Where was this found--close
+by here?"
+
+"Yes, sir; just there, almost opposite this window, in the little
+corner."
+
+"About two o'clock?"
+
+"Ah, about that time, more or less."
+
+Hewitt took the umbrella up, unfastened the band, and shook the silk out
+loose. Then he opened it, and as he did so a small scrap of paper fell
+from inside it. Hewitt pounced on it like lightning. Then, after
+examining the umbrella thoroughly, inside and out, he handed it back to
+the man, who had not observed the incident of the scrap of paper.
+
+"That will do, thanks," he said. "I only wanted to take a peep at
+it--just a small matter connected with a little case of mine.
+Good-morning."
+
+He turned suddenly and saw, gazing at him with a terrified expression
+from a door behind, the face of the woman who had followed him in the
+cab. The veil was lifted, and he caught but a mere glance of the face
+ere it was suddenly withdrawn. He stood for a moment to allow the woman
+time to retreat, and then left the station and walked toward his office,
+close by.
+
+Scarcely thirty yards along the Strand he met Plummer.
+
+"I'm going to make some much closer inquiries all down the line as far
+as Dover," Plummer said. "They wire from Calais that they have no clue
+as yet, and I mean to make quite sure, if I can, that Laker hasn't
+quietly slipped off the line somewhere between here and Dover. There's
+one very peculiar thing," Plummer added confidentially. "Did you see the
+two women who were waiting to see a member of the firm at Liddle, Neal &
+Liddle's?"
+
+"Yes. Laker's mother and his _fiancée_, I was told."
+
+"That's right. Well, do you know that girl--Shaw her name is--has been
+shadowing me ever since I left the Bank. Of course I spotted it from
+the beginning--these amateurs don't know how to follow anybody--and, as
+a matter of fact, she's just inside that jeweller's shop door behind me
+now, pretending to look at the things in the window. But it's odd, isn't
+it?"
+
+"Well," Hewitt replied, "of course it's not a thing to be neglected. If
+you'll look very carefully at the corner of Villiers Street, without
+appearing to stare, I think you will possibly observe some signs of
+Laker's mother. She's shadowing _me_."
+
+Plummer looked casually in the direction indicated, and then immediately
+turned his eyes in another direction.
+
+"I see her," he said; "she's just taking a look round the corner. That's
+a thing not to be ignored. Of course, the Lakers' house is being
+watched--we set a man on it at once, yesterday. But I'll put some one on
+now to watch Miss Shaw's place, too. I'll telephone through to
+Liddle's--probably they'll be able to say where it is. And the women
+themselves must be watched, too. As a matter of fact, I had a notion
+that Laker wasn't alone in it. And it's just possible, you know, that he
+has sent an accomplice off with his tourist ticket to lead us a dance
+while he looks after himself in another direction. Have you done
+anything?"
+
+"Well," Hewitt replied, with a faint reproduction of the secretive
+smile with which Plummer had met an inquiry of his earlier in the
+morning, "I've been to the station here, and I've found Laker's umbrella
+in the lost property office."
+
+"Oh! Then probably he _has_ gone. I'll bear that in mind, and perhaps
+have a word with the lost property man."
+
+Plummer made for the station and Hewitt for his office. He mounted the
+stairs and reached his door just as I myself, who had been disappointed
+in not finding him in, was leaving. I had called with the idea of taking
+Hewitt to lunch with me at my club, but he declined lunch. "I have an
+important case in hand," he said. "Look here, Brett. See this scrap of
+paper. You know the types of the different newspapers--which is this?"
+
+He handed me a small piece of paper. It was part of a cutting containing
+an advertisement, which had been torn in half.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"I _think_," I said, "this is from the _Daily Chronicle_, judging by the
+paper. It is plainly from the 'agony column,' but all the papers use
+pretty much the same type for these advertisements, except the _Times_.
+If it were not torn I could tell you at once, because the _Chronicle_
+columns are rather narrow."
+
+"Never mind--I'll send for them all." He rang, and sent Kerrett for a
+copy of each morning paper of the previous day. Then he took from a
+large wardrobe cupboard a decent but well-worn and rather roughened tall
+hat. Also a coat a little worn and shiny on the collar. He exchanged
+these for his own hat and coat, and then substituted an old necktie for
+his own clean white one, and encased his legs in mud-spotted leggings.
+This done, he produced a very large and thick pocket-book, fastened by a
+broad elastic band, and said, "Well, what do you think of this? Will it
+do for Queen's taxes, or sanitary inspection, or the gas, or the
+water-supply?"
+
+"Very well indeed, I should say," I replied. "What's the case?"
+
+"Oh, I'll tell you all about that when it's over--no time now. Oh, here
+you are, Kerrett. By the bye, Kerrett, I'm going out presently by the
+back way. Wait for about ten minutes or a quarter of an hour after I am
+gone, and then just go across the road and speak to that lady in black,
+with the veil, who is waiting in that little foot-passage opposite. Say
+Mr. Martin Hewitt sends his compliments, and he advises her not to wait,
+as he has already left his office by another door, and has been gone
+some little time. That's all; it would be a pity to keep the poor woman
+waiting all day for nothing. Now the papers. _Daily News, Standard,
+Telegraph, Chronicle_--yes, here it is, in the Chronicle."
+
+The whole advertisement read thus:--
+
+ YOB.--H.R. Shop roast. You 1st. Then to-night. 02. 2nd top
+ 3rd L. No. 197 red bl. straight mon. One at a time.
+
+"What's this," I asked, "a cryptogram?"
+
+"I'll see," Hewitt answered. "But I won't tell you anything about it
+till afterwards, so you get your lunch. Kerrett, bring the directory."
+
+This was all I actually saw of this case myself, and I have written the
+rest in its proper order from Hewitt's information, as I have written
+some other cases entirely.
+
+To resume at the point where, for the time I lost sight of the matter.
+Hewitt left by the back way and stopped an empty cab as it passed.
+"Abney Park Cemetery" was his direction to the driver. In little more
+than twenty minutes the cab was branching off down the Essex Road on its
+way to Stoke Newington, and in twenty minutes more Hewitt stopped it in
+Church Street, Stoke Newington. He walked through a street or two, and
+then down another, the houses of which he scanned carefully as he
+passed. Opposite one which stood by itself he stopped, and, making a
+pretence of consulting and arranging his large pocket-book, he took a
+good look at the house. It was rather larger, neater, and more
+pretentious than the others in the street, and it had a natty little
+coach-house just visible up the side entrance. There were red blinds
+hung with heavy lace in the front windows, and behind one of these
+blinds Hewitt was able to catch the glint of a heavy gas chandelier.
+
+He stepped briskly up the front steps and knocked sharply at the door.
+"Mr. Merston?" he asked, pocket-book in hand, when a neat parlour-maid
+opened the door.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Ah!" Hewitt stepped into the hall and pulled off his hat; "it's only
+the meter. There's been a deal of gas running away somewhere here, and
+I'm just looking to see if the meters are right. Where is it?"
+
+The girl hesitated. "I'll--I'll ask master," she said.
+
+"Very well. I don't want to take it away, you know--only to give it a
+tap or two, and so on."
+
+The girl retired to the back of the hall, and without taking her eyes
+off Martin Hewitt, gave his message to some invisible person in a back
+room, whence came a growling reply of "All right."
+
+Hewitt followed the girl to the basement, apparently looking straight
+before him, but in reality taking in every detail of the place. The gas
+meter was in a very large lumber cupboard under the kitchen stairs. The
+girl opened the door and lit a candle. The meter stood on the floor,
+which was littered with hampers and boxes and odd sheets of brown paper.
+But a thing that at once arrested Hewitt's attention was a garment of
+some sort of bright blue cloth, with large brass buttons, which was
+lying in a tumbled heap in a corner, and appeared to be the only thing
+in the place that was not covered with dust. Nevertheless, Hewitt took
+no apparent notice of it, but stooped down and solemnly tapped the meter
+three times with his pencil, and listened with great gravity, placing
+his ear to the top. Then he shook his head and tapped again. At length
+he said:--
+
+"It's a bit doubtful. I'll just get you to light the gas in the kitchen
+a moment. Keep your hand to the burner, and when I call out shut it off
+_at once_; see?"
+
+The girl turned and entered the kitchen, and Hewitt immediately seized
+the blue coat--for a coat it was. It had a dull red piping in the seams,
+and was of the swallow-tail pattern--a livery coat, in fact. He held it
+for a moment before him, examining its pattern and colour, and then
+rolled it up and flung it again into the corner.
+
+"Right!" he called to the servant. "Shut off!"
+
+The girl emerged from the kitchen as he left the cupboard.
+
+"Well," she asked, "are you satisfied now?"
+
+"Quite satisfied, thank you," Hewitt replied.
+
+"Is it all right?" she continued, jerking her hand toward the cupboard.
+
+"Well, no, it isn't; there's something wrong there, and I'm glad I came.
+You can tell Mr. Merston, if you like, that I expect his gas bill will
+be a good deal less next quarter." And there was a suspicion of a
+chuckle in Hewitt's voice as he crossed the hall to leave. For a gas
+inspector is pleased when he finds at length what he has been searching
+for.
+
+Things had fallen out better than Hewitt had dared to expect. He saw the
+key of the whole mystery in that blue coat; for it was the uniform coat
+of the hall porters at one of the banks that he had visited in the
+morning, though which one he could not for the moment remember. He
+entered the nearest post-office and despatched a telegram to Plummer,
+giving certain directions and asking the inspector to meet him; then he
+hailed the first available cab and hurried toward the City.
+
+At Lombard Street he alighted, and looked in at the door of each bank
+till he came to Buller, Clayton, Ladds & Co.'s. This was the bank he
+wanted. In the other banks the hall porters wore mulberry coats,
+brick-dust coats, brown coats, and what not, but here, behind the
+ladders and scaffold poles which obscured the entrance, he could see a
+man in a blue coat, with dull red piping and brass buttons. He sprang up
+the steps, pushed open the inner swing door, and finally satisfied
+himself by a closer view of the coat, to the wearer's astonishment. Then
+he regained the pavement and walked the whole length of the bank
+premises in front, afterwards turning up the paved passage at the side,
+deep in thought. The bank had no windows or doors on the side next the
+court, and the two adjoining houses were old and supported in places by
+wooden shores. Both were empty, and a great board announced that tenders
+would be received in a month's time for the purchase of the old
+materials of which they were constructed; also that some part of the
+site would be let on a long building lease.
+
+Hewitt looked up at the grimy fronts of the old buildings. The windows
+were crusted thick with dirt--all except the bottom window of the house
+nearer the bank, which was fairly clean, and seemed to have been quite
+lately washed. The door, too, of this house was cleaner than that of the
+other, though the paint was worn. Hewitt reached and fingered a hook
+driven into the left-hand doorpost about six feet from the ground. It
+was new, and not at all rusted; also a tiny splinter had been displaced
+when the hook was driven in, and clean wood showed at the spot.
+
+Having observed these things, Hewitt stepped back and read at the bottom
+of the big board the name, "Winsor & Weekes, Surveyors and Auctioneers,
+Abchurch Lane." Then he stepped into Lombard Street.
+
+Two hansoms pulled up near the post-office, and out of the first stepped
+Inspector Plummer and another man. This man and the two who alighted
+from the second hansom were unmistakably plain-clothes constables--their
+air, gait, and boots proclaimed it.
+
+"What's all this?" demanded Plummer, as Hewitt approached.
+
+"You'll soon see, I think. But, first, have you put the watch on No.
+197, Hackworth Road?"
+
+"Yes; nobody will get away from there alone."
+
+"Very good. I am going into Abchurch Lane for a few minutes. Leave your
+men out here, but just go round into the court by Buller, Clayton &
+Ladds's, and keep your eye on the first door on the left. I think we'll
+find something soon. Did you get rid of Miss Shaw?"
+
+"No, she's behind now, and Mrs. Laker's with her. They met in the
+Strand, and came after us in another cab. Rare fun, eh! They think we're
+pretty green! It's quite handy, too. So long as they keep behind me it
+saves all trouble of watching _them_." And Inspector Plummer chuckled
+and winked.
+
+"Very good. You don't mind keeping your eye on that door, do you? I'll
+be back very soon," and with that Hewitt turned off into Abchurch Lane.
+
+At Winsor & Weekes's information was not difficult to obtain. The houses
+were destined to come down very shortly, but a week or so ago an office
+and a cellar in one of them was let temporarily to a Mr. Westley. He
+brought no references; indeed, as he paid a fortnight's rent in advance,
+he was not asked for any, considering the circumstances of the case. He
+was opening a London branch for a large firm of cider merchants, he
+said, and just wanted a rough office and a cool cellar to store samples
+in for a few weeks till the permanent premises were ready. There was
+another key, and no doubt the premises might be entered if there were
+any special need for such a course. Martin Hewitt gave such excellent
+reasons that Winsor & Weekes's managing clerk immediately produced the
+key and accompanied Hewitt to the spot.
+
+"I think you'd better have your men handy," Hewitt remarked to Plummer
+when they reached the door, and a whistle quickly brought the men over.
+
+The key was inserted in the lock and turned, but the door would not
+open; the bolt was fastened at the bottom. Hewitt stooped and looked
+under the door.
+
+"It's a drop bolt," he said. "Probably the man who left last let it fall
+loose, and then banged the door, so that it fell into its place. I must
+try my best with a wire or a piece of string."
+
+A wire was brought, and with some manoeuvring Hewitt contrived to pass
+it round the bolt, and lift it little by little, steadying it with the
+blade of a pocket-knife. When at length the bolt was raised out of the
+hole, the knife-blade was slipped under it, and the door swung open.
+
+They entered. The door of the little office just inside stood open, but
+in the office there was nothing, except a board a couple of feet long in
+a corner. Hewitt stepped across and lifted this, turning its downward
+face toward Plummer. On it, in fresh white paint on a black ground, were
+painted the words--
+
+ "BULLER, CLAYTON, LADDS & CO.,
+ TEMPORARY ENTRANCE."
+
+Hewitt turned to Winsor & Weekes's clerk and asked, "The man who took
+this room called himself Westley, didn't he?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Youngish man, clean-shaven, and well-dressed?"
+
+"Yes, he was."
+
+"I fancy," Hewitt said, turning to Plummer, "I _fancy_ an old friend of
+yours is in this--Mr. Sam Gunter."
+
+"What, the 'Hoxton Yob'?"
+
+"I think it's possible he's been Mr. Westley for a bit, and somebody
+else for another bit. But let's come to the cellar."
+
+Winsor & Weekes's clerk led the way down a steep flight of steps into a
+dark underground corridor, wherein they lighted their way with many
+successive matches. Soon the corridor made a turn to the right, and as
+the party passed the turn, there came from the end of the passage before
+them a fearful yell.
+
+"Help! help! Open the door! I'm going mad--mad! O my God!"
+
+And there was a sound of desperate beating from the inside of the cellar
+door at the extreme end. The men stopped, startled.
+
+"Come," said Hewitt, "more matches!" and he rushed to the door. It was
+fastened with a bar and padlock.
+
+"Let me out, for God's sake!" came the voice, sick and hoarse, from the
+inside. "Let me out!"
+
+"All right!" Hewitt shouted. "We have come for you. Wait a moment."
+
+The voice sank into a sort of sobbing croon, and Hewitt tried several
+keys from his own bunch on the padlock. None fitted. He drew from his
+pocket the wire he had used for the bolt of the front door, straightened
+it out, and made a sharp bend at the end.
+
+"Hold a match close," he ordered shortly, and one of the men obeyed.
+Three or four attempts were necessary, and several different bendings of
+the wire were effected, but in the end Hewitt picked the lock, and flung
+open the door.
+
+From within a ghastly figure fell forward among them fainting, and
+knocked out the matches.
+
+"Hullo!" cried Plummer. "Hold up! Who are you?"
+
+"Let's get him up into the open," said Hewitt. "He can't tell you who he
+is for a bit, but I believe he's Laker."
+
+"Laker! What, here?"
+
+"I think so. Steady up the steps. Don't bump him. He's pretty sore
+already, I expect."
+
+Truly the man was a pitiable sight. His hair and face were caked in dust
+and blood, and his finger-nails were torn and bleeding. Water was sent
+for at once, and brandy.
+
+"Well," said Plummer hazily, looking first at the unconscious prisoner
+and then at Hewitt, "but what about the swag?"
+
+"You'll have to find that yourself," Hewitt replied. "I think my share
+of the case is about finished. I only act for the Guarantee Society, you
+know, and if Laker's proved innocent----"
+
+"Innocent! How?"
+
+"Well, this is what took place, as near as I can figure it. You'd better
+undo his collar, I think"--this to the men. "What I believe has happened
+is this. There has been a very clever and carefully prepared conspiracy
+here, and Laker has not been the criminal, but the victim."
+
+"Been robbed himself, you mean? But how? Where?"
+
+"Yesterday morning, before he had been to more than three banks--here,
+in fact."
+
+"But then how? You're all wrong. We _know_ he made the whole round, and
+did all the collection. And then Palmer's office, and all, and the
+umbrella; why----"
+
+The man lay still unconscious. "Don't raise his head," Hewitt said. "And
+one of you had best fetch a doctor. He's had a terrible shock." Then
+turning to Plummer he went on, "As to _how_ they managed the job I'll
+tell you what I think. First it struck some very clever person that a
+deal of money might be got by robbing a walk-clerk from a bank. This
+clever person was one of a clever gang of thieves--perhaps the Hoxton
+Row gang, as I think I hinted. Now you know quite as well as I do that
+such a gang will spend any amount of time over a job that promises a big
+haul, and that for such a job they can always command the necessary
+capital. There are many most respectable persons living in good style in
+the suburbs whose chief business lies in financing such ventures, and
+taking the chief share of the proceeds. Well, this is their plan,
+carefully and intelligently carried out. They watch Laker, observe the
+round he takes, and his habits. They find that there is only one of the
+clerks with whom he does business that he is much acquainted with, and
+that this clerk is in a bank which is commonly second in Laker's round.
+The sharpest man among them--and I don't think there's a man in London
+could do this as well as young Sam Gunter--studies Laker's dress and
+habits just as an actor studies a character. They take this office and
+cellar, as we have seen, _because it is next door to a bank whose front
+entrance is being altered_--a fact which Laker must know from his daily
+visits. The smart man--Gunter, let us say, and I have other reasons for
+believing it to be he--makes up precisely like Laker, false moustache,
+dress, and everything, and waits here with the rest of the gang. One of
+the gang is dressed in a blue coat with brass buttons, like a
+hall-porter in Buller's bank. Do you see?"
+
+"Yes, I think so. It's pretty clear now."
+
+"A confederate watches at the top of the court, and the moment Laker
+turns in from Cornhill--having already been, mind, at the only bank
+where he was so well known that the disguised thief would not have
+passed muster--as soon as he turns in from Cornhill, I say, a signal is
+given, and that board"--pointing to that with the white letters--"is
+hung on the hook in the doorpost. The sham porter stands beside it, and
+as Laker approaches says, 'This way in, sir, this morning. The front
+way's shut for the alterations.' Laker, suspecting nothing, and
+supposing that the firm have made a temporary entrance through the empty
+house, enters. He is seized when well along the corridor, the board is
+taken down and the door shut. Probably he is stunned by a blow on the
+head--see the blood now. They take his wallet and all the cash he has
+already collected. Gunter takes the wallet and also the umbrella, since
+it has Laker's initials, and is therefore distinctive. He simply
+completes the walk in the character of Laker, beginning with Buller,
+Clayton & Ladds's just round the corner. It is nothing but routine work,
+which is quickly done, and nobody notices him particularly--it is the
+bills they examine. Meanwhile this unfortunate fellow is locked up in
+the cellar here, right at the end of the underground corridor, where he
+can never make himself heard in the street, and where next him are only
+the empty cellars of the deserted house next door. The thieves shut the
+front door and vanish. The rest is plain. Gunter, having completed the
+round, and bagged some £15,000 or more, spends a few pounds in a tourist
+ticket at Palmer's as a blind, being careful to give Laker's name. He
+leaves the umbrella at Charing Cross in a conspicuous place right
+opposite the lost property office, where it is sure to be seen, and so
+completes his false trail."
+
+"Then who are the people at 197, Hackworth Road?"
+
+"The capitalist lives there--the financier, and probably the directing
+spirit of the whole thing. Merston's the name he goes by there, and I've
+no doubt he cuts a very imposing figure in chapel every Sunday. He'll be
+worth picking up--this isn't the first thing he's been in, I'll
+warrant."
+
+"But--but what about Laker's mother and Miss Shaw?"
+
+"Well, what? The poor women are nearly out of their minds with terror
+and shame, that's all, but though they may think Laker a criminal,
+they'll never desert him. They've been following us about with a feeble,
+vague sort of hope of being able to baffle us in some way or help him if
+we caught him, or something, poor things. Did you ever hear of a real
+woman who'd desert a son or a lover merely because he was a criminal?
+But here's the doctor. When he's attended to him will you let your men
+take Laker home? I must hurry and report to the Guarantee Society, I
+think."
+
+"But," said the perplexed Plummer, "where did you get your clue? You
+must have had a tip from some one, you know--you can't have done it by
+clairvoyance. What gave you the tip?"
+
+"The _Daily Chronicle_."
+
+"The _what_?"
+
+"The _Daily Chronicle_. Just take a look at the 'agony column' in
+yesterday morning's issue, and read the message to 'Yob'--to Gunter, in
+fact. That's all."
+
+By this time a cab was waiting in Lombard Street, and two of Plummer's
+men, under the doctor's directions, carried Laker to it. No sooner,
+however, were they in the court than the two watching women threw
+themselves hysterically upon Laker, and it was long before they could be
+persuaded that he was not being taken to gaol. The mother shrieked
+aloud, "My boy--my boy! Don't take him! Oh, don't take him! They've
+killed my boy! Look at his head--oh, his head!" and wrestled desperately
+with the men, while Hewitt attempted to soothe her, and promised to
+allow her to go in the cab with her son if she would only be quiet. The
+younger woman made no noise, but she held one of Laker's limp hands in
+both hers.
+
+Hewitt and I dined together that evening, and he gave me a full account
+of the occurrences which I have here set down. Still, when he was
+finished I was not able to see clearly by what process of reasoning he
+had arrived at the conclusions that gave him the key to the mystery, nor
+did I understand the "agony column" message, and I said so.
+
+"In the beginning," Hewitt explained, "the thing that struck me as
+curious was the fact that Laker was said to have given his own name at
+Palmer's in buying his ticket. Now, the first thing the greenest and
+newest criminal thinks of is changing his name, so that the giving of
+his own name seemed unlikely to begin with. Still, he _might_ have made
+such a mistake, as Plummer suggested when he said that criminals usually
+make a mistake somewhere--as they do, in fact. Still, it was the least
+likely mistake I could think of--especially as he actually didn't wait
+to be asked for his name, but blurted it out when it wasn't really
+wanted. And it was conjoined with another rather curious mistake, or
+what would have been a mistake if the thief were Laker. Why should he
+conspicuously display his wallet--such a distinctive article--for the
+clerk to see and note? Why rather had he not got rid of it before
+showing himself? Suppose it should be somebody personating Laker? In any
+case I determined not to be prejudiced by what I had heard of Laker's
+betting. A man may bet without being a thief.
+
+"But, again, supposing it _were_ Laker? Might he not have given his
+name, and displayed his wallet, and so on, while buying a ticket for
+France, in order to draw pursuit after himself in that direction while
+he made off in another, in another name, and disguised? Each supposition
+was plausible. And, in either case, it might happen that whoever was
+laying this trail would probably lay it a little farther. Charing Cross
+was the next point, and there I went. I already had it from Plummer that
+Laker had not been recognised there. Perhaps the trail had been laid in
+some other manner. Something left behind with Laker's name on it,
+perhaps? I at once thought of the umbrella with his monogram, and,
+making a long shot, asked for it at the lost property office, as you
+know. The guess was lucky. In the umbrella, as you know, I found that
+scrap of paper. That, I judged, had fallen in from the hand of the man
+carrying the umbrella. He had torn the paper in half in order to fling
+it away, and one piece had fallen into the loosely flapping umbrella. It
+is a thing that will often happen with an omnibus ticket, as you may
+have noticed. Also, it was proved that the umbrella _was_ unrolled when
+found, and rolled immediately after. So here was a piece of paper
+dropped by the person who had brought the umbrella to Charing Cross and
+left it. I got the whole advertisement, as you remember, and I studied
+it. 'Yob' is back-slang for 'boy,' and it is often used in nicknames to
+denote a young smooth-faced thief. Gunter, the man I suspect, as a
+matter of fact, is known as the 'Hoxton Yob.' The message, then, was
+addressed to some one known by such a nickname. Next, 'H.R. shop roast.'
+Now, in thieves' slang, to 'roast' a thing or a person is to watch it or
+him. They call any place a shop--notably, a thieves' den. So that this
+meant that some resort--perhaps the 'Hoxton Row shop'--was watched. 'You
+1st then to-night' would be clearer, perhaps, when the rest was
+understood. I thought a little over the rest, and it struck me that it
+must be a direction to some other house, since one was warned of as
+being watched. Besides, there was the number, 197, and 'red bl.,' which
+would be extremely likely to mean 'red blinds,' by way of clearly
+distinguishing the house. And then the plan of the thing was plain. You
+have noticed, probably, that the map of London which accompanies the
+Post Office Directory is divided, for convenience of reference, into
+numbered squares?"
+
+"Yes. The squares are denoted by letters along the top margin and
+figures down the side. So that if you consult the directory, and find a
+place marked as being in D 5, for instance, you find vertical divisions
+D, and run your finger down it till it intersects horizontal division 5,
+and there you are."
+
+"Precisely. I got my Post Office Directory, and looked for 'O 2.' It was
+in North London, and took in parts of Abney Park Cemetery and Clissold
+Park; '2nd top' was the next sign. Very well, I counted the second
+street intersecting the top of the square--counting, in the usual way,
+from the left. That was Lordship Road. Then, '3rd L.' From the point
+where Lordship Road crossed the top of the square, I ran my finger down
+the road till it came to '3rd L,' or, in other words, the third turning
+on the left--Hackworth Road. So there we were, unless my guesses were
+altogether wrong. 'Straight mon' probably meant 'straight moniker'--that
+is to say, the proper name, a thief's _real_ name, in contradistinction
+to that he may assume. I turned over the directory till I found
+Hackworth Road, and found that No. 197 was inhabited by a Mr. Merston.
+From the whole thing I judged this. There was to have been a meeting at
+the 'H.R. shop,' but that was found, at the last moment, to be watched
+by the police for some purpose, so that another appointment was made for
+this house in the suburbs. 'You 1st. Then to-night'--the person
+addressed was to come first, and the others in the evening. They were to
+ask for the householder's 'straight moniker'--Mr. Merston. And they were
+to come one at a time.
+
+"Now, then, what was this? What theory would fit it? Suppose this were a
+robbery, directed from afar by the advertiser. Suppose, on the day
+before the robbery, it was found that the place fixed for division of
+spoils were watched. Suppose that the principal thereupon advertised (as
+had already been agreed in case of emergency) in these terms. The
+principal in the actual robbery--the 'Yob' addressed--was to go first
+with the booty. The others were to come after, one at a time. Anyway,
+the thing was good enough to follow a little further, and I determined
+to try No. 197, Hackworth Road. I have told you what I found there, and
+how it opened my eyes. I went, of course, merely on chance, to see what
+I might chance to see. But luck favoured, and I happened on that
+coat--brought back rolled up, on the evening after the robbery,
+doubtless by the thief who had used it, and flung carelessly into the
+handiest cupboard. _That_ was this gang's mistake."
+
+"Well, I congratulate you," I said. "I hope they'll catch the rascals."
+
+"I rather think they will, now they know where to look. They can
+scarcely miss Merston, anyway. There has been very little to go upon in
+this case, but I stuck to the thread, however slight, and it brought me
+through. The rest of the case, of course, is Plummer's. It was a
+peculiarity of my commission that I could equally well fulfil it by
+catching the man with all the plunder, or by proving him innocent.
+Having done the latter, my work was at an end, but I left it where
+Plummer will be able to finish the job handsomely."
+
+Plummer did. Sam Gunter, Merston, and one accomplice were taken--the
+first and last were well known to the police--and were identified by
+Laker. Merston, as Hewitt had suspected, had kept the lion's share for
+himself, so that altogether, with what was recovered from him and the
+other two, nearly £11,000 was saved for Messrs. Liddle, Neal & Liddle.
+Merston, when taken, was in the act of packing up to take a holiday
+abroad, and there cash his notes, which were found, neatly packed in
+separate thousands, in his portmanteau. As Hewitt had predicted, his
+gas bill _was_ considerably less next quarter, for less than half-way
+through it he began a term in gaol.
+
+As for Laker, he was reinstated, of course, with an increase of salary
+by way of compensation for his broken head. He had passed a terrible
+twenty-six hours in the cellar, unfed and unheard. Several times he had
+become insensible, and again and again he had thrown himself madly
+against the door, shouting and tearing at it, till he fell back
+exhausted, with broken nails and bleeding fingers. For some hours before
+the arrival of his rescuers he had been sitting in a sort of stupor,
+from which he was suddenly aroused by the sound of voices and footsteps.
+He was in bed for a week, and required a rest of a month in addition
+before he could resume his duties. Then he was quietly lectured by Mr.
+Neal as to betting, and, I believe, dropped that practice in
+consequence. I am told that he is "at the counter" now--a considerable
+promotion.
+
+
+
+
+THE CASE OF THE LOST FOREIGNER.
+
+
+I have already said in more than one place that Hewitt's personal
+relations with the members of the London police force were of a cordial
+character. In the course of his work it has frequently been Hewitt's hap
+to learn of matters on which the police were glad of information, and
+that information was always passed on at once; and so long as no
+infringement of regulations or damage to public service were involved,
+Hewitt could always rely on a return in kind.
+
+It was with a message of a useful sort that Hewitt one day dropped into
+Vine Street police-station and asked for a particular inspector, who was
+not in. Hewitt sat and wrote a note, and by way of making conversation
+said to the inspector on duty, "Anything very startling this way
+to-day?"
+
+"Nothing _very_ startling, perhaps, as yet," the inspector replied. "But
+one of our chaps picked up rather an odd customer a little while ago.
+Lunatic of some sort, I should think--in fact, I've sent for the doctor
+to see him. He's a foreigner--a Frenchman, I believe. He seemed horribly
+weak and faint; but the oddest thing occurred when one of the men,
+thinking he might be hungry, brought in some bread. He went into fits of
+terror at the sight of it, and wouldn't be pacified till they took it
+away again."
+
+"That was strange."
+
+"Odd, wasn't it? And he _was_ hungry too. They brought him some more a
+little while after, and he didn't funk it a bit,--pitched into it, in
+fact, like anything, and ate it all with some cold beef. It's the way
+with some lunatics--never the same five minutes together. He keeps
+crying like a baby, and saying things we can't understand. As it
+happens, there's nobody in just now who speaks French."
+
+"I speak French," Hewitt replied. "Shall I try him?"
+
+"Certainly, if you will. He's in the men's room below. They've been
+making him as comfortable as possible by the fire until the doctor
+comes. He's a long time. I expect he's got a case on."
+
+Hewitt found his way to the large mess-room, where three or four
+policemen in their shirt-sleeves were curiously regarding a young man of
+very disordered appearance who sat on a chair by the fire. He was pale,
+and exhibited marks of bruises on his face, while over one eye was a
+scarcely healed cut. His figure was small and slight, his coat was torn,
+and he sat with a certain indefinite air of shivering suffering. He
+started and looked round apprehensively as Hewitt entered. Hewitt bowed
+smilingly, wished him good-day, speaking in French, and asked him if he
+spoke the language.
+
+The man looked up with a dull expression, and after an effort or two, as
+of one who stutters, burst out with, "_Je le nie!_"
+
+"That's strange," Hewitt observed to the men. "I ask him if he speaks
+French, and he says he denies it--speaking _in_ French."
+
+"He's been saying that very often, sir," one of the men answered, "as
+well as other things we can't make anything of."
+
+Hewitt placed his hand kindly on the man's shoulder and asked his name.
+The reply was for a little while an inarticulate gurgle, presently
+merging into a meaningless medley of words and syllables--"_Qu'est ce
+qu'_--_il n'a_--Leystar Squarr--_sacré nom_--not spik it--_quel
+chemin_--sank you ver' mosh--_je le nie! je le nie!_" He paused, stared,
+and then, as though realizing his helplessness, he burst into tears.
+
+"He's been a-cryin' two or three times," said the man who had spoken
+before. "He was a-cryin' when we found him."
+
+Several more attempts Hewitt made to communicate with the man, but
+though he seemed to comprehend what was meant, he replied with nothing
+but meaningless gibber, and finally gave up the attempt, and, leaning
+against the side of the fireplace, buried his head in the bend of his
+arm.
+
+Then the doctor arrived and made _his_ examination. While it was in
+progress Hewitt took aside the policeman who had been speaking before
+and questioned him further. He had himself found the Frenchman in a dull
+back street by Golden Square, where the man was standing helpless and
+trembling, apparently quite bewildered and very weak. He had brought him
+in, without having been able to learn anything about him. One or two
+shopkeepers in the street where he was found were asked, but knew
+nothing of him--indeed, had never seen him before.
+
+"But the curiousest thing," the policeman proceeded, "was in this 'ere
+room, when I brought him a loaf to give him a bit of a snack, seein' he
+looked so weak an' 'ungry. You'd 'a thought we was a-goin' to poison
+'im. He fair screamed at the very sight o' the bread, an' he scrouged
+hisself up in that corner an' put his hands in front of his face. I
+couldn't make out what was up at first--didn't tumble to it's bein' the
+bread he was frightened of, seein' as he looked like a man as 'ud be
+frightened at anything else afore _that_. But the nearer I came with it
+the more he yelled, so I took it away an' left it outside, an' then he
+calmed down. An' s'elp me, when I cut some bits off that there very loaf
+an' brought 'em in, with a bit o' beef, he just went for 'em like one
+o'clock. _He_ wasn't frightened o' no bread then, you bet. Rum thing,
+how the fancies takes 'em when they're a bit touched, ain't it? All one
+way one minute, all the other the next."
+
+"Yes, it is. By the way, have you another uncut loaf in the place?"
+
+"Yes, sir. Half a dozen if you like."
+
+"One will be enough. I am going over to speak to the doctor. Wait awhile
+until he seems very quiet and fairly comfortable; then bring a loaf in
+quietly and put it on the table, not far from his elbow. Don't attract
+his attention to what you are doing."
+
+The doctor stood looking thoughtfully down on the Frenchman, who, for
+his part, stared gloomily, but tranquilly, at the fireplace. Hewitt
+stepped quietly over to the doctor and, without disturbing the man by
+the fire, said interrogatively, "Aphasia?"
+
+The doctor tightened his lips, frowned, and nodded significantly.
+"Motor," he murmured, just loudly enough for Hewitt to hear; "and
+there's a general nervous break-down as well, I should say. By the way,
+perhaps there's no agraphia. Have you tried him with pen and paper?"
+
+Pen and paper were brought and set before the man. He was told, slowly
+and distinctly, that he was among friends, whose only object was to
+restore him to his proper health. Would he write his name and address,
+and any other information he might care to give about himself, on the
+paper before him?
+
+The Frenchman took the pen and stared at the paper; then slowly, and
+with much hesitation, he traced these marks:--
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The man paused after the last of these futile characters, and his pen
+stabbed into the paper with a blot, as he dazedly regarded his work.
+Then with a groan he dropped it, and his face sank again into the bend
+of his arm.
+
+The doctor took the paper and handed it to Hewitt. "Complete agraphia,
+you see," he said. "He can't write a word. He begins to write 'Monsieur'
+from sheer habit in beginning letters thus; but the word tails off into
+a scrawl. Then his attempts become mere scribble, with just a trace of
+some familiar word here and there--but quite meaningless all."
+
+Although he had never before chanced to come across a case of aphasia
+(happily a rare disease), Hewitt was acquainted with its general nature.
+He knew that it might arise either from some physical injury to the
+brain, or from a break-down consequent on some terrible nervous strain.
+He knew that in the case of motor aphasia the sufferer, though fully
+conscious of all that goes on about him, and though quite understanding
+what is said to him is entirely powerless to put his own thoughts into
+spoken words--has lost, in fact, the connection between words and their
+spoken symbols. Also that in most bad cases agraphia--the loss of
+ability to write words with any reference to their meaning--is commonly
+an accompaniment.
+
+"You will have him taken to the infirmary, I suppose?" Hewitt asked.
+
+"Yes," the doctor replied. "I shall go and see about it at once."
+
+The man looked up again as they spoke. The policeman had, in accordance
+with Hewitt's request, placed a loaf of bread on the table near him, and
+now as he looked up he caught sight of it. He started visibly and paled,
+but gave no such signs of abject terror as the policeman had previously
+observed. He appeared nervous and uneasy, however, and presently reached
+stealthily toward the loaf. Hewitt continued to talk to the doctor,
+while closely watching the Frenchman's behaviour from the corner of his
+eye.
+
+The loaf was what is called a "plain cottage," of solid and regular
+shape. The man reached it and immediately turned it bottom up on the
+table. Then he sank back in his chair with a more contented expression,
+though his gaze was still directed toward the loaf. The policeman
+grinned silently at this curious manoeuvre.
+
+The doctor left, and Hewitt accompanied him to the door of the room. "He
+will not be moved just yet, I take it?" Hewitt asked as they parted.
+
+"It may take an hour or two," the doctor replied. "Are you anxious to
+keep him here?"
+
+"Not for long; but I think there's a curious inside to the case, and I
+may perhaps learn something of it by a little watching. But I can't
+spare very long."
+
+At a sign from Hewitt the loaf was removed. Then Hewitt pulled the small
+table closer to the Frenchman and pushed the pen and sheets of paper
+toward him. The manoeuvre had its result. The man looked up and down
+the room vacantly once or twice and then began to turn the papers over.
+From that he went to dipping the pen in the inkpot, and presently he was
+scribbling at random on the loose sheets. Hewitt affected to leave him
+entirely alone, and seemed to be absorbed in a contemplation of a
+photograph of a police-division brass band that hung on the wall, but he
+saw every scratch the man made.
+
+At first there was nothing but meaningless scrawls and attempted words.
+Then rough sketches appeared, of a man's head, a chair or what not. On
+the mantelpiece stood a small clock--apparently a sort of humble
+presentation piece, the body of the clock being set in a horse-shoe
+frame, with crossed whips behind it. After a time the Frenchman's eyes
+fell on this, and he began a crude sketch of it. That he relinquished,
+and went on with other random sketches and scribblings on the same piece
+of paper, sketching and scribbling over the sketches in a
+half-mechanical sort of way, as of one who trifles with a pen during a
+brown study. Beginning at the top left-hand corner of the paper, he
+travelled all round it till he arrived at the left-hand bottom corner.
+Then dashing his pen hastily across his last sketch he dropped it, and
+with a great shudder turned away again and hid his face by the
+fireplace.
+
+Hewitt turned at once and seized the papers on the table. He stuffed
+them all into his coat-pocket, with the exception of the last which the
+man had been engaged on, and this, a facsimile of which is subjoined, he
+studied earnestly for several minutes.
+
+Hewitt wished the men good-day, and made his way to the inspector.
+
+"Well," the inspector said, "not much to be got out of him, is there?
+The doctor will be sending for him presently."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"I fancy," said Hewitt, "that this may turn out a very important case.
+Possibly--quite possibly--I may not have guessed correctly, and so I
+won't tell you anything of it till I know a little more. But what I want
+now is a messenger. Can I send somebody at once in a cab to my friend
+Brett at his chambers?"
+
+"Certainly. I'll find somebody. Want to write a note?"
+
+Hewitt wrote and despatched a note, which reached me in less than ten
+minutes. Then he asked the inspector, "Have you searched the Frenchman?"
+
+"Oh, yes. We went all over him, when we found he couldn't explain
+himself, to see if we could trace his friends or his address. He didn't
+seem to mind. But there wasn't a single thing in his pocket--not a
+single thing, barring a rag of a pocket-handkerchief with no marking on
+it."
+
+"You noticed that somebody had stolen his watch, I suppose?"
+
+"Well, he hadn't got one."
+
+"But he had one of those little vertical button-holes in his waistcoat,
+used to fasten a watchguard to, and it was much worn and frayed, so that
+he must be in the habit of carrying a watch; and it is gone."
+
+"Yes, and everything else too, eh? Looks like robbery. He's had a knock
+or two in the face--notice that?"
+
+"I saw the bruises and the cut, of course; and his collar has been
+broken away, with the back button; somebody has taken him by the collar
+or throat. Was he wearing a hat when he was found?"
+
+"No."
+
+"That would imply that he had only just left a house. What street was he
+found in?"
+
+"Henry Street--a little off Golden Square. Low street, you know."
+
+"Did the constable notice a door open near by?"
+
+The inspector shook his head. "Half the doors in the street are open,"
+he said, "pretty nearly all day."
+
+"Ah, then there's nothing in that. I don't think he lives there, by the
+bye. I fancy he comes from more in the Seven Dials or Drury Lane
+direction. Did you notice anything about the man that gave you a clue to
+his occupation--or at any rate to his habits?"
+
+"Can't say I did."
+
+"Well, just take a look at the back of his coat before he goes
+away--just over the loins. Good-day."
+
+As I have said, Hewitt's messenger was quick. I happened to be
+in--having lately returned from a latish lunch--when he arrived with
+this note:--
+
+ "My dear B.,--I meant to have lunched with you to-day, but have
+ been kept. I expect you are idle this afternoon, and I have a
+ case that will interest you--perhaps be useful to you from a
+ journalistic point of view. If you care to see anything of it, cab
+ away _at once_ to Fitzroy Square, south side, where I'll meet you.
+ I will wait no later than 3.30. Yours, M. H."
+
+I had scarce a quarter of an hour, so I seized my hat and left my
+chambers at once. As it happened, my cab and Hewitt's burst into Fitzroy
+Square from opposite sides almost at the same moment, so that we lost no
+time.
+
+"Come," said Hewitt, taking my arm and marching me off, "we are going to
+look for some stabling. Try to feel as though you'd just set up a
+brougham and had come out to look for a place to put it in. I fear we
+may have to delude some person with that belief presently."
+
+"Why--what do you want stables for? And why make me your excuse?"
+
+"As to what I want the stables for--really I'm not altogether sure
+myself. As to making you an excuse--well, even the humblest excuse is
+better than none. But come, here are some stables. Not good enough,
+though, even if any of them were empty. Come on."
+
+We had stopped for an instant at the entrance to a small alley of rather
+dirty stables, and Hewitt, paying apparently but small attention to the
+stables themselves, had looked sharply about him with his gaze in the
+air.
+
+"I know this part of London pretty well," Hewitt observed, "and I can
+only remember one other range of stabling near by; we must try that. As
+a matter of fact, I'm coming here on little more than conjecture, though
+I shall be surprised if there isn't something in it. Do you know
+anything of aphasia?"
+
+"I have heard of it, of course, though I can't say I remember ever
+knowing a case."
+
+"I've seen one to-day--very curious case. The man's a Frenchman,
+discovered helpless in the street by a policeman. The only thing he can
+say that has any meaning in it at all is '_je le nie_,' and that he says
+mechanically, without in the least knowing what he is saying. And he
+can't write. But he got sketching and scrawling various things on some
+paper, and his scrawls--together with another thing or two--have given
+me an idea. We're following it up now. When we are less busy, and in a
+quiet place, I'll show you the sketches and explain things generally;
+there's no time now, and I _may_ want your help for a bit, in which case
+ignorance may prevent you spoiling things, you clumsy ruffian. Hullo!
+here we are, I think!"
+
+We had stopped at the end of another stable-yard, rather dirtier than
+the first. The stables were sound but inelegant sheds, and one or two
+appeared to be devoted to other purposes, having low chimneys, on one of
+which an old basket was rakishly set by way of cowl. Beside the entrance
+a worn-out old board was nailed, with the legend, "Stabling to Let," in
+letters formerly white on a ground formerly black.
+
+"Come," said Hewitt, "we'll explore."
+
+We picked our way over the greasy cobble-stones and looked about us. On
+the left was the wall enclosing certain back-yards, and on the right the
+stables. Two doors in the middle of these were open, and a butcher's
+young man, who with his shiny bullet head would have been known for a
+butcher's young man anywhere, was wiping over the new-washed wheel of a
+smart butcher's cart.
+
+"Good-day," Hewitt said pleasantly to the young man. "I notice there's
+some stabling to let here. Now, where should I inquire about it?"
+
+"Jones, Whitfield Street," the young man answered, giving the wheel a
+final spin. "But there's only one little place to let now, I think, and
+it ain't very grand."
+
+"Oh, which is that?"
+
+"Next but one to the street there. A chap 'ad it for wood-choppin', but
+'e chucked it. There ain't room for more'n a donkey an' a barrow."
+
+"Ah, that's a pity. We're not particular, but want something big
+enough, and we don't mind paying a fair price. Perhaps we might make an
+arrangement with somebody here who has a stable?"
+
+The young man shook his head.
+
+"I shouldn't think so," he said doubtfully; "they're mostly shop-people
+as wants all the room theirselves. My guv'nor couldn't do nothink, I
+know. These 'ere two stables ain't scarcely enough for all 'e wants as
+it is. Then there's Barkett the greengrocer 'ere next door. _That_ ain't
+no good. Then, next to that, there's the little place as is to let, and
+at the end there's Griffith's at the butter-shop."
+
+"And those the other way?"
+
+"Well, this 'ere first one's Curtis's, Euston Road--that's a
+butter-shop, too, an' 'e 'as the next after that. The last one, up at
+the end--I dunno quite whose that is. It ain't been long took, but I
+b'lieve it's some foreign baker's. I ain't ever see anythink come out of
+it, though; but there's a 'orse there, I know--I seen the feed took in."
+
+Hewitt turned thoughtfully away.
+
+"Thanks," he said. "I suppose we can't manage it, then. Good-day."
+
+We walked to the street as the butcher's young man wheeled in his cart
+and flung away his pail of water.
+
+"Will you just hang about here, Brett," he asked, "while I hurry round
+to the nearest iron-monger's? I shan't be gone long. We're going to work
+a little burglary. Take note if anybody comes to that stable at the
+farther end."
+
+He hurried away and I waited. In a few moments the butcher's young man
+shut his doors and went whistling down the street, and in a few moments
+more Hewitt appeared.
+
+"Come," he said, "there's nobody about now; we'll lose no time. I've
+bought a pair of pliers and a few nails."
+
+We re-entered the yard at the door of the last stable. Hewitt stooped
+and examined the padlock. Taking a nail in his pliers he bent it
+carefully against the brick wall. Then using the nail as a key, still
+held by the pliers, and working the padlock gently in his left hand, in
+an astonishingly few seconds he had released the hasp and taken off the
+padlock. "I'm not altogether a bad burglar," he remarked. "Not so bad,
+really."
+
+The padlock fastened a bar which, when removed, allowed the door to be
+opened. Opening it, Hewitt immediately seized a candle stuck in a bottle
+which stood on a shelf, pulled me in, and closed the door behind us.
+
+"We'll do this by candle-light," he said, as he struck a match. "If the
+door were left open it would be seen from the street. Keep your ears
+open in case anybody comes down the yard."
+
+The part of the shed that we stood in was used as a coach-house, and was
+occupied by a rather shabby tradesman's cart, the shafts of which rested
+on the ground. From the stall adjoining came the sound of the shuffling
+and trampling of an impatient horse.
+
+We turned to the cart. On the name-board at the side were painted in
+worn letters the words, "Schuyler, Baker." The address, which had been
+below, was painted out.
+
+Hewitt took out the pins and let down the tail board. Within the cart
+was a new bed-mattress which covered the whole surface at the bottom. I
+felt it, pressed it from the top, and saw that it was an ordinary spring
+mattress--perhaps rather unusually soft in the springs. It seemed a
+curious thing to keep in a baker's cart.
+
+Hewitt, who had set the candle on a convenient shelf, plunged his arm
+into the farthermost recesses of the cart and brought forth a very long
+French loaf, and then another. Diving again he produced certain loaves
+of the sort known as the "plain cottage "--two sets of four each, each
+set baked together in a row. "Feel this bread," said Hewitt, and I felt
+it. It was stale--almost as hard as wood.
+
+Hewitt produced a large pocket-knife, and with what seemed to me to be
+superfluous care and elaboration, cut into the top of one of the cottage
+loaves. Then he inserted his fingers in the gap he had made and firmly
+but slowly tore the hard bread into two pieces. He pulled away the crumb
+from within till there was nothing left but a rather thick outer shell.
+
+"No," he said, rather to himself than to me, "there's nothing in
+_that_." He lifted one of the very long French loaves and measured it
+against the interior of the cart. It had before been propped diagonally,
+and now it was noticeable that it was just a shade longer than the
+inside of the cart was wide. Jammed in, in fact, it held firmly. Hewitt
+produced his knife again, and divided this long loaf in the centre;
+there was nothing but bread in _that_. The horse in the stall fidgeted
+more than ever.
+
+"That horse hasn't been fed lately, I fancy," Hewitt said. "We'll give
+the poor chap a bit of this hay in the corner."
+
+"But," I said, "what about this bread? What did you expect to find in
+it? I can't see what you're driving at."
+
+"I'll tell you," Hewitt replied, "I'm driving after something I expect
+to find, and close at hand here, too. How are your nerves to-day--pretty
+steady? The thing may try them."
+
+Before I could reply there was a sound of footsteps in the yard outside,
+approaching. Hewitt lifted his finger instantly for silence and
+whispered hurriedly, "There's only one. If he comes _here_, we grab
+him."
+
+The steps came nearer and stopped outside the door. There was a pause,
+and then a slight drawing in of breath, as of a person suddenly
+surprised. At that moment the door was slightly shifted ajar and an eye
+peeped in.
+
+"Catch him!" said Hewitt aloud, as we sprang to the door. "He mustn't
+get away!"
+
+I had been nearer the doorway, and was first through it. The stranger
+ran down the yard at his best, but my legs were the longer, and half-way
+to the street I caught him by the shoulder and swung him round. Like
+lightning he whipped out a knife, and I flung in my left instantly on
+the chance of flooring him. It barely checked him, however, and the
+knife swung short of my chest by no more than two inches; but Hewitt had
+him by the wrist and tripped him forward on his face. He struggled like
+a wild beast, and Hewitt had to stand on his forearm and force up his
+wrist till the bones were near breaking before he dropped his knife. But
+throughout the struggle the man never shouted, called for help, nor,
+indeed, made the slightest sound, and we on our part were equally
+silent. It was quickly over, of course, for he was on his face, and we
+were two. We dragged our prisoner into the stable and closed the door
+behind us. So far as we had seen, nobody had witnessed the capture from
+the street, though, of course, we had been too busy to be certain.
+
+"There's a set of harness hanging over at the back," said Hewitt; "I
+think we'll tie him up with the traces and reins--nothing like leather.
+We don't need a gag; I know he won't shout."
+
+While I got the straps Hewitt held the prisoner by a peculiar
+neck-and-wrist grip that forbade him to move except at the peril of a
+snapped arm. He had probably never been a person of pleasant aspect,
+being short, strongly and squatly built, large and ugly of feature, and
+wild and dirty of hair and beard. And now, his face flushed with
+struggling and smeared with mud from the stable-yard, his nose bleeding
+and his forehead exhibiting a growing bump, he looked particularly
+repellent. We strapped his elbows together behind, and as he sullenly
+ignored a demand for the contents of his pockets Hewitt unceremoniously
+turned them out. Helpless as he was, the man struggled to prevent this,
+though, of course, ineffectually. There were papers, tobacco, a bunch of
+keys, and various odds and ends. Hewitt was glancing hastily at the
+papers when, suddenly dropping them, he caught the prisoner by the
+shoulder and pulled him away from a partly-consumed hay-truss which
+stood in a corner, and toward which he had quietly sidled.
+
+"Keep him still," said Hewitt; "we haven't examined this place yet." And
+he commenced to pull away the hay from the corner.
+
+Presently a large piece of sackcloth was revealed, and this being lifted
+left visible below it another batch of loaves of the same sort as we had
+seen in the cart. There were a dozen of them in one square batch, and
+the only thing about them that differed them from those in the cart was
+their position, for the batch lay bottom side up.
+
+"That's enough, I think," Hewitt said. "Don't touch them, for Heaven's
+sake!" He picked up the papers he had dropped. "That has saved us a
+little search," he continued. "See here, Brett; I was in the act of
+telling you my suspicions when this little affair interrupted me. If you
+care to look at one or two of these letters you'll see what I should
+have told you. It's Anarchism and bombs, of course. I'm about as certain
+as I can be that there's a reversible dynamite bomb inside each of those
+innocent loaves, though I assure you I don't mean meddling with them
+now. But see here. Will you go and bring in a four-wheeler? Bring it
+right down the yard. There's more to do, and we mustn't attract
+attention."
+
+I hurried away and found the cab. The meaning of the loaves, the cart,
+and the spring-mattress was now plain. There was an Anarchist plot to
+carry out a number of explosions probably simultaneously, in different
+parts of the city. I had, of course, heard much of the terrible
+"reversing" bombs--those bombs which, containing a tube of acid plugged
+by wadding, required no fuse, and only needed to be inverted to be set
+going to explode in a few minutes. The loaves containing these bombs
+would form an effectual "blind," and they were to be distributed,
+probably in broad daylight, in the most natural manner possible, in a
+baker's cart. A man would be waiting near the scene of each contemplated
+explosion. He would be given a loaf taken from the inverted batch. He
+would take it--perhaps wrapped in paper, but still inverted, and
+apparently the most innocent object possible--to the spot selected,
+deposit it, right side up--which would reverse the inner tube and set up
+the action--in some quiet corner, behind a door or what not, and make
+his own escape, while the explosion tore down walls and--if the
+experiment were lucky--scattered the flesh and bones of unsuspecting
+people.
+
+The infernal loaves were made and kept reversed, to begin with, in order
+to stand more firmly, and--if observed--more naturally, when turned
+over to explode. Even if a child picked up the loaf and carried it off,
+that child at least would be blown to atoms, which at any rate would
+have been something for the conspirators to congratulate themselves
+upon. The spring-mattress, of course, was to ease the jolting to the
+bombs, and obviate any random jerking loose of the acid, which might
+have had the deplorable result of sacrificing the valuable life of the
+conspirator who drove the cart. The other loaves, too, with no explosive
+contents, had their use. The two long ones, which fitted across the
+inside of the cart, would be jammed across so as to hold the bombs in
+the centre, and the others would be used to pack the batch on the other
+sides and prevent any dangerous slipping about. The thing seemed pretty
+plain, except that as yet I had no idea of how Hewitt learned anything
+of the business.
+
+I brought the four-wheeler up to the door of the stable and we thrust
+the man into it, and Hewitt locked the stable door with its proper key.
+Then we drove off to Tottenham Court Road police-station, and, by
+Hewitt's order, straight into the yard.
+
+In less than ten minutes from our departure from the stable our prisoner
+was finally secured, and Hewitt was deep in consultation with police
+officials. Messengers were sent and telegrams despatched, and presently
+Hewitt came to me with information.
+
+"The name of the helpless Frenchman the police found this morning," he
+said, "appears to be Gérard--at least I am almost certain of it. Among
+the papers found on the prisoner--whose full name doesn't appear, but
+who seems to be spoken of as Luigi (he is Italian)--among the papers, I
+say, is a sort of notice convening a meeting for this evening to decide
+as to the 'final punishment' to be awarded the 'traitor Gérard, now in
+charge of comrade Pingard.'
+
+"The place of meeting is not mentioned, but it seems more than probable
+that it will be at the Bakunin Club, not five minutes' walk from this
+place. The police have all these places under quiet observation, of
+course, and that is the club at which apparently important Anarchist
+meetings have been held lately. It is the only club that has never been
+raided as yet, and, it would seem, the only one they would feel at all
+safe in using for anything important.
+
+"Moreover, Luigi just now simply declined to open his mouth when asked
+where the meeting was to be, and said nothing when the names of several
+other places were suggested, but suddenly found his tongue at the
+mention of the Bakunin Club, and denied vehemently that the meeting was
+to be there--it was the only thing he uttered. So that it seems pretty
+safe to assume that it _is_ to be there. Now, of course, the matter's
+very serious. Men have been despatched to take charge of the stable very
+quietly, and the club is to be taken possession of at once--also very
+quietly. It must be done without a moment's delay, and as there is a
+chance that the only detective officers within reach at the moment may
+be known by sight, I have undertaken to get in first. Perhaps you'll
+come? We may have to take the door with a rush."
+
+Of course I meant to miss nothing if I could help it, and said so.
+
+"Very well," replied Hewitt, "we'll get ourselves up a bit." He began
+taking off his collar and tie. "It is getting dusk," he proceeded, "and
+we shan't want old clothes to make ourselves look sufficiently shabby.
+We're both wearing bowler hats, which is lucky. Make a dent in yours--if
+you can do so without permanently damaging it."
+
+We got rid of our collars and made chokers of our ties. We turned our
+coat-collars up at one side only, and then, with dented hats worn
+raffishly, and our hands in our pockets, we looked disreputable enough
+for all practical purposes in twilight. A cordon of plain-clothes police
+had already been forming round the club, we were told, and so we sallied
+forth. We turned into Windmill Street, crossed Whitfield Street, and in
+a turning or two we came to the Bakunin Club. I could see no sign of
+anything like a ring of policemen, and said so. Hewitt chuckled. "Of
+course not," he said; "they don't go about a job of this sort with drums
+beating and flags flying. But they are all there, and some are watching
+us. There is the house. I'll negotiate."
+
+The house was one of the very shabby _passé_ sort that abound in that
+quarter. The very narrow area was railed over, and almost choked with
+rubbish. Visible above it were three floors, the lowest indicated by the
+door and one window, and the other two by two windows each--mean and
+dirty all. A faint light appeared in the top floor, and another from
+somewhere behind the refuse-heaped area. Everywhere else was in
+darkness. Hewitt looked intently into the area, but it was impossible to
+discern anything behind the sole grimy patch of window that was visible.
+Then we stepped lightly up the three or four steps to the door and rang
+the bell.
+
+We could hear slippered feet mounting a stair and approaching. A latch
+was shifted, a door opened six inches, an indistinct face appeared, and
+a female voice asked, "_Qui est là?_"
+
+"_Deux camarades_," Hewitt grunted testily. "_Ouvrez vite._"
+
+I had noticed that the door was kept from opening further by a short
+chain. This chain the woman unhooked from the door, but still kept the
+latter merely ajar, as though intending to assure herself still
+further. But Hewitt immediately pushed the door back, planted his foot
+against it, and entered, asking carelessly as he did so, "_Où se trouve
+Luigi?_"
+
+I followed on his heels, and in the dark could just distinguish that
+Hewitt pushed the woman instantly against the wall and clapped his hand
+to her mouth. At the same moment a file of quiet men were suddenly
+visible ascending the steps at my heels. They were the police.
+
+The door was closed behind us almost noiselessly, and a match was
+struck. Two men stood at the bottom of the stairs, and the others
+searched the house. Only two men were found--both in a top room. They
+were secured and brought down.
+
+The woman was now ungagged, and she used her tongue at a great rate. One
+of the men was a small, meek-looking slip of a fellow, and he appeared
+to be the woman's husband. "Eh, messieurs le police," she exclaimed
+vehemently, "it ees not of 'im, mon pauvre Pierre, zat you sall rrun in.
+'Im and me--we are not of the clob--we work only--we housekeep."
+
+Hewitt whispered to an officer, and the two men were taken below. Then
+Hewitt spoke to the woman, whose protests had not ceased. "You say you
+are not of the club," he said, "but what is there to prove that? If you
+are but housekeepers, as you say, you have nothing to fear. But you can
+only prove it by giving the police information. For instance, now, about
+Gérard. What have they done with him?"
+
+"Jean Pingard--'im you 'ave take downstairs--'e 'ave lose 'im. Jean
+Pingard get last night all a-boosa--all dronk like zis"--she rolled her
+head and shoulders to express intoxication--"and he sleep too much
+to-day, when Émile go out, and Gérard, he go too, and nobody know. I
+will tell you anysing. We are not of the clob--we housekeep, me and
+Pierre."
+
+"But what did they do to Gérard before he went away?"
+
+The woman was ready and anxious to tell anything. Gérard had been
+selected to do something--what it was exactly she did not know, but
+there was a horse and cart, and he was to drive it. Where the horse and
+cart was also she did not know, but Gérard had driven a cart before in
+his work for a baker, and he was to drive one in connection with some
+scheme among the members of the club. But _le pauvre Gérard_ at the last
+minute disliked to drive the cart; he had fear. He did not say he had
+fear, but he prepared a letter--a letter that was not signed. The letter
+was to be sent to the police, and it told them the whereabouts of the
+horse and cart, so that the police might seize these things, and then
+there would be nothing for Gérard, who had fear, to do in the way of
+driving. No, he did not betray the names of the comrades, but he told
+the place of the horse and the cart.
+
+Nevertheless, the letter was never sent. There was suspicion, and the
+letter was found in a pocket and read. Then there was a meeting, and
+Gérard was confronted with his letter. He could say nothing but "_Je le
+nie!_"--found no explanation but that. There was much noise, and she had
+observed from a staircase, from which one might see through a
+ventilating hole, Gérard had much fear--very much fear. His face was
+white, and it moved; he prayed for mercy, and they talked of killing
+him. It was discussed how he should be killed, and the poor Gérard was
+more terrified. He was made to take off his collar, and a razor was
+drawn across his throat, though without cutting him, till he fainted.
+
+Then water was flung over him, and he was struck in the face till he
+revived. He again repeated, "_Je le nie! je le nie!_" and nothing more.
+Then one struck him with a bottle, and another with a stick; the point
+of a knife was put against his throat and held there, but this time he
+did not faint, but cried softly, as a man who is drunk, "_Je le nie! je
+le nie!_" So they tied a handkerchief about his neck, and twisted it
+till his face grew purple and black, and his eyes were round and
+terrible, and then they struck his face, and he fainted again. But they
+took away the handkerchief, having fear that they could not easily get
+rid of the body if he were killed, for there was no preparation. So they
+decided to meet again and discuss when there would be preparation.
+Wherefore they took him away to the rooms of Jean Pingard--of Jean and
+Émile Pingard--in Henry Street, Golden Square. But Émile Pingard had
+gone out, and Jean was drunk and slept, and they lost him. Jean Pingard
+was he downstairs--the taller of the two; the other was but _le pauvre
+Pierre_, who, with herself, was not of the club. They worked only; they
+were the keepers of the house. There was nothing for which they should
+be arrested, and she would give the police any information they might
+ask.
+
+"As I thought, you see," Hewitt said to me, "the man's nerves have
+broken down under the terror and the strain, and aphasia is the result.
+I think I told you that the only articulate thing he could say was '_Je
+le nie!_' and now we know how those words were impressed on him till he
+now pronounces them mechanically, with no idea of their meaning. Come,
+we can do no more here now. But wait a moment."
+
+There were footsteps outside. The light was removed, and a policeman
+went to the door and opened it as soon as the bell rang. Three men
+stepped in one after another, and the door was immediately shut behind
+them--they were prisoners.
+
+We left quietly, and although we, of course, expected it, it was not
+till the next morning that we learned absolutely that the largest arrest
+of Anarchists ever made in this country was made at the Bakunin Club
+that night. Each man as he came was admitted--and collared.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We made our way to Luzatti's, and it was over our dinner that Hewitt put
+me in full possession of the earlier facts of this case, which I have
+set down as impersonal narrative in their proper place at the beginning.
+
+"But," I said, "what of that aimless scribble you spoke of that Gérard
+made in the police station? Can I see it?"
+
+Hewitt turned to where his coat hung behind him and took a handful of
+papers from his pocket.
+
+"Most of these," he said, "mean nothing at all. _That_ is what he wrote
+at first," and he handed me the first of the two papers which were
+presented in facsimile in the earlier part of this narrative.
+
+"You see," he said, "he has begun mechanically from long use to write
+'monsieur'--the usual beginning of a letter. But he scarcely makes three
+letters before tailing off into sheer scribble. He tries again and
+again, and although once there is something very like 'que,' and once
+something like a word preceded by a negative 'n,' the whole thing is
+meaningless.
+
+"This" (he handed me the other paper which has been printed in
+facsimile) "_does_ mean something, though Gérard never intended it. Can
+you spot the meaning? Really, I think it's pretty plain--especially now
+that you know as much as I about the day's adventures. The thing at the
+top left-hand corner, I may tell you, Gérard intended for a sketch of a
+clock on the mantelpiece in the police-station."
+
+I stared hard at the paper, but could make nothing whatever of it. "I
+only see the horse-shoe clock," I said, "and a sort of second,
+unsuccessful attempt to draw it again. Then there is a horse-shoe
+dotted, but scribbled over, and then a sort of kite or balloon on a
+string, a Highlander, and--well, I don't understand it, I confess. Tell
+me."
+
+"I'll explain what I learned from that," Hewitt said, "and also what led
+me to look for it. From what the inspector told me, I judged the man to
+be in a very curious state, and I took a fancy to see him. Most I was
+curious to know why he should have a terror of bread at one moment and
+eat it ravenously at another. When I saw him I felt pretty sure that he
+was not mad, in the common sense of the term. As far as I could judge
+it seemed to be a case of aphasia.
+
+"Then when the doctor came I had a chat (as I have already told you)
+with the policeman who found the man. He told me about the incident of
+the bread with rather more detail than I had had from the inspector.
+Thus it was plain that the man was terrified at the bread only when it
+was in the form of a loaf, and ate it eagerly when it was cut into
+pieces. That was _one_ thing to bear in mind. He was not afraid of
+_bread_, but only of a _loaf_.
+
+"Very well. I asked the policeman to find another uncut loaf, and to put
+it near the man when his attention was diverted. Meantime the doctor
+reported that my suspicion as to aphasia was right. The man grew more
+comfortable, and was assured that he was among friends and had nothing
+to fear, so that when at length he found the loaf near his elbow he was
+not so violently terrified, only very uneasy. I watched him and saw him
+turn it bottom up--a very curious thing to do; he immediately became
+less uneasy--the turning over of the loaf seemed to have set his mind at
+rest in some way. This was more curious still. I thought for some little
+while before accepting the bomb theory as the most probable.
+
+"The doctor left, and I determined to give the man another chance with
+pen and paper. I felt pretty certain that if he were allowed to
+scribble and sketch as he pleased, sooner or later he would do something
+that would give me some sort of a hint. I left him entirely alone and
+let him do as he pleased, but I watched.
+
+"After all the futile scribble which you have seen, he began to sketch,
+first a man's head, then a chair--just what he might happen to see in
+the room. Presently he took to the piece of paper you have before you.
+He observed that clock and began to sketch it, then went on to other
+things, such as you see, scribbling idly over most of them when
+finished. When he had made the last of the sketches he made a hasty
+scrawl of his pen over it and broke down. It had brought his terror to
+his mind again somehow.
+
+"I seized the paper and examined it closely. Now just see. Ignore the
+clock, which was merely a sketch of a thing before him, and look at the
+three things following. What are they? A horse-shoe, a captive balloon,
+and a Highlander. Now, can't you think of something those three things
+in that order suggest?"
+
+I could think of nothing whatever, and I confessed as much.
+
+"Think, now. Tottenham Court Road!"
+
+I started. "Of course," I said. "That never struck me. There's the
+Horse-shoe Hotel, with the sign outside, there's the large toy and
+fancy shop half-way up, where they have a captive balloon moored to the
+roof as an advertisement, and there's the tobacco and snuff shop on the
+left, toward the other end, where they have a life-size wooden
+Highlander at the door--an uncommon thing, indeed, nowadays."
+
+"You are right. The curious conjunction struck me at once. There they
+are, all three, and just in the order in which one meets them going up
+from Oxford Street. Also, as if to confirm the conjecture, note the
+_dotted_ horse-shoe. Don't you remember that at night the Horse-shoe
+Hotel sign is illuminated by two rows of gas lights?
+
+"Now here was my clue at last. Plainly, this man, in his mechanical
+sketching, was following a regular train of thought, and unconsciously
+illustrating it as he went along. Many people in perfect health and
+mental soundness do the same thing if a pen and a piece of waste paper
+be near. The man's train of thought led him, in memory, up Tottenham
+Court Road, and further, to where some disagreeable recollection upset
+him. It was my business to trace this train of thought. Do you remember
+the feat of Dupin in Poe's story, 'The Murders in the Rue Morgue'--how
+he walks by his friend's side in silence for some distance, and then
+suddenly breaks out with a divination of his thoughts, having silently
+traced them from a fruiterer with a basket, through paving-stones,
+Epicurus, Dr. Nichols, the constellation Orion, and a Latin poem, to a
+cobbler lately turned actor?
+
+"Well, it was some such task as this (but infinitely simpler, as a
+matter of fact) that was set me. This man begins by drawing the
+horse-shoe clock. Having done with that, and with the horse-shoe still
+in his mind, he starts to draw a horse-shoe simply. It is a failure, and
+he scribbles it out. His mind at once turns to the Horse-shoe Hotel,
+which he knows from frequently passing it, and its sign of gas-jets. He
+sketches _that_, making dots for the gas lights. Once started in
+Tottenham Court Road, his mind naturally follows his usual route along
+it. He remembers the advertising captive balloon half-way up, and down
+_that_ goes on his paper. In imagination he crosses the road, and keeps
+on till he comes to the very noticeable Highlander outside the
+tobacconist's. _That_ is sketched. Thus it is plain that a familiar
+route with him was from New Oxford Street up Tottenham Court Road.
+
+"At the police-station I ventured to guess from this that he lived
+somewhere near Seven Dials. Perhaps before long we shall know if this
+was right. But to return to the sketches. After the Highlander there is
+something at first not very distinct. A little examination, however,
+shows it to be intended for a chimney-pot partly covered with a basket.
+Now an old basket, stuck sideways on a chimney by way of cowl, is not an
+uncommon thing in parts of the country, but it is very unusual in
+London. Probably, then, it would be in some by-street or alley. Next and
+last, there is a horse's head, and it was at this that the man's trouble
+returned to him.
+
+"Now, when one goes to a place and finds a horse there, that place is
+not uncommonly a stable; and, as a matter of fact, the basket-cowl would
+be much more likely to be found in use in a range of back stabling than
+anywhere else. Suppose, then, that after taking the direction indicated
+in the sketches--the direction of Fitzroy Square, in fact--one were to
+find a range of stabling with a basket-cowl visible about it? I know my
+London pretty well, as you are aware, and I could remember but two
+likely stable-yards in that particular part--the two we looked at, in
+the second of which you may possibly have noticed just such a
+basket-cowl as I have been speaking of.
+
+"Well, what we did you know, and that we found confirmation of my
+conjecture about the loaves you also know. It was the recollection of
+the horse and cart, and what they were to transport, and what the end
+of it all had been, that upset Gérard as he drew the horse's head. You
+will notice that the sketches have not been done in separate rows, left
+to right--they have simply followed one another all round the paper,
+which means preoccupation and unconsciousness on the part of the man who
+made them."
+
+"But," I asked, "supposing those loaves to contain bombs, how were the
+bombs put there? Baking the bread round them would have been risky,
+wouldn't it?"
+
+"Certainly. What they did was to cut the loaves, each row, down the
+centre. Then most of the crumb was scooped out, the explosive inserted,
+and the sides joined up and glued. I thought you had spotted the joins,
+though they certainly were neat."
+
+"No, I didn't examine closely. Luigi, of course, had been told off for a
+daily visit to feed the horse, and that is how we caught him."
+
+"One supposes so. They hadn't rearranged their plans as to going on with
+the outrages after Gérard's defection. By the way, I noticed that he was
+accustomed to driving when I first saw him. There was an unmistakable
+mark on his coat, just at the small of the back, that drivers get who
+lean against a rail in a cart."
+
+The loaves were examined by official experts, and, as everybody now
+knows, were found to contain, as Hewitt had supposed, large charges of
+dynamite. What became of some half-dozen of the men captured is also
+well known: their sentences were exemplary.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
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+ 79. _A Merciful Divorce._ By F. W. MAUDE.
+ 80. _Stephen Ellicot's Daughter._ By Mrs. J. H. NEEDELL.
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+ 114. _A Little Minx._ By ADA CAMBRIDGE.
+ 115. _Capt'n Davy's Honeymoon._ By HALL CAINE.
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+ 120. _The Tutor's Secret._ By VICTOR CHERBULIEZ.
+ 121. _From the Five Rivers._ By Mrs. F. A. STEEL.
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+ 123. _Ideala._ By SARAH GRAND.
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+ 125. _Relics._ By FRANCES MACNAB.
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+ 131. _A Gray Eye or So._ By FRANK FRANKFORT MOORE.
+ 132. _Earlscourt._ By ALEXANDER ALLARDYCE.
+ 133. _A Marriage Ceremony._ By ADA CAMBRIDGE.
+ 134. _A Ward in Chancery._ By Mrs. ALEXANDER.
+ 135. _Lot 13._ By DOROTHEA GERARD.
+ 136. _Our Manifold Nature._ By SARAH GRAND.
+ 137. _A Costly Freak._ By MAXWELL GRAY.
+ 138. _A Beginner_. By RHODA BROUGHTON.
+ 139. _A Yellow Aster._ By Mrs. MANNINGTON CAFFYN ("IOTA").
+ 140. _The Rubicon._ By E. F. BENSON.
+ 141. _The Trespasser._ By GILBERT PARKER.
+ 142. _The Rich Miss Riddell._ By DOROTHEA GERARD.
+ 143. _Mary Fenwick's Daughter._ By BEATRICE WHITBY.
+ 144. _Red Diamonds._ By JUSTIN MCCARTHY.
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+ =In the Blue Pike.= A Romance of German Life in the early Sixteenth
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+
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+
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+
+
+_For sale by all booksellers; or sent by mail on receipt of price by the
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+
+New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+BY A. CONAN DOYLE.
+
+
+_THE EXPLOITS OF BRIGADIER GERARD. A Romance of the Life of a Typical
+Napoleonic Soldier._ Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
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+
+
+_THE STARK MUNRO LETTERS._ Being a Series of Twelve Letters written by
+STARK MUNRO, M. B., to his friend and former fellow-student, Herbert
+Swanborough, of Lowell, Massachusetts, during the years 1881-1884.
+Illustrated. 12mo. Buckram, $1.50.
+
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+
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+
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+
+
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+
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+
+"A strikingly realistic and decidedly original contribution to modern
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+
+
+
+BY S. R. CROCKETT.
+
+
+_CLEG KELLY, ARAB OF THE CITY. His Progress and Adventures._ Uniform
+with "The Lilac Sunbonnet" and "Bog-Myrtle and Peat." Illustrated. 12mo.
+Cloth, $1.50.
+
+It is safe to predict for the quaint and delightful figure of Cleg Kelly
+a notable place in the literature of the day. Mr. Crockett's signal
+success in his new field will enlarge the wide circle of his admirers.
+The lights and shadows of curious phases of Edinburgh life, and of
+Scotch farm and railroad life, are pictured with an intimate sympathy,
+richness of humor, and truthful pathos which make this new novel a
+genuine addition to literature. It seems safe to say that at least two
+characters--Cleg and Muckle Alick--are likely to lead Mr. Crockett's
+heroes in popular favor. The illustrations of this fascinating novel
+have been the result of most faithful and sympathetic study.
+
+
+_BOG-MYRTLE AND PEAT._ Third edition. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"Here are idyls, epics, dramas of human life, written in words that
+thrill and burn.... Each is a poem that has an immortal flavor. They are
+fragments of the author's early dreams, too bright, too gorgeous, too
+full of the blood of rubies and the life of diamonds to be caught and
+held palpitating in expression's grasp."--_Boston Courier._
+
+"Hardly a sketch among them all that will not afford pleasure to the
+reader for its genial humor, artistic local coloring, and admirable
+portrayal of character."--_Boston Home Journal._
+
+"One dips into the book anywhere and reads on and on, fascinated by the
+writer's charm of manner."--_Minneapolis Tribune._
+
+
+_THE LILAC SUNBONNET._ Sixth edition. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"A love story pure and simple, one of the old-fashioned, wholesome,
+sunshiny kind, with a pure-minded, sound-hearted hero, and a heroine who
+is merely a good and beautiful woman; and if any other love story half
+so sweet has been written this year, it has escaped our notice."--_New
+York Times._
+
+"The general conception of the story, the motive of which is the growth
+of love between the young chief and heroine, is delineated with a
+sweetness and a freshness, a naturalness and a certainty, which places
+'The Lilac Sunbonnet' among the best stories of the time."--_New York
+Mail and Express._
+
+"In its own line this little love story can hardly be excelled. It is a
+pastoral, an idyl--the story of love and courtship and marriage of a
+fine young man and a lovely girl--no more. But it is told in so
+thoroughly delightful a manner, with such playful humor, such delicate
+fancy, such true and sympathetic feeling, that nothing more could be
+desired."--_Boston Traveller._
+
+
+
+GILBERT PARKER'S BEST BOOKS.
+
+
+_THE SEATS OF THE MIGHTY._ Being the Memoirs of Captain ROBERT MORAY,
+sometime an Officer in the Virginia Regiment, and afterward of Amherst's
+Regiment. 12mo. Cloth, illustrated, $1.50.
+
+For the time of his story Mr. Parker has chosen the most absorbing
+period of the romantic eighteenth-century history of Quebec. The curtain
+rises soon after General Braddock's defeat in Virginia, and the hero, a
+prisoner in Quebec, curiously entangled in the intrigues of La
+Pompadour, becomes a part of a strange history, full of adventure and
+the stress of peril, which culminates only after Wolfe's victory over
+Montcalm. The material offered by the life and history of old Quebec has
+never been utilized for the purposes of fiction with the command of plot
+and incident, the mastery of local color, and the splendid realization
+of dramatic situations shown in this distinguished and moving romance.
+The illustrations preserve the atmosphere of the text, for they present
+the famous buildings, gates, and battle grounds as they appeared at the
+time of the hero's imprisonment in Quebec.
+
+
+_THE TRAIL OF THE SWORD._ A Novel. 12mo. Paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00.
+
+"Mr. Parker here adds to a reputation already wide, and anew
+demonstrates his power of pictorial portrayal and of strong dramatic
+situation and climax."--_Philadelphia Bulletin._
+
+"The tale holds the reader's interest from first to last, for it is full
+of fire and spirit, abounding in incident, and marked by good character
+drawing."--_Pittsburg Times._
+
+
+_THE TRESPASSER._ 12mo. Paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00.
+
+"Interest, pith, force and charm--Mr. Parker's new story possesses all
+these qualities.... Almost bare of synthetical decoration, his
+paragraphs are stirring because they are real. We read at times--as we
+have read the great masters of romance--breathlessly."--_The Critic._
+
+"Gilbert Parker writes a strong novel, but thus far this is his
+masterpiece.... It is one of the great novels of the year."--_Boston
+Advertiser._
+
+
+_THE TRANSLATION OF A SAVAGE._ 16mo. Flexible cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"A book which no one will be satisfied to put down until the end has
+been matter of certainty and assurance."--_The Nation._
+
+"A story of remarkable interest, originality, and ingenuity of
+construction."--_Boston Home Journal._
+
+"The perusal of this romance will repay those who care for new and
+original types of character, and who are susceptible to the fascination
+of a fresh and vigorous style."--_London Daily News._
+
+
+"=A better book than 'The Prisoner of Zenda.'="--_London Queen._
+
+_THE CHRONICLES OF COUNT ANTONIO._ By ANTHONY HOPE, author of "The
+God in the Car," "The Prisoner of Zenda," etc. With photogravure
+Frontispiece by S. W. Van Schaick. Third edition. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"No adventures were ever better worth recounting than are those of
+Antonio of Monte Velluto, a very Bayard among outlaws.... To all those
+whose pulses still stir at the recital of deeds of high courage, we may
+recommend this book.... The chronicle conveys the emotion of heroic
+adventure, and is picturesquely written."--_London Daily News._
+
+"It has literary merits all its own, of a deliberate and rather deep
+order.... In point of execution 'The Chronicles of Count Antonio' is the
+best work that Mr. Hope has yet done. The design is clearer, the
+workmanship more elaborate, the style more colored.... The incidents are
+most ingenious, they are told quietly, but with great cunning, and the
+Quixotic sentiment which pervades it all is exceedingly
+pleasant."--_Westminster Gazette._
+
+"A romance worthy of all the expectations raised by the brilliancy of
+his former books, and likely to be read with a keen enjoyment and a
+healthy exaltation of the spirits by every one who takes it up."--_The
+Scotsman._
+
+"A gallant tale, written with unfailing freshness and spirit."--_London
+Daily Telegraph._
+
+"One of the most fascinating romances written in English within many
+days. The quaint simplicity of its style is delightful, and the
+adventures recorded in these 'Chronicles of Count Antonio' are as
+stirring and ingenious as any conceived even by Weyman at his
+best."--_New York World._
+
+"Romance of the real flavor, wholly and entirely romance, and narrated
+in true romantic style. The characters, drawn with such masterly
+handling, are not merely pictures and portraits, but statues that are
+alive and step boldly forward from the canvas."--_Boston Courier._
+
+"Told in a wonderfully simple and direct style, and with the magic
+touch of a man who has the genius of narrative, making the varied
+incidents flow naturally and rapidly in a stream of sparkling
+discourse."--_Detroit Tribune._
+
+"Easily ranks with, if not above, 'A Prisoner of Zenda.' ... Wonderfully
+strong, graphic, and compels the interest of the most _blasé_ novel
+reader."--_Boston Advertiser._
+
+"No adventures were ever better worth telling than those of Count
+Antonio.... The author knows full well how to make every pulse thrill,
+and how to hold his readers under the spell of his magic."--_Boston
+Herald._
+
+"A book to make women weep proud tears, and the blood of men to tingle
+with knightly fervor.... In 'Count Antonio' we think Mr. Hope surpasses
+himself, as he has already surpassed all the other story-tellers of the
+period."--_New York Spirit of the Times._
+
+
+_THE ONE WHO LOOKED ON._ By F. F. MONTRÉSOR, author of "Into the
+Highways and Hedges." 16mo. Cloth, special binding, $1.25.
+
+"The story runs on as smoothly as a brook through lowlands; it excites
+your interest at the beginning and keeps it to the end."--_New York
+Herald._
+
+"An exquisite story.... No person sensitive to the influence of what
+makes for the true, the lovely, and the strong in human friendship and
+the real in life's work can read this book without being benefited by
+it."--_Buffalo Commercial._
+
+"The book has universal interest and very unusual merit.... Aside from
+its subtle poetic charm, the book is a noble example of the power of
+keen observation."--_Boston Herald._
+
+
+_CORRUPTION._ By PERCY WHITE, author of "Mr. Bailey-Martin," etc. 12mo.
+Cloth, $1.25.
+
+"There is intrigue enough in it for those who love a story of the
+ordinary kind, and the political part is perhaps more attractive in its
+sparkle and variety of incident than the real thing itself."--_London
+Daily News._
+
+"A drama of biting intensity, a tragedy of inflexible purpose and
+relentless result."--_Pall Mall Gazette._
+
+
+_A HARD WOMAN._ A Story in Scenes. By VIOLET HUNT. 12mo. Cloth, $1.25.
+
+"An extremely clever work. Miss Hunt probably writes dialogue better
+than any of our young novelists.... Not only are her conversations
+wonderfully vivacious and sustained, but she contrives to assign to each
+of her characters a distinct mode of speech, so that the reader easily
+identifies them, and can follow the conversations without the slightest
+difficulty."--_London Athenæum._
+
+"One of the best writers of dialogue of our immediate day. The
+conversations in this book will enhance her already secure
+reputation."--_London Daily Chronicle._
+
+"A creation that does Miss Hunt infinite credit, and places her in the
+front rank of the younger novelists.... Brilliantly drawn, quivering
+with life, adroit, quiet-witted, unfalteringly insolent, and withal
+strangely magnetic."--_London Standard._
+
+
+_AN IMAGINATIVE MAN._ By ROBERT S. HICHENS, author of "The Green
+Carnation." 12mo. Cloth, $1.25.
+
+"One of the brightest books of the year."--_Boston Budget._
+
+"Altogether delightful, fascinating, unusual."--_Cleveland Amusement
+Gazette._
+
+"A study in character.... Just as entertaining as though it were the
+conventional story of love and marriage. The clever hand of the author
+of 'The Green Carnation' is easily detected in the caustic wit and
+pointed epigram."--_Jeannette L. Gilder, in the New York World._
+
+
+_A STREET IN SUBURBIA._ By EDWIN PUGH. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.
+
+"Simplicity of style, strength, and delicacy of character study will
+mark this book as one of the most significant of the year."--_New York
+Press._
+
+"Thoroughly entertaining, and more--it shows traces of a creative genius
+something akin to Dickens."--_Boston Traveller._
+
+"In many respects the best of all the books of lighter literature
+brought out this season."--_Providence News._
+
+"Highly pleasing and gracefully recorded reminiscences of early suburban
+life and youthful experience told in a congenial spirit and in very
+charming prose."--_Boston Courier._
+
+
+_MAJESTY._ A Novel. By LOUIS COUPERUS. Translated by A. TEIXEIRA DE
+MATTOS and ERNEST DOWSON. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.
+
+"There have been many workers among novelists in the field of royal
+portraiture, but it may be safely stated that few of those who have
+essayed this dubious path have achieved more striking results than M.
+Couperus. 'Majesty' is an extraordinarily vivid romance of autocratic
+imperialism."--_London Academy._
+
+"No novelist whom we can call to mind has ever given the world such a
+masterpiece of royal portraiture as Louis Couperus's striking romance
+entitled 'Majesty.'"--_Philadelphia Record._
+
+"There is not an uninteresting page in the book, and it ought to be read
+by all who desire to keep in line with the best that is published in
+modern fiction."--_Buffalo Commercial._
+
+
+_THE NEW MOON._ By C. E. RAIMOND, author of "George Mandeville's
+Husband," etc. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.
+
+"A delicate pathos makes itself felt as the narrative progresses, whose
+cadences fall on the spirit's consciousness with a sweet and soothing
+influence not to be measured in words."--_Boston Courier._
+
+"One of the most impressive of recent works of fiction, both for its
+matter and especially for its presentation."--_Milwaukee Journal._
+
+"An intensely interesting story. A curious interweaving of old
+superstitions which govern a nervous woman's selfish life, and the
+brisk, modern ways of a wholesome English girl."--_Philadelphia Ledger._
+
+
+_THE WISH._ A Novel. By HERMANN SUDERMANN. With a Biographical
+Introduction by ELIZABETH LEE. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.
+
+"Contains some superb specimens of original thought."--_New York World._
+
+"The style is direct and incisive, and holds the unflagging attention of
+the reader."--_Boston Journal._
+
+"A powerful story, very simple, very direct."--_Chicago Evening Post._
+
+
+_SLEEPING FIRES._ By GEORGE GISSING, author of "In the Year of Jubilee,"
+"Eve's Ransom," etc. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+In this striking story the author has treated an original motive with
+rare self-command and skill. His book is most interesting as a story,
+and remarkable as a literary performance.
+
+
+_STONEPASTURES._ By ELEANOR STUART. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"This is a strong bit of good literary workmanship.... The book has the
+value of being a real sketch of our own mining regions, and of showing
+how, even in the apparently dull round of work, there is still material
+for a good bit of literature."--_Philadelphia Ledger._
+
+
+_COURTSHIP BY COMMAND._ By M. M. BLAKE. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"A bright, moving study of an unusually interesting period in the life
+of Napoleon,... deliciously told; the characters are clearly, strongly,
+and very delicately modeled, and the touches of color most artistically
+done. 'Courtship by Command' is the most satisfactory Napoleon
+_bonne-bouche_ we have had."--_New York Commercial Advertiser._
+
+
+_THE WATTER'S MOU'._ By BRAM STOKER. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"Here is a tale to stir the most sluggish nature.... It is like standing
+on the deck of a wave tossed ship; you feel the soul of the storm go
+into your blood."--_N. Y. Home Journal._
+
+"The characters are strongly drawn, the descriptions are intensely
+dramatic, and the situations are portrayed with rare vividness of
+language. It is a thrilling story, told with great power."--_Boston
+Advertiser._
+
+
+_MASTER AND MAN._ By Count LEO TOLSTOY. With an Introduction by W. D.
+HOWELLS. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"Crowded with these characteristic touches which mark his literary
+work."--_Public Opinion._
+
+"Reveals a wonderful knowledge of the workings of the human mind, and it
+tells a tale that not only stirs the emotions, but gives us a better
+insight into our own hearts."--_San Francisco Argonaut._
+
+
+_THE ZEIT-GEIST._ By L. DOUGALL, author of "The Mermaid," "Beggars All,"
+etc. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"One of the best of the short stories of the day."--_Boston Journal._
+
+"One of the most remarkable novels of the year."--_New York Commercial
+Advertiser._
+
+"Powerful in conception, treatment, and influence."--_Boston Globe._
+
+
+
+NOVELS BY HALL CAINE.
+
+
+_THE MANXMAN._ 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"A story of marvelous dramatic intensity, and in its ethical meaning has
+a force comparable only to Hawthorne's 'Scarlet Letter.'"--_Boston
+Beacon._
+
+"A work of power which is another stone added to the foundation of
+enduring fame to which Mr. Caine is yearly adding."--_Public Opinion._
+
+"A wonderfully strong study of character; a powerful analysis of those
+elements which go to make up the strength and weakness of a man, which
+are at fierce warfare within the same breast; contending against each
+other, as it were, the one to raise him to fame and power, the other to
+drag him down to degradation and shame. Never in the whole range of
+literature have we seen the struggle between these forces for supremacy
+over the man more powerfully, more realistically delineated than Mr.
+Caine pictures it."--_Boston Home Journal._
+
+
+_THE DEEMSTER. A Romance of the Isle of Man._ 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"Hall Caine has already given us some very strong and fine work, and
+'The Deemster' is a story of unusual power.... Certain passages and
+chapters have an intensely dramatic grasp, and hold the fascinated
+reader with a force rarely excited nowadays in literature."--_The
+Critic._
+
+"One of the strongest novels which has appeared in many a day."--_San
+Francisco Chronicle._
+
+"Fascinates the mind like the gathering and bursting of a
+storm."--_Illustrated London News._
+
+"Deserves to be ranked among the remarkable novels of the
+day."--_Chicago Times._
+
+
+_THE BONDMAN._ New edition. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"The welcome given to this story has cheered and touched me, but I am
+conscious that, to win a reception so warm, such a book must have had
+readers who brought to it as much as they took away.... I have called my
+story a saga, merely because it follows the epic method, and I must not
+claim for it at any point the weighty responsibility of history, or
+serious obligations to the world of fact. But it matters not to me what
+Icelanders may call 'The Bondman,' if they will honor me by reading it
+in the open-hearted spirit and with the free mind with which they are
+content to read of Grettir and of his fights with the Troll."--_From the
+Author's Preface._
+
+
+_CAPT'N DAVY'S HONEYMOON. A Manx Yarn._ 12mo. Paper, 50 cents; cloth,
+$1.00.
+
+"A new departure by this author. Unlike his previous works, this little
+tale is almost wholly humorous, with, however, a current of pathos
+underneath. It is not always that an author can succeed equally well in
+tragedy and in comedy, but it looks as though Mr. Hall Caine would be
+one of the exceptions."--_London Literary World._
+
+"It is pleasant to meet the author of 'The Deemster' in a brightly
+humorous little story like this.... It shows the same observation of
+Manx character, and much of the same artistic skill."--_Philadelphia
+Times._
+
+
+
+NOVELS BY MAARTEN MAARTENS.
+
+
+_THE GREATER GLORY. A Story of High Life._ By MAARTEN MAARTENS, author
+of "God's Fool," "Joost Avelingh," etc. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"Until the Appletons discovered the merits of Maarten Maartens, the
+foremost of Dutch novelists, it is doubtful if many American readers
+knew that there were Dutch novelists. His 'God's Fool' and 'Joost
+Avelingh' made for him an American reputation. To our mind this just
+published work of his is his best.... He is a master of epigram, an
+artist in description, a prophet in insight."--_Boston Advertiser._
+
+"It would take several columns to give any adequate idea of the superb
+way in which the Dutch novelist has developed his theme and wrought out
+one of the most impressive stories of the period.... It belongs to the
+small class of novels which one can not afford to neglect."--_San
+Francisco Chronicle._
+
+"Maarten Maartens stands head and shoulders above the average novelist
+of the day in intellectual subtlety and imaginative power."--_Boston
+Beacon._
+
+
+_GOD'S FOOL._ By MAARTEN MAARTENS. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"Throughout there is an epigrammatic force which would make palatable a
+less interesting story of human lives or one less deftly told."--_London
+Saturday Review._
+
+"Perfectly easy, graceful, humorous.... The author's skill in
+character-drawing is undeniable."--_London Chronicle._
+
+"A remarkable work."--_New York Times._
+
+"Maarten Maartens has secured a firm footing in the eddies of current
+literature.... Pathos deepens into tragedy in the thrilling story of
+'God's Fool.'"--_Philadelphia Ledger._
+
+"Its preface alone stamps the author as one of the leading English
+novelists of to-day."--_Boston Daily Advertiser._
+
+"The story is wonderfully brilliant.... The interest never lags; the
+style is realistic and intense; and there is a constantly underlying
+current of subtle humor.... It is, in short, a book which no student of
+modern literature should fail to read."--_Boston Times._
+
+"A story of remarkable interest and point."--_New York Observer._
+
+
+_JOOST AVELINGH._ By MAARTEN MAARTENS. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"So unmistakably good as to induce the hope that an acquaintance with
+the Dutch literature of fiction may soon become more general among
+us."--_London Morning Post._
+
+"In scarcely any of the sensational novels of the day will the reader
+find more nature or more human nature."--_London Standard._
+
+"A novel of a very high type. At once strongly realistic and powerfully
+idealistic."--_London Literary World._
+
+"Full of local color and rich in quaint phraseology and
+suggestion."--_London Telegraph._
+
+"Maarten Maartens is a capital story-teller."--_Pall Mall Gazette._
+
+"Our English writers of fiction will have to look to their
+laurels."--_Birmingham Daily Post._
+
+
+
+TWO REMARKABLE AMERICAN NOVELS.
+
+
+_THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE. An Episode of the American Civil War._
+By STEPHEN CRANE. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.
+
+"Mr. Stephen Crane is a great artist, with something new to say, and
+consequently with a new way of saying it.... In 'The Red Badge of
+Courage' Mr. Crane has surely contrived a masterpiece.... He has painted
+a picture that challenges comparisons with the most vivid scenes of
+Tolstoy's 'La Guerre et la Paix' or of Zola's 'La Débâcle.'"--_London
+New Review._
+
+"In its whole range of literature we can call to mind nothing so
+searching in its analysis, so manifestly impressed with the stamp of
+truth, as 'The Red Badge of Courage.' ... A remarkable study of the
+average mind under stress of battle.... We repeat, a really fine
+achievement."--_London Daily Chronicle._
+
+"Not merely a remarkable book; it is a revelation.... One feels that,
+with perhaps one or two exceptions, all previous descriptions of modern
+warfare have been the merest abstractions."--_St. James Gazette._
+
+"Holds one irrevocably. There is no possibility of resistance when once
+you are in its grip, from the first of the march of the troops to the
+closing scenes.... Mr. Crane, we repeat, has written a remarkable book.
+His insight and his power of realization amount to genius."--_Pall Mall
+Gazette._
+
+"There is nothing in American fiction to compare with it in the vivid,
+uncompromising, almost aggressive vigor with which it depicts the
+strangely mingled conditions that go to make up what men call war....
+Mr. Crane has added to American literature something that has never been
+done before, and that is, in its own peculiar way, inimitable."--_Boston
+Beacon._
+
+"Never before have we had the seamy side of glorious war so well
+depicted.... The action of the story throughout is splendid, and all
+aglow with color, movement, and vim. The style is as keen and bright as
+a sword blade, and a Kipling has done nothing better in this
+line."--_Chicago Evening Post._
+
+
+_IN DEFIANCE OF THE KING. A Romance of the American Revolution._
+By CHAUNCEY C. HOTCHKISS. 12mo. Paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00.
+
+"The whole story is so completely absorbing that you will sit far into
+the night to finish it. You lay it aside with the feeling that you have
+seen a gloriously true picture of the Revolution."--_Boston Herald._
+
+"The story is a strong one--a thrilling one. It causes the true American
+to flush with excitement, to devour chapter after chapter until the eyes
+smart; and it fairly smokes with patriotism."--_New York Mail and
+Express._
+
+"The heart beats quickly, and we feel ourselves taking part in the
+scenes described.... Altogether the book is an addition to American
+literature."--_Chicago Evening Post._
+
+"One of the most readable novels of the year.... As a love romance it is
+charming, while it is filled with thrilling adventure and deeds of
+patriotic daring."--_Boston Advertiser._
+
+"This romance seems to come the nearest to a satisfactory treatment in
+fiction of the Revolutionary period that we have yet had."--_Buffalo
+Courier._
+
+"A clean, wholesome story, full of romance and interesting
+adventure.... Holds the interest alike by the thread of the story
+and by the incidents.... A remarkably well-balanced and absorbing
+novel."--_Milwaukee Journal._
+
+
+New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Chronicles of Martin Hewitt, by Arthur Morrison
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRONICLES OF MARTIN HEWITT ***
+
+***** This file should be named 37820-8.txt or 37820-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/8/2/37820/
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Chronicles of Martin Hewitt, by Arthur Morrison
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Chronicles of Martin Hewitt
+
+Author: Arthur Morrison
+
+Release Date: October 22, 2011 [EBook #37820]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRONICLES OF MARTIN HEWITT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by Cornell University Digital Collections)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">Appletons'
+Town and Country
+Library</p>
+
+<p class="center">No. 191</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h1>CHRONICLES<br />
+OF MARTIN HEWITT</h1>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h3><small>BY</small><br />
+ARTHUR MORRISON</h3>
+
+<p class="center">AUTHOR OF TALES OF MEAN STREETS, ETC.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80px;">
+<img src="images/003.png" width="80" height="95" alt=""/>
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h3>NEW YORK<br />
+D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
+1896</h3>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Copyright,</span> 1895, 1896,<br />
+<span class="smcap">By</span> D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.<br />
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_IVY_COTTAGE_MYSTERY"><span class="smcap">The Ivy Cottage Mystery</span></a></td><td align='right'>1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_NICOBAR_BULLION_CASE"><span class="smcap">The Nicobar Bullion Case</span></a></td><td align='right'>42</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_HOLFORD_WILL_CASE"><span class="smcap">The Holford Will Case</span></a></td><td align='right'>94</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_CASE_OF_THE_MISSING_HAND"><span class="smcap">The Case of the Missing Hand</span></a></td><td align='right'>138</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_CASE_OF_LAKER_ABSCONDED"><span class="smcap">The Case of Laker, Absconded</span></a></td><td align='right'>187</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><a href="#THE_CASE_OF_THE_LOST_FOREIGNER"><span class="smcap">The Case of the Lost Foreigner</span></a> &nbsp; &nbsp; </td><td align='right'>228</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h1><a name="CHRONICLES" id="CHRONICLES"></a>CHRONICLES<br />
+OF MARTIN HEWITT.</h1>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_IVY_COTTAGE_MYSTERY" id="THE_IVY_COTTAGE_MYSTERY"></a>THE IVY COTTAGE MYSTERY.</h2>
+
+
+<p>I had been working double tides for a month:
+at night on my morning paper, as usual; and in the
+morning on an evening paper as <i>locum tenens</i> for another
+man who was taking a holiday. This was an
+exhausting plan of work, although it only actually
+involved some six hours' attendance a day, or less,
+at the two offices. I turned up at the headquarters
+of my own paper at ten in the evening, and by the
+time I had seen the editor, selected a subject, written
+my leader, corrected the slips, chatted, smoked,
+and so on, and cleared off, it was very usually one
+o'clock. This meant bed at two, or even three,
+after supper at the club.</p>
+
+<p>This was all very well at ordinary periods, when
+any time in the morning would do for rising, but
+when I had to be up again soon after seven, and
+round at the evening paper office by eight, I naturally
+felt a little worn and disgusted with things<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+by midday, after a sharp couple of hours' leaderette
+scribbling and paragraphing, with attendant
+sundries.</p>
+
+<p>But the strain was over, and on the first day of
+comparative comfort I indulged in a midday breakfast
+and the first undisgusted glance at a morning
+paper for a month. I felt rather interested in an inquest,
+begun the day before, on the body of a man
+whom I had known very slightly before I took to
+living in chambers.</p>
+
+<p>His name was Gavin Kingscote, and he was an
+artist of a casual and desultory sort, having, I believe,
+some small private means of his own. As a
+matter of fact, he had boarded in the same house in
+which I had lodged myself for a while, but as I was
+at the time a late homer and a fairly early riser,
+taking no regular board in the house, we never became
+much acquainted. He had since, I understood,
+made some judicious Stock Exchange speculations,
+and had set up house in Finchley.</p>
+
+<p>Now the news was that he had been found one
+morning murdered in his smoking-room, while the
+room itself, with others, was in a state of confusion.
+His pockets had been rifled, and his watch and chain
+were gone, with one or two other small articles of
+value. On the night of the tragedy a friend had
+sat smoking with him in the room where the murder
+took place, and he had been the last person to see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+Mr. Kingscote alive. A jobbing gardener, who kept
+the garden in order by casual work from time to
+time, had been arrested in consequence of footprints
+exactly corresponding with his boots, having been
+found on the garden beds near the French window
+of the smoking-room.</p>
+
+<p>I finished my breakfast and my paper, and Mrs.
+Clayton, the housekeeper, came to clear my table.
+She was sister of my late landlady of the house
+where Kingscote had lodged, and it was by this connection
+that I had found my chambers. I had not
+seen the housekeeper since the crime was first reported,
+so I now said:</p>
+
+<p>"This is shocking news of Mr. Kingscote, Mrs.
+Clayton. Did you know him yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>She had apparently only been waiting for some
+such remark to burst out with whatever information
+she possessed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," she exclaimed: "shocking indeed.
+Pore young feller! I see him often when I was at
+my sister's, and he was always a nice, quiet gentleman,
+so different from some. My sister, she's awful
+cut up, sir, I assure you. And what d'you think
+'appened, sir, only last Tuesday? You remember
+Mr. Kingscote's room where he painted the woodwork
+so beautiful with gold flowers, and blue, and
+pink? He used to tell my sister she'd always have
+something to remember him by. Well, two young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+fellers, gentlemen I can't call them, come and took
+that room (it being to let), and went and scratched
+off all the paint in mere wicked mischief, and then
+chopped up all the panels into sticks and bits! Nice
+sort o' gentlemen them! And then they bolted in
+the morning, being afraid, I s'pose, of being made
+to pay after treating a pore widder's property like
+that. That was only Tuesday, and the very next
+day the pore young gentleman himself's dead, murdered
+in his own 'ouse, and him going to be married
+an' all! Dear, dear! I remember once he
+said&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Clayton was a good soul, but once she began
+to talk some one else had to stop her. I let her
+run on for a reasonable time, and then rose and prepared
+to go out. I remembered very well the panels
+that had been so mischievously destroyed. They
+made the room the show-room of the house, which
+was an old one. They were indeed less than half
+finished when I came away, and Mrs. Lamb, the
+landlady, had shown them to me one day when
+Kingscote was out. All the walls of the room were
+panelled and painted white, and Kingscote had put
+upon them an eccentric but charming decoration,
+obviously suggested by some of the work of Mr.
+Whistler. Tendrils, flowers, and butterflies in a
+quaint convention wandered thinly from panel to
+panel, giving the otherwise rather uninteresting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+room an unwonted atmosphere of richness and elegance.
+The lamentable jackasses who had destroyed
+this had certainly selected the best feature
+of the room whereon to inflict their senseless mischief.</p>
+
+<p>I strolled idly downstairs, with no particular plan
+for the afternoon in my mind, and looked in at
+Hewitt's offices. Hewitt was reading a note, and
+after a little chat he informed me that it had been
+left an hour ago, in his absence, by the brother of
+the man I had just been speaking of.</p>
+
+<p>"He isn't quite satisfied," Hewitt said, "with the
+way the police are investigating the case, and asks
+me to run down to Finchley and look round. Yesterday
+I should have refused, because I have five
+cases in progress already, but to-day I find that circumstances
+have given me a day or two. Didn't
+you say you knew the man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Scarcely more than by sight. He was a boarder
+in the house at Chelsea where I stayed before I
+started chambers."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well; I think I shall look into the thing.
+Do you feel particularly interested in the case? I
+mean, if you've nothing better to do, would you
+come with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be very glad," I said. "I was in some
+doubt what to do with myself. Shall you start at
+once?"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I think so. Kerrett, just call a cab. By the
+way, Brett, which paper has the fullest report of the
+inquest yesterday? I'll run over it as we go down."</p>
+
+<p>As I had only seen one paper that morning, I
+could not answer Hewitt's question. So we bought
+various papers as we went along in the cab, and I
+found the reports while Martin Hewitt studied them.
+Summarised, this was the evidence given&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Sarah Dodson</i>, general servant, deposed that she
+had been in service at Ivy Cottage, the residence of
+the deceased, for five months, the only other regular
+servant being the housekeeper and cook. On the
+evening of the previous Tuesday both servants retired
+a little before eleven, leaving Mr. Kingscote
+with a friend in the smoking or sitting room. She
+never saw her master again alive. On coming downstairs
+the following morning and going to open the
+smoking-room windows, she was horrified to discover
+the body of Mr. Kingscote lying on the floor
+of the room with blood about the head. She at
+once raised an alarm, and, on the instructions of the
+housekeeper, fetched a doctor, and gave information
+to the police. In answer to questions, witness stated
+she had heard no noise of any sort during the night,
+nor had anything suspicious occurred.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hannah Carr</i>, housekeeper and cook, deposed
+that she had been in the late Mr. Kingscote's service
+since he had first taken Ivy Cottage&mdash;a period of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+rather more than a year. She had last seen the deceased
+alive on the evening of the previous Tuesday,
+at half-past ten, when she knocked at the door of
+the smoking-room, where Mr. Kingscote was sitting
+with a friend, to ask if he would require anything
+more. Nothing was required, so witness shortly
+after went to bed. In the morning she was called
+by the previous witness, who had just gone downstairs,
+and found the body of deceased lying as described.
+Deceased's watch and chain were gone, as
+also was a ring he usually wore, and his pockets appeared
+to have been turned out. All the ground
+floor of the house was in confusion, and a bureau,
+a writing-table, and various drawers were open&mdash;a
+bunch of keys usually carried by deceased being
+left hanging at one keyhole. Deceased had drawn
+some money from the bank on the Tuesday, for current
+expenses; how much she did not know. She
+had not heard or seen anything suspicious during
+the night. Besides Dodson and herself, there were
+no regular servants; there was a charwoman, who
+came occasionally, and a jobbing gardener, living
+near, who was called in as required.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. James Vidler</i>, surgeon, had been called by
+the first witness between seven and eight on Wednesday
+morning. He found the deceased lying on his
+face on the floor of the smoking-room, his feet
+being about eighteen inches from the window, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+his head lying in the direction of the fireplace. He
+found three large contused wounds on the head, any
+one of which would probably have caused death.
+The wounds had all been inflicted, apparently, with
+the same blunt instrument&mdash;probably a club or life
+preserver, or other similar weapon. They could not
+have been done with the poker. Death was due to
+concussion of the brain, and deceased had probably
+been dead seven or eight hours when witness saw
+him. He had since examined the body more closely,
+but found no marks at all indicative of a struggle
+having taken place; indeed, from the position of the
+wounds and their severity, he should judge that the
+deceased had been attacked unawares from behind,
+and had died at once. The body appeared to be
+perfectly healthy.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was police evidence, which showed
+that all the doors and windows were found shut and
+completely fastened, except the front door, which,
+although shut, was not bolted. There were shutters
+behind the French windows in the smoking-room,
+and these were found fastened. No money was
+found in the bureau, nor in any of the opened drawers,
+so that if any had been there, it had been stolen.
+The pockets were entirely empty, except for a small
+pair of nail scissors, and there was no watch upon
+the body, nor a ring. Certain footprints were found
+on the garden beds, which had led the police to take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+certain steps. No footprints were to be seen on the
+garden path, which was hard gravel.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Alexander Campbell</i>, stockbroker, stated that
+he had known deceased for some few years, and had
+done business for him. He and Mr. Kingscote frequently
+called on one another, and on Tuesday evening
+they dined together at Ivy Cottage. They sat
+smoking and chatting till nearly twelve o'clock,
+when Mr. Kingscote himself let him out, the servants
+having gone to bed. Here the witness proceeded
+rather excitedly: "That is all I know of this
+horrible business, and I can say nothing else. What
+the police mean by following and watching
+me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p><i>The Coroner</i>: "Pray be calm, Mr. Campbell. The
+police must do what seems best to them in a case of
+this sort. I am sure you would not have them
+neglect any means of getting at the truth."</p>
+
+<p><i>Witness</i>: "Certainly not. But if they suspect
+me, why don't they say so? It is intolerable that
+I should be&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p><i>The Coroner</i>: "Order, order, Mr. Campbell. You
+are here to give evidence."</p>
+
+<p>The witness then, in answer to questions, stated
+that the French windows of the smoking-room had
+been left open during the evening, the weather being
+very warm. He could not recollect whether or not
+deceased closed them before he left, but he certainly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+did not close the shutters. Witness saw nobody near
+the house when he left.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mr. Douglas Kingscote</i>, architect, said deceased
+was his brother. He had not seen him for some
+months, living as he did in another part of the country.
+He believed his brother was fairly well off, and
+he knew that he had made a good amount by speculation
+in the last year or two. Knew of no person
+who would be likely to owe his brother a grudge,
+and could suggest no motive for the crime except
+ordinary robbery. His brother was to have been
+married in a few weeks. Questioned further on this
+point, witness said that the marriage was to have
+taken place a year ago, and it was with that view
+that Ivy Cottage, deceased's residence, was taken.
+The lady, however, sustained a domestic bereavement,
+and afterwards went abroad with her family:
+she was, witness believed, shortly expected back to
+England.</p>
+
+<p><i>William Bates</i>, jobbing gardener, who was brought
+up in custody, was cautioned, but elected to give
+evidence. Witness, who appeared to be much agitated,
+admitted having been in the garden of Ivy
+Cottage at four in the morning, but said that he had
+only gone to attend to certain plants, and knew absolutely
+nothing of the murder. He however admitted
+that he had no order for work beyond what
+he had done the day before. Being further pressed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+witness made various contradictory statements, and
+finally said that he had gone to take certain plants
+away.</p>
+
+<p>The inquest was then adjourned.</p>
+
+<p>This was the case as it stood&mdash;apparently not a
+case presenting any very striking feature, although
+there seemed to me to be doubtful peculiarities in
+many parts of it. I asked Hewitt what he thought.</p>
+
+<p>"Quite impossible to think anything, my boy,
+just yet; wait till we see the place. There are any
+number of possibilities. Kingscote's friend, Campbell,
+may have come in again, you know, by way of
+the window&mdash;or he may not. Campbell may have
+owed him money or something&mdash;or he may not.
+The anticipated wedding may have something to do
+with it&mdash;or, again, <i>that</i> may not. There is no limit
+to the possibilities, as far as we can see from this
+report&mdash;a mere dry husk of the affair. When we get
+closer we shall examine the possibilities by the light
+of more detailed information. One <i>probability</i> is that
+the wretched gardener is innocent. It seems to me
+that his was only a comparatively blameless man&oelig;uvre
+not unheard of at other times in his trade.
+He came at four in the morning to steal away the
+flowers he had planted the day before, and felt rather
+bashful when questioned on the point. Why should
+he trample on the beds, else? I wonder if the police
+thought to examine the beds for traces of rooting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+up, or questioned the housekeeper as to any plants
+being missing? But we shall see."</p>
+
+<p>We chatted at random as the train drew near
+Finchley, and I mentioned <i>inter alia</i> the wanton piece
+of destruction perpetrated at Kingscote's late lodgings.
+Hewitt was interested.</p>
+
+<p>"That was curious," he said, "very curious.
+Was anything else damaged? Furniture and so
+forth?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know. Mrs. Clayton said nothing of it,
+and I didn't ask her. But it was quite bad enough
+as it was. The decoration was really good, and I
+can't conceive a meaner piece of tomfoolery than
+such an attack on a decent woman's property."</p>
+
+<p>Then Hewitt talked of other cases of similar
+stupid damage by creatures inspired by a defective
+sense of humour, or mere love of mischief. He had
+several curious and sometimes funny anecdotes of
+such affairs at museums and picture exhibitions,
+where the damage had been so great as to induce
+the authorities to call him in to discover the offender.
+The work was not always easy, chiefly from the mere
+absence of intelligible motive; nor, indeed, always
+successful. One of the anecdotes related to a case
+of malicious damage to a picture&mdash;the outcome of
+blind artistic jealousy&mdash;a case which had been hushed
+up by a large expenditure in compensation. It
+would considerably startle most people, could it be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+printed here, with the actual names of the parties
+concerned.</p>
+
+<p>Ivy Cottage, Finchley, was a compact little
+house, standing in a compact little square of garden,
+little more than a third of an acre, or perhaps no
+more at all. The front door was but a dozen yards
+or so back from the road, but the intervening space
+was well treed and shrubbed. Mr. Douglas Kingscote
+had not yet returned from town, but the housekeeper,
+an intelligent, matronly woman, who knew
+of his intention to call in Martin Hewitt, was ready
+to show us the house.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>First</i>," Hewitt said, when we stood in the
+smoking-room, "I observe that somebody has
+shut the drawers and the bureau. That is unfortunate.
+Also, the floor has been washed and
+the carpet taken up, which is much worse. That,
+I suppose, was because the police had finished
+their examination, but it doesn't help me to make
+one at all. Has <i>anything</i>&mdash;anything <i>at all</i>&mdash;been left
+as it was on Tuesday morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, you see everything was in such a
+muddle," the housekeeper began, "and when the
+police had done&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Just so. I know. You 'set it to rights,' eh?
+Oh, that setting to rights! It has lost me a fortune
+at one time and another. As to the other
+rooms, now, have they been set to rights?"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Such as was disturbed have been put right,
+sir, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"Which were disturbed? Let me see them.
+But wait a moment."</p>
+
+<p>He opened the French windows, and closely examined
+the catch and bolts. He knelt and inspected
+the holes whereinto the bolts fell, and
+then glanced casually at the folding shutters. He
+opened a drawer or two, and tried the working of
+the locks with the keys the housekeeper carried.
+They were, the housekeeper explained, Mr. Kingscote's
+own keys. All through the lower floors
+Hewitt examined some things attentively and
+closely, and others with scarcely a glance, on a
+system unaccountable to me. Presently, he asked
+to be shown Mr. Kingscote's bedroom, which had
+not been disturbed, "set to rights," or slept in since
+the crime. Here, the housekeeper said, all drawers
+were kept unlocked but two&mdash;one in the wardrobe
+and one in the dressing-table, which Mr. Kingscote
+had always been careful to keep locked. Hewitt
+immediately pulled both drawers open without
+difficulty. Within, in addition to a few odds and
+ends, were papers. All the contents of these
+drawers had been turned over confusedly, while
+those of the unlocked drawers were in perfect
+order.</p>
+
+<p>"The police," Hewitt remarked, "may not have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+observed these matters. Any more than such an
+ordinary thing as <i>this</i>," he added, picking up a bent
+nail lying at the edge of a rug.</p>
+
+<p>The housekeeper doubtless took the remark as
+a reference to the entire unimportance of a bent
+nail, but I noticed that Hewitt dropped the article
+quietly into his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>We came away. At the front gate we met
+Mr. Douglas Kingscote, who had just returned
+from town. He introduced himself, and expressed
+surprise at our promptitude both of coming and
+going.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't have got anything like a clue in this
+short time, Mr. Hewitt?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, no," Hewitt replied, with a certain dryness,
+"perhaps not. But I doubt whether a month's
+visit would have helped me to get anything very
+striking out of a washed floor and a houseful of
+carefully cleaned-up and 'set-to-rights' rooms.
+Candidly, I don't think you can reasonably expect
+much of me. The police have a much better
+chance&mdash;they had the scene of the crime to examine.
+I have seen just such a few rooms as any
+one might see in the first well-furnished house he
+might enter. The trail of the housemaid has overlaid
+all the others."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm very sorry for that; the fact was, I expected
+rather more of the police; and, indeed, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+wasn't here in time entirely to prevent the clearing
+up. But still, I thought your well-known
+powers&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear sir, my 'well-known powers' are
+nothing but common sense assiduously applied and
+made quick by habit. That won't enable me to see
+the invisible."</p>
+
+<p>"But can't we have the rooms put back into
+something of the state they were in? The cook
+will remember&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no. That would be worse and worse; that
+would only be the housemaid's trail in turn overlaid
+by the cook's. You must leave things with me
+for a little, I think."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you don't give the case up?" Mr. Kingscote
+asked anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no! I don't give it up just yet. Do you
+know anything of your brother's private papers&mdash;as
+they were before his death?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never knew anything till after that. I have
+gone over them, but they are all very ordinary
+letters. Do you suspect a theft of papers?"</p>
+
+<p>Martin Hewitt, with his hands on his stick
+behind him, looked sharply at the other, and
+shook his head. "No," he said, "I can't quite say
+that."</p>
+
+<p>We bade Mr. Douglas Kingscote good-day, and
+walked towards the station. "Great nuisance, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+setting to rights," Hewitt observed, on the way.
+"If the place had been left alone, the job might
+have been settled one way or another by this
+time. As it is, we shall have to run over to your
+old lodgings."</p>
+
+<p>"My old lodgings?" I repeated, amazed. "Why
+my old lodgings?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt turned to me with a chuckle and a wide
+smile. "Because we can't see the broken panel-work
+anywhere else," he said. "Let's see&mdash;Chelsea,
+isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Chelsea. But why&mdash;you don't suppose the
+people who defaced the panels also murdered the
+man who painted them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," Hewitt replied, with another smile, "that
+would be carrying a practical joke rather far,
+wouldn't it? Even for the ordinary picture damager."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean you <i>don't</i> think they did it, then?
+But what <i>do</i> you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow, I don't mean anything but
+what I say. Come now, this is rather an interesting
+case despite appearances, and it <i>has</i> interested me:
+so much, in fact, that I really think I forgot to
+offer Mr. Douglas Kingscote my condolence on his
+bereavement. You see a problem is a problem,
+whether of theft, assassination, intrigue, or anything
+else, and I only think of it as one. The work very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+often makes me forget merely human sympathies.
+Now, you have often been good enough to express
+a very flattering interest in my work, and you shall
+have an opportunity of exercising your own common
+sense in the way I am always having to exercise
+mine. You shall see all my evidence (if I'm lucky
+enough to get any) as I collect it, and you shall
+make your own inferences. That will be a little exercise
+for you; the sort of exercise I should give a
+pupil if I had one. But I will give you what information
+I have, and you shall start fairly from this
+moment. You know the inquest evidence, such as
+it was, and you saw everything I did in Ivy Cottage?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; I think so. But I'm not much the wiser."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. Now I will tell you. What does
+the whole case look like? How would you class the
+crime?"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose as the police do. An ordinary case
+of murder with the object of robbery."</p>
+
+<p>"It is <i>not</i> an ordinary case. If it were, I shouldn't
+know as much as I do, little as that is; the ordinary
+cases are always difficult. The assailant did not
+come to commit a burglary, although he was a
+skilled burglar, or one of them was, if more than one
+were concerned. The affair has, I think, nothing to
+do with the expected wedding, nor had Mr. Campbell
+anything to do in it&mdash;at any rate, personally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>&mdash;nor
+the gardener. The criminal (or one of them)
+was known personally to the dead man, and was
+well-dressed: he (or again one of them, and I think
+there were two) even had a chat with Mr. Kingscote
+before the murder took place. He came to ask for
+something which Mr. Kingscote was unwilling to
+part with,&mdash;perhaps hadn't got. It was not a bulky
+thing. Now you have all my materials before you."</p>
+
+<p>"But all this doesn't look like the result of the
+blind spite that would ruin a man's work first and
+attack him bodily afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>"Spite isn't always blind, and there are other
+blind things besides spite; people with good eyes in
+their heads are blind sometimes, even detectives."</p>
+
+<p>"But where did you get all this information?
+What makes you suppose that this was a burglar
+who didn't want to burgle, and a well-dressed man,
+and so on?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt chuckled and smiled again.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw it&mdash;saw it, my boy, that's all," he said.
+"But here comes the train."</p>
+
+<p>On the way back to town, after I had rather
+minutely described Kingscote's work on the boarding-house
+panels, Hewitt asked me for the names
+and professions of such fellow lodgers in that house
+as I might remember. "When did you leave yourself?"
+he ended.</p>
+
+<p>"Three years ago, or rather more. I can re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>member
+Kingscote himself; Turner, a medical student&mdash;James
+Turner, I think; Harvey Challitt, diamond
+merchant's articled pupil&mdash;he was a bad egg
+entirely, he's doing five years for forgery now; by
+the bye he had the room we are going to see till he
+was marched off, and Kingscote took it&mdash;a year before
+I left; there was Norton&mdash;don't know what he
+was; 'something in the City,' I think; and Carter
+Paget, in the Admiralty Office. I don't remember
+any more at this moment; there were pretty frequent
+changes. But you can get it all from Mrs.
+Lamb, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course; and Mrs. Lamb's exact address is&mdash;what?"</p>
+
+<p>I gave him the address, and the conversation became
+disjointed. At Farringdon station, where we
+alighted, Hewitt called two hansoms. Preparing to
+enter one, he motioned me to the other, saying,
+"You get straight away to Mrs. Lamb's at once.
+She may be going to burn that splintered wood, or
+to set things to rights, after the manner of her kind,
+and you can stop her. I must make one or two
+small inquiries, but I shall be there half an hour
+after you."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I tell her our object?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only that I may be able to catch her mischievous
+lodgers&mdash;nothing else yet." He jumped into
+the hansom and was gone.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I found Mrs. Lamb still in a state of indignant
+perturbation over the trick served her four days before.
+Fortunately, she had left everything in the
+panelled room exactly as she had found it, with an
+idea of the being better able to demand or enforce
+reparation should her lodgers return. "The room's
+theirs, you see, sir," she said, "till the end of the
+week, since they paid in advance, and they may
+come back and offer to make amends, although I
+doubt it. As pleasant-spoken a young chap as you
+might wish, he seemed, him as come to take the
+rooms. 'My cousin,' says he, 'is rather an invalid,
+havin' only just got over congestion of the lungs,
+and he won't be in London till this evening late.
+He's comin' up from Birmingham,' he ses, 'and I
+hope he won't catch a fresh cold on the way, although
+of course we've got him muffled up plenty.'
+He took the rooms, sir, like a gentleman, and mentioned
+several gentlemen's names I knew well, as
+had lodged here before; and then he put down on
+that there very table, sir."&mdash;Mrs. Lamb indicated
+the exact spot with her hand, as though that made
+the whole thing much more wonderful&mdash;"he put
+down on that very table a week's rent in advance,
+and ses, 'That's always the best sort of reference,
+Mrs. Lamb, I think,' as kind-mannered as anything&mdash;and
+never 'aggled about the amount nor nothing.
+He only had a little black bag, but he said his cous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>in
+had all the luggage coming in the train, and as
+there was so much p'r'aps they wouldn't get it here
+till next day. Then he went out and came in with
+his cousin at eleven that night&mdash;Sarah let 'em in her
+own self&mdash;and in the morning they was gone&mdash;and
+this!" Poor Mrs. Lamb, plaintively indignant,
+stretched her arm towards the wrecked panels.</p>
+
+<p>"If the gentleman as you say is comin' on,
+sir," she pursued, "can do anything to find 'em,
+I'll prosecute 'em, that I will, if it costs me ten
+pound. I spoke to the constable on the beat, but
+he only looked like a fool, and said if I knew where
+they were I might charge 'em with wilful damage,
+or county court 'em. Of course I know I can do
+that if I knew where they were, but how can I find
+'em? Mr. Jones he said his name was; but how
+many Joneses is there in London, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't imagine any answer to a question like
+this, but I condoled with Mrs. Lamb as well as I
+could. She afterwards went on to express herself
+much as her sister had done with regard to Kingscote's
+death, only as the destruction of her panels
+loomed larger in her mind, she dwelt primarily on
+that. "It might almost seem," she said, "that
+somebody had a deadly spite on the pore young
+gentleman, and went breakin' up his paintin' one
+night, and murderin' him the next!"</p>
+
+<p>I examined the broken panels with some care,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+having half a notion to attempt to deduce something
+from them myself, if possible. But I could
+deduce nothing. The beading had been taken out,
+and the panels, which were thick in the centre but
+bevelled at the edges, had been removed and split
+up literally into thin firewood, which lay in a tumbled
+heap on the hearth and about the floor. Every
+panel in the room had been treated in the same way,
+and the result was a pretty large heap of sticks, with
+nothing whatever about them to distinguish them
+from other sticks, except the paint on one face,
+which I observed in many cases had been scratched
+and scraped away. The rug was drawn half across
+the hearth, and had evidently been used to deaden
+the sound of chopping. But mischief&mdash;wanton and
+stupid mischief&mdash;was all I could deduce from it all.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Jones's cousin, it seemed, only Sarah had
+seen, as she admitted him in the evening, and then
+he was so heavily muffled that she could not distinguish
+his features, and would never be able to
+identify him. But as for the other one, Mrs. Lamb
+was ready to swear to him anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt was long in coming, and internal symptoms
+of the approach of dinner-time (we had had no
+lunch) had made themselves felt before a sharp ring
+at the door-bell foretold his arrival. "I have had
+to wait for answers to a telegram," he said in explanation,
+"but at any rate I have the information I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+wanted. And these are the mysterious panels, are
+they?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Lamb's true opinion of Martin Hewitt's behaviour
+as it proceeded would have been amusing to
+know. She watched in amazement the antics of a
+man who purposed finding out who had been splitting
+sticks by dint of picking up each separate stick
+and staring at it. In the end he collected a small
+handful of sticks by themselves and handed them to
+me, saying, "Just put these together on the table,
+Brett, and see what you make of them."</p>
+
+<p>I turned the pieces painted side up, and fitted
+them together into a complete panel, joining up the
+painted design accurately. "It is an entire panel," I
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"Good. Now look at the sticks a little more
+closely, and tell me if you notice anything peculiar
+about them&mdash;any particular in which they differ
+from all the others."</p>
+
+<p>I looked. "Two adjoining sticks," I said, "have
+each a small semi-circular cavity stuffed with what
+seems to be putty. Put together it would mean a
+small circular hole, perhaps a knot-hole, half an inch
+or so in diameter, in the panel, filled in with putty, or
+whatever it is."</p>
+
+<p>"A <i>knot-hole</i>?" Hewitt asked, with particular
+emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, no, not a knot-hole, of course, because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+that would go right through, and this doesn't. It is
+probably less than half an inch deep from the front
+surface."</p>
+
+<p>"Anything else? Look at the whole appearance
+of the wood itself. Colour, for instance."</p>
+
+<p>"It is certainly darker than the rest."</p>
+
+<p>"So it is." He took the two pieces carrying the
+puttied hole, threw the rest on the heap, and addressed
+the landlady. "The Mr. Harvey Challitt
+who occupied this room before Mr. Kingscote, and
+who got into trouble for forgery, was the Mr. Harvey
+Challitt who was himself robbed of diamonds a
+few months before on a staircase, wasn't he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," Mrs. Lamb replied in some bewilderment.
+"He certainly was that, on his own office
+stairs, chloroformed."</p>
+
+<p>"Just so, and when they marched him away because
+of the forgery, Mr. Kingscote changed into
+his rooms?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and very glad I was. It was bad enough
+to have the disgrace brought into the house, without
+the trouble of trying to get people to take his very
+rooms, and I thought&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, very awkward, very awkward!"
+Hewitt interrupted rather impatiently. "The man
+who took the rooms on Monday, now&mdash;you'd never
+seen him before, had you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Then is <i>that</i> anything like him?" Hewitt held
+a cabinet photograph before her.</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;why&mdash;law, yes, that's <i>him</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt dropped the photograph back into his
+breast pocket with a contented "Um," and picked
+up his hat. "I think we may soon be able to find
+that young gentleman for you, Mrs. Lamb. He is
+not a very respectable young gentleman, and perhaps
+you are well rid of him, even as it is. Come,
+Brett," he added, "the day hasn't been wasted, after
+all."</p>
+
+<p>We made towards the nearest telegraph office.
+On the way I said, "That puttied-up hole in the
+piece of wood seems to have influenced you. Is it
+an important link?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;yes," Hewitt answered, "it is. But all
+those other pieces are important, too."</p>
+
+<p>"But why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because there are no holes in them." He
+looked quizzically at my wondering face, and laughed
+aloud. "Come," he said, "I won't puzzle you much
+longer. Here is the post-office. I'll send my wire,
+and then we'll go and dine at Luzatti's."</p>
+
+<p>He sent his telegram, and we cabbed it to Luzatti's.
+Among actors, journalists, and others who
+know town and like a good dinner, Luzatti's is well
+known. We went upstairs for the sake of quietness,
+and took a table standing alone in a recess just in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>side
+the door. We ordered our dinner, and then
+Hewitt began:</p>
+
+<p>"Now tell me what <i>your</i> conclusion is in this
+matter of the Ivy Cottage murder."</p>
+
+<p>"Mine? I haven't one. I'm sorry I'm so very
+dull, but I really haven't."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, I'll give you a point. Here is the newspaper
+account (torn sacrilegiously from my scrap-book
+for your benefit) of the robbery perpetrated on
+Harvey Challitt a few months before his forgery.
+Read it."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but I remember the circumstances very
+well. He was carrying two packets of diamonds
+belonging to his firm downstairs to the office of
+another firm of diamond merchants on the ground-floor.
+It was a quiet time in the day, and half-way
+down he was seized on a dark landing, made insensible
+by chloroform, and robbed of the diamonds&mdash;five
+or six thousand pounds' worth altogether, of
+stones of various smallish individual values up to
+thirty pounds or so. He lay unconscious on the
+landing till one of the partners, noticing that he had
+been rather long gone, followed and found him.
+That's all, I think."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that's all. Well, what do you make
+of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I don't quite see the connection with
+this case."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, I'll give you another point. The
+telegram I've just sent releases information to the
+police, in consequence of which they will probably
+apprehend Harvey Challitt and his confederate,
+Henry Gillard, <i>alias</i> Jones, for the murder of Gavin
+Kingscote. Now, then."</p>
+
+<p>"Challitt! But he's in gaol already."</p>
+
+<p>"Tut, tut, consider. Five years' penal was his
+dose, although for the first offence, because the
+forgery was of an extremely dangerous sort. You
+left Chelsea over three years ago yourself, and you
+told me that his difficulty occurred a year before.
+That makes four years, at least. Good conduct in
+prison brings a man out of a five years' sentence in
+that time or a little less, and, as a matter of fact,
+Challitt was released rather more than a week ago."</p>
+
+<p>"Still, I'm afraid I don't see what you are driving
+at."</p>
+
+<p>"Whose story is this about the diamond robbery
+from Harvey Challitt?"</p>
+
+<p>"His own."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly. His own. Does his subsequent
+record make him look like a person whose stories are
+to be accepted without doubt or question?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, no. I think I see&mdash;no, I don't. You
+mean he stole them himself? I've a sort of dim
+perception of your drift now, but still I can't fix it.
+The whole thing's too complicated."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It is a little complicated for a first effort, I admit,
+so I will tell you. This is the story. Harvey Challitt
+is an artful young man, and decides on a theft of
+his firm's diamonds. He first prepares a hiding-place
+somewhere near the stairs of his office, and
+when the opportunity arrives he puts the stones
+away, spills his chloroform, and makes a smell&mdash;possibly
+sniffs some, and actually goes off on the
+stairs, and the whole thing's done. He is carried
+into the office&mdash;the diamonds are gone. He tells of
+the attack on the stairs, as we have heard, and he is
+believed. At a suitable opportunity he takes his
+plunder from the hiding-place, and goes home to his
+lodgings. What is he to do with those diamonds?
+He can't sell them yet, because the robbery is publicly
+notorious, and all the regular jewel buyers
+know him.</p>
+
+<p>"Being a criminal novice, he doesn't know any
+regular receiver of stolen goods, and if he did would
+prefer to wait and get full value by an ordinary sale.
+There will always be a danger of detection so long
+as the stones are not securely hidden, so he proceeds
+to hide them. He knows that if any suspicion were
+aroused his rooms would be searched in every likely
+place, so he looks for an unlikely place. Of course,
+he thinks of taking out a panel and hiding them behind
+that. But the idea is so obvious that it won't
+do; the police would certainly take those panels out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+to look behind them. Therefore he determines to
+hide them <i>in</i> the panels. See here&mdash;he took the
+two pieces of wood with the filled hole from his tail
+pocket and opened his penknife&mdash;the putty near
+the surface is softer than that near the bottom of
+the hole; two different lots of putty, differently
+mixed, perhaps, have been used, therefore, presumably,
+at different times."</p>
+
+<p>"But to return to Challitt. He makes holes with
+a centre-bit in different places on the panels, and in
+each hole he places a diamond, embedding it carefully
+in putty. He smooths the surface carefully
+flush with the wood, and then very carefully paints
+the place over, shading off the paint at the edges so
+as to leave no signs of a patch. He doesn't do the
+whole job at once, creating a noise and a smell of
+paint, but keeps on steadily, a few holes at a time,
+till in a little while the whole wainscoting is set with
+hidden diamonds, and every panel is apparently
+sound and whole."</p>
+
+<p>"But, then&mdash;there was only one such hole in the
+whole lot."</p>
+
+<p>"Just so, and that very circumstance tells us the
+whole truth. Let me tell the story first&mdash;I'll explain
+the clue after. The diamonds lie hidden for a few
+months&mdash;he grows impatient. He wants the money,
+and he can't see a way of getting it. At last he determines
+to make a bolt and go abroad to sell his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+plunder. He knows he will want money for expenses,
+and that he may not be able to get rid of
+his diamonds at once. He also expects that his suddenly
+going abroad while the robbery is still in people's
+minds will bring suspicion on him in any case,
+so, in for a penny in for a pound, he commits a bold
+forgery, which, had it been successful, would have
+put him in funds and enabled him to leave the country
+with the stones. But the forgery is detected,
+and he is haled to prison, leaving the diamonds in
+their wainscot setting.</p>
+
+<p>"Now we come to Gavin Kingscote. He must
+have been a shrewd fellow&mdash;the sort of man that
+good detectives are made of. Also he must have
+been pretty unscrupulous. He had his suspicions
+about the genuineness of the diamond robbery, and
+kept his eyes open. What indications he had to
+guide him we don't know, but living in the same
+house a sharp fellow on the look-out would probably
+see enough. At any rate, they led him to the
+belief that the diamonds were in the thief's rooms,
+but not among his movables, or they would have
+been found after the arrest. Here was his chance.
+Challitt was out of the way for years, and there was
+plenty of time to take the house to pieces if it were
+necessary. So he changed into Challitt's rooms.</p>
+
+<p>"How long it took him to find the stones we
+shall never know. He probably tried many other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+places first, and, I expect, found the diamonds at
+last by pricking over the panels with a needle.
+Then came the problem of getting them out without
+attracting attention. He decided not to trust
+to the needle, which might possibly leave a stone
+or two undiscovered, but to split up each panel carefully
+into splinters so as to leave no part unexamined.
+Therefore he took measurements, and had a
+number of panels made by a joiner of the exact size
+and pattern of those in the room, and announced to
+his landlady his intention of painting her panels with
+a pretty design. This to account for the wet paint,
+and even for the fact of a panel being out of the
+wall, should she chance to bounce into the room at
+an awkward moment. All very clever, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, he was a smart man, no doubt. Well, he
+went to work, taking out a panel, substituting a new
+one, painting it over, and chopping up the old one
+on the quiet, getting rid of the splinters out of doors
+when the booty had been extracted. The decoration
+progressed and the little heap of diamonds
+grew. Finally, he came to the last panel, but found
+that he had used all his new panels and hadn't one
+left for a substitute. It must have been at some
+time when it was difficult to get hold of the joiner&mdash;Bank
+Holiday, perhaps, or Sunday, and he was impatient.
+So he scraped the paint off, and went care<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>fully
+over every part of the surface&mdash;experience had
+taught him by this that all the holes were of the
+same sort&mdash;and found one diamond. He took it
+out, refilled the hole with putty, painted the old
+panel and put it back. <i>These</i> are pieces of that old
+panel&mdash;the only old one of the lot.</p>
+
+<p>"Nine men out of ten would have got out of the
+house as soon as possible after the thing was done,
+but he was a cool hand and stayed. That made the
+whole thing look a deal more genuine than if he had
+unaccountably cleared out as soon as he had got his
+room nicely decorated. I expect the original capital
+for those Stock Exchange operations we heard of
+came out of those diamonds. He stayed as long as
+suited him, and left when he set up housekeeping
+with a view to his wedding. The rest of the story
+is pretty plain. You guess it, of course?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I said, "I think I can guess the rest, in
+a general sort of way&mdash;except as to one or two
+points."</p>
+
+<p>"It's all plain&mdash;perfectly. See here! Challitt,
+in gaol, determines to get those diamonds when he
+comes out. To do that without being suspected it
+will be necessary to hire the room. But he knows
+that he won't be able to do that himself, because the
+landlady, of course, knows him, and won't have an
+ex-convict in the house. There is no help for it; he
+must have a confederate, and share the spoil. So<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+he makes the acquaintance of another convict, who
+seems a likely man for the job, and whose sentence
+expires about the same time as his own. When they
+come out, he arranges the matter with this confederate,
+who is a well-mannered (and pretty well-known)
+housebreaker, and the latter calls at Mrs. Lamb's
+house to look for rooms. The very room itself
+happens to be to let, and of course it is taken, and
+Challitt (who is the invalid cousin) comes in at night
+muffled and unrecognisable.</p>
+
+<p>"The decoration on the panel does not alarm
+them, because, of course, they suppose it to have
+been done on the old panels and over the old paint.
+Challitt tries the spots where diamonds were left&mdash;there
+are none&mdash;there is no putty even. Perhaps,
+think they, the panels have been shifted and interchanged
+in the painting, so they set to work and
+split them all up as we have seen, getting more desperate
+as they go on. Finally they realize that they
+are done, and clear out, leaving Mrs. Lamb to mourn
+over their mischief.</p>
+
+<p>"They know that Kingscote is the man who has
+forestalled them, because Gillard (or Jones), in his
+chat with the landlady, has heard all about him and
+his painting of the panels. So the next night they
+set off for Finchley. They get into Kingscote's garden
+and watch him let Campbell out. While he is
+gone, Challitt quietly steps through the French win<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>dow
+into the smoking-room, and waits for him, Gillard
+remaining outside.</p>
+
+<p>"Kingscote returns, and Challitt accuses him of
+taking the stones. Kingscote is contemptuous&mdash;doesn't
+care for Challitt, because he knows he is
+powerless, being the original thief himself; besides,
+knows there is no evidence, since the diamonds are
+sold and dispersed long ago. Challitt offers to divide
+the plunder with him&mdash;Kingscote laughs and
+tells him to go; probably threatens to throw him
+out, Challitt being the smaller man. Gillard, at the
+open window, hears this, steps in behind, and quietly
+knocks him on the head. The rest follows as a matter
+of course. They fasten the window and shutters,
+to exclude observation; turn over all the drawers,
+etc., in case the jewels are there; go to the best bedroom
+and try there, and so on. Failing (and possibly
+being disturbed after a few hours' search by the
+noise of the acquisitive gardener), Gillard, with the
+instinct of an old thief, determines they shan't go
+away with nothing, so empties Kingscote's pockets
+and takes his watch and chain and so on. They go
+out by the front door and shut it after them. <i>Voilà
+tout.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>I was filled with wonder at the prompt ingenuity
+of the man who in these few hours of hurried inquiry
+could piece together so accurately all the materials
+of an intricate and mysterious affair such as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+this; but more, I wondered where and how he had
+collected those materials.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no doubt, Hewitt," I said, "that the
+accurate and minute application of what you are
+pleased to call your common sense has become something
+very like an instinct with you. What did you
+deduce from? You told me your conclusions from
+the examination of Ivy Cottage, but not how you
+arrived at them."</p>
+
+<p>"They didn't leave me much material downstairs,
+did they? But in the bedroom, the two drawers
+which the thieves found locked were ransacked&mdash;opened
+probably with keys taken from the dead
+man. On the floor I saw a bent French nail; here
+it is. You see, it is twice bent at right angles, near
+the head and near the point, and there is the faint
+mark of the pliers that were used to bend it. It is a
+very usual burglars' tool, and handy in experienced
+hands to open ordinary drawer locks. Therefore, I
+knew that a professional burglar had been at work.
+He had probably fiddled at the drawers with the nail
+first, and then had thrown it down to try the dead
+man's keys.</p>
+
+<p>"But I knew this professional burglar didn't
+come for a burglary, from several indications. There
+was no attempt to take plate, the first thing a burglar
+looks for. Valuable clocks were left on mantelpieces,
+and other things that usually go in an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+ordinary burglary were not disturbed. Notably, it
+was to be observed that no doors or windows were
+broken, or had been forcibly opened; therefore, it
+was plain that the thieves had come in by the French
+window of the smoking-room, the only entrance left
+open at the last thing. <i>Therefore</i>, they came in, or
+one did, knowing that Mr. Kingscote was up, and
+being quite willing&mdash;presumably anxious&mdash;to see
+him. Ordinary burglars would have waited till he
+had retired, and then could have got through the
+closed French window as easily almost as if it were
+open, notwithstanding the thin wooden shutters,
+which would never stop a burglar for more than five
+minutes. Being anxious to see him, they&mdash;or again,
+<i>one</i> of them&mdash;presumably knew him. That they had
+come to <i>get</i> something was plain, from the ransacking.
+As, in the end, they <i>did</i> steal his money, and
+watch, but did <i>not</i> take larger valuables, it was plain
+that they had no bag with them&mdash;which proves not
+only that they had not come to burgle, for every
+burglar takes his bag, but that the thing they came
+to get was not bulky. Still, they could easily have
+removed plate or clocks by rolling them up in a
+table-cover or other wrapper, but such a bundle, carried
+by well-dressed men, would attract attention&mdash;therefore
+it was probable that they were well dressed.
+Do I make it clear?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite&mdash;nothing seems simpler now it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+explained&mdash;that's the way with difficult puzzles."</p>
+
+<p>"There was nothing more to be got at the house.
+I had already in my mind the curious coincidence
+that the panels at Chelsea had been broken the very
+night before that of the murder, and determined to
+look at them in any case. I got from you the name
+of the man who had lived in the panelled room before
+Kingscote, and at once remembered it (although
+I said nothing about it) as that of the young man
+who had been chloroformed for his employer's diamonds.
+I keep things of that sort in my mind, you
+see&mdash;and, indeed, in my scrap-book. You told me
+yourself about his imprisonment, and there I was
+with what seemed now a hopeful case getting into a
+promising shape.</p>
+
+<p>"You went on to prevent any setting to rights at
+Chelsea, and I made enquiries as to Challitt. I
+found he had been released only a few days before
+all this trouble arose, and I also found the name of
+another man who was released from the same establishment
+only a few days earlier. I knew this man
+(Gillard) well, and knew that nobody was a more
+likely rascal for such a crime as that at Finchley.
+On my way to Chelsea I called at my office, gave
+my clerk certain instructions, and looked up my
+scrap-book. I found the newspaper account of the
+chloroform business, and also a photograph of Gil<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>lard&mdash;I
+keep as many of these things as I can collect.
+What I did at Chelsea you know. I saw that one
+panel was of old wood and the rest new. I saw the
+hole in the old panel, and I asked one or two questions.
+The case was complete."</p>
+
+<p>We proceeded with our dinner. Presently I said:
+"It all rests with the police now, of course?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course. I should think it very probable that
+Challitt and Gillard will be caught. Gillard, at any
+rate, is pretty well known. It will be rather hard on
+the surviving Kingscote, after engaging me, to have
+his dead brother's diamond transactions publicly exposed
+as a result, won't it? But it can't be helped.
+<i>Fiat justitia</i>, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"How will the police feel over this?" I asked.
+"You've rather cut them out, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, the police are all right. They had not the
+information I had, you see; they knew nothing of
+the panel business. If Mrs. Lamb had gone to Scotland
+Yard instead of to the policeman on the beat,
+perhaps I should never have been sent for."</p>
+
+<p>The same quality that caused Martin Hewitt to
+rank as mere "common-sense" his extraordinary
+power of almost instinctive deduction, kept his respect
+for the abilities of the police at perhaps a
+higher level than some might have considered justified.</p>
+
+<p>We sat some little while over our dessert, talking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+as we sat, when there occurred one of those curious
+conjunctions of circumstances that we notice again
+and again in ordinary life, and forget as often, unless
+the importance of the occasion fixes the matter in
+the memory. A young man had entered the dining-room,
+and had taken his seat at a corner table near
+the back window. He had been sitting there for
+some little time before I particularly observed him.
+At last he happened to turn his thin, pale face in my
+direction, and our eyes met. It was Challitt&mdash;the
+man we had been talking of!</p>
+
+<p>I sprang to my feet in some excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the man!" I cried. "Challitt!"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt rose at my words, and at first attempted
+to pull me back. Challitt, in guilty terror, saw that
+we were between him and the door, and turning,
+leaped upon the sill of the open window, and dropped
+out. There was a fearful crash of broken glass below,
+and everybody rushed to the window.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt drew me through the door, and we ran
+downstairs. "Pity you let out like that," he said,
+as he went. "If you'd kept quiet we could have
+sent out for the police with no trouble. Never mind&mdash;can't
+help it."</p>
+
+<p>Below, Challitt was lying in a broken heap in
+the midst of a crowd of waiters. He had crashed
+through a thick glass skylight and fallen, back
+downward, across the back of a lounge. He was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+taken away on a stretcher unconscious, and, in fact,
+died in a week in hospital from injuries to the spine.</p>
+
+<p>During his periods of consciousness he made a
+detailed statement, bearing out the conclusions of
+Martin Hewitt with the most surprising exactness,
+down to the smallest particulars. He and Gillard
+had parted immediately after the crime, judging it
+safer not to be seen together. He had, he affirmed,
+endured agonies of fear and remorse in the few days
+since the fatal night at Finchley, and had even once
+or twice thought of giving himself up. When I so
+excitedly pointed him out, he knew at once that the
+game was up, and took the one desperate chance of
+escape that offered. But to the end he persistently
+denied that he had himself committed the murder, or
+had even thought of it till he saw it accomplished.
+That had been wholly the work of Gillard, who,
+listening at the window and perceiving the drift of
+the conversation, suddenly beat down Kingscote
+from behind with a life-preserver. And so Harvey
+Challitt ended his life at the age of twenty-six.</p>
+
+<p>Gillard was never taken. He doubtless left the
+country, and has probably since that time become
+"known to the police" under another name abroad.
+Perhaps he has even been hanged, and if he has been,
+there was no miscarriage of justice, no matter what
+the charge against him may have been.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_NICOBAR_BULLION_CASE" id="THE_NICOBAR_BULLION_CASE"></a>THE <i>NICOBAR</i> BULLION CASE.</h2>
+
+
+<h4>I.</h4>
+
+<p>The whole voyage was an unpleasant one, and
+Captain Mackrie, of the Anglo-Malay Company's
+steamship <i>Nicobar</i>, had at last some excuse for the
+ill-temper that had made him notorious and unpopular
+in the company's marine staff. Although the
+fourth and fifth mates in the seclusion of their berth
+ventured deeper in their search for motives, and
+opined that the "old man" had made a deal less out
+of this voyage than usual, the company having lately
+taken to providing its own stores; so that "makings"
+were gone clean and "cumshaw" (which
+means commission in the trading lingo of the China
+seas) had shrunk small indeed. In confirmation
+they adduced the uncommonly long face of the steward
+(the only man in the ship satisfied with the skipper),
+whom the new regulations hit with the same
+blow. But indeed the steward's dolor might well be
+credited to the short passenger list, and the unpromising
+aspect of the few passengers in the eyes of a
+man accustomed to gauge one's tip-yielding capac<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>ity
+a month in advance. For the steward it was altogether
+the wrong time of year, the wrong sort of
+voyage, and certainly the wrong sort of passengers.
+So that doubtless the confidential talk of the fourth
+and fifth officers was mere youthful scandal. At
+any rate, the captain had prospect of a good deal in
+private trade home, for he had been taking curiosities
+and Japanese oddments aboard (plainly for sale
+in London) in a way that a third steward would
+have been ashamed of, and which, for a captain, was
+a scandal and an ignominy; and he had taken pains
+to insure well for the lot. These things the fourth
+and fifth mates often spoke of, and more than once
+made a winking allusion to, in the presence of the
+third mate and the chief engineer, who laughed and
+winked too, and sometimes said as much to the second
+mate, who winked without laughing; for of such
+is the tittle-tattle of shipboard.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Nicobar</i> was bound home with few passengers,
+as I have said, a small general cargo, and gold
+bullion to the value of £200,000&mdash;the bullion to be
+landed at Plymouth, as usual. The presence of this
+bullion was a source of much conspicuous worry on
+the part of the second officer, who had charge of the
+bullion-room. For this was his first voyage on his
+promotion from third officer, and the charge of
+£200,000 worth of gold bars was a thing he had not
+been accustomed to. The placid first officer pointed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+out to him that this wasn't the first shipment of bullion
+the world had ever known, by a long way, nor
+the largest. Also that every usual precaution was
+taken, and the keys were in the captain's cabin; so
+that he might reasonably be as easy in his mind as
+the few thousand other second officers who had had
+charge of hatches and special cargo since the world
+began. But this did not comfort Brasyer. He
+fidgeted about when off watch, considering and puzzling
+out the various means by which the bullion-room
+might be got at, and fidgeted more when on
+watch, lest somebody might be at that moment putting
+into practice the ingenious dodges he had
+thought of. And he didn't keep his fears and speculations
+to himself. He bothered the first officer
+with them, and when the first officer escaped he explained
+the whole thing at length to the third officer.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't think what the company's about," he said
+on one such occasion to the first mate, "calling a
+tin-pot bunker like that a bullion-room."</p>
+
+<p>"Skittles!" responded the first mate, and went
+on smoking.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's all very well for you who aren't responsible,"
+Brasyer went on, "but I'm pretty sure
+something will happen some day; if not on this voyage
+on some other. Talk about a strong room!
+Why, what's it made of?"</p>
+
+<p>"Three-eighths boiler plate."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, three-eighths boiler plate&mdash;about as good
+as a sixpenny tin money box. Why, I'd get through
+that with my grandmother's scissors!"</p>
+
+<p>"All right; borrow 'em and get through. <i>I</i>
+would if I had a grandmother."</p>
+
+<p>"There it is down below there out of sight and
+hearing, nice and handy for anybody who likes to
+put in a quiet hour at plate cutting from the coal
+bunker next door&mdash;always empty, because it's only
+a seven-ton bunker, not worth trimming. And the
+other side's against the steward's pantry. What's to
+prevent a man shipping as steward, getting quietly
+through while he's supposed to be bucketing about
+among his slops and his crockery, and strolling
+away with the plunder at the next port? And then
+there's the carpenter. <i>He's</i> always messing about
+somewhere below, with a bag full of tools. Nothing
+easier than for him to make a job in a quiet corner,
+and get through the plates."</p>
+
+<p>"But then what's he to do with the stuff when
+he's got it? You can't take gold ashore by the hundredweight
+in your boots."</p>
+
+<p>"Do with it. Why, dump it, of course. Dump
+it overboard in a quiet port and mark the spot.
+Come to that, he could desert clean at Port Said&mdash;what
+easier place?&mdash;and take all he wanted. You
+know what Port Said's like. Then there are the
+firemen&mdash;oh, <i>anybody</i> can do it!" And Brasyer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+moved off to take another peep under the hatchway.</p>
+
+<p>The door of the bullion-room was fastened by
+one central patent lock and two padlocks, one above
+and one below the other lock. A day or two after
+the conversation recorded above, Brasyer was carefully
+examining and trying the lower of the padlocks
+with a key, when a voice immediately behind him
+asked sharply, "Well, sir, and what are you up to
+with that padlock?"</p>
+
+<p>Brasyer started violently and looked round. It
+was Captain Mackrie.</p>
+
+<p>"There's&mdash;that is&mdash;I'm afraid these are the same
+sort of padlocks as those in the carpenter's stores,"
+the second mate replied, in a hurry of explanation.
+"I&mdash;I was just trying, that's all; I'm afraid the keys
+fit."</p>
+
+<p>"Just you let the carpenter take care of his own
+stores, will you, Mr. Brasyer? There's a Chubb's
+lock there as well as the padlocks, and the key of
+that's in my cabin, and I'll take care doesn't go out
+of it without my knowledge. So perhaps you'd best
+leave off experiments till you're asked to make 'em,
+for your own sake. That's enough now," the captain
+added, as Brasyer appeared to be ready to reply;
+and he turned on his heel and made for the
+steward's quarters.</p>
+
+<p>Brasyer stared after him ragefully. "Wonder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+what <i>you</i> want down here," he muttered under his
+breath. "Seems to me one doesn't often see a
+skipper as thick with the steward as that." And he
+turned off growling towards the deck above.</p>
+
+<p>"Hanged if I like that steward's pantry stuck
+against the side of the bullion-room," he said later
+in the day to the first officer. "And what does a
+steward want with a lot of boiler-maker's tools
+aboard? You know he's got them."</p>
+
+<p>"In the name of the prophet, rats!" answered
+the first mate, who was of a less fussy disposition.
+"What a fatiguing creature you are, Brasyer!
+Don't you know the man's a boiler-maker by regular
+trade, and has only taken to stewardship for the
+last year or two? That sort of man doesn't like
+parting with his tools, and as he's a widower, with
+no home ashore, of course he has to carry all his
+traps aboard. Do shut up, and take your proper
+rest like a Christian. Here, I'll give you a cigar;
+it's all right&mdash;Burman; stick it in your mouth, and
+keep your jaw tight on it."</p>
+
+<p>But there was no soothing the second officer.
+Still he prowled about the after orlop deck, and
+talked at large of his anxiety for the contents of the
+bullion-room. Once again, a few days later, as he
+approached the iron door, he was startled by the
+appearance of the captain coming, this time, <i>from</i>
+the steward's pantry. He fancied he had heard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+tapping, Brasyer explained, and had come to investigate.
+But the captain turned him back with even
+less ceremony than before, swearing he would give
+charge of the bullion-room to another officer if
+Brasyer persisted in his eccentricities. On the first
+deck the second officer was met by the carpenter, a
+quiet, sleek, soft-spoken man, who asked him for the
+padlock and key he had borrowed from the stores
+during the week. But Brasyer put him off, promising
+to send it back later. And the carpenter trotted
+away to a job he happened to have, singularly
+enough, in the hold, just under the after orlop deck,
+and below the floor of the bullion-room.</p>
+
+<p>As I have said, the voyage was in no way a
+pleasant one. Everywhere the weather was at its
+worst, and scarce was Gibraltar passed before the
+Lascars were shivering in their cotton trousers, and
+the Seedee boys were buttoning tight such old tweed
+jackets as they might muster from their scanty kits.
+It was January. In the Bay the weather was tremendous,
+and the <i>Nicobar</i> banged and shook and
+pitched distractedly across in a howling world of
+thunderous green sea, washed within and without,
+above and below. Then, in the Chops, as night fell,
+something went, and there was no more steerage-way,
+nor, indeed, anything else but an aimless wallowing.
+The screw had broken.</p>
+
+<p>The high sea had abated in some degree, but it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+was still bad. Such sail as the steamer carried, inadequate
+enough, was set, and shift was made somehow
+to worry along to Plymouth&mdash;or to Falmouth if
+occasion better served&mdash;by that means. And so the
+<i>Nicobar</i> beat across the Channel on a rather better,
+though anything but smooth, sea, in a black night,
+made thicker by a storm of sleet, which turned
+gradually to snow as the hours advanced.</p>
+
+<p>The ship laboured slowly ahead, through a universal
+blackness that seemed to stifle. Nothing but
+a black void above, below, and around, and the
+sound of wind and sea; so that one coming before
+a deck-light was startled by the quiet advent of the
+large snowflakes that came like moths as it seemed
+from nowhere. At four bells&mdash;two in the morning&mdash;a
+foggy light appeared away on the starboard
+bow&mdash;it was the Eddystone light&mdash;and an hour or
+two later, the exact whereabouts of the ship being a
+thing of much uncertainty, it was judged best to lay
+her to till daylight. No order had yet been given,
+however, when suddenly there were dim lights over
+the port quarter, with a more solid blackness beneath
+them. Then a shout and a thunderous crash,
+and the whole ship shuddered, and in ten seconds
+had belched up every living soul from below. The
+<i>Nicobar's</i> voyage was over&mdash;it was a collision.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger backed off into the dark, and the
+two vessels drifted apart, though not till some from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+the <i>Nicobar</i> had jumped aboard the other. Captain
+Mackrie's presence of mind was wonderful, and
+never for a moment did he lose absolute command
+of every soul on board. The ship had already begun
+to settle down by the stern and list to port.
+Life-belts were served out promptly. Fortunately
+there were but two women among the passengers,
+and no children. The boats were lowered without a
+mishap, and presently two strange boats came as
+near as they dare from the ship (a large coasting
+steamer, it afterwards appeared) that had cut into
+the <i>Nicobar</i>. The last of the passengers were being
+got off safely, when Brasyer, running anxiously to
+the captain, said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Can't do anything with that bullion, can we,
+sir? Perhaps a box or two&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, damn the bullion!" shouted Captain Mackrie.
+"Look after the boat, sir, and get the passengers
+off. The insurance companies can find the bullion
+for themselves."</p>
+
+<p>But Brasyer had vanished at the skipper's first
+sentence. The skipper turned aside to the steward
+as the crew and engine-room staff made for the remaining
+boats, and the two spoke quietly together.
+Presently the steward turned away as if to execute
+an order, and the skipper continued in a louder
+tone:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"They're the likeliest stuff, and we can but drop<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+'em, at worst. But be slippy&mdash;she won't last ten
+minutes."</p>
+
+<p>She lasted nearly a quarter of an hour. By that
+time, however, everybody was clear of her, and the
+captain in the last boat was only just near enough
+to see the last of her lights as she went down.</p>
+
+
+<h4>II.</h4>
+
+<p>The day broke in a sulky grey, and there lay the
+<i>Nicobar</i>, in ten fathoms, not a mile from the shore,
+her topmasts forlornly visible above the boisterous
+water. The sea was rough all that day, but the
+snow had ceased, and during the night the weather
+calmed considerably. Next day Lloyd's agent was
+steaming about in a launch from Plymouth, and
+soon a salvage company's tug came up and lay to by
+the emerging masts. There was every chance of
+raising the ship as far as could be seen, and a diver
+went down from the salvage tug to measure the
+breach made in the <i>Nicobar's</i> side, in order that the
+necessary oak planking or sheeting might be got
+ready for covering the hole, preparatory to pumping
+and raising. This was done in a very short
+time, and the necessary telegrams having been sent,
+the tug remained in its place through the night,
+and prepared for the sending down of several divers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+on the morrow to get out the bullion as a commencement.</p>
+
+<p>Just at this time Martin Hewitt happened to be
+engaged on a case of some importance and delicacy
+on behalf of Lloyd's Committee, and was staying
+for a few days at Plymouth. He heard the story of
+the wreck, of course, and speaking casually with
+Lloyd's agent as to the salvage work just beginning,
+he was told the name of the salvage company's representative
+on the tug, Mr. Percy Merrick&mdash;a name
+he immediately recognised as that of an old acquaintance
+of his own. So that on the day when
+the divers were at work in the bullion-room of the
+sunken <i>Nicobar</i>, Hewitt gave himself a holiday, and
+went aboard the tug about noon.</p>
+
+<p>Here he found Merrick, a big, pleasant man of
+thirty-eight or so. He was very glad to see Hewitt,
+but was a great deal puzzled as to the results of the
+morning's work on the wreck. Two cases of gold
+bars were missing.</p>
+
+<p>"There was £200,000 worth of bullion on
+board," he said, "that's plain and certain. It was
+packed in forty cases, each of £5,000 value. But
+now there are only thirty-eight cases! Two are
+gone clearly. I wonder what's happened?"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose your men don't know anything about
+it?" asked Hewitt.</p>
+
+<p>"No, they're all right. You see, it's impossible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+for them to bring anything up without its being observed,
+especially as they have to be unscrewed from
+their diving-dresses here on deck. Besides, bless
+you, I was down with them."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Do you dive yourself, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I put the dress on sometimes, you know,
+for any such special occasion as this. I went down
+this morning. There was no difficulty in getting
+about on the vessel below, and I found the keys of
+the bullion-room just where the captain said I
+would, in his cabin. But the locks were useless, of
+course, after being a couple of days in salt water.
+So we just burgled the door with crowbars, and then
+we saw that we might have done it a bit more easily
+from outside. For that coasting-steamer cut clean
+into the bunker next the bullion-room, and ripped
+open the sheet of boiler-plate dividing them."</p>
+
+<p>"The two missing cases couldn't have dropped
+out that way, of course?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no. We looked, of course, but it would
+have been impossible. The vessel has a list the
+other way&mdash;to starboard&mdash;and the piled cases didn't
+reach as high as the torn part. Well, as I said, we
+burgled the door, and there they were, thirty-eight
+sealed bullion cases, neither more nor less, and
+they're down below in the after-cabin at this moment.
+Come and see."</p>
+
+<p>Thirty-eight they were; pine cases bound with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+hoop-iron and sealed at every joint, each case about
+eighteen inches by a foot, and six inches deep.
+They were corded together, two and two, apparently
+for convenience of transport.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you cord them like this yourself?" asked
+Hewitt.</p>
+
+<p>"No, that's how we found 'em. We just hooked
+'em on a block and tackle, the pair at a time, and
+they hauled 'em up here aboard the tug."</p>
+
+<p>"What have you done about the missing two&mdash;anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wired off to headquarters, of course, at once.
+And I've sent for Captain Mackrie&mdash;he's still in the
+neighbourhood, I believe&mdash;and Brasyer, the second
+officer, who had charge of the bullion-room. They
+may possibly know something. Anyway, <i>one</i> thing's
+plain. There were forty cases at the beginning
+of the voyage, and now there are only thirty-eight."</p>
+
+<p>There was a pause; and then Merrick added,
+"By the bye, Hewitt, this is rather your line, isn't
+it? You ought to look up these two cases."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt laughed. "All right," he said; "I'll begin
+this minute if you'll commission me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," Merrick replied slowly, "of course I
+can't do that without authority from headquarters.
+But if you've nothing to do for an hour or so there
+is no harm in putting on your considering cap, is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+there? Although, of course, there's nothing to go
+upon as yet. But you might listen to what Mackrie
+and Brasyer have to say. Of course I don't know,
+but as it's a £10,000 question probably it might pay
+you, and if you <i>do</i> see your way to anything I'd wire
+and get you commissioned at once."</p>
+
+<p>There was a tap at the door and Captain Mackrie
+entered. "Mr. Merrick?" he said interrogatively,
+looking from one to another.</p>
+
+<p>"That's myself, sir," answered Merrick.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm Captain Mackrie, of the <i>Nicobar</i>. You
+sent for me, I believe. Something wrong with the
+bullion I'm told, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>Merrick explained matters fully. "I thought
+perhaps you might be able to help us, Captain
+Mackrie. Perhaps I have been wrongly informed
+as to the number of cases that should have been
+there?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; there were forty right enough. I think
+though&mdash;perhaps I might be able to give you a
+sort of hint."&mdash;and Captain Mackrie looked hard at
+Hewitt.</p>
+
+<p>"This is Mr. Hewitt, Captain Mackrie," Merrick
+interposed. "You may speak as freely as you please
+before him. In fact, he's sort of working on the
+business, so to speak."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," Mackrie said, "if that's so, speaking between
+ourselves, I should advise you to turn your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+attention to Brasyer. He was my second officer,
+you know, and had charge of the stuff."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean," Hewitt asked, "that Mr. Brasyer
+might give us some useful information?"</p>
+
+<p>Mackrie gave an ugly grin. "Very likely he
+might," he said, "if he were fool enough. But I
+don't think you'd get much out of him direct. I
+meant you might watch him."</p>
+
+<p>"What, do you suppose he was concerned in any
+way with the disappearance of this gold?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should think&mdash;speaking, as I said before, in
+confidence and between ourselves&mdash;that it's very
+likely indeed. I didn't like his manner all through
+the voyage."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, he was so eternally cracking on about his
+responsibility, and pretending to suspect the stokers
+and the carpenter, and one person and another, of
+trying to get at the bullion cases&mdash;that that alone
+was almost enough to make one suspicious. He protested
+so much, you see. He was so conscientious
+and diligent himself, and all the rest of it, and everybody
+else was such a desperate thief, and he was so
+sure there would be some of that bullion missing
+some day that&mdash;that&mdash;well, I don't know if I express
+his manner clearly, but I tell you I didn't like it a
+bit. But there was something more than that. He
+was eternally smelling about the place, and peeping<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+in at the steward's pantry&mdash;which adjoins the bullion-room
+on one side, you know&mdash;and nosing about
+in the bunker on the other side. And once I actually
+caught him fitting keys to the padlocks&mdash;keys
+he'd borrowed from the carpenter's stores. And
+every time his excuse was that he fancied he heard
+somebody else trying to get in to the gold, or something
+of that sort; every time I caught him below
+on the orlop deck that was his excuse&mdash;happened to
+have heard something or suspected something or
+somebody every time. Whether or not I succeed in
+conveying my impressions to you, gentlemen, I can
+assure you that I regarded his whole manner and
+actions as very suspicious throughout the voyage,
+and I made up my mind I wouldn't forget it if by
+chance anything <i>did</i> turn out wrong. Well, it has,
+and now I've told you what I've observed. It's for
+you to see if it will lead you anywhere."</p>
+
+<p>"Just so," Hewitt answered. "But let me fully
+understand, Captain Mackrie. You say that Mr.
+Brasyer had charge of the bullion-room, but that he
+was trying keys on it from the carpenter's stores.
+Where were the legitimate keys then?"</p>
+
+<p>"In my cabin. They were only handed out
+when I knew what they were wanted for. There
+was a Chubb's lock between the two padlocks, but a
+duplicate wouldn't have been hard for Brasyer to
+get. He could easily have taken a wax impression<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+of my key when he used it at the port where we took
+the bullion aboard."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and suppose he had taken these boxes,
+where do you think he would keep them?"</p>
+
+<p>Mackrie shrugged his shoulders and smiled.
+"Impossible to say," he replied. "He might have
+hidden 'em somewhere on board, though I don't
+think that's likely. He'd have had a deuce of a job
+to land them at Plymouth, and would have had to
+leave them somewhere while he came on to London.
+Bullion is always landed at Plymouth, you know,
+and if any were found to be missing, then the ship
+would be overhauled at once, every inch of her; so
+that he'd have to get his plunder ashore somehow
+before the rest of the gold was unloaded&mdash;almost
+impossible. Of course, if he's done that it's somewhere
+below there now, but that isn't likely. He'd
+be much more likely to have 'dumped' it&mdash;dropped
+it overboard at some well-known spot in a foreign
+port, where he could go later on and get it. So that
+you've a deal of scope for search, you see. Anywhere
+under water from here to Yokohama;" and
+Captain Mackrie laughed.</p>
+
+<p>Soon afterward he left, and as he was leaving a
+man knocked at the cabin door and looked in to say
+that Mr. Brasyer was on board. "You'll be able
+to have a go at him now," said the captain. "Good-day."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"There's the steward of the <i>Nicobar</i> there too,
+sir," said the man after the captain had gone, "and
+the carpenter."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, we'll see Mr. Brasyer first," said
+Merrick, and the man vanished. "It seems to have
+got about a bit," Merrick went on to Hewitt. "I
+only sent for Brasyer, but as these others have
+come, perhaps they've got something to tell us."</p>
+
+<p>Brasyer made his appearance, overflowing with
+information. He required little assurance to encourage
+him to speak openly before Hewitt, and he said
+again all he had so often said before on board the
+<i>Nicobar</i>. The bullion-room was a mere tin box, the
+whole thing was as easy to get at as anything could
+be, he didn't wonder in the least at the loss&mdash;he had
+prophesied it all along.</p>
+
+<p>The men whose movements should be carefully
+watched, he said, were the captain and the steward.
+"Nobody ever heard of a captain and a steward being
+so thick together before," he said. "The steward's
+pantry was next against the bullion-room, you
+know, with nothing but that wretched bit of three-eighths
+boiler plate between. You wouldn't often
+expect to find the captain down in the steward's
+pantry, would you, thick as they might be. Well,
+that's where I used to find him, time and again.
+And the steward kept boiler-makers' tools there!
+That I can swear to. And he's been a boiler-maker,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+so that, likely as not, he could open a joint somewhere
+and patch it up again neatly so that it
+wouldn't be noticed. He was always messing about
+down there in his pantry, and once I distinctly heard
+knocking there, and when I went down to see, whom
+should I meet? Why, the skipper, coming away from
+the place himself, and he bullyragged me for being
+there and sent me on deck. But before that he bullyragged
+me because I had found out that there
+were other keys knocking about the place that fitted
+the padlocks on the bullion-room door. Why should
+he slang and threaten me for looking after these
+things and keeping my eye on the bullion-room, as
+was my duty? But that was the very thing that he
+didn't like. It was enough for him to see me anxious
+about the gold to make him furious. Of course
+his character for meanness and greed is known all
+through the company's service&mdash;he'll do anything to
+make a bit."</p>
+
+<p>"But have you any positive idea as to what has
+become of the gold?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," Brasyer replied, with a rather knowing
+air, "I don't think they've dumped it."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean you think it's still in the vessel&mdash;hidden
+somewhere?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't. I believe the captain and the
+steward took it ashore, one case each, when we came
+off in the boats."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"But wouldn't that be noticed?"</p>
+
+<p>"It needn't be, on a black night like that. You
+see, the parcels are not so big&mdash;look at them, a foot
+by a foot and a half by six inches or so, roughly.
+Easily slipped under a big coat or covered up with
+anything. Of course they're a bit heavy&mdash;eighty
+or ninety pounds apiece altogether&mdash;but that's not
+much for a strong man to carry&mdash;especially in such
+a handy parcel, on a black night, with no end of
+confusion on. Now you just look here&mdash;I'll tell you
+something. The skipper went ashore last in a boat
+that was sent out by the coasting steamer that ran
+into us. That ship's put into dock for repairs and
+her crew are mostly having an easy time ashore.
+Now I haven't been asleep this last day or two, and
+I had a sort of notion there might be some game of
+this sort on, because when I left the ship that night
+I thought we might save a little at least of the stuff,
+but the skipper wouldn't let me go near the bullion-room,
+and that seemed odd. So I got hold of one
+of the boat's crew that fetched the skipper ashore,
+and questioned him quietly&mdash;pumped him, you know&mdash;and
+he assures me that the skipper <i>did</i> have a
+rather small, heavy sort of parcel with him. What
+do you think of that? Of course, in the circumstances,
+the man couldn't remember any very distinct
+particulars, but he thought it was a sort of square
+wooden case about the size I've mentioned. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+there's something more." Brasyer lifted his fore-finger
+and then brought it down on the table before
+him&mdash;"something more. I've made inquiries at the
+railway station and I find that two heavy parcels
+were sent off yesterday to London&mdash;deal boxes
+wrapped in brown paper, of just about the right
+size. And the paper got torn before the things were
+sent off, and the clerk could see that the boxes inside
+were fastened with hoop-iron&mdash;like those!" and
+the second officer pointed triumphantly to the boxes
+piled at one side of the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>"Well done!" said Hewitt. "You're quite a
+smart detective. Did you find out who brought the
+parcels, and who they were addressed to?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I couldn't get quite as far as that. Of
+course the clerk didn't know the names of the senders,
+and not knowing me, wouldn't tell me exactly where
+the parcels were going. But I got quite chummy
+with him after a bit, and I'm going to meet him presently&mdash;he
+has the afternoon off, and we're going for
+a stroll. I'll find something more, I'll bet you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," replied Hewitt, "find all you can&mdash;it
+may be very important. If you get any valuable
+information you'll let us know at once, of course.
+Anything else, now?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't think so; but I think what I've told
+you is pretty well enough for the present, eh? I'll
+let you know some more soon."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Brasyer went, and Norton, the steward of the old
+ship, was brought into the cabin. He was a sharp-eyed,
+rather cadaverous-looking man, and he spoke
+with sepulchral hollowness. He had heard, he said,
+that there was something wrong with the chests of
+bullion, and came on board to give any information
+he could. It wasn't much, he went on to say, but
+the smallest thing might help. If he might speak
+strictly confidentially he would suggest that observation
+be kept on Wickens, the carpenter. He (Norton)
+didn't want to be uncharitable, but his pantry happened
+to be next the bullion-room, and he had heard
+Wickens at work for a very long time just below&mdash;on
+the under side of the floor of the bullion-room, it
+seemed to him, although, of course, he <i>might</i> have
+been mistaken. Still, it was very odd that the carpenter
+always seemed to have a job just at that
+spot. More, it had been said&mdash;and he (Norton) believed
+it to be true&mdash;that Wickens, the carpenter,
+had in his possession, and kept among his stores,
+keys that fitted the padlocks on the bullion-room
+door. That, it seemed to him, was a very suspicious
+circumstance. He didn't know anything more definite,
+but offered his ideas for what they were worth,
+and if his suspicions proved unfounded nobody
+would be more pleased than himself. But&mdash;but&mdash;and
+the steward shook his head doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Mr. Norton," said Merrick, with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+twinkle in his eye; "we won't forget what you say.
+Of course, if the stuff is found in consequence of
+any of your information, you won't lose by it."</p>
+
+<p>The steward said he hoped not, and he wouldn't
+fail to keep his eye on the carpenter. He had
+noticed Wickens was in the tug, and he trusted that
+if they were going to question him they would do it
+cautiously, so as not to put him on his guard. Merrick
+promised they would.</p>
+
+<p>"By the bye, Mr. Norton," asked Hewitt, "supposing
+your suspicions to be justified, what do you
+suppose the carpenter would do with the bullion?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir," replied Norton, "I don't think he'd
+keep it on the ship. He'd probably dump it somewhere."</p>
+
+<p>The steward left, and Merrick lay back in his
+chair and guffawed aloud. "This grows farcical,"
+he said, "simply farcical. What a happy family
+they must have been aboard the <i>Nicobar</i>! And now
+here's the captain watching the second officer, and
+the second officer watching the captain and the
+steward, and the steward watching the carpenter!
+It's immense. And now we're going to see the carpenter.
+Wonder whom <i>he</i> suspects?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt said nothing, but his eyes twinkled with
+intense merriment, and presently the carpenter was
+brought into the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-day to you, gentlemen," said the car<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>penter
+in a soft and deferential voice, looking from
+one to the other. "Might I 'ave the honour of addressin'
+the salvage gentlemen?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's right," Merrick answered, motioning him
+to a seat. "This is the salvage shop, Mr. Wickens.
+What can we do for you?"</p>
+
+<p>The carpenter coughed gently behind his hand.
+"I took the liberty of comin', gentlemen, consekins
+o' 'earin' as there was some bullion missin'. P'raps
+I'm wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all. We haven't found as much as we
+expected, and I suppose by this time nearly everybody
+knows it. There are two cases wanting. You
+can't tell us where they are, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, as to that&mdash;no. I fear I can't exactly
+go as far as that. But if I am able to give vallable
+information as may lead to recovery of same, I presoom
+I may without offence look for some reasonable
+small recognition of my services?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," answered Merrick, "that'll be all
+right, I promise you. The company will do the
+handsome thing, of course, and no doubt so will the
+underwriters."</p>
+
+<p>"Presoomin' I may take that as a promise&mdash;among
+gentlemen"&mdash;this with an emphasis&mdash;"I'm
+willing to tell something."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a promise, at any rate as far as the company's
+concerned," returned Merrick. "I'll see it's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+made worth your while&mdash;of course, providing it leads
+to anything."</p>
+
+<p>"Purvidin' that, sir, o' course. Well, gentlemen,
+my story ain't a long one. All I've to say was what
+I 'eard on board, just before she went down. The
+passengers was off, and the crew was gettin' into the
+other boats when the skipper turns to the steward
+an' speaks to him quiet-like, not observin', gentlemen,
+as I was agin 'is elbow, so for to say. ''Ere,
+Norton,' 'e sez, or words to that effeck, 'why
+shouldn't we try gettin' them things ashore with us&mdash;you
+know, the cases&mdash;eh? I've a notion we're
+pretty close inshore,' 'e sez, 'and there's nothink of
+a sea now. You take one, anyway, and I'll try the
+other,' 'e says, 'but don't make a flourish.' Then he
+sez, louder, 'cos o' the steward goin' off, 'They're
+the likeliest stuff, and at worst we can but drop 'em.
+But look sharp,' 'e says. So then I gets into the
+nearest boat, and that's all I 'eard."</p>
+
+<p>"That was all?" asked Hewitt, watching the
+man's face sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"All?" the carpenter answered with some surprise.
+"Yes, that was all; but I think it's pretty
+well enough, don't you? It's plain enough what
+was meant&mdash;him and the steward was to take two
+cases, one apiece, on the quiet, and they was the likeliest
+stuff aboard, as he said himself. And now there's
+two cases o' bullion missin'. Ain't that enough?"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The carpenter was not satisfied till an exact
+note had been made of the captain's words. Then
+after Merrick's promise on behalf of the company
+had been renewed, Wickens took himself off.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Merrick, grinning across the table
+at Hewitt, "this is a queer go, isn't it? What that
+man says makes the skipper's case look pretty fishy,
+doesn't it? What he says, and what Brasyer says,
+taken together, makes a pretty strong case&mdash;I
+should say makes the thing a certainty. But what
+a business! It's likely to be a bit serious for some
+one, but it's a rare joke in a way. Wonder if Brasyer
+will find out anything more? Pity the skipper
+and steward didn't agree as to whom they should
+pretend to suspect. <i>That's</i> a mistake on their
+part."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all," Hewitt replied. "<i>If</i> they are
+conspiring, and know what they're about, they
+will avoid seeming to be both in a tale. The
+bullion is in bars, I understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, five bars in each case; weight, I believe,
+sixteen pounds to a bar."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me see," Hewitt went on, as he looked at
+his watch; "it is now nearly two o'clock. I must
+think over these things if I am to do anything in
+the case. In the meantime, if it could be managed,
+I should like enormously to have a turn under
+water in a diving-dress. I have always had a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+curiosity to see under the sea. Could it be managed
+now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," Merrick responded, "there's not much
+fun in it, I can assure you; and it's none the
+pleasanter in this weather. You'd better have a
+try later in the year if you really want to&mdash;unless
+you think you can learn anything about this business
+by smelling about on the <i>Nicobar</i> down
+below?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt raised his eyebrows and pursed his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>might</i> spot something," he said; "one never
+knows. And if I do anything in a case I always
+make it a rule to see and hear everything that can
+possibly be seen or heard, important or not. Clues
+lie where least expected. But beyond that, probably
+I may never have another chance of a little
+experience in a diving-dress. So if it can be managed
+I'd be glad."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, you shall go, if you say so. And
+since it's your first venture, I'll come down with you
+myself. The men are all ashore, I think, or most of
+them. Come along."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt was put in woollens and then in india-rubbers.
+A leaden-soled boot of twenty pounds'
+weight was strapped on each foot, and weights were
+hung on his back and chest.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the dress that Gullen usually has,"
+Merrick remarked. "He's a very smart fellow;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+we usually send him first to make measurements
+and so on. An excellent man, but a bit too fond
+of the diver's lotion."</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?" asked Hewitt.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you shall try some if you like, afterwards.
+It's a bit too heavy for me; rum and gin mixed, I
+think."</p>
+
+<p>A red nightcap was placed on Martin Hewitt's
+head, and after that a copper helmet, secured by
+a short turn in the segmental screw joint at the
+neck. In the end he felt a vast difficulty in moving
+at all. Merrick had been meantime invested
+with a similar rig-out, and then each was provided
+with a communication cord and an incandescent
+electric lamp. Finally, the front window was
+screwed on each helmet, and all was ready.</p>
+
+<p>Merrick went first over the ladder at the side,
+and Hewitt with much difficulty followed. As the
+water closed over his head, his sensations altered
+considerably. There was less weight to carry; his
+arms in particular felt light, though slow in motion.
+Down, down they went slowly, and all round about
+it was fairly light, but once on the sunken vessel
+and among the lower decks, the electric lamps were
+necessary enough. Once or twice Merrick spoke,
+laying his helmet against Hewitt's for the purpose,
+and instructing him to keep his air-pipe, life-line,
+and lamp connection from fouling something at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+every step. Here and there shadowy swimming
+shapes came out of the gloom, attracted by their
+lamps, to dart into obscurity again with a twist of
+the tail. The fishes were exploring the <i>Nicobar</i>.
+The hatchway of the lower deck was open, and
+down this they passed to the orlop deck. A little
+way along this they came to a door standing open,
+with a broken lock hanging to it. It was the door
+of the bullion-room, which had been forced by the
+divers in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>Merrick indicated by signs how the cases had
+been found piled on the floor. One of the sides of
+the room of thin steel was torn and thrust in the
+length of its whole upper half, and when they backed
+out of the room and passed the open door they stood
+in the great breach made by the bow of the strange
+coasting vessel. Steel, iron, wood, and everything
+stood in rents and splinters, and through the great
+gap they looked out into the immeasurable ocean.
+Hewitt put up his hand and felt the edge of the
+bullion-room partition where it had been torn. It
+was just such a tear as might have been made in
+cardboard.</p>
+
+<p>They regained the upper deck, and Hewitt, placing
+his helmet against his companion's, told him that
+he meant to have a short walk on the ocean bed.
+He took to the ladder again, where it lay over the
+side, and Merrick followed him.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The bottom was of that tough, slimy sort of clay-rock
+that is found in many places about our coasts,
+and was dotted here and there with lumps of harder
+rock and clumps of curious weed. The two divers
+turned at the bottom of the ladder, walked a few
+steps, and looked up at the great hole in the <i>Nicobar's</i>
+side. Seen from here it was a fearful chasm,
+laying open hold, orlop, and lower deck.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt turned away, and began walking about.
+Once or twice he stood and looked thoughtfully at
+the ground he stood on, which was fairly flat. He
+turned over with his foot a whitish, clean-looking
+stone about as large as a loaf. Then he wandered
+on slowly, once or twice stopping to examine the
+rock beneath him, and presently stooped to look at
+another stone nearly as large as the other, weedy on
+one side only, standing on the edge of a cavity in the
+claystone. He pushed the stone into the hole, which
+it filled, and then he stood up.</p>
+
+<p>Merrick put his helmet against Hewitt's, and
+shouted&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Satisfied now? Seen enough of the bottom?"</p>
+
+<p>"In a moment!" Hewitt shouted back; and he
+straightway began striding out in the direction of
+the ship. Arrived at the bows, he turned back to
+the point he started from, striding off again from
+there to the white stone he had kicked over, and from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+there to the vessel's side again. Merrick watched
+him in intense amazement, and hurried, as well as he
+might, after the light of Hewitt's lamp. Arrived for
+the second time at the bows of the ship, Hewitt
+turned and made his way along the side to the ladder,
+and forthwith ascended, followed by Merrick.
+There was no halt at the deck this time, and the two
+made there way up and up into the lighter water
+above, and so to the world of air.</p>
+
+<p>On the tug, as the men were unscrewing them
+from there waterproof prisons, Merrick asked
+Hewitt&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Will you try the 'lotion' now?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," Hewitt replied, "I won't go quite so far
+as that. But I <i>will</i> have a little whisky, if you've
+any in the cabin. And give me a pencil and a piece
+of paper."</p>
+
+<p>These things were brought, and on the paper
+Martin Hewitt immediately wrote a few figures and
+kept it in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I might easily forget those figures," he observed.</p>
+
+<p>Merrick wondered, but said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Once more comfortably in the cabin, and clad in
+his usual garments, Hewitt asked if Merrick could
+produce a chart of the parts thereabout.</p>
+
+<p>"Here you are," was the reply, "coast and all.
+Big enough, isn't it? I've already marked the posi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>tion
+of the wreck on it in pencil. She lies pointing
+north by east as nearly exact as anything."</p>
+
+<p>"As you've begun it," said Hewitt, "I shall take
+the liberty of making a few more pencil marks on
+this." And with that he spread out the crumpled
+note of figures, and began much ciphering and
+measuring. Presently he marked certain points on
+a spare piece of paper, and drew through them two
+lines forming an angle. This angle he transferred
+to the chart, and, placing a ruler over one leg of
+the angle, lengthened it out till it met the coast-line.</p>
+
+<p>"There we are," he said musingly. "And the
+nearest village to that is Lostella&mdash;indeed, the only
+coast village in that neighbourhood." He rose.
+"Bring me the sharpest-eyed person on board," he
+said; "that is, if he were here all day yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"But what's up? What's all this mathematical
+business over? Going to find that bullion by rule
+of three?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt laughed. "Yes, perhaps," he said, "but
+where's your sharp look-out? I want somebody who
+can tell me everything that was visible from the deck
+of this tug all day yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, really I believe the very sharpest chap is
+the boy. He's most annoyingly observant sometimes.
+I'll send for him."</p>
+
+<p>He came&mdash;a bright, snub-nosed, impudent-looking
+young ruffian.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"See here, my boy," said Merrick, "polish up
+your wits and tell this gentleman what he asks."</p>
+
+<p>"Yesterday," said Hewitt, "no doubt you saw
+various pieces of wreckage floating about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yessir."</p>
+
+<p>"What were they?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hatch-gratings mostly&mdash;nothin' much else.
+There's some knockin' about now."</p>
+
+<p>"I saw them. Now, remember. Did you see a
+hatch-grating floating yesterday that was different
+from the others? A painted one, for instance&mdash;those
+out there now are not painted, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Yessir, I see a little white 'un painted, bobbin'
+about away beyond the foremast of the <i>Nicobar</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"You're sure of that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certain sure, sir&mdash;it was the only painted thing
+floatin'. And to-day it's washed away somewheres."</p>
+
+<p>"So I noticed. You're a smart lad. Here's a
+shilling for you&mdash;keep your eyes open and perhaps
+you'll find a good many more shillings before you're
+an old man. That's all."</p>
+
+<p>The boy disappeared, and Hewitt turned to Merrick
+and said, "I think you may as well send that
+wire you spoke of. If I get the commission I think
+I may recover that bullion. It may take some little
+time, or, on the other hand, it may not. If you'll
+write the telegram at once, I'll go in the same boat
+as the messenger. I'm going to take a walk down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+to Lostella now&mdash;it's only two or three miles along
+the coast, but it will soon be getting dark."</p>
+
+<p>"But what sort of a clue have you got? I
+didn't&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," replied Hewitt, with a chuckle.
+"Officially, you know, I've no right to a clue just
+yet&mdash;I'm not commissioned. When I am I'll tell
+you everything."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt was scarcely ashore when he was seized
+by the excited Brasyer. "Here you are," he said.
+"I was coming aboard the tug again. I've got
+more news. You remember I said I was going out
+with that railway clerk this afternoon, and meant
+pumping him? Well, I've done it and rushed away&mdash;don't
+know what he'll think's up. As we were
+going along we saw Norton, the steward, on the
+other side of the way, and the clerk recognised him
+as one of the men who brought the cases to be sent
+off; the other was the skipper, I've no doubt, from
+his description. I played him artfully, you know,
+and then he let out that both the cases were addressed
+to Mackrie at his address in London! He
+looked up the entry, he said, after I left when I
+first questioned him, feeling curious. That's about
+enough, I think, eh? I'm off to London now&mdash;I
+believe Mackrie's going to-night. I'll have him!
+Keep it dark!" And the zealous second officer
+dashed off without waiting for a reply. Hewitt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+looked after him with an amused smile, and turned
+off towards Lostella.</p>
+
+
+<h4>III.</h4>
+
+<p>It was about eleven the next morning when
+Merrick received the following note, brought by a
+boatman:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">Dear Merrick</span>,&mdash;Am I commissioned? If not,
+don't trouble, but if I am, be just outside Lostella,
+at the turning before you come to the Smack Inn, at
+two o'clock. Bring with you a light cart, a policeman&mdash;or
+two perhaps will be better&mdash;and a man
+with a spade. There will probably be a little cabbage-digging.
+Are you fond of the sport?&mdash;Yours,
+<span class="smcap">Martin Hewitt</span>.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S.&mdash;<i>Keep all your men aboard</i>; bring the spade
+artist from the town."</p></div>
+
+<p>Merrick was off in a boat at once. His principals
+had replied to his telegram after Hewitt's departure
+the day before, giving him a free hand to do
+whatever seemed best. With some little difficulty
+he got the policemen, and with none at all he got a
+light cart and a jobbing man with a spade. Together
+they drove off to the meeting-place.</p>
+
+<p>It was before the time, but Martin Hewitt was
+there, waiting. "You're quick," he said, "but the
+sooner the better. I gave you the earliest appoint<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>ment
+I thought you could keep, considering what
+you had to do."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you got the stuff, then?" Merrick asked
+anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"No, not exactly yet. But I've got this," and
+Hewitt held up the point of his walking-stick. Protruding
+half an inch or so from it was the sharp end
+of a small gimlet, and in the groove thereof was a
+little white wood, such as commonly remains after a
+gimlet has been used.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what's that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind. Let us move along&mdash;I'll walk. I
+think we're about at the end of the job&mdash;it's been a
+fairly lucky one, and quite simple. But I'll explain
+after."</p>
+
+<p>Just beyond the Smack Inn, Hewitt halted the
+cart, and all got down. They looped the horse's
+reins round a hedge-stake and proceeded the small
+remaining distance on foot, with the policemen behind,
+to avoid a premature scare. They turned up
+a lane behind a few small and rather dirty cottages
+facing the sea, each with its patch of kitchen garden
+behind. Hewitt led the way to the second garden,
+pushed open the small wicket gate and walked boldly
+in, followed by the others.</p>
+
+<p>Cabbages covered most of the patch, and seemed
+pretty healthy in their situation, with the exception
+of half a dozen&mdash;singularly enough, all together in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+a group. These were drooping, yellow, and wilted,
+and towards these Hewitt straightway walked.
+"Dig up those wilted cabbages," he said to the
+jobbing man. "They're really useless now. You'll
+probably find something else six inches down or
+so."</p>
+
+<p>The man struck his spade into the soft earth,
+wherein it stopped suddenly with a thud. But at
+this moment a gaunt, slatternly woman, with a black
+eye, a handkerchief over her head, and her skirt
+pinned up in front, observing the invasion from the
+back door of the cottage, rushed out like a maniac
+and attacked the party valiantly with a broom. She
+upset the jobbing man over his spade, knocked off
+one policeman's helmet, lunged into the other's face
+with her broom, and was making her second attempt
+to hit Hewitt (who had dodged), when Merrick
+caught her firmly by the elbows from behind,
+pressed them together, and held her. She screamed,
+and people came from other cottages and looked on.
+"Peter! Peter!" the woman screamed, "come 'ee,
+come'ee here! Davey! They're come!"</p>
+
+<p>A grimy child came to the cottage door, and seeing
+the woman thus held, and strangers in the garden,
+set up a piteous howl. Meantime the digger
+had uncovered two wooden boxes, each eighteen
+inches long or so, bound with hoop-iron and sealed.
+One had been torn partly open at the top, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+broken wood roughly replaced. When this was
+lifted, bars of yellow metal were visible within.</p>
+
+<p>The woman still screamed vehemently, and struggled.
+The grimy child retreated, and then there appeared
+at the door, staggering hazily and rubbing
+his eyes, a shaggy, unkempt man, in shirt and trousers.
+He looked stupidly at the scene before him,
+and his jaw dropped.</p>
+
+<p>"Take that man," cried Hewitt. "He's one!"
+And the policeman promptly took him, so that he
+had handcuffs on his wrists before he had collected
+his faculties sufficiently to begin swearing.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt and the other policeman entered the cottage.
+In the lower two rooms there was nobody.
+They climbed the few narrow stairs, and in the
+front room above they found another man, younger,
+and fast asleep. "He's the other," said Hewitt.
+"Take <i>him</i>." And this one was handcuffed before
+he woke.</p>
+
+<p>Then the recovered gold was put into the cart,
+and with the help of the village constable, who
+brought his own handcuffs for the benefit and adornment
+of the lady with the broom, such a procession
+marched out of Lostella as had never been dreamed
+of by the oldest inhabitant in his worst nightmare,
+nor recorded in the whole history of Cornwall.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said Hewitt, turning to Merrick, "we
+must have that fellow of yours&mdash;what's his name<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>&mdash;Gullen,
+isn't it? The one that went down to measure
+the hole in the ship. You've kept him aboard,
+of course?"</p>
+
+<p>"What, Gullen?" exclaimed Merrick. "Gullen?
+Well, as a matter of fact he went ashore last
+night and hasn't come back. But you don't mean to
+say&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>do</i>," replied Hewitt. "And now you've lost
+him."</p>
+
+
+<h4>IV.</h4>
+
+<p>"But tell me all about it now we've a little time
+to ourselves," asked Merrick an hour or two later,
+as they sat and smoked in the after-cabin of the
+salvage tug. "We've got the stuff, thanks to you,
+but I don't in the least see how <i>they</i> got it, nor how
+you found it out."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there didn't seem to be a great deal either
+way in the tales told by the men from the <i>Nicobar</i>.
+They cancelled one another out, so to speak, though
+it seemed likely that there might be something in
+them in one or two respects. Brasyer, I could see,
+tried to prove too much. If the captain and the
+steward were conspiring to rob the bullion-room,
+why should the steward trouble to cut through the
+boiler-plate walls when the captain kept the keys in
+his cabin? And if the captain had been stealing the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+bullion, why should he stop at two cases when he
+had all the voyage to operate in and forty cases to
+help himself to? Of course the evidence of the
+carpenter gave some colour to the theory, but I
+think I can imagine a very reasonable explanation
+of that.</p>
+
+<p>"You told me, of course, that you were down
+with the men yourself when they opened the bullion-room
+door and got out the cases, so that there could
+be no suspicion of <i>them</i>. But at the same time you
+told me that the breach in the <i>Nicobar's</i> side had
+laid open the bullion-room partition, and that you
+might more easily have got the cases out that way.
+You told me, of course, that the cases couldn't have
+<i>fallen</i> out that way because of the list of the vessel,
+the position of the rent in the boiler-plate, and so on.
+But I reflected that the day before a diver had been
+down alone&mdash;in fact, that his business had been with
+the very hole that extended partly to the bullion-room:
+he had to measure it. That diver might
+easily have got at the cases through the breach.
+But then, as you told me, a diver can't bring things
+up from below unobserved. This diver would know
+this, and might therefore hide the booty below. So
+that I made up my mind to have a look under water
+before I jumped to any conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't think it likely that he had hidden the
+cases, mind you. Because he would have had to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+dive again to get them, and would have been just
+as awkwardly placed in fetching them to the light
+of day then as ever. Besides, he couldn't come
+diving here again in the company's dress without
+some explanation. So what more likely than that
+he would make some ingenious arrangement with an
+accomplice, whereby he might make the gold in some
+way accessible to him?</p>
+
+<p>"We went under water. I kept my eyes open,
+and observed, among other things, that the vessel
+was one of those well-kept 'swell' ones on which
+all the hatch gratings and so on are in plain oak
+or teak, kept holystoned. This (with the other
+things) I put by in my mind in case it should be
+useful. When we went over the side and looked
+at the great gap, I saw that it would have been
+quite easy to get at the broken bullion-room partition
+from outside."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," remarked Merrick, "it would be no
+trouble at all. The ladder goes down just by the
+side of the breach, and any one descending by that
+might just step off at one side on to the jagged
+plating at the level of the after orlop, and reach
+over into the bullion safe."</p>
+
+<p>"Just so. Well, next I turned my attention to
+the sea-bed, which I was extremely pleased to see
+was of soft, slimy claystone. I walked about a
+little, getting farther and farther away from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+vessel as I went, till I came across that clean stone
+which I turned over with my foot. Do you remember?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that was noticeable. It was the only
+clean, bare stone to be seen. Every other was covered
+with a green growth, and to most clumps of
+weed clung. The obvious explanation of this was
+that the stone was a new-comer&mdash;lately brought from
+dry land&mdash;from the shingle on the sea-shore, probably,
+since it was washed so clean. Such a stone
+could not have come a mile out to sea by itself.
+Somebody had brought it in a boat and thrown it
+over, and whoever did it didn't take all that trouble
+for nothing. Then its shape told a tale; it was
+something of the form, rather exaggerated, of a loaf&mdash;the
+sort that is called a 'cottage'&mdash;the most convenient
+possible shape for attaching to a line and
+lowering. But the line had gone, so somebody must
+have been down there to detach it. Also it wasn't
+unreasonable to suppose that there might have been
+a hook on the end of that line. This, then, was a
+theory. Your man had gone down alone to take his
+measurement, had stepped into the broken side, as
+you have explained he could, reached into the bullion-room,
+and lifted the two cases. Probably he
+unfastened the cord, and brought them out one at
+a time for convenience in carrying. Then he car<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>ried
+the cases, one at a time, as I have said, over to
+that white stone which lay there sunk with the hook
+and line attached by previous arrangement with
+some confederate. He detached the rope from the
+stone&mdash;it was probably fixed by an attached piece
+of cord, tightened round the stone with what you
+call a timber-hitch, easily loosened&mdash;replaced the
+cord round the two cases, passed the hook under the
+cord, and left it to be pulled up from above. But
+then it could not have been pulled up there in broad
+daylight, under your very noses. The confederates
+would wait till night. That meant that the other
+end of the rope was attached to some floating object,
+so that it might be readily recovered. The
+whole arrangement was set one night to be carried
+away the next."</p>
+
+<p>"But why didn't Gullen take more than two
+cases?"</p>
+
+<p>"He couldn't afford to waste the time, in the
+first place. Each case removed meant another journey
+to and from the vessel, and you were waiting
+above for his measurements. Then he was probably
+doubtful as to weight. Too much at once wouldn't
+easily be drawn up, and might upset a small boat.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, so much for the white stone. But there
+was more; close by the stone I noticed (although
+I think you didn't) a mark in the claystone. It was
+a triangular depression or pit, sharp at the bottom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>&mdash;just
+the hole that would be made by the sharp impact
+of the square corner of a heavy box, if shod
+with iron, as the bullion cases are. This was one
+important thing. It seemed to indicate that the
+boxes had not been lifted directly up from the sea-bed,
+but had been dragged sideways&mdash;at all events
+at first&mdash;so that a sharp corner had turned over and
+dug into the claystone! I walked a little farther
+and found more indications&mdash;slight scratches, small
+stones displaced, and so on, that convinced me of
+this, and also pointed out the direction in which the
+cases had been dragged. I followed the direction,
+and presently arrived at another stone, rather
+smaller than the clean one. The cases had evidently
+caught against this, and it had been displaced
+by their momentum, and perhaps by a possible
+wrench from above. The green growth covered
+the part which had been exposed to the water,
+and the rest of the stone fitted the hole beside it,
+from which it had been pulled. Clearly these
+things were done recently, or the sea would have
+wiped out all the traces in the soft claystone. The
+rest of what I did under water of course you understood."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose so: you took the bearings of the
+two stones in relation to the ship by pacing the
+distances."</p>
+
+<p>"That is so. I kept the figures in my head<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+till I could make a note of them, as you saw, on
+paper. The rest was mere calculation. What I
+judged had happened was this. Gullen had arranged
+with somebody, identity unknown, but
+certainly somebody with a boat at his disposal,
+to lay the line, and take it up the following night.
+Now anything larger than a rowing boat could not
+have got up quite so close to you in the night
+(although your tug was at the other end of the
+wreck) without a risk of being seen. <i>But</i> no rowing
+boat could have <i>dragged</i> those cases forcibly
+along the bottom; they would act as an anchor to
+it. Therefore this was what had happened. The
+thieves had come in a large boat&mdash;a fishing smack,
+lugger, or something of that sort&mdash;with a small
+boat in tow. The sailing boat had lain to at a
+convenient distance, <i>in the direction in which it was
+afterwards to go</i>, so as to save time if observed, and
+a man had put off quietly in the small boat to
+pick up the float, whatever it was. There must
+have been a lot of slack line on this for the purpose,
+as also for the purpose of allowing the float
+to drift about fairly freely, and not attract attention
+by remaining in one place. The man pulled off
+to the sailing boat, and took the float and line
+aboard. Then the sailing boat swung off in the
+direction of home, and the line was hauled in with
+the plunder at the end of it."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"One would think you had seen it all&mdash;or done
+it," Merrick remarked, with a laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing else could have happened, you see.
+That chain of events is the only one that will
+explain the circumstances. A rapid grasp of the
+whole circumstances and a perfect appreciation of
+each is more than half the battle in such work as
+this. Well, you know I got the exact bearings of
+the wreck on the chart, worked out from that the
+lay of the two stones with the scratch marks between,
+and then it was obvious that a straight line
+drawn through these and carried ahead would indicate,
+approximately, at any rate, the direction the
+thieves' vessel had taken. The line fell on the
+coast close by the village of Lostella&mdash;indeed that
+was the only village for some few miles either way.
+The indication was not certain, but it was likely,
+and the only one available, therefore it must be
+followed up."</p>
+
+<p>"And what about the painted hatch? How did
+you guess that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I saw there were hatch-gratings belonging
+to the <i>Nicobar</i> floating about, and it seemed probable
+that the thieves would use for a float something
+similar to the other wreckage in the vicinity,
+so as not to attract attention. Nothing would be
+more likely than a hatch-grating. But then, in
+small vessels, such as fishing-luggers and so on,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+fittings are almost always painted&mdash;they can't
+afford to be such holystoning swells as those on
+the <i>Nicobar</i>. So I judged the grating might be
+painted, and this would possibly have been noticed
+by some sharp person. I made the shot, and hit.
+The boy remembered the white grating, which had
+gone&mdash;'washed away,' as he thought. That was
+useful to me, as you shall see.</p>
+
+<p>"I made off toward Lostella. The tide was low
+and it was getting dusk when I arrived. A number
+of boats and smacks were lying anchored on the
+beach, but there were few people to be seen. I
+began looking out for smacks with white-painted
+fittings in them. There are not so many of these
+among fishing vessels&mdash;brown or red is more likely,
+or sheer colourless dirt over paint unrecognisable.
+There were only two that I saw last night. The
+first <i>might</i> have been the one I wanted, but there
+was nothing to show it. The second <i>was</i> the one.
+She was half-decked and had a small white-painted
+hatch. I shifted the hatch and found a long line,
+attached to the grating at one end and carrying a
+hook at the other! They had neglected to unfasten
+their apparatus&mdash;perhaps had an idea that there
+might be a chance of using it again in a few days.
+I went to the transom and read the inscription,
+'<i>Rebecca</i>. Peter and David Garthew, Lostella.'
+Then my business was to find the Garthews.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I wandered about the village for some little
+time, and presently got hold of a boy. I made a
+simple excuse for asking about the Garthews&mdash;wanted
+to go for a sail to-morrow. The boy, with
+many grins, confided to me that both of the Garthews
+were 'on the booze.' I should find them at the
+Smack Inn, where they had been all day, drunk as fiddlers.
+This seemed a likely sort of thing after the
+haul they had made. I went to the Smack Inn, determined
+to claim old friendship with the Garthews,
+although I didn't know Peter from David. There
+they were&mdash;one sleepy drunk, and the other loving
+and crying drunk. I got as friendly as possible
+with them under the circumstances, and at closing
+time stood another gallon of beer and carried it
+home for them, while they carried each other. I
+took care to have a good look round in the cottage.
+I even helped Peter's 'old woman'&mdash;the
+lady with the broom&mdash;to carry them up to bed.
+But nowhere could I see anything that looked like
+a bullion-case or a hiding-place for one. So I came
+away, determined to renew my acquaintance in the
+morning, and to carry it on as long as might be
+necessary; also to look at the garden in the daylight
+for signs of burying. With that view I
+fixed that little gimlet in my walking-stick, as you
+saw.</p>
+
+<p>"This morning I was at Lostella before ten, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+took a look at the Garthews' cabbages. It seemed
+odd that half a dozen, all in a clump together,
+looked withered and limp, as though they had been
+dug up hastily, the roots broken, perhaps, and then
+replanted. And altogether these particular cabbages
+had a dissipated, leaning-different-ways look,
+as though <i>they</i> had been on the loose with the
+Garthews. So, seeing a grubby child near the back
+door of the cottage, I went towards him, walking
+rather unsteadily, so as, if I were observed, to
+favour the delusion that I was not yet quite got
+over last night's diversions. 'Hullo, my b-boy,' I
+said, 'hullo, li'l b-boy, look here,' and I plunged my
+hand into my trousers' pocket and brought it out
+full of small change. Then, making a great business
+of selecting him a penny, I managed to spill it all
+over the dissipated cabbages. It was easy then, in
+stooping to pick up the change, to lean heavily on
+my stick and drive it through the loose earth. As I
+had expected, there was a box below. So I gouged
+away with my walking-stick while I collected my
+coppers, and finally swaggered off, after a few civil
+words with the 'old woman,' carrying with me evident
+proof that it was white wood recently buried
+there. The rest you saw for yourself. I think you
+and I may congratulate each other on having dodged
+that broom. It hit all the others."</p>
+
+<p>"What I'm wild about," said Merrick, "is having<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+let that scoundrel Gullen get off. He's an artful
+chap, without a doubt. He saw us go over the side,
+you know, and after you had gone he came into the
+cabin for some instructions. Your pencil notes and
+the chart were on the table, and no doubt he put
+two and two together (which was more than I could,
+not knowing what had happened), and concluded to
+make himself safe for a bit. He had no leave that
+night&mdash;he just pulled away on the quiet. Why didn't
+you give me the tip to keep him?"</p>
+
+<p>"That wouldn't have done. In the first place,
+there was no legal evidence to warrant his arrest,
+and ordering him to keep aboard would have aroused
+his suspicions. I didn't know at the time how many
+days, or weeks, it would take me to find the bullion,
+if I ever found it, and in that time Gullen might
+have communicated in some way with his accomplices,
+and so spoilt the whole thing. Yes, certainly
+he seems to have been fairly smart in his way. He
+knew he would probably be sent down first, as usual,
+alone to make measurements, and conceived his plan
+and made his arrangements forthwith."</p>
+
+<p>"But now what I want to know is what about
+all those <i>Nicobar</i> people watching and suspecting
+one another? More especially what about the cases
+the captain and the steward are said to have fetched
+ashore?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt laughed. "Well," he said, "as to that,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+the presence of the bullion seems to have bred all
+sorts of mutual suspicion on board the ship. Brasyer
+was over-fussy, and his continual chatter started it
+probably, so that it spread like an infection. As to
+the captain and the steward, of course I don't know
+anything but that their rescued cases were not bullion
+cases. Probably they were doing a little private
+trading&mdash;it's generally the case when captain and
+steward seem unduly friendly for their relative positions&mdash;and
+perhaps the cases contained something
+specially valuable: vases or bronzes from Japan,
+for instance; possibly the most valuable things of
+the size they had aboard. Then, if they had insured
+their things, Captain Mackrie (who has the reputation
+of a sharp and not very scrupulous man) might
+possibly think it rather a stroke of business to get
+the goods and the insurance money too, which
+would lead him to keep his parcels as quiet as possible.
+But that's as it may be."</p>
+
+<p>The case was much as Hewitt had surmised.
+The zealous Brasyer, posting to London in hot haste
+after Mackrie, spent some days in watching him.
+At last the captain and the steward with their two
+boxes took a cab and went to Bond Street, with
+Brasyer in another cab behind them. The two
+entered a shop, the window of which was set out
+with rare curiosities and much old silver and gold.
+Brasyer could restrain himself no longer. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+grabbed a passing policeman, and rushed with him
+into the shop. There they found the captain and
+the steward with two small packing cases opened
+before them, trying to sell&mdash;a couple of very ancient-looking
+Japanese bronze figures, of that curious old
+workmanship and varied colour of metal that in
+genuine examples mean nowadays high money
+value.</p>
+
+<p>Brasyer vanished: there was too much chaff for
+him to live through in the British mercantile marine
+after this adventure. The fact was, the steward had
+come across the bargain, but had not sufficient spare
+cash to buy, so he called in the aid of the captain,
+and they speculated in the bronzes as partners.
+There was much anxious inspection of the prizes on
+the way home, and much discussion as to the proper
+price to ask. Finally, it was said, they got three
+hundred pounds for the pair.</p>
+
+<p>Now and again Hewitt meets Merrick still.
+Sometimes Merrick says, "Now, I wonder after all
+whether or not some of those <i>Nicobar</i> men who were
+continually dodging suspiciously about that bullion-room
+<i>did</i> mean having a dash at the gold if there
+were a chance?" And Hewitt replies, "I wonder."</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_HOLFORD_WILL_CASE" id="THE_HOLFORD_WILL_CASE"></a>THE HOLFORD WILL CASE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>At one time, in common, perhaps, with most
+people, I took a sort of languid, amateur interest
+in questions of psychology, and was impelled there-by
+to plunge into the pages of the many curious and
+rather abstruse books which attempt to deal with
+phenomena of mind, soul and sense. Three things
+of the real nature of which, I am convinced, no man
+will ever learn more than we know at present&mdash;which
+is nothing.</p>
+
+<p>From these I strayed into the many volumes
+of <i>Transactions</i> of the Psychical Research Society,
+with an occasional by-excursion into mental telepathy
+and theosophy; the last, a thing whereof my
+Philistine intelligence obstinately refused to make
+head or tail.</p>
+
+<p>It was while these things were occupying part
+of my attention that I chanced to ask Hewitt
+whether, in the course of his divers odd and out-of-the-way
+experiences, he had met with any such
+weird adventures as were detailed in such profusion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+in the books of "authenticated" spooks, doppelgangers,
+poltergeists, clairvoyance, and so forth.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," Hewitt answered, with reflection, "I
+haven't been such a wallower in the uncanny as
+some of the worthy people who talk at large in
+those books of yours, and, as a matter of fact, my
+little adventures, curious as some of them may
+seem, have been on the whole of the most solid
+and matter-of-fact description. One or two things
+have happened that perhaps your 'psychical'
+people might be interested in, but they've mostly
+been found to be capable of a disappointingly
+simple explanation. One case of some genuine
+psychological interest, however, I have had; although
+there's nothing even in that which isn't a
+matter of well-known scientific possibility." And
+he proceeded to tell me the story that I have set
+down here, as well as I can, from recollection.</p>
+
+<p>I think I have already said, in another place,
+that Hewitt's professional start as a private investigator
+dated from his connection with the famous
+will case of Bartley <i>v.</i> Bartley and others, in which
+his then principals, Messrs. Crellan, Hunt &amp; Crellan,
+chiefly through his exertions established their extremely
+high reputation as solicitors. It was ten
+years or so after this case that Mr. Crellan senior&mdash;the
+head of the firm&mdash;retired into private life,
+and by an odd chance Hewitt's first meeting with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+him after that event was occasioned by another
+will difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>These were the terms of the telegram that
+brought Hewitt again into personal relations with
+his old principal:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Can you run down at once on a matter of private
+business? I will be at Guildford to meet eleven thirty-five
+from Waterloo. If later or prevented please wire.
+Crellan.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The day and the state of Hewitt's engagements
+suited, and there was full half an hour to catch
+the train. Taking, therefore, the small travelling-bag
+that always stood ready packed in case of any
+sudden excursion that presented the possibility of
+a night from home, he got early to Waterloo, and
+by half-past twelve was alighting at Guildford
+Station. Mr. Crellan, a hale, white-haired old gentleman,
+wearing gold-rimmed spectacles, was waiting
+with a covered carriage.</p>
+
+<p>"How d'ye do, Mr. Hewitt, how d'ye do?" the
+old gentleman exclaimed as soon as they met,
+grasping Hewitt's hand, and hurrying him toward
+the carriage. "I'm glad you've come, very glad.
+It isn't raining, and you might have preferred
+something more open, but I brought the brougham
+because I want to talk privately. I've been
+vegetating to such an extent for the last few
+years down here that any little occurrence out of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+the ordinary excites me, and I'm sure I couldn't
+have kept quiet till we had got indoors. It's
+been bad enough, keeping the thing to myself, already."</p>
+
+<p>The door shut, and the brougham started. Mr.
+Crellan laid his hand on Hewitt's knee, "I hope,"
+he said, "I haven't dragged you away from any important
+business?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," Hewitt replied, "you have chosen a most
+excellent time. Indeed, I did think of making a
+small holiday to-day, but your telegram&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes. Do you know, I was almost
+ashamed of having sent it after it had gone. Because,
+after all, the matter is, probably, really a
+very simple sort of affair that you can't possibly
+help me in. A few years ago I should have thought
+nothing of it, nothing at all. But as I have told
+you, I've got into such a dull, vegetable state of
+mind since I retired and have nothing to do that
+a little thing upsets me, and I haven't mental
+energy enough to make up my mind to go to dinner
+sometimes. But you're an old friend, and I'm
+sure you'll forgive my dragging you all down here
+on a matter that will, perhaps, seem ridiculously
+simple to you, a man in the thick of active business.
+If I hadn't known you so well I wouldn't
+have had the impudence to bother you. But
+never mind all that. I'll tell you.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Do you ever remember my speaking of an intimate
+friend, a Mr. Holford? No. Well, it's a
+long time ago, and perhaps I never happened to
+mention him. He was a most excellent man&mdash;old
+fellow, like me, you know; two or three years older,
+as a matter of fact. We were chums many years
+ago; in fact, we lodged in the same house when
+I was an articled clerk and he was a student at
+Guy's. He retired from the medical profession
+early, having come into a fortune, and came down
+here to live at the house we're going to; as a matter
+of fact, Wedbury Hall.</p>
+
+<p>"When I retired I came down and took up my
+quarters not far off, and we were a very excellent
+pair of old chums till last Monday&mdash;the day before
+yesterday&mdash;when my poor old friend died. He was
+pretty well in years&mdash;seventy-three&mdash;and a man
+can't live for ever. But I assure you it has upset
+me terribly, made a greater fool of me than ever, in
+fact, just when I ought to have my wits about me.</p>
+
+<p>"The reason I particularly want my wits just
+now, and the reason I have requisitioned yours, is
+this: that I can't find poor old Holford's will. I
+drew it up for him years ago, and by it I was appointed
+his sole executor. I am perfectly convinced
+that he cannot have destroyed it, because he told
+me everything concerning his affairs. I have always
+been his only adviser, in fact, and I'm sure he would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+have consulted me as to any change in his testamentary
+intentions before he made it. Moreover,
+there are reasons why I know he could not have
+wished to die intestate."</p>
+
+<p>"Which are&mdash;&mdash;?" queried Hewitt as Mr. Crellan
+paused in his statement.</p>
+
+<p>"Which are these: Holford was a widower, with
+no children of his own. His wife, who has been
+dead nearly fifteen years now, was a most excellent
+woman, a model wife, and would have been a model
+mother if she had been one at all. As it was she
+adopted a little girl, a poor little soul who was left
+an orphan at two years of age. The child's father,
+an unsuccessful man of business of the name of
+Garth, maddened by a sudden and ruinous loss, committed
+suicide, and his wife died of the shock occasioned
+by the calamity.</p>
+
+<p>"The child, as I have said, was taken by Mrs.
+Holford and made a daughter of, and my old friend's
+daughter she has been ever since, practically speaking.
+The poor old fellow couldn't possibly have
+been more attached to a daughter of his own, and
+on her part she couldn't possibly have been a better
+daughter than she was. She stuck by him night and
+day during his last illness, until she became rather
+ill herself, although of course there was a regular
+nurse always in attendance.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, in his will, Mr. Holford bequeathed rather<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+more than half of his very large property to this
+Miss Garth; that is to say, as residuary legatee, her
+interest in the will came to about that. The rest
+was distributed in various ways. Holford had
+largely spent the leisure of his retirement in scientific
+pursuits. So there were a few legacies to learned
+societies; all his servants were remembered; he left
+me a certain number of his books; and there was a
+very fair sum of money for his nephew, Mr. Cranley
+Mellis, the only near relation of Mr. Holford's still
+living. So that you see what the loss of this will
+may mean. Miss Garth, who was to have taken the
+greater part of her adoptive father's property, will
+not have one shilling's worth of claim on the estate
+and will be turned out into the world without a cent.
+One or two very old servants will be very awkwardly
+placed, too, with nothing to live on, and very little
+prospect of doing more work."</p>
+
+<p>"Everything will go to this nephew," said Hewitt,
+"of course?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course. That is unless I attempt to prove a
+rough copy of the will which I may possibly have by
+me. But even if I have such a thing and find it,
+long and costly litigation would be called for, and
+the result would probably be all against us."</p>
+
+<p>"You say you feel sure Mr. Holford did not destroy
+the will himself?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite sure he would never have done so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+without telling me of it; indeed, I am sure he would
+have consulted me first. Moreover, it can never
+have been his intention to leave Miss Garth utterly
+unprovided for; it would be the same thing as disinheriting
+his only daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you see him frequently?"</p>
+
+<p>"There's scarcely been a day when I haven't
+seen him since I have lived down here. During
+his illness&mdash;it lasted a month&mdash;I saw him every
+day."</p>
+
+<p>"And he said nothing of destroying his will?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing at all. On the contrary, soon after his
+first seizure&mdash;indeed, on the first visit at which I
+found him in bed&mdash;he said, after telling me how he
+felt, 'Everything's as I want it, you know, in case I
+go under.' That seemed to me to mean his will was
+still as he desired it to be."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, yes, it would seem so. But counsel on
+the other side (supposing there were another side)
+might quite as plausibly argue that he meant to die
+intestate, and had destroyed his will so that everything
+should be as he wanted it, in that sense. But
+what do you want me to do&mdash;find the will?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, if you can. It seemed to me that
+you, with your clever head, might be able to form a
+better judgment than I as to what has happened and
+who is responsible for it. Because if the will <i>has</i>
+been taken away, some one has taken it."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It seems probable. Have you told any one of
+your difficulty?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a soul. I came over as soon as I could
+after Mr. Holford's death, and Miss Garth gave me
+all the keys, because, as executor, the case being a
+peculiar one, I wished to see that all was in order,
+and, as you know, the estate is legally vested in the
+executor from the death of the testator, so that I
+was responsible for everything; although, of course,
+if there is no will I'm not executor. But I thought
+it best to keep the difficulty to myself till I saw
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite right. Is this Wedbury Hall?"</p>
+
+<p>The brougham had passed a lodge gate, and
+approached, by a wide drive, a fine old red brick
+mansion carrying the heavy stone dressings and
+copings distinctive of early eighteenth century domestic
+architecture.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Mr. Crellan, "this is the place. We
+will go straight to the study, I think, and then I
+can explain details."</p>
+
+<p>The study told the tale of the late Mr. Holford's
+habits and interests. It was half a library, half a
+scientific laboratory&mdash;pathological curiosities in
+spirits, a retort or two, test tubes on the writing-table,
+and a fossilized lizard mounted in a case,
+balanced the many shelves and cases of books
+disposed about the walls. In a recess between two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+book-cases stood a heavy, old-fashioned mahogany
+bureau.</p>
+
+<p>"Now it was in that bureau," Mr. Crellan explained,
+indicating it with his finger, "that Mr. Holford
+kept every document that was in the smallest
+degree important or valuable. I have seen him at it
+a hundred times, and he always maintained it was as
+secure as any iron safe. That may not have been
+altogether the fact, but the bureau is certainly a tremendously
+heavy and strong one. Feel it."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt took down the front and pulled out a
+drawer that Mr. Crellan unlocked for the purpose.</p>
+
+<p>"Solid Spanish mahogany an inch thick," was his
+verdict, "heavy, hard, and seasoned; not the sort of
+thing you can buy nowadays. Locks, Chubb's patent,
+early pattern, but not easily to be picked by
+anything short of a blast of gunpowder. If there
+are no marks on this bureau it hasn't been tampered
+with."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," Mr. Crellan pursued, "as I say, <i>that</i> was
+where Mr. Holford kept his will. I have often seen
+it when we have been here together, and this was
+the drawer, the top on the right, that he kept it in.
+The will was a mere single sheet of foolscap, and
+was kept, folded of course, in a blue envelope."</p>
+
+<p>"When did you yourself last actually see the
+will?"</p>
+
+<p>"I saw it in my friend's hand two days before he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+took to his bed. He merely lifted it in his hand to
+get at something else in the drawer, replaced it, and
+locked the drawer again."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course there are other drawers, bureaux, and
+so on, about the place. You have examined them
+carefully, I take it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've turned out ever possible receptacle for that
+will in the house, I positively assure you, and there
+isn't a trace of it."</p>
+
+<p>"You've thought of secret drawers, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. There are two in the bureau which I
+always knew of. Here they are." Mr. Crellan
+pressed his thumb against a partition of the pigeon-holes
+at the back of the bureau and a strip of
+mahogany flew out from below, revealing two shallow
+drawers with small ivory catches in lieu of
+knobs. "Nothing there at all. And this other, as
+I have said, was the drawer where the will was kept.
+The other papers kept in the same drawer are here
+as usual."</p>
+
+<p>"Did anybody else know where Mr. Holford
+kept his will?"</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody in the house, I should think. He
+was a frank, above-board sort of man. His adopted
+daughter knew, and the butler knew, and there was
+absolutely no reason why all the other servants
+shouldn't know; probably they did."</p>
+
+<p>"First," said Hewitt, "we will make quite sure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+there are no more secret drawers about this bureau.
+Lock the door in case anybody comes."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt took out every drawer of the bureau, and
+examined every part of each before he laid it aside.
+Then he produced a small pair of silver callipers and
+an ivory pocket-rule and went over every inch of
+the heavy framework, measuring, comparing, tapping,
+adding, and subtracting dimensions. In the
+end he rose to his feet satisfied. "There is most
+certainly nothing concealed there," he said.</p>
+
+<p>The drawers were put back, and Mr. Crellan
+suggested lunch. At Hewitt's suggestion it was
+brought to the study.</p>
+
+<p>"So far," Hewitt said, "we arrive at this: either
+Mr. Holford has destroyed his will, or he has most
+effectually concealed it, or somebody has stolen it.
+The first of these possibilities you don't favour."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe it is a possibility for a moment.
+I have told you why; and I knew Holford
+so well, you know. For the same reasons I am sure
+he never concealed it."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then. Somebody has stolen it. The
+question is, who?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is so."</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me that every one in this house had
+a direct and personal interest in preserving that
+will. The servants have all something left them,
+you say, and without the will that goes, of course.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+Miss Garth has the greatest possible interest in the
+will. The only person I have heard of as yet who
+would benefit by its loss or destruction would be the
+nephew, Mr. Mellis. There are no other relatives,
+you say, who would benefit by intestacy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not one."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what do you think yourself, now? Have
+you any suspicions?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan shrugged his shoulders. "I've no
+more right to suspicions than you have, I suppose,"
+he said. "Of course, if there are to be suspicions
+they can only point one way. Mr. Mellis is the only
+person who can gain by the disappearance of this
+will."</p>
+
+<p>"Just so, Now, what do you know of him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know much of the young man," Mr.
+Crellan said slowly. "I must say I never particularly
+took to him. He is rather a clever fellow, I
+believe. He was called to the bar some time ago,
+and afterwards studied medicine, I believe, with the
+idea of priming himself for a practice in medical
+jurisprudence. He took a good deal of interest in
+my old friend's researches, I am told&mdash;at any rate
+he <i>said</i> he did; he may have been thinking of his
+uncle's fortune. But they had a small tiff on some
+medical question. I don't know exactly what it was,
+but Mr. Holford objected to something&mdash;a method
+of research or something of that kind&mdash;as being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+dangerous and unprofessional. There was no actual
+rupture between them, you understand, but Mellis's
+visits slacked off, and there was a coolness."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Mr. Mellis now?"</p>
+
+<p>"In London, I believe."</p>
+
+<p>"Has he been in this house between the day you
+last saw the will in that drawer and yesterday, when
+you failed to find it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only once. He came to see his uncle two days
+before his death&mdash;last Saturday, in fact. He didn't
+stay long."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you see him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"What did he do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Merely came into the room for a few minutes&mdash;visitors
+weren't allowed to stay long&mdash;spoke a little
+to his uncle, and went back to town."</p>
+
+<p>"Did he do nothing else, or see anybody
+else?"</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Garth went out of the room with him as
+he left, and I should think they talked for a little
+before he went away, to judge by the time she was
+gone; but I don't know."</p>
+
+<p>"You are sure he went then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I saw him in the drive as I looked from the
+window."</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Garth, you say, has kept all the keys since
+the beginning of Mr. Holford's illness?"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, until she gave them up to me yesterday.
+Indeed, the nurse, who is rather a peppery customer,
+and was jealous of Miss Garth's presence in the sick
+room all along, made several difficulties about having
+to go to her for everything."</p>
+
+<p>"And there is no doubt of the bureau having
+been kept locked all the time?"</p>
+
+<p>"None at all. I have asked Miss Garth that&mdash;and,
+indeed, a good many other things&mdash;without saying
+why I wanted the information."</p>
+
+<p>"How are Mr. Mellis and Miss Garth affected
+toward one another&mdash;are they friendly?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes. Indeed, some while ago I rather
+fancied that Mellis was disposed to pay serious
+addresses in that quarter. He may have had a
+fancy that way, or he may have been attracted by
+the young lady's expectations. At any rate, nothing
+definite seems to have come of it as yet. But I
+must say&mdash;between ourselves, of course&mdash;I have
+more than once noticed a decided air of agitation,
+shyness perhaps, in Miss Garth when Mr. Mellis has
+been present. But, at any rate, that scarcely matters.
+She is twenty-four years of age now, and can
+do as she likes. Although, if I had anything to say
+in the matter&mdash;well, never mind."</p>
+
+<p>"You, I take it, have known Miss Garth a long
+time?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bless you, yes. Danced her on my knee<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+twenty years ago. I've been her 'Uncle Leonard'
+all her life."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I think we must at least let Miss Garth
+know of the loss of the will. Perhaps, when they
+have cleared away these plates, she will come here
+for a few minutes."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll go and ask her," Mr. Crellan answered, and
+having rung the bell, proceeded to find Miss Garth.</p>
+
+<p>Presently he returned with the lady. She was a
+slight, very pale young woman; no doubt rather
+pretty in ordinary, but now not looking her best.
+She was evidently worn and nervous from anxiety
+and want of sleep, and her eyes were sadly inflamed.
+As the wind slammed a loose casement behind her
+she started nervously, and placed her hand to her
+head.</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down at once, my dear," Mr. Crellan said;
+"sit down. This is Mr. Martin Hewitt, whom I
+have taken the liberty of inviting down here to help
+me in a very important matter. The fact is, my
+dear," Mr. Crellan added gravely, "I can't find your
+poor father's will."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Garth was not surprised. "I thought so,"
+she said mildly, "when you asked me about the
+bureau yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I need not say, my dear, what a serious
+thing it may be for you if that will cannot be
+found. So I hope you'll try and tell Mr. Hewitt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+here anything he wants to know as well as you can,
+without forgetting a single thing. I'm pretty sure
+that he will find it for us if it is to be found."</p>
+
+<p>"I understand, Miss Garth," Hewitt asked, "that
+the keys of that bureau never left your possession
+during the whole time of Mr. Holford's last illness,
+and that the bureau was kept locked?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that is so."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you ever have occasion to go to the bureau
+yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I have not touched it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you can answer for it, I presume, that
+the bureau was never unlocked by <i>any one</i> from the
+time Mr. Holford placed the keys in your hands
+till you gave them to Mr. Crellan?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I am sure of that."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good. Now is there any place on the
+whole premises that you can suggest where this will
+may possibly be hidden?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is no place that Mr. Crellan doesn't
+know of, I'm sure."</p>
+
+<p>"It is an old house, I observe," Hewitt pursued.
+"Do you know of any place of concealment in the
+structure&mdash;any secret doors, I mean, you know, or
+sliding panels, or hollow door frames, and so
+forth?"</p>
+
+<p>Miss Garth shook her head. "There is not a
+single place of the sort you speak of in the whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+building, so far as I know," she said, "and I have
+lived here almost all my life."</p>
+
+<p>"You knew the purport of Mr. Holford's will, I
+take it, and understand what its loss may mean to
+yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly."</p>
+
+<p>"Now I must ask you to consider carefully.
+Take your mind back to two or three days before
+Mr. Holford's illness began, and tell me if you can
+remember any single fact, occurrence, word, or hint
+from that day to this in any way bearing on the will
+or anything connected with it?"</p>
+
+<p>Miss Garth shook her head thoughtfully. "I
+can't remember the thing being mentioned by anybody,
+except perhaps by the nurse, who is rather a
+touchy sort of woman, and once or twice took it
+upon herself to hint that my recent anxiety was
+chiefly about my poor father's money. And that
+once, when I had done some small thing for him,
+my father&mdash;I have always called him father, you
+know&mdash;said that he wouldn't forget it, or that I
+should be rewarded, or something of that sort.
+Nothing else that I can remember in the remotest
+degree concerned the will."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Mellis said nothing about it, then?"</p>
+
+<p>Miss Garth changed colour slightly, but answered,
+"No, I only saw him to the door."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Miss Garth, I won't trouble you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+any further just now. But if you <i>can</i> remember
+anything more in the course of the next few hours
+it may turn out to be of great service."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Garth bowed and withdrew. Mr. Crellan
+shut the door behind her and returned to Hewitt.
+"<i>That</i> doesn't carry us much further," he said.
+"The more certain it seems that the will cannot
+have been got at, the more difficult our position
+is from a legal point of view. What shall we do
+now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is the nurse still about the place?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I believe so."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I'll speak to her."</p>
+
+<p>The nurse came in response to Mr. Crellan's
+summons: a sharp-featured, pragmatical woman of
+forty-five. She took the seat offered her, and
+waited for Hewitt's questions.</p>
+
+<p>"You were in attendance on Mr. Holford, I believe,
+Mrs. Turton, since the beginning of his last
+illness?"</p>
+
+<p>"Since October 24th."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you present when Mr. Mellis came to see
+his uncle last Saturday?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Can you tell me what took place?"</p>
+
+<p>"As to what the gentleman said to Mr. Holford,"
+the nurse replied, bridling slightly, "of
+course I don't know anything, it not being my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+business and not intended for my ears. Mr.
+Crellan was there, and knows as much as I do,
+and so does Miss Garth. I only know that Mr.
+Mellis stayed for a few minutes and then went
+out of the room with Miss Garth."</p>
+
+<p>"How long was Miss Garth gone?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know, ten minutes or a quarter of an
+hour, perhaps."</p>
+
+<p>"Now Mrs. Turton, I want you to tell me in
+confidence&mdash;it is very important&mdash;whether you, at
+any time, heard Mr. Holford during his illness say
+anything of his wishes as to how his property was
+to be left in case of his death?"</p>
+
+<p>The nurse started and looked keenly from Hewitt
+to Mr. Crellan and back again.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it the will you mean?" she asked sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Did he mention it?"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean you can't find the will, isn't that
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, suppose it is, what then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose won't do," the nurse answered
+shortly; "I <i>do</i> know something about the will,
+and I believe you can't find it."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure, Mrs. Turton, that if you know anything
+about the will you will tell Mr. Crellan in the
+interests of right and justice."</p>
+
+<p>"And who's to protect me against the spite of
+those I shall offend if I tell you?"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan interposed.</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever you tell us, Mrs. Turton," he said,
+"will be held in the strictest confidence, and the
+source of our information shall not be divulged.
+For that I give you my word of honour. And, I
+need scarcely add, I will see that you come to no
+harm by anything you may say."</p>
+
+<p>"Then the will <i>is</i> lost. I may understand
+that?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt's features were impassive and impenetrable.
+But in Mr. Crellan's disturbed face the
+nurse saw a plain answer in the affirmative.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, "I see that's the trouble.
+Well, I know who took it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then who was it?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Miss Garth!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Garth! Nonsense!" cried Mr. Crellan,
+starting upright. "Nonsense!"</p>
+
+<p>"It may be nonsense," the nurse replied slowly,
+with a monotonous emphasis on each word. "It
+may be nonsense, but it's a fact. I saw her
+take it."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan simply gasped. Hewitt drew his
+chair a little nearer.</p>
+
+<p>"If you saw her take it," he said gently, closely
+watching the woman's face the while, "then, of
+course, there's no doubt."</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you I saw her take it," the nurse re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>peated.
+"What was in it, and what her game was
+in taking it, I don't know. But it was in that
+bureau, wasn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;probably."</p>
+
+<p>"In the right hand top drawer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"A white paper in a blue envelope?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I saw her take it, as I said before. She
+unlocked that drawer before my eyes, took it out,
+and locked the drawer again."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan turned blankly to Hewitt, but
+Hewitt kept his eyes on the nurse's face.</p>
+
+<p>"When did this occur?" he asked, "and
+how?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was on Saturday night, rather late. Everybody
+was in bed but Miss Garth and myself, and
+she had been down to the dining-room for something.
+Mr. Holford was asleep, so as I wanted to
+re-fill the water-bottle, I took it up and went. As
+I was passing the door of this room that we are in
+now, I heard a noise, and looked in at the door,
+which was open. There was a candle on the table
+which had been left there earlier in the evening.
+Miss Garth was opening the top right hand drawer
+of <i>that</i> bureau"&mdash;Mrs. Turton stabbed her finger
+spitefully toward the piece of furniture, as though
+she owed it a personal grudge&mdash;"and I saw her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+take out a blue foolscap envelope, and as the flap
+was open, I could see the enclosed paper was white.
+She shut the drawer, locked it, and came out of the
+room with the envelope in her hand."</p>
+
+<p>"And what did you do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hurried on, and she came away without seeing
+me, and went in the opposite direction&mdash;toward
+the small staircase."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," Mr. Crellan ventured at a blurt,
+"perhaps she was walking in her sleep?"</p>
+
+<p>"That she wasn't!" the nurse replied, "for she
+came back to Mr. Holford's room almost as soon
+as I returned there, and asked some questions
+about the medicine&mdash;which was nothing new, for I
+must say she was very fond of interfering in things
+that were part of my business."</p>
+
+<p>"That is quite certain, I suppose," Hewitt
+remarked&mdash;"that she could not have been
+asleep?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite certain. She talked for about a quarter
+of an hour, and wanted to kiss Mr. Holford, which
+might have wakened him, before she went to bed.
+In fact, I may say we had a disagreement."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt did not take his steady gaze from the
+nurse's face for some seconds after she had finished
+speaking. Then he only said, "Thank you, Mrs.
+Turton. I need scarcely assure you, after what Mr.
+Crellan has said, that your confidence shall not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+be betrayed. I think that is all, unless you have
+more to tell us."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Turton bowed and rose. "There is nothing
+more," she said, and left the room.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as she had gone, "Is Mrs. Turton at all
+interested in the will," Hewitt asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No, there is nothing for her. She is a new-comer,
+you see. Perhaps," Mr. Crellan went on,
+struck by an idea, "she may be jealous, or something.
+She seems a spiteful woman&mdash;and really, I
+can't believe her story for a moment."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you see, it's absurd. Why should Miss
+Garth go to all this secret trouble to do herself
+an injury&mdash;to make a beggar of herself? And
+besides, she's not in the habit of telling barefaced
+lies. She distinctly assured us, you remember,
+that she had never been to the bureau for any
+purpose whatever."</p>
+
+<p>"But the nurse has an honest character, hasn't
+she?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, her character is excellent. Indeed, from
+all accounts, she is a very excellent woman, except
+for a desire to govern everybody, and a habit of
+spite if she is thwarted. But, of course, that sort
+of thing sometimes leads people rather far."</p>
+
+<p>"So it does," Hewitt replied. "But consider
+now. Is it not possible that Miss Garth, com<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>pletely
+infatuated with Mr. Mellis, thinks she is
+doing a noble thing for him by destroying the
+will and giving up her whole claim to his uncle's
+property? Devoted women do just such things,
+you know."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan stared, bent his head to his hand,
+and considered. "So they do, so they do," he
+said. "Insane foolery. Really, it's the sort of
+thing I can imagine her doing&mdash;she's honour and
+generosity itself. But then those lies," he resumed,
+sitting up and slapping his leg; "I can't
+believe she'd tell such tremendous lies as that for
+anybody. And with such a calm face, too&mdash;I'm
+sure she couldn't."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that's as it may be. You can scarcely
+set a limit to the lengths a woman will go on behalf
+of a man she loves. I suppose, by the bye,
+Miss Garth is not exactly what you would call a
+'strong-minded' woman?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, she's not that. She'd never get on in the
+world by herself. She's a good little soul, but
+nervous&mdash;very; and her month of anxiety, grief,
+and want of sleep seems to have broken her up."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Mellis knows of the death, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"I telegraphed to him at his chambers in London
+the first thing yesterday&mdash;Tuesday&mdash;morning,
+as soon as the telegraph office was open. He came
+here (as I've forgotten to tell you as yet) the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+thing this morning&mdash;before I was over here myself,
+in fact. He had been staying not far off&mdash;at Ockham,
+I think&mdash;and the telegram had been sent on.
+He saw Miss Garth, but couldn't stay, having to
+get back to London. I met him going away as I
+came, about eleven o'clock. Of course I said nothing
+about the fact that I couldn't find the will, but
+he will probably be down again soon, and may ask
+questions."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Hewitt replied. "And speaking of that
+matter, you can no doubt talk with Miss Garth on
+very intimate and familiar terms?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes&mdash;yes; I've told you what old friends
+we are."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you could manage, at some favourable
+opportunity to-day, to speak to her alone, and without
+referring to the will in any way, get to know,
+as circumspectly and delicately as you can, how she
+stands in regard to Mr. Mellis. Whether he is an
+accepted lover, or likely to be one, you know.
+Whatever answer you may get, you may judge, I
+expect, by her manner how things really are."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good&mdash;I'll seize the first chance. Meanwhile
+what to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, I'm afraid, except perhaps to examine
+other pieces of furniture as closely as we have examined
+this bureau."</p>
+
+<p>Other bureaux, desks, tables, and chests were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+examined fruitlessly. It was not until after dinner
+that Mr. Crellan saw a favourable opportunity of
+sounding Miss Garth as he had promised. Half an
+hour later he came to Hewitt in the study, more
+puzzled than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"There's no engagement between them," he reported,
+"secret or open, nor ever has been. It
+seems, from what I can make out, going to work
+as diplomatically as possible, that Mellis <i>did</i> propose
+to her, or something very near it, a time ago,
+and was point-blank refused. Altogether, Miss
+Garth's sentiment for him appears to be rather
+dislike than otherwise."</p>
+
+<p>"That rather knocks a hole in the theory of
+self-sacrifice, doesn't it?" Hewitt remarked. "I
+shall have to think over this, and sleep on it. It's
+possible that it may be necessary to-morrow for you
+to tax Miss Garth, point-blank, with having taken
+away the will. Still, I hope not."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope not, too," Mr. Crellan said, rather
+dubious as to the result of such an experiment.
+"She has been quite upset enough already. And,
+by the bye, she didn't seem any the better or more
+composed after Mellis' visit this morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Still, <i>then</i> the will was gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>And so Hewitt and Mr. Crellan talked on late
+into the evening, turning over every apparent possi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>bility
+and finding reason in none. The household
+went to bed at ten, and, soon after, Miss Garth
+came to bid Mr. Crellan good-night. It had been
+settled that both Martin Hewitt and Mr. Crellan
+should stay the night at Wedbury Hall.</p>
+
+<p>Soon all was still, and the ticking of the tall
+clock in the hall below could be heard as distinctly
+as though it were in the study, while the rain
+without dropped from eaves and sills in regular
+splashes. Twelve o'clock struck, and Mr. Crellan
+was about to suggest retirement, when the sound
+of a light footstep startled Hewitt's alert ear.
+He raised his hand to enjoin silence, and stepped
+to the door of the room, Mr. Crellan following
+him.</p>
+
+<p>There was a light over the staircase, seven or
+eight yards away, and down the stairs came Miss
+Garth in dressing gown and slippers; she turned at
+the landing and vanished in a passage leading to
+the right.</p>
+
+<p>"Where does that lead to?" Hewitt whispered
+hurriedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Toward the small staircase&mdash;other end of
+house," Mr. Crellan replied in the same tones.</p>
+
+<p>"Come quietly," said Hewitt, and stepped lightly
+after Miss Garth, Mr. Crellan at his heels.</p>
+
+<p>She was nearing the opposite end of the passage,
+walking at a fair pace and looking neither to right<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+nor left. There was another light over the smaller
+staircase at the end. Without hesitation Miss Garth
+turned down the stairs till about half down the
+flight, and then stopped and pressed her hand
+against the oak wainscot.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately the vertical piece of framing against
+which she had placed her hand turned on central
+pivots top and bottom, revealing a small recess,
+three feet high and little more than six inches
+wide. Miss Garth stooped and felt about at the
+bottom of this recess for several seconds. Then
+with every sign of extreme agitation and horror she
+withdrew her hand empty, and sank on the stairs.
+Her head rolled from side to side on her shoulders,
+and beads of perspiration stood on her forehead.
+Hewitt with difficulty restrained Mr. Crellan from
+going to her assistance.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, with a sort of shuddering sigh, Miss
+Garth rose, and after standing irresolute for a moment,
+descended the flight of stairs to the bottom.
+There she stopped again, and pressing her hand to
+her forehead, turned and began to re-ascend the
+stairs.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt touched his companion's arm, and the
+two hastily but noiselessly made their way back
+along the passage to the study. Miss Garth left
+the open framing as it was, reached the top of the
+landing, and without stopping proceeded along the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+passage and turned up the main staircase, while
+Hewitt and Mr. Crellan still watched her from the
+study door.</p>
+
+<p>At the top of the flight she turned to the right,
+and up three or four more steps toward her own
+room. There she stopped, and leaned thoughtfully
+on the handrail.</p>
+
+<p>"Go up," whispered Hewitt to Mr. Crellan, "as
+though you were going to bed. Appear surprised
+to see her; ask if she isn't well, and, if you can,
+manage to repeat that question of mine about
+secret hiding-places in the house."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan nodded and started quickly up the
+stairs. Half-way up he turned his head, and, as
+he went on, "Why, Nelly, my dear," he said,
+"what's the matter? Aren't you well?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan acted his part well, and waiting below,
+Hewitt heard this dialogue:</p>
+
+<p>"No, uncle, I don't feel very well, but it's nothing.
+I think my room seems close. I can scarcely
+breathe."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it isn't close to-night. You'll be catching
+cold, my dear. Go and have a good sleep; you
+mustn't worry that wise little head of yours, you
+know. Mr. Hewitt and I have been making quite
+a night of it, but I'm off to bed now."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope they've made you both quite comfortable,
+uncle?"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes; capital, capital. We've been talking
+over business, and, no doubt, we shall put that
+matter all in order soon. By the bye, I suppose
+since you saw Mr. Hewitt you haven't happened
+to remember anything more to tell him?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"You still can't remember any hiding-places or
+panels, or that sort of thing in the wainscot or
+anywhere?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I'm sure I don't know of any, and I don't
+believe for a moment that any exist."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite sure of that, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes."</p>
+
+<p>"All right. Now go to bed. You'll catch <i>such</i>
+a cold in these draughty landings. Come, I won't
+move a step till I see your door shut behind you.
+Good-night."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-night, uncle."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan came downstairs again with a face
+of blank puzzlement.</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't have believed it," he assured Martin
+Hewitt; "positively I wouldn't have believed
+she'd have told such a lie, and with such confidence,
+too. There's something deep and horrible
+here, I'm afraid. What does it mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"We'll talk of that afterwards," Hewitt replied.
+"Come now and take a look at that recess."</p>
+
+<p>They went, quietly still, to the small staircase,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+and there, with a candle, closely examined the recess.
+It was a mere box, three feet high, a foot or
+a little more deep, and six or seven inches wide.
+The piece of oak framing, pivoted to the stair at
+the bottom and to a horizontal piece of framing
+at the top, stood edge forward, dividing the opening
+down the centre. There was nothing whatever
+in the recess.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt ascertained that there was no catch, the
+plank simply remaining shut by virtue of fitting
+tightly, so that nothing but pressure on the
+proper part was requisite to open it. He had
+closed the plank and turned to speak to Mr.
+Crellan, when another interruption occurred.</p>
+
+<p>On each floor the two staircases were joined
+by passages, and the ground-floor passage, from the
+foot of the flight they were on, led to the entrance
+hall. Distinct amid the loud clicking of the hall
+clock, Hewitt now heard a sound, as of a person's
+foot shifting on a stone step.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan heard it too, and each glanced at
+the other. Then Hewitt, shading the candle with
+his hand, led the way to the hall. There they listened
+for several seconds&mdash;almost an hour&mdash;it
+seemed&mdash;and then the noise was repeated. There
+was no doubt of it. It was at the other side of
+the front door.</p>
+
+<p>In answer to Hewitt's hurried whispers, Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+Crellan assured him that there was no window
+from which, in the dark, a view could be got of a
+person standing outside the door. Also that any
+other way out would be equally noisy, and would entail
+the circuit of the house. The front door was
+fastened by three heavy bolts, an immense old-fashioned
+lock, and a bar. It would take nearly a
+minute to open at least, even if everything went
+easily. But, as there was no other way, Hewitt
+determined to try it. Handing the candle to his
+companion, he first lifted the bar, conceiving that
+it might be done with the least noise. It went
+easily, and, handling it carefully, Hewitt let it hang
+from its rivet without a sound. Just then, glancing
+at Mr. Crellan, he saw that he was forgetting to
+shade the candle, whose rays extended through the
+fanlight above the door, and probably through the
+wide crack under it. But it was too late. At the
+same moment the light was evidently perceived
+from outside; there was a hurried jump from the
+steps, and for an instant a sound of running on
+gravel. Hewitt tore back the bolts, flung the
+door open, and dashed out into the darkness,
+leaving Mr. Crellan on the doorstep with the
+candle.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt was gone, perhaps, five or ten minutes,
+although to Mr. Crellan&mdash;standing there at the
+open door in a state of high nervous tension, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+with no notion of what was happening or what it
+all meant&mdash;the time seemed an eternity. When at
+last Hewitt reached the door again, "What was
+it?" asked Mr. Crellan, much agitated. "Did you
+see? Have you caught them?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I hadn't a chance," he said. "The wall is low
+over there, and there's a plantation of trees at the
+other side. But I think&mdash;yes, I begin to think&mdash;that
+I may possibly be able to see my way through this
+business in a little while. See this?"</p>
+
+<p>On the top step in the sheltered porch there
+remained the wet prints of two feet. Hewitt took
+a letter from his pocket, opened it out, spread it
+carefully over the more perfect of the two marks,
+pressed it lightly and lifted it. Then, when the
+door was shut, he produced his pocket scissors,
+and with great care cut away the paper round the
+wet part, leaving a piece, of course, the shape of a
+boot sole.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," said Hewitt, "we may get at something
+after all. Don't ask me to tell you anything now;
+I don't know anything, as a matter of fact. I
+hope this is the end of the night's entertainment,
+but I'm afraid the case is rather an unpleasant
+business. There is nothing for us to do now but
+to go to bed, I think. I suppose there's a handy
+man kept about the place?"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he's gardener and carpenter and carpet-beater,
+and so on."</p>
+
+<p>"Good! Where's his sanctum? Where does he
+keep his shovels and carpet sticks?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the shed by the coach house, I believe. I
+think it's generally unlocked."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good. We've earned a night's rest, and
+now we'll have it."</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, after breakfast, Hewitt took
+Mr. Crellan into the study.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you manage," he said, "to send Miss
+Garth out for a walk this morning&mdash;with somebody?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can send her out for a ride with the groom&mdash;unless
+she thinks it wouldn't be the thing to go
+riding so soon after her bereavement."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, that will do. Send her at once,
+and see that she goes. Call it doctor's orders; say
+she must go for her health's sake&mdash;anything."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan departed, used his influence, and in
+half an hour Miss Garth had gone.</p>
+
+<p>"I was up pretty early this morning," Hewitt
+remarked on Mr. Crellan's return to the study,
+"and, among other things, I sent a telegram to
+London. Unless my eyes deceive me, a boy with
+a peaked cap&mdash;a telegraph boy, in fact&mdash;is coming
+up the drive this moment. Yes, he is. It is probably
+my answer."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In a few minutes a telegram was brought in.
+Hewitt read it and then asked,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Your friend Mr. Mellis, I understand, was
+going straight to town yesterday morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Read that, then."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan took the telegram and read:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Mellis did not sleep at chambers last night. Been
+out of town for some days past. Kerrett.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan looked up.</p>
+
+<p>"Who's Kerrett?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Lad in my office; sharp fellow. You see,
+Mellis didn't go to town after all. As a matter of
+fact, I believe he was nearer this place than we
+thought. You said he had a disagreement with
+his uncle because of scientific practices which the
+old gentleman considered 'dangerous and unprofessional,'
+I think?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that was the case."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, then the key to all the mystery of the will
+is in this room."</p>
+
+<p>"Where?"</p>
+
+<p>"There." Hewitt pointed to the book-cases.
+"Read Bernheim's <i>Suggestive Therapeutics</i>, and
+one or two books of Heidenhain's and Björnström's
+and you'll see the thing more clearly
+than you can without them; but that would be
+rather a long sort of job, so&mdash;&mdash;but why, who's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+this? Somebody coming up the drive in a fly,
+isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Mr. Crellan replied, looking out of the
+window. Presently he added, "It's Cranley Mellis."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," said Hewitt, "he won't trouble us for a
+little. I'll bet you a penny cake he goes first by
+himself to the small staircase and tries that secret
+recess. If you get a little way along the passage
+you will be able to see him; but that will scarcely
+matter&mdash;I can see you don't guess now what I am
+driving at."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't in the least."</p>
+
+<p>"I told you the names of the books in which
+you could read the matter up; but that would be
+too long for the present purpose. The thing is
+fairly well summarised, I see, in that encyclopædia
+there in the corner. I have put a marker in volume
+seven. Do you mind opening it at that place and
+seeing for yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan, doubtful and bewildered, reached
+the volume. It opened readily, and in the place
+where it opened lay a blue foolscap envelope. The
+old gentleman took the envelope, drew from it
+a white paper, stared first at the paper, then at
+Hewitt, then at the paper again, let the volume
+slide from his lap, and gasped,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;why&mdash;it's the will!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, so I thought," said Hewitt, catching the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+book as it fell. "But don't lose this place in the
+encyclopædia. Read the name of the article.
+What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan looked absent-mindedly at the title,
+holding the will before him all the time. Then, mechanically,
+he read aloud the word, "<i>Hypnotism</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Hypnotism it is," Hewitt answered. "A dangerous
+and terrible power in the hands of an unscrupulous
+man."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;but how? I don't understand it. This&mdash;this
+is the real will, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Look at it; you know best."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan looked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, "this certainly is the will. But
+where did it come from? It hasn't been in this book
+all the time, has it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Didn't I tell you I put it there myself as
+a marker? But come, you'll understand my explanation
+better if I first read you a few lines from this
+article. See here now:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>'Although hypnotism has power for good when
+properly used by medical men, it is an exceedingly
+dangerous weapon in the hands of the unskilful or
+unscrupulous. Crimes have been committed by persons
+who have been hypnotised. Just as a person
+when hypnotised is rendered extremely impressionable,
+and therefore capable of receiving beneficial
+suggestions, so he is nearly as liable to receive sug<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>gestions
+for evil; and it is quite possible for an
+hypnotic subject, while under hypnotic influence, to
+be impressed with the belief that he is to commit
+some act after the influence is removed, and that act
+he is safe to commit, acting at the time as an automaton.
+Suggestions may be thus made of which
+the subject, in his subsequent uninfluenced moments,
+has no idea, but which he will proceed to carry out
+automatically at the time appointed. In the case of
+a complete state of hypnotism the subject has subsequently
+no recollection whatever of what has happened.
+Persons whose will or nerve power has been
+weakened by fear or other similar causes can be
+hypnotised without consent on their part.'"</p>
+
+<p>"There now, what do you make of that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, do you mean that Miss Garth has been
+hypnotised by&mdash;by&mdash;Cranley Mellis?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think that is the case; indeed, I am pretty
+sure of it. Notice, on the occasion of each of his
+last two visits, he was alone with Miss Garth for
+some little time. On the evening following each of
+those visits she does something which she afterwards
+knows nothing about&mdash;something connected with
+the disappearance of this will, the only thing standing
+between Mr. Mellis and the whole of his uncle's
+property. Who could have been in a weaker nervous
+state than Miss Garth has been lately? Remember,
+too, on the visit of last Saturday, while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+Miss Garth says she only showed Mellis to the door,
+both you and the nurse speak of their being gone
+some little time. Miss Garth must have forgotten
+what took place then, when Mellis hypnotised her,
+and impressed on her the suggestion that she should
+take Mr. Holford's will that night, long after he&mdash;Mellis&mdash;had
+gone, and when he could not be suspected
+of knowing anything of it. Further, that
+she should, at that time when her movements would
+be less likely to be observed, secrete that will in a
+place of hiding known only to himself."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear, dear, what a rascal! Do you really think
+he did that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not only that, but I believe he came here
+yesterday morning while you were out to get the
+will from the recess. The recess, by the bye, I expect
+he discovered by accident on one of his visits
+(he has been here pretty often, I suppose, altogether),
+and kept the secret in case it might be useful.
+Yesterday, not finding the will there, he hypnotised
+Miss Garth once again, and conveyed the suggestion
+that, at midnight last night, she should take the will
+from wherever she had put it and pass it to him
+under the front door."</p>
+
+<p>"What, do you mean it was he you chased across
+the grounds last night?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is a thing I am pretty certain of. If we
+had Mr. Mellis's boot here we could make sure by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+comparing it with the piece of paper I cut out, as
+you will remember, in the entrance hall. As we
+have the will, though, that will scarcely be necessary.
+What he will do now, I expect, will be to go to
+the recess again on the vague chance of the
+will being there now, after all, assuming that his
+second dose of mesmerism has somehow miscarried.
+If Miss Garth were here he might try his
+tricks again, and that is why I got you to send
+her out."</p>
+
+<p>"And where did you find the will?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now you come to practical details. You will
+remember that I asked about the handyman's tool-house?
+Well, I paid it a visit at six o'clock this
+morning, and found therein some very excellent
+carpenter's tools in a chest. I took a selection of
+them to the small staircase, and took out the tread
+of a stair&mdash;the one that the pivoted framing-plank
+rested on."</p>
+
+<p>"And you found the will there?"</p>
+
+<p>"The will, as I rather expected when I examined
+the recess last night, had slipped down a rather wide
+crack at the end of the stair timber, which, you
+know, formed, so to speak, the floor of the recess.
+The fact was, the stair-tread didn't quite reach as
+far as the back of the recess. The opening wasn't
+very distinct to see, but I soon felt it with my fingers.
+When Miss Garth, in her hypnotic condition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+on Saturday night, dropped the will into the recess,
+it shot straight to the back corner and fell down the
+slit. That was why Mellis found it empty, and why
+Miss Garth also found it empty on returning there
+last night under hypnotic influence. You observed
+her terrible state of nervous agitation when she
+failed to carry out the command that haunted her.
+It was frightful. Something like what happens to a
+suddenly awakened somnambulist, perhaps. Anyway,
+that is all over. I found the will under the end
+of the stair-tread, and here it is. If you will come
+to the small staircase now you shall see where the
+paper slipped out of sight. Perhaps we shall meet
+Mr. Mellis."</p>
+
+<p>"He's a scoundrel," said Mr. Crellan. "It's a
+pity we can't punish him."</p>
+
+<p>"That's impossible, of course. Where's your
+proof? And if you had any I'm not sure that a
+hypnotist is responsible at law for what his subject
+does. Even if he were, moving a will from
+one part of the house to another is scarcely a
+legal crime. The explanation I have given you
+accounts entirely for the disturbed manner of Miss
+Garth in the presence of Mellis. She merely felt
+an indefinite sense of his power over her. Indeed,
+there is all the possibility that, finding her an easy
+subject, he had already practised his influence by
+way of experiment. A hypnotist, as you will see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+in the books, has always an easier task with a
+person he has hypnotised before."</p>
+
+<p>As Hewitt had guessed, in the corridor they
+met Mr. Mellis. He was a thin, dark man of
+about thirty-five, with large, bony features, and
+a slight stoop. Mr. Crellan glared at him ferociously.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, and what do you want?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Mellis looked surprised. "Really, that's a
+very extraordinary remark, Mr. Crellan," he said.
+"This is my late uncle's house. I might, with at
+least as much reason, ask you what you want."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm here, sir, as Mr. Holford's executor."</p>
+
+<p>"Appointed by will?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"And is the will in existence?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;the fact is&mdash;we couldn't find it&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Then, what do you mean, sir, by calling yourself
+an executor with no will to warrant you?"
+interrupted Mellis. "Get out of this house. If
+there's no will, I administrate."</p>
+
+<p>"But there <i>is</i> a will," roared Mr. Crellan, shaking
+it in his face. "There is a will. I didn't say
+we hadn't found it yet, did I? There <i>is</i> a will, and
+here it is in spite of all your diabolical tricks, with
+your scoundrelly hypnotism and secret holes, and
+the rest of it! Get out of this place, sir, or I'll have
+you thrown out of the window!"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mr. Mellis shrugged his shoulders with an appearance
+of perfect indifference. "If you've a will
+appointing you executor it's all right, I suppose,
+although I shall take care to hold you responsible
+for any irregularities. As I don't in the least understand
+your conduct, unless it is due to drink, I'll
+leave you." And with that he went.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crellan boiled with indignation for a minute,
+and then turning to Hewitt, "I say, I hope it's all
+right," he said, "connecting him with all this queer
+business?"</p>
+
+<p>"We shall soon see," replied Hewitt, "if you'll
+come and look at the pivoted plank."</p>
+
+<p>They went to the small staircase, and Hewitt
+once again opened the recess. Within lay a blue
+foolscap envelope, which Hewitt picked up. "See,"
+he said, "it is torn at the corner. He has been
+here and opened it. It's a fresh envelope, and I
+left it for him this morning, with the corner
+gummed down a little so that he would have to tear
+it in opening. This is what was inside," Hewitt
+added, and laughed aloud as he drew forth a rather
+crumpled piece of white paper. "It was only a
+childish trick after all," he concluded, "but I
+always liked a small practical joke on occasion."
+He held out the crumpled paper, on which was
+inscribed in large capital letters the single word&mdash;"SOLD."</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_CASE_OF_THE_MISSING_HAND" id="THE_CASE_OF_THE_MISSING_HAND"></a>THE CASE OF THE MISSING HAND.</h2>
+
+
+<p>I think I have recorded in another place Hewitt's
+frequent aphorism that "there is nothing in
+this world that is at all possible that has not happened
+or is not happening in London." But there
+are many strange happenings in this matter-of-fact
+country and in these matter-of-fact times that occur
+far enough from London. Fantastic crimes, savage
+revenges, mediæval superstitions, horrible cruelty,
+though less in sight, have been no more extinguished
+by the advent of the nineteenth century
+than have the ancient races who practised them in
+the dark ages. Some of the races have become civilized,
+and some of the savageries are heard of no
+more. But there are survivals in both cases. I say
+these things having in my mind a particular case
+that came under the personal notice of both Hewitt
+and myself&mdash;an affair that brought one up standing
+with a gasp and a doubt of one's era.</p>
+
+<p>My good uncle, the Colonel, was not in the habit
+of gathering large house parties at his place at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+Ratherby, partly because the place was not a great
+one, and partly because the Colonel's gout was. But
+there was an excellent bit of shooting for two or
+three guns, and even when he was unable to leave
+the house himself, my uncle was always pleased if
+some good friend were enjoying a good day's sport
+in his territory. As to myself, the good old soul
+was in a perpetual state of offence because I visited
+him so seldom, though whenever my scant holidays
+fell in a convenient time of the year I was never
+insensible to the attractions of the Ratherby stubble.
+More than once had I sat by the old gentleman
+when his foot was exceptionally troublesome,
+amusing him with accounts of some of the doings
+of Martin Hewitt, and more than once had my uncle
+expressed his desire to meet Hewitt himself, and
+commissioned me with an invitation to be presented
+to Hewitt at the first likely opportunity, for a joint
+excursion to Ratherby. At length I persuaded
+Hewitt to take a fortnight's rest, coincident with
+a little vacation of my own, and we got down to
+Ratherby within a few days past September the 1st,
+and before a gun had been fired at the Colonel's bit
+of shooting. The Colonel himself we found confined
+to the house with his foot on the familiar rest,
+and though ourselves were the only guests, we managed
+to do pretty well together. It was during this
+short holiday that the case I have mentioned arose.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When first I began to record some of the more
+interesting of Hewitt's operations, I think I explained
+that such cases as I myself had not witnessed
+I should set down in impersonal narrative
+form, without intruding myself. The present case,
+so far as Hewitt's work was concerned, I saw, but
+there were circumstances which led up to it that we
+only fully learned afterwards. These circumstances,
+however, I shall put in their proper place&mdash;at the
+beginning.</p>
+
+<p>The Fosters were a fairly old Ratherby family,
+of whom Mr. John Foster had died by an accident
+at the age of about forty, leaving a wife twelve
+years younger than himself and three children, two
+boys and one girl, who was the youngest. The boys
+grew up strong, healthy, out-of-door young ruffians,
+with all the tastes of sportsmen, and all the qualities,
+good and bad, natural to lads of fairly well-disposed
+character allowed a great deal too much of their
+own way from the beginning.</p>
+
+<p>Their only real bad quality was an unfortunate
+knack of bearing malice, and a certain savage vindictiveness
+towards such persons as they chose to
+consider their enemies. With the louts of the village
+they were at unceasing war, and, indeed, once
+got into serious trouble for peppering the butcher's
+son (who certainly was a great blackguard) with
+sparrow-shot. At the usual time they went to Ox<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>ford
+together, and were fraternally sent down together
+in their second year, after enjoying a spell of
+rustication in their first. The offence was never
+specifically mentioned about Ratherby, but was rumoured
+of as something particularly outrageous.</p>
+
+<p>It was at this time, sixteen years or thereabout
+after the death of their father, that Henry and Robert
+Foster first saw and disliked Mr. Jonas Sneathy,
+a director of penny banks and small insurance
+offices. He visited Ranworth (the Fosters' home) a
+great deal more than the brothers thought necessary,
+and, indeed, it was not for lack of rudeness on
+their part that Mr. Sneathy failed to understand, as
+far as they were concerned, his room was preferred
+to his company.</p>
+
+<p>But their mother welcomed him, and in the end
+it was announced that Mrs. Foster was to marry
+again, and that after that her name would be Mrs.
+Sneathy.</p>
+
+<p>Hereupon there were violent scenes at Ranworth.
+Henry and Robert Foster denounced their
+prospective father-in-law as a fortune-hunter, a snuffler,
+a hypocrite. They did not stop at broad hints
+as to the honesty of his penny banks and insurance
+offices, and the house straightway became a house of
+bitter strife. The marriage took place, and it was
+not long before Mr. Sneathy's real character became
+generally obvious. For months he was a model, if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+somewhat sanctimonious husband, and his influence
+over his wife was complete. Then he discovered
+that her property had been strictly secured by her
+first husband's will, and that, willing as she might
+be, she was unable to raise money for her new husband's
+benefit, and was quite powerless to pass to
+him any of her property by deed of gift. Hereupon
+the man's nature showed itself. Foolish woman as
+Mrs. Sneathy might be, she was a loving, indeed, an
+infatuated wife; but Sneathy repaid her devotion by
+vulgar derision, never hesitating to state plainly
+that he had married her for his own profit, and that
+he considered himself swindled in the result. More,
+he even proceeded to blows and other practical
+brutality of a sort only devisable by a mean and
+ugly nature. This treatment, at first secret, became
+open, and in the midst of it Mr. Sneathy's penny
+banks and insurance offices came to a grievous
+smash all at once, and everybody wondered how Mr.
+Sneathy kept out of gaol.</p>
+
+<p>Keep out of gaol he did, however, for he had
+taken care to remain on the safe side of the law,
+though some of his co-directors learnt the taste
+of penal servitude. But he was beggared, and
+lived, as it were, a mere pensioner in his wife's
+house. Here his brutality increased to a frightful
+extent, till his wife, already broken in health in
+consequence, went in constant fear of her life, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+Miss Foster passed a life of weeping misery. All
+her friends' entreaties, however, could not persuade
+Mrs. Sneathy to obtain a legal separation from
+her husband. She clung to him with the excuse&mdash;for
+it was no more&mdash;that she hoped to win him to
+kindness by submission, and with a pathetic infatuation
+that seemed to increase as her bodily strength
+diminished.</p>
+
+<p>Henry and Robert, as may be supposed, were
+anything but silent in these circumstances. Indeed,
+they broke out violently again and again, and
+more than once went near permanently injuring
+their worthy father-in-law. Once especially, when
+Sneathy, absolutely without provocation, made a
+motion to strike his wife in their presence, there
+was a fearful scene. The two sprang at him like
+wild beasts, knocked him down and dragged him to
+the balcony with the intention of throwing him out
+of the window. But Mrs. Sneathy impeded them,
+hysterically imploring them to desist.</p>
+
+<p>"If you lift your hand to my mother," roared
+Henry, gripping Sneathy by the throat till his fat
+face turned blue, and banging his head against the
+wall, "if you lift your hand to my mother again I'll
+chop it off&mdash;I will! I'll chop it off and drive it
+down your throat!"</p>
+
+<p>"We'll do worse," said Robert, white and frantic
+with passion, "we'll hang you&mdash;hang you to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+door! You're a proved liar and thief, and you're
+worse than a common murderer. I'd hang you to
+the front door for twopence!"</p>
+
+<p>For a few days Sneathy was comparatively quiet,
+cowed by their violence. Then he took to venting
+redoubled spite on his unfortunate wife, always in
+the absence of her sons, well aware that she would
+never inform them. On their part, finding him
+apparently better behaved in consequence of their
+attack, they thought to maintain his wholesome
+terror, and scarcely passed him without a menace,
+taking a fiendish delight in repeating the threats
+they had used during the scene, by way of keeping
+it present to his mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Take care of your hands, sir," they would say.
+"Keep them to yourself, or, by George, we'll take
+'em off with a billhook!"</p>
+
+<p>But his revenge for all this Sneathy took unobserved
+on their mother. Truly a miserable
+household.</p>
+
+<p>Soon, however, the brothers left home, and went
+to London by way of looking for a profession.
+Henry began a belated study of medicine, and
+Robert made a pretence of reading for the bar.
+Indeed, their departure was as much as anything a
+consequence of the earnest entreaty of their sister,
+who saw that their presence at home was an exasperation
+to Sneathy, and aggravated her mother's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+secret sufferings. They went, therefore; but at
+Ranworth things became worse.</p>
+
+<p>Little was allowed to be known outside the
+house, but it was broadly said that Mr. Sneathy's
+behaviour had now become outrageous beyond
+description. Servants left faster than new ones
+could be found, and gave their late employer the
+character of a raving maniac. Once, indeed, he
+committed himself in the village, attacking with
+his walking-stick an inoffensive tradesman who
+had accidentally brushed against him, and immediately
+running home. This assault had to be compounded
+for by a payment of fifty pounds. And
+then Henry and Robert Foster received a most
+urgent letter from their sister requesting their immediate
+presence at home.</p>
+
+<p>They went at once, of course, and the servants'
+account of what occurred was this. When the
+brothers arrived Mr. Sneathy had just left the
+house. The brothers were shut up with their
+mother and sister for about a quarter of an hour,
+and then left them and came out to the stable
+yard together. The coachman (he was a new man,
+who had only arrived the day before) overheard a
+little of their talk as they stood by the door.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Henry said that "the thing must be done,
+and at once. There are two of us, so that it ought
+to be easy enough." And afterwards Mr. Robert<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+said, "You'll know best how to go about it, as a
+doctor." After which Mr. Henry came towards
+the coachman and asked in what direction Mr.
+Sneathy had gone. The coachman replied that it
+was in the direction of Ratherby Wood, by the
+winding footpath that led through it. But as he
+spoke he distinctly with the corner of his eye saw
+the other brother take a halter from a hook by the
+stable door and put it into his coat pocket.</p>
+
+<p>So far for the earlier events, whereof I learned
+later bit by bit. It was on the day of the arrival
+of the brothers Foster at their old home, and,
+indeed, little more than two hours after the incident
+last set down, that news of Mr. Sneathy
+came to Colonel Brett's place, where Hewitt and
+I were sitting and chatting with the Colonel. The
+news was that Mr. Sneathy had committed suicide&mdash;had
+been found hanging, in fact, to a tree in
+Ratherby Wood, just by the side of the footpath.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt and I had of course at this time never
+heard of Sneathy, and the Colonel told us what
+little he knew. He had never spoken to the man,
+he said&mdash;indeed, nobody in the place outside Ranworth
+would have anything to do with him. "He's
+certainly been an unholy scoundrel over those poor
+people's banks," said my uncle, "and if what they
+say's true, he's been about as bad as possible to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+his wretched wife. He must have been pretty
+miserable, too, with all his scoundrelism, for he was
+a completely ruined man, without a chance of retrieving
+his position, and detested by everybody.
+Indeed, some of his recent doings, if what I have
+heard is to be relied on, have been very much those
+of a madman. So that, on the whole, I'm not much
+surprised. Suicide's about the only crime, I suppose,
+that he has never experimented with till now,
+and, indeed, it's rather a service to the world at
+large&mdash;his only service, I expect."</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel sent a man to make further inquiries,
+and presently this man returned with the
+news that now it was said that Mr. Sneathy had
+not committed suicide, but had been murdered.
+And hard on the man's heels came Mr. Hardwick,
+a neighbour of my uncle's and a fellow J. P. He
+had had the case reported to him, it seemed, as
+soon as the body had been found, and had at once
+gone to the spot. He had found the body hanging&mdash;<i>and
+with the right hand cut off</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a murder, Brett," he said, "without doubt&mdash;a
+most horrible case of murder and mutilation.
+The hand is cut off and taken away, but whether the
+atrocity was committed before or after the hanging
+of course I can't say. But the missing hand makes
+it plainly a case of murder, and not suicide. I've
+come to consult you about issuing a warrant, for I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+think there's no doubt as to the identity of the
+murderers."</p>
+
+<p>"That's a good job," said the Colonel, "else we
+should have had some work for Mr. Martin Hewitt
+here, which wouldn't be fair, as he's taking a rest.
+Whom do you think of having arrested?"</p>
+
+<p>"The two young Fosters. It's plain as it can
+be&mdash;and a most revolting crime too, bad as Sneathy
+may have been. They came down from London
+to-day and went out deliberately to it, it's clear.
+They were heard talking of it, asked as to the
+direction in which he had gone, and followed him&mdash;and
+with a rope."</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't that rather an unusual form of murder&mdash;hanging?"
+Hewitt remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps it is," Mr. Hardwick replied; "but it's
+the case here plain enough. It seems, in fact, that
+they had a way of threatening to hang him and
+even to cut off his hand if he used it to strike
+their mother. So that they appear to have carried
+out what might have seemed mere idle threats in a
+diabolically savage way. Of course they <i>may</i> have
+strangled him first and hanged him after, by way
+of carrying out their threat and venting their spite
+on the mutilated body. But that they did it is plain
+enough for me. I've spent an hour or two over it,
+and feel I am certainly more than justified in ordering
+their apprehension. Indeed, they were with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+him at the time, as I have found by their tracks on
+the footpath through the wood."</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel turned to Martin Hewitt. "Mr.
+Hardwick, you must know," he said, "is by way
+of being an amateur in your particular line&mdash;and
+a very good amateur, too, I should say, judging
+by a case or two I have known in this
+county."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt bowed, and laughingly expressed a fear
+lest Mr. Hardwick should come to London and supplant
+him altogether. "This seems a curious case,"
+he added. "If you don't mind, I think I should like
+to take a glance at the tracks and whatever other
+traces there may be, just by way of keeping my
+hand in."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," Mr. Hardwick replied, brightening.
+"I should of all things like to have Mr. Hewitt's
+opinions on the observations I have made&mdash;just for
+my own gratification. As to his opinion&mdash;there can
+be no room for doubt; the thing is plain."</p>
+
+<p>With many promises not to be late for dinner,
+we left my uncle and walked with Mr. Hardwick in
+the direction of Ratherby Wood. It was an unfrequented
+part, he told us, and by particular care he
+had managed, he hoped, to prevent the rumour
+spreading to the village yet, so that we might hope
+to find the trails not yet overlaid. It was a man of
+his own, he said, who, making a short cut through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+the wood, had come upon the body hanging, and
+had run immediately to inform him. With this man
+he had gone back, cut down the body, and made his
+observations. He had followed the trail backward
+to Ranworth, and there had found the new coachman,
+who had once been in his own service. From
+him he had learned the doings of the brothers Foster
+as they left the place, and from him he had ascertained
+that they had not then returned. Then, leaving
+his man by the body, he had come straight to
+my uncle's.</p>
+
+<p>Presently we came on the footpath leading from
+Ranworth across the field to Ratherby Wood. It
+was a mere trail of bare earth worn by successive
+feet amid the grass. It was damp, and we all
+stooped and examined the footmarks that were to
+be seen on it. They all pointed one way&mdash;towards
+the wood in the distance.</p>
+
+<p>"Fortunately it's not a greatly frequented path,"
+Mr. Hardwick said. "You see, there are the marks
+of three pairs of feet only, and as first Sneathy and
+then both of the brothers came this way, these footmarks
+must be theirs. Which are Sneathy's is plain&mdash;they
+are these large flat ones. If you notice, they
+are all distinctly visible in the centre of the track,
+showing plainly that they belong to the man who
+walked alone, which was Sneathy. Of the others,
+the marks of the <i>outside</i> feet&mdash;the left on the left<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+side and the right on the right&mdash;are often not visible.
+Clearly they belong to two men walking side by side,
+and more often than not treading, with their outer
+feet, on the grass at the side. And where these happen
+to drop on the same spot as the marks in the
+middle they cover them. Plainly they are the footmarks
+of Henry and Robert Foster, made as they
+followed Sneathy. Don't you agree with me Mr.
+Hewitt?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, that's very plain. You have a better
+pair of eyes than most people, Mr. Hardwick, and a
+good idea of using them, too. We will go into the
+wood now. As a matter of fact I can pretty clearly
+distinguish most of the other footmarks&mdash;those on
+the grass; but that's a matter of much training."</p>
+
+<p>We followed the footpath, keeping on the grass
+at its side, in case it should be desirable to refer
+again to the foot-tracks. For some little distance
+into the wood the tracks continued as before, those
+of the brothers overlaying those of Sneathy. Then
+there was a difference. The path here was broader
+and muddy, because of the proximity of trees,
+and suddenly the outer footprints separated, and
+no more overlay the larger ones in the centre, but
+proceeded at an equal distance on either side of
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"See there," cried Mr. Hardwick, pointing
+triumphantly to the spot, "this is where they over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>took
+him, and walked on either side. The body was
+found only a little farther on&mdash;you could see the
+place now if the path didn't zigzag about so."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt said nothing, but stooped and examined
+the tracks at the sides with great care and evident
+thought, spanning the distances between them
+comparatively with his arms. Then he rose and
+stepped lightly from one mark to another, taking
+care not to tread on the mark itself. "Very good,"
+he said shortly on finishing his examination. "We'll
+go on."</p>
+
+<p>We went on, and presently came to the place
+where the body lay. Here the ground sloped from
+the left down towards the right, and a tiny streamlet,
+a mere trickle of a foot or two wide, ran across
+the path. In rainy seasons it was probably wider,
+for all the earth and clay had been washed away for
+some feet on each side, leaving flat, bare and very
+coarse gravel, on which the trail was lost. Just beyond
+this, and to the left, the body lay on a grassy
+knoll under the limb of a tree, from which still depended
+a part of the cut rope. It was not a pleasant
+sight. The man was a soft, fleshy creature, probably
+rather under than over the medium height, and he
+lay there, with his stretched neck and protruding
+tongue, a revolting object. His right arm lay by
+his side, and the stump of the wrist was clotted with
+black blood. Mr. Hardwick's man was still in charge,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+seemingly little pleased with his job, and a few
+yards off stood a couple of countrymen looking on.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt asked from which direction these men
+had come, and having ascertained and noticed their
+footmarks, he asked them to stay exactly where they
+were, to avoid confusing such other tracks as might
+be seen. Then he addressed himself to his examination.
+"<i>First</i>," he said, glancing up at the branch,
+that was scarce a yard above his head, "this rope
+has been here for some time."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Mr. Hardwick replied, "it's an old swing
+rope. Some children used it in the summer, but it
+got partly cut away, and the odd couple of yards has
+been hanging since."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," said Hewitt, "then if the Fosters did this
+they were saved some trouble by the chance, and
+were able to take their halter back with them&mdash;and
+so avoid <i>one</i> chance of detection." He very closely
+scrutinised the top of a tree stump, probably the
+relic of a tree that had been cut down long before,
+and then addressed himself to the body.</p>
+
+<p>"When you cut it down," he said, "did it fall in
+a heap?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my man eased it down to some extent."</p>
+
+<p>"Not on to its face?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no. On to its back, just as it is now." Mr.
+Hardwick saw that Hewitt was looking at muddy
+marks on each of the corpse's knees, to one of which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+a small leaf clung, and at one or two other marks of
+the same sort on the fore part of the dress. "That
+seems to show pretty plainly," he said, "that he
+must have struggled with them and was thrown forward,
+doesn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt did not reply, but gingerly lifted the right
+arm by its sleeve. "Is either of the brothers Foster
+left-handed?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I think not. Here, Bennett, you have seen
+plenty of their doings&mdash;cricket, shooting, and so on&mdash;do
+you remember if either is left-handed?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nayther, sir," Mr. Hardwick's man answered.
+"Both on 'em's right-handed."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt lifted the lapel of the coat and attentively
+regarded a small rent in it. The dead man's
+hat lay near, and after a few glances at that, Hewitt
+dropped it and turned his attention to the hair.
+This was coarse and dark and long, and brushed
+straight back with no parting.</p>
+
+<p>"This doesn't look very symmetrical, does it?"
+Hewitt remarked, pointing to the locks over the
+right ear. They were shorter just there than on
+the other side, and apparently very clumsily cut,
+whereas in every other part the hair appeared to be
+rather well and carefully trimmed. Mr. Hardwick
+said nothing, but fidgeted a little, as though he considered
+that valuable time was being wasted over
+irrelevant trivialities.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Presently, however, he spoke. "There's very
+little to be learned from the body, is there?" he
+said. "I think I'm quite justified in ordering their
+arrest, eh?&mdash;indeed, I've wasted too much time already."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt was groping about among some bushes
+behind the tree from which the corpse had been
+taken. When he answered, he said, "I don't think
+I should do anything of the sort just now, Mr. Hardwick.
+As a matter of fact, I <i>fancy</i>"&mdash;this word with
+an emphasis&mdash;"that the brothers Foster may not
+have seen this man Sneathy at all to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"Not seen him? Why, my dear sir, there's no
+question of it. It's certain, absolutely. The evidence
+is positive. The fact of the threats and of
+the body being found treated so is pretty well
+enough, I should think. But that's nothing&mdash;look
+at those footmarks. They've walked along with
+him, one each side, without a possible doubt; plainly
+they were the last people with him, in any case.
+And you don't mean to ask anybody to believe
+that the dead man, even if he hanged himself, cut
+off his own hand first. Even if you do, where's
+the hand? And even putting aside all these considerations,
+each a complete case in itself, the Fosters
+<i>must</i> at least have seen the body as they came
+past, and yet nothing has been heard of them yet.
+Why didn't they spread the alarm? They went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+straight away in the opposite direction from home&mdash;there
+are their footmarks, which you've not seen
+yet, beyond the gravel."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt stepped over to where the patch of clean
+gravel ceased, at the opposite side to that from
+which we had approached the brook, and there, sure
+enough, were the now familiar footmarks of the
+brothers leading away from the scene of Sneathy's
+end. "Yes," Hewitt said, "I see them. Of course,
+Mr. Hardwick, you'll do what seems right in your
+own eyes, and in any case not much harm will be
+done by the arrest beyond a terrible fright for that
+unfortunate family. Nevertheless, if you care for
+my impression, it is, as I have said, that the Fosters
+have not seen Sneathy to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"But what about the hand?"</p>
+
+<p>"As to that I have a conjecture, but as yet it is
+only a conjecture, and if I told it you would probably
+call it absurd&mdash;certainly you'd disregard it, and
+perhaps quite excusably. The case is a complicated
+one, and, if there is anything at all in my conjecture,
+one of the most remarkable I have ever had to do
+with. It interests me intensely, and I shall devote
+a little time now to following up the theory I have
+formed. You have, I suppose, already communicated
+with the police?"</p>
+
+<p>"I wired to Shopperton at once, as soon as I
+heard of the matter. It's a twelve miles drive, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+I wonder the police have not arrived yet. They
+can't be long; I don't know where the village constable
+has got to, but in any case <i>he</i> wouldn't be
+much good. But as to your idea that the Fosters
+can't be suspected&mdash;well, nobody could respect your
+opinion, Mr. Hewitt, more than myself, but really,
+just think. The notion's impossible&mdash;fiftyfold impossible.
+As soon as the police arrive I shall have
+that trail followed and the Fosters apprehended. I
+should be a fool if I didn't."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, Mr. Hardwick," Hewitt replied;
+"you'll do what you consider your duty, of course,
+and quite properly, though I <i>would</i> recommend you
+to take another glance at those three trails in the
+path. I shall take a look in this direction." And
+he turned up by the side of the streamlet, keeping
+on the gravel at its side.</p>
+
+<p>I followed. We climbed the rising ground, and
+presently, among the trees, came to the place where
+the little rill emerged from the broken ground in
+the highest part of the wood. Here the clean
+ground ceased, and there was a large patch of
+wet clayey earth. Several marks left by the feet
+of cattle were there, and one or two human footmarks.
+Two of these (a pair), the newest and the
+most distinct, Hewitt studied carefully, and measured
+each direction.</p>
+
+<p>"Notice these marks," he said. "They may be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+of importance or they may not&mdash;that we shall see.
+Fortunately they are very distinctive&mdash;the right
+boot is a badly worn one, and a small tag of leather,
+where the soul is damaged, is doubled over and
+trodden into the soft earth. Nothing could be
+luckier. Clearly they are the most recent footsteps
+in this direction&mdash;from the main road, which
+lies right ahead, through the rest of the wood."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you think somebody else has been on
+the scene of the tragedy, beside the victim and the
+brothers?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do. But hark; there is a vehicle in the
+road. Can you see between the trees? Yes, it is
+the police cart. We shall be able to report its
+arrival to Mr. Hardwick as we go down."</p>
+
+<p>We turned and walked rapidly down the incline
+to where we had come from. Mr. Hardwick and
+his man were still there, and another rustic had
+arrived to gape. We told Mr. Hardwick that he
+might expect the police presently, and proceeded
+along the gravel skirting the stream, toward the
+lower part of the wood.</p>
+
+<p>Here Hewitt proceeded very cautiously, keeping
+a sharp look-out on either side for footprints on
+the neighbouring soft ground. There were none,
+however, for the gravel margin of the stream made
+a sort of footpath of itself, and the trees and undergrowth
+were close and thick on each side. At the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+bottom we emerged from the wood on a small piece
+of open ground skirting a lane, and here, just by the
+side of the lane, where the stream fell into a trench,
+Hewitt suddenly pounced on another footmark. He
+was unusually excited.</p>
+
+<p>"See," he said, "here it is&mdash;the right foot with
+its broken leather, and the corresponding left foot
+on the damp edge of the lane itself. He&mdash;the man
+with the broken shoe&mdash;has walked on the hard
+gravel all the way down from the source of the
+stream, and his is the only trail unaccounted for
+near the body. Come, Brett, we've an adventure on
+foot. Do you care to let your uncle's dinner go by
+the board, and follow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Can't we go back and tell him?"</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;there's no time to lose; we must follow
+up this man&mdash;or at least I must. You go or stay,
+of course, as you think best."</p>
+
+<p>I hesitated a moment, picturing to myself the
+excellent Colonel as he would appear after waiting
+dinner an hour or two for us, but decided to go.
+"At any rate," I said, "if the way lies along the
+roads we shall probably meet somebody going in the
+direction of Ratherby who will take a message. But
+what is your theory? I don't understand at all. I
+must say everything Hardwick said seemed to me to
+be beyond question. There were the tracks to
+prove that the three had walked together to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+spot, and that the brothers had gone on alone; and
+every other circumstance pointed the same way.
+Then, what possible motive could anybody else
+about here have for such a crime? Unless, indeed,
+it were one of the people defrauded by Sneathy's
+late companies."</p>
+
+<p>"The motive," said Hewitt, "is, I fancy, a most
+extraordinary&mdash;indeed, a weird one. A thing as of
+centuries ago. Ask me no questions&mdash;I think you
+will be a little surprised before very long. But
+come, we must move." And we mended our pace
+along the lane.</p>
+
+<p>The lane, by the bye, was hard and firm, with
+scarcely a spot where a track might be left, except
+in places at the sides; and at these places Hewitt
+never gave a glance. At the end the lane turned
+into a by-road, and at the turning Hewitt stopped
+and scrutinised the ground closely. There was
+nothing like a recognisable footmark to be seen;
+but almost immediately Hewitt turned off to the
+right, and we continued our brisk march without a
+glance at the road.</p>
+
+<p>"How did you judge which way to turn then?"
+I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't you see?" replied Hewitt; "I'll show
+you at the next turning."</p>
+
+<p>Half a mile farther on the road forked, and here
+Hewitt stooped and pointed silently to a couple of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+small twigs, placed crosswise, with the longer twig
+of the two pointing down the branch of the road to
+the left. We took the branch to the left, and went
+on.</p>
+
+<p>"Our man's making a mistake," Hewitt observed.
+"He leaves his friends' messages lying about for his
+enemies to read."</p>
+
+<p>We hurried forward with scarcely a word. I was
+almost too bewildered by what Hewitt had said and
+done to formulate anything like a reasonable guess
+as to what our expedition tended, or even to make
+an effective inquiry&mdash;though, after what Hewitt had
+said, I knew that would be useless. Who was this
+mysterious man with the broken shoe? what had he
+to do with the murder of Sneathy? what did the
+mutilation mean? and who were his friends who left
+him signs and messages by means of crossed twigs?</p>
+
+<p>We met a man, by whom I sent a short note
+to my uncle, and soon after we turned into a main
+road. Here again, at the corner, was the curious
+message of twigs. A cart-wheel had passed over
+and crushed them, but it had not so far displaced
+them as to cause any doubt that the direction to
+take was to the right. At an inn a little farther
+along we entered, and Hewitt bought a pint of Irish
+whisky and a flat bottle to hold it in, as well as a
+loaf of bread and some cheese, which we carried
+away wrapped in paper.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"This will have to do for our dinner," Hewitt
+said as we emerged.</p>
+
+<p>"But we're not going to drink a pint of common
+whisky between us?" I asked in some astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," Hewitt answered with a
+smile. "Perhaps we'll find somebody to help us&mdash;somebody
+not so fastidious as yourself as to
+quality."</p>
+
+<p>Now we hurried&mdash;hurried more than ever, for it
+was beginning to get dusk, and Hewitt feared a difficulty
+in finding and reading the twig signs in the
+dark. Two more turnings we made, each with its
+silent direction&mdash;the crossed twigs. To me there
+was something almost weird and creepy in this curious
+hunt for the invisible and incomprehensible,
+guided faithfully and persistently at every turn by
+this now unmistakable signal. After the second
+turning we broke into a trot along a long, winding
+lane, but presently Hewitt's hand fell on my shoulder,
+and we stopped. He pointed ahead, where
+some large object, round a bend of the hedge was
+illuminated as though by a light from below.</p>
+
+<p>"We will walk now," Hewitt said. "Remember
+that we are on a walking tour, and have come along
+here entirely by accident."</p>
+
+<p>We proceeded at a swinging walk, Hewitt whistling
+gaily. Soon we turned the bend, and saw that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+the large object was a travelling van drawn up with
+two others on a space of grass by the side of the
+lane. It was a gipsy encampment, the caravan having
+apparently only lately stopped, for a man was
+still engaged in tugging at the rope of a tent that
+stood near the vans. Two or three sullen-looking
+ruffians lay about a fire which burned in the space
+left in the middle of the encampment. A woman
+stood at the door of one van with a large kettle in
+her hand, and at the foot of the steps below her a
+more pleasant-looking old man sat on an inverted
+pail. Hewitt swung towards the fire from the road,
+and with an indescribable mixture of slouch, bow,
+and smile addressed the company generally with
+"<i>Kooshto bock, pals!</i>"<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+<p>The men on the ground took no notice, but continued
+to stare doggedly before them. The man
+working at the tent looked round quickly for a moment,
+and the old man on the bucket looked up and
+nodded.</p>
+
+<p>Quick to see the most likely friend, Hewitt at
+once went up to the old man, extending his hand,
+"<i>Sarshin, daddo?</i>" he said; "<i>Dell mandy tooty's
+varst.</i>"<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p>The old man smiled and shook hands, though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+without speaking. Then Hewitt proceeded, producing
+the flat bottle of whisky, "<i>Tatty for pawny,
+chals. Dell mandy the pawny, and lell posh the tatty.</i>"<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
+
+<p>The whisky did it. We were Romany ryes in
+twenty minutes or less, and had already been taking
+tea with the gipsies for half the time. The two or
+three we had found about the fire were still reserved,
+but these, I found, were only half-gipsies,
+and understood very little Romany. One or two
+others, however, including the old man, were of
+purer breed, and talked freely, as did one of the
+women. They were Lees, they said, and expected
+to be on Wirksby racecourse in three days' time.
+We, too, were <i>pirimengroes</i>, or travellers, Hewitt explained,
+and might look to see them on the course.</p>
+
+<p>Then he fell to telling gipsy stories, and they to
+telling others back, to my intense mystification.
+Hewitt explained afterwards that they were mostly
+stories of poaching, with now and again a horse-coping
+anecdote thrown in. Since then I have
+learned enough of Romany to take my part in such
+a conversation, but at the time a word or two here
+and there was all I could understand. In all this
+talk the man we had first noticed stretching the tent-rope
+took very little interest, but lay, with his head<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+away from the fire, smoking his pipe. He was a
+much darker man than any other present&mdash;had, in
+fact, the appearance of a man of even a swarthier
+race than that of the others about us.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, in the middle of a long and, of course,
+to me unintelligible story by the old man, I caught
+Hewitt's eye. He lifted one eyebrow almost imperceptibly,
+and glanced for a single moment at his
+walking-stick. Then I saw that it was pointed toward
+the feet of the very dark man, who had not yet
+spoken. One leg was thrown over the others as he
+lay, with the soles of his shoes presented toward the
+fire, and in its glare I saw&mdash;that the right sole was
+worn and broken, and that a small triangular tag of
+leather was doubled over beneath in just the place
+we knew of from the prints in Ratherby Wood.</p>
+
+<p>I could not take my eyes off that man with his
+broken shoe. There lay the secret, the whole mystery
+of the fantastic crime in Ratherby Wood centred
+in that shabby ruffian. What was it?</p>
+
+<p>But Hewitt went on, talking and joking furiously.
+The men who were not speaking mostly smoked
+gloomily, but whenever one spoke, he became animated
+and lively. I had attempted once or twice to
+join in, though my efforts were not particularly successful,
+except in inducing one man to offer me tobacco
+from his box&mdash;tobacco that almost made me
+giddy in the smell. He tried some of mine in ex<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>change,
+and though he praised it with native politeness,
+and smoked the pipe through, I could see that
+my Hignett mixture was poor stuff in his estimation,
+compared with the awful tobacco in his own
+box.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the man with the broken shoe got up,
+slouched over to his tent, and disappeared. Then
+said Hewitt (I translate):</p>
+
+<p>"You're not all Lees here, I see?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, <i>pal</i>, all Lees."</p>
+
+<p>"But <i>he's</i> not a Lee?" and Hewitt jerked his
+head towards the tent.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not a Lee, <i>pal</i>? We be Lees, and he is
+with us. Thus he is a Lee."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, of course. But I know he is from over
+the <i>pawny</i>. Come, I'll guess the <i>tem</i><a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> he comes
+from&mdash;it's from Roumania, eh? Perhaps the Wallachian
+part?"</p>
+
+<p>The men looked at one another, and then the old
+Lee said:</p>
+
+<p>"You're right, pal. You're cleverer than we took
+you for. That is what they calls his <i>tem</i>. He is a
+petulengro,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>and he comes with us to shoe the <i>gries</i><a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
+and mend the <i>vardoes</i>.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> But he is with us, and so he
+is a Lee."</p>
+
+<p>The talk and the smoke went on, and presently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+the man with the broken shoe returned, and lay
+down again. Then, when the whisky had all gone,
+and Hewitt, with some excuse that I did not understand,
+had begged a piece of cord from one of the
+men, we left in a chorus of <i>kooshto rardies</i>.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
+
+<p>By this time it was nearly ten o'clock. We
+walked briskly till we came back again to the inn
+where we had bought the whisky. Here Hewitt,
+after some little trouble, succeeded in hiring a village
+cart, and while the driver was harnessing the
+horse, cut a couple of short sticks from the hedge.
+These, being each divided into two, made four short,
+stout pieces of something less than six inches long
+apiece. Then Hewitt joined them together in pairs,
+each pair being connected from centre to centre by
+about nine or ten inches of the cord he had brought
+from the gipsies' camp. These done, he handed one
+pair to me. "Handcuffs," he explained, "and no
+bad ones either. See&mdash;you use them so." And he
+passed the cord round my wrist, gripping the two
+handles, and giving them a slight twist that sufficiently
+convinced me of the excruciating pain that
+might be inflicted by a vigorous turn, and the
+utter helplessness of a prisoner thus secured in
+the hands of captors prepared to use their instruments.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span></p><p>"Whom are these for?" I asked. "The man
+with the broken shoe?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said. "I expect we shall find him out
+alone about midnight. You know how to use these
+now."</p>
+
+<p>It was fully eleven before the cart was ready
+and we started. A quarter of a mile or so from
+the gipsy encampment Hewitt stopped the cart and
+gave the driver instructions to wait. We got
+through the hedge, and made our way on the soft
+ground behind it in the direction of the vans and
+the tent.</p>
+
+<p>"Roll up your handkerchief," Hewitt whispered,
+"into a tight pad. The moment I grab him, ram
+it into his mouth&mdash;<i>well</i> in, mind, so that it doesn't
+easily fall out. Probably he will be stooping&mdash;that
+will make it easier; we can pull him suddenly backward.
+Now be quiet."</p>
+
+<p>We kept on till nothing but the hedge divided
+us from the space whereon stood the encampment.
+It was now nearer twelve o'clock than eleven, but
+the time we waited seemed endless. But time is
+not eternity after all, and at last we heard a move
+in the tent. A minute after, the man we sought was
+standing before us. He made straight for a gap in
+the hedge which we had passed on our way, and we
+crouched low and waited. He emerged on our side<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+of the hedge with his back towards us, and began
+walking, as we had walked, behind the hedge, but
+in the opposite direction. We followed.</p>
+
+<p>He carried something in his hand that looked
+like a large bundle of sticks and twigs, and he
+appeared to be as anxious to be secret as we
+ourselves. From time to time he stopped and
+listened; fortunately there was no moon, or in
+turning about, as he did once or twice, he would
+probably have observed us. The field sloped
+downward just before us, and there was another
+hedge at right angles, leading down to a slight
+hollow. To this hollow the man made his way,
+and in the shade of the new hedge we followed.
+Presently he stopped suddenly, stooped, and deposited
+his bundle on the ground before him.
+Crouching before it, he produced matches from his
+pocket, struck one, and in a moment had a fire
+of twigs and small branches, that sent up a heavy
+white smoke. What all this portended I could not
+imagine, but a sense of the weirdness of the whole
+adventure came upon me unchecked. The horrible
+corpse in the wood, with its severed wrist, Hewitt's
+enigmatical forebodings, the mysterious tracking
+of the man with the broken shoe, the scene round
+the gipsies' fire, and now the strange behaviour of
+this man, whose connection with the tragedy was so
+intimate and yet so inexplicable&mdash;all these things<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+contributed to make up a tale of but a few hours'
+duration, but of an inscrutable impressiveness that
+I began to feel in my nerves.</p>
+
+<p>The man bent a thin stick double, and using
+it as a pair of tongs, held some indistinguishable
+object over the flames before him. Excited as I
+was, I could not help noticing that he bent and
+held the stick with his left hand. We crept stealthily
+nearer, and as I stood scarcely three yards
+behind him and looked over his shoulder, the
+form of the object stood out clear and black
+against the dull red of the flame. It was a <i>human
+hand</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose I may have somehow betrayed my
+amazement and horror to my companion's sharp
+eyes, for suddenly I felt his hand tightly grip my
+arm just above the elbow. I turned, and found
+his face close by mine and his finger raised warningly.
+Then I saw him produce his wrist-grip and
+make a motion with his palm toward his mouth,
+which I understood to be intended to remind me
+of the gag. We stepped forward.</p>
+
+<p>The man turned his horrible cookery over and
+over above the crackling sticks, as though to smoke
+and dry it in every part. I saw Hewitt's hand
+reach out toward him, and in a flash we had pulled
+him back over his heels and I had driven the gag
+between his teeth as he opened his mouth. We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+seized his wrists in the cords at once, and I shall
+never forget the man's look of ghastly, frantic
+terror as he lay on the ground. When I knew
+more I understood the reason of this.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt took both wristholds in one hand and
+drove the gag entirely into the man's mouth, so
+that he almost choked. A piece of sacking lay
+near the fire, and by Hewitt's request I dropped
+that awful hand from the wooden twigs upon it
+and rolled it up in a parcel&mdash;it was, no doubt,
+what the sacking had been brought for. Then
+we lifted the man to his feet and hurried him
+in the direction of the cart. The whole capture
+could not have occupied thirty seconds, and as
+I stumbled over the rough field at the man's
+left elbow I could only think of the thing as
+one thinks of a dream that one knows all the time
+<i>is</i> a dream.</p>
+
+<p>But presently the man, who had been walking
+quietly, though gasping, sniffing and choking because
+of the tightly rolled handkerchief in his
+mouth&mdash;presently he made a sudden dive, thinking
+doubtless to get his wrists free by surprise. But
+Hewitt was alert, and gave them a twist that
+made him roll his head with a dismal, stifled yell,
+and with the opening of his mouth, by some chance
+the gag fell away. Immediately the man roared
+aloud for help.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Quick," said Hewitt, "drag him along&mdash;they'll
+hear in the vans. Bring the hand!"</p>
+
+<p>I seized the fallen handkerchief and crammed
+it over the man's mouth as well as I might, and
+together we made as much of a trot as we could,
+dragging the man between us, while Hewitt checked
+any reluctance on his part by a timely wrench of
+the wristholds. It was a hard two hundred and
+fifty yards to the lane even for us&mdash;for the gipsy
+it must have been a bad minute and a half indeed.
+Once more as we went over the uneven ground he
+managed to get out a shout, and we thought we
+heard a distinct reply from somewhere in the
+direction of the encampment.</p>
+
+<p>We pulled him over a stile in a tangle; and
+dragged and pushed him through a small hedge-gap
+all in a heap. Here we were but a short distance
+from the cart, and into that we flung him without
+wasting time or tenderness, to the intense consternation
+of the driver, who, I believe, very nearly set up
+a cry for help on his own account. Once in the
+cart, however, I seized the reins and the whip myself
+and, leaving Hewitt to take care of the prisoner,
+put the turn-out along toward Ratherby at as near
+ten miles an hour as it could go.</p>
+
+<p>We made first for Mr. Hardwick's, but he, we
+found, was with my uncle, so we followed him. The
+arrest of the Fosters had been effected, we learned,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+not very long after we had left the wood, as they
+returned by another route to Ranworth. We
+brought our prisoner into the Colonel's library,
+where he and Mr. Hardwick were sitting.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not quite sure what we can charge him
+with unless it's anatomical robbery," Hewitt remarked,
+"but here's the criminal."</p>
+
+<p>The man only looked down, with a sulkily impenetrable
+countenance. Hewitt spoke to him
+once or twice, and at last he said, in a strange
+accent, something that sounded like "<i>kekin jin-navvy.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Keck jin?</i>"<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> asked Hewitt, in the loud, clear
+tone one instinctively adopts in talking to a foreigner,
+"<i>Keckeno jinny?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The man understood and shook his head, but not
+another word would he say or another question
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>"He's a foreign gipsy," Hewitt explained, "just
+as I thought&mdash;a Wallachian, in fact. Theirs is an
+older and purer dialect than that of the English
+gipsies, and only some of the root-words are alike.
+But I think we can make him explain to-morrow
+that the Fosters at least had nothing to do with, at
+any rate, cutting off Sneathy's hand. Here it is, I
+think." And he gingerly lifted the folds of sacking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+from the ghastly object as it lay on the table, and
+then covered it up again.</p>
+
+<p>"But what&mdash;what does it all mean?" Mr.
+Hardwick said in bewildered astonishment. "Do
+you mean this man was an accomplice?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all&mdash;the case was one of suicide, as I
+think you'll agree, when I've explained. This man
+simply found the body hanging and stole the hand."</p>
+
+<p>"But what in the world for?"</p>
+
+<p>"For the <span class="smcap">Hand of Glory</span>. Eh?" He turned
+to the gipsy and pointed to the hand on the table:
+"<i>Yag-varst</i>,<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> eh?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a quick gleam of intelligence in the
+man's eye, but he said nothing. As for myself I was
+more than astounded. Could it be possible that the
+old superstition of the Hand of Glory remained alive
+in a practical shape at this day?</p>
+
+<p>"You know the superstition, of course," Hewitt
+said. "It did exist in this country in the last century,
+when there were plenty of dead men hanging
+at cross-roads, and so on. On the Continent, in
+some places, it has survived later. Among the
+Wallachian gipsies it has always been a great article
+of belief, and the superstition is quite active still.
+The belief is that the right hand of a hanged man,
+cut off and dried over the smoke of certain wood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+and herbs, and then provided with wicks at each
+finger made of the dead man's hair, becomes, when
+lighted at each wick (the wicks are greased, of
+course), a charm, whereby a thief may walk without
+hinderance where he pleases in a strange house, push
+open all doors and take what he likes. Nobody can
+stop him, for everybody the Hand of Glory approaches
+is made helpless, and can neither move nor
+speak. You may remember there was some talk of
+'thieves' candles' in connection with the horrible
+series of Whitechapel murders not long ago. That
+is only one form of the cult of the Hand of Glory."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," my uncle said, "I remember reading so.
+There is a story about it in the Ingoldsby Legends,
+too, I believe."</p>
+
+<p>"There is&mdash;it is called 'The Hand of Glory,' in
+fact. You remember the spell, 'Open lock to the
+dead man's knock,' and so on. But I think you'd
+better have the constable up and get this man into
+safe quarters for the night. He should be searched,
+of course. I expect they will find on him the hair I
+noticed to have been cut from Sneathy's head."</p>
+
+<p>The village constable arrived with his iron handcuffs
+in substitution for those of cord which had so
+sorely vexed the wrists of our prisoner, and marched
+him away to the little lock-up on the green.</p>
+
+<p>Then my uncle and Mr. Hardwick turned on
+Martin Hewitt with doubts and many questions:</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Why do you call it suicide?" Mr. Hardwick
+asked. "It is plain the Fosters were with him at
+the time from the tracks. Do you mean to say that
+they stood there and watched Sneathy hang himself
+without interfering?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't," Hewitt replied, lighting a cigar.
+"I think I told you that they never saw Sneathy."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you did, and of course that's what they
+said themselves when they were arrested. But the
+thing's impossible. Look at the tracks!"</p>
+
+<p>"The tracks are exactly what revealed to me
+that it was <i>not</i> impossible," Hewitt returned. "I'll
+tell you how the case unfolded itself to me from the
+beginning. As to the information you gathered
+from the Ranworth coachman, to begin with. The
+conversation between the Fosters which he overheard
+might well mean something less serious than
+murder. What did they say? They had been sent
+for in a hurry and had just had a short consultation
+with their mother and sister. Henry said that 'the
+thing must be done at once'; also that as there
+were two of them it should be easy. Robert said
+that Henry, as a doctor, would know best what
+to do.</p>
+
+<p>"Now you, Colonel Brett, had been saying&mdash;before
+we learned these things from Mr. Hardwick&mdash;that
+Sneathy's behaviour of late had become so bad
+as to seem that of a madman. Then there was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+story of his sudden attack on a tradesman in the
+village, and equally sudden running away&mdash;exactly
+the sort of impulsive, wild thing that madmen do.
+Why then might it not be reasonable to suppose
+that Sneathy <i>had</i> become mad&mdash;more especially considering
+all the circumstances of the case, his commercial
+ruin and disgrace and his horrible life with
+his wife and her family?&mdash;had become suddenly
+much worse and quite uncontrollable, so that the
+two wretched women left alone with him were driven
+to send in haste for Henry and Robert to help them?
+That would account for all.</p>
+
+<p>"The brothers arrive just after Sneathy had
+gone out. They are told in a hurried interview how
+affairs stand, and it is decided that Sneathy must be
+at once secured and confined in an asylum before
+something serious happens. He has just gone out&mdash;something
+terrible may be happening at this moment.
+The brothers determine to follow at once
+and secure him wherever he may be. Then the
+meaning of their conversation is plain. The thing
+that 'must be done, and at once,' is the capture of
+Sneathy and his confinement in an asylum. Henry,
+as a doctor, would 'know what to do' in regard to
+the necessary formalities. And they took a halter
+in case a struggle should ensue and it were
+found necessary to bind him. Very likely, wasn't
+it?"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, yes," Mr. Hardwick replied, "it certainly
+is. It never struck me in that light at all."</p>
+
+<p>"That was because you believed, to begin with,
+that a murder had been committed, and looked at
+the preliminary circumstances which you learned
+after in the light of your conviction. But now, to
+come to my actual observations. I saw the footmarks
+across the fields, and agreed with you (it was
+indeed obvious) that Sneathy had gone that way
+first, and that the brothers had followed, walking
+over his tracks. This state of the tracks continued
+until well into the wood, when suddenly the tracks
+of the brothers opened out and proceeded on each
+side of Sneathy's. The simple inference would seem
+to be, of course, the one you made&mdash;that the Fosters
+had here overtaken Sneathy, and walked one at each
+side of him.</p>
+
+<p>"But of this I felt by no means certain. Another
+very simple explanation was available, which
+might chance to be the true one. It was just at
+the spot where the brothers' tracks separated that
+the path became suddenly much muddier, because
+of the closer overhanging of the trees at the
+spot. The path was, as was to be expected, wettest
+in the middle. It would be the most natural thing
+in the world for two well-dressed young men, on
+arriving here, to separate so as to walk one on each
+side of the mud in the middle.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"On the other hand, a man in Sneathy's state
+(assuming him, for the moment, to be mad and contemplating
+suicide) would walk straight along the
+centre of the path, taking no note of mud or anything
+else. I examined all the tracks very carefully,
+and my theory was confirmed. The feet of the
+brothers had everywhere alighted in the driest
+spots, and the steps were of irregular lengths&mdash;which
+meant, of course, that they were picking
+their way; while Sneathy's footmarks had never
+turned aside even for the dirtiest puddle. Here,
+then, were the rudiments of a theory.</p>
+
+<p>"At the watercourse, of course, the footmarks
+ceased, because of the hard gravel. The body lay
+on a knoll at the left&mdash;a knoll covered with grass.
+On this the signs of footmarks were almost undiscoverable,
+although I am often able to discover
+tracks in grass that are invisible to others.
+Here, however, it was almost useless to spend much
+time in examination, for you and your man had been
+there, and what slight marks there might be would
+be indistinguishable one from another.</p>
+
+<p>"Under the branch from which the man had
+hung there was an old tree stump, with a flat top,
+where the tree had been sawn off. I examined this,
+and it became fairly apparent that Sneathy had
+stood on it when the rope was about his neck&mdash;his
+muddy footprint was plain to see; the mud was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+not smeared about, you see, as it probably would
+have been if he had been stood there forcibly and
+pushed off. It was a simple, clear footprint&mdash;another
+hint at suicide.</p>
+
+<p>"But then arose the objection that you mentioned
+yourself. Plainly the brothers Foster were
+following Sneathy, and came this way. Therefore,
+if he hanged himself before they arrived, it would
+seem that they must have come across the body.
+But now I examined the body itself. There
+was mud on the knees, and clinging to one knee
+was a small leaf. It was a leaf corresponding to
+those on the bush behind the tree, and it was not a
+dead leaf, so must have been just detached.</p>
+
+<p>"After my examination of the body I went to
+the bush, and there, in the thick of it, were, for me,
+sufficiently distinct knee-marks, in one of which the
+knee had crushed a spray of the bush against the
+ground, and from that spray a leaf was missing.
+Behind the knee-marks were the indentations of
+boot-toes in the soft, bare earth under the bush,
+and thus the thing was plain. The poor lunatic
+had come in sight of the dangling rope, and the
+temptation to suicide was irresistible. To people
+in a deranged state of mind the mere sight of the
+means of self-destruction is often a temptation
+impossible to withstand. But at that moment he
+must have heard the steps&mdash;probably the voices<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>&mdash;of
+the brothers behind him on the winding path.
+He immediately hid in the bush till they had passed.
+It is probable that seeing who the men were, and
+conjecturing that they were following him&mdash;thinking
+also, perhaps, of things that had occurred between
+them and himself&mdash;his inclination to self-destruction
+became completely ungovernable, with the result
+that you saw.</p>
+
+<p>"But before I inspected the bush I noticed one
+or two more things about the body. You remember
+I inquired if either of the brothers Foster was
+left-handed, and was assured that neither was. But
+clearly the hand had been cut off by a left-handed
+man, with a large, sharply pointed knife. For well
+away to the <i>right</i> of where the wrist had hung the
+knife-point had made a tiny triangular rent in the
+coat, so that the hand must have been held in the
+mutilator's right hand, while he used the knife with
+his left&mdash;clearly a left-handed man.</p>
+
+<p>"But most important of all about the body was
+the jagged hair over the right ear. Everywhere
+else the hair was well cut and orderly&mdash;here it
+seemed as though a good piece had been, so to
+speak, <i>sawn</i> off. What could anybody want with a
+dead man's right hand and certain locks of his
+hair? Then it struck me suddenly&mdash;the man was
+hanged; it was the Hand of Glory!</p>
+
+<p>"Then you will remember I went, at your re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>quest,
+to see the footprints of the Fosters on the
+part of the path <i>past</i> the watercourse. Here again
+it was muddy in the middle, and the two brothers
+had walked as far apart as before, although nobody
+had walked between them. A final proof, if one
+were needed, of my theory as to the three lines of
+footprints.</p>
+
+<p>"Now I was to consider how to get at the man
+who had taken his hand. He should be punished
+for the mutilation, but beyond that he would be
+required as a witness. Now all the foot-tracks in
+the vicinity had been accounted for. There were
+those of the brothers and of Sneathy, which we have
+been speaking of; those of the rustics looking on,
+which, however, stopped a little way off, and did
+not interfere with our sphere of observation; those
+of your man, who had cut straight through the
+wood when he first saw the body, and had come
+back the same way with you; and our own, which
+we had been careful to keep away from the others.
+Consequently there was <i>no</i> track of the man who
+had cut off the hand; therefore it was certain that
+he must have come along the hard gravel by the
+watercourse, for that was the only possible path
+which would not tell the tale. Indeed, it seemed
+quite a likely path through the wood for a passenger
+to take, coming from the high ground by the Shopperton
+road.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Brett and I left you and traversed the watercourse,
+both up and down. We found a footprint
+at the top, left lately by a man with a broken shoe.
+Right down to the bottom of the watercourse where
+it emerged from the wood there was no sign on
+either side of this man having left the gravel.
+(Where the body was, as you will remember, he
+would simply have stepped off the gravel on to the
+grass, which I thought it useless to examine, as I
+have explained.) But at the bottom, by the lane, the
+footprint appeared again.</p>
+
+<p>"This then was the direction in which I was to
+search for a left-handed man with a broken-soled
+shoe, probably a gipsy&mdash;and most probably a foreign
+gipsy&mdash;because a foreign gipsy would be the most
+likely still to hold the belief in the Hand of Glory.
+I conjectured the man to be a straggler from a band
+of gipsies&mdash;one who probably had got behind the
+caravan and had made a short cut across the wood
+after it; so at the end of the lane I looked for a
+<i>patrin</i>. This is a sign that gipsies leave to guide
+stragglers following up. Sometimes it is a heap of
+dead leaves, sometimes a few stones, sometimes a
+mark on the ground, but more usually a couple of
+twigs crossed, with the longer twig pointing the
+road.</p>
+
+<p>"Guided by these <i>patrins</i> we came in the end on
+the gipsy camp just as it was settling down for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+night. We made ourselves agreeable (as Brett will
+probably describe to you better than I can), we left
+them, and after they had got to sleep we came
+back and watched for the gentleman who is now
+in the lock-up. He would, of course, seize the
+first opportunity of treating his ghastly trophy
+in the prescribed way, and I guessed he would
+choose midnight, for that is the time the superstition
+teaches that the hand should be prepared.
+We made a few small preparations, collared him,
+and now you've got him. And I should think
+the sooner you let the brothers Foster go the
+better."</p>
+
+<p>"But why didn't you tell me all the conclusions
+you had arrived at at the time?" asked Mr. Hardwick.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, really," Hewitt replied, with a quiet
+smile, "you were so positive, and some of the
+traces I relied on were so small, that it would
+probably have meant a long argument and a loss
+of time. But more than that, confess, if I had
+told you bluntly that Sneathy's hand had been
+taken away to make a mediæval charm to enable
+a thief to pass through a locked door and steal
+plate calmly under the owner's nose, what <i>would</i> you
+have said?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well, perhaps I <i>should</i> have been a little
+sceptical. Appearances combined so completely to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+point to the Fosters as murderers that any other
+explanation almost would have seemed unlikely to
+me, and <i>that</i>&mdash;well no, I confess, I shouldn't have
+believed in it. But it is a startling thing to find
+such superstitions alive now-a-days."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, perhaps it is. Yet we find survivals of the
+sort very frequently. The Wallachians, however,
+are horribly superstitious still&mdash;the gipsies among
+them are, of course, worse. Don't you remember
+the case reported a few months ago, in which a child
+was drowned as a sacrifice in Wallachia in order to
+bring rain? And that was not done by gipsies
+either. Even in England, as late as 1865, a poor
+paralysed Frenchman was killed by being 'swum'
+for witchcraft&mdash;that was in Essex. And less atrocious
+cases of belief in wizardry occur again and
+again even now."</p>
+
+<p>Then Mr. Hardwick and my uncle fell into a
+discussion as to how the gipsy in the lock-up could
+be legally punished. Mr. Hardwick thought it
+should be treated as a theft of a portion of a dead
+body, but my uncle fancied there was a penalty for
+mutilation of a dead body <i>per se</i>, though he could
+not point to the statute. As it happened, however,
+they were saved the trouble of arriving at a decision,
+for in the morning he was discovered to have
+escaped. He had been left, of course, with free
+hands, and had occupied the night in wrenching out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+the bars at the top of the back wall of the little
+prison-shed (it had stood on the green for a hundred
+and fifty years) and climbing out. He was not
+found again, and a month or two later the Foster
+family left the district entirely.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> "Good luck, brothers!"</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> "How do you do, father? Give me your hand."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> "Spirits for water, lads. Give me the water and take your
+share of the spirits."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Country.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Smith.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Horses.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Vans.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> Good-night.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> "Not understand?"</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Fire-hand.</p></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_CASE_OF_LAKER_ABSCONDED" id="THE_CASE_OF_LAKER_ABSCONDED"></a>THE CASE OF LAKER, ABSCONDED.</h2>
+
+
+<p>There were several of the larger London banks
+and insurance offices from which Hewitt held a sort
+of general retainer as detective adviser, in fulfilment
+of which he was regularly consulted as to the
+measures to be taken in different cases of fraud,
+forgery, theft, and so forth, which it might be the
+misfortune of the particular firms to encounter.
+The more important and intricate of these cases
+were placed in his hands entirely, with separate
+commissions, in the usual way. One of the most
+important companies of the sort was the General
+Guarantee Society, an insurance corporation which,
+among other risks, took those of the integrity of
+secretaries, clerks, and cashiers. In the case of a
+cash-box elopement on the part of any person
+guaranteed by the society, the directors were naturally
+anxious for a speedy capture of the culprit,
+and more especially of the booty, before too much
+of it was spent, in order to lighten the claim upon
+their funds, and in work of this sort Hewitt was at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+times engaged, either in general advice and direction,
+or in the actual pursuit of the plunder and the
+plunderer.</p>
+
+<p>Arriving at his office a little later than usual one
+morning, Hewitt found an urgent message awaiting
+him from the General Guarantee Society, requesting
+his attention to a robbery which had taken place on
+the previous day. He had gleaned some hint of the
+case from the morning paper, wherein appeared a
+short paragraph, which ran thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">Serious Bank Robbery.</span>&mdash;In the course of yesterday
+a clerk employed by Messrs. Liddle, Neal &amp;
+Liddle, the well-known bankers, disappeared, having
+in his possession a large sum of money, the property
+of his employers&mdash;a sum reported to be rather over
+£15,000. It would seem that he had been entrusted
+to collect the money in his capacity of "walk-clerk"
+from various other banks and trading concerns
+during the morning, but failed to return at the
+usual time. A large number of the notes which he
+received had been cashed at the Bank of England
+before suspicion was aroused. We understand that
+Detective-Inspector Plummer, of Scotland Yard, has
+the case in hand.</p></div>
+
+<p>The clerk, whose name was Charles William
+Laker, had, it appeared from the message, been
+guaranteed in the usual way by the General
+Guarantee Society, and Hewitt's presence at the
+office was at once desired, in order that steps might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+quickly be taken for the man's apprehension, and in
+the recovery, at any rate, of as much of the booty
+as possible.</p>
+
+<p>A smart hansom brought Hewitt to Threadneedle
+Street in a bare quarter of an hour, and there
+a few minutes' talk with the manager, Mr. Lyster,
+put him in possession of the main facts of the case,
+which appeared to be simple. Charles William Laker
+was twenty-five years of age, and had been in the
+employ of Messrs. Liddle, Neal &amp; Liddle for something
+more than seven years&mdash;since he left school,
+in fact&mdash;and until the previous day there had been
+nothing in his conduct to complain of. His duties
+as walk-clerk consisted in making a certain round,
+beginning at about half-past ten each morning.
+There were a certain number of the more important
+banks between which and Messrs. Liddle, Neal &amp;
+Liddle there were daily transactions, and a few
+smaller semi-private banks and merchant firms acting
+as financial agents, with whom there was business
+intercourse of less importance and regularity;
+and each of these, as necessary, he visited in turn,
+collecting cash due on bills and other instruments of
+a like nature. He carried a wallet, fastened securely
+to his person by a chain, and this wallet contained
+the bills and the cash. Usually at the end of his
+round, when all his bills had been converted into
+cash, the wallet held very large sums. His work<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+and responsibilities, in fine, were those common to
+walk-clerks in all banks.</p>
+
+<p>On the day of the robbery he had started out as
+usual&mdash;possibly a little earlier than was customary&mdash;and
+the bills and other securities in his possession
+represented considerably more than £15,000. It
+had been ascertained that he had called in the usual
+way at each establishment on the round, and had
+transacted his business at the last place by about a
+quarter-past one, being then, without doubt, in possession
+of cash to the full value of the bills negotiated.
+After that, Mr. Lyster said, yesterday's report
+was that nothing more had been heard of him.
+But this morning there had been a message to the
+effect that he had been traced out of the country&mdash;to
+Calais, at least, it was thought. The directors of
+the society wished Hewitt to take the case in hand
+personally and at once, with a view of recovering
+what was possible from the plunder by way of salvage;
+also, of course, of finding Laker, for it is an
+important moral gain to guarantee societies, as an
+example, if a thief is caught and punished. Therefore
+Hewitt and Mr. Lyster, as soon as might be,
+made for Messrs. Liddle, Neal &amp; Liddle's, that the
+investigation might be begun.</p>
+
+<p>The bank premises were quite near&mdash;in Leadenhall
+Street. Having arrived there, Hewitt and Mr.
+Lyster made their way to the firm's private rooms.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+As they were passing an outer waiting-room, Hewitt
+noticed two women. One, the elder, in widow's weeds,
+was sitting with her head bowed in her hand over a
+small writing-table. Her face was not visible, but
+her whole attitude was that of a person overcome
+with unbearable grief; and she sobbed quietly. The
+other was a young woman of twenty-two or twenty-three.
+Her thick black veil revealed no more than
+that her features were small and regular, and that
+her face was pale and drawn. She stood with a
+hand on the elder woman's shoulder, and she quickly
+turned her head away as the two men entered.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Neal, one of the partners, received them in
+his own room. "Good-morning, Mr. Hewitt," he
+said, when Mr. Lyster had introduced the detective.
+"This is a serious business&mdash;very. I think I am
+sorrier for Laker himself than for anybody else, ourselves
+included&mdash;or, at any rate, I am sorrier for his
+mother. She is waiting now to see Mr. Liddle, as
+soon as he arrives&mdash;Mr. Liddle has known the family
+for a long time. Miss Shaw is with her, too, poor
+girl. She is a governess, or something of that sort,
+and I believe she and Laker were engaged to be
+married. It's all very sad."</p>
+
+<p>"Inspector Plummer, I understand," Hewitt remarked,
+"has the affair in hand, on behalf of the
+police?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Mr. Neal replied; "in fact, he's here<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+now, going through the contents of Laker's desk,
+and so forth; he thinks it possible Laker may have
+had accomplices. Will you see him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Presently. Inspector Plummer and I are old
+friends. We met last, I think, in the case of the
+Stanway cameo, some months ago. But, first, will
+you tell me how long Laker has been a walk-clerk?"</p>
+
+<p>"Barely four months, although he has been with
+us altogether seven years. He was promoted to the
+walk soon after the beginning of the year."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know anything of his habits&mdash;what he
+used to do in his spare time, and so forth?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a great deal. He went in for boating, I
+believe, though I have heard it whispered that he
+had one or two more expensive tastes&mdash;expensive,
+that is, for a young man in his position," Mr. Neal
+explained, with a dignified wave of the hand that he
+peculiarly affected. He was a stout old gentleman,
+and the gesture suited him.</p>
+
+<p>"You have had no reason to suspect him of dishonesty
+before, I take it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no. He made a wrong return once, I believe,
+that went for some time undetected, but it
+turned out, after all, to be a clerical error&mdash;a mere
+clerical error."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know anything of his associates out of
+the office?"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No, how should I? I believe Inspector Plummer
+has been making inquiries as to that, however,
+of the other clerks. Here he is, by the bye, I expect.
+Come in!"</p>
+
+<p>It was Plummer who had knocked, and he came
+in at Mr. Neal's call. He was a middle-sized, small-eyed,
+impenetrable-looking man, as yet of no great
+reputation in the force. Some of my readers may
+remember his connection with that case, so long a
+public mystery, that I have elsewhere fully set forth
+and explained under the title of "The Stanway
+Cameo Mystery." Plummer carried his billy-cock
+hat in one hand and a few papers in the other.
+He gave Hewitt good-morning, placed his hat on a
+chair, and spread the papers on the table.</p>
+
+<p>"There's not a great deal here," he said, "but
+one thing's plain&mdash;Laker had been betting. See
+here, and here, and here"&mdash;he took a few letters
+from the bundle in his hand&mdash;"two letters from a
+bookmaker about settling&mdash;wonder he trusted a
+clerk&mdash;several telegrams from tipsters, and a letter
+from some friend&mdash;only signed by initials&mdash;asking
+Laker to put a sovereign on a horse for the friend
+'with his own.' I'll keep these, I think. It may
+be worth while to see that friend, if we can find
+him. Ah, we often find it's betting, don't we,
+Mr. Hewitt? Meanwhile, there's no news from
+France yet."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You are sure that is where he is gone?" asked
+Hewitt.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll tell you what we've done as yet.
+First, of course, I went round to all the banks.
+There was nothing to be got from that. The
+cashiers all knew him by sight, and one was a
+personal friend of his. He had called as usual,
+said nothing in particular, cashed his bills in the
+ordinary way, and finished up at the Eastern
+Consolidated Bank at about a quarter-past one.
+So far there was nothing whatever. But I had
+started two or three men meanwhile making inquiries
+at the railway stations, and so on. I had
+scarcely left the Eastern Consolidated when one of
+them came after me with news. He had tried Palmer's
+Tourist Office, although that seemed an unlikely
+place, and there struck the track."</p>
+
+<p>"Had he been there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not only had he been there, but he had taken
+a tourist ticket for France. It was quite a smart
+move, in a way. You see it was the sort of
+ticket that lets you do pretty well what you like;
+you have the choice of two or three different routes
+to begin with, and you can break your journey
+where you please, and make all sorts of variations.
+So that a man with a ticket like that, and a few
+hours' start, could twist about on some remote
+branch route, and strike off in another direction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+altogether, with a new ticket, from some out-of-the-way
+place, while we were carefully sorting out and
+inquiring along the different routes he <i>might</i> have
+taken. Not half a bad move for a new hand; but
+he made one bad mistake, as new hands always do&mdash;as
+old hands do, in fact, very often. He was
+fool enough to give his own name, C. Laker!
+Although that didn't matter much, as the description
+was enough to fix him. There he was, wallet
+and all, just as he had come from the Eastern
+Consolidated Bank. He went straight from there
+to Palmer's, by the bye, and probably in a cab.
+We judge that by the time. He left the Eastern
+Consolidated at a quarter-past one, and was at
+Palmer's by twenty-five-past&mdash;ten minutes. The
+clerk at Palmer's remembered the time because he
+was anxious to get out to his lunch, and kept looking
+at the clock, expecting another clerk in to
+relieve him. Laker didn't take much in the way
+of luggage, I fancy. We inquired carefully at the
+stations, and got the porters to remember the passengers
+for whom they had been carrying luggage,
+but none appeared to have had any dealings with
+our man. That, of course, is as one would expect.
+He'd take as little as possible with him, and buy
+what he wanted on the way, or when he'd reached
+his hiding-place. Of course, I wired to Calais (it
+was a Dover to Calais route ticket) and sent a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+couple of smart men off by the 8.15 mail from
+Charing Cross. I expect we shall hear from them
+in the course of the day. I am being kept in London
+in view of something expected at headquarters,
+or I should have been off myself."</p>
+
+<p>"That is all, then, up to the present? Have you
+anything else in view?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's all I've absolutely ascertained at present.
+As for what I'm going to do"&mdash;a slight
+smile curled Plummer's lip&mdash;"well, I shall see.
+I've a thing or two in my mind."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt smiled slightly himself; he recognised
+Plummer's touch of professional jealousy. "Very
+well," he said, rising, "I'll make an inquiry or
+two for myself at once. Perhaps, Mr. Neal, you'll
+allow one of your clerks to show me the banks, in
+their regular order, at which Laker called yesterday.
+I think I'll begin at the beginning."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Neal offered to place at Hewitt's disposal
+anything or anybody the bank contained, and the
+conference broke up. As Hewitt, with the clerk,
+came through the rooms separating Mr. Neal's sanctum
+from the outer office, he fancied he saw the two
+veiled women leaving by a side door.</p>
+
+<p>The first bank was quite close to Liddle, Neal &amp;
+Liddle's. There the cashier who had dealt with
+Laker the day before remembered nothing in particular
+about the interview. Many other walk-clerks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+had called during the morning, as they did every
+morning, and the only circumstances of the visit
+that he could say anything definite about were those
+recorded in figures in the books. He did not know
+Laker's name till Plummer had mentioned it in making
+inquiries on the previous afternoon. As far as
+he could remember, Laker behaved much as usual,
+though really he did not notice much; he looked
+chiefly at the bills. He described Laker in a way
+that corresponded with the photograph that Hewitt
+had borrowed from the bank; a young man with a
+brown moustache and ordinary-looking, fairly regular
+face, dressing much as other clerks dressed&mdash;tall hat,
+black cutaway coat, and so on. The numbers of the
+notes handed over had already been given to Inspector
+Plummer, and these Hewitt did not trouble about.</p>
+
+<p>The next bank was in Cornhill, and here the
+cashier was a personal friend of Laker's&mdash;at any
+rate, an acquaintance&mdash;and he remembered a little
+more. Laker's manner had been quite as usual, he
+said; certainly he did not seem preoccupied or excited
+in his manner. He spoke for a moment or
+two&mdash;of being on the river on Sunday, and so on&mdash;and
+left in his usual way.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you remember <i>everything</i> he said?" Hewitt
+asked. "If you can tell me, I should like to know
+exactly what he did and said to the smallest particular."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, he saw me a little distance off&mdash;I was behind
+there, at one of the desks&mdash;and raised his hand
+to me, and said, 'How d'ye do?' I came across
+and took his bills, and dealt with them in the usual
+way. He had a new umbrella lying on the counter&mdash;rather
+a handsome umbrella&mdash;and I made a remark
+about the handle. He took it up to show me,
+and told me it was a present he had just received
+from a friend. It was a gorse-root handle, with two
+silver bands, one with his monogram C.W.L. I said
+it was a very nice handle, and asked him whether it
+was fine in his district on Sunday. He said he had
+been up the river, and it was very fine there. And
+I think that was all."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. Now about this umbrella. Did
+he carry it rolled? Can you describe it in detail?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I've told you about the handle, and the
+rest was much as usual, I think; it wasn't rolled&mdash;just
+flapping loosely, you know. It was rather an
+odd-shaped handle, though. I'll try and sketch it, if
+you like, as well as I can remember." He did so,
+and Hewitt saw in the result rough indications of a
+gnarled crook, with one silver band near the end, and
+another, with the monogram, a few inches down the
+handle. Hewitt put the sketch in his pocket, and
+bade the cashier good-day.</p>
+
+<p>At the next bank the story was the same as at
+the first&mdash;there was nothing remembered but the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+usual routine. Hewitt and the clerk turned down
+a narrow paved court, and through into Lombard
+Street for the next visit. The bank&mdash;that of Buller,
+Clayton, Ladds &amp; Co.&mdash;was just at the corner at the
+end of the court, and the imposing stone entrance-porch
+was being made larger and more imposing
+still, the way being almost blocked by ladders and
+scaffold-poles. Here there was only the usual tale,
+and so on through the whole walk. The cashiers
+knew Laker only by sight, and that not always very
+distinctly. The calls of walk-clerks were such matters
+of routine that little note was taken of the persons
+of the clerks themselves, who were called by
+the names of their firms, if they were called by any
+names at all. Laker had behaved much as usual, so
+far as the cashiers could remember, and when finally
+the Eastern Consolidated was left behind, nothing
+more had been learnt than the chat about Laker's
+new umbrella.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt had taken leave of Mr. Neal's clerk, and
+was stepping into a hansom, when he noticed a
+veiled woman in widow's weeds hailing another
+hansom a little way behind. He recognised the
+figure again, and said to the driver, "Drive fast to
+Palmer's Tourist Office, but keep your eye on that
+cab behind, and tell me presently if it is following
+us."</p>
+
+<p>The cabman drove off, and after passing one or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+two turnings, opened the lid above Hewitt's head,
+and said, "That there other keb <i>is</i> a-follerin' us, sir,
+an' keepin' about even distance all along."</p>
+
+<p>"All right; that's what I wanted to know. Palmer's
+now."</p>
+
+<p>At Palmer's the clerk who had attended to Laker
+remembered him very well, and described him. He
+also remembered the wallet, and <i>thought</i> he remembered
+the umbrella&mdash;was practically sure of it, in
+fact, upon reflection. He had no record of the
+name given, but remembered it distinctly to be
+Laker. As a matter of fact, names were never asked
+in such a transaction, but in this case Laker appeared
+to be ignorant of the usual procedure, as
+well as in a great hurry, and asked for the ticket
+and gave his name all in one breath, probably assuming
+that the name would be required.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt got back to his cab, and started for Charing
+Cross. The cabman once more lifted the lid and
+informed him that the hansom with the veiled woman
+in it was again following, having waited while
+Hewitt had visited Palmer's. At Charing Cross
+Hewitt discharged his cab and walked straight to
+the lost property office. The man in charge knew
+him very well, for his business had carried him there
+frequently before.</p>
+
+<p>"I fancy an umbrella was lost in the station
+yesterday," Hewitt said. "It was a new umbrella,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+silk, with a gnarled gorse-root handle and two silver
+bands, something like this sketch. There was a
+monogram on the lower band&mdash;'C. W. L.' were the
+letters. Has it been brought here?"</p>
+
+<p>"There was two or three yesterday," the man
+said; "let's see." He took the sketch and retired
+to a corner of his room. "Oh, yes&mdash;here it is, I
+think; isn't this it? Do you claim it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, not exactly that, but I think I'll take a
+look at it, if you'll let me. By the way, I see it's
+rolled up. Was it found like that?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; the chap rolled it up what found it&mdash;porter
+he was. It's a fad of his, rolling up umbrellas
+close and neat, and he's rather proud of it. He
+often looks as though he'd like to take a man's
+umbrella away and roll it up for him when it's a bit
+clumsy done. Rum fad, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; everybody has his little fad, though.
+Where was this found&mdash;close by here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; just there, almost opposite this window,
+in the little corner."</p>
+
+<p>"About two o'clock?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, about that time, more or less."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt took the umbrella up, unfastened the
+band, and shook the silk out loose. Then he opened
+it, and as he did so a small scrap of paper fell from
+inside it. Hewitt pounced on it like lightning.
+Then, after examining the umbrella thoroughly, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>side
+and out, he handed it back to the man, who had
+not observed the incident of the scrap of paper.</p>
+
+<p>"That will do, thanks," he said. "I only wanted
+to take a peep at it&mdash;just a small matter connected
+with a little case of mine. Good-morning."</p>
+
+<p>He turned suddenly and saw, gazing at him with
+a terrified expression from a door behind, the face
+of the woman who had followed him in the cab.
+The veil was lifted, and he caught but a mere glance
+of the face ere it was suddenly withdrawn. He
+stood for a moment to allow the woman time to retreat,
+and then left the station and walked toward
+his office, close by.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely thirty yards along the Strand he met
+Plummer.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to make some much closer inquiries
+all down the line as far as Dover," Plummer said.
+"They wire from Calais that they have no clue as
+yet, and I mean to make quite sure, if I can, that
+Laker hasn't quietly slipped off the line somewhere
+between here and Dover. There's one very peculiar
+thing," Plummer added confidentially. "Did you
+see the two women who were waiting to see a member
+of the firm at Liddle, Neal &amp; Liddle's?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Laker's mother and his <i>fiancée</i>, I was
+told."</p>
+
+<p>"That's right. Well, do you know that girl&mdash;Shaw
+her name is&mdash;has been shadowing me ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+since I left the Bank. Of course I spotted it from
+the beginning&mdash;these amateurs don't know how to
+follow anybody&mdash;and, as a matter of fact, she's just
+inside that jeweller's shop door behind me now, pretending
+to look at the things in the window. But
+it's odd, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," Hewitt replied, "of course it's not a
+thing to be neglected. If you'll look very carefully
+at the corner of Villiers Street, without appearing to
+stare, I think you will possibly observe some signs
+of Laker's mother. She's shadowing <i>me</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Plummer looked casually in the direction indicated,
+and then immediately turned his eyes in another
+direction.</p>
+
+<p>"I see her," he said; "she's just taking a look
+round the corner. That's a thing not to be ignored.
+Of course, the Lakers' house is being watched&mdash;we
+set a man on it at once, yesterday. But I'll put some
+one on now to watch Miss Shaw's place, too. I'll telephone
+through to Liddle's&mdash;probably they'll be able
+to say where it is. And the women themselves must
+be watched, too. As a matter of fact, I had a notion
+that Laker wasn't alone in it. And it's just possible,
+you know, that he has sent an accomplice off with
+his tourist ticket to lead us a dance while he looks
+after himself in another direction. Have you done
+anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," Hewitt replied, with a faint reproduc<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>tion
+of the secretive smile with which Plummer had
+met an inquiry of his earlier in the morning, "I've
+been to the station here, and I've found Laker's
+umbrella in the lost property office."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Then probably he <i>has</i> gone. I'll bear
+that in mind, and perhaps have a word with the lost
+property man."</p>
+
+<p>Plummer made for the station and Hewitt for his
+office. He mounted the stairs and reached his door
+just as I myself, who had been disappointed in not
+finding him in, was leaving. I had called with the
+idea of taking Hewitt to lunch with me at my club,
+but he declined lunch. "I have an important case
+in hand," he said. "Look here, Brett. See this
+scrap of paper. You know the types of the different
+newspapers&mdash;which is this?"</p>
+
+<p>He handed me a small piece of paper. It was
+part of a cutting containing an advertisement, which
+had been torn in half.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/210.png" width="300" height="85" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I <i>think</i>," I said, "this is from the <i>Daily
+Chronicle</i>, judging by the paper. It is plainly from
+the 'agony column,' but all the papers use pretty
+much the same type for these advertisements, except
+the <i>Times</i>. If it were not torn I could tell you at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+once, because the <i>Chronicle</i> columns are rather narrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind&mdash;I'll send for them all." He rang,
+and sent Kerrett for a copy of each morning paper
+of the previous day. Then he took from a large
+wardrobe cupboard a decent but well-worn and
+rather roughened tall hat. Also a coat a little worn
+and shiny on the collar. He exchanged these for his
+own hat and coat, and then substituted an old necktie
+for his own clean white one, and encased his legs
+in mud-spotted leggings. This done, he produced a
+very large and thick pocket-book, fastened by a
+broad elastic band, and said, "Well, what do you
+think of this? Will it do for Queen's taxes, or
+sanitary inspection, or the gas, or the water-supply?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very well indeed, I should say," I replied.
+"What's the case?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'll tell you all about that when it's over&mdash;no
+time now. Oh, here you are, Kerrett. By the
+bye, Kerrett, I'm going out presently by the back
+way. Wait for about ten minutes or a quarter of
+an hour after I am gone, and then just go across the
+road and speak to that lady in black, with the veil,
+who is waiting in that little foot-passage opposite.
+Say Mr. Martin Hewitt sends his compliments, and
+he advises her not to wait, as he has already left his
+office by another door, and has been gone some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+little time. That's all; it would be a pity to keep
+the poor woman waiting all day for nothing. Now
+the papers. <i>Daily News, Standard, Telegraph, Chronicle</i>&mdash;yes,
+here it is, in the Chronicle."</p>
+
+<p>The whole advertisement read thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>
+YOB.&mdash;H.R. Shop roast. You 1st. Then to-night. 02. 2nd top 3rd L. No. 197 red bl.
+straight mon. One at a time.
+</p></div>
+
+<p>"What's this," I asked, "a cryptogram?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll see," Hewitt answered. "But I won't tell
+you anything about it till afterwards, so you get
+your lunch. Kerrett, bring the directory."</p>
+
+<p>This was all I actually saw of this case myself,
+and I have written the rest in its proper order from
+Hewitt's information, as I have written some other
+cases entirely.</p>
+
+<p>To resume at the point where, for the time I lost
+sight of the matter. Hewitt left by the back way
+and stopped an empty cab as it passed. "Abney
+Park Cemetery" was his direction to the driver. In
+little more than twenty minutes the cab was branching
+off down the Essex Road on its way to Stoke
+Newington, and in twenty minutes more Hewitt
+stopped it in Church Street, Stoke Newington. He
+walked through a street or two, and then down
+another, the houses of which he scanned carefully
+as he passed. Opposite one which stood by itself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+he stopped, and, making a pretence of consulting
+and arranging his large pocket-book, he took
+a good look at the house. It was rather larger,
+neater, and more pretentious than the others in
+the street, and it had a natty little coach-house
+just visible up the side entrance. There were
+red blinds hung with heavy lace in the front
+windows, and behind one of these blinds Hewitt
+was able to catch the glint of a heavy gas chandelier.</p>
+
+<p>He stepped briskly up the front steps and
+knocked sharply at the door. "Mr. Merston?" he
+asked, pocket-book in hand, when a neat parlour-maid
+opened the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" Hewitt stepped into the hall and pulled
+off his hat; "it's only the meter. There's been
+a deal of gas running away somewhere here, and
+I'm just looking to see if the meters are right.
+Where is it?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl hesitated. "I'll&mdash;I'll ask master," she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. I don't want to take it away,
+you know&mdash;only to give it a tap or two, and so
+on."</p>
+
+<p>The girl retired to the back of the hall, and
+without taking her eyes off Martin Hewitt, gave
+his message to some invisible person in a back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+room, whence came a growling reply of "All
+right."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt followed the girl to the basement, apparently
+looking straight before him, but in reality
+taking in every detail of the place. The gas meter
+was in a very large lumber cupboard under the
+kitchen stairs. The girl opened the door and lit
+a candle. The meter stood on the floor, which was
+littered with hampers and boxes and odd sheets of
+brown paper. But a thing that at once arrested
+Hewitt's attention was a garment of some sort of
+bright blue cloth, with large brass buttons, which
+was lying in a tumbled heap in a corner, and appeared
+to be the only thing in the place that was
+not covered with dust. Nevertheless, Hewitt took
+no apparent notice of it, but stooped down and
+solemnly tapped the meter three times with his
+pencil, and listened with great gravity, placing his
+ear to the top. Then he shook his head and tapped
+again. At length he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It's a bit doubtful. I'll just get you to light
+the gas in the kitchen a moment. Keep your hand
+to the burner, and when I call out shut it off <i>at
+once</i>; see?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl turned and entered the kitchen, and
+Hewitt immediately seized the blue coat&mdash;for a coat
+it was. It had a dull red piping in the seams, and
+was of the swallow-tail pattern&mdash;a livery coat, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+fact. He held it for a moment before him, examining
+its pattern and colour, and then rolled it up and
+flung it again into the corner.</p>
+
+<p>"Right!" he called to the servant. "Shut
+off!"</p>
+
+<p>The girl emerged from the kitchen as he left
+the cupboard.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she asked, "are you satisfied now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite satisfied, thank you," Hewitt replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it all right?" she continued, jerking her
+hand toward the cupboard.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, no, it isn't; there's something wrong
+there, and I'm glad I came. You can tell Mr.
+Merston, if you like, that I expect his gas bill will
+be a good deal less next quarter." And there was
+a suspicion of a chuckle in Hewitt's voice as he
+crossed the hall to leave. For a gas inspector is
+pleased when he finds at length what he has been
+searching for.</p>
+
+<p>Things had fallen out better than Hewitt had
+dared to expect. He saw the key of the whole
+mystery in that blue coat; for it was the uniform
+coat of the hall porters at one of the banks that he
+had visited in the morning, though which one he
+could not for the moment remember. He entered
+the nearest post-office and despatched a
+telegram to Plummer, giving certain directions
+and asking the inspector to meet him; then he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+hailed the first available cab and hurried toward
+the City.</p>
+
+<p>At Lombard Street he alighted, and looked in at
+the door of each bank till he came to Buller, Clayton,
+Ladds &amp; Co.'s. This was the bank he wanted.
+In the other banks the hall porters wore mulberry
+coats, brick-dust coats, brown coats, and what
+not, but here, behind the ladders and scaffold
+poles which obscured the entrance, he could see
+a man in a blue coat, with dull red piping and
+brass buttons. He sprang up the steps, pushed
+open the inner swing door, and finally satisfied himself
+by a closer view of the coat, to the wearer's
+astonishment. Then he regained the pavement and
+walked the whole length of the bank premises in
+front, afterwards turning up the paved passage at
+the side, deep in thought. The bank had no windows
+or doors on the side next the court, and the
+two adjoining houses were old and supported in
+places by wooden shores. Both were empty, and a
+great board announced that tenders would be received
+in a month's time for the purchase of the old
+materials of which they were constructed; also that
+some part of the site would be let on a long building
+lease.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt looked up at the grimy fronts of the old
+buildings. The windows were crusted thick with
+dirt&mdash;all except the bottom window of the house<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+nearer the bank, which was fairly clean, and seemed
+to have been quite lately washed. The door, too, of
+this house was cleaner than that of the other, though
+the paint was worn. Hewitt reached and fingered a
+hook driven into the left-hand doorpost about six
+feet from the ground. It was new, and not at all
+rusted; also a tiny splinter had been displaced when
+the hook was driven in, and clean wood showed at
+the spot.</p>
+
+<p>Having observed these things, Hewitt stepped
+back and read at the bottom of the big board the
+name, "Winsor &amp; Weekes, Surveyors and Auctioneers,
+Abchurch Lane." Then he stepped into Lombard
+Street.</p>
+
+<p>Two hansoms pulled up near the post-office, and
+out of the first stepped Inspector Plummer and
+another man. This man and the two who alighted
+from the second hansom were unmistakably plain-clothes
+constables&mdash;their air, gait, and boots proclaimed
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"What's all this?" demanded Plummer, as Hewitt
+approached.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll soon see, I think. But, first, have you
+put the watch on No. 197, Hackworth Road?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; nobody will get away from there alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good. I am going into Abchurch Lane
+for a few minutes. Leave your men out here, but
+just go round into the court by Buller, Clayton <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>&amp;
+Ladds's, and keep your eye on the first door on the
+left. I think we'll find something soon. Did you
+get rid of Miss Shaw?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, she's behind now, and Mrs. Laker's with
+her. They met in the Strand, and came after us in
+another cab. Rare fun, eh! They think we're
+pretty green! It's quite handy, too. So long as
+they keep behind me it saves all trouble of watching
+<i>them</i>." And Inspector Plummer chuckled and
+winked.</p>
+
+<p>"Very good. You don't mind keeping your eye
+on that door, do you? I'll be back very soon," and
+with that Hewitt turned off into Abchurch Lane.</p>
+
+<p>At Winsor &amp; Weekes's information was not difficult
+to obtain. The houses were destined to come
+down very shortly, but a week or so ago an office
+and a cellar in one of them was let temporarily to a
+Mr. Westley. He brought no references; indeed, as
+he paid a fortnight's rent in advance, he was not
+asked for any, considering the circumstances of the
+case. He was opening a London branch for a large
+firm of cider merchants, he said, and just wanted a
+rough office and a cool cellar to store samples in for
+a few weeks till the permanent premises were ready.
+There was another key, and no doubt the premises
+might be entered if there were any special need for
+such a course. Martin Hewitt gave such excellent
+reasons that Winsor &amp; Weekes's managing clerk<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+immediately produced the key and accompanied
+Hewitt to the spot.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you'd better have your men handy,"
+Hewitt remarked to Plummer when they reached
+the door, and a whistle quickly brought the men over.</p>
+
+<p>The key was inserted in the lock and turned, but
+the door would not open; the bolt was fastened at the
+bottom. Hewitt stooped and looked under the door.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a drop bolt," he said. "Probably the man
+who left last let it fall loose, and then banged the
+door, so that it fell into its place. I must try my
+best with a wire or a piece of string."</p>
+
+<p>A wire was brought, and with some man&oelig;uvring
+Hewitt contrived to pass it round the bolt, and lift
+it little by little, steadying it with the blade of a
+pocket-knife. When at length the bolt was raised
+out of the hole, the knife-blade was slipped under
+it, and the door swung open.</p>
+
+<p>They entered. The door of the little office just
+inside stood open, but in the office there was nothing,
+except a board a couple of feet long in a corner.
+Hewitt stepped across and lifted this, turning its
+downward face toward Plummer. On it, in fresh
+white paint on a black ground, were painted the
+words&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+"<span class="smcap">Buller, Clayton, Ladds &amp; Co.,<br />
+Temporary Entrance.</span>"<br />
+</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Hewitt turned to Winsor &amp; Weekes's clerk and
+asked, "The man who took this room called himself
+Westley, didn't he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Youngish man, clean-shaven, and well-dressed?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he was."</p>
+
+<p>"I fancy," Hewitt said, turning to Plummer, "I
+<i>fancy</i> an old friend of yours is in this&mdash;Mr. Sam
+Gunter."</p>
+
+<p>"What, the 'Hoxton Yob'?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think it's possible he's been Mr. Westley for a
+bit, and somebody else for another bit. But let's
+come to the cellar."</p>
+
+<p>Winsor &amp; Weekes's clerk led the way down a
+steep flight of steps into a dark underground corridor,
+wherein they lighted their way with many successive
+matches. Soon the corridor made a turn to
+the right, and as the party passed the turn, there
+came from the end of the passage before them a
+fearful yell.</p>
+
+<p>"Help! help! Open the door! I'm going mad&mdash;mad!
+O my God!"</p>
+
+<p>And there was a sound of desperate beating
+from the inside of the cellar door at the extreme
+end. The men stopped, startled.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," said Hewitt, "more matches!" and he
+rushed to the door. It was fastened with a bar and
+padlock.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Let me out, for God's sake!" came the
+voice, sick and hoarse, from the inside. "Let me
+out!"</p>
+
+<p>"All right!" Hewitt shouted. "We have come
+for you. Wait a moment."</p>
+
+<p>The voice sank into a sort of sobbing croon, and
+Hewitt tried several keys from his own bunch on
+the padlock. None fitted. He drew from his
+pocket the wire he had used for the bolt of the
+front door, straightened it out, and made a sharp
+bend at the end.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold a match close," he ordered shortly, and
+one of the men obeyed. Three or four attempts
+were necessary, and several different bendings of the
+wire were effected, but in the end Hewitt picked the
+lock, and flung open the door.</p>
+
+<p>From within a ghastly figure fell forward among
+them fainting, and knocked out the matches.</p>
+
+<p>"Hullo!" cried Plummer. "Hold up! Who
+are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Let's get him up into the open," said Hewitt.
+"He can't tell you who he is for a bit, but I believe
+he's Laker."</p>
+
+<p>"Laker! What, here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think so. Steady up the steps. Don't bump
+him. He's pretty sore already, I expect."</p>
+
+<p>Truly the man was a pitiable sight. His hair
+and face were caked in dust and blood, and his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+finger-nails were torn and bleeding. Water was sent
+for at once, and brandy.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Plummer hazily, looking first at the
+unconscious prisoner and then at Hewitt, "but what
+about the swag?"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll have to find that yourself," Hewitt replied.
+"I think my share of the case is about finished.
+I only act for the Guarantee Society, you
+know, and if Laker's proved innocent&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Innocent! How?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, this is what took place, as near as I can
+figure it. You'd better undo his collar, I think"&mdash;this
+to the men. "What I believe has happened is
+this. There has been a very clever and carefully
+prepared conspiracy here, and Laker has not been
+the criminal, but the victim."</p>
+
+<p>"Been robbed himself, you mean? But how?
+Where?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yesterday morning, before he had been to more
+than three banks&mdash;here, in fact."</p>
+
+<p>"But then how? You're all wrong. We <i>know</i>
+he made the whole round, and did all the collection.
+And then Palmer's office, and all, and the umbrella;
+why&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The man lay still unconscious. "Don't raise his
+head," Hewitt said. "And one of you had best
+fetch a doctor. He's had a terrible shock." Then
+turning to Plummer he went on, "As to <i>how</i> they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+managed the job I'll tell you what I think. First it
+struck some very clever person that a deal of money
+might be got by robbing a walk-clerk from a bank.
+This clever person was one of a clever gang of
+thieves&mdash;perhaps the Hoxton Row gang, as I think
+I hinted. Now you know quite as well as I do that
+such a gang will spend any amount of time over a
+job that promises a big haul, and that for such a job
+they can always command the necessary capital.
+There are many most respectable persons living in
+good style in the suburbs whose chief business lies
+in financing such ventures, and taking the chief
+share of the proceeds. Well, this is their plan, carefully
+and intelligently carried out. They watch
+Laker, observe the round he takes, and his habits.
+They find that there is only one of the clerks with
+whom he does business that he is much acquainted
+with, and that this clerk is in a bank which is commonly
+second in Laker's round. The sharpest man
+among them&mdash;and I don't think there's a man in
+London could do this as well as young Sam Gunter&mdash;studies
+Laker's dress and habits just as an actor
+studies a character. They take this office and cellar,
+as we have seen, <i>because it is next door to a bank
+whose front entrance is being altered</i>&mdash;a fact which
+Laker must know from his daily visits. The smart
+man&mdash;Gunter, let us say, and I have other reasons
+for believing it to be he&mdash;makes up precisely like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+Laker, false moustache, dress, and everything, and
+waits here with the rest of the gang. One of the
+gang is dressed in a blue coat with brass buttons,
+like a hall-porter in Buller's bank. Do you see?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I think so. It's pretty clear now."</p>
+
+<p>"A confederate watches at the top of the court,
+and the moment Laker turns in from Cornhill&mdash;having
+already been, mind, at the only bank where
+he was so well known that the disguised thief would
+not have passed muster&mdash;as soon as he turns in
+from Cornhill, I say, a signal is given, and that
+board"&mdash;pointing to that with the white letters&mdash;"is
+hung on the hook in the doorpost. The sham
+porter stands beside it, and as Laker approaches
+says, 'This way in, sir, this morning. The front
+way's shut for the alterations.' Laker, suspecting
+nothing, and supposing that the firm have made a
+temporary entrance through the empty house, enters.
+He is seized when well along the corridor,
+the board is taken down and the door shut. Probably
+he is stunned by a blow on the head&mdash;see the
+blood now. They take his wallet and all the cash
+he has already collected. Gunter takes the wallet
+and also the umbrella, since it has Laker's initials,
+and is therefore distinctive. He simply completes
+the walk in the character of Laker, beginning with
+Buller, Clayton &amp; Ladds's just round the corner. It
+is nothing but routine work, which is quickly done,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+and nobody notices him particularly&mdash;it is the bills
+they examine. Meanwhile this unfortunate fellow
+is locked up in the cellar here, right at the end of
+the underground corridor, where he can never make
+himself heard in the street, and where next him are
+only the empty cellars of the deserted house next
+door. The thieves shut the front door and vanish.
+The rest is plain. Gunter, having completed the
+round, and bagged some £15,000 or more, spends a
+few pounds in a tourist ticket at Palmer's as a blind,
+being careful to give Laker's name. He leaves the
+umbrella at Charing Cross in a conspicuous place
+right opposite the lost property office, where it is
+sure to be seen, and so completes his false trail."</p>
+
+<p>"Then who are the people at 197, Hackworth
+Road?"</p>
+
+<p>"The capitalist lives there&mdash;the financier, and
+probably the directing spirit of the whole thing.
+Merston's the name he goes by there, and I've
+no doubt he cuts a very imposing figure in
+chapel every Sunday. He'll be worth picking
+up&mdash;this isn't the first thing he's been in, I'll
+warrant."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;but what about Laker's mother and Miss
+Shaw?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what? The poor women are nearly
+out of their minds with terror and shame, that's
+all, but though they may think Laker a criminal,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+they'll never desert him. They've been following
+us about with a feeble, vague sort of hope of
+being able to baffle us in some way or help him
+if we caught him, or something, poor things.
+Did you ever hear of a real woman who'd desert
+a son or a lover merely because he was a criminal?
+But here's the doctor. When he's attended
+to him will you let your men take Laker home?
+I must hurry and report to the Guarantee Society,
+I think."</p>
+
+<p>"But," said the perplexed Plummer, "where
+did you get your clue? You must have had a tip
+from some one, you know&mdash;you can't have done it
+by clairvoyance. What gave you the tip?"</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Daily Chronicle</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>what</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Daily Chronicle</i>. Just take a look at the
+'agony column' in yesterday morning's issue, and
+read the message to 'Yob'&mdash;to Gunter, in fact.
+That's all."</p>
+
+<p>By this time a cab was waiting in Lombard
+Street, and two of Plummer's men, under the
+doctor's directions, carried Laker to it. No sooner,
+however, were they in the court than the two
+watching women threw themselves hysterically
+upon Laker, and it was long before they could be
+persuaded that he was not being taken to gaol.
+The mother shrieked aloud, "My boy&mdash;my boy!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+Don't take him! Oh, don't take him! They've
+killed my boy! Look at his head&mdash;oh, his head!"
+and wrestled desperately with the men, while
+Hewitt attempted to soothe her, and promised to
+allow her to go in the cab with her son if she
+would only be quiet. The younger woman made
+no noise, but she held one of Laker's limp hands
+in both hers.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt and I dined together that evening, and
+he gave me a full account of the occurrences which
+I have here set down. Still, when he was finished
+I was not able to see clearly by what process of
+reasoning he had arrived at the conclusions that
+gave him the key to the mystery, nor did I
+understand the "agony column" message, and I
+said so.</p>
+
+<p>"In the beginning," Hewitt explained, "the
+thing that struck me as curious was the fact that
+Laker was said to have given his own name at
+Palmer's in buying his ticket. Now, the first
+thing the greenest and newest criminal thinks of
+is changing his name, so that the giving of his
+own name seemed unlikely to begin with. Still,
+he <i>might</i> have made such a mistake, as Plummer
+suggested when he said that criminals usually
+make a mistake somewhere&mdash;as they do, in fact.
+Still, it was the least likely mistake I could think
+of&mdash;especially as he actually didn't wait to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+asked for his name, but blurted it out when it
+wasn't really wanted. And it was conjoined with
+another rather curious mistake, or what would have
+been a mistake if the thief were Laker. Why
+should he conspicuously display his wallet&mdash;such
+a distinctive article&mdash;for the clerk to see and
+note? Why rather had he not got rid of it before
+showing himself? Suppose it should be somebody
+personating Laker? In any case I determined
+not to be prejudiced by what I had heard
+of Laker's betting. A man may bet without being
+a thief.</p>
+
+<p>"But, again, supposing it <i>were</i> Laker? Might
+he not have given his name, and displayed his
+wallet, and so on, while buying a ticket for
+France, in order to draw pursuit after himself
+in that direction while he made off in another,
+in another name, and disguised? Each supposition
+was plausible. And, in either case, it might
+happen that whoever was laying this trail would
+probably lay it a little farther. Charing Cross
+was the next point, and there I went. I already
+had it from Plummer that Laker had not been
+recognised there. Perhaps the trail had been
+laid in some other manner. Something left behind
+with Laker's name on it, perhaps? I at
+once thought of the umbrella with his monogram,
+and, making a long shot, asked for it at the lost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+property office, as you know. The guess was
+lucky. In the umbrella, as you know, I found that
+scrap of paper. That, I judged, had fallen in from
+the hand of the man carrying the umbrella. He
+had torn the paper in half in order to fling it away,
+and one piece had fallen into the loosely flapping
+umbrella. It is a thing that will often happen with
+an omnibus ticket, as you may have noticed. Also,
+it was proved that the umbrella <i>was</i> unrolled when
+found, and rolled immediately after. So here was a
+piece of paper dropped by the person who had
+brought the umbrella to Charing Cross and left it.
+I got the whole advertisement, as you remember,
+and I studied it. 'Yob' is back-slang for 'boy,' and
+it is often used in nicknames to denote a young
+smooth-faced thief. Gunter, the man I suspect, as
+a matter of fact, is known as the 'Hoxton Yob.'
+The message, then, was addressed to some one
+known by such a nickname. Next, 'H.R. shop
+roast.' Now, in thieves' slang, to 'roast' a thing or
+a person is to watch it or him. They call any place
+a shop&mdash;notably, a thieves' den. So that this meant
+that some resort&mdash;perhaps the 'Hoxton Row shop'&mdash;was
+watched. 'You 1st then to-night' would be
+clearer, perhaps, when the rest was understood. I
+thought a little over the rest, and it struck me that
+it must be a direction to some other house, since
+one was warned of as being watched. Besides, there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+was the number, 197, and 'red bl.,' which would be
+extremely likely to mean 'red blinds,' by way of
+clearly distinguishing the house. And then the plan
+of the thing was plain. You have noticed, probably,
+that the map of London which accompanies the Post
+Office Directory is divided, for convenience of reference,
+into numbered squares?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. The squares are denoted by letters along
+the top margin and figures down the side. So that
+if you consult the directory, and find a place marked
+as being in D 5, for instance, you find vertical divisions
+D, and run your finger down it till it intersects
+horizontal division 5, and there you are."</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely. I got my Post Office Directory, and
+looked for 'O 2.' It was in North London, and took
+in parts of Abney Park Cemetery and Clissold Park;
+'2nd top' was the next sign. Very well, I counted
+the second street intersecting the top of the square&mdash;counting,
+in the usual way, from the left. That
+was Lordship Road. Then, '3rd L.' From the
+point where Lordship Road crossed the top of the
+square, I ran my finger down the road till it came
+to '3rd L,' or, in other words, the third turning on
+the left&mdash;Hackworth Road. So there we were, unless
+my guesses were altogether wrong. 'Straight
+mon' probably meant 'straight moniker'&mdash;that is to
+say, the proper name, a thief's <i>real</i> name, in contradistinction
+to that he may assume. I turned over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+the directory till I found Hackworth Road, and
+found that No. 197 was inhabited by a Mr. Merston.
+From the whole thing I judged this. There was to
+have been a meeting at the 'H.R. shop,' but that
+was found, at the last moment, to be watched by the
+police for some purpose, so that another appointment
+was made for this house in the suburbs. 'You
+1st. Then to-night'&mdash;the person addressed was to
+come first, and the others in the evening. They
+were to ask for the householder's 'straight moniker'&mdash;Mr.
+Merston. And they were to come one at
+a time.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, then, what was this? What theory would
+fit it? Suppose this were a robbery, directed from
+afar by the advertiser. Suppose, on the day before
+the robbery, it was found that the place fixed for
+division of spoils were watched. Suppose that the
+principal thereupon advertised (as had already been
+agreed in case of emergency) in these terms. The
+principal in the actual robbery&mdash;the 'Yob' addressed&mdash;was
+to go first with the booty. The others
+were to come after, one at a time. Anyway, the
+thing was good enough to follow a little further, and
+I determined to try No. 197, Hackworth Road. I
+have told you what I found there, and how it opened
+my eyes. I went, of course, merely on chance, to
+see what I might chance to see. But luck favoured,
+and I happened on that coat&mdash;brought back rolled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+up, on the evening after the robbery, doubtless by
+the thief who had used it, and flung carelessly into
+the handiest cupboard. <i>That</i> was this gang's mistake."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I congratulate you," I said. "I hope
+they'll catch the rascals."</p>
+
+<p>"I rather think they will, now they know where
+to look. They can scarcely miss Merston, anyway.
+There has been very little to go upon in this case,
+but I stuck to the thread, however slight, and it
+brought me through. The rest of the case, of
+course, is Plummer's. It was a peculiarity of my
+commission that I could equally well fulfil it by
+catching the man with all the plunder, or by proving
+him innocent. Having done the latter, my work was
+at an end, but I left it where Plummer will be able
+to finish the job handsomely."</p>
+
+<p>Plummer did. Sam Gunter, Merston, and one
+accomplice were taken&mdash;the first and last were well
+known to the police&mdash;and were identified by Laker.
+Merston, as Hewitt had suspected, had kept the
+lion's share for himself, so that altogether, with
+what was recovered from him and the other two,
+nearly £11,000 was saved for Messrs. Liddle, Neal
+&amp; Liddle. Merston, when taken, was in the act of
+packing up to take a holiday abroad, and there cash
+his notes, which were found, neatly packed in separate
+thousands, in his portmanteau. As Hewitt had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+predicted, his gas bill <i>was</i> considerably less next
+quarter, for less than half-way through it he began
+a term in gaol.</p>
+
+<p>As for Laker, he was reinstated, of course, with
+an increase of salary by way of compensation for
+his broken head. He had passed a terrible twenty-six
+hours in the cellar, unfed and unheard. Several
+times he had become insensible, and again and again
+he had thrown himself madly against the door,
+shouting and tearing at it, till he fell back exhausted,
+with broken nails and bleeding fingers.
+For some hours before the arrival of his rescuers
+he had been sitting in a sort of stupor, from which
+he was suddenly aroused by the sound of voices and
+footsteps. He was in bed for a week, and required
+a rest of a month in addition before he could resume
+his duties. Then he was quietly lectured by Mr.
+Neal as to betting, and, I believe, dropped that
+practice in consequence. I am told that he is "at
+the counter" now&mdash;a considerable promotion.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_CASE_OF_THE_LOST_FOREIGNER" id="THE_CASE_OF_THE_LOST_FOREIGNER"></a>THE CASE OF THE LOST FOREIGNER.</h2>
+
+
+<p>I have already said in more than one place that
+Hewitt's personal relations with the members of the
+London police force were of a cordial character.
+In the course of his work it has frequently been
+Hewitt's hap to learn of matters on which the police
+were glad of information, and that information was
+always passed on at once; and so long as no
+infringement of regulations or damage to public
+service were involved, Hewitt could always rely on
+a return in kind.</p>
+
+<p>It was with a message of a useful sort that
+Hewitt one day dropped into Vine Street police-station
+and asked for a particular inspector, who
+was not in. Hewitt sat and wrote a note, and by
+way of making conversation said to the inspector on
+duty, "Anything very startling this way to-day?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing <i>very</i> startling, perhaps, as yet," the
+inspector replied. "But one of our chaps picked up
+rather an odd customer a little while ago. Lunatic
+of some sort, I should think&mdash;in fact, I've sent for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+the doctor to see him. He's a foreigner&mdash;a Frenchman,
+I believe. He seemed horribly weak and
+faint; but the oddest thing occurred when one of the
+men, thinking he might be hungry, brought in some
+bread. He went into fits of terror at the sight of it,
+and wouldn't be pacified till they took it away
+again."</p>
+
+<p>"That was strange."</p>
+
+<p>"Odd, wasn't it? And he <i>was</i> hungry too.
+They brought him some more a little while after,
+and he didn't funk it a bit,&mdash;pitched into it, in fact,
+like anything, and ate it all with some cold beef.
+It's the way with some lunatics&mdash;never the same five
+minutes together. He keeps crying like a baby,
+and saying things we can't understand. As it happens,
+there's nobody in just now who speaks
+French."</p>
+
+<p>"I speak French," Hewitt replied. "Shall I try
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, if you will. He's in the men's room
+below. They've been making him as comfortable as
+possible by the fire until the doctor comes. He's a
+long time. I expect he's got a case on."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt found his way to the large mess-room,
+where three or four policemen in their shirt-sleeves
+were curiously regarding a young man of very disordered
+appearance who sat on a chair by the fire.
+He was pale, and exhibited marks of bruises on his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+face, while over one eye was a scarcely healed cut.
+His figure was small and slight, his coat was torn,
+and he sat with a certain indefinite air of shivering
+suffering. He started and looked round apprehensively
+as Hewitt entered. Hewitt bowed smilingly,
+wished him good-day, speaking in French, and asked
+him if he spoke the language.</p>
+
+<p>The man looked up with a dull expression, and
+after an effort or two, as of one who stutters, burst
+out with, "<i>Je le nie!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"That's strange," Hewitt observed to the men.
+"I ask him if he speaks French, and he says he denies
+it&mdash;speaking <i>in</i> French."</p>
+
+<p>"He's been saying that very often, sir," one of
+the men answered, "as well as other things we can't
+make anything of."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt placed his hand kindly on the man's
+shoulder and asked his name. The reply was for a
+little while an inarticulate gurgle, presently merging
+into a meaningless medley of words and syllables&mdash;"<i>Qu'est
+ce qu'</i>&mdash;<i>il n'a</i>&mdash;Leystar Squarr&mdash;<i>sacré nom</i>&mdash;not
+spik it&mdash;<i>quel chemin</i>&mdash;sank you ver' mosh&mdash;<i>je le
+nie! je le nie!</i>" He paused, stared, and then, as
+though realizing his helplessness, he burst into tears.</p>
+
+<p>"He's been a-cryin' two or three times," said the
+man who had spoken before. "He was a-cryin'
+when we found him."</p>
+
+<p>Several more attempts Hewitt made to communi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>cate
+with the man, but though he seemed to comprehend
+what was meant, he replied with nothing
+but meaningless gibber, and finally gave up the attempt,
+and, leaning against the side of the fireplace,
+buried his head in the bend of his arm.</p>
+
+<p>Then the doctor arrived and made <i>his</i> examination.
+While it was in progress Hewitt took aside
+the policeman who had been speaking before and
+questioned him further. He had himself found the
+Frenchman in a dull back street by Golden Square,
+where the man was standing helpless and trembling,
+apparently quite bewildered and very weak. He
+had brought him in, without having been able to
+learn anything about him. One or two shopkeepers
+in the street where he was found were asked, but
+knew nothing of him&mdash;indeed, had never seen him
+before.</p>
+
+<p>"But the curiousest thing," the policeman proceeded,
+"was in this 'ere room, when I brought him
+a loaf to give him a bit of a snack, seein' he looked
+so weak an' 'ungry. You'd 'a thought we was
+a-goin' to poison 'im. He fair screamed at the very
+sight o' the bread, an' he scrouged hisself up in that
+corner an' put his hands in front of his face. I
+couldn't make out what was up at first&mdash;didn't tumble
+to it's bein' the bread he was frightened of,
+seein' as he looked like a man as 'ud be frightened
+at anything else afore <i>that</i>. But the nearer I came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+with it the more he yelled, so I took it away an' left
+it outside, an' then he calmed down. An' s'elp me,
+when I cut some bits off that there very loaf an'
+brought 'em in, with a bit o' beef, he just went for
+'em like one o'clock. <i>He</i> wasn't frightened o' no
+bread then, you bet. Rum thing, how the fancies
+takes 'em when they're a bit touched, ain't
+it? All one way one minute, all the other the
+next."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is. By the way, have you another uncut
+loaf in the place?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. Half a dozen if you like."</p>
+
+<p>"One will be enough. I am going over to speak
+to the doctor. Wait awhile until he seems very
+quiet and fairly comfortable; then bring a loaf in
+quietly and put it on the table, not far from his elbow.
+Don't attract his attention to what you are
+doing."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor stood looking thoughtfully down on
+the Frenchman, who, for his part, stared gloomily,
+but tranquilly, at the fireplace. Hewitt stepped
+quietly over to the doctor and, without disturbing
+the man by the fire, said interrogatively, "Aphasia?"</p>
+
+<p>The doctor tightened his lips, frowned, and
+nodded significantly. "Motor," he murmured, just
+loudly enough for Hewitt to hear; "and there's a
+general nervous break-down as well, I should say.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+By the way, perhaps there's no agraphia. Have
+you tried him with pen and paper?"</p>
+
+<p>Pen and paper were brought and set before the
+man. He was told, slowly and distinctly, that he
+was among friends, whose only object was to restore
+him to his proper health. Would he write his name
+and address, and any other information he might
+care to give about himself, on the paper before him?</p>
+
+<p>The Frenchman took the pen and stared at the
+paper; then slowly, and with much hesitation, he
+traced these marks:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/239.png" width="600" height="115" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<p>The man paused after the last of these futile
+characters, and his pen stabbed into the paper with
+a blot, as he dazedly regarded his work. Then with
+a groan he dropped it, and his face sank again into
+the bend of his arm.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor took the paper and handed it to
+Hewitt. "Complete agraphia, you see," he said.
+"He can't write a word. He begins to write 'Monsieur'
+from sheer habit in beginning letters thus;
+but the word tails off into a scrawl. Then his attempts
+become mere scribble, with just a trace of
+some familiar word here and there&mdash;but quite meaningless
+all."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Although he had never before chanced to come
+across a case of aphasia (happily a rare disease),
+Hewitt was acquainted with its general nature. He
+knew that it might arise either from some physical
+injury to the brain, or from a break-down consequent
+on some terrible nervous strain. He knew that in
+the case of motor aphasia the sufferer, though fully
+conscious of all that goes on about him, and though
+quite understanding what is said to him is entirely
+powerless to put his own thoughts into spoken
+words&mdash;has lost, in fact, the connection between
+words and their spoken symbols. Also that in most
+bad cases agraphia&mdash;the loss of ability to write
+words with any reference to their meaning&mdash;is commonly
+an accompaniment.</p>
+
+<p>"You will have him taken to the infirmary, I
+suppose?" Hewitt asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," the doctor replied. "I shall go and see
+about it at once."</p>
+
+<p>The man looked up again as they spoke. The
+policeman had, in accordance with Hewitt's request,
+placed a loaf of bread on the table near him, and
+now as he looked up he caught sight of it. He
+started visibly and paled, but gave no such signs of
+abject terror as the policeman had previously observed.
+He appeared nervous and uneasy, however,
+and presently reached stealthily toward the loaf.
+Hewitt continued to talk to the doctor, while closely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+watching the Frenchman's behaviour from the
+corner of his eye.</p>
+
+<p>The loaf was what is called a "plain cottage," of
+solid and regular shape. The man reached it and
+immediately turned it bottom up on the table.
+Then he sank back in his chair with a more contented
+expression, though his gaze was still directed
+toward the loaf. The policeman grinned silently at
+this curious man&oelig;uvre.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor left, and Hewitt accompanied him to
+the door of the room. "He will not be moved just
+yet, I take it?" Hewitt asked as they parted.</p>
+
+<p>"It may take an hour or two," the doctor replied.
+"Are you anxious to keep him here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not for long; but I think there's a curious inside
+to the case, and I may perhaps learn something
+of it by a little watching. But I can't spare very
+long."</p>
+
+<p>At a sign from Hewitt the loaf was removed.
+Then Hewitt pulled the small table closer to the
+Frenchman and pushed the pen and sheets of paper
+toward him. The man&oelig;uvre had its result. The
+man looked up and down the room vacantly once or
+twice and then began to turn the papers over.
+From that he went to dipping the pen in the inkpot,
+and presently he was scribbling at random on the
+loose sheets. Hewitt affected to leave him entirely
+alone, and seemed to be absorbed in a contemplation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+of a photograph of a police-division brass band that
+hung on the wall, but he saw every scratch the man
+made.</p>
+
+<p>At first there was nothing but meaningless
+scrawls and attempted words. Then rough sketches
+appeared, of a man's head, a chair or what not. On
+the mantelpiece stood a small clock&mdash;apparently a
+sort of humble presentation piece, the body of the
+clock being set in a horse-shoe frame, with crossed
+whips behind it. After a time the Frenchman's eyes
+fell on this, and he began a crude sketch of it. That
+he relinquished, and went on with other random
+sketches and scribblings on the same piece of paper,
+sketching and scribbling over the sketches in a half-mechanical
+sort of way, as of one who trifles with a pen
+during a brown study. Beginning at the top left-hand
+corner of the paper, he travelled all round it
+till he arrived at the left-hand bottom corner. Then
+dashing his pen hastily across his last sketch he
+dropped it, and with a great shudder turned away
+again and hid his face by the fireplace.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt turned at once and seized the papers on
+the table. He stuffed them all into his coat-pocket,
+with the exception of the last which the man had
+been engaged on, and this, a facsimile of which is
+subjoined, he studied earnestly for several minutes.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt wished the men good-day, and made his
+way to the inspector.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well," the inspector said, "not much to be got
+out of him, is there? The doctor will be sending
+for him presently."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/243.png" width="400" height="389" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I fancy," said Hewitt, "that this may turn out
+a very important case. Possibly&mdash;quite possibly&mdash;I
+may not have guessed correctly, and so I won't tell
+you anything of it till I know a little more. But
+what I want now is a messenger. Can I send some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>body
+at once in a cab to my friend Brett at his
+chambers?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. I'll find somebody. Want to write
+a note?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt wrote and despatched a note, which
+reached me in less than ten minutes. Then he
+asked the inspector, "Have you searched the
+Frenchman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes. We went all over him, when we
+found he couldn't explain himself, to see if we
+could trace his friends or his address. He didn't
+seem to mind. But there wasn't a single thing in
+his pocket&mdash;not a single thing, barring a rag of a
+pocket-handkerchief with no marking on it."</p>
+
+<p>"You noticed that somebody had stolen his
+watch, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, he hadn't got one."</p>
+
+<p>"But he had one of those little vertical button-holes
+in his waistcoat, used to fasten a watchguard
+to, and it was much worn and frayed, so that he
+must be in the habit of carrying a watch; and it
+is gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and everything else too, eh? Looks like
+robbery. He's had a knock or two in the face&mdash;notice
+that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I saw the bruises and the cut, of course;
+and his collar has been broken away, with the
+back button; somebody has taken him by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+collar or throat. Was he wearing a hat when he
+was found?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"That would imply that he had only just left
+a house. What street was he found in?"</p>
+
+<p>"Henry Street&mdash;a little off Golden Square.
+Low street, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Did the constable notice a door open near
+by?"</p>
+
+<p>The inspector shook his head. "Half the doors
+in the street are open," he said, "pretty nearly all
+day."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, then there's nothing in that. I don't think
+he lives there, by the bye. I fancy he comes from
+more in the Seven Dials or Drury Lane direction.
+Did you notice anything about the man that gave
+you a clue to his occupation&mdash;or at any rate to his
+habits?"</p>
+
+<p>"Can't say I did."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, just take a look at the back of his coat
+before he goes away&mdash;just over the loins. Good-day."</p>
+
+<p>As I have said, Hewitt's messenger was quick.
+I happened to be in&mdash;having lately returned
+from a latish lunch&mdash;when he arrived with this
+note:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"My dear B.,&mdash;I meant to have lunched with
+you to-day, but have been kept. I expect you are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>idle this afternoon, and I have a case that will
+interest you&mdash;perhaps be useful to you from a
+journalistic point of view. If you care to see
+anything of it, cab away <i>at once</i> to Fitzroy Square,
+south side, where I'll meet you. I will wait no
+later than 3.30. Yours, M. H."</p></div>
+
+<p>I had scarce a quarter of an hour, so I seized
+my hat and left my chambers at once. As it happened,
+my cab and Hewitt's burst into Fitzroy
+Square from opposite sides almost at the same
+moment, so that we lost no time.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," said Hewitt, taking my arm and marching
+me off, "we are going to look for some stabling.
+Try to feel as though you'd just set up a brougham
+and had come out to look for a place to put it
+in. I fear we may have to delude some person
+with that belief presently."</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;what do you want stables for? And
+why make me your excuse?"</p>
+
+<p>"As to what I want the stables for&mdash;really I'm
+not altogether sure myself. As to making you an
+excuse&mdash;well, even the humblest excuse is better
+than none. But come, here are some stables. Not
+good enough, though, even if any of them were
+empty. Come on."</p>
+
+<p>We had stopped for an instant at the entrance
+to a small alley of rather dirty stables, and Hewitt,
+paying apparently but small attention to the stables<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+themselves, had looked sharply about him with his
+gaze in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"I know this part of London pretty well,"
+Hewitt observed, "and I can only remember one
+other range of stabling near by; we must try that.
+As a matter of fact, I'm coming here on little
+more than conjecture, though I shall be surprised
+if there isn't something in it. Do you know anything
+of aphasia?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard of it, of course, though I can't
+say I remember ever knowing a case."</p>
+
+<p>"I've seen one to-day&mdash;very curious case. The
+man's a Frenchman, discovered helpless in the street
+by a policeman. The only thing he can say that
+has any meaning in it at all is '<i>je le nie</i>,' and
+that he says mechanically, without in the least
+knowing what he is saying. And he can't write.
+But he got sketching and scrawling various things
+on some paper, and his scrawls&mdash;together with
+another thing or two&mdash;have given me an idea.
+We're following it up now. When we are less busy,
+and in a quiet place, I'll show you the sketches
+and explain things generally; there's no time now,
+and I <i>may</i> want your help for a bit, in which case
+ignorance may prevent you spoiling things, you
+clumsy ruffian. Hullo! here we are, I think!"</p>
+
+<p>We had stopped at the end of another stable-yard,
+rather dirtier than the first. The stables were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+sound but inelegant sheds, and one or two appeared
+to be devoted to other purposes, having low chimneys,
+on one of which an old basket was rakishly set
+by way of cowl. Beside the entrance a worn-out
+old board was nailed, with the legend, "Stabling to
+Let," in letters formerly white on a ground formerly
+black.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," said Hewitt, "we'll explore."</p>
+
+<p>We picked our way over the greasy cobble-stones
+and looked about us. On the left was the wall enclosing
+certain back-yards, and on the right the
+stables. Two doors in the middle of these were
+open, and a butcher's young man, who with his
+shiny bullet head would have been known for a
+butcher's young man anywhere, was wiping over
+the new-washed wheel of a smart butcher's cart.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-day," Hewitt said pleasantly to the young
+man. "I notice there's some stabling to let here.
+Now, where should I inquire about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jones, Whitfield Street," the young man answered,
+giving the wheel a final spin. "But there's
+only one little place to let now, I think, and it ain't
+very grand."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, which is that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Next but one to the street there. A chap 'ad
+it for wood-choppin', but 'e chucked it. There ain't
+room for more'n a donkey an' a barrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, that's a pity. We're not particular, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+want something big enough, and we don't mind paying
+a fair price. Perhaps we might make an arrangement
+with somebody here who has a stable?"</p>
+
+<p>The young man shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't think so," he said doubtfully;
+"they're mostly shop-people as wants all the room
+theirselves. My guv'nor couldn't do nothink, I
+know. These 'ere two stables ain't scarcely enough
+for all 'e wants as it is. Then there's Barkett the
+greengrocer 'ere next door. <i>That</i> ain't no good.
+Then, next to that, there's the little place as is to
+let, and at the end there's Griffith's at the butter-shop."</p>
+
+<p>"And those the other way?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, this 'ere first one's Curtis's, Euston Road&mdash;that's
+a butter-shop, too, an' 'e 'as the next after
+that. The last one, up at the end&mdash;I dunno quite
+whose that is. It ain't been long took, but I b'lieve
+it's some foreign baker's. I ain't ever see anythink
+come out of it, though; but there's a 'orse there, I
+know&mdash;I seen the feed took in."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt turned thoughtfully away.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks," he said. "I suppose we can't manage
+it, then. Good-day."</p>
+
+<p>We walked to the street as the butcher's young
+man wheeled in his cart and flung away his pail of
+water.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you just hang about here, Brett," he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+asked, "while I hurry round to the nearest iron-monger's?
+I shan't be gone long. We're going to
+work a little burglary. Take note if anybody comes
+to that stable at the farther end."</p>
+
+<p>He hurried away and I waited. In a few moments
+the butcher's young man shut his doors and
+went whistling down the street, and in a few moments
+more Hewitt appeared.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," he said, "there's nobody about now;
+we'll lose no time. I've bought a pair of pliers and
+a few nails."</p>
+
+<p>We re-entered the yard at the door of the last
+stable. Hewitt stooped and examined the padlock.
+Taking a nail in his pliers he bent it carefully
+against the brick wall. Then using the nail as a
+key, still held by the pliers, and working the padlock
+gently in his left hand, in an astonishingly few
+seconds he had released the hasp and taken off the
+padlock. "I'm not altogether a bad burglar," he
+remarked. "Not so bad, really."</p>
+
+<p>The padlock fastened a bar which, when removed,
+allowed the door to be opened. Opening it,
+Hewitt immediately seized a candle stuck in a bottle
+which stood on a shelf, pulled me in, and closed
+the door behind us.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll do this by candle-light," he said, as
+he struck a match. "If the door were left
+open it would be seen from the street. Keep<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+your ears open in case anybody comes down the
+yard."</p>
+
+<p>The part of the shed that we stood in was used
+as a coach-house, and was occupied by a rather
+shabby tradesman's cart, the shafts of which rested
+on the ground. From the stall adjoining came the
+sound of the shuffling and trampling of an impatient
+horse.</p>
+
+<p>We turned to the cart. On the name-board at
+the side were painted in worn letters the words,
+"Schuyler, Baker." The address, which had been
+below, was painted out.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt took out the pins and let down the tail board.
+Within the cart was a new bed-mattress
+which covered the whole surface at the bottom. I
+felt it, pressed it from the top, and saw that it was
+an ordinary spring mattress&mdash;perhaps rather unusually
+soft in the springs. It seemed a curious thing
+to keep in a baker's cart.</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt, who had set the candle on a convenient
+shelf, plunged his arm into the farthermost recesses
+of the cart and brought forth a very long
+French loaf, and then another. Diving again he
+produced certain loaves of the sort known as the
+"plain cottage "&mdash;two sets of four each, each set
+baked together in a row. "Feel this bread," said
+Hewitt, and I felt it. It was stale&mdash;almost as hard
+as wood.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Hewitt produced a large pocket-knife, and with
+what seemed to me to be superfluous care and
+elaboration, cut into the top of one of the cottage
+loaves. Then he inserted his fingers in the
+gap he had made and firmly but slowly tore the
+hard bread into two pieces. He pulled away the
+crumb from within till there was nothing left but
+a rather thick outer shell.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said, rather to himself than to me,
+"there's nothing in <i>that</i>." He lifted one of the
+very long French loaves and measured it against
+the interior of the cart. It had before been propped
+diagonally, and now it was noticeable that it was
+just a shade longer than the inside of the cart was
+wide. Jammed in, in fact, it held firmly. Hewitt
+produced his knife again, and divided this long
+loaf in the centre; there was nothing but bread in
+<i>that</i>. The horse in the stall fidgeted more than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"That horse hasn't been fed lately, I fancy,"
+Hewitt said. "We'll give the poor chap a bit of
+this hay in the corner."</p>
+
+<p>"But," I said, "what about this bread? What
+did you expect to find in it? I can't see what
+you're driving at."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you," Hewitt replied, "I'm driving
+after something I expect to find, and close at
+hand here, too. How are your nerves to-day&mdash;pretty
+steady? The thing may try them."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Before I could reply there was a sound of footsteps
+in the yard outside, approaching. Hewitt
+lifted his finger instantly for silence and whispered
+hurriedly, "There's only one. If he comes <i>here</i>, we
+grab him."</p>
+
+<p>The steps came nearer and stopped outside the
+door. There was a pause, and then a slight drawing
+in of breath, as of a person suddenly surprised.
+At that moment the door was slightly shifted ajar
+and an eye peeped in.</p>
+
+<p>"Catch him!" said Hewitt aloud, as we sprang
+to the door. "He mustn't get away!"</p>
+
+<p>I had been nearer the doorway, and was first
+through it. The stranger ran down the yard at his
+best, but my legs were the longer, and half-way to
+the street I caught him by the shoulder and swung
+him round. Like lightning he whipped out a knife,
+and I flung in my left instantly on the chance of
+flooring him. It barely checked him, however, and
+the knife swung short of my chest by no more than
+two inches; but Hewitt had him by the wrist and
+tripped him forward on his face. He struggled
+like a wild beast, and Hewitt had to stand on his
+forearm and force up his wrist till the bones were
+near breaking before he dropped his knife. But
+throughout the struggle the man never shouted,
+called for help, nor, indeed, made the slightest
+sound, and we on our part were equally silent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+It was quickly over, of course, for he was on his
+face, and we were two. We dragged our prisoner
+into the stable and closed the door behind us. So
+far as we had seen, nobody had witnessed the capture
+from the street, though, of course, we had been
+too busy to be certain.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a set of harness hanging over at the
+back," said Hewitt; "I think we'll tie him up with
+the traces and reins&mdash;nothing like leather. We
+don't need a gag; I know he won't shout."</p>
+
+<p>While I got the straps Hewitt held the prisoner
+by a peculiar neck-and-wrist grip that forbade him
+to move except at the peril of a snapped arm.
+He had probably never been a person of pleasant
+aspect, being short, strongly and squatly built,
+large and ugly of feature, and wild and dirty of
+hair and beard. And now, his face flushed with
+struggling and smeared with mud from the stable-yard,
+his nose bleeding and his forehead exhibiting
+a growing bump, he looked particularly repellent.
+We strapped his elbows together behind, and as he
+sullenly ignored a demand for the contents of his
+pockets Hewitt unceremoniously turned them out.
+Helpless as he was, the man struggled to prevent
+this, though, of course, ineffectually. There were
+papers, tobacco, a bunch of keys, and various odds
+and ends. Hewitt was glancing hastily at the
+papers when, suddenly dropping them, he caught<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+the prisoner by the shoulder and pulled him
+away from a partly-consumed hay-truss which
+stood in a corner, and toward which he had
+quietly sidled.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep him still," said Hewitt; "we haven't examined
+this place yet." And he commenced to
+pull away the hay from the corner.</p>
+
+<p>Presently a large piece of sackcloth was revealed,
+and this being lifted left visible below it
+another batch of loaves of the same sort as we
+had seen in the cart. There were a dozen of them
+in one square batch, and the only thing about
+them that differed them from those in the cart
+was their position, for the batch lay bottom
+side up.</p>
+
+<p>"That's enough, I think," Hewitt said. "Don't
+touch them, for Heaven's sake!" He picked up
+the papers he had dropped. "That has saved us
+a little search," he continued. "See here, Brett;
+I was in the act of telling you my suspicions when
+this little affair interrupted me. If you care to
+look at one or two of these letters you'll see what
+I should have told you. It's Anarchism and bombs,
+of course. I'm about as certain as I can be that
+there's a reversible dynamite bomb inside each of
+those innocent loaves, though I assure you I don't
+mean meddling with them now. But see here. Will
+you go and bring in a four-wheeler? Bring it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
+right down the yard. There's more to do, and we
+mustn't attract attention."</p>
+
+<p>I hurried away and found the cab. The meaning
+of the loaves, the cart, and the spring-mattress
+was now plain. There was an Anarchist plot to
+carry out a number of explosions probably simultaneously,
+in different parts of the city. I had, of
+course, heard much of the terrible "reversing"
+bombs&mdash;those bombs which, containing a tube of
+acid plugged by wadding, required no fuse, and only
+needed to be inverted to be set going to explode in
+a few minutes. The loaves containing these bombs
+would form an effectual "blind," and they were to
+be distributed, probably in broad daylight, in the
+most natural manner possible, in a baker's cart. A
+man would be waiting near the scene of each contemplated
+explosion. He would be given a loaf
+taken from the inverted batch. He would take it&mdash;perhaps
+wrapped in paper, but still inverted, and
+apparently the most innocent object possible&mdash;to the
+spot selected, deposit it, right side up&mdash;which would
+reverse the inner tube and set up the action&mdash;in
+some quiet corner, behind a door or what not, and
+make his own escape, while the explosion tore down
+walls and&mdash;if the experiment were lucky&mdash;scattered
+the flesh and bones of unsuspecting people.</p>
+
+<p>The infernal loaves were made and kept reversed,
+to begin with, in order to stand more firmly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+and&mdash;if observed&mdash;more naturally, when turned over
+to explode. Even if a child picked up the loaf and
+carried it off, that child at least would be blown to
+atoms, which at any rate would have been something
+for the conspirators to congratulate themselves
+upon. The spring-mattress, of course, was to ease
+the jolting to the bombs, and obviate any random
+jerking loose of the acid, which might have had the
+deplorable result of sacrificing the valuable life of
+the conspirator who drove the cart. The other
+loaves, too, with no explosive contents, had their
+use. The two long ones, which fitted across the
+inside of the cart, would be jammed across so as to
+hold the bombs in the centre, and the others would
+be used to pack the batch on the other sides and
+prevent any dangerous slipping about. The thing
+seemed pretty plain, except that as yet I had no idea
+of how Hewitt learned anything of the business.</p>
+
+<p>I brought the four-wheeler up to the door of the
+stable and we thrust the man into it, and Hewitt
+locked the stable door with its proper key. Then
+we drove off to Tottenham Court Road police-station,
+and, by Hewitt's order, straight into the yard.</p>
+
+<p>In less than ten minutes from our departure
+from the stable our prisoner was finally secured, and
+Hewitt was deep in consultation with police officials.
+Messengers were sent and telegrams despatched,
+and presently Hewitt came to me with information.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The name of the helpless Frenchman the police
+found this morning," he said, "appears to be Gérard&mdash;at
+least I am almost certain of it. Among the
+papers found on the prisoner&mdash;whose full name
+doesn't appear, but who seems to be spoken of as
+Luigi (he is Italian)&mdash;among the papers, I say, is a
+sort of notice convening a meeting for this evening
+to decide as to the 'final punishment' to be awarded
+the 'traitor Gérard, now in charge of comrade Pingard.'</p>
+
+<p>"The place of meeting is not mentioned, but it
+seems more than probable that it will be at the
+Bakunin Club, not five minutes' walk from this
+place. The police have all these places under quiet
+observation, of course, and that is the club at which
+apparently important Anarchist meetings have been
+held lately. It is the only club that has never been
+raided as yet, and, it would seem, the only one they
+would feel at all safe in using for anything important.</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, Luigi just now simply declined to
+open his mouth when asked where the meeting was
+to be, and said nothing when the names of several
+other places were suggested, but suddenly found his
+tongue at the mention of the Bakunin Club, and denied
+vehemently that the meeting was to be there&mdash;it
+was the only thing he uttered. So that it seems
+pretty safe to assume that it <i>is</i> to be there. Now,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+of course, the matter's very serious. Men have
+been despatched to take charge of the stable very
+quietly, and the club is to be taken possession of at
+once&mdash;also very quietly. It must be done without
+a moment's delay, and as there is a chance that the
+only detective officers within reach at the moment
+may be known by sight, I have undertaken to get in
+first. Perhaps you'll come? We may have to take
+the door with a rush."</p>
+
+<p>Of course I meant to miss nothing if I could
+help it, and said so.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," replied Hewitt, "we'll get ourselves
+up a bit." He began taking off his collar and tie.
+"It is getting dusk," he proceeded, "and we shan't
+want old clothes to make ourselves look sufficiently
+shabby. We're both wearing bowler hats, which is
+lucky. Make a dent in yours&mdash;if you can do so
+without permanently damaging it."</p>
+
+<p>We got rid of our collars and made chokers of
+our ties. We turned our coat-collars up at one side
+only, and then, with dented hats worn raffishly, and
+our hands in our pockets, we looked disreputable
+enough for all practical purposes in twilight. A
+cordon of plain-clothes police had already been
+forming round the club, we were told, and so we
+sallied forth. We turned into Windmill Street,
+crossed Whitfield Street, and in a turning or two
+we came to the Bakunin Club. I could see no sign<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+of anything like a ring of policemen, and said so.
+Hewitt chuckled. "Of course not," he said; "they
+don't go about a job of this sort with drums beating
+and flags flying. But they are all there, and some
+are watching us. There is the house. I'll negotiate."</p>
+
+<p>The house was one of the very shabby <i>passé</i> sort
+that abound in that quarter. The very narrow area
+was railed over, and almost choked with rubbish.
+Visible above it were three floors, the lowest indicated
+by the door and one window, and the other two
+by two windows each&mdash;mean and dirty all. A faint
+light appeared in the top floor, and another from
+somewhere behind the refuse-heaped area. Everywhere
+else was in darkness. Hewitt looked intently
+into the area, but it was impossible to discern anything
+behind the sole grimy patch of window that
+was visible. Then we stepped lightly up the three
+or four steps to the door and rang the bell.</p>
+
+<p>We could hear slippered feet mounting a stair
+and approaching. A latch was shifted, a door
+opened six inches, an indistinct face appeared, and
+a female voice asked, "<i>Qui est là?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Deux camarades</i>," Hewitt grunted testily.
+"<i>Ouvrez vite.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>I had noticed that the door was kept from opening
+further by a short chain. This chain the woman
+unhooked from the door, but still kept the latter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
+merely ajar, as though intending to assure herself
+still further. But Hewitt immediately pushed the
+door back, planted his foot against it, and entered,
+asking carelessly as he did so, "<i>Où se trouve Luigi?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>I followed on his heels, and in the dark could
+just distinguish that Hewitt pushed the woman instantly
+against the wall and clapped his hand to her
+mouth. At the same moment a file of quiet men
+were suddenly visible ascending the steps at my
+heels. They were the police.</p>
+
+<p>The door was closed behind us almost noiselessly,
+and a match was struck. Two men stood at the bottom
+of the stairs, and the others searched the house.
+Only two men were found&mdash;both in a top room.
+They were secured and brought down.</p>
+
+<p>The woman was now ungagged, and she used
+her tongue at a great rate. One of the men was a
+small, meek-looking slip of a fellow, and he appeared
+to be the woman's husband. "Eh, messieurs le
+police," she exclaimed vehemently, "it ees not of
+'im, mon pauvre Pierre, zat you sall rrun in. 'Im
+and me&mdash;we are not of the clob&mdash;we work only&mdash;we
+housekeep."</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt whispered to an officer, and the two men
+were taken below. Then Hewitt spoke to the
+woman, whose protests had not ceased. "You say
+you are not of the club," he said, "but what is there
+to prove that? If you are but housekeepers, as you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+say, you have nothing to fear. But you can only
+prove it by giving the police information. For instance,
+now, about Gérard. What have they done
+with him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jean Pingard&mdash;'im you 'ave take downstairs&mdash;'e
+'ave lose 'im. Jean Pingard get last night all
+a-boosa&mdash;all dronk like zis"&mdash;she rolled her head
+and shoulders to express intoxication&mdash;"and he
+sleep too much to-day, when Émile go out, and
+Gérard, he go too, and nobody know. I will tell
+you anysing. We are not of the clob&mdash;we housekeep,
+me and Pierre."</p>
+
+<p>"But what did they do to Gérard before he went
+away?"</p>
+
+<p>The woman was ready and anxious to tell anything.
+Gérard had been selected to do something&mdash;what
+it was exactly she did not know, but there was
+a horse and cart, and he was to drive it. Where the
+horse and cart was also she did not know, but
+Gérard had driven a cart before in his work for a
+baker, and he was to drive one in connection with
+some scheme among the members of the club. But
+<i>le pauvre Gérard</i> at the last minute disliked to drive
+the cart; he had fear. He did not say he had fear,
+but he prepared a letter&mdash;a letter that was not
+signed. The letter was to be sent to the police, and
+it told them the whereabouts of the horse and cart,
+so that the police might seize these things, and then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+there would be nothing for Gérard, who had fear, to
+do in the way of driving. No, he did not betray the
+names of the comrades, but he told the place of the
+horse and the cart.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the letter was never sent. There
+was suspicion, and the letter was found in a pocket
+and read. Then there was a meeting, and Gérard
+was confronted with his letter. He could say nothing
+but "<i>Je le nie!</i>"&mdash;found no explanation but that.
+There was much noise, and she had observed from
+a staircase, from which one might see through a
+ventilating hole, Gérard had much fear&mdash;very much
+fear. His face was white, and it moved; he prayed
+for mercy, and they talked of killing him. It was
+discussed how he should be killed, and the poor
+Gérard was more terrified. He was made to take
+off his collar, and a razor was drawn across his
+throat, though without cutting him, till he fainted.</p>
+
+<p>Then water was flung over him, and he was
+struck in the face till he revived. He again repeated,
+"<i>Je le nie! je le nie!</i>" and nothing more.
+Then one struck him with a bottle, and another with
+a stick; the point of a knife was put against his
+throat and held there, but this time he did not faint,
+but cried softly, as a man who is drunk, "<i>Je le nie!
+je le nie!</i>" So they tied a handkerchief about his
+neck, and twisted it till his face grew purple and
+black, and his eyes were round and terrible, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+then they struck his face, and he fainted again. But
+they took away the handkerchief, having fear that
+they could not easily get rid of the body if he were
+killed, for there was no preparation. So they decided
+to meet again and discuss when there would
+be preparation. Wherefore they took him away to
+the rooms of Jean Pingard&mdash;of Jean and Émile Pingard&mdash;in
+Henry Street, Golden Square. But Émile
+Pingard had gone out, and Jean was drunk and
+slept, and they lost him. Jean Pingard was he
+downstairs&mdash;the taller of the two; the other was but
+<i>le pauvre Pierre</i>, who, with herself, was not of the
+club. They worked only; they were the keepers of
+the house. There was nothing for which they should
+be arrested, and she would give the police any
+information they might ask.</p>
+
+<p>"As I thought, you see," Hewitt said to me,
+"the man's nerves have broken down under the
+terror and the strain, and aphasia is the result. I
+think I told you that the only articulate thing he
+could say was '<i>Je le nie!</i>' and now we know how
+those words were impressed on him till he now pronounces
+them mechanically, with no idea of their
+meaning. Come, we can do no more here now.
+But wait a moment."</p>
+
+<p>There were footsteps outside. The light was
+removed, and a policeman went to the door and
+opened it as soon as the bell rang. Three men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+stepped in one after another, and the door was
+immediately shut behind them&mdash;they were prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>We left quietly, and although we, of course, expected
+it, it was not till the next morning that we
+learned absolutely that the largest arrest of Anarchists
+ever made in this country was made at the
+Bakunin Club that night. Each man as he came
+was admitted&mdash;and collared.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>We made our way to Luzatti's, and it was over
+our dinner that Hewitt put me in full possession of
+the earlier facts of this case, which I have set down
+as impersonal narrative in their proper place at the
+beginning.</p>
+
+<p>"But," I said, "what of that aimless scribble you
+spoke of that Gérard made in the police station?
+Can I see it?"</p>
+
+<p>Hewitt turned to where his coat hung behind
+him and took a handful of papers from his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"Most of these," he said, "mean nothing at all.
+<i>That</i> is what he wrote at first," and he handed me
+the first of the two papers which were presented in
+facsimile in the earlier part of this narrative.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," he said, "he has begun mechanically
+from long use to write 'monsieur'&mdash;the usual beginning
+of a letter. But he scarcely makes three
+letters before tailing off into sheer scribble. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+tries again and again, and although once there is
+something very like 'que,' and once something like
+a word preceded by a negative 'n,' the whole thing
+is meaningless.</p>
+
+<p>"This" (he handed me the other paper which
+has been printed in facsimile) "<i>does</i> mean something,
+though Gérard never intended it. Can you
+spot the meaning? Really, I think it's pretty plain&mdash;especially
+now that you know as much as I about
+the day's adventures. The thing at the top left-hand
+corner, I may tell you, Gérard intended for a
+sketch of a clock on the mantelpiece in the police-station."</p>
+
+<p>I stared hard at the paper, but could make
+nothing whatever of it. "I only see the horse-shoe
+clock," I said, "and a sort of second, unsuccessful
+attempt to draw it again. Then there is a horse-shoe
+dotted, but scribbled over, and then a sort of
+kite or balloon on a string, a Highlander, and&mdash;well,
+I don't understand it, I confess. Tell me."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll explain what I learned from that," Hewitt
+said, "and also what led me to look for it. From
+what the inspector told me, I judged the man to be in
+a very curious state, and I took a fancy to see him.
+Most I was curious to know why he should have a
+terror of bread at one moment and eat it ravenously
+at another. When I saw him I felt pretty sure
+that he was not mad, in the common sense of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+term. As far as I could judge it seemed to be a
+case of aphasia.</p>
+
+<p>"Then when the doctor came I had a chat (as I
+have already told you) with the policeman who
+found the man. He told me about the incident of
+the bread with rather more detail than I had had
+from the inspector. Thus it was plain that the man
+was terrified at the bread only when it was in the
+form of a loaf, and ate it eagerly when it was cut
+into pieces. That was <i>one</i> thing to bear in mind.
+He was not afraid of <i>bread</i>, but only of a <i>loaf</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. I asked the policeman to find
+another uncut loaf, and to put it near the man when
+his attention was diverted. Meantime the doctor
+reported that my suspicion as to aphasia was right.
+The man grew more comfortable, and was assured
+that he was among friends and had nothing to fear,
+so that when at length he found the loaf near his
+elbow he was not so violently terrified, only very
+uneasy. I watched him and saw him turn it bottom
+up&mdash;a very curious thing to do; he immediately
+became less uneasy&mdash;the turning over of the loaf
+seemed to have set his mind at rest in some way.
+This was more curious still. I thought for some
+little while before accepting the bomb theory as the
+most probable.</p>
+
+<p>"The doctor left, and I determined to give the
+man another chance with pen and paper. I felt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+pretty certain that if he were allowed to scribble
+and sketch as he pleased, sooner or later he would
+do something that would give me some sort of a
+hint. I left him entirely alone and let him do as he
+pleased, but I watched.</p>
+
+<p>"After all the futile scribble which you have
+seen, he began to sketch, first a man's head, then a
+chair&mdash;just what he might happen to see in the
+room. Presently he took to the piece of paper you
+have before you. He observed that clock and
+began to sketch it, then went on to other things,
+such as you see, scribbling idly over most of them
+when finished. When he had made the last of the
+sketches he made a hasty scrawl of his pen over it
+and broke down. It had brought his terror to his
+mind again somehow.</p>
+
+<p>"I seized the paper and examined it closely.
+Now just see. Ignore the clock, which was merely
+a sketch of a thing before him, and look at the
+three things following. What are they? A horse-shoe,
+a captive balloon, and a Highlander. Now,
+can't you think of something those three things in
+that order suggest?"</p>
+
+<p>I could think of nothing whatever, and I confessed
+as much.</p>
+
+<p>"Think, now. Tottenham Court Road!"</p>
+
+<p>I started. "Of course," I said. "That never
+struck me. There's the Horse-shoe Hotel, with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+sign outside, there's the large toy and fancy shop
+half-way up, where they have a captive balloon
+moored to the roof as an advertisement, and there's
+the tobacco and snuff shop on the left, toward the
+other end, where they have a life-size wooden Highlander
+at the door&mdash;an uncommon thing, indeed,
+nowadays."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right. The curious conjunction struck
+me at once. There they are, all three, and just in
+the order in which one meets them going up from
+Oxford Street. Also, as if to confirm the conjecture,
+note the <i>dotted</i> horse-shoe. Don't you remember
+that at night the Horse-shoe Hotel sign is illuminated
+by two rows of gas lights?</p>
+
+<p>"Now here was my clue at last. Plainly, this
+man, in his mechanical sketching, was following a
+regular train of thought, and unconsciously illustrating
+it as he went along. Many people in perfect
+health and mental soundness do the same thing if a
+pen and a piece of waste paper be near. The man's
+train of thought led him, in memory, up Tottenham
+Court Road, and further, to where some disagreeable
+recollection upset him. It was my business to
+trace this train of thought. Do you remember the
+feat of Dupin in Poe's story, 'The Murders in the
+Rue Morgue'&mdash;how he walks by his friend's side in
+silence for some distance, and then suddenly breaks
+out with a divination of his thoughts, having silent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>ly
+traced them from a fruiterer with a basket,
+through paving-stones, Epicurus, Dr. Nichols, the
+constellation Orion, and a Latin poem, to a cobbler
+lately turned actor?</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it was some such task as this (but infinitely
+simpler, as a matter of fact) that was set me.
+This man begins by drawing the horse-shoe clock.
+Having done with that, and with the horse-shoe still
+in his mind, he starts to draw a horse-shoe simply.
+It is a failure, and he scribbles it out. His mind at
+once turns to the Horse-shoe Hotel, which he knows
+from frequently passing it, and its sign of gas-jets.
+He sketches <i>that</i>, making dots for the gas lights.
+Once started in Tottenham Court Road, his mind
+naturally follows his usual route along it. He
+remembers the advertising captive balloon half-way
+up, and down <i>that</i> goes on his paper. In
+imagination he crosses the road, and keeps on
+till he comes to the very noticeable Highlander
+outside the tobacconist's. <i>That</i> is sketched. Thus
+it is plain that a familiar route with him was
+from New Oxford Street up Tottenham Court
+Road.</p>
+
+<p>"At the police-station I ventured to guess from
+this that he lived somewhere near Seven Dials. Perhaps
+before long we shall know if this was right.
+But to return to the sketches. After the Highlander
+there is something at first not very distinct.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+A little examination, however, shows it to be intended
+for a chimney-pot partly covered with a
+basket. Now an old basket, stuck sideways on a
+chimney by way of cowl, is not an uncommon thing
+in parts of the country, but it is very unusual in
+London. Probably, then, it would be in some by-street
+or alley. Next and last, there is a horse's
+head, and it was at this that the man's trouble returned
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, when one goes to a place and finds a
+horse there, that place is not uncommonly a stable;
+and, as a matter of fact, the basket-cowl would
+be much more likely to be found in use in a
+range of back stabling than anywhere else. Suppose,
+then, that after taking the direction indicated
+in the sketches&mdash;the direction of Fitzroy
+Square, in fact&mdash;one were to find a range
+of stabling with a basket-cowl visible about it?
+I know my London pretty well, as you are aware,
+and I could remember but two likely stable-yards
+in that particular part&mdash;the two we looked at, in
+the second of which you may possibly have noticed
+just such a basket-cowl as I have been speaking
+of.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what we did you know, and that we found
+confirmation of my conjecture about the loaves you
+also know. It was the recollection of the horse and
+cart, and what they were to transport, and what the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+end of it all had been, that upset Gérard as he drew
+the horse's head. You will notice that the sketches
+have not been done in separate rows, left to right&mdash;they
+have simply followed one another all round
+the paper, which means preoccupation and unconsciousness
+on the part of the man who made
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"But," I asked, "supposing those loaves to contain
+bombs, how were the bombs put there? Baking
+the bread round them would have been risky,
+wouldn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. What they did was to cut the
+loaves, each row, down the centre. Then most of the
+crumb was scooped out, the explosive inserted, and
+the sides joined up and glued. I thought you had
+spotted the joins, though they certainly were
+neat."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I didn't examine closely. Luigi, of course,
+had been told off for a daily visit to feed the horse,
+and that is how we caught him."</p>
+
+<p>"One supposes so. They hadn't rearranged
+their plans as to going on with the outrages after
+Gérard's defection. By the way, I noticed that he
+was accustomed to driving when I first saw him.
+There was an unmistakable mark on his coat, just at
+the small of the back, that drivers get who lean
+against a rail in a cart."</p>
+
+<p>The loaves were examined by official experts,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+and, as everybody now knows, were found to contain,
+as Hewitt had supposed, large charges of
+dynamite. What became of some half-dozen of the
+men captured is also well known: their sentences
+were exemplary.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<br />
+<br />
+THE END.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+<h2>APPLETONS' TOWN AND COUNTRY LIBRARY.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">PUBLISHED SEMIMONTHLY.</p>
+
+
+<p>
+1. <i>The Steel Hammer.</i> By <span class="smcap">Louis Ulbach</span>.<br />
+2. <i>Eve.</i> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">S. Baring-Gould</span>.<br />
+3. <i>For Fifteen Years.</i> A Sequel to The Steel Hammer. By <span class="smcap">Louis Ulbach</span>.<br />
+4. <i>A Counsel of Perfection.</i> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">Lucas Malet</span>.<br />
+5. <i>The Deemster.</i> A Romance. By <span class="smcap">Hall Caine</span>.<br />
+5&frac12;. <i>The Bondman.</i> (New edition.) By <span class="smcap">Hall Caine</span>.<br />
+6. <i>A Virginia Inheritance.</i> By <span class="smcap">Edmund Pendleton</span>.<br />
+7. <i>Ninette</i>: An Idyll of Provence. By the author of Véra.<br />
+8. "<i>The Right Honourable.</i>" By <span class="smcap">Justin McCarthy</span> and Mrs. <span class="smcap">Campbell-Praed</span>.<br />
+9. <i>The Silence of Dean Maitland.</i> By <span class="smcap">Maxwell Gray</span>.<br />
+10. <i>Mrs. Lorimer</i>: A Study in Black and White. By <span class="smcap">Lucas Malet</span>.<br />
+11. <i>The Elect Lady.</i> By <span class="smcap">George MacDonald</span>.<br />
+12. <i>The Mystery of the "Ocean Star."</i> By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>.<br />
+13. <i>Aristocracy.</i> A Novel.<br />
+14. <i>A Recoiling Vengeance.</i> By <span class="smcap">Frank Barrett</span>. With Illustrations.<br />
+15. <i>The Secret of Fontaine-la-Croix.</i> By <span class="smcap">Margaret Field</span>.<br />
+16. <i>The Master of Rathkelly.</i> By <span class="smcap">Hawley Smart</span>.<br />
+17. <i>Donovan</i>: A Modern Englishman. By <span class="smcap">Edna Lyall</span>.<br />
+18. <i>This Mortal Coil.</i> By <span class="smcap">Grant Allen</span>.<br />
+19. <i>A Fair Emigrant.</i> By <span class="smcap">Rosa Mulholland</span>.<br />
+20. <i>The Apostate.</i> By <span class="smcap">Ernest Daudet</span>.<br />
+21. <i>Raleigh Westgate</i>; or, Epimenides in Maine. By <span class="smcap">Helen Kendrick Johnson</span>.<br />
+22. <i>Arius the Libyan.</i> A Romance of the Primitive Church.<br />
+23. <i>Constance</i>, and <i>Calbot's Rival</i>. By <span class="smcap">Julian Hawthorne</span>.<br />
+24. <i>We Two.</i> By <span class="smcap">Edna Lyall</span>.<br />
+25. <i>A Dreamer of Dreams.</i> By the author of Thoth.<br />
+26. <i>The Ladies' Gallery.</i> By <span class="smcap">Justin McCarthy</span> and Mrs. <span class="smcap">Campbell-Praed</span>.<br />
+27. <i>The Reproach of Annesley.</i> By <span class="smcap">Maxwell Gray</span>.<br />
+28. <i>Near to Happiness.</i><br />
+29. <i>In the Wire Grass.</i> By <span class="smcap">Louis Pendleton</span>.<br />
+30. <i>Lace.</i> A Berlin Romance. By <span class="smcap">Paul Lindau</span>.<br />
+30&frac12;. <i>The Black Poodle.</i> By <span class="smcap">F. Anstey</span>.<br />
+31. <i>American Coin.</i> A Novel. By the author of Aristocracy.<br />
+32. <i>Won by Waiting.</i> By <span class="smcap">Edna Lyall</span>.<br />
+33. <i>The Story of Helen Davenant.</i> By <span class="smcap">Violet Fane</span>.<br />
+34. <i>The Light of Her Countenance.</i> By <span class="smcap">H. H. Boyesen</span>.<br />
+35. <i>Mistress Beatrice Cope.</i> By <span class="smcap">M. E. Le Clerc</span>.<br />
+36. <i>The Knight-Errant.</i> By <span class="smcap">Edna Lyall</span>.<br />
+37. <i>In the Golden Days.</i> By <span class="smcap">Edna Lyall</span>.<br />
+38. <i>Giraldi</i>; or, The Curse of Love. By <span class="smcap">Ross George Dering</span>.<br />
+39. <i>A Hardy Norseman.</i> By <span class="smcap">Edna Lyall</span>.<br />
+40. <i>The Romance of Jenny Harlowe</i>, and <i>Sketches of Maritime Life</i>. By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>.<br />
+41. <i>Passion's Slave.</i> By <span class="smcap">Richard Ashe-King</span>.<br />
+42. <i>The Awakening of Mary Fenwick.</i> By <span class="smcap">Beatrice Whitby</span>.<br />
+43. <i>Countess Loretey.</i> Translated from the German of <span class="smcap">Rudolf Menger</span>.<br />
+44. <i>Blind Love.</i> By <span class="smcap">Wilkie Collins</span>.<br />
+45. <i>The Dean's Daughter.</i> By <span class="smcap">Sophie F. F. Veitch</span>.<br />
+46. <i>Countess Irene.</i> A Romance of Austrian Life. By <span class="smcap">J. Fogerty</span>.<br />
+47. <i>Robert Browning's Principal Shorter Poems.</i><br />
+48. <i>Frozen Hearts.</i> By <span class="smcap">G. Webb Appleton</span>.<br />
+49. <i>Djambek the Georgian.</i> By <span class="smcap">A. G. von Suttner</span>.<br />
+50. <i>The Craze of Christian Engelhart.</i> By <span class="smcap">Henry Faulkner Darnell</span>.<br />
+51. <i>Lal.</i> By <span class="smcap">William A. Hammond</span>, M. D.<br />
+52. <i>Aline.</i> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">Henry Gréville</span>.<br />
+53. <i>Joost Avelingh.</i> A Dutch Story. By <span class="smcap">Maarten Maartens</span>.<br />
+54. <i>Katy of Catoctin.</i> By <span class="smcap">George Alfred Townsend</span>.<br />
+55. <i>Throckmorton.</i> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">Molly Elliot Seawell</span>.<br />
+56. <i>Expatriation.</i> By the author of Aristocracy.<br />
+57. <i>Geoffrey Hampstead.</i> By <span class="smcap">T. S. Jarvis</span>.<br />
+58. <i>Dmitri.</i> A Romance of Old Russia. By <span class="smcap">F. W. Bain</span>, M. A.<br />
+59. <i>Part of the Property.</i> By <span class="smcap">Beatrice Whitby</span>.<br />
+60. <i>Bismarck in Private Life.</i> By a Fellow-Student.<br />
+61. <i>In Low Relief.</i> By <span class="smcap">Morley Roberts</span>.<br />
+62. <i>The Canadians of Old.</i> A Historical Romance. By <span class="smcap">Philippe Gaspé</span>.<br />
+63. <i>A Squire of Low Degree.</i> By <span class="smcap">Lily A. Long</span>.<br />
+64. <i>A Fluttered Dovecote.</i> By <span class="smcap">George Manville Fenn</span>.<br />
+65. <i>The Nugents of Carriconna.</i> An Irish Story. By <span class="smcap">Tighe Hopkins</span>.<br />
+66. <i>A Sensitive Plant.</i> By <span class="smcap">E.</span> and <span class="smcap">D. Gerard</span>.<br />
+67. <i>Doña Luz.</i> By <span class="smcap">Juan Valera</span>. Translated by Mrs. <span class="smcap">Mary J. Serrano</span>.<br />
+68. <i>Pepita Ximenez.</i> By <span class="smcap">Juan Valera</span>. Translated by Mrs. <span class="smcap">Mary J. Serrano</span>.<br />
+69. <i>The Primes and their Neighbors.</i> By <span class="smcap">Richard Malcolm Johnston</span>.<br />
+70. <i>The Iron Game.</i> By <span class="smcap">Henry F. Keenan</span>.<br />
+71. <i>Stories of Old New Spain.</i> By <span class="smcap">Thomas A. Janvier</span>.<br />
+72. <i>The Maid of Honor.</i> By Hon. <span class="smcap">Lewis Wingfield</span>.<br />
+73. <i>In the Heart of the Storm.</i> By <span class="smcap">Maxwell Gray</span>.<br />
+74. <i>Consequences.</i> By <span class="smcap">Egerton Castle</span>.<br />
+75. <i>The Three Miss Kings.</i> By <span class="smcap">Ada Cambridge</span>.<br />
+76. <i>A Matter of Skill.</i> By <span class="smcap">Beatrice Whitby</span>.<br />
+77. <i>Maid Marian, and Other Stories.</i> By <span class="smcap">Molly Elliot Seawell</span>.<br />
+78. <i>One Woman's Way.</i> By <span class="smcap">Edmund Pendleton</span>.<br />
+79. <i>A Merciful Divorce.</i> By <span class="smcap">F. W. Maude</span>.<br />
+80. <i>Stephen Ellicot's Daughter.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">J. H. Needell</span>.<br />
+81. <i>One Reason Why.</i> By <span class="smcap">Beatrice Whitby</span>.<br />
+82. <i>The Tragedy of Ida Noble.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>.<br />
+83. <i>The Johnstown Stage, and other Stories.</i> By <span class="smcap">Robert H. Fletcher</span>.<br />
+84. <i>A Widower Indeed.</i> By <span class="smcap">Rhoda Broughton</span> and <span class="smcap">Elizabeth Lisland</span>.<br />
+85. <i>The Flight of a Shadow.</i> By <span class="smcap">George MacDonald</span>.<br />
+86. <i>Love or Money.</i> By <span class="smcap">Katharine Lee</span>.<br />
+87. <i>Not All in Vain.</i> By <span class="smcap">Ada Cambridge</span>.<br />
+88. <i>It Happened Yesterday.</i> By <span class="smcap">Frederick Marshall</span>.<br />
+89. <i>My Guardian.</i> By <span class="smcap">Ada Cambridge</span>.<br />
+90. <i>The Story of Philip Methuen.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">J. H. Needell</span>.<br />
+91. <i>Amethyst</i>: The Story of a Beauty. By <span class="smcap">Christabel R. Coleridge</span>.<br />
+92. <i>Don Braulio.</i> By <span class="smcap">Juan Valera</span>. Translated by <span class="smcap">Clara Bell</span>.<br />
+93. <i>The Chronicles of Mr. Bill Williams.</i> By <span class="smcap">Richard Malcolm Johnston</span>.<br />
+94. <i>A Queen of Curds and Cream.</i> By <span class="smcap">Dorothea Gerard</span>.<br />
+95. <i>"La Bella" and Others.</i> By <span class="smcap">Egerton Castle</span>.<br />
+96. "<i>December Roses.</i>" By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Campbell Praed</span>.<br />
+97. <i>Jean de Kerdren.</i> By <span class="smcap">Jeanne Schultz</span>.<br />
+98. <i>Etelka's Vow.</i> By <span class="smcap">Dorothea Gerard</span>.<br />
+99. <i>Cross Currents.</i> By <span class="smcap">Mary A. Dickens</span>.<br />
+100. <i>His Life's Magnet.</i> By <span class="smcap">Theodora Elmslie</span>.<br />
+101. <i>Passing the Love of Women.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">J. H. Needell</span>.<br />
+102. <i>In Old St. Stephen's.</i> By <span class="smcap">Jeanie Drake</span>.<br />
+103. <i>The Berkeleys and their Neighbors.</i> By <span class="smcap">Molly Elliot Seawell</span>.<br />
+104. <i>Mona Maclean, Medical Student.</i> By <span class="smcap">Graham Travers</span>.<br />
+105. <i>Mrs. Bligh.</i> By <span class="smcap">Rhoda Broughton</span>.<br />
+106. <i>A Stumble on the Threshold.</i> By <span class="smcap">James Payn</span>.<br />
+107. <i>Hanging Moss.</i> By <span class="smcap">Paul Lindau</span>.<br />
+108. <i>A Comedy of Elopement.</i> By <span class="smcap">Christian Reid</span>.<br />
+109. <i>In the Suntime of her Youth.</i> By <span class="smcap">Beatrice Whitby</span>.<br />
+110. <i>Stories in Black and White.</i> By <span class="smcap">Thomas Hardy</span> and Others.<br />
+110&frac12;. <i>An Englishman in Paris.</i> Notes and Recollections.<br />
+111. <i>Commander Mendoza.</i> By <span class="smcap">Juan Valera</span>.<br />
+112. <i>Dr. Paull's Theory.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">A. M. Diehl</span>.<br />
+113. <i>Children of Destiny.</i> By <span class="smcap">Molly Elliot Seawell</span>.<br />
+114. <i>A Little Minx.</i> By <span class="smcap">Ada Cambridge</span>.<br />
+115. <i>Capt'n Davy's Honeymoon.</i> By <span class="smcap">Hall Caine</span>.<br />
+116. <i>The Voice of a Flower.</i> By <span class="smcap">E. Gerard</span>.<br />
+117. <i>Singularly Deluded.</i> By <span class="smcap">Sarah Grand</span>.<br />
+118. <i>Suspected.</i> By <span class="smcap">Louisa Stratenus</span>.<br />
+119. <i>Lucia, Hugh, and Another.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">J. H. Needell</span>.<br />
+120. <i>The Tutor's Secret.</i> By <span class="smcap">Victor Cherbuliez</span>.<br />
+121. <i>From the Five Rivers.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">F. A. Steel</span>.<br />
+122. <i>An Innocent Impostor, and Other Stories.</i> By <span class="smcap">Maxwell Gray</span>.<br />
+123. <i>Ideala.</i> By <span class="smcap">Sarah Grand</span>.<br />
+124. <i>A Comedy of Masks.</i> By <span class="smcap">Ernest Dowson</span> and <span class="smcap">Arthur Moore</span>.<br />
+125. <i>Relics.</i> By <span class="smcap">Frances MacNab</span>.<br />
+126. <i>Dodo: A Detail of the Day.</i> By <span class="smcap">E. F. Benson</span>.<br />
+127. <i>A Woman of Forty.</i> By <span class="smcap">Esmè Stuart</span>.<br />
+128. <i>Diana Tempest.</i> By <span class="smcap">Mary Cholmondeley</span>.<br />
+129. <i>The Recipe for Diamonds.</i> By <span class="smcap">C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne</span>.<br />
+130. <i>Christina Chard.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Campbell-Praed</span>.<br />
+131. <i>A Gray Eye or So.</i> By <span class="smcap">Frank Frankfort Moore</span>.<br />
+132. <i>Earlscourt.</i> By <span class="smcap">Alexander Allardyce</span>.<br />
+133. <i>A Marriage Ceremony.</i> By <span class="smcap">Ada Cambridge</span>.<br />
+134. <i>A Ward in Chancery.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Alexander</span>.<br />
+135. <i>Lot 13.</i> By <span class="smcap">Dorothea Gerard</span>.<br />
+136. <i>Our Manifold Nature.</i> By <span class="smcap">Sarah Grand</span>.<br />
+137. <i>A Costly Freak.</i> By <span class="smcap">Maxwell Gray</span>.<br />
+138. <i>A Beginner</i>. By <span class="smcap">Rhoda Broughton</span>.<br />
+139. <i>A Yellow Aster.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Mannington Caffyn</span> ("<span class="smcap">Iota</span>").<br />
+140. <i>The Rubicon.</i> By <span class="smcap">E. F. Benson</span>.<br />
+141. <i>The Trespasser.</i> By <span class="smcap">Gilbert Parker</span>.<br />
+142. <i>The Rich Miss Riddell.</i> By <span class="smcap">Dorothea Gerard</span>.<br />
+143. <i>Mary Fenwick's Daughter.</i> By <span class="smcap">Beatrice Whitby</span>.<br />
+144. <i>Red Diamonds.</i> By <span class="smcap">Justin McCarthy</span>.<br />
+145. <i>A Daughter of Music.</i> By <span class="smcap">G. Colmore</span>.<br />
+146. <i>Outlaw and Lawmaker.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Campbell-Praed</span>.<br />
+147. <i>Dr. Janet of Harley Street.</i> By <span class="smcap">Arabella Kenealy</span>.<br />
+148. <i>George Mandeville's Husband.</i> By <span class="smcap">C. E. Raimond</span>.<br />
+149. <i>Vashti and Esther.</i><br />
+150. <i>Timar's Two Worlds.</i> By <span class="smcap">M. Jokai</span>.<br />
+151. <i>A Victim of Good Luck.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. E. Norris</span>.<br />
+152. <i>The Trail of the Sword.</i> By <span class="smcap">Gilbert Parker</span>.<br />
+153. <i>A Mild Barbarian.</i> By <span class="smcap">Edgar Fawcett</span>.<br />
+154. <i>The God in the Car.</i> By <span class="smcap">Anthony Hope</span>.<br />
+155. <i>Children of Circumstance.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">M. Caffyn</span>.<br />
+156. <i>At the Gate of Samaria.</i> By <span class="smcap">William J. Locke</span>.<br />
+157. <i>The Justification of Andrew Lebrun.</i> By <span class="smcap">Frank Barrett</span>.<br />
+158. <i>Dust and Laurels.</i> By <span class="smcap">Mary L. Pendered</span>.<br />
+159. <i>The Good Ship Mohock.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>.<br />
+160. <i>Noémi.</i> By S. <span class="smcap">Baring-Gould</span>.<br />
+161. <i>The Honour of Savelli.</i> By <span class="smcap">S. Levett Yeats</span>.<br />
+162. <i>Kitty's Engagement.</i> By <span class="smcap">Florence Warden</span>.<br />
+163. <i>The Mermaid.</i> By <span class="smcap">L. Dougall</span>.<br />
+164. <i>An Arranged Marriage.</i> By <span class="smcap">Dorothea Gerard</span>.<br />
+165. <i>Eve's Ransom.</i> By <span class="smcap">George Gissing</span>.<br />
+166. <i>The Marriage of Esther.</i> By <span class="smcap">Guy Boothry</span>.<br />
+167. <i>Fidelis.</i> By <span class="smcap">Ada Cambridge</span>.<br />
+168. <i>Into the Highways and Hedges.</i> By <span class="smcap">F. F. Montrésor</span>.<br />
+169. <i>The Vengeance of James Vansittart.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">J. H. Needell</span>.<br />
+170. <i>A Study in Prejudices.</i> By <span class="smcap">George Paston</span>.<br />
+171. <i>The Mistress of Quest.</i> By <span class="smcap">Adeline Sergeant</span>.<br />
+172. <i>In the Year of Jubilee.</i> By <span class="smcap">George Gissing</span>.<br />
+173. <i>In Old New England.</i> By <span class="smcap">Hezekiah Butterworth</span>.<br />
+174. <i>Mrs. Musgrave&mdash;and Her Husband.</i> By <span class="smcap">R. Marsh</span>.<br />
+175. <i>Not Counting the Cost.</i> By <span class="smcap">Tasma</span>.<br />
+176. <i>Out of Due Season.</i> By <span class="smcap">Adeline Sergeant</span>.<br />
+177. <i>Scylla or Charybdis?</i> By <span class="smcap">Rhoda Broughton</span>.<br />
+178. <i>In Defiance of the King.</i> By <span class="smcap">C. C. Hotchkiss</span>.<br />
+179. <i>A Bid for Fortune.</i> By <span class="smcap">Guy Boothby</span>.<br />
+180. <i>The King of Andaman.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. Maclaren Cobban</span>.<br />
+181. <i>Mrs. Tregaskiss</i>. By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Campbell-Praed</span>.<br />
+182. <i>The Desire of the Moth.</i> By <span class="smcap">Capel Vane</span>.<br />
+183. <i>A Self-Denying Ordinance.</i> By <span class="smcap">M. Hamilton</span>.<br />
+184. <i>Successors to the Title.</i> By <span class="smcap">Mrs. L. B. Walford</span>.<br />
+185. <i>The Lost Stradivarius.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. Meade Falkner</span>.<br />
+186. <i>The Wrong Man.</i> By <span class="smcap">Dorothea Gerard</span>.<br />
+187. <i>In the Day of Adversity.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. Bloundelle-Burton</span>.<br />
+188. <i>Mistress Dorothy Marvin.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. C. Snaith</span>.<br />
+189. <i>A Flash of Summer.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">W. K. Clifford</span>.<br />
+</p>
+<p class="center">Each, 12mo, paper cover, 50 cents; cloth, $1,00.<br /></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+<h2>GEORG EBERS'S ROMANCES.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Each, 16mo, paper, 40 cents per volume; cloth, 75 cents.<br />
+Sets of 24 volumes, cloth, in box, $18.00.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+<b>In the Blue Pike.</b> A Romance of German Life in the early Sixteenth Century.
+Translated by <span class="smcap">Mary J. Safford</span>. 1 volume.<br />
+<b>In the Fire of the Forge.</b> A Romance of Old Nuremberg. Translated by
+<span class="smcap">Mary J. Safford</span>. 2 volumes.<br />
+<b>Cleopatra.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Mary J. Safford</span>. 2 volumes.<br />
+<b>A Thorny Path.</b> (<span class="smcap">Per Aspera.</span>) Translated by <span class="smcap">Clara Bell</span>. 2 volumes.<br />
+<b>An Egyptian Princess.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Eleanor Grove</span>. 2 volumes.<br />
+<b>Uarda.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Clara Bell</span>. 2 volumes.<br />
+<b>Homo Sum.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Clara Bell</span>. 1 volume.<br />
+<b>The Sisters.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Clara Bell</span>. 1 volume.<br />
+<b>A Question.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Mary J. Safford</span>. 1 volume.<br />
+<b>The Emperor.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Clara Bell</span>. 2 volumes.<br />
+<b>The Burgomaster's Wife.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Mary J. Safford</span>. 1 volume.<br />
+<b>A Word, only a Word.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Mary J. Safford</span>. 1 volume.<br />
+<b>Serapie.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Clara Bell</span>. 1 volume.<br />
+<b>The Bride of the Nile.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Clara Bell</span>. 2 volumes.<br />
+<b>Margery.</b> (<span class="smcap">Gred.</span>) Translated by <span class="smcap">Clara Bell</span>. 2 volumes.<br />
+<b>Joshua.</b> Translated by <span class="smcap">Mary J. Safford</span>. 1 volume.<br />
+<b>The Elixir, and Other Tales.</b> Translated by Mrs. <span class="smcap">Edward H. Bell</span>.
+With Portrait of the Author. 1 volume.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Ebers's romances founded on ancient history are hardly equaled by any
+other living author.... He makes the men and women and the scenes move
+before the reader with living reality."&mdash;<i>Boston Home Journal.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Georg Ebers writes stories of ancient times with the conscientiousness of a
+true investigator. His tales are so carefully told that large portions of them
+might be clipped or quoted by editors of guide-books and authors of histories intended
+to be popular."&mdash;<i>New York Herald.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="center"><i>For sale by all booksellers; or sent by mail on receipt of price by the publishers.</i><br />
+
+<b>New York: D. APPLETON &amp; CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.</b><br /><br /></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h3><span class="smcap">By</span> A. CONAN DOYLE.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE EXPLOITS OF BRIGADIER GERARD.
+A Romance of the Life of a Typical Napoleonic Soldier.</i> Illustrated.
+12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>There is a flavor of Dumas's Musketeers in the life of the redoubtable Brigadier
+Gerard, a typical Napoleonic soldier, more fortunate than many of his compeers because
+some of his Homeric exploits were accomplished under the personal observation of the
+Emperor. His delightfully romantic career included an oddly characteristic glimpse
+of England, and his adventures ranged from the battlefield to secret service. In picturing
+the experiences of his fearless, hard-fighting and hard-drinking hero, the author
+of "The White Company" has given us a book which absorbs the interest and
+quickens the pulse of every reader.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE STARK MUNRO LETTERS.</i> Being a
+Series of Twelve Letters written by <span class="smcap">Stark Munro</span>, M. B.,
+to his friend and former fellow-student, Herbert Swanborough,
+of Lowell, Massachusetts, during the years 1881-1884. Illustrated.
+12mo. Buckram, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Cullingworth, ... a much more interesting creation than Sherlock Holmes,
+and I pray Dr. Doyle to give us more of him."&mdash;<i>Richard le Gallienne, in the London
+Star.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Every one who wants a hearty laugh must make acquaintance with Dr. James
+Cullingworth."&mdash;<i>Westminster Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Every one must read; for not to know Cullingworth should surely argue one's
+self to be unknown."&mdash;<i>Pall Mall Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p>"One of the freshest figures to be met with in any recent fiction."&mdash;<i>London Daily
+News.</i></p>
+
+<p>"'The Stark Munro Letters' is a bit of real literature.... Its reading will be an
+epoch-making event in many a life."&mdash;<i>Philadelphia Evening Telegraph.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Positively magnetic, and written with that combined force and grace for which the
+author's style is known."&mdash;<i>Boston Budget.</i></p>
+
+
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Seventh Edition.</span></p>
+
+<p><i>ROUND THE RED LAMP.</i> Being Facts and
+Fancies of Medical Life. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Too much can not be said in praise of these strong productions, that, to read,
+keep one's heart leaping to the throat and the mind in a tumult of anticipation to the
+end.... No series of short stories in modern literature can approach them."&mdash;<i>Hartford
+Times.</i></p>
+
+<p>"If Mr. A. Conan Doyle had not already placed himself in the front rank of living
+English writers by 'The Refugees,' and other of his larger stories, he would surely do
+so by these fifteen short tales."&mdash;<i>New York Mail and Express.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A strikingly realistic and decidedly original contribution to modern literature."&mdash;<i>Boston
+Saturday Evening Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center"><b>New York: D. APPLETON &amp; CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.</b><br /><br /></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3>BY S. R. CROCKETT.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>CLEG KELLY, ARAB OF THE CITY. His
+Progress and Adventures.</i> Uniform with "The Lilac Sunbonnet"
+and "Bog-Myrtle and Peat." Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth,
+$1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>It is safe to predict for the quaint and delightful figure of Cleg Kelly a
+notable place in the literature of the day. Mr. Crockett's signal success in
+his new field will enlarge the wide circle of his admirers. The lights and
+shadows of curious phases of Edinburgh life, and of Scotch farm and railroad
+life, are pictured with an intimate sympathy, richness of humor, and
+truthful pathos which make this new novel a genuine addition to literature.
+It seems safe to say that at least two characters&mdash;Cleg and Muckle Alick&mdash;are
+likely to lead Mr. Crockett's heroes in popular favor. The illustrations of
+this fascinating novel have been the result of most faithful and sympathetic
+study.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>BOG-MYRTLE AND PEAT.</i> Third edition.
+12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Here are idyls, epics, dramas of human life, written in words that thrill and
+burn.... Each is a poem that has an immortal flavor. They are fragments of the
+author's early dreams, too bright, too gorgeous, too full of the blood of rubies and the
+life of diamonds to be caught and held palpitating in expression's grasp."&mdash;<i>Boston
+Courier.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Hardly a sketch among them all that will not afford pleasure to the reader for its
+genial humor, artistic local coloring, and admirable portrayal of character."&mdash;<i>Boston
+Home Journal.</i></p>
+
+<p>"One dips into the book anywhere and reads on and on, fascinated by the writer's
+charm of manner."&mdash;<i>Minneapolis Tribune.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE LILAC SUNBONNET.</i> Sixth edition.
+12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"A love story pure and simple, one of the old-fashioned, wholesome, sunshiny
+kind, with a pure-minded, sound-hearted hero, and a heroine who is merely a good and
+beautiful woman; and if any other love story half so sweet has been written this year,
+it has escaped our notice."&mdash;<i>New York Times.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The general conception of the story, the motive of which is the growth of love
+between the young chief and heroine, is delineated with a sweetness and a freshness,
+a naturalness and a certainty, which places 'The Lilac Sunbonnet' among the best
+stories of the time."&mdash;<i>New York Mail and Express.</i></p>
+
+<p>"In its own line this little love story can hardly be excelled. It is a pastoral, an
+idyl&mdash;the story of love and courtship and marriage of a fine young man and a lovely
+girl&mdash;no more. But it is told in so thoroughly delightful a manner, with such playful
+humor, such delicate fancy, such true and sympathetic feeling, that nothing more could
+be desired."&mdash;<i>Boston Traveller.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center"><b>New York: D. APPLETON &amp; CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.</b><br /><br /></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+<h3>GILBERT PARKER'S BEST BOOKS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE SEATS OF THE MIGHTY.</i> Being the
+Memoirs of Captain <span class="smcap">Robert Moray</span>, sometime an Officer in
+the Virginia Regiment, and afterward of Amherst's Regiment.
+12mo. Cloth, illustrated, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>For the time of his story Mr. Parker has chosen the most absorbing period
+of the romantic eighteenth-century history of Quebec. The curtain rises soon
+after General Braddock's defeat in Virginia, and the hero, a prisoner in Quebec,
+curiously entangled in the intrigues of La Pompadour, becomes a part
+of a strange history, full of adventure and the stress of peril, which culminates
+only after Wolfe's victory over Montcalm. The material offered by the life
+and history of old Quebec has never been utilized for the purposes of fiction
+with the command of plot and incident, the mastery of local color, and the
+splendid realization of dramatic situations shown in this distinguished and
+moving romance. The illustrations preserve the atmosphere of the text, for
+they present the famous buildings, gates, and battle grounds as they appeared
+at the time of the hero's imprisonment in Quebec.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE TRAIL OF THE SWORD.</i> A Novel.
+12mo. Paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Mr. Parker here adds to a reputation already wide, and anew demonstrates his
+power of pictorial portrayal and of strong dramatic situation and climax."&mdash;<i>Philadelphia
+Bulletin.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The tale holds the reader's interest from first to last, for it is full of fire and spirit,
+abounding in incident, and marked by good character drawing."&mdash;<i>Pittsburg Times.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE TRESPASSER.</i> 12mo. Paper, 50 cents;
+cloth, $1.00.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Interest, pith, force and charm&mdash;Mr. Parker's new story possesses all these
+qualities.... Almost bare of synthetical decoration, his paragraphs are stirring because
+they are real. We read at times&mdash;as we have read the great masters of romance&mdash;breathlessly."&mdash;<i>The
+Critic.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Gilbert Parker writes a strong novel, but thus far this is his masterpiece.... It
+is one of the great novels of the year."&mdash;<i>Boston Advertiser.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE TRANSLATION OF A SAVAGE.</i> 16mo.
+Flexible cloth, 75 cents.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"A book which no one will be satisfied to put down until the end has been matter
+of certainty and assurance."&mdash;<i>The Nation.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A story of remarkable interest, originality, and ingenuity of construction."&mdash;<i>Boston
+Home Journal.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The perusal of this romance will repay those who care for new and original types
+of character, and who are susceptible to the fascination of a fresh and vigorous style."&mdash;<i>London
+Daily News.</i></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="center"><b>"A better book than 'The Prisoner of Zenda.'"</b>&mdash;<i>London Queen.</i></p>
+<p><i>THE CHRONICLES OF COUNT ANTONIO.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">Anthony Hope</span>, author of "The God in the Car," "The
+Prisoner of Zenda," etc. With photogravure Frontispiece by
+S. W. Van Schaick. Third edition. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"No adventures were ever better worth recounting than are those of Antonio of
+Monte Velluto, a very Bayard among outlaws.... To all those whose pulses still stir
+at the recital of deeds of high courage, we may recommend this book.... The chronicle
+conveys the emotion of heroic adventure, and is picturesquely written."&mdash;<i>London
+Daily News.</i></p>
+
+<p>"It has literary merits all its own, of a deliberate and rather deep order.... In
+point of execution 'The Chronicles of Count Antonio' is the best work that Mr. Hope
+has yet done. The design is clearer, the workmanship more elaborate, the style more
+colored.... The incidents are most ingenious, they are told quietly, but with great
+cunning, and the Quixotic sentiment which pervades it all is exceedingly pleasant."&mdash;<i>Westminster
+Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A romance worthy of all the expectations raised by the brilliancy of his former
+books, and likely to be read with a keen enjoyment and a healthy exaltation of the
+spirits by every one who takes it up."&mdash;<i>The Scotsman.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A gallant tale, written with unfailing freshness and spirit."&mdash;<i>London Daily
+Telegraph.</i></p>
+
+<p>"One of the most fascinating romances written in English within many days. The
+quaint simplicity of its style is delightful, and the adventures recorded in these 'Chronicles
+of Count Antonio' are as stirring and ingenious as any conceived even by Weyman
+at his best."&mdash;<i>New York World.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Romance of the real flavor, wholly and entirely romance, and narrated in true romantic
+style. The characters, drawn with such masterly handling, are not merely pictures
+and portraits, but statues that are alive and step boldly forward from the canvas."&mdash;<i>Boston
+Courier.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Told in a wonderfully simple and direct style, and with the magic touch of a man
+who has the genius of narrative, making the varied incidents flow naturally and rapidly
+in a stream of sparkling discourse."&mdash;<i>Detroit Tribune.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Easily ranks with, if not above, 'A Prisoner of Zenda.' ... Wonderfully strong,
+graphic, and compels the interest of the most <i>blasé</i> novel reader."&mdash;<i>Boston Advertiser.</i></p>
+
+<p>"No adventures were ever better worth telling than those of Count Antonio....
+The author knows full well how to make every pulse thrill, and how to hold his readers
+under the spell of his magic."&mdash;<i>Boston Herald.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A book to make women weep proud tears, and the blood of men to tingle with
+knightly fervor.... In 'Count Antonio' we think Mr. Hope surpasses himself, as he
+has already surpassed all the other story-tellers of the period."&mdash;<i>New York Spirit of
+the Times.</i></p>
+
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE ONE WHO LOOKED ON.</i> By <span class="smcap">F. F. Montrésor</span>,
+author of "Into the Highways and Hedges." 16mo.
+Cloth, special binding, $1.25.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"The story runs on as smoothly as a brook through lowlands; it excites your interest
+at the beginning and keeps it to the end."&mdash;<i>New York Herald.</i></p>
+
+<p>"An exquisite story.... No person sensitive to the influence of what makes for the
+true, the lovely, and the strong in human friendship and the real in life's work can read
+this book without being benefited by it."&mdash;<i>Buffalo Commercial.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The book has universal interest and very unusual merit.... Aside from its
+subtle poetic charm, the book is a noble example of the power of keen observation."&mdash;<i>Boston
+Herald.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>CORRUPTION.</i> By <span class="smcap">Percy White</span>, author of "Mr.
+Bailey-Martin," etc. 12mo. Cloth, $1.25.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"There is intrigue enough in it for those who love a story of the ordinary kind, and
+the political part is perhaps more attractive in its sparkle and variety of incident than
+the real thing itself."&mdash;<i>London Daily News.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A drama of biting intensity, a tragedy of inflexible purpose and relentless result."&mdash;<i>Pall
+Mall Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>A HARD WOMAN.</i> A Story in Scenes. By <span class="smcap">Violet
+Hunt</span>. 12mo. Cloth, $1.25.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"An extremely clever work. Miss Hunt probably writes dialogue better than any
+of our young novelists.... Not only are her conversations wonderfully vivacious and
+sustained, but she contrives to assign to each of her characters a distinct mode of
+speech, so that the reader easily identifies them, and can follow the conversations without
+the slightest difficulty."&mdash;<i>London Athenæum.</i></p>
+
+<p>"One of the best writers of dialogue of our immediate day. The conversations in
+this book will enhance her already secure reputation."&mdash;<i>London Daily Chronicle.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A creation that does Miss Hunt infinite credit, and places her in the front rank of
+the younger novelists.... Brilliantly drawn, quivering with life, adroit, quiet-witted,
+unfalteringly insolent, and withal strangely magnetic."&mdash;<i>London Standard.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>AN IMAGINATIVE MAN.</i> By <span class="smcap">Robert S.
+Hichens</span>, author of "The Green Carnation." 12mo. Cloth,
+$1.25.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"One of the brightest books of the year."&mdash;<i>Boston Budget.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Altogether delightful, fascinating, unusual."&mdash;<i>Cleveland Amusement Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A study in character.... Just as entertaining as though it were the conventional
+story of love and marriage. The clever hand of the author of 'The Green
+Carnation' is easily detected in the caustic wit and pointed epigram."&mdash;<i>Jeannette L.
+Gilder, in the New York World.</i></p>
+
+
+<blockquote><p><i>A STREET IN SUBURBIA.</i> By <span class="smcap">Edwin Pugh</span>.
+12mo. Cloth, $1.00.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Simplicity of style, strength, and delicacy of character study will mark this book
+as one of the most significant of the year."&mdash;<i>New York Press.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Thoroughly entertaining, and more&mdash;it shows traces of a creative genius something
+akin to Dickens."&mdash;<i>Boston Traveller.</i></p>
+
+<p>"In many respects the best of all the books of lighter literature brought out this
+season."&mdash;<i>Providence News.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Highly pleasing and gracefully recorded reminiscences of early suburban life
+and youthful experience told in a congenial spirit and in very charming prose."&mdash;<i>Boston
+Courier.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>MAJESTY.</i> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">Louis Couperus</span>. Translated
+by <span class="smcap">A. Teixeira de Mattos</span> and <span class="smcap">Ernest Dowson</span>.
+12mo. Cloth, $1.00.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"There have been many workers among novelists in the field of royal portraiture,
+but it may be safely stated that few of those who have essayed this dubious path have
+achieved more striking results than M. Couperus. 'Majesty' is an extraordinarily
+vivid romance of autocratic imperialism."&mdash;<i>London Academy.</i></p>
+
+<p>"No novelist whom we can call to mind has ever given the world such a masterpiece
+of royal portraiture as Louis Couperus's striking romance entitled 'Majesty.'"&mdash;<i>Philadelphia
+Record.</i></p>
+
+<p>"There is not an uninteresting page in the book, and it ought to be read by all
+who desire to keep in line with the best that is published in modern fiction."&mdash;<i>Buffalo
+Commercial.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE NEW MOON.</i> By <span class="smcap">C. E. Raimond</span>, author
+of "George Mandeville's Husband," etc. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"A delicate pathos makes itself felt as the narrative progresses, whose cadences
+fall on the spirit's consciousness with a sweet and soothing influence not to be measured
+in words."&mdash;<i>Boston Courier.</i></p>
+
+<p>"One of the most impressive of recent works of fiction, both for its matter and
+especially for its presentation."&mdash;<i>Milwaukee Journal.</i></p>
+
+<p>"An intensely interesting story. A curious interweaving of old superstitions which
+govern a nervous woman's selfish life, and the brisk, modern ways of a wholesome
+English girl."&mdash;<i>Philadelphia Ledger.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE WISH.</i> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">Hermann Sudermann</span>.
+With a Biographical Introduction by <span class="smcap">Elizabeth Lee</span>. 12mo.
+Cloth, $1.00.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Contains some superb specimens of original thought."&mdash;<i>New York World.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The style is direct and incisive, and holds the unflagging attention of the reader."&mdash;<i>Boston
+Journal.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A powerful story, very simple, very direct."&mdash;<i>Chicago Evening Post.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>SLEEPING FIRES.</i> By <span class="smcap">George Gissing</span>, author of
+"In the Year of Jubilee," "Eve's Ransom," etc. 16mo. Cloth,
+75 cents.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In this striking story the author has treated an original motive with rare self-command
+and skill. His book is most interesting as a story, and remarkable as a literary
+performance.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>STONEPASTURES.</i> By <span class="smcap">Eleanor Stuart</span>. 16mo.
+Cloth, 75 cents.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"This is a strong bit of good literary workmanship.... The book has the value
+of being a real sketch of our own mining regions, and of showing how, even in the apparently
+dull round of work, there is still material for a good bit of literature."&mdash;<i>Philadelphia
+Ledger.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>COURTSHIP BY COMMAND.</i> By <span class="smcap">M. M. Blake</span>.
+16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"A bright, moving study of an unusually interesting period in the life of Napoleon,...
+deliciously told; the characters are clearly, strongly, and very delicately modeled,
+and the touches of color most artistically done. 'Courtship by Command' is the
+most satisfactory Napoleon <i>bonne-bouche</i> we have had."&mdash;<i>New York Commercial
+Advertiser.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE WATTER'S MOU'.</i> By <span class="smcap">Bram Stoker</span>.
+16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Here is a tale to stir the most sluggish nature.... It is like standing on the
+deck of a wave tossed ship; you feel the soul of the storm go into your blood."&mdash;<i>N. Y.
+Home Journal.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The characters are strongly drawn, the descriptions are intensely dramatic, and the
+situations are portrayed with rare vividness of language. It is a thrilling story, told
+with great power."&mdash;<i>Boston Advertiser.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>MASTER AND MAN.</i> By Count <span class="smcap">Leo Tolstoy</span>.
+With an Introduction by <span class="smcap">W. D. Howells</span>. 16mo. Cloth, 75
+cents.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Crowded with these characteristic touches which mark his literary work."&mdash;<i>Public
+Opinion.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Reveals a wonderful knowledge of the workings of the human mind, and it tells a
+tale that not only stirs the emotions, but gives us a better insight into our own hearts."&mdash;<i>San
+Francisco Argonaut.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE ZEIT-GEIST.</i> By <span class="smcap">L. Dougall</span>, author of
+"The Mermaid," "Beggars All," etc. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"One of the best of the short stories of the day."&mdash;<i>Boston Journal.</i></p>
+
+<p>"One of the most remarkable novels of the year."&mdash;<i>New York Commercial
+Advertiser.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Powerful in conception, treatment, and influence."&mdash;<i>Boston Globe.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center"><b>New York: D. APPLETON &amp; CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.</b><br /><br /></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3>NOVELS BY HALL CAINE.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE MANXMAN.</i> 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"A story of marvelous dramatic intensity, and in its ethical meaning has a force
+comparable only to Hawthorne's 'Scarlet Letter.'"&mdash;<i>Boston Beacon.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A work of power which is another stone added to the foundation of enduring fame
+to which Mr. Caine is yearly adding."&mdash;<i>Public Opinion.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A wonderfully strong study of character; a powerful analysis of those elements
+which go to make up the strength and weakness of a man, which are at fierce warfare
+within the same breast; contending against each other, as it were, the one to raise him
+to fame and power, the other to drag him down to degradation and shame. Never in
+the whole range of literature have we seen the struggle between these forces for
+supremacy over the man more powerfully, more realistically delineated than Mr. Caine
+pictures it."&mdash;<i>Boston Home Journal.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE DEEMSTER. A Romance of the Isle of
+Man.</i> 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Hall Caine has already given us some very strong and fine work, and 'The
+Deemster' is a story of unusual power.... Certain passages and chapters have an
+intensely dramatic grasp, and hold the fascinated reader with a force rarely excited
+nowadays in literature."&mdash;<i>The Critic.</i></p>
+
+<p>"One of the strongest novels which has appeared in many a day."&mdash;<i>San Francisco
+Chronicle.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Fascinates the mind like the gathering and bursting of a storm."&mdash;<i>Illustrated
+London News.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Deserves to be ranked among the remarkable novels of the day."&mdash;<i>Chicago
+Times.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE BONDMAN.</i> New edition. 12mo. Cloth,
+$1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"The welcome given to this story has cheered and touched me, but I am conscious
+that, to win a reception so warm, such a book must have had readers who
+brought to it as much as they took away.... I have called my story a saga, merely
+because it follows the epic method, and I must not claim for it at any point the weighty
+responsibility of history, or serious obligations to the world of fact. But it matters not
+to me what Icelanders may call 'The Bondman,' if they will honor me by reading it in
+the open-hearted spirit and with the free mind with which they are content to read of
+Grettir and of his fights with the Troll."&mdash;<i>From the Author's Preface.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>CAPT'N DAVY'S HONEYMOON. A Manx
+Yarn.</i> 12mo. Paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"A new departure by this author. Unlike his previous works, this little tale is
+almost wholly humorous, with, however, a current of pathos underneath. It is not
+always that an author can succeed equally well in tragedy and in comedy, but it looks
+as though Mr. Hall Caine would be one of the exceptions."&mdash;<i>London Literary
+World.</i></p>
+
+<p>"It is pleasant to meet the author of 'The Deemster' in a brightly humorous little
+story like this.... It shows the same observation of Manx character, and much of
+the same artistic skill."&mdash;<i>Philadelphia Times.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center"><b>New York: D. APPLETON &amp; CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.</b><br /><br /></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3>NOVELS BY MAARTEN MAARTENS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE GREATER GLORY. A Story of High Life.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">Maarten Maartens</span>, author of "God's Fool," "Joost
+Avelingh," etc. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Until the Appletons discovered the merits of Maarten Maartens, the foremost of
+Dutch novelists, it is doubtful if many American readers knew that there were Dutch
+novelists. His 'God's Fool' and 'Joost Avelingh' made for him an American reputation.
+To our mind this just published work of his is his best.... He is a master of
+epigram, an artist in description, a prophet in insight."&mdash;<i>Boston Advertiser.</i></p>
+
+<p>"It would take several columns to give any adequate idea of the superb way in
+which the Dutch novelist has developed his theme and wrought out one of the most
+impressive stories of the period.... It belongs to the small class of novels which
+one can not afford to neglect."&mdash;<i>San Francisco Chronicle.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Maarten Maartens stands head and shoulders above the average novelist of the
+day in intellectual subtlety and imaginative power."&mdash;<i>Boston Beacon.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>GOD'S FOOL.</i> By <span class="smcap">Maarten Maartens</span>. 12mo.
+Cloth, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Throughout there is an epigrammatic force which would make palatable a less
+interesting story of human lives or one less deftly told."&mdash;<i>London Saturday Review.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly easy, graceful, humorous.... The author's skill in character-drawing
+is undeniable."&mdash;<i>London Chronicle.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A remarkable work."&mdash;<i>New York Times.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Maarten Maartens has secured a firm footing in the eddies of current literature....
+Pathos deepens into tragedy in the thrilling story of 'God's Fool.'"&mdash;<i>Philadelphia
+Ledger.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Its preface alone stamps the author as one of the leading English novelists of
+to-day."&mdash;<i>Boston Daily Advertiser.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The story is wonderfully brilliant.... The interest never lags; the style is
+realistic and intense; and there is a constantly underlying current of subtle humor....
+It is, in short, a book which no student of modern literature should fail to read."&mdash;<i>Boston
+Times.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A story of remarkable interest and point."&mdash;<i>New York Observer.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>JOOST AVELINGH.</i> By <span class="smcap">Maarten Maartens</span>.
+12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"So unmistakably good as to induce the hope that an acquaintance with the Dutch
+literature of fiction may soon become more general among us."&mdash;<i>London Morning
+Post.</i></p>
+
+<p>"In scarcely any of the sensational novels of the day will the reader find more
+nature or more human nature."&mdash;<i>London Standard.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A novel of a very high type. At once strongly realistic and powerfully idealistic."&mdash;<i>London
+Literary World.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Full of local color and rich in quaint phraseology and suggestion."&mdash;<i>London
+Telegraph.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Maarten Maartens is a capital story-teller."&mdash;<i>Pall Mall Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Our English writers of fiction will have to look to their laurels."&mdash;<i>Birmingham
+Daily Post.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center"><b>New York: D. APPLETON &amp; CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.</b><br /><br /></p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3>TWO REMARKABLE AMERICAN NOVELS.</h3>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE. An Episode
+of the American Civil War.</i> By <span class="smcap">Stephen Crane</span>. 12mo.
+Cloth, $1.00.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"Mr. Stephen Crane is a great artist, with something new to say, and consequently
+with a new way of saying it.... In 'The Red Badge of Courage' Mr.
+Crane has surely contrived a masterpiece.... He has painted a picture that challenges
+comparisons with the most vivid scenes of Tolstoy's 'La Guerre et la Paix' or
+of Zola's 'La Débâcle.'"&mdash;<i>London New Review.</i></p>
+
+<p>"In its whole range of literature we can call to mind nothing so searching in its
+analysis, so manifestly impressed with the stamp of truth, as 'The Red Badge of
+Courage.' ... A remarkable study of the average mind under stress of battle....
+We repeat, a really fine achievement."&mdash;<i>London Daily Chronicle.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Not merely a remarkable book; it is a revelation.... One feels that, with perhaps
+one or two exceptions, all previous descriptions of modern warfare have been the
+merest abstractions."&mdash;<i>St. James Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Holds one irrevocably. There is no possibility of resistance when once you are
+in its grip, from the first of the march of the troops to the closing scenes.... Mr.
+Crane, we repeat, has written a remarkable book. His insight and his power of realization
+amount to genius."&mdash;<i>Pall Mall Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing in American fiction to compare with it in the vivid, uncompromising,
+almost aggressive vigor with which it depicts the strangely mingled conditions
+that go to make up what men call war.... Mr. Crane has added to American
+literature something that has never been done before, and that is, in its own peculiar
+way, inimitable."&mdash;<i>Boston Beacon.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Never before have we had the seamy side of glorious war so well depicted....
+The action of the story throughout is splendid, and all aglow with color, movement,
+and vim. The style is as keen and bright as a sword blade, and a Kipling has done
+nothing better in this line."&mdash;<i>Chicago Evening Post.</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>IN DEFIANCE OF THE KING. A Romance of
+the American Revolution.</i> By <span class="smcap">Chauncey C. Hotchkiss</span>.
+12mo. Paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"The whole story is so completely absorbing that you will sit far into the night to
+finish it. You lay it aside with the feeling that you have seen a gloriously true picture
+of the Revolution."&mdash;<i>Boston Herald.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The story is a strong one&mdash;a thrilling one. It causes the true American to flush
+with excitement, to devour chapter after chapter until the eyes smart; and it fairly
+smokes with patriotism."&mdash;<i>New York Mail and Express.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The heart beats quickly, and we feel ourselves taking part in the scenes described....
+Altogether the book is an addition to American literature."&mdash;<i>Chicago Evening
+Post.</i></p>
+
+<p>"One of the most readable novels of the year.... As a love romance it is charming,
+while it is filled with thrilling adventure and deeds of patriotic daring."&mdash;<i>Boston
+Advertiser.</i></p>
+
+<p>"This romance seems to come the nearest to a satisfactory treatment in fiction of
+the Revolutionary period that we have yet had."&mdash;<i>Buffalo Courier.</i></p>
+
+<p>"A clean, wholesome story, full of romance and interesting adventure.... Holds
+the interest alike by the thread of the story and by the incidents.... A remarkably
+well-balanced and absorbing novel."&mdash;<i>Milwaukee Journal.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="center"><b>New York: D. APPLETON &amp; CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.</b></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Chronicles of Martin Hewitt, by Arthur Morrison
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Chronicles of Martin Hewitt, by Arthur Morrison
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Chronicles of Martin Hewitt
+
+Author: Arthur Morrison
+
+Release Date: October 22, 2011 [EBook #37820]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRONICLES OF MARTIN HEWITT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by Cornell University Digital Collections)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Appletons' Town and Country Library
+ No. 191
+
+
+
+
+ CHRONICLES OF MARTIN HEWITT
+
+
+ BY
+
+ ARTHUR MORRISON
+ AUTHOR OF TALES OF MEAN STREETS, ETC.
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
+ 1896
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1895, 1896,
+ BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ THE IVY COTTAGE MYSTERY 1
+
+ THE NICOBAR BULLION CASE 42
+
+ THE HOLFORD WILL CASE 94
+
+ THE CASE OF THE MISSING HAND 138
+
+ THE CASE OF LAKER, ABSCONDED 187
+
+ THE CASE OF THE LOST FOREIGNER 228
+
+
+
+
+CHRONICLES OF MARTIN HEWITT.
+
+
+
+
+THE IVY COTTAGE MYSTERY.
+
+
+I had been working double tides for a month: at night on my morning
+paper, as usual; and in the morning on an evening paper as _locum
+tenens_ for another man who was taking a holiday. This was an exhausting
+plan of work, although it only actually involved some six hours'
+attendance a day, or less, at the two offices. I turned up at the
+headquarters of my own paper at ten in the evening, and by the time I
+had seen the editor, selected a subject, written my leader, corrected
+the slips, chatted, smoked, and so on, and cleared off, it was very
+usually one o'clock. This meant bed at two, or even three, after supper
+at the club.
+
+This was all very well at ordinary periods, when any time in the morning
+would do for rising, but when I had to be up again soon after seven, and
+round at the evening paper office by eight, I naturally felt a little
+worn and disgusted with things by midday, after a sharp couple of
+hours' leaderette scribbling and paragraphing, with attendant sundries.
+
+But the strain was over, and on the first day of comparative comfort I
+indulged in a midday breakfast and the first undisgusted glance at a
+morning paper for a month. I felt rather interested in an inquest, begun
+the day before, on the body of a man whom I had known very slightly
+before I took to living in chambers.
+
+His name was Gavin Kingscote, and he was an artist of a casual and
+desultory sort, having, I believe, some small private means of his own.
+As a matter of fact, he had boarded in the same house in which I had
+lodged myself for a while, but as I was at the time a late homer and a
+fairly early riser, taking no regular board in the house, we never
+became much acquainted. He had since, I understood, made some judicious
+Stock Exchange speculations, and had set up house in Finchley.
+
+Now the news was that he had been found one morning murdered in his
+smoking-room, while the room itself, with others, was in a state of
+confusion. His pockets had been rifled, and his watch and chain were
+gone, with one or two other small articles of value. On the night of the
+tragedy a friend had sat smoking with him in the room where the murder
+took place, and he had been the last person to see Mr. Kingscote alive.
+A jobbing gardener, who kept the garden in order by casual work from
+time to time, had been arrested in consequence of footprints exactly
+corresponding with his boots, having been found on the garden beds near
+the French window of the smoking-room.
+
+I finished my breakfast and my paper, and Mrs. Clayton, the housekeeper,
+came to clear my table. She was sister of my late landlady of the house
+where Kingscote had lodged, and it was by this connection that I had
+found my chambers. I had not seen the housekeeper since the crime was
+first reported, so I now said:
+
+"This is shocking news of Mr. Kingscote, Mrs. Clayton. Did you know him
+yourself?"
+
+She had apparently only been waiting for some such remark to burst out
+with whatever information she possessed.
+
+"Yes, sir," she exclaimed: "shocking indeed. Pore young feller! I see
+him often when I was at my sister's, and he was always a nice, quiet
+gentleman, so different from some. My sister, she's awful cut up, sir, I
+assure you. And what d'you think 'appened, sir, only last Tuesday? You
+remember Mr. Kingscote's room where he painted the woodwork so beautiful
+with gold flowers, and blue, and pink? He used to tell my sister she'd
+always have something to remember him by. Well, two young fellers,
+gentlemen I can't call them, come and took that room (it being to let),
+and went and scratched off all the paint in mere wicked mischief, and
+then chopped up all the panels into sticks and bits! Nice sort o'
+gentlemen them! And then they bolted in the morning, being afraid, I
+s'pose, of being made to pay after treating a pore widder's property
+like that. That was only Tuesday, and the very next day the pore young
+gentleman himself's dead, murdered in his own 'ouse, and him going to be
+married an' all! Dear, dear! I remember once he said----"
+
+Mrs. Clayton was a good soul, but once she began to talk some one else
+had to stop her. I let her run on for a reasonable time, and then rose
+and prepared to go out. I remembered very well the panels that had been
+so mischievously destroyed. They made the room the show-room of the
+house, which was an old one. They were indeed less than half finished
+when I came away, and Mrs. Lamb, the landlady, had shown them to me one
+day when Kingscote was out. All the walls of the room were panelled and
+painted white, and Kingscote had put upon them an eccentric but charming
+decoration, obviously suggested by some of the work of Mr. Whistler.
+Tendrils, flowers, and butterflies in a quaint convention wandered
+thinly from panel to panel, giving the otherwise rather uninteresting
+room an unwonted atmosphere of richness and elegance. The lamentable
+jackasses who had destroyed this had certainly selected the best feature
+of the room whereon to inflict their senseless mischief.
+
+I strolled idly downstairs, with no particular plan for the afternoon in
+my mind, and looked in at Hewitt's offices. Hewitt was reading a note,
+and after a little chat he informed me that it had been left an hour
+ago, in his absence, by the brother of the man I had just been speaking
+of.
+
+"He isn't quite satisfied," Hewitt said, "with the way the police are
+investigating the case, and asks me to run down to Finchley and look
+round. Yesterday I should have refused, because I have five cases in
+progress already, but to-day I find that circumstances have given me a
+day or two. Didn't you say you knew the man?"
+
+"Scarcely more than by sight. He was a boarder in the house at Chelsea
+where I stayed before I started chambers."
+
+"Ah, well; I think I shall look into the thing. Do you feel particularly
+interested in the case? I mean, if you've nothing better to do, would
+you come with me?"
+
+"I shall be very glad," I said. "I was in some doubt what to do with
+myself. Shall you start at once?"
+
+"I think so. Kerrett, just call a cab. By the way, Brett, which paper
+has the fullest report of the inquest yesterday? I'll run over it as we
+go down."
+
+As I had only seen one paper that morning, I could not answer Hewitt's
+question. So we bought various papers as we went along in the cab, and I
+found the reports while Martin Hewitt studied them. Summarised, this was
+the evidence given--
+
+_Sarah Dodson_, general servant, deposed that she had been in service at
+Ivy Cottage, the residence of the deceased, for five months, the only
+other regular servant being the housekeeper and cook. On the evening of
+the previous Tuesday both servants retired a little before eleven,
+leaving Mr. Kingscote with a friend in the smoking or sitting room. She
+never saw her master again alive. On coming downstairs the following
+morning and going to open the smoking-room windows, she was horrified to
+discover the body of Mr. Kingscote lying on the floor of the room with
+blood about the head. She at once raised an alarm, and, on the
+instructions of the housekeeper, fetched a doctor, and gave information
+to the police. In answer to questions, witness stated she had heard no
+noise of any sort during the night, nor had anything suspicious
+occurred.
+
+_Hannah Carr_, housekeeper and cook, deposed that she had been in the
+late Mr. Kingscote's service since he had first taken Ivy Cottage--a
+period of rather more than a year. She had last seen the deceased alive
+on the evening of the previous Tuesday, at half-past ten, when she
+knocked at the door of the smoking-room, where Mr. Kingscote was sitting
+with a friend, to ask if he would require anything more. Nothing was
+required, so witness shortly after went to bed. In the morning she was
+called by the previous witness, who had just gone downstairs, and found
+the body of deceased lying as described. Deceased's watch and chain were
+gone, as also was a ring he usually wore, and his pockets appeared to
+have been turned out. All the ground floor of the house was in
+confusion, and a bureau, a writing-table, and various drawers were
+open--a bunch of keys usually carried by deceased being left hanging at
+one keyhole. Deceased had drawn some money from the bank on the Tuesday,
+for current expenses; how much she did not know. She had not heard or
+seen anything suspicious during the night. Besides Dodson and herself,
+there were no regular servants; there was a charwoman, who came
+occasionally, and a jobbing gardener, living near, who was called in as
+required.
+
+_Mr. James Vidler_, surgeon, had been called by the first witness
+between seven and eight on Wednesday morning. He found the deceased
+lying on his face on the floor of the smoking-room, his feet being about
+eighteen inches from the window, and his head lying in the direction of
+the fireplace. He found three large contused wounds on the head, any one
+of which would probably have caused death. The wounds had all been
+inflicted, apparently, with the same blunt instrument--probably a club
+or life preserver, or other similar weapon. They could not have been
+done with the poker. Death was due to concussion of the brain, and
+deceased had probably been dead seven or eight hours when witness saw
+him. He had since examined the body more closely, but found no marks at
+all indicative of a struggle having taken place; indeed, from the
+position of the wounds and their severity, he should judge that the
+deceased had been attacked unawares from behind, and had died at once.
+The body appeared to be perfectly healthy.
+
+Then there was police evidence, which showed that all the doors and
+windows were found shut and completely fastened, except the front door,
+which, although shut, was not bolted. There were shutters behind the
+French windows in the smoking-room, and these were found fastened. No
+money was found in the bureau, nor in any of the opened drawers, so that
+if any had been there, it had been stolen. The pockets were entirely
+empty, except for a small pair of nail scissors, and there was no watch
+upon the body, nor a ring. Certain footprints were found on the garden
+beds, which had led the police to take certain steps. No footprints
+were to be seen on the garden path, which was hard gravel.
+
+_Mr. Alexander Campbell_, stockbroker, stated that he had known deceased
+for some few years, and had done business for him. He and Mr. Kingscote
+frequently called on one another, and on Tuesday evening they dined
+together at Ivy Cottage. They sat smoking and chatting till nearly
+twelve o'clock, when Mr. Kingscote himself let him out, the servants
+having gone to bed. Here the witness proceeded rather excitedly: "That
+is all I know of this horrible business, and I can say nothing else.
+What the police mean by following and watching me----"
+
+_The Coroner_: "Pray be calm, Mr. Campbell. The police must do what
+seems best to them in a case of this sort. I am sure you would not have
+them neglect any means of getting at the truth."
+
+_Witness_: "Certainly not. But if they suspect me, why don't they say
+so? It is intolerable that I should be----"
+
+_The Coroner_: "Order, order, Mr. Campbell. You are here to give
+evidence."
+
+The witness then, in answer to questions, stated that the French windows
+of the smoking-room had been left open during the evening, the weather
+being very warm. He could not recollect whether or not deceased closed
+them before he left, but he certainly did not close the shutters.
+Witness saw nobody near the house when he left.
+
+_Mr. Douglas Kingscote_, architect, said deceased was his brother. He
+had not seen him for some months, living as he did in another part of
+the country. He believed his brother was fairly well off, and he knew
+that he had made a good amount by speculation in the last year or two.
+Knew of no person who would be likely to owe his brother a grudge, and
+could suggest no motive for the crime except ordinary robbery. His
+brother was to have been married in a few weeks. Questioned further on
+this point, witness said that the marriage was to have taken place a
+year ago, and it was with that view that Ivy Cottage, deceased's
+residence, was taken. The lady, however, sustained a domestic
+bereavement, and afterwards went abroad with her family: she was,
+witness believed, shortly expected back to England.
+
+_William Bates_, jobbing gardener, who was brought up in custody, was
+cautioned, but elected to give evidence. Witness, who appeared to be
+much agitated, admitted having been in the garden of Ivy Cottage at four
+in the morning, but said that he had only gone to attend to certain
+plants, and knew absolutely nothing of the murder. He however admitted
+that he had no order for work beyond what he had done the day before.
+Being further pressed, witness made various contradictory statements,
+and finally said that he had gone to take certain plants away.
+
+The inquest was then adjourned.
+
+This was the case as it stood--apparently not a case presenting any very
+striking feature, although there seemed to me to be doubtful
+peculiarities in many parts of it. I asked Hewitt what he thought.
+
+"Quite impossible to think anything, my boy, just yet; wait till we see
+the place. There are any number of possibilities. Kingscote's friend,
+Campbell, may have come in again, you know, by way of the window--or he
+may not. Campbell may have owed him money or something--or he may not.
+The anticipated wedding may have something to do with it--or, again,
+_that_ may not. There is no limit to the possibilities, as far as we can
+see from this report--a mere dry husk of the affair. When we get closer
+we shall examine the possibilities by the light of more detailed
+information. One _probability_ is that the wretched gardener is
+innocent. It seems to me that his was only a comparatively blameless
+manoeuvre not unheard of at other times in his trade. He came at four
+in the morning to steal away the flowers he had planted the day before,
+and felt rather bashful when questioned on the point. Why should he
+trample on the beds, else? I wonder if the police thought to examine the
+beds for traces of rooting up, or questioned the housekeeper as to any
+plants being missing? But we shall see."
+
+We chatted at random as the train drew near Finchley, and I mentioned
+_inter alia_ the wanton piece of destruction perpetrated at Kingscote's
+late lodgings. Hewitt was interested.
+
+"That was curious," he said, "very curious. Was anything else damaged?
+Furniture and so forth?"
+
+"I don't know. Mrs. Clayton said nothing of it, and I didn't ask her.
+But it was quite bad enough as it was. The decoration was really good,
+and I can't conceive a meaner piece of tomfoolery than such an attack on
+a decent woman's property."
+
+Then Hewitt talked of other cases of similar stupid damage by creatures
+inspired by a defective sense of humour, or mere love of mischief. He
+had several curious and sometimes funny anecdotes of such affairs at
+museums and picture exhibitions, where the damage had been so great as
+to induce the authorities to call him in to discover the offender. The
+work was not always easy, chiefly from the mere absence of intelligible
+motive; nor, indeed, always successful. One of the anecdotes related to
+a case of malicious damage to a picture--the outcome of blind artistic
+jealousy--a case which had been hushed up by a large expenditure in
+compensation. It would considerably startle most people, could it be
+printed here, with the actual names of the parties concerned.
+
+Ivy Cottage, Finchley, was a compact little house, standing in a compact
+little square of garden, little more than a third of an acre, or perhaps
+no more at all. The front door was but a dozen yards or so back from the
+road, but the intervening space was well treed and shrubbed. Mr. Douglas
+Kingscote had not yet returned from town, but the housekeeper, an
+intelligent, matronly woman, who knew of his intention to call in Martin
+Hewitt, was ready to show us the house.
+
+"_First_," Hewitt said, when we stood in the smoking-room, "I observe
+that somebody has shut the drawers and the bureau. That is unfortunate.
+Also, the floor has been washed and the carpet taken up, which is much
+worse. That, I suppose, was because the police had finished their
+examination, but it doesn't help me to make one at all. Has
+_anything_--anything _at all_--been left as it was on Tuesday morning?"
+
+"Well, sir, you see everything was in such a muddle," the housekeeper
+began, "and when the police had done----"
+
+"Just so. I know. You 'set it to rights,' eh? Oh, that setting to
+rights! It has lost me a fortune at one time and another. As to the
+other rooms, now, have they been set to rights?"
+
+"Such as was disturbed have been put right, sir, of course."
+
+"Which were disturbed? Let me see them. But wait a moment."
+
+He opened the French windows, and closely examined the catch and bolts.
+He knelt and inspected the holes whereinto the bolts fell, and then
+glanced casually at the folding shutters. He opened a drawer or two, and
+tried the working of the locks with the keys the housekeeper carried.
+They were, the housekeeper explained, Mr. Kingscote's own keys. All
+through the lower floors Hewitt examined some things attentively and
+closely, and others with scarcely a glance, on a system unaccountable to
+me. Presently, he asked to be shown Mr. Kingscote's bedroom, which had
+not been disturbed, "set to rights," or slept in since the crime. Here,
+the housekeeper said, all drawers were kept unlocked but two--one in the
+wardrobe and one in the dressing-table, which Mr. Kingscote had always
+been careful to keep locked. Hewitt immediately pulled both drawers open
+without difficulty. Within, in addition to a few odds and ends, were
+papers. All the contents of these drawers had been turned over
+confusedly, while those of the unlocked drawers were in perfect order.
+
+"The police," Hewitt remarked, "may not have observed these matters.
+Any more than such an ordinary thing as _this_," he added, picking up a
+bent nail lying at the edge of a rug.
+
+The housekeeper doubtless took the remark as a reference to the entire
+unimportance of a bent nail, but I noticed that Hewitt dropped the
+article quietly into his pocket.
+
+We came away. At the front gate we met Mr. Douglas Kingscote, who had
+just returned from town. He introduced himself, and expressed surprise
+at our promptitude both of coming and going.
+
+"You can't have got anything like a clue in this short time, Mr.
+Hewitt?" he asked.
+
+"Well, no," Hewitt replied, with a certain dryness, "perhaps not. But I
+doubt whether a month's visit would have helped me to get anything very
+striking out of a washed floor and a houseful of carefully cleaned-up
+and 'set-to-rights' rooms. Candidly, I don't think you can reasonably
+expect much of me. The police have a much better chance--they had the
+scene of the crime to examine. I have seen just such a few rooms as any
+one might see in the first well-furnished house he might enter. The
+trail of the housemaid has overlaid all the others."
+
+"I'm very sorry for that; the fact was, I expected rather more of the
+police; and, indeed, I wasn't here in time entirely to prevent the
+clearing up. But still, I thought your well-known powers----"
+
+"My dear sir, my 'well-known powers' are nothing but common sense
+assiduously applied and made quick by habit. That won't enable me to see
+the invisible."
+
+"But can't we have the rooms put back into something of the state they
+were in? The cook will remember----"
+
+"No, no. That would be worse and worse; that would only be the
+housemaid's trail in turn overlaid by the cook's. You must leave things
+with me for a little, I think."
+
+"Then you don't give the case up?" Mr. Kingscote asked anxiously.
+
+"Oh, no! I don't give it up just yet. Do you know anything of your
+brother's private papers--as they were before his death?"
+
+"I never knew anything till after that. I have gone over them, but they
+are all very ordinary letters. Do you suspect a theft of papers?"
+
+Martin Hewitt, with his hands on his stick behind him, looked sharply at
+the other, and shook his head. "No," he said, "I can't quite say that."
+
+We bade Mr. Douglas Kingscote good-day, and walked towards the station.
+"Great nuisance, that setting to rights," Hewitt observed, on the way.
+"If the place had been left alone, the job might have been settled one
+way or another by this time. As it is, we shall have to run over to your
+old lodgings."
+
+"My old lodgings?" I repeated, amazed. "Why my old lodgings?"
+
+Hewitt turned to me with a chuckle and a wide smile. "Because we can't
+see the broken panel-work anywhere else," he said. "Let's see--Chelsea,
+isn't it?"
+
+"Yes, Chelsea. But why--you don't suppose the people who defaced the
+panels also murdered the man who painted them?"
+
+"Well," Hewitt replied, with another smile, "that would be carrying a
+practical joke rather far, wouldn't it? Even for the ordinary picture
+damager."
+
+"You mean you _don't_ think they did it, then? But what _do_ you mean?"
+
+"My dear fellow, I don't mean anything but what I say. Come now, this is
+rather an interesting case despite appearances, and it _has_ interested
+me: so much, in fact, that I really think I forgot to offer Mr. Douglas
+Kingscote my condolence on his bereavement. You see a problem is a
+problem, whether of theft, assassination, intrigue, or anything else,
+and I only think of it as one. The work very often makes me forget
+merely human sympathies. Now, you have often been good enough to express
+a very flattering interest in my work, and you shall have an opportunity
+of exercising your own common sense in the way I am always having to
+exercise mine. You shall see all my evidence (if I'm lucky enough to get
+any) as I collect it, and you shall make your own inferences. That will
+be a little exercise for you; the sort of exercise I should give a pupil
+if I had one. But I will give you what information I have, and you shall
+start fairly from this moment. You know the inquest evidence, such as it
+was, and you saw everything I did in Ivy Cottage?"
+
+"Yes; I think so. But I'm not much the wiser."
+
+"Very well. Now I will tell you. What does the whole case look like? How
+would you class the crime?"
+
+"I suppose as the police do. An ordinary case of murder with the object
+of robbery."
+
+"It is _not_ an ordinary case. If it were, I shouldn't know as much as I
+do, little as that is; the ordinary cases are always difficult. The
+assailant did not come to commit a burglary, although he was a skilled
+burglar, or one of them was, if more than one were concerned. The affair
+has, I think, nothing to do with the expected wedding, nor had Mr.
+Campbell anything to do in it--at any rate, personally--nor the
+gardener. The criminal (or one of them) was known personally to the dead
+man, and was well-dressed: he (or again one of them, and I think there
+were two) even had a chat with Mr. Kingscote before the murder took
+place. He came to ask for something which Mr. Kingscote was unwilling to
+part with,--perhaps hadn't got. It was not a bulky thing. Now you have
+all my materials before you."
+
+"But all this doesn't look like the result of the blind spite that would
+ruin a man's work first and attack him bodily afterwards."
+
+"Spite isn't always blind, and there are other blind things besides
+spite; people with good eyes in their heads are blind sometimes, even
+detectives."
+
+"But where did you get all this information? What makes you suppose that
+this was a burglar who didn't want to burgle, and a well-dressed man,
+and so on?"
+
+Hewitt chuckled and smiled again.
+
+"I saw it--saw it, my boy, that's all," he said. "But here comes the
+train."
+
+On the way back to town, after I had rather minutely described
+Kingscote's work on the boarding-house panels, Hewitt asked me for the
+names and professions of such fellow lodgers in that house as I might
+remember. "When did you leave yourself?" he ended.
+
+"Three years ago, or rather more. I can remember Kingscote himself;
+Turner, a medical student--James Turner, I think; Harvey Challitt,
+diamond merchant's articled pupil--he was a bad egg entirely, he's doing
+five years for forgery now; by the bye he had the room we are going to
+see till he was marched off, and Kingscote took it--a year before I
+left; there was Norton--don't know what he was; 'something in the City,'
+I think; and Carter Paget, in the Admiralty Office. I don't remember any
+more at this moment; there were pretty frequent changes. But you can get
+it all from Mrs. Lamb, of course."
+
+"Of course; and Mrs. Lamb's exact address is--what?"
+
+I gave him the address, and the conversation became disjointed. At
+Farringdon station, where we alighted, Hewitt called two hansoms.
+Preparing to enter one, he motioned me to the other, saying, "You get
+straight away to Mrs. Lamb's at once. She may be going to burn that
+splintered wood, or to set things to rights, after the manner of her
+kind, and you can stop her. I must make one or two small inquiries, but
+I shall be there half an hour after you."
+
+"Shall I tell her our object?"
+
+"Only that I may be able to catch her mischievous lodgers--nothing else
+yet." He jumped into the hansom and was gone.
+
+I found Mrs. Lamb still in a state of indignant perturbation over the
+trick served her four days before. Fortunately, she had left everything
+in the panelled room exactly as she had found it, with an idea of the
+being better able to demand or enforce reparation should her lodgers
+return. "The room's theirs, you see, sir," she said, "till the end of
+the week, since they paid in advance, and they may come back and offer
+to make amends, although I doubt it. As pleasant-spoken a young chap as
+you might wish, he seemed, him as come to take the rooms. 'My cousin,'
+says he, 'is rather an invalid, havin' only just got over congestion of
+the lungs, and he won't be in London till this evening late. He's comin'
+up from Birmingham,' he ses, 'and I hope he won't catch a fresh cold on
+the way, although of course we've got him muffled up plenty.' He took
+the rooms, sir, like a gentleman, and mentioned several gentlemen's
+names I knew well, as had lodged here before; and then he put down on
+that there very table, sir."--Mrs. Lamb indicated the exact spot with
+her hand, as though that made the whole thing much more wonderful--"he
+put down on that very table a week's rent in advance, and ses, 'That's
+always the best sort of reference, Mrs. Lamb, I think,' as kind-mannered
+as anything--and never 'aggled about the amount nor nothing. He only had
+a little black bag, but he said his cousin had all the luggage coming
+in the train, and as there was so much p'r'aps they wouldn't get it here
+till next day. Then he went out and came in with his cousin at eleven
+that night--Sarah let 'em in her own self--and in the morning they was
+gone--and this!" Poor Mrs. Lamb, plaintively indignant, stretched her
+arm towards the wrecked panels.
+
+"If the gentleman as you say is comin' on, sir," she pursued, "can do
+anything to find 'em, I'll prosecute 'em, that I will, if it costs me
+ten pound. I spoke to the constable on the beat, but he only looked like
+a fool, and said if I knew where they were I might charge 'em with
+wilful damage, or county court 'em. Of course I know I can do that if I
+knew where they were, but how can I find 'em? Mr. Jones he said his name
+was; but how many Joneses is there in London, sir?"
+
+I couldn't imagine any answer to a question like this, but I condoled
+with Mrs. Lamb as well as I could. She afterwards went on to express
+herself much as her sister had done with regard to Kingscote's death,
+only as the destruction of her panels loomed larger in her mind, she
+dwelt primarily on that. "It might almost seem," she said, "that
+somebody had a deadly spite on the pore young gentleman, and went
+breakin' up his paintin' one night, and murderin' him the next!"
+
+I examined the broken panels with some care, having half a notion to
+attempt to deduce something from them myself, if possible. But I could
+deduce nothing. The beading had been taken out, and the panels, which
+were thick in the centre but bevelled at the edges, had been removed and
+split up literally into thin firewood, which lay in a tumbled heap on
+the hearth and about the floor. Every panel in the room had been treated
+in the same way, and the result was a pretty large heap of sticks, with
+nothing whatever about them to distinguish them from other sticks,
+except the paint on one face, which I observed in many cases had been
+scratched and scraped away. The rug was drawn half across the hearth,
+and had evidently been used to deaden the sound of chopping. But
+mischief--wanton and stupid mischief--was all I could deduce from it
+all.
+
+Mr. Jones's cousin, it seemed, only Sarah had seen, as she admitted him
+in the evening, and then he was so heavily muffled that she could not
+distinguish his features, and would never be able to identify him. But
+as for the other one, Mrs. Lamb was ready to swear to him anywhere.
+
+Hewitt was long in coming, and internal symptoms of the approach of
+dinner-time (we had had no lunch) had made themselves felt before a
+sharp ring at the door-bell foretold his arrival. "I have had to wait
+for answers to a telegram," he said in explanation, "but at any rate I
+have the information I wanted. And these are the mysterious panels, are
+they?"
+
+Mrs. Lamb's true opinion of Martin Hewitt's behaviour as it proceeded
+would have been amusing to know. She watched in amazement the antics of
+a man who purposed finding out who had been splitting sticks by dint of
+picking up each separate stick and staring at it. In the end he
+collected a small handful of sticks by themselves and handed them to me,
+saying, "Just put these together on the table, Brett, and see what you
+make of them."
+
+I turned the pieces painted side up, and fitted them together into a
+complete panel, joining up the painted design accurately. "It is an
+entire panel," I said.
+
+"Good. Now look at the sticks a little more closely, and tell me if you
+notice anything peculiar about them--any particular in which they differ
+from all the others."
+
+I looked. "Two adjoining sticks," I said, "have each a small
+semi-circular cavity stuffed with what seems to be putty. Put together
+it would mean a small circular hole, perhaps a knot-hole, half an inch
+or so in diameter, in the panel, filled in with putty, or whatever it
+is."
+
+"A _knot-hole_?" Hewitt asked, with particular emphasis.
+
+"Well, no, not a knot-hole, of course, because that would go right
+through, and this doesn't. It is probably less than half an inch deep
+from the front surface."
+
+"Anything else? Look at the whole appearance of the wood itself. Colour,
+for instance."
+
+"It is certainly darker than the rest."
+
+"So it is." He took the two pieces carrying the puttied hole, threw the
+rest on the heap, and addressed the landlady. "The Mr. Harvey Challitt
+who occupied this room before Mr. Kingscote, and who got into trouble
+for forgery, was the Mr. Harvey Challitt who was himself robbed of
+diamonds a few months before on a staircase, wasn't he?"
+
+"Yes, sir," Mrs. Lamb replied in some bewilderment. "He certainly was
+that, on his own office stairs, chloroformed."
+
+"Just so, and when they marched him away because of the forgery, Mr.
+Kingscote changed into his rooms?"
+
+"Yes, and very glad I was. It was bad enough to have the disgrace
+brought into the house, without the trouble of trying to get people to
+take his very rooms, and I thought----"
+
+"Yes, yes, very awkward, very awkward!" Hewitt interrupted rather
+impatiently. "The man who took the rooms on Monday, now--you'd never
+seen him before, had you?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Then is _that_ anything like him?" Hewitt held a cabinet photograph
+before her.
+
+"Why--why--law, yes, that's _him_!"
+
+Hewitt dropped the photograph back into his breast pocket with a
+contented "Um," and picked up his hat. "I think we may soon be able to
+find that young gentleman for you, Mrs. Lamb. He is not a very
+respectable young gentleman, and perhaps you are well rid of him, even
+as it is. Come, Brett," he added, "the day hasn't been wasted, after
+all."
+
+We made towards the nearest telegraph office. On the way I said, "That
+puttied-up hole in the piece of wood seems to have influenced you. Is it
+an important link?"
+
+"Well--yes," Hewitt answered, "it is. But all those other pieces are
+important, too."
+
+"But why?"
+
+"Because there are no holes in them." He looked quizzically at my
+wondering face, and laughed aloud. "Come," he said, "I won't puzzle you
+much longer. Here is the post-office. I'll send my wire, and then we'll
+go and dine at Luzatti's."
+
+He sent his telegram, and we cabbed it to Luzatti's. Among actors,
+journalists, and others who know town and like a good dinner, Luzatti's
+is well known. We went upstairs for the sake of quietness, and took a
+table standing alone in a recess just inside the door. We ordered our
+dinner, and then Hewitt began:
+
+"Now tell me what _your_ conclusion is in this matter of the Ivy Cottage
+murder."
+
+"Mine? I haven't one. I'm sorry I'm so very dull, but I really haven't."
+
+"Come, I'll give you a point. Here is the newspaper account (torn
+sacrilegiously from my scrap-book for your benefit) of the robbery
+perpetrated on Harvey Challitt a few months before his forgery. Read
+it."
+
+"Oh, but I remember the circumstances very well. He was carrying two
+packets of diamonds belonging to his firm downstairs to the office of
+another firm of diamond merchants on the ground-floor. It was a quiet
+time in the day, and half-way down he was seized on a dark landing, made
+insensible by chloroform, and robbed of the diamonds--five or six
+thousand pounds' worth altogether, of stones of various smallish
+individual values up to thirty pounds or so. He lay unconscious on the
+landing till one of the partners, noticing that he had been rather long
+gone, followed and found him. That's all, I think."
+
+"Yes, that's all. Well, what do you make of it?"
+
+"I'm afraid I don't quite see the connection with this case."
+
+"Well, then, I'll give you another point. The telegram I've just sent
+releases information to the police, in consequence of which they will
+probably apprehend Harvey Challitt and his confederate, Henry Gillard,
+_alias_ Jones, for the murder of Gavin Kingscote. Now, then."
+
+"Challitt! But he's in gaol already."
+
+"Tut, tut, consider. Five years' penal was his dose, although for the
+first offence, because the forgery was of an extremely dangerous sort.
+You left Chelsea over three years ago yourself, and you told me that his
+difficulty occurred a year before. That makes four years, at least. Good
+conduct in prison brings a man out of a five years' sentence in that
+time or a little less, and, as a matter of fact, Challitt was released
+rather more than a week ago."
+
+"Still, I'm afraid I don't see what you are driving at."
+
+"Whose story is this about the diamond robbery from Harvey Challitt?"
+
+"His own."
+
+"Exactly. His own. Does his subsequent record make him look like a
+person whose stories are to be accepted without doubt or question?"
+
+"Why, no. I think I see--no, I don't. You mean he stole them himself?
+I've a sort of dim perception of your drift now, but still I can't fix
+it. The whole thing's too complicated."
+
+"It is a little complicated for a first effort, I admit, so I will tell
+you. This is the story. Harvey Challitt is an artful young man, and
+decides on a theft of his firm's diamonds. He first prepares a
+hiding-place somewhere near the stairs of his office, and when the
+opportunity arrives he puts the stones away, spills his chloroform, and
+makes a smell--possibly sniffs some, and actually goes off on the
+stairs, and the whole thing's done. He is carried into the office--the
+diamonds are gone. He tells of the attack on the stairs, as we have
+heard, and he is believed. At a suitable opportunity he takes his
+plunder from the hiding-place, and goes home to his lodgings. What is he
+to do with those diamonds? He can't sell them yet, because the robbery
+is publicly notorious, and all the regular jewel buyers know him.
+
+"Being a criminal novice, he doesn't know any regular receiver of stolen
+goods, and if he did would prefer to wait and get full value by an
+ordinary sale. There will always be a danger of detection so long as the
+stones are not securely hidden, so he proceeds to hide them. He knows
+that if any suspicion were aroused his rooms would be searched in every
+likely place, so he looks for an unlikely place. Of course, he thinks of
+taking out a panel and hiding them behind that. But the idea is so
+obvious that it won't do; the police would certainly take those panels
+out to look behind them. Therefore he determines to hide them _in_ the
+panels. See here--he took the two pieces of wood with the filled hole
+from his tail pocket and opened his penknife--the putty near the surface
+is softer than that near the bottom of the hole; two different lots of
+putty, differently mixed, perhaps, have been used, therefore,
+presumably, at different times."
+
+"But to return to Challitt. He makes holes with a centre-bit in
+different places on the panels, and in each hole he places a diamond,
+embedding it carefully in putty. He smooths the surface carefully flush
+with the wood, and then very carefully paints the place over, shading
+off the paint at the edges so as to leave no signs of a patch. He
+doesn't do the whole job at once, creating a noise and a smell of paint,
+but keeps on steadily, a few holes at a time, till in a little while the
+whole wainscoting is set with hidden diamonds, and every panel is
+apparently sound and whole."
+
+"But, then--there was only one such hole in the whole lot."
+
+"Just so, and that very circumstance tells us the whole truth. Let me
+tell the story first--I'll explain the clue after. The diamonds lie
+hidden for a few months--he grows impatient. He wants the money, and he
+can't see a way of getting it. At last he determines to make a bolt and
+go abroad to sell his plunder. He knows he will want money for
+expenses, and that he may not be able to get rid of his diamonds at
+once. He also expects that his suddenly going abroad while the robbery
+is still in people's minds will bring suspicion on him in any case, so,
+in for a penny in for a pound, he commits a bold forgery, which, had it
+been successful, would have put him in funds and enabled him to leave
+the country with the stones. But the forgery is detected, and he is
+haled to prison, leaving the diamonds in their wainscot setting.
+
+"Now we come to Gavin Kingscote. He must have been a shrewd fellow--the
+sort of man that good detectives are made of. Also he must have been
+pretty unscrupulous. He had his suspicions about the genuineness of the
+diamond robbery, and kept his eyes open. What indications he had to
+guide him we don't know, but living in the same house a sharp fellow on
+the look-out would probably see enough. At any rate, they led him to the
+belief that the diamonds were in the thief's rooms, but not among his
+movables, or they would have been found after the arrest. Here was his
+chance. Challitt was out of the way for years, and there was plenty of
+time to take the house to pieces if it were necessary. So he changed
+into Challitt's rooms.
+
+"How long it took him to find the stones we shall never know. He
+probably tried many other places first, and, I expect, found the
+diamonds at last by pricking over the panels with a needle. Then came
+the problem of getting them out without attracting attention. He decided
+not to trust to the needle, which might possibly leave a stone or two
+undiscovered, but to split up each panel carefully into splinters so as
+to leave no part unexamined. Therefore he took measurements, and had a
+number of panels made by a joiner of the exact size and pattern of those
+in the room, and announced to his landlady his intention of painting her
+panels with a pretty design. This to account for the wet paint, and even
+for the fact of a panel being out of the wall, should she chance to
+bounce into the room at an awkward moment. All very clever, eh?"
+
+"Very."
+
+"Ah, he was a smart man, no doubt. Well, he went to work, taking out a
+panel, substituting a new one, painting it over, and chopping up the old
+one on the quiet, getting rid of the splinters out of doors when the
+booty had been extracted. The decoration progressed and the little heap
+of diamonds grew. Finally, he came to the last panel, but found that he
+had used all his new panels and hadn't one left for a substitute. It
+must have been at some time when it was difficult to get hold of the
+joiner--Bank Holiday, perhaps, or Sunday, and he was impatient. So he
+scraped the paint off, and went carefully over every part of the
+surface--experience had taught him by this that all the holes were of
+the same sort--and found one diamond. He took it out, refilled the hole
+with putty, painted the old panel and put it back. _These_ are pieces of
+that old panel--the only old one of the lot.
+
+"Nine men out of ten would have got out of the house as soon as possible
+after the thing was done, but he was a cool hand and stayed. That made
+the whole thing look a deal more genuine than if he had unaccountably
+cleared out as soon as he had got his room nicely decorated. I expect
+the original capital for those Stock Exchange operations we heard of
+came out of those diamonds. He stayed as long as suited him, and left
+when he set up housekeeping with a view to his wedding. The rest of the
+story is pretty plain. You guess it, of course?"
+
+"Yes," I said, "I think I can guess the rest, in a general sort of
+way--except as to one or two points."
+
+"It's all plain--perfectly. See here! Challitt, in gaol, determines to
+get those diamonds when he comes out. To do that without being suspected
+it will be necessary to hire the room. But he knows that he won't be
+able to do that himself, because the landlady, of course, knows him, and
+won't have an ex-convict in the house. There is no help for it; he must
+have a confederate, and share the spoil. So he makes the acquaintance
+of another convict, who seems a likely man for the job, and whose
+sentence expires about the same time as his own. When they come out, he
+arranges the matter with this confederate, who is a well-mannered (and
+pretty well-known) housebreaker, and the latter calls at Mrs. Lamb's
+house to look for rooms. The very room itself happens to be to let, and
+of course it is taken, and Challitt (who is the invalid cousin) comes in
+at night muffled and unrecognisable.
+
+"The decoration on the panel does not alarm them, because, of course,
+they suppose it to have been done on the old panels and over the old
+paint. Challitt tries the spots where diamonds were left--there are
+none--there is no putty even. Perhaps, think they, the panels have been
+shifted and interchanged in the painting, so they set to work and split
+them all up as we have seen, getting more desperate as they go on.
+Finally they realize that they are done, and clear out, leaving Mrs.
+Lamb to mourn over their mischief.
+
+"They know that Kingscote is the man who has forestalled them, because
+Gillard (or Jones), in his chat with the landlady, has heard all about
+him and his painting of the panels. So the next night they set off for
+Finchley. They get into Kingscote's garden and watch him let Campbell
+out. While he is gone, Challitt quietly steps through the French window
+into the smoking-room, and waits for him, Gillard remaining outside.
+
+"Kingscote returns, and Challitt accuses him of taking the stones.
+Kingscote is contemptuous--doesn't care for Challitt, because he knows
+he is powerless, being the original thief himself; besides, knows there
+is no evidence, since the diamonds are sold and dispersed long ago.
+Challitt offers to divide the plunder with him--Kingscote laughs and
+tells him to go; probably threatens to throw him out, Challitt being the
+smaller man. Gillard, at the open window, hears this, steps in behind,
+and quietly knocks him on the head. The rest follows as a matter of
+course. They fasten the window and shutters, to exclude observation;
+turn over all the drawers, etc., in case the jewels are there; go to the
+best bedroom and try there, and so on. Failing (and possibly being
+disturbed after a few hours' search by the noise of the acquisitive
+gardener), Gillard, with the instinct of an old thief, determines they
+shan't go away with nothing, so empties Kingscote's pockets and takes
+his watch and chain and so on. They go out by the front door and shut it
+after them. _Voila tout._"
+
+I was filled with wonder at the prompt ingenuity of the man who in these
+few hours of hurried inquiry could piece together so accurately all the
+materials of an intricate and mysterious affair such as this; but more,
+I wondered where and how he had collected those materials.
+
+"There is no doubt, Hewitt," I said, "that the accurate and minute
+application of what you are pleased to call your common sense has become
+something very like an instinct with you. What did you deduce from? You
+told me your conclusions from the examination of Ivy Cottage, but not
+how you arrived at them."
+
+"They didn't leave me much material downstairs, did they? But in the
+bedroom, the two drawers which the thieves found locked were
+ransacked--opened probably with keys taken from the dead man. On the
+floor I saw a bent French nail; here it is. You see, it is twice bent at
+right angles, near the head and near the point, and there is the faint
+mark of the pliers that were used to bend it. It is a very usual
+burglars' tool, and handy in experienced hands to open ordinary drawer
+locks. Therefore, I knew that a professional burglar had been at work.
+He had probably fiddled at the drawers with the nail first, and then had
+thrown it down to try the dead man's keys.
+
+"But I knew this professional burglar didn't come for a burglary, from
+several indications. There was no attempt to take plate, the first thing
+a burglar looks for. Valuable clocks were left on mantelpieces, and
+other things that usually go in an ordinary burglary were not
+disturbed. Notably, it was to be observed that no doors or windows were
+broken, or had been forcibly opened; therefore, it was plain that the
+thieves had come in by the French window of the smoking-room, the only
+entrance left open at the last thing. _Therefore_, they came in, or one
+did, knowing that Mr. Kingscote was up, and being quite
+willing--presumably anxious--to see him. Ordinary burglars would have
+waited till he had retired, and then could have got through the closed
+French window as easily almost as if it were open, notwithstanding the
+thin wooden shutters, which would never stop a burglar for more than
+five minutes. Being anxious to see him, they--or again, _one_ of
+them--presumably knew him. That they had come to _get_ something was
+plain, from the ransacking. As, in the end, they _did_ steal his money,
+and watch, but did _not_ take larger valuables, it was plain that they
+had no bag with them--which proves not only that they had not come to
+burgle, for every burglar takes his bag, but that the thing they came to
+get was not bulky. Still, they could easily have removed plate or clocks
+by rolling them up in a table-cover or other wrapper, but such a bundle,
+carried by well-dressed men, would attract attention--therefore it was
+probable that they were well dressed. Do I make it clear?"
+
+"Quite--nothing seems simpler now it is explained--that's the way with
+difficult puzzles."
+
+"There was nothing more to be got at the house. I had already in my mind
+the curious coincidence that the panels at Chelsea had been broken the
+very night before that of the murder, and determined to look at them in
+any case. I got from you the name of the man who had lived in the
+panelled room before Kingscote, and at once remembered it (although I
+said nothing about it) as that of the young man who had been
+chloroformed for his employer's diamonds. I keep things of that sort in
+my mind, you see--and, indeed, in my scrap-book. You told me yourself
+about his imprisonment, and there I was with what seemed now a hopeful
+case getting into a promising shape.
+
+"You went on to prevent any setting to rights at Chelsea, and I made
+enquiries as to Challitt. I found he had been released only a few days
+before all this trouble arose, and I also found the name of another man
+who was released from the same establishment only a few days earlier. I
+knew this man (Gillard) well, and knew that nobody was a more likely
+rascal for such a crime as that at Finchley. On my way to Chelsea I
+called at my office, gave my clerk certain instructions, and looked up
+my scrap-book. I found the newspaper account of the chloroform business,
+and also a photograph of Gillard--I keep as many of these things as I
+can collect. What I did at Chelsea you know. I saw that one panel was of
+old wood and the rest new. I saw the hole in the old panel, and I asked
+one or two questions. The case was complete."
+
+We proceeded with our dinner. Presently I said: "It all rests with the
+police now, of course?"
+
+"Of course. I should think it very probable that Challitt and Gillard
+will be caught. Gillard, at any rate, is pretty well known. It will be
+rather hard on the surviving Kingscote, after engaging me, to have his
+dead brother's diamond transactions publicly exposed as a result, won't
+it? But it can't be helped. _Fiat justitia_, of course."
+
+"How will the police feel over this?" I asked. "You've rather cut them
+out, eh?"
+
+"Oh, the police are all right. They had not the information I had, you
+see; they knew nothing of the panel business. If Mrs. Lamb had gone to
+Scotland Yard instead of to the policeman on the beat, perhaps I should
+never have been sent for."
+
+The same quality that caused Martin Hewitt to rank as mere
+"common-sense" his extraordinary power of almost instinctive deduction,
+kept his respect for the abilities of the police at perhaps a higher
+level than some might have considered justified.
+
+We sat some little while over our dessert, talking as we sat, when
+there occurred one of those curious conjunctions of circumstances that
+we notice again and again in ordinary life, and forget as often, unless
+the importance of the occasion fixes the matter in the memory. A young
+man had entered the dining-room, and had taken his seat at a corner
+table near the back window. He had been sitting there for some little
+time before I particularly observed him. At last he happened to turn his
+thin, pale face in my direction, and our eyes met. It was Challitt--the
+man we had been talking of!
+
+I sprang to my feet in some excitement.
+
+"That's the man!" I cried. "Challitt!"
+
+Hewitt rose at my words, and at first attempted to pull me back.
+Challitt, in guilty terror, saw that we were between him and the door,
+and turning, leaped upon the sill of the open window, and dropped out.
+There was a fearful crash of broken glass below, and everybody rushed to
+the window.
+
+Hewitt drew me through the door, and we ran downstairs. "Pity you let
+out like that," he said, as he went. "If you'd kept quiet we could have
+sent out for the police with no trouble. Never mind--can't help it."
+
+Below, Challitt was lying in a broken heap in the midst of a crowd of
+waiters. He had crashed through a thick glass skylight and fallen, back
+downward, across the back of a lounge. He was taken away on a stretcher
+unconscious, and, in fact, died in a week in hospital from injuries to
+the spine.
+
+During his periods of consciousness he made a detailed statement,
+bearing out the conclusions of Martin Hewitt with the most surprising
+exactness, down to the smallest particulars. He and Gillard had parted
+immediately after the crime, judging it safer not to be seen together.
+He had, he affirmed, endured agonies of fear and remorse in the few days
+since the fatal night at Finchley, and had even once or twice thought of
+giving himself up. When I so excitedly pointed him out, he knew at once
+that the game was up, and took the one desperate chance of escape that
+offered. But to the end he persistently denied that he had himself
+committed the murder, or had even thought of it till he saw it
+accomplished. That had been wholly the work of Gillard, who, listening
+at the window and perceiving the drift of the conversation, suddenly
+beat down Kingscote from behind with a life-preserver. And so Harvey
+Challitt ended his life at the age of twenty-six.
+
+Gillard was never taken. He doubtless left the country, and has probably
+since that time become "known to the police" under another name abroad.
+Perhaps he has even been hanged, and if he has been, there was no
+miscarriage of justice, no matter what the charge against him may have
+been.
+
+
+
+
+THE _NICOBAR_ BULLION CASE.
+
+
+I.
+
+The whole voyage was an unpleasant one, and Captain Mackrie, of the
+Anglo-Malay Company's steamship _Nicobar_, had at last some excuse for
+the ill-temper that had made him notorious and unpopular in the
+company's marine staff. Although the fourth and fifth mates in the
+seclusion of their berth ventured deeper in their search for motives,
+and opined that the "old man" had made a deal less out of this voyage
+than usual, the company having lately taken to providing its own stores;
+so that "makings" were gone clean and "cumshaw" (which means commission
+in the trading lingo of the China seas) had shrunk small indeed. In
+confirmation they adduced the uncommonly long face of the steward (the
+only man in the ship satisfied with the skipper), whom the new
+regulations hit with the same blow. But indeed the steward's dolor might
+well be credited to the short passenger list, and the unpromising aspect
+of the few passengers in the eyes of a man accustomed to gauge one's
+tip-yielding capacity a month in advance. For the steward it was
+altogether the wrong time of year, the wrong sort of voyage, and
+certainly the wrong sort of passengers. So that doubtless the
+confidential talk of the fourth and fifth officers was mere youthful
+scandal. At any rate, the captain had prospect of a good deal in private
+trade home, for he had been taking curiosities and Japanese oddments
+aboard (plainly for sale in London) in a way that a third steward would
+have been ashamed of, and which, for a captain, was a scandal and an
+ignominy; and he had taken pains to insure well for the lot. These
+things the fourth and fifth mates often spoke of, and more than once
+made a winking allusion to, in the presence of the third mate and the
+chief engineer, who laughed and winked too, and sometimes said as much
+to the second mate, who winked without laughing; for of such is the
+tittle-tattle of shipboard.
+
+The _Nicobar_ was bound home with few passengers, as I have said, a
+small general cargo, and gold bullion to the value of L200,000--the
+bullion to be landed at Plymouth, as usual. The presence of this bullion
+was a source of much conspicuous worry on the part of the second
+officer, who had charge of the bullion-room. For this was his first
+voyage on his promotion from third officer, and the charge of L200,000
+worth of gold bars was a thing he had not been accustomed to. The placid
+first officer pointed out to him that this wasn't the first shipment of
+bullion the world had ever known, by a long way, nor the largest. Also
+that every usual precaution was taken, and the keys were in the
+captain's cabin; so that he might reasonably be as easy in his mind as
+the few thousand other second officers who had had charge of hatches and
+special cargo since the world began. But this did not comfort Brasyer.
+He fidgeted about when off watch, considering and puzzling out the
+various means by which the bullion-room might be got at, and fidgeted
+more when on watch, lest somebody might be at that moment putting into
+practice the ingenious dodges he had thought of. And he didn't keep his
+fears and speculations to himself. He bothered the first officer with
+them, and when the first officer escaped he explained the whole thing at
+length to the third officer.
+
+"Can't think what the company's about," he said on one such occasion to
+the first mate, "calling a tin-pot bunker like that a bullion-room."
+
+"Skittles!" responded the first mate, and went on smoking.
+
+"Oh, that's all very well for you who aren't responsible," Brasyer went
+on, "but I'm pretty sure something will happen some day; if not on this
+voyage on some other. Talk about a strong room! Why, what's it made of?"
+
+"Three-eighths boiler plate."
+
+"Yes, three-eighths boiler plate--about as good as a sixpenny tin money
+box. Why, I'd get through that with my grandmother's scissors!"
+
+"All right; borrow 'em and get through. _I_ would if I had a
+grandmother."
+
+"There it is down below there out of sight and hearing, nice and handy
+for anybody who likes to put in a quiet hour at plate cutting from the
+coal bunker next door--always empty, because it's only a seven-ton
+bunker, not worth trimming. And the other side's against the steward's
+pantry. What's to prevent a man shipping as steward, getting quietly
+through while he's supposed to be bucketing about among his slops and
+his crockery, and strolling away with the plunder at the next port? And
+then there's the carpenter. _He's_ always messing about somewhere below,
+with a bag full of tools. Nothing easier than for him to make a job in a
+quiet corner, and get through the plates."
+
+"But then what's he to do with the stuff when he's got it? You can't
+take gold ashore by the hundredweight in your boots."
+
+"Do with it. Why, dump it, of course. Dump it overboard in a quiet port
+and mark the spot. Come to that, he could desert clean at Port
+Said--what easier place?--and take all he wanted. You know what Port
+Said's like. Then there are the firemen--oh, _anybody_ can do it!" And
+Brasyer moved off to take another peep under the hatchway.
+
+The door of the bullion-room was fastened by one central patent lock and
+two padlocks, one above and one below the other lock. A day or two after
+the conversation recorded above, Brasyer was carefully examining and
+trying the lower of the padlocks with a key, when a voice immediately
+behind him asked sharply, "Well, sir, and what are you up to with that
+padlock?"
+
+Brasyer started violently and looked round. It was Captain Mackrie.
+
+"There's--that is--I'm afraid these are the same sort of padlocks as
+those in the carpenter's stores," the second mate replied, in a hurry of
+explanation. "I--I was just trying, that's all; I'm afraid the keys
+fit."
+
+"Just you let the carpenter take care of his own stores, will you, Mr.
+Brasyer? There's a Chubb's lock there as well as the padlocks, and the
+key of that's in my cabin, and I'll take care doesn't go out of it
+without my knowledge. So perhaps you'd best leave off experiments till
+you're asked to make 'em, for your own sake. That's enough now," the
+captain added, as Brasyer appeared to be ready to reply; and he turned
+on his heel and made for the steward's quarters.
+
+Brasyer stared after him ragefully. "Wonder what _you_ want down here,"
+he muttered under his breath. "Seems to me one doesn't often see a
+skipper as thick with the steward as that." And he turned off growling
+towards the deck above.
+
+"Hanged if I like that steward's pantry stuck against the side of the
+bullion-room," he said later in the day to the first officer. "And what
+does a steward want with a lot of boiler-maker's tools aboard? You know
+he's got them."
+
+"In the name of the prophet, rats!" answered the first mate, who was of
+a less fussy disposition. "What a fatiguing creature you are, Brasyer!
+Don't you know the man's a boiler-maker by regular trade, and has only
+taken to stewardship for the last year or two? That sort of man doesn't
+like parting with his tools, and as he's a widower, with no home ashore,
+of course he has to carry all his traps aboard. Do shut up, and take
+your proper rest like a Christian. Here, I'll give you a cigar; it's all
+right--Burman; stick it in your mouth, and keep your jaw tight on it."
+
+But there was no soothing the second officer. Still he prowled about the
+after orlop deck, and talked at large of his anxiety for the contents of
+the bullion-room. Once again, a few days later, as he approached the
+iron door, he was startled by the appearance of the captain coming, this
+time, _from_ the steward's pantry. He fancied he had heard tapping,
+Brasyer explained, and had come to investigate. But the captain turned
+him back with even less ceremony than before, swearing he would give
+charge of the bullion-room to another officer if Brasyer persisted in
+his eccentricities. On the first deck the second officer was met by the
+carpenter, a quiet, sleek, soft-spoken man, who asked him for the
+padlock and key he had borrowed from the stores during the week. But
+Brasyer put him off, promising to send it back later. And the carpenter
+trotted away to a job he happened to have, singularly enough, in the
+hold, just under the after orlop deck, and below the floor of the
+bullion-room.
+
+As I have said, the voyage was in no way a pleasant one. Everywhere the
+weather was at its worst, and scarce was Gibraltar passed before the
+Lascars were shivering in their cotton trousers, and the Seedee boys
+were buttoning tight such old tweed jackets as they might muster from
+their scanty kits. It was January. In the Bay the weather was
+tremendous, and the _Nicobar_ banged and shook and pitched distractedly
+across in a howling world of thunderous green sea, washed within and
+without, above and below. Then, in the Chops, as night fell, something
+went, and there was no more steerage-way, nor, indeed, anything else but
+an aimless wallowing. The screw had broken.
+
+The high sea had abated in some degree, but it was still bad. Such sail
+as the steamer carried, inadequate enough, was set, and shift was made
+somehow to worry along to Plymouth--or to Falmouth if occasion better
+served--by that means. And so the _Nicobar_ beat across the Channel on a
+rather better, though anything but smooth, sea, in a black night, made
+thicker by a storm of sleet, which turned gradually to snow as the hours
+advanced.
+
+The ship laboured slowly ahead, through a universal blackness that
+seemed to stifle. Nothing but a black void above, below, and around, and
+the sound of wind and sea; so that one coming before a deck-light was
+startled by the quiet advent of the large snowflakes that came like
+moths as it seemed from nowhere. At four bells--two in the morning--a
+foggy light appeared away on the starboard bow--it was the Eddystone
+light--and an hour or two later, the exact whereabouts of the ship being
+a thing of much uncertainty, it was judged best to lay her to till
+daylight. No order had yet been given, however, when suddenly there were
+dim lights over the port quarter, with a more solid blackness beneath
+them. Then a shout and a thunderous crash, and the whole ship shuddered,
+and in ten seconds had belched up every living soul from below. The
+_Nicobar's_ voyage was over--it was a collision.
+
+The stranger backed off into the dark, and the two vessels drifted
+apart, though not till some from the _Nicobar_ had jumped aboard the
+other. Captain Mackrie's presence of mind was wonderful, and never for a
+moment did he lose absolute command of every soul on board. The ship had
+already begun to settle down by the stern and list to port. Life-belts
+were served out promptly. Fortunately there were but two women among the
+passengers, and no children. The boats were lowered without a mishap,
+and presently two strange boats came as near as they dare from the ship
+(a large coasting steamer, it afterwards appeared) that had cut into the
+_Nicobar_. The last of the passengers were being got off safely, when
+Brasyer, running anxiously to the captain, said:--
+
+"Can't do anything with that bullion, can we, sir? Perhaps a box or
+two----"
+
+"Oh, damn the bullion!" shouted Captain Mackrie. "Look after the boat,
+sir, and get the passengers off. The insurance companies can find the
+bullion for themselves."
+
+But Brasyer had vanished at the skipper's first sentence. The skipper
+turned aside to the steward as the crew and engine-room staff made for
+the remaining boats, and the two spoke quietly together. Presently the
+steward turned away as if to execute an order, and the skipper continued
+in a louder tone:--
+
+"They're the likeliest stuff, and we can but drop 'em, at worst. But be
+slippy--she won't last ten minutes."
+
+She lasted nearly a quarter of an hour. By that time, however, everybody
+was clear of her, and the captain in the last boat was only just near
+enough to see the last of her lights as she went down.
+
+
+II.
+
+The day broke in a sulky grey, and there lay the _Nicobar_, in ten
+fathoms, not a mile from the shore, her topmasts forlornly visible above
+the boisterous water. The sea was rough all that day, but the snow had
+ceased, and during the night the weather calmed considerably. Next day
+Lloyd's agent was steaming about in a launch from Plymouth, and soon a
+salvage company's tug came up and lay to by the emerging masts. There
+was every chance of raising the ship as far as could be seen, and a
+diver went down from the salvage tug to measure the breach made in the
+_Nicobar's_ side, in order that the necessary oak planking or sheeting
+might be got ready for covering the hole, preparatory to pumping and
+raising. This was done in a very short time, and the necessary telegrams
+having been sent, the tug remained in its place through the night, and
+prepared for the sending down of several divers on the morrow to get
+out the bullion as a commencement.
+
+Just at this time Martin Hewitt happened to be engaged on a case of some
+importance and delicacy on behalf of Lloyd's Committee, and was staying
+for a few days at Plymouth. He heard the story of the wreck, of course,
+and speaking casually with Lloyd's agent as to the salvage work just
+beginning, he was told the name of the salvage company's representative
+on the tug, Mr. Percy Merrick--a name he immediately recognised as that
+of an old acquaintance of his own. So that on the day when the divers
+were at work in the bullion-room of the sunken _Nicobar_, Hewitt gave
+himself a holiday, and went aboard the tug about noon.
+
+Here he found Merrick, a big, pleasant man of thirty-eight or so. He was
+very glad to see Hewitt, but was a great deal puzzled as to the results
+of the morning's work on the wreck. Two cases of gold bars were missing.
+
+"There was L200,000 worth of bullion on board," he said, "that's plain
+and certain. It was packed in forty cases, each of L5,000 value. But now
+there are only thirty-eight cases! Two are gone clearly. I wonder what's
+happened?"
+
+"I suppose your men don't know anything about it?" asked Hewitt.
+
+"No, they're all right. You see, it's impossible for them to bring
+anything up without its being observed, especially as they have to be
+unscrewed from their diving-dresses here on deck. Besides, bless you, I
+was down with them."
+
+"Oh! Do you dive yourself, then?"
+
+"Well, I put the dress on sometimes, you know, for any such special
+occasion as this. I went down this morning. There was no difficulty in
+getting about on the vessel below, and I found the keys of the
+bullion-room just where the captain said I would, in his cabin. But the
+locks were useless, of course, after being a couple of days in salt
+water. So we just burgled the door with crowbars, and then we saw that
+we might have done it a bit more easily from outside. For that
+coasting-steamer cut clean into the bunker next the bullion-room, and
+ripped open the sheet of boiler-plate dividing them."
+
+"The two missing cases couldn't have dropped out that way, of course?"
+
+"Oh, no. We looked, of course, but it would have been impossible. The
+vessel has a list the other way--to starboard--and the piled cases
+didn't reach as high as the torn part. Well, as I said, we burgled the
+door, and there they were, thirty-eight sealed bullion cases, neither
+more nor less, and they're down below in the after-cabin at this moment.
+Come and see."
+
+Thirty-eight they were; pine cases bound with hoop-iron and sealed at
+every joint, each case about eighteen inches by a foot, and six inches
+deep. They were corded together, two and two, apparently for convenience
+of transport.
+
+"Did you cord them like this yourself?" asked Hewitt.
+
+"No, that's how we found 'em. We just hooked 'em on a block and tackle,
+the pair at a time, and they hauled 'em up here aboard the tug."
+
+"What have you done about the missing two--anything?"
+
+"Wired off to headquarters, of course, at once. And I've sent for
+Captain Mackrie--he's still in the neighbourhood, I believe--and
+Brasyer, the second officer, who had charge of the bullion-room. They
+may possibly know something. Anyway, _one_ thing's plain. There were
+forty cases at the beginning of the voyage, and now there are only
+thirty-eight."
+
+There was a pause; and then Merrick added, "By the bye, Hewitt, this is
+rather your line, isn't it? You ought to look up these two cases."
+
+Hewitt laughed. "All right," he said; "I'll begin this minute if you'll
+commission me."
+
+"Well," Merrick replied slowly, "of course I can't do that without
+authority from headquarters. But if you've nothing to do for an hour or
+so there is no harm in putting on your considering cap, is there?
+Although, of course, there's nothing to go upon as yet. But you might
+listen to what Mackrie and Brasyer have to say. Of course I don't know,
+but as it's a L10,000 question probably it might pay you, and if you
+_do_ see your way to anything I'd wire and get you commissioned at
+once."
+
+There was a tap at the door and Captain Mackrie entered. "Mr. Merrick?"
+he said interrogatively, looking from one to another.
+
+"That's myself, sir," answered Merrick.
+
+"I'm Captain Mackrie, of the _Nicobar_. You sent for me, I believe.
+Something wrong with the bullion I'm told, isn't it?"
+
+Merrick explained matters fully. "I thought perhaps you might be able to
+help us, Captain Mackrie. Perhaps I have been wrongly informed as to the
+number of cases that should have been there?"
+
+"No; there were forty right enough. I think though--perhaps I might be
+able to give you a sort of hint."--and Captain Mackrie looked hard at
+Hewitt.
+
+"This is Mr. Hewitt, Captain Mackrie," Merrick interposed. "You may
+speak as freely as you please before him. In fact, he's sort of working
+on the business, so to speak."
+
+"Well," Mackrie said, "if that's so, speaking between ourselves, I
+should advise you to turn your attention to Brasyer. He was my second
+officer, you know, and had charge of the stuff."
+
+"Do you mean," Hewitt asked, "that Mr. Brasyer might give us some useful
+information?"
+
+Mackrie gave an ugly grin. "Very likely he might," he said, "if he were
+fool enough. But I don't think you'd get much out of him direct. I meant
+you might watch him."
+
+"What, do you suppose he was concerned in any way with the disappearance
+of this gold?"
+
+"I should think--speaking, as I said before, in confidence and between
+ourselves--that it's very likely indeed. I didn't like his manner all
+through the voyage."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Well, he was so eternally cracking on about his responsibility, and
+pretending to suspect the stokers and the carpenter, and one person and
+another, of trying to get at the bullion cases--that that alone was
+almost enough to make one suspicious. He protested so much, you see. He
+was so conscientious and diligent himself, and all the rest of it, and
+everybody else was such a desperate thief, and he was so sure there
+would be some of that bullion missing some day that--that--well, I don't
+know if I express his manner clearly, but I tell you I didn't like it a
+bit. But there was something more than that. He was eternally smelling
+about the place, and peeping in at the steward's pantry--which adjoins
+the bullion-room on one side, you know--and nosing about in the bunker
+on the other side. And once I actually caught him fitting keys to the
+padlocks--keys he'd borrowed from the carpenter's stores. And every time
+his excuse was that he fancied he heard somebody else trying to get in
+to the gold, or something of that sort; every time I caught him below on
+the orlop deck that was his excuse--happened to have heard something or
+suspected something or somebody every time. Whether or not I succeed in
+conveying my impressions to you, gentlemen, I can assure you that I
+regarded his whole manner and actions as very suspicious throughout the
+voyage, and I made up my mind I wouldn't forget it if by chance anything
+_did_ turn out wrong. Well, it has, and now I've told you what I've
+observed. It's for you to see if it will lead you anywhere."
+
+"Just so," Hewitt answered. "But let me fully understand, Captain
+Mackrie. You say that Mr. Brasyer had charge of the bullion-room, but
+that he was trying keys on it from the carpenter's stores. Where were
+the legitimate keys then?"
+
+"In my cabin. They were only handed out when I knew what they were
+wanted for. There was a Chubb's lock between the two padlocks, but a
+duplicate wouldn't have been hard for Brasyer to get. He could easily
+have taken a wax impression of my key when he used it at the port where
+we took the bullion aboard."
+
+"Well, and suppose he had taken these boxes, where do you think he would
+keep them?"
+
+Mackrie shrugged his shoulders and smiled. "Impossible to say," he
+replied. "He might have hidden 'em somewhere on board, though I don't
+think that's likely. He'd have had a deuce of a job to land them at
+Plymouth, and would have had to leave them somewhere while he came on to
+London. Bullion is always landed at Plymouth, you know, and if any were
+found to be missing, then the ship would be overhauled at once, every
+inch of her; so that he'd have to get his plunder ashore somehow before
+the rest of the gold was unloaded--almost impossible. Of course, if he's
+done that it's somewhere below there now, but that isn't likely. He'd be
+much more likely to have 'dumped' it--dropped it overboard at some
+well-known spot in a foreign port, where he could go later on and get
+it. So that you've a deal of scope for search, you see. Anywhere under
+water from here to Yokohama;" and Captain Mackrie laughed.
+
+Soon afterward he left, and as he was leaving a man knocked at the cabin
+door and looked in to say that Mr. Brasyer was on board. "You'll be able
+to have a go at him now," said the captain. "Good-day."
+
+"There's the steward of the _Nicobar_ there too, sir," said the man
+after the captain had gone, "and the carpenter."
+
+"Very well, we'll see Mr. Brasyer first," said Merrick, and the man
+vanished. "It seems to have got about a bit," Merrick went on to Hewitt.
+"I only sent for Brasyer, but as these others have come, perhaps they've
+got something to tell us."
+
+Brasyer made his appearance, overflowing with information. He required
+little assurance to encourage him to speak openly before Hewitt, and he
+said again all he had so often said before on board the _Nicobar_. The
+bullion-room was a mere tin box, the whole thing was as easy to get at
+as anything could be, he didn't wonder in the least at the loss--he had
+prophesied it all along.
+
+The men whose movements should be carefully watched, he said, were the
+captain and the steward. "Nobody ever heard of a captain and a steward
+being so thick together before," he said. "The steward's pantry was next
+against the bullion-room, you know, with nothing but that wretched bit
+of three-eighths boiler plate between. You wouldn't often expect to find
+the captain down in the steward's pantry, would you, thick as they might
+be. Well, that's where I used to find him, time and again. And the
+steward kept boiler-makers' tools there! That I can swear to. And he's
+been a boiler-maker, so that, likely as not, he could open a joint
+somewhere and patch it up again neatly so that it wouldn't be noticed.
+He was always messing about down there in his pantry, and once I
+distinctly heard knocking there, and when I went down to see, whom
+should I meet? Why, the skipper, coming away from the place himself, and
+he bullyragged me for being there and sent me on deck. But before that
+he bullyragged me because I had found out that there were other keys
+knocking about the place that fitted the padlocks on the bullion-room
+door. Why should he slang and threaten me for looking after these things
+and keeping my eye on the bullion-room, as was my duty? But that was the
+very thing that he didn't like. It was enough for him to see me anxious
+about the gold to make him furious. Of course his character for meanness
+and greed is known all through the company's service--he'll do anything
+to make a bit."
+
+"But have you any positive idea as to what has become of the gold?"
+
+"Well," Brasyer replied, with a rather knowing air, "I don't think
+they've dumped it."
+
+"Do you mean you think it's still in the vessel--hidden somewhere?"
+
+"No, I don't. I believe the captain and the steward took it ashore, one
+case each, when we came off in the boats."
+
+"But wouldn't that be noticed?"
+
+"It needn't be, on a black night like that. You see, the parcels are not
+so big--look at them, a foot by a foot and a half by six inches or so,
+roughly. Easily slipped under a big coat or covered up with anything. Of
+course they're a bit heavy--eighty or ninety pounds apiece
+altogether--but that's not much for a strong man to carry--especially in
+such a handy parcel, on a black night, with no end of confusion on. Now
+you just look here--I'll tell you something. The skipper went ashore
+last in a boat that was sent out by the coasting steamer that ran into
+us. That ship's put into dock for repairs and her crew are mostly having
+an easy time ashore. Now I haven't been asleep this last day or two, and
+I had a sort of notion there might be some game of this sort on, because
+when I left the ship that night I thought we might save a little at
+least of the stuff, but the skipper wouldn't let me go near the
+bullion-room, and that seemed odd. So I got hold of one of the boat's
+crew that fetched the skipper ashore, and questioned him quietly--pumped
+him, you know--and he assures me that the skipper _did_ have a rather
+small, heavy sort of parcel with him. What do you think of that? Of
+course, in the circumstances, the man couldn't remember any very
+distinct particulars, but he thought it was a sort of square wooden case
+about the size I've mentioned. But there's something more." Brasyer
+lifted his fore-finger and then brought it down on the table before
+him--"something more. I've made inquiries at the railway station and I
+find that two heavy parcels were sent off yesterday to London--deal
+boxes wrapped in brown paper, of just about the right size. And the
+paper got torn before the things were sent off, and the clerk could see
+that the boxes inside were fastened with hoop-iron--like those!" and the
+second officer pointed triumphantly to the boxes piled at one side of
+the cabin.
+
+"Well done!" said Hewitt. "You're quite a smart detective. Did you find
+out who brought the parcels, and who they were addressed to?"
+
+"No, I couldn't get quite as far as that. Of course the clerk didn't
+know the names of the senders, and not knowing me, wouldn't tell me
+exactly where the parcels were going. But I got quite chummy with him
+after a bit, and I'm going to meet him presently--he has the afternoon
+off, and we're going for a stroll. I'll find something more, I'll bet
+you!"
+
+"Certainly," replied Hewitt, "find all you can--it may be very
+important. If you get any valuable information you'll let us know at
+once, of course. Anything else, now?"
+
+"No, I don't think so; but I think what I've told you is pretty well
+enough for the present, eh? I'll let you know some more soon."
+
+Brasyer went, and Norton, the steward of the old ship, was brought into
+the cabin. He was a sharp-eyed, rather cadaverous-looking man, and he
+spoke with sepulchral hollowness. He had heard, he said, that there was
+something wrong with the chests of bullion, and came on board to give
+any information he could. It wasn't much, he went on to say, but the
+smallest thing might help. If he might speak strictly confidentially he
+would suggest that observation be kept on Wickens, the carpenter. He
+(Norton) didn't want to be uncharitable, but his pantry happened to be
+next the bullion-room, and he had heard Wickens at work for a very long
+time just below--on the under side of the floor of the bullion-room, it
+seemed to him, although, of course, he _might_ have been mistaken.
+Still, it was very odd that the carpenter always seemed to have a job
+just at that spot. More, it had been said--and he (Norton) believed it
+to be true--that Wickens, the carpenter, had in his possession, and kept
+among his stores, keys that fitted the padlocks on the bullion-room
+door. That, it seemed to him, was a very suspicious circumstance. He
+didn't know anything more definite, but offered his ideas for what they
+were worth, and if his suspicions proved unfounded nobody would be more
+pleased than himself. But--but--and the steward shook his head
+doubtfully.
+
+"Thank you, Mr. Norton," said Merrick, with a twinkle in his eye; "we
+won't forget what you say. Of course, if the stuff is found in
+consequence of any of your information, you won't lose by it."
+
+The steward said he hoped not, and he wouldn't fail to keep his eye on
+the carpenter. He had noticed Wickens was in the tug, and he trusted
+that if they were going to question him they would do it cautiously, so
+as not to put him on his guard. Merrick promised they would.
+
+"By the bye, Mr. Norton," asked Hewitt, "supposing your suspicions to be
+justified, what do you suppose the carpenter would do with the bullion?"
+
+"Well, sir," replied Norton, "I don't think he'd keep it on the ship.
+He'd probably dump it somewhere."
+
+The steward left, and Merrick lay back in his chair and guffawed aloud.
+"This grows farcical," he said, "simply farcical. What a happy family
+they must have been aboard the _Nicobar_! And now here's the captain
+watching the second officer, and the second officer watching the captain
+and the steward, and the steward watching the carpenter! It's immense.
+And now we're going to see the carpenter. Wonder whom _he_ suspects?"
+
+Hewitt said nothing, but his eyes twinkled with intense merriment, and
+presently the carpenter was brought into the cabin.
+
+"Good-day to you, gentlemen," said the carpenter in a soft and
+deferential voice, looking from one to the other. "Might I 'ave the
+honour of addressin' the salvage gentlemen?"
+
+"That's right," Merrick answered, motioning him to a seat. "This is the
+salvage shop, Mr. Wickens. What can we do for you?"
+
+The carpenter coughed gently behind his hand. "I took the liberty of
+comin', gentlemen, consekins o' 'earin' as there was some bullion
+missin'. P'raps I'm wrong."
+
+"Not at all. We haven't found as much as we expected, and I suppose by
+this time nearly everybody knows it. There are two cases wanting. You
+can't tell us where they are, I suppose?"
+
+"Well, sir, as to that--no. I fear I can't exactly go as far as that.
+But if I am able to give vallable information as may lead to recovery of
+same, I presoom I may without offence look for some reasonable small
+recognition of my services?"
+
+"Oh, yes," answered Merrick, "that'll be all right, I promise you. The
+company will do the handsome thing, of course, and no doubt so will the
+underwriters."
+
+"Presoomin' I may take that as a promise--among gentlemen"--this with an
+emphasis--"I'm willing to tell something."
+
+"It's a promise, at any rate as far as the company's concerned,"
+returned Merrick. "I'll see it's made worth your while--of course,
+providing it leads to anything."
+
+"Purvidin' that, sir, o' course. Well, gentlemen, my story ain't a long
+one. All I've to say was what I 'eard on board, just before she went
+down. The passengers was off, and the crew was gettin' into the other
+boats when the skipper turns to the steward an' speaks to him
+quiet-like, not observin', gentlemen, as I was agin 'is elbow, so for to
+say. ''Ere, Norton,' 'e sez, or words to that effeck, 'why shouldn't we
+try gettin' them things ashore with us--you know, the cases--eh? I've a
+notion we're pretty close inshore,' 'e sez, 'and there's nothink of a
+sea now. You take one, anyway, and I'll try the other,' 'e says, 'but
+don't make a flourish.' Then he sez, louder, 'cos o' the steward goin'
+off, 'They're the likeliest stuff, and at worst we can but drop 'em. But
+look sharp,' 'e says. So then I gets into the nearest boat, and that's
+all I 'eard."
+
+"That was all?" asked Hewitt, watching the man's face sharply.
+
+"All?" the carpenter answered with some surprise. "Yes, that was all;
+but I think it's pretty well enough, don't you? It's plain enough what
+was meant--him and the steward was to take two cases, one apiece, on the
+quiet, and they was the likeliest stuff aboard, as he said himself. And
+now there's two cases o' bullion missin'. Ain't that enough?"
+
+The carpenter was not satisfied till an exact note had been made of the
+captain's words. Then after Merrick's promise on behalf of the company
+had been renewed, Wickens took himself off.
+
+"Well," said Merrick, grinning across the table at Hewitt, "this is a
+queer go, isn't it? What that man says makes the skipper's case look
+pretty fishy, doesn't it? What he says, and what Brasyer says, taken
+together, makes a pretty strong case--I should say makes the thing a
+certainty. But what a business! It's likely to be a bit serious for some
+one, but it's a rare joke in a way. Wonder if Brasyer will find out
+anything more? Pity the skipper and steward didn't agree as to whom they
+should pretend to suspect. _That's_ a mistake on their part."
+
+"Not at all," Hewitt replied. "_If_ they are conspiring, and know what
+they're about, they will avoid seeming to be both in a tale. The bullion
+is in bars, I understand?"
+
+"Yes, five bars in each case; weight, I believe, sixteen pounds to a
+bar."
+
+"Let me see," Hewitt went on, as he looked at his watch; "it is now
+nearly two o'clock. I must think over these things if I am to do
+anything in the case. In the meantime, if it could be managed, I should
+like enormously to have a turn under water in a diving-dress. I have
+always had a curiosity to see under the sea. Could it be managed now?"
+
+"Well," Merrick responded, "there's not much fun in it, I can assure
+you; and it's none the pleasanter in this weather. You'd better have a
+try later in the year if you really want to--unless you think you can
+learn anything about this business by smelling about on the _Nicobar_
+down below?"
+
+Hewitt raised his eyebrows and pursed his lips.
+
+"I _might_ spot something," he said; "one never knows. And if I do
+anything in a case I always make it a rule to see and hear everything
+that can possibly be seen or heard, important or not. Clues lie where
+least expected. But beyond that, probably I may never have another
+chance of a little experience in a diving-dress. So if it can be managed
+I'd be glad."
+
+"Very well, you shall go, if you say so. And since it's your first
+venture, I'll come down with you myself. The men are all ashore, I
+think, or most of them. Come along."
+
+Hewitt was put in woollens and then in india-rubbers. A leaden-soled
+boot of twenty pounds' weight was strapped on each foot, and weights
+were hung on his back and chest.
+
+"That's the dress that Gullen usually has," Merrick remarked. "He's a
+very smart fellow; we usually send him first to make measurements and
+so on. An excellent man, but a bit too fond of the diver's lotion."
+
+"What's that?" asked Hewitt.
+
+"Oh, you shall try some if you like, afterwards. It's a bit too heavy
+for me; rum and gin mixed, I think."
+
+A red nightcap was placed on Martin Hewitt's head, and after that a
+copper helmet, secured by a short turn in the segmental screw joint at
+the neck. In the end he felt a vast difficulty in moving at all. Merrick
+had been meantime invested with a similar rig-out, and then each was
+provided with a communication cord and an incandescent electric lamp.
+Finally, the front window was screwed on each helmet, and all was ready.
+
+Merrick went first over the ladder at the side, and Hewitt with much
+difficulty followed. As the water closed over his head, his sensations
+altered considerably. There was less weight to carry; his arms in
+particular felt light, though slow in motion. Down, down they went
+slowly, and all round about it was fairly light, but once on the sunken
+vessel and among the lower decks, the electric lamps were necessary
+enough. Once or twice Merrick spoke, laying his helmet against Hewitt's
+for the purpose, and instructing him to keep his air-pipe, life-line,
+and lamp connection from fouling something at every step. Here and
+there shadowy swimming shapes came out of the gloom, attracted by their
+lamps, to dart into obscurity again with a twist of the tail. The fishes
+were exploring the _Nicobar_. The hatchway of the lower deck was open,
+and down this they passed to the orlop deck. A little way along this
+they came to a door standing open, with a broken lock hanging to it. It
+was the door of the bullion-room, which had been forced by the divers in
+the morning.
+
+Merrick indicated by signs how the cases had been found piled on the
+floor. One of the sides of the room of thin steel was torn and thrust in
+the length of its whole upper half, and when they backed out of the room
+and passed the open door they stood in the great breach made by the bow
+of the strange coasting vessel. Steel, iron, wood, and everything stood
+in rents and splinters, and through the great gap they looked out into
+the immeasurable ocean. Hewitt put up his hand and felt the edge of the
+bullion-room partition where it had been torn. It was just such a tear
+as might have been made in cardboard.
+
+They regained the upper deck, and Hewitt, placing his helmet against his
+companion's, told him that he meant to have a short walk on the ocean
+bed. He took to the ladder again, where it lay over the side, and
+Merrick followed him.
+
+The bottom was of that tough, slimy sort of clay-rock that is found in
+many places about our coasts, and was dotted here and there with lumps
+of harder rock and clumps of curious weed. The two divers turned at the
+bottom of the ladder, walked a few steps, and looked up at the great
+hole in the _Nicobar's_ side. Seen from here it was a fearful chasm,
+laying open hold, orlop, and lower deck.
+
+Hewitt turned away, and began walking about. Once or twice he stood and
+looked thoughtfully at the ground he stood on, which was fairly flat. He
+turned over with his foot a whitish, clean-looking stone about as large
+as a loaf. Then he wandered on slowly, once or twice stopping to examine
+the rock beneath him, and presently stooped to look at another stone
+nearly as large as the other, weedy on one side only, standing on the
+edge of a cavity in the claystone. He pushed the stone into the hole,
+which it filled, and then he stood up.
+
+Merrick put his helmet against Hewitt's, and shouted--
+
+"Satisfied now? Seen enough of the bottom?"
+
+"In a moment!" Hewitt shouted back; and he straightway began striding
+out in the direction of the ship. Arrived at the bows, he turned back to
+the point he started from, striding off again from there to the white
+stone he had kicked over, and from there to the vessel's side again.
+Merrick watched him in intense amazement, and hurried, as well as he
+might, after the light of Hewitt's lamp. Arrived for the second time at
+the bows of the ship, Hewitt turned and made his way along the side to
+the ladder, and forthwith ascended, followed by Merrick. There was no
+halt at the deck this time, and the two made there way up and up into
+the lighter water above, and so to the world of air.
+
+On the tug, as the men were unscrewing them from there waterproof
+prisons, Merrick asked Hewitt--
+
+"Will you try the 'lotion' now?"
+
+"No," Hewitt replied, "I won't go quite so far as that. But I _will_
+have a little whisky, if you've any in the cabin. And give me a pencil
+and a piece of paper."
+
+These things were brought, and on the paper Martin Hewitt immediately
+wrote a few figures and kept it in his hand.
+
+"I might easily forget those figures," he observed.
+
+Merrick wondered, but said nothing.
+
+Once more comfortably in the cabin, and clad in his usual garments,
+Hewitt asked if Merrick could produce a chart of the parts thereabout.
+
+"Here you are," was the reply, "coast and all. Big enough, isn't it?
+I've already marked the position of the wreck on it in pencil. She lies
+pointing north by east as nearly exact as anything."
+
+"As you've begun it," said Hewitt, "I shall take the liberty of making a
+few more pencil marks on this." And with that he spread out the crumpled
+note of figures, and began much ciphering and measuring. Presently he
+marked certain points on a spare piece of paper, and drew through them
+two lines forming an angle. This angle he transferred to the chart, and,
+placing a ruler over one leg of the angle, lengthened it out till it met
+the coast-line.
+
+"There we are," he said musingly. "And the nearest village to that is
+Lostella--indeed, the only coast village in that neighbourhood." He
+rose. "Bring me the sharpest-eyed person on board," he said; "that is,
+if he were here all day yesterday."
+
+"But what's up? What's all this mathematical business over? Going to
+find that bullion by rule of three?"
+
+Hewitt laughed. "Yes, perhaps," he said, "but where's your sharp
+look-out? I want somebody who can tell me everything that was visible
+from the deck of this tug all day yesterday."
+
+"Well, really I believe the very sharpest chap is the boy. He's most
+annoyingly observant sometimes. I'll send for him."
+
+He came--a bright, snub-nosed, impudent-looking young ruffian.
+
+"See here, my boy," said Merrick, "polish up your wits and tell this
+gentleman what he asks."
+
+"Yesterday," said Hewitt, "no doubt you saw various pieces of wreckage
+floating about?"
+
+"Yessir."
+
+"What were they?"
+
+"Hatch-gratings mostly--nothin' much else. There's some knockin' about
+now."
+
+"I saw them. Now, remember. Did you see a hatch-grating floating
+yesterday that was different from the others? A painted one, for
+instance--those out there now are not painted, you know."
+
+"Yessir, I see a little white 'un painted, bobbin' about away beyond the
+foremast of the _Nicobar_."
+
+"You're sure of that?"
+
+"Certain sure, sir--it was the only painted thing floatin'. And to-day
+it's washed away somewheres."
+
+"So I noticed. You're a smart lad. Here's a shilling for you--keep your
+eyes open and perhaps you'll find a good many more shillings before
+you're an old man. That's all."
+
+The boy disappeared, and Hewitt turned to Merrick and said, "I think you
+may as well send that wire you spoke of. If I get the commission I think
+I may recover that bullion. It may take some little time, or, on the
+other hand, it may not. If you'll write the telegram at once, I'll go in
+the same boat as the messenger. I'm going to take a walk down to
+Lostella now--it's only two or three miles along the coast, but it will
+soon be getting dark."
+
+"But what sort of a clue have you got? I didn't----"
+
+"Never mind," replied Hewitt, with a chuckle. "Officially, you know,
+I've no right to a clue just yet--I'm not commissioned. When I am I'll
+tell you everything."
+
+Hewitt was scarcely ashore when he was seized by the excited Brasyer.
+"Here you are," he said. "I was coming aboard the tug again. I've got
+more news. You remember I said I was going out with that railway clerk
+this afternoon, and meant pumping him? Well, I've done it and rushed
+away--don't know what he'll think's up. As we were going along we saw
+Norton, the steward, on the other side of the way, and the clerk
+recognised him as one of the men who brought the cases to be sent off;
+the other was the skipper, I've no doubt, from his description. I played
+him artfully, you know, and then he let out that both the cases were
+addressed to Mackrie at his address in London! He looked up the entry,
+he said, after I left when I first questioned him, feeling curious.
+That's about enough, I think, eh? I'm off to London now--I believe
+Mackrie's going to-night. I'll have him! Keep it dark!" And the zealous
+second officer dashed off without waiting for a reply. Hewitt looked
+after him with an amused smile, and turned off towards Lostella.
+
+
+III.
+
+It was about eleven the next morning when Merrick received the following
+note, brought by a boatman:--
+
+ "DEAR MERRICK,--Am I commissioned? If not, don't trouble, but if
+ I am, be just outside Lostella, at the turning before you come to
+ the Smack Inn, at two o'clock. Bring with you a light cart, a
+ policeman--or two perhaps will be better--and a man with a spade.
+ There will probably be a little cabbage-digging. Are you fond of
+ the sport?--Yours, MARTIN HEWITT.
+
+ "P.S.--_Keep all your men aboard_; bring the spade artist from the
+ town."
+
+Merrick was off in a boat at once. His principals had replied to his
+telegram after Hewitt's departure the day before, giving him a free hand
+to do whatever seemed best. With some little difficulty he got the
+policemen, and with none at all he got a light cart and a jobbing man
+with a spade. Together they drove off to the meeting-place.
+
+It was before the time, but Martin Hewitt was there, waiting. "You're
+quick," he said, "but the sooner the better. I gave you the earliest
+appointment I thought you could keep, considering what you had to do."
+
+"Have you got the stuff, then?" Merrick asked anxiously.
+
+"No, not exactly yet. But I've got this," and Hewitt held up the point
+of his walking-stick. Protruding half an inch or so from it was the
+sharp end of a small gimlet, and in the groove thereof was a little
+white wood, such as commonly remains after a gimlet has been used.
+
+"Why, what's that?"
+
+"Never mind. Let us move along--I'll walk. I think we're about at the
+end of the job--it's been a fairly lucky one, and quite simple. But I'll
+explain after."
+
+Just beyond the Smack Inn, Hewitt halted the cart, and all got down.
+They looped the horse's reins round a hedge-stake and proceeded the
+small remaining distance on foot, with the policemen behind, to avoid a
+premature scare. They turned up a lane behind a few small and rather
+dirty cottages facing the sea, each with its patch of kitchen garden
+behind. Hewitt led the way to the second garden, pushed open the small
+wicket gate and walked boldly in, followed by the others.
+
+Cabbages covered most of the patch, and seemed pretty healthy in their
+situation, with the exception of half a dozen--singularly enough, all
+together in a group. These were drooping, yellow, and wilted, and
+towards these Hewitt straightway walked. "Dig up those wilted cabbages,"
+he said to the jobbing man. "They're really useless now. You'll probably
+find something else six inches down or so."
+
+The man struck his spade into the soft earth, wherein it stopped
+suddenly with a thud. But at this moment a gaunt, slatternly woman, with
+a black eye, a handkerchief over her head, and her skirt pinned up in
+front, observing the invasion from the back door of the cottage, rushed
+out like a maniac and attacked the party valiantly with a broom. She
+upset the jobbing man over his spade, knocked off one policeman's
+helmet, lunged into the other's face with her broom, and was making her
+second attempt to hit Hewitt (who had dodged), when Merrick caught her
+firmly by the elbows from behind, pressed them together, and held her.
+She screamed, and people came from other cottages and looked on. "Peter!
+Peter!" the woman screamed, "come 'ee, come'ee here! Davey! They're
+come!"
+
+A grimy child came to the cottage door, and seeing the woman thus held,
+and strangers in the garden, set up a piteous howl. Meantime the digger
+had uncovered two wooden boxes, each eighteen inches long or so, bound
+with hoop-iron and sealed. One had been torn partly open at the top, and
+the broken wood roughly replaced. When this was lifted, bars of yellow
+metal were visible within.
+
+The woman still screamed vehemently, and struggled. The grimy child
+retreated, and then there appeared at the door, staggering hazily and
+rubbing his eyes, a shaggy, unkempt man, in shirt and trousers. He
+looked stupidly at the scene before him, and his jaw dropped.
+
+"Take that man," cried Hewitt. "He's one!" And the policeman promptly
+took him, so that he had handcuffs on his wrists before he had collected
+his faculties sufficiently to begin swearing.
+
+Hewitt and the other policeman entered the cottage. In the lower two
+rooms there was nobody. They climbed the few narrow stairs, and in the
+front room above they found another man, younger, and fast asleep. "He's
+the other," said Hewitt. "Take _him_." And this one was handcuffed
+before he woke.
+
+Then the recovered gold was put into the cart, and with the help of the
+village constable, who brought his own handcuffs for the benefit and
+adornment of the lady with the broom, such a procession marched out of
+Lostella as had never been dreamed of by the oldest inhabitant in his
+worst nightmare, nor recorded in the whole history of Cornwall.
+
+"Now," said Hewitt, turning to Merrick, "we must have that fellow of
+yours--what's his name--Gullen, isn't it? The one that went down to
+measure the hole in the ship. You've kept him aboard, of course?"
+
+"What, Gullen?" exclaimed Merrick. "Gullen? Well, as a matter of fact he
+went ashore last night and hasn't come back. But you don't mean to
+say----"
+
+"I _do_," replied Hewitt. "And now you've lost him."
+
+
+IV.
+
+"But tell me all about it now we've a little time to ourselves," asked
+Merrick an hour or two later, as they sat and smoked in the after-cabin
+of the salvage tug. "We've got the stuff, thanks to you, but I don't in
+the least see how _they_ got it, nor how you found it out."
+
+"Well, there didn't seem to be a great deal either way in the tales told
+by the men from the _Nicobar_. They cancelled one another out, so to
+speak, though it seemed likely that there might be something in them in
+one or two respects. Brasyer, I could see, tried to prove too much. If
+the captain and the steward were conspiring to rob the bullion-room, why
+should the steward trouble to cut through the boiler-plate walls when
+the captain kept the keys in his cabin? And if the captain had been
+stealing the bullion, why should he stop at two cases when he had all
+the voyage to operate in and forty cases to help himself to? Of course
+the evidence of the carpenter gave some colour to the theory, but I
+think I can imagine a very reasonable explanation of that.
+
+"You told me, of course, that you were down with the men yourself when
+they opened the bullion-room door and got out the cases, so that there
+could be no suspicion of _them_. But at the same time you told me that
+the breach in the _Nicobar's_ side had laid open the bullion-room
+partition, and that you might more easily have got the cases out that
+way. You told me, of course, that the cases couldn't have _fallen_ out
+that way because of the list of the vessel, the position of the rent in
+the boiler-plate, and so on. But I reflected that the day before a diver
+had been down alone--in fact, that his business had been with the very
+hole that extended partly to the bullion-room: he had to measure it.
+That diver might easily have got at the cases through the breach. But
+then, as you told me, a diver can't bring things up from below
+unobserved. This diver would know this, and might therefore hide the
+booty below. So that I made up my mind to have a look under water before
+I jumped to any conclusion.
+
+"I didn't think it likely that he had hidden the cases, mind you.
+Because he would have had to dive again to get them, and would have
+been just as awkwardly placed in fetching them to the light of day then
+as ever. Besides, he couldn't come diving here again in the company's
+dress without some explanation. So what more likely than that he would
+make some ingenious arrangement with an accomplice, whereby he might
+make the gold in some way accessible to him?
+
+"We went under water. I kept my eyes open, and observed, among other
+things, that the vessel was one of those well-kept 'swell' ones on which
+all the hatch gratings and so on are in plain oak or teak, kept
+holystoned. This (with the other things) I put by in my mind in case it
+should be useful. When we went over the side and looked at the great
+gap, I saw that it would have been quite easy to get at the broken
+bullion-room partition from outside."
+
+"Yes," remarked Merrick, "it would be no trouble at all. The ladder goes
+down just by the side of the breach, and any one descending by that
+might just step off at one side on to the jagged plating at the level of
+the after orlop, and reach over into the bullion safe."
+
+"Just so. Well, next I turned my attention to the sea-bed, which I was
+extremely pleased to see was of soft, slimy claystone. I walked about a
+little, getting farther and farther away from the vessel as I went,
+till I came across that clean stone which I turned over with my foot. Do
+you remember?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, that was noticeable. It was the only clean, bare stone to be
+seen. Every other was covered with a green growth, and to most clumps of
+weed clung. The obvious explanation of this was that the stone was a
+new-comer--lately brought from dry land--from the shingle on the
+sea-shore, probably, since it was washed so clean. Such a stone could
+not have come a mile out to sea by itself. Somebody had brought it in a
+boat and thrown it over, and whoever did it didn't take all that trouble
+for nothing. Then its shape told a tale; it was something of the form,
+rather exaggerated, of a loaf--the sort that is called a 'cottage'--the
+most convenient possible shape for attaching to a line and lowering. But
+the line had gone, so somebody must have been down there to detach it.
+Also it wasn't unreasonable to suppose that there might have been a hook
+on the end of that line. This, then, was a theory. Your man had gone
+down alone to take his measurement, had stepped into the broken side, as
+you have explained he could, reached into the bullion-room, and lifted
+the two cases. Probably he unfastened the cord, and brought them out one
+at a time for convenience in carrying. Then he carried the cases, one
+at a time, as I have said, over to that white stone which lay there sunk
+with the hook and line attached by previous arrangement with some
+confederate. He detached the rope from the stone--it was probably fixed
+by an attached piece of cord, tightened round the stone with what you
+call a timber-hitch, easily loosened--replaced the cord round the two
+cases, passed the hook under the cord, and left it to be pulled up from
+above. But then it could not have been pulled up there in broad
+daylight, under your very noses. The confederates would wait till night.
+That meant that the other end of the rope was attached to some floating
+object, so that it might be readily recovered. The whole arrangement was
+set one night to be carried away the next."
+
+"But why didn't Gullen take more than two cases?"
+
+"He couldn't afford to waste the time, in the first place. Each case
+removed meant another journey to and from the vessel, and you were
+waiting above for his measurements. Then he was probably doubtful as to
+weight. Too much at once wouldn't easily be drawn up, and might upset a
+small boat.
+
+"Well, so much for the white stone. But there was more; close by the
+stone I noticed (although I think you didn't) a mark in the claystone.
+It was a triangular depression or pit, sharp at the bottom--just the
+hole that would be made by the sharp impact of the square corner of a
+heavy box, if shod with iron, as the bullion cases are. This was one
+important thing. It seemed to indicate that the boxes had not been
+lifted directly up from the sea-bed, but had been dragged sideways--at
+all events at first--so that a sharp corner had turned over and dug into
+the claystone! I walked a little farther and found more
+indications--slight scratches, small stones displaced, and so on, that
+convinced me of this, and also pointed out the direction in which the
+cases had been dragged. I followed the direction, and presently arrived
+at another stone, rather smaller than the clean one. The cases had
+evidently caught against this, and it had been displaced by their
+momentum, and perhaps by a possible wrench from above. The green growth
+covered the part which had been exposed to the water, and the rest of
+the stone fitted the hole beside it, from which it had been pulled.
+Clearly these things were done recently, or the sea would have wiped out
+all the traces in the soft claystone. The rest of what I did under water
+of course you understood."
+
+"I suppose so: you took the bearings of the two stones in relation to
+the ship by pacing the distances."
+
+"That is so. I kept the figures in my head till I could make a note of
+them, as you saw, on paper. The rest was mere calculation. What I judged
+had happened was this. Gullen had arranged with somebody, identity
+unknown, but certainly somebody with a boat at his disposal, to lay the
+line, and take it up the following night. Now anything larger than a
+rowing boat could not have got up quite so close to you in the night
+(although your tug was at the other end of the wreck) without a risk of
+being seen. _But_ no rowing boat could have _dragged_ those cases
+forcibly along the bottom; they would act as an anchor to it. Therefore
+this was what had happened. The thieves had come in a large boat--a
+fishing smack, lugger, or something of that sort--with a small boat in
+tow. The sailing boat had lain to at a convenient distance, _in the
+direction in which it was afterwards to go_, so as to save time if
+observed, and a man had put off quietly in the small boat to pick up the
+float, whatever it was. There must have been a lot of slack line on this
+for the purpose, as also for the purpose of allowing the float to drift
+about fairly freely, and not attract attention by remaining in one
+place. The man pulled off to the sailing boat, and took the float and
+line aboard. Then the sailing boat swung off in the direction of home,
+and the line was hauled in with the plunder at the end of it."
+
+"One would think you had seen it all--or done it," Merrick remarked,
+with a laugh.
+
+"Nothing else could have happened, you see. That chain of events is the
+only one that will explain the circumstances. A rapid grasp of the whole
+circumstances and a perfect appreciation of each is more than half the
+battle in such work as this. Well, you know I got the exact bearings of
+the wreck on the chart, worked out from that the lay of the two stones
+with the scratch marks between, and then it was obvious that a straight
+line drawn through these and carried ahead would indicate,
+approximately, at any rate, the direction the thieves' vessel had taken.
+The line fell on the coast close by the village of Lostella--indeed that
+was the only village for some few miles either way. The indication was
+not certain, but it was likely, and the only one available, therefore it
+must be followed up."
+
+"And what about the painted hatch? How did you guess that?"
+
+"Well, I saw there were hatch-gratings belonging to the _Nicobar_
+floating about, and it seemed probable that the thieves would use for a
+float something similar to the other wreckage in the vicinity, so as not
+to attract attention. Nothing would be more likely than a hatch-grating.
+But then, in small vessels, such as fishing-luggers and so on, fittings
+are almost always painted--they can't afford to be such holystoning
+swells as those on the _Nicobar_. So I judged the grating might be
+painted, and this would possibly have been noticed by some sharp person.
+I made the shot, and hit. The boy remembered the white grating, which
+had gone--'washed away,' as he thought. That was useful to me, as you
+shall see.
+
+"I made off toward Lostella. The tide was low and it was getting dusk
+when I arrived. A number of boats and smacks were lying anchored on the
+beach, but there were few people to be seen. I began looking out for
+smacks with white-painted fittings in them. There are not so many of
+these among fishing vessels--brown or red is more likely, or sheer
+colourless dirt over paint unrecognisable. There were only two that I
+saw last night. The first _might_ have been the one I wanted, but there
+was nothing to show it. The second _was_ the one. She was half-decked
+and had a small white-painted hatch. I shifted the hatch and found a
+long line, attached to the grating at one end and carrying a hook at the
+other! They had neglected to unfasten their apparatus--perhaps had an
+idea that there might be a chance of using it again in a few days. I
+went to the transom and read the inscription, '_Rebecca_. Peter and
+David Garthew, Lostella.' Then my business was to find the Garthews.
+
+"I wandered about the village for some little time, and presently got
+hold of a boy. I made a simple excuse for asking about the
+Garthews--wanted to go for a sail to-morrow. The boy, with many grins,
+confided to me that both of the Garthews were 'on the booze.' I should
+find them at the Smack Inn, where they had been all day, drunk as
+fiddlers. This seemed a likely sort of thing after the haul they had
+made. I went to the Smack Inn, determined to claim old friendship with
+the Garthews, although I didn't know Peter from David. There they
+were--one sleepy drunk, and the other loving and crying drunk. I got as
+friendly as possible with them under the circumstances, and at closing
+time stood another gallon of beer and carried it home for them, while
+they carried each other. I took care to have a good look round in the
+cottage. I even helped Peter's 'old woman'--the lady with the broom--to
+carry them up to bed. But nowhere could I see anything that looked like
+a bullion-case or a hiding-place for one. So I came away, determined to
+renew my acquaintance in the morning, and to carry it on as long as
+might be necessary; also to look at the garden in the daylight for signs
+of burying. With that view I fixed that little gimlet in my
+walking-stick, as you saw.
+
+"This morning I was at Lostella before ten, and took a look at the
+Garthews' cabbages. It seemed odd that half a dozen, all in a clump
+together, looked withered and limp, as though they had been dug up
+hastily, the roots broken, perhaps, and then replanted. And altogether
+these particular cabbages had a dissipated, leaning-different-ways look,
+as though _they_ had been on the loose with the Garthews. So, seeing a
+grubby child near the back door of the cottage, I went towards him,
+walking rather unsteadily, so as, if I were observed, to favour the
+delusion that I was not yet quite got over last night's diversions.
+'Hullo, my b-boy,' I said, 'hullo, li'l b-boy, look here,' and I plunged
+my hand into my trousers' pocket and brought it out full of small
+change. Then, making a great business of selecting him a penny, I
+managed to spill it all over the dissipated cabbages. It was easy then,
+in stooping to pick up the change, to lean heavily on my stick and drive
+it through the loose earth. As I had expected, there was a box below. So
+I gouged away with my walking-stick while I collected my coppers, and
+finally swaggered off, after a few civil words with the 'old woman,'
+carrying with me evident proof that it was white wood recently buried
+there. The rest you saw for yourself. I think you and I may congratulate
+each other on having dodged that broom. It hit all the others."
+
+"What I'm wild about," said Merrick, "is having let that scoundrel
+Gullen get off. He's an artful chap, without a doubt. He saw us go over
+the side, you know, and after you had gone he came into the cabin for
+some instructions. Your pencil notes and the chart were on the table,
+and no doubt he put two and two together (which was more than I could,
+not knowing what had happened), and concluded to make himself safe for a
+bit. He had no leave that night--he just pulled away on the quiet. Why
+didn't you give me the tip to keep him?"
+
+"That wouldn't have done. In the first place, there was no legal
+evidence to warrant his arrest, and ordering him to keep aboard would
+have aroused his suspicions. I didn't know at the time how many days, or
+weeks, it would take me to find the bullion, if I ever found it, and in
+that time Gullen might have communicated in some way with his
+accomplices, and so spoilt the whole thing. Yes, certainly he seems to
+have been fairly smart in his way. He knew he would probably be sent
+down first, as usual, alone to make measurements, and conceived his plan
+and made his arrangements forthwith."
+
+"But now what I want to know is what about all those _Nicobar_ people
+watching and suspecting one another? More especially what about the
+cases the captain and the steward are said to have fetched ashore?"
+
+Hewitt laughed. "Well," he said, "as to that, the presence of the
+bullion seems to have bred all sorts of mutual suspicion on board the
+ship. Brasyer was over-fussy, and his continual chatter started it
+probably, so that it spread like an infection. As to the captain and the
+steward, of course I don't know anything but that their rescued cases
+were not bullion cases. Probably they were doing a little private
+trading--it's generally the case when captain and steward seem unduly
+friendly for their relative positions--and perhaps the cases contained
+something specially valuable: vases or bronzes from Japan, for instance;
+possibly the most valuable things of the size they had aboard. Then, if
+they had insured their things, Captain Mackrie (who has the reputation
+of a sharp and not very scrupulous man) might possibly think it rather a
+stroke of business to get the goods and the insurance money too, which
+would lead him to keep his parcels as quiet as possible. But that's as
+it may be."
+
+The case was much as Hewitt had surmised. The zealous Brasyer, posting
+to London in hot haste after Mackrie, spent some days in watching him.
+At last the captain and the steward with their two boxes took a cab and
+went to Bond Street, with Brasyer in another cab behind them. The two
+entered a shop, the window of which was set out with rare curiosities
+and much old silver and gold. Brasyer could restrain himself no longer.
+He grabbed a passing policeman, and rushed with him into the shop.
+There they found the captain and the steward with two small packing
+cases opened before them, trying to sell--a couple of very
+ancient-looking Japanese bronze figures, of that curious old workmanship
+and varied colour of metal that in genuine examples mean nowadays high
+money value.
+
+Brasyer vanished: there was too much chaff for him to live through in
+the British mercantile marine after this adventure. The fact was, the
+steward had come across the bargain, but had not sufficient spare cash
+to buy, so he called in the aid of the captain, and they speculated in
+the bronzes as partners. There was much anxious inspection of the prizes
+on the way home, and much discussion as to the proper price to ask.
+Finally, it was said, they got three hundred pounds for the pair.
+
+Now and again Hewitt meets Merrick still. Sometimes Merrick says, "Now,
+I wonder after all whether or not some of those _Nicobar_ men who were
+continually dodging suspiciously about that bullion-room _did_ mean
+having a dash at the gold if there were a chance?" And Hewitt replies,
+"I wonder."
+
+
+
+
+THE HOLFORD WILL CASE.
+
+
+At one time, in common, perhaps, with most people, I took a sort of
+languid, amateur interest in questions of psychology, and was impelled
+there-by to plunge into the pages of the many curious and rather
+abstruse books which attempt to deal with phenomena of mind, soul and
+sense. Three things of the real nature of which, I am convinced, no man
+will ever learn more than we know at present--which is nothing.
+
+From these I strayed into the many volumes of _Transactions_ of the
+Psychical Research Society, with an occasional by-excursion into mental
+telepathy and theosophy; the last, a thing whereof my Philistine
+intelligence obstinately refused to make head or tail.
+
+It was while these things were occupying part of my attention that I
+chanced to ask Hewitt whether, in the course of his divers odd and
+out-of-the-way experiences, he had met with any such weird adventures as
+were detailed in such profusion in the books of "authenticated" spooks,
+doppelgangers, poltergeists, clairvoyance, and so forth.
+
+"Well," Hewitt answered, with reflection, "I haven't been such a
+wallower in the uncanny as some of the worthy people who talk at large
+in those books of yours, and, as a matter of fact, my little adventures,
+curious as some of them may seem, have been on the whole of the most
+solid and matter-of-fact description. One or two things have happened
+that perhaps your 'psychical' people might be interested in, but they've
+mostly been found to be capable of a disappointingly simple explanation.
+One case of some genuine psychological interest, however, I have had;
+although there's nothing even in that which isn't a matter of well-known
+scientific possibility." And he proceeded to tell me the story that I
+have set down here, as well as I can, from recollection.
+
+I think I have already said, in another place, that Hewitt's
+professional start as a private investigator dated from his connection
+with the famous will case of Bartley _v._ Bartley and others, in which
+his then principals, Messrs. Crellan, Hunt & Crellan, chiefly through
+his exertions established their extremely high reputation as solicitors.
+It was ten years or so after this case that Mr. Crellan senior--the head
+of the firm--retired into private life, and by an odd chance Hewitt's
+first meeting with him after that event was occasioned by another will
+difficulty.
+
+These were the terms of the telegram that brought Hewitt again into
+personal relations with his old principal:--
+
+"_Can you run down at once on a matter of private business? I will be at
+Guildford to meet eleven thirty-five from Waterloo. If later or
+prevented please wire. Crellan._"
+
+The day and the state of Hewitt's engagements suited, and there was full
+half an hour to catch the train. Taking, therefore, the small
+travelling-bag that always stood ready packed in case of any sudden
+excursion that presented the possibility of a night from home, he got
+early to Waterloo, and by half-past twelve was alighting at Guildford
+Station. Mr. Crellan, a hale, white-haired old gentleman, wearing
+gold-rimmed spectacles, was waiting with a covered carriage.
+
+"How d'ye do, Mr. Hewitt, how d'ye do?" the old gentleman exclaimed as
+soon as they met, grasping Hewitt's hand, and hurrying him toward the
+carriage. "I'm glad you've come, very glad. It isn't raining, and you
+might have preferred something more open, but I brought the brougham
+because I want to talk privately. I've been vegetating to such an extent
+for the last few years down here that any little occurrence out of the
+ordinary excites me, and I'm sure I couldn't have kept quiet till we had
+got indoors. It's been bad enough, keeping the thing to myself,
+already."
+
+The door shut, and the brougham started. Mr. Crellan laid his hand on
+Hewitt's knee, "I hope," he said, "I haven't dragged you away from any
+important business?"
+
+"No," Hewitt replied, "you have chosen a most excellent time. Indeed, I
+did think of making a small holiday to-day, but your telegram----"
+
+"Yes, yes. Do you know, I was almost ashamed of having sent it after it
+had gone. Because, after all, the matter is, probably, really a very
+simple sort of affair that you can't possibly help me in. A few years
+ago I should have thought nothing of it, nothing at all. But as I have
+told you, I've got into such a dull, vegetable state of mind since I
+retired and have nothing to do that a little thing upsets me, and I
+haven't mental energy enough to make up my mind to go to dinner
+sometimes. But you're an old friend, and I'm sure you'll forgive my
+dragging you all down here on a matter that will, perhaps, seem
+ridiculously simple to you, a man in the thick of active business. If I
+hadn't known you so well I wouldn't have had the impudence to bother
+you. But never mind all that. I'll tell you.
+
+"Do you ever remember my speaking of an intimate friend, a Mr. Holford?
+No. Well, it's a long time ago, and perhaps I never happened to mention
+him. He was a most excellent man--old fellow, like me, you know; two or
+three years older, as a matter of fact. We were chums many years ago; in
+fact, we lodged in the same house when I was an articled clerk and he
+was a student at Guy's. He retired from the medical profession early,
+having come into a fortune, and came down here to live at the house
+we're going to; as a matter of fact, Wedbury Hall.
+
+"When I retired I came down and took up my quarters not far off, and we
+were a very excellent pair of old chums till last Monday--the day before
+yesterday--when my poor old friend died. He was pretty well in
+years--seventy-three--and a man can't live for ever. But I assure you it
+has upset me terribly, made a greater fool of me than ever, in fact,
+just when I ought to have my wits about me.
+
+"The reason I particularly want my wits just now, and the reason I have
+requisitioned yours, is this: that I can't find poor old Holford's will.
+I drew it up for him years ago, and by it I was appointed his sole
+executor. I am perfectly convinced that he cannot have destroyed it,
+because he told me everything concerning his affairs. I have always been
+his only adviser, in fact, and I'm sure he would have consulted me as
+to any change in his testamentary intentions before he made it.
+Moreover, there are reasons why I know he could not have wished to die
+intestate."
+
+"Which are----?" queried Hewitt as Mr. Crellan paused in his statement.
+
+"Which are these: Holford was a widower, with no children of his own.
+His wife, who has been dead nearly fifteen years now, was a most
+excellent woman, a model wife, and would have been a model mother if she
+had been one at all. As it was she adopted a little girl, a poor little
+soul who was left an orphan at two years of age. The child's father, an
+unsuccessful man of business of the name of Garth, maddened by a sudden
+and ruinous loss, committed suicide, and his wife died of the shock
+occasioned by the calamity.
+
+"The child, as I have said, was taken by Mrs. Holford and made a
+daughter of, and my old friend's daughter she has been ever since,
+practically speaking. The poor old fellow couldn't possibly have been
+more attached to a daughter of his own, and on her part she couldn't
+possibly have been a better daughter than she was. She stuck by him
+night and day during his last illness, until she became rather ill
+herself, although of course there was a regular nurse always in
+attendance.
+
+"Now, in his will, Mr. Holford bequeathed rather more than half of his
+very large property to this Miss Garth; that is to say, as residuary
+legatee, her interest in the will came to about that. The rest was
+distributed in various ways. Holford had largely spent the leisure of
+his retirement in scientific pursuits. So there were a few legacies to
+learned societies; all his servants were remembered; he left me a
+certain number of his books; and there was a very fair sum of money for
+his nephew, Mr. Cranley Mellis, the only near relation of Mr. Holford's
+still living. So that you see what the loss of this will may mean. Miss
+Garth, who was to have taken the greater part of her adoptive father's
+property, will not have one shilling's worth of claim on the estate and
+will be turned out into the world without a cent. One or two very old
+servants will be very awkwardly placed, too, with nothing to live on,
+and very little prospect of doing more work."
+
+"Everything will go to this nephew," said Hewitt, "of course?"
+
+"Of course. That is unless I attempt to prove a rough copy of the will
+which I may possibly have by me. But even if I have such a thing and
+find it, long and costly litigation would be called for, and the result
+would probably be all against us."
+
+"You say you feel sure Mr. Holford did not destroy the will himself?"
+
+"I am quite sure he would never have done so without telling me of it;
+indeed, I am sure he would have consulted me first. Moreover, it can
+never have been his intention to leave Miss Garth utterly unprovided
+for; it would be the same thing as disinheriting his only daughter."
+
+"Did you see him frequently?"
+
+"There's scarcely been a day when I haven't seen him since I have lived
+down here. During his illness--it lasted a month--I saw him every day."
+
+"And he said nothing of destroying his will?"
+
+"Nothing at all. On the contrary, soon after his first seizure--indeed,
+on the first visit at which I found him in bed--he said, after telling
+me how he felt, 'Everything's as I want it, you know, in case I go
+under.' That seemed to me to mean his will was still as he desired it to
+be."
+
+"Well, yes, it would seem so. But counsel on the other side (supposing
+there were another side) might quite as plausibly argue that he meant to
+die intestate, and had destroyed his will so that everything should be
+as he wanted it, in that sense. But what do you want me to do--find the
+will?"
+
+"Certainly, if you can. It seemed to me that you, with your clever head,
+might be able to form a better judgment than I as to what has happened
+and who is responsible for it. Because if the will _has_ been taken
+away, some one has taken it."
+
+"It seems probable. Have you told any one of your difficulty?"
+
+"Not a soul. I came over as soon as I could after Mr. Holford's death,
+and Miss Garth gave me all the keys, because, as executor, the case
+being a peculiar one, I wished to see that all was in order, and, as you
+know, the estate is legally vested in the executor from the death of the
+testator, so that I was responsible for everything; although, of course,
+if there is no will I'm not executor. But I thought it best to keep the
+difficulty to myself till I saw you."
+
+"Quite right. Is this Wedbury Hall?"
+
+The brougham had passed a lodge gate, and approached, by a wide drive, a
+fine old red brick mansion carrying the heavy stone dressings and
+copings distinctive of early eighteenth century domestic architecture.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Crellan, "this is the place. We will go straight to the
+study, I think, and then I can explain details."
+
+The study told the tale of the late Mr. Holford's habits and interests.
+It was half a library, half a scientific laboratory--pathological
+curiosities in spirits, a retort or two, test tubes on the
+writing-table, and a fossilized lizard mounted in a case, balanced the
+many shelves and cases of books disposed about the walls. In a recess
+between two book-cases stood a heavy, old-fashioned mahogany bureau.
+
+"Now it was in that bureau," Mr. Crellan explained, indicating it with
+his finger, "that Mr. Holford kept every document that was in the
+smallest degree important or valuable. I have seen him at it a hundred
+times, and he always maintained it was as secure as any iron safe. That
+may not have been altogether the fact, but the bureau is certainly a
+tremendously heavy and strong one. Feel it."
+
+Hewitt took down the front and pulled out a drawer that Mr. Crellan
+unlocked for the purpose.
+
+"Solid Spanish mahogany an inch thick," was his verdict, "heavy, hard,
+and seasoned; not the sort of thing you can buy nowadays. Locks, Chubb's
+patent, early pattern, but not easily to be picked by anything short of
+a blast of gunpowder. If there are no marks on this bureau it hasn't
+been tampered with."
+
+"Well," Mr. Crellan pursued, "as I say, _that_ was where Mr. Holford
+kept his will. I have often seen it when we have been here together, and
+this was the drawer, the top on the right, that he kept it in. The will
+was a mere single sheet of foolscap, and was kept, folded of course, in
+a blue envelope."
+
+"When did you yourself last actually see the will?"
+
+"I saw it in my friend's hand two days before he took to his bed. He
+merely lifted it in his hand to get at something else in the drawer,
+replaced it, and locked the drawer again."
+
+"Of course there are other drawers, bureaux, and so on, about the place.
+You have examined them carefully, I take it?"
+
+"I've turned out ever possible receptacle for that will in the house, I
+positively assure you, and there isn't a trace of it."
+
+"You've thought of secret drawers, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes. There are two in the bureau which I always knew of. Here they
+are." Mr. Crellan pressed his thumb against a partition of the
+pigeon-holes at the back of the bureau and a strip of mahogany flew out
+from below, revealing two shallow drawers with small ivory catches in
+lieu of knobs. "Nothing there at all. And this other, as I have said,
+was the drawer where the will was kept. The other papers kept in the
+same drawer are here as usual."
+
+"Did anybody else know where Mr. Holford kept his will?"
+
+"Everybody in the house, I should think. He was a frank, above-board
+sort of man. His adopted daughter knew, and the butler knew, and there
+was absolutely no reason why all the other servants shouldn't know;
+probably they did."
+
+"First," said Hewitt, "we will make quite sure there are no more secret
+drawers about this bureau. Lock the door in case anybody comes."
+
+Hewitt took out every drawer of the bureau, and examined every part of
+each before he laid it aside. Then he produced a small pair of silver
+callipers and an ivory pocket-rule and went over every inch of the heavy
+framework, measuring, comparing, tapping, adding, and subtracting
+dimensions. In the end he rose to his feet satisfied. "There is most
+certainly nothing concealed there," he said.
+
+The drawers were put back, and Mr. Crellan suggested lunch. At Hewitt's
+suggestion it was brought to the study.
+
+"So far," Hewitt said, "we arrive at this: either Mr. Holford has
+destroyed his will, or he has most effectually concealed it, or somebody
+has stolen it. The first of these possibilities you don't favour."
+
+"I don't believe it is a possibility for a moment. I have told you why;
+and I knew Holford so well, you know. For the same reasons I am sure he
+never concealed it."
+
+"Very well, then. Somebody has stolen it. The question is, who?"
+
+"That is so."
+
+"It seems to me that every one in this house had a direct and personal
+interest in preserving that will. The servants have all something left
+them, you say, and without the will that goes, of course. Miss Garth
+has the greatest possible interest in the will. The only person I have
+heard of as yet who would benefit by its loss or destruction would be
+the nephew, Mr. Mellis. There are no other relatives, you say, who would
+benefit by intestacy?"
+
+"Not one."
+
+"Well, what do you think yourself, now? Have you any suspicions?"
+
+Mr. Crellan shrugged his shoulders. "I've no more right to suspicions
+than you have, I suppose," he said. "Of course, if there are to be
+suspicions they can only point one way. Mr. Mellis is the only person
+who can gain by the disappearance of this will."
+
+"Just so, Now, what do you know of him?"
+
+"I don't know much of the young man," Mr. Crellan said slowly. "I must
+say I never particularly took to him. He is rather a clever fellow, I
+believe. He was called to the bar some time ago, and afterwards studied
+medicine, I believe, with the idea of priming himself for a practice in
+medical jurisprudence. He took a good deal of interest in my old
+friend's researches, I am told--at any rate he _said_ he did; he may
+have been thinking of his uncle's fortune. But they had a small tiff on
+some medical question. I don't know exactly what it was, but Mr. Holford
+objected to something--a method of research or something of that
+kind--as being dangerous and unprofessional. There was no actual
+rupture between them, you understand, but Mellis's visits slacked off,
+and there was a coolness."
+
+"Where is Mr. Mellis now?"
+
+"In London, I believe."
+
+"Has he been in this house between the day you last saw the will in that
+drawer and yesterday, when you failed to find it?"
+
+"Only once. He came to see his uncle two days before his death--last
+Saturday, in fact. He didn't stay long."
+
+"Did you see him?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What did he do?"
+
+"Merely came into the room for a few minutes--visitors weren't allowed
+to stay long--spoke a little to his uncle, and went back to town."
+
+"Did he do nothing else, or see anybody else?"
+
+"Miss Garth went out of the room with him as he left, and I should think
+they talked for a little before he went away, to judge by the time she
+was gone; but I don't know."
+
+"You are sure he went then?"
+
+"I saw him in the drive as I looked from the window."
+
+"Miss Garth, you say, has kept all the keys since the beginning of Mr.
+Holford's illness?"
+
+"Yes, until she gave them up to me yesterday. Indeed, the nurse, who is
+rather a peppery customer, and was jealous of Miss Garth's presence in
+the sick room all along, made several difficulties about having to go to
+her for everything."
+
+"And there is no doubt of the bureau having been kept locked all the
+time?"
+
+"None at all. I have asked Miss Garth that--and, indeed, a good many
+other things--without saying why I wanted the information."
+
+"How are Mr. Mellis and Miss Garth affected toward one another--are they
+friendly?"
+
+"Oh, yes. Indeed, some while ago I rather fancied that Mellis was
+disposed to pay serious addresses in that quarter. He may have had a
+fancy that way, or he may have been attracted by the young lady's
+expectations. At any rate, nothing definite seems to have come of it as
+yet. But I must say--between ourselves, of course--I have more than once
+noticed a decided air of agitation, shyness perhaps, in Miss Garth when
+Mr. Mellis has been present. But, at any rate, that scarcely matters.
+She is twenty-four years of age now, and can do as she likes. Although,
+if I had anything to say in the matter--well, never mind."
+
+"You, I take it, have known Miss Garth a long time?"
+
+"Bless you, yes. Danced her on my knee twenty years ago. I've been her
+'Uncle Leonard' all her life."
+
+"Well, I think we must at least let Miss Garth know of the loss of the
+will. Perhaps, when they have cleared away these plates, she will come
+here for a few minutes."
+
+"I'll go and ask her," Mr. Crellan answered, and having rung the bell,
+proceeded to find Miss Garth.
+
+Presently he returned with the lady. She was a slight, very pale young
+woman; no doubt rather pretty in ordinary, but now not looking her best.
+She was evidently worn and nervous from anxiety and want of sleep, and
+her eyes were sadly inflamed. As the wind slammed a loose casement
+behind her she started nervously, and placed her hand to her head.
+
+"Sit down at once, my dear," Mr. Crellan said; "sit down. This is Mr.
+Martin Hewitt, whom I have taken the liberty of inviting down here to
+help me in a very important matter. The fact is, my dear," Mr. Crellan
+added gravely, "I can't find your poor father's will."
+
+Miss Garth was not surprised. "I thought so," she said mildly, "when you
+asked me about the bureau yesterday."
+
+"Of course I need not say, my dear, what a serious thing it may be for
+you if that will cannot be found. So I hope you'll try and tell Mr.
+Hewitt here anything he wants to know as well as you can, without
+forgetting a single thing. I'm pretty sure that he will find it for us
+if it is to be found."
+
+"I understand, Miss Garth," Hewitt asked, "that the keys of that bureau
+never left your possession during the whole time of Mr. Holford's last
+illness, and that the bureau was kept locked?"
+
+"Yes, that is so."
+
+"Did you ever have occasion to go to the bureau yourself?"
+
+"No, I have not touched it."
+
+"Then you can answer for it, I presume, that the bureau was never
+unlocked by _any one_ from the time Mr. Holford placed the keys in your
+hands till you gave them to Mr. Crellan?"
+
+"Yes, I am sure of that."
+
+"Very good. Now is there any place on the whole premises that you can
+suggest where this will may possibly be hidden?"
+
+"There is no place that Mr. Crellan doesn't know of, I'm sure."
+
+"It is an old house, I observe," Hewitt pursued. "Do you know of any
+place of concealment in the structure--any secret doors, I mean, you
+know, or sliding panels, or hollow door frames, and so forth?"
+
+Miss Garth shook her head. "There is not a single place of the sort you
+speak of in the whole building, so far as I know," she said, "and I
+have lived here almost all my life."
+
+"You knew the purport of Mr. Holford's will, I take it, and understand
+what its loss may mean to yourself?"
+
+"Perfectly."
+
+"Now I must ask you to consider carefully. Take your mind back to two or
+three days before Mr. Holford's illness began, and tell me if you can
+remember any single fact, occurrence, word, or hint from that day to
+this in any way bearing on the will or anything connected with it?"
+
+Miss Garth shook her head thoughtfully. "I can't remember the thing
+being mentioned by anybody, except perhaps by the nurse, who is rather a
+touchy sort of woman, and once or twice took it upon herself to hint
+that my recent anxiety was chiefly about my poor father's money. And
+that once, when I had done some small thing for him, my father--I have
+always called him father, you know--said that he wouldn't forget it, or
+that I should be rewarded, or something of that sort. Nothing else that
+I can remember in the remotest degree concerned the will."
+
+"Mr. Mellis said nothing about it, then?"
+
+Miss Garth changed colour slightly, but answered, "No, I only saw him to
+the door."
+
+"Thank you, Miss Garth, I won't trouble you any further just now. But
+if you _can_ remember anything more in the course of the next few hours
+it may turn out to be of great service."
+
+Miss Garth bowed and withdrew. Mr. Crellan shut the door behind her and
+returned to Hewitt. "_That_ doesn't carry us much further," he said.
+"The more certain it seems that the will cannot have been got at, the
+more difficult our position is from a legal point of view. What shall we
+do now?"
+
+"Is the nurse still about the place?"
+
+"Yes, I believe so."
+
+"Then I'll speak to her."
+
+The nurse came in response to Mr. Crellan's summons: a sharp-featured,
+pragmatical woman of forty-five. She took the seat offered her, and
+waited for Hewitt's questions.
+
+"You were in attendance on Mr. Holford, I believe, Mrs. Turton, since
+the beginning of his last illness?"
+
+"Since October 24th."
+
+"Were you present when Mr. Mellis came to see his uncle last Saturday?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Can you tell me what took place?"
+
+"As to what the gentleman said to Mr. Holford," the nurse replied,
+bridling slightly, "of course I don't know anything, it not being my
+business and not intended for my ears. Mr. Crellan was there, and knows
+as much as I do, and so does Miss Garth. I only know that Mr. Mellis
+stayed for a few minutes and then went out of the room with Miss Garth."
+
+"How long was Miss Garth gone?"
+
+"I don't know, ten minutes or a quarter of an hour, perhaps."
+
+"Now Mrs. Turton, I want you to tell me in confidence--it is very
+important--whether you, at any time, heard Mr. Holford during his
+illness say anything of his wishes as to how his property was to be left
+in case of his death?"
+
+The nurse started and looked keenly from Hewitt to Mr. Crellan and back
+again.
+
+"Is it the will you mean?" she asked sharply.
+
+"Yes. Did he mention it?"
+
+"You mean you can't find the will, isn't that it?"
+
+"Well, suppose it is, what then?"
+
+"Suppose won't do," the nurse answered shortly; "I _do_ know something
+about the will, and I believe you can't find it."
+
+"I'm sure, Mrs. Turton, that if you know anything about the will you
+will tell Mr. Crellan in the interests of right and justice."
+
+"And who's to protect me against the spite of those I shall offend if I
+tell you?"
+
+Mr. Crellan interposed.
+
+"Whatever you tell us, Mrs. Turton," he said, "will be held in the
+strictest confidence, and the source of our information shall not be
+divulged. For that I give you my word of honour. And, I need scarcely
+add, I will see that you come to no harm by anything you may say."
+
+"Then the will _is_ lost. I may understand that?"
+
+Hewitt's features were impassive and impenetrable. But in Mr. Crellan's
+disturbed face the nurse saw a plain answer in the affirmative.
+
+"Yes," she said, "I see that's the trouble. Well, I know who took it."
+
+"Then who was it?"
+
+"_Miss Garth!_"
+
+"Miss Garth! Nonsense!" cried Mr. Crellan, starting upright. "Nonsense!"
+
+"It may be nonsense," the nurse replied slowly, with a monotonous
+emphasis on each word. "It may be nonsense, but it's a fact. I saw her
+take it."
+
+Mr. Crellan simply gasped. Hewitt drew his chair a little nearer.
+
+"If you saw her take it," he said gently, closely watching the woman's
+face the while, "then, of course, there's no doubt."
+
+"I tell you I saw her take it," the nurse repeated. "What was in it,
+and what her game was in taking it, I don't know. But it was in that
+bureau, wasn't it?"
+
+"Yes--probably."
+
+"In the right hand top drawer?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"A white paper in a blue envelope?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then I saw her take it, as I said before. She unlocked that drawer
+before my eyes, took it out, and locked the drawer again."
+
+Mr. Crellan turned blankly to Hewitt, but Hewitt kept his eyes on the
+nurse's face.
+
+"When did this occur?" he asked, "and how?"
+
+"It was on Saturday night, rather late. Everybody was in bed but Miss
+Garth and myself, and she had been down to the dining-room for
+something. Mr. Holford was asleep, so as I wanted to re-fill the
+water-bottle, I took it up and went. As I was passing the door of this
+room that we are in now, I heard a noise, and looked in at the door,
+which was open. There was a candle on the table which had been left
+there earlier in the evening. Miss Garth was opening the top right hand
+drawer of _that_ bureau"--Mrs. Turton stabbed her finger spitefully
+toward the piece of furniture, as though she owed it a personal
+grudge--"and I saw her take out a blue foolscap envelope, and as the
+flap was open, I could see the enclosed paper was white. She shut the
+drawer, locked it, and came out of the room with the envelope in her
+hand."
+
+"And what did you do?"
+
+"I hurried on, and she came away without seeing me, and went in the
+opposite direction--toward the small staircase."
+
+"Perhaps," Mr. Crellan ventured at a blurt, "perhaps she was walking in
+her sleep?"
+
+"That she wasn't!" the nurse replied, "for she came back to Mr.
+Holford's room almost as soon as I returned there, and asked some
+questions about the medicine--which was nothing new, for I must say she
+was very fond of interfering in things that were part of my business."
+
+"That is quite certain, I suppose," Hewitt remarked--"that she could not
+have been asleep?"
+
+"Quite certain. She talked for about a quarter of an hour, and wanted to
+kiss Mr. Holford, which might have wakened him, before she went to bed.
+In fact, I may say we had a disagreement."
+
+Hewitt did not take his steady gaze from the nurse's face for some
+seconds after she had finished speaking. Then he only said, "Thank you,
+Mrs. Turton. I need scarcely assure you, after what Mr. Crellan has
+said, that your confidence shall not be betrayed. I think that is all,
+unless you have more to tell us."
+
+Mrs. Turton bowed and rose. "There is nothing more," she said, and left
+the room.
+
+As soon as she had gone, "Is Mrs. Turton at all interested in the will,"
+Hewitt asked.
+
+"No, there is nothing for her. She is a new-comer, you see. Perhaps,"
+Mr. Crellan went on, struck by an idea, "she may be jealous, or
+something. She seems a spiteful woman--and really, I can't believe her
+story for a moment."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Well, you see, it's absurd. Why should Miss Garth go to all this secret
+trouble to do herself an injury--to make a beggar of herself? And
+besides, she's not in the habit of telling barefaced lies. She
+distinctly assured us, you remember, that she had never been to the
+bureau for any purpose whatever."
+
+"But the nurse has an honest character, hasn't she?"
+
+"Yes, her character is excellent. Indeed, from all accounts, she is a
+very excellent woman, except for a desire to govern everybody, and a
+habit of spite if she is thwarted. But, of course, that sort of thing
+sometimes leads people rather far."
+
+"So it does," Hewitt replied. "But consider now. Is it not possible that
+Miss Garth, completely infatuated with Mr. Mellis, thinks she is doing
+a noble thing for him by destroying the will and giving up her whole
+claim to his uncle's property? Devoted women do just such things, you
+know."
+
+Mr. Crellan stared, bent his head to his hand, and considered. "So they
+do, so they do," he said. "Insane foolery. Really, it's the sort of
+thing I can imagine her doing--she's honour and generosity itself. But
+then those lies," he resumed, sitting up and slapping his leg; "I can't
+believe she'd tell such tremendous lies as that for anybody. And with
+such a calm face, too--I'm sure she couldn't."
+
+"Well, that's as it may be. You can scarcely set a limit to the lengths
+a woman will go on behalf of a man she loves. I suppose, by the bye,
+Miss Garth is not exactly what you would call a 'strong-minded' woman?"
+
+"No, she's not that. She'd never get on in the world by herself. She's a
+good little soul, but nervous--very; and her month of anxiety, grief,
+and want of sleep seems to have broken her up."
+
+"Mr. Mellis knows of the death, I suppose?"
+
+"I telegraphed to him at his chambers in London the first thing
+yesterday--Tuesday--morning, as soon as the telegraph office was open.
+He came here (as I've forgotten to tell you as yet) the first thing
+this morning--before I was over here myself, in fact. He had been
+staying not far off--at Ockham, I think--and the telegram had been sent
+on. He saw Miss Garth, but couldn't stay, having to get back to London.
+I met him going away as I came, about eleven o'clock. Of course I said
+nothing about the fact that I couldn't find the will, but he will
+probably be down again soon, and may ask questions."
+
+"Yes," Hewitt replied. "And speaking of that matter, you can no doubt
+talk with Miss Garth on very intimate and familiar terms?"
+
+"Oh yes--yes; I've told you what old friends we are."
+
+"I wish you could manage, at some favourable opportunity to-day, to
+speak to her alone, and without referring to the will in any way, get to
+know, as circumspectly and delicately as you can, how she stands in
+regard to Mr. Mellis. Whether he is an accepted lover, or likely to be
+one, you know. Whatever answer you may get, you may judge, I expect, by
+her manner how things really are."
+
+"Very good--I'll seize the first chance. Meanwhile what to do?"
+
+"Nothing, I'm afraid, except perhaps to examine other pieces of
+furniture as closely as we have examined this bureau."
+
+Other bureaux, desks, tables, and chests were examined fruitlessly. It
+was not until after dinner that Mr. Crellan saw a favourable opportunity
+of sounding Miss Garth as he had promised. Half an hour later he came to
+Hewitt in the study, more puzzled than ever.
+
+"There's no engagement between them," he reported, "secret or open, nor
+ever has been. It seems, from what I can make out, going to work as
+diplomatically as possible, that Mellis _did_ propose to her, or
+something very near it, a time ago, and was point-blank refused.
+Altogether, Miss Garth's sentiment for him appears to be rather dislike
+than otherwise."
+
+"That rather knocks a hole in the theory of self-sacrifice, doesn't it?"
+Hewitt remarked. "I shall have to think over this, and sleep on it. It's
+possible that it may be necessary to-morrow for you to tax Miss Garth,
+point-blank, with having taken away the will. Still, I hope not."
+
+"I hope not, too," Mr. Crellan said, rather dubious as to the result of
+such an experiment. "She has been quite upset enough already. And, by
+the bye, she didn't seem any the better or more composed after Mellis'
+visit this morning."
+
+"Still, _then_ the will was gone."
+
+"Yes."
+
+And so Hewitt and Mr. Crellan talked on late into the evening, turning
+over every apparent possibility and finding reason in none. The
+household went to bed at ten, and, soon after, Miss Garth came to bid
+Mr. Crellan good-night. It had been settled that both Martin Hewitt and
+Mr. Crellan should stay the night at Wedbury Hall.
+
+Soon all was still, and the ticking of the tall clock in the hall below
+could be heard as distinctly as though it were in the study, while the
+rain without dropped from eaves and sills in regular splashes. Twelve
+o'clock struck, and Mr. Crellan was about to suggest retirement, when
+the sound of a light footstep startled Hewitt's alert ear. He raised his
+hand to enjoin silence, and stepped to the door of the room, Mr. Crellan
+following him.
+
+There was a light over the staircase, seven or eight yards away, and
+down the stairs came Miss Garth in dressing gown and slippers; she
+turned at the landing and vanished in a passage leading to the right.
+
+"Where does that lead to?" Hewitt whispered hurriedly.
+
+"Toward the small staircase--other end of house," Mr. Crellan replied in
+the same tones.
+
+"Come quietly," said Hewitt, and stepped lightly after Miss Garth, Mr.
+Crellan at his heels.
+
+She was nearing the opposite end of the passage, walking at a fair pace
+and looking neither to right nor left. There was another light over the
+smaller staircase at the end. Without hesitation Miss Garth turned down
+the stairs till about half down the flight, and then stopped and pressed
+her hand against the oak wainscot.
+
+Immediately the vertical piece of framing against which she had placed
+her hand turned on central pivots top and bottom, revealing a small
+recess, three feet high and little more than six inches wide. Miss Garth
+stooped and felt about at the bottom of this recess for several seconds.
+Then with every sign of extreme agitation and horror she withdrew her
+hand empty, and sank on the stairs. Her head rolled from side to side on
+her shoulders, and beads of perspiration stood on her forehead. Hewitt
+with difficulty restrained Mr. Crellan from going to her assistance.
+
+Presently, with a sort of shuddering sigh, Miss Garth rose, and after
+standing irresolute for a moment, descended the flight of stairs to the
+bottom. There she stopped again, and pressing her hand to her forehead,
+turned and began to re-ascend the stairs.
+
+Hewitt touched his companion's arm, and the two hastily but noiselessly
+made their way back along the passage to the study. Miss Garth left the
+open framing as it was, reached the top of the landing, and without
+stopping proceeded along the passage and turned up the main staircase,
+while Hewitt and Mr. Crellan still watched her from the study door.
+
+At the top of the flight she turned to the right, and up three or four
+more steps toward her own room. There she stopped, and leaned
+thoughtfully on the handrail.
+
+"Go up," whispered Hewitt to Mr. Crellan, "as though you were going to
+bed. Appear surprised to see her; ask if she isn't well, and, if you
+can, manage to repeat that question of mine about secret hiding-places
+in the house."
+
+Mr. Crellan nodded and started quickly up the stairs. Half-way up he
+turned his head, and, as he went on, "Why, Nelly, my dear," he said,
+"what's the matter? Aren't you well?"
+
+Mr. Crellan acted his part well, and waiting below, Hewitt heard this
+dialogue:
+
+"No, uncle, I don't feel very well, but it's nothing. I think my room
+seems close. I can scarcely breathe."
+
+"Oh, it isn't close to-night. You'll be catching cold, my dear. Go and
+have a good sleep; you mustn't worry that wise little head of yours, you
+know. Mr. Hewitt and I have been making quite a night of it, but I'm off
+to bed now."
+
+"I hope they've made you both quite comfortable, uncle?"
+
+"Oh, yes; capital, capital. We've been talking over business, and, no
+doubt, we shall put that matter all in order soon. By the bye, I suppose
+since you saw Mr. Hewitt you haven't happened to remember anything more
+to tell him?"
+
+"No."
+
+"You still can't remember any hiding-places or panels, or that sort of
+thing in the wainscot or anywhere?"
+
+"No, I'm sure I don't know of any, and I don't believe for a moment that
+any exist."
+
+"Quite sure of that, I suppose?"
+
+"Oh yes."
+
+"All right. Now go to bed. You'll catch _such_ a cold in these draughty
+landings. Come, I won't move a step till I see your door shut behind
+you. Good-night."
+
+"Good-night, uncle."
+
+Mr. Crellan came downstairs again with a face of blank puzzlement.
+
+"I wouldn't have believed it," he assured Martin Hewitt; "positively I
+wouldn't have believed she'd have told such a lie, and with such
+confidence, too. There's something deep and horrible here, I'm afraid.
+What does it mean?"
+
+"We'll talk of that afterwards," Hewitt replied. "Come now and take a
+look at that recess."
+
+They went, quietly still, to the small staircase, and there, with a
+candle, closely examined the recess. It was a mere box, three feet high,
+a foot or a little more deep, and six or seven inches wide. The piece of
+oak framing, pivoted to the stair at the bottom and to a horizontal
+piece of framing at the top, stood edge forward, dividing the opening
+down the centre. There was nothing whatever in the recess.
+
+Hewitt ascertained that there was no catch, the plank simply remaining
+shut by virtue of fitting tightly, so that nothing but pressure on the
+proper part was requisite to open it. He had closed the plank and turned
+to speak to Mr. Crellan, when another interruption occurred.
+
+On each floor the two staircases were joined by passages, and the
+ground-floor passage, from the foot of the flight they were on, led to
+the entrance hall. Distinct amid the loud clicking of the hall clock,
+Hewitt now heard a sound, as of a person's foot shifting on a stone
+step.
+
+Mr. Crellan heard it too, and each glanced at the other. Then Hewitt,
+shading the candle with his hand, led the way to the hall. There they
+listened for several seconds--almost an hour--it seemed--and then the
+noise was repeated. There was no doubt of it. It was at the other side
+of the front door.
+
+In answer to Hewitt's hurried whispers, Mr. Crellan assured him that
+there was no window from which, in the dark, a view could be got of a
+person standing outside the door. Also that any other way out would be
+equally noisy, and would entail the circuit of the house. The front door
+was fastened by three heavy bolts, an immense old-fashioned lock, and a
+bar. It would take nearly a minute to open at least, even if everything
+went easily. But, as there was no other way, Hewitt determined to try
+it. Handing the candle to his companion, he first lifted the bar,
+conceiving that it might be done with the least noise. It went easily,
+and, handling it carefully, Hewitt let it hang from its rivet without a
+sound. Just then, glancing at Mr. Crellan, he saw that he was forgetting
+to shade the candle, whose rays extended through the fanlight above the
+door, and probably through the wide crack under it. But it was too late.
+At the same moment the light was evidently perceived from outside; there
+was a hurried jump from the steps, and for an instant a sound of running
+on gravel. Hewitt tore back the bolts, flung the door open, and dashed
+out into the darkness, leaving Mr. Crellan on the doorstep with the
+candle.
+
+Hewitt was gone, perhaps, five or ten minutes, although to Mr.
+Crellan--standing there at the open door in a state of high nervous
+tension, and with no notion of what was happening or what it all
+meant--the time seemed an eternity. When at last Hewitt reached the door
+again, "What was it?" asked Mr. Crellan, much agitated. "Did you see?
+Have you caught them?"
+
+Hewitt shook his head.
+
+"I hadn't a chance," he said. "The wall is low over there, and there's a
+plantation of trees at the other side. But I think--yes, I begin to
+think--that I may possibly be able to see my way through this business
+in a little while. See this?"
+
+On the top step in the sheltered porch there remained the wet prints of
+two feet. Hewitt took a letter from his pocket, opened it out, spread it
+carefully over the more perfect of the two marks, pressed it lightly and
+lifted it. Then, when the door was shut, he produced his pocket
+scissors, and with great care cut away the paper round the wet part,
+leaving a piece, of course, the shape of a boot sole.
+
+"Come," said Hewitt, "we may get at something after all. Don't ask me to
+tell you anything now; I don't know anything, as a matter of fact. I
+hope this is the end of the night's entertainment, but I'm afraid the
+case is rather an unpleasant business. There is nothing for us to do now
+but to go to bed, I think. I suppose there's a handy man kept about the
+place?"
+
+"Yes, he's gardener and carpenter and carpet-beater, and so on."
+
+"Good! Where's his sanctum? Where does he keep his shovels and carpet
+sticks?"
+
+"In the shed by the coach house, I believe. I think it's generally
+unlocked."
+
+"Very good. We've earned a night's rest, and now we'll have it."
+
+The next morning, after breakfast, Hewitt took Mr. Crellan into the
+study.
+
+"Can you manage," he said, "to send Miss Garth out for a walk this
+morning--with somebody?"
+
+"I can send her out for a ride with the groom--unless she thinks it
+wouldn't be the thing to go riding so soon after her bereavement."
+
+"Never mind, that will do. Send her at once, and see that she goes. Call
+it doctor's orders; say she must go for her health's sake--anything."
+
+Mr. Crellan departed, used his influence, and in half an hour Miss Garth
+had gone.
+
+"I was up pretty early this morning," Hewitt remarked on Mr. Crellan's
+return to the study, "and, among other things, I sent a telegram to
+London. Unless my eyes deceive me, a boy with a peaked cap--a telegraph
+boy, in fact--is coming up the drive this moment. Yes, he is. It is
+probably my answer."
+
+In a few minutes a telegram was brought in. Hewitt read it and then
+asked,--
+
+"Your friend Mr. Mellis, I understand, was going straight to town
+yesterday morning?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Read that, then."
+
+Mr. Crellan took the telegram and read:
+
+"_Mellis did not sleep at chambers last night. Been out of town for some
+days past. Kerrett._"
+
+Mr. Crellan looked up.
+
+"Who's Kerrett?" he asked.
+
+"Lad in my office; sharp fellow. You see, Mellis didn't go to town after
+all. As a matter of fact, I believe he was nearer this place than we
+thought. You said he had a disagreement with his uncle because of
+scientific practices which the old gentleman considered 'dangerous and
+unprofessional,' I think?"
+
+"Yes, that was the case."
+
+"Ah, then the key to all the mystery of the will is in this room."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"There." Hewitt pointed to the book-cases. "Read Bernheim's _Suggestive
+Therapeutics_, and one or two books of Heidenhain's and Bjoernstroem's and
+you'll see the thing more clearly than you can without them; but that
+would be rather a long sort of job, so----but why, who's this? Somebody
+coming up the drive in a fly, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes," Mr. Crellan replied, looking out of the window. Presently he
+added, "It's Cranley Mellis."
+
+"Ah," said Hewitt, "he won't trouble us for a little. I'll bet you a
+penny cake he goes first by himself to the small staircase and tries
+that secret recess. If you get a little way along the passage you will
+be able to see him; but that will scarcely matter--I can see you don't
+guess now what I am driving at."
+
+"I don't in the least."
+
+"I told you the names of the books in which you could read the matter
+up; but that would be too long for the present purpose. The thing is
+fairly well summarised, I see, in that encyclopaedia there in the corner.
+I have put a marker in volume seven. Do you mind opening it at that
+place and seeing for yourself?"
+
+Mr. Crellan, doubtful and bewildered, reached the volume. It opened
+readily, and in the place where it opened lay a blue foolscap envelope.
+The old gentleman took the envelope, drew from it a white paper, stared
+first at the paper, then at Hewitt, then at the paper again, let the
+volume slide from his lap, and gasped,--
+
+"Why--why--it's the will!"
+
+"Ah, so I thought," said Hewitt, catching the book as it fell. "But
+don't lose this place in the encyclopaedia. Read the name of the article.
+What is it?"
+
+Mr. Crellan looked absent-mindedly at the title, holding the will before
+him all the time. Then, mechanically, he read aloud the word,
+"_Hypnotism_."
+
+"Hypnotism it is," Hewitt answered. "A dangerous and terrible power in
+the hands of an unscrupulous man."
+
+"But--but how? I don't understand it. This--this is the real will, I
+suppose?"
+
+"Look at it; you know best."
+
+Mr. Crellan looked.
+
+"Yes," he said, "this certainly is the will. But where did it come from?
+It hasn't been in this book all the time, has it?"
+
+"No. Didn't I tell you I put it there myself as a marker? But come,
+you'll understand my explanation better if I first read you a few lines
+from this article. See here now:--
+
+'Although hypnotism has power for good when properly used by medical
+men, it is an exceedingly dangerous weapon in the hands of the unskilful
+or unscrupulous. Crimes have been committed by persons who have been
+hypnotised. Just as a person when hypnotised is rendered extremely
+impressionable, and therefore capable of receiving beneficial
+suggestions, so he is nearly as liable to receive suggestions for evil;
+and it is quite possible for an hypnotic subject, while under hypnotic
+influence, to be impressed with the belief that he is to commit some act
+after the influence is removed, and that act he is safe to commit,
+acting at the time as an automaton. Suggestions may be thus made of
+which the subject, in his subsequent uninfluenced moments, has no idea,
+but which he will proceed to carry out automatically at the time
+appointed. In the case of a complete state of hypnotism the subject has
+subsequently no recollection whatever of what has happened. Persons
+whose will or nerve power has been weakened by fear or other similar
+causes can be hypnotised without consent on their part.'"
+
+"There now, what do you make of that?"
+
+"Why, do you mean that Miss Garth has been hypnotised by--by--Cranley
+Mellis?"
+
+"I think that is the case; indeed, I am pretty sure of it. Notice, on
+the occasion of each of his last two visits, he was alone with Miss
+Garth for some little time. On the evening following each of those
+visits she does something which she afterwards knows nothing
+about--something connected with the disappearance of this will, the only
+thing standing between Mr. Mellis and the whole of his uncle's property.
+Who could have been in a weaker nervous state than Miss Garth has been
+lately? Remember, too, on the visit of last Saturday, while Miss Garth
+says she only showed Mellis to the door, both you and the nurse speak of
+their being gone some little time. Miss Garth must have forgotten what
+took place then, when Mellis hypnotised her, and impressed on her the
+suggestion that she should take Mr. Holford's will that night, long
+after he--Mellis--had gone, and when he could not be suspected of
+knowing anything of it. Further, that she should, at that time when her
+movements would be less likely to be observed, secrete that will in a
+place of hiding known only to himself."
+
+"Dear, dear, what a rascal! Do you really think he did that?"
+
+"Not only that, but I believe he came here yesterday morning while you
+were out to get the will from the recess. The recess, by the bye, I
+expect he discovered by accident on one of his visits (he has been here
+pretty often, I suppose, altogether), and kept the secret in case it
+might be useful. Yesterday, not finding the will there, he hypnotised
+Miss Garth once again, and conveyed the suggestion that, at midnight
+last night, she should take the will from wherever she had put it and
+pass it to him under the front door."
+
+"What, do you mean it was he you chased across the grounds last night?"
+
+"That is a thing I am pretty certain of. If we had Mr. Mellis's boot
+here we could make sure by comparing it with the piece of paper I cut
+out, as you will remember, in the entrance hall. As we have the will,
+though, that will scarcely be necessary. What he will do now, I expect,
+will be to go to the recess again on the vague chance of the will being
+there now, after all, assuming that his second dose of mesmerism has
+somehow miscarried. If Miss Garth were here he might try his tricks
+again, and that is why I got you to send her out."
+
+"And where did you find the will?"
+
+"Now you come to practical details. You will remember that I asked about
+the handyman's tool-house? Well, I paid it a visit at six o'clock this
+morning, and found therein some very excellent carpenter's tools in a
+chest. I took a selection of them to the small staircase, and took out
+the tread of a stair--the one that the pivoted framing-plank rested on."
+
+"And you found the will there?"
+
+"The will, as I rather expected when I examined the recess last night,
+had slipped down a rather wide crack at the end of the stair timber,
+which, you know, formed, so to speak, the floor of the recess. The fact
+was, the stair-tread didn't quite reach as far as the back of the
+recess. The opening wasn't very distinct to see, but I soon felt it with
+my fingers. When Miss Garth, in her hypnotic condition on Saturday
+night, dropped the will into the recess, it shot straight to the back
+corner and fell down the slit. That was why Mellis found it empty, and
+why Miss Garth also found it empty on returning there last night under
+hypnotic influence. You observed her terrible state of nervous agitation
+when she failed to carry out the command that haunted her. It was
+frightful. Something like what happens to a suddenly awakened
+somnambulist, perhaps. Anyway, that is all over. I found the will under
+the end of the stair-tread, and here it is. If you will come to the
+small staircase now you shall see where the paper slipped out of sight.
+Perhaps we shall meet Mr. Mellis."
+
+"He's a scoundrel," said Mr. Crellan. "It's a pity we can't punish him."
+
+"That's impossible, of course. Where's your proof? And if you had any
+I'm not sure that a hypnotist is responsible at law for what his subject
+does. Even if he were, moving a will from one part of the house to
+another is scarcely a legal crime. The explanation I have given you
+accounts entirely for the disturbed manner of Miss Garth in the presence
+of Mellis. She merely felt an indefinite sense of his power over her.
+Indeed, there is all the possibility that, finding her an easy subject,
+he had already practised his influence by way of experiment. A
+hypnotist, as you will see in the books, has always an easier task with
+a person he has hypnotised before."
+
+As Hewitt had guessed, in the corridor they met Mr. Mellis. He was a
+thin, dark man of about thirty-five, with large, bony features, and a
+slight stoop. Mr. Crellan glared at him ferociously.
+
+"Well, sir, and what do you want?" he asked.
+
+Mr. Mellis looked surprised. "Really, that's a very extraordinary
+remark, Mr. Crellan," he said. "This is my late uncle's house. I might,
+with at least as much reason, ask you what you want."
+
+"I'm here, sir, as Mr. Holford's executor."
+
+"Appointed by will?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And is the will in existence?"
+
+"Well--the fact is--we couldn't find it----"
+
+"Then, what do you mean, sir, by calling yourself an executor with no
+will to warrant you?" interrupted Mellis. "Get out of this house. If
+there's no will, I administrate."
+
+"But there _is_ a will," roared Mr. Crellan, shaking it in his face.
+"There is a will. I didn't say we hadn't found it yet, did I? There _is_
+a will, and here it is in spite of all your diabolical tricks, with your
+scoundrelly hypnotism and secret holes, and the rest of it! Get out of
+this place, sir, or I'll have you thrown out of the window!"
+
+Mr. Mellis shrugged his shoulders with an appearance of perfect
+indifference. "If you've a will appointing you executor it's all right,
+I suppose, although I shall take care to hold you responsible for any
+irregularities. As I don't in the least understand your conduct, unless
+it is due to drink, I'll leave you." And with that he went.
+
+Mr. Crellan boiled with indignation for a minute, and then turning to
+Hewitt, "I say, I hope it's all right," he said, "connecting him with
+all this queer business?"
+
+"We shall soon see," replied Hewitt, "if you'll come and look at the
+pivoted plank."
+
+They went to the small staircase, and Hewitt once again opened the
+recess. Within lay a blue foolscap envelope, which Hewitt picked up.
+"See," he said, "it is torn at the corner. He has been here and opened
+it. It's a fresh envelope, and I left it for him this morning, with the
+corner gummed down a little so that he would have to tear it in opening.
+This is what was inside," Hewitt added, and laughed aloud as he drew
+forth a rather crumpled piece of white paper. "It was only a childish
+trick after all," he concluded, "but I always liked a small practical
+joke on occasion." He held out the crumpled paper, on which was
+inscribed in large capital letters the single word--"SOLD."
+
+
+
+
+THE CASE OF THE MISSING HAND.
+
+
+I think I have recorded in another place Hewitt's frequent aphorism that
+"there is nothing in this world that is at all possible that has not
+happened or is not happening in London." But there are many strange
+happenings in this matter-of-fact country and in these matter-of-fact
+times that occur far enough from London. Fantastic crimes, savage
+revenges, mediaeval superstitions, horrible cruelty, though less in
+sight, have been no more extinguished by the advent of the nineteenth
+century than have the ancient races who practised them in the dark ages.
+Some of the races have become civilized, and some of the savageries are
+heard of no more. But there are survivals in both cases. I say these
+things having in my mind a particular case that came under the personal
+notice of both Hewitt and myself--an affair that brought one up standing
+with a gasp and a doubt of one's era.
+
+My good uncle, the Colonel, was not in the habit of gathering large
+house parties at his place at Ratherby, partly because the place was
+not a great one, and partly because the Colonel's gout was. But there
+was an excellent bit of shooting for two or three guns, and even when he
+was unable to leave the house himself, my uncle was always pleased if
+some good friend were enjoying a good day's sport in his territory. As
+to myself, the good old soul was in a perpetual state of offence because
+I visited him so seldom, though whenever my scant holidays fell in a
+convenient time of the year I was never insensible to the attractions of
+the Ratherby stubble. More than once had I sat by the old gentleman when
+his foot was exceptionally troublesome, amusing him with accounts of
+some of the doings of Martin Hewitt, and more than once had my uncle
+expressed his desire to meet Hewitt himself, and commissioned me with an
+invitation to be presented to Hewitt at the first likely opportunity,
+for a joint excursion to Ratherby. At length I persuaded Hewitt to take
+a fortnight's rest, coincident with a little vacation of my own, and we
+got down to Ratherby within a few days past September the 1st, and
+before a gun had been fired at the Colonel's bit of shooting. The
+Colonel himself we found confined to the house with his foot on the
+familiar rest, and though ourselves were the only guests, we managed to
+do pretty well together. It was during this short holiday that the case
+I have mentioned arose.
+
+When first I began to record some of the more interesting of Hewitt's
+operations, I think I explained that such cases as I myself had not
+witnessed I should set down in impersonal narrative form, without
+intruding myself. The present case, so far as Hewitt's work was
+concerned, I saw, but there were circumstances which led up to it that
+we only fully learned afterwards. These circumstances, however, I shall
+put in their proper place--at the beginning.
+
+The Fosters were a fairly old Ratherby family, of whom Mr. John Foster
+had died by an accident at the age of about forty, leaving a wife twelve
+years younger than himself and three children, two boys and one girl,
+who was the youngest. The boys grew up strong, healthy, out-of-door
+young ruffians, with all the tastes of sportsmen, and all the qualities,
+good and bad, natural to lads of fairly well-disposed character allowed
+a great deal too much of their own way from the beginning.
+
+Their only real bad quality was an unfortunate knack of bearing malice,
+and a certain savage vindictiveness towards such persons as they chose
+to consider their enemies. With the louts of the village they were at
+unceasing war, and, indeed, once got into serious trouble for peppering
+the butcher's son (who certainly was a great blackguard) with
+sparrow-shot. At the usual time they went to Oxford together, and were
+fraternally sent down together in their second year, after enjoying a
+spell of rustication in their first. The offence was never specifically
+mentioned about Ratherby, but was rumoured of as something particularly
+outrageous.
+
+It was at this time, sixteen years or thereabout after the death of
+their father, that Henry and Robert Foster first saw and disliked Mr.
+Jonas Sneathy, a director of penny banks and small insurance offices. He
+visited Ranworth (the Fosters' home) a great deal more than the brothers
+thought necessary, and, indeed, it was not for lack of rudeness on their
+part that Mr. Sneathy failed to understand, as far as they were
+concerned, his room was preferred to his company.
+
+But their mother welcomed him, and in the end it was announced that Mrs.
+Foster was to marry again, and that after that her name would be Mrs.
+Sneathy.
+
+Hereupon there were violent scenes at Ranworth. Henry and Robert Foster
+denounced their prospective father-in-law as a fortune-hunter, a
+snuffler, a hypocrite. They did not stop at broad hints as to the
+honesty of his penny banks and insurance offices, and the house
+straightway became a house of bitter strife. The marriage took place,
+and it was not long before Mr. Sneathy's real character became generally
+obvious. For months he was a model, if somewhat sanctimonious husband,
+and his influence over his wife was complete. Then he discovered that
+her property had been strictly secured by her first husband's will, and
+that, willing as she might be, she was unable to raise money for her new
+husband's benefit, and was quite powerless to pass to him any of her
+property by deed of gift. Hereupon the man's nature showed itself.
+Foolish woman as Mrs. Sneathy might be, she was a loving, indeed, an
+infatuated wife; but Sneathy repaid her devotion by vulgar derision,
+never hesitating to state plainly that he had married her for his own
+profit, and that he considered himself swindled in the result. More, he
+even proceeded to blows and other practical brutality of a sort only
+devisable by a mean and ugly nature. This treatment, at first secret,
+became open, and in the midst of it Mr. Sneathy's penny banks and
+insurance offices came to a grievous smash all at once, and everybody
+wondered how Mr. Sneathy kept out of gaol.
+
+Keep out of gaol he did, however, for he had taken care to remain on the
+safe side of the law, though some of his co-directors learnt the taste
+of penal servitude. But he was beggared, and lived, as it were, a mere
+pensioner in his wife's house. Here his brutality increased to a
+frightful extent, till his wife, already broken in health in
+consequence, went in constant fear of her life, and Miss Foster passed
+a life of weeping misery. All her friends' entreaties, however, could
+not persuade Mrs. Sneathy to obtain a legal separation from her husband.
+She clung to him with the excuse--for it was no more--that she hoped to
+win him to kindness by submission, and with a pathetic infatuation that
+seemed to increase as her bodily strength diminished.
+
+Henry and Robert, as may be supposed, were anything but silent in these
+circumstances. Indeed, they broke out violently again and again, and
+more than once went near permanently injuring their worthy
+father-in-law. Once especially, when Sneathy, absolutely without
+provocation, made a motion to strike his wife in their presence, there
+was a fearful scene. The two sprang at him like wild beasts, knocked him
+down and dragged him to the balcony with the intention of throwing him
+out of the window. But Mrs. Sneathy impeded them, hysterically imploring
+them to desist.
+
+"If you lift your hand to my mother," roared Henry, gripping Sneathy by
+the throat till his fat face turned blue, and banging his head against
+the wall, "if you lift your hand to my mother again I'll chop it off--I
+will! I'll chop it off and drive it down your throat!"
+
+"We'll do worse," said Robert, white and frantic with passion, "we'll
+hang you--hang you to the door! You're a proved liar and thief, and
+you're worse than a common murderer. I'd hang you to the front door for
+twopence!"
+
+For a few days Sneathy was comparatively quiet, cowed by their violence.
+Then he took to venting redoubled spite on his unfortunate wife, always
+in the absence of her sons, well aware that she would never inform them.
+On their part, finding him apparently better behaved in consequence of
+their attack, they thought to maintain his wholesome terror, and
+scarcely passed him without a menace, taking a fiendish delight in
+repeating the threats they had used during the scene, by way of keeping
+it present to his mind.
+
+"Take care of your hands, sir," they would say. "Keep them to yourself,
+or, by George, we'll take 'em off with a billhook!"
+
+But his revenge for all this Sneathy took unobserved on their mother.
+Truly a miserable household.
+
+Soon, however, the brothers left home, and went to London by way of
+looking for a profession. Henry began a belated study of medicine, and
+Robert made a pretence of reading for the bar. Indeed, their departure
+was as much as anything a consequence of the earnest entreaty of their
+sister, who saw that their presence at home was an exasperation to
+Sneathy, and aggravated her mother's secret sufferings. They went,
+therefore; but at Ranworth things became worse.
+
+Little was allowed to be known outside the house, but it was broadly
+said that Mr. Sneathy's behaviour had now become outrageous beyond
+description. Servants left faster than new ones could be found, and gave
+their late employer the character of a raving maniac. Once, indeed, he
+committed himself in the village, attacking with his walking-stick an
+inoffensive tradesman who had accidentally brushed against him, and
+immediately running home. This assault had to be compounded for by a
+payment of fifty pounds. And then Henry and Robert Foster received a
+most urgent letter from their sister requesting their immediate presence
+at home.
+
+They went at once, of course, and the servants' account of what occurred
+was this. When the brothers arrived Mr. Sneathy had just left the house.
+The brothers were shut up with their mother and sister for about a
+quarter of an hour, and then left them and came out to the stable yard
+together. The coachman (he was a new man, who had only arrived the day
+before) overheard a little of their talk as they stood by the door.
+
+Mr. Henry said that "the thing must be done, and at once. There are two
+of us, so that it ought to be easy enough." And afterwards Mr. Robert
+said, "You'll know best how to go about it, as a doctor." After which
+Mr. Henry came towards the coachman and asked in what direction Mr.
+Sneathy had gone. The coachman replied that it was in the direction of
+Ratherby Wood, by the winding footpath that led through it. But as he
+spoke he distinctly with the corner of his eye saw the other brother
+take a halter from a hook by the stable door and put it into his coat
+pocket.
+
+So far for the earlier events, whereof I learned later bit by bit. It
+was on the day of the arrival of the brothers Foster at their old home,
+and, indeed, little more than two hours after the incident last set
+down, that news of Mr. Sneathy came to Colonel Brett's place, where
+Hewitt and I were sitting and chatting with the Colonel. The news was
+that Mr. Sneathy had committed suicide--had been found hanging, in fact,
+to a tree in Ratherby Wood, just by the side of the footpath.
+
+Hewitt and I had of course at this time never heard of Sneathy, and the
+Colonel told us what little he knew. He had never spoken to the man, he
+said--indeed, nobody in the place outside Ranworth would have anything
+to do with him. "He's certainly been an unholy scoundrel over those poor
+people's banks," said my uncle, "and if what they say's true, he's been
+about as bad as possible to his wretched wife. He must have been pretty
+miserable, too, with all his scoundrelism, for he was a completely
+ruined man, without a chance of retrieving his position, and detested by
+everybody. Indeed, some of his recent doings, if what I have heard is to
+be relied on, have been very much those of a madman. So that, on the
+whole, I'm not much surprised. Suicide's about the only crime, I
+suppose, that he has never experimented with till now, and, indeed, it's
+rather a service to the world at large--his only service, I expect."
+
+The Colonel sent a man to make further inquiries, and presently this man
+returned with the news that now it was said that Mr. Sneathy had not
+committed suicide, but had been murdered. And hard on the man's heels
+came Mr. Hardwick, a neighbour of my uncle's and a fellow J. P. He had
+had the case reported to him, it seemed, as soon as the body had been
+found, and had at once gone to the spot. He had found the body
+hanging--_and with the right hand cut off_.
+
+"It's a murder, Brett," he said, "without doubt--a most horrible case of
+murder and mutilation. The hand is cut off and taken away, but whether
+the atrocity was committed before or after the hanging of course I can't
+say. But the missing hand makes it plainly a case of murder, and not
+suicide. I've come to consult you about issuing a warrant, for I think
+there's no doubt as to the identity of the murderers."
+
+"That's a good job," said the Colonel, "else we should have had some
+work for Mr. Martin Hewitt here, which wouldn't be fair, as he's taking
+a rest. Whom do you think of having arrested?"
+
+"The two young Fosters. It's plain as it can be--and a most revolting
+crime too, bad as Sneathy may have been. They came down from London
+to-day and went out deliberately to it, it's clear. They were heard
+talking of it, asked as to the direction in which he had gone, and
+followed him--and with a rope."
+
+"Isn't that rather an unusual form of murder--hanging?" Hewitt remarked.
+
+"Perhaps it is," Mr. Hardwick replied; "but it's the case here plain
+enough. It seems, in fact, that they had a way of threatening to hang
+him and even to cut off his hand if he used it to strike their mother.
+So that they appear to have carried out what might have seemed mere idle
+threats in a diabolically savage way. Of course they _may_ have
+strangled him first and hanged him after, by way of carrying out their
+threat and venting their spite on the mutilated body. But that they did
+it is plain enough for me. I've spent an hour or two over it, and feel I
+am certainly more than justified in ordering their apprehension. Indeed,
+they were with him at the time, as I have found by their tracks on the
+footpath through the wood."
+
+The Colonel turned to Martin Hewitt. "Mr. Hardwick, you must know," he
+said, "is by way of being an amateur in your particular line--and a very
+good amateur, too, I should say, judging by a case or two I have known
+in this county."
+
+Hewitt bowed, and laughingly expressed a fear lest Mr. Hardwick should
+come to London and supplant him altogether. "This seems a curious case,"
+he added. "If you don't mind, I think I should like to take a glance at
+the tracks and whatever other traces there may be, just by way of
+keeping my hand in."
+
+"Certainly," Mr. Hardwick replied, brightening. "I should of all things
+like to have Mr. Hewitt's opinions on the observations I have made--just
+for my own gratification. As to his opinion--there can be no room for
+doubt; the thing is plain."
+
+With many promises not to be late for dinner, we left my uncle and
+walked with Mr. Hardwick in the direction of Ratherby Wood. It was an
+unfrequented part, he told us, and by particular care he had managed, he
+hoped, to prevent the rumour spreading to the village yet, so that we
+might hope to find the trails not yet overlaid. It was a man of his own,
+he said, who, making a short cut through the wood, had come upon the
+body hanging, and had run immediately to inform him. With this man he
+had gone back, cut down the body, and made his observations. He had
+followed the trail backward to Ranworth, and there had found the new
+coachman, who had once been in his own service. From him he had learned
+the doings of the brothers Foster as they left the place, and from him
+he had ascertained that they had not then returned. Then, leaving his
+man by the body, he had come straight to my uncle's.
+
+Presently we came on the footpath leading from Ranworth across the field
+to Ratherby Wood. It was a mere trail of bare earth worn by successive
+feet amid the grass. It was damp, and we all stooped and examined the
+footmarks that were to be seen on it. They all pointed one way--towards
+the wood in the distance.
+
+"Fortunately it's not a greatly frequented path," Mr. Hardwick said.
+"You see, there are the marks of three pairs of feet only, and as first
+Sneathy and then both of the brothers came this way, these footmarks
+must be theirs. Which are Sneathy's is plain--they are these large flat
+ones. If you notice, they are all distinctly visible in the centre of
+the track, showing plainly that they belong to the man who walked alone,
+which was Sneathy. Of the others, the marks of the _outside_ feet--the
+left on the left side and the right on the right--are often not
+visible. Clearly they belong to two men walking side by side, and more
+often than not treading, with their outer feet, on the grass at the
+side. And where these happen to drop on the same spot as the marks in
+the middle they cover them. Plainly they are the footmarks of Henry and
+Robert Foster, made as they followed Sneathy. Don't you agree with me
+Mr. Hewitt?"
+
+"Oh yes, that's very plain. You have a better pair of eyes than most
+people, Mr. Hardwick, and a good idea of using them, too. We will go
+into the wood now. As a matter of fact I can pretty clearly distinguish
+most of the other footmarks--those on the grass; but that's a matter of
+much training."
+
+We followed the footpath, keeping on the grass at its side, in case it
+should be desirable to refer again to the foot-tracks. For some little
+distance into the wood the tracks continued as before, those of the
+brothers overlaying those of Sneathy. Then there was a difference. The
+path here was broader and muddy, because of the proximity of trees, and
+suddenly the outer footprints separated, and no more overlay the larger
+ones in the centre, but proceeded at an equal distance on either side of
+them.
+
+"See there," cried Mr. Hardwick, pointing triumphantly to the spot,
+"this is where they overtook him, and walked on either side. The body
+was found only a little farther on--you could see the place now if the
+path didn't zigzag about so."
+
+Hewitt said nothing, but stooped and examined the tracks at the sides
+with great care and evident thought, spanning the distances between them
+comparatively with his arms. Then he rose and stepped lightly from one
+mark to another, taking care not to tread on the mark itself. "Very
+good," he said shortly on finishing his examination. "We'll go on."
+
+We went on, and presently came to the place where the body lay. Here
+the ground sloped from the left down towards the right, and a tiny
+streamlet, a mere trickle of a foot or two wide, ran across the path.
+In rainy seasons it was probably wider, for all the earth and clay had
+been washed away for some feet on each side, leaving flat, bare and very
+coarse gravel, on which the trail was lost. Just beyond this, and to the
+left, the body lay on a grassy knoll under the limb of a tree, from
+which still depended a part of the cut rope. It was not a pleasant
+sight. The man was a soft, fleshy creature, probably rather under than
+over the medium height, and he lay there, with his stretched neck and
+protruding tongue, a revolting object. His right arm lay by his side,
+and the stump of the wrist was clotted with black blood. Mr. Hardwick's
+man was still in charge, seemingly little pleased with his job, and a
+few yards off stood a couple of countrymen looking on.
+
+Hewitt asked from which direction these men had come, and having
+ascertained and noticed their footmarks, he asked them to stay exactly
+where they were, to avoid confusing such other tracks as might be seen.
+Then he addressed himself to his examination. "_First_," he said,
+glancing up at the branch, that was scarce a yard above his head, "this
+rope has been here for some time."
+
+"Yes," Mr. Hardwick replied, "it's an old swing rope. Some children used
+it in the summer, but it got partly cut away, and the odd couple of
+yards has been hanging since."
+
+"Ah," said Hewitt, "then if the Fosters did this they were saved some
+trouble by the chance, and were able to take their halter back with
+them--and so avoid _one_ chance of detection." He very closely
+scrutinised the top of a tree stump, probably the relic of a tree that
+had been cut down long before, and then addressed himself to the body.
+
+"When you cut it down," he said, "did it fall in a heap?"
+
+"No, my man eased it down to some extent."
+
+"Not on to its face?"
+
+"Oh no. On to its back, just as it is now." Mr. Hardwick saw that Hewitt
+was looking at muddy marks on each of the corpse's knees, to one of
+which a small leaf clung, and at one or two other marks of the same
+sort on the fore part of the dress. "That seems to show pretty plainly,"
+he said, "that he must have struggled with them and was thrown forward,
+doesn't it?"
+
+Hewitt did not reply, but gingerly lifted the right arm by its sleeve.
+"Is either of the brothers Foster left-handed?" he asked.
+
+"No, I think not. Here, Bennett, you have seen plenty of their
+doings--cricket, shooting, and so on--do you remember if either is
+left-handed?"
+
+"Nayther, sir," Mr. Hardwick's man answered. "Both on 'em's
+right-handed."
+
+Hewitt lifted the lapel of the coat and attentively regarded a small
+rent in it. The dead man's hat lay near, and after a few glances at
+that, Hewitt dropped it and turned his attention to the hair. This was
+coarse and dark and long, and brushed straight back with no parting.
+
+"This doesn't look very symmetrical, does it?" Hewitt remarked, pointing
+to the locks over the right ear. They were shorter just there than on
+the other side, and apparently very clumsily cut, whereas in every other
+part the hair appeared to be rather well and carefully trimmed. Mr.
+Hardwick said nothing, but fidgeted a little, as though he considered
+that valuable time was being wasted over irrelevant trivialities.
+
+Presently, however, he spoke. "There's very little to be learned from
+the body, is there?" he said. "I think I'm quite justified in ordering
+their arrest, eh?--indeed, I've wasted too much time already."
+
+Hewitt was groping about among some bushes behind the tree from which
+the corpse had been taken. When he answered, he said, "I don't think I
+should do anything of the sort just now, Mr. Hardwick. As a matter of
+fact, I _fancy_"--this word with an emphasis--"that the brothers Foster
+may not have seen this man Sneathy at all to-day."
+
+"Not seen him? Why, my dear sir, there's no question of it. It's
+certain, absolutely. The evidence is positive. The fact of the threats
+and of the body being found treated so is pretty well enough, I should
+think. But that's nothing--look at those footmarks. They've walked along
+with him, one each side, without a possible doubt; plainly they were the
+last people with him, in any case. And you don't mean to ask anybody to
+believe that the dead man, even if he hanged himself, cut off his own
+hand first. Even if you do, where's the hand? And even putting aside all
+these considerations, each a complete case in itself, the Fosters _must_
+at least have seen the body as they came past, and yet nothing has been
+heard of them yet. Why didn't they spread the alarm? They went straight
+away in the opposite direction from home--there are their footmarks,
+which you've not seen yet, beyond the gravel."
+
+Hewitt stepped over to where the patch of clean gravel ceased, at the
+opposite side to that from which we had approached the brook, and there,
+sure enough, were the now familiar footmarks of the brothers leading
+away from the scene of Sneathy's end. "Yes," Hewitt said, "I see them.
+Of course, Mr. Hardwick, you'll do what seems right in your own eyes,
+and in any case not much harm will be done by the arrest beyond a
+terrible fright for that unfortunate family. Nevertheless, if you care
+for my impression, it is, as I have said, that the Fosters have not seen
+Sneathy to-day."
+
+"But what about the hand?"
+
+"As to that I have a conjecture, but as yet it is only a conjecture, and
+if I told it you would probably call it absurd--certainly you'd
+disregard it, and perhaps quite excusably. The case is a complicated
+one, and, if there is anything at all in my conjecture, one of the most
+remarkable I have ever had to do with. It interests me intensely, and I
+shall devote a little time now to following up the theory I have formed.
+You have, I suppose, already communicated with the police?"
+
+"I wired to Shopperton at once, as soon as I heard of the matter. It's a
+twelve miles drive, but I wonder the police have not arrived yet. They
+can't be long; I don't know where the village constable has got to, but
+in any case _he_ wouldn't be much good. But as to your idea that the
+Fosters can't be suspected--well, nobody could respect your opinion, Mr.
+Hewitt, more than myself, but really, just think. The notion's
+impossible--fiftyfold impossible. As soon as the police arrive I shall
+have that trail followed and the Fosters apprehended. I should be a fool
+if I didn't."
+
+"Very well, Mr. Hardwick," Hewitt replied; "you'll do what you consider
+your duty, of course, and quite properly, though I _would_ recommend you
+to take another glance at those three trails in the path. I shall take a
+look in this direction." And he turned up by the side of the streamlet,
+keeping on the gravel at its side.
+
+I followed. We climbed the rising ground, and presently, among the
+trees, came to the place where the little rill emerged from the broken
+ground in the highest part of the wood. Here the clean ground ceased,
+and there was a large patch of wet clayey earth. Several marks left by
+the feet of cattle were there, and one or two human footmarks. Two of
+these (a pair), the newest and the most distinct, Hewitt studied
+carefully, and measured each direction.
+
+"Notice these marks," he said. "They may be of importance or they may
+not--that we shall see. Fortunately they are very distinctive--the right
+boot is a badly worn one, and a small tag of leather, where the soul is
+damaged, is doubled over and trodden into the soft earth. Nothing could
+be luckier. Clearly they are the most recent footsteps in this
+direction--from the main road, which lies right ahead, through the rest
+of the wood."
+
+"Then you think somebody else has been on the scene of the tragedy,
+beside the victim and the brothers?" I said.
+
+"Yes, I do. But hark; there is a vehicle in the road. Can you see
+between the trees? Yes, it is the police cart. We shall be able to
+report its arrival to Mr. Hardwick as we go down."
+
+We turned and walked rapidly down the incline to where we had come from.
+Mr. Hardwick and his man were still there, and another rustic had
+arrived to gape. We told Mr. Hardwick that he might expect the police
+presently, and proceeded along the gravel skirting the stream, toward
+the lower part of the wood.
+
+Here Hewitt proceeded very cautiously, keeping a sharp look-out on
+either side for footprints on the neighbouring soft ground. There were
+none, however, for the gravel margin of the stream made a sort of
+footpath of itself, and the trees and undergrowth were close and thick
+on each side. At the bottom we emerged from the wood on a small piece
+of open ground skirting a lane, and here, just by the side of the lane,
+where the stream fell into a trench, Hewitt suddenly pounced on another
+footmark. He was unusually excited.
+
+"See," he said, "here it is--the right foot with its broken leather, and
+the corresponding left foot on the damp edge of the lane itself. He--the
+man with the broken shoe--has walked on the hard gravel all the way down
+from the source of the stream, and his is the only trail unaccounted for
+near the body. Come, Brett, we've an adventure on foot. Do you care to
+let your uncle's dinner go by the board, and follow?"
+
+"Can't we go back and tell him?"
+
+"No--there's no time to lose; we must follow up this man--or at least I
+must. You go or stay, of course, as you think best."
+
+I hesitated a moment, picturing to myself the excellent Colonel as he
+would appear after waiting dinner an hour or two for us, but decided to
+go. "At any rate," I said, "if the way lies along the roads we shall
+probably meet somebody going in the direction of Ratherby who will take
+a message. But what is your theory? I don't understand at all. I must
+say everything Hardwick said seemed to me to be beyond question. There
+were the tracks to prove that the three had walked together to the
+spot, and that the brothers had gone on alone; and every other
+circumstance pointed the same way. Then, what possible motive could
+anybody else about here have for such a crime? Unless, indeed, it were
+one of the people defrauded by Sneathy's late companies."
+
+"The motive," said Hewitt, "is, I fancy, a most extraordinary--indeed, a
+weird one. A thing as of centuries ago. Ask me no questions--I think you
+will be a little surprised before very long. But come, we must move."
+And we mended our pace along the lane.
+
+The lane, by the bye, was hard and firm, with scarcely a spot where a
+track might be left, except in places at the sides; and at these places
+Hewitt never gave a glance. At the end the lane turned into a by-road,
+and at the turning Hewitt stopped and scrutinised the ground closely.
+There was nothing like a recognisable footmark to be seen; but almost
+immediately Hewitt turned off to the right, and we continued our brisk
+march without a glance at the road.
+
+"How did you judge which way to turn then?" I asked.
+
+"Didn't you see?" replied Hewitt; "I'll show you at the next turning."
+
+Half a mile farther on the road forked, and here Hewitt stooped and
+pointed silently to a couple of small twigs, placed crosswise, with the
+longer twig of the two pointing down the branch of the road to the left.
+We took the branch to the left, and went on.
+
+"Our man's making a mistake," Hewitt observed. "He leaves his friends'
+messages lying about for his enemies to read."
+
+We hurried forward with scarcely a word. I was almost too bewildered by
+what Hewitt had said and done to formulate anything like a reasonable
+guess as to what our expedition tended, or even to make an effective
+inquiry--though, after what Hewitt had said, I knew that would be
+useless. Who was this mysterious man with the broken shoe? what had he
+to do with the murder of Sneathy? what did the mutilation mean? and who
+were his friends who left him signs and messages by means of crossed
+twigs?
+
+We met a man, by whom I sent a short note to my uncle, and soon after we
+turned into a main road. Here again, at the corner, was the curious
+message of twigs. A cart-wheel had passed over and crushed them, but it
+had not so far displaced them as to cause any doubt that the direction
+to take was to the right. At an inn a little farther along we entered,
+and Hewitt bought a pint of Irish whisky and a flat bottle to hold it
+in, as well as a loaf of bread and some cheese, which we carried away
+wrapped in paper.
+
+"This will have to do for our dinner," Hewitt said as we emerged.
+
+"But we're not going to drink a pint of common whisky between us?" I
+asked in some astonishment.
+
+"Never mind," Hewitt answered with a smile. "Perhaps we'll find somebody
+to help us--somebody not so fastidious as yourself as to quality."
+
+Now we hurried--hurried more than ever, for it was beginning to get
+dusk, and Hewitt feared a difficulty in finding and reading the twig
+signs in the dark. Two more turnings we made, each with its silent
+direction--the crossed twigs. To me there was something almost weird and
+creepy in this curious hunt for the invisible and incomprehensible,
+guided faithfully and persistently at every turn by this now
+unmistakable signal. After the second turning we broke into a trot along
+a long, winding lane, but presently Hewitt's hand fell on my shoulder,
+and we stopped. He pointed ahead, where some large object, round a bend
+of the hedge was illuminated as though by a light from below.
+
+"We will walk now," Hewitt said. "Remember that we are on a walking
+tour, and have come along here entirely by accident."
+
+We proceeded at a swinging walk, Hewitt whistling gaily. Soon we turned
+the bend, and saw that the large object was a travelling van drawn up
+with two others on a space of grass by the side of the lane. It was a
+gipsy encampment, the caravan having apparently only lately stopped, for
+a man was still engaged in tugging at the rope of a tent that stood near
+the vans. Two or three sullen-looking ruffians lay about a fire which
+burned in the space left in the middle of the encampment. A woman stood
+at the door of one van with a large kettle in her hand, and at the foot
+of the steps below her a more pleasant-looking old man sat on an
+inverted pail. Hewitt swung towards the fire from the road, and with an
+indescribable mixture of slouch, bow, and smile addressed the company
+generally with "_Kooshto bock, pals!_"[1]
+
+ [1] "Good luck, brothers!"
+
+The men on the ground took no notice, but continued to stare doggedly
+before them. The man working at the tent looked round quickly for a
+moment, and the old man on the bucket looked up and nodded.
+
+Quick to see the most likely friend, Hewitt at once went up to the old
+man, extending his hand, "_Sarshin, daddo?_" he said; "_Dell mandy
+tooty's varst._"[2]
+
+ [2] "How do you do, father? Give me your hand."
+
+The old man smiled and shook hands, though without speaking. Then
+Hewitt proceeded, producing the flat bottle of whisky, "_Tatty for
+pawny, chals. Dell mandy the pawny, and lell posh the tatty._"[3]
+
+ [3] "Spirits for water, lads. Give me the water and take your share of
+ the spirits."
+
+The whisky did it. We were Romany ryes in twenty minutes or less, and
+had already been taking tea with the gipsies for half the time. The two
+or three we had found about the fire were still reserved, but these, I
+found, were only half-gipsies, and understood very little Romany. One or
+two others, however, including the old man, were of purer breed, and
+talked freely, as did one of the women. They were Lees, they said, and
+expected to be on Wirksby racecourse in three days' time. We, too, were
+_pirimengroes_, or travellers, Hewitt explained, and might look to see
+them on the course.
+
+Then he fell to telling gipsy stories, and they to telling others back,
+to my intense mystification. Hewitt explained afterwards that they were
+mostly stories of poaching, with now and again a horse-coping anecdote
+thrown in. Since then I have learned enough of Romany to take my part in
+such a conversation, but at the time a word or two here and there was
+all I could understand. In all this talk the man we had first noticed
+stretching the tent-rope took very little interest, but lay, with his
+head away from the fire, smoking his pipe. He was a much darker man
+than any other present--had, in fact, the appearance of a man of even a
+swarthier race than that of the others about us.
+
+Presently, in the middle of a long and, of course, to me unintelligible
+story by the old man, I caught Hewitt's eye. He lifted one eyebrow
+almost imperceptibly, and glanced for a single moment at his
+walking-stick. Then I saw that it was pointed toward the feet of the
+very dark man, who had not yet spoken. One leg was thrown over the
+others as he lay, with the soles of his shoes presented toward the fire,
+and in its glare I saw--that the right sole was worn and broken, and
+that a small triangular tag of leather was doubled over beneath in just
+the place we knew of from the prints in Ratherby Wood.
+
+I could not take my eyes off that man with his broken shoe. There lay
+the secret, the whole mystery of the fantastic crime in Ratherby Wood
+centred in that shabby ruffian. What was it?
+
+But Hewitt went on, talking and joking furiously. The men who were not
+speaking mostly smoked gloomily, but whenever one spoke, he became
+animated and lively. I had attempted once or twice to join in, though my
+efforts were not particularly successful, except in inducing one man to
+offer me tobacco from his box--tobacco that almost made me giddy in the
+smell. He tried some of mine in exchange, and though he praised it with
+native politeness, and smoked the pipe through, I could see that my
+Hignett mixture was poor stuff in his estimation, compared with the
+awful tobacco in his own box.
+
+Presently the man with the broken shoe got up, slouched over to his
+tent, and disappeared. Then said Hewitt (I translate):
+
+"You're not all Lees here, I see?"
+
+"Yes, _pal_, all Lees."
+
+"But _he's_ not a Lee?" and Hewitt jerked his head towards the tent.
+
+"Why not a Lee, _pal_? We be Lees, and he is with us. Thus he is a Lee."
+
+"Oh yes, of course. But I know he is from over the _pawny_. Come, I'll
+guess the _tem_[4] he comes from--it's from Roumania, eh? Perhaps the
+Wallachian part?"
+
+ [4] Country.
+
+The men looked at one another, and then the old Lee said:
+
+"You're right, pal. You're cleverer than we took you for. That is what
+they calls his _tem_. He is a petulengro,[5]and he comes with us to shoe
+the _gries_[6] and mend the _vardoes_.[7] But he is with us, and so he
+is a Lee."
+
+ [5] Smith.
+
+ [6] Horses.
+
+ [7] Vans.
+
+The talk and the smoke went on, and presently the man with the broken
+shoe returned, and lay down again. Then, when the whisky had all gone,
+and Hewitt, with some excuse that I did not understand, had begged a
+piece of cord from one of the men, we left in a chorus of _kooshto
+rardies_.[8]
+
+ [8] Good-night.
+
+By this time it was nearly ten o'clock. We walked briskly till we came
+back again to the inn where we had bought the whisky. Here Hewitt, after
+some little trouble, succeeded in hiring a village cart, and while the
+driver was harnessing the horse, cut a couple of short sticks from the
+hedge. These, being each divided into two, made four short, stout pieces
+of something less than six inches long apiece. Then Hewitt joined them
+together in pairs, each pair being connected from centre to centre by
+about nine or ten inches of the cord he had brought from the gipsies'
+camp. These done, he handed one pair to me. "Handcuffs," he explained,
+"and no bad ones either. See--you use them so." And he passed the cord
+round my wrist, gripping the two handles, and giving them a slight twist
+that sufficiently convinced me of the excruciating pain that might be
+inflicted by a vigorous turn, and the utter helplessness of a prisoner
+thus secured in the hands of captors prepared to use their instruments.
+
+"Whom are these for?" I asked. "The man with the broken shoe?"
+
+Hewitt nodded.
+
+"Yes," he said. "I expect we shall find him out alone about midnight.
+You know how to use these now."
+
+It was fully eleven before the cart was ready and we started. A quarter
+of a mile or so from the gipsy encampment Hewitt stopped the cart and
+gave the driver instructions to wait. We got through the hedge, and made
+our way on the soft ground behind it in the direction of the vans and
+the tent.
+
+"Roll up your handkerchief," Hewitt whispered, "into a tight pad. The
+moment I grab him, ram it into his mouth--_well_ in, mind, so that it
+doesn't easily fall out. Probably he will be stooping--that will make it
+easier; we can pull him suddenly backward. Now be quiet."
+
+We kept on till nothing but the hedge divided us from the space whereon
+stood the encampment. It was now nearer twelve o'clock than eleven, but
+the time we waited seemed endless. But time is not eternity after all,
+and at last we heard a move in the tent. A minute after, the man we
+sought was standing before us. He made straight for a gap in the hedge
+which we had passed on our way, and we crouched low and waited. He
+emerged on our side of the hedge with his back towards us, and began
+walking, as we had walked, behind the hedge, but in the opposite
+direction. We followed.
+
+He carried something in his hand that looked like a large bundle of
+sticks and twigs, and he appeared to be as anxious to be secret as we
+ourselves. From time to time he stopped and listened; fortunately there
+was no moon, or in turning about, as he did once or twice, he would
+probably have observed us. The field sloped downward just before us, and
+there was another hedge at right angles, leading down to a slight
+hollow. To this hollow the man made his way, and in the shade of the new
+hedge we followed. Presently he stopped suddenly, stooped, and deposited
+his bundle on the ground before him. Crouching before it, he produced
+matches from his pocket, struck one, and in a moment had a fire of twigs
+and small branches, that sent up a heavy white smoke. What all this
+portended I could not imagine, but a sense of the weirdness of the whole
+adventure came upon me unchecked. The horrible corpse in the wood, with
+its severed wrist, Hewitt's enigmatical forebodings, the mysterious
+tracking of the man with the broken shoe, the scene round the gipsies'
+fire, and now the strange behaviour of this man, whose connection with
+the tragedy was so intimate and yet so inexplicable--all these things
+contributed to make up a tale of but a few hours' duration, but of an
+inscrutable impressiveness that I began to feel in my nerves.
+
+The man bent a thin stick double, and using it as a pair of tongs, held
+some indistinguishable object over the flames before him. Excited as I
+was, I could not help noticing that he bent and held the stick with his
+left hand. We crept stealthily nearer, and as I stood scarcely three
+yards behind him and looked over his shoulder, the form of the object
+stood out clear and black against the dull red of the flame. It was a
+_human hand_.
+
+I suppose I may have somehow betrayed my amazement and horror to my
+companion's sharp eyes, for suddenly I felt his hand tightly grip my arm
+just above the elbow. I turned, and found his face close by mine and his
+finger raised warningly. Then I saw him produce his wrist-grip and make
+a motion with his palm toward his mouth, which I understood to be
+intended to remind me of the gag. We stepped forward.
+
+The man turned his horrible cookery over and over above the crackling
+sticks, as though to smoke and dry it in every part. I saw Hewitt's hand
+reach out toward him, and in a flash we had pulled him back over his
+heels and I had driven the gag between his teeth as he opened his mouth.
+We seized his wrists in the cords at once, and I shall never forget the
+man's look of ghastly, frantic terror as he lay on the ground. When I
+knew more I understood the reason of this.
+
+Hewitt took both wristholds in one hand and drove the gag entirely into
+the man's mouth, so that he almost choked. A piece of sacking lay near
+the fire, and by Hewitt's request I dropped that awful hand from the
+wooden twigs upon it and rolled it up in a parcel--it was, no doubt,
+what the sacking had been brought for. Then we lifted the man to his
+feet and hurried him in the direction of the cart. The whole capture
+could not have occupied thirty seconds, and as I stumbled over the rough
+field at the man's left elbow I could only think of the thing as one
+thinks of a dream that one knows all the time _is_ a dream.
+
+But presently the man, who had been walking quietly, though gasping,
+sniffing and choking because of the tightly rolled handkerchief in his
+mouth--presently he made a sudden dive, thinking doubtless to get his
+wrists free by surprise. But Hewitt was alert, and gave them a twist
+that made him roll his head with a dismal, stifled yell, and with the
+opening of his mouth, by some chance the gag fell away. Immediately the
+man roared aloud for help.
+
+"Quick," said Hewitt, "drag him along--they'll hear in the vans. Bring
+the hand!"
+
+I seized the fallen handkerchief and crammed it over the man's mouth as
+well as I might, and together we made as much of a trot as we could,
+dragging the man between us, while Hewitt checked any reluctance on his
+part by a timely wrench of the wristholds. It was a hard two hundred and
+fifty yards to the lane even for us--for the gipsy it must have been a
+bad minute and a half indeed. Once more as we went over the uneven
+ground he managed to get out a shout, and we thought we heard a distinct
+reply from somewhere in the direction of the encampment.
+
+We pulled him over a stile in a tangle; and dragged and pushed him
+through a small hedge-gap all in a heap. Here we were but a short
+distance from the cart, and into that we flung him without wasting time
+or tenderness, to the intense consternation of the driver, who, I
+believe, very nearly set up a cry for help on his own account. Once in
+the cart, however, I seized the reins and the whip myself and, leaving
+Hewitt to take care of the prisoner, put the turn-out along toward
+Ratherby at as near ten miles an hour as it could go.
+
+We made first for Mr. Hardwick's, but he, we found, was with my uncle,
+so we followed him. The arrest of the Fosters had been effected, we
+learned, not very long after we had left the wood, as they returned by
+another route to Ranworth. We brought our prisoner into the Colonel's
+library, where he and Mr. Hardwick were sitting.
+
+"I'm not quite sure what we can charge him with unless it's anatomical
+robbery," Hewitt remarked, "but here's the criminal."
+
+The man only looked down, with a sulkily impenetrable countenance.
+Hewitt spoke to him once or twice, and at last he said, in a strange
+accent, something that sounded like "_kekin jin-navvy._"
+
+"_Keck jin?_"[9] asked Hewitt, in the loud, clear tone one instinctively
+adopts in talking to a foreigner, "_Keckeno jinny?_"
+
+ [9] "Not understand?"
+
+The man understood and shook his head, but not another word would he say
+or another question answer.
+
+"He's a foreign gipsy," Hewitt explained, "just as I thought--a
+Wallachian, in fact. Theirs is an older and purer dialect than that of
+the English gipsies, and only some of the root-words are alike. But I
+think we can make him explain to-morrow that the Fosters at least had
+nothing to do with, at any rate, cutting off Sneathy's hand. Here it is,
+I think." And he gingerly lifted the folds of sacking from the ghastly
+object as it lay on the table, and then covered it up again.
+
+"But what--what does it all mean?" Mr. Hardwick said in bewildered
+astonishment. "Do you mean this man was an accomplice?"
+
+"Not at all--the case was one of suicide, as I think you'll agree, when
+I've explained. This man simply found the body hanging and stole the
+hand."
+
+"But what in the world for?"
+
+"For the HAND OF GLORY. Eh?" He turned to the gipsy and pointed to the
+hand on the table: "_Yag-varst_,[10] eh?"
+
+ [10] Fire-hand.
+
+There was a quick gleam of intelligence in the man's eye, but he said
+nothing. As for myself I was more than astounded. Could it be possible
+that the old superstition of the Hand of Glory remained alive in a
+practical shape at this day?
+
+"You know the superstition, of course," Hewitt said. "It did exist in
+this country in the last century, when there were plenty of dead men
+hanging at cross-roads, and so on. On the Continent, in some places, it
+has survived later. Among the Wallachian gipsies it has always been a
+great article of belief, and the superstition is quite active still. The
+belief is that the right hand of a hanged man, cut off and dried over
+the smoke of certain wood and herbs, and then provided with wicks at
+each finger made of the dead man's hair, becomes, when lighted at each
+wick (the wicks are greased, of course), a charm, whereby a thief may
+walk without hinderance where he pleases in a strange house, push open
+all doors and take what he likes. Nobody can stop him, for everybody the
+Hand of Glory approaches is made helpless, and can neither move nor
+speak. You may remember there was some talk of 'thieves' candles' in
+connection with the horrible series of Whitechapel murders not long ago.
+That is only one form of the cult of the Hand of Glory."
+
+"Yes," my uncle said, "I remember reading so. There is a story about it
+in the Ingoldsby Legends, too, I believe."
+
+"There is--it is called 'The Hand of Glory,' in fact. You remember the
+spell, 'Open lock to the dead man's knock,' and so on. But I think you'd
+better have the constable up and get this man into safe quarters for the
+night. He should be searched, of course. I expect they will find on him
+the hair I noticed to have been cut from Sneathy's head."
+
+The village constable arrived with his iron handcuffs in substitution
+for those of cord which had so sorely vexed the wrists of our prisoner,
+and marched him away to the little lock-up on the green.
+
+Then my uncle and Mr. Hardwick turned on Martin Hewitt with doubts and
+many questions:
+
+"Why do you call it suicide?" Mr. Hardwick asked. "It is plain the
+Fosters were with him at the time from the tracks. Do you mean to say
+that they stood there and watched Sneathy hang himself without
+interfering?"
+
+"No, I don't," Hewitt replied, lighting a cigar. "I think I told you
+that they never saw Sneathy."
+
+"Yes, you did, and of course that's what they said themselves when they
+were arrested. But the thing's impossible. Look at the tracks!"
+
+"The tracks are exactly what revealed to me that it was _not_
+impossible," Hewitt returned. "I'll tell you how the case unfolded
+itself to me from the beginning. As to the information you gathered from
+the Ranworth coachman, to begin with. The conversation between the
+Fosters which he overheard might well mean something less serious than
+murder. What did they say? They had been sent for in a hurry and had
+just had a short consultation with their mother and sister. Henry said
+that 'the thing must be done at once'; also that as there were two of
+them it should be easy. Robert said that Henry, as a doctor, would know
+best what to do.
+
+"Now you, Colonel Brett, had been saying--before we learned these things
+from Mr. Hardwick--that Sneathy's behaviour of late had become so bad as
+to seem that of a madman. Then there was the story of his sudden attack
+on a tradesman in the village, and equally sudden running away--exactly
+the sort of impulsive, wild thing that madmen do. Why then might it not
+be reasonable to suppose that Sneathy _had_ become mad--more especially
+considering all the circumstances of the case, his commercial ruin and
+disgrace and his horrible life with his wife and her family?--had become
+suddenly much worse and quite uncontrollable, so that the two wretched
+women left alone with him were driven to send in haste for Henry and
+Robert to help them? That would account for all.
+
+"The brothers arrive just after Sneathy had gone out. They are told in a
+hurried interview how affairs stand, and it is decided that Sneathy must
+be at once secured and confined in an asylum before something serious
+happens. He has just gone out--something terrible may be happening at
+this moment. The brothers determine to follow at once and secure him
+wherever he may be. Then the meaning of their conversation is plain. The
+thing that 'must be done, and at once,' is the capture of Sneathy and
+his confinement in an asylum. Henry, as a doctor, would 'know what to
+do' in regard to the necessary formalities. And they took a halter in
+case a struggle should ensue and it were found necessary to bind him.
+Very likely, wasn't it?"
+
+"Well, yes," Mr. Hardwick replied, "it certainly is. It never struck me
+in that light at all."
+
+"That was because you believed, to begin with, that a murder had been
+committed, and looked at the preliminary circumstances which you learned
+after in the light of your conviction. But now, to come to my actual
+observations. I saw the footmarks across the fields, and agreed with you
+(it was indeed obvious) that Sneathy had gone that way first, and that
+the brothers had followed, walking over his tracks. This state of the
+tracks continued until well into the wood, when suddenly the tracks of
+the brothers opened out and proceeded on each side of Sneathy's. The
+simple inference would seem to be, of course, the one you made--that the
+Fosters had here overtaken Sneathy, and walked one at each side of him.
+
+"But of this I felt by no means certain. Another very simple explanation
+was available, which might chance to be the true one. It was just at the
+spot where the brothers' tracks separated that the path became suddenly
+much muddier, because of the closer overhanging of the trees at the
+spot. The path was, as was to be expected, wettest in the middle. It
+would be the most natural thing in the world for two well-dressed young
+men, on arriving here, to separate so as to walk one on each side of the
+mud in the middle.
+
+"On the other hand, a man in Sneathy's state (assuming him, for the
+moment, to be mad and contemplating suicide) would walk straight along
+the centre of the path, taking no note of mud or anything else. I
+examined all the tracks very carefully, and my theory was confirmed. The
+feet of the brothers had everywhere alighted in the driest spots, and
+the steps were of irregular lengths--which meant, of course, that they
+were picking their way; while Sneathy's footmarks had never turned aside
+even for the dirtiest puddle. Here, then, were the rudiments of a
+theory.
+
+"At the watercourse, of course, the footmarks ceased, because of the
+hard gravel. The body lay on a knoll at the left--a knoll covered with
+grass. On this the signs of footmarks were almost undiscoverable,
+although I am often able to discover tracks in grass that are invisible
+to others. Here, however, it was almost useless to spend much time in
+examination, for you and your man had been there, and what slight marks
+there might be would be indistinguishable one from another.
+
+"Under the branch from which the man had hung there was an old tree
+stump, with a flat top, where the tree had been sawn off. I examined
+this, and it became fairly apparent that Sneathy had stood on it when
+the rope was about his neck--his muddy footprint was plain to see; the
+mud was not smeared about, you see, as it probably would have been if
+he had been stood there forcibly and pushed off. It was a simple, clear
+footprint--another hint at suicide.
+
+"But then arose the objection that you mentioned yourself. Plainly the
+brothers Foster were following Sneathy, and came this way. Therefore, if
+he hanged himself before they arrived, it would seem that they must have
+come across the body. But now I examined the body itself. There was mud
+on the knees, and clinging to one knee was a small leaf. It was a leaf
+corresponding to those on the bush behind the tree, and it was not a
+dead leaf, so must have been just detached.
+
+"After my examination of the body I went to the bush, and there, in the
+thick of it, were, for me, sufficiently distinct knee-marks, in one of
+which the knee had crushed a spray of the bush against the ground, and
+from that spray a leaf was missing. Behind the knee-marks were the
+indentations of boot-toes in the soft, bare earth under the bush, and
+thus the thing was plain. The poor lunatic had come in sight of the
+dangling rope, and the temptation to suicide was irresistible. To people
+in a deranged state of mind the mere sight of the means of
+self-destruction is often a temptation impossible to withstand. But at
+that moment he must have heard the steps--probably the voices--of the
+brothers behind him on the winding path. He immediately hid in the bush
+till they had passed. It is probable that seeing who the men were, and
+conjecturing that they were following him--thinking also, perhaps, of
+things that had occurred between them and himself--his inclination to
+self-destruction became completely ungovernable, with the result that
+you saw.
+
+"But before I inspected the bush I noticed one or two more things about
+the body. You remember I inquired if either of the brothers Foster was
+left-handed, and was assured that neither was. But clearly the hand had
+been cut off by a left-handed man, with a large, sharply pointed knife.
+For well away to the _right_ of where the wrist had hung the knife-point
+had made a tiny triangular rent in the coat, so that the hand must have
+been held in the mutilator's right hand, while he used the knife with
+his left--clearly a left-handed man.
+
+"But most important of all about the body was the jagged hair over the
+right ear. Everywhere else the hair was well cut and orderly--here it
+seemed as though a good piece had been, so to speak, _sawn_ off. What
+could anybody want with a dead man's right hand and certain locks of his
+hair? Then it struck me suddenly--the man was hanged; it was the Hand of
+Glory!
+
+"Then you will remember I went, at your request, to see the footprints
+of the Fosters on the part of the path _past_ the watercourse. Here
+again it was muddy in the middle, and the two brothers had walked as far
+apart as before, although nobody had walked between them. A final proof,
+if one were needed, of my theory as to the three lines of footprints.
+
+"Now I was to consider how to get at the man who had taken his hand. He
+should be punished for the mutilation, but beyond that he would be
+required as a witness. Now all the foot-tracks in the vicinity had been
+accounted for. There were those of the brothers and of Sneathy, which we
+have been speaking of; those of the rustics looking on, which, however,
+stopped a little way off, and did not interfere with our sphere of
+observation; those of your man, who had cut straight through the wood
+when he first saw the body, and had come back the same way with you; and
+our own, which we had been careful to keep away from the others.
+Consequently there was _no_ track of the man who had cut off the hand;
+therefore it was certain that he must have come along the hard gravel by
+the watercourse, for that was the only possible path which would not
+tell the tale. Indeed, it seemed quite a likely path through the wood
+for a passenger to take, coming from the high ground by the Shopperton
+road.
+
+"Brett and I left you and traversed the watercourse, both up and down.
+We found a footprint at the top, left lately by a man with a broken
+shoe. Right down to the bottom of the watercourse where it emerged from
+the wood there was no sign on either side of this man having left the
+gravel. (Where the body was, as you will remember, he would simply have
+stepped off the gravel on to the grass, which I thought it useless to
+examine, as I have explained.) But at the bottom, by the lane, the
+footprint appeared again.
+
+"This then was the direction in which I was to search for a left-handed
+man with a broken-soled shoe, probably a gipsy--and most probably a
+foreign gipsy--because a foreign gipsy would be the most likely still to
+hold the belief in the Hand of Glory. I conjectured the man to be a
+straggler from a band of gipsies--one who probably had got behind the
+caravan and had made a short cut across the wood after it; so at the end
+of the lane I looked for a _patrin_. This is a sign that gipsies leave
+to guide stragglers following up. Sometimes it is a heap of dead leaves,
+sometimes a few stones, sometimes a mark on the ground, but more usually
+a couple of twigs crossed, with the longer twig pointing the road.
+
+"Guided by these _patrins_ we came in the end on the gipsy camp just as
+it was settling down for the night. We made ourselves agreeable (as
+Brett will probably describe to you better than I can), we left them,
+and after they had got to sleep we came back and watched for the
+gentleman who is now in the lock-up. He would, of course, seize the
+first opportunity of treating his ghastly trophy in the prescribed way,
+and I guessed he would choose midnight, for that is the time the
+superstition teaches that the hand should be prepared. We made a few
+small preparations, collared him, and now you've got him. And I should
+think the sooner you let the brothers Foster go the better."
+
+"But why didn't you tell me all the conclusions you had arrived at at
+the time?" asked Mr. Hardwick.
+
+"Well, really," Hewitt replied, with a quiet smile, "you were so
+positive, and some of the traces I relied on were so small, that it
+would probably have meant a long argument and a loss of time. But more
+than that, confess, if I had told you bluntly that Sneathy's hand had
+been taken away to make a mediaeval charm to enable a thief to pass
+through a locked door and steal plate calmly under the owner's nose,
+what _would_ you have said?"
+
+"Well, well, perhaps I _should_ have been a little sceptical.
+Appearances combined so completely to point to the Fosters as murderers
+that any other explanation almost would have seemed unlikely to me, and
+_that_--well no, I confess, I shouldn't have believed in it. But it is a
+startling thing to find such superstitions alive now-a-days."
+
+"Yes, perhaps it is. Yet we find survivals of the sort very frequently.
+The Wallachians, however, are horribly superstitious still--the gipsies
+among them are, of course, worse. Don't you remember the case reported a
+few months ago, in which a child was drowned as a sacrifice in Wallachia
+in order to bring rain? And that was not done by gipsies either. Even in
+England, as late as 1865, a poor paralysed Frenchman was killed by being
+'swum' for witchcraft--that was in Essex. And less atrocious cases of
+belief in wizardry occur again and again even now."
+
+Then Mr. Hardwick and my uncle fell into a discussion as to how the
+gipsy in the lock-up could be legally punished. Mr. Hardwick thought it
+should be treated as a theft of a portion of a dead body, but my uncle
+fancied there was a penalty for mutilation of a dead body _per se_,
+though he could not point to the statute. As it happened, however, they
+were saved the trouble of arriving at a decision, for in the morning he
+was discovered to have escaped. He had been left, of course, with free
+hands, and had occupied the night in wrenching out the bars at the top
+of the back wall of the little prison-shed (it had stood on the green
+for a hundred and fifty years) and climbing out. He was not found again,
+and a month or two later the Foster family left the district entirely.
+
+
+
+
+THE CASE OF LAKER, ABSCONDED.
+
+
+There were several of the larger London banks and insurance offices from
+which Hewitt held a sort of general retainer as detective adviser, in
+fulfilment of which he was regularly consulted as to the measures to be
+taken in different cases of fraud, forgery, theft, and so forth, which
+it might be the misfortune of the particular firms to encounter. The
+more important and intricate of these cases were placed in his hands
+entirely, with separate commissions, in the usual way. One of the most
+important companies of the sort was the General Guarantee Society, an
+insurance corporation which, among other risks, took those of the
+integrity of secretaries, clerks, and cashiers. In the case of a
+cash-box elopement on the part of any person guaranteed by the society,
+the directors were naturally anxious for a speedy capture of the
+culprit, and more especially of the booty, before too much of it was
+spent, in order to lighten the claim upon their funds, and in work of
+this sort Hewitt was at times engaged, either in general advice and
+direction, or in the actual pursuit of the plunder and the plunderer.
+
+Arriving at his office a little later than usual one morning, Hewitt
+found an urgent message awaiting him from the General Guarantee Society,
+requesting his attention to a robbery which had taken place on the
+previous day. He had gleaned some hint of the case from the morning
+paper, wherein appeared a short paragraph, which ran thus:--
+
+ SERIOUS BANK ROBBERY.--In the course of yesterday a clerk employed
+ by Messrs. Liddle, Neal & Liddle, the well-known bankers,
+ disappeared, having in his possession a large sum of money, the
+ property of his employers--a sum reported to be rather over
+ L15,000. It would seem that he had been entrusted to collect the
+ money in his capacity of "walk-clerk" from various other banks and
+ trading concerns during the morning, but failed to return at the
+ usual time. A large number of the notes which he received had been
+ cashed at the Bank of England before suspicion was aroused. We
+ understand that Detective-Inspector Plummer, of Scotland Yard,
+ has the case in hand.
+
+The clerk, whose name was Charles William Laker, had, it appeared from
+the message, been guaranteed in the usual way by the General Guarantee
+Society, and Hewitt's presence at the office was at once desired, in
+order that steps might quickly be taken for the man's apprehension, and
+in the recovery, at any rate, of as much of the booty as possible.
+
+A smart hansom brought Hewitt to Threadneedle Street in a bare quarter
+of an hour, and there a few minutes' talk with the manager, Mr. Lyster,
+put him in possession of the main facts of the case, which appeared to
+be simple. Charles William Laker was twenty-five years of age, and had
+been in the employ of Messrs. Liddle, Neal & Liddle for something more
+than seven years--since he left school, in fact--and until the previous
+day there had been nothing in his conduct to complain of. His duties as
+walk-clerk consisted in making a certain round, beginning at about
+half-past ten each morning. There were a certain number of the more
+important banks between which and Messrs. Liddle, Neal & Liddle there
+were daily transactions, and a few smaller semi-private banks and
+merchant firms acting as financial agents, with whom there was business
+intercourse of less importance and regularity; and each of these, as
+necessary, he visited in turn, collecting cash due on bills and other
+instruments of a like nature. He carried a wallet, fastened securely to
+his person by a chain, and this wallet contained the bills and the cash.
+Usually at the end of his round, when all his bills had been converted
+into cash, the wallet held very large sums. His work and
+responsibilities, in fine, were those common to walk-clerks in all
+banks.
+
+On the day of the robbery he had started out as usual--possibly a little
+earlier than was customary--and the bills and other securities in his
+possession represented considerably more than L15,000. It had been
+ascertained that he had called in the usual way at each establishment on
+the round, and had transacted his business at the last place by about a
+quarter-past one, being then, without doubt, in possession of cash to
+the full value of the bills negotiated. After that, Mr. Lyster said,
+yesterday's report was that nothing more had been heard of him. But this
+morning there had been a message to the effect that he had been traced
+out of the country--to Calais, at least, it was thought. The directors
+of the society wished Hewitt to take the case in hand personally and at
+once, with a view of recovering what was possible from the plunder by
+way of salvage; also, of course, of finding Laker, for it is an
+important moral gain to guarantee societies, as an example, if a thief
+is caught and punished. Therefore Hewitt and Mr. Lyster, as soon as
+might be, made for Messrs. Liddle, Neal & Liddle's, that the
+investigation might be begun.
+
+The bank premises were quite near--in Leadenhall Street. Having arrived
+there, Hewitt and Mr. Lyster made their way to the firm's private
+rooms. As they were passing an outer waiting-room, Hewitt noticed two
+women. One, the elder, in widow's weeds, was sitting with her head bowed
+in her hand over a small writing-table. Her face was not visible, but
+her whole attitude was that of a person overcome with unbearable grief;
+and she sobbed quietly. The other was a young woman of twenty-two or
+twenty-three. Her thick black veil revealed no more than that her
+features were small and regular, and that her face was pale and drawn.
+She stood with a hand on the elder woman's shoulder, and she quickly
+turned her head away as the two men entered.
+
+Mr. Neal, one of the partners, received them in his own room.
+"Good-morning, Mr. Hewitt," he said, when Mr. Lyster had introduced the
+detective. "This is a serious business--very. I think I am sorrier for
+Laker himself than for anybody else, ourselves included--or, at any
+rate, I am sorrier for his mother. She is waiting now to see Mr. Liddle,
+as soon as he arrives--Mr. Liddle has known the family for a long time.
+Miss Shaw is with her, too, poor girl. She is a governess, or something
+of that sort, and I believe she and Laker were engaged to be married.
+It's all very sad."
+
+"Inspector Plummer, I understand," Hewitt remarked, "has the affair in
+hand, on behalf of the police?"
+
+"Yes," Mr. Neal replied; "in fact, he's here now, going through the
+contents of Laker's desk, and so forth; he thinks it possible Laker may
+have had accomplices. Will you see him?"
+
+"Presently. Inspector Plummer and I are old friends. We met last, I
+think, in the case of the Stanway cameo, some months ago. But, first,
+will you tell me how long Laker has been a walk-clerk?"
+
+"Barely four months, although he has been with us altogether seven
+years. He was promoted to the walk soon after the beginning of the
+year."
+
+"Do you know anything of his habits--what he used to do in his spare
+time, and so forth?"
+
+"Not a great deal. He went in for boating, I believe, though I have
+heard it whispered that he had one or two more expensive
+tastes--expensive, that is, for a young man in his position," Mr. Neal
+explained, with a dignified wave of the hand that he peculiarly
+affected. He was a stout old gentleman, and the gesture suited him.
+
+"You have had no reason to suspect him of dishonesty before, I take it?"
+
+"Oh, no. He made a wrong return once, I believe, that went for some time
+undetected, but it turned out, after all, to be a clerical error--a mere
+clerical error."
+
+"Do you know anything of his associates out of the office?"
+
+"No, how should I? I believe Inspector Plummer has been making inquiries
+as to that, however, of the other clerks. Here he is, by the bye, I
+expect. Come in!"
+
+It was Plummer who had knocked, and he came in at Mr. Neal's call. He
+was a middle-sized, small-eyed, impenetrable-looking man, as yet of no
+great reputation in the force. Some of my readers may remember his
+connection with that case, so long a public mystery, that I have
+elsewhere fully set forth and explained under the title of "The Stanway
+Cameo Mystery." Plummer carried his billy-cock hat in one hand and a few
+papers in the other. He gave Hewitt good-morning, placed his hat on a
+chair, and spread the papers on the table.
+
+"There's not a great deal here," he said, "but one thing's plain--Laker
+had been betting. See here, and here, and here"--he took a few letters
+from the bundle in his hand--"two letters from a bookmaker about
+settling--wonder he trusted a clerk--several telegrams from tipsters,
+and a letter from some friend--only signed by initials--asking Laker to
+put a sovereign on a horse for the friend 'with his own.' I'll keep
+these, I think. It may be worth while to see that friend, if we can find
+him. Ah, we often find it's betting, don't we, Mr. Hewitt? Meanwhile,
+there's no news from France yet."
+
+"You are sure that is where he is gone?" asked Hewitt.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you what we've done as yet. First, of course, I went
+round to all the banks. There was nothing to be got from that. The
+cashiers all knew him by sight, and one was a personal friend of his. He
+had called as usual, said nothing in particular, cashed his bills in the
+ordinary way, and finished up at the Eastern Consolidated Bank at about
+a quarter-past one. So far there was nothing whatever. But I had started
+two or three men meanwhile making inquiries at the railway stations, and
+so on. I had scarcely left the Eastern Consolidated when one of them
+came after me with news. He had tried Palmer's Tourist Office, although
+that seemed an unlikely place, and there struck the track."
+
+"Had he been there?"
+
+"Not only had he been there, but he had taken a tourist ticket for
+France. It was quite a smart move, in a way. You see it was the sort of
+ticket that lets you do pretty well what you like; you have the choice
+of two or three different routes to begin with, and you can break your
+journey where you please, and make all sorts of variations. So that a
+man with a ticket like that, and a few hours' start, could twist about
+on some remote branch route, and strike off in another direction
+altogether, with a new ticket, from some out-of-the-way place, while we
+were carefully sorting out and inquiring along the different routes he
+_might_ have taken. Not half a bad move for a new hand; but he made one
+bad mistake, as new hands always do--as old hands do, in fact, very
+often. He was fool enough to give his own name, C. Laker! Although that
+didn't matter much, as the description was enough to fix him. There he
+was, wallet and all, just as he had come from the Eastern Consolidated
+Bank. He went straight from there to Palmer's, by the bye, and probably
+in a cab. We judge that by the time. He left the Eastern Consolidated at
+a quarter-past one, and was at Palmer's by twenty-five-past--ten
+minutes. The clerk at Palmer's remembered the time because he was
+anxious to get out to his lunch, and kept looking at the clock,
+expecting another clerk in to relieve him. Laker didn't take much in the
+way of luggage, I fancy. We inquired carefully at the stations, and got
+the porters to remember the passengers for whom they had been carrying
+luggage, but none appeared to have had any dealings with our man. That,
+of course, is as one would expect. He'd take as little as possible with
+him, and buy what he wanted on the way, or when he'd reached his
+hiding-place. Of course, I wired to Calais (it was a Dover to Calais
+route ticket) and sent a couple of smart men off by the 8.15 mail from
+Charing Cross. I expect we shall hear from them in the course of the
+day. I am being kept in London in view of something expected at
+headquarters, or I should have been off myself."
+
+"That is all, then, up to the present? Have you anything else in view?"
+
+"That's all I've absolutely ascertained at present. As for what I'm
+going to do"--a slight smile curled Plummer's lip--"well, I shall see.
+I've a thing or two in my mind."
+
+Hewitt smiled slightly himself; he recognised Plummer's touch of
+professional jealousy. "Very well," he said, rising, "I'll make an
+inquiry or two for myself at once. Perhaps, Mr. Neal, you'll allow one
+of your clerks to show me the banks, in their regular order, at which
+Laker called yesterday. I think I'll begin at the beginning."
+
+Mr. Neal offered to place at Hewitt's disposal anything or anybody the
+bank contained, and the conference broke up. As Hewitt, with the clerk,
+came through the rooms separating Mr. Neal's sanctum from the outer
+office, he fancied he saw the two veiled women leaving by a side door.
+
+The first bank was quite close to Liddle, Neal & Liddle's. There the
+cashier who had dealt with Laker the day before remembered nothing in
+particular about the interview. Many other walk-clerks had called
+during the morning, as they did every morning, and the only
+circumstances of the visit that he could say anything definite about
+were those recorded in figures in the books. He did not know Laker's
+name till Plummer had mentioned it in making inquiries on the previous
+afternoon. As far as he could remember, Laker behaved much as usual,
+though really he did not notice much; he looked chiefly at the bills. He
+described Laker in a way that corresponded with the photograph that
+Hewitt had borrowed from the bank; a young man with a brown moustache
+and ordinary-looking, fairly regular face, dressing much as other clerks
+dressed--tall hat, black cutaway coat, and so on. The numbers of the
+notes handed over had already been given to Inspector Plummer, and these
+Hewitt did not trouble about.
+
+The next bank was in Cornhill, and here the cashier was a personal
+friend of Laker's--at any rate, an acquaintance--and he remembered a
+little more. Laker's manner had been quite as usual, he said; certainly
+he did not seem preoccupied or excited in his manner. He spoke for a
+moment or two--of being on the river on Sunday, and so on--and left in
+his usual way.
+
+"Can you remember _everything_ he said?" Hewitt asked. "If you can tell
+me, I should like to know exactly what he did and said to the smallest
+particular."
+
+"Well, he saw me a little distance off--I was behind there, at one of
+the desks--and raised his hand to me, and said, 'How d'ye do?' I came
+across and took his bills, and dealt with them in the usual way. He had
+a new umbrella lying on the counter--rather a handsome umbrella--and I
+made a remark about the handle. He took it up to show me, and told me it
+was a present he had just received from a friend. It was a gorse-root
+handle, with two silver bands, one with his monogram C.W.L. I said it
+was a very nice handle, and asked him whether it was fine in his
+district on Sunday. He said he had been up the river, and it was very
+fine there. And I think that was all."
+
+"Thank you. Now about this umbrella. Did he carry it rolled? Can you
+describe it in detail?"
+
+"Well, I've told you about the handle, and the rest was much as usual, I
+think; it wasn't rolled--just flapping loosely, you know. It was rather
+an odd-shaped handle, though. I'll try and sketch it, if you like, as
+well as I can remember." He did so, and Hewitt saw in the result rough
+indications of a gnarled crook, with one silver band near the end, and
+another, with the monogram, a few inches down the handle. Hewitt put the
+sketch in his pocket, and bade the cashier good-day.
+
+At the next bank the story was the same as at the first--there was
+nothing remembered but the usual routine. Hewitt and the clerk turned
+down a narrow paved court, and through into Lombard Street for the next
+visit. The bank--that of Buller, Clayton, Ladds & Co.--was just at the
+corner at the end of the court, and the imposing stone entrance-porch
+was being made larger and more imposing still, the way being almost
+blocked by ladders and scaffold-poles. Here there was only the usual
+tale, and so on through the whole walk. The cashiers knew Laker only by
+sight, and that not always very distinctly. The calls of walk-clerks
+were such matters of routine that little note was taken of the persons
+of the clerks themselves, who were called by the names of their firms,
+if they were called by any names at all. Laker had behaved much as
+usual, so far as the cashiers could remember, and when finally the
+Eastern Consolidated was left behind, nothing more had been learnt than
+the chat about Laker's new umbrella.
+
+Hewitt had taken leave of Mr. Neal's clerk, and was stepping into a
+hansom, when he noticed a veiled woman in widow's weeds hailing another
+hansom a little way behind. He recognised the figure again, and said to
+the driver, "Drive fast to Palmer's Tourist Office, but keep your eye on
+that cab behind, and tell me presently if it is following us."
+
+The cabman drove off, and after passing one or two turnings, opened the
+lid above Hewitt's head, and said, "That there other keb _is_
+a-follerin' us, sir, an' keepin' about even distance all along."
+
+"All right; that's what I wanted to know. Palmer's now."
+
+At Palmer's the clerk who had attended to Laker remembered him very
+well, and described him. He also remembered the wallet, and _thought_ he
+remembered the umbrella--was practically sure of it, in fact, upon
+reflection. He had no record of the name given, but remembered it
+distinctly to be Laker. As a matter of fact, names were never asked in
+such a transaction, but in this case Laker appeared to be ignorant of
+the usual procedure, as well as in a great hurry, and asked for the
+ticket and gave his name all in one breath, probably assuming that the
+name would be required.
+
+Hewitt got back to his cab, and started for Charing Cross. The cabman
+once more lifted the lid and informed him that the hansom with the
+veiled woman in it was again following, having waited while Hewitt had
+visited Palmer's. At Charing Cross Hewitt discharged his cab and walked
+straight to the lost property office. The man in charge knew him very
+well, for his business had carried him there frequently before.
+
+"I fancy an umbrella was lost in the station yesterday," Hewitt said.
+"It was a new umbrella, silk, with a gnarled gorse-root handle and two
+silver bands, something like this sketch. There was a monogram on the
+lower band--'C. W. L.' were the letters. Has it been brought here?"
+
+"There was two or three yesterday," the man said; "let's see." He took
+the sketch and retired to a corner of his room. "Oh, yes--here it is, I
+think; isn't this it? Do you claim it?"
+
+"Well, not exactly that, but I think I'll take a look at it, if you'll
+let me. By the way, I see it's rolled up. Was it found like that?"
+
+"No; the chap rolled it up what found it--porter he was. It's a fad of
+his, rolling up umbrellas close and neat, and he's rather proud of it.
+He often looks as though he'd like to take a man's umbrella away and
+roll it up for him when it's a bit clumsy done. Rum fad, eh?"
+
+"Yes; everybody has his little fad, though. Where was this found--close
+by here?"
+
+"Yes, sir; just there, almost opposite this window, in the little
+corner."
+
+"About two o'clock?"
+
+"Ah, about that time, more or less."
+
+Hewitt took the umbrella up, unfastened the band, and shook the silk out
+loose. Then he opened it, and as he did so a small scrap of paper fell
+from inside it. Hewitt pounced on it like lightning. Then, after
+examining the umbrella thoroughly, inside and out, he handed it back to
+the man, who had not observed the incident of the scrap of paper.
+
+"That will do, thanks," he said. "I only wanted to take a peep at
+it--just a small matter connected with a little case of mine.
+Good-morning."
+
+He turned suddenly and saw, gazing at him with a terrified expression
+from a door behind, the face of the woman who had followed him in the
+cab. The veil was lifted, and he caught but a mere glance of the face
+ere it was suddenly withdrawn. He stood for a moment to allow the woman
+time to retreat, and then left the station and walked toward his office,
+close by.
+
+Scarcely thirty yards along the Strand he met Plummer.
+
+"I'm going to make some much closer inquiries all down the line as far
+as Dover," Plummer said. "They wire from Calais that they have no clue
+as yet, and I mean to make quite sure, if I can, that Laker hasn't
+quietly slipped off the line somewhere between here and Dover. There's
+one very peculiar thing," Plummer added confidentially. "Did you see the
+two women who were waiting to see a member of the firm at Liddle, Neal &
+Liddle's?"
+
+"Yes. Laker's mother and his _fiancee_, I was told."
+
+"That's right. Well, do you know that girl--Shaw her name is--has been
+shadowing me ever since I left the Bank. Of course I spotted it from
+the beginning--these amateurs don't know how to follow anybody--and, as
+a matter of fact, she's just inside that jeweller's shop door behind me
+now, pretending to look at the things in the window. But it's odd, isn't
+it?"
+
+"Well," Hewitt replied, "of course it's not a thing to be neglected. If
+you'll look very carefully at the corner of Villiers Street, without
+appearing to stare, I think you will possibly observe some signs of
+Laker's mother. She's shadowing _me_."
+
+Plummer looked casually in the direction indicated, and then immediately
+turned his eyes in another direction.
+
+"I see her," he said; "she's just taking a look round the corner. That's
+a thing not to be ignored. Of course, the Lakers' house is being
+watched--we set a man on it at once, yesterday. But I'll put some one on
+now to watch Miss Shaw's place, too. I'll telephone through to
+Liddle's--probably they'll be able to say where it is. And the women
+themselves must be watched, too. As a matter of fact, I had a notion
+that Laker wasn't alone in it. And it's just possible, you know, that he
+has sent an accomplice off with his tourist ticket to lead us a dance
+while he looks after himself in another direction. Have you done
+anything?"
+
+"Well," Hewitt replied, with a faint reproduction of the secretive
+smile with which Plummer had met an inquiry of his earlier in the
+morning, "I've been to the station here, and I've found Laker's umbrella
+in the lost property office."
+
+"Oh! Then probably he _has_ gone. I'll bear that in mind, and perhaps
+have a word with the lost property man."
+
+Plummer made for the station and Hewitt for his office. He mounted the
+stairs and reached his door just as I myself, who had been disappointed
+in not finding him in, was leaving. I had called with the idea of taking
+Hewitt to lunch with me at my club, but he declined lunch. "I have an
+important case in hand," he said. "Look here, Brett. See this scrap of
+paper. You know the types of the different newspapers--which is this?"
+
+He handed me a small piece of paper. It was part of a cutting containing
+an advertisement, which had been torn in half.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"I _think_," I said, "this is from the _Daily Chronicle_, judging by the
+paper. It is plainly from the 'agony column,' but all the papers use
+pretty much the same type for these advertisements, except the _Times_.
+If it were not torn I could tell you at once, because the _Chronicle_
+columns are rather narrow."
+
+"Never mind--I'll send for them all." He rang, and sent Kerrett for a
+copy of each morning paper of the previous day. Then he took from a
+large wardrobe cupboard a decent but well-worn and rather roughened tall
+hat. Also a coat a little worn and shiny on the collar. He exchanged
+these for his own hat and coat, and then substituted an old necktie for
+his own clean white one, and encased his legs in mud-spotted leggings.
+This done, he produced a very large and thick pocket-book, fastened by a
+broad elastic band, and said, "Well, what do you think of this? Will it
+do for Queen's taxes, or sanitary inspection, or the gas, or the
+water-supply?"
+
+"Very well indeed, I should say," I replied. "What's the case?"
+
+"Oh, I'll tell you all about that when it's over--no time now. Oh, here
+you are, Kerrett. By the bye, Kerrett, I'm going out presently by the
+back way. Wait for about ten minutes or a quarter of an hour after I am
+gone, and then just go across the road and speak to that lady in black,
+with the veil, who is waiting in that little foot-passage opposite. Say
+Mr. Martin Hewitt sends his compliments, and he advises her not to wait,
+as he has already left his office by another door, and has been gone
+some little time. That's all; it would be a pity to keep the poor woman
+waiting all day for nothing. Now the papers. _Daily News, Standard,
+Telegraph, Chronicle_--yes, here it is, in the Chronicle."
+
+The whole advertisement read thus:--
+
+ YOB.--H.R. Shop roast. You 1st. Then to-night. 02. 2nd top
+ 3rd L. No. 197 red bl. straight mon. One at a time.
+
+"What's this," I asked, "a cryptogram?"
+
+"I'll see," Hewitt answered. "But I won't tell you anything about it
+till afterwards, so you get your lunch. Kerrett, bring the directory."
+
+This was all I actually saw of this case myself, and I have written the
+rest in its proper order from Hewitt's information, as I have written
+some other cases entirely.
+
+To resume at the point where, for the time I lost sight of the matter.
+Hewitt left by the back way and stopped an empty cab as it passed.
+"Abney Park Cemetery" was his direction to the driver. In little more
+than twenty minutes the cab was branching off down the Essex Road on its
+way to Stoke Newington, and in twenty minutes more Hewitt stopped it in
+Church Street, Stoke Newington. He walked through a street or two, and
+then down another, the houses of which he scanned carefully as he
+passed. Opposite one which stood by itself he stopped, and, making a
+pretence of consulting and arranging his large pocket-book, he took a
+good look at the house. It was rather larger, neater, and more
+pretentious than the others in the street, and it had a natty little
+coach-house just visible up the side entrance. There were red blinds
+hung with heavy lace in the front windows, and behind one of these
+blinds Hewitt was able to catch the glint of a heavy gas chandelier.
+
+He stepped briskly up the front steps and knocked sharply at the door.
+"Mr. Merston?" he asked, pocket-book in hand, when a neat parlour-maid
+opened the door.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Ah!" Hewitt stepped into the hall and pulled off his hat; "it's only
+the meter. There's been a deal of gas running away somewhere here, and
+I'm just looking to see if the meters are right. Where is it?"
+
+The girl hesitated. "I'll--I'll ask master," she said.
+
+"Very well. I don't want to take it away, you know--only to give it a
+tap or two, and so on."
+
+The girl retired to the back of the hall, and without taking her eyes
+off Martin Hewitt, gave his message to some invisible person in a back
+room, whence came a growling reply of "All right."
+
+Hewitt followed the girl to the basement, apparently looking straight
+before him, but in reality taking in every detail of the place. The gas
+meter was in a very large lumber cupboard under the kitchen stairs. The
+girl opened the door and lit a candle. The meter stood on the floor,
+which was littered with hampers and boxes and odd sheets of brown paper.
+But a thing that at once arrested Hewitt's attention was a garment of
+some sort of bright blue cloth, with large brass buttons, which was
+lying in a tumbled heap in a corner, and appeared to be the only thing
+in the place that was not covered with dust. Nevertheless, Hewitt took
+no apparent notice of it, but stooped down and solemnly tapped the meter
+three times with his pencil, and listened with great gravity, placing
+his ear to the top. Then he shook his head and tapped again. At length
+he said:--
+
+"It's a bit doubtful. I'll just get you to light the gas in the kitchen
+a moment. Keep your hand to the burner, and when I call out shut it off
+_at once_; see?"
+
+The girl turned and entered the kitchen, and Hewitt immediately seized
+the blue coat--for a coat it was. It had a dull red piping in the seams,
+and was of the swallow-tail pattern--a livery coat, in fact. He held it
+for a moment before him, examining its pattern and colour, and then
+rolled it up and flung it again into the corner.
+
+"Right!" he called to the servant. "Shut off!"
+
+The girl emerged from the kitchen as he left the cupboard.
+
+"Well," she asked, "are you satisfied now?"
+
+"Quite satisfied, thank you," Hewitt replied.
+
+"Is it all right?" she continued, jerking her hand toward the cupboard.
+
+"Well, no, it isn't; there's something wrong there, and I'm glad I came.
+You can tell Mr. Merston, if you like, that I expect his gas bill will
+be a good deal less next quarter." And there was a suspicion of a
+chuckle in Hewitt's voice as he crossed the hall to leave. For a gas
+inspector is pleased when he finds at length what he has been searching
+for.
+
+Things had fallen out better than Hewitt had dared to expect. He saw the
+key of the whole mystery in that blue coat; for it was the uniform coat
+of the hall porters at one of the banks that he had visited in the
+morning, though which one he could not for the moment remember. He
+entered the nearest post-office and despatched a telegram to Plummer,
+giving certain directions and asking the inspector to meet him; then he
+hailed the first available cab and hurried toward the City.
+
+At Lombard Street he alighted, and looked in at the door of each bank
+till he came to Buller, Clayton, Ladds & Co.'s. This was the bank he
+wanted. In the other banks the hall porters wore mulberry coats,
+brick-dust coats, brown coats, and what not, but here, behind the
+ladders and scaffold poles which obscured the entrance, he could see a
+man in a blue coat, with dull red piping and brass buttons. He sprang up
+the steps, pushed open the inner swing door, and finally satisfied
+himself by a closer view of the coat, to the wearer's astonishment. Then
+he regained the pavement and walked the whole length of the bank
+premises in front, afterwards turning up the paved passage at the side,
+deep in thought. The bank had no windows or doors on the side next the
+court, and the two adjoining houses were old and supported in places by
+wooden shores. Both were empty, and a great board announced that tenders
+would be received in a month's time for the purchase of the old
+materials of which they were constructed; also that some part of the
+site would be let on a long building lease.
+
+Hewitt looked up at the grimy fronts of the old buildings. The windows
+were crusted thick with dirt--all except the bottom window of the house
+nearer the bank, which was fairly clean, and seemed to have been quite
+lately washed. The door, too, of this house was cleaner than that of the
+other, though the paint was worn. Hewitt reached and fingered a hook
+driven into the left-hand doorpost about six feet from the ground. It
+was new, and not at all rusted; also a tiny splinter had been displaced
+when the hook was driven in, and clean wood showed at the spot.
+
+Having observed these things, Hewitt stepped back and read at the bottom
+of the big board the name, "Winsor & Weekes, Surveyors and Auctioneers,
+Abchurch Lane." Then he stepped into Lombard Street.
+
+Two hansoms pulled up near the post-office, and out of the first stepped
+Inspector Plummer and another man. This man and the two who alighted
+from the second hansom were unmistakably plain-clothes constables--their
+air, gait, and boots proclaimed it.
+
+"What's all this?" demanded Plummer, as Hewitt approached.
+
+"You'll soon see, I think. But, first, have you put the watch on No.
+197, Hackworth Road?"
+
+"Yes; nobody will get away from there alone."
+
+"Very good. I am going into Abchurch Lane for a few minutes. Leave your
+men out here, but just go round into the court by Buller, Clayton &
+Ladds's, and keep your eye on the first door on the left. I think we'll
+find something soon. Did you get rid of Miss Shaw?"
+
+"No, she's behind now, and Mrs. Laker's with her. They met in the
+Strand, and came after us in another cab. Rare fun, eh! They think we're
+pretty green! It's quite handy, too. So long as they keep behind me it
+saves all trouble of watching _them_." And Inspector Plummer chuckled
+and winked.
+
+"Very good. You don't mind keeping your eye on that door, do you? I'll
+be back very soon," and with that Hewitt turned off into Abchurch Lane.
+
+At Winsor & Weekes's information was not difficult to obtain. The houses
+were destined to come down very shortly, but a week or so ago an office
+and a cellar in one of them was let temporarily to a Mr. Westley. He
+brought no references; indeed, as he paid a fortnight's rent in advance,
+he was not asked for any, considering the circumstances of the case. He
+was opening a London branch for a large firm of cider merchants, he
+said, and just wanted a rough office and a cool cellar to store samples
+in for a few weeks till the permanent premises were ready. There was
+another key, and no doubt the premises might be entered if there were
+any special need for such a course. Martin Hewitt gave such excellent
+reasons that Winsor & Weekes's managing clerk immediately produced the
+key and accompanied Hewitt to the spot.
+
+"I think you'd better have your men handy," Hewitt remarked to Plummer
+when they reached the door, and a whistle quickly brought the men over.
+
+The key was inserted in the lock and turned, but the door would not
+open; the bolt was fastened at the bottom. Hewitt stooped and looked
+under the door.
+
+"It's a drop bolt," he said. "Probably the man who left last let it fall
+loose, and then banged the door, so that it fell into its place. I must
+try my best with a wire or a piece of string."
+
+A wire was brought, and with some manoeuvring Hewitt contrived to pass
+it round the bolt, and lift it little by little, steadying it with the
+blade of a pocket-knife. When at length the bolt was raised out of the
+hole, the knife-blade was slipped under it, and the door swung open.
+
+They entered. The door of the little office just inside stood open, but
+in the office there was nothing, except a board a couple of feet long in
+a corner. Hewitt stepped across and lifted this, turning its downward
+face toward Plummer. On it, in fresh white paint on a black ground, were
+painted the words--
+
+ "BULLER, CLAYTON, LADDS & CO.,
+ TEMPORARY ENTRANCE."
+
+Hewitt turned to Winsor & Weekes's clerk and asked, "The man who took
+this room called himself Westley, didn't he?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Youngish man, clean-shaven, and well-dressed?"
+
+"Yes, he was."
+
+"I fancy," Hewitt said, turning to Plummer, "I _fancy_ an old friend of
+yours is in this--Mr. Sam Gunter."
+
+"What, the 'Hoxton Yob'?"
+
+"I think it's possible he's been Mr. Westley for a bit, and somebody
+else for another bit. But let's come to the cellar."
+
+Winsor & Weekes's clerk led the way down a steep flight of steps into a
+dark underground corridor, wherein they lighted their way with many
+successive matches. Soon the corridor made a turn to the right, and as
+the party passed the turn, there came from the end of the passage before
+them a fearful yell.
+
+"Help! help! Open the door! I'm going mad--mad! O my God!"
+
+And there was a sound of desperate beating from the inside of the cellar
+door at the extreme end. The men stopped, startled.
+
+"Come," said Hewitt, "more matches!" and he rushed to the door. It was
+fastened with a bar and padlock.
+
+"Let me out, for God's sake!" came the voice, sick and hoarse, from the
+inside. "Let me out!"
+
+"All right!" Hewitt shouted. "We have come for you. Wait a moment."
+
+The voice sank into a sort of sobbing croon, and Hewitt tried several
+keys from his own bunch on the padlock. None fitted. He drew from his
+pocket the wire he had used for the bolt of the front door, straightened
+it out, and made a sharp bend at the end.
+
+"Hold a match close," he ordered shortly, and one of the men obeyed.
+Three or four attempts were necessary, and several different bendings of
+the wire were effected, but in the end Hewitt picked the lock, and flung
+open the door.
+
+From within a ghastly figure fell forward among them fainting, and
+knocked out the matches.
+
+"Hullo!" cried Plummer. "Hold up! Who are you?"
+
+"Let's get him up into the open," said Hewitt. "He can't tell you who he
+is for a bit, but I believe he's Laker."
+
+"Laker! What, here?"
+
+"I think so. Steady up the steps. Don't bump him. He's pretty sore
+already, I expect."
+
+Truly the man was a pitiable sight. His hair and face were caked in dust
+and blood, and his finger-nails were torn and bleeding. Water was sent
+for at once, and brandy.
+
+"Well," said Plummer hazily, looking first at the unconscious prisoner
+and then at Hewitt, "but what about the swag?"
+
+"You'll have to find that yourself," Hewitt replied. "I think my share
+of the case is about finished. I only act for the Guarantee Society, you
+know, and if Laker's proved innocent----"
+
+"Innocent! How?"
+
+"Well, this is what took place, as near as I can figure it. You'd better
+undo his collar, I think"--this to the men. "What I believe has happened
+is this. There has been a very clever and carefully prepared conspiracy
+here, and Laker has not been the criminal, but the victim."
+
+"Been robbed himself, you mean? But how? Where?"
+
+"Yesterday morning, before he had been to more than three banks--here,
+in fact."
+
+"But then how? You're all wrong. We _know_ he made the whole round, and
+did all the collection. And then Palmer's office, and all, and the
+umbrella; why----"
+
+The man lay still unconscious. "Don't raise his head," Hewitt said. "And
+one of you had best fetch a doctor. He's had a terrible shock." Then
+turning to Plummer he went on, "As to _how_ they managed the job I'll
+tell you what I think. First it struck some very clever person that a
+deal of money might be got by robbing a walk-clerk from a bank. This
+clever person was one of a clever gang of thieves--perhaps the Hoxton
+Row gang, as I think I hinted. Now you know quite as well as I do that
+such a gang will spend any amount of time over a job that promises a big
+haul, and that for such a job they can always command the necessary
+capital. There are many most respectable persons living in good style in
+the suburbs whose chief business lies in financing such ventures, and
+taking the chief share of the proceeds. Well, this is their plan,
+carefully and intelligently carried out. They watch Laker, observe the
+round he takes, and his habits. They find that there is only one of the
+clerks with whom he does business that he is much acquainted with, and
+that this clerk is in a bank which is commonly second in Laker's round.
+The sharpest man among them--and I don't think there's a man in London
+could do this as well as young Sam Gunter--studies Laker's dress and
+habits just as an actor studies a character. They take this office and
+cellar, as we have seen, _because it is next door to a bank whose front
+entrance is being altered_--a fact which Laker must know from his daily
+visits. The smart man--Gunter, let us say, and I have other reasons for
+believing it to be he--makes up precisely like Laker, false moustache,
+dress, and everything, and waits here with the rest of the gang. One of
+the gang is dressed in a blue coat with brass buttons, like a
+hall-porter in Buller's bank. Do you see?"
+
+"Yes, I think so. It's pretty clear now."
+
+"A confederate watches at the top of the court, and the moment Laker
+turns in from Cornhill--having already been, mind, at the only bank
+where he was so well known that the disguised thief would not have
+passed muster--as soon as he turns in from Cornhill, I say, a signal is
+given, and that board"--pointing to that with the white letters--"is
+hung on the hook in the doorpost. The sham porter stands beside it, and
+as Laker approaches says, 'This way in, sir, this morning. The front
+way's shut for the alterations.' Laker, suspecting nothing, and
+supposing that the firm have made a temporary entrance through the empty
+house, enters. He is seized when well along the corridor, the board is
+taken down and the door shut. Probably he is stunned by a blow on the
+head--see the blood now. They take his wallet and all the cash he has
+already collected. Gunter takes the wallet and also the umbrella, since
+it has Laker's initials, and is therefore distinctive. He simply
+completes the walk in the character of Laker, beginning with Buller,
+Clayton & Ladds's just round the corner. It is nothing but routine work,
+which is quickly done, and nobody notices him particularly--it is the
+bills they examine. Meanwhile this unfortunate fellow is locked up in
+the cellar here, right at the end of the underground corridor, where he
+can never make himself heard in the street, and where next him are only
+the empty cellars of the deserted house next door. The thieves shut the
+front door and vanish. The rest is plain. Gunter, having completed the
+round, and bagged some L15,000 or more, spends a few pounds in a tourist
+ticket at Palmer's as a blind, being careful to give Laker's name. He
+leaves the umbrella at Charing Cross in a conspicuous place right
+opposite the lost property office, where it is sure to be seen, and so
+completes his false trail."
+
+"Then who are the people at 197, Hackworth Road?"
+
+"The capitalist lives there--the financier, and probably the directing
+spirit of the whole thing. Merston's the name he goes by there, and I've
+no doubt he cuts a very imposing figure in chapel every Sunday. He'll be
+worth picking up--this isn't the first thing he's been in, I'll
+warrant."
+
+"But--but what about Laker's mother and Miss Shaw?"
+
+"Well, what? The poor women are nearly out of their minds with terror
+and shame, that's all, but though they may think Laker a criminal,
+they'll never desert him. They've been following us about with a feeble,
+vague sort of hope of being able to baffle us in some way or help him if
+we caught him, or something, poor things. Did you ever hear of a real
+woman who'd desert a son or a lover merely because he was a criminal?
+But here's the doctor. When he's attended to him will you let your men
+take Laker home? I must hurry and report to the Guarantee Society, I
+think."
+
+"But," said the perplexed Plummer, "where did you get your clue? You
+must have had a tip from some one, you know--you can't have done it by
+clairvoyance. What gave you the tip?"
+
+"The _Daily Chronicle_."
+
+"The _what_?"
+
+"The _Daily Chronicle_. Just take a look at the 'agony column' in
+yesterday morning's issue, and read the message to 'Yob'--to Gunter, in
+fact. That's all."
+
+By this time a cab was waiting in Lombard Street, and two of Plummer's
+men, under the doctor's directions, carried Laker to it. No sooner,
+however, were they in the court than the two watching women threw
+themselves hysterically upon Laker, and it was long before they could be
+persuaded that he was not being taken to gaol. The mother shrieked
+aloud, "My boy--my boy! Don't take him! Oh, don't take him! They've
+killed my boy! Look at his head--oh, his head!" and wrestled desperately
+with the men, while Hewitt attempted to soothe her, and promised to
+allow her to go in the cab with her son if she would only be quiet. The
+younger woman made no noise, but she held one of Laker's limp hands in
+both hers.
+
+Hewitt and I dined together that evening, and he gave me a full account
+of the occurrences which I have here set down. Still, when he was
+finished I was not able to see clearly by what process of reasoning he
+had arrived at the conclusions that gave him the key to the mystery, nor
+did I understand the "agony column" message, and I said so.
+
+"In the beginning," Hewitt explained, "the thing that struck me as
+curious was the fact that Laker was said to have given his own name at
+Palmer's in buying his ticket. Now, the first thing the greenest and
+newest criminal thinks of is changing his name, so that the giving of
+his own name seemed unlikely to begin with. Still, he _might_ have made
+such a mistake, as Plummer suggested when he said that criminals usually
+make a mistake somewhere--as they do, in fact. Still, it was the least
+likely mistake I could think of--especially as he actually didn't wait
+to be asked for his name, but blurted it out when it wasn't really
+wanted. And it was conjoined with another rather curious mistake, or
+what would have been a mistake if the thief were Laker. Why should he
+conspicuously display his wallet--such a distinctive article--for the
+clerk to see and note? Why rather had he not got rid of it before
+showing himself? Suppose it should be somebody personating Laker? In any
+case I determined not to be prejudiced by what I had heard of Laker's
+betting. A man may bet without being a thief.
+
+"But, again, supposing it _were_ Laker? Might he not have given his
+name, and displayed his wallet, and so on, while buying a ticket for
+France, in order to draw pursuit after himself in that direction while
+he made off in another, in another name, and disguised? Each supposition
+was plausible. And, in either case, it might happen that whoever was
+laying this trail would probably lay it a little farther. Charing Cross
+was the next point, and there I went. I already had it from Plummer that
+Laker had not been recognised there. Perhaps the trail had been laid in
+some other manner. Something left behind with Laker's name on it,
+perhaps? I at once thought of the umbrella with his monogram, and,
+making a long shot, asked for it at the lost property office, as you
+know. The guess was lucky. In the umbrella, as you know, I found that
+scrap of paper. That, I judged, had fallen in from the hand of the man
+carrying the umbrella. He had torn the paper in half in order to fling
+it away, and one piece had fallen into the loosely flapping umbrella. It
+is a thing that will often happen with an omnibus ticket, as you may
+have noticed. Also, it was proved that the umbrella _was_ unrolled when
+found, and rolled immediately after. So here was a piece of paper
+dropped by the person who had brought the umbrella to Charing Cross and
+left it. I got the whole advertisement, as you remember, and I studied
+it. 'Yob' is back-slang for 'boy,' and it is often used in nicknames to
+denote a young smooth-faced thief. Gunter, the man I suspect, as a
+matter of fact, is known as the 'Hoxton Yob.' The message, then, was
+addressed to some one known by such a nickname. Next, 'H.R. shop roast.'
+Now, in thieves' slang, to 'roast' a thing or a person is to watch it or
+him. They call any place a shop--notably, a thieves' den. So that this
+meant that some resort--perhaps the 'Hoxton Row shop'--was watched. 'You
+1st then to-night' would be clearer, perhaps, when the rest was
+understood. I thought a little over the rest, and it struck me that it
+must be a direction to some other house, since one was warned of as
+being watched. Besides, there was the number, 197, and 'red bl.,' which
+would be extremely likely to mean 'red blinds,' by way of clearly
+distinguishing the house. And then the plan of the thing was plain. You
+have noticed, probably, that the map of London which accompanies the
+Post Office Directory is divided, for convenience of reference, into
+numbered squares?"
+
+"Yes. The squares are denoted by letters along the top margin and
+figures down the side. So that if you consult the directory, and find a
+place marked as being in D 5, for instance, you find vertical divisions
+D, and run your finger down it till it intersects horizontal division 5,
+and there you are."
+
+"Precisely. I got my Post Office Directory, and looked for 'O 2.' It was
+in North London, and took in parts of Abney Park Cemetery and Clissold
+Park; '2nd top' was the next sign. Very well, I counted the second
+street intersecting the top of the square--counting, in the usual way,
+from the left. That was Lordship Road. Then, '3rd L.' From the point
+where Lordship Road crossed the top of the square, I ran my finger down
+the road till it came to '3rd L,' or, in other words, the third turning
+on the left--Hackworth Road. So there we were, unless my guesses were
+altogether wrong. 'Straight mon' probably meant 'straight moniker'--that
+is to say, the proper name, a thief's _real_ name, in contradistinction
+to that he may assume. I turned over the directory till I found
+Hackworth Road, and found that No. 197 was inhabited by a Mr. Merston.
+From the whole thing I judged this. There was to have been a meeting at
+the 'H.R. shop,' but that was found, at the last moment, to be watched
+by the police for some purpose, so that another appointment was made for
+this house in the suburbs. 'You 1st. Then to-night'--the person
+addressed was to come first, and the others in the evening. They were to
+ask for the householder's 'straight moniker'--Mr. Merston. And they were
+to come one at a time.
+
+"Now, then, what was this? What theory would fit it? Suppose this were a
+robbery, directed from afar by the advertiser. Suppose, on the day
+before the robbery, it was found that the place fixed for division of
+spoils were watched. Suppose that the principal thereupon advertised (as
+had already been agreed in case of emergency) in these terms. The
+principal in the actual robbery--the 'Yob' addressed--was to go first
+with the booty. The others were to come after, one at a time. Anyway,
+the thing was good enough to follow a little further, and I determined
+to try No. 197, Hackworth Road. I have told you what I found there, and
+how it opened my eyes. I went, of course, merely on chance, to see what
+I might chance to see. But luck favoured, and I happened on that
+coat--brought back rolled up, on the evening after the robbery,
+doubtless by the thief who had used it, and flung carelessly into the
+handiest cupboard. _That_ was this gang's mistake."
+
+"Well, I congratulate you," I said. "I hope they'll catch the rascals."
+
+"I rather think they will, now they know where to look. They can
+scarcely miss Merston, anyway. There has been very little to go upon in
+this case, but I stuck to the thread, however slight, and it brought me
+through. The rest of the case, of course, is Plummer's. It was a
+peculiarity of my commission that I could equally well fulfil it by
+catching the man with all the plunder, or by proving him innocent.
+Having done the latter, my work was at an end, but I left it where
+Plummer will be able to finish the job handsomely."
+
+Plummer did. Sam Gunter, Merston, and one accomplice were taken--the
+first and last were well known to the police--and were identified by
+Laker. Merston, as Hewitt had suspected, had kept the lion's share for
+himself, so that altogether, with what was recovered from him and the
+other two, nearly L11,000 was saved for Messrs. Liddle, Neal & Liddle.
+Merston, when taken, was in the act of packing up to take a holiday
+abroad, and there cash his notes, which were found, neatly packed in
+separate thousands, in his portmanteau. As Hewitt had predicted, his
+gas bill _was_ considerably less next quarter, for less than half-way
+through it he began a term in gaol.
+
+As for Laker, he was reinstated, of course, with an increase of salary
+by way of compensation for his broken head. He had passed a terrible
+twenty-six hours in the cellar, unfed and unheard. Several times he had
+become insensible, and again and again he had thrown himself madly
+against the door, shouting and tearing at it, till he fell back
+exhausted, with broken nails and bleeding fingers. For some hours before
+the arrival of his rescuers he had been sitting in a sort of stupor,
+from which he was suddenly aroused by the sound of voices and footsteps.
+He was in bed for a week, and required a rest of a month in addition
+before he could resume his duties. Then he was quietly lectured by Mr.
+Neal as to betting, and, I believe, dropped that practice in
+consequence. I am told that he is "at the counter" now--a considerable
+promotion.
+
+
+
+
+THE CASE OF THE LOST FOREIGNER.
+
+
+I have already said in more than one place that Hewitt's personal
+relations with the members of the London police force were of a cordial
+character. In the course of his work it has frequently been Hewitt's hap
+to learn of matters on which the police were glad of information, and
+that information was always passed on at once; and so long as no
+infringement of regulations or damage to public service were involved,
+Hewitt could always rely on a return in kind.
+
+It was with a message of a useful sort that Hewitt one day dropped into
+Vine Street police-station and asked for a particular inspector, who was
+not in. Hewitt sat and wrote a note, and by way of making conversation
+said to the inspector on duty, "Anything very startling this way
+to-day?"
+
+"Nothing _very_ startling, perhaps, as yet," the inspector replied. "But
+one of our chaps picked up rather an odd customer a little while ago.
+Lunatic of some sort, I should think--in fact, I've sent for the doctor
+to see him. He's a foreigner--a Frenchman, I believe. He seemed horribly
+weak and faint; but the oddest thing occurred when one of the men,
+thinking he might be hungry, brought in some bread. He went into fits of
+terror at the sight of it, and wouldn't be pacified till they took it
+away again."
+
+"That was strange."
+
+"Odd, wasn't it? And he _was_ hungry too. They brought him some more a
+little while after, and he didn't funk it a bit,--pitched into it, in
+fact, like anything, and ate it all with some cold beef. It's the way
+with some lunatics--never the same five minutes together. He keeps
+crying like a baby, and saying things we can't understand. As it
+happens, there's nobody in just now who speaks French."
+
+"I speak French," Hewitt replied. "Shall I try him?"
+
+"Certainly, if you will. He's in the men's room below. They've been
+making him as comfortable as possible by the fire until the doctor
+comes. He's a long time. I expect he's got a case on."
+
+Hewitt found his way to the large mess-room, where three or four
+policemen in their shirt-sleeves were curiously regarding a young man of
+very disordered appearance who sat on a chair by the fire. He was pale,
+and exhibited marks of bruises on his face, while over one eye was a
+scarcely healed cut. His figure was small and slight, his coat was torn,
+and he sat with a certain indefinite air of shivering suffering. He
+started and looked round apprehensively as Hewitt entered. Hewitt bowed
+smilingly, wished him good-day, speaking in French, and asked him if he
+spoke the language.
+
+The man looked up with a dull expression, and after an effort or two, as
+of one who stutters, burst out with, "_Je le nie!_"
+
+"That's strange," Hewitt observed to the men. "I ask him if he speaks
+French, and he says he denies it--speaking _in_ French."
+
+"He's been saying that very often, sir," one of the men answered, "as
+well as other things we can't make anything of."
+
+Hewitt placed his hand kindly on the man's shoulder and asked his name.
+The reply was for a little while an inarticulate gurgle, presently
+merging into a meaningless medley of words and syllables--"_Qu'est ce
+qu'_--_il n'a_--Leystar Squarr--_sacre nom_--not spik it--_quel
+chemin_--sank you ver' mosh--_je le nie! je le nie!_" He paused, stared,
+and then, as though realizing his helplessness, he burst into tears.
+
+"He's been a-cryin' two or three times," said the man who had spoken
+before. "He was a-cryin' when we found him."
+
+Several more attempts Hewitt made to communicate with the man, but
+though he seemed to comprehend what was meant, he replied with nothing
+but meaningless gibber, and finally gave up the attempt, and, leaning
+against the side of the fireplace, buried his head in the bend of his
+arm.
+
+Then the doctor arrived and made _his_ examination. While it was in
+progress Hewitt took aside the policeman who had been speaking before
+and questioned him further. He had himself found the Frenchman in a dull
+back street by Golden Square, where the man was standing helpless and
+trembling, apparently quite bewildered and very weak. He had brought him
+in, without having been able to learn anything about him. One or two
+shopkeepers in the street where he was found were asked, but knew
+nothing of him--indeed, had never seen him before.
+
+"But the curiousest thing," the policeman proceeded, "was in this 'ere
+room, when I brought him a loaf to give him a bit of a snack, seein' he
+looked so weak an' 'ungry. You'd 'a thought we was a-goin' to poison
+'im. He fair screamed at the very sight o' the bread, an' he scrouged
+hisself up in that corner an' put his hands in front of his face. I
+couldn't make out what was up at first--didn't tumble to it's bein' the
+bread he was frightened of, seein' as he looked like a man as 'ud be
+frightened at anything else afore _that_. But the nearer I came with it
+the more he yelled, so I took it away an' left it outside, an' then he
+calmed down. An' s'elp me, when I cut some bits off that there very loaf
+an' brought 'em in, with a bit o' beef, he just went for 'em like one
+o'clock. _He_ wasn't frightened o' no bread then, you bet. Rum thing,
+how the fancies takes 'em when they're a bit touched, ain't it? All one
+way one minute, all the other the next."
+
+"Yes, it is. By the way, have you another uncut loaf in the place?"
+
+"Yes, sir. Half a dozen if you like."
+
+"One will be enough. I am going over to speak to the doctor. Wait awhile
+until he seems very quiet and fairly comfortable; then bring a loaf in
+quietly and put it on the table, not far from his elbow. Don't attract
+his attention to what you are doing."
+
+The doctor stood looking thoughtfully down on the Frenchman, who, for
+his part, stared gloomily, but tranquilly, at the fireplace. Hewitt
+stepped quietly over to the doctor and, without disturbing the man by
+the fire, said interrogatively, "Aphasia?"
+
+The doctor tightened his lips, frowned, and nodded significantly.
+"Motor," he murmured, just loudly enough for Hewitt to hear; "and
+there's a general nervous break-down as well, I should say. By the way,
+perhaps there's no agraphia. Have you tried him with pen and paper?"
+
+Pen and paper were brought and set before the man. He was told, slowly
+and distinctly, that he was among friends, whose only object was to
+restore him to his proper health. Would he write his name and address,
+and any other information he might care to give about himself, on the
+paper before him?
+
+The Frenchman took the pen and stared at the paper; then slowly, and
+with much hesitation, he traced these marks:--
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The man paused after the last of these futile characters, and his pen
+stabbed into the paper with a blot, as he dazedly regarded his work.
+Then with a groan he dropped it, and his face sank again into the bend
+of his arm.
+
+The doctor took the paper and handed it to Hewitt. "Complete agraphia,
+you see," he said. "He can't write a word. He begins to write 'Monsieur'
+from sheer habit in beginning letters thus; but the word tails off into
+a scrawl. Then his attempts become mere scribble, with just a trace of
+some familiar word here and there--but quite meaningless all."
+
+Although he had never before chanced to come across a case of aphasia
+(happily a rare disease), Hewitt was acquainted with its general nature.
+He knew that it might arise either from some physical injury to the
+brain, or from a break-down consequent on some terrible nervous strain.
+He knew that in the case of motor aphasia the sufferer, though fully
+conscious of all that goes on about him, and though quite understanding
+what is said to him is entirely powerless to put his own thoughts into
+spoken words--has lost, in fact, the connection between words and their
+spoken symbols. Also that in most bad cases agraphia--the loss of
+ability to write words with any reference to their meaning--is commonly
+an accompaniment.
+
+"You will have him taken to the infirmary, I suppose?" Hewitt asked.
+
+"Yes," the doctor replied. "I shall go and see about it at once."
+
+The man looked up again as they spoke. The policeman had, in accordance
+with Hewitt's request, placed a loaf of bread on the table near him, and
+now as he looked up he caught sight of it. He started visibly and paled,
+but gave no such signs of abject terror as the policeman had previously
+observed. He appeared nervous and uneasy, however, and presently reached
+stealthily toward the loaf. Hewitt continued to talk to the doctor,
+while closely watching the Frenchman's behaviour from the corner of his
+eye.
+
+The loaf was what is called a "plain cottage," of solid and regular
+shape. The man reached it and immediately turned it bottom up on the
+table. Then he sank back in his chair with a more contented expression,
+though his gaze was still directed toward the loaf. The policeman
+grinned silently at this curious manoeuvre.
+
+The doctor left, and Hewitt accompanied him to the door of the room. "He
+will not be moved just yet, I take it?" Hewitt asked as they parted.
+
+"It may take an hour or two," the doctor replied. "Are you anxious to
+keep him here?"
+
+"Not for long; but I think there's a curious inside to the case, and I
+may perhaps learn something of it by a little watching. But I can't
+spare very long."
+
+At a sign from Hewitt the loaf was removed. Then Hewitt pulled the small
+table closer to the Frenchman and pushed the pen and sheets of paper
+toward him. The manoeuvre had its result. The man looked up and down
+the room vacantly once or twice and then began to turn the papers over.
+From that he went to dipping the pen in the inkpot, and presently he was
+scribbling at random on the loose sheets. Hewitt affected to leave him
+entirely alone, and seemed to be absorbed in a contemplation of a
+photograph of a police-division brass band that hung on the wall, but he
+saw every scratch the man made.
+
+At first there was nothing but meaningless scrawls and attempted words.
+Then rough sketches appeared, of a man's head, a chair or what not. On
+the mantelpiece stood a small clock--apparently a sort of humble
+presentation piece, the body of the clock being set in a horse-shoe
+frame, with crossed whips behind it. After a time the Frenchman's eyes
+fell on this, and he began a crude sketch of it. That he relinquished,
+and went on with other random sketches and scribblings on the same piece
+of paper, sketching and scribbling over the sketches in a
+half-mechanical sort of way, as of one who trifles with a pen during a
+brown study. Beginning at the top left-hand corner of the paper, he
+travelled all round it till he arrived at the left-hand bottom corner.
+Then dashing his pen hastily across his last sketch he dropped it, and
+with a great shudder turned away again and hid his face by the
+fireplace.
+
+Hewitt turned at once and seized the papers on the table. He stuffed
+them all into his coat-pocket, with the exception of the last which the
+man had been engaged on, and this, a facsimile of which is subjoined, he
+studied earnestly for several minutes.
+
+Hewitt wished the men good-day, and made his way to the inspector.
+
+"Well," the inspector said, "not much to be got out of him, is there?
+The doctor will be sending for him presently."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"I fancy," said Hewitt, "that this may turn out a very important case.
+Possibly--quite possibly--I may not have guessed correctly, and so I
+won't tell you anything of it till I know a little more. But what I want
+now is a messenger. Can I send somebody at once in a cab to my friend
+Brett at his chambers?"
+
+"Certainly. I'll find somebody. Want to write a note?"
+
+Hewitt wrote and despatched a note, which reached me in less than ten
+minutes. Then he asked the inspector, "Have you searched the Frenchman?"
+
+"Oh, yes. We went all over him, when we found he couldn't explain
+himself, to see if we could trace his friends or his address. He didn't
+seem to mind. But there wasn't a single thing in his pocket--not a
+single thing, barring a rag of a pocket-handkerchief with no marking on
+it."
+
+"You noticed that somebody had stolen his watch, I suppose?"
+
+"Well, he hadn't got one."
+
+"But he had one of those little vertical button-holes in his waistcoat,
+used to fasten a watchguard to, and it was much worn and frayed, so that
+he must be in the habit of carrying a watch; and it is gone."
+
+"Yes, and everything else too, eh? Looks like robbery. He's had a knock
+or two in the face--notice that?"
+
+"I saw the bruises and the cut, of course; and his collar has been
+broken away, with the back button; somebody has taken him by the collar
+or throat. Was he wearing a hat when he was found?"
+
+"No."
+
+"That would imply that he had only just left a house. What street was he
+found in?"
+
+"Henry Street--a little off Golden Square. Low street, you know."
+
+"Did the constable notice a door open near by?"
+
+The inspector shook his head. "Half the doors in the street are open,"
+he said, "pretty nearly all day."
+
+"Ah, then there's nothing in that. I don't think he lives there, by the
+bye. I fancy he comes from more in the Seven Dials or Drury Lane
+direction. Did you notice anything about the man that gave you a clue to
+his occupation--or at any rate to his habits?"
+
+"Can't say I did."
+
+"Well, just take a look at the back of his coat before he goes
+away--just over the loins. Good-day."
+
+As I have said, Hewitt's messenger was quick. I happened to be
+in--having lately returned from a latish lunch--when he arrived with
+this note:--
+
+ "My dear B.,--I meant to have lunched with you to-day, but have
+ been kept. I expect you are idle this afternoon, and I have a
+ case that will interest you--perhaps be useful to you from a
+ journalistic point of view. If you care to see anything of it, cab
+ away _at once_ to Fitzroy Square, south side, where I'll meet you.
+ I will wait no later than 3.30. Yours, M. H."
+
+I had scarce a quarter of an hour, so I seized my hat and left my
+chambers at once. As it happened, my cab and Hewitt's burst into Fitzroy
+Square from opposite sides almost at the same moment, so that we lost no
+time.
+
+"Come," said Hewitt, taking my arm and marching me off, "we are going to
+look for some stabling. Try to feel as though you'd just set up a
+brougham and had come out to look for a place to put it in. I fear we
+may have to delude some person with that belief presently."
+
+"Why--what do you want stables for? And why make me your excuse?"
+
+"As to what I want the stables for--really I'm not altogether sure
+myself. As to making you an excuse--well, even the humblest excuse is
+better than none. But come, here are some stables. Not good enough,
+though, even if any of them were empty. Come on."
+
+We had stopped for an instant at the entrance to a small alley of rather
+dirty stables, and Hewitt, paying apparently but small attention to the
+stables themselves, had looked sharply about him with his gaze in the
+air.
+
+"I know this part of London pretty well," Hewitt observed, "and I can
+only remember one other range of stabling near by; we must try that. As
+a matter of fact, I'm coming here on little more than conjecture, though
+I shall be surprised if there isn't something in it. Do you know
+anything of aphasia?"
+
+"I have heard of it, of course, though I can't say I remember ever
+knowing a case."
+
+"I've seen one to-day--very curious case. The man's a Frenchman,
+discovered helpless in the street by a policeman. The only thing he can
+say that has any meaning in it at all is '_je le nie_,' and that he says
+mechanically, without in the least knowing what he is saying. And he
+can't write. But he got sketching and scrawling various things on some
+paper, and his scrawls--together with another thing or two--have given
+me an idea. We're following it up now. When we are less busy, and in a
+quiet place, I'll show you the sketches and explain things generally;
+there's no time now, and I _may_ want your help for a bit, in which case
+ignorance may prevent you spoiling things, you clumsy ruffian. Hullo!
+here we are, I think!"
+
+We had stopped at the end of another stable-yard, rather dirtier than
+the first. The stables were sound but inelegant sheds, and one or two
+appeared to be devoted to other purposes, having low chimneys, on one of
+which an old basket was rakishly set by way of cowl. Beside the entrance
+a worn-out old board was nailed, with the legend, "Stabling to Let," in
+letters formerly white on a ground formerly black.
+
+"Come," said Hewitt, "we'll explore."
+
+We picked our way over the greasy cobble-stones and looked about us. On
+the left was the wall enclosing certain back-yards, and on the right the
+stables. Two doors in the middle of these were open, and a butcher's
+young man, who with his shiny bullet head would have been known for a
+butcher's young man anywhere, was wiping over the new-washed wheel of a
+smart butcher's cart.
+
+"Good-day," Hewitt said pleasantly to the young man. "I notice there's
+some stabling to let here. Now, where should I inquire about it?"
+
+"Jones, Whitfield Street," the young man answered, giving the wheel a
+final spin. "But there's only one little place to let now, I think, and
+it ain't very grand."
+
+"Oh, which is that?"
+
+"Next but one to the street there. A chap 'ad it for wood-choppin', but
+'e chucked it. There ain't room for more'n a donkey an' a barrow."
+
+"Ah, that's a pity. We're not particular, but want something big
+enough, and we don't mind paying a fair price. Perhaps we might make an
+arrangement with somebody here who has a stable?"
+
+The young man shook his head.
+
+"I shouldn't think so," he said doubtfully; "they're mostly shop-people
+as wants all the room theirselves. My guv'nor couldn't do nothink, I
+know. These 'ere two stables ain't scarcely enough for all 'e wants as
+it is. Then there's Barkett the greengrocer 'ere next door. _That_ ain't
+no good. Then, next to that, there's the little place as is to let, and
+at the end there's Griffith's at the butter-shop."
+
+"And those the other way?"
+
+"Well, this 'ere first one's Curtis's, Euston Road--that's a
+butter-shop, too, an' 'e 'as the next after that. The last one, up at
+the end--I dunno quite whose that is. It ain't been long took, but I
+b'lieve it's some foreign baker's. I ain't ever see anythink come out of
+it, though; but there's a 'orse there, I know--I seen the feed took in."
+
+Hewitt turned thoughtfully away.
+
+"Thanks," he said. "I suppose we can't manage it, then. Good-day."
+
+We walked to the street as the butcher's young man wheeled in his cart
+and flung away his pail of water.
+
+"Will you just hang about here, Brett," he asked, "while I hurry round
+to the nearest iron-monger's? I shan't be gone long. We're going to work
+a little burglary. Take note if anybody comes to that stable at the
+farther end."
+
+He hurried away and I waited. In a few moments the butcher's young man
+shut his doors and went whistling down the street, and in a few moments
+more Hewitt appeared.
+
+"Come," he said, "there's nobody about now; we'll lose no time. I've
+bought a pair of pliers and a few nails."
+
+We re-entered the yard at the door of the last stable. Hewitt stooped
+and examined the padlock. Taking a nail in his pliers he bent it
+carefully against the brick wall. Then using the nail as a key, still
+held by the pliers, and working the padlock gently in his left hand, in
+an astonishingly few seconds he had released the hasp and taken off the
+padlock. "I'm not altogether a bad burglar," he remarked. "Not so bad,
+really."
+
+The padlock fastened a bar which, when removed, allowed the door to be
+opened. Opening it, Hewitt immediately seized a candle stuck in a bottle
+which stood on a shelf, pulled me in, and closed the door behind us.
+
+"We'll do this by candle-light," he said, as he struck a match. "If the
+door were left open it would be seen from the street. Keep your ears
+open in case anybody comes down the yard."
+
+The part of the shed that we stood in was used as a coach-house, and was
+occupied by a rather shabby tradesman's cart, the shafts of which rested
+on the ground. From the stall adjoining came the sound of the shuffling
+and trampling of an impatient horse.
+
+We turned to the cart. On the name-board at the side were painted in
+worn letters the words, "Schuyler, Baker." The address, which had been
+below, was painted out.
+
+Hewitt took out the pins and let down the tail board. Within the cart
+was a new bed-mattress which covered the whole surface at the bottom. I
+felt it, pressed it from the top, and saw that it was an ordinary spring
+mattress--perhaps rather unusually soft in the springs. It seemed a
+curious thing to keep in a baker's cart.
+
+Hewitt, who had set the candle on a convenient shelf, plunged his arm
+into the farthermost recesses of the cart and brought forth a very long
+French loaf, and then another. Diving again he produced certain loaves
+of the sort known as the "plain cottage "--two sets of four each, each
+set baked together in a row. "Feel this bread," said Hewitt, and I felt
+it. It was stale--almost as hard as wood.
+
+Hewitt produced a large pocket-knife, and with what seemed to me to be
+superfluous care and elaboration, cut into the top of one of the cottage
+loaves. Then he inserted his fingers in the gap he had made and firmly
+but slowly tore the hard bread into two pieces. He pulled away the crumb
+from within till there was nothing left but a rather thick outer shell.
+
+"No," he said, rather to himself than to me, "there's nothing in
+_that_." He lifted one of the very long French loaves and measured it
+against the interior of the cart. It had before been propped diagonally,
+and now it was noticeable that it was just a shade longer than the
+inside of the cart was wide. Jammed in, in fact, it held firmly. Hewitt
+produced his knife again, and divided this long loaf in the centre;
+there was nothing but bread in _that_. The horse in the stall fidgeted
+more than ever.
+
+"That horse hasn't been fed lately, I fancy," Hewitt said. "We'll give
+the poor chap a bit of this hay in the corner."
+
+"But," I said, "what about this bread? What did you expect to find in
+it? I can't see what you're driving at."
+
+"I'll tell you," Hewitt replied, "I'm driving after something I expect
+to find, and close at hand here, too. How are your nerves to-day--pretty
+steady? The thing may try them."
+
+Before I could reply there was a sound of footsteps in the yard outside,
+approaching. Hewitt lifted his finger instantly for silence and
+whispered hurriedly, "There's only one. If he comes _here_, we grab
+him."
+
+The steps came nearer and stopped outside the door. There was a pause,
+and then a slight drawing in of breath, as of a person suddenly
+surprised. At that moment the door was slightly shifted ajar and an eye
+peeped in.
+
+"Catch him!" said Hewitt aloud, as we sprang to the door. "He mustn't
+get away!"
+
+I had been nearer the doorway, and was first through it. The stranger
+ran down the yard at his best, but my legs were the longer, and half-way
+to the street I caught him by the shoulder and swung him round. Like
+lightning he whipped out a knife, and I flung in my left instantly on
+the chance of flooring him. It barely checked him, however, and the
+knife swung short of my chest by no more than two inches; but Hewitt had
+him by the wrist and tripped him forward on his face. He struggled like
+a wild beast, and Hewitt had to stand on his forearm and force up his
+wrist till the bones were near breaking before he dropped his knife. But
+throughout the struggle the man never shouted, called for help, nor,
+indeed, made the slightest sound, and we on our part were equally
+silent. It was quickly over, of course, for he was on his face, and we
+were two. We dragged our prisoner into the stable and closed the door
+behind us. So far as we had seen, nobody had witnessed the capture from
+the street, though, of course, we had been too busy to be certain.
+
+"There's a set of harness hanging over at the back," said Hewitt; "I
+think we'll tie him up with the traces and reins--nothing like leather.
+We don't need a gag; I know he won't shout."
+
+While I got the straps Hewitt held the prisoner by a peculiar
+neck-and-wrist grip that forbade him to move except at the peril of a
+snapped arm. He had probably never been a person of pleasant aspect,
+being short, strongly and squatly built, large and ugly of feature, and
+wild and dirty of hair and beard. And now, his face flushed with
+struggling and smeared with mud from the stable-yard, his nose bleeding
+and his forehead exhibiting a growing bump, he looked particularly
+repellent. We strapped his elbows together behind, and as he sullenly
+ignored a demand for the contents of his pockets Hewitt unceremoniously
+turned them out. Helpless as he was, the man struggled to prevent this,
+though, of course, ineffectually. There were papers, tobacco, a bunch of
+keys, and various odds and ends. Hewitt was glancing hastily at the
+papers when, suddenly dropping them, he caught the prisoner by the
+shoulder and pulled him away from a partly-consumed hay-truss which
+stood in a corner, and toward which he had quietly sidled.
+
+"Keep him still," said Hewitt; "we haven't examined this place yet." And
+he commenced to pull away the hay from the corner.
+
+Presently a large piece of sackcloth was revealed, and this being lifted
+left visible below it another batch of loaves of the same sort as we had
+seen in the cart. There were a dozen of them in one square batch, and
+the only thing about them that differed them from those in the cart was
+their position, for the batch lay bottom side up.
+
+"That's enough, I think," Hewitt said. "Don't touch them, for Heaven's
+sake!" He picked up the papers he had dropped. "That has saved us a
+little search," he continued. "See here, Brett; I was in the act of
+telling you my suspicions when this little affair interrupted me. If you
+care to look at one or two of these letters you'll see what I should
+have told you. It's Anarchism and bombs, of course. I'm about as certain
+as I can be that there's a reversible dynamite bomb inside each of those
+innocent loaves, though I assure you I don't mean meddling with them
+now. But see here. Will you go and bring in a four-wheeler? Bring it
+right down the yard. There's more to do, and we mustn't attract
+attention."
+
+I hurried away and found the cab. The meaning of the loaves, the cart,
+and the spring-mattress was now plain. There was an Anarchist plot to
+carry out a number of explosions probably simultaneously, in different
+parts of the city. I had, of course, heard much of the terrible
+"reversing" bombs--those bombs which, containing a tube of acid plugged
+by wadding, required no fuse, and only needed to be inverted to be set
+going to explode in a few minutes. The loaves containing these bombs
+would form an effectual "blind," and they were to be distributed,
+probably in broad daylight, in the most natural manner possible, in a
+baker's cart. A man would be waiting near the scene of each contemplated
+explosion. He would be given a loaf taken from the inverted batch. He
+would take it--perhaps wrapped in paper, but still inverted, and
+apparently the most innocent object possible--to the spot selected,
+deposit it, right side up--which would reverse the inner tube and set up
+the action--in some quiet corner, behind a door or what not, and make
+his own escape, while the explosion tore down walls and--if the
+experiment were lucky--scattered the flesh and bones of unsuspecting
+people.
+
+The infernal loaves were made and kept reversed, to begin with, in order
+to stand more firmly, and--if observed--more naturally, when turned
+over to explode. Even if a child picked up the loaf and carried it off,
+that child at least would be blown to atoms, which at any rate would
+have been something for the conspirators to congratulate themselves
+upon. The spring-mattress, of course, was to ease the jolting to the
+bombs, and obviate any random jerking loose of the acid, which might
+have had the deplorable result of sacrificing the valuable life of the
+conspirator who drove the cart. The other loaves, too, with no explosive
+contents, had their use. The two long ones, which fitted across the
+inside of the cart, would be jammed across so as to hold the bombs in
+the centre, and the others would be used to pack the batch on the other
+sides and prevent any dangerous slipping about. The thing seemed pretty
+plain, except that as yet I had no idea of how Hewitt learned anything
+of the business.
+
+I brought the four-wheeler up to the door of the stable and we thrust
+the man into it, and Hewitt locked the stable door with its proper key.
+Then we drove off to Tottenham Court Road police-station, and, by
+Hewitt's order, straight into the yard.
+
+In less than ten minutes from our departure from the stable our prisoner
+was finally secured, and Hewitt was deep in consultation with police
+officials. Messengers were sent and telegrams despatched, and presently
+Hewitt came to me with information.
+
+"The name of the helpless Frenchman the police found this morning," he
+said, "appears to be Gerard--at least I am almost certain of it. Among
+the papers found on the prisoner--whose full name doesn't appear, but
+who seems to be spoken of as Luigi (he is Italian)--among the papers, I
+say, is a sort of notice convening a meeting for this evening to decide
+as to the 'final punishment' to be awarded the 'traitor Gerard, now in
+charge of comrade Pingard.'
+
+"The place of meeting is not mentioned, but it seems more than probable
+that it will be at the Bakunin Club, not five minutes' walk from this
+place. The police have all these places under quiet observation, of
+course, and that is the club at which apparently important Anarchist
+meetings have been held lately. It is the only club that has never been
+raided as yet, and, it would seem, the only one they would feel at all
+safe in using for anything important.
+
+"Moreover, Luigi just now simply declined to open his mouth when asked
+where the meeting was to be, and said nothing when the names of several
+other places were suggested, but suddenly found his tongue at the
+mention of the Bakunin Club, and denied vehemently that the meeting was
+to be there--it was the only thing he uttered. So that it seems pretty
+safe to assume that it _is_ to be there. Now, of course, the matter's
+very serious. Men have been despatched to take charge of the stable very
+quietly, and the club is to be taken possession of at once--also very
+quietly. It must be done without a moment's delay, and as there is a
+chance that the only detective officers within reach at the moment may
+be known by sight, I have undertaken to get in first. Perhaps you'll
+come? We may have to take the door with a rush."
+
+Of course I meant to miss nothing if I could help it, and said so.
+
+"Very well," replied Hewitt, "we'll get ourselves up a bit." He began
+taking off his collar and tie. "It is getting dusk," he proceeded, "and
+we shan't want old clothes to make ourselves look sufficiently shabby.
+We're both wearing bowler hats, which is lucky. Make a dent in yours--if
+you can do so without permanently damaging it."
+
+We got rid of our collars and made chokers of our ties. We turned our
+coat-collars up at one side only, and then, with dented hats worn
+raffishly, and our hands in our pockets, we looked disreputable enough
+for all practical purposes in twilight. A cordon of plain-clothes police
+had already been forming round the club, we were told, and so we sallied
+forth. We turned into Windmill Street, crossed Whitfield Street, and in
+a turning or two we came to the Bakunin Club. I could see no sign of
+anything like a ring of policemen, and said so. Hewitt chuckled. "Of
+course not," he said; "they don't go about a job of this sort with drums
+beating and flags flying. But they are all there, and some are watching
+us. There is the house. I'll negotiate."
+
+The house was one of the very shabby _passe_ sort that abound in that
+quarter. The very narrow area was railed over, and almost choked with
+rubbish. Visible above it were three floors, the lowest indicated by the
+door and one window, and the other two by two windows each--mean and
+dirty all. A faint light appeared in the top floor, and another from
+somewhere behind the refuse-heaped area. Everywhere else was in
+darkness. Hewitt looked intently into the area, but it was impossible to
+discern anything behind the sole grimy patch of window that was visible.
+Then we stepped lightly up the three or four steps to the door and rang
+the bell.
+
+We could hear slippered feet mounting a stair and approaching. A latch
+was shifted, a door opened six inches, an indistinct face appeared, and
+a female voice asked, "_Qui est la?_"
+
+"_Deux camarades_," Hewitt grunted testily. "_Ouvrez vite._"
+
+I had noticed that the door was kept from opening further by a short
+chain. This chain the woman unhooked from the door, but still kept the
+latter merely ajar, as though intending to assure herself still
+further. But Hewitt immediately pushed the door back, planted his foot
+against it, and entered, asking carelessly as he did so, "_Ou se trouve
+Luigi?_"
+
+I followed on his heels, and in the dark could just distinguish that
+Hewitt pushed the woman instantly against the wall and clapped his hand
+to her mouth. At the same moment a file of quiet men were suddenly
+visible ascending the steps at my heels. They were the police.
+
+The door was closed behind us almost noiselessly, and a match was
+struck. Two men stood at the bottom of the stairs, and the others
+searched the house. Only two men were found--both in a top room. They
+were secured and brought down.
+
+The woman was now ungagged, and she used her tongue at a great rate. One
+of the men was a small, meek-looking slip of a fellow, and he appeared
+to be the woman's husband. "Eh, messieurs le police," she exclaimed
+vehemently, "it ees not of 'im, mon pauvre Pierre, zat you sall rrun in.
+'Im and me--we are not of the clob--we work only--we housekeep."
+
+Hewitt whispered to an officer, and the two men were taken below. Then
+Hewitt spoke to the woman, whose protests had not ceased. "You say you
+are not of the club," he said, "but what is there to prove that? If you
+are but housekeepers, as you say, you have nothing to fear. But you can
+only prove it by giving the police information. For instance, now, about
+Gerard. What have they done with him?"
+
+"Jean Pingard--'im you 'ave take downstairs--'e 'ave lose 'im. Jean
+Pingard get last night all a-boosa--all dronk like zis"--she rolled her
+head and shoulders to express intoxication--"and he sleep too much
+to-day, when Emile go out, and Gerard, he go too, and nobody know. I
+will tell you anysing. We are not of the clob--we housekeep, me and
+Pierre."
+
+"But what did they do to Gerard before he went away?"
+
+The woman was ready and anxious to tell anything. Gerard had been
+selected to do something--what it was exactly she did not know, but
+there was a horse and cart, and he was to drive it. Where the horse and
+cart was also she did not know, but Gerard had driven a cart before in
+his work for a baker, and he was to drive one in connection with some
+scheme among the members of the club. But _le pauvre Gerard_ at the last
+minute disliked to drive the cart; he had fear. He did not say he had
+fear, but he prepared a letter--a letter that was not signed. The letter
+was to be sent to the police, and it told them the whereabouts of the
+horse and cart, so that the police might seize these things, and then
+there would be nothing for Gerard, who had fear, to do in the way of
+driving. No, he did not betray the names of the comrades, but he told
+the place of the horse and the cart.
+
+Nevertheless, the letter was never sent. There was suspicion, and the
+letter was found in a pocket and read. Then there was a meeting, and
+Gerard was confronted with his letter. He could say nothing but "_Je le
+nie!_"--found no explanation but that. There was much noise, and she had
+observed from a staircase, from which one might see through a
+ventilating hole, Gerard had much fear--very much fear. His face was
+white, and it moved; he prayed for mercy, and they talked of killing
+him. It was discussed how he should be killed, and the poor Gerard was
+more terrified. He was made to take off his collar, and a razor was
+drawn across his throat, though without cutting him, till he fainted.
+
+Then water was flung over him, and he was struck in the face till he
+revived. He again repeated, "_Je le nie! je le nie!_" and nothing more.
+Then one struck him with a bottle, and another with a stick; the point
+of a knife was put against his throat and held there, but this time he
+did not faint, but cried softly, as a man who is drunk, "_Je le nie! je
+le nie!_" So they tied a handkerchief about his neck, and twisted it
+till his face grew purple and black, and his eyes were round and
+terrible, and then they struck his face, and he fainted again. But they
+took away the handkerchief, having fear that they could not easily get
+rid of the body if he were killed, for there was no preparation. So they
+decided to meet again and discuss when there would be preparation.
+Wherefore they took him away to the rooms of Jean Pingard--of Jean and
+Emile Pingard--in Henry Street, Golden Square. But Emile Pingard had
+gone out, and Jean was drunk and slept, and they lost him. Jean Pingard
+was he downstairs--the taller of the two; the other was but _le pauvre
+Pierre_, who, with herself, was not of the club. They worked only; they
+were the keepers of the house. There was nothing for which they should
+be arrested, and she would give the police any information they might
+ask.
+
+"As I thought, you see," Hewitt said to me, "the man's nerves have
+broken down under the terror and the strain, and aphasia is the result.
+I think I told you that the only articulate thing he could say was '_Je
+le nie!_' and now we know how those words were impressed on him till he
+now pronounces them mechanically, with no idea of their meaning. Come,
+we can do no more here now. But wait a moment."
+
+There were footsteps outside. The light was removed, and a policeman
+went to the door and opened it as soon as the bell rang. Three men
+stepped in one after another, and the door was immediately shut behind
+them--they were prisoners.
+
+We left quietly, and although we, of course, expected it, it was not
+till the next morning that we learned absolutely that the largest arrest
+of Anarchists ever made in this country was made at the Bakunin Club
+that night. Each man as he came was admitted--and collared.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We made our way to Luzatti's, and it was over our dinner that Hewitt put
+me in full possession of the earlier facts of this case, which I have
+set down as impersonal narrative in their proper place at the beginning.
+
+"But," I said, "what of that aimless scribble you spoke of that Gerard
+made in the police station? Can I see it?"
+
+Hewitt turned to where his coat hung behind him and took a handful of
+papers from his pocket.
+
+"Most of these," he said, "mean nothing at all. _That_ is what he wrote
+at first," and he handed me the first of the two papers which were
+presented in facsimile in the earlier part of this narrative.
+
+"You see," he said, "he has begun mechanically from long use to write
+'monsieur'--the usual beginning of a letter. But he scarcely makes three
+letters before tailing off into sheer scribble. He tries again and
+again, and although once there is something very like 'que,' and once
+something like a word preceded by a negative 'n,' the whole thing is
+meaningless.
+
+"This" (he handed me the other paper which has been printed in
+facsimile) "_does_ mean something, though Gerard never intended it. Can
+you spot the meaning? Really, I think it's pretty plain--especially now
+that you know as much as I about the day's adventures. The thing at the
+top left-hand corner, I may tell you, Gerard intended for a sketch of a
+clock on the mantelpiece in the police-station."
+
+I stared hard at the paper, but could make nothing whatever of it. "I
+only see the horse-shoe clock," I said, "and a sort of second,
+unsuccessful attempt to draw it again. Then there is a horse-shoe
+dotted, but scribbled over, and then a sort of kite or balloon on a
+string, a Highlander, and--well, I don't understand it, I confess. Tell
+me."
+
+"I'll explain what I learned from that," Hewitt said, "and also what led
+me to look for it. From what the inspector told me, I judged the man to
+be in a very curious state, and I took a fancy to see him. Most I was
+curious to know why he should have a terror of bread at one moment and
+eat it ravenously at another. When I saw him I felt pretty sure that he
+was not mad, in the common sense of the term. As far as I could judge
+it seemed to be a case of aphasia.
+
+"Then when the doctor came I had a chat (as I have already told you)
+with the policeman who found the man. He told me about the incident of
+the bread with rather more detail than I had had from the inspector.
+Thus it was plain that the man was terrified at the bread only when it
+was in the form of a loaf, and ate it eagerly when it was cut into
+pieces. That was _one_ thing to bear in mind. He was not afraid of
+_bread_, but only of a _loaf_.
+
+"Very well. I asked the policeman to find another uncut loaf, and to put
+it near the man when his attention was diverted. Meantime the doctor
+reported that my suspicion as to aphasia was right. The man grew more
+comfortable, and was assured that he was among friends and had nothing
+to fear, so that when at length he found the loaf near his elbow he was
+not so violently terrified, only very uneasy. I watched him and saw him
+turn it bottom up--a very curious thing to do; he immediately became
+less uneasy--the turning over of the loaf seemed to have set his mind at
+rest in some way. This was more curious still. I thought for some little
+while before accepting the bomb theory as the most probable.
+
+"The doctor left, and I determined to give the man another chance with
+pen and paper. I felt pretty certain that if he were allowed to
+scribble and sketch as he pleased, sooner or later he would do something
+that would give me some sort of a hint. I left him entirely alone and
+let him do as he pleased, but I watched.
+
+"After all the futile scribble which you have seen, he began to sketch,
+first a man's head, then a chair--just what he might happen to see in
+the room. Presently he took to the piece of paper you have before you.
+He observed that clock and began to sketch it, then went on to other
+things, such as you see, scribbling idly over most of them when
+finished. When he had made the last of the sketches he made a hasty
+scrawl of his pen over it and broke down. It had brought his terror to
+his mind again somehow.
+
+"I seized the paper and examined it closely. Now just see. Ignore the
+clock, which was merely a sketch of a thing before him, and look at the
+three things following. What are they? A horse-shoe, a captive balloon,
+and a Highlander. Now, can't you think of something those three things
+in that order suggest?"
+
+I could think of nothing whatever, and I confessed as much.
+
+"Think, now. Tottenham Court Road!"
+
+I started. "Of course," I said. "That never struck me. There's the
+Horse-shoe Hotel, with the sign outside, there's the large toy and
+fancy shop half-way up, where they have a captive balloon moored to the
+roof as an advertisement, and there's the tobacco and snuff shop on the
+left, toward the other end, where they have a life-size wooden
+Highlander at the door--an uncommon thing, indeed, nowadays."
+
+"You are right. The curious conjunction struck me at once. There they
+are, all three, and just in the order in which one meets them going up
+from Oxford Street. Also, as if to confirm the conjecture, note the
+_dotted_ horse-shoe. Don't you remember that at night the Horse-shoe
+Hotel sign is illuminated by two rows of gas lights?
+
+"Now here was my clue at last. Plainly, this man, in his mechanical
+sketching, was following a regular train of thought, and unconsciously
+illustrating it as he went along. Many people in perfect health and
+mental soundness do the same thing if a pen and a piece of waste paper
+be near. The man's train of thought led him, in memory, up Tottenham
+Court Road, and further, to where some disagreeable recollection upset
+him. It was my business to trace this train of thought. Do you remember
+the feat of Dupin in Poe's story, 'The Murders in the Rue Morgue'--how
+he walks by his friend's side in silence for some distance, and then
+suddenly breaks out with a divination of his thoughts, having silently
+traced them from a fruiterer with a basket, through paving-stones,
+Epicurus, Dr. Nichols, the constellation Orion, and a Latin poem, to a
+cobbler lately turned actor?
+
+"Well, it was some such task as this (but infinitely simpler, as a
+matter of fact) that was set me. This man begins by drawing the
+horse-shoe clock. Having done with that, and with the horse-shoe still
+in his mind, he starts to draw a horse-shoe simply. It is a failure, and
+he scribbles it out. His mind at once turns to the Horse-shoe Hotel,
+which he knows from frequently passing it, and its sign of gas-jets. He
+sketches _that_, making dots for the gas lights. Once started in
+Tottenham Court Road, his mind naturally follows his usual route along
+it. He remembers the advertising captive balloon half-way up, and down
+_that_ goes on his paper. In imagination he crosses the road, and keeps
+on till he comes to the very noticeable Highlander outside the
+tobacconist's. _That_ is sketched. Thus it is plain that a familiar
+route with him was from New Oxford Street up Tottenham Court Road.
+
+"At the police-station I ventured to guess from this that he lived
+somewhere near Seven Dials. Perhaps before long we shall know if this
+was right. But to return to the sketches. After the Highlander there is
+something at first not very distinct. A little examination, however,
+shows it to be intended for a chimney-pot partly covered with a basket.
+Now an old basket, stuck sideways on a chimney by way of cowl, is not an
+uncommon thing in parts of the country, but it is very unusual in
+London. Probably, then, it would be in some by-street or alley. Next and
+last, there is a horse's head, and it was at this that the man's trouble
+returned to him.
+
+"Now, when one goes to a place and finds a horse there, that place is
+not uncommonly a stable; and, as a matter of fact, the basket-cowl would
+be much more likely to be found in use in a range of back stabling than
+anywhere else. Suppose, then, that after taking the direction indicated
+in the sketches--the direction of Fitzroy Square, in fact--one were to
+find a range of stabling with a basket-cowl visible about it? I know my
+London pretty well, as you are aware, and I could remember but two
+likely stable-yards in that particular part--the two we looked at, in
+the second of which you may possibly have noticed just such a
+basket-cowl as I have been speaking of.
+
+"Well, what we did you know, and that we found confirmation of my
+conjecture about the loaves you also know. It was the recollection of
+the horse and cart, and what they were to transport, and what the end
+of it all had been, that upset Gerard as he drew the horse's head. You
+will notice that the sketches have not been done in separate rows, left
+to right--they have simply followed one another all round the paper,
+which means preoccupation and unconsciousness on the part of the man who
+made them."
+
+"But," I asked, "supposing those loaves to contain bombs, how were the
+bombs put there? Baking the bread round them would have been risky,
+wouldn't it?"
+
+"Certainly. What they did was to cut the loaves, each row, down the
+centre. Then most of the crumb was scooped out, the explosive inserted,
+and the sides joined up and glued. I thought you had spotted the joins,
+though they certainly were neat."
+
+"No, I didn't examine closely. Luigi, of course, had been told off for a
+daily visit to feed the horse, and that is how we caught him."
+
+"One supposes so. They hadn't rearranged their plans as to going on with
+the outrages after Gerard's defection. By the way, I noticed that he was
+accustomed to driving when I first saw him. There was an unmistakable
+mark on his coat, just at the small of the back, that drivers get who
+lean against a rail in a cart."
+
+The loaves were examined by official experts, and, as everybody now
+knows, were found to contain, as Hewitt had supposed, large charges of
+dynamite. What became of some half-dozen of the men captured is also
+well known: their sentences were exemplary.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
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+
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+
+
+_For sale by all booksellers; or sent by mail on receipt of price by the
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+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+BY A. CONAN DOYLE.
+
+
+_THE EXPLOITS OF BRIGADIER GERARD. A Romance of the Life of a Typical
+Napoleonic Soldier._ Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+There is a flavor of Dumas's Musketeers in the life of the redoubtable
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+under the personal observation of the Emperor. His delightfully romantic
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+
+
+_THE STARK MUNRO LETTERS._ Being a Series of Twelve Letters written by
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+Swanborough, of Lowell, Massachusetts, during the years 1881-1884.
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+
+
+SEVENTH EDITION.
+
+_ROUND THE RED LAMP._ Being Facts and Fancies of Medical Life. 12mo.
+Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"Too much can not be said in praise of these strong productions, that,
+to read, keep one's heart leaping to the throat and the mind in a tumult
+of anticipation to the end.... No series of short stories in modern
+literature can approach them."--_Hartford Times._
+
+"If Mr. A. Conan Doyle had not already placed himself in the front rank
+of living English writers by 'The Refugees,' and other of his larger
+stories, he would surely do so by these fifteen short tales."--_New York
+Mail and Express._
+
+"A strikingly realistic and decidedly original contribution to modern
+literature."--_Boston Saturday Evening Gazette._
+
+
+
+BY S. R. CROCKETT.
+
+
+_CLEG KELLY, ARAB OF THE CITY. His Progress and Adventures._ Uniform
+with "The Lilac Sunbonnet" and "Bog-Myrtle and Peat." Illustrated. 12mo.
+Cloth, $1.50.
+
+It is safe to predict for the quaint and delightful figure of Cleg Kelly
+a notable place in the literature of the day. Mr. Crockett's signal
+success in his new field will enlarge the wide circle of his admirers.
+The lights and shadows of curious phases of Edinburgh life, and of
+Scotch farm and railroad life, are pictured with an intimate sympathy,
+richness of humor, and truthful pathos which make this new novel a
+genuine addition to literature. It seems safe to say that at least two
+characters--Cleg and Muckle Alick--are likely to lead Mr. Crockett's
+heroes in popular favor. The illustrations of this fascinating novel
+have been the result of most faithful and sympathetic study.
+
+
+_BOG-MYRTLE AND PEAT._ Third edition. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"Here are idyls, epics, dramas of human life, written in words that
+thrill and burn.... Each is a poem that has an immortal flavor. They are
+fragments of the author's early dreams, too bright, too gorgeous, too
+full of the blood of rubies and the life of diamonds to be caught and
+held palpitating in expression's grasp."--_Boston Courier._
+
+"Hardly a sketch among them all that will not afford pleasure to the
+reader for its genial humor, artistic local coloring, and admirable
+portrayal of character."--_Boston Home Journal._
+
+"One dips into the book anywhere and reads on and on, fascinated by the
+writer's charm of manner."--_Minneapolis Tribune._
+
+
+_THE LILAC SUNBONNET._ Sixth edition. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"A love story pure and simple, one of the old-fashioned, wholesome,
+sunshiny kind, with a pure-minded, sound-hearted hero, and a heroine who
+is merely a good and beautiful woman; and if any other love story half
+so sweet has been written this year, it has escaped our notice."--_New
+York Times._
+
+"The general conception of the story, the motive of which is the growth
+of love between the young chief and heroine, is delineated with a
+sweetness and a freshness, a naturalness and a certainty, which places
+'The Lilac Sunbonnet' among the best stories of the time."--_New York
+Mail and Express._
+
+"In its own line this little love story can hardly be excelled. It is a
+pastoral, an idyl--the story of love and courtship and marriage of a
+fine young man and a lovely girl--no more. But it is told in so
+thoroughly delightful a manner, with such playful humor, such delicate
+fancy, such true and sympathetic feeling, that nothing more could be
+desired."--_Boston Traveller._
+
+
+
+GILBERT PARKER'S BEST BOOKS.
+
+
+_THE SEATS OF THE MIGHTY._ Being the Memoirs of Captain ROBERT MORAY,
+sometime an Officer in the Virginia Regiment, and afterward of Amherst's
+Regiment. 12mo. Cloth, illustrated, $1.50.
+
+For the time of his story Mr. Parker has chosen the most absorbing
+period of the romantic eighteenth-century history of Quebec. The curtain
+rises soon after General Braddock's defeat in Virginia, and the hero, a
+prisoner in Quebec, curiously entangled in the intrigues of La
+Pompadour, becomes a part of a strange history, full of adventure and
+the stress of peril, which culminates only after Wolfe's victory over
+Montcalm. The material offered by the life and history of old Quebec has
+never been utilized for the purposes of fiction with the command of plot
+and incident, the mastery of local color, and the splendid realization
+of dramatic situations shown in this distinguished and moving romance.
+The illustrations preserve the atmosphere of the text, for they present
+the famous buildings, gates, and battle grounds as they appeared at the
+time of the hero's imprisonment in Quebec.
+
+
+_THE TRAIL OF THE SWORD._ A Novel. 12mo. Paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00.
+
+"Mr. Parker here adds to a reputation already wide, and anew
+demonstrates his power of pictorial portrayal and of strong dramatic
+situation and climax."--_Philadelphia Bulletin._
+
+"The tale holds the reader's interest from first to last, for it is full
+of fire and spirit, abounding in incident, and marked by good character
+drawing."--_Pittsburg Times._
+
+
+_THE TRESPASSER._ 12mo. Paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00.
+
+"Interest, pith, force and charm--Mr. Parker's new story possesses all
+these qualities.... Almost bare of synthetical decoration, his
+paragraphs are stirring because they are real. We read at times--as we
+have read the great masters of romance--breathlessly."--_The Critic._
+
+"Gilbert Parker writes a strong novel, but thus far this is his
+masterpiece.... It is one of the great novels of the year."--_Boston
+Advertiser._
+
+
+_THE TRANSLATION OF A SAVAGE._ 16mo. Flexible cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"A book which no one will be satisfied to put down until the end has
+been matter of certainty and assurance."--_The Nation._
+
+"A story of remarkable interest, originality, and ingenuity of
+construction."--_Boston Home Journal._
+
+"The perusal of this romance will repay those who care for new and
+original types of character, and who are susceptible to the fascination
+of a fresh and vigorous style."--_London Daily News._
+
+
+"=A better book than 'The Prisoner of Zenda.'="--_London Queen._
+
+_THE CHRONICLES OF COUNT ANTONIO._ By ANTHONY HOPE, author of "The
+God in the Car," "The Prisoner of Zenda," etc. With photogravure
+Frontispiece by S. W. Van Schaick. Third edition. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"No adventures were ever better worth recounting than are those of
+Antonio of Monte Velluto, a very Bayard among outlaws.... To all those
+whose pulses still stir at the recital of deeds of high courage, we may
+recommend this book.... The chronicle conveys the emotion of heroic
+adventure, and is picturesquely written."--_London Daily News._
+
+"It has literary merits all its own, of a deliberate and rather deep
+order.... In point of execution 'The Chronicles of Count Antonio' is the
+best work that Mr. Hope has yet done. The design is clearer, the
+workmanship more elaborate, the style more colored.... The incidents are
+most ingenious, they are told quietly, but with great cunning, and the
+Quixotic sentiment which pervades it all is exceedingly
+pleasant."--_Westminster Gazette._
+
+"A romance worthy of all the expectations raised by the brilliancy of
+his former books, and likely to be read with a keen enjoyment and a
+healthy exaltation of the spirits by every one who takes it up."--_The
+Scotsman._
+
+"A gallant tale, written with unfailing freshness and spirit."--_London
+Daily Telegraph._
+
+"One of the most fascinating romances written in English within many
+days. The quaint simplicity of its style is delightful, and the
+adventures recorded in these 'Chronicles of Count Antonio' are as
+stirring and ingenious as any conceived even by Weyman at his
+best."--_New York World._
+
+"Romance of the real flavor, wholly and entirely romance, and narrated
+in true romantic style. The characters, drawn with such masterly
+handling, are not merely pictures and portraits, but statues that are
+alive and step boldly forward from the canvas."--_Boston Courier._
+
+"Told in a wonderfully simple and direct style, and with the magic
+touch of a man who has the genius of narrative, making the varied
+incidents flow naturally and rapidly in a stream of sparkling
+discourse."--_Detroit Tribune._
+
+"Easily ranks with, if not above, 'A Prisoner of Zenda.' ... Wonderfully
+strong, graphic, and compels the interest of the most _blase_ novel
+reader."--_Boston Advertiser._
+
+"No adventures were ever better worth telling than those of Count
+Antonio.... The author knows full well how to make every pulse thrill,
+and how to hold his readers under the spell of his magic."--_Boston
+Herald._
+
+"A book to make women weep proud tears, and the blood of men to tingle
+with knightly fervor.... In 'Count Antonio' we think Mr. Hope surpasses
+himself, as he has already surpassed all the other story-tellers of the
+period."--_New York Spirit of the Times._
+
+
+_THE ONE WHO LOOKED ON._ By F. F. MONTRESOR, author of "Into the
+Highways and Hedges." 16mo. Cloth, special binding, $1.25.
+
+"The story runs on as smoothly as a brook through lowlands; it excites
+your interest at the beginning and keeps it to the end."--_New York
+Herald._
+
+"An exquisite story.... No person sensitive to the influence of what
+makes for the true, the lovely, and the strong in human friendship and
+the real in life's work can read this book without being benefited by
+it."--_Buffalo Commercial._
+
+"The book has universal interest and very unusual merit.... Aside from
+its subtle poetic charm, the book is a noble example of the power of
+keen observation."--_Boston Herald._
+
+
+_CORRUPTION._ By PERCY WHITE, author of "Mr. Bailey-Martin," etc. 12mo.
+Cloth, $1.25.
+
+"There is intrigue enough in it for those who love a story of the
+ordinary kind, and the political part is perhaps more attractive in its
+sparkle and variety of incident than the real thing itself."--_London
+Daily News._
+
+"A drama of biting intensity, a tragedy of inflexible purpose and
+relentless result."--_Pall Mall Gazette._
+
+
+_A HARD WOMAN._ A Story in Scenes. By VIOLET HUNT. 12mo. Cloth, $1.25.
+
+"An extremely clever work. Miss Hunt probably writes dialogue better
+than any of our young novelists.... Not only are her conversations
+wonderfully vivacious and sustained, but she contrives to assign to each
+of her characters a distinct mode of speech, so that the reader easily
+identifies them, and can follow the conversations without the slightest
+difficulty."--_London Athenaeum._
+
+"One of the best writers of dialogue of our immediate day. The
+conversations in this book will enhance her already secure
+reputation."--_London Daily Chronicle._
+
+"A creation that does Miss Hunt infinite credit, and places her in the
+front rank of the younger novelists.... Brilliantly drawn, quivering
+with life, adroit, quiet-witted, unfalteringly insolent, and withal
+strangely magnetic."--_London Standard._
+
+
+_AN IMAGINATIVE MAN._ By ROBERT S. HICHENS, author of "The Green
+Carnation." 12mo. Cloth, $1.25.
+
+"One of the brightest books of the year."--_Boston Budget._
+
+"Altogether delightful, fascinating, unusual."--_Cleveland Amusement
+Gazette._
+
+"A study in character.... Just as entertaining as though it were the
+conventional story of love and marriage. The clever hand of the author
+of 'The Green Carnation' is easily detected in the caustic wit and
+pointed epigram."--_Jeannette L. Gilder, in the New York World._
+
+
+_A STREET IN SUBURBIA._ By EDWIN PUGH. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.
+
+"Simplicity of style, strength, and delicacy of character study will
+mark this book as one of the most significant of the year."--_New York
+Press._
+
+"Thoroughly entertaining, and more--it shows traces of a creative genius
+something akin to Dickens."--_Boston Traveller._
+
+"In many respects the best of all the books of lighter literature
+brought out this season."--_Providence News._
+
+"Highly pleasing and gracefully recorded reminiscences of early suburban
+life and youthful experience told in a congenial spirit and in very
+charming prose."--_Boston Courier._
+
+
+_MAJESTY._ A Novel. By LOUIS COUPERUS. Translated by A. TEIXEIRA DE
+MATTOS and ERNEST DOWSON. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.
+
+"There have been many workers among novelists in the field of royal
+portraiture, but it may be safely stated that few of those who have
+essayed this dubious path have achieved more striking results than M.
+Couperus. 'Majesty' is an extraordinarily vivid romance of autocratic
+imperialism."--_London Academy._
+
+"No novelist whom we can call to mind has ever given the world such a
+masterpiece of royal portraiture as Louis Couperus's striking romance
+entitled 'Majesty.'"--_Philadelphia Record._
+
+"There is not an uninteresting page in the book, and it ought to be read
+by all who desire to keep in line with the best that is published in
+modern fiction."--_Buffalo Commercial._
+
+
+_THE NEW MOON._ By C. E. RAIMOND, author of "George Mandeville's
+Husband," etc. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.
+
+"A delicate pathos makes itself felt as the narrative progresses, whose
+cadences fall on the spirit's consciousness with a sweet and soothing
+influence not to be measured in words."--_Boston Courier._
+
+"One of the most impressive of recent works of fiction, both for its
+matter and especially for its presentation."--_Milwaukee Journal._
+
+"An intensely interesting story. A curious interweaving of old
+superstitions which govern a nervous woman's selfish life, and the
+brisk, modern ways of a wholesome English girl."--_Philadelphia Ledger._
+
+
+_THE WISH._ A Novel. By HERMANN SUDERMANN. With a Biographical
+Introduction by ELIZABETH LEE. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.
+
+"Contains some superb specimens of original thought."--_New York World._
+
+"The style is direct and incisive, and holds the unflagging attention of
+the reader."--_Boston Journal._
+
+"A powerful story, very simple, very direct."--_Chicago Evening Post._
+
+
+_SLEEPING FIRES._ By GEORGE GISSING, author of "In the Year of Jubilee,"
+"Eve's Ransom," etc. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+In this striking story the author has treated an original motive with
+rare self-command and skill. His book is most interesting as a story,
+and remarkable as a literary performance.
+
+
+_STONEPASTURES._ By ELEANOR STUART. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"This is a strong bit of good literary workmanship.... The book has the
+value of being a real sketch of our own mining regions, and of showing
+how, even in the apparently dull round of work, there is still material
+for a good bit of literature."--_Philadelphia Ledger._
+
+
+_COURTSHIP BY COMMAND._ By M. M. BLAKE. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"A bright, moving study of an unusually interesting period in the life
+of Napoleon,... deliciously told; the characters are clearly, strongly,
+and very delicately modeled, and the touches of color most artistically
+done. 'Courtship by Command' is the most satisfactory Napoleon
+_bonne-bouche_ we have had."--_New York Commercial Advertiser._
+
+
+_THE WATTER'S MOU'._ By BRAM STOKER. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"Here is a tale to stir the most sluggish nature.... It is like standing
+on the deck of a wave tossed ship; you feel the soul of the storm go
+into your blood."--_N. Y. Home Journal._
+
+"The characters are strongly drawn, the descriptions are intensely
+dramatic, and the situations are portrayed with rare vividness of
+language. It is a thrilling story, told with great power."--_Boston
+Advertiser._
+
+
+_MASTER AND MAN._ By Count LEO TOLSTOY. With an Introduction by W. D.
+HOWELLS. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"Crowded with these characteristic touches which mark his literary
+work."--_Public Opinion._
+
+"Reveals a wonderful knowledge of the workings of the human mind, and it
+tells a tale that not only stirs the emotions, but gives us a better
+insight into our own hearts."--_San Francisco Argonaut._
+
+
+_THE ZEIT-GEIST._ By L. DOUGALL, author of "The Mermaid," "Beggars All,"
+etc. 16mo. Cloth, 75 cents.
+
+"One of the best of the short stories of the day."--_Boston Journal._
+
+"One of the most remarkable novels of the year."--_New York Commercial
+Advertiser._
+
+"Powerful in conception, treatment, and influence."--_Boston Globe._
+
+
+
+NOVELS BY HALL CAINE.
+
+
+_THE MANXMAN._ 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"A story of marvelous dramatic intensity, and in its ethical meaning has
+a force comparable only to Hawthorne's 'Scarlet Letter.'"--_Boston
+Beacon._
+
+"A work of power which is another stone added to the foundation of
+enduring fame to which Mr. Caine is yearly adding."--_Public Opinion._
+
+"A wonderfully strong study of character; a powerful analysis of those
+elements which go to make up the strength and weakness of a man, which
+are at fierce warfare within the same breast; contending against each
+other, as it were, the one to raise him to fame and power, the other to
+drag him down to degradation and shame. Never in the whole range of
+literature have we seen the struggle between these forces for supremacy
+over the man more powerfully, more realistically delineated than Mr.
+Caine pictures it."--_Boston Home Journal._
+
+
+_THE DEEMSTER. A Romance of the Isle of Man._ 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"Hall Caine has already given us some very strong and fine work, and
+'The Deemster' is a story of unusual power.... Certain passages and
+chapters have an intensely dramatic grasp, and hold the fascinated
+reader with a force rarely excited nowadays in literature."--_The
+Critic._
+
+"One of the strongest novels which has appeared in many a day."--_San
+Francisco Chronicle._
+
+"Fascinates the mind like the gathering and bursting of a
+storm."--_Illustrated London News._
+
+"Deserves to be ranked among the remarkable novels of the
+day."--_Chicago Times._
+
+
+_THE BONDMAN._ New edition. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"The welcome given to this story has cheered and touched me, but I am
+conscious that, to win a reception so warm, such a book must have had
+readers who brought to it as much as they took away.... I have called my
+story a saga, merely because it follows the epic method, and I must not
+claim for it at any point the weighty responsibility of history, or
+serious obligations to the world of fact. But it matters not to me what
+Icelanders may call 'The Bondman,' if they will honor me by reading it
+in the open-hearted spirit and with the free mind with which they are
+content to read of Grettir and of his fights with the Troll."--_From the
+Author's Preface._
+
+
+_CAPT'N DAVY'S HONEYMOON. A Manx Yarn._ 12mo. Paper, 50 cents; cloth,
+$1.00.
+
+"A new departure by this author. Unlike his previous works, this little
+tale is almost wholly humorous, with, however, a current of pathos
+underneath. It is not always that an author can succeed equally well in
+tragedy and in comedy, but it looks as though Mr. Hall Caine would be
+one of the exceptions."--_London Literary World._
+
+"It is pleasant to meet the author of 'The Deemster' in a brightly
+humorous little story like this.... It shows the same observation of
+Manx character, and much of the same artistic skill."--_Philadelphia
+Times._
+
+
+
+NOVELS BY MAARTEN MAARTENS.
+
+
+_THE GREATER GLORY. A Story of High Life._ By MAARTEN MAARTENS, author
+of "God's Fool," "Joost Avelingh," etc. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"Until the Appletons discovered the merits of Maarten Maartens, the
+foremost of Dutch novelists, it is doubtful if many American readers
+knew that there were Dutch novelists. His 'God's Fool' and 'Joost
+Avelingh' made for him an American reputation. To our mind this just
+published work of his is his best.... He is a master of epigram, an
+artist in description, a prophet in insight."--_Boston Advertiser._
+
+"It would take several columns to give any adequate idea of the superb
+way in which the Dutch novelist has developed his theme and wrought out
+one of the most impressive stories of the period.... It belongs to the
+small class of novels which one can not afford to neglect."--_San
+Francisco Chronicle._
+
+"Maarten Maartens stands head and shoulders above the average novelist
+of the day in intellectual subtlety and imaginative power."--_Boston
+Beacon._
+
+
+_GOD'S FOOL._ By MAARTEN MAARTENS. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"Throughout there is an epigrammatic force which would make palatable a
+less interesting story of human lives or one less deftly told."--_London
+Saturday Review._
+
+"Perfectly easy, graceful, humorous.... The author's skill in
+character-drawing is undeniable."--_London Chronicle._
+
+"A remarkable work."--_New York Times._
+
+"Maarten Maartens has secured a firm footing in the eddies of current
+literature.... Pathos deepens into tragedy in the thrilling story of
+'God's Fool.'"--_Philadelphia Ledger._
+
+"Its preface alone stamps the author as one of the leading English
+novelists of to-day."--_Boston Daily Advertiser._
+
+"The story is wonderfully brilliant.... The interest never lags; the
+style is realistic and intense; and there is a constantly underlying
+current of subtle humor.... It is, in short, a book which no student of
+modern literature should fail to read."--_Boston Times._
+
+"A story of remarkable interest and point."--_New York Observer._
+
+
+_JOOST AVELINGH._ By MAARTEN MAARTENS. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.
+
+"So unmistakably good as to induce the hope that an acquaintance with
+the Dutch literature of fiction may soon become more general among
+us."--_London Morning Post._
+
+"In scarcely any of the sensational novels of the day will the reader
+find more nature or more human nature."--_London Standard._
+
+"A novel of a very high type. At once strongly realistic and powerfully
+idealistic."--_London Literary World._
+
+"Full of local color and rich in quaint phraseology and
+suggestion."--_London Telegraph._
+
+"Maarten Maartens is a capital story-teller."--_Pall Mall Gazette._
+
+"Our English writers of fiction will have to look to their
+laurels."--_Birmingham Daily Post._
+
+
+
+TWO REMARKABLE AMERICAN NOVELS.
+
+
+_THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE. An Episode of the American Civil War._
+By STEPHEN CRANE. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.
+
+"Mr. Stephen Crane is a great artist, with something new to say, and
+consequently with a new way of saying it.... In 'The Red Badge of
+Courage' Mr. Crane has surely contrived a masterpiece.... He has painted
+a picture that challenges comparisons with the most vivid scenes of
+Tolstoy's 'La Guerre et la Paix' or of Zola's 'La Debacle.'"--_London
+New Review._
+
+"In its whole range of literature we can call to mind nothing so
+searching in its analysis, so manifestly impressed with the stamp of
+truth, as 'The Red Badge of Courage.' ... A remarkable study of the
+average mind under stress of battle.... We repeat, a really fine
+achievement."--_London Daily Chronicle._
+
+"Not merely a remarkable book; it is a revelation.... One feels that,
+with perhaps one or two exceptions, all previous descriptions of modern
+warfare have been the merest abstractions."--_St. James Gazette._
+
+"Holds one irrevocably. There is no possibility of resistance when once
+you are in its grip, from the first of the march of the troops to the
+closing scenes.... Mr. Crane, we repeat, has written a remarkable book.
+His insight and his power of realization amount to genius."--_Pall Mall
+Gazette._
+
+"There is nothing in American fiction to compare with it in the vivid,
+uncompromising, almost aggressive vigor with which it depicts the
+strangely mingled conditions that go to make up what men call war....
+Mr. Crane has added to American literature something that has never been
+done before, and that is, in its own peculiar way, inimitable."--_Boston
+Beacon._
+
+"Never before have we had the seamy side of glorious war so well
+depicted.... The action of the story throughout is splendid, and all
+aglow with color, movement, and vim. The style is as keen and bright as
+a sword blade, and a Kipling has done nothing better in this
+line."--_Chicago Evening Post._
+
+
+_IN DEFIANCE OF THE KING. A Romance of the American Revolution._
+By CHAUNCEY C. HOTCHKISS. 12mo. Paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00.
+
+"The whole story is so completely absorbing that you will sit far into
+the night to finish it. You lay it aside with the feeling that you have
+seen a gloriously true picture of the Revolution."--_Boston Herald._
+
+"The story is a strong one--a thrilling one. It causes the true American
+to flush with excitement, to devour chapter after chapter until the eyes
+smart; and it fairly smokes with patriotism."--_New York Mail and
+Express._
+
+"The heart beats quickly, and we feel ourselves taking part in the
+scenes described.... Altogether the book is an addition to American
+literature."--_Chicago Evening Post._
+
+"One of the most readable novels of the year.... As a love romance it is
+charming, while it is filled with thrilling adventure and deeds of
+patriotic daring."--_Boston Advertiser._
+
+"This romance seems to come the nearest to a satisfactory treatment in
+fiction of the Revolutionary period that we have yet had."--_Buffalo
+Courier._
+
+"A clean, wholesome story, full of romance and interesting
+adventure.... Holds the interest alike by the thread of the story
+and by the incidents.... A remarkably well-balanced and absorbing
+novel."--_Milwaukee Journal._
+
+
+New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Chronicles of Martin Hewitt, by Arthur Morrison
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRONICLES OF MARTIN HEWITT ***
+
+***** This file should be named 37820.txt or 37820.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
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+file was produced from images generously made available
+by Cornell University Digital Collections)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
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